HB4781 EngrossedLRB103 38607 KTG 68743 b

1    AN ACT concerning children.
 
2    Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
3represented in the General Assembly:
 
4    Section 1. This Act may be referred to as the Kinship in
5Demand (KIND) Act.
 
6    Section 2. Legislative findings and declaration of policy.
7The General Assembly finds, determines, and declares the
8following:
9        (1) The Kinship in Demand Act creates the statutory
10    vision and authority for the Department of Children and
11    Family Services to execute a kin-first approach to service
12    delivery and directs the juvenile courts to provide
13    necessary oversight of the Department's obligations to
14    maintain family connections and promote equitable
15    opportunities for youth and families to thrive with
16    relational permanence.
17        (2) Connection to family, community, and culture
18    creates emotional and relational permanency. Emotional and
19    relational permanency includes recognizing and supporting
20    many types of important long-term relationships that help
21    a youth feel loved and connected.
22        (3) Federal policy prioritizes placement with
23    relatives or close family friends when youth enter into

 

 

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1    the foster system. Research consistently demonstrates that
2    placing youth with their kin lessens the trauma of family
3    separation, reduces placement disruptions, enhances
4    permanency options if youth cannot be reunified, results
5    in higher placement satisfaction for youth in care, and
6    delivers better social, behavioral, mental health, and
7    educational outcomes for youth than non-kin foster care.
8        (4) Kinship placements are not only more stable, they
9    are shown to reduce the time to permanence when both
10    subsidized guardianship and adoption are available as
11    permanency options. By making the duration in foster care
12    shorter, kinship placements can help to mitigate the
13    long-term consequences of family separation. This reality
14    means that the State should encourage kinship
15    guardianship, and carefully consider how such arrangements
16    help children with existing family structures which can be
17    damaged by the termination of parental rights.
18        (5) It is in the State's public policy interest to
19    adopt a kin-first culture for the Illinois foster system
20    and ensure that youth placed in the care of relatives by
21    the Department of Children and Family Services receive
22    equitable resources and permanency planning tailored to
23    each family's unique needs. The Department of Children and
24    Family Services must promote kinship placement, help youth
25    in care maintain connections with their families, tailor
26    services and supports to kinship families, and listen to

 

 

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1    the voices of youth, their families, and kinship
2    caregivers to materially improve young people's
3    experiences. The Department's policies and resource
4    allocations must align with kin-first values and the
5    Department must pursue federal funding opportunities to
6    enhance kinship care. Lawyers and judges in juvenile court
7    play a meaningful role in creating a kin-first culture.
8    The juvenile court must have sufficient information at all
9    stages of the process to provide essential judicial
10    oversight of the Department's efforts to contact and
11    engage relatives.
12        (6) The financial costs of raising a child, whether
13    borne by a relative or a foster parent, are significant.
14    Youth in care who are placed with relatives should not be
15    deprived of the financial resources available to
16    non-relative foster parents. Foster home licensing
17    standards comprise the foundation on which different and
18    insufficient financial support for relative caregivers
19    compared to non-relatives is built, a disparity that
20    undermines the economic security, well-being, and
21    equitable access to federal foster care maintenance
22    payments for youth living with kin. In September 2023, the
23    U.S. Department of Health and Human Services authorized
24    states to voluntarily establish different licensing or
25    approval standards for kinship caregivers to remove
26    barriers to kinship caregiving that harms youth and

 

 

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1    impedes attainment of permanency. To address inequities
2    and harms, the General Assembly intends to effectuate this
3    federal rule and to leverage every opportunity permitted
4    by the federal government to obtain federal funds for (i)
5    family finding and relative placements, including payments
6    for kinship caregivers at least equivalent to those
7    provided to licensed foster parents and (ii) kinship
8    navigator programs, which the federal government asserts
9    are essential components of the foster system, designed to
10    support kinship caregivers who are providing homes for
11    youth in care.
 
12    Section 5. The Children and Family Services Act is amended
13by changing Sections 4d, 5, 6a, 7, and 7.3 and by adding
14Sections 46 and 55 as follows:
 
15    (20 ILCS 505/4d)
16    Sec. 4d. Definitions Definition. As used in this Act:
17    "Caregiver" means a certified relative caregiver, relative
18caregiver, or foster parent with whom a youth in care is
19placed.
20    "Certified relative caregiver" has the meaning ascribed to
21that term in Section 2.36 of the Child Care Act of 1969.
22    "Certified relative caregiver home" has the meaning
23ascribed to that term in Section 2.37 of the Child Care Act of
241969.

 

 

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1    "Fictive kin" means a person who is unrelated to a child by
2birth, marriage, tribal custom, or adoption who is shown to
3have significant and close personal or emotional ties with the
4child or the child's family.
5    "Relative" means a person who is: (i) related to a child by
6blood, marriage, tribal custom, adoption, or to a child's
7sibling in any of the foregoing ways, even though the person is
8not related to the child, when the child and the child's
9sibling are placed together with that person or (ii) fictive
10kin. For children who have been in the guardianship of the
11Department following the termination of their parents'
12parental rights, been adopted or placed in subsidized or
13unsubsidized guardianship, and are subsequently returned to
14the temporary custody or guardianship of the Department,
15"relative" includes any person who would have qualified as a
16relative under this Section prior to the termination of the
17parents' parental rights if the Department determines, and
18documents, or the court finds that it would be in the child's
19best interests to consider this person a relative, based upon
20the factors for determining best interests set forth in
21subsection (4.05) of Section 1-3 of the Juvenile Court Act of
221987.
23    "Relative caregiver" means a person responsible for the
24care and supervision of a child placed by the Department,
25other than the parent, who is a relative.
26    "Relative home" means a home of a relative that is not a

 

 

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1foster family home or a certified relative caregiver home but
2provides care to a child placed by the Department who is a
3relative of a household member of the relative's home.
4    "Subsidized guardian" means a person who signs a
5subsidized guardianship agreement prior to being appointed as
6plenary guardian of the person of a minor.
7    "Subsidized guardianship" means a permanency outcome when
8a caregiver is appointed as a plenary guardian of the person of
9a minor exiting the foster care system, who receives
10guardianship assistance program payments. Payments may be
11funded through State funds, federal funds, or both State and
12federal funds.
13    "Youth in care" means persons placed in the temporary
14custody or guardianship of the Department pursuant to the
15Juvenile Court Act of 1987.
16(Source: P.A. 100-159, eff. 8-18-17.)
 
17    (20 ILCS 505/5)
18    Sec. 5. Direct child welfare services; Department of
19Children and Family Services. To provide direct child welfare
20services when not available through other public or private
21child care or program facilities.
22    (a) For purposes of this Section:
23        (1) "Children" means persons found within the State
24    who are under the age of 18 years. The term also includes
25    persons under age 21 who:

 

 

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1            (A) were committed to the Department pursuant to
2        the Juvenile Court Act or the Juvenile Court Act of
3        1987 and who continue under the jurisdiction of the
4        court; or
5            (B) were accepted for care, service and training
6        by the Department prior to the age of 18 and whose best
7        interest in the discretion of the Department would be
8        served by continuing that care, service and training
9        because of severe emotional disturbances, physical
10        disability, social adjustment or any combination
11        thereof, or because of the need to complete an
12        educational or vocational training program.
13        (2) "Homeless youth" means persons found within the
14    State who are under the age of 19, are not in a safe and
15    stable living situation and cannot be reunited with their
16    families.
17        (3) "Child welfare services" means public social
18    services which are directed toward the accomplishment of
19    the following purposes:
20            (A) protecting and promoting the health, safety
21        and welfare of children, including homeless,
22        dependent, or neglected children;
23            (B) remedying, or assisting in the solution of
24        problems which may result in, the neglect, abuse,
25        exploitation, or delinquency of children;
26            (C) preventing the unnecessary separation of

 

 

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1        children from their families by identifying family
2        problems, assisting families in resolving their
3        problems, and preventing the breakup of the family
4        where the prevention of child removal is desirable and
5        possible when the child can be cared for at home
6        without endangering the child's health and safety;
7            (D) restoring to their families children who have
8        been removed, by the provision of services to the
9        child and the families when the child can be cared for
10        at home without endangering the child's health and
11        safety;
12            (E) placing children in suitable permanent family
13        arrangements, through guardianship or adoption, in
14        cases where restoration to the birth family is not
15        safe, possible, or appropriate;
16            (F) at the time of placement, conducting
17        concurrent planning, as described in subsection (l-1)
18        of this Section, so that permanency may occur at the
19        earliest opportunity. Consideration should be given so
20        that if reunification fails or is delayed, the
21        placement made is the best available placement to
22        provide permanency for the child;
23            (G) (blank);
24            (H) (blank); and
25            (I) placing and maintaining children in facilities
26        that provide separate living quarters for children

 

 

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1        under the age of 18 and for children 18 years of age
2        and older, unless a child 18 years of age is in the
3        last year of high school education or vocational
4        training, in an approved individual or group treatment
5        program, in a licensed shelter facility, or secure
6        child care facility. The Department is not required to
7        place or maintain children:
8                (i) who are in a foster home, or
9                (ii) who are persons with a developmental
10            disability, as defined in the Mental Health and
11            Developmental Disabilities Code, or
12                (iii) who are female children who are
13            pregnant, pregnant and parenting, or parenting, or
14                (iv) who are siblings, in facilities that
15            provide separate living quarters for children 18
16            years of age and older and for children under 18
17            years of age.
18    (b) (Blank).
19    (b-5) The Department shall adopt rules to establish a
20process for all licensed residential providers in Illinois to
21submit data as required by the Department, if they contract or
22receive reimbursement for children's mental health, substance
23use, and developmental disability services from the Department
24of Human Services, the Department of Juvenile Justice, or the
25Department of Healthcare and Family Services. The requested
26data must include, but is not limited to, capacity, staffing,

 

 

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1and occupancy data for the purpose of establishing State need
2and placement availability.
3    All information collected, shared, or stored pursuant to
4this subsection shall be handled in accordance with all State
5and federal privacy laws and accompanying regulations and
6rules, including without limitation the federal Health
7Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 (Public
8Law 104-191) and the Mental Health and Developmental
9Disabilities Confidentiality Act.
10    (c) The Department shall establish and maintain
11tax-supported child welfare services and extend and seek to
12improve voluntary services throughout the State, to the end
13that services and care shall be available on an equal basis
14throughout the State to children requiring such services.
15    (d) The Director may authorize advance disbursements for
16any new program initiative to any agency contracting with the
17Department. As a prerequisite for an advance disbursement, the
18contractor must post a surety bond in the amount of the advance
19disbursement and have a purchase of service contract approved
20by the Department. The Department may pay up to 2 months
21operational expenses in advance. The amount of the advance
22disbursement shall be prorated over the life of the contract
23or the remaining months of the fiscal year, whichever is less,
24and the installment amount shall then be deducted from future
25bills. Advance disbursement authorizations for new initiatives
26shall not be made to any agency after that agency has operated

 

 

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1during 2 consecutive fiscal years. The requirements of this
2Section concerning advance disbursements shall not apply with
3respect to the following: payments to local public agencies
4for child day care services as authorized by Section 5a of this
5Act; and youth service programs receiving grant funds under
6Section 17a-4.
7    (e) (Blank).
8    (f) (Blank).
9    (g) The Department shall establish rules and regulations
10concerning its operation of programs designed to meet the
11goals of child safety and protection, family preservation, and
12permanency, family reunification, and adoption, including, but
13not limited to:
14        (1) reunification, guardianship, and adoption;
15        (2) relative and licensed foster care;
16        (3) family counseling;
17        (4) protective services;
18        (5) (blank);
19        (6) homemaker service;
20        (7) return of runaway children;
21        (8) (blank);
22        (9) placement under Section 5-7 of the Juvenile Court
23    Act or Section 2-27, 3-28, 4-25, or 5-740 of the Juvenile
24    Court Act of 1987 in accordance with the federal Adoption
25    Assistance and Child Welfare Act of 1980; and
26        (10) interstate services.

 

 

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1    Rules and regulations established by the Department shall
2include provisions for training Department staff and the staff
3of Department grantees, through contracts with other agencies
4or resources, in screening techniques to identify substance
5use disorders, as defined in the Substance Use Disorder Act,
6approved by the Department of Human Services, as a successor
7to the Department of Alcoholism and Substance Abuse, for the
8purpose of identifying children and adults who should be
9referred for an assessment at an organization appropriately
10licensed by the Department of Human Services for substance use
11disorder treatment.
12    (h) If the Department finds that there is no appropriate
13program or facility within or available to the Department for
14a youth in care and that no licensed private facility has an
15adequate and appropriate program or none agrees to accept the
16youth in care, the Department shall create an appropriate
17individualized, program-oriented plan for such youth in care.
18The plan may be developed within the Department or through
19purchase of services by the Department to the extent that it is
20within its statutory authority to do.
21    (i) Service programs shall be available throughout the
22State and shall include but not be limited to the following
23services:
24        (1) case management;
25        (2) homemakers;
26        (3) counseling;

 

 

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1        (4) parent education;
2        (5) day care; and
3        (6) emergency assistance and advocacy; and .
4        (7) kinship navigator and relative caregiver supports.
5    In addition, the following services may be made available
6to assess and meet the needs of children and families:
7        (1) comprehensive family-based services;
8        (2) assessments;
9        (3) respite care; and
10        (4) in-home health services.
11    The Department shall provide transportation for any of the
12services it makes available to children or families or for
13which it refers children or families.
14    (j) The Department may provide categories of financial
15assistance and education assistance grants, and shall
16establish rules and regulations concerning the assistance and
17grants, to persons who adopt or become subsidized guardians of
18children with physical or mental disabilities, children who
19are older, or other hard-to-place children who (i) immediately
20prior to their adoption or subsidized guardianship were youth
21in care or (ii) were determined eligible for financial
22assistance with respect to a prior adoption and who become
23available for adoption because the prior adoption has been
24dissolved and the parental rights of the adoptive parents have
25been terminated or because the child's adoptive parents have
26died. The Department may continue to provide financial

 

 

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1assistance and education assistance grants for a child who was
2determined eligible for financial assistance under this
3subsection (j) in the interim period beginning when the
4child's adoptive parents died and ending with the finalization
5of the new adoption of the child by another adoptive parent or
6parents. The Department may also provide categories of
7financial assistance and education assistance grants, and
8shall establish rules and regulations for the assistance and
9grants, to persons appointed guardian of the person under
10Section 5-7 of the Juvenile Court Act or Section 2-27, 3-28,
114-25, or 5-740 of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987 for children
12who were youth in care for 12 months immediately prior to the
13appointment of the guardian.
14    The amount of assistance may vary, depending upon the
15needs of the child and the adoptive parents or subsidized
16guardians, as set forth in the annual assistance agreement.
17Special purpose grants are allowed where the child requires
18special service but such costs may not exceed the amounts
19which similar services would cost the Department if it were to
20provide or secure them as guardian of the child.
21    Any financial assistance provided under this subsection is
22inalienable by assignment, sale, execution, attachment,
23garnishment, or any other remedy for recovery or collection of
24a judgment or debt.
25    (j-5) The Department shall not deny or delay the placement
26of a child for adoption if an approved family is available

 

 

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1either outside of the Department region handling the case, or
2outside of the State of Illinois.
3    (k) The Department shall accept for care and training any
4child who has been adjudicated neglected or abused, or
5dependent committed to it pursuant to the Juvenile Court Act
6or the Juvenile Court Act of 1987.
7    (l) The Department shall offer family preservation
8services, as defined in Section 8.2 of the Abused and
9Neglected Child Reporting Act, to help families, including
10adoptive and extended families. Family preservation services
11shall be offered (i) to prevent the placement of children in
12substitute care when the children can be cared for at home or
13in the custody of the person responsible for the children's
14welfare, (ii) to reunite children with their families, or
15(iii) to maintain an adoption or subsidized guardianship
16adoptive placement. Family preservation services shall only be
17offered when doing so will not endanger the children's health
18or safety. With respect to children who are in substitute care
19pursuant to the Juvenile Court Act of 1987, family
20preservation services shall not be offered if a goal other
21than those of subdivisions (A), (B), or (B-1) of subsection
22(2.3) (2) of Section 2-28 of that Act has been set, except that
23reunification services may be offered as provided in paragraph
24(F) of subsection (2.3) (2) of Section 2-28 of that Act.
25Nothing in this paragraph shall be construed to create a
26private right of action or claim on the part of any individual

 

 

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1or child welfare agency, except that when a child is the
2subject of an action under Article II of the Juvenile Court Act
3of 1987 and the child's service plan calls for services to
4facilitate achievement of the permanency goal, the court
5hearing the action under Article II of the Juvenile Court Act
6of 1987 may order the Department to provide the services set
7out in the plan, if those services are not provided with
8reasonable promptness and if those services are available.
9    The Department shall notify the child and the child's
10family of the Department's responsibility to offer and provide
11family preservation services as identified in the service
12plan. The child and the child's family shall be eligible for
13services as soon as the report is determined to be
14"indicated". The Department may offer services to any child or
15family with respect to whom a report of suspected child abuse
16or neglect has been filed, prior to concluding its
17investigation under Section 7.12 of the Abused and Neglected
18Child Reporting Act. However, the child's or family's
19willingness to accept services shall not be considered in the
20investigation. The Department may also provide services to any
21child or family who is the subject of any report of suspected
22child abuse or neglect or may refer such child or family to
23services available from other agencies in the community, even
24if the report is determined to be unfounded, if the conditions
25in the child's or family's home are reasonably likely to
26subject the child or family to future reports of suspected

 

 

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1child abuse or neglect. Acceptance of such services shall be
2voluntary. The Department may also provide services to any
3child or family after completion of a family assessment, as an
4alternative to an investigation, as provided under the
5"differential response program" provided for in subsection
6(a-5) of Section 7.4 of the Abused and Neglected Child
7Reporting Act.
8    The Department may, at its discretion except for those
9children also adjudicated neglected or dependent, accept for
10care and training any child who has been adjudicated addicted,
11as a truant minor in need of supervision or as a minor
12requiring authoritative intervention, under the Juvenile Court
13Act or the Juvenile Court Act of 1987, but no such child shall
14be committed to the Department by any court without the
15approval of the Department. On and after January 1, 2015 (the
16effective date of Public Act 98-803) and before January 1,
172017, a minor charged with a criminal offense under the
18Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012 or
19adjudicated delinquent shall not be placed in the custody of
20or committed to the Department by any court, except (i) a minor
21less than 16 years of age committed to the Department under
22Section 5-710 of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987, (ii) a minor
23for whom an independent basis of abuse, neglect, or dependency
24exists, which must be defined by departmental rule, or (iii) a
25minor for whom the court has granted a supplemental petition
26to reinstate wardship pursuant to subsection (2) of Section

 

 

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12-33 of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987. On and after January 1,
22017, a minor charged with a criminal offense under the
3Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012 or
4adjudicated delinquent shall not be placed in the custody of
5or committed to the Department by any court, except (i) a minor
6less than 15 years of age committed to the Department under
7Section 5-710 of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987, (ii) a minor
8for whom an independent basis of abuse, neglect, or dependency
9exists, which must be defined by departmental rule, or (iii) a
10minor for whom the court has granted a supplemental petition
11to reinstate wardship pursuant to subsection (2) of Section
122-33 of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987. An independent basis
13exists when the allegations or adjudication of abuse, neglect,
14or dependency do not arise from the same facts, incident, or
15circumstances which give rise to a charge or adjudication of
16delinquency. The Department shall assign a caseworker to
17attend any hearing involving a youth in the care and custody of
18the Department who is placed on aftercare release, including
19hearings involving sanctions for violation of aftercare
20release conditions and aftercare release revocation hearings.
21    As soon as is possible after August 7, 2009 (the effective
22date of Public Act 96-134), the Department shall develop and
23implement a special program of family preservation services to
24support intact, relative, foster, and adoptive families who
25are experiencing extreme hardships due to the difficulty and
26stress of caring for a child who has been diagnosed with a

 

 

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1pervasive developmental disorder if the Department determines
2that those services are necessary to ensure the health and
3safety of the child. The Department may offer services to any
4family whether or not a report has been filed under the Abused
5and Neglected Child Reporting Act. The Department may refer
6the child or family to services available from other agencies
7in the community if the conditions in the child's or family's
8home are reasonably likely to subject the child or family to
9future reports of suspected child abuse or neglect. Acceptance
10of these services shall be voluntary. The Department shall
11develop and implement a public information campaign to alert
12health and social service providers and the general public
13about these special family preservation services. The nature
14and scope of the services offered and the number of families
15served under the special program implemented under this
16paragraph shall be determined by the level of funding that the
17Department annually allocates for this purpose. The term
18"pervasive developmental disorder" under this paragraph means
19a neurological condition, including, but not limited to,
20Asperger's Syndrome and autism, as defined in the most recent
21edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental
22Disorders of the American Psychiatric Association.
23    (l-1) The General Assembly recognizes that the best
24interests of the child require that the child be placed in a
25the most permanent living arrangement that is an appropriate
26option for the child, consistent with the child's best

 

 

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1interest, using the factors set forth in subsection (4.05) of
2Section 1-3 of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987 as soon as is
3practically possible. To achieve this goal, the General
4Assembly directs the Department of Children and Family
5Services to conduct concurrent planning so that permanency may
6occur at the earliest opportunity. Permanent living
7arrangements may include prevention of placement of a child
8outside the home of the family when the child can be cared for
9at home without endangering the child's health or safety;
10reunification with the family, when safe and appropriate, if
11temporary placement is necessary; or movement of the child
12toward the most appropriate permanent living arrangement and
13permanent legal status.
14    When determining reasonable efforts to be made with
15respect to a child, as described in this subsection, and in
16making such reasonable efforts, the child's health and safety
17shall be the paramount concern.
18    When a child is placed in foster care, the Department
19shall ensure and document that reasonable efforts were made to
20prevent or eliminate the need to remove the child from the
21child's home. The Department must make reasonable efforts to
22reunify the family when temporary placement of the child
23occurs unless otherwise required, pursuant to the Juvenile
24Court Act of 1987. At any time after the dispositional hearing
25where the Department believes that further reunification
26services would be ineffective, it may request a finding from

 

 

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1the court that reasonable efforts are no longer appropriate.
2The Department is not required to provide further
3reunification services after such a finding.
4    A decision to place a child in substitute care shall be
5made with considerations of the child's health, safety, and
6best interests. The Department shall make diligent efforts to
7place the child with a relative, document those diligent
8efforts, and document reasons for any failure or inability to
9secure such a relative placement. If the primary issue
10preventing an emergency placement of a child with a relative
11is a lack of resources, including, but not limited to,
12concrete goods, safety modifications, and services, the
13Department shall make diligent efforts to assist the relative
14in obtaining the necessary resources. No later than January 1,
152025, the Department shall adopt rules defining what is
16diligent and necessary in providing supports to potential
17relative placements. At the time of placement, consideration
18should also be given so that if reunification fails or is
19delayed, the placement has the potential to be an appropriate
20permanent placement made is the best available placement to
21provide permanency for the child.
22    The Department shall adopt rules addressing concurrent
23planning for reunification and permanency. The Department
24shall consider the following factors when determining
25appropriateness of concurrent planning:
26        (1) the likelihood of prompt reunification;

 

 

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1        (2) the past history of the family;
2        (3) the barriers to reunification being addressed by
3    the family;
4        (4) the level of cooperation of the family;
5        (4.5) the child's wishes;
6        (5) the caregivers' foster parents' willingness to
7    work with the family to reunite;
8        (6) the willingness and ability of the caregiver
9    foster family to provide a permanent placement an adoptive
10    home or long-term placement;
11        (7) the age of the child;
12        (8) placement of siblings; and .
13        (9) the wishes of the parent or parents unless the
14    parental preferences are contrary to the best interests of
15    the child.
16    (m) The Department may assume temporary custody of any
17child if:
18        (1) it has received a written consent to such
19    temporary custody signed by the parents of the child or by
20    the parent having custody of the child if the parents are
21    not living together or by the guardian or custodian of the
22    child if the child is not in the custody of either parent,
23    or
24        (2) the child is found in the State and neither a
25    parent, guardian nor custodian of the child can be
26    located.

 

 

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1If the child is found in the child's residence without a
2parent, guardian, custodian, or responsible caretaker, the
3Department may, instead of removing the child and assuming
4temporary custody, place an authorized representative of the
5Department in that residence until such time as a parent,
6guardian, or custodian enters the home and expresses a
7willingness and apparent ability to ensure the child's health
8and safety and resume permanent charge of the child, or until a
9relative enters the home and is willing and able to ensure the
10child's health and safety and assume charge of the child until
11a parent, guardian, or custodian enters the home and expresses
12such willingness and ability to ensure the child's safety and
13resume permanent charge. After a caretaker has remained in the
14home for a period not to exceed 12 hours, the Department must
15follow those procedures outlined in Section 2-9, 3-11, 4-8, or
165-415 of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987.
17    The Department shall have the authority, responsibilities
18and duties that a legal custodian of the child would have
19pursuant to subsection (9) of Section 1-3 of the Juvenile
20Court Act of 1987. Whenever a child is taken into temporary
21custody pursuant to an investigation under the Abused and
22Neglected Child Reporting Act, or pursuant to a referral and
23acceptance under the Juvenile Court Act of 1987 of a minor in
24limited custody, the Department, during the period of
25temporary custody and before the child is brought before a
26judicial officer as required by Section 2-9, 3-11, 4-8, or

 

 

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15-415 of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987, shall have the
2authority, responsibilities and duties that a legal custodian
3of the child would have under subsection (9) of Section 1-3 of
4the Juvenile Court Act of 1987.
5    The Department shall ensure that any child taken into
6custody is scheduled for an appointment for a medical
7examination.
8    A parent, guardian, or custodian of a child in the
9temporary custody of the Department who would have custody of
10the child if the child were not in the temporary custody of the
11Department may deliver to the Department a signed request that
12the Department surrender the temporary custody of the child.
13The Department may retain temporary custody of the child for
1410 days after the receipt of the request, during which period
15the Department may cause to be filed a petition pursuant to the
16Juvenile Court Act of 1987. If a petition is so filed, the
17Department shall retain temporary custody of the child until
18the court orders otherwise. If a petition is not filed within
19the 10-day period, the child shall be surrendered to the
20custody of the requesting parent, guardian, or custodian not
21later than the expiration of the 10-day period, at which time
22the authority and duties of the Department with respect to the
23temporary custody of the child shall terminate.
24    (m-1) The Department may place children under 18 years of
25age in a secure child care facility licensed by the Department
26that cares for children who are in need of secure living

 

 

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1arrangements for their health, safety, and well-being after a
2determination is made by the facility director and the
3Director or the Director's designate prior to admission to the
4facility subject to Section 2-27.1 of the Juvenile Court Act
5of 1987. This subsection (m-1) does not apply to a child who is
6subject to placement in a correctional facility operated
7pursuant to Section 3-15-2 of the Unified Code of Corrections,
8unless the child is a youth in care who was placed in the care
9of the Department before being subject to placement in a
10correctional facility and a court of competent jurisdiction
11has ordered placement of the child in a secure care facility.
12    (n) The Department may place children under 18 years of
13age in licensed child care facilities when in the opinion of
14the Department, appropriate services aimed at family
15preservation have been unsuccessful and cannot ensure the
16child's health and safety or are unavailable and such
17placement would be for their best interest. Payment for board,
18clothing, care, training and supervision of any child placed
19in a licensed child care facility may be made by the
20Department, by the parents or guardians of the estates of
21those children, or by both the Department and the parents or
22guardians, except that no payments shall be made by the
23Department for any child placed in a licensed child care
24facility for board, clothing, care, training, and supervision
25of such a child that exceed the average per capita cost of
26maintaining and of caring for a child in institutions for

 

 

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1dependent or neglected children operated by the Department.
2However, such restriction on payments does not apply in cases
3where children require specialized care and treatment for
4problems of severe emotional disturbance, physical disability,
5social adjustment, or any combination thereof and suitable
6facilities for the placement of such children are not
7available at payment rates within the limitations set forth in
8this Section. All reimbursements for services delivered shall
9be absolutely inalienable by assignment, sale, attachment, or
10garnishment or otherwise.
11    (n-1) The Department shall provide or authorize child
12welfare services, aimed at assisting minors to achieve
13sustainable self-sufficiency as independent adults, for any
14minor eligible for the reinstatement of wardship pursuant to
15subsection (2) of Section 2-33 of the Juvenile Court Act of
161987, whether or not such reinstatement is sought or allowed,
17provided that the minor consents to such services and has not
18yet attained the age of 21. The Department shall have
19responsibility for the development and delivery of services
20under this Section. An eligible youth may access services
21under this Section through the Department of Children and
22Family Services or by referral from the Department of Human
23Services. Youth participating in services under this Section
24shall cooperate with the assigned case manager in developing
25an agreement identifying the services to be provided and how
26the youth will increase skills to achieve self-sufficiency. A

 

 

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1homeless shelter is not considered appropriate housing for any
2youth receiving child welfare services under this Section. The
3Department shall continue child welfare services under this
4Section to any eligible minor until the minor becomes 21 years
5of age, no longer consents to participate, or achieves
6self-sufficiency as identified in the minor's service plan.
7The Department of Children and Family Services shall create
8clear, readable notice of the rights of former foster youth to
9child welfare services under this Section and how such
10services may be obtained. The Department of Children and
11Family Services and the Department of Human Services shall
12disseminate this information statewide. The Department shall
13adopt regulations describing services intended to assist
14minors in achieving sustainable self-sufficiency as
15independent adults.
16    (o) The Department shall establish an administrative
17review and appeal process for children and families who
18request or receive child welfare services from the Department.
19Youth in care who are placed by private child welfare
20agencies, and caregivers foster families with whom those youth
21are placed, shall be afforded the same procedural and appeal
22rights as children and families in the case of placement by the
23Department, including the right to an initial review of a
24private agency decision by that agency. The Department shall
25ensure that any private child welfare agency, which accepts
26youth in care for placement, affords those rights to children

 

 

