Public Act 098-0718
 
HB4336 EnrolledLRB098 16126 NHT 51183 b

    AN ACT concerning education.
 
    Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
represented in the General Assembly:
 
    Section 5. The Personnel Code is amended by changing
Section 8c as follows:
 
    (20 ILCS 415/8c)  (from Ch. 127, par. 63b108c)
    Sec. 8c. Jurisdiction C; conditions of employment. For
positions in the State service subject to the jurisdiction of
the Department of Central Management Services with respect to
conditions of employment:
    (1) For establishment of a plan for resolving employee
grievances and complaints, excluding compulsory arbitration.
    (2) For hours of work, holidays, and attendance regulation
in the various classes of positions in the State service; for
annual, sick and special leaves of absence, with or without pay
or with reduced pay; for compensatory time off for overtime or
for pay for overtime, and for the rate at which compensatory
time off is to be allowed or for the rate which is to be paid
for overtime. If the services of an employee in the State
service are terminated by reason of his retirement, disability
or death, he, or his estate, as the case may be, shall be paid a
lump sum, for the number of days for leave for personal
business which the employee had accumulated but not used as of
the date his services were terminated, in an amount equal to
1/2 of his pay per working day times the number of such leave
days so accumulated and not used.
    (3) For the development and operation of programs to
improve the work effectiveness and morale of employees in the
State service, including training, safety, health, welfare,
counseling, recreation, employee relations, a suggestion
system, and others.
    Employees whose tuition and fees are paid by the State,
either directly or by reimbursement, shall incur a work
commitment to the State. Employees whose State paid training
has not led to a postsecondary degree shall be obligated to
continue in the employ of the State, but not necessarily in the
same agency, for a period of at least 18 months following
completion of the most recent course. Employees whose State
paid training has led to a postsecondary degree and whose State
payments have paid for 50% or more of the required credit hours
shall be obligated to continue in the employ of the State, but
not necessarily in the same agency, for a minimum of 4 years
after receiving the degree.
    If the employee does not fulfill this work commitment by
voluntarily leaving State employment, the State may recover
payments in a civil action and may also recover interest at the
rate of 1% per month from the time the State makes payment
until the time the State recovers the payment. The amount the
State may recover under this subsection (3) shall be reduced by
25% of the gross amount paid by the State for each year the
employee is employed by the State after the employee receives a
postsecondary degree, and 1/18th of the gross amount paid by
the State for each month the employee is employed by the State
after the employee completes the most recent course which has
not led to a postsecondary degree.
    The State shall not recover payments for course work or a
training program that was (a) started before the effective date
of this Act; (b) completed as a requirement for a grammar
school certificate or a high school diploma, to prepare for
high school equivalency testing, a high school level General
Educational Development Test or to improve literacy or
numeracy; (c) specialized training in the form of a conference,
seminar, workshop, or similar arrangement offered by public or
private organizations; (d) provided as part of the Upward
Mobility Program administered by the Department of Central
Management Services; or (e) a condition of continued
employment.
    Department of State Police employees who are enrolled in an
official training program that lasts longer than one year shall
incur a work commitment to the State. The work commitment shall
be 2 months for each month of completed training. If the
employee fails to fulfill this work commitment by voluntarily
leaving State employment, the State may recover wages in a
civil action and may also recover interest at the rate of 1%
per month from the time the State makes payment until the time
the State recovers the payment. The amount the State may
recover under this subsection (3) shall be reduced by the
number of months served after the training is completed times
the monthly salary at the time of separation.
    The Department of Central Management Services shall
promulgate rules governing recovery activities to be used by
all State agencies paying, whether directly or by
reimbursement, for employee tuition and fees. Each such agency
shall make necessary efforts, including pursuing appropriate
legal action, to recover the actual reimbursements and
applicable interest due the State under this subsection (3).
    (4) For the establishment of a sick pay plan in accordance
with Section 36 of the State Finance Act.
    (5) For the establishment of a family responsibility leave
plan under which an employee in the State service may request
and receive a leave of absence for up to one year without
penalty whenever such leave is requested to enable the employee
to meet a bona fide family responsibility of such employee. The
procedure for determining and documenting the existence of a
bona fide family responsibility shall be as provided by rule,
but without limiting the circumstances which shall constitute a
bona fide family responsibility under the rules, such
circumstances shall include leave incident to the birth of the
employee's child and the responsibility thereafter to provide
proper care to that child or to a newborn child adopted by the
employee, the responsibility to provide regular care to a
disabled, incapacitated or bedridden resident of the
employee's household or member of the employee's family, and
the responsibility to furnish special guidance, care and
supervision to a resident of the employee's household or member
of the employee's family in need thereof under circumstances
temporarily inconsistent with uninterrupted employment in
State service. The family responsibility leave plan so
established shall provide that any such leave shall be without
pay, that the seniority of the employee on such leave shall not
be reduced during the period of the leave, that such leave
shall not under any circumstance or for any purpose be deemed
to cause a break in such employee's State service, that during
the period of such leave any coverage of the employee or the
employee's dependents which existed at the commencement of the
leave under any group health, hospital, medical and life
insurance plan provided through the State shall continue so
long as the employee pays to the State when due the full
premium incident to such coverage, and that upon expiration of
the leave the employee shall be returned to the same position
and classification which such employee held at the commencement
of the leave. The Director of Central Management Services shall
prepare proposed rules consistent with this paragraph within 45
days after the effective date of this amendatory Act of 1983,
shall promptly thereafter cause a public hearing thereon to be
held as provided in Section 8 and shall within 120 days after
the effective date of this amendatory Act of 1983 cause such
proposed rules to be submitted to the Civil Service Commission
as provided in Section 8.
    (6) For the development and operation of a plan for
alternative employment for any employee who is able to perform
alternative employment after a work related or non-work related
disability essentially precludes that employee from performing
his or her currently assigned duties. Such a plan shall be
voluntary for any employee and nonparticipation shall not be
grounds for denial of any benefit to which the employee would
otherwise be eligible. Any plan seeking to cover positions for
which there is a recognized bargaining agent shall be subject
to collective bargaining between the parties.
    (7) For the development and operation of an Executive
Development Program to provide scholarships for the receipt of
academic degrees or senior executive training beyond the
Bachelor's degree level for as many as 25 employees at any
given time:
        (i) each of whom is nominated for such scholarship by
    the head of the employee's agency and approved by the
    Director;
        (ii) who are subject to Term Appointment under Section
    8b.18 or who would be subject to such Term Appointment but
    for Federal funding or who are exempt from Jurisdiction B
    under subsections (2), (3) or (6) of Section 4d of this
    Act:
        (iii) who meet the admission standards established by
    the institution awarding the advanced degree or conducting
    the training;
        (iv) each of whom agrees, as a condition of accepting
    such scholarship, that the State may recover the
    scholarship by garnishment, lien or other appropriate
    legal action if the employee fails to continue in the
    employ of the State, but not necessarily in the same
    agency, for a minimum of 4 years following receipt of an
    advanced degree or training and that the State may charge
    interest from the time of payment until the time of
    recovery of such scholarship of no less than 1% per month
    or 12% per annum on all funds recovered by the State. The
    amount the State may recover under this Section will be
    reduced by 25% of the gross amount paid by the State for
    each year of employment following receipt of the advanced
    degree or training.
    The Director shall in approving eligible employees for the
Executive Development Program make every attempt to guarantee
that at least 1/3 of the employees appointed to the program
reflect the ratio of sex, race, and ethnicity of eligible
employees.
    Such scholarships shall not exceed the amount established
for tuition and fees for the applicable advanced degree or
training at State universities in Illinois whether the employee
enrolls at any Illinois public or private institution, and
shall not include any textbooks or equipment such as personal
computers.
    The Department of Central Management Services shall make
necessary efforts, including appropriate legal action, to
recover scholarships and interest thereupon due subject to
recovery by the State under Subparagraph (iv) of this
Subsection (7).
(Source: P.A. 91-357, eff. 7-29-99.)
 
    Section 10. The Children and Family Services Act is amended
by changing Section 8 as follows:
 
    (20 ILCS 505/8)  (from Ch. 23, par. 5008)
    Sec. 8. Scholarships and fee waivers. Each year the
Department may select from among the youth under care, youth
who aged out of care at age 18 or older, or youth formerly
under care who have been adopted or are in a guardianship
placement, a maximum of 48 students (at least 4 of whom shall
be children of veterans) who have earned a high school diploma
from a public school district or a recognized nonpublic school
or a high school equivalency certificate of general education
development (GED), or who have met the State criteria for high
school graduation; the youth selected shall be eligible for
scholarships and fee waivers which will entitle them to 4
consecutive years of community college, university, or college
education. Selection shall be made on the basis of scholastic
record, aptitude, and general interest in higher education. In
accordance with this Act, tuition scholarships and fee waivers
shall be available to such students at any university or
college maintained by the State of Illinois. The Department
shall provide maintenance and school expenses, except tuition
and fees, during the academic years to supplement the students'
earnings or other resources so long as they consistently
maintain scholastic records which are acceptable to their
schools and to the Department. Students may attend other
colleges and universities, if scholarships are awarded them,
and receive the same benefits for maintenance and other
expenses as those students attending any Illinois State
community college, university, or college under this Section.
(Source: P.A. 97-799, eff. 7-13-12.)
 
    Section 15. The Illinois Youthbuild Act is amended by
changing Section 25 as follows:
 
    (20 ILCS 1315/25)
    Sec. 25. Eligible participants. Eligible participants are
youth 16 to 24 years old who are economically disadvantaged as
defined in United States Code, Title 29, Section 1503, and who
are part of one of the following groups:
        (a) Persons who are not attending any school and have
    not received a secondary school diploma or its equivalent.
        (b) Persons currently enrolled in a traditional or
    alternative school setting or a high school equivalency
    testing GED program and who are in danger of dropping out
    of school.
        (c) A member of a low-income family, a youth in foster
    care (including a youth aging-out of foster care), a youth
    offender, a youth with a disability, a child of
    incarcerated parents, or a migrant youth.
    Not more than 25% of the participants in the program may be
individuals who do not meet the requirements of subsections (a)
or (b), but who are deficient in basic skills despite having
attained a secondary school diploma, high school equivalency
General Educational Development (GED) certificate, or other
State-recognized equivalent, or who have been referred by a
local secondary school for participation in a Youthbuild
program leading to the attainment of a secondary school
diploma.
(Source: P.A. 95-524, eff. 8-28-07.)
 
    Section 20. The Illinois Guaranteed Job Opportunity Act is
amended by changing Section 30 as follows:
 
    (20 ILCS 1510/30)
    Sec. 30. Education requirements. Any individual who has not
completed high school and who participates in a job project
under this Act may enroll, if appropriate, in and maintain
satisfactory progress in a secondary school or an adult basic
education or high school equivalency testing GED program. Any
individual with limited English speaking ability may
participate, if appropriate, in an English as a Second Language
program.
(Source: P.A. 93-46, eff. 7-1-03.)
 
    Section 25. The Mental Health and Developmental
Disabilities Administrative Act is amended by changing Section
15.4 as follows:
 
    (20 ILCS 1705/15.4)
    Sec. 15.4. Authorization for nursing delegation to permit
direct care staff to administer medications.
    (a) This Section applies to (i) all programs for persons
with a developmental disability in settings of 16 persons or
fewer that are funded or licensed by the Department of Human
Services and that distribute or administer medications and (ii)
all intermediate care facilities for the developmentally
disabled with 16 beds or fewer that are licensed by the
Department of Public Health. The Department of Human Services
shall develop a training program for authorized direct care
staff to administer oral and topical medications under the
supervision and monitoring of a registered professional nurse.
This training program shall be developed in consultation with
professional associations representing (i) physicians licensed
to practice medicine in all its branches, (ii) registered
professional nurses, and (iii) pharmacists.
    (b) For the purposes of this Section:
    "Authorized direct care staff" means non-licensed persons
who have successfully completed a medication administration
training program approved by the Department of Human Services
and conducted by a nurse-trainer. This authorization is
specific to an individual receiving service in a specific
agency and does not transfer to another agency.
    "Nurse-trainer training program" means a standardized,
competency-based medication administration train-the-trainer
program provided by the Department of Human Services and
conducted by a Department of Human Services master
nurse-trainer for the purpose of training nurse-trainers to
train persons employed or under contract to provide direct care
or treatment to individuals receiving services to administer
medications and provide self-administration of medication
training to individuals under the supervision and monitoring of
the nurse-trainer. The program incorporates adult learning
styles, teaching strategies, classroom management, and a
curriculum overview, including the ethical and legal aspects of
supervising those administering medications.
    "Self-administration of medications" means an individual
administers his or her own medications. To be considered
capable to self-administer their own medication, individuals
must, at a minimum, be able to identify their medication by
size, shape, or color, know when they should take the
medication, and know the amount of medication to be taken each
time.
    "Training program" means a standardized medication
administration training program approved by the Department of
Human Services and conducted by a registered professional nurse
for the purpose of training persons employed or under contract
to provide direct care or treatment to individuals receiving
services to administer medications and provide
self-administration of medication training to individuals
under the delegation and supervision of a nurse-trainer. The
program incorporates adult learning styles, teaching
strategies, classroom management, curriculum overview,
including ethical-legal aspects, and standardized
competency-based evaluations on administration of medications
and self-administration of medication training programs.
    (c) Training and authorization of non-licensed direct care
staff by nurse-trainers must meet the requirements of this
subsection.
        (1) Prior to training non-licensed direct care staff to
    administer medication, the nurse-trainer shall perform the
    following for each individual to whom medication will be
    administered by non-licensed direct care staff:
            (A) An assessment of the individual's health
        history and physical and mental status.
            (B) An evaluation of the medications prescribed.
        (2) Non-licensed authorized direct care staff shall
    meet the following criteria:
            (A) Be 18 years of age or older.
            (B) Have completed high school or have a high
        school equivalency certificate its equivalent (GED).
            (C) Have demonstrated functional literacy.
            (D) Have satisfactorily completed the Health and
        Safety component of a Department of Human Services
        authorized direct care staff training program.
            (E) Have successfully completed the training
        program, pass the written portion of the comprehensive
        exam, and score 100% on the competency-based
        assessment specific to the individual and his or her
        medications.
            (F) Have received additional competency-based
        assessment by the nurse-trainer as deemed necessary by
        the nurse-trainer whenever a change of medication
        occurs or a new individual that requires medication
        administration enters the program.
        (3) Authorized direct care staff shall be re-evaluated
    by a nurse-trainer at least annually or more frequently at
    the discretion of the registered professional nurse. Any
    necessary retraining shall be to the extent that is
    necessary to ensure competency of the authorized direct
    care staff to administer medication.
        (4) Authorization of direct care staff to administer
    medication shall be revoked if, in the opinion of the
    registered professional nurse, the authorized direct care
    staff is no longer competent to administer medication.
        (5) The registered professional nurse shall assess an
    individual's health status at least annually or more
    frequently at the discretion of the registered
    professional nurse.
    (d) Medication self-administration shall meet the
following requirements:
        (1) As part of the normalization process, in order for
    each individual to attain the highest possible level of
    independent functioning, all individuals shall be
    permitted to participate in their total health care
    program. This program shall include, but not be limited to,
    individual training in preventive health and
    self-medication procedures.
            (A) Every program shall adopt written policies and
        procedures for assisting individuals in obtaining
        preventative health and self-medication skills in
        consultation with a registered professional nurse,
        advanced practice nurse, physician assistant, or
        physician licensed to practice medicine in all its
        branches.
            (B) Individuals shall be evaluated to determine
        their ability to self-medicate by the nurse-trainer
        through the use of the Department's required,
        standardized screening and assessment instruments.
            (C) When the results of the screening and
        assessment indicate an individual not to be capable to
        self-administer his or her own medications, programs
        shall be developed in consultation with the Community
        Support Team or Interdisciplinary Team to provide
        individuals with self-medication administration.
        (2) Each individual shall be presumed to be competent
    to self-administer medications if:
            (A) authorized by an order of a physician licensed
        to practice medicine in all its branches; and
            (B) approved to self-administer medication by the
        individual's Community Support Team or
        Interdisciplinary Team, which includes a registered
        professional nurse or an advanced practice nurse.
    (e) Quality Assurance.
        (1) A registered professional nurse, advanced practice
    nurse, licensed practical nurse, physician licensed to
    practice medicine in all its branches, physician
    assistant, or pharmacist shall review the following for all
    individuals:
            (A) Medication orders.
            (B) Medication labels, including medications
        listed on the medication administration record for
        persons who are not self-medicating to ensure the
        labels match the orders issued by the physician
        licensed to practice medicine in all its branches,
        advanced practice nurse, or physician assistant.
            (C) Medication administration records for persons
        who are not self-medicating to ensure that the records
        are completed appropriately for:
                (i) medication administered as prescribed;
                (ii) refusal by the individual; and
                (iii) full signatures provided for all
            initials used.
        (2) Reviews shall occur at least quarterly, but may be
    done more frequently at the discretion of the registered
    professional nurse or advanced practice nurse.
        (3) A quality assurance review of medication errors and
    data collection for the purpose of monitoring and
    recommending corrective action shall be conducted within 7
    days and included in the required annual review.
    (f) Programs using authorized direct care staff to
administer medications are responsible for documenting and
maintaining records on the training that is completed.
    (g) The absence of this training program constitutes a
threat to the public interest, safety, and welfare and
necessitates emergency rulemaking by the Departments of Human
Services and Public Health under Section 5-45 of the Illinois
Administrative Procedure Act.
    (h) Direct care staff who fail to qualify for delegated
authority to administer medications pursuant to the provisions
of this Section shall be given additional education and testing
to meet criteria for delegation authority to administer
medications. Any direct care staff person who fails to qualify
as an authorized direct care staff after initial training and
testing must within 3 months be given another opportunity for
retraining and retesting. A direct care staff person who fails
to meet criteria for delegated authority to administer
medication, including, but not limited to, failure of the
written test on 2 occasions shall be given consideration for
shift transfer or reassignment, if possible. No employee shall
be terminated for failure to qualify during the 3-month time
period following initial testing. Refusal to complete training
and testing required by this Section may be grounds for
immediate dismissal.
    (i) No authorized direct care staff person delegated to
administer medication shall be subject to suspension or
discharge for errors resulting from the staff person's acts or
omissions when performing the functions unless the staff
person's actions or omissions constitute willful and wanton
conduct. Nothing in this subsection is intended to supersede
paragraph (4) of subsection (c).
    (j) A registered professional nurse, advanced practice
nurse, physician licensed to practice medicine in all its
branches, or physician assistant shall be on duty or on call at
all times in any program covered by this Section.
    (k) The employer shall be responsible for maintaining
liability insurance for any program covered by this Section.
    (l) Any direct care staff person who qualifies as
authorized direct care staff pursuant to this Section shall be
granted consideration for a one-time additional salary
differential. The Department shall determine and provide the
necessary funding for the differential in the base. This
subsection (l) is inoperative on and after June 30, 2000.
(Source: P.A. 91-630, eff. 8-19-99.)
 
    Section 30. The Interagency Coordinating Council Act is
amended by changing Section 3 as follows:
 
    (20 ILCS 3970/3)  (from Ch. 127, par. 3833)
    Sec. 3. Scope and Functions. The Interagency Coordinating
Council shall:
    (a) gather and coordinate data on services for secondary
age youth with disabilities in transition from school to
employment, post-secondary education and training, and
community living;
    (b) provide information, consultation, and technical
assistance to State and local agencies and local school
districts involved in the delivery of services to youth with
disabilities in transition from secondary school programs to
employment and other post-secondary programs;
    (c) assist State and local agencies and school districts,
through local transition planning committees, in establishing
interagency agreements to assure the necessary services for
efficient and appropriate transition from school to
employment, post-secondary education and training, and
community living;
    (d) conduct an annual statewide evaluation of student
transition outcomes and needs from information collected from
local transition planning committees, school districts, and
other appropriate sources; indicators used to evaluate
outcomes shall include (i) high school graduation or passage of
high school equivalency testing the Test of General Educational
Development, (ii) participation in post-secondary education,
including continuing and adult education, (iii) involvement in
integrated employment, supported employment, and work-based
learning activities, including vocational training, and (iv)
independent living, community participation, adult services,
and other post-secondary activities; and
    (e) provide periodic in-service training to consumers in
developing and improving awareness of transition services.
(Source: P.A. 92-452, eff. 8-21-01.)
 
    Section 35. The School Code is amended by changing Sections
2-3.66, 3-15.12, 10-22.20, 13-40, 13B-20.20, 13B-30.15,
13B-85, 26-2, and 26-16 as follows:
 
    (105 ILCS 5/2-3.66)  (from Ch. 122, par. 2-3.66)
    Sec. 2-3.66. Truants' alternative and optional education
programs. To establish projects to offer modified
instructional programs or other services designed to prevent
students from dropping out of school, including programs
pursuant to Section 2-3.41, and to serve as a part time or full
time option in lieu of regular school attendance and to award
grants to local school districts, educational service regions
or community college districts from appropriated funds to
assist districts in establishing such projects. The education
agency may operate its own program or enter into a contract
with another not-for-profit entity to implement the program.
The projects shall allow dropouts, up to and including age 21,
potential dropouts, including truants, uninvolved, unmotivated
and disaffected students, as defined by State Board of
Education rules and regulations, to enroll, as an alternative
to regular school attendance, in an optional education program
which may be established by school board policy and is in
conformance with rules adopted by the State Board of Education.
Truants' Alternative and Optional Education programs funded
pursuant to this Section shall be planned by a student, the
student's parents or legal guardians, unless the student is 18
years or older, and school officials and shall culminate in an
individualized optional education plan. Such plan shall focus
on academic or vocational skills, or both, and may include, but
not be limited to, evening school, summer school, community
college courses, adult education, preparation courses for high
school equivalency testing the high school level test of
General Educational Development, vocational training, work
experience, programs to enhance self concept and parenting
courses. School districts which are awarded grants pursuant to
this Section shall be authorized to provide day care services
to children of students who are eligible and desire to enroll
in programs established and funded under this Section, but only
if and to the extent that such day care is necessary to enable
those eligible students to attend and participate in the
programs and courses which are conducted pursuant to this
Section. School districts and regional offices of education may
claim general State aid under Section 18-8.05 for students
enrolled in truants' alternative and optional education
programs, provided that such students are receiving services
that are supplemental to a program leading to a high school
diploma and are otherwise eligible to be claimed for general
State aid under Section 18-8.05.
(Source: P.A. 96-734, eff. 8-25-09.)
 
    (105 ILCS 5/3-15.12)  (from Ch. 122, par. 3-15.12)
    Sec. 3-15.12. High school equivalency testing program. The
regional superintendent of schools shall make available for
qualified individuals residing within the region a High School
Equivalency Testing Program. For that purpose the regional
superintendent alone or with other regional superintendents
may establish and supervise a testing center or centers to
administer the secure forms for high school equivalency testing
of the high school level Test of General Educational
Development to qualified persons. Such centers shall be under
the supervision of the regional superintendent in whose region
such centers are located, subject to the approval of the
President of the Illinois Community College Board.
    An individual is eligible to apply to the regional
superintendent of schools for the region in which he or she
resides if he or she is: (a) a person who is 17 years of age or
older, has maintained residence in the State of Illinois, and
is not a high school graduate; (b) a person who is successfully
completing an alternative education program under Section
2-3.81, Article 13A, or Article 13B; or (c) a person who is
enrolled in a youth education program sponsored by the Illinois
National Guard. For purposes of this Section, residence is that
abode which the applicant considers his or her home. Applicants
may provide as sufficient proof of such residence and as an
acceptable form of identification a driver's license, valid
passport, military ID, or other form of government-issued
national or foreign identification that shows the applicant's
name, address, date of birth, signature, and photograph or
other acceptable identification as may be allowed by law or as
regulated by the Illinois Community College Board. Such
regional superintendent shall determine if the applicant meets
statutory and regulatory state standards. If qualified the
applicant shall at the time of such application pay a fee
established by the Illinois Community College Board, which fee
shall be paid into a special fund under the control and
supervision of the regional superintendent. Such moneys
received by the regional superintendent shall be used, first,
for the expenses incurred in administering and scoring the
examination, and next for other educational programs that are
developed and designed by the regional superintendent of
schools to assist those who successfully complete high school
equivalency testing the high school level test of General
Education Development in furthering their academic development
or their ability to secure and retain gainful employment,
including programs for the competitive award based on test
scores of college or adult education scholarship grants or
similar educational incentives. Any excess moneys shall be paid
into the institute fund.
    Any applicant who has achieved the minimum passing
standards as established by the Illinois Community College
Board shall be notified in writing by the regional
superintendent and shall be issued a high school equivalency
certificate on the forms provided by the Illinois Community
College Board. The regional superintendent shall then certify
to the Illinois Community College Board the score of the
applicant and such other and additional information that may be
required by the Illinois Community College Board. The moneys
received therefrom shall be used in the same manner as provided
for in this Section.
    Any applicant who has attained the age of 17 years and
maintained residence in the State of Illinois and is not a high
school graduate, any person who has enrolled in a youth
education program sponsored by the Illinois National Guard, or
any person who has successfully completed an alternative
education program under Section 2-3.81, Article 13A, or Article
13B is eligible to apply for a high school equivalency
certificate (if he or she meets the requirements prescribed by
the Illinois Community College Board) upon showing evidence
that he or she has completed, successfully, high school
equivalency testing the high school level General Educational
Development Tests, administered by the United States Armed
Forces Institute, official high school equivalency testing
centers GED Centers established in other states, or at
Veterans' Administration Hospitals, or the office of the State
Superintendent of Education administered for the Illinois
State Penitentiary System and the Department of Corrections.
Such applicant shall apply to the regional superintendent of
the region wherein he or she has maintained residence, and,
upon payment of a fee established by the Illinois Community
College Board, the regional superintendent shall issue a high
school equivalency certificate, and immediately thereafter
certify to the Illinois Community College Board the score of
the applicant and such other and additional information as may
be required by the Illinois Community College Board.
    Notwithstanding the provisions of this Section, any
applicant who has been out of school for at least one year may
request the regional superintendent of schools to administer
the restricted high school equivalency testing GED test upon
written request of: the The director of a program who certifies
to the Chief Examiner of an official high school equivalency
testing GED center that the applicant has completed a program
of instruction provided by such agencies as the Job Corps, the
Postal Service Academy, or an apprenticeship training program;
an employer or program director for purposes of entry into
apprenticeship programs; another state's department of
education State Department of Education in order to meet
regulations established by that department of education; or
Department of Education, a post high school educational
institution for purposes of admission, the Department of
Financial and Professional Regulation for licensing purposes,
or the Armed Forces for induction purposes. The regional
superintendent shall administer such testing, test and the
applicant shall be notified in writing that he or she is
eligible to receive a high school equivalency certificate the
Illinois High School Equivalency Certificate upon reaching age
17, provided he or she meets the standards established by the
Illinois Community College Board.
    Any test administered under this Section to an applicant
who does not speak and understand English may at the discretion
of the administering agency be given and answered in any
language in which the test is printed. The regional
superintendent of schools may waive any fees required by this
Section in case of hardship.
    In counties of over 3,000,000 population, a high school
equivalency GED certificate shall contain the signatures of the
President of the Illinois Community College Board, the
superintendent, president, or other chief executive officer of
the institution where high school equivalency testing GED
instruction occurred, and any other signatures authorized by
the Illinois Community College Board.
    The regional superintendent of schools shall furnish the
Illinois Community College Board with any information that the
Illinois Community College Board requests with regard to
testing and certificates under this Section.
(Source: P.A. 94-108, eff. 7-1-05; 95-609, eff. 6-1-08.)
 
