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Public Act 102-1053 |
SB3617 Enrolled | LRB102 22973 KTG 32127 b |
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AN ACT concerning mental health.
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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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Article 1. |
Section 1-1. Short title. This Article may be cited as the |
Ensuring a More Qualified, Competent, and Diverse Community |
Behavioral Health Workforce Act. References in this Article to |
"this Act" mean this Article. |
Section 1-5. Findings. The General Assembly Finds that: |
(1) The behavioral health workforce shortage, already |
at dire levels before 2020, has been exacerbated by the |
COVID-19 pandemic and is at a crisis point. |
(2) Behavioral health workforce shortages, |
particularly licensed clinical staff, staff turnover in |
all positions, and workforce development are major |
concerns in the behavioral health field. |
(3) By 2026, unfilled mental healthcare jobs in |
Illinois are expected to reach 8,353, according to |
Mercer's 2021 External Healthcare Labor Market Analysis. |
(4) Community based mental health agencies often serve |
as training or supervision sites for interns and new |
entrants to the workforce seeking supervision hours to |
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meet licensure requirements. These professionals are |
mandated to complete up to 3000 hours of supervised |
clinical experience. This places financial and |
time-resource hardships on these already lean |
organizations to provide the supervision. |
(5) Many new mental health clinicians have to pay an |
estimated $10,000-$30,000 in fees for supervision |
according to Motivo. The amount is unaffordable for many |
students, particularly lower-income students, who graduate |
with tens of thousands of dollars in debt. |
(6) Community mental health agencies frequently serve |
the most complex and chronically ill behavioral health |
clients, which can be a challenging population for new |
entrants to the workforce. Many times, professionals leave |
for better-paid opportunities with lower acuity patients |
after completing their facility-sponsored supervision |
requirements. |
(7) The lack of compensation for serving as a training |
or supervision site and staff turnover adversely impact |
the ability of agencies to better prepare the workforce |
and meet the needs of their behavioral health clients. |
(8) Recognizing and providing financial support for |
this function will help community-based agencies provide |
more training or supervision opportunities and may also |
assist with recruiting and retaining professionals at |
these sites. |
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(9) Providing financial support for this role would |
help to address reductions in standard clinical |
productivity as a result of time spent supervising new |
workers, enabling better absorption of the costs of high |
turnover, or allowing for these settings to staff |
appropriately to support training or supervision. |
(10) For individuals seeking their licensure, |
roadblocks to supervision include cost-prohibitive fees, |
difficulty finding supervisors, and an even greater |
supervisor shortage in rural areas. |
(11) Beyond fulfilling the required hours to get |
licensed, clinical supervision has a profound impact on |
the trajectory of an individual's career and the lives of |
their clients. Ultimately, effective clinical supervision |
helps ensure that clients are competently served. |
(12) At a time when behavioral health providers report |
crisis level wait lists that force individuals seeking |
care to wait for months before they receive care, now more |
than ever, we need immediate solutions to help strengthen |
our State's behavioral health workforce. |
Section 1-10. Grant awards. To develop and enhance |
professional development opportunities and diversity in the |
behavioral health field, and increase access to quality care, |
the Department of Human Services, Division of Mental Health, |
shall award grants or contracts to community mental health |
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centers or behavioral health clinics licensed or certified by |
the Department of Human Services or the Department of |
Healthcare and Family Services to establish or enhance |
training and supervision of interns and behavioral health |
providers-in-training pursuing licensure as a licensed |
clinical social worker, licensed clinical professional |
counselor, and licensed marriage and family therapist. |
Section 1-15. Use of funds. An eligible entity receiving a |
grant or contract under this Act shall use funds received |
through the grant or contract to establish new, or enhance |
existing, training, and supervision of interns and behavioral |
health providers-in-training pursuing licensure as a licensed |
clinical social worker, licensed clinical professional |
counselor, and licensed marriage and family therapist. |
Section 1-20. Priority. In awarding grants and contracts |
under this Act, the Department of Human Services, Division of |
Mental Health, shall give priority to eligible entities in |
underserved urban areas and rural areas of the State. |
Section 1-25. Grant terms. A grant or contract awarded |
under this Act shall be for a period of 3 years. Nothing in the |
Act precludes grantees to reapply for additional rounds of |
funding. |
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Section 1-30. Application submission. An entity seeking a |
grant or contract under this Act shall submit an application |
at such time, in such manner, and accompanied by such |
information as the Department of Human Services, Division of |
Mental Health, may require. Requirements by the Department of |
Human Services, Division of Mental Health shall be done in a |
way that ensures minimum additional administrative work. |
Section 1-35. Reporting. Reporting requirements for the |
grant agreement shall be set forth by the Department of Human |
Services, Division of Mental Health. |
Section 1-40. Funding. Funding for the grants or contracts |
is subject to appropriation. |
Article 3. |
Section 3-1. Short title. This Article may be cited as the |
Recovery and Mental Health Tax Credit Act. References in this |
Article to "this Act" mean this Article. |
Section 3-5. Findings. |
(a) In the interest of reducing stigma and increasing the
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available pool of potential employees, the General Assembly
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finds and declares that those residents of Illinois diagnosed
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with mental illness and substance use disorders should be
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eligible for and encouraged to seek gainful employment.
