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Public Act 101-0610 |
SB1300 Enrolled | LRB101 07899 RPS 52954 b |
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AN ACT concerning public employee benefits.
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Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
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represented in the General Assembly:
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Section 5. The Illinois Finance Authority Act is amended by |
changing Sections 801-10, 801-40, and 805-20 as follows:
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(20 ILCS 3501/801-10)
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Sec. 801-10. Definitions. The following terms, whenever |
used or referred
to
in this Act, shall have the following |
meanings, except in such instances where
the context may |
clearly indicate otherwise:
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(a) The term "Authority" means the Illinois Finance |
Authority created by
this Act.
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(b) The term "project" means an industrial project, |
conservation project, housing project, public
purpose project, |
higher education project, health facility project, cultural
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institution project, municipal bond program project, PACE |
Project, agricultural facility or agribusiness, and "project" |
may
include any combination of one or more of the foregoing |
undertaken jointly by
any person with one or more other |
persons.
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(c) The term "public purpose project" means (i) any project |
or facility,
including
without limitation land, buildings, |
structures, machinery, equipment and all
other real and |
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personal property, which is authorized or required by law to be
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acquired, constructed, improved, rehabilitated, reconstructed, |
replaced or
maintained by any unit of government or any other |
lawful public purpose , including provision of working capital, |
which
is authorized or required by law to be undertaken by any |
unit of government or (ii) costs incurred and other |
expenditures, including expenditures for management, |
investment, or working capital costs, incurred in connection |
with the reform, consolidation, or implementation of the |
transition process as described in Articles 22B and 22C of the |
Illinois Pension Code .
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(d) The term "industrial project" means the acquisition, |
construction,
refurbishment, creation, development or |
redevelopment of any facility,
equipment, machinery, real |
property or personal property for use by any
instrumentality of |
the State or its political subdivisions, for use by any
person |
or institution, public or private, for profit or not for |
profit, or for
use in any trade or business, including, but not |
limited to, any industrial,
manufacturing or commercial |
enterprise that is located within or outside the State, |
provided that, with respect to a project involving property |
located outside the State, the property must be owned, |
operated, leased or managed by an entity located within the |
State or an entity affiliated with an entity located within the |
State, and which is (1) a capital project,
including, but not |
limited to: (i) land and any rights therein, one or more
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buildings, structures or other improvements, machinery and |
equipment, whether
now existing or hereafter acquired, and |
whether or not located on the same site
or sites; (ii) all |
appurtenances and facilities incidental to the foregoing,
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including, but not limited to, utilities, access roads, |
railroad sidings, track,
docking and similar facilities, |
parking facilities, dockage, wharfage, railroad
roadbed, |
track, trestle, depot, terminal, switching and signaling or |
related
equipment, site preparation and landscaping; and (iii) |
all non-capital costs
and expenses relating thereto or (2) any |
addition to, renovation,
rehabilitation or
improvement of a |
capital project or (3) any activity or undertaking within or |
outside the State, provided that, with respect to a project |
involving property located outside the State, the property must |
be owned, operated, leased or managed by an entity located |
within the State or an entity affiliated with an entity located |
within the State, which the
Authority determines will aid, |
assist or encourage economic growth, development
or |
redevelopment within the State or any area thereof, will |
promote the
expansion, retention or diversification of |
employment opportunities within the
State or any area thereof |
or will aid in stabilizing or developing any industry
or |
economic sector of the State economy. The term "industrial |
project" also
means the production of motion pictures.
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(e) The term "bond" or "bonds" shall include bonds, notes |
(including bond,
grant or revenue anticipation notes), |
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certificates and/or other evidences of
indebtedness |
representing an obligation to pay money, including refunding
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bonds.
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(f) The terms "lease agreement" and "loan agreement" shall |
mean: (i) an
agreement whereby a project acquired by the |
Authority by purchase, gift or
lease
is leased to any person, |
corporation or unit of local government which will use
or cause |
the project to be used as a project as heretofore defined upon |
terms
providing for lease rental payments at least sufficient |
to pay when due all
principal of, interest and premium, if any, |
on any bonds of the Authority
issued
with respect to such |
project, providing for the maintenance, insuring and
operation |
of the project on terms satisfactory to the Authority, |
providing for
disposition of the project upon termination of |
the lease term, including
purchase options or abandonment of |
the premises, and such other terms as may be
deemed desirable |
by the Authority, or (ii) any agreement pursuant to which the
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Authority agrees to loan the proceeds of its bonds issued with |
respect to a
project or other funds of the Authority to any |
person which will use or cause
the project to be used as a |
project as heretofore defined upon terms providing
for loan |
repayment installments at least sufficient to pay when due all
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principal of, interest and premium, if any, on any bonds of the |
Authority, if
any, issued with respect to the project, and |
providing for maintenance,
insurance and other matters as may |
be deemed desirable by the Authority.
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(g) The term "financial aid" means the expenditure of |
Authority funds or
funds provided by the Authority through the |
issuance of its bonds, notes or
other
evidences of indebtedness |
or from other sources for the development,
construction, |
acquisition or improvement of a project.
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(h) The term "person" means an individual, corporation, |
unit of government,
business trust, estate, trust, partnership |
or association, 2 or more persons
having a joint or common |
interest, or any other legal entity.
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(i) The term "unit of government" means the federal |
government, the State or
unit of local government, a school |
district, or any agency or instrumentality,
office, officer, |
department, division, bureau, commission, college or
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university thereof.
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(j) The term "health facility" means: (a) any public or |
private institution,
place, building, or agency required to be |
licensed under the Hospital Licensing
Act; (b) any public or |
private institution, place, building, or agency required
to be |
licensed under the Nursing Home Care Act, the Specialized |
Mental Health Rehabilitation Act of 2013, the ID/DD Community |
Care Act, or the MC/DD Act; (c)
any public or licensed private |
hospital as defined in the Mental Health and
Developmental |
Disabilities Code; (d) any such facility exempted from such
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licensure when the Director of Public Health attests that such |
exempted
facility
meets the statutory definition of a facility |
subject to licensure; (e) any
other
public or private health |
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service institution, place, building, or agency which
the |
Director of Public Health attests is subject to certification |
by the
Secretary, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services |
under the Social
Security Act, as now or hereafter amended, or |
which the Director of Public
Health attests is subject to |
standard-setting by a recognized public or
voluntary |
accrediting or standard-setting agency; (f) any public or |
private
institution, place, building or agency engaged in |
providing one or more
supporting services to a health facility; |
(g) any public or private
institution,
place, building or |
agency engaged in providing training in the healing arts,
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including, but not limited to, schools of medicine, dentistry, |
osteopathy,
optometry, podiatry, pharmacy or nursing, schools |
for the training of x-ray,
laboratory or other health care |
technicians and schools for the training of
para-professionals |
in the health care field; (h) any public or private
congregate, |
life or extended care or elderly housing facility or any public |
or
private home for the aged or infirm, including, without |
limitation, any
Facility as defined in the Life Care Facilities |
Act; (i) any public or private
mental, emotional or physical |
rehabilitation facility or any public or private
educational, |
counseling, or rehabilitation facility or home, for those |
persons
with a developmental disability, those who are |
physically ill or disabled, the
emotionally disturbed, those |
persons with a mental illness or persons with
learning or |
similar disabilities or problems; (j) any public or private
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alcohol, drug or substance abuse diagnosis, counseling |
treatment or
rehabilitation
facility, (k) any public or private |
institution, place, building or agency
licensed by the |
Department of Children and Family Services or which is not so
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licensed but which the Director of Children and Family Services |
attests
provides child care, child welfare or other services of |
the type provided by
facilities
subject to such licensure; (l) |
any public or private adoption agency or
facility; and (m) any |
public or private blood bank or blood center. "Health
facility" |
also means a public or private structure or structures suitable
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primarily for use as a laboratory, laundry, nurses or interns |
residence or
other housing or hotel facility used in whole or |
in part for staff, employees
or
students and their families, |
patients or relatives of patients admitted for
treatment or |
care in a health facility, or persons conducting business with |
a
health facility, physician's facility, surgicenter, |
administration building,
research facility, maintenance, |
storage or utility facility and all structures
or facilities |
related to any of the foregoing or required or useful for the
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operation of a health facility, including parking or other |
facilities or other
supporting service structures required or |
useful for the orderly conduct of
such health facility. "Health |
facility" also means, with respect to a project located outside |
the State, any public or private institution, place, building, |
or agency which provides services similar to those described |
above, provided that such project is owned, operated, leased or |
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managed by a participating health institution located within |
the State, or a participating health institution affiliated |
with an entity located within the State.
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(k) The term "participating health institution" means (i) a |
private corporation
or association or (ii) a public entity of |
this State, in either case authorized by the laws of this
State |
or the applicable state to provide or operate a health facility |
as defined in this Act and which,
pursuant to the provisions of |
this Act, undertakes the financing, construction
or |
acquisition of a project or undertakes the refunding or |
refinancing of
obligations, loans, indebtedness or advances as |
provided in this Act.
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(l) The term "health facility project", means a specific |
health facility
work
or improvement to be financed or |
refinanced (including without limitation
through reimbursement |
of prior expenditures), acquired, constructed, enlarged,
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remodeled, renovated, improved, furnished, or equipped, with |
funds provided in
whole or in part hereunder, any accounts |
receivable, working capital, liability
or insurance cost or |
operating expense financing or refinancing program of a
health |
facility with or involving funds provided in whole or in part |
hereunder,
or any combination thereof.
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(m) The term "bond resolution" means the resolution or |
resolutions
authorizing the issuance of, or providing terms and |
conditions related to,
bonds issued
under this Act and |
includes, where appropriate, any trust agreement, trust
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indenture, indenture of mortgage or deed of trust providing |
terms and
conditions for such bonds.
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(n) The term "property" means any real, personal or mixed |
property, whether
tangible or intangible, or any interest |
therein, including, without limitation,
any real estate, |
leasehold interests, appurtenances, buildings, easements,
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equipment, furnishings, furniture, improvements, machinery, |
rights of way,
structures, accounts, contract rights or any |
interest therein.
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(o) The term "revenues" means, with respect to any project, |
the rents, fees,
charges, interest, principal repayments, |
collections and other income or profit
derived therefrom.
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(p) The term "higher education project" means, in the case |
of a private
institution of higher education, an educational |
facility to be acquired,
constructed, enlarged, remodeled, |
renovated, improved, furnished, or equipped,
or any |
combination thereof.
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(q) The term "cultural institution project" means, in the |
case of a cultural
institution, a cultural facility to be |
acquired, constructed, enlarged,
remodeled, renovated, |
improved, furnished, or equipped, or any combination
thereof.
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(r) The term "educational facility" means any property |
located within the
State, or any property located outside the |
State, provided that, if the property is located outside the |
State, it must be owned, operated, leased or managed by an |
entity located within the State or an entity affiliated with an |
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entity located within the State, in each case
constructed or |
acquired before or after the effective date of this Act, which
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is
or will be, in whole or in part, suitable for the |
instruction, feeding,
recreation or housing of students, the |
conducting of research or other work of
a
private institution |
of higher education, the use by a private institution of
higher |
education in connection with any educational, research or |
related or
incidental activities then being or to be conducted |
by it, or any combination
of the foregoing, including, without |
limitation, any such property suitable for
use as or in |
connection with any one or more of the following: an academic
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facility, administrative facility, agricultural facility, |
assembly hall,
athletic facility, auditorium, boating |
facility, campus, communication
facility,
computer facility, |
continuing education facility, classroom, dining hall,
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dormitory, exhibition hall, fire fighting facility, fire |
prevention facility,
food service and preparation facility, |
gymnasium, greenhouse, health care
facility, hospital, |
housing, instructional facility, laboratory, library,
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maintenance facility, medical facility, museum, offices, |
parking area,
physical education facility, recreational |
facility, research facility, stadium,
storage facility, |
student union, study facility, theatre or utility.
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(s) The term "cultural facility" means any property located |
within the State, or any property located outside the State, |
provided that, if the property is located outside the State, it |
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must be owned, operated, leased or managed by an entity located |
within the State or an entity affiliated with an entity located |
within the State, in each case
constructed or acquired before |
or after the effective date of this Act, which
is or will be, |
in whole or in part, suitable for the particular purposes or
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needs
of a cultural institution, including, without |
limitation, any such property
suitable for use as or in |
connection with any one or more of the following: an
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administrative facility, aquarium, assembly hall, auditorium, |
botanical garden,
exhibition hall, gallery, greenhouse, |
library, museum, scientific laboratory,
theater or zoological |
facility, and shall also include, without limitation,
books, |
works of art or music, animal, plant or aquatic life or other |
items for
display, exhibition or performance. The term |
"cultural facility" includes
buildings on the National |
Register of Historic Places which are owned or
operated by |
nonprofit entities.
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(t) "Private institution of higher education" means a |
not-for-profit
educational institution which is not owned by |
the State or any political
subdivision, agency, |
instrumentality, district or municipality thereof, which
is
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authorized by law to provide a program of education beyond the |
high school
level
and which:
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(1) Admits as regular students only individuals having |
a
certificate of graduation from a high school, or the |
recognized equivalent of
such a certificate;
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(2) Provides an educational program for which it awards |
a
bachelor's degree, or provides an educational program, |
admission into which is
conditioned upon the prior |
attainment of a bachelor's degree or its equivalent,
for |
which it awards a postgraduate degree, or provides not less |
than a 2-year
program which is acceptable for full credit |
toward such a degree, or offers a
2-year program in |
engineering, mathematics, or the physical or biological
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sciences
which is designed to prepare the student to work |
as a technician and at a
semiprofessional level in |
engineering, scientific, or other technological
fields
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which require the understanding and application of basic |
engineering,
scientific, or mathematical principles or |
knowledge;
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(3) Is accredited by a nationally recognized |
accrediting agency or
association or, if not so accredited, |
is an institution whose credits are
accepted, on transfer, |
by not less than 3 institutions which are so accredited,
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for credit on the same basis as if transferred from an |
institution so
accredited, and holds an unrevoked |
certificate of approval under the Private
College Act from |
the Board of Higher Education, or is qualified as a
"degree |
granting institution" under the Academic Degree Act; and
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(4) Does not discriminate in the admission of students |
on the basis
of race or color.
"Private institution of |
higher education" also includes any "academic
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institution".
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(u) The term "academic institution" means any |
not-for-profit institution
which
is not owned by the State or |
any political subdivision, agency,
instrumentality,
district |
or municipality thereof, which institution engages in, or |
facilitates
academic, scientific, educational or professional |
research or learning in a
field or fields of study taught at a |
private institution of higher education.
Academic institutions |
include, without limitation, libraries, archives,
academic, |
scientific, educational or professional societies, |
institutions,
associations or foundations having such |
purposes.
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(v) The term "cultural institution" means any |
not-for-profit institution
which
is not owned by the State or |
any political subdivision, agency,
instrumentality,
district |
or municipality thereof, which institution engages in the |
cultural,
intellectual, scientific, educational or artistic |
enrichment of the people of
the State. Cultural institutions |
include, without limitation, aquaria,
botanical societies, |
historical societies, libraries, museums, performing arts
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associations or societies, scientific societies and zoological |
societies.
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(w) The term "affiliate" means, with respect to financing |
of an agricultural
facility or an agribusiness, any lender, any |
person, firm or corporation
controlled by, or under common |
control with, such lender, and any person, firm
or corporation |
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controlling such lender.
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(x) The term "agricultural facility" means land, any |
building or other
improvement thereon or thereto, and any |
personal properties deemed necessary or
suitable for use, |
whether or not now in existence, in farming, ranching, the
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production of agricultural commodities (including, without |
limitation, the
products of aquaculture, hydroponics and |
silviculture) or the treating,
processing or storing of such |
agricultural commodities when such activities are
customarily |
engaged in by farmers as a part of farming and which land, |
building, improvement or personal property is located within |
the State, or is located outside the State, provided that, if |
such property is located outside the State, it must be owned, |
operated, leased, or managed by an entity located within the |
State or an entity affiliated with an entity located within the |
State.
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(y) The term "lender" with respect to financing of an |
agricultural facility
or an agribusiness, means any federal or |
State chartered bank, Federal Land
Bank,
Production Credit |
Association, Bank for Cooperatives, federal or State
chartered |
savings and loan association or building and loan association, |
Small
Business
Investment Company or any other institution |
qualified within this State to
originate and service loans, |
including, but without limitation to, insurance
companies, |
credit unions and mortgage loan companies. "Lender" also means |
a
wholly owned subsidiary of a manufacturer, seller or |
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distributor of goods or
services that makes loans to businesses |
or individuals, commonly known as a
"captive finance company".
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(z) The term "agribusiness" means any sole proprietorship, |
limited
partnership, co-partnership, joint venture, |
corporation or cooperative which
operates or will operate a |
facility located within the State or outside the State, |
provided that, if any facility is located outside the State, it |
must be owned, operated, leased, or managed by an entity |
located within the State or an entity affiliated with an entity |
located within the State, that
is related to the
processing of |
agricultural commodities (including, without limitation, the
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products of aquaculture, hydroponics and silviculture) or the |
manufacturing,
production or construction of agricultural |
buildings, structures, equipment,
implements, and supplies, or |
any other facilities or processes used in
agricultural |
production. Agribusiness includes but is not limited to the
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following:
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(1) grain handling and processing, including grain |
storage,
drying, treatment, conditioning, mailing and |
packaging;
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(2) seed and feed grain development and processing;
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(3) fruit and vegetable processing, including |
preparation, canning
and packaging;
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(4) processing of livestock and livestock products, |
dairy products,
poultry and poultry products, fish or |
apiarian products, including slaughter,
shearing, |
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collecting, preparation, canning and packaging;
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(5) fertilizer and agricultural chemical |
manufacturing,
processing, application and supplying;
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(6) farm machinery, equipment and implement |
manufacturing and
supplying;
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(7) manufacturing and supplying of agricultural |
commodity
processing machinery and equipment, including |
machinery and equipment used in
slaughter, treatment, |
handling, collecting, preparation, canning or packaging
of |
agricultural commodities;
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(8) farm building and farm structure manufacturing, |
construction
and supplying;
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(9) construction, manufacturing, implementation, |
supplying or
servicing of irrigation, drainage and soil and |
water conservation devices or
equipment;
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(10) fuel processing and development facilities that |
produce fuel
from agricultural commodities or byproducts;
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(11) facilities and equipment for processing and |
packaging
agricultural commodities specifically for |
export;
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(12) facilities and equipment for forestry product |
processing and
supplying, including sawmilling operations, |
wood chip operations, timber
harvesting operations, and |
manufacturing of prefabricated buildings, paper,
furniture |
or other goods from forestry products;
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(13) facilities and equipment for research and |
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development of
products, processes and equipment for the |
production, processing, preparation
or packaging of |
agricultural commodities and byproducts.
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(aa) The term "asset" with respect to financing of any |
agricultural facility
or
any agribusiness, means, but is not |
limited to the following: cash crops or
feed on hand; livestock |
held for sale; breeding stock; marketable bonds and
securities; |
securities not readily marketable; accounts receivable; notes
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receivable; cash invested in growing crops; net cash value of |
life insurance;
machinery and equipment; cars and trucks; farm |
and other real estate including
life estates and personal |
residence; value of beneficial interests in trusts;
government |
payments or grants; and any other assets.
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(bb) The term "liability" with respect to financing of any |
agricultural
facility or any agribusiness shall include, but |
not be limited to the
following:
accounts payable; notes or |
other indebtedness owed to any source; taxes; rent;
amounts |
owed on real estate contracts or real estate mortgages; |
judgments;
accrued interest payable; and any other liability.
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(cc) The term "Predecessor Authorities" means those |
authorities as described
in Section 845-75.
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(dd) The term "housing project" means a specific work or |
improvement located within the State or outside the State and
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undertaken
to provide residential dwelling accommodations, |
including the acquisition,
construction or rehabilitation of |
lands, buildings and community facilities and
in connection |
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therewith to provide nonhousing facilities which are part of |
the
housing project, including land, buildings, improvements, |
equipment and all
ancillary facilities for use for offices, |
stores, retirement homes, hotels,
financial institutions, |
service, health care, education, recreation or research
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establishments, or any other commercial purpose which are or |
are to be related
to a housing development, provided that any |
work or improvement located outside the State is owned, |
operated, leased or managed by an entity located within the |
State, or any entity affiliated with an entity located within |
the State. |
(ee) The term "conservation project" means any project |
including the acquisition, construction, rehabilitation, |
maintenance, operation, or upgrade that is intended to create |
or expand open space or to reduce energy usage through |
efficiency measures. For the purpose of this definition, "open |
space" has the definition set forth under Section 10 of the |
Illinois Open Land Trust Act.
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(ff) The term "significant presence" means the existence |
within the State of the national or regional headquarters of an |
entity or group or such other facility of an entity or group of |
entities where a significant amount of the business functions |
are performed for such entity or group of entities. |
(gg) The term "municipal bond issuer" means the State or |
any other state or commonwealth of the United States, or any |
unit of local government, school district, agency or |
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instrumentality, office, department, division, bureau, |
commission, college or university thereof located in the State |
or any other state or commonwealth of the United States. |
(hh) The term "municipal bond program project" means a |
program for the funding of the purchase of bonds, notes or |
other obligations issued by or on behalf of a municipal bond |
issuer. |
(ii) The term "participating lender" means any trust |
company, bank, savings bank, credit union, merchant bank, |
investment bank, broker, investment trust, pension fund, |
building and loan association, savings and loan association, |
insurance company, venture capital company, or other |
institution approved by the Authority which provides a portion |
of the financing for a project. |
(jj) The term "loan participation" means any loan in which |
the Authority co-operates with a participating lender to |
provide all or a portion of the financing for a project. |
(kk) The term "PACE Project" means an energy project as |
defined in Section 5 of the Property Assessed Clean Energy Act. |
(Source: P.A. 99-180, eff. 7-29-15; 100-919, eff. 8-17-18.)
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(20 ILCS 3501/801-40)
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Sec. 801-40. In addition to the powers otherwise authorized |
by law and in
addition to the foregoing general corporate |
powers, the Authority shall also
have the following additional |
specific powers to be exercised in furtherance of
the purposes |
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of this Act.
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(a) The Authority shall have power (i) to accept grants, |
loans or
appropriations from the federal government or the |
State, or any agency or
instrumentality thereof, to be used for |
the operating expenses of the
Authority,
or for any purposes of |
the Authority, including the making of direct loans of
such |
funds with respect to projects, and (ii) to enter into any |
agreement with
the federal government or the State, or any |
agency or instrumentality thereof,
in relationship to such |
grants, loans or appropriations.
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(b) The Authority shall have power to procure and enter |
into contracts for
any
type of insurance and indemnity |
agreements covering loss or damage to property
from any cause, |
including loss of use and occupancy, or covering any other
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insurable risk.
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(c) The Authority shall have the continuing power to issue |
bonds for its
corporate purposes. Bonds may be issued by the |
Authority in one or more series
and may provide for the payment |
of any interest deemed necessary on such bonds,
of the costs of |
issuance of such bonds, of any premium on any insurance, or of
|
the cost of any guarantees, letters of credit or other similar |
documents, may
provide for the funding of the reserves deemed |
necessary in connection with
such bonds, and may provide for |
the refunding or advance refunding of any bonds
or
for accounts |
deemed necessary in connection with any purpose of the |
Authority.
The bonds may bear interest payable at any time or |
|
times and at any rate or
rates, notwithstanding any other |
provision of law to the contrary, and such
rate or rates may be |
established by an index or formula which may be
implemented or
|
established by persons appointed or retained therefor by the |
Authority, or may
bear no interest or may bear interest payable |
at maturity or upon redemption
prior to maturity, may bear such |
date or dates, may be payable at such time or
times and at such |
place or places, may mature at any time or times not later
than |
40 years from the date of issuance, may be sold at public or |
private sale
at such time or times and at such price or prices, |
may be secured by such
pledges, reserves, guarantees, letters |
of credit, insurance contracts or other
similar credit support |
or liquidity instruments, may be executed in such
manner, may |
be subject to redemption prior to maturity, may provide for the
|
registration of the bonds, and may be subject to such other |
terms and
conditions all as may
be provided by the resolution |
or indenture authorizing the issuance of such
bonds. The holder |
or holders of any bonds issued by the Authority may bring
suits |
at law or proceedings in equity to compel the performance and |
observance
by any person or by the Authority or any of its |
agents or employees of any
contract or covenant made with the |
holders of such bonds and to compel such
person or the |
Authority and any of its agents or employees to perform any
|
duties
required to be performed for the benefit of the holders |
of any such bonds by
the provision of the resolution |
authorizing their issuance, and to enjoin such
person or the |
|
Authority and any of its agents or employees from taking any
|
action in conflict with any such contract or covenant.
|
Notwithstanding the form and tenor of any such bonds and in the |
absence of any
express recital on the face thereof that it is |
non-negotiable, all such bonds
shall be negotiable |
instruments. Pending the preparation and execution of any
such |
bonds, temporary bonds may be issued as provided by the |
resolution.
The bonds shall be sold by the Authority in such |
manner as it shall determine.
The bonds may be secured as |
provided in the authorizing resolution by the
receipts, |
revenues, income and other available funds of the Authority and |
by
any amounts derived by the Authority from the loan agreement |
or lease agreement
with respect to the project or projects; and |
bonds may be issued as general
obligations of the Authority |
payable from such revenues, funds and obligations
of the |
Authority as the bond resolution shall provide, or may be |
issued as
limited obligations with a claim for payment solely |
from such revenues, funds
and obligations as the bond |
resolution shall provide. The Authority may grant a
specific |
pledge or assignment of and lien on or security interest in |
such
rights, revenues, income, or amounts and may grant a |
specific pledge or
assignment of and lien on or security |
interest in any reserves, funds or
accounts established in the |
resolution authorizing the issuance of bonds. Any
such pledge, |
assignment, lien or security interest for the benefit of the
|
holders of the Authority's bonds shall be valid and binding |
|
from the time the
bonds are issued without any physical |
delivery or further act, and shall be
valid and binding as |
against and prior to the claims of all other parties
having |
claims against the Authority or any other person irrespective |
of whether
the
other parties have notice of the pledge, |
assignment, lien or security interest.
As evidence of such |
pledge, assignment, lien and security interest, the
Authority |
may execute and deliver a mortgage, trust agreement, indenture |
or
security agreement or an assignment thereof.
A remedy for |
any breach or default of the terms of any such agreement by the
|
Authority may be by mandamus proceedings in any court of |
competent jurisdiction
to compel the performance and |
compliance therewith, but the agreement may
prescribe by whom |
or on whose behalf such action may be instituted.
It is |
expressly understood that the Authority may, but need not, |
acquire title
to any project with respect to which it exercises |
its authority.
|
(d) With respect to the powers granted by this Act, the |
Authority may adopt
rules and regulations prescribing the |
procedures by which persons may apply for
assistance under this |
Act. Nothing herein shall be deemed to preclude the
Authority, |
prior to the filing of any formal application, from conducting
|
preliminary discussions and investigations with respect to the |
subject matter
of any prospective application.
|
(e) The Authority shall have power to acquire by purchase, |
lease, gift or
otherwise any property or rights therein from |
|
any person useful for its
purposes, whether improved for the |
purposes of any prospective project, or
unimproved. The |
Authority may also accept any donation of funds for its
|
purposes from any such source. The Authority shall have no |
independent power of
condemnation but may acquire any property |
or rights therein obtained upon
condemnation by any other |
authority, governmental entity or unit of local
government with |
such power.
|
(f) The Authority shall have power to develop, construct |
and improve either
under its own direction, or through |
collaboration with any approved applicant,
or to acquire |
through purchase or otherwise, any project, using for such
|
purpose the proceeds derived from the sale of its bonds or from |
governmental
loans or
grants, and to hold title in the name of |
the Authority to such projects.
|
(g) The Authority shall have power to lease pursuant to a |
lease agreement
any
project so developed and constructed or |
acquired to the approved tenant on such
terms and conditions as |
may be appropriate to further the purposes of this Act
and to |
maintain the credit of the Authority. Any such lease may |
provide for
either the Authority or the approved tenant to |
assume initially, in whole or in
part, the costs of |
maintenance, repair and improvements during the leasehold
|
period. In no case, however, shall the total rentals from any |
project during
any initial leasehold period or the total loan |
repayments to be made pursuant
to any loan agreement, be less |
|
than an amount necessary to return over such
lease
or loan |
period (1) all costs incurred in connection with the |
development,
construction, acquisition or improvement of the |
project and for repair,
maintenance and improvements thereto |
during the period of the lease or loan;
provided, however, that |
the rentals or loan repayments need not include costs
met |
through the use of funds other than those obtained by the |
Authority through
the issuance of its bonds or governmental |
loans; (2) a reasonable percentage
additive to be agreed upon |
by the Authority and the borrower or tenant to cover
a properly |
allocable portion of the Authority's general expenses, |
including,
but not limited to, administrative expenses, |
salaries and general insurance,
and
(3) an amount sufficient to |
pay when due all principal of, interest and
premium, if
any on, |
any bonds issued by the Authority with respect to the project. |
The
portion of total rentals payable under clause (3) of this |
subsection (g) shall
be deposited in such special accounts, |
including all sinking funds, acquisition
or construction |
funds, debt service and other funds as provided by any
|
resolution, mortgage or trust agreement of the Authority |
pursuant to which any
bond is issued.
|
(h) The Authority has the power, upon the termination of |
any leasehold
period
of any project, to sell or lease for a |
further term or terms such project on
such terms and conditions |
as the Authority shall deem reasonable and consistent
with the |
purposes of the Act. The net proceeds from all such sales and |
|
the
revenues or income from such leases shall be used to |
satisfy any indebtedness
of
the Authority with respect to such |
project and any balance may be used to pay
any expenses of the |
Authority or be used for the further development,
construction, |
acquisition or improvement of projects.