    (105 ILCS 5/10-22.20)  (from Ch. 122, par. 10-22.20)
    Sec. 10-22.20. Classes for adults and youths whose
schooling has been interrupted; conditions for State
reimbursement; use of child care facilities.
    (a) To establish special classes for the instruction (1) of
persons of age 21 years or over, and (2) of persons less than
age 21 and not otherwise in attendance in public school, for
the purpose of providing adults in the community, and youths
whose schooling has been interrupted, with such additional
basic education, vocational skill training, and other
instruction as may be necessary to increase their
qualifications for employment or other means of self-support
and their ability to meet their responsibilities as citizens,
including courses of instruction regularly accepted for
graduation from elementary or high schools and for
Americanization and high school equivalency testing review
General Educational Development Review classes.
    The board shall pay the necessary expenses of such classes
out of school funds of the district, including costs of student
transportation and such facilities or provision for child-care
as may be necessary in the judgment of the board to permit
maximum utilization of the courses by students with children,
and other special needs of the students directly related to
such instruction. The expenses thus incurred shall be subject
to State reimbursement, as provided in this Section. The board
may make a tuition charge for persons taking instruction who
are not subject to State reimbursement, such tuition charge not
to exceed the per capita cost of such classes.
    The cost of such instruction, including the additional
expenses herein authorized, incurred for recipients of
financial aid under the Illinois Public Aid Code, or for
persons for whom education and training aid has been authorized
under Section 9-8 of that Code, shall be assumed in its
entirety from funds appropriated by the State to the Illinois
Community College Board.
    (b) The Illinois Community College Board shall establish
the standards for the courses of instruction reimbursed under
this Section. The Illinois Community College Board shall
supervise the administration of the programs. The Illinois
Community College Board shall determine the cost of instruction
in accordance with standards established by the Illinois
Community College Board, including therein other incidental
costs as herein authorized, which shall serve as the basis of
State reimbursement in accordance with the provisions of this
Section. In the approval of programs and the determination of
the cost of instruction, the Illinois Community College Board
shall provide for the maximum utilization of federal funds for
such programs. The Illinois Community College Board shall also
provide for:
        (1) the development of an index of need for program
    planning and for area funding allocations, as defined by
    the Illinois Community College Board;
        (2) the method for calculating hours of instruction, as
    defined by the Illinois Community College Board, claimable
    for reimbursement and a method to phase in the calculation
    and for adjusting the calculations in cases where the
    services of a program are interrupted due to circumstances
    beyond the control of the program provider;
        (3) a plan for the reallocation of funds to increase
    the amount allocated for grants based upon program
    performance as set forth in subsection (d) below; and
        (4) the development of standards for determining
    grants based upon performance as set forth in subsection
    (d) below and a plan for the phased-in implementation of
    those standards.
    For instruction provided by school districts and community
college districts beginning July 1, 1996 and thereafter,
reimbursement provided by the Illinois Community College Board
for classes authorized by this Section shall be provided from
funds appropriated for the reimbursement criteria set forth in
subsection (c) below.
    (c) Upon the annual approval of the Illinois Community
College Board, reimbursement shall be first provided for
transportation, child care services, and other special needs of
the students directly related to instruction and then from the
funds remaining an amount equal to the product of the total
credit hours or units of instruction approved by the Illinois
Community College Board, multiplied by the following:
        (1) For adult basic education, the maximum
    reimbursement per credit hour or per unit of instruction
    shall be equal to the general state aid per pupil
    foundation level established in subsection (B) of Section
    18-8.05, divided by 60;
        (2) The maximum reimbursement per credit hour or per
    unit of instruction in subparagraph (1) above shall be
    weighted for students enrolled in classes defined as
    vocational skills and approved by the Illinois Community
    College Board by 1.25;
        (3) The maximum reimbursement per credit hour or per
    unit of instruction in subparagraph (1) above shall be
    multiplied by .90 for students enrolled in classes defined
    as adult secondary education programs and approved by the
    Illinois Community College Board;
        (4) (Blank); and
        (5) Funding for program years after 1999-2000 shall be
    determined by the Illinois Community College Board.
    (d) Upon its annual approval, the Illinois Community
College Board shall provide grants to eligible programs for
supplemental activities to improve or expand services under the
Adult Education Act. Eligible programs shall be determined
based upon performance outcomes of students in the programs as
set by the Illinois Community College Board.
    (e) Reimbursement under this Section shall not exceed the
actual costs of the approved program.
    If the amount appropriated to the Illinois Community
College Board for reimbursement under this Section is less than
the amount required under this Act, the apportionment shall be
proportionately reduced.
    School districts and community college districts may
assess students up to $3.00 per credit hour, for classes other
than Adult Basic Education level programs, if needed to meet
program costs.
    (f) An education plan shall be established for each adult
or youth whose schooling has been interrupted and who is
participating in the instructional programs provided under
this Section.
    Each school board and community college shall keep an
accurate and detailed account of the students assigned to and
receiving instruction under this Section who are subject to
State reimbursement and shall submit reports of services
provided commencing with fiscal year 1997 as required by the
Illinois Community College Board.
    For classes authorized under this Section, a credit hour or
unit of instruction is equal to 15 hours of direct instruction
for students enrolled in approved adult education programs at
midterm and making satisfactory progress, in accordance with
standards established by the Illinois Community College Board.
    (g) Upon proof submitted to the Illinois Department of
Human Services of the payment of all claims submitted under
this Section, that Department shall apply for federal funds
made available therefor and any federal funds so received shall
be paid into the General Revenue Fund in the State Treasury.
    School districts or community colleges providing classes
under this Section shall submit applications to the Illinois
Community College Board for preapproval in accordance with the
standards established by the Illinois Community College Board.
Payments shall be made by the Illinois Community College Board
based upon approved programs. Interim expenditure reports may
be required by the Illinois Community College Board. Final
claims for the school year shall be submitted to the regional
superintendents for transmittal to the Illinois Community
College Board. Final adjusted payments shall be made by
September 30.
    If a school district or community college district fails to
provide, or is providing unsatisfactory or insufficient
classes under this Section, the Illinois Community College
Board may enter into agreements with public or private
educational or other agencies other than the public schools for
the establishment of such classes.
    (h) If a school district or community college district
establishes child-care facilities for the children of
participants in classes established under this Section, it may
extend the use of these facilities to students who have
obtained employment and to other persons in the community whose
children require care and supervision while the parent or other
person in charge of the children is employed or otherwise
absent from the home during all or part of the day. It may make
the facilities available before and after as well as during
regular school hours to school age and preschool age children
who may benefit thereby, including children who require care
and supervision pending the return of their parent or other
person in charge of their care from employment or other
activity requiring absence from the home.
    The Illinois Community College Board shall pay to the board
the cost of care in the facilities for any child who is a
recipient of financial aid under the Illinois Public Aid Code.
    The board may charge for care of children for whom it
cannot make claim under the provisions of this Section. The
charge shall not exceed per capita cost, and to the extent
feasible, shall be fixed at a level which will permit
utilization by employed parents of low or moderate income. It
may also permit any other State or local governmental agency or
private agency providing care for children to purchase care.
    After July 1, 1970 when the provisions of Section 10-20.20
become operative in the district, children in a child-care
facility shall be transferred to the kindergarten established
under that Section for such portion of the day as may be
required for the kindergarten program, and only the prorated
costs of care and training provided in the Center for the
remaining period shall be charged to the Illinois Department of
Human Services or other persons or agencies paying for such
care.
    (i) The provisions of this Section shall also apply to
school districts having a population exceeding 500,000.
    (j) In addition to claiming reimbursement under this
Section, a school district may claim general State aid under
Section 18-8.05 for any student under age 21 who is enrolled in
courses accepted for graduation from elementary or high school
and who otherwise meets the requirements of Section 18-8.05.
(Source: P.A. 95-331, eff. 8-21-07.)
 
    (105 ILCS 5/13-40)  (from Ch. 122, par. 13-40)
    Sec. 13-40. To increase the effectiveness of the Department
of Juvenile Justice and thereby to better serve the interests
of the people of Illinois the following bill is presented.
    Its purpose is to enhance the quality and scope of
education for inmates and wards within the Department of
Juvenile Justice so that they will be better motivated and
better equipped to restore themselves to constructive and law
abiding lives in the community. The specific measure sought is
the creation of a school district within the Department so that
its educational programs can meet the needs of persons
committed and so the resources of public education at the state
and federal levels are best used, all of the same being
contemplated within the provisions of the Illinois State
Constitution of 1970 which provides that "A fundamental goal of
the People of the State is the educational development of all
persons to the limits of their capacities." Therefore, on July
1, 2006, the Department of Corrections school district shall be
transferred to the Department of Juvenile Justice. It shall be
responsible for the education of youth within the Department of
Juvenile Justice and inmates age 21 or under within the
Department of Corrections who have not yet earned a high school
diploma or a high school equivalency General Educational
Development (GED) certificate, and the said district may
establish primary, secondary, vocational, adult, special, and
advanced educational schools as provided in this Act. The
Department of Corrections retains authority as provided for in
subsection (d) of Section 3-6-2 of the Unified Code of
Corrections. The Board of Education for this district shall
with the aid and advice of professional educational personnel
of the Department of Juvenile Justice and the State Board of
Education determine the needs and type of schools and the
curriculum for each school within the school district and may
proceed to establish the same through existing means within
present and future appropriations, federal and state school
funds, vocational rehabilitation grants and funds and all other
funds, gifts and grants, private or public, including federal
funds, but not exclusive to the said sources but inclusive of
all funds which might be available for school purposes.
(Source: P.A. 94-696, eff. 6-1-06.)
 
    (105 ILCS 5/13B-20.20)
    Sec. 13B-20.20. Enrollment in other programs. High school
equivalency testing General Educational Development
preparation programs are not eligible for funding under this
Article. A student may enroll in a program approved under
Section 18-8.05 of this Code, as appropriate, or attend both
the alternative learning opportunities program and the regular
school program to enhance student performance and facilitate
on-time graduation.
(Source: P.A. 92-42, eff. 1-1-02.)
 
    (105 ILCS 5/13B-30.15)
    Sec. 13B-30.15. Statewide program evaluation of student
outcomes. Alternative learning opportunities programs must be
evaluated annually on a statewide basis. Indicators used to
measure student outcomes for this evaluation may include
program completion, elementary school graduation, high school
graduation or passage of high school equivalency testing the
General Educational Development test, attendance, the number
of students involved in work-based learning activities, the
number of students making an effective transition to the
regular school program, further education or work, and
improvement in the percentage of students enrolled in the
sending school district or districts that meet State standards.
(Source: P.A. 92-42, eff. 1-1-02.)
 
    (105 ILCS 5/13B-85)
    Sec. 13B-85. High school equivalency testing Test of
General Educational Development. A student 16 years of age or
over who satisfactorily completes an alternative learning
opportunities program in accordance with school district
guidelines and the Student Success Plan may take a high school
equivalency test the Test of General Educational Development.
(Source: P.A. 92-42, eff. 1-1-02.)
 
    (105 ILCS 5/26-2)  (from Ch. 122, par. 26-2)
    (Text of Section before amendment by P.A. 98-544)
    Sec. 26-2. Enrolled pupils below 7 or over 17.
    (a) Any person having custody or control of a child who is
below the age of 7 years or is 17 years of age or above and who
is enrolled in any of grades kindergarten through 12 in the
public school shall cause him to attend the public school in
the district wherein he resides when it is in session during
the regular school term, unless he is excused under paragraph
2, 3, 4, 5, or 6 of Section 26-1.
    (b) A school district shall deny reenrollment in its
secondary schools to any child 19 years of age or above who has
dropped out of school and who could not, because of age and
lack of credits, attend classes during the normal school year
and graduate before his or her twenty-first birthday. A
district may, however, enroll the child in a graduation
incentives program under Section 26-16 of this Code or an
alternative learning opportunities program established under
Article 13B. No child shall be denied reenrollment for the
above reasons unless the school district first offers the child
due process as required in cases of expulsion under Section
10-22.6. If a child is denied reenrollment after being provided
with due process, the school district must provide counseling
to that child and must direct that child to alternative
educational programs, including adult education programs, that
lead to graduation or receipt of a high school equivalency
certificate GED diploma.
    (c) A school or school district may deny enrollment to a
student 17 years of age or older for one semester for failure
to meet minimum academic standards if all of the following
conditions are met:
        (1) The student achieved a grade point average of less
    than "D" (or its equivalent) in the semester immediately
    prior to the current semester.
        (2) The student and the student's parent or guardian
    are given written notice warning that the student is
    failing academically and is subject to denial from
    enrollment for one semester unless a "D" average (or its
    equivalent) or better is attained in the current semester.
        (3) The parent or guardian is provided with the right
    to appeal the notice, as determined by the State Board of
    Education in accordance with due process.
        (4) The student is provided with an academic
    improvement plan and academic remediation services.
        (5) The student fails to achieve a "D" average (or its
    equivalent) or better in the current semester.
    A school or school district may deny enrollment to a
student 17 years of age or older for one semester for failure
to meet minimum attendance standards if all of the following
conditions are met:
        (1) The student was absent without valid cause for 20%
    or more of the attendance days in the semester immediately
    prior to the current semester.
        (2) The student and the student's parent or guardian
    are given written notice warning that the student is
    subject to denial from enrollment for one semester unless
    the student is absent without valid cause less than 20% of
    the attendance days in the current semester.
        (3) The student's parent or guardian is provided with
    the right to appeal the notice, as determined by the State
    Board of Education in accordance with due process.
        (4) The student is provided with attendance
    remediation services, including without limitation
    assessment, counseling, and support services.
        (5) The student is absent without valid cause for 20%
    or more of the attendance days in the current semester.
    A school or school district may not deny enrollment to a
student (or reenrollment to a dropout) who is at least 17 years
of age or older but below 19 years for more than one
consecutive semester for failure to meet academic or attendance
standards.
    (d) No child may be denied enrollment or reenrollment under
this Section in violation of the Individuals with Disabilities
Education Act or the Americans with Disabilities Act.
    (e) In this subsection (e), "reenrolled student" means a
dropout who has reenrolled full-time in a public school. Each
school district shall identify, track, and report on the
educational progress and outcomes of reenrolled students as a
subset of the district's required reporting on all enrollments.
A reenrolled student who again drops out must not be counted
again against a district's dropout rate performance measure.
The State Board of Education shall set performance standards
for programs serving reenrolled students.
    (f) The State Board of Education shall adopt any rules
necessary to implement the changes to this Section made by
Public Act 93-803.
(Source: P.A. 95-417, eff. 8-24-07.)
 
    (Text of Section after amendment by P.A. 98-544)
    Sec. 26-2. Enrolled pupils not of compulsory school age.
    (a) For school years before the 2014-2015 school year, any
person having custody or control of a child who is below the
age of 7 years or is 17 years of age or above and who is
enrolled in any of grades kindergarten through 12 in the public
school shall cause him to attend the public school in the
district wherein he resides when it is in session during the
regular school term, unless he is excused under paragraph 2, 3,
4, 5, or 6 of Section 26-1. Beginning with the 2014-2015 school
year, any person having custody or control of a child who is
below the age of 6 years or is 17 years of age or above and who
is enrolled in any of grades kindergarten through 12 in the
public school shall cause the child to attend the public school
in the district wherein he or she resides when it is in session
during the regular school term, unless the child is excused
under paragraph 2, 3, 4, 5, or 6 of Section 26-1 of this Code.
    (b) A school district shall deny reenrollment in its
secondary schools to any child 19 years of age or above who has
dropped out of school and who could not, because of age and
lack of credits, attend classes during the normal school year
and graduate before his or her twenty-first birthday. A
district may, however, enroll the child in a graduation
incentives program under Section 26-16 of this Code or an
alternative learning opportunities program established under
Article 13B. No child shall be denied reenrollment for the
above reasons unless the school district first offers the child
due process as required in cases of expulsion under Section
10-22.6. If a child is denied reenrollment after being provided
with due process, the school district must provide counseling
to that child and must direct that child to alternative
educational programs, including adult education programs, that
lead to graduation or receipt of a high school equivalency
certificate GED diploma.
    (c) A school or school district may deny enrollment to a
student 17 years of age or older for one semester for failure
to meet minimum academic standards if all of the following
conditions are met:
        (1) The student achieved a grade point average of less
    than "D" (or its equivalent) in the semester immediately
    prior to the current semester.
        (2) The student and the student's parent or guardian
    are given written notice warning that the student is
    failing academically and is subject to denial from
    enrollment for one semester unless a "D" average (or its
    equivalent) or better is attained in the current semester.
        (3) The parent or guardian is provided with the right
    to appeal the notice, as determined by the State Board of
    Education in accordance with due process.
        (4) The student is provided with an academic
    improvement plan and academic remediation services.
        (5) The student fails to achieve a "D" average (or its
    equivalent) or better in the current semester.
    A school or school district may deny enrollment to a
student 17 years of age or older for one semester for failure
to meet minimum attendance standards if all of the following
conditions are met:
        (1) The student was absent without valid cause for 20%
    or more of the attendance days in the semester immediately
    prior to the current semester.
        (2) The student and the student's parent or guardian
    are given written notice warning that the student is
    subject to denial from enrollment for one semester unless
    the student is absent without valid cause less than 20% of
    the attendance days in the current semester.
        (3) The student's parent or guardian is provided with
    the right to appeal the notice, as determined by the State
    Board of Education in accordance with due process.
        (4) The student is provided with attendance
    remediation services, including without limitation
    assessment, counseling, and support services.
        (5) The student is absent without valid cause for 20%
    or more of the attendance days in the current semester.
    A school or school district may not deny enrollment to a
student (or reenrollment to a dropout) who is at least 17 years
of age or older but below 19 years for more than one
consecutive semester for failure to meet academic or attendance
standards.
    (d) No child may be denied enrollment or reenrollment under
this Section in violation of the Individuals with Disabilities
Education Act or the Americans with Disabilities Act.
    (e) In this subsection (e), "reenrolled student" means a
dropout who has reenrolled full-time in a public school. Each
school district shall identify, track, and report on the
educational progress and outcomes of reenrolled students as a
subset of the district's required reporting on all enrollments.
A reenrolled student who again drops out must not be counted
again against a district's dropout rate performance measure.
The State Board of Education shall set performance standards
for programs serving reenrolled students.
    (f) The State Board of Education shall adopt any rules
necessary to implement the changes to this Section made by
Public Act 93-803.
(Source: P.A. 98-544, eff. 7-1-14.)
 
    (105 ILCS 5/26-16)
    Sec. 26-16. Graduation incentives program.
    (a) The General Assembly finds that it is critical to
provide options for children to succeed in school. The purpose
of this Section is to provide incentives for and encourage all
Illinois students who have experienced or are experiencing
difficulty in the traditional education system to enroll in
alternative programs.
    (b) Any student who is below the age of 20 years is
eligible to enroll in a graduation incentives program if he or
she:
        (1) is considered a dropout pursuant to Section 26-2a
    of this Code;
        (2) has been suspended or expelled pursuant to Section
    10-22.6 or 34-19 of this Code;
        (3) is pregnant or is a parent;
        (4) has been assessed as chemically dependent; or
        (5) is enrolled in a bilingual education or LEP
    program.
    (c) The following programs qualify as graduation
incentives programs for students meeting the criteria
established in this Section:
        (1) Any public elementary or secondary education
    graduation incentives program established by a school
    district or by a regional office of education.
        (2) Any alternative learning opportunities program
    established pursuant to Article 13B of this Code.
        (3) Vocational or job training courses approved by the
    State Superintendent of Education that are available
    through the Illinois public community college system.
    Students may apply for reimbursement of 50% of tuition
    costs for one course per semester or a maximum of 3 courses
    per school year. Subject to available funds, students may
    apply for reimbursement of up to 100% of tuition costs upon
    a showing of employment within 6 months after completion of
    a vocational or job training program. The qualifications
    for reimbursement shall be established by the State
    Superintendent of Education by rule.
        (4) Job and career programs approved by the State
    Superintendent of Education that are available through
    Illinois-accredited private business and vocational
    schools. Subject to available funds, pupils may apply for
    reimbursement of up to 100% of tuition costs upon a showing
    of employment within 6 months after completion of a job or
    career program. The State Superintendent of Education
    shall establish, by rule, the qualifications for
    reimbursement, criteria for determining reimbursement
    amounts, and limits on reimbursement.
        (5) Adult education courses that offer preparation for
    high school equivalency testing the General Educational
    Development Test.
    (d) Graduation incentives programs established by school
districts are entitled to claim general State aid, subject to
Sections 13B-50, 13B-50.5, and 13B-50.10 of this Code.
Graduation incentives programs operated by regional offices of
education are entitled to receive general State aid at the
foundation level of support per pupil enrolled. A school
district must ensure that its graduation incentives program
receives supplemental general State aid, transportation
reimbursements, and special education resources, if
appropriate, for students enrolled in the program.
(Source: P.A. 93-858, eff. 1-1-05; 93-1079, eff. 1-21-05.)
 
    Section 40. The Adult Education Act is amended by changing
Section 3-1 as follows:
 
    (105 ILCS 405/3-1)  (from Ch. 122, par. 203-1)
    Sec. 3-1. Apportionment for Adult Education Courses. Any
school district maintaining adult education classes for the
instruction of persons over 21 years of age and youths under 21
years of age whose schooling has been interrupted shall be
entitled to claim an apportionment in accordance with the
provisions of Section 10-22.20 of the School Code and Section
2-4 of this Act. Any public community college district
maintaining adult education classes for the instruction of
persons over 21 years of age and youths under 21 years of age
whose schooling has been interrupted shall be entitled to claim
an apportionment in accordance with the provisions of Section
2-16.02 of the Public Community College Act.
    Reimbursement as herein provided shall be limited to
courses regularly accepted for graduation from elementary or
high schools and for Americanization and high school
equivalency testing review General Educational Development
Review classes which are approved by the Board.
    If the amount appropriated for this purpose is less than
the amount required under the provisions of this Section, the
apportionment for local districts shall be proportionately
reduced.
(Source: P.A. 93-21, eff. 7-1-03.)
 
    Section 45. The University of Illinois Act is amended by
changing Section 8 as follows:
 
    (110 ILCS 305/8)  (from Ch. 144, par. 29)
    Sec. 8. Admissions.
    (a) (Blank).
    (b) In addition, commencing in the fall of 1993, no new
student shall then or thereafter be admitted to instruction in
any of the departments or colleges of the University unless
such student also has satisfactorily completed:
        (1) at least 15 units of high school coursework from
    the following 5 categories:
            (A) 4 years of English (emphasizing written and
        oral communications and literature), of which up to 2
        years may be collegiate level instruction;
            (B) 3 years of social studies (emphasizing history
        and government);
            (C) 3 years of mathematics (introductory through
        advanced algebra, geometry, trigonometry, or
        fundamentals of computer programming);
            (D) 3 years of science (laboratory sciences); and
            (E) 2 years of electives in foreign language (which
        may be deemed to include American Sign Language),
        music, vocational education or art;
        (2) except that institutions may admit individual
    applicants if the institution determines through
    assessment or through evaluation based on learning
    outcomes of the coursework taken, including vocational
    education courses and courses taken in a charter school
    established under Article 27A of the School Code, that the
    applicant demonstrates knowledge and skills substantially
    equivalent to the knowledge and skills expected to be
    acquired in the high school courses required for admission.
    The Board of Trustees of the University of Illinois shall
    not discriminate in the University's admissions process
    against an applicant for admission because of the
    applicant's enrollment in a charter school established
    under Article 27A of the School Code. Institutions may also
    admit 1) applicants who did not have an opportunity to
    complete the minimum college preparatory curriculum in
    high school, and 2) educationally disadvantaged applicants
    who are admitted to the formal organized special assistance
    programs that are tailored to the needs of such students,
    providing that in either case, the institution
    incorporates in the applicant's baccalaureate curriculum
    courses or other academic activities that compensate for
    course deficiencies; and
        (3) except that up to 3 of the 15 units of coursework
    required by paragraph (1) of this subsection may be
    distributed by deducting no more than one unit each from
    the categories of social studies, mathematics, sciences
    and electives and completing those 3 units in any of the 5
    categories of coursework described in paragraph (1).
    (c) When allocating funds, local boards of education shall
recognize their obligation to their students to offer the
coursework required by subsection (b).
    (d) A student who has graduated from high school and has
scored within the University's accepted range on the ACT or SAT
shall not be required to take a high school equivalency test
the high school level General Educational Development (GED)
Test as a prerequisite to admission.
(Source: P.A. 96-203, eff. 8-10-09; 96-843, eff. 6-1-10;
96-1000, eff. 7-2-10.)
 
    Section 50. The Southern Illinois University Management
Act is amended by changing Section 8e as follows:
 
    (110 ILCS 520/8e)  (from Ch. 144, par. 658e)
    Sec. 8e. Admissions.
    (a) Commencing in the fall of 1993, no new student shall
then or thereafter be admitted to instruction in any of the
departments or colleges of the University unless such student
also has satisfactorily completed:
        (1) at least 15 units of high school coursework from
    the following 5 categories:
            (A) 4 years of English (emphasizing written and
        oral communications and literature), of which up to 2
        years may be collegiate level instruction;
            (B) 3 years of social studies (emphasizing history
        and government);
            (C) 3 years of mathematics (introductory through
        advanced algebra, geometry, trigonometry, or
        fundamentals of computer programming);
            (D) 3 years of science (laboratory sciences); and
            (E) 2 years of electives in foreign language (which
        may be deemed to include American Sign Language),
        music, vocational education or art;
        (2) except that institutions may admit individual
    applicants if the institution determines through
    assessment or through evaluation based on learning
    outcomes of the coursework taken, including vocational
    education courses and courses taken in a charter school
    established under Article 27A of the School Code, that the
    applicant demonstrates knowledge and skills substantially
    equivalent to the knowledge and skills expected to be
    acquired in the high school courses required for admission.
    The Board of Trustees of Southern Illinois University shall
    not discriminate in the University's admissions process
    against an applicant for admission because of the
    applicant's enrollment in a charter school established
    under Article 27A of the School Code. Institutions may also
    admit 1) applicants who did not have an opportunity to
    complete the minimum college preparatory curriculum in
    high school, and 2) educationally disadvantaged applicants
    who are admitted to the formal organized special assistance
    programs that are tailored to the needs of such students,
    providing that in either case, the institution
    incorporates in the applicant's baccalaureate curriculum
    courses or other academic activities that compensate for
    course deficiencies; and
        (3) except that up to 3 of 15 units of coursework
    required by paragraph (1) of this subsection may be
    distributed by deducting no more than one unit each from
    the categories of social studies, mathematics, sciences
    and electives and completing those 3 units in any of the 5
    categories of coursework described in paragraph (1).
    (b) When allocating funds, local boards of education shall
recognize their obligation to their students to offer the
coursework required by subsection (a).
    (c) A student who has graduated from high school and has
scored within the University's accepted range on the ACT or SAT
shall not be required to take a high school equivalency test
the high school level General Educational Development (GED)
Test as a prerequisite to admission.
(Source: P.A. 96-843, eff. 6-1-10; 96-1000, eff. 7-2-10.)
 
    Section 55. The Chicago State University Law is amended by
changing Section 5-85 as follows:
 
    (110 ILCS 660/5-85)
    Sec. 5-85. Admission requirements.
    (a) No new student shall be admitted to instruction in any
of the departments or colleges of the Chicago State University
unless such student also has satisfactorily completed:
        (1) at least 15 units of high school coursework from
    the following 5 categories:
            (A) 4 years of English (emphasizing written and
        oral communications and literature), of which up to 2
        years may be collegiate level instruction;
            (B) 3 years of social studies (emphasizing history
        and government);
            (C) 3 years of mathematics (introductory through
        advanced algebra, geometry, trigonometry, or
        fundamentals of computer programming);
            (D) 3 years of science (laboratory sciences); and
            (E) 2 years of electives in foreign language (which
        may be deemed to include American Sign Language),
        music, vocational education or art;
        (2) except that Chicago State University may admit
    individual applicants if it determines through assessment
    or through evaluation based on learning outcomes of the
    coursework taken, including vocational education courses
    and courses taken in a charter school established under
    Article 27A of the School Code, that the applicant
    demonstrates knowledge and skills substantially equivalent
    to the knowledge and skills expected to be acquired in the
    high school courses required for admission. The Board of
    Trustees of Chicago State University shall not
    discriminate in the University's admissions process
    against an applicant for admission because of the
    applicant's enrollment in a charter school established
    under Article 27A of the School Code. Chicago State
    University may also admit (i) applicants who did not have
    an opportunity to complete the minimum college preparatory
    curriculum in high school, and (ii) educationally
    disadvantaged applicants who are admitted to the formal
    organized special assistance programs that are tailored to
    the needs of such students, providing that in either case,
    the institution incorporates in the applicant's
    baccalaureate curriculum courses or other academic
    activities that compensate for course deficiencies; and
        (3) except that up to 3 of 15 units of coursework
    required by paragraph (1) of this subsection may be
    distributed by deducting no more than one unit each from
    the categories of social studies, mathematics, sciences
    and electives and completing those 3 units in any of the 5
    categories of coursework described in paragraph (1).
    (b) When allocating funds, local boards of education shall
recognize their obligation to their students to offer the
coursework required by subsection (a).
    (c) A student who has graduated from high school and has
scored within the University's accepted range on the ACT or SAT
shall not be required to take a high school equivalency test
the high school level General Educational Development (GED)
Test as a prerequisite to admission.
(Source: P.A. 96-843, eff. 6-1-10; 96-1000, eff. 7-2-10.)
 
    Section 60. The Eastern Illinois University Law is amended
by changing Section 10-85 as follows:
 
    (110 ILCS 665/10-85)
    Sec. 10-85. Admission requirements.
    (a) No new student shall be admitted to instruction in any
of the departments or colleges of the Eastern Illinois
University unless such student also has satisfactorily
completed:
        (1) at least 15 units of high school coursework from
    the following 5 categories:
            (A) 4 years of English (emphasizing written and
        oral communications and literature), of which up to 2
        years may be collegiate level instruction;
            (B) 3 years of social studies (emphasizing history
        and government);
            (C) 3 years of mathematics (introductory through
        advanced algebra, geometry, trigonometry, or
        fundamentals of computer programming);
            (D) 3 years of science (laboratory sciences); and
            (E) 2 years of electives in foreign language (which
        may be deemed to include American Sign Language),
        music, vocational education or art;
        (2) except that Eastern Illinois University may admit
    individual applicants if it determines through assessment
    or through evaluation based on learning outcomes of the
    coursework taken, including vocational education courses
    and courses taken in a charter school established under
    Article 27A of the School Code, that the applicant
    demonstrates knowledge and skills substantially equivalent
    to the knowledge and skills expected to be acquired in the
    high school courses required for admission. The Board of
    Trustees of Eastern Illinois University shall not
    discriminate in the University's admissions process
    against an applicant for admission because of the
    applicant's enrollment in a charter school established
    under Article 27A of the School Code. Eastern Illinois
    University may also admit (i) applicants who did not have
    an opportunity to complete the minimum college preparatory
    curriculum in high school, and (ii) educationally
    disadvantaged applicants who are admitted to the formal
    organized special assistance programs that are tailored to
    the needs of such students, providing that in either case,
    the institution incorporates in the applicant's
    baccalaureate curriculum courses or other academic
    activities that compensate for course deficiencies; and
        (3) except that up to 3 of 15 units of coursework
    required by paragraph (1) of this subsection may be
    distributed by deducting no more than one unit each from
    the categories of social studies, mathematics, sciences
    and electives and completing those 3 units in any of the 5
    categories of coursework described in paragraph (1).
    (b) When allocating funds, local boards of education shall
recognize their obligation to their students to offer the
coursework required by subsection (a).
    (c) A student who has graduated from high school and has
scored within the University's accepted range on the ACT or SAT
shall not be required to take a high school equivalency test
the high school level General Educational Development (GED)
Test as a prerequisite to admission.
(Source: P.A. 96-843, eff. 6-1-10; 96-1000, eff. 7-2-10.)
 
    Section 65. The Governors State University Law is amended
by changing Section 15-85 as follows:
 
    (110 ILCS 670/15-85)
    Sec. 15-85. Admission requirements.
    (a) No new student shall be admitted to instruction in any
of the departments or colleges of the Governors State
University unless such student also has satisfactorily
completed:
        (1) at least 15 units of high school coursework from
    the following 5 categories:
            (A) 4 years of English (emphasizing written and
        oral communications and literature), of which up to 2
        years may be collegiate level instruction;
            (B) 3 years of social studies (emphasizing history
        and government);
            (C) 3 years of mathematics (introductory through
        advanced algebra, geometry, trigonometry, or
        fundamentals of computer programming);
            (D) 3 years of science (laboratory sciences); and
            (E) 2 years of electives in foreign language (which
        may be deemed to include American Sign Language),
        music, vocational education or art;
        (2) except that Governors State University may admit
    individual applicants if it determines through assessment
    or through evaluation based on learning outcomes of the
    coursework taken, including vocational education courses
    and courses taken in a charter school established under
    Article 27A of the School Code, that the applicant
    demonstrates knowledge and skills substantially equivalent
    to the knowledge and skills expected to be acquired in the
    high school courses required for admission. The Board of
    Trustees of Governors State University shall not
    discriminate in the University's admissions process
    against an applicant for admission because of the
    applicant's enrollment in a charter school established
    under Article 27A of the School Code. Governors State
    University may also admit (i) applicants who did not have
    an opportunity to complete the minimum college preparatory
    curriculum in high school, and (ii) educationally
    disadvantaged applicants who are admitted to the formal
    organized special assistance programs that are tailored to
    the needs of such students, providing that in either case,
    the institution incorporates in the applicant's
    baccalaureate curriculum courses or other academic
    activities that compensate for course deficiencies; and
        (3) except that up to 3 of 15 units of coursework
    required by paragraph (1) of this subsection may be
    distributed by deducting no more than one unit each from
    the categories of social studies, mathematics, sciences
    and electives and completing those 3 units in any of the 5
    categories of coursework described in paragraph (1).
    (b) When allocating funds, local boards of education shall
recognize their obligation to their students to offer the
coursework required by subsection (a).
    (c) A student who has graduated from high school and has
scored within the University's accepted range on the ACT or SAT
shall not be required to take a high school equivalency test
the high school level General Educational Development (GED)
Test as a prerequisite to admission.
(Source: P.A. 96-843, eff. 6-1-10; 96-1000, eff. 7-2-10.)
 