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(b) The General Assembly finds and declares that minority
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communities in this State have been more negatively impacted |
in
employment opportunities for minority residents diagnosed |
with
mental illness and substance use disorders and should |
receive
additional employment opportunities and incentives for
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employing minority residents diagnosed with mental illness or
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substance use disorders.
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(c) Due to the COVID-19 public health emergency, employers
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in the State of Illinois have suffered negative economic
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impacts, a loss in workforce, staffing difficulties, and have
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found it difficult to recruit new workers.
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(d) In the interest of providing additional employment
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opportunities for those residents of Illinois diagnosed with
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mental illness or substance use disorders and expanding the
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pool of potential workers in this State, the General Assembly
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finds and declares that certain qualified employers who employ
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eligible individuals should be eligible for a tax credit.
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Section 3-10. Definitions. As used in this Act: |
"Department" means the Department of Human Services.
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"Eligible individual" means an individual with a substance
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use disorder, as that term is defined under Section 1-10 of the
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Substance Use Disorder Act, or an individual with a mental
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illness as that term is defined under Section 1-129 of the
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Mental Health and Developmental Disabilities Code, who is in a
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state of wellness and recovery where there is an abatement of
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signs and symptoms that characterize active substance use
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disorder or mental illness and has demonstrated to the
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qualified employer's satisfaction, pursuant to rules
adopted |
by the Department, that he or she has completed a
course of |
treatment or is currently in receipt of treatment
for such |
substance use disorder or mental illness. A relapse
in an |
individual's state of wellness shall not make the
individual |
ineligible, so long as the individual shows a
continued |
commitment to recovery that aligns with an
individual's |
relapse prevention plan, discharge plan, or
recovery plan.
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"Qualified employer" means an employer operating within
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the State that has received a certificate of tax credit from
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the Department after the Department has determined that the
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employer:
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(1) provides a recovery supportive environment for
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their employees evidenced by a formal working relationship
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with a substance use disorder treatment provider or
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facility or mental health provider or facility, each as
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may be licensed or certified within the State of Illinois,
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and providing reasonable accommodation to the employees to
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address their substance use disorder or mental illness,
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all at no cost or expense to the eligible individual; and |
(2) satisfies all other criteria in this Section and
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established by the Department to participate in the
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recovery tax program created hereunder.
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"Taxpayer" means any individual, corporation, |
partnership,
trust, or other entity subject to the Illinois |
income tax. For
the purposes of this Act, 2 individuals filing |
a joint return
shall be considered one taxpayer.
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Section 3-15. Authorization of tax credit program for |
individuals in recovery from substance use disorders or mental |
illness. |
(a) For taxable years beginning on or after January 1, |
2023, the Department is authorized to and shall establish and |
administer a recovery tax credit program to provide tax |
incentives to qualified employers who employ eligible |
individuals in recovery from a substance use disorder or |
mental illness in part-time and full-time positions within |
Illinois. The Department shall award the tax credit by |
issuance of a certificate of tax credit to the qualified |
employer, who will present the certificate of tax credit to |
the Department of Revenue by attaching the certificate to its |
tax return, as a credit against the qualified employer's |
income tax liability in accordance with the Illinois Income |
Tax Act. The Department shall maintain an electronic listing |
of the certificates issued by which the Department of Revenue |
may verify tax credit certificates issued. |
(b) To be a qualified employer, an employer must apply |
annually to the Department to claim a credit based upon |
eligible individuals employed during the preceding calendar |
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year, using the forms prescribed by the Department. To be |
approved for a credit under this Act, the employer must: |
(1) agree to provide to the Department the information |
necessary to demonstrate that the employer has satisfied |
program eligibility requirements and provided all |
information requested or needed by the Department, |
including the number of hours worked by the eligible |
individual and other information necessary for the |
Department to calculate the amount of credit permitted; |
and |
(2) agree to provide names, employer identification |
numbers, amounts that the employer may claim, and other |
information necessary for the Department to calculate any |
tax credit. |
(c) To be an eligible individual, the individual must be |
diagnosed with or have been diagnosed with a substance use |
disorder or mental illness. Disclosure by the eligible |
individual of his or her mental illness or substance use |
disorder shall be completely voluntary and his or her health |
information may not be shared or disclosed under this Act |
without the eligible individual's express written consent. The |
eligible individual must have been employed by the qualified |
employer in this State for a minimum of 500 hours during the |
applicable calendar year and the tax credit may only begin on |
the date the eligible individual is hired by the qualified |
employer and ending on December 31 of that calendar year or the |
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date that the eligible individual's employment with the |
qualified employer ends, whichever occurs first. Only one tax |
credit may be awarded for any eligible individual while |
employed by the same or related qualified employer. The hours |
of employment of 2 or more eligible individuals may not be |
aggregated to reach the minimum number of hours. If an |
eligible individual has worked in excess of 500 hours between |
the date of hiring and December 31 of that year, a qualified |
employer can elect to compute and claim a credit for such |
eligible individual in that year based on the hours worked by |
December 31. Alternatively, the qualified employer may elect |
to include such individual in the computation of the credit in |
the year immediately succeeding the year in which the eligible |
individual was hired. In that case, the credit shall be |
computed on the basis of all hours worked by the eligible |
individual from the date of hire to the earlier of the last day |
of employment or December 31 of the succeeding year. |
(d) If Department criteria and all other requirements are
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met, a qualified employer shall be entitled to a tax credit
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equal to the product of $1 and the number of hours worked by
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each eligible individual during the eligible individual's
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period of employment with the qualified employer. The tax
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credit awarded under this Act may not exceed $2,000 per |
eligible
individual employed by the qualified employer in this |
State. In
determining the amount of tax credit that any |
qualified
employer may claim, the Department shall review all |
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claims
submitted for credit by all employers and, to the |
extent that
the total amount claimed by employers exceeds the |
amount
allocated for this program in that calendar year, shall |
issue
tax credits on a pro rata basis corresponding to each
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qualified employer's share of the total amount claimed.