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1and caregivers with whom those children are placed foster
2families. The Department shall accept for administrative
3review and an appeal hearing a complaint made by (i) a child or
4caregiver with whom the child is placed foster family
5concerning a decision following an initial review by a private
6child welfare agency or (ii) a prospective adoptive parent who
7alleges a violation of subsection (j-5) of this Section. An
8appeal of a decision concerning a change in the placement of a
9child shall be conducted in an expedited manner. A court
10determination that a current foster home placement is
11necessary and appropriate under Section 2-28 of the Juvenile
12Court Act of 1987 does not constitute a judicial determination
13on the merits of an administrative appeal, filed by a former
14caregiver foster parent, involving a change of placement
15decision. No later than January 1, 2025, the Department shall
16adopt rules to develop a reconsideration process to review: a
17denial of certification of a relative, a denial of placement
18with a relative, and a denial of visitation with an identified
19relative. Rules shall include standards and criteria for
20reconsideration that incorporate the best interests of the
21child under Section 4.05 of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987,
22address situations where multiple relatives seek
23certification, and provide that all rules regarding placement
24changes shall be followed.
25    (p) (Blank).
26    (q) The Department may receive and use, in their entirety,

 

 

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1for the benefit of children any gift, donation, or bequest of
2money or other property which is received on behalf of such
3children, or any financial benefits to which such children are
4or may become entitled while under the jurisdiction or care of
5the Department, except that the benefits described in Section
65.46 must be used and conserved consistent with the provisions
7under Section 5.46.
8    The Department shall set up and administer no-cost,
9interest-bearing accounts in appropriate financial
10institutions for children for whom the Department is legally
11responsible and who have been determined eligible for
12Veterans' Benefits, Social Security benefits, assistance
13allotments from the armed forces, court ordered payments,
14parental voluntary payments, Supplemental Security Income,
15Railroad Retirement payments, Black Lung benefits, or other
16miscellaneous payments. Interest earned by each account shall
17be credited to the account, unless disbursed in accordance
18with this subsection.
19    In disbursing funds from children's accounts, the
20Department shall:
21        (1) Establish standards in accordance with State and
22    federal laws for disbursing money from children's
23    accounts. In all circumstances, the Department's
24    Guardianship Administrator or the Guardianship
25    Administrator's designee must approve disbursements from
26    children's accounts. The Department shall be responsible

 

 

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1    for keeping complete records of all disbursements for each
2    account for any purpose.
3        (2) Calculate on a monthly basis the amounts paid from
4    State funds for the child's board and care, medical care
5    not covered under Medicaid, and social services; and
6    utilize funds from the child's account, as covered by
7    regulation, to reimburse those costs. Monthly,
8    disbursements from all children's accounts, up to 1/12 of
9    $13,000,000, shall be deposited by the Department into the
10    General Revenue Fund and the balance over 1/12 of
11    $13,000,000 into the DCFS Children's Services Fund.
12        (3) Maintain any balance remaining after reimbursing
13    for the child's costs of care, as specified in item (2).
14    The balance shall accumulate in accordance with relevant
15    State and federal laws and shall be disbursed to the child
16    or the child's guardian, or to the issuing agency.
17    (r) The Department shall promulgate regulations
18encouraging all adoption agencies to voluntarily forward to
19the Department or its agent names and addresses of all persons
20who have applied for and have been approved for adoption of a
21hard-to-place child or child with a disability and the names
22of such children who have not been placed for adoption. A list
23of such names and addresses shall be maintained by the
24Department or its agent, and coded lists which maintain the
25confidentiality of the person seeking to adopt the child and
26of the child shall be made available, without charge, to every

 

 

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1adoption agency in the State to assist the agencies in placing
2such children for adoption. The Department may delegate to an
3agent its duty to maintain and make available such lists. The
4Department shall ensure that such agent maintains the
5confidentiality of the person seeking to adopt the child and
6of the child.
7    (s) The Department of Children and Family Services may
8establish and implement a program to reimburse caregivers
9Department and private child welfare agency foster parents
10licensed, certified, or otherwise approved by the Department
11of Children and Family Services for damages sustained by the
12caregivers foster parents as a result of the malicious or
13negligent acts of foster children placed by the Department, as
14well as providing third party coverage for such caregivers
15foster parents with regard to actions of foster children
16placed by the Department to other individuals. Such coverage
17will be secondary to the caregiver's foster parent liability
18insurance policy, if applicable. The program shall be funded
19through appropriations from the General Revenue Fund,
20specifically designated for such purposes.
21    (t) The Department shall perform home studies and
22investigations and shall exercise supervision over visitation
23as ordered by a court pursuant to the Illinois Marriage and
24Dissolution of Marriage Act or the Adoption Act only if:
25        (1) an order entered by an Illinois court specifically
26    directs the Department to perform such services; and

 

 

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1        (2) the court has ordered one or both of the parties to
2    the proceeding to reimburse the Department for its
3    reasonable costs for providing such services in accordance
4    with Department rules, or has determined that neither
5    party is financially able to pay.
6    The Department shall provide written notification to the
7court of the specific arrangements for supervised visitation
8and projected monthly costs within 60 days of the court order.
9The Department shall send to the court information related to
10the costs incurred except in cases where the court has
11determined the parties are financially unable to pay. The
12court may order additional periodic reports as appropriate.
13    (u) In addition to other information that must be
14provided, whenever the Department places a child with a
15prospective adoptive parent or parents, in a licensed foster
16home, group home, or child care institution, or in a relative
17home, or in a certified relative caregiver home, the
18Department shall provide to the caregiver, appropriate
19facility staff, or prospective adoptive parent or parents or
20other caretaker:
21        (1) available detailed information concerning the
22    child's educational and health history, copies of
23    immunization records (including insurance and medical card
24    information), a history of the child's previous
25    placements, if any, and reasons for placement changes
26    excluding any information that identifies or reveals the

 

 

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1    location of any previous caregiver or adoptive parents
2    caretaker;
3        (2) a copy of the child's portion of the client
4    service plan, including any visitation arrangement, and
5    all amendments or revisions to it as related to the child;
6    and
7        (3) information containing details of the child's
8    individualized educational plan when the child is
9    receiving special education services.
10    The caregiver, appropriate facility staff, or prospective
11adoptive parent or parents, caretaker shall be informed of any
12known social or behavioral information (including, but not
13limited to, criminal background, fire setting, perpetuation of
14sexual abuse, destructive behavior, and substance abuse)
15necessary to care for and safeguard the children to be placed
16or currently in the home or setting. The Department may
17prepare a written summary of the information required by this
18paragraph, which may be provided to the caregiver, appropriate
19facility staff, or foster or prospective adoptive parent in
20advance of a placement. The caregiver, appropriate facility
21staff, foster or prospective adoptive parent may review the
22supporting documents in the child's file in the presence of
23casework staff. In the case of an emergency placement,
24casework staff shall at least provide known information
25verbally, if necessary, and must subsequently provide the
26information in writing as required by this subsection.

 

 

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1    The information described in this subsection shall be
2provided in writing. In the case of emergency placements when
3time does not allow prior review, preparation, and collection
4of written information, the Department shall provide such
5information as it becomes available. Within 10 business days
6after placement, the Department shall obtain from the
7caregiver, appropriate facility staff, or prospective adoptive
8parent or parents or other caretaker a signed verification of
9receipt of the information provided. Within 10 business days
10after placement, the Department shall provide to the child's
11guardian ad litem a copy of the information provided to the
12caregiver, appropriate facility staff, or prospective adoptive
13parent or parents or other caretaker. The information provided
14to the caregiver, appropriate facility staff, or prospective
15adoptive parent or parents or other caretaker shall be
16reviewed and approved regarding accuracy at the supervisory
17level.
18    (u-5) Beginning January 1, 2025, certified relative
19caregiver homes under Section 3.4 of the Child Care Act of 1969
20shall be eligible to receive foster care maintenance payments
21from the Department in an amount no less than payments made to
22licensed foster family homes. Beginning July 1, 2025, relative
23homes providing care to a child placed by the Department that
24are not a certified relative caregiver home under Section 3.4
25of the Child Care Act of 1969 or a licensed foster family home
26shall be eligible to receive payments from the Department in

 

 

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1an amount no less 90% of the payments made to licensed foster
2family homes and certified relative caregiver homes. Effective
3July 1, 1995, only foster care placements licensed as foster
4family homes pursuant to the Child Care Act of 1969 shall be
5eligible to receive foster care payments from the Department.
6Relative caregivers who, as of July 1, 1995, were approved
7pursuant to approved relative placement rules previously
8promulgated by the Department at 89 Ill. Adm. Code 335 and had
9submitted an application for licensure as a foster family home
10may continue to receive foster care payments only until the
11Department determines that they may be licensed as a foster
12family home or that their application for licensure is denied
13or until September 30, 1995, whichever occurs first.
14    (u-6) To assist relative and certified relative
15caregivers, no later than January 1, 2025, the Department
16shall adopt rules to implement a relative support program, as
17follows:
18        (1) For relative and certified relative caregivers,
19    the Department is authorized to reimburse or prepay
20    reasonable expenditures to remedy home conditions
21    necessary to fulfill the home safety-related requirements
22    of relative caregiver homes.
23        (2) The Department may provide short-term emergency
24    funds to relative and certified relative caregiver homes
25    experiencing extreme hardships due to the difficulty and
26    stress associated with adding youth in care as new

 

 

HB4781 Engrossed- 36 -LRB103 38607 KTG 68743 b

1    household members.
2        (3) Consistent with federal law, the Department shall
3    include in any State Plan made in accordance with the
4    Adoption Assistance and Child Welfare Act of 1980, Titles
5    IV-E and XIX of the Social Security, and any other
6    applicable federal laws the provision of kinship navigator
7    program services. The Department shall apply for and
8    administer all relevant federal aid in accordance with
9    law. Federal funds acquired for the kinship navigator
10    program shall be used for the development, implementation,
11    and operation of kinship navigator program services. The
12    kinship navigator program services may provide
13    information, referral services, support, and assistance to
14    relative and certified relative caregivers of youth in
15    care to address their unique needs and challenges. Until
16    the Department is approved to receive federal funds for
17    these purposes, the Department shall publicly post on the
18    Department's website semi-annual updates regarding the
19    Department's progress in pursuing federal funding.
20    (u-7) To support finding permanency for children through
21subsidized guardianship and adoption and to prevent disruption
22in guardianship and adoptive placements, the Department shall
23establish and maintain accessible subsidized guardianship and
24adoption support services for all children under 18 years of
25age placed in guardianship or adoption who, immediately
26preceding the guardianship or adoption, were in the custody or

 

 

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1guardianship of the Department under Article II of the
2Juvenile Court Act of 1987.
3    The Department shall establish and maintain a toll-free
4number to respond to requests from the public about its
5subsidized guardianship and adoption support services under
6this subsection and shall staff the toll-free number so that
7calls are answered on a timely basis, but in no event more than
8one business day after the receipt of a request. To meet this
9obligation, the Department may utilize the same toll-free
10number the Department operates to respond to post-adoption
11requests under subsection (b-5) of Section 18.9 of the
12Adoption Act. The Department shall publicize information about
13the Department's subsidized guardianship support services and
14toll-free number as follows:
15        (1) it shall post information on the Department's
16    website;
17        (2) it shall provide the information to every licensed
18    child welfare agency and any entity providing subsidized
19    guardianship support services in Illinois courts;
20        (3) it shall reference such information in the
21    materials the Department provides to caregivers pursuing
22    subsidized guardianship to inform them of their rights and
23    responsibilities under the Child Care Act of 1969 and this
24    Act;
25        (4) it shall provide the information, including the
26    Department's Post Adoption and Guardianship Services

 

 

HB4781 Engrossed- 38 -LRB103 38607 KTG 68743 b

1    booklet, to eligible caregivers as part of its
2    guardianship training and at the time they are presented
3    with the Permanency Commitment form;
4        (5) it shall include, in each annual notification
5    letter mailed to subsidized guardians, a short, 2-sided
6    flier or news bulletin in plain language that describes
7    access to post-guardianship services, how to access
8    services under the Family Support Program, formerly known
9    as the Individual Care Grant Program, the webpage address
10    to the Post Adoption and Guardianship Services booklet,
11    information on how to request that a copy of the booklet be
12    mailed; and
13        (6) it shall ensure that kinship navigator programs of
14    this State, when established, have this information to
15    include in materials the programs provide to caregivers.
16    The Department shall review and update annually all
17information relating to its subsidized guardianship support
18services, including its Post Adoption and Guardianship
19Services booklet, to include updated information on Family
20Support Program services eligibility and subsidized
21guardianship support services that are available through the
22medical assistance program established under Article V of the
23Illinois Public Aid Code or any other State program for mental
24health services. The Department and the Department of
25Healthcare and Family Services shall coordinate their efforts
26in the development of these resources.

 

 

HB4781 Engrossed- 39 -LRB103 38607 KTG 68743 b

1    Every licensed child welfare agency and any entity
2providing kinship navigator programs funded by the Department
3shall provide the Department's website address and link to the
4Department's subsidized guardianship support services
5information set forth in subsection (d), including the
6Department's toll-free number, to every relative who is or
7will be providing guardianship placement for a child placed by
8the Department.
9    (v) The Department shall access criminal history record
10information as defined in the Illinois Uniform Conviction
11Information Act and information maintained in the adjudicatory
12and dispositional record system as defined in Section 2605-355
13of the Illinois State Police Law if the Department determines
14the information is necessary to perform its duties under the
15Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act, the Child Care Act
16of 1969, and the Children and Family Services Act. The
17Department shall provide for interactive computerized
18communication and processing equipment that permits direct
19on-line communication with the Illinois State Police's central
20criminal history data repository. The Department shall comply
21with all certification requirements and provide certified
22operators who have been trained by personnel from the Illinois
23State Police. In addition, one Office of the Inspector General
24investigator shall have training in the use of the criminal
25history information access system and have access to the
26terminal. The Department of Children and Family Services and

 

 

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1its employees shall abide by rules and regulations established
2by the Illinois State Police relating to the access and
3dissemination of this information.
4    (v-1) Prior to final approval for placement of a child
5with a foster or adoptive parent, the Department shall conduct
6a criminal records background check of the prospective foster
7or adoptive parent, including fingerprint-based checks of
8national crime information databases. Final approval for
9placement shall not be granted if the record check reveals a
10felony conviction for child abuse or neglect, for spousal
11abuse, for a crime against children, or for a crime involving
12violence, including rape, sexual assault, or homicide, but not
13including other physical assault or battery, or if there is a
14felony conviction for physical assault, battery, or a
15drug-related offense committed within the past 5 years.
16    (v-2) Prior to final approval for placement of a child
17with a foster or adoptive parent, the Department shall check
18its child abuse and neglect registry for information
19concerning prospective foster and adoptive parents, and any
20adult living in the home. If any prospective foster or
21adoptive parent or other adult living in the home has resided
22in another state in the preceding 5 years, the Department
23shall request a check of that other state's child abuse and
24neglect registry.
25    (v-3) Prior to the final approval of final placement of a
26related child in a certified relative caregiver home as

 

 

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1defined in Section 2.37 of the Child Care Act of 1969, the
2Department shall ensure that the background screening meets
3the standards required under subsection (c) of Section 3.4 of
4the Child Care Act of 1969.
5    (v-4) Prior to final approval for placement of a child
6with a relative, as defined in Section 4d of this Act, who is
7not a licensed foster parent, has declined to seek approval to
8be a certified relative caregiver, or was denied approval as a
9certified relative caregiver, the Department shall:
10        (i) check the child abuse and neglect registry for
11    information concerning the prospective relative caregiver
12    and any other adult living in the home. If any prospective
13    relative caregiver or other adult living in the home has
14    resided in another state in the preceding 5 years, the
15    Department shall request a check of that other state's
16    child abuse and neglect registry; and
17        (ii) conduct a criminal records background check of
18    the prospective relative caregiver and all other adults
19    living in the home, including fingerprint-based checks of
20    national crime information databases. Final approval for
21    placement shall not be granted if the record check reveals
22    a felony conviction for child abuse or neglect, for
23    spousal abuse, for a crime against children, or for a
24    crime involving violence, including rape, sexual assault,
25    or homicide, but not including other physical assault or
26    battery, or if there is a felony conviction for physical

 

 

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1    assault, battery, or a drug-related offense committed
2    within the past 5 years; provided however, that the
3    Department is empowered to grant a waiver as the
4    Department may provide by rule, and the Department
5    approves the request for the waiver based on a
6    comprehensive evaluation of the caregiver and household
7    members and the conditions relating to the safety of the
8    placement. No later than January 1, 2025, the Department
9    shall adopt rules or revise existing rules to effectuate
10    the changes made to this subsection (v-4).
11    (w) (Blank). Within 120 days of August 20, 1995 (the
12effective date of Public Act 89-392), the Department shall
13prepare and submit to the Governor and the General Assembly, a
14written plan for the development of in-state licensed secure
15child care facilities that care for children who are in need of
16secure living arrangements for their health, safety, and
17well-being. For purposes of this subsection, secure care
18facility shall mean a facility that is designed and operated
19to ensure that all entrances and exits from the facility, a
20building or a distinct part of the building, are under the
21exclusive control of the staff of the facility, whether or not
22the child has the freedom of movement within the perimeter of
23the facility, building, or distinct part of the building. The
24plan shall include descriptions of the types of facilities
25that are needed in Illinois; the cost of developing these
26secure care facilities; the estimated number of placements;

 

 

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1the potential cost savings resulting from the movement of
2children currently out-of-state who are projected to be
3returned to Illinois; the necessary geographic distribution of
4these facilities in Illinois; and a proposed timetable for
5development of such facilities.
6    (x) The Department shall conduct annual credit history
7checks to determine the financial history of children placed
8under its guardianship pursuant to the Juvenile Court Act of
91987. The Department shall conduct such credit checks starting
10when a youth in care turns 12 years old and each year
11thereafter for the duration of the guardianship as terminated
12pursuant to the Juvenile Court Act of 1987. The Department
13shall determine if financial exploitation of the child's
14personal information has occurred. If financial exploitation
15appears to have taken place or is presently ongoing, the
16Department shall notify the proper law enforcement agency, the
17proper State's Attorney, or the Attorney General.
18    (y) Beginning on July 22, 2010 (the effective date of
19Public Act 96-1189), a child with a disability who receives
20residential and educational services from the Department shall
21be eligible to receive transition services in accordance with
22Article 14 of the School Code from the age of 14.5 through age
2321, inclusive, notwithstanding the child's residential
24services arrangement. For purposes of this subsection, "child
25with a disability" means a child with a disability as defined
26by the federal Individuals with Disabilities Education

 

 

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1Improvement Act of 2004.
2    (z) The Department shall access criminal history record
3information as defined as "background information" in this
4subsection and criminal history record information as defined
5in the Illinois Uniform Conviction Information Act for each
6Department employee or Department applicant. Each Department
7employee or Department applicant shall submit the employee's
8or applicant's fingerprints to the Illinois State Police in
9the form and manner prescribed by the Illinois State Police.
10These fingerprints shall be checked against the fingerprint
11records now and hereafter filed in the Illinois State Police
12and the Federal Bureau of Investigation criminal history
13records databases. The Illinois State Police shall charge a
14fee for conducting the criminal history record check, which
15shall be deposited into the State Police Services Fund and
16shall not exceed the actual cost of the record check. The
17Illinois State Police shall furnish, pursuant to positive
18identification, all Illinois conviction information to the
19Department of Children and Family Services.
20    For purposes of this subsection:
21    "Background information" means all of the following:
22        (i) Upon the request of the Department of Children and
23    Family Services, conviction information obtained from the
24    Illinois State Police as a result of a fingerprint-based
25    criminal history records check of the Illinois criminal
26    history records database and the Federal Bureau of

 

 

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1    Investigation criminal history records database concerning
2    a Department employee or Department applicant.
3        (ii) Information obtained by the Department of
4    Children and Family Services after performing a check of
5    the Illinois State Police's Sex Offender Database, as
6    authorized by Section 120 of the Sex Offender Community
7    Notification Law, concerning a Department employee or
8    Department applicant.
9        (iii) Information obtained by the Department of
10    Children and Family Services after performing a check of
11    the Child Abuse and Neglect Tracking System (CANTS)
12    operated and maintained by the Department.
13    "Department employee" means a full-time or temporary
14employee coded or certified within the State of Illinois
15Personnel System.
16    "Department applicant" means an individual who has
17conditional Department full-time or part-time work, a
18contractor, an individual used to replace or supplement staff,
19an academic intern, a volunteer in Department offices or on
20Department contracts, a work-study student, an individual or
21entity licensed by the Department, or an unlicensed service
22provider who works as a condition of a contract or an agreement
23and whose work may bring the unlicensed service provider into
24contact with Department clients or client records.
25(Source: P.A. 102-538, eff. 8-20-21; 102-558, eff. 8-20-21;
26102-1014, eff. 5-27-22; 103-22, eff. 8-8-23; 103-50, eff.

 

 

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11-1-24; 103-546, eff. 8-11-23; revised 9-25-23.)
 
2    (20 ILCS 505/6a)  (from Ch. 23, par. 5006a)
3    Sec. 6a. Case plan.
4    (a) With respect to each Department client for whom the
5Department is providing placement service, the Department
6shall develop a case plan designed to stabilize the family
7situation and prevent placement of a child outside the home of
8the family when the child can be cared for at home without
9endangering the child's health or safety, reunify the family
10if temporary placement is necessary when safe and appropriate,
11or move the child toward an appropriate the most permanent
12living arrangement and permanent legal status, consistent with
13the child's best interest, using the factors set forth in
14subsection (4.05) of Section 1-3 of the Juvenile Court Act of
151987. Such case plan shall provide for the utilization of
16family preservation services as defined in Section 8.2 of the
17Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act. Such case plan shall
18be reviewed and updated every 6 months. The Department shall
19ensure that incarcerated parents are able to participate in
20case plan reviews via teleconference or videoconference. Where
21appropriate, the case plan shall include recommendations
22concerning alcohol or drug abuse evaluation.
23    If the parent is incarcerated, the case plan must address
24the tasks that must be completed by the parent and how the
25parent will participate in the administrative case review and

 

 

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1permanency planning hearings and, wherever possible, must
2include treatment that reflects the resources available at the
3facility where the parent is confined. The case plan must
4provide for visitation opportunities, unless visitation is not
5in the best interests of the child.
6    (b) The Department may enter into written agreements with
7child welfare agencies to establish and implement case plan
8demonstration projects. The demonstration projects shall
9require that service providers develop, implement, review and
10update client case plans. The Department shall examine the
11effectiveness of the demonstration projects in promoting the
12family reunification or the permanent placement of each client
13and shall report its findings to the General Assembly no later
14than 90 days after the end of the fiscal year in which any such
15demonstration project is implemented.
16(Source: P.A. 99-836, eff. 1-1-17.)
 
17    (20 ILCS 505/7)  (from Ch. 23, par. 5007)
18    Sec. 7. Placement of children; considerations.
19    (a) In placing any child under this Act, the Department
20shall place the child, as far as possible, in the care and
21custody of some individual holding the same religious belief
22as the parents of the child, or with some child care facility
23which is operated by persons of like religious faith as the
24parents of such child.
25    (a-5) In placing a child under this Act, the Department

 

 

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1shall place the child with the child's sibling or siblings
2under Section 7.4 of this Act unless the placement is not in
3each child's best interest, or is otherwise not possible under
4the Department's rules. If the child is not placed with a
5sibling under the Department's rules, the Department shall
6consider placements that are likely to develop, preserve,
7nurture, and support sibling relationships, where doing so is
8in each child's best interest.
9    (b) In placing a child under this Act, the Department
10shall may place a child with a relative if the Department
11determines that the relative will be able to adequately
12provide for the child's safety and welfare based on the
13factors set forth in the Department's rules governing such
14relative placements, and that the placement is consistent with
15the child's best interests, taking into consideration the
16factors set out in subsection (4.05) of Section 1-3 of the
17Juvenile Court Act of 1987.
18    When the Department first assumes custody of a child, in
19placing that child under this Act, the Department shall make
20reasonable efforts to identify, locate, and provide notice to
21all adult grandparents and other adult relatives of the child
22who are ready, willing, and able to care for the child. At a
23minimum, these diligent efforts shall be renewed each time the
24child requires a placement change and it is appropriate for
25the child to be cared for in a home environment. The Department
26must document its efforts to identify, locate, and provide

 

 

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1notice to such potential relative placements and maintain the
2documentation in the child's case file. Beginning July 1,
32025, the Department shall complete the following initial
4family finding and relative engagement efforts:
5        (1) The Department shall conduct an investigation in
6    order to identify and locate all grandparents, parents of
7    a sibling of the child, if the parent has legal custody of
8    the sibling, adult siblings, other adult relatives of the
9    minor including any other adult relatives suggested by the
10    parents, and, if it is known or there is reason to know the
11    child is an Indian child, any extended family members, as
12    defined in Section 4 of the Indian Child Welfare Act of
13    1978 (25 U.S.C. 1903). The Department shall make diligent
14    efforts to investigate the names and locations of the
15    relatives, including, but not limited to, asking the child
16    in an age-appropriate manner and consistent with the
17    child's best interest about any parent, alleged parent,
18    and relatives important to the child, and obtaining
19    information regarding the location of the child's parents,
20    alleged parents, and adult relatives.
21        As used in this subsection (b), "family finding and
22    relative engagement" means conducting an investigation,
23    including, but not limited to, through a computer-based
24    search engine, to identify any person who would be
25    eligible to be a relative caregiver as defined in Section
26    4d of this Act and to connect a child, consistent with the

 

 

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1    child's best interest, who may be disconnected from the
2    child's parents, with those relatives and kin in an effort
3    to provide family support or possible placement. If it is
4    known or there is reason to know that the child is an
5    Indian child, as defined in Section 4 of the Indian Child
6    Welfare Act of 1978 (25 U.S.C. 1903), "family finding and
7    relative engagement" also includes contacting the Indian
8    child's tribe to identify relatives and kin. No later than
9    July 1, 2025, the Department shall adopt rules setting
10    forth specific criteria as to family finding and relative
11    engagement efforts under this subsection (b) and under
12    Section 2-27.3 of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987,
13    including determining the manner in which efforts may or
14    may not be appropriate, consistent with the best interests
15    of the child.
16        (2) In accordance with Section 471(a)(29) of the
17    Social Security Act, the Department shall make diligent
18    efforts to provide all adult relatives who are located
19    with written notification and oral notification, in person
20    or by telephone, of all the following information:
21            (i) the minor has been removed from the custody of
22        the minor's parent or guardian; and
23            (ii) an explanation of the various options to
24        participate in the care and placement of the minor and
25        support for the minor's family, including any options
26        that may expire by failing to respond. The notice

 

 

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1        shall provide information about providing care for the
2        minor while the family receives reunification services
3        with the goal of returning the child to the parent or
4        guardian, how to become a certified relative caregiver
5        home, and additional services and support that are
6        available in substitute care. The notice shall also
7        include information regarding, adoption and subsidized
8        guardianship assistance options, health care coverage
9        for youth in care under the medical assistance program
10        established under Article V of the Illinois Public Aid
11        Code, and other options for contact with the minor,
12        including, but not limited to, visitation. Upon
13        establishing the Department's kinship navigator
14        program, the notice shall also include information
15        regarding that benefit.
16    No later than July 1, 2025, the Department shall adopt or
17amend existing rules to implement the requirements of this
18subsection, including what constitutes "diligent efforts" and
19when exceptions, consistent with federal law, are appropriate.
20    (b-5)(1) If the Department determines that a placement
21with any identified relative is not in the child's best
22interests or that the relative does not meet the requirements
23to be a relative caregiver, as set forth in Department rules or
24by statute, the Department must document the basis for that
25decision, and maintain the documentation in the child's case
26file, inform the identified relative of the relative's right

 

 

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1to reconsideration of the decision to deny placement with the
2identified relative, provide the identified relative with a
3description of the reconsideration process established in
4accordance with subsection (o) of Section 5 of this Act, and
5beginning July 1, 2025, report this information to the court
6in accordance with the requirements of Section 2-27.3 of the
7Juvenile Court Act of 1987.
8    If, pursuant to the Department's rules, any person files
9an administrative appeal of the Department's decision not to
10place a child with a relative, it is the Department's burden to
11prove that the decision is consistent with the child's best
12interests. The Department shall report information related to
13these appeals pursuant to Section 46 of this Act.
14    Until July 1, 2025, when When the Department determines
15that the child requires placement in an environment, other
16than a home environment, the Department shall continue to make
17reasonable efforts to identify and locate relatives to serve
18as visitation resources for the child and potential future
19placement resources, except when the Department determines
20that those efforts would be futile or inconsistent with the
21child's best interests. Beginning July 1, 2025, when the
22Department determines that the child requires placement in an
23environment, other than a home environment, the Department
24shall continue to make reasonable efforts to identify and
25locate relatives to serve as visitation resources for the
26child and potential future placement resources unless excused

 

 

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1by the court, as outlined in Section 2-27.3 of the Juvenile
2Court Act of 1987.
3    If the Department determines that efforts to identify and
4locate relatives would be futile or inconsistent with the
5child's best interests, the Department shall document the
6basis of its determination and maintain the documentation in
7the child's case file.
8    If the Department determines that an individual or a group
9of relatives are inappropriate to serve as visitation
10resources or possible placement resources, the Department
11shall document the basis of its determination, and maintain
12the documentation in the child's case file, inform the
13identified relative of the relative's right to a
14reconsideration of the decision to deny visitation with the
15identified relative, provide the identified relative with a
16description of the reconsideration process established in
17accordance with subsection (o) of Section 5 of this Act, and
18beginning July 1, 2025, report this information to the court
19in accordance with the requirements of Section 2-27.3 of the
20Juvenile Court Act of 1987.
21    When the Department determines that an individual or a
22group of relatives are appropriate to serve as visitation
23resources or possible future placement resources, the
24Department shall document the basis of its determination,
25maintain the documentation in the child's case file, create a
26visitation or transition plan, or both, and incorporate the

 

 

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1visitation or transition plan, or both, into the child's case
2plan. Beginning July 1, 2025, the Department shall report this
3information to the court as part of the Department's family
4finding and relative engagement efforts required under Section
52-27.3 of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987. For the purpose of
6this subsection, any determination as to the child's best
7interests shall include consideration of the factors set out
8in subsection (4.05) of Section 1-3 of the Juvenile Court Act
9of 1987.
10    (2) The Department may initially not place a child in a
11foster family home as defined under Section 2.17 of the Child
12Care Act of 1969 or a certified relative caregiver home as
13defined under Section 4d of this Act. Initial placement may
14also be made with a relative who is not yet a certified
15relative caregiver if all of the following conditions are met:
16        (A) The prospective relative caregiver and all other
17    adults in the home must authorize and submit to a
18    background screening that includes the components set
19    forth in subsection (c) of Section 3.4 of the Child Care
20    Act of 1969. If the results of a check of the Law
21    Enforcement Agencies Data System (LEADS) identifies a
22    prior criminal conviction of (i) the prospective relative
23    caregiver for an offense not prohibited under subsection
24    (c) of Section 3.4 of the Child Care Act of 1969 or (ii)
25    any other adult in the home for a felony offense, the
26    Department shall thoroughly investigate and evaluate the