    Section 70. The Illinois State University Law is amended by
changing Section 20-85 as follows:
 
    (110 ILCS 675/20-85)
    Sec. 20-85. Admission requirements.
    (a) No new student shall be admitted to instruction in any
of the departments or colleges of the Illinois State University
unless such student also has satisfactorily completed:
        (1) at least 15 units of high school coursework from
    the following 5 categories:
            (A) 4 years of English (emphasizing written and
        oral communications and literature), of which up to 2
        years may be collegiate level instruction;
            (B) 3 years of social studies (emphasizing history
        and government);
            (C) 3 years of mathematics (introductory through
        advanced algebra, geometry, trigonometry, or
        fundamentals of computer programming);
            (D) 3 years of science (laboratory sciences); and
            (E) 2 years of electives in foreign language (which
        may be deemed to include American Sign Language),
        music, vocational education or art;
        (2) except that Illinois State University may admit
    individual applicants if it determines through assessment
    or through evaluation based on learning outcomes of the
    coursework taken, including vocational education courses
    and courses taken in a charter school established under
    Article 27A of the School Code, that the applicant
    demonstrates knowledge and skills substantially equivalent
    to the knowledge and skills expected to be acquired in the
    high school courses required for admission. The Board of
    Trustees of Illinois State University shall not
    discriminate in the University's admissions process
    against an applicant for admission because of the
    applicant's enrollment in a charter school established
    under Article 27A of the School Code. Illinois State
    University may also admit (i) applicants who did not have
    an opportunity to complete the minimum college preparatory
    curriculum in high school, and (ii) educationally
    disadvantaged applicants who are admitted to the formal
    organized special assistance programs that are tailored to
    the needs of such students, providing that in either case,
    the institution incorporates in the applicant's
    baccalaureate curriculum courses or other academic
    activities that compensate for course deficiencies; and
        (3) except that up to 3 of 15 units of coursework
    required by paragraph (1) of this subsection may be
    distributed by deducting no more than one unit each from
    the categories of social studies, mathematics, sciences
    and electives and completing those 3 units in any of the 5
    categories of coursework described in paragraph (1).
    (b) When allocating funds, local boards of education shall
recognize their obligation to their students to offer the
coursework required by subsection (a).
    (c) A student who has graduated from high school and has
scored within the University's accepted range on the ACT or SAT
shall not be required to take a high school equivalency test
the high school level General Educational Development (GED)
Test as a prerequisite to admission.
(Source: P.A. 96-843, eff. 6-1-10; 96-1000, eff. 7-2-10.)
 
    Section 75. The Northeastern Illinois University Law is
amended by changing Section 25-85 as follows:
 
    (110 ILCS 680/25-85)
    Sec. 25-85. Admission requirements.
    (a) No new student shall be admitted to instruction in any
of the departments or colleges of the Northeastern Illinois
University unless such student also has satisfactorily
completed:
        (1) at least 15 units of high school coursework from
    the following 5 categories:
            (A) 4 years of English (emphasizing written and
        oral communications and literature), of which up to 2
        years may be collegiate level instruction;
            (B) 3 years of social studies (emphasizing history
        and government);
            (C) 3 years of mathematics (introductory through
        advanced algebra, geometry, trigonometry, or
        fundamentals of computer programming);
            (D) 3 years of science (laboratory sciences); and
            (E) 2 years of electives in foreign language (which
        may be deemed to include American Sign Language),
        music, vocational education or art;
        (2) except that Northeastern Illinois University may
    admit individual applicants if it determines through
    assessment or through evaluation based on learning
    outcomes of the coursework taken, including vocational
    education courses and courses taken in a charter school
    established under Article 27A of the School Code, that the
    applicant demonstrates knowledge and skills substantially
    equivalent to the knowledge and skills expected to be
    acquired in the high school courses required for admission.
    The Board of Trustees of Northeastern Illinois University
    shall not discriminate in the University's admissions
    process against an applicant for admission because of the
    applicant's enrollment in a charter school established
    under Article 27A of the School Code. Northeastern Illinois
    University may also admit (i) applicants who did not have
    an opportunity to complete the minimum college preparatory
    curriculum in high school, and (ii) educationally
    disadvantaged applicants who are admitted to the formal
    organized special assistance programs that are tailored to
    the needs of such students, providing that in either case,
    the institution incorporates in the applicant's
    baccalaureate curriculum courses or other academic
    activities that compensate for course deficiencies; and
        (3) except that up to 3 of 15 units of coursework
    required by paragraph (1) of this subsection may be
    distributed by deducting no more than one unit each from
    the categories of social studies, mathematics, sciences
    and electives and completing those 3 units in any of the 5
    categories of coursework described in paragraph (1).
    (b) When allocating funds, local boards of education shall
recognize their obligation to their students to offer the
coursework required by subsection (a).
    (c) A student who has graduated from high school and has
scored within the University's accepted range on the ACT or SAT
shall not be required to take a high school equivalency test
the high school level General Educational Development (GED)
Test as a prerequisite to admission.
(Source: P.A. 96-843, eff. 6-1-10; 96-1000, eff. 7-2-10.)
 
    Section 80. The Northern Illinois University Law is amended
by changing Section 30-85 as follows:
 
    (110 ILCS 685/30-85)
    Sec. 30-85. Admission requirements.
    (a) No new student shall be admitted to instruction in any
of the departments or colleges of the Northern Illinois
University unless such student also has satisfactorily
completed:
        (1) at least 15 units of high school coursework from
    the following 5 categories:
            (A) 4 years of English (emphasizing written and
        oral communications and literature), of which up to 2
        years may be collegiate level instruction;
            (B) 3 years of social studies (emphasizing history
        and government);
            (C) 3 years of mathematics (introductory through
        advanced algebra, geometry, trigonometry, or
        fundamentals of computer programming);
            (D) 3 years of science (laboratory sciences); and
            (E) 2 years of electives in foreign language (which
        may be deemed to include American Sign Language),
        music, vocational education or art;
        (2) except that Northern Illinois University may admit
    individual applicants if it determines through assessment
    or through evaluation based on learning outcomes of the
    coursework taken, including vocational education courses
    and courses taken in a charter school established under
    Article 27A of the School Code, that the applicant
    demonstrates knowledge and skills substantially equivalent
    to the knowledge and skills expected to be acquired in the
    high school courses required for admission. The Board of
    Trustees of Northern Illinois University shall not
    discriminate in the University's admissions process
    against an applicant for admission because of the
    applicant's enrollment in a charter school established
    under Article 27A of the School Code. Northern Illinois
    University may also admit (i) applicants who did not have
    an opportunity to complete the minimum college preparatory
    curriculum in high school, and (ii) educationally
    disadvantaged applicants who are admitted to the formal
    organized special assistance programs that are tailored to
    the needs of such students, providing that in either case,
    the institution incorporates in the applicant's
    baccalaureate curriculum courses or other academic
    activities that compensate for course deficiencies; and
        (3) except that up to 3 of 15 units of coursework
    required by paragraph (1) of this subsection may be
    distributed by deducting no more than one unit each from
    the categories of social studies, mathematics, sciences
    and electives and completing those 3 units in any of the 5
    categories of coursework described in paragraph (1).
    (b) When allocating funds, local boards of education shall
recognize their obligation to their students to offer the
coursework required by subsection (a).
    (c) A student who has graduated from high school and has
scored within the University's accepted range on the ACT or SAT
shall not be required to take a high school equivalency test
the high school level General Educational Development (GED)
Test as a prerequisite to admission.
(Source: P.A. 96-843, eff. 6-1-10; 96-1000, eff. 7-2-10.)
 
    Section 85. The Western Illinois University Law is amended
by changing Section 35-85 as follows:
 
    (110 ILCS 690/35-85)
    Sec. 35-85. Admission requirements.
    (a) No new student shall be admitted to instruction in any
of the departments or colleges of the Western Illinois
University unless such student also has satisfactorily
completed:
        (1) at least 15 units of high school coursework from
    the following 5 categories:
            (A) 4 years of English (emphasizing written and
        oral communications and literature), of which up to 2
        years may be collegiate level instruction;
            (B) 3 years of social studies (emphasizing history
        and government);
            (C) 3 years of mathematics (introductory through
        advanced algebra, geometry, trigonometry, or
        fundamentals of computer programming);
            (D) 3 years of science (laboratory sciences); and
            (E) 2 years of electives in foreign language (which
        may be deemed to include American Sign Language),
        music, vocational education or art;
        (2) except that Western Illinois University may admit
    individual applicants if it determines through assessment
    or through evaluation based on learning outcomes of the
    coursework taken, including vocational education courses
    and courses taken in a charter school established under
    Article 27A of the School Code, that the applicant
    demonstrates knowledge and skills substantially equivalent
    to the knowledge and skills expected to be acquired in the
    high school courses required for admission. The Board of
    Trustees of Western Illinois University shall not
    discriminate in the University's admissions process
    against an applicant for admission because of the
    applicant's enrollment in a charter school established
    under Article 27A of the School Code. Western Illinois
    University may also admit (i) applicants who did not have
    an opportunity to complete the minimum college preparatory
    curriculum in high school, and (ii) educationally
    disadvantaged applicants who are admitted to the formal
    organized special assistance programs that are tailored to
    the needs of such students, providing that in either case,
    the institution incorporates in the applicant's
    baccalaureate curriculum courses or other academic
    activities that compensate for course deficiencies; and
        (3) except that up to 3 of 15 units of coursework
    required by paragraph (1) of this subsection may be
    distributed by deducting no more than one unit each from
    the categories of social studies, mathematics, sciences
    and electives and completing those 3 units in any of the 5
    categories of coursework described in paragraph (1).
    (b) When allocating funds, local boards of education shall
recognize their obligation to their students to offer the
coursework required by subsection (a).
    (c) A student who has graduated from high school and has
scored within the University's accepted range on the ACT or SAT
shall not be required to take a high school equivalency test
the high school level General Educational Development (GED)
Test as a prerequisite to admission.
(Source: P.A. 96-843, eff. 6-1-10; 96-1000, eff. 7-2-10.)
 
    Section 90. The Public Community College Act is amended by
changing Sections 2-12 and 3-17 as follows:
 
    (110 ILCS 805/2-12)  (from Ch. 122, par. 102-12)
    Sec. 2-12. The State Board shall have the power and it
shall be its duty:
    (a) To provide statewide planning for community colleges as
institutions of higher education and co-ordinate the programs,
services and activities of all community colleges in the State
so as to encourage and establish a system of locally initiated
and administered comprehensive community colleges.
    (b) To organize and conduct feasibility surveys for new
community colleges or for the inclusion of existing
institutions as community colleges and the locating of new
institutions.
    (c) To approve all locally funded capital projects for
which no State monies are required, in accordance with
standards established by rule.
    (d) To cooperate with the community colleges in continuing
studies of student characteristics, admission standards,
grading policies, performance of transfer students,
qualification and certification of facilities and any other
problem of community college education.
    (e) To enter into contracts with other governmental
agencies and eligible providers, such as local educational
agencies, community-based organizations of demonstrated
effectiveness, volunteer literacy organizations of
demonstrated effectiveness, institutions of higher education,
public and private nonprofit agencies, libraries, and public
housing authorities; to accept federal funds and to plan with
other State agencies when appropriate for the allocation of
such federal funds for instructional programs and student
services including such funds for adult education and adult
literacy, vocational and technical education, and retraining
as may be allocated by state and federal agencies for the aid
of community colleges. To receive, receipt for, hold in trust,
expend and administer, for all purposes of this Act, funds and
other aid made available by the federal government or by other
agencies public or private, subject to appropriation by the
General Assembly. The changes to this subdivision (e) made by
this amendatory Act of the 91st General Assembly apply on and
after July 1, 2001.
    (f) To determine efficient and adequate standards for
community colleges for the physical plant, heating, lighting,
ventilation, sanitation, safety, equipment and supplies,
instruction and teaching, curriculum, library, operation,
maintenance, administration and supervision, and to grant
recognition certificates to community colleges meeting such
standards.
    (g) To determine the standards for establishment of
community colleges and the proper location of the site in
relation to existing institutions of higher education offering
academic, occupational and technical training curricula,
possible enrollment, assessed valuation, industrial, business,
agricultural, and other conditions reflecting educational
needs in the area to be served; however, no community college
may be considered as being recognized nor may the establishment
of any community college be authorized in any district which
shall be deemed inadequate for the maintenance, in accordance
with the desirable standards thus determined, of a community
college offering the basic subjects of general education and
suitable vocational and semiprofessional and technical
curricula.
    (h) To approve or disapprove new units of instruction,
research or public service as defined in Section 3-25.1 of this
Act submitted by the boards of trustees of the respective
community college districts of this State. The State Board may
discontinue programs which fail to reflect the educational
needs of the area being served. The community college district
shall be granted 60 days following the State Board staff
recommendation and prior to the State Board's action to respond
to concerns regarding the program in question. If the State
Board acts to abolish a community college program, the
community college district has a right to appeal the decision
in accordance with administrative rules promulgated by the
State Board under the provisions of the Illinois Administrative
Procedure Act.
    (i) To participate in, to recommend approval or
disapproval, and to assist in the coordination of the programs
of community colleges participating in programs of
interinstitutional cooperation with other public or nonpublic
institutions of higher education. If the State Board does not
approve a particular cooperative agreement, the community
college district has a right to appeal the decision in
accordance with administrative rules promulgated by the State
Board under the provisions of the Illinois Administrative
Procedure Act.
    (j) To establish guidelines regarding sabbatical leaves.
    (k) To establish guidelines for the admission into special,
appropriate programs conducted or created by community
colleges for elementary and secondary school dropouts who have
received truant status from the school districts of this State
in compliance with Section 26-14 of The School Code.
    (l) The Community College Board shall conduct a study of
community college teacher education courses to determine how
the community college system can increase its participation in
the preparation of elementary and secondary teachers.
    (m) To establish by July 1, 1997 uniform financial
accounting and reporting standards and principles for
community colleges and develop procedures and systems for
community colleges for reporting financial data to the State
Board.
    (n) To create and participate in the conduct and operation
of any corporation, joint venture, partnership, association,
or other organizational entity that has the power: (i) to
acquire land, buildings, and other capital equipment for the
use and benefit of the community colleges or their students;
(ii) to accept gifts and make grants for the use and benefit of
the community colleges or their students; (iii) to aid in the
instruction and education of students of community colleges;
and (iv) to promote activities to acquaint members of the
community with the facilities of the various community
colleges.
    (o) On and after July 1, 2001, to ensure the effective
teaching of adults and to prepare them for success in
employment and lifelong learning by administering a network of
providers, programs, and services to provide adult basic
education, adult secondary and high school equivalency testing
education secondary/general education development, English as
a second language, and any other instruction designed to
prepare adult students to function successfully in society and
to experience success in postsecondary education and the world
of work.
    (p) On and after July 1, 2001, to supervise the
administration of adult education and adult literacy programs,
to establish the standards for such courses of instruction and
supervise the administration thereof, to contract with other
State and local agencies and eligible providers, such as local
educational agencies, community-based organizations of
demonstrated effectiveness, volunteer literacy organizations
of demonstrated effectiveness, institutions of higher
education, public and private nonprofit agencies, libraries,
and public housing authorities, for the purpose of promoting
and establishing classes for instruction under these programs,
to contract with other State and local agencies to accept and
expend appropriations for educational purposes to reimburse
local eligible providers for the cost of these programs, and to
establish an advisory council consisting of all categories of
eligible providers; agency partners, such as the State Board of
Education, the Department of Human Services, the Department of
Employment Security, and the Secretary of State literacy
program; and other stakeholders to identify, deliberate, and
make recommendations to the State Board on adult education
policy and priorities. The State Board shall support statewide
geographic distribution; diversity of eligible providers; and
the adequacy, stability, and predictability of funding so as
not to disrupt or diminish, but rather to enhance, adult
education by this change of administration.
(Source: P.A. 94-1105, eff. 6-1-07.)
 
    (110 ILCS 805/3-17)  (from Ch. 122, par. 103-17)
    Sec. 3-17. The community college districts shall admit all
students qualified to complete any one of their programs
including general education, transfer, occupational,
technical, and terminal, as long as space for effective
instruction is available. After entry, the college shall
counsel and distribute the students among its programs
according to their interests and abilities. Students allowed
entry in college transfer programs must have ability and
competence similar to that possessed by students admitted to
state universities for similar programs. Entry level
competence to such college transfer programs may be achieved
through successful completion of other preparatory courses
offered by the college. If space is not available for all
students applying, the community college will accept those best
qualified, using rank in class and ability and achievement
tests as guides, and shall give preference to students residing
in the district unless the district has entered into a
contractual agreement for the mutual exchange of students with
another community college district, in which case, equal
enrollment preference may be granted to students residing in
such contracting districts.
    A student who has graduated from high school and has scored
within the community college's accepted range on the ACT or SAT
shall not be required to take a high school equivalency test
the high school level General Educational Development (GED)
Test as a prerequisite to admission.
(Source: P.A. 91-374, eff. 7-30-99.)
 
    Section 95. The Higher Education Student Assistance Act is
amended by changing Sections 50 and 52 as follows:
 
    (110 ILCS 947/50)
    Sec. 50. Minority Teachers of Illinois scholarship
program.
    (a) As used in this Section:
        "Eligible applicant" means a minority student who has
    graduated from high school or has received a high school
    equivalency certificate General Educational Development
    Certification and has maintained a cumulative grade point
    average of no less than 2.5 on a 4.0 scale, and who by
    reason thereof is entitled to apply for scholarships to be
    awarded under this Section.
        "Minority student" means a student who is any of the
    following:
            (1) American Indian or Alaska Native (a person
        having origins in any of the original peoples of North
        and South America, including Central America, and who
        maintains tribal affiliation or community attachment).
            (2) Asian (a person having origins in any of the
        original peoples of the Far East, Southeast Asia, or
        the Indian subcontinent, including, but not limited
        to, Cambodia, China, India, Japan, Korea, Malaysia,
        Pakistan, the Philippine Islands, Thailand, and
        Vietnam).
            (3) Black or African American (a person having
        origins in any of the black racial groups of Africa).
        Terms such as "Haitian" or "Negro" can be used in
        addition to "Black or African American".
            (4) Hispanic or Latino (a person of Cuban, Mexican,
        Puerto Rican, South or Central American, or other
        Spanish culture or origin, regardless of race).
            (5) Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander (a
        person having origins in any of the original peoples of
        Hawaii, Guam, Samoa, or other Pacific Islands).
        "Qualified student" means a person (i) who is a
    resident of this State and a citizen or permanent resident
    of the United States; (ii) who is a minority student, as
    defined in this Section; (iii) who, as an eligible
    applicant, has made a timely application for a minority
    teaching scholarship under this Section; (iv) who is
    enrolled on at least a half-time basis at a qualified
    Illinois institution of higher learning; (v) who is
    enrolled in a course of study leading to teacher
    certification, including alternative teacher
    certification; (vi) who maintains a grade point average of
    no less than 2.5 on a 4.0 scale; and (vii) who continues to
    advance satisfactorily toward the attainment of a degree.
    (b) In order to encourage academically talented Illinois
minority students to pursue teaching careers at the preschool
or elementary or secondary school level, each qualified student
shall be awarded a minority teacher scholarship to any
qualified Illinois institution of higher learning. However,
preference may be given to qualified applicants enrolled at or
above the junior level.
    (c) Each minority teacher scholarship awarded under this
Section shall be in an amount sufficient to pay the tuition and
fees and room and board costs of the qualified Illinois
institution of higher learning at which the recipient is
enrolled, up to an annual maximum of $5,000; except that in the
case of a recipient who does not reside on-campus at the
institution at which he or she is enrolled, the amount of the
scholarship shall be sufficient to pay tuition and fee expenses
and a commuter allowance, up to an annual maximum of $5,000.
    (d) The total amount of minority teacher scholarship
assistance awarded by the Commission under this Section to an
individual in any given fiscal year, when added to other
financial assistance awarded to that individual for that year,
shall not exceed the cost of attendance at the institution at
which the student is enrolled. If the amount of minority
teacher scholarship to be awarded to a qualified student as
provided in subsection (c) of this Section exceeds the cost of
attendance at the institution at which the student is enrolled,
the minority teacher scholarship shall be reduced by an amount
equal to the amount by which the combined financial assistance
available to the student exceeds the cost of attendance.
    (e) The maximum number of academic terms for which a
qualified student can receive minority teacher scholarship
assistance shall be 8 semesters or 12 quarters.
    (f) In any academic year for which an eligible applicant
under this Section accepts financial assistance through the
Paul Douglas Teacher Scholarship Program, as authorized by
Section 551 et seq. of the Higher Education Act of 1965, the
applicant shall not be eligible for scholarship assistance
awarded under this Section.
    (g) All applications for minority teacher scholarships to
be awarded under this Section shall be made to the Commission
on forms which the Commission shall provide for eligible
applicants. The form of applications and the information
required to be set forth therein shall be determined by the
Commission, and the Commission shall require eligible
applicants to submit with their applications such supporting
documents or recommendations as the Commission deems
necessary.
    (h) Subject to a separate appropriation for such purposes,
payment of any minority teacher scholarship awarded under this
Section shall be determined by the Commission. All scholarship
funds distributed in accordance with this subsection shall be
paid to the institution and used only for payment of the
tuition and fee and room and board expenses incurred by the
student in connection with his or her attendance as an
undergraduate student at a qualified Illinois institution of
higher learning. Any minority teacher scholarship awarded
under this Section shall be applicable to 2 semesters or 3
quarters of enrollment. If a qualified student withdraws from
enrollment prior to completion of the first semester or quarter
for which the minority teacher scholarship is applicable, the
school shall refund to the Commission the full amount of the
minority teacher scholarship.
    (i) The Commission shall administer the minority teacher
scholarship aid program established by this Section and shall
make all necessary and proper rules not inconsistent with this
Section for its effective implementation.
    (j) When an appropriation to the Commission for a given
fiscal year is insufficient to provide scholarships to all
qualified students, the Commission shall allocate the
appropriation in accordance with this subsection. If funds are
insufficient to provide all qualified students with a
scholarship as authorized by this Section, the Commission shall
allocate the available scholarship funds for that fiscal year
on the basis of the date the Commission receives a complete
application form.
    (k) Notwithstanding the provisions of subsection (j) or any
other provision of this Section, at least 30% of the funds
appropriated for scholarships awarded under this Section in
each fiscal year shall be reserved for qualified male minority
applicants. If the Commission does not receive enough
applications from qualified male minorities on or before
January 1 of each fiscal year to award 30% of the funds
appropriated for these scholarships to qualified male minority
applicants, then the Commission may award a portion of the
reserved funds to qualified female minority applicants.
    (l) Prior to receiving scholarship assistance for any
academic year, each recipient of a minority teacher scholarship
awarded under this Section shall be required by the Commission
to sign an agreement under which the recipient pledges that,
within the one-year period following the termination of the
program for which the recipient was awarded a minority teacher
scholarship, the recipient (i) shall begin teaching for a
period of not less than one year for each year of scholarship
assistance he or she was awarded under this Section; and (ii)
shall fulfill this teaching obligation at a nonprofit Illinois
public, private, or parochial preschool, elementary school, or
secondary school at which no less than 30% of the enrolled
students are minority students in the year during which the
recipient begins teaching at the school; and (iii) shall, upon
request by the Commission, provide the Commission with evidence
that he or she is fulfilling or has fulfilled the terms of the
teaching agreement provided for in this subsection.
    (m) If a recipient of a minority teacher scholarship
awarded under this Section fails to fulfill the teaching
obligation set forth in subsection (l) of this Section, the
Commission shall require the recipient to repay the amount of
the scholarships received, prorated according to the fraction
of the teaching obligation not completed, at a rate of interest
equal to 5%, and, if applicable, reasonable collection fees.
The Commission is authorized to establish rules relating to its
collection activities for repayment of scholarships under this
Section. All repayments collected under this Section shall be
forwarded to the State Comptroller for deposit into the State's
General Revenue Fund.
    (n) A recipient of minority teacher scholarship shall not
be considered in violation of the agreement entered into
pursuant to subsection (l) if the recipient (i) enrolls on a
full time basis as a graduate student in a course of study
related to the field of teaching at a qualified Illinois
institution of higher learning; (ii) is serving, not in excess
of 3 years, as a member of the armed services of the United
States; (iii) is temporarily totally disabled for a period of
time not to exceed 3 years as established by sworn affidavit of
a qualified physician; (iv) is seeking and unable to find full
time employment as a teacher at an Illinois public, private, or
parochial preschool or elementary or secondary school that
satisfies the criteria set forth in subsection (l) of this
Section and is able to provide evidence of that fact; (v)
becomes permanently totally disabled as established by sworn
affidavit of a qualified physician; (vi) is taking additional
courses, on at least a half-time basis, needed to obtain
certification as a teacher in Illinois; or (vii) is fulfilling
teaching requirements associated with other programs
administered by the Commission and cannot concurrently fulfill
them under this Section in a period of time equal to the length
of the teaching obligation.
    (o) Scholarship recipients under this Section who withdraw
from a program of teacher education but remain enrolled in
school to continue their postsecondary studies in another
academic discipline shall not be required to commence repayment
of their Minority Teachers of Illinois scholarship so long as
they remain enrolled in school on a full-time basis or if they
can document for the Commission special circumstances that
warrant extension of repayment.
(Source: P.A. 97-396, eff. 1-1-12.)
 