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(e) The aggregate amount of all credits the Department may |
award under this Act in any calendar year may not exceed |
$2,000,000. |
(f) A taxpayer who is a qualified
employer who has |
received a certificate of tax credit from the
Department shall |
be allowed a credit against the tax imposed equal
to the amount |
shown on such certificate of tax credit.
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(g) The credit must be claimed in the taxable year in which |
the tax credit certificate is issued. The credit cannot reduce |
a taxpayer's liability to less than zero. If the amount of the |
credit exceeds the tax liability for the year, the credit may |
not
be carried forward. |
(h) If the taxpayer is a partnership or Subchapter S |
corporation the credit shall be allowed to the partners or |
shareholders in accordance with the determination of income |
and distributive share of income under Sections 702 and 704 |
and subchapter S of the Internal Revenue Code. |
(i) In carrying out this Act, no patient-specific |
information shall
be shared or disclosed. Any individual or |
patient-specific
information collected by the Department or |
the Department
of Revenue shall not be subject
to public |
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disclosure or Freedom of Information Act requests.
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(j) The credit under this Act is exempt from the |
provisions of Section 250 of the Illinois Income Tax Act. |
Section 3-20. Advisory Council on Mental Illness and |
Substance Use Disorder Impacts on Employment Opportunities |
within Minority Communities. The Secretary of the Department |
shall appoint the Advisory Council on Mental Illness and |
Substance Use Disorder Impacts on Employment Opportunities |
within Minority Communities, to be composed of 15 members, |
which shall include a balanced representation of recipients, |
services providers, employers, local governmental units, |
community and welfare advocacy groups, academia, and the |
general public. The Advisory Council shall advise the |
Department regarding all aspects of employment impacts |
resulting from mental illnesses and substance use disorders |
within minority communities, tax credits, outreach, marketing, |
and education about the tax credit and employment |
opportunities, and other areas as deemed appropriate by the |
Secretary. In appointing the first Council, the Secretary |
shall name 8 members to terms of 2 years and 7 members to serve |
terms of 4 years, all of whom shall be appointed within 6 |
months of the effective date of this Act. All members |
appointed thereafter shall serve terms of 4 years. Members |
shall serve without compensation other than reimbursement of |
expenses actually incurred in the performance of their |
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official duties. At its first meeting, the Advisory Council |
shall select a chair from among its members. The Advisory |
Council shall meet at least quarterly and at other times at the |
call of the chair. |
Section 3-25. Powers. The Department shall adopt rules for |
the administration of this Act. The Department may enter into |
an intergovernmental agreement with the Department of Revenue |
for the administration of this Act. |
Section 3-30. The Illinois Income Tax Act is amended by |
adding Section 232 as follows: |
(35 ILCS 5/232 new) |
Sec. 232. Recovery and Mental Health Tax Credit Act. For |
taxable years beginning on or after January 1, 2023, a
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taxpayer who has been awarded a credit under the Recovery and
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Mental Health Tax Credit Act is entitled to a credit against
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the tax imposed by subsections (a) and (b) of Section 201 as
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provided in that Act. This Section is exempt from the
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provisions of Section 250. |
Article 5. |
Section 5-5. The Specialized Mental Health Rehabilitation |
Act of 2013 is amended by changing Sections 1-102 and 2-102.5 |
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as follows: |
(210 ILCS 49/1-102)
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Sec. 1-102. Definitions. For the purposes of this Act, |
unless the context otherwise requires: |
"Abuse" means any physical or mental injury or sexual |
assault inflicted on a consumer other than by accidental means |
in a facility. |
"Accreditation" means any of the following: |
(1) the Joint Commission; |
(2) the Commission on Accreditation of Rehabilitation |
Facilities; |
(3) the Healthcare Facilities Accreditation Program; |
or |
(4) any other national standards of care as approved |
by the Department. |
"APRN" means an Advanced Practice Registered Nurse, |
nationally certified as a mental health or psychiatric nurse |
practitioner and licensed under the Nurse Practice Act. |
"Applicant" means any person making application for a |
license or a provisional license under this Act. |
"Consumer" means a person, 18 years of age or older, |
admitted to a mental health rehabilitation facility for |
evaluation, observation, diagnosis, treatment, stabilization, |
recovery, and rehabilitation. |
"Consumer" does not mean any of the following: |
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(i) an individual requiring a locked setting; |
(ii) an individual requiring psychiatric |
hospitalization because of an acute psychiatric crisis; |
(iii) an individual under 18 years of age; |
(iv) an individual who is actively suicidal or violent |
toward others; |
(v) an individual who has been found unfit to stand |
trial; |
(vi) an individual who has been found not guilty by |
reason of insanity based on committing a violent act, such |
as sexual assault, assault with a deadly weapon, arson, or |
murder; |
(vii) an individual subject to temporary detention and |