 

 

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1    criminal history, including an assessment of the person's
2    character and the impact that the criminal history has on
3    the prospective relative caregiver's ability to parent the
4    child. The investigation must consider the type of crime,
5    the number of crimes, the nature of the offense, the age of
6    the person at the time of the crime, the length of time
7    that has elapsed since the last conviction, the
8    relationship of the crime to the ability to care for
9    children, the role that the person will have with the
10    child, and any evidence of rehabilitation. Initial
11    placement may not be made if the results of a check of the
12    Law Enforcement Agencies Data System (LEADS) identifies a
13    prior criminal conviction of the prospective relative
14    caregiver for an offense prohibited under subsection (c)
15    of Section 3.4 of the Child Care Act of 1969; however, a
16    waiver may be granted for placement of the child in
17    accordance with subsection (v-4) of Section 5.
18        (B) The home safety and needs assessment requirements
19    set forth in paragraph (1) of subsection (b) of the Child
20    Care Act of 1969 are satisfied.
21        (C) The prospective relative caregiver is able to meet
22    the physical, emotional, medical, and educational needs of
23    the specific child or children being placed by the
24    Department.
25    No later than January 1, 2025, the Department shall adopt
26rules or amend existing rules to implement the provisions of

 

 

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1this subsection (b-5).
2with a relative, with the exception of certain circumstances
3which may be waived as defined by the Department in rules, if
4the results of a check of the Law Enforcement Agencies Data
5System (LEADS) identifies a prior criminal conviction of the
6relative or any adult member of the relative's household for
7any of the following offenses under the Criminal Code of 1961
8or the Criminal Code of 2012:
9        (1) murder;
10        (1.1) solicitation of murder;
11        (1.2) solicitation of murder for hire;
12        (1.3) intentional homicide of an unborn child;
13        (1.4) voluntary manslaughter of an unborn child;
14        (1.5) involuntary manslaughter;
15        (1.6) reckless homicide;
16        (1.7) concealment of a homicidal death;
17        (1.8) involuntary manslaughter of an unborn child;
18        (1.9) reckless homicide of an unborn child;
19        (1.10) drug-induced homicide;
20        (2) a sex offense under Article 11, except offenses
21    described in Sections 11-7, 11-8, 11-12, 11-13, 11-35,
22    11-40, and 11-45;
23        (3) kidnapping;
24        (3.1) aggravated unlawful restraint;
25        (3.2) forcible detention;
26        (3.3) aiding and abetting child abduction;

 

 

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1        (4) aggravated kidnapping;
2        (5) child abduction;
3        (6) aggravated battery of a child as described in
4    Section 12-4.3 or subdivision (b)(1) of Section 12-3.05;
5        (7) criminal sexual assault;
6        (8) aggravated criminal sexual assault;
7        (8.1) predatory criminal sexual assault of a child;
8        (9) criminal sexual abuse;
9        (10) aggravated sexual abuse;
10        (11) heinous battery as described in Section 12-4.1 or
11    subdivision (a)(2) of Section 12-3.05;
12        (12) aggravated battery with a firearm as described in
13    Section 12-4.2 or subdivision (e)(1), (e)(2), (e)(3), or
14    (e)(4) of Section 12-3.05;
15        (13) tampering with food, drugs, or cosmetics;
16        (14) drug-induced infliction of great bodily harm as
17    described in Section 12-4.7 or subdivision (g)(1) of
18    Section 12-3.05;
19        (15) aggravated stalking;
20        (16) home invasion;
21        (17) vehicular invasion;
22        (18) criminal transmission of HIV;
23        (19) criminal abuse or neglect of an elderly person or
24    person with a disability as described in Section 12-21 or
25    subsection (b) of Section 12-4.4a;
26        (20) child abandonment;

 

 

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1        (21) endangering the life or health of a child;
2        (22) ritual mutilation;
3        (23) ritualized abuse of a child;
4        (24) an offense in any other state the elements of
5    which are similar and bear a substantial relationship to
6    any of the foregoing offenses.
7    No later than January 1, 2025, relative caregiver payments
8shall be made to relative caregiver homes as provided under
9Section 5 of this Act. For the purpose of this subsection,
10"relative" shall include any person, 21 years of age or over,
11other than the parent, who (i) is currently related to the
12child in any of the following ways by blood or adoption:
13grandparent, sibling, great-grandparent, parent's sibling,
14sibling's child, first cousin, second cousin, godparent, or
15grandparent's sibling; or (ii) is the spouse of such a
16relative; or (iii) is the child's step-parent, or adult
17step-sibling; or (iv) is a fictive kin; "relative" also
18includes a person related in any of the foregoing ways to a
19sibling of a child, even though the person is not related to
20the child, when the child and the child's sibling are placed
21together with that person. For children who have been in the
22guardianship of the Department, have been adopted, and are
23subsequently returned to the temporary custody or guardianship
24of the Department, a "relative" may also include any person
25who would have qualified as a relative under this paragraph
26prior to the adoption, but only if the Department determines,

 

 

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1and documents, that it would be in the child's best interests
2to consider this person a relative, based upon the factors for
3determining best interests set forth in subsection (4.05) of
4Section 1-3 of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987. A relative with
5whom a child is placed pursuant to this subsection may, but is
6not required to, apply for licensure as a foster family home
7pursuant to the Child Care Act of 1969; provided, however,
8that as of July 1, 1995, foster care payments shall be made
9only to licensed foster family homes pursuant to the terms of
10Section 5 of this Act.
11    Notwithstanding any other provision under this subsection
12to the contrary, a fictive kin with whom a child is placed
13pursuant to this subsection shall apply for licensure as a
14foster family home pursuant to the Child Care Act of 1969
15within 6 months of the child's placement with the fictive kin.
16The Department shall not remove a child from the home of a
17fictive kin on the basis that the fictive kin fails to apply
18for licensure within 6 months of the child's placement with
19the fictive kin, or fails to meet the standard for licensure.
20All other requirements established under the rules and
21procedures of the Department concerning the placement of a
22child, for whom the Department is legally responsible, with a
23relative shall apply. By June 1, 2015, the Department shall
24promulgate rules establishing criteria and standards for
25placement, identification, and licensure of fictive kin.
26    For purposes of this subsection, "fictive kin" means any

 

 

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1individual, unrelated by birth or marriage, who:
2        (i) is shown to have significant and close personal or
3    emotional ties with the child or the child's family prior
4    to the child's placement with the individual; or
5        (ii) is the current foster parent of a child in the
6    custody or guardianship of the Department pursuant to this
7    Act and the Juvenile Court Act of 1987, if the child has
8    been placed in the home for at least one year and has
9    established a significant and family-like relationship
10    with the foster parent, and the foster parent has been
11    identified by the Department as the child's permanent
12    connection, as defined by Department rule.
13    The provisions added to this subsection (b) by Public Act
1498-846 shall become operative on and after June 1, 2015.
15    (c) In placing a child under this Act, the Department
16shall ensure that the child's health, safety, and best
17interests are met. In rejecting placement of a child with an
18identified relative, the Department shall (i) ensure that the
19child's health, safety, and best interests are met, (ii)
20inform the identified relative of the relative's right to
21reconsideration of the decision and provide the identified
22relative with a description of the reconsideration process
23established in accordance with subsection (o) of Section 5 of
24this Act, (iii) beginning July 1, 2025, report that the
25Department rejected the relative placement to the court in
26accordance with the requirements of Section 2-27.3 of the

 

 

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1Juvenile Court Act of 1987, and (iv) report the reason for
2denial in accordance with Section 46 of this Act. In
3evaluating the best interests of the child, the Department
4shall take into consideration the factors set forth in
5subsection (4.05) of Section 1-3 of the Juvenile Court Act of
61987.
7    The Department shall consider the individual needs of the
8child and the capacity of the prospective caregivers or
9prospective foster or adoptive parents to meet the needs of
10the child. When a child must be placed outside the child's home
11and cannot be immediately returned to the child's parents or
12guardian, a comprehensive, individualized assessment shall be
13performed of that child at which time the needs of the child
14shall be determined. Only if race, color, or national origin
15is identified as a legitimate factor in advancing the child's
16best interests shall it be considered. Race, color, or
17national origin shall not be routinely considered in making a
18placement decision. The Department shall make special efforts
19for the diligent recruitment of potential foster and adoptive
20families that reflect the ethnic and racial diversity of the
21children for whom foster and adoptive homes are needed.
22"Special efforts" shall include contacting and working with
23community organizations and religious organizations and may
24include contracting with those organizations, utilizing local
25media and other local resources, and conducting outreach
26activities.

 

 

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1    (c-1) At the time of placement, the Department shall
2consider concurrent planning, as described in subsection (l-1)
3of Section 5, so that permanency may occur at the earliest
4opportunity. Consideration should be given so that if
5reunification fails or is delayed, the placement made is the
6best available placement to provide permanency for the child.
7To the extent that doing so is in the child's best interests as
8set forth in subsection (4.05) of Section 1-3 of the Juvenile
9Court Act of 1987, the Department should consider placements
10that will permit the child to maintain a meaningful
11relationship with the child's parents.
12    (d) The Department may accept gifts, grants, offers of
13services, and other contributions to use in making special
14recruitment efforts.
15    (e) The Department in placing children in relative
16caregiver, certified relative caregiver, adoptive, or foster
17care homes may not, in any policy or practice relating to the
18placement of children for adoption or foster care,
19discriminate against any child or prospective caregiver or
20adoptive parent adoptive or foster parent on the basis of
21race.
22(Source: P.A. 103-22, eff. 8-8-23.)
 
23    (20 ILCS 505/7.3)
24    Sec. 7.3. Placement plan. The Department shall develop and
25implement a written plan for placing children. The plan shall

 

 

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1include at least the following features:
2        (1) A plan for recruiting minority adoptive and foster
3    families. The plan shall include strategies for using
4    existing resources in minority communities, use of
5    minority outreach staff whenever possible, use of minority
6    foster homes for placements after birth and before
7    adoption, and other techniques as appropriate.
8        (2) A plan for training adoptive and foster families
9    of minority children.
10        (3) A plan for employing social workers in adoption
11    and foster care. The plan shall include staffing goals and
12    objectives.
13        (4) A plan for ensuring that adoption and foster care
14    workers attend training offered or approved by the
15    Department regarding the State's goal of encouraging
16    cultural diversity and the needs of special needs
17    children.
18        (5) A plan that includes policies and procedures for
19    determining for each child requiring placement outside of
20    the child's home, and who cannot be immediately returned
21    to the child's parents or guardian, the placement needs of
22    that child. In the rare instance when an individualized
23    assessment identifies, documents, and substantiates that
24    race, color, or national origin is a factor that needs to
25    be considered in advancing a particular child's best
26    interests, it shall be considered in making a placement.

 

 

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1        (6) A plan for improving the certification of relative
2    homes as certified relative caregiver homes, including
3    establishing and expanding access to a kinship navigator
4    program once established pursuant to paragraph (3) of
5    subsection (u-6) of Section 5 of this Act, providing an
6    effective process for ensuring relatives are informed of
7    the benefits of relative caregiver home certification
8    under Section 3.4 of the Child Care Act of 1969, and
9    tailoring relative caregiver home certification standards
10    that are appropriately distinct from foster home licensure
11    standards.
12    Beginning July 1, 2026 and every 3 years thereafter, the
13plans required under this Section shall be evaluated by the
14Department and revised based on the findings of that
15evaluation.
16(Source: P.A. 103-22, eff. 8-8-23.)
 
17    (20 ILCS 505/46 new)
18    Sec. 46. Annual reports regarding relative and certified
19relative caregiver placements. Beginning January 1, 2026, and
20annually thereafter, the Department shall post on its website
21data from the preceding State fiscal year regarding:
22        (1) the number of youth in care who were adopted
23    specifying the length of stay in out-of-home care and the
24    number of youth in care who exited to permanency through
25    guardianship specifying the length of stay in out-of-home

 

 

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1    care and whether the guardianship was subsidized or
2    unsubsidized for each case;
3        (2) the number of youth with the permanency goal of
4    guardianship and the number of youth with the permanency
5    goal of adoption;
6        (3) the number of youth in care who moved from
7    non-relative care to a relative placement;
8        (4) the number of homes that successfully became a
9    certified relative caregiver home in accordance with
10    Section 3.4 of the Child Care Act of 1969; and
11        (5) the number of reconsideration reviews of the
12    Department's decisions not to place a child with a
13    relative commenced in accordance with subsection (o) of
14    Section 5 of this Act. For data related to each
15    reconsideration review, the Department shall indicate
16    whether the child resides in a licensed placement or in
17    the home of a relative at the time of the reconsideration
18    review, the reason for the Department's denial of the
19    placement with the relative, and the outcome associated
20    with each reconsideration review.
21    The Department shall include a description of the
22methodology the Department used to collect the information for
23paragraphs (1) through (5), indicate whether the Department
24had any difficulties collecting the information, and indicate
25whether there are concerns about the validity of the
26information. If any of the data elements required to be

 

 

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1disclosed under this Section could reveal a youth's identity
2if revealed in combination with all the identifying
3information due to small sample size, the Department shall
4exclude the data elements that could be used to identify the
5youth so that the data can be included as part of a larger
6sample and report that the data was excluded for this reason.
 
7    (20 ILCS 505/55 new)
8    Sec. 55. Performance audits. Three years after the
9effective date of this amendatory Act of the 103rd General
10Assembly, the Auditor General shall commence a performance
11audit of the Department to determine whether the Department is
12meeting the requirements established by this amendatory Act of
13the 103rd General Assembly under Sections 4d, 5, 6a, 7, 7.3,
1446, and 55 of this Act, Sections 2.05, 2.17, 2.36, 2.37, 2.38,
152.39, 2.40, 3.4, 4, 4.3, 7.3, and 7.4 of the Child Care Act of
161969, Sections 1-3, 1-5, 2-10, 2-13, 2-21, 2-22, 2-23, 2-27,
172-27.3, 2-28, 2-28.1, and 5-745 of the Juvenile Court Act of
181987, and Sections 4.1 and 15.1 of the Adoption Act. Within 2
19years after the audit's release, the Auditor General shall
20commence a follow-up performance audit to determine whether
21the Department has implemented the recommendations contained
22in the initial performance audit. Upon completion of each
23audit, the Auditor General shall report its findings to the
24General Assembly. The Auditor General's reports shall include
25any issues or deficiencies and recommendations. The audits

 

 

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1required by this Section shall be in accordance with and
2subject to the Illinois State Auditing Act.
 
3    Section 10. The Child Care Act of 1969 is amended by
4changing Sections 2.05, 2.17, 4, 4.3, 5, 7.3, and 7.4 and by
5adding Sections 2.36, 2.37, 2.38, 2.39, 2.40, and 3.4 as
6follows:
 
7    (225 ILCS 10/2.05)  (from Ch. 23, par. 2212.05)
8    Sec. 2.05. "Facility for child care" or "child care
9facility" means any person, group of persons, agency,
10association, organization, corporation, institution, center,
11or group, whether established for gain or otherwise, who or
12which receives or arranges for care or placement of one or more
13children, unrelated to the operator of the facility, apart
14from the parents, with or without the transfer of the right of
15custody in any facility as defined in this Act, established
16and maintained for the care of children. "Child care facility"
17includes a relative, as defined in Section 2.36 2.17 of this
18Act, who is licensed as a foster family home under Section 4 of
19this Act or provides a certified relative caregiver home, as
20defined in Section 2.37 of this Act.
21(Source: P.A. 98-804, eff. 1-1-15.)
 
22    (225 ILCS 10/2.17)  (from Ch. 23, par. 2212.17)
23    Sec. 2.17. "Foster family home" means the home of an

 

 

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1individual or family:
2    (1) that is licensed or approved by the state in which it
3is situated as a foster family home that meets the standards
4established for the licensing or approval; and
5    (2) in which a child in foster care has been placed in the
6care of an individual who resides with the child and who has
7been licensed or approved by the state to be a foster parent
8and:
9        (A) who the Department of Children and Family Services
10    deems capable of adhering to the reasonable and prudent
11    parent standard;
12        (B) who provides 24-hour substitute care for children
13    placed away from their parents or other caretakers; and
14    (3) who provides the care for no more than 6 children,
15except the Director of Children and Family Services, pursuant
16to Department regulations, may waive the numerical limitation
17of foster children who may be cared for in a foster family home
18for any of the following reasons to allow: (i) a parenting
19youth in foster care to remain with the child of the parenting
20youth; (ii) siblings to remain together; (iii) a child with an
21established meaningful relationship with the family to remain
22with the family; or (iv) a family with special training or
23skills to provide care to a child who has a severe disability.
24The family's or relative's own children, under 18 years of
25age, shall be included in determining the maximum number of
26children served.

 

 

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1    For purposes of this Section, a "relative" includes any
2person, 21 years of age or over, other than the parent, who (i)
3is currently related to the child in any of the following ways
4by blood or adoption: grandparent, sibling, great-grandparent,
5uncle, aunt, nephew, niece, first cousin, great-uncle, or
6great-aunt; or (ii) is the spouse of such a relative; or (iii)
7is a child's step-father, step-mother, or adult step-brother
8or step-sister; or (iv) is a fictive kin; "relative" also
9includes a person related in any of the foregoing ways to a
10sibling of a child, even though the person is not related to
11the child, when the child and its sibling are placed together
12with that person. For purposes of placement of children
13pursuant to Section 7 of the Children and Family Services Act
14and for purposes of licensing requirements set forth in
15Section 4 of this Act, for children under the custody or
16guardianship of the Department pursuant to the Juvenile Court
17Act of 1987, after a parent signs a consent, surrender, or
18waiver or after a parent's rights are otherwise terminated,
19and while the child remains in the custody or guardianship of
20the Department, the child is considered to be related to those
21to whom the child was related under this Section prior to the
22signing of the consent, surrender, or waiver or the order of
23termination of parental rights.
24    The term "foster family home" includes homes receiving
25children from any State-operated institution for child care;
26or from any agency established by a municipality or other

 

 

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1political subdivision of the State of Illinois authorized to
2provide care for children outside their own homes. The term
3"foster family home" does not include an "adoption-only home"
4as defined in Section 2.23 or a "certified relative caregiver
5home" as defined in Section 2.37 of this Act. The types of
6foster family homes are defined as follows:
7        (a) "Boarding home" means a foster family home which
8    receives payment for regular full-time care of a child or
9    children.
10        (b) "Free home" means a foster family home other than
11    an adoptive home which does not receive payments for the
12    care of a child or children.
13        (c) "Adoptive home" means a foster family home which
14    receives a child or children for the purpose of adopting
15    the child or children, but does not include an
16    adoption-only home.
17        (d) "Work-wage home" means a foster family home which
18    receives a child or children who pay part or all of their
19    board by rendering some services to the family not
20    prohibited by the Child Labor Law or by standards or
21    regulations of the Department prescribed under this Act.
22    The child or children may receive a wage in connection
23    with the services rendered the foster family.
24        (e) "Agency-supervised home" means a foster family
25    home under the direct and regular supervision of a
26    licensed child welfare agency, of the Department of

 

 

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1    Children and Family Services, of a circuit court, or of
2    any other State agency which has authority to place
3    children in child care facilities, and which receives no
4    more than 6 8 children, unless of common parentage, who
5    are placed and are regularly supervised by one of the
6    specified agencies.
7        (f) "Independent home" means a foster family home,
8    other than an adoptive home, which receives no more than 4
9    children, unless of common parentage, directly from
10    parents, or other legally responsible persons, by
11    independent arrangement and which is not subject to direct
12    and regular supervision of a specified agency except as
13    such supervision pertains to licensing by the Department.
14        (g) "Host home" means an emergency foster family home
15    under the direction and regular supervision of a licensed
16    child welfare agency, contracted to provide short-term
17    crisis intervention services to youth served under the
18    Comprehensive Community-Based Youth Services program,
19    under the direction of the Department of Human Services.
20    The youth shall not be under the custody or guardianship
21    of the Department pursuant to the Juvenile Court Act of
22    1987.
23(Source: P.A. 102-688, eff. 7-1-22; 103-564, eff. 11-17-23.)
 
24    (225 ILCS 10/2.36 new)
25    Sec. 2.36. Certified relative caregiver. "Certified

 

 

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1relative caregiver" means a person responsible for the care
2and supervision of a child placed in a certified relative
3caregiver home by the Department, other than the parent, who
4is a relative. As used in this definition, "relative" means a
5person who is: (i) related to a child by blood, marriage,
6tribal custom, adoption, or to a child's sibling in any of the
7foregoing ways, even though the person is not related to the
8child, when the child and the child's sibling are placed
9together with that person or (ii) fictive kin. For children
10who have been in the guardianship of the Department following
11the termination of their parents' parental rights, been
12adopted or placed in subsidized or unsubsidized guardianship,
13and are subsequently returned to the temporary custody or
14guardianship of the Department, a "relative" shall include any
15person who would have qualified as a relative under this
16Section prior to the termination of the parents' parental
17rights if the Department determines, and documents, or the
18court finds that it would be in the child's best interests to
19consider this person a relative, based upon the factors for
20determining best interests set forth in subsection (4.05) of
21Section 1-3 of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987.
 
22    (225 ILCS 10/2.37 new)
23    Sec. 2.37. Certified relative caregiver home. "Certified
24relative caregiver home" means a placement resource meeting
25the standards for a certified relative caregiver home under

 

 

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1Section 3.4 of this Act, which is eligible to receive payments
2from the Department under State or federal law for room and
3board for a child placed with a certified relative caregiver.
4A certified relative caregiver home is sufficient to comply
5with 45 CFR 1355.20.
 
6    (225 ILCS 10/2.38 new)
7    Sec. 2.38. Fictive kin. "Fictive kin" has the meaning
8ascribed to the term in Section 4d of the Children and Family
9Services Act.
 
10    (225 ILCS 10/2.39 new)
11    Sec. 2.39. Caregiver. "Caregiver" means a certified
12relative caregiver, relative caregiver, or foster parent with
13whom a youth in care is placed.
 
14    (225 ILCS 10/2.40 new)
15    Sec. 2.40. National consortium recommendations. "National
16consortium recommendations" means the preferred standards of
17national organizations with expertise in relative home care
18developed to establish requirements or criteria for relative
19homes that are no more or only minimally more restrictive than
20necessary to comply with the requirements under Sections 471
21and 474 of the Social Security Act, Public Law 115-123.
22Consortium recommendations include criteria for assessing
23relative homes for safety, sanitation, protection of civil

 

 

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1rights, use of the reasonable and prudent parenting standard,
2and background screening for caregivers and other residents in
3the caregiver home.
 
4    (225 ILCS 10/3.4 new)
5    Sec. 3.4. Standards for certified relative caregiver
6homes.
7    (a) No later than January 1, 2025, the Department shall
8adopt rules outlining the standards for certified relative
9caregiver homes, which are reasonably in accordance with the
10national consortium recommendations and federal law and rules,
11and consistent with the requirements of this Act. The
12standards for certified relative caregiver homes shall: (i) be
13different from licensing standards used for non-relative
14foster family homes under Section 4; (ii) align with the
15recommendation of the U.S. Department of Health and Human
16Services' Administration for Children and Families for
17implementation of Section 471(a)(10), 471(a)(11), and
18471(a)(20) and Section 474 of Title IV-E of the Social
19Security Act; (iii) be no more restrictive than, and
20reasonably in accordance with, national consortium
21recommendations; and (iv) address background screening for
22caregivers and other household residents and assessing home
23safety and caregiver capacity to meet the identified child's
24needs.
25    A guiding premise for certified relative caregiver home

 

 

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1standards is that foster care maintenance payments for every
2relative, starting upon placement, regardless of federal
3reimbursement, are critical to ensure that the basic needs and
4well-being of all children in relative care are being met. If
5an agency places a child in the care of a relative, the
6relative must immediately be provided with adequate support to
7care for that child. The Department shall review foster care
8maintenance payments to ensure that children receive the same
9amount of foster care maintenance payments whether placed in a
10certified relative caregiver home or a licensed foster family
11home.
12    In developing rules, the Department shall solicit and
13incorporate feedback from relative caregivers. No later than
1460 days after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the
15103rd General Assembly, the Department shall begin soliciting
16input from relatives who are currently or have recently been
17caregivers to youth in care to develop the rules and
18procedures to implement the requirements of this Section. The
19Department shall solicit this input in a manner convenient for
20caregivers to participate, including without limitation,
21in-person convenings at after hours and weekend venues,
22locations that provide child care, and modalities that are
23accessible and welcoming to new and experienced relative
24caregivers from all regions of the State.
25    (b) In order to assess whether standards are met for a
26certified relative caregiver home under this Section, the

 

 

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1Department or a licensed child welfare agency shall:
2        (1) complete the home safety and needs assessment and
3    identify and provide any necessary concrete goods or
4    safety modifications to assist the prospective certified
5    relative caregiver in meeting the needs of the specific
6    child or children being placed by the Department, in a
7    manner consistent with Department rule;
8        (2) assess the ability of the prospective certified
9    relative caregiver to care for the physical, emotional,
10    medical, and educational needs of the specific child or
11    children being placed by the Department using the protocol
12    and form provided through national consortium
13    recommendations; and
14        (3) using the standard background check form
15    established by rule, complete a background check for each
16    person seeking certified relative caregiver approval and
17    any other adults living in the home as required under this
18    Section.
19    (c) The Department or a licensed child welfare agency
20shall conduct the following background screening investigation
21for every prospective certified relative caregiver and adult
22resident living in the home:
23        (1) a name-based State, local, or tribal criminal
24    background check, and as soon as reasonably possible,
25    initiate a fingerprint-based background check;
26        (2) a review of this State's Central Registry and

 

 

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1    registries of any state in which an adult household member
2    has resided in the last 5 years, if applicable to
3    determine if the person has been determined to be a
4    perpetrator in an indicated report of child abuse or
5    neglect; and
6        (3) a review of the sex offender registry.
7    No home may be a certified relative caregiver home if any
8prospective caregivers or adult residents in the home refuse
9to authorize a background screening investigation as required
10by this Section. Only information and standards that bear a
11reasonable and rational relation to the caregiving capacity of
12the certified relative caregiver and adult member of the
13household and overall safety provided by residents of that
14home shall be used by the Department or licensed child welfare
15agency.
16    In approving a certified relative caregiver home in
17accordance with this Section, if an adult has a criminal
18record, the Department or licensed child welfare agency shall
19thoroughly investigate and evaluate the criminal history of
20the adult and, in so doing, include an assessment of the
21adult's character and, in the case of the prospective
22certified relative caregiver, the impact that the criminal
23history has on the prospective certified relative caregiver's
24ability to parent the child; the investigation should consider
25the type of crime, the number of crimes, the nature of the
26offense, the age of the person at the time of the crime, the

 

 

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1length of time that has elapsed since the last conviction, the
2relationship of the crime to the ability to care for children,
3the role that adult will have with the child, and any evidence
4of rehabilitation. In accordance with federal law, a home
5shall not be approved if the record of the prospective
6certified relative caregiver's background screening reveals:
7(i) a felony conviction for child abuse or neglect, spousal
8abuse, crimes against a child, including child pornography, or
9a crime of rape, sexual assault, or homicide; or (ii) a felony
10conviction in the last 5 years for physical assault, battery,
11or a drug-related offense.
12    If the Department is contemplating denying approval of a
13certified relative caregiver home, the Department shall
14provide a written notice in the prospective certified relative
15caregiver's primary language to each prospective certified
16relative caregiver before the Department takes final action to
17deny approval of the home. This written notice shall include
18the specific reason or reasons the Department is considering
19denial, list actions prospective certified relative caregivers
20can take, if any, to remedy such conditions and the timeframes
21in which such actions would need to be completed, explain
22reasonable supports that the Department can provide to assist
23the prospective certified relative caregivers in taking
24remedial actions and how the prospective certified relative
25caregivers can request such assistance, and provide the
26recourse prospective certified relative caregivers can seek to

 

 

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1resolve disputes about the Department's findings. The
2Department shall provide prospective certified relative
3caregivers reasonable opportunity pursuant to rulemaking to
4cure any remediable deficiencies that the Department
5identified before taking final action to deny approval of a
6certified relative caregiver home.
7    If conditions have not been remedied after a reasonable
8opportunity and assistance to cure identified deficiencies has
9been provided, the Department shall provide a final written
10notice explaining the reasons for denying the certified
11relative caregiver home approval and the reconsideration
12process to review the decision to deny certification. The
13Department shall not prohibit a prospective certified relative
14caregiver from being reconsidered for approval if the
15prospective certified relative caregivers are able to
16demonstrate a change in circumstances that improves deficient
17conditions.
18    Documentation that a certified relative caregiver home
19meets the required standards may be filed on behalf of such
20homes by a licensed child welfare agency, by a State agency
21authorized to place children in foster care, or by
22out-of-state agencies approved by the Department to place
23children in this State. For documentation on behalf of a home
24in which specific children are placed by and remain under
25supervision of the applicant agency, such agency shall
26document that the certified relative caregiver home,

 

 

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1responsible for the care of related specific children therein,
2was found to be in reasonable compliance with standards
3prescribed by the Department for certified relative caregiver
4homes under this Section. Certification is applicable to one
5or more related children and documentation for certification
6shall indicate the specific child or children who would be
7eligible for placement in this certified relative caregiver
8home.
9    Information concerning criminal convictions of prospective
10certified relative caregivers and adult residents of a
11prospective certified relative caregiver home investigated
12under this Section, including the source of the information,
13State conviction information provided by the Illinois State
14Police, and any conclusions or recommendations derived from
15the information, shall be offered to the prospective certified
16relative caregivers and adult residents of a prospective
17certified relative caregiver home, and provided, upon request,
18to such persons prior to final action by the Department in the
19certified relative caregiver home approval process.
20    Any information concerning criminal charges or the
21disposition of such criminal charges obtained by the
22Department shall be confidential and may not be transmitted
23outside the Department, except as required or permitted by
24State or federal law, and may not be transmitted to anyone
25within the Department except as needed for the purpose of
26evaluating standards for a certified relative caregiver home

 

 

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1or for evaluating the placement of a specific child in the
2home. Information concerning a prospective certified relative
3caregiver or an adult resident of a prospective certified
4relative caregiver home obtained by the Department for the
5purposes of this Section shall be confidential and exempt from
6public inspection and copying as provided under Section 7 of
7the Freedom of Information Act, and such information shall not
8be transmitted outside the Department, except as required or
9authorized by State or federal law, including applicable
10provisions in the Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act,
11and shall not be transmitted to anyone within the Department
12except as provided in the Abused and Neglected Child Reporting
13Act, and shall not be transmitted to anyone within the
14Department except as needed for the purposes of evaluating
15homes. Any employee of the Department, the Illinois State
16Police, or a licensed child welfare agency receiving
17confidential information under this Section who gives or
18causes to be given any confidential information concerning any
19criminal convictions or child abuse or neglect reports
20involving a prospective certified relative caregiver or an
21adult resident of a prospective certified relative caregiver
22home shall be guilty of a Class A misdemeanor unless release of
23such information is authorized by this Section or Section 11.1
24of the Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act.
25    The Department shall permit, but shall not require, a
26prospective certified relative caregiver who does not yet have

 

 

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1eligible children placed by the Department in the relative's
2home to commence the process to become a certified relative
3caregiver home for a particular identified child under this
4Section before a child is placed by the Department if the
5prospective certified relative caregiver prefers to begin this
6process in advance of the identified child being placed. No
7later than January 1, 2025, the Department shall adopt rules
8delineating the process for re-assessing a certified relative
9caregiver home if the identified child is not placed in that
10home within 6 months of the home becoming certified.
11    (d) The Department shall ensure that prospective certified
12relative caregivers are provided with assistance in completing
13the steps required for approval as a certified relative
14caregiver home, including, but not limited to, the following
15types of assistance:
16        (1) completing forms together with the relative or for
17    the relative, if possible;
18        (2) obtaining court records or dispositions related to
19    background checks;
20        (3) accessing translation services;
21        (4) using mobile fingerprinting devices in the home,
22    and if mobile devices are unavailable, providing
23    assistance scheduling appointments that are accessible and
24    available at times that fit the household members'
25    schedules, providing transportation and childcare to allow
26    the household members to complete fingerprinting

 

 

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1    appointments, and contracting with community-based
2    fingerprinting locations that offer evening and weekend
3    appointments;
4        (5) reimbursement or advance payment for the
5    prospective certified relative caregiver to help with
6    reasonable home maintenance to resolve critical safety
7    issues in accordance with Department rulemaking; and
8        (6) purchasing required safety or comfort items such
9    as a car seat or mattress.
10    (e) Orientation provided to certified relative caregivers
11shall include information regarding:
12        (1) caregivers' right to be heard in juvenile court
13    proceedings;
14        (2) the availability of the advocacy hotline and
15    Office of the Inspector General that caregivers may use to
16    report incidents of misconduct or violation of rules by
17    Department employees, service providers, or contractors;
18        (3) the Department's expectations for caregiving
19    obligations including, but not limited to, specific
20    requirements of court orders, critical incident
21    notifications and timeframes, supervision for the child's
22    age and needs, out-of-state travel, and consent
23    procedures;
24        (4) assistance available to the certified relative
25    caregivers, including child care, respite care,
26    transportation assistance, case management, training and

 

 

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1    support groups, kinship navigator services, financial
2    assistance, and after hours and weekend 24 hours, 7 days a
3    week emergency supports, and how to access such
4    assistance;
5        (5) reasonable and prudent parenting standards; and
6        (6) permanency options.
7    Orientation shall be provided in a setting and modality
8convenient for the residents of the certified relative
9caregiver home, which shall include the option for one-on-one
10sessions at the residence, after business hours, and in the
11primary language of the caregivers. Training opportunities
12shall be offered to the residents of the certified relative
13caregiver home, but shall not be a requirement that delays the
14certified relative caregiver home approval process from being
15completed.
16    The Department or licensed child welfare agency may
17provide support groups and development opportunities for
18certified relative caregivers, and take other steps to support
19permanency, such as offering voluntary training, or concurrent
20assessments of multiple prospective certified relative
21caregivers to determine which may be best suited to provide
22long-term permanency for a particular child. However, these
23support groups and development opportunities shall not be
24requirements for prospective certified relative caregiver
25homes or delay immediate placement and support to a relative
26who satisfies the standards set forth in this Section.