    (110 ILCS 947/52)
    Sec. 52. Golden Apple Scholars of Illinois Program; Golden
Apple Foundation for Excellence in Teaching.
    (a) In this Section, "Foundation" means the Golden Apple
Foundation for Excellence in Teaching, a registered 501(c)(3)
not-for-profit corporation.
    (a-2) In order to encourage academically talented Illinois
students, especially minority students, to pursue teaching
careers, especially in teacher shortage disciplines (which
shall be defined to include early childhood education) or at
hard-to-staff schools (as defined by the Commission in
consultation with the State Board of Education), to provide
those students with the crucial mentoring, guidance, and
in-service support that will significantly increase the
likelihood that they will complete their full teaching
commitments and elect to continue teaching in targeted
disciplines and hard-to-staff schools, and to ensure that
students in this State will continue to have access to a pool
of highly-qualified teachers, each qualified student shall be
awarded a Golden Apple Scholars of Illinois Program scholarship
to any Illinois institution of higher learning. The Commission
shall administer the Golden Apple Scholars of Illinois Program,
which shall be managed by the Foundation pursuant to the terms
of a grant agreement meeting the requirements of Section 4 of
the Illinois Grant Funds Recovery Act.
    (a-3) For purposes of this Section, a qualified student
shall be a student who meets the following qualifications:
        (1) is a resident of this State and a citizen or
    eligible noncitizen of the United States;
        (2) is a high school graduate or a person who has
    received a high school equivalency General Educational
    Development certificate;
        (3) is enrolled or accepted, on at least a half-time
    basis, at an institution of higher learning;
        (4) is pursuing a postsecondary course of study leading
    to initial certification or pursuing additional course
    work needed to gain State Board of Education approval to
    teach, including alternative teacher licensure; and
        (5) is a participant in programs managed by and is
    approved to receive a scholarship from the Foundation.
    (a-5) (Blank).
    (b) (Blank).
    (b-5) Funds designated for the Golden Apple Scholars of
Illinois Program shall be used by the Commission for the
payment of scholarship assistance under this Section or for the
award of grant funds, subject to the Illinois Grant Funds
Recovery Act, to the Foundation. Subject to appropriation,
awards of grant funds to the Foundation shall be made on an
annual basis and following an application for grant funds by
the Foundation.
    (b-10) Each year, the Foundation shall include in its
application to the Commission for grant funds an estimate of
the amount of scholarship assistance to be provided to
qualified students during the grant period. Any amount of
appropriated funds exceeding the estimated amount of
scholarship assistance may be awarded by the Commission to the
Foundation for management expenses expected to be incurred by
the Foundation in providing the mentoring, guidance, and
in-service supports that will increase the likelihood that
qualified students will complete their teaching commitments
and elect to continue teaching in hard-to-staff schools. If the
estimate of the amount of scholarship assistance described in
the Foundation's application is less than the actual amount
required for the award of scholarship assistance to qualified
students, the Foundation shall be responsible for using awarded
grant funds to ensure all qualified students receive
scholarship assistance under this Section.
    (b-15) All grant funds not expended or legally obligated
within the time specified in a grant agreement between the
Foundation and the Commission shall be returned to the
Commission within 45 days. Any funds legally obligated by the
end of a grant agreement shall be liquidated within 45 days or
otherwise returned to the Commission within 90 days after the
end of the grant agreement that resulted in the award of grant
funds.
    (c) Each scholarship awarded under this Section shall be in
an amount sufficient to pay the tuition and fees and room and
board costs of the Illinois institution of higher learning at
which the recipient is enrolled, up to an annual maximum of
$5,000; except that in the case of a recipient who does not
reside on-campus at the institution of higher learning at which
he or she is enrolled, the amount of the scholarship shall be
sufficient to pay tuition and fee expenses and a commuter
allowance, up to an annual maximum of $5,000. All scholarship
funds distributed in accordance with this Section shall be paid
to the institution on behalf of recipients.
    (d) The total amount of scholarship assistance awarded by
the Commission under this Section to an individual in any given
fiscal year, when added to other financial assistance awarded
to that individual for that year, shall not exceed the cost of
attendance at the institution of higher learning at which the
student is enrolled. In any academic year for which a qualified
student under this Section accepts financial assistance
through any other teacher scholarship program administered by
the Commission, a qualified student shall not be eligible for
scholarship assistance awarded under this Section.
    (e) A recipient may receive up to 8 semesters or 12
quarters of scholarship assistance under this Section.
Scholarship funds are applicable toward 2 semesters or 3
quarters of enrollment each academic year.
    (f) All applications for scholarship assistance to be
awarded under this Section shall be made to the Foundation in a
form determined by the Foundation. Each year, the Foundation
shall notify the Commission of the individuals awarded
scholarship assistance under this Section. Each year, at least
30% of the Golden Apple Scholars of Illinois Program
scholarships shall be awarded to students residing in counties
having a population of less than 500,000.
    (g) (Blank).
    (h) The Commission shall administer the payment of
scholarship assistance provided through the Golden Apple
Scholars of Illinois Program and shall make all necessary and
proper rules not inconsistent with this Section for the
effective implementation of this Section.
    (i) Prior to receiving scholarship assistance for any
academic year, each recipient of a scholarship awarded under
this Section shall be required by the Foundation to sign an
agreement under which the recipient pledges that, within the
2-year period following the termination of the academic program
for which the recipient was awarded a scholarship, the
recipient: (i) shall begin teaching for a period of not less
than 5 years, (ii) shall fulfill this teaching obligation at a
nonprofit Illinois public, private, or parochial preschool or
an Illinois public elementary or secondary school that
qualifies for teacher loan cancellation under Section
465(a)(2)(A) of the federal Higher Education Act of 1965 (20
U.S.C. 1087ee(a)(2)(A)) or other Illinois schools deemed
eligible for fulfilling the teaching commitment as designated
by the Foundation, and (iii) shall, upon request of the
Foundation, provide the Foundation with evidence that he or she
is fulfilling or has fulfilled the terms of the teaching
agreement provided for in this subsection. Upon request, the
Foundation shall provide evidence of teacher fulfillment to the
Commission.
    (j) If a recipient of a scholarship awarded under this
Section fails to fulfill the teaching obligation set forth in
subsection (i) of this Section, the Commission shall require
the recipient to repay the amount of the scholarships received,
prorated according to the fraction of the teaching obligation
not completed, plus interest at a rate of 5% and if applicable,
reasonable collection fees. Payments received by the
Commission under this subsection (j) shall be remitted to the
State Comptroller for deposit into the General Revenue Fund,
except that that portion of a recipient's repayment that equals
the amount in expenses that the Commission has reasonably
incurred in attempting collection from that recipient shall be
remitted to the State Comptroller for deposit into the
Commission's Accounts Receivable Fund.
    (k) A recipient of a scholarship awarded by the Foundation
under this Section shall not be considered to have failed to
fulfill the teaching obligations of the agreement entered into
pursuant to subsection (i) if the recipient (i) enrolls on a
full-time basis as a graduate student in a course of study
related to the field of teaching at an institution of higher
learning; (ii) is serving as a member of the armed services of
the United States; (iii) is temporarily totally disabled, as
established by sworn affidavit of a qualified physician; (iv)
is seeking and unable to find full-time employment as a teacher
at a school that satisfies the criteria set forth in subsection
(i) and is able to provide evidence of that fact; (v) is taking
additional courses, on at least a half-time basis, needed to
obtain certification as a teacher in Illinois; (vi) is
fulfilling teaching requirements associated with other
programs administered by the Commission and cannot
concurrently fulfill them under this Section in a period of
time equal to the length of the teaching obligation; or (vii)
is participating in a program established under Executive Order
10924 of the President of the United States or the federal
National Community Service Act of 1990 (42 U.S.C. 12501 et
seq.). Any such extension of the period during which the
teaching requirement must be fulfilled shall be subject to
limitations of duration as established by the Commission.
    (l) A recipient who fails to fulfill the teaching
obligations of the agreement entered into pursuant to
subsection (i) of this Section shall repay the amount of
scholarship assistance awarded to them under this Section
within 10 years.
    (m) Annually, at a time determined by the Commission in
consultation with the Foundation, the Foundation shall submit a
report to assist the Commission in monitoring the Foundation's
performance of grant activities. The report shall describe the
following:
        (1) the Foundation's anticipated expenditures for the
    next fiscal year;
        (2) the number of qualified students receiving
    scholarship assistance at each institution of higher
    learning where a qualified student was enrolled under this
    Section during the previous fiscal year;
        (3) the total monetary value of scholarship funds paid
    to each institution of higher learning at which a qualified
    student was enrolled during the previous fiscal year;
        (4) the number of scholarship recipients who completed
    a baccalaureate degree during the previous fiscal year;
        (5) the number of scholarship recipients who fulfilled
    their teaching obligation during the previous fiscal year;
        (6) the number of scholarship recipients who failed to
    fulfill their teaching obligation during the previous
    fiscal year;
        (7) the number of scholarship recipients granted an
    extension described in subsection (k) of this Section
    during the previous fiscal year;
        (8) the number of scholarship recipients required to
    repay scholarship assistance in accordance with subsection
    (j) of this Section during the previous fiscal year;
        (9) the number of scholarship recipients who
    successfully repaid scholarship assistance in full during
    the previous fiscal year;
        (10) the number of scholarship recipients who
    defaulted on their obligation to repay scholarship
    assistance during the previous fiscal year;
        (11) the amount of scholarship assistance subject to
    collection in accordance with subsection (j) of this
    Section at the end of the previous fiscal year;
        (12) the amount of collected funds to be remitted to
    the Comptroller in accordance with subsection (j) of this
    Section at the end of the previous fiscal year; and
        (13) other information that the Commission may
    reasonably request.
    (n) Nothing in this Section shall affect the rights of the
Commission to collect moneys owed to it by recipients of
scholarship assistance through the Illinois Future Teacher
Corps Program, repealed by this amendatory Act of the 98th
General Assembly.
    (o) The Auditor General shall prepare an annual audit of
the operations and finances of the Golden Apple Scholars of
Illinois Program. This audit shall be provided to the Governor,
General Assembly, and the Commission.
    (p) The suspension of grant making authority found in
Section 4.2 of the Illinois Grant Funds Recovery Act shall not
apply to grants made pursuant to this Section.
(Source: P.A. 98-533, eff. 8-23-13.)
 
    Section 100. The Illinois Insurance Code is amended by
changing Section 500-50 as follows:
 
    (215 ILCS 5/500-50)
    (Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2017)
    Sec. 500-50. Insurance producers; examination statistics.
    (a) The use of examinations for the purpose of determining
qualifications of persons to be licensed as insurance producers
has a direct and far-reaching effect on persons seeking those
licenses, on insurance companies, and on the public. It is in
the public interest and it will further the public welfare to
insure that examinations for licensing do not have the effect
of unlawfully discriminating against applicants for licensing
as insurance producers on the basis of race, color, national
origin, or sex.
    (b) As used in this Section, the following words have the
meanings given in this subsection.
    Examination. "Examination" means the examination in each
line of insurance administered pursuant to Section 500-30.
    Examinee. "Examinee" means a person who takes an
examination.
    Part. "Part" means a portion of an examination for which a
score is calculated.
    Operational item. "Operational item" means a test question
considered in determining an examinee's score.
    Test form. "Test form" means the test booklet or instrument
used for a part of an examination.
    Pretest item. "Pretest item" means a prospective test
question that is included in a test form in order to assess its
performance, but is not considered in determining an examinee's
score.
    Minority group or examinees. "Minority group" or "minority
examinees" means examinees who are American Indian or Alaska
Native, Asian, Black or African American, Hispanic or Latino,
or Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander.
    Correct-answer rate. "Correct-answer rate" for an item
means the number of examinees who provided the correct answer
on an item divided by the number of examinees who answered the
item.
    Correlation. "Correlation" means a statistical measure of
the relationship between performance on an item and performance
on a part of the examination.
    (c) The Director shall ask each examinee to self-report on
a voluntary basis on the answer sheet, application form, or by
other appropriate means, the following information:
        (1) race or ethnicity (American Indian or Alaska
    Native, Asian, Black or African American, Hispanic or
    Latino, Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander, or
    White);
        (2) education (8th grade or less; less than 12th grade;
    high school diploma or high school equivalency certificate
    G.E.D.; some college, but no 4-year degree; or 4-year
    degree or more); and
        (3) gender (male or female).
    The Director must advise all examinees that they are not
required to provide this information, that they will not be
penalized for not doing so, and that the Director will use the
information provided exclusively for research and statistical
purposes and to improve the quality and fairness of the
examinations.
    (d) No later than May 1 of each year, the Director must
prepare, publicly announce, and publish an Examination Report
of summary statistical information relating to each
examination administered during the preceding calendar year.
Each Examination Report shall show with respect to each
examination:
        (1) For all examinees combined and separately by race
    or ethnicity, by educational level, by gender, by
    educational level within race or ethnicity, by education
    level within gender, and by race or ethnicity within
    gender:
            (A) number of examinees;
            (B) percentage and number of examinees who passed
        each part;
            (C) percentage and number of examinees who passed
        all parts;
            (D) mean scaled scores on each part; and
            (E) standard deviation of scaled scores on each
        part.
        (2) For male examinees, female examinees, Black or
    African American examinees, white examinees, American
    Indian or Alaska Native examinees, Asian examinees,
    Hispanic or Latino examinees, and Native Hawaiian or Other
    Pacific Islander, respectively, with a high school diploma
    or high school equivalency certificate G.E.D., the
    distribution of scaled scores on each part.
    No later than May 1 of each year, the Director must prepare
and make available on request an Item Report of summary
statistical information relating to each operational item on
each test form administered during the preceding calendar year.
The Item Report shall show, for each operational item, for all
examinees combined and separately for Black or African American
examinees, white examinees, American Indian or Alaska Native
examinees, Asian examinees, Hispanic or Latino examinees, and
Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander, the correct-answer
rates and correlations.
    The Director is not required to report separate statistical
information for any group or subgroup comprising fewer than 50
examinees.
    (e) The Director must obtain a regular analysis of the data
collected under this Section, and any other relevant
information, for purposes of the development of new test forms.
The analysis shall continue the implementation of the item
selection methodology as recommended in the Final Report of the
Illinois Insurance Producer's Licensing Examination Advisory
Committee dated November 19, 1991, and filed with the
Department unless some other methodology is determined by the
Director to be as effective in minimizing differences between
white and minority examinee pass-fail rates.
    (f) The Director has the discretion to set cutoff scores
for the examinations, provided that scaled scores on test forms
administered after July 1, 1993, shall be made comparable to
scaled scores on test forms administered in 1991 by use of
professionally acceptable methods so as to minimize changes in
passing rates related to the presence or absence of or changes
in equating or scaling equations or methods or content
outlines. Each calendar year, the scaled cutoff score for each
part of each examination shall fluctuate by no more than the
standard error of measurement from the scaled cutoff score
employed during the preceding year.
    (g) No later than May 1, 2003 and no later than May 1 of
every fourth year thereafter, the Director must release to the
public and make generally available one representative test
form and set of answer keys for each part of each examination.
    (h) The Director must maintain, for a period of 3 years
after they are prepared or used, all registration forms, test
forms, answer sheets, operational items and pretest items, item
analyses, and other statistical analyses relating to the
examinations. All personal identifying information regarding
examinees and the content of test items must be maintained
confidentially as necessary for purposes of protecting the
personal privacy of examinees and the maintenance of test
security.
    (i) In administering the examinations, the Director must
make such accommodations for disabled examinees as are
reasonably warranted by the particular disability involved,
including the provision of additional time if necessary to
complete an examination or special assistance in taking an
examination.
    (j) For the purposes of this Section:
        (1) "American Indian or Alaska Native" means a person
    having origins in any of the original peoples of North and
    South America, including Central America, and who
    maintains tribal affiliation or community attachment.
        (2) "Asian" means a person having origins in any of the
    original peoples of the Far East, Southeast Asia, or the
    Indian subcontinent, including, but not limited to,
    Cambodia, China, India, Japan, Korea, Malaysia, Pakistan,
    the Philippine Islands, Thailand, and Vietnam.
        (3) "Black or African American" means a person having
    origins in any of the black racial groups of Africa. Terms
    such as "Haitian" or "Negro" can be used in addition to
    "Black or African American".
        (4) "Hispanic or Latino" means a person of Cuban,
    Mexican, Puerto Rican, South or Central American, or other
    Spanish culture or origin, regardless of race.
        (5) "Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander" means a
    person having origins in any of the original peoples of
    Hawaii, Guam, Samoa, or other Pacific Islands.
        (6) "White" means a person having origins in any of the
    original peoples of Europe, the Middle East, or North
    Africa.
(Source: P.A. 97-396, eff. 1-1-12.)
 
    Section 105. The Pharmacy Practice Act is amended by
changing Section 9 as follows:
 
    (225 ILCS 85/9)  (from Ch. 111, par. 4129)
    (Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2018)
    Sec. 9. Registration as pharmacy technician. Any person
shall be entitled to registration as a registered pharmacy
technician who is of the age of 16 or over, has not engaged in
conduct or behavior determined to be grounds for discipline
under this Act, is attending or has graduated from an
accredited high school or comparable school or educational
institution or received a high school equivalency certificate
GED, and has filed a written application for registration on a
form to be prescribed and furnished by the Department for that
purpose. The Department shall issue a certificate of
registration as a registered pharmacy technician to any
applicant who has qualified as aforesaid, and such registration
shall be the sole authority required to assist licensed
pharmacists in the practice of pharmacy, under the supervision
of a licensed pharmacist. A registered pharmacy technician may,
under the supervision of a pharmacist, assist in the practice
of pharmacy and perform such functions as assisting in the
dispensing process, offering counseling, receiving new verbal
prescription orders, and having prescriber contact concerning
prescription drug order clarification. A registered pharmacy
technician may not engage in patient counseling, drug regimen
review, or clinical conflict resolution.
    Beginning on January 1, 2010, within 2 years after initial
registration as a registered technician, a pharmacy technician
must become certified by successfully passing the Pharmacy
Technician Certification Board (PTCB) examination or another
Board-approved pharmacy technician examination and register as
a certified pharmacy technician with the Department in order to
continue to perform pharmacy technician's duties. This
requirement does not apply to pharmacy technicians registered
prior to January 1, 2008.
    Any person registered as a pharmacy technician who is also
enrolled in a first professional degree program in pharmacy in
a school or college of pharmacy or a department of pharmacy of
a university approved by the Department or has graduated from
such a program within the last 18 months, shall be considered a
"student pharmacist" and entitled to use the title "student
pharmacist". A student pharmacist must meet all of the
requirements for registration as a pharmacy technician set
forth in this Section excluding the requirement of
certification prior to the second registration renewal and pay
the required pharmacy technician registration fees. A student
pharmacist may, under the supervision of a pharmacist, assist
in the practice of pharmacy and perform any and all functions
delegated to him or her by the pharmacist.
    Any person seeking licensure as a pharmacist who has
graduated from a pharmacy program outside the United States
must register as a pharmacy technician and shall be considered
a "student pharmacist" and be entitled to use the title
"student pharmacist" while completing the 1,200 clinical hours
of training approved by the Board of Pharmacy described and for
no more than 18 months after completion of these hours. These
individuals are not required to become certified pharmacy
technicians while completing their Board approved clinical
training, but must become licensed as a pharmacist or become a
certified pharmacy technician before the second pharmacy
technician registration renewal following completion of the
Board approved clinical training.
    The Department shall not renew the pharmacy technician
license of any person who has been registered as a "student
pharmacist" and has dropped out of or been expelled from an
ACPE accredited college of pharmacy, who has failed to complete
his or her 1,200 hours of Board approved clinical training
within 24 months or who has failed the pharmacist licensure
examination 3 times and shall require these individuals to meet
the requirements of and become registered a certified pharmacy
technician.
    The Department may take any action set forth in Section 30
of this Act with regard to registrations pursuant to this
Section.
    Any person who is enrolled in a non-traditional Pharm.D.
program at an ACPE accredited college of pharmacy and is a
licensed pharmacist under the laws of another United States
jurisdiction shall be permitted to engage in the program of
practice experience required in the academic program by virtue
of such license. Such person shall be exempt from the
requirement of registration as a registered pharmacy
technician while engaged in the program of practice experience
required in the academic program.
    An applicant for registration as a pharmacy technician may
assist a pharmacist in the practice of pharmacy for a period of
up to 60 days prior to the issuance of a certificate of
registration if the applicant has submitted the required fee
and an application for registration to the Department. The
applicant shall keep a copy of the submitted application on the
premises where the applicant is assisting in the practice of
pharmacy. The Department shall forward confirmation of receipt
of the application with start and expiration dates of practice
pending registration.
(Source: P.A. 95-689, eff. 10-29-07; 96-673, eff. 1-1-10.)
 
    Section 110. The Structural Pest Control Act is amended by
changing Section 5 as follows:
 
    (225 ILCS 235/5)  (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 2205)
    (Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2019)
    Sec. 5. Certification requirements. No individual shall
apply any general use or restricted pesticide while engaged in
commercial structural pest control in this State unless
certified, or supervised by someone who is certified, by the
Department in accordance with this Section.
    No individual shall apply any restricted pesticide while
engaged in non-commercial structural pest control in this State
unless certified, or supervised by someone who is certified, by
the Department in accordance with this Section. In addition,
any individual at any non-commercial structural pest control
location using general use pesticides shall comply with the
labeling requirements of the pesticides used at that location.
    Each commercial structural pest control location shall be
required to employ at least one certified technician at each
location. In addition, each non-commercial structural pest
control location utilizing restricted pesticides shall be
required to employ at least one certified technician at each
location. Individuals who are not certified technicians may
work under the supervision of a certified technician employed
at the commercial or non-commercial location who shall be
responsible for their pest control activities. Any technician
providing supervision for the use of restricted pesticides must
be certified in the sub-category for which he is providing
supervision.
    A. Any individual engaging in commercial structural pest
control and utilizing general use pesticides shall meet the
following requirements:
        1. He has a high school diploma or a high school
    equivalency GED certificate;
        2. He has filed an original application, paid the fee
    required for examination, and successfully passed the
    General Standards examination.
    B. Any individual engaging in commercial or non-commercial
structural pest control and utilizing restricted pesticides in
any one of the sub-categories in Section 7 of this Act shall
meet the following requirements:
        1. He has a high school diploma or a high school
    equivalency GED certificate;
        2. He has:
            a. six months of practical experience in one or
        more sub-categories in structural pest control; or
            b. successfully completed a minimum of 16 semester
        hours, or their equivalent, in entomology or related
        fields from a recognized college or university; or
            c. successfully completed a pest control course,
        approved by the Department, from a recognized
        educational institution or other entity.
    Each applicant shall have filed an original application and
paid the fee required for examination. Every applicant who
successfully passes the General Standards examination and at
least one sub-category examination shall be certified in each
sub-category which he has successfully passed.
    A certified technician who wishes to be certified in
sub-categories for which he has not been previously certified
may apply for any sub-category examination provided he meets
the requirements set forth in this Section, files an original
application, and pays the fee for examination.
    An applicant who fails to pass the General Standards
examination or any sub-category examination may reapply for
that examination, provided that he files an application and
pays the fee required for an original examination.
Re-examination applications shall be on forms prescribed by the
Department.
(Source: P.A. 87-703; reenacted by P.A. 95-786, eff. 8-7-08.)
 
    Section 115. The Illinois Public Aid Code is amended by
changing Section 9A-9 as follows:
 
    (305 ILCS 5/9A-9)  (from Ch. 23, par. 9A-9)
    Sec. 9A-9. Program Activities. The Department shall
establish education, training and placement activities by
rule. Not all of the same activities need be provided in each
county in the State. Such activities may include the following:
    (a) Education (Below post secondary). In the Education
(below post secondary) activity, the individual receives
information, referral, counseling services and support
services to increase the individual's employment potential.
Participants may be referred to testing, counseling and
education resources. Educational activities will include basic
and remedial education; English proficiency classes; high
school or its equivalency (e.g., GED) or alternative education
at the secondary level; and with any educational program,
structured study time to enhance successful participation. An
individual's participation in an education program such as
literacy, basic adult education, high school equivalency
(GED), or a remedial program shall be limited to 2 years unless
the individual also is working or participating in a work
activity approved by the Illinois Department as defined by
rule; this requirement does not apply, however, to students
enrolled in high school.
    (b) Job Skills Training (Vocational). Job Skills Training
is designed to increase the individual's ability to obtain and
maintain employment. Job Skills Training activities will
include vocational skill classes designed to increase a
participant's ability to obtain and maintain employment. Job
Skills Training may include certificate programs.
    (c) Job Readiness. The job readiness activity is designed
to enhance the quality of the individual's level of
participation in the world of work while learning the necessary
essentials to obtain and maintain employment. This activity
helps individuals gain the necessary job finding skills to help
them find and retain employment that will lead to economic
independence.
    (d) Job Search. Job Search may be conducted individually or
in groups. Job Search includes the provision of counseling, job
seeking skills training and information dissemination. Group
job search may include training in a group session. Assignment
exclusively to job search cannot be in excess of 8 consecutive
weeks (or its equivalent) in any period of 12 consecutive
months.
    (e) Work Experience. Work Experience assignments may be
with private employers or not-for-profit or public agencies in
the State. The Illinois Department shall provide workers'
compensation coverage. Participants who are not members of a
2-parent assistance unit may not be assigned more hours than
their cash grant amount plus food stamps divided by the minimum
wage. Private employers and not-for-profit and public agencies
shall not use Work Experience participants to displace regular
employees. Participants in Work Experience may perform work in
the public interest (which otherwise meets the requirements of
this Section) for a federal office or agency with its consent,
and notwithstanding the provisions of 31 U.S.C. 1342, or any
other provision of law, such agency may accept such services,
but participants shall not be considered federal employees for
any purpose. A participant shall be reassessed at the end of
assignment to Work Experience. The participant may be
reassigned to Work Experience or assigned to another activity,
based on the reassessment.
    (f) On the Job Training. In On the Job Training, a
participant is hired by a private or public employer and while
engaged in productive work receives training that provides
knowledge or skills essential to full and adequate performance
of the job.
    (g) Work Supplementation. In work supplementation, the
Department pays a wage subsidy to an employer who hires a
participant. The cash grant which a participant would receive
if not employed is diverted and the diverted cash grant is used
to pay the wage subsidy.
    (h) Post Secondary Education. Post secondary education
must be administered by an educational institution accredited
under requirements of State law.
    (i) Self Initiated Education. Participants who are
attending an institution of higher education or a vocational or
technical program of their own choosing and who are in good
standing, may continue to attend and receive supportive
services only if the educational program is approved by the
Department, and is in conformity with the participant's
personal plan for achieving employment and self-sufficiency
and the participant is employed part-time, as defined by the
Illinois Department by rule.
    (j) Job Development and Placement. Department staff shall
develop through contacts with public and private employers
unsubsidized job openings for participants. Job interviews
will be secured for clients by the marketing of participants
for specific job openings. Job ready individuals may be
assigned to Job Development and Placement.
    (k) Job Retention. The job retention component is designed
to assist participants in retaining employment. Initial
employment expenses and job retention services are provided.
The individual's support service needs are assessed and the
individual receives counseling regarding job retention skills.
    (l) (Blank).
    (l-5) Transitional Jobs. These programs provide temporary
wage-paying work combined with case management and other social
services designed to address employment barriers. The
wage-paying work is treated as regular employment for all
purposes under this Code, and the additional activities, as
determined by the Transitional Jobs provider, shall be
countable work activities. The program must comply with the
anti-displacement provisions of this Code governing the Work
Experience program.
    (m) Pay-after-performance Program. A parent may be
required to participate in a pay-after-performance program in
which the parent must work a specified number of hours to earn
the grant. The program shall comply with provisions of this
Code governing work experience programs.
    (n) Community Service. Community service includes unpaid
work that the client performs in his or her community, such as
for a school, church, government agency, or nonprofit
organization.
(Source: P.A. 93-598, eff. 8-26-03.)
 
    Section 120. The Firearm Concealed Carry Act is amended by
changing Section 80 as follows:
 
    (430 ILCS 66/80)
    Sec. 80. Certified firearms instructors.
    (a) Within 60 days of the effective date of this Act, the
Department shall begin approval of certified firearms
instructors and enter certified firearms instructors into an
online registry on the Department's website.
    (b) A person who is not a certified firearms instructor
shall not teach applicant training courses or advertise or
otherwise represent courses they teach as qualifying their
students to meet the requirements to receive a license under
this Act. Each violation of this subsection is a business
offense with a fine of at least $1,000 per violation.
    (c) A person seeking to become a certified firearms
instructor shall:
        (1) be at least 21 years of age;
        (2) be a legal resident of the United States; and
        (3) meet the requirements of Section 25 of this Act,
    except for the Illinois residency requirement in item (xiv)
    of paragraph (2) of subsection (a) of Section 4 of the
    Firearm Owners Identification Card Act; and any additional
    uniformly applied requirements established by the
    Department.
    (d) A person seeking to become a certified firearms
instructor, in addition to the requirements of subsection (c)
of this Section, shall:
        (1) possess a high school diploma or high school
    equivalency GED certificate; and
        (2) have at least one of the following valid firearms
    instructor certifications:
            (A) certification from a law enforcement agency;
            (B) certification from a firearm instructor course
        offered by a State or federal governmental agency;
            (C) certification from a firearm instructor
        qualification course offered by the Illinois Law
        Enforcement Training Standards Board; or
            (D) certification from an entity approved by the
        Department that offers firearm instructor education
        and training in the use and safety of firearms.
    (e) A person may have his or her firearms instructor
certification denied or revoked if he or she does not meet the
requirements to obtain a license under this Act, provides false
or misleading information to the Department, or has had a prior
instructor certification revoked or denied by the Department.
(Source: P.A. 98-63, eff. 7-9-13; 98-600, eff. 12-6-13.)
 
    Section 125. The Illinois Vehicle Code is amended by
changing Sections 6-107 and 6-408.5 as follows:
 
    (625 ILCS 5/6-107)  (from Ch. 95 1/2, par. 6-107)
    Sec. 6-107. Graduated license.
    (a) The purpose of the Graduated Licensing Program is to
develop safe and mature driving habits in young, inexperienced
drivers and reduce or prevent motor vehicle accidents,
fatalities, and injuries by:
        (1) providing for an increase in the time of practice
    period before granting permission to obtain a driver's
    license;
        (2) strengthening driver licensing and testing
    standards for persons under the age of 21 years;
        (3) sanctioning driving privileges of drivers under
    age 21 who have committed serious traffic violations or
    other specified offenses; and
        (4) setting stricter standards to promote the public's
    health and safety.
    (b) The application of any person under the age of 18
years, and not legally emancipated, for a drivers license or
permit to operate a motor vehicle issued under the laws of this
State, shall be accompanied by the written consent of either
parent of the applicant; otherwise by the guardian having
custody of the applicant, or in the event there is no parent or
guardian, then by another responsible adult. The written
consent must accompany any application for a driver's license
under this subsection (b), regardless of whether or not the
required written consent also accompanied the person's
previous application for an instruction permit.
    No graduated driver's license shall be issued to any
applicant under 18 years of age, unless the applicant is at
least 16 years of age and has:
        (1) Held a valid instruction permit for a minimum of 9
    months.
        (2) Passed an approved driver education course and
    submits proof of having passed the course as may be
    required.
        (3) Certification by the parent, legal guardian, or
    responsible adult that the applicant has had a minimum of
    50 hours of behind-the-wheel practice time, at least 10
    hours of which have been at night, and is sufficiently
    prepared and able to safely operate a motor vehicle.
    (b-1) No graduated driver's license shall be issued to any
applicant who is under 18 years of age and not legally
emancipated, unless the applicant has graduated from a
secondary school of this State or any other state, is enrolled
in a course leading to a high school equivalency general
educational development (GED) certificate, has obtained a high
school equivalency GED certificate, is enrolled in an
elementary or secondary school or college or university of this
State or any other state and is not a chronic or habitual
truant as provided in Section 26-2a of the School Code, or is
receiving home instruction and submits proof of meeting any of
those requirements at the time of application.
    An applicant under 18 years of age who provides proof
acceptable to the Secretary that the applicant has resumed
regular school attendance or home instruction or that his or
her application was denied in error shall be eligible to
receive a graduated license if other requirements are met. The
Secretary shall adopt rules for implementing this subsection
(b-1).
    (c) No graduated driver's license or permit shall be issued
to any applicant under 18 years of age who has committed the
offense of operating a motor vehicle without a valid license or
permit in violation of Section 6-101 of this Code or a similar
out of state offense and no graduated driver's license or
permit shall be issued to any applicant under 18 years of age
who has committed an offense that would otherwise result in a
mandatory revocation of a license or permit as provided in
Section 6-205 of this Code or who has been either convicted of
or adjudicated a delinquent based upon a violation of the
Cannabis Control Act, the Illinois Controlled Substances Act,
the Use of Intoxicating Compounds Act, or the Methamphetamine
Control and Community Protection Act while that individual was
in actual physical control of a motor vehicle. For purposes of
this Section, any person placed on probation under Section 10
of the Cannabis Control Act, Section 410 of the Illinois
Controlled Substances Act, or Section 70 of the Methamphetamine
Control and Community Protection Act shall not be considered
convicted. Any person found guilty of this offense, while in
actual physical control of a motor vehicle, shall have an entry
made in the court record by the judge that this offense did
occur while the person was in actual physical control of a
motor vehicle and order the clerk of the court to report the
violation to the Secretary of State as such.
    (d) No graduated driver's license shall be issued for 9
months to any applicant under the age of 18 years who has
committed and subsequently been convicted of an offense against
traffic regulations governing the movement of vehicles, any
violation of this Section or Section 12-603.1 of this Code, or
who has received a disposition of court supervision for a
violation of Section 6-20 of the Illinois Liquor Control Act of
1934 or a similar provision of a local ordinance.
    (e) No graduated driver's license holder under the age of
18 years shall operate any motor vehicle, except a motor driven
cycle or motorcycle, with more than one passenger in the front
seat of the motor vehicle and no more passengers in the back
seats than the number of available seat safety belts as set
forth in Section 12-603 of this Code. If a graduated driver's
license holder over the age of 18 committed an offense against
traffic regulations governing the movement of vehicles or any
violation of this Section or Section 12-603.1 of this Code in
the 6 months prior to the graduated driver's license holder's
18th birthday, and was subsequently convicted of the violation,
the provisions of this paragraph shall continue to apply until
such time as a period of 6 consecutive months has elapsed
without an additional violation and subsequent conviction of an
offense against traffic regulations governing the movement of
vehicles or any violation of this Section or Section 12-603.1
of this Code.
    (f) (Blank).
    (g) If a graduated driver's license holder is under the age
of 18 when he or she receives the license, for the first 12
months he or she holds the license or until he or she reaches
the age of 18, whichever occurs sooner, the graduated license
holder may not operate a motor vehicle with more than one
passenger in the vehicle who is under the age of 20, unless any
additional passenger or passengers are siblings,
step-siblings, children, or stepchildren of the driver. If a
graduated driver's license holder committed an offense against
traffic regulations governing the movement of vehicles or any
violation of this Section or Section 12-603.1 of this Code
during the first 12 months the license is held and subsequently
is convicted of the violation, the provisions of this paragraph
shall remain in effect until such time as a period of 6
consecutive months has elapsed without an additional violation
and subsequent conviction of an offense against traffic
regulations governing the movement of vehicles or any violation
of this Section or Section 12-603.1 of this Code.
    (h) It shall be an offense for a person that is age 15, but
under age 20, to be a passenger in a vehicle operated by a
driver holding a graduated driver's license during the first 12
months the driver holds the license or until the driver reaches
the age of 18, whichever occurs sooner, if another passenger
under the age of 20 is present, excluding a sibling,
step-sibling, child, or step-child of the driver.
    (i) No graduated driver's license shall be issued to any
applicant under the age of 18 years if the applicant has been
issued a traffic citation for which a disposition has not been
rendered at the time of application.
(Source: P.A. 97-229, eff. 7-28-11; 97-835, eff. 7-20-12;
98-168, eff. 1-1-14.)
 