examination under Section 3-607 of the Mental Health and |
Developmental Disabilities Code; |
(viii) an individual deemed clinically appropriate for |
inpatient admission in a State psychiatric hospital; and |
(ix) an individual transferred by the Department of |
Corrections pursuant to Section 3-8-5 of the Unified Code |
of Corrections. |
"Consumer record" means a record that organizes all |
information on the care, treatment, and rehabilitation |
services rendered to a consumer in a specialized mental health |
rehabilitation facility. |
"Controlled drugs" means those drugs covered under the |
federal Comprehensive Drug Abuse Prevention Control Act of |
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1970, as amended, or the Illinois Controlled Substances Act. |
"Department" means the Department of Public Health. |
"Discharge" means the full release of any consumer from a |
facility. |
"Drug administration" means the act in which a single dose |
of a prescribed drug or biological is given to a consumer. The |
complete act of administration entails removing an individual |
dose from a container, verifying the dose with the |
prescriber's orders, giving the individual dose to the |
consumer, and promptly recording the time and dose given. |
"Drug dispensing" means the act entailing the following of |
a prescription order for a drug or biological and proper |
selection, measuring, packaging, labeling, and issuance of the |
drug or biological to a consumer. |
"Emergency" means a situation, physical condition, or one |
or more practices, methods, or operations which present |
imminent danger of death or serious physical or mental harm to |
consumers of a facility. |
"Facility" means a specialized mental health |
rehabilitation facility that provides at least one of the |
following services: (1) triage center; (2) crisis |
stabilization; (3) recovery and rehabilitation supports; or |
(4) transitional living units for 3 or more persons. The |
facility shall provide a 24-hour program that provides |
intensive support and recovery services designed to assist |
persons, 18 years or older, with mental disorders to develop |
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the skills to become self-sufficient and capable of increasing |
levels of independent functioning. It includes facilities that |
meet the following criteria: |
(1) 100% of the consumer population of the facility |
has a diagnosis of serious mental illness; |
(2) no more than 15% of the consumer population of the |
facility is 65 years of age or older; |
(3) none of the consumers are non-ambulatory; |
(4) none of the consumers have a primary diagnosis of |
moderate, severe, or profound intellectual disability; and |
(5) the facility must have been licensed under the |
Specialized Mental Health Rehabilitation Act or the |
Nursing Home Care Act immediately preceding July 22, 2013 |
(the effective date of this Act) and qualifies as an |
institute for mental disease under the federal definition |
of the term. |
"Facility" does not include the following: |
(1) a home, institution, or place operated by the |
federal government or agency thereof, or by the State of |
Illinois; |
(2) a hospital, sanitarium, or other institution whose |
principal activity or business is the diagnosis, care, and |
treatment of human illness through the maintenance and |
operation as organized facilities therefor which is |
required to be licensed under the Hospital Licensing Act; |
(3) a facility for child care as defined in the Child |
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Care Act of 1969; |
(4) a community living facility as defined in the |
Community Living Facilities Licensing Act; |
(5) a nursing home or sanatorium operated solely by |
and for persons who rely exclusively upon treatment by |
spiritual means through prayer, in accordance with the |
creed or tenets of any well-recognized church or religious |
denomination; however, such nursing home or sanatorium |
shall comply with all local laws and rules relating to |
sanitation and safety; |
(6) a facility licensed by the Department of Human |
Services as a community-integrated living arrangement as |
defined in the Community-Integrated Living Arrangements |
Licensure and Certification Act; |
(7) a supportive residence licensed under the |
Supportive Residences Licensing Act; |
(8) a supportive living facility in good standing with |
the program established under Section 5-5.01a of the |
Illinois Public Aid Code, except only for purposes of the |
employment of persons in accordance with Section 3-206.01 |
of the Nursing Home Care Act; |
(9) an assisted living or shared housing establishment |
licensed under the Assisted Living and Shared Housing Act, |
except only for purposes of the employment of persons in |
accordance with Section 3-206.01 of the Nursing Home Care |
Act; |
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(10) an Alzheimer's disease management center |
alternative health care model licensed under the |
Alternative Health Care Delivery Act; |
(11) a home, institution, or other place operated by |
or under the authority of the Illinois Department of |
Veterans' Affairs; |
(12) a facility licensed under the ID/DD Community |
Care Act; |
(13) a facility licensed under the Nursing Home Care |
Act after July 22, 2013 (the effective date of this Act); |
or |
(14) a facility licensed under the MC/DD Act. |
"Executive director" means a person who is charged with |
the general administration and supervision of a facility |
licensed under this Act and who is a licensed nursing home |
administrator, licensed practitioner of the healing arts, or |
qualified mental health professional. |
"Guardian" means a person appointed as a guardian of the |
person or guardian of the estate, or both, of a consumer under |
the Probate Act of 1975. |
"Identified offender" means a person who meets any of the |
following criteria: |
(1) Has been convicted of, found guilty of, |
adjudicated delinquent for, found not guilty by reason of |