 

 

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1    (f) All child welfare agencies serving relative and
2certified relative caregiver homes shall be required by the
3Department to have complaint policies and procedures that
4shall be provided in writing to prospective and current
5certified relative caregivers and residents of prospective and
6current certified relative caregiver homes, at the earliest
7time possible. These complaint procedures must be filed with
8the Department within 6 months after the effective date of
9this amendatory of the 103rd General Assembly.
10    No later than January 1, 2025, the Department shall revise
11any rules and procedures pertaining to eligibility of
12certified relative caregivers to qualify for State and federal
13subsidies and services under the guardianship and adoption
14assistance program and remove any requirements that exceed the
15federal requirements for participation in these programs or
16supports to ensure that certified relative caregiver homes are
17deemed eligible for permanency options, such as adoption or
18subsidized guardianship, if the child is unable to safely
19return to the child's parents.
20    The Department shall submit any necessary State plan
21amendments necessary to comply with this Section and to ensure
22Title IV-E reimbursement eligibility under Section
23671(a)(20)(A-B) of the Social Security Act can be achieved
24expediently. The Department shall differentiate expenditures
25related to certified relative caregivers from licensed care
26placements to provide clarity in expenditures of State and

 

 

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1federal monies for certified relative caregiver supports.
 
2    (225 ILCS 10/4)  (from Ch. 23, par. 2214)
3    Sec. 4. License requirement; application; notice.
4    (a) Any person, group of persons or corporation who or
5which receives children or arranges for care or placement of
6one or more children unrelated to the operator must apply for a
7license to operate one of the types of facilities defined in
8Sections 2.05 through 2.19 and in Section 2.22 of this Act. Any
9relative, as defined in Section 2.38 2.17 of this Act, who
10receives a child or children for placement by the Department
11on a full-time basis may apply for a license to operate a
12foster family home as defined in Section 2.17 of this Act or
13may apply to be a certified relative caregiver home as defined
14in Section 2.37 of this Act.
15    (a-5) Any agency, person, group of persons, association,
16organization, corporation, institution, center, or group
17providing adoption services must be licensed by the Department
18as a child welfare agency as defined in Section 2.08 of this
19Act. "Providing adoption services" as used in this Act,
20includes facilitating or engaging in adoption services.
21    (b) Application for a license to operate a child care
22facility must be made to the Department in the manner and on
23forms prescribed by it. An application to operate a foster
24family home shall include, at a minimum: a completed written
25form; written authorization by the applicant and all adult

 

 

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1members of the applicant's household to conduct a criminal
2background investigation; medical evidence in the form of a
3medical report, on forms prescribed by the Department, that
4the applicant and all members of the household are free from
5communicable diseases or physical and mental conditions that
6affect their ability to provide care for the child or
7children; the names and addresses of at least 3 persons not
8related to the applicant who can attest to the applicant's
9moral character; the name and address of at least one relative
10who can attest to the applicant's capability to care for the
11child or children; and fingerprints submitted by the applicant
12and all adult members of the applicant's household.
13    (b-5) Prior to submitting an application for a foster
14family home license, a quality of care concerns applicant as
15defined in Section 2.22a of this Act must submit a preliminary
16application to the Department in the manner and on forms
17prescribed by it. The Department shall explain to the quality
18of care concerns applicant the grounds for requiring a
19preliminary application. The preliminary application shall
20include a list of (i) all children placed in the home by the
21Department who were removed by the Department for reasons
22other than returning to a parent and the circumstances under
23which they were removed and (ii) all children placed by the
24Department who were subsequently adopted by or placed in the
25private guardianship of the quality of care concerns applicant
26who are currently under 18 and who no longer reside in the home

 

 

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1and the reasons why they no longer reside in the home. The
2preliminary application shall also include, if the quality of
3care concerns applicant chooses to submit, (1) a response to
4the quality of care concerns, including any reason the
5concerns are invalid, have been addressed or ameliorated, or
6no longer apply and (2) affirmative documentation
7demonstrating that the quality of care concerns applicant's
8home does not pose a risk to children and that the family will
9be able to meet the physical and emotional needs of children.
10The Department shall verify the information in the preliminary
11application and review (i) information regarding any prior
12licensing complaints, (ii) information regarding any prior
13child abuse or neglect investigations, (iii) information
14regarding any involuntary foster home holds placed on the home
15by the Department, and (iv) information regarding all child
16exit interviews, as provided in Section 5.26 of the Children
17and Family Services Act, regarding the home. Foster home
18applicants with quality of care concerns are presumed
19unsuitable for future licensure.
20    Notwithstanding the provisions of this subsection (b-5),
21the Department may make an exception and issue a foster family
22license to a quality of care concerns applicant if the
23Department is satisfied that the foster family home does not
24pose a risk to children and that the foster family will be able
25to meet the physical and emotional needs of children. In
26making this determination, the Department must obtain and

 

 

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1carefully review all relevant documents and shall obtain
2consultation from its Clinical Division as appropriate and as
3prescribed by Department rule and procedure. The Department
4has the authority to deny a preliminary application based on
5the record of quality of care concerns of the foster family
6home. In the alternative, the Department may (i) approve the
7preliminary application, (ii) approve the preliminary
8application subject to obtaining additional information or
9assessments, or (iii) approve the preliminary application for
10purposes of placing a particular child or children only in the
11foster family home. If the Department approves a preliminary
12application, the foster family shall submit an application for
13licensure as described in subsection (b) of this Section. The
14Department shall notify the quality of care concerns applicant
15of its decision and the basis for its decision in writing.
16    (c) The Department shall notify the public when a child
17care institution, maternity center, or group home licensed by
18the Department undergoes a change in (i) the range of care or
19services offered at the facility, (ii) the age or type of
20children served, or (iii) the area within the facility used by
21children. The Department shall notify the public of the change
22in a newspaper of general circulation in the county or
23municipality in which the applicant's facility is or is
24proposed to be located.
25    (d) If, upon examination of the facility and investigation
26of persons responsible for care of children and, in the case of

 

 

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1a foster home, taking into account information obtained for
2purposes of evaluating a preliminary application, if
3applicable, the Department is satisfied that the facility and
4responsible persons reasonably meet standards prescribed for
5the type of facility for which application is made, it shall
6issue a license in proper form, designating on that license
7the type of child care facility and, except for a child welfare
8agency, the number of children to be served at any one time.
9    (e) The Department shall not issue or renew the license of
10any child welfare agency providing adoption services, unless
11the agency (i) is officially recognized by the United States
12Internal Revenue Service as a tax-exempt organization
13described in Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code of
141986 (or any successor provision of federal tax law) and (ii)
15is in compliance with all of the standards necessary to
16maintain its status as an organization described in Section
17501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 (or any
18successor provision of federal tax law). The Department shall
19grant a grace period of 24 months from the effective date of
20this amendatory Act of the 94th General Assembly for existing
21child welfare agencies providing adoption services to obtain
22501(c)(3) status. The Department shall permit an existing
23child welfare agency that converts from its current structure
24in order to be recognized as a 501(c)(3) organization as
25required by this Section to either retain its current license
26or transfer its current license to a newly formed entity, if

 

 

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1the creation of a new entity is required in order to comply
2with this Section, provided that the child welfare agency
3demonstrates that it continues to meet all other licensing
4requirements and that the principal officers and directors and
5programs of the converted child welfare agency or newly
6organized child welfare agency are substantially the same as
7the original. The Department shall have the sole discretion to
8grant a one year extension to any agency unable to obtain
9501(c)(3) status within the timeframe specified in this
10subsection (e), provided that such agency has filed an
11application for 501(c)(3) status with the Internal Revenue
12Service within the 2-year timeframe specified in this
13subsection (e).
14(Source: P.A. 101-63, eff. 7-12-19; 102-763, eff. 1-1-23.)
 
15    (225 ILCS 10/4.3)  (from Ch. 23, par. 2214.3)
16    Sec. 4.3. Child Abuse and Neglect Reports. All child care
17facility license applicants and all current and prospective
18employees of a child care facility who have any possible
19contact with children in the course of their duties, as a
20condition of such licensure or employment, shall authorize in
21writing on a form prescribed by the Department an
22investigation of the Central Register, as defined in the
23Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act, to ascertain if such
24applicant or employee has been determined to be a perpetrator
25in an indicated report of child abuse or neglect.

 

 

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1    All child care facilities as a condition of licensure
2pursuant to this Act shall maintain such information which
3demonstrates that all current employees and other applicants
4for employment who have any possible contact with children in
5the course of their duties have authorized an investigation of
6the Central Register as hereinabove required. Only those
7current or prospective employees who will have no possible
8contact with children as part of their present or prospective
9employment may be excluded from provisions requiring
10authorization of an investigation.
11    Such information concerning a license applicant, employee
12or prospective employee obtained by the Department shall be
13confidential and exempt from public inspection and copying as
14provided under Section 7 of The Freedom of Information Act,
15and such information shall not be transmitted outside the
16Department, except as provided in the Abused and Neglected
17Child Reporting Act, and shall not be transmitted to anyone
18within the Department except as provided in the Abused and
19Neglected Child Reporting Act, and shall not be transmitted to
20anyone within the Department except as needed for the purposes
21of evaluation of an application for licensure or for
22consideration by a child care facility of an employee. Any
23employee of the Department of Children and Family Services
24under this Section who gives or causes to be given any
25confidential information concerning any child abuse or neglect
26reports about a child care facility applicant, child care

 

 

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1facility employee, shall be guilty of a Class A misdemeanor,
2unless release of such information is authorized by Section
311.1 of the Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act.
4    Additionally, any licensee who is informed by the
5Department of Children and Family Services, pursuant to
6Section 7.4 of the Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act,
7approved June 26, 1975, as amended, that a formal
8investigation has commenced relating to an employee of the
9child care facility or any other person in frequent contact
10with children at the facility, shall take reasonable action
11necessary to insure that the employee or other person is
12restricted during the pendency of the investigation from
13contact with children whose care has been entrusted to the
14facility.
15    When a foster family home is the subject of an indicated
16report under the Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act, the
17Department of Children and Family Services must immediately
18conduct a re-examination of the foster family home to evaluate
19whether it continues to meet the minimum standards for
20licensure. The re-examination is separate and apart from the
21formal investigation of the report. The Department must
22establish a schedule for re-examination of the foster family
23home mentioned in the report at least once a year.
24    When a certified relative caregiver home is the subject of
25an indicated report under the Abused and Neglected Child
26Reporting Act, the Department shall immediately conduct a

 

 

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1re-examination of the certified relative caregiver home to
2evaluate whether the home remains an appropriate placement or
3the certified relative caregiver home continues to meet the
4minimum standards for certification required under Section 3.4
5of this Act. The re-examination is separate and apart from the
6formal investigation of the report and shall be completed in
7the timeframes established by rule.
8(Source: P.A. 91-557, eff. 1-1-00.)
 
9    (225 ILCS 10/5)  (from Ch. 23, par. 2215)
10    Sec. 5. (a) In respect to child care institutions,
11maternity centers, child welfare agencies, day care centers,
12day care agencies and group homes, the Department, upon
13receiving application filed in proper order, shall examine the
14facilities and persons responsible for care of children
15therein.
16    (b) In respect to foster family and day care homes,
17applications may be filed on behalf of such homes by a licensed
18child welfare agency, by a State agency authorized to place
19children in foster care or by out-of-State agencies approved
20by the Department to place children in this State. In respect
21to day care homes, applications may be filed on behalf of such
22homes by a licensed day care agency or licensed child welfare
23agency. In applying for license in behalf of a home in which
24children are placed by and remain under supervision of the
25applicant agency, such agency shall certify that the home and

 

 

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1persons responsible for care of unrelated children therein, or
2the home and relatives, as defined in Section 2.36 2.17 of this
3Act, responsible for the care of related children therein,
4were found to be in reasonable compliance with standards
5prescribed by the Department for the type of care indicated.
6    (c) The Department shall not allow any person to examine
7facilities under a provision of this Act who has not passed an
8examination demonstrating that such person is familiar with
9this Act and with the appropriate standards and regulations of
10the Department.
11    (d) With the exception of day care centers, day care
12homes, and group day care homes, licenses shall be issued in
13such form and manner as prescribed by the Department and are
14valid for 4 years from the date issued, unless revoked by the
15Department or voluntarily surrendered by the licensee.
16Licenses issued for day care centers, day care homes, and
17group day care homes shall be valid for 3 years from the date
18issued, unless revoked by the Department or voluntarily
19surrendered by the licensee. When a licensee has made timely
20and sufficient application for the renewal of a license or a
21new license with reference to any activity of a continuing
22nature, the existing license shall continue in full force and
23effect for up to 30 days until the final agency decision on the
24application has been made. The Department may further extend
25the period in which such decision must be made in individual
26cases for up to 30 days, but such extensions shall be only upon

 

 

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1good cause shown.
2    (e) The Department may issue one 6-month permit to a newly
3established facility for child care to allow that facility
4reasonable time to become eligible for a full license. If the
5facility for child care is a foster family home, or day care
6home the Department may issue one 2-month permit only.
7    (f) The Department may issue an emergency permit to a
8child care facility taking in children as a result of the
9temporary closure for more than 2 weeks of a licensed child
10care facility due to a natural disaster. An emergency permit
11under this subsection shall be issued to a facility only if the
12persons providing child care services at the facility were
13employees of the temporarily closed day care center at the
14time it was closed. No investigation of an employee of a child
15care facility receiving an emergency permit under this
16subsection shall be required if that employee has previously
17been investigated at another child care facility. No emergency
18permit issued under this subsection shall be valid for more
19than 90 days after the date of issuance.
20    (g) During the hours of operation of any licensed child
21care facility, authorized representatives of the Department
22may without notice visit the facility for the purpose of
23determining its continuing compliance with this Act or
24regulations adopted pursuant thereto.
25    (h) Day care centers, day care homes, and group day care
26homes shall be monitored at least annually by a licensing

 

 

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1representative from the Department or the agency that
2recommended licensure.
3(Source: P.A. 98-804, eff. 1-1-15.)
 
4    (225 ILCS 10/7.3)
5    Sec. 7.3. Children placed by private child welfare agency.
6    (a) Before placing a child who is a youth in care in a
7foster family home, a private child welfare agency must
8ascertain (i) whether any other children who are youth in care
9have been placed in that home and (ii) whether every such child
10who has been placed in that home continues to reside in that
11home, unless the child has been transferred to another
12placement or is no longer a youth in care. The agency must keep
13a record of every other child welfare agency that has placed
14such a child in that foster family home; the record must
15include the name and telephone number of a contact person at
16each such agency.
17    (b) At least once every 30 days, a private child welfare
18agency that places youth in care in certified relative
19caregiver or foster family homes must make a site visit to
20every such home where it has placed a youth in care. The
21purpose of the site visit is to verify that the child continues
22to reside in that home and to verify the child's safety and
23well-being. The agency must document the verification in its
24records. If a private child welfare agency fails to comply
25with the requirements of this subsection, the Department must

 

 

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1suspend all payments to the agency until the agency complies.
2    (c) The Department must periodically (but no less often
3than once every 6 months) review the child placement records
4of each private child welfare agency that places youth in
5care.
6    (d) If a child placed in a foster family home is missing,
7the foster parent must promptly report that fact to the
8Department or to the child welfare agency that placed the
9child in the home. If the foster parent fails to make such a
10report, the Department shall put the home on hold for the
11placement of other children and initiate corrective action
12that may include revocation of the foster parent's license to
13operate the foster family home. A foster parent who knowingly
14and willfully fails to report a missing foster child under
15this subsection is guilty of a Class A misdemeanor.
16    (e) If a private child welfare agency determines that a
17youth in care whom it has placed in a certified relative
18caregiver or foster family home no longer resides in that
19home, the agency must promptly report that fact to the
20Department. If the agency fails to make such a report, the
21Department shall put the agency on hold for the placement of
22other children and initiate corrective action that may include
23revocation of the agency's license.
24    (f) When a child is missing from a certified relative
25caregiver or foster home, the Department or private agency in
26charge of case management shall report regularly to the

 

 

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1certified relative caregiver or foster parent concerning
2efforts to locate the missing child.
3    (g) The Department must strive to account for the status
4and whereabouts of every one of its youth in care who it
5determines is not residing in the authorized placement in
6which the youth was placed.
7(Source: P.A. 103-22, eff. 8-8-23.)
 
8    (225 ILCS 10/7.4)
9    Sec. 7.4. Disclosures.
10    (a) Every licensed child welfare agency providing adoption
11services shall provide to all prospective clients and to the
12public written disclosures with respect to its adoption
13services, policies, and practices, including general
14eligibility criteria, fees, and the mutual rights and
15responsibilities of clients, including birth parents and
16adoptive parents. The written disclosure shall be posted on
17any website maintained by the child welfare agency that
18relates to adoption services. The Department shall adopt rules
19relating to the contents of the written disclosures. Eligible
20agencies may be deemed compliant with this subsection (a).
21    (b) Every licensed child welfare agency providing adoption
22services shall provide to all applicants, prior to
23application, a written schedule of estimated fees, expenses,
24and refund policies. Every child welfare agency providing
25adoption services shall have a written policy that shall be

 

 

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1part of its standard adoption contract and state that it will
2not charge additional fees and expenses beyond those disclosed
3in the adoption contract unless additional fees are reasonably
4required by the circumstances and are disclosed to the
5adoptive parents or parent before they are incurred. The
6Department shall adopt rules relating to the contents of the
7written schedule and policy. Eligible agencies may be deemed
8compliant with this subsection (b).
9    (c) Every licensed child welfare agency providing adoption
10services must make full and fair disclosure to its clients,
11including birth parents and adoptive parents, of all
12circumstances material to the placement of a child for
13adoption. The Department shall adopt rules necessary for the
14implementation and regulation of the requirements of this
15subsection (c).
16    (c-5) Whenever a licensed child welfare agency places a
17child in a certified relative caregiver or licensed foster
18family home or an adoption-only home, the agency shall provide
19the following to the caregiver caretaker or prospective
20adoptive parent:
21        (1) Available detailed information concerning the
22    child's educational and health history, copies of
23    immunization records (including insurance and medical card
24    information), a history of the child's previous
25    placements, if any, and reasons for placement changes,
26    excluding any information that identifies or reveals the

 

 

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1    location of any previous caretaker.
2        (2) A copy of the child's portion of the client
3    service plan, including any visitation arrangement, and
4    all amendments or revisions to it as related to the child.
5        (3) Information containing details of the child's
6    individualized educational plan when the child is
7    receiving special education services.
8        (4) Any known social or behavioral information
9    (including, but not limited to, criminal background, fire
10    setting, perpetration of sexual abuse, destructive
11    behavior, and substance abuse) necessary to care for and
12    safeguard the child.
13    The agency may prepare a written summary of the
14information required by this subsection, which may be provided
15to the certified relative caregiver or foster or prospective
16adoptive parent in advance of a placement. The certified
17relative caregiver or foster or prospective adoptive parent
18may review the supporting documents in the child's file in the
19presence of casework staff. In the case of an emergency
20placement, casework staff shall at least provide information
21verbally, if necessary, and must subsequently provide the
22information in writing as required by this subsection. In the
23case of emergency placements when time does not allow prior
24review, preparation, and collection of written information,
25the agency shall provide such information as it becomes
26available.

 

 

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1    The Department shall adopt rules necessary for the
2implementation and regulation of the requirements of this
3subsection (c-5).
4    (d) Every licensed child welfare agency providing adoption
5services shall meet minimum standards set forth by the
6Department concerning the taking or acknowledging of a consent
7prior to taking or acknowledging a consent from a prospective
8birth parent. The Department shall adopt rules concerning the
9minimum standards required by agencies under this Section.
10(Source: P.A. 103-22, eff. 8-8-23.)
 
11    Section 15. The Juvenile Court Act of 1987 is amended by
12changing Sections 1-3, 1-5, 2-10, 2-13, 2-21, 2-22, 2-23,
132-27, 2-28, 2-28.1, and 5-745 and by adding Section 2-27.3 as
14follows:
 
15    (705 ILCS 405/1-3)  (from Ch. 37, par. 801-3)
16    Sec. 1-3. Definitions. Terms used in this Act, unless the
17context otherwise requires, have the following meanings
18ascribed to them:
19    (1) "Adjudicatory hearing" means a hearing to determine
20whether the allegations of a petition under Section 2-13,
213-15, or 4-12 that a minor under 18 years of age is abused,
22neglected, or dependent, or requires authoritative
23intervention, or addicted, respectively, are supported by a
24preponderance of the evidence or whether the allegations of a

 

 

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1petition under Section 5-520 that a minor is delinquent are
2proved beyond a reasonable doubt.
3    (2) "Adult" means a person 21 years of age or older.
4    (3) "Agency" means a public or private child care facility
5legally authorized or licensed by this State for placement or
6institutional care or for both placement and institutional
7care.
8    (4) "Association" means any organization, public or
9private, engaged in welfare functions which include services
10to or on behalf of children but does not include "agency" as
11herein defined.
12    (4.05) Whenever a "best interest" determination is
13required, the following factors shall be considered in the
14context of the child's age and developmental needs:
15        (a) the physical safety and welfare of the child,
16    including food, shelter, health, and clothing;
17        (b) the development of the child's identity;
18        (c) the child's background and ties, including
19    familial, cultural, and religious;
20        (d) the child's sense of attachments, including:
21            (i) where the child actually feels love,
22        attachment, and a sense of being valued (as opposed to
23        where adults believe the child should feel such love,
24        attachment, and a sense of being valued);
25            (ii) the child's sense of security;
26            (iii) the child's sense of familiarity;

 

 

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1            (iv) continuity of affection for the child;
2            (v) the least disruptive placement alternative for
3        the child;
4        (e) the child's wishes and long-term goals, including
5    the child's wishes regarding available permanency options
6    and the child's wishes regarding maintaining connections
7    with parents, siblings, and other relatives;
8        (f) the child's community ties, including church,
9    school, and friends;
10        (g) the child's need for permanence which includes the
11    child's need for stability and continuity of relationships
12    with parent figures, and with siblings, and other
13    relatives;
14        (h) the uniqueness of every family and child;
15        (i) the risks attendant to entering and being in
16    substitute care; and
17        (j) the preferences of the persons available to care
18    for the child, including willingness to provide permanency
19    to the child, either through subsidized guardianship or
20    through adoption.
21    (4.08) "Caregiver" includes a foster parent, as defined in
22Section 2.17 of the Child Care Act of 1969, certified relative
23caregiver, as defined in Section 2.36 of the Child Care Act of
241969, and relative caregiver as defined in Section 4d of the
25Children and Family Services Act.
26    (4.1) "Chronic truant" shall have the definition ascribed

 

 

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1to it in Section 26-2a of the School Code.
2    (5) "Court" means the circuit court in a session or
3division assigned to hear proceedings under this Act.
4    (6) "Dispositional hearing" means a hearing to determine
5whether a minor should be adjudged to be a ward of the court,
6and to determine what order of disposition should be made in
7respect to a minor adjudged to be a ward of the court.
8    (6.5) "Dissemination" or "disseminate" means to publish,
9produce, print, manufacture, distribute, sell, lease, exhibit,
10broadcast, display, transmit, or otherwise share information
11in any format so as to make the information accessible to
12others.
13    (7) "Emancipated minor" means any minor 16 years of age or
14over who has been completely or partially emancipated under
15the Emancipation of Minors Act or under this Act.
16    (7.03) "Expunge" means to physically destroy the records
17and to obliterate the minor's name from any official index,
18public record, or electronic database.
19    (7.05) "Foster parent" includes a relative caregiver
20selected by the Department of Children and Family Services to
21provide care for the minor.
22    (8) "Guardianship of the person" of a minor means the duty
23and authority to act in the best interests of the minor,
24subject to residual parental rights and responsibilities, to
25make important decisions in matters having a permanent effect
26on the life and development of the minor and to be concerned

 

 

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1with the minor's general welfare. It includes but is not
2necessarily limited to:
3        (a) the authority to consent to marriage, to
4    enlistment in the armed forces of the United States, or to
5    a major medical, psychiatric, and surgical treatment; to
6    represent the minor in legal actions; and to make other
7    decisions of substantial legal significance concerning the
8    minor;
9        (b) the authority and duty of reasonable visitation,
10    except to the extent that these have been limited in the
11    best interests of the minor by court order;
12        (c) the rights and responsibilities of legal custody
13    except where legal custody has been vested in another
14    person or agency; and
15        (d) the power to consent to the adoption of the minor,
16    but only if expressly conferred on the guardian in
17    accordance with Section 2-29, 3-30, or 4-27.
18    (8.1) "Juvenile court record" includes, but is not limited
19to:
20        (a) all documents filed in or maintained by the
21    juvenile court pertaining to a specific incident,
22    proceeding, or individual;
23        (b) all documents relating to a specific incident,
24    proceeding, or individual made available to or maintained
25    by probation officers;
26        (c) all documents, video or audio tapes, photographs,

 

 

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1    and exhibits admitted into evidence at juvenile court
2    hearings; or
3        (d) all documents, transcripts, records, reports, or
4    other evidence prepared by, maintained by, or released by
5    any municipal, county, or State agency or department, in
6    any format, if indicating involvement with the juvenile
7    court relating to a specific incident, proceeding, or
8    individual.
9    (8.2) "Juvenile law enforcement record" includes records
10of arrest, station adjustments, fingerprints, probation
11adjustments, the issuance of a notice to appear, or any other
12records or documents maintained by any law enforcement agency
13relating to a minor suspected of committing an offense, and
14records maintained by a law enforcement agency that identifies
15a juvenile as a suspect in committing an offense, but does not
16include records identifying a juvenile as a victim, witness,
17or missing juvenile and any records created, maintained, or
18used for purposes of referral to programs relating to
19diversion as defined in subsection (6) of Section 5-105.
20    (9) "Legal custody" means the relationship created by an
21order of court in the best interests of the minor which imposes
22on the custodian the responsibility of physical possession of
23a minor and the duty to protect, train and discipline the minor
24and to provide the minor with food, shelter, education, and
25ordinary medical care, except as these are limited by residual
26parental rights and responsibilities and the rights and

 

 