    (625 ILCS 5/6-408.5)
    Sec. 6-408.5. Courses for students or high school dropouts;
limitation.
    (a) No driver training school or driving training
instructor licensed under this Act may request a certificate of
completion from the Secretary of State as provided in Section
6-411 for any person who is enrolled as a student in any public
or non-public secondary school at the time such instruction is
to be provided, or who was so enrolled during the semester last
ended if that instruction is to be provided between semesters
or during the summer after the regular school term ends, unless
that student has received a passing grade in at least 8 courses
during the 2 semesters last ending prior to requesting a
certificate of completion from the Secretary of State for the
student.
    (b) No driver training school or driving training
instructor licensed under this Act may request a certificate of
completion from the Secretary of State as provided in Section
6-411 for any person who has dropped out of school and has not
yet attained the age of 18 years unless the driver training
school or driving training instructor has: 1) obtained written
documentation verifying the dropout's enrollment in a high
school equivalency testing GED or alternative education
program or has obtained a copy of the dropout's high school
equivalency GED certificate; 2) obtained verification that the
student prior to dropping out had received a passing grade in
at least 8 courses during the 2 previous semesters last ending
prior to requesting a certificate of completion; or 3) obtained
written consent from the dropout's parents or guardians and the
regional superintendent.
    (c) Students shall be informed of the eligibility
requirements of this Act in writing at the time of
registration.
    (d) The superintendent of schools of the school district in
which the student resides and attends school or in which the
student resides at the time he or she drops out of school (with
respect to a public high school student or a dropout from the
public high school) or the chief school administrator (with
respect to a student who attends a non-public high school or a
dropout from a non-public high school) may waive the
requirements of this Section if the superintendent or chief
school administrator, as the case may be, deems it to be in the
best interests of the student or dropout. Before requesting a
certificate of completion from the Secretary of State for any
person who is enrolled as a student in any public or non-public
secondary school or who was so enrolled in the semester last
ending prior to the request for a certificate of completion
from the Secretary of State or who is of high school age, the
driver training school shall determine from the school district
in which that person resides or resided at the time of dropping
out of school, or from the chief administrator of the
non-public high school attended or last attended by such
person, as the case may be, that such person is not ineligible
to receive a certificate of completion under this Section.
(Source: P.A. 96-740, eff. 1-1-10; 96-962, eff. 7-2-10.)
 
    Section 130. The Unified Code of Corrections is amended by
changing Sections 3-3-8, 3-6-3, 3-6-8, 3-12-16, 5-5-3, 5-6-3,
5-6-3.1, 5-6-3.3, 5-6-3.4, 5-7-1, and 5-8-1.3 as follows:
 
    (730 ILCS 5/3-3-8)  (from Ch. 38, par. 1003-3-8)
    Sec. 3-3-8. Length of parole, aftercare release, and
mandatory supervised release; discharge.)
    (a) The length of parole for a person sentenced under the
law in effect prior to the effective date of this amendatory
Act of 1977 and the length of mandatory supervised release for
those sentenced under the law in effect on and after such
effective date shall be as set out in Section 5-8-1 unless
sooner terminated under paragraph (b) of this Section. The
aftercare release period of a juvenile committed to the
Department under the Juvenile Court Act or the Juvenile Court
Act of 1987 shall extend until he or she is 21 years of age
unless sooner terminated under paragraph (b) of this Section.
    (b) The Prisoner Review Board may enter an order releasing
and discharging one from parole, aftercare release, or
mandatory supervised release, and his or her commitment to the
Department, when it determines that he or she is likely to
remain at liberty without committing another offense.
    (b-1) Provided that the subject is in compliance with the
terms and conditions of his or her parole, aftercare release,
or mandatory supervised release, the Prisoner Review Board may
reduce the period of a parolee or releasee's parole, aftercare
release, or mandatory supervised release by 90 days upon the
parolee or releasee receiving a high school diploma or upon
passage of high school equivalency testing the high school
level Test of General Educational Development during the period
of his or her parole, aftercare release, or mandatory
supervised release. This reduction in the period of a subject's
term of parole, aftercare release, or mandatory supervised
release shall be available only to subjects who have not
previously earned a high school diploma or who have not
previously passed high school equivalency testing the high
school level Test of General Educational Development.
    (c) The order of discharge shall become effective upon
entry of the order of the Board. The Board shall notify the
clerk of the committing court of the order. Upon receipt of
such copy, the clerk shall make an entry on the record judgment
that the sentence or commitment has been satisfied pursuant to
the order.
    (d) Rights of the person discharged under this Section
shall be restored under Section 5-5-5. This Section is subject
to Section 5-750 of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987.
(Source: P.A. 97-531, eff. 1-1-12; 98-558, eff. 1-1-14.)
 
    (730 ILCS 5/3-6-3)  (from Ch. 38, par. 1003-6-3)
    Sec. 3-6-3. Rules and Regulations for Sentence Credit.
        (a) (1) The Department of Corrections shall prescribe
    rules and regulations for awarding and revoking sentence
    credit for persons committed to the Department which shall
    be subject to review by the Prisoner Review Board.
        (1.5) As otherwise provided by law, sentence credit may
    be awarded for the following:
            (A) successful completion of programming while in
        custody of the Department or while in custody prior to
        sentencing;
            (B) compliance with the rules and regulations of
        the Department; or
            (C) service to the institution, service to a
        community, or service to the State.
        (2) The rules and regulations on sentence credit shall
    provide, with respect to offenses listed in clause (i),
    (ii), or (iii) of this paragraph (2) committed on or after
    June 19, 1998 or with respect to the offense listed in
    clause (iv) of this paragraph (2) committed on or after
    June 23, 2005 (the effective date of Public Act 94-71) or
    with respect to offense listed in clause (vi) committed on
    or after June 1, 2008 (the effective date of Public Act
    95-625) or with respect to the offense of being an armed
    habitual criminal committed on or after August 2, 2005 (the
    effective date of Public Act 94-398) or with respect to the
    offenses listed in clause (v) of this paragraph (2)
    committed on or after August 13, 2007 (the effective date
    of Public Act 95-134) or with respect to the offense of
    aggravated domestic battery committed on or after July 23,
    2010 (the effective date of Public Act 96-1224) or with
    respect to the offense of attempt to commit terrorism
    committed on or after January 1, 2013 (the effective date
    of Public Act 97-990), the following:
            (i) that a prisoner who is serving a term of
        imprisonment for first degree murder or for the offense
        of terrorism shall receive no sentence credit and shall
        serve the entire sentence imposed by the court;
            (ii) that a prisoner serving a sentence for attempt
        to commit terrorism, attempt to commit first degree
        murder, solicitation of murder, solicitation of murder
        for hire, intentional homicide of an unborn child,
        predatory criminal sexual assault of a child,
        aggravated criminal sexual assault, criminal sexual
        assault, aggravated kidnapping, aggravated battery
        with a firearm as described in Section 12-4.2 or
        subdivision (e)(1), (e)(2), (e)(3), or (e)(4) of
        Section 12-3.05, heinous battery as described in
        Section 12-4.1 or subdivision (a)(2) of Section
        12-3.05, being an armed habitual criminal, aggravated
        battery of a senior citizen as described in Section
        12-4.6 or subdivision (a)(4) of Section 12-3.05, or
        aggravated battery of a child as described in Section
        12-4.3 or subdivision (b)(1) of Section 12-3.05 shall
        receive no more than 4.5 days of sentence credit for
        each month of his or her sentence of imprisonment;
            (iii) that a prisoner serving a sentence for home
        invasion, armed robbery, aggravated vehicular
        hijacking, aggravated discharge of a firearm, or armed
        violence with a category I weapon or category II
        weapon, when the court has made and entered a finding,
        pursuant to subsection (c-1) of Section 5-4-1 of this
        Code, that the conduct leading to conviction for the
        enumerated offense resulted in great bodily harm to a
        victim, shall receive no more than 4.5 days of sentence
        credit for each month of his or her sentence of
        imprisonment;
            (iv) that a prisoner serving a sentence for
        aggravated discharge of a firearm, whether or not the
        conduct leading to conviction for the offense resulted
        in great bodily harm to the victim, shall receive no
        more than 4.5 days of sentence credit for each month of
        his or her sentence of imprisonment;
            (v) that a person serving a sentence for
        gunrunning, narcotics racketeering, controlled
        substance trafficking, methamphetamine trafficking,
        drug-induced homicide, aggravated
        methamphetamine-related child endangerment, money
        laundering pursuant to clause (c) (4) or (5) of Section
        29B-1 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code
        of 2012, or a Class X felony conviction for delivery of
        a controlled substance, possession of a controlled
        substance with intent to manufacture or deliver,
        calculated criminal drug conspiracy, criminal drug
        conspiracy, street gang criminal drug conspiracy,
        participation in methamphetamine manufacturing,
        aggravated participation in methamphetamine
        manufacturing, delivery of methamphetamine, possession
        with intent to deliver methamphetamine, aggravated
        delivery of methamphetamine, aggravated possession
        with intent to deliver methamphetamine,
        methamphetamine conspiracy when the substance
        containing the controlled substance or methamphetamine
        is 100 grams or more shall receive no more than 7.5
        days sentence credit for each month of his or her
        sentence of imprisonment;
            (vi) that a prisoner serving a sentence for a
        second or subsequent offense of luring a minor shall
        receive no more than 4.5 days of sentence credit for
        each month of his or her sentence of imprisonment; and
            (vii) that a prisoner serving a sentence for
        aggravated domestic battery shall receive no more than
        4.5 days of sentence credit for each month of his or
        her sentence of imprisonment.
        (2.1) For all offenses, other than those enumerated in
    subdivision (a)(2)(i), (ii), or (iii) committed on or after
    June 19, 1998 or subdivision (a)(2)(iv) committed on or
    after June 23, 2005 (the effective date of Public Act
    94-71) or subdivision (a)(2)(v) committed on or after
    August 13, 2007 (the effective date of Public Act 95-134)
    or subdivision (a)(2)(vi) committed on or after June 1,
    2008 (the effective date of Public Act 95-625) or
    subdivision (a)(2)(vii) committed on or after July 23, 2010
    (the effective date of Public Act 96-1224), and other than
    the offense of aggravated driving under the influence of
    alcohol, other drug or drugs, or intoxicating compound or
    compounds, or any combination thereof as defined in
    subparagraph (F) of paragraph (1) of subsection (d) of
    Section 11-501 of the Illinois Vehicle Code, and other than
    the offense of aggravated driving under the influence of
    alcohol, other drug or drugs, or intoxicating compound or
    compounds, or any combination thereof as defined in
    subparagraph (C) of paragraph (1) of subsection (d) of
    Section 11-501 of the Illinois Vehicle Code committed on or
    after January 1, 2011 (the effective date of Public Act
    96-1230), the rules and regulations shall provide that a
    prisoner who is serving a term of imprisonment shall
    receive one day of sentence credit for each day of his or
    her sentence of imprisonment or recommitment under Section
    3-3-9. Each day of sentence credit shall reduce by one day
    the prisoner's period of imprisonment or recommitment
    under Section 3-3-9.
        (2.2) A prisoner serving a term of natural life
    imprisonment or a prisoner who has been sentenced to death
    shall receive no sentence credit.
        (2.3) The rules and regulations on sentence credit
    shall provide that a prisoner who is serving a sentence for
    aggravated driving under the influence of alcohol, other
    drug or drugs, or intoxicating compound or compounds, or
    any combination thereof as defined in subparagraph (F) of
    paragraph (1) of subsection (d) of Section 11-501 of the
    Illinois Vehicle Code, shall receive no more than 4.5 days
    of sentence credit for each month of his or her sentence of
    imprisonment.
        (2.4) The rules and regulations on sentence credit
    shall provide with respect to the offenses of aggravated
    battery with a machine gun or a firearm equipped with any
    device or attachment designed or used for silencing the
    report of a firearm or aggravated discharge of a machine
    gun or a firearm equipped with any device or attachment
    designed or used for silencing the report of a firearm,
    committed on or after July 15, 1999 (the effective date of
    Public Act 91-121), that a prisoner serving a sentence for
    any of these offenses shall receive no more than 4.5 days
    of sentence credit for each month of his or her sentence of
    imprisonment.
        (2.5) The rules and regulations on sentence credit
    shall provide that a prisoner who is serving a sentence for
    aggravated arson committed on or after July 27, 2001 (the
    effective date of Public Act 92-176) shall receive no more
    than 4.5 days of sentence credit for each month of his or
    her sentence of imprisonment.
        (2.6) The rules and regulations on sentence credit
    shall provide that a prisoner who is serving a sentence for
    aggravated driving under the influence of alcohol, other
    drug or drugs, or intoxicating compound or compounds or any
    combination thereof as defined in subparagraph (C) of
    paragraph (1) of subsection (d) of Section 11-501 of the
    Illinois Vehicle Code committed on or after January 1, 2011
    (the effective date of Public Act 96-1230) shall receive no
    more than 4.5 days of sentence credit for each month of his
    or her sentence of imprisonment.
        (3) The rules and regulations shall also provide that
    the Director may award up to 180 days additional sentence
    credit for good conduct in specific instances as the
    Director deems proper. The good conduct may include, but is
    not limited to, compliance with the rules and regulations
    of the Department, service to the Department, service to a
    community, or service to the State. However, the Director
    shall not award more than 90 days of sentence credit for
    good conduct to any prisoner who is serving a sentence for
    conviction of first degree murder, reckless homicide while
    under the influence of alcohol or any other drug, or
    aggravated driving under the influence of alcohol, other
    drug or drugs, or intoxicating compound or compounds, or
    any combination thereof as defined in subparagraph (F) of
    paragraph (1) of subsection (d) of Section 11-501 of the
    Illinois Vehicle Code, aggravated kidnapping, kidnapping,
    predatory criminal sexual assault of a child, aggravated
    criminal sexual assault, criminal sexual assault, deviate
    sexual assault, aggravated criminal sexual abuse,
    aggravated indecent liberties with a child, indecent
    liberties with a child, child pornography, heinous battery
    as described in Section 12-4.1 or subdivision (a)(2) of
    Section 12-3.05, aggravated battery of a spouse,
    aggravated battery of a spouse with a firearm, stalking,
    aggravated stalking, aggravated battery of a child as
    described in Section 12-4.3 or subdivision (b)(1) of
    Section 12-3.05, endangering the life or health of a child,
    or cruelty to a child. Notwithstanding the foregoing,
    sentence credit for good conduct shall not be awarded on a
    sentence of imprisonment imposed for conviction of: (i) one
    of the offenses enumerated in subdivision (a)(2)(i), (ii),
    or (iii) when the offense is committed on or after June 19,
    1998 or subdivision (a)(2)(iv) when the offense is
    committed on or after June 23, 2005 (the effective date of
    Public Act 94-71) or subdivision (a)(2)(v) when the offense
    is committed on or after August 13, 2007 (the effective
    date of Public Act 95-134) or subdivision (a)(2)(vi) when
    the offense is committed on or after June 1, 2008 (the
    effective date of Public Act 95-625) or subdivision
    (a)(2)(vii) when the offense is committed on or after July
    23, 2010 (the effective date of Public Act 96-1224), (ii)
    aggravated driving under the influence of alcohol, other
    drug or drugs, or intoxicating compound or compounds, or
    any combination thereof as defined in subparagraph (F) of
    paragraph (1) of subsection (d) of Section 11-501 of the
    Illinois Vehicle Code, (iii) one of the offenses enumerated
    in subdivision (a)(2.4) when the offense is committed on or
    after July 15, 1999 (the effective date of Public Act
    91-121), (iv) aggravated arson when the offense is
    committed on or after July 27, 2001 (the effective date of
    Public Act 92-176), (v) offenses that may subject the
    offender to commitment under the Sexually Violent Persons
    Commitment Act, or (vi) aggravated driving under the
    influence of alcohol, other drug or drugs, or intoxicating
    compound or compounds or any combination thereof as defined
    in subparagraph (C) of paragraph (1) of subsection (d) of
    Section 11-501 of the Illinois Vehicle Code committed on or
    after January 1, 2011 (the effective date of Public Act
    96-1230).
    Eligible inmates for an award of sentence credit under this
paragraph (3) may be selected to receive the credit at the
Director's or his or her designee's sole discretion.
Consideration may be based on, but not limited to, any
available risk assessment analysis on the inmate, any history
of conviction for violent crimes as defined by the Rights of
Crime Victims and Witnesses Act, facts and circumstances of the
inmate's holding offense or offenses, and the potential for
rehabilitation.
    The Director shall not award sentence credit under this
paragraph (3) to an inmate unless the inmate has served a
minimum of 60 days of the sentence; except nothing in this
paragraph shall be construed to permit the Director to extend
an inmate's sentence beyond that which was imposed by the
court. Prior to awarding credit under this paragraph (3), the
Director shall make a written determination that the inmate:
            (A) is eligible for the sentence credit;
            (B) has served a minimum of 60 days, or as close to
        60 days as the sentence will allow; and
            (C) has met the eligibility criteria established
        by rule.
        The Director shall determine the form and content of
    the written determination required in this subsection.
        (3.5) The Department shall provide annual written
    reports to the Governor and the General Assembly on the
    award of sentence credit for good conduct, with the first
    report due January 1, 2014. The Department must publish
    both reports on its website within 48 hours of transmitting
    the reports to the Governor and the General Assembly. The
    reports must include:
            (A) the number of inmates awarded sentence credit
        for good conduct;
            (B) the average amount of sentence credit for good
        conduct awarded;
            (C) the holding offenses of inmates awarded
        sentence credit for good conduct; and
            (D) the number of sentence credit for good conduct
        revocations.
        (4) The rules and regulations shall also provide that
    the sentence credit accumulated and retained under
    paragraph (2.1) of subsection (a) of this Section by any
    inmate during specific periods of time in which such inmate
    is engaged full-time in substance abuse programs,
    correctional industry assignments, educational programs,
    behavior modification programs, life skills courses, or
    re-entry planning provided by the Department under this
    paragraph (4) and satisfactorily completes the assigned
    program as determined by the standards of the Department,
    shall be multiplied by a factor of 1.25 for program
    participation before August 11, 1993 and 1.50 for program
    participation on or after that date. The rules and
    regulations shall also provide that sentence credit,
    subject to the same offense limits and multiplier provided
    in this paragraph, may be provided to an inmate who was
    held in pre-trial detention prior to his or her current
    commitment to the Department of Corrections and
    successfully completed a full-time, 60-day or longer
    substance abuse program, educational program, behavior
    modification program, life skills course, or re-entry
    planning provided by the county department of corrections
    or county jail. Calculation of this county program credit
    shall be done at sentencing as provided in Section
    5-4.5-100 of this Code and shall be included in the
    sentencing order. However, no inmate shall be eligible for
    the additional sentence credit under this paragraph (4) or
    (4.1) of this subsection (a) while assigned to a boot camp
    or electronic detention, or if convicted of an offense
    enumerated in subdivision (a)(2)(i), (ii), or (iii) of this
    Section that is committed on or after June 19, 1998 or
    subdivision (a)(2)(iv) of this Section that is committed on
    or after June 23, 2005 (the effective date of Public Act
    94-71) or subdivision (a)(2)(v) of this Section that is
    committed on or after August 13, 2007 (the effective date
    of Public Act 95-134) or subdivision (a)(2)(vi) when the
    offense is committed on or after June 1, 2008 (the
    effective date of Public Act 95-625) or subdivision
    (a)(2)(vii) when the offense is committed on or after July
    23, 2010 (the effective date of Public Act 96-1224), or if
    convicted of aggravated driving under the influence of
    alcohol, other drug or drugs, or intoxicating compound or
    compounds or any combination thereof as defined in
    subparagraph (F) of paragraph (1) of subsection (d) of
    Section 11-501 of the Illinois Vehicle Code, or if
    convicted of aggravated driving under the influence of
    alcohol, other drug or drugs, or intoxicating compound or
    compounds or any combination thereof as defined in
    subparagraph (C) of paragraph (1) of subsection (d) of
    Section 11-501 of the Illinois Vehicle Code committed on or
    after January 1, 2011 (the effective date of Public Act
    96-1230), or if convicted of an offense enumerated in
    paragraph (a)(2.4) of this Section that is committed on or
    after July 15, 1999 (the effective date of Public Act
    91-121), or first degree murder, a Class X felony, criminal
    sexual assault, felony criminal sexual abuse, aggravated
    criminal sexual abuse, aggravated battery with a firearm as
    described in Section 12-4.2 or subdivision (e)(1), (e)(2),
    (e)(3), or (e)(4) of Section 12-3.05, or any predecessor or
    successor offenses with the same or substantially the same
    elements, or any inchoate offenses relating to the
    foregoing offenses. No inmate shall be eligible for the
    additional good conduct credit under this paragraph (4) who
    (i) has previously received increased good conduct credit
    under this paragraph (4) and has subsequently been
    convicted of a felony, or (ii) has previously served more
    than one prior sentence of imprisonment for a felony in an
    adult correctional facility.
        Educational, vocational, substance abuse, behavior
    modification programs, life skills courses, re-entry
    planning, and correctional industry programs under which
    sentence credit may be increased under this paragraph (4)
    and paragraph (4.1) of this subsection (a) shall be
    evaluated by the Department on the basis of documented
    standards. The Department shall report the results of these
    evaluations to the Governor and the General Assembly by
    September 30th of each year. The reports shall include data
    relating to the recidivism rate among program
    participants.
        Availability of these programs shall be subject to the
    limits of fiscal resources appropriated by the General
    Assembly for these purposes. Eligible inmates who are
    denied immediate admission shall be placed on a waiting
    list under criteria established by the Department. The
    inability of any inmate to become engaged in any such
    programs by reason of insufficient program resources or for
    any other reason established under the rules and
    regulations of the Department shall not be deemed a cause
    of action under which the Department or any employee or
    agent of the Department shall be liable for damages to the
    inmate.
        (4.1) The rules and regulations shall also provide that
    an additional 60 days of sentence credit shall be awarded
    to any prisoner who passes high school equivalency testing
    the high school level Test of General Educational
    Development (GED) while the prisoner is committed to the
    Department of Corrections. The sentence credit awarded
    under this paragraph (4.1) shall be in addition to, and
    shall not affect, the award of sentence credit under any
    other paragraph of this Section, but shall also be pursuant
    to the guidelines and restrictions set forth in paragraph
    (4) of subsection (a) of this Section. The sentence credit
    provided for in this paragraph shall be available only to
    those prisoners who have not previously earned a high
    school diploma or a high school equivalency certificate
    GED. If, after an award of the high school equivalency
    testing GED sentence credit has been made, and the
    Department determines that the prisoner was not eligible,
    then the award shall be revoked. The Department may also
    award 60 days of sentence credit to any committed person
    who passed high school equivalency testing the high school
    level Test of General Educational Development (GED) while
    he or she was held in pre-trial detention prior to the
    current commitment to the Department of Corrections.
        (4.5) The rules and regulations on sentence credit
    shall also provide that when the court's sentencing order
    recommends a prisoner for substance abuse treatment and the
    crime was committed on or after September 1, 2003 (the
    effective date of Public Act 93-354), the prisoner shall
    receive no sentence credit awarded under clause (3) of this
    subsection (a) unless he or she participates in and
    completes a substance abuse treatment program. The
    Director may waive the requirement to participate in or
    complete a substance abuse treatment program and award the
    sentence credit in specific instances if the prisoner is
    not a good candidate for a substance abuse treatment
    program for medical, programming, or operational reasons.
    Availability of substance abuse treatment shall be subject
    to the limits of fiscal resources appropriated by the
    General Assembly for these purposes. If treatment is not
    available and the requirement to participate and complete
    the treatment has not been waived by the Director, the
    prisoner shall be placed on a waiting list under criteria
    established by the Department. The Director may allow a
    prisoner placed on a waiting list to participate in and
    complete a substance abuse education class or attend
    substance abuse self-help meetings in lieu of a substance
    abuse treatment program. A prisoner on a waiting list who
    is not placed in a substance abuse program prior to release
    may be eligible for a waiver and receive sentence credit
    under clause (3) of this subsection (a) at the discretion
    of the Director.
        (4.6) The rules and regulations on sentence credit
    shall also provide that a prisoner who has been convicted
    of a sex offense as defined in Section 2 of the Sex
    Offender Registration Act shall receive no sentence credit
    unless he or she either has successfully completed or is
    participating in sex offender treatment as defined by the
    Sex Offender Management Board. However, prisoners who are
    waiting to receive treatment, but who are unable to do so
    due solely to the lack of resources on the part of the
    Department, may, at the Director's sole discretion, be
    awarded sentence credit at a rate as the Director shall
    determine.
        (5) Whenever the Department is to release any inmate
    earlier than it otherwise would because of a grant of
    sentence credit for good conduct under paragraph (3) of
    subsection (a) of this Section given at any time during the
    term, the Department shall give reasonable notice of the
    impending release not less than 14 days prior to the date
    of the release to the State's Attorney of the county where
    the prosecution of the inmate took place, and if
    applicable, the State's Attorney of the county into which
    the inmate will be released. The Department must also make
    identification information and a recent photo of the inmate
    being released accessible on the Internet by means of a
    hyperlink labeled "Community Notification of Inmate Early
    Release" on the Department's World Wide Web homepage. The
    identification information shall include the inmate's:
    name, any known alias, date of birth, physical
    characteristics, residence address, commitment offense and
    county where conviction was imposed. The identification
    information shall be placed on the website within 3 days of
    the inmate's release and the information may not be removed
    until either: completion of the first year of mandatory
    supervised release or return of the inmate to custody of
    the Department.
    (b) Whenever a person is or has been committed under
several convictions, with separate sentences, the sentences
shall be construed under Section 5-8-4 in granting and
forfeiting of sentence credit.
    (c) The Department shall prescribe rules and regulations
for revoking sentence credit, including revoking sentence
credit awarded for good conduct under paragraph (3) of
subsection (a) of this Section. The Department shall prescribe
rules and regulations for suspending or reducing the rate of
accumulation of sentence credit for specific rule violations,
during imprisonment. These rules and regulations shall provide
that no inmate may be penalized more than one year of sentence
credit for any one infraction.
    When the Department seeks to revoke, suspend or reduce the
rate of accumulation of any sentence credits for an alleged
infraction of its rules, it shall bring charges therefor
against the prisoner sought to be so deprived of sentence
credits before the Prisoner Review Board as provided in
subparagraph (a)(4) of Section 3-3-2 of this Code, if the
amount of credit at issue exceeds 30 days or when during any 12
month period, the cumulative amount of credit revoked exceeds
30 days except where the infraction is committed or discovered
within 60 days of scheduled release. In those cases, the
Department of Corrections may revoke up to 30 days of sentence
credit. The Board may subsequently approve the revocation of
additional sentence credit, if the Department seeks to revoke
sentence credit in excess of 30 days. However, the Board shall
not be empowered to review the Department's decision with
respect to the loss of 30 days of sentence credit within any
calendar year for any prisoner or to increase any penalty
beyond the length requested by the Department.
    The Director of the Department of Corrections, in
appropriate cases, may restore up to 30 days of sentence
credits which have been revoked, suspended or reduced. Any
restoration of sentence credits in excess of 30 days shall be
subject to review by the Prisoner Review Board. However, the
Board may not restore sentence credit in excess of the amount
requested by the Director.
    Nothing contained in this Section shall prohibit the
Prisoner Review Board from ordering, pursuant to Section
3-3-9(a)(3)(i)(B), that a prisoner serve up to one year of the
sentence imposed by the court that was not served due to the
accumulation of sentence credit.
    (d) If a lawsuit is filed by a prisoner in an Illinois or
federal court against the State, the Department of Corrections,
or the Prisoner Review Board, or against any of their officers
or employees, and the court makes a specific finding that a
pleading, motion, or other paper filed by the prisoner is
frivolous, the Department of Corrections shall conduct a
hearing to revoke up to 180 days of sentence credit by bringing
charges against the prisoner sought to be deprived of the
sentence credits before the Prisoner Review Board as provided
in subparagraph (a)(8) of Section 3-3-2 of this Code. If the
prisoner has not accumulated 180 days of sentence credit at the
time of the finding, then the Prisoner Review Board may revoke
all sentence credit accumulated by the prisoner.
    For purposes of this subsection (d):
        (1) "Frivolous" means that a pleading, motion, or other
    filing which purports to be a legal document filed by a
    prisoner in his or her lawsuit meets any or all of the
    following criteria:
            (A) it lacks an arguable basis either in law or in
        fact;
            (B) it is being presented for any improper purpose,
        such as to harass or to cause unnecessary delay or
        needless increase in the cost of litigation;
            (C) the claims, defenses, and other legal
        contentions therein are not warranted by existing law
        or by a nonfrivolous argument for the extension,
        modification, or reversal of existing law or the
        establishment of new law;
            (D) the allegations and other factual contentions
        do not have evidentiary support or, if specifically so
        identified, are not likely to have evidentiary support
        after a reasonable opportunity for further
        investigation or discovery; or
            (E) the denials of factual contentions are not
        warranted on the evidence, or if specifically so
        identified, are not reasonably based on a lack of
        information or belief.
        (2) "Lawsuit" means a motion pursuant to Section 116-3
    of the Code of Criminal Procedure of 1963, a habeas corpus
    action under Article X of the Code of Civil Procedure or
    under federal law (28 U.S.C. 2254), a petition for claim
    under the Court of Claims Act, an action under the federal
    Civil Rights Act (42 U.S.C. 1983), or a second or
    subsequent petition for post-conviction relief under
    Article 122 of the Code of Criminal Procedure of 1963
    whether filed with or without leave of court or a second or
    subsequent petition for relief from judgment under Section
    2-1401 of the Code of Civil Procedure.
    (e) Nothing in Public Act 90-592 or 90-593 affects the
validity of Public Act 89-404.
    (f) Whenever the Department is to release any inmate who
has been convicted of a violation of an order of protection
under Section 12-3.4 or 12-30 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or
the Criminal Code of 2012, earlier than it otherwise would
because of a grant of sentence credit, the Department, as a
condition of release, shall require that the person, upon
release, be placed under electronic surveillance as provided in
Section 5-8A-7 of this Code.
(Source: P.A. 96-860, eff. 1-15-10; 96-1110, eff. 7-19-10;
96-1128, eff. 1-1-11; 96-1200, eff. 7-22-10; 96-1224, eff.
7-23-10; 96-1230, eff. 1-1-11; 96-1551, eff. 7-1-11; 97-333,
eff. 8-12-11; 97-697, eff. 6-22-12; 97-990, eff. 1-1-13;
97-1150, eff. 1-25-13.)
 