insanity for, or found unfit to stand trial for, any |
felony offense listed in Section 25 of the Health Care |
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Worker Background Check Act, except for the following: |
(i) a felony offense described in Section 10-5 of |
the Nurse Practice Act; |
(ii) a felony offense described in Section 4, 5, |
6, 8, or 17.02 of the Illinois Credit Card and Debit |
Card Act; |
(iii) a felony offense described in Section 5, |
5.1, 5.2, 7, or 9 of the Cannabis Control Act; |
(iv) a felony offense described in Section 401, |
401.1, 404, 405, 405.1, 407, or 407.1 of the Illinois |
Controlled Substances Act; and |
(v) a felony offense described in the |
Methamphetamine Control and Community Protection Act. |
(2) Has been convicted of, adjudicated delinquent
for, |
found not guilty by reason of insanity for, or found unfit |
to stand trial for, any sex offense as defined in |
subsection (c) of Section 10 of the Sex Offender |
Management Board Act. |
"Transitional living units" are residential units within a |
facility that have the purpose of assisting the consumer in |
developing and reinforcing the necessary skills to live |
independently outside of the facility. The duration of stay in |
such a setting shall not exceed 120 days for each consumer. |
Nothing in this definition shall be construed to be a |
prerequisite for transitioning out of a facility. |
"Licensee" means the person, persons, firm, partnership, |
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association, organization, company, corporation, or business |
trust to which a license has been issued. |
"Misappropriation of a consumer's property" means the |
deliberate misplacement, exploitation, or wrongful temporary |
or permanent use of a consumer's belongings or money without |
the consent of a consumer or his or her guardian. |
"Neglect" means a facility's failure to provide, or |
willful withholding of, adequate medical care, mental health |
treatment, psychiatric rehabilitation, personal care, or |
assistance that is necessary to avoid physical harm and mental |
anguish of a consumer. |
"Personal care" means assistance with meals, dressing, |
movement, bathing, or other personal needs, maintenance, or |
general supervision and oversight of the physical and mental |
well-being of an individual who is incapable of maintaining a |
private, independent residence or who is incapable of managing |
his or her person, whether or not a guardian has been appointed |
for such individual. "Personal care" shall not be construed to |
confine or otherwise constrain a facility's pursuit to develop |
the skills and abilities of a consumer to become |
self-sufficient and capable of increasing levels of |
independent functioning. |
"Recovery and rehabilitation supports" means a program |
that facilitates a consumer's longer-term symptom management |
and stabilization while preparing the consumer for |
transitional living units by improving living skills and |
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community socialization. The duration of stay in such a |
setting shall be established by the Department by rule. |
"Restraint" means: |
(i) a physical restraint that is any manual method or
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physical or mechanical device, material, or equipment |
attached or adjacent to a consumer's body that the |
consumer cannot remove easily and restricts freedom of |
movement or normal access to one's body; devices used for |
positioning, including, but not limited to, bed rails, |
gait belts, and cushions, shall not be considered to be |
restraints for purposes of this Section; or |
(ii) a chemical restraint that is any drug used for
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discipline or convenience and not required to treat |
medical symptoms; the Department shall, by rule, designate |
certain devices as restraints, including at least all |
those devices that have been determined to be restraints |
by the United States Department of Health and Human |
Services in interpretive guidelines issued for the |
purposes of administering Titles XVIII and XIX of the |
federal Social Security Act. For the purposes of this Act, |
restraint shall be administered only after utilizing a |
coercive free environment and culture. |
"Self-administration of medication" means consumers shall |
be responsible for the control, management, and use of their |
own medication. |
"Crisis stabilization" means a secure and separate unit |
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that provides short-term behavioral, emotional, or psychiatric |
crisis stabilization as an alternative to hospitalization or |
re-hospitalization for consumers from residential or community |
placement. The duration of stay in such a setting shall not |
exceed 21 days for each consumer. |
"Therapeutic separation" means the removal of a consumer |
from the milieu to a room or area which is designed to aid in |
the emotional or psychiatric stabilization of that consumer. |
"Triage center" means a non-residential 23-hour center |
that serves as an alternative to emergency room care, |
hospitalization, or re-hospitalization for consumers in need |
of short-term crisis stabilization. Consumers may access a |
triage center from a number of referral sources, including |
family, emergency rooms, hospitals, community behavioral |
health providers, federally qualified health providers, or |
schools, including colleges or universities. A triage center |
may be located in a building separate from the licensed |
location of a facility, but shall not be more than 1,000 feet |
from the licensed location of the facility and must meet all of |
the facility standards applicable to the licensed location. If |
the triage center does operate in a separate building, safety |
personnel shall be provided, on site, 24 hours per day and the |
triage center shall meet all other staffing requirements |
without counting any staff employed in the main facility |
building.