In the event any |
project is vacated by a tenant prior to the termination of the
|
initial leasehold period, the Authority shall sell or lease the |
facilities of
the project on the most advantageous terms |
available. The net proceeds of any
such disposition shall be |
treated in the same manner as the proceeds from sales
or the |
revenues or income from leases subsequent to the termination of |
any
initial leasehold period.
|
(i) The Authority shall have the power to make loans, or to |
purchase loan participations in loans made, to persons to |
finance a
project, to enter into loan agreements or agreements |
with participating lenders with respect thereto, and to accept
|
guarantees from persons of its loans or the resultant evidences |
of obligations
of the Authority.
|
(j) The Authority may fix, determine, charge and collect |
any premiums, fees,
charges, costs and expenses, including, |
without limitation, any application
fees, commitment fees, |
program fees, financing charges or publication fees from
any |
person in connection with its activities under this Act.
|
(k) In addition to the funds established as provided |
herein, the Authority
shall have the power to create and |
establish such reserve funds and accounts as
may be necessary |
|
or desirable to accomplish its purposes under this Act and to
|
deposit its available monies into the funds and accounts.
|
(l) At the request of the governing body of any unit of |
local government,
the
Authority is authorized to market such |
local government's revenue bond
offerings by preparing bond |
issues for sale, advertising for sealed bids,
receiving bids
at |
its offices, making the award to the bidder that offers the |
most favorable
terms or arranging for negotiated placements or |
underwritings of such
securities. The Authority may, at its |
discretion, offer for concurrent sale the
revenue bonds of |
several local governments. Sales by the Authority of revenue
|
bonds under this Section shall in no way imply State guarantee |
of such debt
issue. The Authority may require such financial |
information from participating
local governments as it deems |
necessary in order to carry out the purposes of
this subsection |
(1).
|
(m) The Authority may make grants to any county to which |
Division 5-37 of
the
Counties Code is applicable to assist in |
the financing of capital development,
construction and |
renovation of new or existing facilities for hospitals and
|
health care facilities under that Act. Such grants may only be |
made from funds
appropriated for such purposes from the Build |
Illinois Bond Fund.
|
(n) The Authority may establish an urban development action |
grant program
for
the purpose of assisting municipalities in |
Illinois which are experiencing
severe economic distress to |
|
help stimulate economic development activities
needed to aid in |
economic recovery. The Authority shall determine the types of
|
activities and projects for which the urban development action |
grants may be
used, provided that such projects and activities |
are broadly defined to include
all reasonable projects and |
activities the primary objectives of which are the
development |
of viable urban communities, including decent housing and a
|
suitable living environment, and expansion of economic |
opportunity, principally
for
persons of low and moderate |
incomes. The Authority shall enter into grant
agreements from |
monies appropriated for such purposes from the Build Illinois
|
Bond Fund. The Authority shall monitor the
use of the grants, |
and shall provide for audits of the funds as well as
recovery |
by the Authority of any funds determined to have been spent in
|
violation of this
subsection (n) or any rule or regulation |
promulgated hereunder. The Authority
shall provide technical |
assistance with regard to the effective use of the
urban |
development action grants. The Authority shall file an annual |
report to
the
General Assembly concerning the progress of the |
grant program.
|
(o) The Authority may establish a Housing Partnership |
Program whereby the
Authority provides zero-interest loans to |
municipalities for the purpose of
assisting in the financing of |
projects for the rehabilitation of affordable
multi-family |
housing for low and moderate income residents. The Authority |
may
provide such loans only upon a municipality's providing |
|
evidence that it has
obtained private funding for the |
rehabilitation project. The Authority shall
provide 3 State |
dollars for every 7 dollars obtained by the municipality from
|
sources other than the State of Illinois. The loans shall be |
made from monies
appropriated for such purpose from the Build |
Illinois Bond Fund. The total amount of loans available under |
the Housing
Partnership Program shall not exceed $30,000,000. |
State loan monies under this
subsection shall be used only for |
the acquisition and rehabilitation of
existing
buildings |
containing 4 or more dwelling units. The terms of any loan made |
by
the municipality under this subsection shall require |
repayment of the loan to
the municipality upon any sale or |
other transfer of the project. In addition, the Authority may |
use any moneys appropriated for such purpose from the Build |
Illinois Bond Fund, including funds loaned under this |
subsection and repaid as principal or interest, and investment |
income on such funds, to make the loans authorized by |
subsection (z), without regard to any restrictions or |
limitations provided in this subsection.
|
(p) The Authority may award grants to universities and |
research
institutions,
research consortiums and other |
not-for-profit entities for the purposes of:
remodeling or |
otherwise physically altering existing laboratory or research
|
facilities, expansion or physical additions to existing |
laboratory or research
facilities, construction of new |
laboratory or research facilities or
acquisition of modern |
|
equipment to support laboratory or research operations
|
provided that
such grants (i) be used solely in support of |
project and equipment acquisitions
which enhance technology |
transfer, and (ii) not constitute more than 60 percent
of the |
total project or acquisition cost.
|
(q) Grants may be awarded by the Authority to units of |
local government for
the
purpose of developing the appropriate |
infrastructure or defraying other costs
to
the local government |
in support of laboratory or research facilities provided
that |
such grants may not exceed 40% of the cost to the unit of local
|
government.
|
(r) In addition to the powers granted to the Authority |
under subsection (i), and in all cases supplemental to it, the |
Authority may establish a direct loan program to make loans to, |
or may purchase participations in loans made by participating |
lenders to,
individuals, partnerships, corporations, or other |
business entities for the purpose of financing an industrial
|
project, as defined in
Section 801-10 of this Act. For the |
purposes of such program
and not by way of limitation on any |
other program of the Authority, including, without limitation, |
programs established under subsection (i), the
Authority shall |
have the power to issue bonds, notes, or other evidences of
|
indebtedness including commercial paper for purposes of |
providing a fund of
capital from which it may make such loans. |
The Authority shall have the power
to use any appropriations |
from the State made especially for the Authority's direct loan |
|
program, or moneys at any time held by the Authority under this |
Act outside the State treasury in the custody of either the |
Treasurer of the Authority or a trustee or depository appointed |
by the Authority,
for additional capital to make such loans or |
purchase such loan participations, or for the
purposes of |
reserve funds or pledged funds which secure the Authority's
|
obligations of repayment of any bond, note or other form of |
indebtedness
established for the purpose of providing capital |
for which it intends to make
such loans or purchase such loan |
participations. For the purpose of obtaining such
capital, the |
Authority may also enter into agreements with financial
|
institutions, participating lenders, and other persons for the |
purpose of administering a loan participation program, selling |
loans or developing
a secondary market for such loans or loan |
participations.
Loans made under the direct loan program |
specifically established under this subsection (r), including |
loans under such program made by participating lenders in which |
the Authority purchases a participation, may be in an amount |
not to exceed $600,000
and shall be made for a portion of an |
industrial project which does
not exceed 50% of the total |
project. No loan may be made by the Authority
unless
approved |
by the affirmative vote of at least 8 members of the board. The
|
Authority shall establish procedures and publish rules which |
shall provide for
the submission, review, and analysis of each |
direct loan and loan participation application and which
shall |
preserve the ability of each board member and the Executive |
|
Director, as applicable, to reach an individual business
|
judgment regarding the propriety of each direct loan or loan |
participation. The collective
discretion of the board to |
approve or disapprove each loan shall be
unencumbered.
The |
Authority may establish and collect such fees and charges, |
determine and
enforce such terms and conditions, and charge |
such interest rates as it
determines to be necessary and |
appropriate to the successful administration of
the direct loan |
program, including purchasing loan participations. The |
Authority may require such interests in collateral
and such |
guarantees as it determines are necessary to protect the |
Authority's
interest in the repayment of the principal and |
interest of each loan and loan participation made under
the |
direct loan program. The restrictions established under this |
subsection (r) shall not be applicable to any loan or loan |
participation made under subsection (i) or to any loan or loan |
participation made under any other Section of this Act.
|
(s) The Authority may guarantee private loans to third |
parties up to a
specified dollar amount in order to promote |
economic development in this State.
|
(t) The Authority may adopt rules and regulations as may be |
necessary or
advisable to implement the powers conferred by |
this Act.
|
(u) The Authority shall have the power to issue bonds, |
notes or other
evidences
of indebtedness, which may be used to |
make loans to units of local government
which are authorized to |
|
enter into loan agreements and other documents and to
issue |
bonds, notes and other evidences of indebtedness for the |
purpose of
financing the protection of storm sewer outfalls, |
the construction of adequate
storm sewer outfalls, and the |
provision for flood protection of sanitary sewage
treatment |
plans, in counties that have established a stormwater |
management
planning committee in accordance with
Section |
5-1062 of the Counties Code. Any
such loan shall be made by the |
Authority pursuant to the provisions of
Section
820-5 to 820-60 |
of this Act. The unit of local government shall pay back to the
|
Authority the principal amount of the loan, plus annual |
interest as determined
by the Authority. The Authority shall |
have the power, subject to appropriations
by the General |
Assembly, to subsidize or buy down a portion of the interest on
|
such loans, up to 4% per annum.
|
(v) The Authority may accept security interests as provided |
in
Sections 11-3
and 11-3.3 of the Illinois Public Aid Code.
|
(w) Moral Obligation. In the event that the Authority |
determines that monies
of the Authority will not be sufficient |
for the payment of the principal of and
interest on its bonds |
during the next State fiscal year, the Chairperson, as
soon as |
practicable, shall certify to the Governor the amount required |
by the
Authority to enable it to pay such principal of and |
interest on the bonds. The
Governor shall submit the amount so |
certified to the General Assembly as soon
as
practicable, but |
no later than the end of the current State fiscal year. This
|
|
subsection shall apply only to any bonds or notes as to which |
the Authority
shall have determined, in the resolution |
authorizing the issuance of the bonds
or notes, that this |
subsection shall apply. Whenever the Authority makes such a
|
determination, that fact shall be plainly stated on the face of |
the bonds or
notes and that fact shall also be reported to the |
Governor. In the event of a
withdrawal of moneys from a reserve |
fund established with respect to any issue
or issues of bonds |
of the Authority to pay principal or interest on those
bonds,
|
the Chairperson of the Authority, as soon as practicable, shall |
certify to the
Governor the amount required to restore the |
reserve fund to the level required
in the resolution or |
indenture securing those bonds. The Governor shall submit
the |
amount so certified to the General Assembly as soon as |
practicable, but no
later than the end of the current State |
fiscal year. The Authority shall obtain
written approval from |
the Governor for any bonds and notes to be issued under
this |
Section.
In addition to any other bonds authorized to be issued |
under
Sections 825-60, 825-65(e), 830-25 and 845-5, the |
principal amount of Authority
bonds outstanding
issued under |
this
Section 801-40(w) or under 20 ILCS 3850/1-80 or 30 ILCS |
360/2-6(c), which have
been
assumed by the Authority, shall not |
exceed $150,000,000. This subsection (w) shall in no way be |
applied to any bonds issued by the Authority on behalf of the |
Illinois Power Agency under Section 825-90 of this Act.
|
(x) The Authority may enter into agreements or contracts |
|
with any person necessary or appropriate to place the payment |
obligations of the Authority under any of its bonds in whole or |
in part on any interest rate basis, cash flow basis, or other |
basis desired by the Authority, including without limitation |
agreements or contracts commonly known as "interest rate swap |
agreements", "forward payment conversion agreements", and |
"futures", or agreements or contracts to exchange cash flows or |
a series of payments, or agreements or contracts, including |
without limitation agreements or contracts commonly known as |
"options", "puts", or "calls", to hedge payment, rate spread, |
or similar exposure; provided that any such agreement or |
contract shall not constitute an obligation for borrowed money |
and shall not be taken into account under Section 845-5 of this |
Act or any other debt limit of the Authority or the State of |
Illinois.
|
(y) The Authority shall publish summaries of projects and |
actions approved by the members of the Authority on its |
website. These summaries shall include, but not be limited to, |
information regarding the: |
(1) project; |
(2) Board's action or actions; |
(3) purpose of the project; |
(4) Authority's program and contribution; |
(5) volume cap; |
(6) jobs retained; |
(7) projected new jobs; |
|
(8) construction jobs created; |
(9) estimated sources and uses of funds; |
(10) financing summary; |
(11) project summary; |
(12) business summary; |
(13) ownership or economic disclosure statement; |
(14) professional and financial information; |
(15) service area; and |
(16) legislative district. |
The disclosure of information pursuant to this subsection |
shall comply with the Freedom of Information Act. |
(z) Consistent with the findings and declaration of policy |
set forth in item (j) of Section 801-5 of this Act, the |
Authority shall have the power to make loans to the Police |
Officers' Pension Investment Fund authorized by Section |
22B-120 of the Illinois Pension Code and to make loans to the |
Firefighters' Pension Investment Fund authorized by Section |
22C-120 of the Illinois Pension Code. Notwithstanding anything |
in this Act to the contrary, loans authorized by Section |
22B-120 and Section 22C-120 of the Illinois Pension Code may be |
made from any of the Authority's funds, including, but not |
limited to, funds in its Illinois Housing Partnership Program |
Fund, its Industrial Project Insurance Fund, or its Illinois |
Venture Investment Fund. |
(Source: P.A. 100-919, eff. 8-17-18.)
|
|
(20 ILCS 3501/805-20)
|
Sec. 805-20. Powers and Duties; Industrial Project |
Insurance Program. The
Authority has the power:
|
(a) to insure and make advance commitments to insure |
all or any part of the
payments required on the bonds |
issued or a loan made to finance any
environmental facility |
under the Illinois Environmental Facilities Financing
Act
|
or for any industrial project upon such terms and |
conditions as the Authority
may prescribe in accordance |
with
this Article. The
insurance provided by the Authority |
shall be payable solely from the Fund
created by
Section |
805-15 and shall not constitute a debt or pledge of the |
full
faith and credit of the State, the Authority, or any |
political subdivision
thereof;
|
(b) to enter into insurance contracts, letters of |
credit or any other
agreements or contracts with financial |
institutions with respect to the Fund
and
any bonds or |
loans insured thereunder. Any such agreement or contract |
may
contain terms and provisions necessary or desirable in |
connection with the
program, subject to the requirements |
established by this Act, including without
limitation |
terms and provisions relating to loan documentation, |
review and
approval procedures, origination and servicing |
rights and responsibilities,
default conditions, |
procedures and obligations with respect to insurance
|
contracts made under this Act. The agreements or contracts |
|
may be executed on
an individual, group or master contract |
basis with financial institutions;
|
(c) to charge reasonable fees to defray the cost of |
obtaining letters of
credit
or other similar documents, |
other than insurance contracts under paragraph (b).
Any |
such fees shall be payable by such person, in such amounts |
and at such
times
as the Authority shall determine, and the |
amount of the fees need not be
uniform
among the various |
bonds or loans insured;
|
(d) to fix insurance premiums for the insurance of |
payments under the
provisions of
this Article. Such |
premiums shall be
computed as determined by the Authority. |
Any premiums for the insurance of loan
payments under the |
provisions of this Act shall be payable by such person, in
|
such amounts and at such times as the Authority shall |
determine, and the amount
of the premiums need not be |
uniform among the various bonds or loans insured;
|
(e) to establish application fees and prescribe |
application, notification,
contract and insurance forms, |
rules and regulations it deems necessary or
appropriate;
|
(f) to make loans and to issue bonds secured by |
insurance or other
agreements
authorized by paragraphs (a) |
and (b) of this
Section 805-20 and to issue bonds
secured |
by loans that are guaranteed by the federal government or |
agencies
thereof;
|
(g) to issue a single bond issue, or a series of bond |
|
issues, for a group of
industrial projects, a group of |
corporations, or a group of business entities
or
any |
combination thereof insured by insurance or backed by any |
other agreement
authorized by paragraphs (a) and (b) of |
this
Section or secured by loans that
are guaranteed by the |
federal government or agencies thereof;
|
(h) to enter into trust agreements for the management |
of the Fund created
under Section 805-15 of this Act;
|
(i) to exercise such other powers as are necessary or |
incidental to the powers granted in this Section and to the |
issuance of State Guarantees under Article 830 of this Act; |
and
|
(j) at the discretion of the Authority, (i) to insure |
and make advance commitments to insure, and issue State |
Guarantees for, all or any part of the payments required on |
the bonds issued or loans made to finance any agricultural |
facility, project, farmer, producer, agribusiness, |
qualified veteran-owned small business, or program under |
Article 830 or Article 835 of this Act upon such terms and |
conditions as the Authority may prescribe in accordance |
with this Article or (ii) to make loans authorized by |
subsection (z) of Section 801-40 of this Act upon such |
terms and conditions as the Authority may prescribe, |
consistent with Sections 22B-120 and 22C-120 of the |
Illinois Pension Code and without regard to any other |
restrictions or limitations provided in this Article . The |
|
insurance and State Guarantees provided by the Authority |
may be payable from the Fund created by Section 805-15 and |
is in addition to and not in replacement of the Illinois |
Agricultural Loan Guarantee Fund and the Illinois Farmer |
and Agribusiness Loan Guarantee Fund created under Article |
830 of this Act. |
(Source: P.A. 99-509, eff. 6-24-16.)
|
Section 10. The Illinois Pension Code is amended by |
changing Sections 1-109.3, 1-113.12, 1-160, 1A-102, 1A-104, |
1A-109, 1A-111, 1A-112, 1A-113, 3-111, 3-112, 3-125, 3-132, |
4-109, 4-114, 4-118, 4-123, 7-159, 14-110, 14-152.1, 15-120, |
15-135, 15-136, 15-159, 15-198, 16-163, 16-164, and 16-165 and |
by adding Sections 1-101.6, 3-124.3, 3-132.1, 4-117.2, and |
4-123.2 and Articles 22B and 22C as follows: |
(40 ILCS 5/1-101.6 new) |
Sec. 1-101.6. Transferor pension fund. "Transferor pension |
fund" means any pension fund established pursuant to Article 3 |
or 4 of this Code. |
(40 ILCS 5/1-109.3) |
Sec. 1-109.3. Training requirement for pension trustees. |
(a) All elected and appointed trustees under Article 3 and |
4 of this Code must participate in a mandatory trustee |
certification training seminar that consists of at least 16 32 |
|
hours of initial trustee certification at a training facility |
that is accredited and affiliated with a State of Illinois |
certified college or university. This training must include |
without limitation all of the following: |
(1) Duties and liabilities of a fiduciary with respect |
to the administration and payment of pension benefits under |
Article 1 of the Illinois Pension Code . |
(2) Adjudication of pension claims. |
(3) (Blank) Basic accounting and actuarial training . |
(4) Trustee ethics. |
(5) The Illinois Open Meetings Act. |
(6) The Illinois Freedom of Information Act. |
The training required under this subsection (a) must be |
completed within the first year that a trustee is elected or |
appointed under an Article 3 or 4 pension fund. Any trustee who |
has completed the training required under Section 1.05 of the |
Open Meetings Act shall not be required to participate in |
training concerning item (5) of this subsection. The elected |
and appointed trustees of an Article 3 or 4 pension fund who |
are police officers (as defined in Section 3-106 of this Code) |
or firefighters (as defined in Section 4-106 of this Code) or |
are employed by the municipality shall be permitted time away |
from their duties to attend such training without reduction of |
accrued leave or benefit time. Active or appointed trustees |
serving on the effective date of this amendatory Act of the |
96th General Assembly shall not be required to attend the |
|
training required under this subsection (a). |
(a-5) In addition to the initial trustee certification |
training required under subsection (a), all elected and |
appointed trustees who were elected or appointed on or before |
the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 101st General |
Assembly shall also participate in 4 hours of training on the |
changes made by this amendatory Act of the 101st General |
Assembly. For trustees of funds under Article 3, this training |
shall be conducted at a training facility that is accredited |
and affiliated with a State of Illinois certified college or |
university. For trustees of funds under Article 4, this |
training may be conducted by a fund, the Department of |
Insurance, or both a fund and the Department of Insurance. This |
training is only required to be completed once by each trustee |
required to participate. |
(b) In addition to the initial trustee certification |
training required under subsection (a), all elected and |
appointed trustees under Article 3 and 4 of this Code, |
including trustees serving on the effective date of this |
amendatory Act of the 96th General Assembly, shall also |
participate in a minimum of 8 16 hours of continuing trustee |
education each year after the first year that the trustee is |
elected or appointed. |
(c) The training required under this Section shall be paid |
for by the pension fund. |
(d) Any board member who does not timely complete the |
|
training required under this Section is not eligible to serve |
on the board of trustees of an Article 3 or 4 pension fund, |
unless the board member completes the missed training within 6 |
months after the date the member failed to complete the |
required training. In the event of a board member's failure to |
complete the required training, a successor shall be appointed |
or elected, as applicable, for the unexpired term. A successor |
who is elected under such circumstances must be elected at a |
special election called by the board and conducted in the same |
manner as a regular election under Article 3 or 4, as |
applicable.
|
(Source: P.A. 96-429, eff. 8-13-09.)
|
(40 ILCS 5/1-113.12)
|
Sec. 1-113.12. Application. |
(a) Except as provided in subsection (b) of this Section, |
Sections 1-113.1 through 1-113.10 apply only
to pension funds |
established under Article 3 or 4 of this Code.
|
(b) Upon the transfer of the securities, funds, assets, and |
moneys of a transferor pension fund to a fund created under |
Article 22B or 22C, that pension fund shall no longer exercise |
any investment authority with respect to those securities, |
funds, assets, and moneys and Sections 1-113.1 through 113.10 |
shall not apply to those securities, funds, assets, and moneys. |
(Source: P.A. 90-507, eff. 8-22-97.)
|
|
(40 ILCS 5/1-160)
|
Sec. 1-160. Provisions applicable to new hires. |
(a) The provisions of this Section apply to a person who, |
on or after January 1, 2011, first becomes a member or a |
participant under any reciprocal retirement system or pension |
fund established under this Code, other than a retirement |
system or pension fund established under Article 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, |
15 or 18 of this Code, notwithstanding any other provision of |
this Code to the contrary, but do not apply to any self-managed |
plan established under this Code, to any person with respect to |
service as a sheriff's law enforcement employee under Article |
7, or to any participant of the retirement plan established |
under Section 22-101. Notwithstanding anything to the contrary |
in this Section, for purposes of this Section, a person who |
participated in a retirement system under Article 15 prior to |
January 1, 2011 shall be deemed a person who first became a |
member or participant prior to January 1, 2011 under any |
retirement system or pension fund subject to this Section. The |
changes made to this Section by Public Act 98-596 are a |
clarification of existing law and are intended to be |
retroactive to January 1, 2011 (the effective date of Public |
Act 96-889), notwithstanding the provisions of Section 1-103.1 |
of this Code. |
This Section does not apply to a person who first becomes a |
noncovered employee under Article 14 on or after the |
implementation date of the plan created under Section 1-161 for |
|
that Article, unless that person elects under subsection (b) of |
Section 1-161 to instead receive the benefits provided under |
this Section and the applicable provisions of that Article. |
This Section does not apply to a person who first becomes a |
member or participant under Article 16 on or after the |
implementation date of the plan created under Section 1-161 for |
that Article, unless that person elects under subsection (b) of |
Section 1-161 to instead receive the benefits provided under |
this Section and the applicable provisions of that Article. |
This Section does not apply to a person who elects under |
subsection (c-5) of Section 1-161 to receive the benefits under |
Section 1-161. |
This Section does not apply to a person who first becomes a |
member or participant of an affected pension fund on or after 6 |
months after the resolution or ordinance date, as defined in |
Section 1-162, unless that person elects under subsection (c) |
of Section 1-162 to receive the benefits provided under this |
Section and the applicable provisions of the Article under |
which he or she is a member or participant. |
(b) "Final average salary" means the average monthly (or |
annual) salary obtained by dividing the total salary or |
earnings calculated under the Article applicable to the member |
or participant during the 96 consecutive months (or 8 |
consecutive years) of service within the last 120 months (or 10 |
years) of service in which the total salary or earnings |
calculated under the applicable Article was the highest by the |
|
number of months (or years) of service in that period. For the |
purposes of a person who first becomes a member or participant |
of any retirement system or pension fund to which this Section |
applies on or after January 1, 2011, in this Code, "final |
average salary" shall be substituted for the following: |
(1) In Article 7 (except for service as sheriff's law |
enforcement employees), "final rate of earnings". |
(2) In Articles 8, 9, 10, 11, and 12, "highest average |
annual salary for any 4 consecutive years within the last |
10 years of service immediately preceding the date of |
withdrawal". |
(3) In Article 13, "average final salary". |
(4) In Article 14, "final average compensation". |
(5) In Article 17, "average salary". |
(6) In Section 22-207, "wages or salary received by him |
at the date of retirement or discharge". |
(b-5) Beginning on January 1, 2011, for all purposes under |
this Code (including without limitation the calculation of |
benefits and employee contributions), the annual earnings, |
salary, or wages (based on the plan year) of a member or |
participant to whom this Section applies shall not exceed |
$106,800; however, that amount shall annually thereafter be |
increased by the lesser of (i) 3% of that amount, including all |
previous adjustments, or (ii) one-half the annual unadjusted |
percentage increase (but not less than zero) in the consumer |
price index-u
for the 12 months ending with the September |
|
preceding each November 1, including all previous adjustments. |
For the purposes of this Section, "consumer price index-u" |
means
the index published by the Bureau of Labor Statistics of |
the United States
Department of Labor that measures the average |
change in prices of goods and
services purchased by all urban |
consumers, United States city average, all
items, 1982-84 = |
100. The new amount resulting from each annual adjustment
shall |
be determined by the Public Pension Division of the Department |
of Insurance and made available to the boards of the retirement |
systems and pension funds by November 1 of each year. |
(c) A member or participant is entitled to a retirement
|
annuity upon written application if he or she has attained age |
67 (beginning January 1, 2015, age 65 with respect to service |
under Article 12 of this Code that is subject to this Section) |
and has at least 10 years of service credit and is otherwise |
eligible under the requirements of the applicable Article. |
A member or participant who has attained age 62 (beginning |
January 1, 2015, age 60 with respect to service under Article |
12 of this Code that is subject to this Section) and has at |
least 10 years of service credit and is otherwise eligible |
under the requirements of the applicable Article may elect to |
receive the lower retirement annuity provided
in subsection (d) |
of this Section. |
(c-5) A person who first becomes a member or a participant |
subject to this Section on or after July 6, 2017 (the effective |
date of Public Act 100-23), notwithstanding any other provision |
|
of this Code to the contrary, is entitled to a retirement |
annuity under Article 8 or Article 11 upon written application |
if he or she has attained age 65 and has at least 10 years of |
service credit and is otherwise eligible under the requirements |
of Article 8 or Article 11 of this Code, whichever is |
applicable. |
(d) The retirement annuity of a member or participant who |
is retiring after attaining age 62 (beginning January 1, 2015, |
age 60 with respect to service under Article 12 of this Code |
that is subject to this Section) with at least 10 years of |
service credit shall be reduced by one-half
of 1% for each full |
month that the member's age is under age 67 (beginning January |
1, 2015, age 65 with respect to service under Article 12 of |
this Code that is subject to this Section). |
(d-5) The retirement annuity payable under Article 8 or |
Article 11 to an eligible person subject to subsection (c-5) of |
this Section who is retiring at age 60 with at least 10 years |
of service credit shall be reduced by one-half of 1% for each |
full month that the member's age is under age 65. |
(d-10) Each person who first became a member or participant |
under Article 8 or Article 11 of this Code on or after January |
1, 2011 and prior to the effective date of this amendatory Act |
of the 100th General Assembly shall make an irrevocable |
election either: |
(i) to be eligible for the reduced retirement age |
provided in subsections (c-5)
and (d-5) of this Section, |
|
the eligibility for which is conditioned upon the member or |
participant agreeing to the increases in employee |
contributions for age and service annuities provided in |
subsection (a-5) of Section 8-174 of this Code (for service |
under Article 8) or subsection (a-5) of Section 11-170 of |
this Code (for service under Article 11); or |
(ii) to not agree to item (i) of this subsection |
(d-10), in which case the member or participant shall |
continue to be subject to the retirement age provisions in |
subsections (c) and (d) of this Section and the employee |
contributions for age and service annuity as provided in |
subsection (a) of Section 8-174 of this Code (for service |
under Article 8) or subsection (a) of Section 11-170 of |
this Code (for service under Article 11). |
The election provided for in this subsection shall be made |
between October 1, 2017 and November 15, 2017. A person subject |
to this subsection who makes the required election shall remain |
bound by that election. A person subject to this subsection who |
fails for any reason to make the required election within the |
time specified in this subsection shall be deemed to have made |
the election under item (ii). |
(e) Any retirement annuity or supplemental annuity shall be |
subject to annual increases on the January 1 occurring either |
on or after the attainment of age 67 (beginning January 1, |
2015, age 65 with respect to service under Article 12 of this |
Code that is subject to this Section and beginning on the |
|
effective date of this amendatory Act of the 100th General |
Assembly, age 65 with respect to service under Article 8 or |
Article 11 for eligible persons who: (i) are subject to |
subsection (c-5) of this Section; or (ii) made the election |
under item (i) of subsection (d-10) of this Section) or the |
first anniversary of the annuity start date, whichever is |
later. Each annual increase shall be calculated at 3% or |
one-half the annual unadjusted percentage increase (but not |
less than zero) in the consumer price index-u for the 12 months |
ending with the September preceding each November 1, whichever |
is less, of the originally granted retirement annuity. If the |
annual unadjusted percentage change in the consumer price |
index-u for the 12 months ending with the September preceding |
each November 1 is zero or there is a decrease, then the |
annuity shall not be increased. |
For the purposes of Section 1-103.1 of this Code, the |
changes made to this Section by this amendatory Act of the |
100th General Assembly are applicable without regard to whether |
the employee was in active service on or after the effective |
date of this amendatory Act of the 100th General Assembly. |
(f) The initial survivor's or widow's annuity of an |
otherwise eligible survivor or widow of a retired member or |
participant who first became a member or participant on or |
after January 1, 2011 shall be in the amount of 66 2/3% of the |
retired member's or participant's retirement annuity at the |
date of death. In the case of the death of a member or |
|
participant who has not retired and who first became a member |
or participant on or after January 1, 2011, eligibility for a |
survivor's or widow's annuity shall be determined by the |
applicable Article of this Code. The initial benefit shall be |
66 2/3% of the earned annuity without a reduction due to age. A |
child's annuity of an otherwise eligible child shall be in the |
amount prescribed under each Article if applicable. Any |
survivor's or widow's annuity shall be increased (1) on each |
January 1 occurring on or after the commencement of the annuity |
if
the deceased member died while receiving a retirement |
annuity or (2) in
other cases, on each January 1 occurring |
after the first anniversary
of the commencement of the annuity. |
Each annual increase shall be calculated at 3% or one-half the |
annual unadjusted percentage increase (but not less than zero) |
in the consumer price index-u for the 12 months ending with the |
September preceding each November 1, whichever is less, of the |
originally granted survivor's annuity. If the annual |
unadjusted percentage change in the consumer price index-u for |
the 12 months ending with the September preceding each November |
1 is zero or there is a decrease, then the annuity shall not be |
increased. |
(g) The benefits in Section 14-110 apply only if the person |
is a State policeman, a fire fighter in the fire protection |
service of a department, a conservation police officer, an |
investigator for the Secretary of State, an arson investigator, |
a Commerce Commission police officer, investigator for the |
|
Department of Revenue or the
Illinois Gaming Board, a security |
employee of the Department of Corrections or the Department of |
Juvenile Justice, or a security employee of the Department of |
Innovation and Technology, as those terms are defined in |
subsection (b) and subsection (c) of Section 14-110. A person |
who meets the requirements of this Section is entitled to an |
annuity calculated under the provisions of Section 14-110, in |
lieu of the regular or minimum retirement annuity, only if the |
person has withdrawn from service with not less than 20
years |
of eligible creditable service and has attained age 60, |
regardless of whether
the attainment of age 60 occurs while the |
person is
still in service. |
(h) If a person who first becomes a member or a participant |
of a retirement system or pension fund subject to this Section |
on or after January 1, 2011 is receiving a retirement annuity |
or retirement pension under that system or fund and becomes a |
member or participant under any other system or fund created by |
this Code and is employed on a full-time basis, except for |
those members or participants exempted from the provisions of |
this Section under subsection (a) of this Section, then the |
person's retirement annuity or retirement pension under that |
system or fund shall be suspended during that employment. Upon |
termination of that employment, the person's retirement |
annuity or retirement pension payments shall resume and be |
recalculated if recalculation is provided for under the |
applicable Article of this Code. |
|
If a person who first becomes a member of a retirement |
system or pension fund subject to this Section on or after |
January 1, 2012 and is receiving a retirement annuity or |
retirement pension under that system or fund and accepts on a |
contractual basis a position to provide services to a |
governmental entity from which he or she has retired, then that |
person's annuity or retirement pension earned as an active |
employee of the employer shall be suspended during that |
contractual service. A person receiving an annuity or |
retirement pension under this Code shall notify the pension |
fund or retirement system from which he or she is receiving an |
annuity or retirement pension, as well as his or her |
contractual employer, of his or her retirement status before |
accepting contractual employment. A person who fails to submit |
such notification shall be guilty of a Class A misdemeanor and |
required to pay a fine of $1,000. Upon termination of that |
contractual employment, the person's retirement annuity or |
retirement pension payments shall resume and, if appropriate, |
be recalculated under the applicable provisions of this Code. |
(i) (Blank). |
(j) In the case of a conflict between the provisions of |
this Section and any other provision of this Code, the |
provisions of this Section shall control.
|
(Source: P.A. 100-23, eff. 7-6-17; 100-201, eff. 8-18-17; |
100-563, eff. 12-8-17; 100-611, eff. 7-20-18; 100-1166, eff. |
1-4-19.)
|
|
(40 ILCS 5/1A-102)
|
Sec. 1A-102. Definitions. As used in this Article, the |
following terms
have the meanings ascribed to them in this |
Section, unless the context
otherwise requires:
|
"Accrued liability" means the actuarial present value of |
future benefit
payments and appropriate administrative |
expenses under a plan, reduced by the
actuarial present value |
of all future normal costs (including any participant
|
contributions) with respect to the participants included in the |
actuarial
valuation of the plan.
|
"Actuarial present value" means the single amount, as of a |
given valuation
date, that results from applying actuarial |
assumptions to an amount or series
of amounts payable or |
receivable at various times.
|
"Actuarial value of assets" means the value assigned by the |
actuary to the
assets of a plan for the purposes of an |
actuarial valuation.
|
"Basis point" means 1/100th of one percent.
|
"Beneficiary" means a person eligible for or receiving |
benefits from a
pension fund as provided in the Article of this |
Code under which the fund is
established.
|
"Consolidated Fund" means: (i) with respect to the pension |
funds established under Article 3 of this Code, the Police |
Officers' Pension Investment Fund established under Article |
22B of this Code; and (ii) with respect to the pension funds |
|
established under Article 4 of this Code, the Firefighters' |
Pension Investment Fund established under Article 22C of this |
Code. |
"Credited projected benefit" means that portion of a |
participant's projected
benefit based on an allocation taking |
into account service to date determined
in accordance with the |
terms of the plan based on anticipated future
compensation.
|
"Current value" means the fair market value when available; |
otherwise, the
fair value as determined in good faith by a |
trustee, assuming an orderly
liquidation at the time of the |
determination.
|
"Department" means the Department of Insurance of the State |
of Illinois.
|
"Director" means the Director of the Department of |
Insurance.
|
"Division" means the Public Pension Division of the |
Department of Insurance.
|
"Governmental unit" means the State of Illinois, any |
instrumentality or
agency thereof (except transit authorities |
or agencies operating within or
within and without cities with |
a population over 3,000,000), and any political
subdivision or |
municipal corporation that establishes and maintains a public
|
pension fund.
|
"Normal cost" means that part of the actuarial present |
value of all future
benefit payments and appropriate |
administrative expenses assigned to the
current year under the |
|
actuarial valuation method used by the plan (excluding
any |
amortization of the unfunded accrued liability).
|
"Participant" means a participating member or deferred |
pensioner or annuitant
of a pension fund as provided in the |
Article of this Code under which the
pension fund is |
established, or a beneficiary thereof.
|
"Pension fund" means any public pension fund, annuity and |
benefit fund, or
retirement system established under this Code.
|
"Plan year" means the calendar or fiscal year on which the |
records of a given
plan are kept.
|
"Projected benefits" means benefit amounts under a plan |
which are expected
to be paid at various future times under a |
particular set of actuarial
assumptions, taking into account, |
as applicable, the effect of advancement
in age and past and |
anticipated future compensation and service credits.
|
"Supplemental annual cost" means that portion of the |
unfunded accrued
liability assigned to the current year under |
one of the following bases:
|
(1) interest only on the unfunded accrued liability;
|
(2) the level annual amount required to amortize the |
unfunded accrued
liability over a period not exceeding 40 |
years;
|
(3) the amount required for the current year to |
amortize the unfunded
accrued liability over a period not |
exceeding 40 years as a level percentage of
payroll.
|
"Total annual cost" means the sum of the normal cost plus |
|
the supplemental
annual cost.
|
"Transition period" means the period described in Section |
22B-120 with respect to the pension funds established under |
Article 3 of this Code and the period described in Section |
22C-120 with respect to the pension funds established under |
Article 4 of this Code. |
"Unfunded accrued liability" means the excess of the |
accrued liability over
the actuarial value of the assets of a |
plan.
|
"Vested pension benefit" means an interest obtained by a |
participant or
beneficiary in that part of an immediate or |
deferred benefit under a plan
which arises from the |
participant's service and is not conditional upon the
|
participant's continued service for an employer any of whose |
employees are
covered under the plan, and which has not been |
forfeited under the terms of the
plan.
|
(Source: P.A. 90-507, eff. 8-22-97.)
|
(40 ILCS 5/1A-104)
|
Sec. 1A-104. Examinations and investigations.
|
(a) Except as described in the following paragraph with |
respect to pension funds established under Article 3 or 4 of |
this Code, the The Division shall make periodic examinations |
and investigations of all
pension funds established under this |
Code and maintained for the benefit of
employees and officers |
of governmental units in the State of Illinois.