    (730 ILCS 5/3-6-8)
    Sec. 3-6-8. High school equivalency testing General
Educational Development (GED) programs. The Department of
Corrections shall develop and establish a program in the Adult
Division designed to increase the number of committed persons
enrolled in programs for high school equivalency testing the
high school level Test of General Educational Development (GED)
and pursuing high school equivalency GED certificates by at
least 100% over the 4-year period following the effective date
of this amendatory Act of the 94th General Assembly. Pursuant
to the program, each adult institution and facility shall
report annually to the Director of Corrections on the number of
committed persons enrolled in high school equivalency testing
GED programs and those who pass high school equivalency testing
the high school level Test of General Educational Development
(GED), and the number of committed persons in the Adult
Division who are on waiting lists for participation in the high
school equivalency testing GED programs.
(Source: P.A. 94-128, eff. 7-7-05; 94-744, eff. 5-8-06.)
 
    (730 ILCS 5/3-12-16)
    Sec. 3-12-16. Helping Paws Service Dog Program.
    (a) In this Section:
    "Disabled person" means a person who suffers from a
physical or mental impairment that substantially limits one or
more major life activities.
    "Program" means the Helping Paws Service Dog Program
created by this Section.
    "Service dog" means a dog trained in obedience and task
skills to meet the needs of a disabled person.
    "Animal care professional" means a person certified to work
in animal care related services, such as grooming, kenneling,
and any other related fields.
    "Service dog professional" means a person certified to
train service dogs by an agency, organization, or school
approved by the Department.
    (b) The Department may establish the Helping Paws Service
Dog Program to train committed persons to be service dog
trainers and animal care professionals. The Department shall
select committed persons in various correctional institutions
and facilities to participate in the Program.
    (c) Priority for participation in the Program must be given
to committed persons who either have a high school diploma or
have passed high school equivalency testing the high school
level Test of General Educational Development (GED).
    (d) The Department may contract with service dog
professionals to train committed persons to be certified
service dog trainers. Service dog professionals shall train
committed persons in dog obedience training, service dog
training, and animal health care. Upon successful completion of
the training, a committed person shall receive certification by
an agency, organization, or school approved by the Department.
    (e) The Department may designate a non-profit organization
to select animals from humane societies and shelters for the
purpose of being trained as service dogs and for participation
in any program designed to train animal care professionals.
    (f) After a dog is trained by the committed person as a
service dog, a review committee consisting of an equal number
of persons from the Department and the non-profit organization
shall select a disabled person to receive the service dog free
of charge.
    (g) Employees of the Department shall periodically visit
disabled persons who have received service dogs from the
Department under this Section to determine whether the needs of
the disabled persons have been met by the service dogs trained
by committed persons.
    (h) Employees of the Department shall periodically visit
committed persons who have been certified as service dog
trainers or animal care professionals and who have been paroled
or placed on mandatory supervised release to determine whether
the committed persons are using their skills as certified
service dog trainers or animal care professionals.
(Source: P.A. 92-236, eff. 8-3-01.)
 
    (730 ILCS 5/5-5-3)  (from Ch. 38, par. 1005-5-3)
    Sec. 5-5-3. Disposition.
    (a) (Blank).
    (b) (Blank).
    (c) (1) (Blank).
        (2) A period of probation, a term of periodic
    imprisonment or conditional discharge shall not be imposed
    for the following offenses. The court shall sentence the
    offender to not less than the minimum term of imprisonment
    set forth in this Code for the following offenses, and may
    order a fine or restitution or both in conjunction with
    such term of imprisonment:
            (A) First degree murder where the death penalty is
        not imposed.
            (B) Attempted first degree murder.
            (C) A Class X felony.
            (D) A violation of Section 401.1 or 407 of the
        Illinois Controlled Substances Act, or a violation of
        subdivision (c)(1.5) or (c)(2) of Section 401 of that
        Act which relates to more than 5 grams of a substance
        containing cocaine, fentanyl, or an analog thereof.
            (D-5) A violation of subdivision (c)(1) of Section
        401 of the Illinois Controlled Substances Act which
        relates to 3 or more grams of a substance containing
        heroin or an analog thereof.
            (E) A violation of Section 5.1 or 9 of the Cannabis
        Control Act.
            (F) A Class 2 or greater felony if the offender had
        been convicted of a Class 2 or greater felony,
        including any state or federal conviction for an
        offense that contained, at the time it was committed,
        the same elements as an offense now (the date of the
        offense committed after the prior Class 2 or greater
        felony) classified as a Class 2 or greater felony,
        within 10 years of the date on which the offender
        committed the offense for which he or she is being
        sentenced, except as otherwise provided in Section
        40-10 of the Alcoholism and Other Drug Abuse and
        Dependency Act.
            (F-5) A violation of Section 24-1, 24-1.1, or
        24-1.6 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal
        Code of 2012 for which imprisonment is prescribed in
        those Sections.
            (G) Residential burglary, except as otherwise
        provided in Section 40-10 of the Alcoholism and Other
        Drug Abuse and Dependency Act.
            (H) Criminal sexual assault.
            (I) Aggravated battery of a senior citizen as
        described in Section 12-4.6 or subdivision (a)(4) of
        Section 12-3.05 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the
        Criminal Code of 2012.
            (J) A forcible felony if the offense was related to
        the activities of an organized gang.
            Before July 1, 1994, for the purposes of this
        paragraph, "organized gang" means an association of 5
        or more persons, with an established hierarchy, that
        encourages members of the association to perpetrate
        crimes or provides support to the members of the
        association who do commit crimes.
            Beginning July 1, 1994, for the purposes of this
        paragraph, "organized gang" has the meaning ascribed
        to it in Section 10 of the Illinois Streetgang
        Terrorism Omnibus Prevention Act.
            (K) Vehicular hijacking.
            (L) A second or subsequent conviction for the
        offense of hate crime when the underlying offense upon
        which the hate crime is based is felony aggravated
        assault or felony mob action.
            (M) A second or subsequent conviction for the
        offense of institutional vandalism if the damage to the
        property exceeds $300.
            (N) A Class 3 felony violation of paragraph (1) of
        subsection (a) of Section 2 of the Firearm Owners
        Identification Card Act.
            (O) A violation of Section 12-6.1 or 12-6.5 of the
        Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012.
            (P) A violation of paragraph (1), (2), (3), (4),
        (5), or (7) of subsection (a) of Section 11-20.1 of the
        Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012.
            (Q) A violation of subsection (b) or (b-5) of
        Section 20-1, Section 20-1.2, or Section 20-1.3 of the
        Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012.
            (R) A violation of Section 24-3A of the Criminal
        Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012.
            (S) (Blank).
            (T) A second or subsequent violation of the
        Methamphetamine Control and Community Protection Act.
            (U) A second or subsequent violation of Section
        6-303 of the Illinois Vehicle Code committed while his
        or her driver's license, permit, or privilege was
        revoked because of a violation of Section 9-3 of the
        Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012,
        relating to the offense of reckless homicide, or a
        similar provision of a law of another state.
            (V) A violation of paragraph (4) of subsection (c)
        of Section 11-20.1B or paragraph (4) of subsection (c)
        of Section 11-20.3 of the Criminal Code of 1961, or
        paragraph (6) of subsection (a) of Section 11-20.1 of
        the Criminal Code of 2012 when the victim is under 13
        years of age and the defendant has previously been
        convicted under the laws of this State or any other
        state of the offense of child pornography, aggravated
        child pornography, aggravated criminal sexual abuse,
        aggravated criminal sexual assault, predatory criminal
        sexual assault of a child, or any of the offenses
        formerly known as rape, deviate sexual assault,
        indecent liberties with a child, or aggravated
        indecent liberties with a child where the victim was
        under the age of 18 years or an offense that is
        substantially equivalent to those offenses.
            (W) A violation of Section 24-3.5 of the Criminal
        Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012.
            (X) A violation of subsection (a) of Section 31-1a
        of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of
        2012.
            (Y) A conviction for unlawful possession of a
        firearm by a street gang member when the firearm was
        loaded or contained firearm ammunition.
            (Z) A Class 1 felony committed while he or she was
        serving a term of probation or conditional discharge
        for a felony.
            (AA) Theft of property exceeding $500,000 and not
        exceeding $1,000,000 in value.
            (BB) Laundering of criminally derived property of
        a value exceeding $500,000.
            (CC) Knowingly selling, offering for sale, holding
        for sale, or using 2,000 or more counterfeit items or
        counterfeit items having a retail value in the
        aggregate of $500,000 or more.
            (DD) A conviction for aggravated assault under
        paragraph (6) of subsection (c) of Section 12-2 of the
        Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012 if
        the firearm is aimed toward the person against whom the
        firearm is being used.
        (3) (Blank).
        (4) A minimum term of imprisonment of not less than 10
    consecutive days or 30 days of community service shall be
    imposed for a violation of paragraph (c) of Section 6-303
    of the Illinois Vehicle Code.
        (4.1) (Blank).
        (4.2) Except as provided in paragraphs (4.3) and (4.8)
    of this subsection (c), a minimum of 100 hours of community
    service shall be imposed for a second violation of Section
    6-303 of the Illinois Vehicle Code.
        (4.3) A minimum term of imprisonment of 30 days or 300
    hours of community service, as determined by the court,
    shall be imposed for a second violation of subsection (c)
    of Section 6-303 of the Illinois Vehicle Code.
        (4.4) Except as provided in paragraphs (4.5), (4.6),
    and (4.9) of this subsection (c), a minimum term of
    imprisonment of 30 days or 300 hours of community service,
    as determined by the court, shall be imposed for a third or
    subsequent violation of Section 6-303 of the Illinois
    Vehicle Code.
        (4.5) A minimum term of imprisonment of 30 days shall
    be imposed for a third violation of subsection (c) of
    Section 6-303 of the Illinois Vehicle Code.
        (4.6) Except as provided in paragraph (4.10) of this
    subsection (c), a minimum term of imprisonment of 180 days
    shall be imposed for a fourth or subsequent violation of
    subsection (c) of Section 6-303 of the Illinois Vehicle
    Code.
        (4.7) A minimum term of imprisonment of not less than
    30 consecutive days, or 300 hours of community service,
    shall be imposed for a violation of subsection (a-5) of
    Section 6-303 of the Illinois Vehicle Code, as provided in
    subsection (b-5) of that Section.
        (4.8) A mandatory prison sentence shall be imposed for
    a second violation of subsection (a-5) of Section 6-303 of
    the Illinois Vehicle Code, as provided in subsection (c-5)
    of that Section. The person's driving privileges shall be
    revoked for a period of not less than 5 years from the date
    of his or her release from prison.
        (4.9) A mandatory prison sentence of not less than 4
    and not more than 15 years shall be imposed for a third
    violation of subsection (a-5) of Section 6-303 of the
    Illinois Vehicle Code, as provided in subsection (d-2.5) of
    that Section. The person's driving privileges shall be
    revoked for the remainder of his or her life.
        (4.10) A mandatory prison sentence for a Class 1 felony
    shall be imposed, and the person shall be eligible for an
    extended term sentence, for a fourth or subsequent
    violation of subsection (a-5) of Section 6-303 of the
    Illinois Vehicle Code, as provided in subsection (d-3.5) of
    that Section. The person's driving privileges shall be
    revoked for the remainder of his or her life.
        (5) The court may sentence a corporation or
    unincorporated association convicted of any offense to:
            (A) a period of conditional discharge;
            (B) a fine;
            (C) make restitution to the victim under Section
        5-5-6 of this Code.
        (5.1) In addition to any other penalties imposed, and
    except as provided in paragraph (5.2) or (5.3), a person
    convicted of violating subsection (c) of Section 11-907 of
    the Illinois Vehicle Code shall have his or her driver's
    license, permit, or privileges suspended for at least 90
    days but not more than one year, if the violation resulted
    in damage to the property of another person.
        (5.2) In addition to any other penalties imposed, and
    except as provided in paragraph (5.3), a person convicted
    of violating subsection (c) of Section 11-907 of the
    Illinois Vehicle Code shall have his or her driver's
    license, permit, or privileges suspended for at least 180
    days but not more than 2 years, if the violation resulted
    in injury to another person.
        (5.3) In addition to any other penalties imposed, a
    person convicted of violating subsection (c) of Section
    11-907 of the Illinois Vehicle Code shall have his or her
    driver's license, permit, or privileges suspended for 2
    years, if the violation resulted in the death of another
    person.
        (5.4) In addition to any other penalties imposed, a
    person convicted of violating Section 3-707 of the Illinois
    Vehicle Code shall have his or her driver's license,
    permit, or privileges suspended for 3 months and until he
    or she has paid a reinstatement fee of $100.
        (5.5) In addition to any other penalties imposed, a
    person convicted of violating Section 3-707 of the Illinois
    Vehicle Code during a period in which his or her driver's
    license, permit, or privileges were suspended for a
    previous violation of that Section shall have his or her
    driver's license, permit, or privileges suspended for an
    additional 6 months after the expiration of the original
    3-month suspension and until he or she has paid a
    reinstatement fee of $100.
        (6) (Blank).
        (7) (Blank).
        (8) (Blank).
        (9) A defendant convicted of a second or subsequent
    offense of ritualized abuse of a child may be sentenced to
    a term of natural life imprisonment.
        (10) (Blank).
        (11) The court shall impose a minimum fine of $1,000
    for a first offense and $2,000 for a second or subsequent
    offense upon a person convicted of or placed on supervision
    for battery when the individual harmed was a sports
    official or coach at any level of competition and the act
    causing harm to the sports official or coach occurred
    within an athletic facility or within the immediate
    vicinity of the athletic facility at which the sports
    official or coach was an active participant of the athletic
    contest held at the athletic facility. For the purposes of
    this paragraph (11), "sports official" means a person at an
    athletic contest who enforces the rules of the contest,
    such as an umpire or referee; "athletic facility" means an
    indoor or outdoor playing field or recreational area where
    sports activities are conducted; and "coach" means a person
    recognized as a coach by the sanctioning authority that
    conducted the sporting event.
        (12) A person may not receive a disposition of court
    supervision for a violation of Section 5-16 of the Boat
    Registration and Safety Act if that person has previously
    received a disposition of court supervision for a violation
    of that Section.
        (13) A person convicted of or placed on court
    supervision for an assault or aggravated assault when the
    victim and the offender are family or household members as
    defined in Section 103 of the Illinois Domestic Violence
    Act of 1986 or convicted of domestic battery or aggravated
    domestic battery may be required to attend a Partner Abuse
    Intervention Program under protocols set forth by the
    Illinois Department of Human Services under such terms and
    conditions imposed by the court. The costs of such classes
    shall be paid by the offender.
    (d) In any case in which a sentence originally imposed is
vacated, the case shall be remanded to the trial court. The
trial court shall hold a hearing under Section 5-4-1 of the
Unified Code of Corrections which may include evidence of the
defendant's life, moral character and occupation during the
time since the original sentence was passed. The trial court
shall then impose sentence upon the defendant. The trial court
may impose any sentence which could have been imposed at the
original trial subject to Section 5-5-4 of the Unified Code of
Corrections. If a sentence is vacated on appeal or on
collateral attack due to the failure of the trier of fact at
trial to determine beyond a reasonable doubt the existence of a
fact (other than a prior conviction) necessary to increase the
punishment for the offense beyond the statutory maximum
otherwise applicable, either the defendant may be re-sentenced
to a term within the range otherwise provided or, if the State
files notice of its intention to again seek the extended
sentence, the defendant shall be afforded a new trial.
    (e) In cases where prosecution for aggravated criminal
sexual abuse under Section 11-1.60 or 12-16 of the Criminal
Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012 results in conviction
of a defendant who was a family member of the victim at the
time of the commission of the offense, the court shall consider
the safety and welfare of the victim and may impose a sentence
of probation only where:
        (1) the court finds (A) or (B) or both are appropriate:
            (A) the defendant is willing to undergo a court
        approved counseling program for a minimum duration of 2
        years; or
            (B) the defendant is willing to participate in a
        court approved plan including but not limited to the
        defendant's:
                (i) removal from the household;
                (ii) restricted contact with the victim;
                (iii) continued financial support of the
            family;
                (iv) restitution for harm done to the victim;
            and
                (v) compliance with any other measures that
            the court may deem appropriate; and
        (2) the court orders the defendant to pay for the
    victim's counseling services, to the extent that the court
    finds, after considering the defendant's income and
    assets, that the defendant is financially capable of paying
    for such services, if the victim was under 18 years of age
    at the time the offense was committed and requires
    counseling as a result of the offense.
    Probation may be revoked or modified pursuant to Section
5-6-4; except where the court determines at the hearing that
the defendant violated a condition of his or her probation
restricting contact with the victim or other family members or
commits another offense with the victim or other family
members, the court shall revoke the defendant's probation and
impose a term of imprisonment.
    For the purposes of this Section, "family member" and
"victim" shall have the meanings ascribed to them in Section
11-0.1 of the Criminal Code of 2012.
    (f) (Blank).
    (g) Whenever a defendant is convicted of an offense under
Sections 11-1.20, 11-1.30, 11-1.40, 11-1.50, 11-1.60, 11-14,
11-14.3, 11-14.4 except for an offense that involves keeping a
place of juvenile prostitution, 11-15, 11-15.1, 11-16, 11-17,
11-18, 11-18.1, 11-19, 11-19.1, 11-19.2, 12-13, 12-14,
12-14.1, 12-15 or 12-16 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the
Criminal Code of 2012, the defendant shall undergo medical
testing to determine whether the defendant has any sexually
transmissible disease, including a test for infection with
human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) or any other identified
causative agent of acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS).
Any such medical test shall be performed only by appropriately
licensed medical practitioners and may include an analysis of
any bodily fluids as well as an examination of the defendant's
person. Except as otherwise provided by law, the results of
such test shall be kept strictly confidential by all medical
personnel involved in the testing and must be personally
delivered in a sealed envelope to the judge of the court in
which the conviction was entered for the judge's inspection in
camera. Acting in accordance with the best interests of the
victim and the public, the judge shall have the discretion to
determine to whom, if anyone, the results of the testing may be
revealed. The court shall notify the defendant of the test
results. The court shall also notify the victim if requested by
the victim, and if the victim is under the age of 15 and if
requested by the victim's parents or legal guardian, the court
shall notify the victim's parents or legal guardian of the test
results. The court shall provide information on the
availability of HIV testing and counseling at Department of
Public Health facilities to all parties to whom the results of
the testing are revealed and shall direct the State's Attorney
to provide the information to the victim when possible. A
State's Attorney may petition the court to obtain the results
of any HIV test administered under this Section, and the court
shall grant the disclosure if the State's Attorney shows it is
relevant in order to prosecute a charge of criminal
transmission of HIV under Section 12-5.01 or 12-16.2 of the
Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012 against the
defendant. The court shall order that the cost of any such test
shall be paid by the county and may be taxed as costs against
the convicted defendant.
    (g-5) When an inmate is tested for an airborne communicable
disease, as determined by the Illinois Department of Public
Health including but not limited to tuberculosis, the results
of the test shall be personally delivered by the warden or his
or her designee in a sealed envelope to the judge of the court
in which the inmate must appear for the judge's inspection in
camera if requested by the judge. Acting in accordance with the
best interests of those in the courtroom, the judge shall have
the discretion to determine what if any precautions need to be
taken to prevent transmission of the disease in the courtroom.
    (h) Whenever a defendant is convicted of an offense under
Section 1 or 2 of the Hypodermic Syringes and Needles Act, the
defendant shall undergo medical testing to determine whether
the defendant has been exposed to human immunodeficiency virus
(HIV) or any other identified causative agent of acquired
immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS). Except as otherwise provided
by law, the results of such test shall be kept strictly
confidential by all medical personnel involved in the testing
and must be personally delivered in a sealed envelope to the
judge of the court in which the conviction was entered for the
judge's inspection in camera. Acting in accordance with the
best interests of the public, the judge shall have the
discretion to determine to whom, if anyone, the results of the
testing may be revealed. The court shall notify the defendant
of a positive test showing an infection with the human
immunodeficiency virus (HIV). The court shall provide
information on the availability of HIV testing and counseling
at Department of Public Health facilities to all parties to
whom the results of the testing are revealed and shall direct
the State's Attorney to provide the information to the victim
when possible. A State's Attorney may petition the court to
obtain the results of any HIV test administered under this
Section, and the court shall grant the disclosure if the
State's Attorney shows it is relevant in order to prosecute a
charge of criminal transmission of HIV under Section 12-5.01 or
12-16.2 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of
2012 against the defendant. The court shall order that the cost
of any such test shall be paid by the county and may be taxed as
costs against the convicted defendant.
    (i) All fines and penalties imposed under this Section for
any violation of Chapters 3, 4, 6, and 11 of the Illinois
Vehicle Code, or a similar provision of a local ordinance, and
any violation of the Child Passenger Protection Act, or a
similar provision of a local ordinance, shall be collected and
disbursed by the circuit clerk as provided under Section 27.5
of the Clerks of Courts Act.
    (j) In cases when prosecution for any violation of Section
11-1.20, 11-1.30, 11-1.40, 11-1.50, 11-1.60, 11-6, 11-8, 11-9,
11-11, 11-14, 11-14.3, 11-14.4, 11-15, 11-15.1, 11-16, 11-17,
11-17.1, 11-18, 11-18.1, 11-19, 11-19.1, 11-19.2, 11-20.1,
11-20.1B, 11-20.3, 11-21, 11-30, 11-40, 12-13, 12-14, 12-14.1,
12-15, or 12-16 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal
Code of 2012, any violation of the Illinois Controlled
Substances Act, any violation of the Cannabis Control Act, or
any violation of the Methamphetamine Control and Community
Protection Act results in conviction, a disposition of court
supervision, or an order of probation granted under Section 10
of the Cannabis Control Act, Section 410 of the Illinois
Controlled Substances Substance Act, or Section 70 of the
Methamphetamine Control and Community Protection Act of a
defendant, the court shall determine whether the defendant is
employed by a facility or center as defined under the Child
Care Act of 1969, a public or private elementary or secondary
school, or otherwise works with children under 18 years of age
on a daily basis. When a defendant is so employed, the court
shall order the Clerk of the Court to send a copy of the
judgment of conviction or order of supervision or probation to
the defendant's employer by certified mail. If the employer of
the defendant is a school, the Clerk of the Court shall direct
the mailing of a copy of the judgment of conviction or order of
supervision or probation to the appropriate regional
superintendent of schools. The regional superintendent of
schools shall notify the State Board of Education of any
notification under this subsection.
    (j-5) A defendant at least 17 years of age who is convicted
of a felony and who has not been previously convicted of a
misdemeanor or felony and who is sentenced to a term of
imprisonment in the Illinois Department of Corrections shall as
a condition of his or her sentence be required by the court to
attend educational courses designed to prepare the defendant
for a high school diploma and to work toward a high school
diploma or to work toward passing high school equivalency
testing the high school level Test of General Educational
Development (GED) or to work toward completing a vocational
training program offered by the Department of Corrections. If a
defendant fails to complete the educational training required
by his or her sentence during the term of incarceration, the
Prisoner Review Board shall, as a condition of mandatory
supervised release, require the defendant, at his or her own
expense, to pursue a course of study toward a high school
diploma or passage of high school equivalency testing the GED
test. The Prisoner Review Board shall revoke the mandatory
supervised release of a defendant who wilfully fails to comply
with this subsection (j-5) upon his or her release from
confinement in a penal institution while serving a mandatory
supervised release term; however, the inability of the
defendant after making a good faith effort to obtain financial
aid or pay for the educational training shall not be deemed a
wilful failure to comply. The Prisoner Review Board shall
recommit the defendant whose mandatory supervised release term
has been revoked under this subsection (j-5) as provided in
Section 3-3-9. This subsection (j-5) does not apply to a
defendant who has a high school diploma or has successfully
passed high school equivalency testing the GED test. This
subsection (j-5) does not apply to a defendant who is
determined by the court to be developmentally disabled or
otherwise mentally incapable of completing the educational or
vocational program.
    (k) (Blank).
    (l) (A) Except as provided in paragraph (C) of subsection
    (l), whenever a defendant, who is an alien as defined by
    the Immigration and Nationality Act, is convicted of any
    felony or misdemeanor offense, the court after sentencing
    the defendant may, upon motion of the State's Attorney,
    hold sentence in abeyance and remand the defendant to the
    custody of the Attorney General of the United States or his
    or her designated agent to be deported when:
            (1) a final order of deportation has been issued
        against the defendant pursuant to proceedings under
        the Immigration and Nationality Act, and
            (2) the deportation of the defendant would not
        deprecate the seriousness of the defendant's conduct
        and would not be inconsistent with the ends of justice.
        Otherwise, the defendant shall be sentenced as
    provided in this Chapter V.
        (B) If the defendant has already been sentenced for a
    felony or misdemeanor offense, or has been placed on
    probation under Section 10 of the Cannabis Control Act,
    Section 410 of the Illinois Controlled Substances Act, or
    Section 70 of the Methamphetamine Control and Community
    Protection Act, the court may, upon motion of the State's
    Attorney to suspend the sentence imposed, commit the
    defendant to the custody of the Attorney General of the
    United States or his or her designated agent when:
            (1) a final order of deportation has been issued
        against the defendant pursuant to proceedings under
        the Immigration and Nationality Act, and
            (2) the deportation of the defendant would not
        deprecate the seriousness of the defendant's conduct
        and would not be inconsistent with the ends of justice.
        (C) This subsection (l) does not apply to offenders who
    are subject to the provisions of paragraph (2) of
    subsection (a) of Section 3-6-3.
        (D) Upon motion of the State's Attorney, if a defendant
    sentenced under this Section returns to the jurisdiction of
    the United States, the defendant shall be recommitted to
    the custody of the county from which he or she was
    sentenced. Thereafter, the defendant shall be brought
    before the sentencing court, which may impose any sentence
    that was available under Section 5-5-3 at the time of
    initial sentencing. In addition, the defendant shall not be
    eligible for additional sentence credit for good conduct as
    provided under Section 3-6-3.
    (m) A person convicted of criminal defacement of property
under Section 21-1.3 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the
Criminal Code of 2012, in which the property damage exceeds
$300 and the property damaged is a school building, shall be
ordered to perform community service that may include cleanup,
removal, or painting over the defacement.
    (n) The court may sentence a person convicted of a
violation of Section 12-19, 12-21, 16-1.3, or 17-56, or
subsection (a) or (b) of Section 12-4.4a, of the Criminal Code
of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012 (i) to an impact
incarceration program if the person is otherwise eligible for
that program under Section 5-8-1.1, (ii) to community service,
or (iii) if the person is an addict or alcoholic, as defined in
the Alcoholism and Other Drug Abuse and Dependency Act, to a
substance or alcohol abuse program licensed under that Act.
    (o) Whenever a person is convicted of a sex offense as
defined in Section 2 of the Sex Offender Registration Act, the
defendant's driver's license or permit shall be subject to
renewal on an annual basis in accordance with the provisions of
license renewal established by the Secretary of State.
(Source: P.A. 96-348, eff. 8-12-09; 96-400, eff. 8-13-09;
96-829, eff. 12-3-09; 96-1200, eff. 7-22-10; 96-1551, Article
1, Section 970, eff. 7-1-11; 96-1551, Article 2, Section 1065,
eff. 7-1-11; 96-1551, Article 10, Section 10-150, eff. 7-1-11;
97-159, eff. 7-21-11; 97-697, eff. 6-22-12; 97-917, eff.
8-9-12; 97-1108, eff. 1-1-13; 97-1109, eff. 1-1-13; 97-1150,
eff. 1-25-13; revised 11-12-13.)
 