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1responsibilities of the guardian of the person, if any.
2    (9.1) "Mentally capable adult relative" means a person 21
3years of age or older who is not suffering from a mental
4illness that prevents the person from providing the care
5necessary to safeguard the physical safety and welfare of a
6minor who is left in that person's care by the parent or
7parents or other person responsible for the minor's welfare.
8    (10) "Minor" means a person under the age of 21 years
9subject to this Act.
10    (11) "Parent" means a father or mother of a child and
11includes any adoptive parent. It also includes a person (i)
12whose parentage is presumed or has been established under the
13law of this or another jurisdiction or (ii) who has registered
14with the Putative Father Registry in accordance with Section
1512.1 of the Adoption Act and whose paternity has not been ruled
16out under the law of this or another jurisdiction. It does not
17include a parent whose rights in respect to the minor have been
18terminated in any manner provided by law. It does not include a
19person who has been or could be determined to be a parent under
20the Illinois Parentage Act of 1984 or the Illinois Parentage
21Act of 2015, or similar parentage law in any other state, if
22that person has been convicted of or pled nolo contendere to a
23crime that resulted in the conception of the child under
24Section 11-1.20, 11-1.30, 11-1.40, 11-11, 12-13, 12-14,
2512-14.1, subsection (a) or (b) (but not subsection (c)) of
26Section 11-1.50 or 12-15, or subsection (a), (b), (c), (e), or

 

 

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1(f) (but not subsection (d)) of Section 11-1.60 or 12-16 of the
2Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012, or similar
3statute in another jurisdiction unless upon motion of any
4party, other than the offender, to the juvenile court
5proceedings the court finds it is in the child's best interest
6to deem the offender a parent for purposes of the juvenile
7court proceedings.
8    (11.1) "Permanency goal" means a goal set by the court as
9defined in subsection (2.3) subdivision (2) of Section 2-28.
10    (11.2) "Permanency hearing" means a hearing to set the
11permanency goal and to review and determine (i) the
12appropriateness of the services contained in the plan and
13whether those services have been provided, (ii) whether
14reasonable efforts have been made by all the parties to the
15service plan to achieve the goal, and (iii) whether the plan
16and goal have been achieved.
17    (12) "Petition" means the petition provided for in Section
182-13, 3-15, 4-12, or 5-520, including any supplemental
19petitions thereunder in Section 3-15, 4-12, or 5-520.
20    (12.1) "Physically capable adult relative" means a person
2121 years of age or older who does not have a severe physical
22disability or medical condition, or is not suffering from
23alcoholism or drug addiction, that prevents the person from
24providing the care necessary to safeguard the physical safety
25and welfare of a minor who is left in that person's care by the
26parent or parents or other person responsible for the minor's

 

 

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1welfare.
2    (12.2) "Post Permanency Sibling Contact Agreement" has the
3meaning ascribed to the term in Section 7.4 of the Children and
4Family Services Act.
5    (12.3) "Residential treatment center" means a licensed
6setting that provides 24-hour care to children in a group home
7or institution, including a facility licensed as a child care
8institution under Section 2.06 of the Child Care Act of 1969, a
9licensed group home under Section 2.16 of the Child Care Act of
101969, a qualified residential treatment program under Section
112.35 of the Child Care Act of 1969, a secure child care
12facility as defined in paragraph (18) of this Section, or any
13similar facility in another state. "Residential treatment
14center" does not include a relative foster home or a licensed
15foster family home.
16    (13) "Residual parental rights and responsibilities" means
17those rights and responsibilities remaining with the parent
18after the transfer of legal custody or guardianship of the
19person, including, but not necessarily limited to, the right
20to reasonable visitation (which may be limited by the court in
21the best interests of the minor as provided in subsection
22(8)(b) of this Section), the right to consent to adoption, the
23right to determine the minor's religious affiliation, and the
24responsibility for the minor's support.
25    (14) "Shelter" means the temporary care of a minor in
26physically unrestricting facilities pending court disposition

 

 

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1or execution of court order for placement.
2    (14.05) "Shelter placement" means a temporary or emergency
3placement for a minor, including an emergency foster home
4placement.
5    (14.1) "Sibling Contact Support Plan" has the meaning
6ascribed to the term in Section 7.4 of the Children and Family
7Services Act.
8    (14.2) "Significant event report" means a written document
9describing an occurrence or event beyond the customary
10operations, routines, or relationships in the Department of
11Children of Family Services, a child care facility, or other
12entity that is licensed or regulated by the Department of
13Children of Family Services or that provides services for the
14Department of Children of Family Services under a grant,
15contract, or purchase of service agreement; involving children
16or youth, employees, foster parents, or relative caregivers;
17allegations of abuse or neglect or any other incident raising
18a concern about the well-being of a minor under the
19jurisdiction of the court under Article II of the Juvenile
20Court Act of 1987; incidents involving damage to property,
21allegations of criminal activity, misconduct, or other
22occurrences affecting the operations of the Department of
23Children of Family Services or a child care facility; any
24incident that could have media impact; and unusual incidents
25as defined by Department of Children and Family Services rule.
26    (15) "Station adjustment" means the informal handling of

 

 

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1an alleged offender by a juvenile police officer.
2    (16) "Ward of the court" means a minor who is so adjudged
3under Section 2-22, 3-23, 4-20, or 5-705, after a finding of
4the requisite jurisdictional facts, and thus is subject to the
5dispositional powers of the court under this Act.
6    (17) "Juvenile police officer" means a sworn police
7officer who has completed a Basic Recruit Training Course, has
8been assigned to the position of juvenile police officer by
9the officer's chief law enforcement officer and has completed
10the necessary juvenile officers training as prescribed by the
11Illinois Law Enforcement Training Standards Board, or in the
12case of a State police officer, juvenile officer training
13approved by the Director of the Illinois State Police.
14    (18) "Secure child care facility" means any child care
15facility licensed by the Department of Children and Family
16Services to provide secure living arrangements for children
17under 18 years of age who are subject to placement in
18facilities under the Children and Family Services Act and who
19are not subject to placement in facilities for whom standards
20are established by the Department of Corrections under Section
213-15-2 of the Unified Code of Corrections. "Secure child care
22facility" also means a facility that is designed and operated
23to ensure that all entrances and exits from the facility, a
24building, or a distinct part of the building are under the
25exclusive control of the staff of the facility, whether or not
26the child has the freedom of movement within the perimeter of

 

 

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1the facility, building, or distinct part of the building.
2(Source: P.A. 102-538, eff. 8-20-21; 103-22, eff. 8-8-23;
3103-564, eff. 11-17-23.)
 
4    (705 ILCS 405/1-5)  (from Ch. 37, par. 801-5)
5    Sec. 1-5. Rights of parties to proceedings.
6    (1) Except as provided in this Section and paragraph (2)
7of Sections 2-22, 3-23, 4-20, 5-610 or 5-705, the minor who is
8the subject of the proceeding and the minor's parents,
9guardian, legal custodian or responsible relative who are
10parties respondent have the right to be present, to be heard,
11to present evidence material to the proceedings, to
12cross-examine witnesses, to examine pertinent court files and
13records and also, although proceedings under this Act are not
14intended to be adversary in character, the right to be
15represented by counsel. At the request of any party
16financially unable to employ counsel, with the exception of a
17foster parent permitted to intervene under this Section, the
18court shall appoint the Public Defender or such other counsel
19as the case may require. Counsel appointed for the minor and
20any indigent party shall appear at all stages of the trial
21court proceeding, and such appointment shall continue through
22the permanency hearings and termination of parental rights
23proceedings subject to withdrawal, vacating of appointment, or
24substitution pursuant to Supreme Court Rules or the Code of
25Civil Procedure. Following the dispositional hearing, the

 

 

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1court may require appointed counsel, other than counsel for
2the minor or counsel for the guardian ad litem, to withdraw the
3counsel's appearance upon failure of the party for whom
4counsel was appointed under this Section to attend any
5subsequent proceedings.
6    No hearing on any petition or motion filed under this Act
7may be commenced unless the minor who is the subject of the
8proceeding is represented by counsel. Notwithstanding the
9preceding sentence, if a guardian ad litem has been appointed
10for the minor under Section 2-17 of this Act and the guardian
11ad litem is a licensed attorney at law of this State, or in the
12event that a court appointed special advocate has been
13appointed as guardian ad litem and counsel has been appointed
14to represent the court appointed special advocate, the court
15may not require the appointment of counsel to represent the
16minor unless the court finds that the minor's interests are in
17conflict with what the guardian ad litem determines to be in
18the best interest of the minor. Each adult respondent shall be
19furnished a written "Notice of Rights" at or before the first
20hearing at which the adult respondent appears.
21    (1.5) The Department shall maintain a system of response
22to inquiry made by parents or putative parents as to whether
23their child is under the custody or guardianship of the
24Department; and if so, the Department shall direct the parents
25or putative parents to the appropriate court of jurisdiction,
26including where inquiry may be made of the clerk of the court

 

 

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1regarding the case number and the next scheduled court date of
2the minor's case. Effective notice and the means of accessing
3information shall be given to the public on a continuing basis
4by the Department.
5    (2)(a) Though not appointed guardian or legal custodian or
6otherwise made a party to the proceeding, any current or
7previously appointed foster parent or relative caregiver, or
8representative of an agency or association interested in the
9minor has the right to be heard by the court, but does not
10thereby become a party to the proceeding.
11    In addition to the foregoing right to be heard by the
12court, any current foster parent or relative caregiver of a
13minor and the agency designated by the court or the Department
14of Children and Family Services as custodian of the minor who
15is alleged to be or has been adjudicated an abused or neglected
16minor under Section 2-3 or a dependent minor under Section 2-4
17of this Act has the right to and shall be given adequate notice
18at all stages of any hearing or proceeding under this Act.
19    Any foster parent or relative caregiver who is denied the
20right to be heard under this Section may bring a mandamus
21action under Article XIV of the Code of Civil Procedure
22against the court or any public agency to enforce that right.
23The mandamus action may be brought immediately upon the denial
24of those rights but in no event later than 30 days after the
25foster parent caregiver has been denied the right to be heard.
26    (b) If after an adjudication that a minor is abused or

 

 

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1neglected as provided under Section 2-21 of this Act and a
2motion has been made to restore the minor to any parent,
3guardian, or legal custodian found by the court to have caused
4the neglect or to have inflicted the abuse on the minor, a
5caregiver foster parent may file a motion to intervene in the
6proceeding for the sole purpose of requesting that the minor
7be placed with the caregiver foster parent, provided that the
8caregiver foster parent (i) is the current caregiver foster
9parent of the minor or (ii) has previously been a caregiver
10foster parent for the minor for one year or more, has a foster
11care license or is eligible for a license or is not required to
12have a license, and is not the subject of any findings of abuse
13or neglect of any child. The juvenile court may only enter
14orders placing a minor with a specific caregiver foster parent
15under this subsection (2)(b) and nothing in this Section shall
16be construed to confer any jurisdiction or authority on the
17juvenile court to issue any other orders requiring the
18appointed guardian or custodian of a minor to place the minor
19in a designated caregiver's foster home or facility. This
20Section is not intended to encompass any matters that are
21within the scope or determinable under the administrative and
22appeal process established by rules of the Department of
23Children and Family Services under Section 5(o) of the
24Children and Family Services Act. Nothing in this Section
25shall relieve the court of its responsibility, under Section
262-14(a) of this Act to act in a just and speedy manner to

 

 

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1reunify families where it is the best interests of the minor
2and the child can be cared for at home without endangering the
3child's health or safety and, if reunification is not in the
4best interests of the minor, to find another permanent home
5for the minor. Nothing in this Section, or in any order issued
6by the court with respect to the placement of a minor with a
7caregiver foster parent, shall impair the ability of the
8Department of Children and Family Services, or anyone else
9authorized under Section 5 of the Abused and Neglected Child
10Reporting Act, to remove a minor from the home of a caregiver
11foster parent if the Department of Children and Family
12Services or the person removing the minor has reason to
13believe that the circumstances or conditions of the minor are
14such that continuing in the residence or care of the caregiver
15foster parent will jeopardize the child's health and safety or
16present an imminent risk of harm to that minor's life.
17    (c) If a caregiver foster parent has had the minor who is
18the subject of the proceeding under Article II in the
19caregiver's foster parent's home for more than one year on or
20after July 3, 1994 and if the minor's placement is being
21terminated from that caregiver's foster parent's home, that
22caregiver foster parent shall have standing and intervenor
23status except in those circumstances where the Department of
24Children and Family Services or anyone else authorized under
25Section 5 of the Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act has
26removed the minor from the caregiver foster parent because of

 

 

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1a reasonable belief that the circumstances or conditions of
2the minor are such that continuing in the residence or care of
3the caregiver foster parent will jeopardize the child's health
4or safety or presents an imminent risk of harm to the minor's
5life.
6    (d) The court may grant standing to any caregiver foster
7parent if the court finds that it is in the best interest of
8the child for the caregiver foster parent to have standing and
9intervenor status.
10    (3) Parties respondent are entitled to notice in
11compliance with Sections 2-15 and 2-16, 3-17 and 3-18, 4-14
12and 4-15 or 5-525 and 5-530, as appropriate. At the first
13appearance before the court by the minor, the minor's parents,
14guardian, custodian or responsible relative, the court shall
15explain the nature of the proceedings and inform the parties
16of their rights under the first 2 paragraphs of this Section.
17    If the child is alleged to be abused, neglected or
18dependent, the court shall admonish the parents that if the
19court declares the child to be a ward of the court and awards
20custody or guardianship to the Department of Children and
21Family Services, the parents must cooperate with the
22Department of Children and Family Services, comply with the
23terms of the service plans, and correct the conditions that
24require the child to be in care, or risk termination of their
25parental rights.
26    Upon an adjudication of wardship of the court under

 

 

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1Sections 2-22, 3-23, 4-20 or 5-705, the court shall inform the
2parties of their right to appeal therefrom as well as from any
3other final judgment of the court.
4    When the court finds that a child is an abused, neglected,
5or dependent minor under Section 2-21, the court shall
6admonish the parents that the parents must cooperate with the
7Department of Children and Family Services, comply with the
8terms of the service plans, and correct the conditions that
9require the child to be in care, or risk termination of their
10parental rights.
11    When the court declares a child to be a ward of the court
12and awards guardianship to the Department of Children and
13Family Services under Section 2-22, the court shall admonish
14the parents, guardian, custodian, or responsible relative that
15the parents must cooperate with the Department of Children and
16Family Services, comply with the terms of the service plans,
17and correct the conditions that require the child to be in
18care, or risk termination of their parental rights.
19    (4) No sanction may be applied against the minor who is the
20subject of the proceedings by reason of the minor's refusal or
21failure to testify in the course of any hearing held prior to
22final adjudication under Section 2-22, 3-23, 4-20 or 5-705.
23    (5) In the discretion of the court, the minor may be
24excluded from any part or parts of a dispositional hearing
25and, with the consent of the parent or parents, guardian,
26counsel or a guardian ad litem, from any part or parts of an

 

 

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1adjudicatory hearing.
2    (6) The general public except for the news media and the
3crime victim, as defined in Section 3 of the Rights of Crime
4Victims and Witnesses Act, shall be excluded from any hearing
5and, except for the persons specified in this Section only
6persons, including representatives of agencies and
7associations, who in the opinion of the court have a direct
8interest in the case or in the work of the court shall be
9admitted to the hearing. However, the court may, for the
10minor's safety and protection and for good cause shown,
11prohibit any person or agency present in court from further
12disclosing the minor's identity. Nothing in this subsection
13(6) prevents the court from allowing other juveniles to be
14present or to participate in a court session being held under
15the Juvenile Drug Court Treatment Act.
16    (7) A party shall not be entitled to exercise the right to
17a substitution of a judge without cause under subdivision
18(a)(2) of Section 2-1001 of the Code of Civil Procedure in a
19proceeding under this Act if the judge is currently assigned
20to a proceeding involving the alleged abuse, neglect, or
21dependency of the minor's sibling or half sibling and that
22judge has made a substantive ruling in the proceeding
23involving the minor's sibling or half sibling.
24(Source: P.A. 103-22, eff. 8-8-23.)
 
25    (705 ILCS 405/2-10)  (from Ch. 37, par. 802-10)

 

 

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1    Sec. 2-10. Temporary custody hearing. At the appearance of
2the minor before the court at the temporary custody hearing,
3all witnesses present shall be examined before the court in
4relation to any matter connected with the allegations made in
5the petition.
6    (1) If the court finds that there is not probable cause to
7believe that the minor is abused, neglected, or dependent it
8shall release the minor and dismiss the petition.
9    (2) If the court finds that there is probable cause to
10believe that the minor is abused, neglected, or dependent, the
11court shall state in writing the factual basis supporting its
12finding and the minor, the minor's parent, guardian, or
13custodian, and other persons able to give relevant testimony
14shall be examined before the court. The Department of Children
15and Family Services shall give testimony concerning indicated
16reports of abuse and neglect, of which they are aware through
17the central registry, involving the minor's parent, guardian,
18or custodian. After such testimony, the court may, consistent
19with the health, safety, and best interests of the minor,
20enter an order that the minor shall be released upon the
21request of parent, guardian, or custodian if the parent,
22guardian, or custodian appears to take custody. If it is
23determined that a parent's, guardian's, or custodian's
24compliance with critical services mitigates the necessity for
25removal of the minor from the minor's home, the court may enter
26an Order of Protection setting forth reasonable conditions of

 

 

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1behavior that a parent, guardian, or custodian must observe
2for a specified period of time, not to exceed 12 months,
3without a violation; provided, however, that the 12-month
4period shall begin anew after any violation. "Custodian"
5includes the Department of Children and Family Services, if it
6has been given custody of the child, or any other agency of the
7State which has been given custody or wardship of the child. If
8it is consistent with the health, safety, and best interests
9of the minor, the court may also prescribe shelter care and
10order that the minor be kept in a suitable place designated by
11the court or in a shelter care facility designated by the
12Department of Children and Family Services or a licensed child
13welfare agency; however, on and after January 1, 2015 (the
14effective date of Public Act 98-803) and before January 1,
152017, a minor charged with a criminal offense under the
16Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012 or
17adjudicated delinquent shall not be placed in the custody of
18or committed to the Department of Children and Family Services
19by any court, except a minor less than 16 years of age and
20committed to the Department of Children and Family Services
21under Section 5-710 of this Act or a minor for whom an
22independent basis of abuse, neglect, or dependency exists; and
23on and after January 1, 2017, a minor charged with a criminal
24offense under the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of
252012 or adjudicated delinquent shall not be placed in the
26custody of or committed to the Department of Children and

 

 

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1Family Services by any court, except a minor less than 15 years
2of age and committed to the Department of Children and Family
3Services under Section 5-710 of this Act or a minor for whom an
4independent basis of abuse, neglect, or dependency exists. An
5independent basis exists when the allegations or adjudication
6of abuse, neglect, or dependency do not arise from the same
7facts, incident, or circumstances which give rise to a charge
8or adjudication of delinquency.
9    In placing the minor, the Department or other agency
10shall, to the extent compatible with the court's order, comply
11with Section 7 of the Children and Family Services Act. In
12determining the health, safety, and best interests of the
13minor to prescribe shelter care, the court must find that it is
14a matter of immediate and urgent necessity for the safety, and
15protection of the minor or of the person or property of another
16that the minor be placed in a shelter care facility or that the
17minor is likely to flee the jurisdiction of the court, and must
18further find that reasonable efforts have been made or that,
19consistent with the health, safety and best interests of the
20minor, no efforts reasonably can be made to prevent or
21eliminate the necessity of removal of the minor from the
22minor's home. The court shall require documentation from the
23Department of Children and Family Services as to the
24reasonable efforts that were made to prevent or eliminate the
25necessity of removal of the minor from the minor's home or the
26reasons why no efforts reasonably could be made to prevent or

 

 

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1eliminate the necessity of removal. When a minor is placed in
2the home of a relative, the Department of Children and Family
3Services shall complete a preliminary background review of the
4members of the minor's custodian's household in accordance
5with Section 3.4 or Section 4.3 of the Child Care Act of 1969
6within 90 days of that placement. If the minor is not placed in
7the home of a relative, the court shall require evidence from
8the Department as to the efforts that were made to place the
9minor in the home of a relative or the reasons why no efforts
10reasonably could be made to place the minor in the home of a
11relative, consistent with the best interests of the minor. If
12the minor is ordered placed in a shelter care facility of the
13Department of Children and Family Services or a licensed child
14welfare agency, the court shall, upon request of the
15appropriate Department or other agency, appoint the Department
16of Children and Family Services Guardianship Administrator or
17other appropriate agency executive temporary custodian of the
18minor and the court may enter such other orders related to the
19temporary custody as it deems fit and proper, including the
20provision of services to the minor or the minor's family to
21ameliorate the causes contributing to the finding of probable
22cause or to the finding of the existence of immediate and
23urgent necessity.
24    Where the Department of Children and Family Services
25Guardianship Administrator is appointed as the executive
26temporary custodian, the Department of Children and Family

 

 

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1Services shall file with the court and serve on the parties a
2parent-child visiting plan, within 10 days, excluding weekends
3and holidays, after the appointment. The parent-child visiting
4plan shall set out the time and place of visits, the frequency
5of visits, the length of visits, who shall be present at the
6visits, and where appropriate, the minor's opportunities to
7have telephone and mail communication with the parents.
8    Where the Department of Children and Family Services
9Guardianship Administrator is appointed as the executive
10temporary custodian, and when the child has siblings in care,
11the Department of Children and Family Services shall file with
12the court and serve on the parties a sibling placement and
13contact plan within 10 days, excluding weekends and holidays,
14after the appointment. The sibling placement and contact plan
15shall set forth whether the siblings are placed together, and
16if they are not placed together, what, if any, efforts are
17being made to place them together. If the Department has
18determined that it is not in a child's best interest to be
19placed with a sibling, the Department shall document in the
20sibling placement and contact plan the basis for its
21determination. For siblings placed separately, the sibling
22placement and contact plan shall set the time and place for
23visits, the frequency of the visits, the length of visits, who
24shall be present for the visits, and where appropriate, the
25child's opportunities to have contact with their siblings in
26addition to in person contact. If the Department determines it

 

 

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1is not in the best interest of a sibling to have contact with a
2sibling, the Department shall document in the sibling
3placement and contact plan the basis for its determination.
4The sibling placement and contact plan shall specify a date
5for development of the Sibling Contact Support Plan, under
6subsection (f) of Section 7.4 of the Children and Family
7Services Act, and shall remain in effect until the Sibling
8Contact Support Plan is developed.
9    For good cause, the court may waive the requirement to
10file the parent-child visiting plan or the sibling placement
11and contact plan, or extend the time for filing either plan.
12Any party may, by motion, request the court to review the
13parent-child visiting plan to determine whether it is
14reasonably calculated to expeditiously facilitate the
15achievement of the permanency goal. A party may, by motion,
16request the court to review the parent-child visiting plan or
17the sibling placement and contact plan to determine whether it
18is consistent with the minor's best interest. The court may
19refer the parties to mediation where available. The frequency,
20duration, and locations of visitation shall be measured by the
21needs of the child and family, and not by the convenience of
22Department personnel. Child development principles shall be
23considered by the court in its analysis of how frequent
24visitation should be, how long it should last, where it should
25take place, and who should be present. If upon motion of the
26party to review either plan and after receiving evidence, the

 

 

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1court determines that the parent-child visiting plan is not
2reasonably calculated to expeditiously facilitate the
3achievement of the permanency goal or that the restrictions
4placed on parent-child contact or sibling placement or contact
5are contrary to the child's best interests, the court shall
6put in writing the factual basis supporting the determination
7and enter specific findings based on the evidence. The court
8shall enter an order for the Department to implement changes
9to the parent-child visiting plan or sibling placement or
10contact plan, consistent with the court's findings. At any
11stage of proceeding, any party may by motion request the court
12to enter any orders necessary to implement the parent-child
13visiting plan, sibling placement or contact plan, or
14subsequently developed Sibling Contact Support Plan. Nothing
15under this subsection (2) shall restrict the court from
16granting discretionary authority to the Department to increase
17opportunities for additional parent-child contacts or sibling
18contacts, without further court orders. Nothing in this
19subsection (2) shall restrict the Department from immediately
20restricting or terminating parent-child contact or sibling
21contacts, without either amending the parent-child visiting
22plan or the sibling contact plan or obtaining a court order,
23where the Department or its assigns reasonably believe there
24is an immediate need to protect the child's health, safety,
25and welfare. Such restrictions or terminations must be based
26on available facts to the Department and its assigns when

 

 

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1viewed in light of the surrounding circumstances and shall
2only occur on an individual case-by-case basis. The Department
3shall file with the court and serve on the parties any
4amendments to the plan within 10 days, excluding weekends and
5holidays, of the change of the visitation.
6    Acceptance of services shall not be considered an
7admission of any allegation in a petition made pursuant to
8this Act, nor may a referral of services be considered as
9evidence in any proceeding pursuant to this Act, except where
10the issue is whether the Department has made reasonable
11efforts to reunite the family. In making its findings that it
12is consistent with the health, safety, and best interests of
13the minor to prescribe shelter care, the court shall state in
14writing (i) the factual basis supporting its findings
15concerning the immediate and urgent necessity for the
16protection of the minor or of the person or property of another
17and (ii) the factual basis supporting its findings that
18reasonable efforts were made to prevent or eliminate the
19removal of the minor from the minor's home or that no efforts
20reasonably could be made to prevent or eliminate the removal
21of the minor from the minor's home. The parents, guardian,
22custodian, temporary custodian, and minor shall each be
23furnished a copy of such written findings. The temporary
24custodian shall maintain a copy of the court order and written
25findings in the case record for the child. The order together
26with the court's findings of fact in support thereof shall be

 

 

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1entered of record in the court.
2    Once the court finds that it is a matter of immediate and
3urgent necessity for the protection of the minor that the
4minor be placed in a shelter care facility, the minor shall not
5be returned to the parent, custodian, or guardian until the
6court finds that such placement is no longer necessary for the
7protection of the minor.
8    If the child is placed in the temporary custody of the
9Department of Children and Family Services for the minor's
10protection, the court shall admonish the parents, guardian,
11custodian, or responsible relative that the parents must
12cooperate with the Department of Children and Family Services,
13comply with the terms of the service plans, and correct the
14conditions which require the child to be in care, or risk
15termination of their parental rights. The court shall ensure,
16by inquiring in open court of each parent, guardian,
17custodian, or responsible relative, that the parent, guardian,
18custodian, or responsible relative has had the opportunity to
19provide the Department with all known names, addresses, and
20telephone numbers of each of the minor's living adult
21relatives, including, but not limited to, grandparents,
22siblings of the minor's parents, and siblings. The court shall
23advise the parents, guardian, custodian, or responsible
24relative to inform the Department if additional information
25regarding the minor's adult relatives becomes available.
26    (2.5) When the court places the minor in the temporary

 

 

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1custody of the Department, the court shall inquire of the
2Department's initial family finding and relative engagement
3efforts, as described in Section 7 of the Children and Family
4Services Act, and the Department shall complete any remaining
5family finding and relative engagement efforts required under
6Section 7 of the Children and Family Services Act within 30
7days of the minor being taken into temporary custody. The
8Department shall complete new family finding and relative
9engagement efforts in accordance with Section 7 of the
10Children and Family Services Act for relatives of the minor
11within 30 days of an unknown parent's identity being
12determined or a parent whose whereabouts were unknown being
13located.
14    (3) If prior to the shelter care hearing for a minor
15described in Sections 2-3, 2-4, 3-3, and 4-3 the moving party
16is unable to serve notice on the party respondent, the shelter
17care hearing may proceed ex parte. A shelter care order from an
18ex parte hearing shall be endorsed with the date and hour of
19issuance and shall be filed with the clerk's office and
20entered of record. The order shall expire after 10 days from
21the time it is issued unless before its expiration it is
22renewed, at a hearing upon appearance of the party respondent,
23or upon an affidavit of the moving party as to all diligent
24efforts to notify the party respondent by notice as herein
25prescribed. The notice prescribed shall be in writing and
26shall be personally delivered to the minor or the minor's

 

 

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1attorney and to the last known address of the other person or
2persons entitled to notice. The notice shall also state the
3nature of the allegations, the nature of the order sought by
4the State, including whether temporary custody is sought, and
5the consequences of failure to appear and shall contain a
6notice that the parties will not be entitled to further
7written notices or publication notices of proceedings in this
8case, including the filing of an amended petition or a motion
9to terminate parental rights, except as required by Supreme
10Court Rule 11; and shall explain the right of the parties and
11the procedures to vacate or modify a shelter care order as
12provided in this Section. The notice for a shelter care
13hearing shall be substantially as follows:
14
NOTICE TO PARENTS AND CHILDREN
15
OF SHELTER CARE HEARING
16        On ................ at ........., before the Honorable
17    ................, (address:) ................., the State
18    of Illinois will present evidence (1) that (name of child
19    or children) ....................... are abused,
20    neglected, or dependent for the following reasons:
21    .............................................. and (2)
22    whether there is "immediate and urgent necessity" to
23    remove the child or children from the responsible
24    relative.
25        YOUR FAILURE TO APPEAR AT THE HEARING MAY RESULT IN
26    PLACEMENT of the child or children in foster care until a

 

 

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1    trial can be held. A trial may not be held for up to 90
2    days. You will not be entitled to further notices of
3    proceedings in this case, including the filing of an
4    amended petition or a motion to terminate parental rights.
5        At the shelter care hearing, parents have the
6    following rights:
7            1. To ask the court to appoint a lawyer if they
8        cannot afford one.
9            2. To ask the court to continue the hearing to
10        allow them time to prepare.
11            3. To present evidence concerning:
12                a. Whether or not the child or children were
13            abused, neglected or dependent.
14                b. Whether or not there is "immediate and
15            urgent necessity" to remove the child from home
16            (including: their ability to care for the child,
17            conditions in the home, alternative means of
18            protecting the child other than removal).
19                c. The best interests of the child.
20            4. To cross examine the State's witnesses.
 