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(Source: P.A. 99-180, eff. 7-29-15; 100-201, eff. 8-18-17; |
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100-365, eff. 8-25-17.) |
(210 ILCS 49/2-102.5 new) |
Sec. 2-102.5. Psychiatric visits. For the purposes of this |
Act, any required psychiatric visit to a consumer may be |
conducted by an APRN or by a physician. |
Section 5-10. The Clinical Psychologist Licensing Act is |
amended by changing Section 13 as follows: |
(225 ILCS 15/13) (from Ch. 111, par. 5363) |
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2027) |
Sec. 13. License renewal; restoration. |
(a) The expiration date and renewal
period for each |
license
issued under this Act shall be set by rule. Every |
holder of a license
under this Act may renew such license |
during the 90-day period immediately
preceding the
expiration |
date thereof upon payment of the required renewal fees and |
demonstrating compliance with any continuing education |
requirements. The Department shall adopt rules establishing |
minimum requirements of continuing education and means for |
verification of the completion of the continuing education |
requirements. The Department may, by rule, specify |
circumstances under which the continuing education |
requirements may be waived. |
A clinical psychologist who has permitted his or her |
|
license to expire or
who
has had his or her license on inactive |
status may have his or her
license restored
by
making |
application to the Department and filing proof acceptable to |
the
Department, as defined by rule, of his or her fitness to |
have his or her license restored,
including evidence
|
certifying to active practice in another jurisdiction |
satisfactory to the
Department and by paying the required |
restoration fee. |
If the clinical psychologist has not maintained an active |
practice in
another jurisdiction satisfactory to the |
Department, the Board shall
determine, by an evaluation |
program established by rule, his or her fitness
to
resume |
active status and may require the clinical psychologist to |
complete
a period of supervised professional experience and |
may require successful
completion of an examination. |
However, any clinical psychologist whose license expired |
while he or she
was (1)
in Federal Service on active duty with |
the Armed Forces of the United
States, or the State Militia |
called into service or training, or (2) in
training or |
education under the supervision of the United States
|
preliminary to induction into the military service, may have |
his or her
license
renewed or restored without paying any |
lapsed renewal fees if within 2
years after honorable |
termination of such service, training or education he
or she |
furnishes the Department with satisfactory evidence to the |
effect
that he
or she has been so engaged and that his or her |
|
service, training or
education has been
so terminated. |
(b) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the |
following requirements for restoration of an inactive or |
expired license of less than 5 years as set forth in subsection |
(a) are suspended for any licensed clinical psychologist who |
has had no disciplinary action taken against his
or her |
license in this State or in any other jurisdiction during the |
entire period of licensure: proof of fitness, certification of |
active practice in another jurisdiction, and the payment of a |
renewal fee. An individual may not restore his or her license |
in accordance with this subsection more than once. |
(Source: P.A. 96-1050, eff. 1-1-11 .) |
Section 5-15. The Clinical Social Work and Social Work |
Practice Act is amended by changing Section 11 as follows:
|
(225 ILCS 20/11) (from Ch. 111, par. 6361)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2028)
|
Sec. 11. Licenses; renewal; restoration; person in |
military service; inactive status.
|
(a) The expiration date and renewal period for each |
license issued under this Act shall be set by rule.