    (730 ILCS 5/5-6-3)  (from Ch. 38, par. 1005-6-3)
    Sec. 5-6-3. Conditions of Probation and of Conditional
Discharge.
    (a) The conditions of probation and of conditional
discharge shall be that the person:
        (1) not violate any criminal statute of any
    jurisdiction;
        (2) report to or appear in person before such person or
    agency as directed by the court;
        (3) refrain from possessing a firearm or other
    dangerous weapon where the offense is a felony or, if a
    misdemeanor, the offense involved the intentional or
    knowing infliction of bodily harm or threat of bodily harm;
        (4) not leave the State without the consent of the
    court or, in circumstances in which the reason for the
    absence is of such an emergency nature that prior consent
    by the court is not possible, without the prior
    notification and approval of the person's probation
    officer. Transfer of a person's probation or conditional
    discharge supervision to another state is subject to
    acceptance by the other state pursuant to the Interstate
    Compact for Adult Offender Supervision;
        (5) permit the probation officer to visit him at his
    home or elsewhere to the extent necessary to discharge his
    duties;
        (6) perform no less than 30 hours of community service
    and not more than 120 hours of community service, if
    community service is available in the jurisdiction and is
    funded and approved by the county board where the offense
    was committed, where the offense was related to or in
    furtherance of the criminal activities of an organized gang
    and was motivated by the offender's membership in or
    allegiance to an organized gang. The community service
    shall include, but not be limited to, the cleanup and
    repair of any damage caused by a violation of Section
    21-1.3 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of
    2012 and similar damage to property located within the
    municipality or county in which the violation occurred.
    When possible and reasonable, the community service should
    be performed in the offender's neighborhood. For purposes
    of this Section, "organized gang" has the meaning ascribed
    to it in Section 10 of the Illinois Streetgang Terrorism
    Omnibus Prevention Act;
        (7) if he or she is at least 17 years of age and has
    been sentenced to probation or conditional discharge for a
    misdemeanor or felony in a county of 3,000,000 or more
    inhabitants and has not been previously convicted of a
    misdemeanor or felony, may be required by the sentencing
    court to attend educational courses designed to prepare the
    defendant for a high school diploma and to work toward a
    high school diploma or to work toward passing high school
    equivalency testing the high school level Test of General
    Educational Development (GED) or to work toward completing
    a vocational training program approved by the court. The
    person on probation or conditional discharge must attend a
    public institution of education to obtain the educational
    or vocational training required by this clause (7). The
    court shall revoke the probation or conditional discharge
    of a person who wilfully fails to comply with this clause
    (7). The person on probation or conditional discharge shall
    be required to pay for the cost of the educational courses
    or high school equivalency testing GED test, if a fee is
    charged for those courses or testing test. The court shall
    resentence the offender whose probation or conditional
    discharge has been revoked as provided in Section 5-6-4.
    This clause (7) does not apply to a person who has a high
    school diploma or has successfully passed high school
    equivalency testing the GED test. This clause (7) does not
    apply to a person who is determined by the court to be
    developmentally disabled or otherwise mentally incapable
    of completing the educational or vocational program;
        (8) if convicted of possession of a substance
    prohibited by the Cannabis Control Act, the Illinois
    Controlled Substances Act, or the Methamphetamine Control
    and Community Protection Act after a previous conviction or
    disposition of supervision for possession of a substance
    prohibited by the Cannabis Control Act or Illinois
    Controlled Substances Act or after a sentence of probation
    under Section 10 of the Cannabis Control Act, Section 410
    of the Illinois Controlled Substances Act, or Section 70 of
    the Methamphetamine Control and Community Protection Act
    and upon a finding by the court that the person is
    addicted, undergo treatment at a substance abuse program
    approved by the court;
        (8.5) if convicted of a felony sex offense as defined
    in the Sex Offender Management Board Act, the person shall
    undergo and successfully complete sex offender treatment
    by a treatment provider approved by the Board and conducted
    in conformance with the standards developed under the Sex
    Offender Management Board Act;
        (8.6) if convicted of a sex offense as defined in the
    Sex Offender Management Board Act, refrain from residing at
    the same address or in the same condominium unit or
    apartment unit or in the same condominium complex or
    apartment complex with another person he or she knows or
    reasonably should know is a convicted sex offender or has
    been placed on supervision for a sex offense; the
    provisions of this paragraph do not apply to a person
    convicted of a sex offense who is placed in a Department of
    Corrections licensed transitional housing facility for sex
    offenders;
        (8.7) if convicted for an offense committed on or after
    June 1, 2008 (the effective date of Public Act 95-464) that
    would qualify the accused as a child sex offender as
    defined in Section 11-9.3 or 11-9.4 of the Criminal Code of
    1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012, refrain from
    communicating with or contacting, by means of the Internet,
    a person who is not related to the accused and whom the
    accused reasonably believes to be under 18 years of age;
    for purposes of this paragraph (8.7), "Internet" has the
    meaning ascribed to it in Section 16-0.1 of the Criminal
    Code of 2012; and a person is not related to the accused if
    the person is not: (i) the spouse, brother, or sister of
    the accused; (ii) a descendant of the accused; (iii) a
    first or second cousin of the accused; or (iv) a step-child
    or adopted child of the accused;
        (8.8) if convicted for an offense under Section 11-6,
    11-9.1, 11-14.4 that involves soliciting for a juvenile
    prostitute, 11-15.1, 11-20.1, 11-20.1B, 11-20.3, or 11-21
    of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012,
    or any attempt to commit any of these offenses, committed
    on or after June 1, 2009 (the effective date of Public Act
    95-983):
            (i) not access or use a computer or any other
        device with Internet capability without the prior
        written approval of the offender's probation officer,
        except in connection with the offender's employment or
        search for employment with the prior approval of the
        offender's probation officer;
            (ii) submit to periodic unannounced examinations
        of the offender's computer or any other device with
        Internet capability by the offender's probation
        officer, a law enforcement officer, or assigned
        computer or information technology specialist,
        including the retrieval and copying of all data from
        the computer or device and any internal or external
        peripherals and removal of such information,
        equipment, or device to conduct a more thorough
        inspection;
            (iii) submit to the installation on the offender's
        computer or device with Internet capability, at the
        offender's expense, of one or more hardware or software
        systems to monitor the Internet use; and
            (iv) submit to any other appropriate restrictions
        concerning the offender's use of or access to a
        computer or any other device with Internet capability
        imposed by the offender's probation officer;
        (8.9) if convicted of a sex offense as defined in the
    Sex Offender Registration Act committed on or after January
    1, 2010 (the effective date of Public Act 96-262), refrain
    from accessing or using a social networking website as
    defined in Section 17-0.5 of the Criminal Code of 2012;
        (9) if convicted of a felony or of any misdemeanor
    violation of Section 12-1, 12-2, 12-3, 12-3.2, 12-3.4, or
    12-3.5 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of
    2012 that was determined, pursuant to Section 112A-11.1 of
    the Code of Criminal Procedure of 1963, to trigger the
    prohibitions of 18 U.S.C. 922(g)(9), physically surrender
    at a time and place designated by the court, his or her
    Firearm Owner's Identification Card and any and all
    firearms in his or her possession. The Court shall return
    to the Department of State Police Firearm Owner's
    Identification Card Office the person's Firearm Owner's
    Identification Card;
        (10) if convicted of a sex offense as defined in
    subsection (a-5) of Section 3-1-2 of this Code, unless the
    offender is a parent or guardian of the person under 18
    years of age present in the home and no non-familial minors
    are present, not participate in a holiday event involving
    children under 18 years of age, such as distributing candy
    or other items to children on Halloween, wearing a Santa
    Claus costume on or preceding Christmas, being employed as
    a department store Santa Claus, or wearing an Easter Bunny
    costume on or preceding Easter;
        (11) if convicted of a sex offense as defined in
    Section 2 of the Sex Offender Registration Act committed on
    or after January 1, 2010 (the effective date of Public Act
    96-362) that requires the person to register as a sex
    offender under that Act, may not knowingly use any computer
    scrub software on any computer that the sex offender uses;
    and
        (12) if convicted of a violation of the Methamphetamine
    Control and Community Protection Act, the Methamphetamine
    Precursor Control Act, or a methamphetamine related
    offense:
            (A) prohibited from purchasing, possessing, or
        having under his or her control any product containing
        pseudoephedrine unless prescribed by a physician; and
            (B) prohibited from purchasing, possessing, or
        having under his or her control any product containing
        ammonium nitrate.
    (b) The Court may in addition to other reasonable
conditions relating to the nature of the offense or the
rehabilitation of the defendant as determined for each
defendant in the proper discretion of the Court require that
the person:
        (1) serve a term of periodic imprisonment under Article
    7 for a period not to exceed that specified in paragraph
    (d) of Section 5-7-1;
        (2) pay a fine and costs;
        (3) work or pursue a course of study or vocational
    training;
        (4) undergo medical, psychological or psychiatric
    treatment; or treatment for drug addiction or alcoholism;
        (5) attend or reside in a facility established for the
    instruction or residence of defendants on probation;
        (6) support his dependents;
        (7) and in addition, if a minor:
            (i) reside with his parents or in a foster home;
            (ii) attend school;
            (iii) attend a non-residential program for youth;
            (iv) contribute to his own support at home or in a
        foster home;
            (v) with the consent of the superintendent of the
        facility, attend an educational program at a facility
        other than the school in which the offense was
        committed if he or she is convicted of a crime of
        violence as defined in Section 2 of the Crime Victims
        Compensation Act committed in a school, on the real
        property comprising a school, or within 1,000 feet of
        the real property comprising a school;
        (8) make restitution as provided in Section 5-5-6 of
    this Code;
        (9) perform some reasonable public or community
    service;
        (10) serve a term of home confinement. In addition to
    any other applicable condition of probation or conditional
    discharge, the conditions of home confinement shall be that
    the offender:
            (i) remain within the interior premises of the
        place designated for his confinement during the hours
        designated by the court;
            (ii) admit any person or agent designated by the
        court into the offender's place of confinement at any
        time for purposes of verifying the offender's
        compliance with the conditions of his confinement; and
            (iii) if further deemed necessary by the court or
        the Probation or Court Services Department, be placed
        on an approved electronic monitoring device, subject
        to Article 8A of Chapter V;
            (iv) for persons convicted of any alcohol,
        cannabis or controlled substance violation who are
        placed on an approved monitoring device as a condition
        of probation or conditional discharge, the court shall
        impose a reasonable fee for each day of the use of the
        device, as established by the county board in
        subsection (g) of this Section, unless after
        determining the inability of the offender to pay the
        fee, the court assesses a lesser fee or no fee as the
        case may be. This fee shall be imposed in addition to
        the fees imposed under subsections (g) and (i) of this
        Section. The fee shall be collected by the clerk of the
        circuit court. The clerk of the circuit court shall pay
        all monies collected from this fee to the county
        treasurer for deposit in the substance abuse services
        fund under Section 5-1086.1 of the Counties Code; and
            (v) for persons convicted of offenses other than
        those referenced in clause (iv) above and who are
        placed on an approved monitoring device as a condition
        of probation or conditional discharge, the court shall
        impose a reasonable fee for each day of the use of the
        device, as established by the county board in
        subsection (g) of this Section, unless after
        determining the inability of the defendant to pay the
        fee, the court assesses a lesser fee or no fee as the
        case may be. This fee shall be imposed in addition to
        the fees imposed under subsections (g) and (i) of this
        Section. The fee shall be collected by the clerk of the
        circuit court. The clerk of the circuit court shall pay
        all monies collected from this fee to the county
        treasurer who shall use the monies collected to defray
        the costs of corrections. The county treasurer shall
        deposit the fee collected in the probation and court
        services fund.
        (11) comply with the terms and conditions of an order
    of protection issued by the court pursuant to the Illinois
    Domestic Violence Act of 1986, as now or hereafter amended,
    or an order of protection issued by the court of another
    state, tribe, or United States territory. A copy of the
    order of protection shall be transmitted to the probation
    officer or agency having responsibility for the case;
        (12) reimburse any "local anti-crime program" as
    defined in Section 7 of the Anti-Crime Advisory Council Act
    for any reasonable expenses incurred by the program on the
    offender's case, not to exceed the maximum amount of the
    fine authorized for the offense for which the defendant was
    sentenced;
        (13) contribute a reasonable sum of money, not to
    exceed the maximum amount of the fine authorized for the
    offense for which the defendant was sentenced, (i) to a
    "local anti-crime program", as defined in Section 7 of the
    Anti-Crime Advisory Council Act, or (ii) for offenses under
    the jurisdiction of the Department of Natural Resources, to
    the fund established by the Department of Natural Resources
    for the purchase of evidence for investigation purposes and
    to conduct investigations as outlined in Section 805-105 of
    the Department of Natural Resources (Conservation) Law;
        (14) refrain from entering into a designated
    geographic area except upon such terms as the court finds
    appropriate. Such terms may include consideration of the
    purpose of the entry, the time of day, other persons
    accompanying the defendant, and advance approval by a
    probation officer, if the defendant has been placed on
    probation or advance approval by the court, if the
    defendant was placed on conditional discharge;
        (15) refrain from having any contact, directly or
    indirectly, with certain specified persons or particular
    types of persons, including but not limited to members of
    street gangs and drug users or dealers;
        (16) refrain from having in his or her body the
    presence of any illicit drug prohibited by the Cannabis
    Control Act, the Illinois Controlled Substances Act, or the
    Methamphetamine Control and Community Protection Act,
    unless prescribed by a physician, and submit samples of his
    or her blood or urine or both for tests to determine the
    presence of any illicit drug;
        (17) if convicted for an offense committed on or after
    June 1, 2008 (the effective date of Public Act 95-464) that
    would qualify the accused as a child sex offender as
    defined in Section 11-9.3 or 11-9.4 of the Criminal Code of
    1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012, refrain from
    communicating with or contacting, by means of the Internet,
    a person who is related to the accused and whom the accused
    reasonably believes to be under 18 years of age; for
    purposes of this paragraph (17), "Internet" has the meaning
    ascribed to it in Section 16-0.1 of the Criminal Code of
    2012; and a person is related to the accused if the person
    is: (i) the spouse, brother, or sister of the accused; (ii)
    a descendant of the accused; (iii) a first or second cousin
    of the accused; or (iv) a step-child or adopted child of
    the accused;
        (18) if convicted for an offense committed on or after
    June 1, 2009 (the effective date of Public Act 95-983) that
    would qualify as a sex offense as defined in the Sex
    Offender Registration Act:
            (i) not access or use a computer or any other
        device with Internet capability without the prior
        written approval of the offender's probation officer,
        except in connection with the offender's employment or
        search for employment with the prior approval of the
        offender's probation officer;
            (ii) submit to periodic unannounced examinations
        of the offender's computer or any other device with
        Internet capability by the offender's probation
        officer, a law enforcement officer, or assigned
        computer or information technology specialist,
        including the retrieval and copying of all data from
        the computer or device and any internal or external
        peripherals and removal of such information,
        equipment, or device to conduct a more thorough
        inspection;
            (iii) submit to the installation on the offender's
        computer or device with Internet capability, at the
        subject's expense, of one or more hardware or software
        systems to monitor the Internet use; and
            (iv) submit to any other appropriate restrictions
        concerning the offender's use of or access to a
        computer or any other device with Internet capability
        imposed by the offender's probation officer; and
        (19) refrain from possessing a firearm or other
    dangerous weapon where the offense is a misdemeanor that
    did not involve the intentional or knowing infliction of
    bodily harm or threat of bodily harm.
    (c) The court may as a condition of probation or of
conditional discharge require that a person under 18 years of
age found guilty of any alcohol, cannabis or controlled
substance violation, refrain from acquiring a driver's license
during the period of probation or conditional discharge. If
such person is in possession of a permit or license, the court
may require that the minor refrain from driving or operating
any motor vehicle during the period of probation or conditional
discharge, except as may be necessary in the course of the
minor's lawful employment.
    (d) An offender sentenced to probation or to conditional
discharge shall be given a certificate setting forth the
conditions thereof.
    (e) Except where the offender has committed a fourth or
subsequent violation of subsection (c) of Section 6-303 of the
Illinois Vehicle Code, the court shall not require as a
condition of the sentence of probation or conditional discharge
that the offender be committed to a period of imprisonment in
excess of 6 months. This 6 month limit shall not include
periods of confinement given pursuant to a sentence of county
impact incarceration under Section 5-8-1.2.
    Persons committed to imprisonment as a condition of
probation or conditional discharge shall not be committed to
the Department of Corrections.
    (f) The court may combine a sentence of periodic
imprisonment under Article 7 or a sentence to a county impact
incarceration program under Article 8 with a sentence of
probation or conditional discharge.
    (g) An offender sentenced to probation or to conditional
discharge and who during the term of either undergoes mandatory
drug or alcohol testing, or both, or is assigned to be placed
on an approved electronic monitoring device, shall be ordered
to pay all costs incidental to such mandatory drug or alcohol
testing, or both, and all costs incidental to such approved
electronic monitoring in accordance with the defendant's
ability to pay those costs. The county board with the
concurrence of the Chief Judge of the judicial circuit in which
the county is located shall establish reasonable fees for the
cost of maintenance, testing, and incidental expenses related
to the mandatory drug or alcohol testing, or both, and all
costs incidental to approved electronic monitoring, involved
in a successful probation program for the county. The
concurrence of the Chief Judge shall be in the form of an
administrative order. The fees shall be collected by the clerk
of the circuit court. The clerk of the circuit court shall pay
all moneys collected from these fees to the county treasurer
who shall use the moneys collected to defray the costs of drug
testing, alcohol testing, and electronic monitoring. The
county treasurer shall deposit the fees collected in the county
working cash fund under Section 6-27001 or Section 6-29002 of
the Counties Code, as the case may be.
    (h) Jurisdiction over an offender may be transferred from
the sentencing court to the court of another circuit with the
concurrence of both courts. Further transfers or retransfers of
jurisdiction are also authorized in the same manner. The court
to which jurisdiction has been transferred shall have the same
powers as the sentencing court. The probation department within
the circuit to which jurisdiction has been transferred, or
which has agreed to provide supervision, may impose probation
fees upon receiving the transferred offender, as provided in
subsection (i). For all transfer cases, as defined in Section
9b of the Probation and Probation Officers Act, the probation
department from the original sentencing court shall retain all
probation fees collected prior to the transfer. After the
transfer all probation fees shall be paid to the probation
department within the circuit to which jurisdiction has been
transferred.
    (i) The court shall impose upon an offender sentenced to
probation after January 1, 1989 or to conditional discharge
after January 1, 1992 or to community service under the
supervision of a probation or court services department after
January 1, 2004, as a condition of such probation or
conditional discharge or supervised community service, a fee of
$50 for each month of probation or conditional discharge
supervision or supervised community service ordered by the
court, unless after determining the inability of the person
sentenced to probation or conditional discharge or supervised
community service to pay the fee, the court assesses a lesser
fee. The court may not impose the fee on a minor who is made a
ward of the State under the Juvenile Court Act of 1987 while
the minor is in placement. The fee shall be imposed only upon
an offender who is actively supervised by the probation and
court services department. The fee shall be collected by the
clerk of the circuit court. The clerk of the circuit court
shall pay all monies collected from this fee to the county
treasurer for deposit in the probation and court services fund
under Section 15.1 of the Probation and Probation Officers Act.
    A circuit court may not impose a probation fee under this
subsection (i) in excess of $25 per month unless the circuit
court has adopted, by administrative order issued by the chief
judge, a standard probation fee guide determining an offender's
ability to pay Of the amount collected as a probation fee, up
to $5 of that fee collected per month may be used to provide
services to crime victims and their families.
    The Court may only waive probation fees based on an
offender's ability to pay. The probation department may
re-evaluate an offender's ability to pay every 6 months, and,
with the approval of the Director of Court Services or the
Chief Probation Officer, adjust the monthly fee amount. An
offender may elect to pay probation fees due in a lump sum. Any
offender that has been assigned to the supervision of a
probation department, or has been transferred either under
subsection (h) of this Section or under any interstate compact,
shall be required to pay probation fees to the department
supervising the offender, based on the offender's ability to
pay.
    This amendatory Act of the 93rd General Assembly deletes
the $10 increase in the fee under this subsection that was
imposed by Public Act 93-616. This deletion is intended to
control over any other Act of the 93rd General Assembly that
retains or incorporates that fee increase.
    (i-5) In addition to the fees imposed under subsection (i)
of this Section, in the case of an offender convicted of a
felony sex offense (as defined in the Sex Offender Management
Board Act) or an offense that the court or probation department
has determined to be sexually motivated (as defined in the Sex
Offender Management Board Act), the court or the probation
department shall assess additional fees to pay for all costs of
treatment, assessment, evaluation for risk and treatment, and
monitoring the offender, based on that offender's ability to
pay those costs either as they occur or under a payment plan.
    (j) All fines and costs imposed under this Section for any
violation of Chapters 3, 4, 6, and 11 of the Illinois Vehicle
Code, or a similar provision of a local ordinance, and any
violation of the Child Passenger Protection Act, or a similar
provision of a local ordinance, shall be collected and
disbursed by the circuit clerk as provided under Section 27.5
of the Clerks of Courts Act.
    (k) Any offender who is sentenced to probation or
conditional discharge for a felony sex offense as defined in
the Sex Offender Management Board Act or any offense that the
court or probation department has determined to be sexually
motivated as defined in the Sex Offender Management Board Act
shall be required to refrain from any contact, directly or
indirectly, with any persons specified by the court and shall
be available for all evaluations and treatment programs
required by the court or the probation department.
    (l) The court may order an offender who is sentenced to
probation or conditional discharge for a violation of an order
of protection be placed under electronic surveillance as
provided in Section 5-8A-7 of this Code.
(Source: P.A. 97-454, eff. 1-1-12; 97-560, eff. 1-1-12; 97-597,
eff. 1-1-12; 97-1109, eff. 1-1-13; 97-1131, eff. 1-1-13;
97-1150, eff. 1-25-13; 98-575, eff. 1-1-14.)
 
    (730 ILCS 5/5-6-3.1)  (from Ch. 38, par. 1005-6-3.1)
    Sec. 5-6-3.1. Incidents and Conditions of Supervision.
    (a) When a defendant is placed on supervision, the court
shall enter an order for supervision specifying the period of
such supervision, and shall defer further proceedings in the
case until the conclusion of the period.
    (b) The period of supervision shall be reasonable under all
of the circumstances of the case, but may not be longer than 2
years, unless the defendant has failed to pay the assessment
required by Section 10.3 of the Cannabis Control Act, Section
411.2 of the Illinois Controlled Substances Act, or Section 80
of the Methamphetamine Control and Community Protection Act, in
which case the court may extend supervision beyond 2 years.
Additionally, the court shall order the defendant to perform no
less than 30 hours of community service and not more than 120
hours of community service, if community service is available
in the jurisdiction and is funded and approved by the county
board where the offense was committed, when the offense (1) was
related to or in furtherance of the criminal activities of an
organized gang or was motivated by the defendant's membership
in or allegiance to an organized gang; or (2) is a violation of
any Section of Article 24 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the
Criminal Code of 2012 where a disposition of supervision is not
prohibited by Section 5-6-1 of this Code. The community service
shall include, but not be limited to, the cleanup and repair of
any damage caused by violation of Section 21-1.3 of the
Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012 and similar
damages to property located within the municipality or county
in which the violation occurred. Where possible and reasonable,
the community service should be performed in the offender's
neighborhood.
    For the purposes of this Section, "organized gang" has the
meaning ascribed to it in Section 10 of the Illinois Streetgang
Terrorism Omnibus Prevention Act.
    (c) The court may in addition to other reasonable
conditions relating to the nature of the offense or the
rehabilitation of the defendant as determined for each
defendant in the proper discretion of the court require that
the person:
        (1) make a report to and appear in person before or
    participate with the court or such courts, person, or
    social service agency as directed by the court in the order
    of supervision;
        (2) pay a fine and costs;
        (3) work or pursue a course of study or vocational
    training;
        (4) undergo medical, psychological or psychiatric
    treatment; or treatment for drug addiction or alcoholism;
        (5) attend or reside in a facility established for the
    instruction or residence of defendants on probation;
        (6) support his dependents;
        (7) refrain from possessing a firearm or other
    dangerous weapon;
        (8) and in addition, if a minor:
            (i) reside with his parents or in a foster home;
            (ii) attend school;
            (iii) attend a non-residential program for youth;
            (iv) contribute to his own support at home or in a
        foster home; or
            (v) with the consent of the superintendent of the
        facility, attend an educational program at a facility
        other than the school in which the offense was
        committed if he or she is placed on supervision for a
        crime of violence as defined in Section 2 of the Crime
        Victims Compensation Act committed in a school, on the
        real property comprising a school, or within 1,000 feet
        of the real property comprising a school;
        (9) make restitution or reparation in an amount not to
    exceed actual loss or damage to property and pecuniary loss
    or make restitution under Section 5-5-6 to a domestic
    violence shelter. The court shall determine the amount and
    conditions of payment;
        (10) perform some reasonable public or community
    service;
        (11) comply with the terms and conditions of an order
    of protection issued by the court pursuant to the Illinois
    Domestic Violence Act of 1986 or an order of protection
    issued by the court of another state, tribe, or United
    States territory. If the court has ordered the defendant to
    make a report and appear in person under paragraph (1) of
    this subsection, a copy of the order of protection shall be
    transmitted to the person or agency so designated by the
    court;
        (12) reimburse any "local anti-crime program" as
    defined in Section 7 of the Anti-Crime Advisory Council Act
    for any reasonable expenses incurred by the program on the
    offender's case, not to exceed the maximum amount of the
    fine authorized for the offense for which the defendant was
    sentenced;
        (13) contribute a reasonable sum of money, not to
    exceed the maximum amount of the fine authorized for the
    offense for which the defendant was sentenced, (i) to a
    "local anti-crime program", as defined in Section 7 of the
    Anti-Crime Advisory Council Act, or (ii) for offenses under
    the jurisdiction of the Department of Natural Resources, to
    the fund established by the Department of Natural Resources
    for the purchase of evidence for investigation purposes and
    to conduct investigations as outlined in Section 805-105 of
    the Department of Natural Resources (Conservation) Law;
        (14) refrain from entering into a designated
    geographic area except upon such terms as the court finds
    appropriate. Such terms may include consideration of the
    purpose of the entry, the time of day, other persons
    accompanying the defendant, and advance approval by a
    probation officer;
        (15) refrain from having any contact, directly or
    indirectly, with certain specified persons or particular
    types of person, including but not limited to members of
    street gangs and drug users or dealers;
        (16) refrain from having in his or her body the
    presence of any illicit drug prohibited by the Cannabis
    Control Act, the Illinois Controlled Substances Act, or the
    Methamphetamine Control and Community Protection Act,
    unless prescribed by a physician, and submit samples of his
    or her blood or urine or both for tests to determine the
    presence of any illicit drug;
        (17) refrain from operating any motor vehicle not
    equipped with an ignition interlock device as defined in
    Section 1-129.1 of the Illinois Vehicle Code; under this
    condition the court may allow a defendant who is not
    self-employed to operate a vehicle owned by the defendant's
    employer that is not equipped with an ignition interlock
    device in the course and scope of the defendant's
    employment; and
        (18) if placed on supervision for a sex offense as
    defined in subsection (a-5) of Section 3-1-2 of this Code,
    unless the offender is a parent or guardian of the person
    under 18 years of age present in the home and no
    non-familial minors are present, not participate in a
    holiday event involving children under 18 years of age,
    such as distributing candy or other items to children on
    Halloween, wearing a Santa Claus costume on or preceding
    Christmas, being employed as a department store Santa
    Claus, or wearing an Easter Bunny costume on or preceding
    Easter.
    (d) The court shall defer entering any judgment on the
charges until the conclusion of the supervision.
    (e) At the conclusion of the period of supervision, if the
court determines that the defendant has successfully complied
with all of the conditions of supervision, the court shall
discharge the defendant and enter a judgment dismissing the
charges.
    (f) Discharge and dismissal upon a successful conclusion of
a disposition of supervision shall be deemed without
adjudication of guilt and shall not be termed a conviction for
purposes of disqualification or disabilities imposed by law
upon conviction of a crime. Two years after the discharge and
dismissal under this Section, unless the disposition of
supervision was for a violation of Sections 3-707, 3-708,
3-710, 5-401.3, or 11-503 of the Illinois Vehicle Code or a
similar provision of a local ordinance, or for a violation of
Sections 12-3.2, 16-25, or 16A-3 of the Criminal Code of 1961
or the Criminal Code of 2012, in which case it shall be 5 years
after discharge and dismissal, a person may have his record of
arrest sealed or expunged as may be provided by law. However,
any defendant placed on supervision before January 1, 1980, may
move for sealing or expungement of his arrest record, as
provided by law, at any time after discharge and dismissal
under this Section. A person placed on supervision for a sexual
offense committed against a minor as defined in clause
(a)(1)(L) of Section 5.2 of the Criminal Identification Act or
for a violation of Section 11-501 of the Illinois Vehicle Code
or a similar provision of a local ordinance shall not have his
or her record of arrest sealed or expunged.
    (g) A defendant placed on supervision and who during the
period of supervision undergoes mandatory drug or alcohol
testing, or both, or is assigned to be placed on an approved
electronic monitoring device, shall be ordered to pay the costs
incidental to such mandatory drug or alcohol testing, or both,
and costs incidental to such approved electronic monitoring in
accordance with the defendant's ability to pay those costs. The
county board with the concurrence of the Chief Judge of the
judicial circuit in which the county is located shall establish
reasonable fees for the cost of maintenance, testing, and
incidental expenses related to the mandatory drug or alcohol
testing, or both, and all costs incidental to approved
electronic monitoring, of all defendants placed on
supervision. The concurrence of the Chief Judge shall be in the
form of an administrative order. The fees shall be collected by
the clerk of the circuit court. The clerk of the circuit court
shall pay all moneys collected from these fees to the county
treasurer who shall use the moneys collected to defray the
costs of drug testing, alcohol testing, and electronic
monitoring. The county treasurer shall deposit the fees
collected in the county working cash fund under Section 6-27001
or Section 6-29002 of the Counties Code, as the case may be.
    (h) A disposition of supervision is a final order for the
purposes of appeal.
    (i) The court shall impose upon a defendant placed on
supervision after January 1, 1992 or to community service under
the supervision of a probation or court services department
after January 1, 2004, as a condition of supervision or
supervised community service, a fee of $50 for each month of
supervision or supervised community service ordered by the
court, unless after determining the inability of the person
placed on supervision or supervised community service to pay
the fee, the court assesses a lesser fee. The court may not
impose the fee on a minor who is made a ward of the State under
the Juvenile Court Act of 1987 while the minor is in placement.
The fee shall be imposed only upon a defendant who is actively
supervised by the probation and court services department. The
fee shall be collected by the clerk of the circuit court. The
clerk of the circuit court shall pay all monies collected from
this fee to the county treasurer for deposit in the probation
and court services fund pursuant to Section 15.1 of the
Probation and Probation Officers Act.
    A circuit court may not impose a probation fee in excess of
$25 per month unless the circuit court has adopted, by
administrative order issued by the chief judge, a standard
probation fee guide determining an offender's ability to pay.
Of the amount collected as a probation fee, not to exceed $5 of
that fee collected per month may be used to provide services to
crime victims and their families.
    The Court may only waive probation fees based on an
offender's ability to pay. The probation department may
re-evaluate an offender's ability to pay every 6 months, and,
with the approval of the Director of Court Services or the
Chief Probation Officer, adjust the monthly fee amount. An
offender may elect to pay probation fees due in a lump sum. Any
offender that has been assigned to the supervision of a
probation department, or has been transferred either under
subsection (h) of this Section or under any interstate compact,
shall be required to pay probation fees to the department
supervising the offender, based on the offender's ability to
pay.
    (j) All fines and costs imposed under this Section for any
violation of Chapters 3, 4, 6, and 11 of the Illinois Vehicle
Code, or a similar provision of a local ordinance, and any
violation of the Child Passenger Protection Act, or a similar
provision of a local ordinance, shall be collected and
disbursed by the circuit clerk as provided under Section 27.5
of the Clerks of Courts Act.
    (k) A defendant at least 17 years of age who is placed on
supervision for a misdemeanor in a county of 3,000,000 or more
inhabitants and who has not been previously convicted of a
misdemeanor or felony may as a condition of his or her
supervision be required by the court to attend educational
courses designed to prepare the defendant for a high school
diploma and to work toward a high school diploma or to work
toward passing high school equivalency testing the high school
level Test of General Educational Development (GED) or to work
toward completing a vocational training program approved by the
court. The defendant placed on supervision must attend a public
institution of education to obtain the educational or
vocational training required by this subsection (k). The
defendant placed on supervision shall be required to pay for
the cost of the educational courses or high school equivalency
testing GED test, if a fee is charged for those courses or
testing test. The court shall revoke the supervision of a
person who wilfully fails to comply with this subsection (k).
The court shall resentence the defendant upon revocation of
supervision as provided in Section 5-6-4. This subsection (k)
does not apply to a defendant who has a high school diploma or
has successfully passed high school equivalency testing the GED
test. This subsection (k) does not apply to a defendant who is
determined by the court to be developmentally disabled or
otherwise mentally incapable of completing the educational or
vocational program.
    (l) The court shall require a defendant placed on
supervision for possession of a substance prohibited by the
Cannabis Control Act, the Illinois Controlled Substances Act,
or the Methamphetamine Control and Community Protection Act
after a previous conviction or disposition of supervision for
possession of a substance prohibited by the Cannabis Control
Act, the Illinois Controlled Substances Act, or the
Methamphetamine Control and Community Protection Act or a
sentence of probation under Section 10 of the Cannabis Control
Act or Section 410 of the Illinois Controlled Substances Act
and after a finding by the court that the person is addicted,
to undergo treatment at a substance abuse program approved by
the court.
    (m) The Secretary of State shall require anyone placed on
court supervision for a violation of Section 3-707 of the
Illinois Vehicle Code or a similar provision of a local
ordinance to give proof of his or her financial responsibility
as defined in Section 7-315 of the Illinois Vehicle Code. The
proof shall be maintained by the individual in a manner
satisfactory to the Secretary of State for a minimum period of
3 years after the date the proof is first filed. The proof
shall be limited to a single action per arrest and may not be
affected by any post-sentence disposition. The Secretary of
State shall suspend the driver's license of any person
determined by the Secretary to be in violation of this
subsection.
    (n) Any offender placed on supervision for any offense that
the court or probation department has determined to be sexually
motivated as defined in the Sex Offender Management Board Act
shall be required to refrain from any contact, directly or
indirectly, with any persons specified by the court and shall
be available for all evaluations and treatment programs
required by the court or the probation department.
    (o) An offender placed on supervision for a sex offense as
defined in the Sex Offender Management Board Act shall refrain
from residing at the same address or in the same condominium
unit or apartment unit or in the same condominium complex or
apartment complex with another person he or she knows or
reasonably should know is a convicted sex offender or has been
placed on supervision for a sex offense. The provisions of this
subsection (o) do not apply to a person convicted of a sex
offense who is placed in a Department of Corrections licensed
transitional housing facility for sex offenders.
    (p) An offender placed on supervision for an offense
committed on or after June 1, 2008 (the effective date of
Public Act 95-464) that would qualify the accused as a child
sex offender as defined in Section 11-9.3 or 11-9.4 of the
Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012 shall
refrain from communicating with or contacting, by means of the
Internet, a person who is not related to the accused and whom
the accused reasonably believes to be under 18 years of age.
For purposes of this subsection (p), "Internet" has the meaning
ascribed to it in Section 16-0.1 of the Criminal Code of 2012;
and a person is not related to the accused if the person is
not: (i) the spouse, brother, or sister of the accused; (ii) a
descendant of the accused; (iii) a first or second cousin of
the accused; or (iv) a step-child or adopted child of the
accused.
    (q) An offender placed on supervision for an offense
committed on or after June 1, 2008 (the effective date of
Public Act 95-464) that would qualify the accused as a child
sex offender as defined in Section 11-9.3 or 11-9.4 of the
Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012 shall, if so
ordered by the court, refrain from communicating with or
contacting, by means of the Internet, a person who is related
to the accused and whom the accused reasonably believes to be
under 18 years of age. For purposes of this subsection (q),
"Internet" has the meaning ascribed to it in Section 16-0.1 of
the Criminal Code of 2012; and a person is related to the
accused if the person is: (i) the spouse, brother, or sister of
the accused; (ii) a descendant of the accused; (iii) a first or
second cousin of the accused; or (iv) a step-child or adopted
child of the accused.
    (r) An offender placed on supervision for an offense under
Section 11-6, 11-9.1, 11-14.4 that involves soliciting for a
juvenile prostitute, 11-15.1, 11-20.1, 11-20.1B, 11-20.3, or
11-21 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of
2012, or any attempt to commit any of these offenses, committed
on or after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the
95th General Assembly shall:
        (i) not access or use a computer or any other device
    with Internet capability without the prior written
    approval of the court, except in connection with the
    offender's employment or search for employment with the
    prior approval of the court;
        (ii) submit to periodic unannounced examinations of
    the offender's computer or any other device with Internet
    capability by the offender's probation officer, a law
    enforcement officer, or assigned computer or information
    technology specialist, including the retrieval and copying
    of all data from the computer or device and any internal or
    external peripherals and removal of such information,
    equipment, or device to conduct a more thorough inspection;
        (iii) submit to the installation on the offender's
    computer or device with Internet capability, at the
    offender's expense, of one or more hardware or software
    systems to monitor the Internet use; and
        (iv) submit to any other appropriate restrictions
    concerning the offender's use of or access to a computer or
    any other device with Internet capability imposed by the
    court.
    (s) An offender placed on supervision for an offense that
is a sex offense as defined in Section 2 of the Sex Offender
Registration Act that is committed on or after January 1, 2010
(the effective date of Public Act 96-362) that requires the
person to register as a sex offender under that Act, may not
knowingly use any computer scrub software on any computer that
the sex offender uses.
    (t) An offender placed on supervision for a sex offense as
defined in the Sex Offender Registration Act committed on or
after January 1, 2010 (the effective date of Public Act 96-262)
shall refrain from accessing or using a social networking
website as defined in Section 17-0.5 of the Criminal Code of
2012.
    (u) Jurisdiction over an offender may be transferred from
the sentencing court to the court of another circuit with the
concurrence of both courts. Further transfers or retransfers of
jurisdiction are also authorized in the same manner. The court
to which jurisdiction has been transferred shall have the same
powers as the sentencing court. The probation department within
the circuit to which jurisdiction has been transferred may
impose probation fees upon receiving the transferred offender,
as provided in subsection (i). The probation department from
the original sentencing court shall retain all probation fees
collected prior to the transfer.
(Source: P.A. 96-262, eff. 1-1-10; 96-362, eff. 1-1-10; 96-409,
eff. 1-1-10; 96-1000, eff. 7-2-10; 96-1414, eff. 1-1-11;
96-1551, Article 2, Section 1065, eff. 7-1-11; 96-1551, Article
10, Section 10-150, eff. 7-1-11; 97-454, eff. 1-1-12; 97-597,
eff. 1-1-12; 97-1109, eff. 1-1-13; 97-1150, eff. 1-25-13.)
 