21    The Notice for rehearings shall be substantially as
22follows:
23
NOTICE OF PARENT'S AND CHILDREN'S RIGHTS
24
TO REHEARING ON TEMPORARY CUSTODY
25        If you were not present at and did not have adequate

 

 

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1    notice of the Shelter Care Hearing at which temporary
2    custody of ............... was awarded to
3    ................, you have the right to request a full
4    rehearing on whether the State should have temporary
5    custody of ................. To request this rehearing,
6    you must file with the Clerk of the Juvenile Court
7    (address): ........................, in person or by
8    mailing a statement (affidavit) setting forth the
9    following:
10            1. That you were not present at the shelter care
11        hearing.
12            2. That you did not get adequate notice
13        (explaining how the notice was inadequate).
14            3. Your signature.
15            4. Signature must be notarized.
16        The rehearing should be scheduled within 48 hours of
17    your filing this affidavit.
18        At the rehearing, your rights are the same as at the
19    initial shelter care hearing. The enclosed notice explains
20    those rights.
21        At the Shelter Care Hearing, children have the
22    following rights:
23            1. To have a guardian ad litem appointed.
24            2. To be declared competent as a witness and to
25        present testimony concerning:
26                a. Whether they are abused, neglected or

 

 

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1            dependent.
2                b. Whether there is "immediate and urgent
3            necessity" to be removed from home.
4                c. Their best interests.
5            3. To cross examine witnesses for other parties.
6            4. To obtain an explanation of any proceedings and
7        orders of the court.
8    (4) If the parent, guardian, legal custodian, responsible
9relative, minor age 8 or over, or counsel of the minor did not
10have actual notice of or was not present at the shelter care
11hearing, the parent, guardian, legal custodian, responsible
12relative, minor age 8 or over, or counsel of the minor may file
13an affidavit setting forth these facts, and the clerk shall
14set the matter for rehearing not later than 48 hours,
15excluding Sundays and legal holidays, after the filing of the
16affidavit. At the rehearing, the court shall proceed in the
17same manner as upon the original hearing.
18    (5) Only when there is reasonable cause to believe that
19the minor taken into custody is a person described in
20subsection (3) of Section 5-105 may the minor be kept or
21detained in a detention home or county or municipal jail. This
22Section shall in no way be construed to limit subsection (6).
23    (6) No minor under 16 years of age may be confined in a
24jail or place ordinarily used for the confinement of prisoners
25in a police station. Minors under 18 years of age must be kept
26separate from confined adults and may not at any time be kept

 

 

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1in the same cell, room, or yard with adults confined pursuant
2to the criminal law.
3    (7) If the minor is not brought before a judicial officer
4within the time period as specified in Section 2-9, the minor
5must immediately be released from custody.
6    (8) If neither the parent, guardian, or custodian appears
7within 24 hours to take custody of a minor released upon
8request pursuant to subsection (2) of this Section, then the
9clerk of the court shall set the matter for rehearing not later
10than 7 days after the original order and shall issue a summons
11directed to the parent, guardian, or custodian to appear. At
12the same time the probation department shall prepare a report
13on the minor. If a parent, guardian, or custodian does not
14appear at such rehearing, the judge may enter an order
15prescribing that the minor be kept in a suitable place
16designated by the Department of Children and Family Services
17or a licensed child welfare agency.
18    (9) Notwithstanding any other provision of this Section
19any interested party, including the State, the temporary
20custodian, an agency providing services to the minor or family
21under a service plan pursuant to Section 8.2 of the Abused and
22Neglected Child Reporting Act, foster parent, or any of their
23representatives, on notice to all parties entitled to notice,
24may file a motion that it is in the best interests of the minor
25to modify or vacate a temporary custody order on any of the
26following grounds:

 

 

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1        (a) It is no longer a matter of immediate and urgent
2    necessity that the minor remain in shelter care; or
3        (b) There is a material change in the circumstances of
4    the natural family from which the minor was removed and
5    the child can be cared for at home without endangering the
6    child's health or safety; or
7        (c) A person not a party to the alleged abuse, neglect
8    or dependency, including a parent, relative, or legal
9    guardian, is capable of assuming temporary custody of the
10    minor; or
11        (d) Services provided by the Department of Children
12    and Family Services or a child welfare agency or other
13    service provider have been successful in eliminating the
14    need for temporary custody and the child can be cared for
15    at home without endangering the child's health or safety.
16    In ruling on the motion, the court shall determine whether
17it is consistent with the health, safety, and best interests
18of the minor to modify or vacate a temporary custody order. If
19the minor is being restored to the custody of a parent, legal
20custodian, or guardian who lives outside of Illinois, and an
21Interstate Compact has been requested and refused, the court
22may order the Department of Children and Family Services to
23arrange for an assessment of the minor's proposed living
24arrangement and for ongoing monitoring of the health, safety,
25and best interest of the minor and compliance with any order of
26protective supervision entered in accordance with Section 2-20

 

 

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1or 2-25.
2    The clerk shall set the matter for hearing not later than
314 days after such motion is filed. In the event that the court
4modifies or vacates a temporary custody order but does not
5vacate its finding of probable cause, the court may order that
6appropriate services be continued or initiated in behalf of
7the minor and the minor's family.
8    (10) When the court finds or has found that there is
9probable cause to believe a minor is an abused minor as
10described in subsection (2) of Section 2-3 and that there is an
11immediate and urgent necessity for the abused minor to be
12placed in shelter care, immediate and urgent necessity shall
13be presumed for any other minor residing in the same household
14as the abused minor provided:
15        (a) Such other minor is the subject of an abuse or
16    neglect petition pending before the court; and
17        (b) A party to the petition is seeking shelter care
18    for such other minor.
19    Once the presumption of immediate and urgent necessity has
20been raised, the burden of demonstrating the lack of immediate
21and urgent necessity shall be on any party that is opposing
22shelter care for the other minor.
23    (11) The changes made to this Section by Public Act 98-61
24apply to a minor who has been arrested or taken into custody on
25or after January 1, 2014 (the effective date of Public Act
2698-61).

 

 

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1    (12) After the court has placed a minor in the care of a
2temporary custodian pursuant to this Section, any party may
3file a motion requesting the court to grant the temporary
4custodian the authority to serve as a surrogate decision maker
5for the minor under the Health Care Surrogate Act for purposes
6of making decisions pursuant to paragraph (1) of subsection
7(b) of Section 20 of the Health Care Surrogate Act. The court
8may grant the motion if it determines by clear and convincing
9evidence that it is in the best interests of the minor to grant
10the temporary custodian such authority. In making its
11determination, the court shall weigh the following factors in
12addition to considering the best interests factors listed in
13subsection (4.05) of Section 1-3 of this Act:
14        (a) the efforts to identify and locate the respondents
15    and adult family members of the minor and the results of
16    those efforts;
17        (b) the efforts to engage the respondents and adult
18    family members of the minor in decision making on behalf
19    of the minor;
20        (c) the length of time the efforts in paragraphs (a)
21    and (b) have been ongoing;
22        (d) the relationship between the respondents and adult
23    family members and the minor;
24        (e) medical testimony regarding the extent to which
25    the minor is suffering and the impact of a delay in
26    decision-making on the minor; and

 

 

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1        (f) any other factor the court deems relevant.
2    If the Department of Children and Family Services is the
3temporary custodian of the minor, in addition to the
4requirements of paragraph (1) of subsection (b) of Section 20
5of the Health Care Surrogate Act, the Department shall follow
6its rules and procedures in exercising authority granted under
7this subsection.
8(Source: P.A. 102-489, eff. 8-20-21; 102-502, eff. 1-1-22;
9102-813, eff. 5-13-22; 103-22, eff. 8-8-23; revised 9-20-23.)
 
10    (705 ILCS 405/2-13)  (from Ch. 37, par. 802-13)
11    Sec. 2-13. Petition.
12    (1) Any adult person, any agency or association by its
13representative may file, or the court on its own motion,
14consistent with the health, safety and best interests of the
15minor may direct the filing through the State's Attorney of a
16petition in respect of a minor under this Act. The petition and
17all subsequent court documents shall be entitled "In the
18interest of ...., a minor".
19    (2) The petition shall be verified but the statements may
20be made upon information and belief. It shall allege that the
21minor is abused, neglected, or dependent, with citations to
22the appropriate provisions of this Act, and set forth (a)
23facts sufficient to bring the minor under Section 2-3 or 2-4
24and to inform respondents of the cause of action, including,
25but not limited to, a plain and concise statement of the

 

 

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1factual allegations that form the basis for the filing of the
2petition; (b) the name, age and residence of the minor; (c) the
3names and residences of the minor's parents; (d) the name and
4residence of the minor's legal guardian or the person or
5persons having custody or control of the minor, or of the
6nearest known relative if no parent or guardian can be found;
7and (e) if the minor upon whose behalf the petition is brought
8is sheltered in custody, the date on which such temporary
9custody was ordered by the court or the date set for a
10temporary custody hearing. If any of the facts herein required
11are not known by the petitioner, the petition shall so state.
12    (3) The petition must allege that it is in the best
13interests of the minor and of the public that the minor be
14adjudged a ward of the court and may pray generally for relief
15available under this Act. The petition need not specify any
16proposed disposition following adjudication of wardship. The
17petition may request that the minor remain in the custody of
18the parent, guardian, or custodian under an Order of
19Protection.
20    (4) If termination of parental rights and appointment of a
21guardian of the person with power to consent to adoption of the
22minor under Section 2-29 is sought, the petition shall so
23state. If the petition includes this request, the prayer for
24relief shall clearly and obviously state that the parents
25could permanently lose their rights as a parent at this
26hearing.

 

 

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1    In addition to the foregoing, the petitioner, by motion,
2may request the termination of parental rights and appointment
3of a guardian of the person with power to consent to adoption
4of the minor under Section 2-29 at any time after the entry of
5a dispositional order under Section 2-22.
6    (4.5) (a) Unless good cause exists that filing a petition
7to terminate parental rights is contrary to the child's best
8interests, with respect to any minors committed to its care
9pursuant to this Act, the Department of Children and Family
10Services shall request the State's Attorney to file a petition
11or motion for termination of parental rights and appointment
12of guardian of the person with power to consent to adoption of
13the minor under Section 2-29 if:
14        (i) a minor has been in foster care, as described in
15    subsection (b), for 15 months of the most recent 22
16    months; or
17        (ii) a minor under the age of 2 years has been
18    previously determined to be abandoned at an adjudicatory
19    hearing; or
20        (iii) the parent is criminally convicted of:
21            (A) first degree murder or second degree murder of
22        any child;
23            (B) attempt or conspiracy to commit first degree
24        murder or second degree murder of any child;
25            (C) solicitation to commit murder of any child,
26        solicitation to commit murder for hire of any child,

 

 

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1        or solicitation to commit second degree murder of any
2        child;
3            (D) aggravated battery, aggravated battery of a
4        child, or felony domestic battery, any of which has
5        resulted in serious injury to the minor or a sibling of
6        the minor;
7            (E) predatory criminal sexual assault of a child;
8            (E-5) aggravated criminal sexual assault;
9            (E-10) criminal sexual abuse in violation of
10        subsection (a) of Section 11-1.50 of the Criminal Code
11        of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012;
12            (E-15) sexual exploitation of a child;
13            (E-20) permitting sexual abuse of a child;
14            (E-25) criminal sexual assault; or
15            (F) an offense in any other state the elements of
16        which are similar and bear a substantial relationship
17        to any of the foregoing offenses.
18    (a-1) For purposes of this subsection (4.5), good cause
19exists in the following circumstances:
20        (i) the child is being cared for by a relative,
21        (ii) the Department has documented in the case plan a
22    compelling reason for determining that filing such
23    petition would not be in the best interests of the child,
24        (iii) the court has found within the preceding 12
25    months that the Department has failed to make reasonable
26    efforts to reunify the child and family, or

 

 

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1        (iv) the parent is incarcerated, or the parent's prior
2    incarceration is a significant factor in why the child has
3    been in foster care for 15 months out of any 22-month
4    period, the parent maintains a meaningful role in the
5    child's life, and the Department has not documented
6    another reason why it would otherwise be appropriate to
7    file a petition to terminate parental rights pursuant to
8    this Section and the Adoption Act. The assessment of
9    whether an incarcerated parent maintains a meaningful role
10    in the child's life may include consideration of the
11    following:
12            (A) the child's best interest;
13            (B) the parent's expressions or acts of
14        manifesting concern for the child, such as letters,
15        telephone calls, visits, and other forms of
16        communication with the child and the impact of the
17        communication on the child;
18            (C) the parent's efforts to communicate with and
19        work with the Department for the purpose of complying
20        with the service plan and repairing, maintaining, or
21        building the parent-child relationship; or
22            (D) limitations in the parent's access to family
23        support programs, therapeutic services, visiting
24        opportunities, telephone and mail services, and
25        meaningful participation in court proceedings; or .
26        (v) the Department has not yet met with the child's

 

 

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1    caregiver to discuss the permanency goals of guardianship
2    and adoption.
3    (b) For purposes of this subsection, the date of entering
4foster care is defined as the earlier of:
5        (1) The date of a judicial finding at an adjudicatory
6    hearing that the child is an abused, neglected, or
7    dependent minor; or
8        (2) 60 days after the date on which the child is
9    removed from the child's parent, guardian, or legal
10    custodian.
11    (c) (Blank).
12    (d) (Blank).
13    (5) The court shall liberally allow the petitioner to
14amend the petition to set forth a cause of action or to add,
15amend, or supplement factual allegations that form the basis
16for a cause of action up until 14 days before the adjudicatory
17hearing. The petitioner may amend the petition after that date
18and prior to the adjudicatory hearing if the court grants
19leave to amend upon a showing of good cause. The court may
20allow amendment of the petition to conform with the evidence
21at any time prior to ruling. In all cases in which the court
22has granted leave to amend based on new evidence or new
23allegations, the court shall permit the respondent an adequate
24opportunity to prepare a defense to the amended petition.
25    (6) At any time before dismissal of the petition or before
26final closing and discharge under Section 2-31, one or more

 

 

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1motions in the best interests of the minor may be filed. The
2motion shall specify sufficient facts in support of the relief
3requested.
4(Source: P.A. 103-22, eff. 8-8-23.)
 
5    (705 ILCS 405/2-21)  (from Ch. 37, par. 802-21)
6    Sec. 2-21. Findings and adjudication.
7    (1) The court shall state for the record the manner in
8which the parties received service of process and shall note
9whether the return or returns of service, postal return
10receipt or receipts for notice by certified mail, or
11certificate or certificates of publication have been filed in
12the court record. The court shall enter any appropriate orders
13of default against any parent who has been properly served in
14any manner and fails to appear.
15    No further service of process as defined in Sections 2-15
16and 2-16 is required in any subsequent proceeding for a parent
17who was properly served in any manner, except as required by
18Supreme Court Rule 11.
19    The caseworker shall testify about the diligent search
20conducted for the parent.
21    After hearing the evidence the court shall determine
22whether or not the minor is abused, neglected, or dependent.
23If it finds that the minor is not such a person, the court
24shall order the petition dismissed and the minor discharged.
25The court's determination of whether the minor is abused,

 

 

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1neglected, or dependent shall be stated in writing with the
2factual basis supporting that determination.
3    If the court finds that the minor is abused, neglected, or
4dependent, the court shall then determine and put in writing
5the factual basis supporting that determination, and specify,
6to the extent possible, the acts or omissions or both of each
7parent, guardian, or legal custodian that form the basis of
8the court's findings. That finding shall appear in the order
9of the court.
10    If the court finds that the child has been abused,
11neglected or dependent, the court shall admonish the parents
12that they must cooperate with the Department of Children and
13Family Services, comply with the terms of the service plan,
14and correct the conditions that require the child to be in
15care, or risk termination of parental rights.
16    If the court determines that a person has inflicted
17physical or sexual abuse upon a minor, the court shall report
18that determination to the Illinois State Police, which shall
19include that information in its report to the President of the
20school board for a school district that requests a criminal
21history records check of that person, or the regional
22superintendent of schools who requests a check of that person,
23as required under Section 10-21.9 or 34-18.5 of the School
24Code.
25    (2) If, pursuant to subsection (1) of this Section, the
26court determines and puts in writing the factual basis

 

 

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1supporting the determination that the minor is either abused
2or neglected or dependent, the court shall then set a time not
3later than 30 days after the entry of the finding for a
4dispositional hearing (unless an earlier date is required
5pursuant to Section 2-13.1) to be conducted under Section 2-22
6at which hearing the court shall determine whether it is
7consistent with the health, safety and best interests of the
8minor and the public that the minor he be made a ward of the
9court. To assist the court in making this and other
10determinations at the dispositional hearing, the court may
11order that an investigation be conducted and a dispositional
12report be prepared concerning the minor's physical and mental
13history and condition, family situation and background,
14economic status, education, occupation, history of delinquency
15or criminality, personal habits, and any other information
16that may be helpful to the court. The dispositional hearing
17may be continued once for a period not to exceed 30 days if the
18court finds that such continuance is necessary to complete the
19dispositional report.
20    (3) The time limits of this Section may be waived only by
21consent of all parties and approval by the court, as
22determined to be consistent with the health, safety and best
23interests of the minor.
24    (4) For all cases adjudicated prior to July 1, 1991, for
25which no dispositional hearing has been held prior to that
26date, a dispositional hearing under Section 2-22 shall be held

 

 

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1within 90 days of July 1, 1991.
2    (5) The court may terminate the parental rights of a
3parent at the initial dispositional hearing if all of the
4following conditions are met:
5        (i) the original or amended petition contains a
6    request for termination of parental rights and appointment
7    of a guardian with power to consent to adoption; and
8        (ii) the court has found by a preponderance of
9    evidence, introduced or stipulated to at an adjudicatory
10    hearing, that the child comes under the jurisdiction of
11    the court as an abused, neglected, or dependent minor
12    under Section 2-18; and
13        (iii) the court finds, on the basis of clear and
14    convincing evidence admitted at the adjudicatory hearing
15    that the parent is an unfit person under subdivision D of
16    Section 1 of the Adoption Act; and
17        (iv) the court determines in accordance with the rules
18    of evidence for dispositional proceedings, that:
19            (A) it is in the best interest of the minor and
20        public that the child be made a ward of the court;
21            (A-1) the petitioner has demonstrated that the
22        Department has discussed the permanency options of
23        guardianship and adoption with the caregiver and the
24        Department has informed the court of the caregiver's
25        wishes as to the permanency goal;
26            (A-5) reasonable efforts under subsection (l-1) of

 

 

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1        Section 5 of the Children and Family Services Act are
2        inappropriate or such efforts were made and were
3        unsuccessful; and
4            (B) termination of parental rights and appointment
5        of a guardian with power to consent to adoption is in
6        the best interest of the child pursuant to Section
7        2-29.
8(Source: P.A. 102-538, eff. 8-20-21.)
 
9    (705 ILCS 405/2-22)  (from Ch. 37, par. 802-22)
10    Sec. 2-22. Dispositional hearing; evidence; continuance.
11    (1) At the dispositional hearing, the court shall
12determine whether it is in the best interests of the minor and
13the public that the minor be made a ward of the court, and, if
14the minor is to be made a ward of the court, the court shall
15determine the proper disposition best serving the health,
16safety and interests of the minor and the public. The court
17also shall consider the Department's diligent efforts in
18family finding and relative engagement for the minor required
19under Section 2-27.3 beginning July 1, 2025, the permanency
20goal set for the minor, the nature of the service plan for the
21minor and the services delivered and to be delivered under the
22plan. All evidence helpful in determining these questions,
23including oral and written reports, may be admitted and may be
24relied upon to the extent of its probative value, even though
25not competent for the purposes of the adjudicatory hearing.

 

 

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1    (2) Once all parties respondent have been served in
2compliance with Sections 2-15 and 2-16, no further service or
3notice must be given to a party prior to proceeding to a
4dispositional hearing. Before making an order of disposition
5the court shall advise the State's Attorney, the parents,
6guardian, custodian or responsible relative or their counsel
7of the factual contents and the conclusions of the reports
8prepared for the use of the court and considered by it, and
9afford fair opportunity, if requested, to controvert them. The
10court may order, however, that the documents containing such
11reports need not be submitted to inspection, or that sources
12of confidential information need not be disclosed except to
13the attorneys for the parties. Factual contents, conclusions,
14documents and sources disclosed by the court under this
15paragraph shall not be further disclosed without the express
16approval of the court pursuant to an in camera hearing.
17    (3) A record of a prior continuance under supervision
18under Section 2-20, whether successfully completed with regard
19to the child's health, safety and best interest, or not, is
20admissible at the dispositional hearing.
21    (4) On its own motion or that of the State's Attorney, a
22parent, guardian, custodian, responsible relative or counsel,
23the court may adjourn the hearing for a reasonable period to
24receive reports or other evidence, if the adjournment is
25consistent with the health, safety and best interests of the
26minor, but in no event shall continuances be granted so that

 

 

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1the dispositional hearing occurs more than 6 months after the
2initial removal of a minor from the minor's home. In
3scheduling investigations and hearings, the court shall give
4priority to proceedings in which a minor has been removed from
5the minor's home before an order of disposition has been made.
6    (5) Unless already set by the court, at the conclusion of
7the dispositional hearing, the court shall set the date for
8the first permanency hearing, to be conducted under
9subsections (2), (2.3), and (2.4) subsection (2) of Section
102-28, which shall be held: (a) within 12 months from the date
11temporary custody was taken, (b) if the parental rights of
12both parents have been terminated in accordance with the
13procedure described in subsection (5) of Section 2-21, within
1430 days of the termination of parental rights and appointment
15of a guardian with power to consent to adoption, or (c) in
16accordance with subsection (2) of Section 2-13.1.
17    (6) When the court declares a child to be a ward of the
18court and awards guardianship to the Department of Children
19and Family Services: ,
20        (a) The the court shall admonish the parents,
21    guardian, custodian or responsible relative that the
22    parents must cooperate with the Department of Children and
23    Family Services, comply with the terms of the service
24    plans, and correct the conditions which require the child
25    to be in care, or risk termination of their parental
26    rights; and

 

 

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1        (b) the court shall inquire of the parties of any
2    intent to proceed with termination of parental rights of a
3    parent:
4            (A) whose identity still remains unknown;
5            (B) whose whereabouts remain unknown; or
6            (C) who was found in default at the adjudicatory
7        hearing and has not obtained an order setting aside
8        the default in accordance with Section 2-1301 of the
9        Code of Civil Procedure.
10(Source: P.A. 103-22, eff. 8-8-23.)
 
11    (705 ILCS 405/2-23)  (from Ch. 37, par. 802-23)
12    Sec. 2-23. Kinds of dispositional orders.
13    (1) The following kinds of orders of disposition may be
14made in respect of wards of the court:
15        (a) A minor found to be neglected or abused under
16    Section 2-3 or dependent under Section 2-4 may be (1)
17    continued in the custody of the minor's parents, guardian
18    or legal custodian; (2) placed in accordance with Section
19    2-27; (3) restored to the custody of the parent, parents,
20    guardian, or legal custodian, provided the court shall
21    order the parent, parents, guardian, or legal custodian to
22    cooperate with the Department of Children and Family
23    Services and comply with the terms of an after-care plan
24    or risk the loss of custody of the child and the possible
25    termination of their parental rights; or (4) ordered

 

 

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1    partially or completely emancipated in accordance with the
2    provisions of the Emancipation of Minors Act.
3        If the minor is being restored to the custody of a
4    parent, legal custodian, or guardian who lives outside of
5    Illinois, and an Interstate Compact has been requested and
6    refused, the court may order the Department of Children
7    and Family Services to arrange for an assessment of the
8    minor's proposed living arrangement and for ongoing
9    monitoring of the health, safety, and best interest of the
10    minor and compliance with any order of protective
11    supervision entered in accordance with Section 2-24.
12        However, in any case in which a minor is found by the
13    court to be neglected or abused under Section 2-3 of this
14    Act, custody of the minor shall not be restored to any
15    parent, guardian or legal custodian whose acts or
16    omissions or both have been identified, pursuant to
17    subsection (1) of Section 2-21, as forming the basis for
18    the court's finding of abuse or neglect, until such time
19    as a hearing is held on the issue of the best interests of
20    the minor and the fitness of such parent, guardian or
21    legal custodian to care for the minor without endangering
22    the minor's health or safety, and the court enters an
23    order that such parent, guardian or legal custodian is fit
24    to care for the minor.
25        (b) A minor found to be dependent under Section 2-4
26    may be (1) placed in accordance with Section 2-27 or (2)

 

 

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1    ordered partially or completely emancipated in accordance
2    with the provisions of the Emancipation of Minors Act.
3        However, in any case in which a minor is found by the
4    court to be dependent under Section 2-4 of this Act,
5    custody of the minor shall not be restored to any parent,
6    guardian or legal custodian whose acts or omissions or
7    both have been identified, pursuant to subsection (1) of
8    Section 2-21, as forming the basis for the court's finding
9    of dependency, until such time as a hearing is held on the
10    issue of the fitness of such parent, guardian or legal
11    custodian to care for the minor without endangering the
12    minor's health or safety, and the court enters an order
13    that such parent, guardian or legal custodian is fit to
14    care for the minor.
15        (b-1) A minor between the ages of 18 and 21 may be
16    placed pursuant to Section 2-27 of this Act if (1) the
17    court has granted a supplemental petition to reinstate
18    wardship of the minor pursuant to subsection (2) of
19    Section 2-33, (2) the court has adjudicated the minor a
20    ward of the court, permitted the minor to return home
21    under an order of protection, and subsequently made a
22    finding that it is in the minor's best interest to vacate
23    the order of protection and commit the minor to the
24    Department of Children and Family Services for care and
25    service, or (3) the court returned the minor to the
26    custody of the respondent under Section 2-4b of this Act

 

 

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1    without terminating the proceedings under Section 2-31 of
2    this Act, and subsequently made a finding that it is in the
3    minor's best interest to commit the minor to the
4    Department of Children and Family Services for care and
5    services.
6        (c) When the court awards guardianship to the
7    Department of Children and Family Services, the court
8    shall order: (i) the parents to cooperate with the
9    Department of Children and Family Services, comply with
10    the terms of the service plans, and correct the conditions
11    that require the child to be in care, or risk termination
12    of their parental rights; and (ii) the Department to make
13    diligent efforts in family finding and relative engagement
14    to establish lifelong connections for the minor,
15    consistent with the best interest of the minor, as
16    required under Section 2-27.3.
17    (2) Any order of disposition may provide for protective
18supervision under Section 2-24 and may include an order of
19protection under Section 2-25.
20    Unless the order of disposition expressly so provides, it
21does not operate to close proceedings on the pending petition,
22but is subject to modification, not inconsistent with Section
232-28, until final closing and discharge of the proceedings
24under Section 2-31.
25    (3) The court also shall enter any other orders necessary
26to fulfill the service plan, including, but not limited to,

 

 

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1(i) orders requiring parties to cooperate with services, (ii)
2restraining orders controlling the conduct of any party likely
3to frustrate the achievement of the goal, and (iii) visiting
4orders. When the child is placed separately from a sibling,
5the court shall review the Sibling Contact Support Plan
6developed under subsection (f) of Section 7.4 of the Children
7and Family Services Act, if applicable. If the Department has
8not convened a meeting to develop a Sibling Contact Support
9Plan, or if the court finds that the existing Plan is not in
10the child's best interest, the court may enter an order
11requiring the Department to develop and implement a Sibling
12Contact Support Plan under subsection (f) of Section 7.4 of
13the Children and Family Services Act or order mediation.
14Unless otherwise specifically authorized by law, the court is
15not empowered under this subsection (3) to order specific
16placements, specific services, or specific service providers
17to be included in the plan. If, after receiving evidence, the
18court determines that the services contained in the plan are
19not reasonably calculated to facilitate achievement of the
20permanency goal, the court shall put in writing the factual
21basis supporting the determination and enter specific findings
22based on the evidence. The court also shall enter an order for
23the Department to develop and implement a new service plan or
24to implement changes to the current service plan consistent
25with the court's findings. The new service plan shall be filed
26with the court and served on all parties within 45 days after

 

 

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1the date of the order. The court shall continue the matter
2until the new service plan is filed. Except as authorized by
3subsection (3.5) of this Section or authorized by law, the
4court is not empowered under this Section to order specific
5placements, specific services, or specific service providers
6to be included in the service plan.
7    (3.5) If, after reviewing the evidence, including evidence
8from the Department, the court determines that the minor's
9current or planned placement is not necessary or appropriate
10to facilitate achievement of the permanency goal, the court
11shall put in writing the factual basis supporting its
12determination and enter specific findings based on the
13evidence. If the court finds that the minor's current or
14planned placement is not necessary or appropriate, the court
15may enter an order directing the Department to implement a
16recommendation by the minor's treating clinician or a
17clinician contracted by the Department to evaluate the minor
18or a recommendation made by the Department. If the Department
19places a minor in a placement under an order entered under this
20subsection (3.5), the Department has the authority to remove
21the minor from that placement when a change in circumstances
22necessitates the removal to protect the minor's health,
23safety, and best interest. If the Department determines
24removal is necessary, the Department shall notify the parties
25of the planned placement change in writing no later than 10
26days prior to the implementation of its determination unless

 

 

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1remaining in the placement poses an imminent risk of harm to
2the minor, in which case the Department shall notify the
3parties of the placement change in writing immediately
4following the implementation of its decision. The Department
5shall notify others of the decision to change the minor's
6placement as required by Department rule.
7    (4) In addition to any other order of disposition, the
8court may order any minor adjudicated neglected with respect
9to the minor's own injurious behavior to make restitution, in
10monetary or non-monetary form, under the terms and conditions
11of Section 5-5-6 of the Unified Code of Corrections, except
12that the "presentence hearing" referred to therein shall be
13the dispositional hearing for purposes of this Section. The
14parent, guardian or legal custodian of the minor may pay some
15or all of such restitution on the minor's behalf.
16    (5) Any order for disposition where the minor is committed
17or placed in accordance with Section 2-27 shall provide for
18the parents or guardian of the estate of such minor to pay to
19the legal custodian or guardian of the person of the minor such
20sums as are determined by the custodian or guardian of the
21person of the minor as necessary for the minor's needs. Such
22payments may not exceed the maximum amounts provided for by
23Section 9.1 of the Children and Family Services Act.
24    (6) Whenever the order of disposition requires the minor
25to attend school or participate in a program of training, the
26truant officer or designated school official shall regularly

 

 

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1report to the court if the minor is a chronic or habitual
2truant under Section 26-2a of the School Code.
3    (7) The court may terminate the parental rights of a
4parent at the initial dispositional hearing if all of the
5conditions in subsection (5) of Section 2-21 are met.
6(Source: P.A. 102-489, eff. 8-20-21; 103-22, eff. 8-8-23.)
 