The |
licensee may renew a license during the 60-day period |
preceding its
expiration date by paying the required fee and |
by demonstrating compliance
with any continuing education |
requirements. The Department shall adopt rules establishing |
|
minimum requirements of continuing education and means for |
verification of the completion of the continuing education |
requirements. The Department may, by rule, specify |
circumstances under which the continuing education |
requirements may be waived.
|
(b) Any person who has permitted a license to expire or who |
has a
license on inactive status may have it restored by |
submitting an application to
the Department and filing proof |
of fitness, as defined by rule, to have the license restored,
|
including, if appropriate, evidence which is satisfactory to |
the
Department certifying the active practice of clinical |
social work or
social work in another jurisdiction and by |
paying the required fee.
|
(b-5) If the person has not maintained an active practice |
in another
jurisdiction which is satisfactory to the |
Department, the Department
shall determine the person's |
fitness to resume active status. The Department may also |
require the person to
complete a specific period of evaluated |
clinical social work or social
work experience and may require |
successful completion of an examination for clinical social |
workers.
|
(b-7) Notwithstanding any other provision of this Act, any |
person whose license expired while on active duty with
the |
armed forces of the United States, while called into service |
or
training with the State Militia or in training or education |
under the
supervision of the United States government prior to |
|
induction into the
military service may have his or her |
license restored without paying any
renewal
fees if, within 2 |
years after the honorable termination of that service,
|
training or education, except under conditions other than |
honorable, the
Department is furnished with satisfactory |
evidence that the person has been
so engaged and that the |
service, training or education has
been so terminated.
|
(c) A license to practice shall not be denied any |
applicant because of the applicant's race, religion, creed, |
national origin, political beliefs or activities, age, sex, |
sexual orientation, or physical impairment.
|
(d) (Blank).
|
(e) (Blank).
|
(f) (Blank).
|
(g) The Department shall indicate on each license the |
academic degree of
the licensee.
|
(h) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the |
following requirements for restoration of an inactive or |
expired license of 5 years or less as set forth in subsections |
(b) and (b-5) are suspended for any licensed clinical social |
worker who has had no disciplinary action taken against his
or |
her license in this State or in any other jurisdiction during |
the entire period of licensure: proof of fitness, |
certification of active practice in another jurisdiction, and |
the payment of a fee or renewal fee. An individual may not |
restore his or her license in accordance with this subsection |
|
more than once. |
(Source: P.A. 102-326, eff. 1-1-22 .)
|
Section 5-20. The Professional Counselor and Clinical |
Professional Counselor
Licensing and Practice Act is amended |
by changing Section 50 as follows:
|
(225 ILCS 107/50)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2023)
|
Sec. 50. Licenses; renewal; restoration; person in |
military service;
inactive status. |
(a) The expiration date and renewal period for each |
license issued under
this Act shall be set by rule. As a |
condition for renewal of a license, the licensee shall be |
required to complete continuing education in accordance with |
rules established by the Department.
|
(b) Any person who has permitted a license to expire or who |
has a
license on inactive status may have it restored by |
submitting an application to
the Department and filing proof |
of fitness acceptable to the Department, to have
the license |
restored, including, if appropriate, evidence which is |
satisfactory
to the Department certifying the active practice |
of professional counseling or
clinical professional counseling |
in another jurisdiction and by paying the
required fee.
|
(c) If the person has not maintained an active practice in |
another
jurisdiction which is satisfactory to the Department, |
|
the Department shall
determine, by an evaluation program |
established by rule, the person's fitness to resume active |
status and shall establish procedures and requirements for |
restoration.
|
(d) However, any person whose license expired while he or |
she was (i) in federal service on active duty with
the armed |
forces of the United States or the State Militia or (ii) in |
training or education under the
supervision of the United |
States government prior to induction into the
military service |
may have his or her license restored without paying any lapsed |
renewal
fees if, within 2 years after the honorable |
termination of such service, training, or
education, the |
Department is
furnished with satisfactory evidence that the |
person has been so engaged and
that such service, training, or |
education has been so terminated.
|
(e) A license to practice shall not be denied any |
applicant because of
the applicant's race, religion, creed, |
national origin, political beliefs
or activities, age, sex, |
sexual orientation, or physical impairment.
|
(f) Any person requesting restoration from inactive status |
shall (i) be required to pay the current renewal fee, (ii) meet |
continuing education requirements, and (iii) be required to |
restore his or her license as provided in this Act. |
(g) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the |
following requirements for restoration of an inactive or |
expired license of 5 years or less as set forth in subsections |
|
(b), (c), and (f) are suspended for any licensed clinical |
professional counselor who has had no disciplinary action |
taken against his
or her license in this State or in any other |
jurisdiction during the entire period of licensure: proof of |
fitness, certification of active practice in another |
jurisdiction, and the payment of a renewal fee. An individual |
may not restore his or her license in accordance with this |
subsection more than once. |
(Source: P.A. 97-706, eff. 6-25-12.)
|
Article 15. |
Section 15-5. The Clinical Social Work and Social Work |
Practice Act is amended by changing Section 12.5 as follows:
|
(225 ILCS 20/12.5)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2028)
|
Sec. 12.5. Endorsement. The Department may issue a license |
as a
clinical social worker or as a social worker, without the |
required
examination, to an applicant licensed under the laws |
of another jurisdiction if
the requirements for licensure in |
that jurisdiction are, on the date of
licensure, substantially |
equivalent to the requirements of this Act or to any
person
|
who, at the time of his or her licensure, possessed individual |
qualifications
that were substantially equivalent to the |
requirements then in force in this
State. An applicant under |
|
this Section shall pay the required fees.