    (730 ILCS 5/5-6-3.3)
    Sec. 5-6-3.3. Offender Initiative Program.
    (a) Statement of purpose. The General Assembly seeks to
continue other successful programs that promote public safety,
conserve valuable resources, and reduce recidivism by
defendants who can lead productive lives by creating the
Offender Initiative Program.
    (a-1) Whenever any person who has not previously been
convicted of, or placed on probation or conditional discharge
for, any felony offense under the laws of this State, the laws
of any other state, or the laws of the United States, is
arrested for and charged with a probationable felony offense of
theft, retail theft, forgery, possession of a stolen motor
vehicle, burglary, possession of burglary tools, possession of
cannabis, possession of a controlled substance, or possession
of methamphetamine, the court, with the consent of the
defendant and the State's Attorney, may continue this matter to
allow a defendant to participate and complete the Offender
Initiative Program.
    (a-2) Exemptions. A defendant shall not be eligible for
this Program if the offense he or she has been arrested for and
charged with is a violent offense. For purposes of this
Program, a "violent offense" is any offense where bodily harm
was inflicted or where force was used against any person or
threatened against any person, any offense involving sexual
conduct, sexual penetration, or sexual exploitation, any
offense of domestic violence, domestic battery, violation of an
order of protection, stalking, hate crime, driving under the
influence of drugs or alcohol, and any offense involving the
possession of a firearm or dangerous weapon. A defendant shall
not be eligible for this Program if he or she has previously
been adjudicated a delinquent minor for the commission of a
violent offense as defined in this subsection.
    (b) When a defendant is placed in the Program, after both
the defendant and State's Attorney waive preliminary hearing
pursuant to Section 109-3 of the Code of Criminal Procedure of
1963, the court shall enter an order specifying that the
proceedings shall be suspended while the defendant is
participating in a Program of not less 12 months.
    (c) The conditions of the Program shall be that the
defendant:
        (1) not violate any criminal statute of this State or
    any other jurisdiction;
        (2) refrain from possessing a firearm or other
    dangerous weapon;
        (3) make full restitution to the victim or property
    owner pursuant to Section 5-5-6 of this Code;
        (4) obtain employment or perform not less than 30 hours
    of community service, provided community service is
    available in the county and is funded and approved by the
    county board; and
        (5) attend educational courses designed to prepare the
    defendant for obtaining a high school diploma or to work
    toward passing high school equivalency testing the high
    school level test of General Educational Development
    (G.E.D.) or to work toward completing a vocational training
    program.
    (d) The court may, in addition to other conditions, require
that the defendant:
        (1) undergo medical or psychiatric treatment, or
    treatment or rehabilitation approved by the Illinois
    Department of Human Services;
        (2) refrain from having in his or her body the presence
    of any illicit drug prohibited by the Methamphetamine
    Control and Community Protection Act, the Cannabis Control
    Act or the Illinois Controlled Substances Act, unless
    prescribed by a physician, and submit samples of his or her
    blood or urine or both for tests to determine the presence
    of any illicit drug;
        (3) submit to periodic drug testing at a time, manner,
    and frequency as ordered by the court;
        (4) pay fines, fees and costs; and
        (5) in addition, if a minor:
            (i) reside with his or her parents or in a foster
        home;
            (ii) attend school;
            (iii) attend a non-residential program for youth;
        or
            (iv) contribute to his or her own support at home
        or in a foster home.
    (e) When the State's Attorney makes a factually specific
offer of proof that the defendant has failed to successfully
complete the Program or has violated any of the conditions of
the Program, the court shall enter an order that the defendant
has not successfully completed the Program and continue the
case for arraignment pursuant to Section 113-1 of the Code of
Criminal Procedure of 1963 for further proceedings as if the
defendant had not participated in the Program.
    (f) Upon fulfillment of the terms and conditions of the
Program, the State's Attorney shall dismiss the case or the
court shall discharge the person and dismiss the proceedings
against the person.
    (g) There may be only one discharge and dismissal under
this Section with respect to any person.
(Source: P.A. 97-1118, eff. 1-1-13.)
 
    (730 ILCS 5/5-6-3.4)
    Sec. 5-6-3.4. Second Chance Probation.
    (a) Whenever any person who has not previously been
convicted of, or placed on probation or conditional discharge
for, any felony offense under the laws of this State, the laws
of any other state, or the laws of the United States, including
probation under Section 410 of the Illinois Controlled
Substances Act, Section 70 of the Methamphetamine Control and
Community Protection Act, Section 10 of the Cannabis Control
Act, subsection (c) of Section 11-14 of the Criminal Code of
2012, Treatment Alternatives for Criminal Justice Clients
(TASC) under Article 40 of the Alcoholism and Other Drug Abuse
and Dependency Act, or prior successful completion of the
Offender Initiative Program under Section 5-6-3.3 of this Code,
and pleads guilty to, or is found guilty of, a probationable
felony offense of possession of a controlled substance that is
punishable as a Class 4 felony; possession of methamphetamine
that is punishable as a Class 4 felony; theft that is
punishable as a Class 3 felony based on the value of the
property or punishable as a Class 4 felony if the theft was
committed in a school or place of worship or if the theft was
of governmental property; retail theft that is punishable as a
Class 3 felony based on the value of the property; criminal
damage to property that is punishable as a Class 4 felony;
criminal damage to government supported property that is
punishable as a Class 4 felony; or possession of cannabis which
is punishable as a Class 4 felony, the court, with the consent
of the defendant and the State's Attorney, may, without
entering a judgment, sentence the defendant to probation under
this Section.
    (a-1) Exemptions. A defendant is not eligible for this
probation if the offense he or she pleads guilty to, or is
found guilty of, is a violent offense, or he or she has
previously been convicted of a violent offense. For purposes of
this probation, a "violent offense" is any offense where bodily
harm was inflicted or where force was used against any person
or threatened against any person, any offense involving sexual
conduct, sexual penetration, or sexual exploitation, any
offense of domestic violence, domestic battery, violation of an
order of protection, stalking, hate crime, driving under the
influence of drugs or alcohol, and any offense involving the
possession of a firearm or dangerous weapon. A defendant shall
not be eligible for this probation if he or she has previously
been adjudicated a delinquent minor for the commission of a
violent offense as defined in this subsection.
    (b) When a defendant is placed on probation, the court
shall enter an order specifying a period of probation of not
less than 24 months and shall defer further proceedings in the
case until the conclusion of the period or until the filing of
a petition alleging violation of a term or condition of
probation.
    (c) The conditions of probation shall be that the
defendant:
        (1) not violate any criminal statute of this State or
    any other jurisdiction;
        (2) refrain from possessing a firearm or other
    dangerous weapon;
        (3) make full restitution to the victim or property
    owner under Section 5-5-6 of this Code;
        (4) obtain or attempt to obtain employment;
        (5) pay fines and costs;
        (6) attend educational courses designed to prepare the
    defendant for obtaining a high school diploma or to work
    toward passing high school equivalency testing the high
    school level test of General Educational Development
    (G.E.D.) or to work toward completing a vocational training
    program;
        (7) submit to periodic drug testing at a time and in a
    manner as ordered by the court, but no less than 3 times
    during the period of probation, with the cost of the
    testing to be paid by the defendant; and
        (8) perform a minimum of 30 hours of community service.
    (d) The court may, in addition to other conditions, require
that the defendant:
        (1) make a report to and appear in person before or
    participate with the court or such courts, person, or
    social service agency as directed by the court in the order
    of probation;
        (2) undergo medical or psychiatric treatment, or
    treatment or rehabilitation approved by the Illinois
    Department of Human Services;
        (3) attend or reside in a facility established for the
    instruction or residence of defendants on probation;
        (4) support his or her dependents; or
        (5) refrain from having in his or her body the presence
    of any illicit drug prohibited by the Methamphetamine
    Control and Community Protection Act, the Cannabis Control
    Act, or the Illinois Controlled Substances Act, unless
    prescribed by a physician, and submit samples of his or her
    blood or urine or both for tests to determine the presence
    of any illicit drug.
    (e) Upon violation of a term or condition of probation, the
court may enter a judgment on its original finding of guilt and
proceed as otherwise provided by law.
    (f) Upon fulfillment of the terms and conditions of
probation, the court shall discharge the person and dismiss the
proceedings against the person.
    (g) A disposition of probation is considered to be a
conviction for the purposes of imposing the conditions of
probation and for appeal; however, a discharge and dismissal
under this Section is not a conviction for purposes of this
Code or for purposes of disqualifications or disabilities
imposed by law upon conviction of a crime.
    (h) There may be only one discharge and dismissal under
this Section, Section 410 of the Illinois Controlled Substances
Act, Section 70 of the Methamphetamine Control and Community
Protection Act, Section 10 of the Cannabis Control Act,
Treatment Alternatives for Criminal Justice Clients (TASC)
under Article 40 of the Alcoholism and Other Drug Abuse and
Dependency Act, the Offender Initiative Program under Section
5-6-3.3 of this Code, and subsection (c) of Section 11-14 of
the Criminal Code of 2012 with respect to any person.
    (i) If a person is convicted of any offense which occurred
within 5 years subsequent to a discharge and dismissal under
this Section, the discharge and dismissal under this Section
shall be admissible in the sentencing proceeding for that
conviction as evidence in aggravation.
(Source: P.A. 98-164, eff. 1-1-14.)
 
    (730 ILCS 5/5-7-1)  (from Ch. 38, par. 1005-7-1)
    Sec. 5-7-1. Sentence of Periodic Imprisonment.
    (a) A sentence of periodic imprisonment is a sentence of
imprisonment during which the committed person may be released
for periods of time during the day or night or for periods of
days, or both, or if convicted of a felony, other than first
degree murder, a Class X or Class 1 felony, committed to any
county, municipal, or regional correctional or detention
institution or facility in this State for such periods of time
as the court may direct. Unless the court orders otherwise, the
particular times and conditions of release shall be determined
by the Department of Corrections, the sheriff, or the
Superintendent of the house of corrections, who is
administering the program.
    (b) A sentence of periodic imprisonment may be imposed to
permit the defendant to:
        (1) seek employment;
        (2) work;
        (3) conduct a business or other self-employed
    occupation including housekeeping;
        (4) attend to family needs;
        (5) attend an educational institution, including
    vocational education;
        (6) obtain medical or psychological treatment;
        (7) perform work duties at a county, municipal, or
    regional correctional or detention institution or
    facility;
        (8) continue to reside at home with or without
    supervision involving the use of an approved electronic
    monitoring device, subject to Article 8A of Chapter V; or
        (9) for any other purpose determined by the court.
    (c) Except where prohibited by other provisions of this
Code, the court may impose a sentence of periodic imprisonment
for a felony or misdemeanor on a person who is 17 years of age
or older. The court shall not impose a sentence of periodic
imprisonment if it imposes a sentence of imprisonment upon the
defendant in excess of 90 days.
    (d) A sentence of periodic imprisonment shall be for a
definite term of from 3 to 4 years for a Class 1 felony, 18 to
30 months for a Class 2 felony, and up to 18 months, or the
longest sentence of imprisonment that could be imposed for the
offense, whichever is less, for all other offenses; however, no
person shall be sentenced to a term of periodic imprisonment
longer than one year if he is committed to a county
correctional institution or facility, and in conjunction with
that sentence participate in a county work release program
comparable to the work and day release program provided for in
Article 13 of the Unified Code of Corrections in State
facilities. The term of the sentence shall be calculated upon
the basis of the duration of its term rather than upon the
basis of the actual days spent in confinement. No sentence of
periodic imprisonment shall be subject to the good time credit
provisions of Section 3-6-3 of this Code.
    (e) When the court imposes a sentence of periodic
imprisonment, it shall state:
        (1) the term of such sentence;
        (2) the days or parts of days which the defendant is to
    be confined;
        (3) the conditions.
    (f) The court may issue an order of protection pursuant to
the Illinois Domestic Violence Act of 1986 as a condition of a
sentence of periodic imprisonment. The Illinois Domestic
Violence Act of 1986 shall govern the issuance, enforcement and
recording of orders of protection issued under this Section. A
copy of the order of protection shall be transmitted to the
person or agency having responsibility for the case.
    (f-5) An offender sentenced to a term of periodic
imprisonment for a felony sex offense as defined in the Sex
Offender Management Board Act shall be required to undergo and
successfully complete sex offender treatment by a treatment
provider approved by the Board and conducted in conformance
with the standards developed under the Sex Offender Management
Board Act.
    (g) An offender sentenced to periodic imprisonment who
undergoes mandatory drug or alcohol testing, or both, or is
assigned to be placed on an approved electronic monitoring
device, shall be ordered to pay the costs incidental to such
mandatory drug or alcohol testing, or both, and costs
incidental to such approved electronic monitoring in
accordance with the defendant's ability to pay those costs. The
county board with the concurrence of the Chief Judge of the
judicial circuit in which the county is located shall establish
reasonable fees for the cost of maintenance, testing, and
incidental expenses related to the mandatory drug or alcohol
testing, or both, and all costs incidental to approved
electronic monitoring, of all offenders with a sentence of
periodic imprisonment. The concurrence of the Chief Judge shall
be in the form of an administrative order. The fees shall be
collected by the clerk of the circuit court. The clerk of the
circuit court shall pay all moneys collected from these fees to
the county treasurer who shall use the moneys collected to
defray the costs of drug testing, alcohol testing, and
electronic monitoring. The county treasurer shall deposit the
fees collected in the county working cash fund under Section
6-27001 or Section 6-29002 of the Counties Code, as the case
may be.
    (h) All fees and costs imposed under this Section for any
violation of Chapters 3, 4, 6, and 11 of the Illinois Vehicle
Code, or a similar provision of a local ordinance, and any
violation of the Child Passenger Protection Act, or a similar
provision of a local ordinance, shall be collected and
disbursed by the circuit clerk as provided under Section 27.5
of the Clerks of Courts Act.
    (i) A defendant at least 17 years of age who is convicted
of a misdemeanor or felony in a county of 3,000,000 or more
inhabitants and who has not been previously convicted of a
misdemeanor or a felony and who is sentenced to a term of
periodic imprisonment may as a condition of his or her sentence
be required by the court to attend educational courses designed
to prepare the defendant for a high school diploma and to work
toward receiving a high school diploma or to work toward
passing high school equivalency testing the high school level
Test of General Educational Development (GED) or to work toward
completing a vocational training program approved by the court.
The defendant sentenced to periodic imprisonment must attend a
public institution of education to obtain the educational or
vocational training required by this subsection (i). The
defendant sentenced to a term of periodic imprisonment shall be
required to pay for the cost of the educational courses or high
school equivalency testing GED test, if a fee is charged for
those courses or testing test. The court shall revoke the
sentence of periodic imprisonment of the defendant who wilfully
fails to comply with this subsection (i). The court shall
resentence the defendant whose sentence of periodic
imprisonment has been revoked as provided in Section 5-7-2.
This subsection (i) does not apply to a defendant who has a
high school diploma or has successfully passed high school
equivalency testing the GED test. This subsection (i) does not
apply to a defendant who is determined by the court to be
developmentally disabled or otherwise mentally incapable of
completing the educational or vocational program.
(Source: P.A. 93-616, eff. 1-1-04.)
 
    (730 ILCS 5/5-8-1.3)
    Sec. 5-8-1.3. Pilot residential and transition treatment
program for women.
    (a) The General Assembly recognizes:
        (1) that drug-offending women with children who have
    been in and out of the criminal justice system for years
    are a serious problem;
        (2) that the intergenerational cycle of women
    continuously being part of the criminal justice system
    needs to be broken;
        (3) that the effects of drug offending women with
    children disrupts family harmony and creates an atmosphere
    that is not conducive to healthy childhood development;
        (4) that there is a need for an effective residential
    community supervision model to provide help to women to
    become drug free, recover from trauma, focus on healthy
    mother-child relationships, and establish economic
    independence and long-term support;
        (5) that certain non-violent women offenders with
    children eligible for sentences of incarceration, may
    benefit from the rehabilitative aspects of gender
    responsive treatment programs and services. This Section
    shall not be construed to allow violent offenders to
    participate in a treatment program.
    (b) Under the direction of the sheriff and with the
approval of the county board of commissioners, the sheriff, in
any county with more than 3,000,000 inhabitants, may operate a
residential and transition treatment program for women
established by the Illinois Department of Corrections if
funding has been provided by federal, local or private
entities. If the court finds during the sentencing hearing
conducted under Section 5-4-1 that a woman convicted of a
felony meets the eligibility requirements of the sheriff's
residential and transition treatment program for women, the
court may refer the offender to the sheriff's residential and
transition treatment program for women for consideration as a
participant as an alternative to incarceration in the
penitentiary. The sheriff shall be responsible for supervising
all women who are placed in the residential and transition
treatment program for women for the 12-month period. In the
event that the woman is not accepted for placement in the
sheriff's residential and transition treatment program for
women, the court shall proceed to sentence the woman to any
other disposition authorized by this Code. If the woman does
not successfully complete the residential and transition
treatment program for women, the woman's failure to do so shall
constitute a violation of the sentence to the residential and
transition treatment program for women.
    (c) In order to be eligible to be a participant in the
pilot residential and transition treatment program for women,
the participant shall meet all of the following conditions:
        (1) The woman has not been convicted of a violent crime
    as defined in subsection (c) of Section 3 of the Rights of
    Crime Victims and Witnesses Act, a Class X felony, first or
    second degree murder, armed violence, aggravated
    kidnapping, criminal sexual assault, aggravated criminal
    sexual abuse or a subsequent conviction for criminal sexual
    abuse, forcible detention, or arson and has not been
    previously convicted of any of those offenses.
        (2) The woman must undergo an initial assessment
    evaluation to determine the treatment and program plan.
        (3) The woman was recommended and accepted for
    placement in the pilot residential and transition
    treatment program for women by the Department of
    Corrections and has consented in writing to participation
    in the program under the terms and conditions of the
    program. The Department of Corrections may consider
    whether space is available.
    (d) The program may include a substance abuse treatment
program designed for women offenders, mental health, trauma,
and medical treatment; parenting skills and family
relationship counseling, preparation for a high school
equivalency GED or vocational certificate; life skills
program; job readiness and job skill training, and a community
transition development plan.
    (e) With the approval of the Department of Corrections, the
sheriff shall issue requirements for the program and inform the
participants who shall sign an agreement to adhere to all rules
and all requirements for the pilot residential and transition
treatment program.
    (f) Participation in the pilot residential and transition
treatment program for women shall be for a period not to exceed
12 months. The period may not be reduced by accumulation of
good time.
    (g) If the woman successfully completes the pilot
residential and transition treatment program for women, the
sheriff shall notify the Department of Corrections, the court,
and the State's Attorney of the county of the woman's
successful completion.
    (h) A woman may be removed from the pilot residential and
transition treatment program for women for violation of the
terms and conditions of the program or in the event she is
unable to participate. The failure to complete the program
shall be deemed a violation of the conditions of the program.
The sheriff shall give notice to the Department of Corrections,
the court, and the State's Attorney of the woman's failure to
complete the program. The Department of Corrections or its
designee shall file a petition alleging that the woman has
violated the conditions of the program with the court. The
State's Attorney may proceed on the petition under Section
5-4-1 of this Code.
    (i) The conditions of the pilot residential and transition
treatment program for women shall include that the woman while
in the program:
        (1) not violate any criminal statute of any
    jurisdiction;
        (2) report or appear in person before any person or
    agency as directed by the court, the sheriff, or Department
    of Corrections;
        (3) refrain from possessing a firearm or other
    dangerous weapon;
        (4) consent to drug testing;
        (5) not leave the State without the consent of the
    court or, in circumstances in which reason for the absence
    is of such an emergency nature that prior consent by the
    court is not possible, without prior notification and
    approval of the Department of Corrections;
        (6) upon placement in the program, must agree to follow
    all requirements of the program.
    (j) The Department of Corrections or the sheriff may
terminate the program at any time by mutual agreement or with
30 days prior written notice by either the Department of
Corrections or the sheriff.
    (k) The Department of Corrections may enter into a joint
contract with a county with more than 3,000,000 inhabitants to
establish and operate a pilot residential and treatment program
for women.
    (l) The Director of the Department of Corrections shall
have the authority to develop rules to establish and operate a
pilot residential and treatment program for women that shall
include criteria for selection of the participants of the
program in conjunction and approval by the sentencing court.
Violent crime offenders are not eligible to participate in the
program.
    (m) The Department shall report to the Governor and the
General Assembly before September 30th of each year on the
pilot residential and treatment program for women, including
the composition of the program by offenders, sentence, age,
offense, and race. Reporting is only required if the pilot
residential and treatment program for women is operational.
    (n) The Department of Corrections or the sheriff may
terminate the program with 30 days prior written notice.
    (o) A county with more than 3,000,000 inhabitants is
authorized to apply for funding from federal, local or private
entities to create a Residential and Treatment Program for
Women. This sentencing option may not go into effect until the
funding is secured for the program and the program has been
established.
(Source: P.A. 97-800, eff. 7-13-12.)
 
    Section 995. No acceleration or delay. Where this Act makes
changes in a statute that is represented in this Act by text
that is not yet or no longer in effect (for example, a Section
represented by multiple versions), the use of that text does
not accelerate or delay the taking effect of (i) the changes
made by this Act or (ii) provisions derived from any other
Public Act.
INDEX
Statutes amended in order of appearance
    20 ILCS 415/8cfrom Ch. 127, par. 63b108c
    20 ILCS 505/8from Ch. 23, par. 5008
    20 ILCS 1315/25
    20 ILCS 1510/30
    20 ILCS 1705/15.4
    20 ILCS 3970/3from Ch. 127, par. 3833
    105 ILCS 5/2-3.66from Ch. 122, par. 2-3.66
    105 ILCS 5/3-15.12from Ch. 122, par. 3-15.12
    105 ILCS 5/10-22.20from Ch. 122, par. 10-22.20
    105 ILCS 5/13-40from Ch. 122, par. 13-40
    105 ILCS 5/13B-20.20
    105 ILCS 5/13B-30.15
    105 ILCS 5/13B-85
    105 ILCS 5/26-2from Ch. 122, par. 26-2
    105 ILCS 5/26-16
    105 ILCS 405/3-1from Ch. 122, par. 203-1
    110 ILCS 305/8from Ch. 144, par. 29
    110 ILCS 520/8efrom Ch. 144, par. 658e
    110 ILCS 660/5-85
    110 ILCS 665/10-85
    110 ILCS 670/15-85
    110 ILCS 675/20-85
    110 ILCS 680/25-85
    110 ILCS 685/30-85
    110 ILCS 690/35-85
    110 ILCS 805/2-12from Ch. 122, par. 102-12
    110 ILCS 805/3-17from Ch. 122, par. 103-17
    110 ILCS 947/50
    110 ILCS 947/52
    215 ILCS 5/500-50
    225 ILCS 85/9from Ch. 111, par. 4129
    225 ILCS 235/5from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 2205
    305 ILCS 5/9A-9from Ch. 23, par. 9A-9
    430 ILCS 66/80
    625 ILCS 5/6-107from Ch. 95 1/2, par. 6-107
    625 ILCS 5/6-408.5
    730 ILCS 5/3-3-8from Ch. 38, par. 1003-3-8
    730 ILCS 5/3-6-3from Ch. 38, par. 1003-6-3
    730 ILCS 5/3-6-8
    730 ILCS 5/3-12-16
    730 ILCS 5/5-5-3from Ch. 38, par. 1005-5-3
    730 ILCS 5/5-6-3from Ch. 38, par. 1005-6-3
    730 ILCS 5/5-6-3.1from Ch. 38, par. 1005-6-3.1
    730 ILCS 5/5-6-3.3
    730 ILCS 5/5-6-3.4
    730 ILCS 5/5-7-1from Ch. 38, par. 1005-7-1
    730 ILCS 5/5-8-1.3