7    (705 ILCS 405/2-27)  (from Ch. 37, par. 802-27)
8    Sec. 2-27. Placement; legal custody or guardianship.
9    (1) If the court determines and puts in writing the
10factual basis supporting the determination of whether the
11parents, guardian, or legal custodian of a minor adjudged a
12ward of the court are unfit or are unable, for some reason
13other than financial circumstances alone, to care for,
14protect, train or discipline the minor or are unwilling to do
15so, and that the health, safety, and best interest of the minor
16will be jeopardized if the minor remains in the custody of the
17minor's parents, guardian or custodian, the court may at this
18hearing and at any later point:
19        (a) place the minor in the custody of a suitable
20    relative or other person as legal custodian or guardian;
21        (a-5) with the approval of the Department of Children
22    and Family Services, place the minor in the subsidized
23    guardianship of a suitable relative or other person as
24    legal guardian; "subsidized guardianship" has the meaning
25    ascribed to that term in Section 4d of the Children and

 

 

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1    Family Services Act means a private guardianship
2    arrangement for children for whom the permanency goals of
3    return home and adoption have been ruled out and who meet
4    the qualifications for subsidized guardianship as defined
5    by the Department of Children and Family Services in
6    administrative rules;
7        (b) place the minor under the guardianship of a
8    probation officer;
9        (c) commit the minor to an agency for care or
10    placement, except an institution under the authority of
11    the Department of Corrections or of the Department of
12    Children and Family Services;
13        (d) on and after the effective date of this amendatory
14    Act of the 98th General Assembly and before January 1,
15    2017, commit the minor to the Department of Children and
16    Family Services for care and service; however, a minor
17    charged with a criminal offense under the Criminal Code of
18    1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012 or adjudicated
19    delinquent shall not be placed in the custody of or
20    committed to the Department of Children and Family
21    Services by any court, except (i) a minor less than 16
22    years of age and committed to the Department of Children
23    and Family Services under Section 5-710 of this Act, (ii)
24    a minor under the age of 18 for whom an independent basis
25    of abuse, neglect, or dependency exists, or (iii) a minor
26    for whom the court has granted a supplemental petition to

 

 

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1    reinstate wardship pursuant to subsection (2) of Section
2    2-33 of this Act. On and after January 1, 2017, commit the
3    minor to the Department of Children and Family Services
4    for care and service; however, a minor charged with a
5    criminal offense under the Criminal Code of 1961 or the
6    Criminal Code of 2012 or adjudicated delinquent shall not
7    be placed in the custody of or committed to the Department
8    of Children and Family Services by any court, except (i) a
9    minor less than 15 years of age and committed to the
10    Department of Children and Family Services under Section
11    5-710 of this Act, (ii) a minor under the age of 18 for
12    whom an independent basis of abuse, neglect, or dependency
13    exists, or (iii) a minor for whom the court has granted a
14    supplemental petition to reinstate wardship pursuant to
15    subsection (2) of Section 2-33 of this Act. An independent
16    basis exists when the allegations or adjudication of
17    abuse, neglect, or dependency do not arise from the same
18    facts, incident, or circumstances which give rise to a
19    charge or adjudication of delinquency. The Department
20    shall be given due notice of the pendency of the action and
21    the Guardianship Administrator of the Department of
22    Children and Family Services shall be appointed guardian
23    of the person of the minor. Whenever the Department seeks
24    to discharge a minor from its care and service, the
25    Guardianship Administrator shall petition the court for an
26    order terminating guardianship. The Guardianship

 

 

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1    Administrator may designate one or more other officers of
2    the Department, appointed as Department officers by
3    administrative order of the Department Director,
4    authorized to affix the signature of the Guardianship
5    Administrator to documents affecting the guardian-ward
6    relationship of children for whom the Guardianship
7    Administrator has been appointed guardian at such times as
8    the Guardianship Administrator is unable to perform the
9    duties of the Guardianship Administrator office. The
10    signature authorization shall include but not be limited
11    to matters of consent of marriage, enlistment in the armed
12    forces, legal proceedings, adoption, major medical and
13    surgical treatment and application for driver's license.
14    Signature authorizations made pursuant to the provisions
15    of this paragraph shall be filed with the Secretary of
16    State and the Secretary of State shall provide upon
17    payment of the customary fee, certified copies of the
18    authorization to any court or individual who requests a
19    copy.
20    (1.5) In making a determination under this Section, the
21court shall also consider whether, based on health, safety,
22and the best interests of the minor,
23        (a) appropriate services aimed at family preservation
24    and family reunification have been unsuccessful in
25    rectifying the conditions that have led to a finding of
26    unfitness or inability to care for, protect, train, or

 

 

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1    discipline the minor, or
2        (b) no family preservation or family reunification
3    services would be appropriate,
4and if the petition or amended petition contained an
5allegation that the parent is an unfit person as defined in
6subdivision (D) of Section 1 of the Adoption Act, and the order
7of adjudication recites that parental unfitness was
8established by clear and convincing evidence, the court shall,
9when appropriate and in the best interest of the minor, enter
10an order terminating parental rights and appointing a guardian
11with power to consent to adoption in accordance with Section
122-29.
13    When making a placement, the court, wherever possible,
14shall require the Department of Children and Family Services
15to select a person holding the same religious belief as that of
16the minor or a private agency controlled by persons of like
17religious faith of the minor and shall require the Department
18to otherwise comply with Section 7 of the Children and Family
19Services Act in placing the child. In addition, whenever
20alternative plans for placement are available, the court shall
21ascertain and consider, to the extent appropriate in the
22particular case, the views and preferences of the minor.
23    (2) When a minor is placed with a suitable relative or
24other person pursuant to item (a) of subsection (1), the court
25shall appoint the suitable relative or other person the legal
26custodian or guardian of the person of the minor. When a minor

 

 

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1is committed to any agency, the court shall appoint the proper
2officer or representative thereof as legal custodian or
3guardian of the person of the minor. Legal custodians and
4guardians of the person of the minor have the respective
5rights and duties set forth in subsection (9) of Section 1-3
6except as otherwise provided by order of court; but no
7guardian of the person may consent to adoption of the minor
8unless that authority is conferred upon the guardian in
9accordance with Section 2-29. An agency whose representative
10is appointed guardian of the person or legal custodian of the
11minor may place the minor in any child care facility, but the
12facility must be licensed under the Child Care Act of 1969 or
13have been approved by the Department of Children and Family
14Services as meeting the standards established for such
15licensing. No agency may place a minor adjudicated under
16Sections 2-3 or 2-4 in a child care facility unless the
17placement is in compliance with the rules and regulations for
18placement under this Section promulgated by the Department of
19Children and Family Services under Section 5 of the Children
20and Family Services Act. Like authority and restrictions shall
21be conferred by the court upon any probation officer who has
22been appointed guardian of the person of a minor.
23    (3) No placement by any probation officer or agency whose
24representative is appointed guardian of the person or legal
25custodian of a minor may be made in any out of State child care
26facility unless it complies with the Interstate Compact on the

 

 

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1Placement of Children. Placement with a parent, however, is
2not subject to that Interstate Compact.
3    (4) The clerk of the court shall issue to the legal
4custodian or guardian of the person a certified copy of the
5order of court, as proof of the legal custodian's or
6guardian's authority. No other process is necessary as
7authority for the keeping of the minor.
8    (5) Custody or guardianship granted under this Section
9continues until the court otherwise directs, but not after the
10minor reaches the age of 19 years except as set forth in
11Section 2-31, or if the minor was previously committed to the
12Department of Children and Family Services for care and
13service and the court has granted a supplemental petition to
14reinstate wardship pursuant to subsection (2) of Section 2-33.
15    (6) (Blank).
16(Source: P.A. 103-22, eff. 8-8-23.)
 
17    (705 ILCS 405/2-27.3 new)
18    Sec. 2-27.3. Ongoing family finding and relative
19engagement.
20    (a)(1) The Department shall make ongoing diligent efforts,
21to the fullest extent consistent with the minor's best
22interest, to engage in ongoing family finding and relative
23engagement for the purposes of:
24        (A) establishing and supporting lifelong connections
25    for the minor by building a network of sustainable and

 

 

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1    supportive relationships that allow the minor to
2    experience a sense of belonging through enduring,
3    life-long relationships with family, extended family, and
4    other caring adults; and
5        (B) for minors who are not in a placement likely to
6    achieve permanency, identifying relatives who may be
7    willing and able to care for the minor and provide
8    permanency for the minor.
9    Efforts to identify, locate, and engage relatives to
10assist in supporting and establishing lifelong connections for
11the minor are required, consistent with the best interests of
12the minor, even if the minor is placed with a relative,
13recognizing it may be in the minor's best interest to maintain
14connections with different relatives, and a relative's
15capacity to provide connection and support, may change over
16time.
17    (2) The Department shall provide a report to the court, as
18part of the reporting requirement under Section 2-10.1, not
19later than 45 days after a minor is placed in the Department's
20custody, and with each case plan submitted to the court
21thereafter, describing the Department's efforts, to identify,
22locate, and engage relatives in a manner consistent with the
23minor's best interest. The initial and subsequent reports
24shall include:
25        (A) a list of contacts made and the outcome of each
26    contact;

 

 

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1        (B) for minors requiring placement in a home
2    environment or a home likely to achieve permanency, the
3    report shall specify which identified relatives have been
4    evaluated as placement options, including assessment as a
5    certified relative caregiver home under Section 3.4 of the
6    Child Care Act of 1969, and the diligent efforts the
7    Department is undertaking to remove barriers to placement,
8    if applicable, with one or more relatives or certified
9    relative caregivers. If the Department determines
10    placement with an identified relative willing to serve as
11    a caregiver for the minor is not in the minor's best
12    interest, the Department shall include its rationale in
13    the report; and
14        (C) consistent with the minor's best interest, the
15    manner in which the relative or person may be engaged with
16    the minor. Engagement may include, but is not limited to,
17    in person visitation, virtual visitation, telephone
18    contact, supervising visits between the minor and a parent
19    or sibling, assisting with transportation, providing
20    respite care and providing placement. If the Department
21    determines an identified relative's engagement with the
22    minor is not in the minor's best interest, the Department
23    shall include its rationale in the report.
24    (3) Ongoing family finding and relative engagement efforts
25shall continue until excused in whole or in part by the court.
26The court may order that further efforts to locate and engage

 

 

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1relatives are futile based on efforts already made, or that
2efforts to identify, locate, or engage a specified person or
3persons is not in the minor's best interests. If a court finds
4that family finding and relative engagement efforts should
5cease, the court shall enter an order in writing. An order
6entered under this Section shall include specific factual
7findings supporting the court's decision. The Department may
8resume family finding and relative engagement efforts after an
9order excusing such efforts has been entered, if the court
10determines resuming such efforts are in the minor's best
11interest.
12    (4) Within 30 days of (i) an unknown parent's identity
13being determined or (ii) a parent's whereabouts becoming known
14for the first time, the Department shall complete family
15finding and relative engagement efforts in accordance with
16paragraph (2.5) of Section 2-10.
17    (b) Nothing in this Section shall be construed to create a
18legally enforceable right on behalf of any relative or person
19to placement, visitation, or engagement with the minor.
 
20    (705 ILCS 405/2-28)
21    Sec. 2-28. Court review.
22    (1) The court may require any legal custodian or guardian
23of the person appointed under this Act to report periodically
24to the court or may cite the legal custodian or guardian into
25court and require the legal custodian, guardian, or the legal

 

 

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1custodian's or guardian's agency to make a full and accurate
2report of the doings of the legal custodian, guardian, or
3agency on behalf of the minor. The custodian or guardian,
4within 10 days after such citation, or earlier if the court
5determines it to be necessary to protect the health, safety,
6or welfare of the minor, shall make the report, either in
7writing verified by affidavit or orally under oath in open
8court, or otherwise as the court directs. Upon the hearing of
9the report the court may remove the custodian or guardian and
10appoint another in the custodian's or guardian's stead or
11restore the minor to the custody of the minor's parents or
12former guardian or custodian. However, custody of the minor
13shall not be restored to any parent, guardian, or legal
14custodian in any case in which the minor is found to be
15neglected or abused under Section 2-3 or dependent under
16Section 2-4 of this Act, unless the minor can be cared for at
17home without endangering the minor's health or safety and it
18is in the best interests of the minor, and if such neglect,
19abuse, or dependency is found by the court under paragraph (1)
20of Section 2-21 of this Act to have come about due to the acts
21or omissions or both of such parent, guardian, or legal
22custodian, until such time as an investigation is made as
23provided in paragraph (5) and a hearing is held on the issue of
24the fitness of such parent, guardian, or legal custodian to
25care for the minor and the court enters an order that such
26parent, guardian, or legal custodian is fit to care for the

 

 

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1minor.
2    (1.5) The public agency that is the custodian or guardian
3of the minor shall file a written report with the court no
4later than 15 days after a minor in the agency's care remains:
5        (1) in a shelter placement beyond 30 days;
6        (2) in a psychiatric hospital past the time when the
7    minor is clinically ready for discharge or beyond medical
8    necessity for the minor's health; or
9        (3) in a detention center or Department of Juvenile
10    Justice facility solely because the public agency cannot
11    find an appropriate placement for the minor.
12    The report shall explain the steps the agency is taking to
13ensure the minor is placed appropriately, how the minor's
14needs are being met in the minor's shelter placement, and if a
15future placement has been identified by the Department, why
16the anticipated placement is appropriate for the needs of the
17minor and the anticipated placement date.
18    (1.6) Within 30 days after placing a child in its care in a
19qualified residential treatment program, as defined by the
20federal Social Security Act, the Department of Children and
21Family Services shall prepare a written report for filing with
22the court and send copies of the report to all parties. Within
2320 days of the filing of the report, or as soon thereafter as
24the court's schedule allows but not more than 60 days from the
25date of placement, the court shall hold a hearing to consider
26the Department's report and determine whether placement of the

 

 

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1child in a qualified residential treatment program provides
2the most effective and appropriate level of care for the child
3in the least restrictive environment and if the placement is
4consistent with the short-term and long-term goals for the
5child, as specified in the permanency plan for the child. The
6court shall approve or disapprove the placement. If
7applicable, the requirements of Sections 2-27.1 and 2-27.2
8must also be met. The Department's written report and the
9court's written determination shall be included in and made
10part of the case plan for the child. If the child remains
11placed in a qualified residential treatment program, the
12Department shall submit evidence at each status and permanency
13hearing:
14        (A) (1) demonstrating that on-going assessment of the
15    strengths and needs of the child continues to support the
16    determination that the child's needs cannot be met through
17    placement in a foster family home, that the placement
18    provides the most effective and appropriate level of care
19    for the child in the least restrictive, appropriate
20    environment, and that the placement is consistent with the
21    short-term and long-term permanency goal for the child, as
22    specified in the permanency plan for the child;
23        (B) (2) documenting the specific treatment or service
24    needs that should be met for the child in the placement and
25    the length of time the child is expected to need the
26    treatment or services; and

 

 

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1        (C) (3) the efforts made by the agency to prepare the
2    child to return home or to be placed with a fit and willing
3    relative, a legal guardian, or an adoptive parent, or in a
4    foster family home; and .
5        (D) beginning July 1, 2025, documenting the
6    Department's efforts regarding ongoing family finding and
7    relative engagement required under Section 2-27.3.
8    (2) The first permanency hearing shall be conducted by the
9judge. Subsequent permanency hearings may be heard by a judge
10or by hearing officers appointed or approved by the court in
11the manner set forth in Section 2-28.1 of this Act. The initial
12hearing shall be held (a) within 12 months from the date
13temporary custody was taken, regardless of whether an
14adjudication or dispositional hearing has been completed
15within that time frame, (b) if the parental rights of both
16parents have been terminated in accordance with the procedure
17described in subsection (5) of Section 2-21, within 30 days of
18the order for termination of parental rights and appointment
19of a guardian with power to consent to adoption, or (c) in
20accordance with subsection (2) of Section 2-13.1. Subsequent
21permanency hearings shall be held every 6 months or more
22frequently if necessary in the court's determination following
23the initial permanency hearing, in accordance with the
24standards set forth in this Section, until the court
25determines that the plan and goal have been achieved. Once the
26plan and goal have been achieved, if the minor remains in

 

 

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1substitute care, the case shall be reviewed at least every 6
2months thereafter, subject to the provisions of this Section,
3unless the minor is placed in the guardianship of a suitable
4relative or other person and the court determines that further
5monitoring by the court does not further the health, safety,
6or best interest of the child and that this is a stable
7permanent placement. The permanency hearings must occur within
8the time frames set forth in this subsection and may not be
9delayed in anticipation of a report from any source or due to
10the agency's failure to timely file its written report (this
11written report means the one required under the next paragraph
12and does not mean the service plan also referred to in that
13paragraph).
14    The public agency that is the custodian or guardian of the
15minor, or another agency responsible for the minor's care,
16shall ensure that all parties to the permanency hearings are
17provided a copy of the most recent service plan prepared
18within the prior 6 months at least 14 days in advance of the
19hearing. If not contained in the agency's service plan, the
20agency shall also include a report setting forth the
21following:
22        (A) (i) any special physical, psychological,
23    educational, medical, emotional, or other needs of the
24    minor or the minor's family that are relevant to a
25    permanency or placement determination, and (ii) for any
26    minor age 16 or over, a written description of the

 

 

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1    programs and services that will enable the minor to
2    prepare for independent living;
3        (B) beginning July 1, 2025, a written description of
4    ongoing family finding and relative engagement efforts in
5    accordance with the requirements under Section 2-27.3 the
6    agency has undertaken since the most recent report to the
7    court to plan for the emotional and legal permanency of
8    the minor; . If not contained in the agency's service plan,
9    the agency's report shall
10        (C) whether specify if a minor is placed in a licensed
11    child care facility under a corrective plan by the
12    Department due to concerns impacting the minor's safety
13    and well-being. The report shall explain the steps the
14    Department is taking to ensure the safety and well-being
15    of the minor and that the minor's needs are met in the
16    facility; . The agency's written report must
17        (D) detail regarding what progress or lack of progress
18    the parent has made in correcting the conditions requiring
19    the child to be in care; whether the child can be returned
20    home without jeopardizing the child's health, safety, and
21    welfare, and if not, what permanency goal is recommended
22    to be in the best interests of the child, and the reasons
23    for the recommendation. If a permanency goal under
24    paragraph (A), (B), or (B-1) of subsection (2.3) have been
25    deemed inappropriate and not in the minor's best interest,
26    the report must include the following information: why the

 

 

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1    other permanency goals are not appropriate.
2            (i) confirmation that the caseworker has discussed
3        the permanency options and subsidies available for
4        guardianship and adoption with the minor's caregivers,
5        the minor's parents, as appropriate, and has discussed
6        the available permanency options with the minor in an
7        age-appropriate manner;
8            (ii) confirmation that the caseworker has
9        discussed with the minor's caregivers, the minor's
10        parents, as appropriate, and the minor as
11        age-appropriate, the distinctions between guardianship
12        and adoption, including, but not limited to, that
13        guardianship does not require termination of the
14        parent's rights or the consent of the parent;
15            (iii) a description of the stated preferences and
16        concerns, if any, the minor, the parent as
17        appropriate, and the caregiver expressed relating to
18        the options of guardianship and adoption, and the
19        reasons for the preferences;
20            (iv) if the minor is not currently in a placement
21        that will provide permanency, identification of all
22        persons presently willing and able to provide
23        permanency to the minor through either guardianship or
24        adoption, and beginning July 1, 2025, if none are
25        available, a description of the efforts made in
26        accordance with Section 2-27.3; and

 

 

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1            (v) state the recommended permanency goal, why
2        that goal is recommended, and why the other potential
3        goals were not recommended.
4    The caseworker must appear and testify at the permanency
5hearing. If a permanency hearing has not previously been
6scheduled by the court, the moving party shall move for the
7setting of a permanency hearing and the entry of an order
8within the time frames set forth in this subsection.
9    (2.3) At the permanency hearing, the court shall determine
10the permanency goal future status of the child. The court
11shall set one of the following permanency goals:
12        (A) The minor will be returned home by a specific date
13    within 5 months.
14        (B) The minor will be in short-term care with a
15    continued goal to return home within a period not to
16    exceed one year, where the progress of the parent or
17    parents is substantial giving particular consideration to
18    the age and individual needs of the minor.
19        (B-1) The minor will be in short-term care with a
20    continued goal to return home pending a status hearing.
21    When the court finds that a parent has not made reasonable
22    efforts or reasonable progress to date, the court shall
23    identify what actions the parent and the Department must
24    take in order to justify a finding of reasonable efforts
25    or reasonable progress and shall set a status hearing to
26    be held not earlier than 9 months from the date of

 

 

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1    adjudication nor later than 11 months from the date of
2    adjudication during which the parent's progress will again
3    be reviewed.
4        If the court has determined that goals (A), (B), and
5    (B-1) are not appropriate and not in the minor's best
6    interest, the court may select one of the following goals:
7    (C), (D), (E), (F), or (G) for the minor as appropriate and
8    based on the best interests of the minor. The court shall
9    determine the appropriate goal for the minor based on best
10    interest factors and any considerations outlined in that
11    goal.
12        (C) The guardianship of the minor shall be transferred
13    to an individual or couple on a permanent basis. Prior to
14    changing the goal to guardianship, the court shall
15    consider the following:
16            (i) whether the agency has discussed adoption and
17        guardianship with the caregiver and what preference,
18        if any, the caregiver has as to the permanency goal;
19            (ii) whether the agency has discussed adoption and
20        guardianship with the minor, as age-appropriate, and
21        what preference, if any, the minor has as to the
22        permanency goal;
23            (iii) whether the minor is of sufficient age to
24        remember the minor's parents and if the child values
25        this familial identity;
26            (iv) whether the minor is placed in a relative

 

 

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1        home as defined in Section 4d of the Children and
2        Family Services Act or in a certified relative
3        caregiver home as defined in Section 2.36 of the Child
4        Care Act of 1969; and
5            (v) whether the parent or parents have been
6        informed about guardianship and adoption, and, if
7        appropriate, what preferences, if any, the parent or
8        parents have as to the permanency goal.
9        (D) The minor will be in substitute care pending court
10    determination on termination of parental rights. Prior to
11    changing the goal to substitute care pending court
12    determination on termination of parental rights, the court
13    shall consider the following:
14            (i) whether the agency has discussed adoption and
15        guardianship with the caregiver and what preference,
16        if any, the caregiver has as to the permanency goal;
17            (ii) whether the agency has discussed adoption and
18        guardianship with the minor, as age-appropriate, and
19        what preference, if any, the minor has as to the
20        permanency goal;
21            (iii) whether the minor is of sufficient age to
22        remember the minor's parents and if the child values
23        this familial identity;
24            (iv) whether the minor is placed in a relative
25        home as defined in Section 4d of the Children and
26        Family Services Act, in a certified relative caregiver

 

 

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1        home as defined in Section 2.36 of the Child Care Act
2        of 1969;
3            (v) whether the minor is already placed in a
4        pre-adoptive home, and if not, whether such a home has
5        been identified; and
6            (vi) whether the parent or parents have been
7        informed about guardianship and adoption, and, if
8        appropriate, what preferences, if any, the parent or
9        parents have as to the permanency goal.
10        (E) (D) Adoption, provided that parental rights have
11    been terminated or relinquished.
12        (E) The guardianship of the minor will be transferred
13    to an individual or couple on a permanent basis provided
14    that goals (A) through (D) have been deemed inappropriate
15    and not in the child's best interests. The court shall
16    confirm that the Department has discussed adoption, if
17    appropriate, and guardianship with the caregiver prior to
18    changing a goal to guardianship.
19        (F) Provided that permanency goals (A) through (E)
20    have been deemed inappropriate and not in the minor's best
21    interests, the The minor over age 15 will be in substitute
22    care pending independence. In selecting this permanency
23    goal, the Department of Children and Family Services may
24    provide services to enable reunification and to strengthen
25    the minor's connections with family, fictive kin, and
26    other responsible adults, provided the services are in the

 

 

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1    minor's best interest. The services shall be documented in
2    the service plan.
3        (G) The minor will be in substitute care because the
4    minor cannot be provided for in a home environment due to
5    developmental disabilities or mental illness or because
6    the minor is a danger to self or others, provided that
7    goals (A) through (E) (D) have been deemed inappropriate
8    and not in the child's best interests.
9    In selecting any permanency goal, the court shall indicate
10in writing the reasons the goal was selected and why the
11preceding goals were deemed inappropriate and not in the
12child's best interest. Where the court has selected a
13permanency goal other than (A), (B), or (B-1), the Department
14of Children and Family Services shall not provide further
15reunification services, except as provided in paragraph (F) of
16this subsection (2.3) (2), but shall provide services
17consistent with the goal selected.
18        (H) Notwithstanding any other provision in this
19    Section, the court may select the goal of continuing
20    foster care as a permanency goal if:
21            (1) The Department of Children and Family Services
22        has custody and guardianship of the minor;
23            (2) The court has deemed all other permanency
24        goals inappropriate based on the child's best
25        interest;
26            (3) The court has found compelling reasons, based

 

 

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1        on written documentation reviewed by the court, to
2        place the minor in continuing foster care. Compelling
3        reasons include:
4                (a) the child does not wish to be adopted or to
5            be placed in the guardianship of the minor's
6            relative, certified relative caregiver, or foster
7            care placement;
8                (b) the child exhibits an extreme level of
9            need such that the removal of the child from the
10            minor's placement would be detrimental to the
11            child; or
12                (c) the child who is the subject of the
13            permanency hearing has existing close and strong
14            bonds with a sibling, and achievement of another
15            permanency goal would substantially interfere with
16            the subject child's sibling relationship, taking
17            into consideration the nature and extent of the
18            relationship, and whether ongoing contact is in
19            the subject child's best interest, including
20            long-term emotional interest, as compared with the
21            legal and emotional benefit of permanence;
22            (4) The child has lived with the relative,
23        certified relative caregiver, or foster parent for at
24        least one year; and
25            (5) The relative, certified relative caregiver, or
26        foster parent currently caring for the child is

 

 

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1        willing and capable of providing the child with a
2        stable and permanent environment.
3    (2.4) The court shall set a permanency goal that is in the
4best interest of the child. In determining that goal, the
5court shall consult with the minor in an age-appropriate
6manner regarding the proposed permanency or transition plan
7for the minor. The court's determination shall include the
8following factors:
9        (A) (1) Age of the child.
10        (B) (2) Options available for permanence, including
11    both out-of-state and in-state placement options.
12        (C) (3) Current placement of the child and the intent
13    of the family regarding subsidized guardianship and
14    adoption.
15        (D) (4) Emotional, physical, and mental status or
16    condition of the child.
17        (E) (5) Types of services previously offered and
18    whether or not the services were successful and, if not
19    successful, the reasons the services failed.
20        (F) (6) Availability of services currently needed and
21    whether the services exist.
22        (G) (7) Status of siblings of the minor.
23        (H) If the minor is not currently in a placement
24    likely to achieve permanency, whether there is an
25    identified and willing potential permanent caregiver for
26    the minor, and if so, that potential permanent caregiver's

 

 

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1    intent regarding guardianship and adoption.
2    The court shall consider (i) the permanency goal contained
3in the service plan, (ii) the appropriateness of the services
4contained in the plan and whether those services have been
5provided, (iii) whether reasonable efforts have been made by
6all the parties to the service plan to achieve the goal, and
7(iv) whether the plan and goal have been achieved. All
8evidence relevant to determining these questions, including
9oral and written reports, may be admitted and may be relied on
10to the extent of their probative value.
11    The court shall make findings as to whether, in violation
12of Section 8.2 of the Abused and Neglected Child Reporting
13Act, any portion of the service plan compels a child or parent
14to engage in any activity or refrain from any activity that is
15not reasonably related to remedying a condition or conditions
16that gave rise or which could give rise to any finding of child
17abuse or neglect. The services contained in the service plan
18shall include services reasonably related to remedy the
19conditions that gave rise to removal of the child from the home
20of the child's parents, guardian, or legal custodian or that
21the court has found must be remedied prior to returning the
22child home. Any tasks the court requires of the parents,
23guardian, or legal custodian or child prior to returning the
24child home must be reasonably related to remedying a condition
25or conditions that gave rise to or which could give rise to any
26finding of child abuse or neglect.

 

 

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1    If the permanency goal is to return home, the court shall
2make findings that identify any problems that are causing
3continued placement of the children away from the home and
4identify what outcomes would be considered a resolution to
5these problems. The court shall explain to the parents that
6these findings are based on the information that the court has
7at that time and may be revised, should additional evidence be
8presented to the court.
9    The court shall review the Sibling Contact Support Plan
10developed or modified under subsection (f) of Section 7.4 of
11the Children and Family Services Act, if applicable. If the
12Department has not convened a meeting to develop or modify a
13Sibling Contact Support Plan, or if the court finds that the
14existing Plan is not in the child's best interest, the court
15may enter an order requiring the Department to develop,
16modify, or implement a Sibling Contact Support Plan, or order
17mediation.
18    Beginning July 1, 2025, the court shall review the Ongoing
19Family Finding and Relative Engagement Plan required under
20Section 2-27.3. If the court finds that the plan is not in the
21minor's best interest, the court shall enter specific factual
22findings and order the Department to modify the plan
23consistent with the court's findings.
24    If the goal has been achieved, the court shall enter
25orders that are necessary to conform the minor's legal custody
26and status to those findings.

 

 

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1    If, after receiving evidence, the court determines that
2the services contained in the plan are not reasonably
3calculated to facilitate achievement of the permanency goal,
4the court shall put in writing the factual basis supporting
5the determination and enter specific findings based on the
6evidence. The court also shall enter an order for the
7Department to develop and implement a new service plan or to
8implement changes to the current service plan consistent with
9the court's findings. The new service plan shall be filed with
10the court and served on all parties within 45 days of the date
11of the order. The court shall continue the matter until the new
12service plan is filed. Except as authorized by subsection
13(2.5) of this Section and as otherwise specifically authorized
14by law, the court is not empowered under this Section to order
15specific placements, specific services, or specific service
16providers to be included in the service plan.
17    A guardian or custodian appointed by the court pursuant to
18this Act shall file updated case plans with the court every 6
19months.
20    Rights of wards of the court under this Act are
21enforceable against any public agency by complaints for relief
22by mandamus filed in any proceedings brought under this Act.
23    (2.5) If, after reviewing the evidence, including evidence
24from the Department, the court determines that the minor's
25current or planned placement is not necessary or appropriate
26to facilitate achievement of the permanency goal, the court

 

 

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1shall put in writing the factual basis supporting its
2determination and enter specific findings based on the
3evidence. If the court finds that the minor's current or
4planned placement is not necessary or appropriate, the court
5may enter an order directing the Department to implement a
6recommendation by the minor's treating clinician or a
7clinician contracted by the Department to evaluate the minor
8or a recommendation made by the Department. If the Department
9places a minor in a placement under an order entered under this
10subsection (2.5), the Department has the authority to remove
11the minor from that placement when a change in circumstances
12necessitates the removal to protect the minor's health,
13safety, and best interest. If the Department determines
14removal is necessary, the Department shall notify the parties
15of the planned placement change in writing no later than 10
16days prior to the implementation of its determination unless
17remaining in the placement poses an imminent risk of harm to
18the minor, in which case the Department shall notify the
19parties of the placement change in writing immediately
20following the implementation of its decision. The Department
21shall notify others of the decision to change the minor's
22placement as required by Department rule.
23    (3) Following the permanency hearing, the court shall
24enter a written order that includes the determinations
25required under subsections subsection (2) and (2.3) of this
26Section and sets forth the following:

 

 

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1        (a) The future status of the minor, including the
2    permanency goal, and any order necessary to conform the
3    minor's legal custody and status to such determination; or
4        (b) If the permanency goal of the minor cannot be
5    achieved immediately, the specific reasons for continuing
6    the minor in the care of the Department of Children and
7    Family Services or other agency for short-term placement,
8    and the following determinations:
9            (i) (Blank).
10            (ii) Whether the services required by the court
11        and by any service plan prepared within the prior 6
12        months have been provided and (A) if so, whether the
13        services were reasonably calculated to facilitate the
14        achievement of the permanency goal or (B) if not
15        provided, why the services were not provided.
16            (iii) Whether the minor's current or planned
17        placement is necessary, and appropriate to the plan
18        and goal, recognizing the right of minors to the least
19        restrictive (most family-like) setting available and
20        in close proximity to the parents' home consistent
21        with the health, safety, best interest, and special
22        needs of the minor and, if the minor is placed
23        out-of-state, whether the out-of-state placement
24        continues to be appropriate and consistent with the
25        health, safety, and best interest of the minor.
26            (iv) (Blank).