However, in |
|
lieu of making an examination and investigation, the Division
|
may accept and rely upon a report of audit or examination of |
any pension fund
made by an independent certified public |
accountant pursuant to the provisions
of the Article of this |
Code governing the pension fund. The acceptance of the
report |
of audit or examination does not bar the Division from making a |
further
audit, examination, and investigation if deemed |
necessary by the Division.
|
For pension funds established under Article 3 or 4 of this |
Code: (i) prior to the conclusion of the transition period, the |
Division shall make the periodic examinations and |
investigations described in the preceding paragraph; and (ii) |
after the conclusion of the transition period, the Division may |
accept and rely upon a report of audit or examination of such |
pension fund made by an independent certified public accountant |
retained by the Consolidated Fund. The acceptance of the report |
of audit or examination does not bar the Division from making a |
further audit, examination, and investigation if deemed |
necessary by the Division. |
The Department may implement a flexible system of |
examinations under
which it directs resources as it deems |
necessary or appropriate. In
consultation with the pension fund |
being examined, the Division may retain
attorneys, independent |
actuaries, independent certified public accountants, and
other |
professionals and specialists as examiners, the cost of which |
(except in
the case of pension funds established under Article |
|
3 or 4) shall be borne by
the pension fund that is the subject |
of the examination.
|
(b) The Division or the Consolidated Fund, as appropriate, |
shall examine or investigate each pension fund established
|
under Article 3 or Article 4 of this Code. The schedule of each |
examination shall be such that each fund shall be examined once |
every 3 years.
|
Each examination shall include the following:
|
(1) an audit of financial transactions, investment |
policies, and
procedures;
|
(2) an examination of books, records, documents, |
files, and other
pertinent memoranda relating to |
financial, statistical, and administrative
operations;
|
(3) a review of policies and procedures maintained for |
the administration
and operation of the pension fund;
|
(4) a determination of whether or not full effect is |
being given to the
statutory provisions governing the |
operation of the pension fund;
|
(5) a determination of whether or not the |
administrative policies in force
are in accord with the |
purposes of the statutory provisions and effectively
|
protect and preserve the rights and equities of the |
participants;
|
(6) a determination of whether or not proper financial |
and statistical
records have been established and adequate |
documentary evidence is recorded and
maintained in support |
|
of the several types of annuity and benefit payments
being |
made; and
|
(7) a determination of whether or not the calculations |
made by the fund for the payment of all annuities and |
benefits are accurate. |
In addition, the Division or the Consolidated Fund, as |
appropriate, may conduct investigations, which shall be
|
identified as such and which may include one or more of the |
items listed in
this subsection.
|
A copy of the report of examination or investigation as |
prepared by the
Division or the Consolidated Fund, as |
appropriate, shall be submitted to the secretary of the board |
of trustees of the
pension fund examined or investigated and to |
the chief executive officer of the municipality. The Director, |
upon request, shall grant
a hearing to the officers or trustees |
of the pension fund and to the officers or trustees of the |
Consolidated Fund, as appropriate, or their duly
appointed |
representatives, upon any facts contained in the report of
|
examination. The hearing shall be conducted before filing the |
report or making
public any information contained in the |
report. The Director may withhold the
report from public |
inspection for up to 60 days following the hearing.
|
(Source: P.A. 95-950, eff. 8-29-08.)
|
(40 ILCS 5/1A-109)
|
Sec. 1A-109. Annual statements by pension funds. Each |
|
pension fund shall
furnish to the Division an annual statement |
in a format prepared by the
Division. |
The Division shall design the form and prescribe the |
content of the
annual statement and, at least 60 days prior to |
the filing date, shall furnish
the form to each pension fund |
for completion. The annual statement shall be
prepared by each |
fund, properly certified by its officers, and submitted to the
|
Division within 6 months following the close of the fiscal year |
of the pension
fund.
|
The annual statement shall include, but need not be limited |
to, the
following:
|
(1) a financial balance sheet as of the close of the |
fiscal year;
|
(2) a statement of income and expenditures;
|
(3) an actuarial balance sheet;
|
(4) statistical data reflecting age, service, and |
salary characteristics
concerning all participants;
|
(5) special facts concerning disability or other |
claims;
|
(6) details on investment transactions that occurred |
during the fiscal
year covered by the report;
|
(7) details on administrative expenses; and
|
(8) such other supporting data and schedules as in the |
judgement of the
Division may be necessary for a proper |
appraisal of the financial condition of
the pension fund |
and the results of its operations. The annual statement
|
|
shall also specify the actuarial and interest tables used |
in the operation
of the pension fund.
|
For pension funds under Article 3 or 4 of this Code, after |
the conclusion of the transition period, the Consolidated Fund |
shall furnish directly to the Division the information |
described in items (1) and (6) of this Section and shall |
otherwise cooperate with the pension fund in the preparation of |
the annual statement. |
A pension fund that fails to file its annual statement |
within the time
prescribed under this Section is subject to the |
penalty provisions of Section
1A-113.
|
(Source: P.A. 90-507, eff. 8-22-97.)
|
(40 ILCS 5/1A-111)
|
Sec. 1A-111.
Actuarial statements by pension funds |
established under
Article 3 or 4.
|
(a) For each Each pension fund established under Article 3 |
or 4 of this Code , a complete actuarial statement applicable to |
its plan year shall be included
include as part of its annual |
statement in accordance with the following: a complete |
actuarial statement
applicable to the plan year.
|
(1) Prior to the conclusion of the transition period, |
if If the actuarial statement is prepared by a person other |
than the Department,
it shall be filed with the Division |
within 9 months after the close of the
fiscal year of the |
pension fund. Any pension fund that fails to file within
|
|
that time shall be subject to the penalty provisions of |
Section 1A-113. The
statement shall be prepared by or under |
the supervision of a qualified actuary,
signed by the |
qualified actuary, and contain such information as the |
Division
may by rule require.
|
(2) After the conclusion of the transition period, each |
actuarial statement shall be prepared by or under the |
supervision of a qualified actuary retained by the |
Consolidated Fund and signed by the qualified actuary and |
shall contain such information as the Division may by rule |
require. The actuarial statement shall be filed with the |
Division within 9 months after the close of the fiscal year |
of the pension fund. |
(a-5) Prior to the conclusion of the transition period, the |
actuarial statements may be prepared utilizing the method for |
calculating the actuarially required contribution for the |
pension fund that was in effect prior to the effective date of |
this amendatory Act of the 101st General Assembly. |
After the conclusion of the transition period, the |
actuarial statements shall be prepared by or under the |
supervision of a qualified actuary retained by the Consolidated |
Fund, and if a change occurs in an actuarial or investment |
assumption that increases or decreases the actuarially |
required contribution for the pension fund, that change shall |
be implemented in equal annual amounts over the 3-year period |
beginning in the fiscal year of the pension fund in which such |
|
change first occurs. |
The actuarially required contribution as described in this |
subsection shall determine the annual required employer |
contribution. |
(b) For the purposes of this Section, "qualified actuary" |
means (i) a
member of the American Academy of Actuaries, or |
(ii) an individual who has
demonstrated to the satisfaction of |
the Director that he or she has the
educational background |
necessary for the practice of actuarial science and has
at |
least 7 years of actuarial experience.
|
(Source: P.A. 90-507, eff. 8-22-97.)
|
(40 ILCS 5/1A-112)
|
Sec. 1A-112. Fees.
|
(a) Every pension fund that is required to file an annual |
statement under
Section 1A-109 shall pay to the Department an |
annual compliance fee. In the
case of a pension fund under |
Article 3 or 4 of this Code, (i) prior to the conclusion of the |
transition period, the annual compliance
fee shall be 0.02% (2 |
basis points) of the total
assets of the pension
fund, as |
reported in the most current annual statement of the fund, but |
not
more than $8,000 and (ii) after the conclusion of the |
transition period, the annual compliance fee shall be $8,000 |
and shall be paid by the Consolidated Fund . In the case of all |
other pension funds and
retirement
systems, the annual |
compliance fee shall be $8,000.
|
|
(b) The annual compliance fee shall be due on June 30 for |
the following
State fiscal year, except that the fee payable in |
1997 for fiscal year 1998
shall be due no earlier than 30 days |
following the effective date of this
amendatory Act of 1997.
|
(c) Any information obtained by the Division that is |
available to the public
under the Freedom of Information Act |
and is either compiled in published form
or maintained on a |
computer processible medium shall be furnished upon the
written |
request of any applicant and the payment of a reasonable |
information
services fee established by the Director, |
sufficient to cover the total cost to
the Division of |
compiling, processing, maintaining, and generating the
|
information. The information may be furnished by means of |
published copy or on
a computer processed or computer |
processible medium.
|
No fee may be charged to any person for information that |
the Division is
required by law to furnish to that person.
|
(d) Except as otherwise provided in this Section, all fees |
and penalties
collected by the Department under this Code shall |
be deposited into the Public
Pension Regulation Fund.
|
(e) Fees collected under subsection (c) of this Section and |
money collected
under Section 1A-107 shall be deposited into |
the Technology Management Revolving Fund and credited to the |
account of the Department's Public Pension
Division. This |
income shall be used exclusively for the
purposes set forth in |
Section 1A-107. Notwithstanding the provisions of
Section |
|
408.2 of the Illinois Insurance Code, no surplus funds |
remaining in
this account shall be deposited in the Insurance |
Financial Regulation Fund.
All money in this account that the |
Director certifies is not needed for the
purposes set forth in |
Section 1A-107 of this Code shall be transferred to the
Public |
Pension Regulation Fund.
|
(f) Nothing in this Code prohibits the General Assembly |
from appropriating
funds from the General Revenue Fund to the |
Department for the purpose of
administering or enforcing this |
Code.
|
(Source: P.A. 100-23, eff. 7-6-17.)
|
(40 ILCS 5/1A-113)
|
Sec. 1A-113. Penalties.
|
(a) A pension fund that fails, without just cause, to file |
its annual
statement within the time prescribed under Section |
1A-109 shall pay to the
Department a penalty to be determined |
by the Department, which shall not exceed
$100 for each day's |
delay.
|
(b) A pension fund that fails, without just cause, to file |
its actuarial
statement within the time prescribed under |
Section 1A-110 or 1A-111 shall pay
to the Department a penalty |
to be determined by the Department, which shall not
exceed $100 |
for each day's delay.
|
(c) A pension fund that fails to pay a fee within the time |
prescribed under
Section 1A-112 shall pay to the Department a |
|
penalty of 5% of the amount of the
fee for each month or part of |
a month that the fee is late. The entire penalty
shall not |
exceed 25% of the fee due.
|
(d) This subsection applies to any governmental unit, as |
defined in Section
1A-102, that is subject to any law |
establishing a pension fund or retirement
system for the |
benefit of employees of the governmental unit.
|
Whenever the Division determines by examination, |
investigation, or in any
other manner that the governing body |
or any elected or appointed officer or
official of a |
governmental unit has failed to comply with any provision of |
that
law:
|
(1) The Director shall notify in writing the governing |
body, officer, or
official of the specific provision or |
provisions of the law with which the
person has failed to |
comply.
|
(2) Upon receipt of the notice, the person notified |
shall take immediate
steps to comply with the provisions of |
law specified in the notice.
|
(3) If the person notified fails to comply within a |
reasonable time after
receiving the notice, the Director |
may hold a hearing at which the person
notified may show |
cause for noncompliance with the law.
|
(4) If upon hearing the Director determines that good |
and sufficient cause
for noncompliance has not been shown, |
the Director may order the person to
submit evidence of |
|
compliance within a specified period of not less than 30
|
days.
|
(5) If evidence of compliance has not been submitted to |
the Director
within the period of time prescribed in the |
order and no administrative appeal
from the order has been |
initiated, the Director may assess a civil penalty of
up to |
$2,000 against the governing body, officer, or
official for |
each noncompliance with an order of the Director.
|
The Director shall develop by rule, with as much |
specificity as
practicable, the standards and criteria to be |
used in assessing penalties and
their amounts. The standards |
and criteria shall include, but need not be
limited to, |
consideration of evidence of efforts made in good faith to |
comply
with applicable legal requirements. This rulemaking is |
subject to the
provisions of the Illinois Administrative |
Procedure Act.
|
If a penalty is not paid within 30 days of the date of |
assessment, the
Director without further notice shall report |
the act of noncompliance to the
Attorney General of this State. |
It shall be the duty of the Attorney General
or, if the |
Attorney General so designates, the State's Attorney of the |
county
in which the governmental unit is located to apply |
promptly by complaint on
relation of the Director of Insurance |
in the name of the people of the State of
Illinois, as |
plaintiff, to the circuit court of the county in which the
|
governmental unit is located for enforcement of the penalty |
|
prescribed in this
subsection or for such additional relief as |
the nature of the case and the
interest of the employees of the |
governmental unit or the public may require.
|
(e) Whoever knowingly makes a false certificate, entry, or |
memorandum upon
any of the books or papers pertaining to any |
pension fund or upon any
statement, report, or exhibit filed or |
offered for file with the Division or
the Director of Insurance |
in the course of any examination, inquiry, or
investigation, |
with intent to deceive the Director, the Division, or any of |
its
employees is guilty of a Class A misdemeanor.
|
(f) Subsections (b) and (c) shall apply to pension funds |
established under Article 3 or Article 4 of this Code only |
prior to the conclusion of the transition period, and this |
Section shall not apply to the Consolidated Funds. |
(Source: P.A. 90-507, eff. 8-22-97.)
|
(40 ILCS 5/3-111) (from Ch. 108 1/2, par. 3-111)
|
Sec. 3-111. Pension.
|
(a) A police officer age 50 or more with 20 or
more years |
of creditable service, who is not a participant in the
|
self-managed plan under Section 3-109.3 and who is no longer in |
service
as a police officer, shall receive a pension of 1/2 of |
the salary
attached to the rank held by the officer on the |
police force for one year
immediately prior to retirement or, |
beginning July 1, 1987 for persons
terminating service on or |
after that date, the salary attached to the rank
held on the |
|
last day of service or for one year prior to the last day,
|
whichever is greater. The pension shall be increased by 2.5%
of |
such salary for each additional year of service over 20 years |
of service
through 30 years of service, to a maximum of 75% of |
such
salary.
|
The changes made to this subsection (a) by this amendatory |
Act of the
91st General Assembly apply to all pensions that |
become payable under this
subsection on or after January 1, |
1999. All pensions payable under this
subsection that began on |
or after January 1, 1999 and before the effective date
of this |
amendatory Act shall be recalculated, and the amount of the |
increase
accruing for that period shall be payable to the |
pensioner in a lump sum.
|
(a-5) No pension in effect on or granted after June 30, |
1973 shall be
less than $200 per month. Beginning July 1, 1987, |
the minimum retirement
pension for a police officer having at |
least 20 years of creditable service
shall be $400 per month, |
without regard to whether or not retirement occurred
prior to |
that date.
If the minimum pension established in Section |
3-113.1 is greater than the
minimum provided in this |
subsection, the Section 3-113.1 minimum controls.
|
(b) A police officer mandatorily retired from service
due |
to age by operation of law, having at least 8 but
less than 20 |
years of creditable service, shall receive a pension
equal to 2 |
1/2% of the salary attached to the rank he or she held on
the |
police force for one year immediately prior to retirement or,
|
|
beginning July 1, 1987 for persons terminating service on or |
after that
date, the salary attached to the rank held on the |
last day of service or
for one year prior to the last day, |
whichever is greater, for each
year of creditable service.
|
A police officer who retires or is separated from service |
having at least 8
years but less than 20 years of creditable |
service, who is not mandatorily
retired due to age by operation |
of law, and who does not apply for a refund of
contributions at |
his or her last separation from police service, shall receive
a |
pension upon attaining age 60 equal to 2.5% of the salary |
attached to the
rank held by the police officer on the police |
force for one year immediately
prior to retirement or, |
beginning July 1, 1987 for persons terminating service
on or |
after that date, the salary attached to the rank held on the |
last day of
service or for one year prior to the last day, |
whichever is greater, for each
year of creditable service.
|
(c) A police officer no longer in service who has at least |
one but less
than 8 years of creditable service in a police |
pension fund but meets the
requirements of this subsection (c) |
shall be eligible to receive a pension from
that fund equal to |
2.5% of the salary attached to the rank held on the last day
of |
service under that fund or for one year prior to that last day, |
whichever is
greater, for each year of creditable service in |
that fund. The pension shall
begin no earlier than upon |
attainment of age 60 (or upon mandatory retirement
from the |
fund by operation of law due to age, if that occurs before age |
|
60) and
in no event before the effective date of this |
amendatory Act of 1997.
|
In order to be eligible for a pension under this subsection |
(c), the police
officer must have at least 8 years of |
creditable service in a second police
pension fund under this |
Article and be receiving a pension under subsection (a)
or (b) |
of this Section from that second fund. The police officer need |
not be
in service on or after the effective date of this |
amendatory Act of 1997.
|
(d) Notwithstanding any other provision of this Article,
|
the provisions of this subsection (d) apply to a person who is |
not a participant in the self-managed plan under Section |
3-109.3 and who first
becomes a police officer under this |
Article on or after January 1, 2011. |
A police officer age 55 or more who has 10 or more years of |
service in that capacity shall be entitled at his option to |
receive a monthly pension for his service as a police officer |
computed by multiplying 2.5% for each year of such service by |
his or her final average salary. |
The pension of a police officer who is retiring after |
attaining age 50 with 10 or more years of creditable service |
shall be reduced by one-half of 1% for each month that the |
police officer's age is under age 55. |
The maximum pension under this subsection (d) shall be 75%
|
of final average salary. |
For the purposes of this subsection (d), "final average |
|
salary" means the greater of: (i) the average monthly salary |
obtained by dividing the total salary of the police officer |
during the 48 96 consecutive months of service within the last |
60 120 months of service in which the total salary was the |
highest by the number of months of service in that period ; or |
(ii) the average monthly salary obtained by dividing the total |
salary of the police officer during the 96 consecutive months |
of service within the last 120 months of service in which the |
total salary was the highest by the number of months of service |
in that period . |
Beginning on January 1, 2011, for all purposes under
this |
Code (including without limitation the calculation of
benefits |
and employee contributions), the annual salary
based on the |
plan year of a member or participant to whom this Section |
applies shall not exceed $106,800; however, that amount shall |
annually thereafter be increased by the lesser of (i) 3% of |
that amount, including all previous adjustments, or (ii) |
one-half the annual unadjusted percentage increase (but not |
less than zero) in the consumer price index-u for the 12 months |
ending with the September preceding each November 1, including |
all previous adjustments. |
Nothing in this amendatory Act of the 101st General |
Assembly shall cause or otherwise result in any retroactive |
adjustment of any employee contributions. |
(Source: P.A. 96-1495, eff. 1-1-11 .)
|
|
(40 ILCS 5/3-112) (from Ch. 108 1/2, par. 3-112)
|
Sec. 3-112. Pension to survivors.
|
(a) Upon the death of a police officer entitled to a |
pension under Section
3-111, the surviving spouse shall be |
entitled to the pension to which the
police officer was then |
entitled. Upon the death of the surviving spouse,
or upon the |
remarriage of the surviving spouse if that remarriage
|
terminates the surviving spouse's eligibility under Section |
3-121, the police
officer's unmarried children who are under |
age 18 or who are dependent because
of physical or mental |
disability shall be entitled to equal shares of such
pension. |
If there is no eligible surviving spouse and no eligible child, |
the
dependent parent or parents of the officer shall be |
entitled to receive or
share such pension until their death or |
marriage or remarriage after the death
of the police officer.
|
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Article, for a |
person who first becomes a police officer under this Article on |
or after January 1, 2011, the pension to which the surviving |
spouse, children, or parents are entitled under this subsection |
(a) shall be in an the amount equal to the greater of (i) 54% of |
the police officer's monthly salary at the date of death, or |
(ii) of 66 2/3% of the police officer's earned pension at the |
date of death , and, if there is a surviving spouse, 12% of such |
monthly salary shall be granted to the guardian of any minor |
child or children, including a child who has been conceived but |
not yet born, for each such child until attainment of age 18. |
|
Upon the death of the surviving spouse leaving one or more |
minor children, or upon the death of a police officer leaving |
one or more minor children but no surviving spouse, a monthly |
pension of 20% of the monthly salary shall be granted to the |
duly appointed guardian of each such child for the support and |
maintenance of each such child until the child reaches age 18 . |
The total pension provided under this paragraph shall not |
exceed 75% of the monthly salary of the deceased police officer |
(1) when paid to the survivor of a police officer who has |
attained 20 or more years of service credit and who receives or |
is eligible to receive a retirement pension under this Article, |
(2) when paid to the survivor of a police officer who dies as a |
result of illness or accident, (3) when paid to the survivor of |
a police officer who dies from any cause while in receipt of a |
disability pension under this Article, or (4) when paid to the |
survivor of a deferred pensioner. Nothing in this subsection |
(a) shall act to diminish the survivor's
benefits described in |
subsection (e) of this Section. |
Notwithstanding Section 1-103.1, the changes made to this |
subsection apply without regard to whether the deceased police |
officer was in service on or after the effective date of this |
amendatory Act of the 101st General Assembly. |
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Article, the |
monthly pension
of a survivor of a person who first becomes a |
police officer under this Article on or after January 1, 2011 |
shall be increased on the January 1 after attainment of age 60 |
|
by the recipient of the survivor's pension and
each January 1 |
thereafter by 3% or one-half the annual unadjusted percentage |
increase (but not less than zero) in the consumer price index-u |
for the 12 months ending with the September preceding each |
November 1, whichever is less, of the originally granted |
survivor's pension. If the annual unadjusted percentage change |
in
the consumer price index-u for a 12-month period ending in |
September is zero or, when compared with the preceding period, |
decreases, then the survivor's pension shall not
be increased. |
For the purposes of this subsection (a), "consumer price |
index-u" means the index published by the Bureau of Labor |
Statistics of the United States Department of Labor that |
measures the average change in prices of goods and services |
purchased by all urban consumers, United States city average, |
all items, 1982-84 = 100. The new amount resulting from each |
annual adjustment shall be determined by the Public Pension |
Division of the Department of Insurance and made available to |
the boards of the pension funds. |
(b) Upon the death of a police officer while in service, |
having at least
20 years of creditable service, or upon the |
death of a police officer who
retired from service with at |
least 20 years of creditable service, whether
death occurs |
before or after attainment of age 50, the pension earned by
the |
police officer as of the date of death as provided in Section |
3-111
shall be paid to the survivors in the sequence provided |
in subsection (a)
of this Section.
|
|
(c) Upon the death of a police officer while in service, |
having at least
10 but less than 20 years of service, a pension |
of 1/2 of the salary attached
to the rank or ranks held by the |
officer for one year immediately
prior to death shall be |
payable to the survivors in the sequence provided
in subsection |
(a) of this Section. If death occurs as a result of the
|
performance of duty, the 10 year requirement shall not apply |
and the
pension to survivors shall be payable after any period |
of service.
|
(d) Beginning July 1, 1987, a minimum pension of $400 per |
month shall
be paid to all surviving spouses, without regard to |
the fact that the death
of the police officer occurred prior to |
that date.
