(5 ILCS 80/7) (from Ch. 127, par. 1907)
    Sec. 7. Additional criteria.
    (a) In determining whether to recommend to the General Assembly under Section 5 the continuation of a regulatory agency or program or any function thereof, the Governor shall also consider the following criteria:
        (1) whether the absence or modification of regulation would significantly harm or
    
endanger the public health, safety or welfare;
        (2) whether there is a reasonable relationship between the exercise of the State's
    
police power and the protection of the public health, safety or welfare;
        (3) whether there is another less restrictive method of regulation available which could
    
adequately protect the public;
        (4) whether the regulation has the effect of directly or indirectly increasing the costs
    
of any goods or services involved, and if so, to what degree;
        (5) whether the increase in cost is more harmful to the public than the harm which could
    
result from the absence of regulation; and
        (6) whether all facets of the regulatory process are designed solely for the purpose of,
    
and have as their primary effect, the protection of the public.
    (b) In making an evaluation or recommendation with respect to paragraph (3) of subsection (a), the Governor shall follow the following guidelines to address the following:
        (1) Contractual disputes, including pricing disputes. The Governor may recommend
    
enacting a specific civil cause of action in small claims court or district court to remedy consumer harm. This cause of action may provide for reimbursement of the attorney's fees or court costs, if a consumer's claim is successful.
        (2) Fraud. The Governor may recommend strengthening powers under the State's
    
deceptive trade practices acts or requiring disclosures that will reduce misleading attributes of the specific good or service.
        (3) General health and safety risks. The Governor may recommend enacting a regulation
    
on the related process or requiring a facility license.
        (4) Unclean facilities. The Governor may recommend requiring periodic facility
    
inspections.
        (5) A provider's failure to complete a contract fully or to standards. The Governor
    
may recommend requiring the provider to be bonded.
        (6) A lack of protection for a person who is not a party to a contract between
    
providers and consumers. The Governor may recommend requiring that the provider have insurance.
        (7) Transactions with transient, out-of-state, or fly-by-night providers. The
    
Governor may recommend requiring the provider register its business with the Secretary of State.
        (8) A shortfall or imbalance in the consumer's knowledge about the good or service
    
relative to the provider's knowledge (asymmetrical information). The Governor may recommend enacting government certification.
        (9) An inability to qualify providers of new or highly specialized medical services
    
for reimbursement by the State. The Governor may recommend enacting a specialty certification solely for medical reimbursement.
        (10) A systematic information shortfall in which a reasonable consumer of the service
    
is permanently unable to distinguish between the quality of providers and there is an absence of institutions that provide guidance to consumers. The Governor may recommend enacting an occupational license.
        (11) The need to address multiple types of harm. The Governor may recommend a
    
combination of regulations. This may include a government regulation combined with a private remedy, including third-party or consumer-created ratings and reviews or private certification.
(Source: P.A. 102-984, eff. 1-1-23; 103-154, eff. 6-30-23.)