|
An individual applying for licensure as a clinical social |
worker who has been licensed at the independent level in |
another United States jurisdiction for 5 10 consecutive years |
without discipline is not required to submit proof of |
completion of the education and supervised clinical |
professional experience required in paragraph (3) of Section 9 |
and proof of passage of the examination required in paragraph |
(4) of Section 9 . Individuals with 5 10 consecutive years of |
experience must submit certified verification of licensure |
from the jurisdiction in which the applicant practiced and |
must comply with all other licensing requirements and pay all |
required fees. |
If the accuracy of any submitted documentation or the |
relevance or sufficiency of the course work or experience is |
questioned by the Department or the Board because of a lack of |
information, discrepancies or conflicts in information given, |
or a need for clarification, the applicant seeking licensure |
may be required to provide additional information. |
An applicant has 3 years from the date of application to |
complete the application process. If the process has not been |
completed within 3 years, the application shall be denied, the |
fee shall be forfeited, and the applicant must reapply and |
meet the requirements in effect at the time of reapplication. |
(Source: P.A. 100-766, eff. 1-1-19 .)
|
|
Section 15-10. The Marriage and Family Therapy Licensing |
Act is amended by changing Section 65 as follows:
|
(225 ILCS 55/65) (from Ch. 111, par. 8351-65)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2027)
|
Sec. 65. Endorsement. The Department may issue a license |
as a
licensed marriage and family therapist, without the |
required examination,
to an applicant licensed under the laws |
of another state if the
requirements for licensure in that |
state are, on the date of licensure,
substantially equivalent |
to the requirements of this Act or to a person who, at
the time |
of his or her application for licensure, possessed individual
|
qualifications that were
substantially equivalent to the |
requirements then in force in this State. An
applicant under
|
this Section shall pay all of the required fees.
|
An individual applying for licensure as a licensed |
marriage and family therapist who has been licensed at the |
independent level in another United States jurisdiction for 5 |
10 consecutive years without discipline is not required to |
submit proof of completion of the education, professional |
experience, and supervision required in Section 40. |
Individuals with 5 10 consecutive years of experience must |
submit certified verification of licensure from the |
jurisdiction in which the applicant practiced and must comply |
with all other licensing requirements and pay all required |
fees. |
|
If the accuracy of any submitted documentation or the |
relevance or sufficiency of the course work or experience is |
questioned by the Department or the Board because of a lack of |
information, discrepancies or conflicts in information given, |
or a need for clarification, the applicant seeking licensure |
may be required to provide additional information. |
Applicants have 3 years from the date of application to |
complete the
application process. If the process has not been |
completed within the 3
years, the application shall be denied, |
the fee shall be forfeited, and the
applicant
must reapply and |
meet the requirements in effect at the time of
reapplication.
|
(Source: P.A. 100-372, eff. 8-25-17; 100-766, eff. 1-1-19 .)
|
Section 15-20. The Professional Counselor and Clinical |
Professional Counselor Licensing and Practice Act is amended |
by changing Section 70 as follows:
|
(225 ILCS 107/70)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2023)
|
Sec. 70. Endorsement. The Department may issue a license |
as a licensed
professional counselor or licensed clinical |
professional counselor, without the
required examination, to |
(i) an applicant licensed under the laws of another
state or |
United States jurisdiction whose standards in the opinion of |
the
Department, were substantially equivalent at the date of |
his or her licensure
in the other jurisdiction to the |
|
requirements of this Act or (ii) any person
who, at the time of |
licensure, possessed individual qualifications which were
|
substantially equivalent to the requirements of this Act. Such |
an applicant
shall pay all of the required fees.
|
An individual applying for licensure as a clinical |
professional counselor who has been licensed at the |
independent level in another United States jurisdiction for 5 |
10 consecutive years without discipline is not required to |
submit proof of completion of the education, supervised |
employment , or experience required in subsection (b) of |
Section 45. Individuals with 5 10 consecutive years of |
experience must submit certified verification of licensure |
from the jurisdiction in which the applicant practiced and |
must comply with all other licensing requirements and pay all |
required fees. |
If the accuracy of any submitted documentation or the |
relevance or sufficiency of the course work or experience is |
questioned by the Department or the Board because of a lack of |
information, discrepancies or conflicts in information given, |
or a need for clarification, the applicant seeking licensure |
may be required to provide additional information. |
Applicants have 3 years from the date of application to |
complete the
application process. If the process has not been |
completed within 3
years, the application shall be denied, the |
fee forfeited, and the
applicant must reapply and meet the |
requirements in effect at the time of
reapplication.
|