If the minimum pension established in Section |
3-113.1 is greater than the
minimum provided in this |
subsection, the Section 3-113.1 minimum controls.
|
(e) The pension of the surviving spouse of a police officer |
who dies (i)
on or after January 1, 2001, (ii) without having |
begun to receive either a
retirement pension payable under |
Section 3-111 or a disability pension payable
under Section |
3-114.1, 3-114.2, 3-114.3, or 3-114.6, and (iii) as a result of
|
sickness, accident, or injury incurred in or resulting from the |
performance of
an act of duty shall not be less than 100% of |
the salary attached to the rank
held by the deceased police |
officer on the last day of service, notwithstanding
any |
provision in this Article to the contrary.
|
(Source: P.A. 96-1495, eff. 1-1-11.)
|
|
(40 ILCS 5/3-124.3 new) |
Sec. 3-124.3. Authority of the fund. Subject to Section |
3-141.1, the fund shall retain the exclusive authority to |
adjudicate and award disability benefits pursuant to Sections |
3-114.1, 3-114.2, and 3-114.3, retirement benefits pursuant to |
Section 3-111, and survivor benefits under Sections 3-112 and |
3-113.1 and to issue refunds pursuant to Section 3-124. The |
exclusive method of judicial review of any final administrative |
decision of the fund shall be made in accordance with Section |
3-148. The Police Officers' Pension Investment Fund |
established under Article 22B of this Code shall not have the |
authority to control, alter, or modify, or the ability to |
review or intervene in, the proceedings or decisions of the |
fund as otherwise provided in this Section.
|
(40 ILCS 5/3-125) (from Ch. 108 1/2, par. 3-125)
|
Sec. 3-125. Financing. |
(a) The city council or the board of trustees of
the |
municipality shall annually levy a tax upon all
the taxable |
property of the municipality at the rate on the dollar which
|
will produce an amount which, when added to the deductions from |
the salaries
or wages of police officers, and revenues
|
available from other
sources, will equal a sum sufficient to |
meet
the annual requirements of the police pension fund. The |
annual
requirements to be provided by such tax levy are equal
|
|
to (1) the normal cost of the pension fund for the year |
involved, plus
(2) an amount sufficient to bring the total |
assets of the pension fund up to 90% of the total actuarial |
liabilities of the pension fund by the end of municipal fiscal |
year 2040, as annually updated and determined by an enrolled |
actuary employed by the Illinois Department of Insurance or by |
an enrolled actuary retained by the pension fund or the |
municipality. In making these determinations, the required |
minimum employer contribution shall be calculated each year as |
a level percentage of payroll over the years remaining up to |
and including fiscal year 2040 and shall be determined under |
the projected unit credit actuarial cost method. The tax shall |
be levied and
collected in the same manner as the general taxes
|
of the municipality, and in addition to all other taxes now or |
hereafter authorized to
be levied upon all property within the |
municipality, and shall be in
addition to the amount authorized |
to be levied for general purposes as
provided by Section 8-3-1 |
of the Illinois Municipal Code, approved May
29, 1961, as |
amended. The tax shall be forwarded directly to the treasurer |
of the board within 30 business days after receipt by the |
county.
|
(b) For purposes of determining the required employer |
contribution to a pension fund, the value of the pension fund's |
assets shall be equal to the actuarial value of the pension |
fund's assets, which shall be calculated as follows: |
(1) On March 30, 2011, the actuarial value of a pension |
|
fund's assets shall be equal to the market value of the |
assets as of that date. |
(2) In determining the actuarial value of the System's |
assets for fiscal years after March 30, 2011, any actuarial |
gains or losses from investment return incurred in a fiscal |
year shall be recognized in equal annual amounts over the |
5-year period following that fiscal year. |
(c) If a participating municipality fails to transmit to |
the fund contributions required of it under this Article for |
more than 90 days after the payment of those contributions is |
due, the fund may, after giving notice to the municipality, |
certify to the State Comptroller the amounts of the delinquent |
payments in accordance with any applicable rules of the |
Comptroller, and the Comptroller must, beginning in fiscal year |
2016, deduct and remit to the fund the certified amounts or a |
portion of those amounts from the following proportions of |
payments of State funds to the municipality: |
(1) in fiscal year 2016, one-third of the total amount |
of any payments of State funds to the municipality; |
(2) in fiscal year 2017, two-thirds of the total amount |
of any payments of State funds to the municipality; and |
(3) in fiscal year 2018 and each fiscal year |
thereafter, the total amount of any payments of State funds |
to the municipality. |
The State Comptroller may not deduct from any payments of |
State funds to the municipality more than the amount of |
|
delinquent payments certified to the State Comptroller by the |
fund. |
(d) The police pension fund shall consist of the following |
moneys which
shall be set apart by the treasurer of the |
municipality:
|
(1) All moneys derived from the taxes levied hereunder;
|
(2) Contributions by police officers under Section |
3-125.1;
|
(2.5) All moneys received from the Police Officers' |
Pension Investment Fund as provided in Article 22B of this |
Code; |
(3) All moneys accumulated by the municipality under |
any previous
legislation establishing a fund for the |
benefit of disabled or retired
police officers;
|
(4) Donations, gifts or other transfers authorized by |
this
Article.
|
(e) The Commission on Government Forecasting and
|
Accountability shall conduct a study of all funds established
|
under this Article and shall report its findings to the General
|
Assembly on or before January 1, 2013. To the fullest extent |
possible, the study shall include, but not be limited to, the |
following: |
(1) fund balances; |
(2) historical employer contribution rates for each
|
fund; |
(3) the actuarial formulas used as a basis for employer
|
|
contributions, including the actual assumed rate of return
|
for each year, for each fund; |
(4) available contribution funding sources; |
(5) the impact of any revenue limitations caused by
|
PTELL and employer home rule or non-home rule status; and |
(6) existing statutory funding compliance procedures
|
and funding enforcement mechanisms for all municipal
|
pension funds. |
(Source: P.A. 99-8, eff. 7-9-15.)
|
(40 ILCS 5/3-132) (from Ch. 108 1/2, par. 3-132)
|
Sec. 3-132. To control and manage the Pension Fund. In |
accordance with the
applicable provisions of Articles 1 and 1A |
and this Article, to control and
manage, exclusively, the |
following:
|
(1) the pension fund,
|
(2) until the board's investment authority is |
terminated pursuant to Section 3-132.1, investment |
expenditures and income, including interest dividends,
|
capital gains and other distributions on the investments, |
and
|
(3) all money donated, paid, assessed, or provided by
|
law for the pensioning of disabled and retired police |
officers, their
surviving spouses, minor children, and |
dependent parents.
|
All money received or collected shall be credited by the |
|
treasurer of the
municipality to the account of the pension |
fund and
held by the treasurer of the municipality subject to |
the order and
control of the board. The treasurer of the |
municipality shall maintain a
record of all money received, |
transferred, and held for the account of the
board.
|
(Source: P.A. 90-507, eff. 8-22-97.)
|
(40 ILCS 5/3-132.1 new) |
Sec. 3-132.1. To transfer investment authority to the |
Police Officers' Pension Investment Fund. As soon as |
practicable after the effective date of this amendatory Act of |
the 101st General Assembly, but no later than 30 months after |
the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 101st General |
Assembly, each transferor pension fund shall transfer, in |
accordance with the requirements of Section 22B-120, to the |
Police Officers' Pension Investment Fund created under Article |
22B for management and investment all of their securities or |
for which commitments have been made, and all funds, assets, or |
moneys representing permanent or temporary investments, or |
cash reserves maintained for the purpose of obtaining income |
thereon. Upon the transfer of such securities, funds, assets, |
and moneys of a transferor pension fund to the Police Officers' |
Pension Investment Fund, the transferor pension fund shall not |
manage or control the same and shall no longer exercise any |
investment authority pursuant to Section 3-135 of this Code, |
notwithstanding any other provision of this Article to the |
|
contrary. |
Nothing in this Section prohibits a fund under this Article |
from maintaining an account, including an interest earning |
account, for the purposes of benefit payments and other |
reasonable expenses after the end of the transition period as |
defined in Section 22B-112, and funds under this Article are |
encouraged to consider a local bank or financial institution to |
provide such accounts and related financial services.
|
(40 ILCS 5/4-109) (from Ch. 108 1/2, par. 4-109)
|
Sec. 4-109. Pension.
|
(a) A firefighter age 50 or more with 20 or more years of |
creditable
service, who is no longer in service as a |
firefighter, shall receive a monthly
pension of 1/2 the monthly |
salary attached to the rank held by him or her in
the fire |
service at the date of retirement.
|
The monthly pension shall be increased by 1/12 of 2.5% of |
such
monthly salary for each additional month over 20 years of |
service through 30
years of service, to a maximum of 75% of |
such monthly salary.
|
The changes made to this subsection (a) by this amendatory |
Act of the
91st General Assembly apply to all pensions that |
become payable under this
subsection on or after January 1, |
1999. All pensions payable under this
subsection that began on |
or after January 1, 1999 and before the effective date
of this |
amendatory Act shall be recalculated, and the amount of the |
|
increase
accruing for that period shall be payable to the |
pensioner in a lump sum.
|
(b) A firefighter who retires or is separated from service |
having at
least 10 but less than 20 years of creditable |
service, who is not entitled
to receive a disability pension, |
and who did not apply for a refund of
contributions at his or |
her last separation from service shall receive a
monthly |
pension upon attainment of age 60 based on the monthly salary |
attached
to his or her rank in the fire service on the date of |
retirement or separation
from service according to the |
following schedule:
|
For 10 years of service, 15% of salary;
|
For 11 years of service, 17.6% of salary;
|
For 12 years of service, 20.4% of salary;
|
For 13 years of service, 23.4% of salary;
|
For 14 years of service, 26.6% of salary;
|
For 15 years of service, 30% of salary;
|
For 16 years of service, 33.6% of salary;
|
For 17 years of service, 37.4% of salary;
|
For 18 years of service, 41.4% of salary;
|
For 19 years of service, 45.6% of salary.
|
(c) Notwithstanding any other provision of this Article,
|
the provisions of this subsection (c) apply to a person who |
first
becomes a firefighter under this Article on or after |
January 1, 2011. |
A firefighter age 55 or more who has 10 or more years of |
|
service in that capacity shall be entitled at his option to |
receive a monthly pension for his service as a firefighter |
computed by multiplying 2.5% for each year of such service by |
his or her final average salary. |
The pension of a firefighter who is retiring after |
attaining age 50 with 10 or more years of creditable service |
shall be reduced by one-half of 1% for each month that the |
firefighter's age is under age 55. |
The maximum pension under this subsection (c) shall be 75%
|
of final average salary. |
For the purposes of this subsection (c), "final average |
salary" means the greater of: (i) the average monthly salary |
obtained by dividing the total salary of the firefighter during |
the 48 96 consecutive months of service within the last 60 120 |
months of service in which the total salary was the highest by |
the number of months of service in that period ; or (ii) the |
average monthly salary obtained by dividing the total salary of |
the firefighter during the 96 consecutive months of service |
within the last 120 months of service in which the total salary |
was the highest by the number of months of service in that |
period . |
Beginning on January 1, 2011, for all purposes under
this |
Code (including without limitation the calculation of
benefits |
and employee contributions), the annual salary
based on the |
plan year of a member or participant to whom this Section |
applies shall not exceed $106,800; however, that amount shall |
|
annually thereafter be increased by the lesser of (i) 3% of |
that amount, including all previous adjustments, or (ii) |
one-half the annual unadjusted percentage increase (but not |
less than zero) in the consumer price index-u for the 12 months |
ending with the September preceding each November 1, including |
all previous adjustments. |
Nothing in this amendatory Act of the 101st General |
Assembly shall cause or otherwise result in any retroactive |
adjustment of any employee contributions. |
(Source: P.A. 96-1495, eff. 1-1-11.)
|
(40 ILCS 5/4-114) (from Ch. 108 1/2, par. 4-114)
|
Sec. 4-114. Pension to survivors. If a firefighter who is |
not receiving a
disability pension under Section 4-110 or |
4-110.1 dies (1) as a result of any
illness or accident, or (2) |
from any cause while in receipt of a disability
pension under |
this Article, or (3) during retirement after 20 years service, |
or
(4) while vested for or in receipt of a pension payable |
under subsection (b)
of Section 4-109, or (5) while a deferred |
pensioner, having made all required
contributions, a pension |
shall be paid to his or her survivors, based on the
monthly |
salary attached to the firefighter's rank on the last day of |
service
in the fire department, as follows:
|
(a)(1) To the surviving spouse, a monthly pension of
|
40% of the monthly salary, and if there is a surviving |
spouse, to the guardian of any minor child or
children |
|
including a child which has been conceived but not yet |
born, 12%
of such monthly salary for each such child until |
attainment of age 18 or
until the child's marriage, |
whichever occurs first. Beginning July 1,
1993, the monthly |
pension to the surviving spouse shall be 54% of the
monthly |
salary for all persons receiving a surviving spouse pension |
under
this Article, regardless of whether the deceased |
firefighter was in service
on or after the effective date |
of this amendatory Act of 1993.
|
(2) Beginning July 1, 2004, unless the amount provided |
under paragraph (1) of this subsection (a) is greater, the |
total monthly pension payable under
this paragraph (a), |
including any amount payable on account of children, to the |
surviving spouse of a firefighter who died (i) while
|
receiving a retirement pension, (ii) while he or she was a |
deferred pensioner with at least 20 years of creditable |
service, or (iii) while he or she was in active service |
having at least 20 years of creditable service, regardless |
of age, shall be no less than 100% of the monthly |
retirement pension earned by
the deceased firefighter at |
the time of death, regardless of whether death occurs |
before or after attainment of age 50, including any
|
increases under Section 4-109.1. This minimum applies to |
all such surviving
spouses who are eligible to receive a |
surviving spouse pension, regardless of
whether the |
deceased firefighter was in service on or after the |
|
effective date
of this amendatory Act of the 93rd General |
Assembly, and notwithstanding any
limitation on maximum |
pension under paragraph (d) or any other provision of
this |
Article.
|
(3) If the pension paid on and after July 1, 2004 to |
the surviving spouse of a firefighter who died on or after |
July 1, 2004 and before the effective date of this |
amendatory Act of the 93rd General Assembly was less than |
the minimum pension payable under paragraph (1) or (2) of |
this subsection (a), the fund shall pay a lump sum equal to |
the difference within 90 days after the effective date of |
this amendatory Act of the 93rd General Assembly.
|
The pension to the surviving spouse shall terminate in |
the event of the
surviving spouse's remarriage prior to |
July 1, 1993; remarriage on or after
that date does not |
affect the surviving spouse's pension, regardless of
|
whether the deceased firefighter was in service on or after |
the effective
date of this amendatory Act of 1993.
|
The surviving spouse's pension shall be subject to the |
minimum established
in Section 4-109.2.
|
(b) Upon the death of the surviving spouse leaving one |
or more minor
children, or upon the death of a firefighter |
leaving one or more minor
children but no surviving spouse, |
to the duly appointed guardian of each such child, for |
support
and maintenance of each such child until the child |
reaches age 18 or
marries, whichever occurs first, a |
|
monthly pension of 20% of the monthly
salary.
|
In a case where the deceased firefighter left one or |
more minor children but no surviving spouse and the |
guardian of a child is receiving a pension of 12% of the |
monthly salary on August 16, 2013 (the effective date of |
Public Act 98-391), the pension is increased by Public Act |
98-391 to 20% of the monthly salary for each such child, |
beginning on the pension payment date occurring on or next |
following August 16, 2013. The changes to this Section made |
by Public Act 98-391 apply without regard to whether the |
deceased firefighter was in service
on or after August 16, |
2013. |
(c) If a deceased firefighter leaves no surviving |
spouse or unmarried
minor children under age 18, but leaves |
a dependent father or mother, to
each dependent parent a |
monthly pension of 18% of the monthly salary. To
qualify |
for the pension, a dependent parent must furnish |
satisfactory proof
that the deceased firefighter was at the |
time of his or her death the sole
supporter of the parent |
or that the parent was the deceased's dependent for
federal |
income tax purposes.
|
(d) The total pension provided under paragraphs (a), |
(b) and (c) of this
Section shall not exceed 75% of the |
monthly salary of the deceased firefighter
(1) when paid to |
the survivor of a firefighter who has attained 20 or more
|
years of service credit and who receives or is eligible to |
|
receive a retirement
pension under this Article, or (2) |
when paid to the survivor of a firefighter
who dies as a |
result of illness or accident, or (3) when paid to the |
survivor
of a firefighter who dies from any cause while in |
receipt of a disability
pension under this Article, or (4) |
when paid to the survivor of a deferred
pensioner. For all |
other survivors of deceased firefighters, the total |
pension
provided under paragraphs (a), (b) and (c) of this |
Section shall not exceed 50%
of the retirement annuity the |
firefighter would have received on the date of
death.
|
The maximum pension limitations in this paragraph (d) |
do not control
over any contrary provision of this Article |
explicitly establishing a minimum
amount of pension or |
granting a one-time or annual increase in pension.
|
(e) If a firefighter leaves no eligible survivors under |
paragraphs (a),
(b) and (c), the board shall refund to the |
firefighter's estate the amount
of his or her accumulated |
contributions, less the amount of pension
payments, if any, |
made to the firefighter while living.
|
(f) (Blank).
|
(g) If a judgment of dissolution of marriage between a |
firefighter and
spouse is judicially set aside subsequent |
to the firefighter's death, the
surviving spouse is |
eligible for the pension provided in paragraph (a) only
if |
the judicial proceedings are filed within 2 years after the |
date of the
dissolution of marriage and within one year |
|
after the firefighter's death and
the board is made a party |
to the proceedings. In such case the pension shall be
|
payable only from the date of the court's order setting |
aside the judgment of
dissolution of marriage.
|
(h) Benefits payable on account of a child under this |
Section shall
not be reduced or terminated by reason of the |
child's attainment of age 18
if he or she is then dependent |
by reason of a physical or mental disability
but shall |
continue to be paid as long as such dependency continues.
|
Individuals over the age of 18 and adjudged as a disabled |
person pursuant
to Article XIa of the Probate Act of 1975, |
except for persons receiving
benefits under Article III of |
the Illinois Public Aid Code, shall be
eligible to receive |
benefits under this Act.
|
(i) Beginning January 1, 2000, the pension of the |
surviving spouse of
a firefighter who dies on or after |
January 1, 1994 as a result of sickness,
accident, or |
injury incurred in or resulting from the performance of an |
act of
duty or from the cumulative effects of acts of duty |
shall not be less than 100%
of the salary attached to the |
rank held by the deceased firefighter on the last
day of |
service, notwithstanding subsection (d) or any other |
provision of
this Article.
|
(j) Beginning July 1, 2004, the pension of the |
surviving spouse of
a firefighter who dies on or after |
January 1, 1988 as a result of sickness,
accident, or |
|
injury incurred in or resulting from the performance of an |
act of
duty or from the cumulative effects of acts of duty |
shall not be less than 100%
of the salary attached to the |
rank held by the deceased firefighter on the last
day of |
service, notwithstanding subsection (d) or any other |
provision of
this Article.
|
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Article, if a |
person who first becomes a firefighter under this Article on or |
after January 1, 2011 and who is not receiving a
disability |
pension under Section 4-110 or 4-110.1 dies (1) as a result of |
any
illness or accident, (2) from any cause while in receipt of |
a disability
pension under this Article, (3) during retirement |
after 20 years service, (4) while vested for or in receipt of a |
pension payable under subsection (b)
of Section 4-109, or (5) |
while a deferred pensioner, having made all required
|
contributions, then a pension shall be paid to his or her |
survivors in an the amount equal to the greater of (i) 54% of |
the firefighter's monthly salary at the date of death, or (ii) |
of 66 2/3% of the firefighter's earned pension at the date of |
death , and, if there is a surviving spouse, 12% of such monthly |
salary shall be granted to the guardian of any minor child or |
children, including a child who has been conceived but not yet |
born, for each such child until attainment of age 18. Upon the |
death of the surviving spouse leaving one or more minor |
children, or upon the death of a firefighter leaving one or |
more minor children but no surviving spouse, a monthly pension |
|
of 20% of the monthly salary shall be granted to the duly |
appointed guardian of each such child for the support and |
maintenance of each such child until the child reaches age 18 . |
The total pension provided under this paragraph shall not |
exceed 75% of the monthly salary of the deceased firefighter |
(1) when paid to the survivor of a firefighter who has attained |
20 or more years of service credit and who receives or is |
eligible to receive a retirement pension under this Article, |
(2) when paid to the survivor of a firefighter who dies as a |
result of illness or accident, (3) when paid to the survivor of |
a firefighter who dies from any cause while in receipt of a |
disability pension under this Article, or (4) when paid to the |
survivor of a deferred pensioner. Nothing in this Section shall |
act to diminish the
survivor's benefits described in subsection |
(j) of this Section. |
Notwithstanding Section 1-103.1, the changes made to this |
subsection apply without regard to whether the deceased |
firefighter was in service on or after the effective date of |
this amendatory Act of the 101st General Assembly. |
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Article, the |
monthly
pension of a survivor of a person who first becomes a |
firefighter under this Article on or after January 1, 2011 |
shall be increased on the January 1 after attainment of age 60 |
by the recipient of the survivor's pension and
each January 1 |
thereafter by 3% or one-half the annual unadjusted percentage |
increase in the consumer price index-u for the
12 months ending |
|
with the September preceding each November 1, whichever is |
less, of the originally granted survivor's pension. If the |
annual unadjusted percentage change in
the consumer price |
index-u for a 12-month period ending in September is zero or, |
when compared with the preceding period, decreases, then the |
survivor's pension shall not
be increased. |
For the purposes of this Section, "consumer price index-u" |
means the index published by the Bureau of Labor Statistics of |
the United States Department of Labor that measures the average |
change in prices of goods and services purchased by all urban |
consumers, United States city average, all items, 1982-84 = |
100. The new amount resulting from each annual adjustment shall |
be determined by the Public Pension Division of the Department |
of Insurance and made available to the boards of the pension |
funds. |
(Source: P.A. 98-391, eff. 8-16-13; 98-756, eff. 7-16-14.)
|
(40 ILCS 5/4-117.2 new) |
Sec. 4-117.2. Authority of the fund. The fund shall retain |
the exclusive authority to adjudicate and award disability |
benefits, retirement benefits, and survivor benefits under |
this Article and to issue refunds under this Article. The |
exclusive method of judicial review of any final administrative |
decision of the fund shall be made in accordance with Section |
4-139. The Firefighters' Pension Investment Fund established |
under Article 22C of this Code shall not have the authority to |
|
control, alter, or modify, or the ability to review or |
intervene in, the proceedings or decisions of the fund as |
otherwise provided in this Section.
|
(40 ILCS 5/4-118) (from Ch. 108 1/2, par. 4-118)
|
Sec. 4-118. Financing.
|
(a) The city council or the board of trustees
of the |
municipality shall annually levy a tax upon all the taxable |
property
of the municipality at the rate on the dollar which |
will produce an amount
which, when added to the deductions from |
the salaries or wages of
firefighters and revenues available |
from other sources, will equal a sum
sufficient to meet the |
annual actuarial requirements of the pension fund,
as |
determined by an enrolled actuary employed by the Illinois |
Department of
Insurance or by an enrolled actuary retained by |
the pension fund or
municipality. For the purposes of this |
Section, the annual actuarial
requirements of the pension fund |
are equal to (1) the normal cost of the
pension fund, or 17.5% |
of the salaries and wages to be paid to firefighters
for the |
year involved, whichever is greater, plus (2) an annual amount
|
sufficient to bring the total assets of the pension fund up to |
90% of the total actuarial liabilities of the pension fund by |
the end of municipal fiscal year 2040, as annually updated and |
determined by an enrolled actuary employed by the Illinois |
Department of Insurance or by an enrolled actuary retained by |
the pension fund or the municipality. In making these |
|
determinations, the required minimum employer contribution |
shall be calculated each year as a level percentage of payroll |
over the years remaining up to and including fiscal year 2040 |
and shall be determined under the projected unit credit |
actuarial cost method. The amount
to be applied towards the |
amortization of the unfunded accrued liability in any
year |
shall not be less than the annual amount required to amortize |
the unfunded
accrued liability, including interest, as a level |
percentage of payroll over
the number of years remaining in the |
40 year amortization period.
|
(a-2) A municipality that has established a pension fund |
under this Article and who employs a full-time firefighter, as |
defined in Section 4-106, shall be deemed a primary employer |
with respect to that full-time firefighter. Any municipality of |
5,000 or more inhabitants that employs or enrolls a firefighter |
while that firefighter continues to earn service credit as a |
participant in a primary employer's pension fund under this |
Article shall be deemed a secondary employer and such employees |
shall be deemed to be secondary employee firefighters. To |
ensure that the primary employer's pension fund under this |
Article is aware of additional liabilities and risks to which |
firefighters are exposed when performing work as firefighters |
for secondary employers, a secondary employer shall annually |
prepare a report accounting for all hours worked by and wages |
and salaries paid to the secondary employee firefighters it |
receives services from or employs for each fiscal year in which |
|
such firefighters are employed and transmit a certified copy of |
that report to the primary employer's pension fund and the |
secondary employee firefighter no later than 30 days after the |
end of any fiscal year in which wages were paid to the |
secondary employee firefighters. |
Nothing in this Section shall be construed to allow a |
secondary employee to qualify for benefits or creditable |
service for employment as a firefighter for a secondary |
employer. |
(a-5) For purposes of determining the required employer |
contribution to a pension fund, the value of the pension fund's |
assets shall be equal to the actuarial value of the pension |
fund's assets, which shall be calculated as follows: |
(1) On March 30, 2011, the actuarial value of a pension |
fund's assets shall be equal to the market value of the |
assets as of that date. |
(2) In determining the actuarial value of the pension |
fund's assets for fiscal years after March 30, 2011, any |
actuarial gains or losses from investment return incurred |
in a fiscal year shall be recognized in equal annual |
amounts over the 5-year period following that fiscal year. |
(b) The tax shall be levied and collected in the same |
manner
as the general taxes of the municipality, and shall be |
in addition
to all other taxes now or hereafter authorized to |
be levied upon all
property within the municipality, and in |
addition to the amount authorized
to be levied for general |
|
purposes, under Section 8-3-1 of the Illinois
Municipal Code or |
under Section 14 of the Fire Protection District Act. The
tax |
shall be forwarded directly to the treasurer of the board |
within 30
business days of receipt by the county
(or, in the |
case of amounts
added to the tax levy under subsection (f), |
used by the municipality to pay the
employer contributions |
required under subsection (b-1) of Section 15-155 of
this |
Code).
|
(b-5) If a participating municipality fails to transmit to |
the fund contributions required of it under this Article for |
more than 90 days after the payment of those contributions is |
due, the fund may, after giving notice to the municipality, |
certify to the State Comptroller the amounts of the delinquent |
payments in accordance with any applicable rules of the |
Comptroller, and the Comptroller must, beginning in fiscal year |
2016, deduct and remit to the fund the certified amounts or a |
portion of those amounts from the following proportions of |
payments of State funds to the municipality: |
(1) in fiscal year 2016, one-third of the total amount |
of any payments of State funds to the municipality; |
(2) in fiscal year 2017, two-thirds of the total amount |
of any payments of State funds to the municipality; and |
(3) in fiscal year 2018 and each fiscal year |
thereafter, the total amount of any payments of State funds |
to the municipality. |
The State Comptroller may not deduct from any payments of |
|
State funds to the municipality more than the amount of |
delinquent payments certified to the State Comptroller by the |
fund. |
(c) The board shall make available to the membership and |
the general public
for inspection and copying at reasonable |
times the most recent Actuarial
Valuation Balance Sheet and Tax |
Levy Requirement issued to the fund by the
Department of |
Insurance.
|
(d) The firefighters' pension fund shall consist of the |
following moneys
which shall be set apart by the treasurer of |
the municipality: (1) all
moneys derived from the taxes levied |
hereunder; (2) contributions
by firefighters as provided under |
Section 4-118.1; (2.5) all moneys received from the |
Firefighters' Pension Investment Fund as provided in Article |
22C of this Code; (3) all
rewards in money, fees, gifts, and |
emoluments that may be paid or given
for or on account of |
extraordinary service by the fire department or any
member |
thereof, except when allowed to be retained by competitive |
awards;
and (4) any money, real estate or personal property |
received by the board.
|
(e) For the purposes of this Section, "enrolled actuary" |
means an actuary:
(1) who is a member of the Society of |
Actuaries or the American
Academy of Actuaries; and (2) who is |
enrolled under Subtitle
C of Title III of the Employee |
Retirement Income Security Act of 1974, or
who has been engaged |
in providing actuarial services to one or more public
|
|
retirement systems for a period of at least 3 years as of July |
1, 1983.
|
(f) The corporate authorities of a municipality that |
employs a person
who is described in subdivision (d) of Section |
4-106 may add to the tax levy
otherwise provided for in this |
Section an amount equal to the projected cost of
the employer |
contributions required to be paid by the municipality to the |
State
Universities Retirement System under subsection (b-1) of |
Section 15-155 of this
Code. |
(g) The Commission on Government Forecasting and
|
Accountability shall conduct a study of all funds established
|
under this Article and shall report its findings to the General
|
Assembly on or before January 1, 2013. To the fullest extent |
possible, the study shall include, but not be limited to, the |
following: |
(1) fund balances; |
(2) historical employer contribution rates for each
|
fund; |
(3) the actuarial formulas used as a basis for employer
|
contributions, including the actual assumed rate of return
|
for each year, for each fund; |
(4) available contribution funding sources; |
(5) the impact of any revenue limitations caused by
|
PTELL and employer home rule or non-home rule status; and |
(6) existing statutory funding compliance procedures
|
and funding enforcement mechanisms for all municipal
|
|
pension funds.
|
(Source: P.A. 101-522, eff. 8-23-19.)
|
(40 ILCS 5/4-123) (from Ch. 108 1/2, par. 4-123)
|
Sec. 4-123. To control and manage the Pension Fund. In |
accordance with the
applicable provisions of Articles 1 and 1A |
and this Article, to control and
manage, exclusively, the |
following:
|
(1) the pension fund,
|
(2) until the board's investment authority is |
terminated pursuant to Section 4-123.2, investment |
expenditures and income, including interest dividends,
|
capital gains, and other distributions on the investments, |
and
|
(3) all money donated, paid, assessed, or provided by |
law for the
pensioning of disabled and retired |
firefighters, their surviving spouses,
minor children, and |
dependent parents.
|
All money received or collected shall be credited by the |
treasurer of the
municipality to the account of the pension |
fund and held by the treasurer of
the municipality subject to |
the order and control of the board. The treasurer
of the |
municipality shall maintain a record of all money received, |
transferred,
and held for the account of the board.
|
(Source: P.A. 90-507, eff. 8-22-97.)
|
|
(40 ILCS 5/4-123.2 new) |
Sec. 4-123.2. To transfer investment authority to the |
Firefighters' Pension Investment Fund. As soon as practicable |
after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 101st |
General Assembly, but no later than 30 months after the |
effective date of this amendatory Act of the 101st General |
Assembly, each transferor pension fund shall transfer, in |
accordance with the requirements of Section 22C-120 to the |
Firefighters' Pension Investment Fund created under Article |
22C for management and investment all of their securities or |
for which commitments have been made, and all funds, assets, or |
moneys representing permanent or temporary investments, or |
cash reserves maintained for the purpose of obtaining income |
thereon. Upon the transfer of such securities, funds, assets, |
and moneys of a transferor pension fund to the Firefighters' |
Pension Investment Fund, the transferor pension fund shall not |
manage or control the same and shall no longer exercise any |
investment authority pursuant to Section 4-128 of this Code, |
notwithstanding any other provision of this Article to the |
contrary. |
Nothing in this Section prohibits a fund under this Article |
from maintaining an account, including an interest earning |
account, for the purposes of benefit payments and other |
reasonable expenses after the end of the transition period as |
defined in Section 22C-112, and funds under this Article are |
encouraged to consider a local bank or financial institution to |
|
provide such accounts and related financial services.
|
(40 ILCS 5/7-159) (from Ch. 108 1/2, par. 7-159)
|
Sec. 7-159. Surviving spouse annuity - refund of survivor |
credits.
|
(a) Any employee annuitant who (1) upon the date a |
retirement annuity
begins is not then married, or (2) is |
married to a person who would not qualify
for surviving spouse |
annuity if the person died on such date, is entitled to a
|
refund of the survivor credits including interest accumulated |
on the date the
annuity begins, excluding survivor credits and |
interest thereon credited during
periods of disability, and no |
spouse shall have a right to any surviving spouse
annuity from |
this Fund. If the employee annuitant
reenters service and upon |
subsequent retirement has a spouse who would
qualify for a |
surviving spouse annuity, the employee annuitant may pay the
|
fund the amount of the refund plus interest at the effective |
rate at the
date of payment. The payment shall qualify the |
spouse for a surviving
spouse annuity and the amount paid shall |
be considered as survivor
contributions.
|
(b) Instead of a refund under subsection (a), the retiring |
employee may
elect to convert the amount of the refund into an |
annuity, payable
separately from the retirement annuity. If the |
annuitant dies before the
guaranteed amount has been |
distributed, the remainder shall be paid in a lump
sum to the |
designated beneficiary of the annuitant. The Board shall adopt |
|
any
rules necessary for the implementation of this subsection.
|
(c) An annuitant who retired prior to June 1, 2011 and |
received a refund of
survivor credits under subsection (a), and |
who thereafter became, and remains,
either: |
(1) a party to a civil union or a party to a legal |
relationship that is recognized as a civil union or |
marriage under the Illinois Religious Freedom Protection |
and Civil Union Act on or after June 1, 2011; or |
(2) a party to a marriage under the Illinois Marriage |
and Dissolution of Marriage Act on or after February 26, |
2014; or |
(3) a party to a marriage, civil union or other legal |
relationship that, at the time it was formed, was not |
legally recognized in Illinois but was subsequently |
recognized as a civil union or marriage under the Illinois |
Religious Freedom Protection and Civil Union Act on or |
after June 1, 2011, a marriage under the Illinois Marriage |
and Dissolution of Marriage Act on or after February 26, |
2014, or both; |
may, within a period of one year beginning 5 months after the |
effective date of this amendatory Act of the 99th General |
Assembly, make an election to re-establish rights to a
|
surviving spouse annuity under Sections 7-154 through 7-158 |
(notwithstanding
the eligibility requirements of paragraph |
(a)(1) of Section 7-154), by paying to the
Fund: (1) the total |
amount of the refund received for survivor credits; and (2)
|
|
interest thereon at the actuarially assumed rate of return from |
the date of the refund to the date of
payment. Such election |
must be made prior to the date of death of the annuitant. |
The Fund may allow the annuitant to repay this refund over |
a period of not more
than 24 months. To the extent permitted by |
the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended, for federal and |
State tax purposes, if a member pays in monthly
installments by |
reducing the monthly benefit by the amount of the otherwise
|
applicable contribution, the monthly amount by which the |
annuitant's benefit is
reduced shall not be treated as a |
contribution by the annuitant but rather as a
reduction of the |
annuitant's monthly benefit. |
If an annuitant makes an election under this subsection (c) |
and the contributions
required are not paid in full, an |
otherwise qualifying spouse shall be given the
option to make |
an additional lump sum payment of the remaining contributions
|
and qualify for a surviving spouse annuity. Otherwise, an |
additional refund
representing contributions made hereunder |
shall be paid at the annuitant's death
and there shall be no |
surviving spouse annuity paid. |
(d) Any surviving spouse of an annuitant who (1) retired |
prior to June 1, 2011, (2) was not married on the date the |
retirement annuity began, (3) received a refund of survivor |
credits under subsection (a), and (4) died prior to the |
implementation of Public Act 99-682 on December 29, 2016 may, |
within a period of one year beginning 5 months after the |
|
effective date of this amendatory Act of the 101st General |
Assembly, make an election to re-establish rights to a |
surviving spouse annuity under Sections 7-154 through 7-158 |
(notwithstanding the eligibility requirements of paragraph (a) |
of subsection (1) of Section 7-154), by paying to the Fund: (i) |
the total amount of the refund received for survivor credits; |
and (ii) interest thereon at the actuarially assumed rate of |
return from the date of the refund to the date of payment. The |
surviving spouse must also provide documentation proving he or |
she was married to the annuitant or a party to a civil union |
with the annuitant at the time of death and has not |
subsequently remarried. This proof must include a marriage |
certificate or a certificate for a civil union and any other |
supporting documents deemed necessary by the Fund. |
(Source: P.A. 99-682, eff. 7-29-16.)
|
(40 ILCS 5/14-110) (from Ch. 108 1/2, par. 14-110)
|
Sec. 14-110. Alternative retirement annuity.
|
(a) Any member who has withdrawn from service with not less |
than 20
years of eligible creditable service and has attained |
age 55, and any
member who has withdrawn from service with not |
less than 25 years of
eligible creditable service and has |
attained age 50, regardless of whether
the attainment of either |
of the specified ages occurs while the member is
still in |
service, shall be entitled to receive at the option of the |
member,
in lieu of the regular or minimum retirement annuity, a |
|
retirement annuity
computed as follows:
|
(i) for periods of service as a noncovered employee:
if |
retirement occurs on or after January 1, 2001, 3% of final
|
average compensation for each year of creditable service; |
if retirement occurs
before January 1, 2001, 2 1/4% of |
final average compensation for each of the
first 10 years |
of creditable service, 2 1/2% for each year above 10 years |
to
and including 20 years of creditable service, and 2 3/4% |
for each year of
creditable service above 20 years; and
|
(ii) for periods of eligible creditable service as a |
covered employee:
if retirement occurs on or after January |
1, 2001, 2.5% of final average
compensation for each year |
of creditable service; if retirement occurs before
January |
1, 2001, 1.67% of final average compensation for each of |
the first
10 years of such service, 1.90% for each of the |
next 10 years of such service,
2.10% for each year of such |
service in excess of 20 but not exceeding 30, and
2.30% for |
each year in excess of 30.
|
Such annuity shall be subject to a maximum of 75% of final |
average
compensation if retirement occurs before January 1, |
2001 or to a maximum
of 80% of final average compensation if |
retirement occurs on or after January
1, 2001.
|
These rates shall not be applicable to any service |
performed
by a member as a covered employee which is not |
eligible creditable service.