 

 

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1            (v) (Blank).
2    (4) The minor or any person interested in the minor may
3apply to the court for a change in custody of the minor and the
4appointment of a new custodian or guardian of the person or for
5the restoration of the minor to the custody of the minor's
6parents or former guardian or custodian.
7    When return home is not selected as the permanency goal:
8        (a) The Department, the minor, or the current foster
9    parent or relative caregiver seeking private guardianship
10    may file a motion for private guardianship of the minor.
11    Appointment of a guardian under this Section requires
12    approval of the court.
13        (b) The State's Attorney may file a motion to
14    terminate parental rights of any parent who has failed to
15    make reasonable efforts to correct the conditions which
16    led to the removal of the child or reasonable progress
17    toward the return of the child, as defined in subdivision
18    (D)(m) of Section 1 of the Adoption Act or for whom any
19    other unfitness ground for terminating parental rights as
20    defined in subdivision (D) of Section 1 of the Adoption
21    Act exists.
22        When parental rights have been terminated for a
23    minimum of 3 years and the child who is the subject of the
24    permanency hearing is 13 years old or older and is not
25    currently placed in a placement likely to achieve
26    permanency, the Department of Children and Family Services

 

 

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1    shall make reasonable efforts to locate parents whose
2    rights have been terminated, except when the Court
3    determines that those efforts would be futile or
4    inconsistent with the subject child's best interests. The
5    Department of Children and Family Services shall assess
6    the appropriateness of the parent whose rights have been
7    terminated, and shall, as appropriate, foster and support
8    connections between the parent whose rights have been
9    terminated and the youth. The Department of Children and
10    Family Services shall document its determinations and
11    efforts to foster connections in the child's case plan.
12    Custody of the minor shall not be restored to any parent,
13guardian, or legal custodian in any case in which the minor is
14found to be neglected or abused under Section 2-3 or dependent
15under Section 2-4 of this Act, unless the minor can be cared
16for at home without endangering the minor's health or safety
17and it is in the best interest of the minor, and if such
18neglect, abuse, or dependency is found by the court under
19paragraph (1) of Section 2-21 of this Act to have come about
20due to the acts or omissions or both of such parent, guardian,
21or legal custodian, until such time as an investigation is
22made as provided in paragraph (5) and a hearing is held on the
23issue of the health, safety, and best interest of the minor and
24the fitness of such parent, guardian, or legal custodian to
25care for the minor and the court enters an order that such
26parent, guardian, or legal custodian is fit to care for the

 

 

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1minor. If a motion is filed to modify or vacate a private
2guardianship order and return the child to a parent, guardian,
3or legal custodian, the court may order the Department of
4Children and Family Services to assess the minor's current and
5proposed living arrangements and to provide ongoing monitoring
6of the health, safety, and best interest of the minor during
7the pendency of the motion to assist the court in making that
8determination. In the event that the minor has attained 18
9years of age and the guardian or custodian petitions the court
10for an order terminating the minor's guardianship or custody,
11guardianship or custody shall terminate automatically 30 days
12after the receipt of the petition unless the court orders
13otherwise. No legal custodian or guardian of the person may be
14removed without the legal custodian's or guardian's consent
15until given notice and an opportunity to be heard by the court.
16    When the court orders a child restored to the custody of
17the parent or parents, the court shall order the parent or
18parents to cooperate with the Department of Children and
19Family Services and comply with the terms of an after-care
20plan, or risk the loss of custody of the child and possible
21termination of their parental rights. The court may also enter
22an order of protective supervision in accordance with Section
232-24.
24    If the minor is being restored to the custody of a parent,
25legal custodian, or guardian who lives outside of Illinois,
26and an Interstate Compact has been requested and refused, the

 

 

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1court may order the Department of Children and Family Services
2to arrange for an assessment of the minor's proposed living
3arrangement and for ongoing monitoring of the health, safety,
4and best interest of the minor and compliance with any order of
5protective supervision entered in accordance with Section
62-24.
7    (5) Whenever a parent, guardian, or legal custodian files
8a motion for restoration of custody of the minor, and the minor
9was adjudicated neglected, abused, or dependent as a result of
10physical abuse, the court shall cause to be made an
11investigation as to whether the movant has ever been charged
12with or convicted of any criminal offense which would indicate
13the likelihood of any further physical abuse to the minor.
14Evidence of such criminal convictions shall be taken into
15account in determining whether the minor can be cared for at
16home without endangering the minor's health or safety and
17fitness of the parent, guardian, or legal custodian.
18        (a) Any agency of this State or any subdivision
19    thereof shall cooperate with the agent of the court in
20    providing any information sought in the investigation.
21        (b) The information derived from the investigation and
22    any conclusions or recommendations derived from the
23    information shall be provided to the parent, guardian, or
24    legal custodian seeking restoration of custody prior to
25    the hearing on fitness and the movant shall have an
26    opportunity at the hearing to refute the information or

 

 

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1    contest its significance.
2        (c) All information obtained from any investigation
3    shall be confidential as provided in Section 5-150 of this
4    Act.
5(Source: P.A. 102-193, eff. 7-30-21; 102-489, eff. 8-20-21;
6102-813, eff. 5-13-22; 103-22, eff. 8-8-23; 103-154, eff.
76-30-23; 103-171, eff. 1-1-24; revised 12-15-23.)
 
8    (705 ILCS 405/2-28.1)
9    Sec. 2-28.1. Permanency hearings; before hearing officers.
10    (a) The chief judge of the circuit court may appoint
11hearing officers to conduct the permanency hearings set forth
12in subsections (2), (2.3), and (2.4) subsection (2) of Section
132-28, in accordance with the provisions of this Section. The
14hearing officers shall be attorneys with at least 3 years
15experience in child abuse and neglect or permanency planning
16and in counties with a population of 3,000,000 or more, any
17hearing officer appointed after September 1, 1997, must be an
18attorney admitted to practice for at least 7 years. Once
19trained by the court, hearing officers shall be authorized to
20do the following:
21        (1) Conduct a fair and impartial hearing.
22        (2) Summon and compel the attendance of witnesses.
23        (3) Administer the oath or affirmation and take
24    testimony under oath or affirmation.
25        (4) Require the production of evidence relevant to the

 

 

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1    permanency hearing to be conducted. That evidence may
2    include, but need not be limited to case plans, social
3    histories, medical and psychological evaluations, child
4    placement histories, visitation records, and other
5    documents and writings applicable to those items.
6        (5) Rule on the admissibility of evidence using the
7    standard applied at a dispositional hearing under Section
8    2-22 of this Act.
9        (6) When necessary, cause notices to be issued
10    requiring parties, the public agency that is custodian or
11    guardian of the minor, or another agency responsible for
12    the minor's care to appear either before the hearing
13    officer or in court.
14        (7) Analyze the evidence presented to the hearing
15    officer and prepare written recommended orders, including
16    findings of fact, based on the evidence.
17        (8) Prior to the hearing, conduct any pre-hearings
18    that may be necessary.
19        (9) Conduct in camera interviews with children when
20    requested by a child or the child's guardian ad litem.
21In counties with a population of 3,000,000 or more, hearing
22officers shall also be authorized to do the following:
23        (i) Accept specific consents for adoption or
24    surrenders of parental rights from a parent or parents.
25        (ii) Conduct hearings on the progress made toward the
26    permanency goal set for the minor.

 

 

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1        (iii) Perform other duties as assigned by the court.
2    (b) The hearing officer shall consider evidence and
3conduct the permanency hearings as set forth in subsections
4(2), (2.3), (2.4), and (3) (2) and (3) of Section 2-28 in
5accordance with the standards set forth therein. The hearing
6officer shall assure that a verbatim record of the proceedings
7is made and retained for a period of 12 months or until the
8next permanency hearing, whichever date is later, and shall
9direct to the clerk of the court all documents and evidence to
10be made part of the court file. The hearing officer shall
11inform the participants of their individual rights and
12responsibilities. The hearing officer shall identify the
13issues to be reviewed under subsections (2), (2.3), and (2.4)
14subsection (2) of Section 2-28, consider all relevant facts,
15and receive or request any additional information necessary to
16make recommendations to the court.
17    If a party fails to appear at the hearing, the hearing
18officer may proceed to the permanency hearing with the parties
19present at the hearing. The hearing officer shall specifically
20note for the court the absence of any parties. If all parties
21are present at the permanency hearing, and the parties and the
22Department are in agreement that the service plan and
23permanency goal are appropriate or are in agreement that the
24permanency goal for the child has been achieved, the hearing
25officer shall prepare a recommended order, including findings
26of fact, to be submitted to the court, and all parties and the

 

 

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1Department shall sign the recommended order at the time of the
2hearing. The recommended order will then be submitted to the
3court for its immediate consideration and the entry of an
4appropriate order.
5    The court may enter an order consistent with the
6recommended order without further hearing or notice to the
7parties, may refer the matter to the hearing officer for
8further proceedings, or may hold such additional hearings as
9the court deems necessary. All parties present at the hearing
10and the Department shall be tendered a copy of the court's
11order at the conclusion of the hearing.
12    (c) If one or more parties are not present at the
13permanency hearing, or any party or the Department of Children
14and Family Services objects to the hearing officer's
15recommended order, including any findings of fact, the hearing
16officer shall set the matter for a judicial determination
17within 30 days of the permanency hearing for the entry of the
18recommended order or for receipt of the parties' objections.
19Any objections shall be in writing and identify the specific
20findings or recommendations that are contested, the basis for
21the objections, and the evidence or applicable law supporting
22the objection. The recommended order and its contents may not
23be disclosed to anyone other than the parties and the
24Department or other agency unless otherwise specifically
25ordered by a judge of the court.
26    Following the receipt of objections consistent with this

 

 

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1subsection from any party or the Department of Children and
2Family Services to the hearing officer's recommended orders,
3the court shall make a judicial determination of those
4portions of the order to which objections were made, and shall
5enter an appropriate order. The court may refuse to review any
6objections that fail to meet the requirements of this
7subsection.
8    (d) The following are judicial functions and shall be
9performed only by a circuit judge or associate judge:
10        (1) Review of the recommended orders of the hearing
11    officer and entry of orders the court deems appropriate.
12        (2) Conduct of judicial hearings on all pre-hearing
13    motions and other matters that require a court order and
14    entry of orders as the court deems appropriate.
15        (3) Conduct of judicial determinations on all matters
16    in which the parties or the Department of Children and
17    Family Services disagree with the hearing officer's
18    recommended orders under subsection (3).
19        (4) Issuance of rules to show cause, conduct of
20    contempt proceedings, and imposition of appropriate
21    sanctions or relief.
22(Source: P.A. 89-17, eff. 5-31-95; 90-27, eff. 1-1-98; 90-28,
23eff. 1-1-98; 90-87, eff. 9-1-97; 90-608, eff. 6-30-98; 90-655,
24eff. 7-30-98.)
 
25    (705 ILCS 405/5-745)

 

 

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1    Sec. 5-745. Court review.
2    (1) The court may require any legal custodian or guardian
3of the person appointed under this Act, including the
4Department of Juvenile Justice for youth committed under
5Section 5-750 of this Act, to report periodically to the court
6or may cite the legal custodian or guardian into court and
7require the legal custodian or guardian, or the legal
8custodian's or guardian's agency, to make a full and accurate
9report of the doings of the legal custodian, guardian, or
10agency on behalf of the minor, including efforts to secure
11post-release placement of the youth after release from the
12Department's facilities. The legal custodian or guardian,
13within 10 days after the citation, shall make the report,
14either in writing verified by affidavit or orally under oath
15in open court, or otherwise as the court directs. Upon the
16hearing of the report the court may remove the legal custodian
17or guardian and appoint another in the legal custodian's or
18guardian's stead or restore the minor to the custody of the
19minor's parents or former guardian or legal custodian.
20    (2) If the Department of Children and Family Services is
21appointed legal custodian or guardian of a minor under Section
225-740 of this Act, the Department of Children and Family
23Services shall file updated case plans with the court every 6
24months. Every agency which has guardianship of a child shall
25file a supplemental petition for court review, or review by an
26administrative body appointed or approved by the court and

 

 

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1further order within 18 months of the sentencing order and
2each 18 months thereafter. The petition shall state facts
3relative to the child's present condition of physical, mental
4and emotional health as well as facts relative to the minor's
5present custodial or foster care. The petition shall be set
6for hearing and the clerk shall mail 10 days notice of the
7hearing by certified mail, return receipt requested, to the
8person or agency having the physical custody of the child, the
9minor and other interested parties unless a written waiver of
10notice is filed with the petition.
11    If the minor is in the custody of the Illinois Department
12of Children and Family Services, pursuant to an order entered
13under this Article, the court shall conduct permanency
14hearings as set out in subsections (1), (2), (2.3), (2.4), and
15(3) of Section 2-28 of Article II of this Act.
16    Rights of wards of the court under this Act are
17enforceable against any public agency by complaints for relief
18by mandamus filed in any proceedings brought under this Act.
19    (3) The minor or any person interested in the minor may
20apply to the court for a change in custody of the minor and the
21appointment of a new custodian or guardian of the person or for
22the restoration of the minor to the custody of the minor's
23parents or former guardian or custodian. In the event that the
24minor has attained 18 years of age and the guardian or
25custodian petitions the court for an order terminating the
26minor's guardianship or custody, guardianship or legal custody

 

 

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1shall terminate automatically 30 days after the receipt of the
2petition unless the court orders otherwise. No legal custodian
3or guardian of the person may be removed without the legal
4custodian's or guardian's consent until given notice and an
5opportunity to be heard by the court.
6    (4) If the minor is committed to the Department of
7Juvenile Justice under Section 5-750 of this Act, the
8Department shall notify the court in writing of the occurrence
9of any of the following:
10        (a) a critical incident involving a youth committed to
11    the Department; as used in this paragraph (a), "critical
12    incident" means any incident that involves a serious risk
13    to the life, health, or well-being of the youth and
14    includes, but is not limited to, an accident or suicide
15    attempt resulting in serious bodily harm or
16    hospitalization, psychiatric hospitalization, alleged or
17    suspected abuse, or escape or attempted escape from
18    custody, filed within 10 days of the occurrence;
19        (b) a youth who has been released by the Prisoner
20    Review Board but remains in a Department facility solely
21    because the youth does not have an approved aftercare
22    release host site, filed within 10 days of the occurrence;
23        (c) a youth, except a youth who has been adjudicated a
24    habitual or violent juvenile offender under Section 5-815
25    or 5-820 of this Act or committed for first degree murder,
26    who has been held in a Department facility for over one

 

 

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1    consecutive year; or
2        (d) if a report has been filed under paragraph (c) of
3    this subsection, a supplemental report shall be filed
4    every 6 months thereafter.
5The notification required by this subsection (4) shall contain
6a brief description of the incident or situation and a summary
7of the youth's current physical, mental, and emotional health
8and the actions the Department took in response to the
9incident or to identify an aftercare release host site, as
10applicable. Upon receipt of the notification, the court may
11require the Department to make a full report under subsection
12(1) of this Section.
13    (5) With respect to any report required to be filed with
14the court under this Section, the Independent Juvenile
15Ombudsperson shall provide a copy to the minor's court
16appointed guardian ad litem, if the Department has received
17written notice of the appointment, and to the minor's
18attorney, if the Department has received written notice of
19representation from the attorney. If the Department has a
20record that a guardian has been appointed for the minor and a
21record of the last known address of the minor's court
22appointed guardian, the Independent Juvenile Ombudsperson
23shall send a notice to the guardian that the report is
24available and will be provided by the Independent Juvenile
25Ombudsperson upon request. If the Department has no record
26regarding the appointment of a guardian for the minor, and the

 

 

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1Department's records include the last known addresses of the
2minor's parents, the Independent Juvenile Ombudsperson shall
3send a notice to the parents that the report is available and
4will be provided by the Independent Juvenile Ombudsperson upon
5request.
6(Source: P.A. 103-22, eff. 8-8-23.)
 
7    Section 20. The Adoption Act is amended by changing
8Sections 4.1 and 15.1 as follows:
 
9    (750 ILCS 50/4.1)  (from Ch. 40, par. 1506)
10    Sec. 4.1. Adoption between multiple jurisdictions. It is
11the public policy of this State to promote child welfare in
12adoption between multiple jurisdictions by implementing
13standards that foster permanency for children in an
14expeditious manner while considering the best interests of the
15child as paramount. Ensuring that standards for
16interjurisdictional adoption are clear and applied
17consistently, efficiently, and reasonably will promote the
18best interests of the child in finding a permanent home.
19    (a) The Department of Children and Family Services shall
20promulgate rules regarding the approval and regulation of
21agencies providing, in this State, adoption services, as
22defined in Section 2.24 of the Child Care Act of 1969, which
23shall include, but not be limited to, a requirement that any
24agency shall be licensed in this State as a child welfare

 

 

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1agency as defined in Section 2.08 of the Child Care Act of
21969. Any out-of-state agency, if not licensed in this State
3as a child welfare agency, must obtain the approval of the
4Department in order to act as a sending agency, as defined in
5Section 1 of the Interstate Compact on Placement of Children
6Act, seeking to place a child into this State through a
7placement subject to the Interstate Compact on the Placement
8of Children. An out-of-state agency, if not licensed in this
9State as a child welfare agency, is prohibited from providing
10in this State adoption services, as defined by Section 2.24 of
11the Child Care Act of 1969; shall comply with Section 12C-70 of
12the Criminal Code of 2012; and shall provide all of the
13following to the Department:
14        (1) A copy of the agency's current license or other
15    form of authorization from the approving authority in the
16    agency's state. If no license or authorization is issued,
17    the agency must provide a reference statement, from the
18    approving authority, stating that the agency is authorized
19    to place children in foster care or adoption or both in its
20    jurisdiction.
21        (2) A description of the program, including home
22    studies, placements, and supervisions, that the child
23    welfare agency conducts within its geographical area, and,
24    if applicable, adoptive placements and the finalization of
25    adoptions. The child welfare agency must accept continued
26    responsibility for placement planning and replacement if

 

 

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1    the placement fails.
2        (3) Notification to the Department of any significant
3    child welfare agency changes after approval.
4        (4) Any other information the Department may require.
5    The rules shall also provide that any agency that places
6children for adoption in this State may not, in any policy or
7practice relating to the placement of children for adoption,
8discriminate against any child or prospective adoptive parent
9on the basis of race.
10    (a-5) (Blank).
11    (b) Interstate adoptions.
12        (1) All interstate adoption placements under this Act
13    shall comply with the Child Care Act of 1969 and the
14    Interstate Compact on the Placement of Children. The
15    placement of children with relatives by the Department of
16    Children and Family Services shall also comply with
17    subsections (b) and (b-5) subsection (b) of Section 7 of
18    the Children and Family Services Act. The Department may
19    promulgate rules to implement interstate adoption
20    placements, including those requirements set forth in this
21    Section.
22        (2) If an adoption is finalized prior to bringing or
23    sending a child to this State, compliance with the
24    Interstate Compact on the Placement of Children is not
25    required.
26        (3) Approval requirements. The Department shall

 

 

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1    promulgate procedures for interstate adoption placements
2    of children under this Act. No later than September 24,
3    2017 (30 days after the effective date of Public Act
4    100-344), the Department shall distribute a written list
5    of all preadoption approval requirements to all Illinois
6    licensed child welfare agencies performing adoption
7    services, and all out-of-state agencies approved under
8    this Section, and shall post the requirements on the
9    Department's website. The Department may not require any
10    further preadoption requirements other than those set
11    forth in the procedures required under this paragraph. The
12    procedures shall reflect the standard of review as stated
13    in the Interstate Compact on the Placement of Children and
14    approval shall be given by the Department if the placement
15    appears not to be contrary to the best interests of the
16    child.
17        (4) Time for review and decision. In all cases where
18    the child to be placed is not a youth in care in Illinois
19    or any other state, a provisional or final approval for
20    placement shall be provided in writing from the Department
21    in accordance with the Interstate Compact on the Placement
22    of Children. Approval or denial of the placement must be
23    given by the Department as soon as practicable, but in no
24    event more than 3 business days of the receipt of the
25    completed referral packet by the Department's Interstate
26    Compact Administrator. Receipt of the packet shall be

 

 

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1    evidenced by the packet's arrival at the address
2    designated by the Department to receive such referrals.
3    The written decision to approve or deny the placement
4    shall be communicated in an expeditious manner, including,
5    but not limited to, electronic means referenced in
6    paragraph (b)(7) of this Section, and shall be provided to
7    all Illinois licensed child welfare agencies involved in
8    the placement, all out-of-state child placing agencies
9    involved in the placement, and all attorneys representing
10    the prospective adoptive parent or biological parent. If,
11    during its initial review of the packet, the Department
12    believes there are any incomplete or missing documents, or
13    missing information, as required in paragraph (b)(3), the
14    Department shall, as soon as practicable, but in no event
15    more than 2 business days of receipt of the packet,
16    communicate a list of any incomplete or missing documents
17    and information to all Illinois licensed child welfare
18    agencies involved in the placement, all out-of-state child
19    placing agencies involved in the placement, and all
20    attorneys representing the adoptive parent or biological
21    parent. This list shall be communicated in an expeditious
22    manner, including, but not limited to, electronic means
23    referenced in paragraph (b)(7) of this Section.
24        (5) Denial of approval. In all cases where the child
25    to be placed is not a youth in the care of any state, if
26    the Department denies approval of an interstate placement,

 

 

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1    the written decision referenced in paragraph (b)(4) of
2    this Section shall set forth the reason or reasons why the
3    placement was not approved and shall reference which
4    requirements under paragraph (b)(3) of this Section were
5    not met. The written decision shall be communicated in an
6    expeditious manner, including, but not limited to,
7    electronic means referenced in paragraph (b)(7) of this
8    Section, to all Illinois licensed child welfare agencies
9    involved in the placement, all out-of-state child placing
10    agencies involved in the placement, and all attorneys
11    representing the prospective adoptive parent or biological
12    parent.
13        (6) Provisional approval. Nothing in paragraphs (b)(3)
14    through (b)(5) of this Section shall preclude the
15    Department from issuing provisional approval of the
16    placement pending receipt of any missing or incomplete
17    documents or information.
18        (7) Electronic communication. All communications
19    concerning an interstate placement made between the
20    Department and an Illinois licensed child welfare agency,
21    an out-of-state child placing agency, and attorneys
22    representing the prospective adoptive parent or biological
23    parent, including the written communications referenced in
24    this Section, may be made through any type of electronic
25    means, including, but not limited to, electronic mail.
26    (c) Intercountry adoptions. The adoption of a child, if

 

 

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1the child is a habitual resident of a country other than the
2United States and the petitioner is a habitual resident of the
3United States, or, if the child is a habitual resident of the
4United States and the petitioner is a habitual resident of a
5country other than the United States, shall comply with the
6Intercountry Adoption Act of 2000, as amended, and the
7Immigration and Nationality Act, as amended. In the case of an
8intercountry adoption that requires oversight by the adoption
9services governed by the Intercountry Adoption Universal
10Accreditation Act of 2012, this State shall not impose any
11additional preadoption requirements.
12    (d) (Blank).
13    (e) Re-adoption after an intercountry adoption.
14        (1) Any time after a minor child has been adopted in a
15    foreign country and has immigrated to the United States,
16    the adoptive parent or parents of the child may petition
17    the court for a judgment of adoption to re-adopt the child
18    and confirm the foreign adoption decree.
19        (2) The petitioner must submit to the court one or
20    more of the following to verify the foreign adoption:
21            (i) an immigrant visa for the child issued by
22        United States Citizenship and Immigration Services of
23        the U.S. Department of Homeland Security that was
24        valid at the time of the child's immigration;
25            (ii) a decree, judgment, certificate of adoption,
26        adoption registration, or equivalent court order,

 

 

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1        entered or issued by a court of competent jurisdiction
2        or administrative body outside the United States,
3        establishing the relationship of parent and child by
4        adoption; or
5            (iii) such other evidence deemed satisfactory by
6        the court.
7        (3) The child's immigrant visa shall be prima facie
8    proof that the adoption was established in accordance with
9    the laws of the foreign jurisdiction and met United States
10    requirements for immigration.
11        (4) If the petitioner submits documentation that
12    satisfies the requirements of paragraph (2), the court
13    shall not appoint a guardian ad litem for the minor who is
14    the subject of the proceeding, shall not require any
15    further termination of parental rights of the child's
16    biological parents, nor shall it require any home study,
17    investigation, post-placement visit, or background check
18    of the petitioner.
19        (5) The petition may include a request for change of
20    the child's name and any other request for specific relief
21    that is in the best interests of the child. The relief may
22    include a request for a revised birth date for the child if
23    supported by evidence from a medical or dental
24    professional attesting to the appropriate age of the child
25    or other collateral evidence.
26        (6) Two adoptive parents who adopted a minor child

 

 

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1    together in a foreign country while married to one another
2    may file a petition for adoption to re-adopt the child
3    jointly, regardless of whether their marriage has been
4    dissolved. If either parent whose marriage was dissolved
5    has subsequently remarried or entered into a civil union
6    with another person, the new spouse or civil union partner
7    shall not join in the petition to re-adopt the child,
8    unless the new spouse or civil union partner is seeking to
9    adopt the child. If either adoptive parent does not join
10    in the petition, he or she must be joined as a party
11    defendant. The defendant parent's failure to participate
12    in the re-adoption proceeding shall not affect the
13    existing parental rights or obligations of the parent as
14    they relate to the minor child, and the parent's name
15    shall be placed on any subsequent birth record issued for
16    the child as a result of the re-adoption proceeding.
17        (7) An adoptive parent who adopted a minor child in a
18    foreign country as an unmarried person may file a petition
19    for adoption to re-adopt the child as a sole petitioner,
20    even if the adoptive parent has subsequently married or
21    entered into a civil union.
22        (8) If one of the adoptive parents who adopted a minor
23    child dies prior to a re-adoption proceeding, the deceased
24    parent's name shall be placed on any subsequent birth
25    record issued for the child as a result of the re-adoption
26    proceeding.

 

 

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1(Source: P.A. 103-501, eff. 1-1-24.)
 
2    (750 ILCS 50/15.1)  (from Ch. 40, par. 1519.1)
3    Sec. 15.1. (a) Any person over the age of 18, who has cared
4for a child for a continuous period of one year or more as a
5foster parent licensed under the Child Care Act of 1969 to
6operate a foster family home, as a certified relative
7caregiver as defined in Section 2.37 of the Child Care Act of
81969, or as a relative caregiver as defined in Section 4d of
9the Children and Family Services Act, may apply to the child's
10guardian with the power to consent to adoption, for such
11guardian's consent.
12    (b) Such guardian shall give preference and first
13consideration to that application over all other applications
14for adoption of the child but the guardian's final decision
15shall be based on the welfare and best interest of the child.
16In arriving at this decision, the guardian shall consider all
17relevant factors including but not limited to:
18        (1) the wishes of the child;
19        (2) the interaction and interrelationship of the child
20    with the applicant to adopt the child;
21        (3) the child's need for stability and continuity of
22    relationship with parent figures;
23        (4) the wishes of the child's parent as expressed in
24    writing prior to that parent's execution of a consent or
25    surrender for adoption;

 

 

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1        (5) the child's adjustment to the child's his present
2    home, school and community;
3        (6) the mental and physical health of all individuals
4    involved;
5        (7) the family ties between the child and the
6    applicant to adopt the child and the value of preserving
7    family ties between the child and the child's relatives,
8    including siblings;
9        (8) the background, age and living arrangements of the
10    applicant to adopt the child;
11        (9) the criminal background check report presented to
12    the court as part of the investigation required under
13    Section 6 of this Act.
14    (c) The final determination of the propriety of the
15adoption shall be within the sole discretion of the court,
16which shall base its decision on the welfare and best interest
17of the child. In arriving at this decision, the court shall
18consider all relevant factors including but not limited to the
19factors in subsection (b).
20    (d) If the court specifically finds that the guardian has
21abused the guardian's his discretion by withholding consent to
22an adoption in violation of the child's welfare and best
23interests, then the court may grant an adoption, after all of
24the other provisions of this Act have been complied with, with
25or without the consent of the guardian with power to consent to
26adoption. If the court specifically finds that the guardian

 

 

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1has abused the guardian's his discretion by granting consent
2to an adoption in violation of the child's welfare and best
3interests, then the court may deny an adoption even though the
4guardian with power to consent to adoption has consented to
5it.
6(Source: P.A. 90-608, eff. 6-30-98.)
 
7    Section 99. Effective date.
8    (a) This Section and the amendatory changes made by this
9Act to Sections 1-3, 1-5, 2-13, 2-21, 2-22, 2-27, 2-28,
102-28.1, and 5-745 of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987 take effect
11upon becoming law.
12    (b) The amendatory changes made by this Act to the
13following take effect on January 1, 2025:
14        (1) The Child Care Act of 1969.
15        (2) The Adoption Act.
16        (3) The Children and Family Services Act.
17    (c) The amendatory changes made by this Act to Sections
182-10, 2-23, and 2-27.3 of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987 take
19effect on July 1, 2025.