Service as a covered employee |
which is not eligible creditable service
shall be subject to |
|
the rates and provisions of Section 14-108.
|
(b) For the purpose of this Section, "eligible creditable |
service" means
creditable service resulting from service in one |
or more of the following
positions:
|
(1) State policeman;
|
(2) fire fighter in the fire protection service of a |
department;
|
(3) air pilot;
|
(4) special agent;
|
(5) investigator for the Secretary of State;
|
(6) conservation police officer;
|
(7) investigator for the Department of Revenue or the |
Illinois Gaming Board;
|
(8) security employee of the Department of Human |
Services;
|
(9) Central Management Services security police |
officer;
|
(10) security employee of the Department of |
Corrections or the Department of Juvenile Justice;
|
(11) dangerous drugs investigator;
|
(12) investigator for the Department of State Police;
|
(13) investigator for the Office of the Attorney |
General;
|
(14) controlled substance inspector;
|
(15) investigator for the Office of the State's |
Attorneys Appellate
Prosecutor;
|
|
(16) Commerce Commission police officer;
|
(17) arson investigator;
|
(18) State highway maintenance worker;
|
(19) security employee of the Department of Innovation |
and Technology; or |
(20) transferred employee. |
A person employed in one of the positions specified in this |
subsection is
entitled to eligible creditable service for |
service credit earned under this
Article while undergoing the |
basic police training course approved by the
Illinois Law |
Enforcement Training
Standards Board, if
completion of that |
training is required of persons serving in that position.
For |
the purposes of this Code, service during the required basic |
police
training course shall be deemed performance of the |
duties of the specified
position, even though the person is not |
a sworn peace officer at the time of
the training.
|
A person under paragraph (20) is entitled to eligible |
creditable service for service credit earned under this Article |
on and after his or her transfer by Executive Order No. |
2003-10, Executive Order No. 2004-2, or Executive Order No. |
2016-1. |
(c) For the purposes of this Section:
|
(1) The term "State policeman" includes any title or |
position
in the Department of State Police that is held by |
an individual employed
under the State Police Act.
|
(2) The term "fire fighter in the fire protection |
|
service of a
department" includes all officers in such fire |
protection service
including fire chiefs and assistant |
fire chiefs.
|
(3) The term "air pilot" includes any employee whose |
official job
description on file in the Department of |
Central Management Services, or
in the department by which |
he is employed if that department is not covered
by the |
Personnel Code, states that his principal duty is the |
operation of
aircraft, and who possesses a pilot's license; |
however, the change in this
definition made by this |
amendatory Act of 1983 shall not operate to exclude
any |
noncovered employee who was an "air pilot" for the purposes |
of this
Section on January 1, 1984.
|
(4) The term "special agent" means any person who by |
reason of
employment by the Division of Narcotic Control, |
the Bureau of Investigation
or, after July 1, 1977, the |
Division of Criminal Investigation, the
Division of |
Internal Investigation, the Division of Operations, or any
|
other Division or organizational
entity in the Department |
of State Police is vested by law with duties to
maintain |
public order, investigate violations of the criminal law of |
this
State, enforce the laws of this State, make arrests |
and recover property.
The term "special agent" includes any |
title or position in the Department
of State Police that is |
held by an individual employed under the State
Police Act.
|
(5) The term "investigator for the Secretary of State" |
|
means any person
employed by the Office of the Secretary of |
State and vested with such
investigative duties as render |
him ineligible for coverage under the Social
Security Act |
by reason of Sections 218(d)(5)(A), 218(d)(8)(D) and |
218(l)(1)
of that Act.
|
A person who became employed as an investigator for the |
Secretary of
State between January 1, 1967 and December 31, |
1975, and who has served as
such until attainment of age |
60, either continuously or with a single break
in service |
of not more than 3 years duration, which break terminated |
before
January 1, 1976, shall be entitled to have his |
retirement annuity
calculated in accordance with |
subsection (a), notwithstanding
that he has less than 20 |
years of credit for such service.
|
(6) The term "Conservation Police Officer" means any |
person employed
by the Division of Law Enforcement of the |
Department of Natural Resources and
vested with such law |
enforcement duties as render him ineligible for coverage
|
under the Social Security Act by reason of Sections |
218(d)(5)(A), 218(d)(8)(D),
and 218(l)(1) of that Act. The |
term "Conservation Police Officer" includes
the positions |
of Chief Conservation Police Administrator and Assistant
|
Conservation Police Administrator.
|
(7) The term "investigator for the Department of |
Revenue" means any
person employed by the Department of |
Revenue and vested with such
investigative duties as render |
|
him ineligible for coverage under the Social
Security Act |
by reason of Sections 218(d)(5)(A), 218(d)(8)(D) and |
218(l)(1)
of that Act.
|
The term "investigator for the Illinois Gaming Board" |
means any
person employed as such by the Illinois Gaming |
Board and vested with such
peace officer duties as render |
the person ineligible for coverage under the Social
|
Security Act by reason of Sections 218(d)(5)(A), |
218(d)(8)(D), and 218(l)(1)
of that Act.
|
(8) The term "security employee of the Department of |
Human Services"
means any person employed by the Department |
of Human Services who (i) is
employed at the Chester Mental |
Health Center and has daily contact with the
residents |
thereof, (ii) is employed within a security unit at a |
facility
operated by the Department and has daily contact |
with the residents of the
security unit, (iii) is employed |
at a facility operated by the Department
that includes a |
security unit and is regularly scheduled to work at least
|
50% of his or her working hours within that security unit, |
or (iv) is a mental health police officer.
"Mental health |
police officer" means any person employed by the Department |
of
Human Services in a position pertaining to the |
Department's mental health and
developmental disabilities |
functions who is vested with such law enforcement
duties as |
render the person ineligible for coverage under the Social |
Security
Act by reason of Sections 218(d)(5)(A), |
|
218(d)(8)(D) and 218(l)(1) of that
Act. "Security unit" |
means that portion of a facility that is devoted to
the |
care, containment, and treatment of persons committed to |
the Department of
Human Services as sexually violent |
persons, persons unfit to stand trial, or
persons not |
guilty by reason of insanity. With respect to past |
employment,
references to the Department of Human Services |
include its predecessor, the
Department of Mental Health |
and Developmental Disabilities.
|
The changes made to this subdivision (c)(8) by Public |
Act 92-14 apply to persons who retire on or after January |
1,
2001, notwithstanding Section 1-103.1.
|
(9) "Central Management Services security police |
officer" means any
person employed by the Department of |
Central Management Services who is
vested with such law |
enforcement duties as render him ineligible for
coverage |
under the Social Security Act by reason of Sections |
218(d)(5)(A),
218(d)(8)(D) and 218(l)(1) of that Act.
|
(10) For a member who first became an employee under |
this Article before July 1, 2005, the term "security |
employee of the Department of Corrections or the Department |
of Juvenile Justice"
means any employee of the Department |
of Corrections or the Department of Juvenile Justice or the |
former
Department of Personnel, and any member or employee |
of the Prisoner
Review Board, who has daily contact with |
inmates or youth by working within a
correctional facility |
|
or Juvenile facility operated by the Department of Juvenile |
Justice or who is a parole officer or an employee who has
|
direct contact with committed persons in the performance of |
his or her
job duties. For a member who first becomes an |
employee under this Article on or after July 1, 2005, the |
term means an employee of the Department of Corrections or |
the Department of Juvenile Justice who is any of the |
following: (i) officially headquartered at a correctional |
facility or Juvenile facility operated by the Department of |
Juvenile Justice, (ii) a parole officer, (iii) a member of |
the apprehension unit, (iv) a member of the intelligence |
unit, (v) a member of the sort team, or (vi) an |
investigator.
|
(11) The term "dangerous drugs investigator" means any |
person who is
employed as such by the Department of Human |
Services.
|
(12) The term "investigator for the Department of State |
Police" means
a person employed by the Department of State |
Police who is vested under
Section 4 of the Narcotic |
Control Division Abolition Act with such
law enforcement |
powers as render him ineligible for coverage under the
|
Social Security Act by reason of Sections 218(d)(5)(A), |
218(d)(8)(D) and
218(l)(1) of that Act.
|
(13) "Investigator for the Office of the Attorney |
General" means any
person who is employed as such by the |
Office of the Attorney General and
is vested with such |
|
investigative duties as render him ineligible for
coverage |
under the Social Security Act by reason of Sections |
218(d)(5)(A),
218(d)(8)(D) and 218(l)(1) of that Act. For |
the period before January 1,
1989, the term includes all |
persons who were employed as investigators by the
Office of |
the Attorney General, without regard to social security |
status.
|
(14) "Controlled substance inspector" means any person |
who is employed
as such by the Department of Professional |
Regulation and is vested with such
law enforcement duties |
as render him ineligible for coverage under the Social
|
Security Act by reason of Sections 218(d)(5)(A), |
218(d)(8)(D) and 218(l)(1) of
that Act. The term |
"controlled substance inspector" includes the Program
|
Executive of Enforcement and the Assistant Program |
Executive of Enforcement.
|
(15) The term "investigator for the Office of the |
State's Attorneys
Appellate Prosecutor" means a person |
employed in that capacity on a full
time basis under the |
authority of Section 7.06 of the State's Attorneys
|
Appellate Prosecutor's Act.
|
(16) "Commerce Commission police officer" means any |
person employed
by the Illinois Commerce Commission who is |
vested with such law
enforcement duties as render him |
ineligible for coverage under the Social
Security Act by |
reason of Sections 218(d)(5)(A), 218(d)(8)(D), and
|
|
218(l)(1) of that Act.
|
(17) "Arson investigator" means any person who is |
employed as such by
the Office of the State Fire Marshal |
and is vested with such law enforcement
duties as render |
the person ineligible for coverage under the Social |
Security
Act by reason of Sections 218(d)(5)(A), |
218(d)(8)(D), and 218(l)(1) of that
Act. A person who was |
employed as an arson
investigator on January 1, 1995 and is |
no longer in service but not yet
receiving a retirement |
annuity may convert his or her creditable service for
|
employment as an arson investigator into eligible |
creditable service by paying
to the System the difference |
between the employee contributions actually paid
for that |
service and the amounts that would have been contributed if |
the
applicant were contributing at the rate applicable to |
persons with the same
social security status earning |
eligible creditable service on the date of
application.
|
(18) The term "State highway maintenance worker" means |
a person who is
either of the following:
|
(i) A person employed on a full-time basis by the |
Illinois
Department of Transportation in the position |
of
highway maintainer,
highway maintenance lead |
worker,
highway maintenance lead/lead worker,
heavy |
construction equipment operator,
power shovel |
operator, or
bridge mechanic; and
whose principal |
responsibility is to perform, on the roadway, the |
|
actual
maintenance necessary to keep the highways that |
form a part of the State
highway system in serviceable |
condition for vehicular traffic.
|
(ii) A person employed on a full-time basis by the |
Illinois
State Toll Highway Authority in the position |
of
equipment operator/laborer H-4,
equipment |
operator/laborer H-6,
welder H-4,
welder H-6,
|
mechanical/electrical H-4,
mechanical/electrical H-6,
|
water/sewer H-4,
water/sewer H-6,
sign maker/hanger |
H-4,
sign maker/hanger H-6,
roadway lighting H-4,
|
roadway lighting H-6,
structural H-4,
structural H-6,
|
painter H-4, or
painter H-6; and
whose principal |
responsibility is to perform, on the roadway, the |
actual
maintenance necessary to keep the Authority's |
tollways in serviceable condition
for vehicular |
traffic.
|
(19) The term "security employee of the Department of |
Innovation and Technology" means a person who was a |
security employee of the Department of Corrections or the |
Department of Juvenile Justice, was transferred to the |
Department of Innovation and Technology pursuant to |
Executive Order 2016-01, and continues to perform similar |
job functions under that Department. |
(20) "Transferred employee" means an employee who was |
transferred to the Department of Central Management |
Services by Executive Order No. 2003-10 or Executive Order |
|
No. 2004-2 or transferred to the Department of Innovation |
and Technology by Executive Order No. 2016-1, or both, and |
was entitled to eligible creditable service for services |
immediately preceding the transfer. |
(d) A security employee of the Department of Corrections or |
the Department of Juvenile Justice, a security
employee of the |
Department of Human Services who is not a mental health police
|
officer, and a security employee of the Department of |
Innovation and Technology shall not be eligible for the |
alternative retirement annuity provided
by this Section unless |
he or she meets the following minimum age and service
|
requirements at the time of retirement:
|
(i) 25 years of eligible creditable service and age 55; |
or
|
(ii) beginning January 1, 1987, 25 years of eligible |
creditable service
and age 54, or 24 years of eligible |
creditable service and age 55; or
|
(iii) beginning January 1, 1988, 25 years of eligible |
creditable service
and age 53, or 23 years of eligible |
creditable service and age 55; or
|
(iv) beginning January 1, 1989, 25 years of eligible |
creditable service
and age 52, or 22 years of eligible |
creditable service and age 55; or
|
(v) beginning January 1, 1990, 25 years of eligible |
creditable service
and age 51, or 21 years of eligible |
creditable service and age 55; or
|
|
(vi) beginning January 1, 1991, 25 years of eligible |
creditable service
and age 50, or 20 years of eligible |
creditable service and age 55.
|
Persons who have service credit under Article 16 of this |
Code for service
as a security employee of the Department of |
Corrections or the Department of Juvenile Justice, or the |
Department
of Human Services in a position requiring |
certification as a teacher may
count such service toward |
establishing their eligibility under the service
requirements |
of this Section; but such service may be used only for
|
establishing such eligibility, and not for the purpose of |
increasing or
calculating any benefit.
|
(e) If a member enters military service while working in a |
position in
which eligible creditable service may be earned, |
and returns to State
service in the same or another such |
position, and fulfills in all other
respects the conditions |
prescribed in this Article for credit for military
service, |
such military service shall be credited as eligible creditable
|
service for the purposes of the retirement annuity prescribed |
in this Section.
|
(f) For purposes of calculating retirement annuities under |
this
Section, periods of service rendered after December 31, |
1968 and before
October 1, 1975 as a covered employee in the |
position of special agent,
conservation police officer, mental |
health police officer, or investigator
for the Secretary of |
State, shall be deemed to have been service as a
noncovered |
|
employee, provided that the employee pays to the System prior |
to
retirement an amount equal to (1) the difference between the |
employee
contributions that would have been required for such |
service as a
noncovered employee, and the amount of employee |
contributions actually
paid, plus (2) if payment is made after |
July 31, 1987, regular interest
on the amount specified in item |
(1) from the date of service to the date
of payment.
|
For purposes of calculating retirement annuities under |
this Section,
periods of service rendered after December 31, |
1968 and before January 1,
1982 as a covered employee in the |
position of investigator for the
Department of Revenue shall be |
deemed to have been service as a noncovered
employee, provided |
that the employee pays to the System prior to retirement
an |
amount equal to (1) the difference between the employee |
contributions
that would have been required for such service as |
a noncovered employee,
and the amount of employee contributions |
actually paid, plus (2) if payment
is made after January 1, |
1990, regular interest on the amount specified in
item (1) from |
the date of service to the date of payment.
|
(g) A State policeman may elect, not later than January 1, |
1990, to
establish eligible creditable service for up to 10 |
years of his service as
a policeman under Article 3, by filing |
a written election with the Board,
accompanied by payment of an |
amount to be determined by the Board, equal to
(i) the |
difference between the amount of employee and employer
|
contributions transferred to the System under Section 3-110.5, |
|
and the
amounts that would have been contributed had such |
contributions been made
at the rates applicable to State |
policemen, plus (ii) interest thereon at
the effective rate for |
each year, compounded annually, from the date of
service to the |
date of payment.
|
Subject to the limitation in subsection (i), a State |
policeman may elect,
not later than July 1, 1993, to establish |
eligible creditable service for
up to 10 years of his service |
as a member of the County Police Department
under Article 9, by |
filing a written election with the Board, accompanied
by |
payment of an amount to be determined by the Board, equal to |
(i) the
difference between the amount of employee and employer |
contributions
transferred to the System under Section 9-121.10 |
and the amounts that would
have been contributed had those |
contributions been made at the rates
applicable to State |
policemen, plus (ii) interest thereon at the effective
rate for |
each year, compounded annually, from the date of service to the
|
date of payment.
|
(h) Subject to the limitation in subsection (i), a State |
policeman or
investigator for the Secretary of State may elect |
to establish eligible
creditable service for up to 12 years of |
his service as a policeman under
Article 5, by filing a written |
election with the Board on or before January
31, 1992, and |
paying to the System by January 31, 1994 an amount to be
|
determined by the Board, equal to (i) the difference between |
the amount of
employee and employer contributions transferred |
|
to the System under Section
5-236, and the amounts that would |
have been contributed had such
contributions been made at the |
rates applicable to State policemen, plus
(ii) interest thereon |
at the effective rate for each year, compounded
annually, from |
the date of service to the date of payment.
|
Subject to the limitation in subsection (i), a State |
policeman,
conservation police officer, or investigator for |
the Secretary of State may
elect to establish eligible |
creditable service for up to 10 years of
service as a sheriff's |
law enforcement employee under Article 7, by filing
a written |
election with the Board on or before January 31, 1993, and |
paying
to the System by January 31, 1994 an amount to be |
determined by the Board,
equal to (i) the difference between |
the amount of employee and
employer contributions transferred |
to the System under Section
7-139.7, and the amounts that would |
have been contributed had such
contributions been made at the |
rates applicable to State policemen, plus
(ii) interest thereon |
at the effective rate for each year, compounded
annually, from |
the date of service to the date of payment.
|
Subject to the limitation in subsection (i), a State |
policeman,
conservation police officer, or investigator for |
the Secretary of State may
elect to establish eligible |
creditable service for up to 5 years of
service as a police |
officer under Article 3, a policeman under Article 5, a |
sheriff's law enforcement employee under Article 7, a member of |
the county police department under Article 9, or a police |
|
officer under Article 15 by filing
a written election with the |
Board and paying
to the System an amount to be determined by |
the Board,
equal to (i) the difference between the amount of |
employee and
employer contributions transferred to the System |
under Section
3-110.6, 5-236, 7-139.8, 9-121.10, or 15-134.4 |
and the amounts that would have been contributed had such
|
contributions been made at the rates applicable to State |
policemen, plus
(ii) interest thereon at the effective rate for |
each year, compounded
annually, from the date of service to the |
date of payment. |
Subject to the limitation in subsection (i), an |
investigator for the Office of the Attorney General, or an |
investigator for the Department of Revenue, may elect to |
establish eligible creditable service for up to 5 years of |
service as a police officer under Article 3, a policeman under |
Article 5, a sheriff's law enforcement employee under Article |
7, or a member of the county police department under Article 9 |
by filing a written election with the Board within 6 months |
after August 25, 2009 (the effective date of Public Act 96-745) |
and paying to the System an amount to be determined by the |
Board, equal to (i) the difference between the amount of |
employee and employer contributions transferred to the System |
under Section 3-110.6, 5-236, 7-139.8, or 9-121.10 and the |
amounts that would have been contributed had such contributions |
been made at the rates applicable to State policemen, plus (ii) |
interest thereon at the actuarially assumed rate for each year, |
|
compounded annually, from the date of service to the date of |
payment. |
Subject to the limitation in subsection (i), a State |
policeman, conservation police officer, investigator for the |
Office of the Attorney General, an investigator for the |
Department of Revenue, or investigator for the Secretary of |
State may elect to establish eligible creditable service for up |
to 5 years of service as a person employed by a participating |
municipality to perform police duties, or law enforcement |
officer employed on a full-time basis by a forest preserve |
district under Article 7, a county corrections officer, or a |
court services officer under Article 9, by filing a written |
election with the Board within 6 months after August 25, 2009 |
(the effective date of Public Act 96-745) and paying to the |
System an amount to be determined by the Board, equal to (i) |
the difference between the amount of employee and employer |
contributions transferred to the System under Sections 7-139.8 |
and 9-121.10 and the amounts that would have been contributed |
had such contributions been made at the rates applicable to |
State policemen, plus (ii) interest thereon at the actuarially |
assumed rate for each year, compounded annually, from the date |
of service to the date of payment. |
(i) The total amount of eligible creditable service |
established by any
person under subsections (g), (h), (j), (k), |
and (l) , (l-5), and (o) of this
Section shall not exceed 12 |
years.
|
|
(j) Subject to the limitation in subsection (i), an |
investigator for
the Office of the State's Attorneys Appellate |
Prosecutor or a controlled
substance inspector may elect to
|
establish eligible creditable service for up to 10 years of his |
service as
a policeman under Article 3 or a sheriff's law |
enforcement employee under
Article 7, by filing a written |
election with the Board, accompanied by
payment of an amount to |
be determined by the Board, equal to (1) the
difference between |
the amount of employee and employer contributions
transferred |
to the System under Section 3-110.6 or 7-139.8, and the amounts
|
that would have been contributed had such contributions been |
made at the
rates applicable to State policemen, plus (2) |
interest thereon at the
effective rate for each year, |
compounded annually, from the date of service
to the date of |
payment.
|
(k) Subject to the limitation in subsection (i) of this |
Section, an
alternative formula employee may elect to establish |
eligible creditable
service for periods spent as a full-time |
law enforcement officer or full-time
corrections officer |
employed by the federal government or by a state or local
|
government located outside of Illinois, for which credit is not |
held in any
other public employee pension fund or retirement |
system. To obtain this
credit, the applicant must file a |
written application with the Board by March
31, 1998, |
accompanied by evidence of eligibility acceptable to the Board |
and
payment of an amount to be determined by the Board, equal |
|
to (1) employee
contributions for the credit being established, |
based upon the applicant's
salary on the first day as an |
alternative formula employee after the employment
for which |
credit is being established and the rates then applicable to
|
alternative formula employees, plus (2) an amount determined by |
the Board
to be the employer's normal cost of the benefits |
accrued for the credit being
established, plus (3) regular |
interest on the amounts in items (1) and (2) from
the first day |
as an alternative formula employee after the employment for |
which
credit is being established to the date of payment.
|
(l) Subject to the limitation in subsection (i), a security |
employee of
the Department of Corrections may elect, not later |
than July 1, 1998, to
establish eligible creditable service for |
up to 10 years of his or her service
as a policeman under |
Article 3, by filing a written election with the Board,
|
accompanied by payment of an amount to be determined by the |
Board, equal to
(i) the difference between the amount of |
employee and employer contributions
transferred to the System |
under Section 3-110.5, and the amounts that would
have been |
contributed had such contributions been made at the rates |
applicable
to security employees of the Department of |
Corrections, plus (ii) interest
thereon at the effective rate |
for each year, compounded annually, from the date
of service to |
the date of payment.
|
(l-5) Subject to the limitation in subsection (i) of this |
Section, a State policeman may elect to establish eligible |
|
creditable service for up to 5 years of service as a full-time |
law enforcement officer employed by the federal government or |
by a state or local government located outside of Illinois for |
which credit is not held in any other public employee pension |
fund or retirement system. To obtain this credit, the applicant |
must file a written application with the Board no later than 3 |
years after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the |
101st General Assembly, accompanied by evidence of eligibility |
acceptable to the Board and payment of an amount to be |
determined by the Board, equal to (1) employee contributions |
for the credit being established, based upon the applicant's |
salary on the first day as an alternative formula employee |
after the employment for which credit is being established and |
the rates then applicable to alternative formula employees, |
plus (2) an amount determined by the Board to be the employer's |
normal cost of the benefits accrued for the credit being |
established, plus (3) regular interest on the amounts in items |
(1) and (2) from the first day as an alternative formula |
employee after the employment for which credit is being |
established to the date of payment. |
(m) The amendatory changes to this Section made by this |
amendatory Act of the 94th General Assembly apply only to: (1) |
security employees of the Department of Juvenile Justice |
employed by the Department of Corrections before the effective |
date of this amendatory Act of the 94th General Assembly and |
transferred to the Department of Juvenile Justice by this |
|
amendatory Act of the 94th General Assembly; and (2) persons |
employed by the Department of Juvenile Justice on or after the |
effective date of this amendatory Act of the 94th General |
Assembly who are required by subsection (b) of Section 3-2.5-15 |
of the Unified Code of Corrections to have any bachelor's or |
advanced degree from an accredited college or university or, in |
the case of persons who provide vocational training, who are |
required to have adequate knowledge in the skill for which they |
are providing the vocational training.
|
(n) A person employed in a position under subsection (b) of |
this Section who has purchased service credit under subsection |
(j) of Section 14-104 or subsection (b) of Section 14-105 in |
any other capacity under this Article may convert up to 5 years |
of that service credit into service credit covered under this |
Section by paying to the Fund an amount equal to (1) the |
additional employee contribution required under Section |
14-133, plus (2) the additional employer contribution required |
under Section 14-131, plus (3) interest on items (1) and (2) at |
the actuarially assumed rate from the date of the service to |
the date of payment. |
(o) Subject to the limitation in subsection (i), a |
conservation police officer, investigator for the Secretary of |
State, Commerce Commission police officer, investigator for |
the Department of Revenue or the
Illinois Gaming Board, or |
arson investigator subject to subsection (g) of Section 1-160 |
may elect to convert up to 8 years of service credit |
|
established before the effective date of this amendatory Act of |
the 101st General Assembly as a conservation police officer, |
investigator for the Secretary of State, Commerce Commission |
police officer, investigator for the Department of Revenue or |
the
Illinois Gaming Board, or arson investigator under this |
Article into eligible creditable service by filing a written |
election with the Board no later than one year after the |
effective date of this amendatory Act of the 101st General |
Assembly, accompanied by payment of an amount to be determined |
by the Board equal to (i) the difference between the amount of |
the employee contributions actually paid for that service and |
the amount of the employee contributions that would have been |
paid had the employee contributions been made as a noncovered |
employee serving in a position in which eligible creditable |
service, as defined in this Section, may be earned, plus (ii) |
interest thereon at the effective rate for each year, |
compounded annually, from the date of service to the date of |
payment. |
(Source: P.A. 100-19, eff. 1-1-18; 100-611, eff. 7-20-18.)
|
(40 ILCS 5/14-152.1) |
Sec. 14-152.1. Application and expiration of new benefit |
increases. |
(a) As used in this Section, "new benefit increase" means |
an increase in the amount of any benefit provided under this |
Article, or an expansion of the conditions of eligibility for |
|
any benefit under this Article, that results from an amendment |
to this Code that takes effect after June 1, 2005 (the |
effective date of Public Act 94-4). "New benefit increase", |
however, does not include any benefit increase resulting from |
the changes made to Article 1 or this Article by Public Act |
96-37, Public Act 100-23, Public Act 100-587, or Public Act |
100-611, or Public Act 101-10, or this amendatory Act of the |
101st General Assembly this amendatory Act of the 101st General |
Assembly .
|
(b) Notwithstanding any other provision of this Code or any |
subsequent amendment to this Code, every new benefit increase |
is subject to this Section and shall be deemed to be granted |
only in conformance with and contingent upon compliance with |
the provisions of this Section.
|
(c) The Public Act enacting a new benefit increase must |
identify and provide for payment to the System of additional |
funding at least sufficient to fund the resulting annual |
increase in cost to the System as it accrues. |
Every new benefit increase is contingent upon the General |
Assembly providing the additional funding required under this |
subsection. The Commission on Government Forecasting and |
Accountability shall analyze whether adequate additional |
funding has been provided for the new benefit increase and |
shall report its analysis to the Public Pension Division of the |
Department of Insurance. A new benefit increase created by a |
Public Act that does not include the additional funding |
|
required under this subsection is null and void. If the Public |
Pension Division determines that the additional funding |
provided for a new benefit increase under this subsection is or |
has become inadequate, it may so certify to the Governor and |
the State Comptroller and, in the absence of corrective action |
by the General Assembly, the new benefit increase shall expire |
at the end of the fiscal year in which the certification is |
made.
|
(d) Every new benefit increase shall expire 5 years after |
its effective date or on such earlier date as may be specified |
in the language enacting the new benefit increase or provided |
under subsection (c). This does not prevent the General |
Assembly from extending or re-creating a new benefit increase |
by law. |
(e) Except as otherwise provided in the language creating |
the new benefit increase, a new benefit increase that expires |
under this Section continues to apply to persons who applied |
and qualified for the affected benefit while the new benefit |
increase was in effect and to the affected beneficiaries and |
alternate payees of such persons, but does not apply to any |
other person, including , without limitation , a person who |
continues in service after the expiration date and did not |
apply and qualify for the affected benefit while the new |
benefit increase was in effect.
|
(Source: P.A. 100-23, eff. 7-6-17; 100-587, eff. 6-4-18; |
100-611, eff. 7-20-18; 101-10, eff. 6-5-19; 101-81, eff. |
|
7-12-19; revised 7-24-19.)
|
(40 ILCS 5/15-120) (from Ch. 108 1/2, par. 15-120)
|
Sec. 15-120.
Beneficiary; survivor annuitant under |
portable benefit
package. "Beneficiary": The person or persons |
designated
by the participant or annuitant in the last written |
designation on file
with the board; or if no person so |
designated survives, or if no designation
is on file, the |
estate of the participant or annuitant. Acceptance by the
|
participant of a refund of accumulated contributions or an |
accelerated pension benefit payment under Section 15-185.5
|
shall result in cancellation of all beneficiary designations |
previously
filed. A spouse whose marriage was dissolved shall |
be disqualified
as beneficiary unless the spouse was designated |
as beneficiary after the
effective date of the dissolution of |
marriage.
|
After a joint and survivor annuity commences under the |
portable benefit
package, the survivor annuitant of a joint and |
survivor annuity is not
disqualified, and may not be removed, |
as the survivor annuitant by a
dissolution of the survivor's |
marriage with the participant or annuitant.
|
(Source: P.A. 91-887, eff. 7-6-00.)
|
(40 ILCS 5/15-135) (from Ch. 108 1/2, par. 15-135)
|
Sec. 15-135. Retirement annuities - Conditions.
|
(a) This subsection (a) applies only to a Tier 1 member. A |
|
participant who retires in one of the following specified years |
with
the specified amount of service is entitled to a |
retirement annuity at any age
under the retirement program |
applicable to the participant:
|
35 years if retirement is in 1997 or before;
|
34 years if retirement is in 1998;
|
33 years if retirement is in 1999;
|
32 years if retirement is in 2000;
|
31 years if retirement is in 2001;
|
30 years if retirement is in 2002 or later.
|
A participant with 8 or more years of service after |
September 1, 1941, is
entitled to a retirement annuity on or |
after attainment of age 55.
|
A participant with at least 5 but less than 8 years
of |
service after September 1, 1941, is entitled to a retirement |
annuity on
or after attainment of age 62.
|
A participant who has at least 25 years of service in this |
system as a
police officer or firefighter is entitled to a |
retirement
annuity on or after the attainment of age 50, if |
Rule 4 of Section
15-136 is applicable to the participant.
|
(a-5) A Tier 2 member is entitled to a retirement annuity |
upon written application if he or she has attained age 67 and |
has at least 10 years of service credit and is otherwise |
eligible under the requirements of this Article. A Tier 2 |
member who has attained age 62 and has at least 10 years of |
service credit and is otherwise eligible under the requirements |
|
of this Article may elect to receive the lower retirement |
annuity provided in subsection (b-5) of Section 15-136 of this |
Article. |
(a-10) A Tier 2 member who has at least 20 years of service |
in this system as a police officer or firefighter is entitled |
to a retirement annuity upon written application on or after |
the attainment of age 60 if Rule 4 of Section 15-136 is |
applicable to the participant. The changes made to this |
subsection by this amendatory Act of the 101st General Assembly |
apply retroactively to January 1, 2011. |
(b) The annuity payment period shall begin on the date |
specified by the
participant or the recipient of a disability |
retirement annuity submitting a written application. For a |
participant, the date on which the annuity payment period |
begins shall not be prior
to termination of employment or more |
than one year before the application is
received by the board; |
however, if the participant is not an employee of an
employer |
participating in this System or in a participating system as |
defined
in Article 20 of this Code on April 1 of the calendar |
year next following
the calendar year in which the participant |
attains age 70 1/2, the annuity
payment period shall begin on |
that date regardless of whether an application
has been filed. |
For a recipient of a disability retirement annuity, the date on |
which the annuity payment period begins shall not be prior to |
the discontinuation of the disability retirement annuity under |
Section 15-153.2.
|
|
(c) An annuity is not payable if the amount provided under |
Section
15-136 is less than $10 per month.
|
(Source: P.A. 100-556, eff. 12-8-17.)
|
(40 ILCS 5/15-136) (from Ch. 108 1/2, par. 15-136)
|
(Text of Section WITHOUT the changes made by P.A. 98-599, |
which has been held unconstitutional)
|
Sec. 15-136. Retirement annuities - Amount. The provisions |
of this
Section 15-136 apply only to those participants who are |
participating in the
traditional benefit package or the |
portable benefit package and do not
apply to participants who |
are participating in the self-managed plan.
|
(a) The amount of a participant's retirement annuity, |
expressed in the form
of a single-life annuity, shall be |
determined by whichever of the following
rules is applicable |
and provides the largest annuity:
|
Rule 1: The retirement annuity shall be 1.67% of final rate |
of earnings for
each of the first 10 years of service, 1.90% |
for each of the next 10 years of
service, 2.10% for each year |
of service in excess of 20 but not exceeding 30,
and 2.30% for |
each year in excess of 30; or for persons who retire on or
|
after January 1, 1998, 2.2% of the final rate of earnings for |
each year of
service.
|
Rule 2: The retirement annuity shall be the sum of the |
following,
determined from amounts credited to the participant |
in accordance with the
actuarial tables and the effective rate |
|
of interest in effect at the
time the retirement annuity |
begins:
|
(i) the normal annuity which can be provided on an |
actuarially
equivalent basis, by the accumulated normal |
contributions as of
the date the annuity begins;
|
(ii) an annuity from employer contributions of an |
amount equal to that
which can be provided on an |
actuarially equivalent basis from the accumulated
normal |
contributions made by the participant under Section |
15-113.6 and Section
15-113.7 plus 1.4 times all other |
accumulated normal contributions made by
the participant; |
and
|
(iii) the annuity that can be provided on an |
actuarially equivalent basis
from the entire contribution |
made by the participant under Section 15-113.3.
|
With respect to a police officer or firefighter who retires |
on or after
August 14, 1998, the accumulated normal |
contributions taken into account under
clauses (i) and (ii) of |
this Rule 2 shall include the additional normal
contributions |
made by the police officer or firefighter under Section
|
15-157(a).
|
The amount of a retirement annuity calculated under this |
Rule 2 shall
be computed solely on the basis of the |
participant's accumulated normal
contributions, as specified |
in this Rule and defined in Section 15-116.
Neither an employee |
or employer contribution for early retirement under
Section |
|
15-136.2 nor any other employer contribution shall be used in |
the
calculation of the amount of a retirement annuity under |
this Rule 2.
|
This amendatory Act of the 91st General Assembly is a |
clarification of
existing law and applies to every participant |
and annuitant without regard to
whether status as an employee |
terminates before the effective date of this
amendatory Act.
|
This Rule 2 does not apply to a person who first becomes an |
employee under this Article on or after July 1, 2005.
|
Rule 3: The retirement annuity of a participant who is |
employed
at least one-half time during the period on which his |
or her final rate of
earnings is based, shall be equal to the |
participant's years of service
not to exceed 30, multiplied by |
(1) $96 if the participant's final rate
of earnings is less |
than $3,500, (2) $108 if the final rate of earnings is
at least |
$3,500 but less than $4,500, (3) $120 if the final rate of |
earnings
is at least $4,500 but less than $5,500, (4) $132 if |
the final rate
of earnings is at least $5,500 but less than |
$6,500, (5)
$144 if the final rate of earnings is at least |
$6,500 but less than
$7,500, (6) $156 if the final rate of |
earnings is at least $7,500 but less
than $8,500, (7) $168 if |
the final rate of earnings is at least $8,500 but
less than |
$9,500, and (8) $180 if the final rate of earnings is $9,500 or
|
more, except that the annuity for those persons having made an |
election under
Section 15-154(a-1) shall be calculated and |
payable under the portable
retirement benefit program pursuant |
|
to the provisions of Section 15-136.4.
|
Rule 4: A participant who is at least age 50 and has 25 or |
more years of
service as a police officer or firefighter, and a |
participant who is age 55 or
over and has at least 20 but less |
than 25 years of service as a police officer
or firefighter, |
shall be entitled to a retirement annuity of 2 1/4% of the
|
final rate of earnings for each of the first 10 years of |
service as a police
officer or firefighter, 2 1/2% for each of |
the next 10 years of service as a
police officer or |
firefighter, and 2 3/4% for each year of service as a police
|
officer or firefighter in excess of 20. The retirement annuity |
for all other
service shall be computed under Rule 1. A Tier 2 |
member is eligible for a retirement annuity calculated under |
Rule 4 only if that Tier 2 member meets the service |
requirements for that benefit calculation as prescribed under |
this Rule 4 in addition to the applicable age requirement under |
subsection (a-10) (a-5) of Section 15-135.
|
For purposes of this Rule 4, a participant's service as a |
firefighter
shall also include the following:
|
(i) service that is performed while the person is an |
employee under
subsection (h) of Section 15-107; and
|
(ii) in the case of an individual who was a |
participating employee
employed in the fire department of |
the University of Illinois's
Champaign-Urbana campus |
immediately prior to the elimination of that fire
|
department and who immediately after the elimination of |
|
that fire department
transferred to another job with the |
University of Illinois, service performed
as an employee of |
the University of Illinois in a position other than police
|
officer or firefighter, from the date of that transfer |
until the employee's
next termination of service with the |
University of Illinois.
|
(b) For a Tier 1 member, the retirement annuity provided |
under Rules 1 and 3 above shall be
reduced by 1/2 of 1% for each |
month the participant is under age 60 at the
time of |
retirement. However, this reduction shall not apply in the |
following
cases:
|
(1) For a disabled participant whose disability |
benefits have been
discontinued because he or she has |
exhausted eligibility for disability
benefits under clause |
(6) of Section 15-152;
|
(2) For a participant who has at least the number of |
years of service
required to retire at any age under |
subsection (a) of Section 15-135; or
|
(3) For that portion of a retirement annuity which has |
been provided on
account of service of the participant |
during periods when he or she performed
the duties of a |
police officer or firefighter, if these duties were |
performed
for at least 5 years immediately preceding the |
date the retirement annuity
is to begin.
|
(b-5) The retirement annuity of a Tier 2 member who is |
retiring under Rule 1 or 3 after attaining age 62 with at least |
|
10 years of service credit shall be reduced by 1/2 of 1% for |
each full month that the member's age is under age 67. |
(c) The maximum retirement annuity provided under Rules 1, |
2, 4,
and 5
shall be the lesser of (1) the annual limit of |
benefits as specified in
Section 415 of the Internal Revenue |
Code of 1986, as such Section may be
amended from time to time |
and as such benefit limits shall be adjusted by
the |
Commissioner of Internal Revenue, and (2) 80% of final rate of
|
earnings.
|
(d) A Tier 1 member whose status as an employee terminates |
after August 14,
1969 shall receive automatic increases in his |
or her retirement annuity as
follows:
|
Effective January 1 immediately following the date the |
retirement annuity
begins, the annuitant shall receive an |
increase in his or her monthly
retirement annuity of 0.125% of |
the monthly retirement annuity provided under
Rule 1, Rule 2, |
Rule 3, or Rule 4 contained in this
Section, multiplied by
the |
number of full months which elapsed from the date the |
retirement annuity
payments began to January 1, 1972, plus |
0.1667% of such annuity, multiplied by
the number of full |
months which elapsed from January 1, 1972, or the date the
|
retirement annuity payments began, whichever is later, to |
January 1, 1978, plus
0.25% of such annuity multiplied by the |
number of full months which elapsed
from January 1, 1978, or |
the date the retirement annuity payments began,
whichever is |
later, to the effective date of the increase.
|
|
The annuitant shall receive an increase in his or her |
monthly retirement
annuity on each January 1 thereafter during |
the annuitant's life of 3% of
the monthly annuity provided |
under Rule 1, Rule 2, Rule 3, or Rule 4 contained
in this |
Section. The change made under this subsection by P.A. 81-970 |
is
effective January 1, 1980 and applies to each annuitant |
whose status as
an employee terminates before or after that |
date.
|
Beginning January 1, 1990, all automatic annual increases |
payable under
this Section shall be calculated as a percentage |
of the total annuity
payable at the time of the increase, |
including all increases previously
granted under this Article.
|
The change made in this subsection by P.A. 85-1008 is |
effective January
26, 1988, and is applicable without regard to |
whether status as an employee
terminated before that date.
|
(d-5) A retirement annuity of a Tier 2 member shall receive |
annual increases on the January 1 occurring either on or after |
the attainment of age 67 or the first anniversary of the |
annuity start date, whichever is later. Each annual increase |
shall be calculated at 3% or one half the annual unadjusted |
percentage increase (but not less than zero) in the consumer |
price index-u for the 12 months ending with the September |
preceding each November 1, whichever is less, of the originally |
granted retirement annuity. If the annual unadjusted |
percentage change in the consumer price index-u for the 12 |
months ending with the September preceding each November 1 is |
|
zero or there is a decrease, then the annuity shall not be |
increased. |
(e) If, on January 1, 1987, or the date the retirement |
annuity payment
period begins, whichever is later, the sum of |
the retirement annuity
provided under Rule 1 or Rule 2 of this |
Section
and the automatic annual increases provided under the |
preceding subsection
or Section 15-136.1, amounts to less than |
the retirement
annuity which would be provided by Rule 3, the |
retirement
annuity shall be increased as of January 1, 1987, or |
the date the
retirement annuity payment period begins, |
whichever is later, to the amount
which would be provided by |
Rule 3 of this Section. Such increased
amount shall be |
considered as the retirement annuity in determining
benefits |
provided under other Sections of this Article. This paragraph
|
applies without regard to whether status as an employee |
terminated before the
effective date of this amendatory Act of |
1987, provided that the annuitant was
employed at least |
one-half time during the period on which the final rate of
|
earnings was based.
|
(f) A participant is entitled to such additional annuity as |
may be provided
on an actuarially equivalent basis, by any |
accumulated
additional contributions to his or her credit. |
However,
the additional contributions made by the participant |
toward the automatic
increases in annuity provided under this |
Section shall not be taken into
account in determining the |
amount of such additional annuity.
|
|
(g) If, (1) by law, a function of a governmental unit, as |
defined by Section
20-107 of this Code, is transferred in whole |
or in part to an employer, and (2)
a participant transfers |
employment from such governmental unit to such employer
within |
6 months after the transfer of the function, and (3) the sum of |
(A) the
annuity payable to the participant under Rule 1, 2, or |
3 of this Section (B)
all proportional annuities payable to the |
participant by all other retirement
systems covered by Article |
20, and (C) the initial primary insurance amount to
which the |
participant is entitled under the Social Security Act, is less |
than
the retirement annuity which would have been payable if |
all of the
participant's pension credits validated under |
Section 20-109 had been validated
under this system, a |
supplemental annuity equal to the difference in such
amounts |
shall be payable to the participant.
|
(h) On January 1, 1981, an annuitant who was receiving
a |
retirement annuity on or before January 1, 1971 shall have his |
or her
retirement annuity then being paid increased $1 per |
month for
each year of creditable service. On January 1, 1982, |
an annuitant whose
retirement annuity began on or before |
January 1, 1977, shall have his or her
retirement annuity then |
being paid increased $1 per month for each year of
creditable |
service.
|
(i) On January 1, 1987, any annuitant whose retirement |
annuity began on or
before January 1, 1977, shall have the |
monthly retirement annuity increased by
an amount equal to 8¢ |
|
per year of creditable service times the number of years
that |
have elapsed since the annuity began.
|
(j) The changes made to this Section by this amendatory Act |
of the 101st General Assembly apply retroactively to January 1, |
2011. |
(Source: P.A. 97-933, eff. 8-10-12; 97-968, eff. 8-16-12; |
98-92, eff. 7-16-13.)
|
(40 ILCS 5/15-159) (from Ch. 108 1/2, par. 15-159)
|
Sec. 15-159. Board created. |
(a) A board of trustees constituted as provided in
this |
Section shall administer this System. The board shall be known |
as the
Board of Trustees of the State Universities Retirement |
System.
|
(b) (Blank).
|
(c) (Blank).
|
(d) Beginning on the 90th day after April 3, 2009 (the |
effective date of Public Act 96-6), the Board of Trustees shall |
be constituted as follows: |
(1) The Chairperson of the Board of Higher Education , |
who shall act as chairperson of this Board . |
(2) Four trustees appointed by the Governor with the |
advice and consent of the Senate who may not be members of |
the system or hold an elective State office and who shall |
serve for a term of 6 years, except that the terms of the |
initial appointees under this subsection (d) shall be as |
|
follows: 2 for a term of 3 years and 2 for a term of 6 |
years. |
(3) Four active participants of the system to be |
elected from the contributing membership of the system by |
the
contributing members, no more than 2 of which may be |
from any of the University of Illinois campuses, who shall |
serve for a term of 6 years, except that the terms of the |
initial electees shall be as follows: 2 for a term of 3 |
years and 2 for a term of 6 years. |
(4) Two annuitants of
the system who have been |
annuitants for at least one full year, to be
elected from |
and by the annuitants of the system, no more than one of |
which may be from any of the University of Illinois |
campuses, who shall serve for a term of 6 years, except |
that the terms of the initial electees shall be as follows: |
one for a term of 3 years and one for a term of 6 years. |
The chairperson of the Board shall be appointed by the |
Governor from among the trustees. |
For the purposes of this Section, the Governor may make a |
nomination and the Senate may confirm the nominee in advance of |
the commencement of the nominee's term of office. |
(e) The 6 elected trustees shall be elected within 90 days |
after April 3, 2009 (the effective date of Public Act 96-6) for |
a term beginning on the 90th day after that effective date. |
Trustees shall be elected thereafter as terms expire for a |
6-year term beginning July 15 next following their election, |
|
and such election shall be held on May 1, or on May 2 when May 1 |
falls on a Sunday. The board may establish rules for the |
election of trustees to implement the provisions of Public Act |
96-6 and for future elections. Candidates for the participating |
trustee shall be nominated by petitions in writing, signed by |
not less than 400 participants with their addresses shown |
opposite their names. Candidates for the annuitant trustee |
shall be nominated by petitions in writing, signed by not less |
than 100 annuitants with their addresses shown opposite their |
names. If there is more than one qualified nominee for each |
elected trustee, then the board shall conduct a secret ballot |
election by mail for that trustee, in accordance with rules as |
established by the board. If there is only one qualified person |
nominated by petition for each elected trustee, then the |
election as required by this Section shall not be conducted for |
that trustee and the board shall declare such nominee duly |
elected. A vacancy occurring in the elective membership of the |
board shall be filled for the unexpired term by the elected |
trustees serving on the board for the remainder of the term. |
Nothing in this subsection shall preclude the adoption of rules |
providing for internet or phone balloting in addition, or as an |
alternative, to election by mail. |
(f) A vacancy in the appointed membership on the board of |
trustees caused by resignation,
death, expiration of term of |
office, or other reason shall be filled by a
qualified person |
appointed by the Governor for the remainder of the unexpired
|
|
term.
|
(g) Trustees (other than the trustees incumbent on June 30, |
1995 or as provided in subsection (c) of this Section)
shall |
continue in office until their respective successors are |
appointed
and have qualified, except that a trustee appointed |
to one of the
participant positions shall be disqualified |
immediately upon the termination of
his or her status as a |
participant and a trustee appointed to one of the
annuitant |
positions shall be disqualified immediately upon the |
termination of
his or her status as an annuitant receiving a |
retirement annuity.
|
(h) Each trustee must take an oath of office
before a |
notary public of this State and shall qualify as a trustee upon |
the
presentation to the board of a certified copy of the oath. |
The oath must state
that the person will diligently and |
honestly administer the affairs of the
retirement system, and |
will not knowingly violate or willfully permit to be
violated |
any provisions of this Article.
|
Each trustee shall serve without compensation but shall be |
reimbursed for
expenses necessarily incurred in attending |
board meetings and carrying out his
or her duties as a trustee |
or officer of the system.
|
(Source: P.A. 98-92, eff. 7-16-13.)
|
(40 ILCS 5/15-198)
|
Sec. 15-198. Application and expiration of new benefit |
|
increases. |
(a) As used in this Section, "new benefit increase" means |
an increase in the amount of any benefit provided under this |
Article, or an expansion of the conditions of eligibility for |
any benefit under this Article, that results from an amendment |
to this Code that takes effect after June 1, 2005 ( the |
effective date of Public Act 94-4) this amendatory Act of the |
94th General Assembly . "New benefit increase", however, does |
not include any benefit increase resulting from the changes |
made to Article 1 or this Article by Public Act 100-23, Public |
Act 100-587, or Public Act 100-769, or Public Act 101-10, or |
this amendatory Act of the 101st General Assembly this |
amendatory Act of the 101st General Assembly . |
(b) Notwithstanding any other provision of this Code or any |
subsequent amendment to this Code, every new benefit increase |
is subject to this Section and shall be deemed to be granted |
only in conformance with and contingent upon compliance with |
the provisions of this Section.
|
(c) The Public Act enacting a new benefit increase must |
identify and provide for payment to the System of additional |
funding at least sufficient to fund the resulting annual |
increase in cost to the System as it accrues. |
Every new benefit increase is contingent upon the General |
Assembly providing the additional funding required under this |
subsection. The Commission on Government Forecasting and |
Accountability shall analyze whether adequate additional |
|
funding has been provided for the new benefit increase and |
shall report its analysis to the Public Pension Division of the |
Department of Insurance. A new benefit increase created by a |
Public Act that does not include the additional funding |
required under this subsection is null and void. If the Public |
Pension Division determines that the additional funding |
provided for a new benefit increase under this subsection is or |
has become inadequate, it may so certify to the Governor and |
the State Comptroller and, in the absence of corrective action |
by the General Assembly, the new benefit increase shall expire |
at the end of the fiscal year in which the certification is |
made.
|
(d) Every new benefit increase shall expire 5 years after |
its effective date or on such earlier date as may be specified |
in the language enacting the new benefit increase or provided |
under subsection (c). This does not prevent the General |
Assembly from extending or re-creating a new benefit increase |
by law. |
(e) Except as otherwise provided in the language creating |
the new benefit increase, a new benefit increase that expires |
under this Section continues to apply to persons who applied |
and qualified for the affected benefit while the new benefit |
increase was in effect and to the affected beneficiaries and |
alternate payees of such persons, but does not apply to any |
other person, including , without limitation , a person who |
continues in service after the expiration date and did not |
|
apply and qualify for the affected benefit while the new |
benefit increase was in effect.
|
(Source: P.A. 100-23, eff. 7-6-17; 100-587, eff. 6-4-18; |
100-769, eff. 8-10-18; 101-10, eff. 6-5-19; 101-81, eff. |
7-12-19; revised 8-1-19.) |
(40 ILCS 5/16-163) (from Ch. 108 1/2, par. 16-163) |
Sec. 16-163. Board created. A board of 15 13 members |
constitutes the
board of trustees authorized to carry out the |
provisions of this Article and is
responsible for the general |
administration of the System. The board shall
be known as the |
Board of Trustees of the Teachers' Retirement System
of the |
State of Illinois. The board shall be composed of the
|
Superintendent of Education, ex officio , who shall be the |
president of the
board ; 7 6 persons, not members of the System, |
to be appointed by the Governor,
who shall hold no elected |
State office; 5 4 persons who, at the time of their
election, |
are
teachers as defined in Section 16-106, elected by the
|
contributing members; and 2 annuitant members elected by the |
annuitants of the
System, as provided in Section 16-165.
The |
president of the board shall be appointed by the Governor from |
among the trustees.
|
(Source: P.A. 96-6, eff. 4-3-09.)
|
(40 ILCS 5/16-164) (from Ch. 108 1/2, par. 16-164)
|
Sec. 16-164. Board; appointed members; vacancies Board - |
|
appointed members - vacancies . Terms of office for
the |
appointed members shall begin on July 15 of an even-numbered |
year, except that the terms of office for members appointed |
pursuant to this amendatory Act of the 96th General Assembly |
shall begin upon being confirmed by the Senate.
The Governor |
shall appoint 3 members as trustees with the advice and consent |
of the Senate in each even-numbered year
who shall hold office |
for a term of 4 years, except that, of the members appointed |
pursuant to this amendatory Act of the 96th General Assembly, 3 |
members shall be appointed for a term ending July 14, 2012 and |
3 members shall be appointed for a term ending July 14, 2014. |
The Governor shall appoint the additional member authorized |
under this amendatory Act of the 101st General Assembly with |
the advice and consent of the Senate for a term beginning on |
July 15, 2020 and ending July 14, 2022, and successors shall |
hold office for a term of 4 years. Each such appointee shall |
reside in and be
a taxpayer in the territory covered by this |
system, shall be interested
in public school welfare, and |
experienced and competent in financial and
business |
management. A vacancy in the term of an appointed
trustee shall |
be filled for the unexpired term by appointment of the
|
Governor.
|
Notwithstanding any provision of this Section to the |
contrary, the term of office of each member of the Board |
appointed by the Governor who is sitting on the Board on the |
effective date of this amendatory Act of the 96th General |
|
Assembly is terminated on that effective date. A trustee |
sitting on the Board on the effective date of this amendatory |
Act of the 96th General Assembly may not hold over in office |
for more than 60 days after the effective date of this |
amendatory Act of the 96th General Assembly. Nothing in this |
Section shall prevent the Governor from making a temporary |
appointment or nominating a trustee holding office on the day |
before the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 96th |
General Assembly. |
(Source: P.A. 96-6, eff. 4-3-09.)
|
(40 ILCS 5/16-165) (from Ch. 108 1/2, par. 16-165)
|
Sec. 16-165. Board; elected members; vacancies.
|
(a) In each odd-numbered year, if there are 2 teachers |
whose terms of office will expire in that year, there shall be |
elected 2 teachers who
shall hold office for a term of 4 years |
beginning July 15 next following their
election or, if there |
are 3 teachers whose terms of office will expire in that year, |
there shall be elected 3 teachers who shall hold office for a |
term of 4 years beginning July 15 next following their |
election , in the manner provided under this Section. An elected |
teacher
member of the board who ceases to be a teacher as |
defined in Section 16-106 may
continue to serve on the board |
for the remainder of the term to which he or she
was elected.
|
(b) One elected annuitant trustee shall first be elected in
|
1987, and in every fourth year thereafter, for a
term of 4 |
|
years beginning July 15 next following his or her election.
|
(c) The elected annuitant position created by this |
amendatory Act of
the 91st General Assembly shall be filled as |
soon as possible in the manner
provided for vacancies, for an |
initial term ending July 15, 2001. One
elected annuitant |
trustee shall be elected in 2001, and in every fourth year
|
thereafter, for a term of 4 years beginning July 15 next |
following his or her
election.
|
The elected teacher position created by this amendatory Act |
of the 101st General Assembly shall be for an initial 3-year |
term and shall be filled in the manner provided for vacancies; |
except that if the teacher candidate who receives the highest |
number of votes and the incumbent members not up for election |
belong to the same statewide teacher organization, then the |
teacher candidate who receives the highest number of votes and |
is not a member of that statewide teacher organization shall be |
declared elected. |
(d) Elections shall be held on May 1, unless May 1 falls on |
a Saturday
or Sunday, in which event the election shall be |
conducted on the
following Monday. Candidates shall be |
nominated by petitions in writing,
signed by not less than 500 |
teachers or annuitants, as the case may be, with
their |
addresses shown opposite their names. The petitions shall be |
filed with
the board's Secretary not less than 90 nor more than |
120 days prior to May 1.
The Secretary shall determine their |
validity not less than 75 days before the
election.
|
|
(d-5) Beginning July 15, 2020, not more than 4 of the 5 |
teachers elected to the Board of Trustees may be active members |
of the same statewide teacher organization. For the purposes of |
this Section, "statewide teacher organization" means a teacher |
organization (1) in which membership is not restricted to |
persons living or teaching within a limited geographical area |
of this State and (2) that has among its membership at least |
10,000 persons who participate in this System. |
Candidates for the teacher positions on the Board shall |
indicate, in their nomination petitions and campaign |
materials, which (if any) statewide teacher organizations they |
have belonged to during the 5 years preceding the election. |
(e) If, for either teacher or annuitant members, the number |
of qualified
nominees exceeds the number of available |
positions,
the system shall prepare an appropriate ballot with |
the names of the candidates
in alphabetical order and shall |
mail one copy thereof, at least 10 days prior
to the election |
day, to each teacher or annuitant of this system as of the
|
latest date practicable, at the latest known address, together |
with a return
envelope addressed to the board and also a |
smaller envelope marked "For Ballot
Only", and a slip for |
signature. Each voter, upon marking his ballot with a
cross |
mark in the square before the name of the person voted for, |
shall place
the ballot in the envelope marked "For Ballot |
Only", seal the envelope, write
on the slip provided therefor |
his signature and address, enclose both the slip
and sealed |
|
envelope containing the marked ballot in the return envelope
|
addressed to the board, and mail it. Whether a person is |
eligible to vote for
the teacher nominees or the annuitant |
nominees shall be
determined from system payroll records as of |
March 1.
|
Upon receipt of the return envelopes, the system shall open |
them and set
aside unopened the envelopes marked "For Ballot |
Only". On election day ballots
shall be publicly opened and |
counted by the trustees or canvassers appointed
therefor. Each |
vote cast for a candidate represents one vote only. No ballot
|
arriving after 10 o'clock a.m. on election day shall be |
counted. |
(e-3) The 2 teacher
candidates or 3 teacher candidates, |
whichever is applicable for that election, and the annuitant |
candidate receiving the highest number of votes
shall be |
declared elected ; except that beginning with the election in |
2021, if the teacher candidate who receives the highest number |
of votes and the incumbent members not up for election belong |
to the same statewide teacher organization, then the second |
teacher candidate to be declared elected shall be the candidate |
who is not a member of the same statewide teacher organization |
and receives the highest number of votes, unless there is no |
such candidate or at least one candidate declared elected in |
the same election is not a member of that statewide teacher |
organization . The board shall declare the results of the |
election, keep a
record thereof, and notify the candidates of |
|
the results thereof within 30 days
after the election.
|
(e-5) If, for either class of members, there are only as |
many
qualified nominees as there are positions available, the |
balloting as described
in this
Section shall not be conducted |
for those nominees,
and the board shall declare them duly |
elected.
|
(f) A vacancy occurring in the elective membership of
the |
board
shall be filled for the unexpired term by a person |
qualified
for the vacant position, selected by the remaining |
elected members of the
board, if there are no more than 6 |
months remaining on the
term. For a term with more than 6 |
months remaining, the Director of the
Teachers' Retirement |
System of the State of Illinois shall institute an
election in |
accordance with this Act to fill the unexpired term.
|
(Source: P.A. 94-423, eff. 8-2-05; 94-710, eff. 12-5-05; |
95-331, eff. 8-21-07.)
|
(40 ILCS 5/Art. 22B heading new) |
ARTICLE 22B. THE POLICE OFFICERS' PENSION INVESTMENT FUND |
(40 ILCS 5/22B-101 new) |
Sec. 22B-101. Establishment. The Police Officers' Pension |
Investment Fund is created with authority to manage the |
reserves, funds, assets, securities, properties, and moneys of |
the police pension funds created pursuant to Article 3 of this |
Code, all as provided in this Article. |
|
(40 ILCS 5/22B-102 new) |
Sec. 22B-102. Definitions. For the purposes of this |
Article, the following words and phrases shall have the meaning |
ascribed to them unless the context requires otherwise. |
(40 ILCS 5/22B-103 new) |
Sec. 22B-103. Fund. "Fund" means the Police Officers' |
Pension Investment Fund. |
(40 ILCS 5/22B-104 new) |
Sec. 22B-104. Transferor pension fund. "Transferor pension |
fund" means any pension fund established pursuant to Article 3 |
of this Code. |
(40 ILCS 5/22B-105 new) |
Sec. 22B-105. Participating pension fund. "Participating |
pension fund" means any pension fund established pursuant to |
Article 3 of this Code that has transferred securities, funds, |
assets, and moneys, and responsibility for custody and control |
of those securities, funds, assets, and moneys, to the Fund |
pursuant to Section 3-132.1. |
(40 ILCS 5/22B-106 new) |
Sec. 22B-106. Pension fund assets. "Pension fund assets" |
means the reserves, funds, assets, securities, and moneys of |
|
any transferor pension fund. |
(40 ILCS 5/22B-107 new) |
Sec. 22B-107. Invest. "Invest" means to acquire, invest, |
reinvest, exchange, or retain pension fund assets of the |
transferor pension funds and to sell and manage the reserves, |
funds, securities, moneys, or assets of the transferor pension |
fund, all in accordance with this Article. |
(40 ILCS 5/22B-108 new) |
Sec. 22B-108. Investment advisor. "Investment advisor" |
means any person or business entity that provides investment |
advice to the Board on a personalized basis and with an |
understanding of the policies and goals of the Board. |
"Investment advisor" does not include any person or business |
entity that provides statistical or general market research |
data available for purchase or use by others. |
(40 ILCS 5/22B-112 new) |
Sec. 22B-112. Transition period. "Transition period" means |
the period immediately following the effective date of this |
amendatory Act of the 101st General Assembly during which |
pension fund assets, and responsibility for custody and control |
of those assets, will be transferred from the transferor |
pension funds to the board, as described in Section 22B-120. |
|
(40 ILCS 5/22B-113 new) |
Sec. 22B-113. Illinois Municipal League. "Illinois |
Municipal League" means the unincorporated, nonprofit, |
nonpolitical association of Illinois cities, villages, and |
incorporated towns described in Section 1-8-1 of the Illinois |
Municipal Code. |
(40 ILCS 5/22B-114 new) |
Sec. 22B-114. Purpose, establishment, and governance. The |
Fund is established to consolidate the transferor pension funds |
to streamline investments and eliminate unnecessary and |
redundant administrative costs, thereby ensuring more money is |
available to fund pension benefits for the beneficiaries of the |
transferor pension funds. The transition board trustees and |
permanent board trustees of the Fund shall be fiduciaries for |
the participants and beneficiaries of the participating |
pension funds and shall discharge their duties with respect to |
the retirement system or pension fund solely in the interest of |
the participants and beneficiaries. Further, the transition |
board trustees and permanent board trustees, acting prudently |
and as fiduciaries, shall take all reasonable steps to ensure |
that all of the transferor pension funds are treated equitably |
and that the financial condition of one participating pension |
fund, including, but not limited to, pension benefit funding |
levels and ratios, will have no effect on the financial |
condition of any other transferor pension fund. |
|
(40 ILCS 5/22B-115 new) |
Sec. 22B-115. Board of Trustees of the Fund. |
(a) No later than one month after the effective date of |
this amendatory Act of the 101st General Assembly or as soon |
thereafter as may be practicable, the Governor shall appoint, |
by and with the advice and consent of the Senate, a transition |
board of trustees consisting of 9 members as follows: |
(1) three members representing municipalities who are |
mayors, presidents, chief executive officers, chief |
financial officers, or other officers, executives, or |
department heads of municipalities and appointed from |
among candidates recommended by the Illinois Municipal |
League; |
(2) three members representing participants and who |
are participants, 2 of whom shall be appointed from among |
candidates recommended by a statewide fraternal |
organization representing more than 20,000 active and |
retired police officers in the State of Illinois, and one |
of whom shall be appointed from among candidates |
recommended by a benevolent association representing sworn |
police officers in the State of Illinois; |
(3) two members representing beneficiaries and who are |
beneficiaries, one of whom shall be appointed from among |
candidates recommended by a statewide fraternal |
organization representing more than 20,000 active and |
|
retired police officers in the State of Illinois, and one |
of whom shall be appointed from among candidates |
recommended by a benevolent association representing sworn |
police officers in the State of Illinois; and |
(4) one member who is a representative of the Illinois |
Municipal League. |
The transition board members shall serve until the initial |
permanent board members are elected and qualified. |
The transition board of trustees shall select the |
chairperson of the transition board of trustees from among the |
trustees for the duration of the transition board's tenure. |
(b) The permanent board of trustees shall consist of 9 |
members as follows: |
(1) Three members who are mayors, presidents, chief |
executive officers, chief financial officers, or other |
officers, executives, or department heads of |
municipalities that have participating pension funds and |
are elected by the mayors and presidents of municipalities |
that have participating pension funds. |
(2) Three members who are participants of |
participating pension funds and are elected by the |
participants of participating pension funds. |
(3) Two members who are beneficiaries of participating |
pension funds and are elected by the beneficiaries of |
participating pension funds. |
(4) One member recommended by the Illinois Municipal |
|
League who shall be appointed by the Governor with the |
advice and consent of the Senate. |
The permanent board of trustees shall select the |
chairperson of the permanent board of trustees from among the |
trustees for a term of 2 years. The holder of the office of |
chairperson shall alternate between a person elected or |
appointed under item (1) or (4) of this subsection (b) and a |
person elected under item (2) or (3) of this subsection (b). |
(c) Each trustee shall qualify by taking an oath of office |
before the Secretary of State stating that he or she will |
diligently and honestly administer the affairs of the board and |
will not violate or knowingly permit the violation of any |
provision of this Article. |
(d) Trustees shall receive no salary for service on the |
board but shall be reimbursed for travel expenses incurred |
while on business for the board according to the standards in |
effect for members of the Commission on Government Forecasting |
and Accountability. |
A municipality employing a police officer who is an elected |
or appointed trustee of the board must allow reasonable time |
off with compensation for the police officer to conduct |
official business related to his or her position on the board, |
including time for travel. The board shall notify the |
municipality in advance of the dates, times, and locations of |
this official business. The Fund shall timely reimburse the |
municipality for the reasonable costs incurred that are due to |
|
the police officer's absence. |
(e) No trustee shall have any interest in any brokerage |
fee, commission, or other profit or gain arising out of any |
investment directed by the board. This subsection does not |
preclude ownership by any member of any minority interest in |
any common stock or any corporate obligation in which an |
investment is directed by the board. |
(f) Notwithstanding any provision or interpretation of law |
to the contrary, any member of the transition board may also be |
elected or appointed as a member of the permanent board. |
Notwithstanding any provision or interpretation of law to |
the contrary, any trustee of a fund established under Article 3 |
of this Code may also be appointed as a member of the |
transition board or elected or appointed as a member of the |
permanent board. |
The restriction in Section 3.1 of the Lobbyist Registration |
Act shall not apply to a member of the transition board |
appointed pursuant to item (4) of subsection (a) or to a member |
of the permanent board appointed pursuant to item (4) of |
subsection (b). |
(40 ILCS 5/22B-116 new) |
Sec. 22B-116. Conduct and administration of elections; |
terms of office. |
(a) For the election of the permanent trustees, the |
transition board shall administer the initial elections and the |
|
permanent board shall administer all subsequent elections. |
Each board shall develop and implement such procedures as it |
determines to be appropriate for the conduct of such elections. |
For the purposes of obtaining information necessary to conduct |
elections under this Section, participating pension funds |
shall cooperate with the Fund. |
(b) All nominations for election shall be by petition. Each |
petition for a trustee shall be executed as follows: |
(1) for trustees to be elected by the mayors and |
presidents of municipalities that have participating |
pension funds, by at least 20 such mayors and presidents; |
(2) for trustees to be elected by participants, by at |
least 400 participants; and |
(3) for trustees to be elected by beneficiaries, by at |
least 100 beneficiaries. |
(c) A separate ballot shall be used for each class of |
trustee. The board shall prepare and send ballots and ballot |
envelopes to the participants and beneficiaries eligible to |
vote in accordance with rules adopted by the board. The ballots |
shall contain the names of all candidates in alphabetical |
order. The ballot envelope shall have on the outside a form of |
certificate stating that the person voting the ballot is a |
participant or beneficiary entitled to vote. |
Participants and beneficiaries, upon receipt of the |
ballot, shall vote the ballot and place it in the ballot |
envelope, seal the envelope, execute the certificate thereon, |
|
and return the ballot to the Fund. |
The board shall set a final date for ballot return, and |
ballots received prior to that date in a ballot envelope with a |
properly executed certificate and properly voted shall be valid |
ballots. |
The board shall set a day for counting the ballots and name |
judges and clerks of election to conduct the count of ballots |
and shall make any rules necessary for the conduct of the |
count. |
The candidate or candidates receiving the highest number of |
votes for each class of trustee shall be elected. In the case |
of a tie vote, the winner shall be determined in accordance |
with procedures developed by the Department of Insurance. |
In lieu of conducting elections via mail balloting as |
described in this Section, the board may instead adopt rules to |
provide for elections to be carried out solely via Internet |
balloting or phone balloting. Nothing in this Section prohibits |
the Fund from contracting with a third party to administer the |
election in accordance with this Section. |
(d) At any election, voting shall be as follows: |
(1) Each person authorized to vote for an elected |
trustee may cast one vote for each related position for |
which such person is entitled to vote and may cast such |
vote for any candidate or candidates on the ballot for such |
trustee position. |
(2) If only one candidate for each position is properly |
|
nominated in petitions received, that candidate shall be |
deemed the winner and no election under this Section shall |
be required. |
(3) The results shall be entered in the minutes of the |
first meeting of the board following the tally of votes. |
(e) The initial election for permanent trustees shall be |
held and the permanent board shall be seated no later than 12 |
months after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the |
101st General Assembly. Each subsequent election shall be held |
no later than 30 days prior to the end of the term of the |
incumbent trustees. |
(f) The elected trustees shall each serve for terms of 4 |
years commencing on the first business day of the first month |
after election; except that the terms of office of the |
initially elected trustees shall be as follows: |
(1) one trustee elected pursuant to item (1) of |
subsection (b) of Section 22B-115 shall serve for a term of |
2 years and 2 trustees elected pursuant to item (1) of |
subsection (b) of Section 22B-115 shall serve for a term of |
4 years; |
(2) two trustees elected pursuant to item (2) of |
subsection (b) of Section 22B-115 shall serve for a term of |
2 years and one trustee elected pursuant to item (2) of |
subsection (b) of Section 22B-115 shall serve for a term of |
4 years; and |
(3) one trustee elected pursuant to item (3) of |
|
subsection (b) of Section 22B-115 shall serve for a term of |
2 years and one trustee elected pursuant to item (3) of |
subsection (b) of Section 22B-115 shall serve for a term of |
4 years. |
(g) The trustee appointed pursuant to item (4) of |
subsection (b) of Section 22B-115 shall serve for a term of 2 |
years commencing on the first business day of the first month |
after the election of the elected trustees. |
(h) A member of the board who was elected pursuant to item |
(1) of subsection (b) of Section 22B-115 who ceases to serve as |
a mayor, president, chief executive officer, chief financial |
officer, or other officer, executive, or department head of a |
municipality that has a participating pension fund shall not be |
eligible to serve as a member of the board and his or her |
position shall be deemed vacant. A member of the board who was |
elected by the participants of participating pension funds who |
ceases to be a participant may serve the remainder of his or |
her elected term. |
For a vacancy of an elected trustee occurring with an |
unexpired term of 6 months or more, an election shall be |
conducted for the vacancy in accordance with Section 22B-115 |
and this Section. |
For a vacancy of an elected trustee occurring with an |
unexpired term of less than 6 months, the vacancy shall be |
filled by appointment by the board for the unexpired term as |
follows: a vacancy of a member elected pursuant to item (1) of |
|
subsection (b) of Section 22B-115 shall be filled by a mayor, |
president, chief executive officer, chief financial officer, |
or other officer, executive, or department head of a |
municipality that has a participating pension fund; a vacancy |
of a member elected pursuant to item (2) of subsection (b) of |
Section 22B-115 shall be filled by a participant of a |
participating pension fund; and a vacancy of a member elected |
under item (3) of subsection (b) of Section 22B-115 shall be |
filled by a beneficiary of a participating pension fund. |
Vacancies among the appointed trustees shall be filled for |
unexpired terms by appointment in like manner as for the |
original appointments. |
(40 ILCS 5/22B-117 new) |
Sec. 22B-117. Meetings of the board. |
(a) The transition board and the permanent board shall each |
meet at least quarterly and otherwise upon written request of |
either the Chairperson or 3 other members. The Chairperson |
shall preside over meetings of the board. The executive |
director and personnel of the board shall prepare agendas and |
materials and required postings for meetings of the board. |
(b) Six members of the board shall constitute a quorum. |
(c) All actions taken by the transition board and the |
permanent board shall require a vote of least 5 trustees, |
except that the following shall require a vote of at least 6 |
trustees: the adoption of actuarial assumptions; the selection |
|
of the chief investment officer, fiduciary counsel, or a |
consultant as defined under Section 1-101.5 of this Code; the |
adoption of rules for the conduct of election of trustees; and |
the adoption of asset allocation policies and investment |
policies. |
(40 ILCS 5/22B-118 new) |
Sec. 22B-118. Operation and administration of the Fund. |
(a) The operation and administration of the Fund shall be |
managed by an executive director. No later than 2 months after |
the transition board is appointed or as soon thereafter as may |
be practicable, the transition board shall appoint an interim |
executive director who shall serve until a permanent executive |
director is appointed by the board, with such appointment to be |
made no later than 6 months after the end of the transition |
period. The executive director shall act subject to and under |
the supervision of the board and the board shall fix the |
compensation of the executive director. |
(b) The board may appoint one or more custodians to |
facilitate the transfer of pension fund assets during the |
transition period, and subsequently to provide custodial and |
related fiduciary services on behalf of the board, and enter |
into contracts for such services. The board may also appoint |
external legal counsel and an independent auditing firm and may |
appoint investment advisors and other consultants as it |
determines to be appropriate and enter into contracts for such |
|
services. With approval of the board, the executive director |
may retain such other consultants, advisors, fiduciaries, and |
service providers as may be desirable and enter into contracts |
for such services. |
(c) The board shall separately calculate account balances |
for each participating pension fund. The operations and |
financial condition of each participating pension fund account |
shall not affect the account balance of any other participating |
pension fund. Further, investment returns earned by the Fund |
shall be allocated and distributed pro rata among each |
participating pension fund account in accordance with the value |
of the pension fund assets attributable to each fund. |
(d) With approval of the board, the executive director may |
employ such personnel, professional or clerical, as may be |
desirable and fix their compensation. The appointment and |
compensation of the personnel, including the executive |
director, shall not be subject to the Personnel Code. |
(e) The board shall annually adopt a budget to support its |
operations and administration. The board shall apply moneys |
derived from the pension fund assets transferred and under its |
control to pay the costs and expenses incurred in the operation |
and administration of the Fund. The board shall from time to |
time transfer moneys and other assets to the participating |
pension funds as required for the participating pension funds |
to pay expenses, benefits, and other required payments to |
beneficiaries in the amounts and at the times prescribed in |
|
this Code. |
(f) The board may exercise any of the powers granted to |
boards of trustees of pension funds under Sections 1-107 and |
1-108 of this Code and may by resolution provide for the |
indemnification of its members and any of its officers, |
advisors, or employees in a manner consistent with those |
Sections. |
(g) An office for meetings of the board and for its |
administrative personnel shall be established at any suitable |
place within the State as may be selected by the board. All |
books and records of the board shall be kept in such office. |
(h) The board shall contract for a blanket fidelity bond in |
the penal sum of not less than $1,000,000 to cover members of |
the board of trustees, the executive director, and all other |
employees of the board, conditioned for the faithful |
performance of the duties of their respective offices, the |
premium on which shall be paid by the board. |
(40 ILCS 5/22B-119 new) |
Sec. 22B-119. Adoption of rules. The board shall adopt such |
rules (not inconsistent with this Code) as in its judgment are |
desirable to implement and properly administer this Article. |
Such rules shall specifically provide for the following: (1) |
the implementation of the transition process described in |
Section 22B-120; (2) the process by which the participating |
pension funds may request transfer of funds; (3) the process |
|
for the transfer in, receipt for, and investment of pension |
assets received by the Fund after the transition period from |
the participating pension funds; (4) the process by which |
contributions from municipalities for the benefit of the |
participating pension funds may, but are not required to, be |
directly transferred to the Fund; and (5) compensation and |
benefits for its employees. A copy of the rules adopted by the |
Fund shall be filed with the Secretary of State and the |
Department of Insurance. The adoption and effectiveness of such |
rules shall not be subject to Article 5 of the Illinois |
Administrative Procedure Act. |
(40 ILCS 5/22B-120 new) |
Sec. 22B-120. Transition period; transfer of securities, |
assets, and investment functions. |
(a) The transition period shall commence on the effective |
date of this amendatory Act of the 101st General Assembly and |
shall end as determined by the board, consistent with and in |
the application of its fiduciary responsibilities, but in no |
event later than 30 months thereafter. |
(b) The board may retain the services of custodians, |
investment consultants, and other professional services it |
deems prudent to implement the transition of assets described |
in this Section. The permanent board of trustees shall not be |
bound by any contract or agreement regarding such custodians, |
investment consultants, or other professional services entered |
|
into by the transition board of trustees. |
(c) As soon as practicable after the effective date of this |
amendatory Act of the 101st General Assembly, the board, in |
cooperation with the Department of Insurance, shall audit the |
investment assets of each transferor pension fund to determine |
a certified investment asset list for each transferor pension |
fund. The audit shall be performed by a certified public |
accountant engaged by the board, and the board shall be |
responsible for payment of the costs and expenses associated |
with the audit. Upon completion of the audit for any transferor |
pension fund, the board and the Department of Insurance shall |
provide the certified investment asset list to that transferor |
pension fund. Upon determination of the certified investment |
asset list for any transferor pension fund, the board shall, |
within 10 business days or as soon thereafter as may be |
practicable as determined by the board, initiate the transfer |
of assets from that transferor pension fund. Further and to |
maintain accuracy of the certified investment asset list, upon |
determination of the certified investment asset list for a |
transferor pension fund, that fund shall not purchase or sell |
any of its pension fund assets. |
(d) When the Fund is prepared to receive pension fund |
assets from any transferor pension fund, the executive director |
shall notify in writing the board of trustees of that |
transferor pension fund of the Fund's intent to assume |
fiduciary control of those pension fund assets, and the date at |
|
which it will assume such control and that the transferor |
pension fund will cease to exercise fiduciary responsibility. |
This letter shall be transmitted no less than 30 days prior to |
the transfer date. A copy of the letter shall be transmitted to |
the Department of Insurance. Upon receipt of the letter, the |
transferor pension fund shall promptly notify its custodian, as |
well as any and all entities with fiduciary control of any |
portion of the pension assets. Each transferor pension fund |
shall have sole fiduciary and statutory responsibility for the |
management of its pension assets until the start of business on |
the transfer date. At the start of business on the transfer |
date, statutory and fiduciary responsibility for the |
investment of pension fund assets shall shift exclusively to |
the Fund and the Fund shall promptly and prudently transfer all |
such pension fund assets to the board and terminate the |
relationship with the local custodian of that transferor |
pension fund. The Fund shall provide a receipt for the transfer |
to the transferor pension fund within 30 days of the transfer |
date. |
As used in this subsection, "transfer date" means the date |
at which the Fund will assume fiduciary control of the |
transferor pension fund's assets and the transferor pension |
fund will cease to exercise fiduciary responsibility. |
(e) Within 90 days after the end of the transition period |
or as soon thereafter as may be practicable as determined by |
the board, the Fund and the Department of Insurance shall |
|
cooperate in transferring to the Fund all pension fund assets |
remaining in the custody of the transferor pension funds. |
(f) The board shall adopt such rules as in its judgment are |
desirable to implement the transition process, including, |
without limitation, the transfer of the pension fund assets of |
the transferor pension funds, the assumption of fiduciary |
control of such assets by the Fund, and the termination of |
relationships with local custodians. The adoption and |
effectiveness of such rules and regulations shall not be |
subject to Article 5 of the Illinois Administrative Procedure |
Act. |
(g) Within 6 months after the end of the transition period |
or as soon thereafter as may be practicable as determined by |
the board, the books, records, accounts, and securities of the |
Fund shall be audited by a certified public accountant selected |
by the board. This audit shall include, but not be limited to, |
the following: (1) a full description of the investments |
acquired, showing average costs; (2) a full description of the |
securities sold or exchanged, showing average proceeds or other |
conditions of an exchange; (3) gains or losses realized during |
the period; (4) income from investments; and (5) administrative |
expenses incurred by the board. This audit report shall be |
published on the Fund's official website and filed with the |
Department of Insurance. |
(h) To provide funds for payment of the ordinary and |
regular costs associated with the implementation of this |
|
transition process, the Illinois Finance Authority is |
authorized to loan to the Fund up to $7,500,000 of any of the |
Authority's funds, including, but not limited to, funds in its |
Illinois Housing Partnership Program Fund, its Industrial |
Project Insurance Fund, or its Illinois Venture Investment |
Fund, for such purpose. Such loan shall be repaid by the Fund |
with an interest rate tied to the Federal Funds Rate or an |
equivalent market established variable rate. The Fund and the |
Illinois Finance Authority shall enter into a loan or similar |
agreement that specifies the period of the loan, the payment |
interval, procedures for making periodic loans, the variable |
rate methodology to which the interest rate for loans should be |
tied, the funds of the Illinois Finance Authority that will be |
used to provide the loan, and such other terms that the Fund |
and the Illinois Finance Authority reasonably believe to be |
mutually beneficial. Such agreement shall be a public record |
and the Fund shall post the terms of the agreement on its |
official website. |
(40 ILCS 5/22B-121 new) |
Sec. 22B-121. Management and direction of investments. |
(a) The board shall have the authority to manage the |
pension fund assets of the transferor pension funds for the |
purpose of obtaining a total return on investments for the long |
term. |
(b) The authority of the board to manage pension fund |
|
assets and the liability shall begin when there has been a |
physical transfer of the pension fund assets to the Fund and |
placed in the custody of the Fund's custodian or custodians, as |
described in Section 22B-123. |
(c) The pension fund assets of the Fund shall be maintained |
in accounts held outside the State treasury. Moneys in those |
accounts are not subject to administrative charges or |
chargebacks, including, but not limited to, those authorized |
under the State Finance Act. |
(d) The board may not delegate its management functions, |
but it may, but is not required to, arrange to compensate for |
personalized investment advisory service for any or all |
investments under its control with any national or state bank |
or trust company authorized to do a trust business and |
domiciled in Illinois, other financial institution organized |
under the laws of Illinois, or an investment advisor who is |
qualified under the federal Investment Advisers Act of 1940 and |
is registered under the Illinois Securities Law of 1953. |
Nothing contained in this Article prevents the board from |
subscribing to general investment research services available |
for purchase or use by others. The board shall also have the |
authority to compensate for accounting services. |
(e) This Section does not prohibit the board from directly |
investing pension fund assets in public market investments, |
private investments, real estate investments, or other |
investments authorized by this Code. |
|
(40 ILCS 5/22B-122 new) |
Sec. 22B-122. Investment authority. The Fund shall have the |
authority to invest funds, subject to the requirements and |
restrictions set forth in Sections 1-109, 1-109.1, 1-109.2, |
1-110, 1-111, 1-114, and 1-115 of this Code. |
The Fund shall not be subject to any of the limitations |
applicable to investments of pension fund assets by the |
transferor pension funds under Sections 1-113.1 through |
1-113.12 or Article 3 of this Code. The Fund shall not, for |
purposes of Article 1 of this Code, be deemed to be a |
retirement system, pension fund, or investment board whose |
investments are restricted by Section 1-113.2 of this Code, |
and, as a result, the Fund shall be subject to the provisions |
of Section 1-109.1, including, but not limited to: utilization |
of emerging investment managers; increasing racial, ethnic, |
and gender diversity of its fiduciaries; utilization of |
businesses owned by minorities, women, and persons with |
disabilities; utilization of minority broker-dealers; |
utilization of minority investment managers; and applicable |
reporting requirements. |
No bank or savings and loan association shall receive |
investment funds as permitted by this Section, unless it has |
complied with the requirements established pursuant to Section |
6 of the Public Funds Investment Act. The limitations set forth |
in Section 6 of the Public Funds Investment Act shall be |
|
applicable only at the time of investment and shall not require |
the liquidation of any investment at any time. |
The Fund shall have the authority to enter into such |
agreements and to execute such documents as it determines to be |
necessary to complete any investment transaction. |
All investments shall be clearly held and accounted for to |
indicate ownership by the Fund. The Fund may direct the |
registration of securities in its own name or in the name of a |
nominee created for the express purpose of registration of |
securities by a national or state bank or trust company |
authorized to conduct a trust business in the State of |
Illinois. |
Investments shall be carried at cost or at a value |
determined in accordance with generally accepted accounting |
principles and accounting procedures approved by the Fund. |
(40 ILCS 5/22B-123 new) |
Sec. 22B-123. Custodian. The pension fund assets |
transferred to or otherwise acquired by the Fund shall be |
placed in the custody of a custodian who shall provide adequate |
safe deposit facilities for those assets and hold all such |
securities, funds, and other assets subject to the order of the |
Fund. |
Each custodian shall furnish a corporate surety bond of |
such amount as the board designates, which bond shall indemnify |
the Fund, the board, and the officers and employees of the Fund |
|
against any loss that may result from any action or failure to |
act by the custodian or any of the custodian's agents. All |
charges incidental to the procuring and giving of any bond |
shall be paid by the board and each bond shall be in the |
custody of the board. |
(40 ILCS 5/22B-124 new) |
Sec. 22B-124. Accounting for pension fund assets. In the |
management of the pension fund assets of the transferor pension |
funds, the Fund: |
(1) shall carry all pension fund assets at fair market |
value determined in accordance with generally accepted |
accounting principles and accounting procedures approved |
by the board. Each investment initially transferred to the |
Fund by a transferor pension fund shall be similarly |
valued, except that the board may elect to place such value |
on any investment conditionally in which case, the amount |
of any later realization of such asset in cash that is in |
excess of or is less than the amount so credited shall be |
credited or charged to the account maintained for the |
transferor pension fund that made the transfer; |
(2) shall keep proper books of account that shall |
reflect at all times the value of all investments held by |
the Fund; and |
(3) shall charge all distributions made by the Fund to |
or for a transferor pension fund to the account maintained |
|
for that fund. |
(40 ILCS 5/22B-125 new) |
Sec. 22B-125. Audits and reports. |
(a) At least annually, the books, records, accounts, and |
securities of the Fund shall be audited by a certified public |
accountant selected by the board and conducted in accordance |
with the rules and procedures promulgated by the Governmental |
Accounting Standards Board. The audit opinion shall be |
published as a part of the annual report of the Fund, which |
shall be submitted to the transferor pension funds and to the |
Department of Insurance. |
(b) For the quarterly periods ending September 30, December |
31, and March 31, the Fund shall submit to the participating |
pension funds and to the Department of Insurance a report |
providing, among other things, the following information: |
(1) a full description of the investments acquired, |
showing average costs; |
(2) a full description of the securities sold or |
exchanged, showing average proceeds or other conditions of |
an exchange; |
(3) gains or losses realized during the period; |
(4) income from investments; and |
(5) administrative expenses. |
(c) An annual report shall be prepared by the Fund for |
submission to the participating pension funds and to the |
|
Department of Insurance within 6 months after the close of each |
fiscal year. A fiscal year shall date from July 1 of one year |
to June 30 of the year next following. This report shall |
contain full information concerning the results of investment |
operations of the Fund. This report shall include the |
information described in subsection (b) and, in addition |
thereto, the following information: |
(1) a listing of the investments held by the Fund at |
the end of the year, showing their book values and market |
values and their income yields on market values; |
(2) comments on the pertinent factors affecting such |
investments; |
(3) a review of the policies maintained by the Fund and |
any changes that occurred during the year; |
(4) a copy of the audited financial statements for the |
year; |
(5) recommendations for possible changes in this |
Article or otherwise governing the operations of the Fund; |
and |
(6) a listing of the names of securities brokers and |
dealers dealt with during the year showing the total amount |
of commissions received by each on transactions with the |
Fund. |
(40 ILCS 5/Art. 22C heading new) |
ARTICLE 22C. THE FIREFIGHTERS' PENSION INVESTMENT FUND |
|
(40 ILCS 5/22C-101 new) |
Sec. 22C-101. Establishment. The Firefighters' Pension |
Investment Fund is created with authority to manage the |
reserves, funds, assets, securities, properties, and moneys of |
the firefighter pension funds created pursuant to Article 4 of |
this Code, all as provided in this Article. |
(40 ILCS 5/22C-102 new) |
Sec. 22C-102. Definitions. For the purposes of this |
Article, the following words and phrases shall have the meaning |
ascribed to them unless the context requires otherwise. |
(40 ILCS 5/22C-103 new) |
Sec. 22C-103. Fund. "Fund" means the Firefighters' Pension |
Investment Fund. |
(40 ILCS 5/22C-104 new) |
Sec. 22C-104. Transferor pension fund. "Transferor pension |
fund" means any pension fund established pursuant to Article 4 |
of this Code. |
(40 ILCS 5/22C-105 new) |
Sec. 22C-105. Participating pension fund. "Participating |
pension fund" means any pension fund established pursuant to |
Article 4 of this Code that has transferred securities, funds, |
|
assets, and moneys, and responsibility for custody and control |
of those securities, funds, assets, and moneys, to the Fund |
pursuant to Section 4-123.2. |
(40 ILCS 5/22C-106 new) |
Sec. 22C-106. Pension fund assets. "Pension fund assets" |
means the reserves, funds, assets, securities, and moneys of |
any transferor pension fund. |
(40 ILCS 5/22C-107 new) |
Sec. 22C-107. Invest. "Invest" means to acquire, invest, |
reinvest, exchange, or retain pension fund assets of the |
transferor pension funds and to sell and manage the reserves, |
funds, securities, moneys, or assets of the transferor pension |
fund, all in accordance with this Article. |
(40 ILCS 5/22C-108 new) |
Sec. 22C-108. Investment advisor. "Investment advisor" |
means any person or business entity that provides investment |
advice to the board on a personalized basis and with an |
understanding of the policies and goals of the board. |
"Investment advisor" does not include any person or business |
entity that provides statistical or general market research |
data available for purchase or use by others. |
(40 ILCS 5/22C-112 new) |
|
Sec. 22C-112. Transition period. "Transition period" means |
the period immediately following the effective date of this |
amendatory Act of the 101st General Assembly during which |
pension fund assets, and responsibility for custody and control |
of those assets, will be transferred from the transferor |
pension funds to the board, as described in Section 22C-120. |
(40 ILCS 5/22C-113 new) |
Sec. 22C-113. Illinois Municipal League. "Illinois |
Municipal League" means the unincorporated, nonprofit, |
nonpolitical association of Illinois cities, villages, and |
incorporated towns described in Section 1-8-1 of the Illinois |
Municipal Code. |
(40 ILCS 5/22C-114 new) |
Sec. 22C-114. Purpose, establishment, and governance. The |
Fund is established to consolidate the transferor pension funds |
to streamline investments and eliminate unnecessary and |
redundant administrative costs, thereby ensuring more money is |
available to fund pension benefits for the beneficiaries of the |
transferor pension funds. The transition board trustees and |
permanent board trustees of the Fund shall be fiduciaries for |
the participants and beneficiaries of the participating |
pension funds and shall discharge their duties with respect to |
the retirement system or pension fund solely in the interest of |
the participants and beneficiaries. Further, the transition |
|
board trustees and permanent board trustees, acting prudently |
and as fiduciaries, shall take all reasonable steps to ensure |
that all of the transferor pension funds are treated equitably |
and that the financial condition of one participating pension |
fund, including, but not limited to, pension benefit funding |
levels and ratios, will have no effect on the financial |
condition of any other transferor pension fund. |
(40 ILCS 5/22C-115 new) |
Sec. 22C-115. Board of Trustees of the Fund. |
(a) No later than one month after the effective date of |
this amendatory Act of the 101st General Assembly or as soon |
thereafter as may be practicable, the Governor shall appoint, |
by and with the advice and consent of the Senate, a transition |
board of trustees consisting of 9 members as follows: |
(1) three members representing municipalities and fire |
protection districts who are mayors, presidents, chief |
executive officers, chief financial officers, or other |
officers, executives, or department heads of |
municipalities or fire protection districts and appointed |
from among candidates recommended by the Illinois |
Municipal League; |
(2) three members representing participants who are |
participants and appointed from among candidates |
recommended by the statewide labor organization |
representing firefighters employed by at least 85 |
|
municipalities that is affiliated with the Illinois State |
Federation of Labor; |
(3) one member representing beneficiaries who is a |
beneficiary and appointed from among the candidate or |
candidates recommended by the statewide labor organization |
representing firefighters employed by at least 85 |
municipalities that is affiliated with the Illinois State |
Federation of Labor; and |
(4) one member recommended by the Illinois Municipal |
League; and |
(5) one member who is a participant recommended by the |
statewide labor organization representing firefighters |
employed by at least 85 municipalities and that is |
affiliated with the Illinois State Federation of Labor. |
The transition board members shall serve until the initial |
permanent board members are elected and qualified. |
The transition board of trustees shall select the |
chairperson of the transition board of trustees from among the |
trustees for the duration of the
transition board's tenure. |
(b) The permanent board of trustees shall consist of 9 |
members comprised as follows: |
(1) Three members who are mayors, presidents, chief |
executive officers, chief financial officers, or other |
officers, executives, or department heads of |
municipalities or fire protection districts that have |
participating pension funds and are elected by the mayors |
|
and presidents of municipalities or fire protection |
districts that have participating pension funds. |
(2) Three members who are participants of |
participating pension funds and elected by the |
participants of participating pension funds. |
(3) One member who is a beneficiary of a participating |
pension fund and is elected by the beneficiaries of |
participating pension funds. |
(4) One member recommended by the Illinois Municipal |
League who shall be appointed by the Governor with the |
advice and consent of the Senate. |
(5) One member recommended by the statewide labor |
organization representing firefighters employed by at |
least 85 municipalities and that is affiliated with the |
Illinois State Federation of Labor who shall be appointed |
by the Governor with the advice and consent of the Senate. |
The permanent board of trustees shall select the |
chairperson of the permanent board of trustees from among the |
trustees for a term of 2 years. The holder of the office of |
chairperson shall alternate between a person elected or |
appointed under item (1) or (4) of this subsection (b) and a |
person elected or appointed under item (2), (3), or (5) of this |
subsection (b). |
(c) Each trustee shall qualify by taking an oath of office |
before the Secretary of State stating that he or she will |
diligently and honestly administer the affairs of the board and |
|
will not violate or knowingly permit the violation of any |
provision of this Article. |
(d) Trustees shall receive no salary for service on the |
board but shall be reimbursed for travel expenses incurred |
while on business for the board according to the standards in |
effect for members of the Commission on Government Forecasting |
and Accountability. |
A municipality or fire protection district employing a |
firefighter who is an elected or appointed trustee of the board |
must allow reasonable time off with compensation for the |
firefighter to conduct official business related to his or her |
position on the board, including time for travel. The board |
shall notify the municipality or fire protection district in |
advance of the dates, times, and locations of this official |
business. The Fund shall timely reimburse the municipality or |
fire protection district for the reasonable costs incurred that |
are due to the firefighter's absence. |
(e) No trustee shall have any interest in any brokerage |
fee, commission, or other profit or gain arising out of any |
investment directed by the board. This subsection does not |
preclude ownership by any member of any minority interest in |
any common stock or any corporate obligation in which an |
investment is directed by the board. |
(f) Notwithstanding any provision or interpretation of law |
to the contrary, any member of the transition board may also be |
elected or appointed as a member of the permanent board. |
|
Notwithstanding any provision or interpretation of law to |
the contrary, any trustee of a fund established under Article 4 |
of this Code may also be appointed as a member of the |
transition board or elected or appointed as a member of the |
permanent board. |
The restriction in Section 3.1 of the Lobbyist Registration |
Act shall not apply to a member of the transition board |
appointed pursuant to items (4) or (5) of subsection (a) or to |
a member of the permanent board appointed pursuant to items (4) |
or (5) of subsection (b). |
(40 ILCS 5/22C-116 new) |
Sec. 22C-116. Conduct and administration of elections; |
terms of office. |
(a) For the election of the permanent trustees, the |
transition board shall administer the initial elections and the |
permanent board shall administer all subsequent elections. |
Each board shall develop and implement such procedures as it |
determines to be appropriate for the conduct of such elections. |
For the purposes of obtaining information necessary to conduct |
elections under this Section, participating pension funds |
shall cooperate with the Fund. |
(b) All nominations for election shall be by petition. Each |
petition for a trustee shall be executed as follows: |
(1) for trustees to be elected by the mayors and |
presidents of municipalities or fire protection districts |
|
that have participating pension funds, by at least 20 such |
mayors and presidents; except that this item (1) shall |
apply only with respect to participating pension funds; |
(2) for trustees to be elected by participants, by at |
least 400 participants; and |
(3) for trustees to be elected by beneficiaries, by at |
least 100 beneficiaries. |
(c) A separate ballot shall be used for each class of |
trustee. The board shall prepare and send ballots and ballot |
envelopes to the participants and beneficiaries eligible to |
vote in accordance with rules adopted by the board. The ballots |
shall contain the names of all candidates in alphabetical |
order. The ballot envelope shall have on the outside a form of |
certificate stating that the person voting the ballot is a |
participant or beneficiary entitled to vote. |
Participants and beneficiaries, upon receipt of the |
ballot, shall vote the ballot and place it in the ballot |
envelope, seal the envelope, execute the certificate thereon, |
and return the ballot to the Fund. |
The board shall set a final date for ballot return, and |
ballots received prior to that date in a ballot envelope with a |
properly executed certificate and properly voted shall be valid |
ballots. |
The board shall set a day for counting the ballots and name |
judges and clerks of election to conduct the count of ballots |
and shall make any rules necessary for the conduct of the |
|
count. |
The candidate or candidates receiving the highest number of |
votes for each class of trustee shall be elected. In the case |
of a tie vote, the winner shall be determined in accordance |
with procedures developed by the Department of Insurance. |
In lieu of conducting elections via mail balloting as |
described in this Section, the board may instead adopt rules to |
provide for elections to be carried out solely via Internet |
balloting or phone balloting. Nothing in this Section prohibits |
the Fund from contracting with a third party to administer the |
election in accordance with this Section. |
(d) At any election, voting shall be as follows: |
(1) Each person authorized to vote for an elected |
trustee may cast one vote for each related position for |
which such person is entitled to vote and may cast such |
vote for any candidate or candidates on the ballot for such |
trustee position. |
(2) If only one candidate for each position is properly |
nominated in petitions received, that candidate shall be |
deemed the winner and no election under this Section shall |
be required. |
(3) The results shall be entered in the minutes of the |
first meeting of the board following the tally of votes. |
(e) The initial election for permanent trustees shall be |
held and the permanent board shall be seated no later than 12 |
months after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the |
|
101st General Assembly. Each subsequent election shall be held |
no later than 30 days prior to the end of the term of the |
incumbent trustees. |
(f) The elected trustees shall each serve for terms of 4 |
years commencing on the first business day of the first month |
after election; except that the terms of office of the |
initially elected trustees shall be as follows: |
(1) One trustee elected pursuant to item (1) of |
subsection (b) of Section 22C-115 shall serve for a term of |
2 years and 2 trustees elected pursuant to item (1) of |
subsection (b) of Section 22C-115 shall serve for a term of |
4 years; |
(2) One trustee elected pursuant to item (2) of |
subsection (b) of Section 22C-115 shall serve for a term of |
2 years and 2 trustees elected pursuant to item (2) of |
subsection (b) of Section 22C-115 shall serve for a term of |
4 years; and |
(3) The trustee elected pursuant to item (3) of |
subsection (b) of Section 22C-115 shall serve for a term of |
2 years. |
(g) The trustees appointed pursuant to items (4) and (5) of |
subsection (b) of Section 22C-115 shall each serve for a term |
of 4 years commencing on the first business day of the first |
month after the election of the elected trustees. |
(h) A member of the board who was elected pursuant to item |
(1) of subsection (b) of Section 22C-115 who ceases to serve as |
|
a mayor, president, chief executive officer, chief financial |
officer, or other officer, executive, or department head of a |
municipality or fire protection district that has a |
participating pension fund shall not be eligible to serve as a |
member of the board and his or her position shall be deemed |
vacant. A member of the board who was elected by the |
participants of participating pension funds who ceases to be a |
participant may serve the remainder of his or her elected term. |
For a vacancy of an elected trustee occurring with an |
unexpired term of 6 months or more, an election shall be |
conducted for the vacancy in accordance with Section 22C-115 |
and this Section. |
For a vacancy of an elected trustee occurring with an |
unexpired term of less than 6 months, the vacancy shall be |
filled by appointment by the board for the unexpired term as |
follows: a vacancy of a member elected pursuant to item (1) of |
subsection (b) of Section 22C-115 shall be filled by a mayor, |
president, chief executive officer, chief financial officer, |
or other officer, executive, or department head of a |
municipality or fire protection district that has a |
participating pension fund; a vacancy of a member elected |
pursuant to item (2) of subsection (b) of Section 22C-115 shall |
be filled by a participant of a participating pension fund; and |
a vacancy of a member elected under item (3) of subsection (b) |
of Section 22C-115 shall be filled by a beneficiary of a |
participating pension fund. |
|
Vacancies among the appointed trustees shall be filled for |
unexpired terms by appointment in like manner as for the |
original appointments. |
(40 ILCS 5/22C-117 new) |
Sec. 22C-117. Meetings of the board. |
(a) The transition board and the permanent board shall each |
meet at least quarterly and otherwise upon written request of |
either the Chairperson or 3 other members. The Chairperson |
shall preside over meetings of the board. The executive |
director and personnel of the board shall prepare agendas and |
materials and required postings for meetings of the board. |
(b) Six members of the board shall constitute a quorum. |
(c) All actions taken by the transition board and the |
permanent board shall require a vote of least 5 trustees, |
except that the following shall require a vote of at least 6 |
trustees: the adoption of actuarial assumptions; the selection |
of the chief investment officer, fiduciary counsel, or a |
consultant as defined under Section 1-101.5 of this Code; the |
adoption of rules for the conduct of election of trustees; and |
the adoption of asset allocation policies and investment |
policies. |
(40 ILCS 5/22C-118 new) |
Sec. 22C-118. Operation and administration of the Fund. |
(a) The operation and administration of the Fund shall be |
|
managed by an executive director. No later than 2 months after |
the transition board is appointed or as soon thereafter as may |
be practicable, the transition board shall appoint an interim |
executive director who shall serve until a permanent executive |
director is appointed by the board, with such appointment to be |
made no later than 6 months after the end of the transition |
period. The executive director shall act subject to and under |
the supervision of the board and the board shall fix the |
compensation of the executive director. |
(b) The board may appoint one or more custodians to |
facilitate the transfer of pension fund assets during the |
transition period, and subsequently to provide custodial and |
related fiduciary services on behalf of the board, and enter |
into contracts for such services. The board may also appoint |
external legal counsel and an independent auditing firm and may |
appoint investment advisors and other consultants as it |
determines to be appropriate and enter into contracts for such |
services. With approval of the board, the executive director |
may retain such other consultants, advisors, fiduciaries, and |
service providers as may be desirable and enter into contracts |
for such services. |
(c) The board shall separately calculate account balances |
for each participating pension fund. The operations and |
financial condition of each participating pension fund account |
shall not affect the account balance of any other participating |
pension fund. Further, investment returns earned by the Fund |
|
shall be allocated and distributed pro rata among each |
participating pension fund account in accordance with the value |
of the pension fund assets attributable to each fund. |
(d) With approval of the board, the executive director may |
employ such personnel, professional or clerical, as may be |
desirable and fix their compensation. The appointment and |
compensation of the personnel, including the executive |
director, shall not be subject to the Personnel Code. |
(e) The board shall annually adopt a budget to support its |
operations and administration. The board shall apply moneys |
derived from the pension fund assets transferred and under its |
control to pay the costs and expenses incurred in the operation |
and administration of the Fund. The board shall from time to |
time transfer moneys and other assets to the participating |
pension funds as required for the participating pension funds |
to pay expenses, benefits, and other required payments to |
beneficiaries in the amounts and at the times prescribed in |
this Code. |
(f) The board may exercise any of the powers granted to |
boards of trustees of pension funds under Sections 1-107 and |
1-108 of this Code and may by resolution provide for the |
indemnification of its members and any of its officers, |
advisors, or employees in a manner consistent with those |
Sections. |
(g) An office for meetings of the board and for its |
administrative personnel shall be established at any suitable |
|
place within the State as may be selected by the board. All |
books and records of the board shall be kept in such office. |
(h) The board shall contract for a blanket fidelity bond in |
the penal sum of not less than $1,000,000 to cover members of |
the board of trustees, the executive director, and all other |
employees of the board, conditioned for the faithful |
performance of the duties of their respective offices, the |
premium on which shall be paid by the board. |
(40 ILCS 5/22C-119 new) |
Sec. 22C-119. Adoption of rules. The board shall adopt such |
rules (not inconsistent with this Code) as in its judgment are |
desirable to implement and properly administer this Article. |
Such rules shall specifically provide for the following: (1) |
the implementation of the transition process described in |
Section 22C-120; (2) the process by which the participating |
pension funds may request transfer of funds; (3) the process |
for the transfer in, receipt for, and investment of pension |
assets received by the Fund after the transition period from |
the participating pension funds; (4) the process by which |
contributions from municipalities and fire protection |
districts for the benefit of the participating pension funds |
may, but are not required to, be directly transferred to the |
Fund; and (5) compensation and benefits for its employees. A |
copy of the rules adopted by the Fund shall be filed with the |
Secretary of State and the Department of Insurance. The |
|
adoption and effectiveness of such rules shall not be subject |
to Article 5 of the Illinois Administrative Procedure Act. |
(40 ILCS 5/22C-120 new) |
Sec. 22C-120. Transition period; transfer of securities, |
assets, and investment functions. |
(a) The transition period shall commence on the effective |
date of this amendatory Act of the 101st General Assembly and |
shall end as determined by the board, consistent with and in |
the application of its fiduciary responsibilities, but in no |
event later than 30 months thereafter. |
(b) The board may retain the services of custodians, |
investment consultants, and other professional services it |
deems prudent to implement the transition of assets described |
in this Section. The permanent board of trustees shall not be |
bound by any contract or agreement regarding such custodians, |
investment consultants, or other professional services entered |
into by the transition board of trustees. |
(c) As soon as practicable after the effective date of this |
amendatory Act of the 101st General Assembly, the board, in |
cooperation with the Department of Insurance, shall audit the |
investment assets of each transferor pension fund to determine |
a certified investment asset list for each transferor pension |
fund. The audit shall be performed by a certified public |
accountant engaged by the board, and the board shall be |
responsible for payment of the costs and expenses associated |
|
with the audit. Upon completion of the audit for any transferor |
pension fund, the board and the Department of Insurance shall |
provide the certified investment asset list to that transferor |
pension fund. Upon determination of the certified investment |
asset list for any transferor pension fund, the board shall, |
within 10 business days or as soon thereafter as may be |
practicable, as determined by the board, initiate the transfer |
of assets from that transferor pension fund. Further and to |
maintain accuracy of the certified investment asset list, upon |
determination of the certified investment asset list for a |
transferor pension fund, that fund shall not purchase or sell |
any of its pension fund assets. |
(d) When the Fund is prepared to receive pension fund |
assets from any transferor pension fund, the executive director |
shall notify in writing the board of trustees of that |
transferor pension fund of the Fund's intent to assume |
fiduciary control of those pension fund assets, and the date at |
which it will assume such control and that the transferor |
pension fund will cease to exercise fiduciary responsibility. |
This letter shall be transmitted no less than 30 days prior to |
the transfer date. A copy of the letter shall be transmitted to |
the Department of Insurance. Upon receipt of the letter, the |
transferor pension fund shall promptly notify its custodian, as |
well as any and all entities with fiduciary control of any |
portion of the pension assets. Each transferor pension fund |
shall have sole fiduciary and statutory responsibility for the |
|
management of its pension assets until the start of business on |
the transfer date. At the start of business on the transfer |
date, statutory and fiduciary responsibility for the |
investment of pension fund assets shall shift exclusively to |
the Fund and the Fund shall promptly and prudently transfer all |
such pension fund assets to the board and terminate the |
relationship with the local custodian of that transferor |
pension fund. The Fund shall provide a receipt for the transfer |
to the transferor pension fund within 30 days of the transfer |
date. |
As used in this subsection, "transfer date" means the date |
at which the Fund will assume fiduciary control of the |
transferor pension fund's assets and the transferor pension |
fund will cease to exercise fiduciary responsibility. |
(e) Within 90 days after the end of the transition period |
or as soon thereafter as may be practicable as determined by |
the board, the Fund and the Department of Insurance shall |
cooperate in transferring to the Fund all pension fund assets |
remaining in the custody of the transferor pension funds. |
(f) The board shall adopt such rules as in its judgment are |
desirable to implement the transition process, including, |
without limitation, the transfer of the pension fund assets of |
the transferor pension funds, the assumption of fiduciary |
control of such assets by the Fund, and the termination of |
relationships with local custodians. The adoption and |
effectiveness of such rules and regulations shall not be |
|
subject to Article 5 of the Illinois Administrative Procedure |
Act. |
(g) Within 6 months after the end of the transition period |
or as soon thereafter as may be practicable as determined by |
the board, the books, records, accounts, and securities of the |
Fund shall be audited by a certified public accountant selected |
by the board. This audit shall include, but not be limited to, |
the following: (1) a full description of the investments |
acquired, showing average costs; (2) a full description of the |
securities sold or exchanged, showing average proceeds or other |
conditions of an exchange; (3) gains or losses realized during |
the period; (4) income from investments; and (5) administrative |
expenses incurred by the board. This audit report shall be |
published on the Fund's official website and filed with the |
Department of Insurance. |
(h) To provide funds for payment of the ordinary and |
regular costs associated with the implementation of this |
transition process, the Illinois Finance Authority is |
authorized to loan to the Fund up to $7,500,000 of any of the |
Authority's funds, including, but not limited to, funds in its |
Illinois Housing Partnership Program Fund, its Industrial |
Project Insurance Fund, or its Illinois Venture Investment |
Fund, for such purpose. Such loan shall be repaid by the Fund |
with an interest rate tied to the Federal Funds Rate or an |
equivalent market established variable rate. The Fund and the |
Illinois Finance Authority shall enter into a loan or similar |
|
agreement that specifies the period of the loan, the payment |
interval, procedures for making periodic loans, the variable |
rate methodology to which the interest rate for loans should be |
tied, the funds of the Illinois Finance Authority that will be |
used to provide the loan, and such other terms that the Fund |
and the Illinois Finance Authority reasonably believe to be |
mutually beneficial. Such agreement shall be a public record |
and the Fund shall post the terms of the agreement on its |
official website. |
(40 ILCS 5/22C-121 new) |
Sec. 22C-121. Management and direction of investments. |
(a) The board shall have the authority to manage the |
pension fund assets of the transferor pension funds for the |
purpose of obtaining a total return on investments for the long |
term. |
(b) The authority of the board to manage pension fund |
assets and the liability shall begin when there has been a |
physical transfer of the pension fund assets to the Fund and |
placed in the custody of the Fund's custodian or custodians, as |
described in Section 22C-123. |
(c) The pension fund assets of the Fund shall be maintained |
in accounts held outside the State treasury. Moneys in those |
accounts are not subject to administrative charges or |
chargebacks, including, but not limited to, those authorized |
under the State Finance Act. |
|
(d) The board may not delegate its management functions, |
but it may, but is not required to, arrange to compensate for |
personalized investment advisory service for any or all |
investments under its control with any national or state bank |
or trust company authorized to do a trust business and |
domiciled in Illinois, other financial institution organized |
under the laws of Illinois, or an investment advisor who is |
qualified under the federal Investment Advisers Act of 1940 and |
is registered under the Illinois Securities Law of 1953. |
Nothing contained in this Article prevents the board from |
subscribing to general investment research services available |
for purchase or use by others. The board shall also have the |
authority to compensate for accounting services. |
(e) This Section does not prohibit the board from directly |
investing pension fund assets in public market investments, |
private investments, real estate investments, or other |
investments authorized by this Code. |
(40 ILCS 5/22C-122 new) |
Sec. 22C-122. Investment authority. The Fund shall have the |
authority to invest funds, subject to the requirements and |
restrictions set forth in Sections 1-109, 1-109.1, 1-109.2, |
1-110, 1-111, 1-114, and 1-115 of this Code. |
The Fund shall not be subject to any of the limitations |
applicable to investments of pension fund assets by the |
transferor pension funds under Sections 1-113.1 through |
|
1-113.12 or Article 4 of this Code. The Fund shall not, for |
purposes of Article 1 of this Code, be deemed to be a |
retirement system, pension fund, or investment board whose |
investments are restricted by Section 1-113.2 of this Code, |
and, as a result, the Fund shall be subject to the provisions |
of Section 1-109.1, including, but not limited to: utilization |
of emerging investment managers; increasing racial, ethnic, |
and gender diversity of its fiduciaries; utilization of |
businesses owned by minorities, women, and persons with |
disabilities; utilization of minority broker-dealers; |
utilization of minority investment managers; and applicable |
reporting requirements. |
No bank or savings and loan association shall receive |
investment funds as permitted by this Section, unless it has |
complied with the requirements established pursuant to Section |
6 of the Public Funds Investment Act. The limitations set forth |
in Section 6 of the Public Funds Investment Act shall be |
applicable only at the time of investment and shall not require |
the liquidation of any investment at any time. |
The Fund shall have the authority to enter into such |
agreements and to execute such documents as it determines to be |
necessary to complete any investment transaction. |
All investments shall be clearly held and accounted for to |
indicate ownership by the Fund. The Fund may direct the |
registration of securities in its own name or in the name of a |
nominee created for the express purpose of registration of |
|
securities by a national or state bank or trust company |
authorized to conduct a trust business in the State of |
Illinois. |
Investments shall be carried at cost or at a value |
determined in accordance with generally accepted accounting |
principles and accounting procedures approved by the Fund. |
(40 ILCS 5/22C-123 new) |
Sec. 22C-123. Custodian. The pension fund assets |
transferred to or otherwise acquired by the Fund shall be |
placed in the custody of a custodian who shall provide adequate |
safe deposit facilities for those assets and hold all such |
securities, funds, and other assets subject to the order of the |
Fund. |
Each custodian shall furnish a corporate surety bond of |
such amount as the board designates, which bond shall indemnify |
the Fund, the board, and the officers and employees of the Fund |
against any loss that may result from any action or failure to |
act by the custodian or any of the custodian's agents. All |
charges incidental to the procuring and giving of any bond |
shall be paid by the board and each bond shall be in the |
custody of the board. |
(40 ILCS 5/22C-124 new) |
Sec. 22C-124. Accounting for pension fund assets. In the |
management of the pension fund assets of the transferor pension |
|
funds, the Fund: |
(1) shall carry all pension fund assets at fair market |
value determined in accordance with generally accepted |
accounting principles and accounting procedures approved |
by the board. Each investment initially transferred to the |
Fund by a transferor pension fund shall be similarly |
valued, except that the board may elect to place such value |
on any investment conditionally in which case, the amount |
of any later realization of such asset in cash that is in |
excess of or is less than the amount so credited shall be |
credited or charged to the account maintained for the |
transferor pension fund that made the transfer; |
(2) shall keep proper books of account that shall |
reflect at all times the value of all investments held by |
the Fund; and |
(3) shall charge all distributions made by the Fund to |
or for a transferor pension fund to the account maintained |
for that fund. |
(40 ILCS 5/22C-125 new) |
Sec. 22C-125. Audits and reports. |
(a) At least annually, the books, records, accounts, and |
securities of the Fund shall be audited by a certified public |
accountant selected by the board and conducted in accordance |
with the rules and procedures promulgated by the Governmental |
Accounting Standards Board. The audit opinion shall be |
|
published as a part of the annual report of the Fund, which |
shall be submitted to the transferor pension funds and to the |
Department of Insurance. |
(b) For the quarterly periods ending September 30, December |
31, and March 31, the Fund shall submit to the participating |
pension funds and to the Department of Insurance a report |
providing, among other things, the following information: |
(1) a full description of the investments acquired, |
showing average costs; |
(2) a full description of the securities sold or |
exchanged, showing average proceeds or other conditions of |
an exchange; |
(3) gains or losses realized during the period; |
(4) income from investments; and |
(5) administrative expenses. |
(c) An annual report shall be prepared by the Fund for |
submission to the participating pension funds and to the |
Department of Insurance within 6 months after the close of each |
fiscal year. A fiscal year shall date from July 1 of one year |
to June 30 of the year next following. This report shall |
contain full information concerning the results of investment |
operations of the Fund. This report shall include the |
information described in subsection (b) and, in addition |
thereto, the following information: |
(1) a listing of the investments held by the Fund at |
the end of the year, showing their book values and market |
|
values and their income yields on market values; |
(2) comments on the pertinent factors affecting such |
investments; |
(3) a review of the policies maintained by the Fund and |
any changes that occurred during the year; |
(4) a copy of the audited financial statements for the |
year; |
(5) recommendations for possible changes in this |
Article or otherwise governing the operations of the Fund; |
and |
(6) a listing of the names of securities brokers and |
dealers dealt with during the year showing the total amount |
of commissions received by each on transactions with the |
Fund. |
Section 15. The Local Government Officer Compensation Act |
is amended by changing Section 25 as follows: |
(50 ILCS 145/25) |
Sec. 25. Elected official salary. |
(a) Notwithstanding the provision of any other law to the |
contrary, an elected officer of a unit of local government that |
is a participating employer under the Illinois Municipal |
Retirement Fund shall not receive any salary or other |
compensation from the unit of local government if the member is |
receiving pension benefits from the Illinois Municipal |
|
Retirement Fund under Article 7 of the Illinois Pension Code |
for the elected official's service in that same elected |
position. If an elected officer is receiving benefits from the |
Illinois Municipal Retirement Fund on August 23, 2019 ( the |
effective date of Public Act 101-544) this amendatory Act of |
the 101st General Assembly , the elected official's salary and |
compensation shall be reduced to zero at the beginning of the |
member's next term if the member is still receiving such |
pension benefits. |
(b) This Section does not apply to a unit of local |
government that has adopted an ordinance or resolution |
effective prior to January 1, 2019 that: (i) reduces the |
compensation of an elected official of the unit of local |
government who is receiving pension benefits from the Illinois |
Municipal Retirement Fund under Article 7 of the Illinois |
Pension Code for his or her service as an elected official in |
the same elected position of that unit of local government; and |
(ii) changes the official's position to part-time.
|
(Source: P.A. 101-544, eff. 8-23-19.) |
Section 20. The Illinois Vehicle Code is amended by |
changing Section 2-115 as follows:
|
(625 ILCS 5/2-115) (from Ch. 95 1/2, par. 2-115)
|
Sec. 2-115. Investigators.
|
(a) The Secretary of State, for the purpose
of
more |
|
effectively carrying out the provisions of the laws in relation |
to
motor vehicles, shall have power to appoint such number of |
investigators as
he may deem necessary. It shall be the duty of |
such investigators to
investigate and enforce violations of the |
provisions of this
Act administered by the Secretary of State |
and provisions of Chapters 11,
12, 13, 14, and 15 and to |
investigate and report any violation by any person
who operates |
as a motor carrier of property as defined in Section 18-100 of
|
this Act and does not hold a valid certificate or permit. Such |
investigators
shall have and may exercise throughout the State |
all of the powers of
peace officers.
|
No person may be retained in service as an investigator |
under this
Section after he or she has reached 60 years of age, |
except for a person employed in the title of Capitol Police |
Investigator and who began employment on or after January 1, |
2011 , in which case, that person may not be retained in service |
after that person has reached 65 years of age.
|
The Secretary of State must authorize to each investigator |
employed under
this
Section and to any other employee of the |
Office of the Secretary of State
exercising the
powers of a |
peace officer a distinct badge that, on its face, (i) clearly
|
states that the
badge is authorized by
the Office of the |
Secretary of State and (ii) contains a unique identifying
|
number.
No other badge shall be authorized by
the Office of the |
Secretary of State.
|
(b) The Secretary may expend such sums as he deems |
|
necessary from
Contractual
Services appropriations for the |
Department of Police
for the purchase of evidence, for the |
employment of persons to obtain
evidence, and for the payment |
for any goods or services related to
obtaining evidence. Such |
sums shall be advanced to investigators authorized by
the
|
Secretary to expend funds, on vouchers signed by the Secretary. |
In
addition, the Secretary of State is authorized to maintain |
one or more
commercial checking accounts with any State banking |
corporation or
corporations organized under or subject to the |
Illinois Banking Act for the
deposit and withdrawal of moneys |
to be used solely for the purchase of
evidence and for the |
employment of persons to obtain evidence, or for the
payment |
for any goods or services related to obtaining evidence; |
provided
that no check may be written on nor any withdrawal |
made from any such
account except on the written signatures of |
2 persons designated by the
Secretary to write such checks and |
make such withdrawals, and provided
further that the balance of |
moneys on deposit in any such account shall not
exceed $5,000 |
at any time, nor shall any one check written on or single
|
withdrawal made from any such account exceed $5,000.
|
All fines or moneys collected or received by the Department |
of Police under
any State or federal forfeiture statute; |
including, but not limited to moneys
forfeited under Section 12 |
of the Cannabis Control Act, moneys forfeited under Section 85 |
of the Methamphetamine Control and Community Protection Act,
|
and moneys distributed
under Section 413 of the Illinois |
|
Controlled Substances Act, shall be deposited
into the |
Secretary of State Evidence Fund.
|
In all convictions for offenses in violation of this Act, |
the Court may
order restitution to the Secretary of any or all |
sums expended for the
purchase of evidence, for the employment |
of persons to obtain evidence,
and for the payment for any |
goods or services related to obtaining evidence.
All such |
restitution received by the Secretary shall be deposited into |
the
Secretary of State Evidence Fund. Moneys deposited into the |
fund shall,
subject to appropriation, be used by the Secretary |
of State for the
purposes provided for under the provisions of |
this Section.
|
(Source: P.A. 99-896, eff. 1-1-17; 100-201, eff. 8-18-17.)
|
Section 90. The State Mandates Act is amended by adding |
Section 8.43 as follows: |
(30 ILCS 805/8.43) |
(Text of Section before amendment by P.A. 101-50 and |
101-504 ) |
Sec. 8.43. Exempt mandate. Notwithstanding Sections 6 and 8 |
of this Act, no reimbursement by the State is required for the |
implementation of any mandate created by Public Act 101-11, |
101-49, 101-275, 101-320, 101-377, 101-387, 101-474, 101-492, |
101-502, 101-522, or this amendatory Act of the 101st General |
Assembly this amendatory Act of the 101st General Assembly .
|
|
(Source: P.A. 101-11, eff. 6-7-19; 101-49, eff. 7-12-19; |
101-275, eff. 8-9-19; 101-320, eff. 8-9-19; 101-377, eff. |
8-16-19; 101-387, eff. 8-16-19; 101-474, eff. 8-23-19; |
101-492, eff. 8-23-19; 101-502, eff. 8-23-19; 101-522, eff. |
8-23-19; revised 10-21-19.) |
(Text of Section after amendment by P.A. 101-50 and |
101-504 ) |
Sec. 8.43. Exempt mandate. |
(a) Notwithstanding Sections 6 and 8 of this Act, no |
reimbursement by the State is required for the implementation |
of any mandate created by Public Act 101-11, 101-49, 101-275, |
101-320, 101-377, 101-387, 101-474, 101-492, 101-502, 101-504, |
101-522, or this amendatory Act of the 101st General Assembly |
this amendatory Act of the 101st General Assembly . |
(b) Notwithstanding Sections 6 and 8 of this Act, no |
reimbursement by the State is required for the implementation |
of any mandate created by the Seizure Smart School Act. |
(Source: P.A. 101-11, eff. 6-7-19; 101-49, eff. 7-12-19; |
101-50, eff. 7-1-20; 101-275, eff. 8-9-19; 101-320, eff. |
8-9-19; 101-377, eff. 8-16-19; 101-387, eff. 8-16-19; 101-474, |
eff. 8-23-19; 101-492, eff. 8-23-19; 101-502, eff. 8-23-19; |
101-504, eff. 7-1-20; 101-522, eff. 8-23-19; revised |
10-21-19.) |
Section 95. No acceleration or delay. Where this Act makes |