Public Act 93-0021

SB744 Enrolled                       LRB093 03065 NHT 03082 b

    AN ACT concerning schools.

    Be it enacted by the People of  the  State  of  Illinois,
represented in the General Assembly:

                          Article 1

    Section  1-1.   Short title. This Act may be cited as the
FY2004 Budget Implementation (Education) Act.

    Section 1-5.  Purpose. It is the purpose of this  Act  to
make  changes  relating  to  education  that are necessary to
implement the State's FY2004 budget.

                          Article 5

    Section 5-5.  The School  Code  is  amended  by  changing
Sections  1D-1, 2-3.47, 2-3.61, 2-3.62, 18-8.05, and 27A-11.5
and adding Section 2-3.131 as follows:

    (105 ILCS 5/1D-1)
    Sec. 1D-1.  Block grant funding.
    (a)  For  fiscal  year  1996   and   each   fiscal   year
thereafter,  the  State  Board  of Education shall award to a
school  district  having  a  population   exceeding   500,000
inhabitants   a   general   education   block  grant  and  an
educational services block grant, determined as  provided  in
this  Section,  in  lieu  of  distributing  to  the  district
separate   State   funding  for  the  programs  described  in
subsections (b) and (c).  The  provisions  of  this  Section,
however,  do not apply to any federal funds that the district
is entitled to receive.  In accordance with  Section  2-3.32,
all  block  grants are subject to an audit.  Therefore, block
grant receipts and block grant expenditures shall be recorded
to the appropriate fund code for the designated block grant.
    (b)  The general education block grant shall include  the
following programs: REI Initiative, Summer Bridges, Preschool
At  Risk, K-6 Comprehensive Arts, School Improvement Support,
Urban  Education,  Scientific   Literacy,   Substance   Abuse
Prevention,  Second  Language  Planning,  Staff  Development,
Outcomes  and  Assessment,  K-6 Reading Improvement, Truants'
Optional Education, Hispanic Programs, Agriculture Education,
Gifted Education, Parental Education, Prevention  Initiative,
Report   Cards,   and   Criminal  Background  Investigations.
Notwithstanding any other provision of law, all amounts  paid
under   the   general   education   block  grant  from  State
appropriations to a  school  district  in  a  city  having  a
population    exceeding    500,000   inhabitants   shall   be
appropriated and expended by the board of that  district  for
any of the programs included in the block grant or any of the
board's lawful purposes.
    (c)  The  educational  services block grant shall include
the following programs:  Bilingual,  Regular  and  Vocational
Transportation,  State  Lunch  and  Free  Breakfast  Program,
Special  Education (Personnel, Extraordinary, Transportation,
Orphanage,  Private  Tuition),  Summer  School,   Educational
Service   Centers,   and   Administrator's   Academy.    This
subsection   (c)   does  not  relieve  the  district  of  its
obligation to provide the services required under  a  program
that is included within the educational services block grant.
It  is  the intention of the General Assembly in enacting the
provisions of this subsection (c) to relieve the district  of
the   administrative   burdens  that  impede  efficiency  and
accompany  single-program  funding.   The  General   Assembly
encourages  the  board  to pursue mandate waivers pursuant to
Section 2-3.25g.
    (d)  For  fiscal  year  1996   and   each   fiscal   year
thereafter,  the  amount of the district's block grants shall
be determined as follows: (i) with respect  to  each  program
that  is included within each block grant, the district shall
receive an amount equal to the same percentage of the current
fiscal year  appropriation  made  for  that  program  as  the
percentage of the appropriation received by the district from
the 1995 fiscal year appropriation made for that program, and
(ii)  the  total  amount  that  is due the district under the
block grant shall be the aggregate of the  amounts  that  the
district  is  entitled  to  receive  for the fiscal year with
respect to each program that is  included  within  the  block
grant  that  the  State  Board  of  Education shall award the
district under this Section for that  fiscal  year.   In  the
case  of  the  Summer  Bridges  program,  the  amount  of the
district's block grant shall be equal to 44% of the amount of
the current fiscal year appropriation made for that program.
    (e)  The district is not required to file any application
or other claim in order to receive the block grants to  which
it  is  entitled  under  this  Section.  The  State  Board of
Education shall make payments to the district of amounts  due
under the district's block grants on a schedule determined by
the State Board of Education.
    (f)  A  school  district  to  which  this Section applies
shall report to the State Board of Education on  its  use  of
the  block  grants in such form and detail as the State Board
of Education may specify.
    (g)  This paragraph provides for the treatment  of  block
grants  under  Article  1C  for  purposes  of calculating the
amount of block grants for a  district  under  this  Section.
Those  block  grants  under Article 1C are, for this purpose,
treated as included in the amount of  appropriation  for  the
various  programs  set  forth  in  paragraph  (b) above.  The
appropriation in each current  fiscal  year  for  each  block
grant under Article 1C shall be treated for these purposes as
appropriations  for  the  individual program included in that
block grant.  The proportion of each block grant so allocated
to each such program included in it shall be  the  proportion
which   the   appropriation  for  that  program  was  of  all
appropriations for such purposes now in that block grant,  in
fiscal 1995.
    Payments  to  the school district under this Section with
respect  to  each  program  for  which  payments  to   school
districts generally, as of the date of this amendatory Act of
the 92nd General Assembly, are on a reimbursement basis shall
continue to be made to the district on a reimbursement basis,
pursuant  to  the  provisions  of  this  Code governing those
programs.
    (h)  Notwithstanding any  other  provision  of  law,  any
school  district  receiving  a block grant under this Section
may classify all or a portion of the funds that  it  receives
in  a  particular fiscal year from any block grant authorized
under this Code or from general State aid pursuant to Section
18-8.05 of this Code (other than supplemental  general  State
aid) as funds received in connection with any funding program
for  which  it is entitled to receive funds from the State in
that fiscal year (including, without limitation, any  funding
program  referred  to  in  subsection  (c)  of this Section),
regardless of the source  or  timing  of  the  receipt.   The
district  may  not  classify  more funds as funds received in
connection with the funding  program  than  the  district  is
entitled  to  receive  in  that fiscal year for that program.
Any classification by a district must be made by a resolution
of its board of education.  The resolution must identify  the
amount  of  any  block  grant  or  general  State  aid  to be
classified under this subsection (h)  and  must  specify  the
funding  program  to  which  the  funds  are to be treated as
received  in  connection  therewith.   This   resolution   is
controlling  as  to  the  classification  of funds referenced
therein.  A certified copy of the resolution must be sent  to
the  State  Superintendent of Education. The resolution shall
still take effect even though a copy of  the  resolution  has
not  been  sent to the State Superintendent of Education in a
timely manner.  No classification under this  subsection  (h)
by  a  district  shall  affect  the total amount or timing of
money the district is entitled to receive  under  this  Code.
No  classification  under  this  subsection (h) by a district
shall in any way relieve the  district  from  or  affect  any
requirements  that  otherwise would apply with respect to the
block grant  as  provided  in  this  Section,  including  any
accounting  of  funds  by  source,  reporting expenditures by
original  source  and  purpose,  reporting  requirements,  or
requirements of provision of services.
(Source: P.A. 91-711,  eff.  7-1-00;  92-568,  eff.  6-26-02;
92-651, eff. 7-11-02.)

    (105 ILCS 5/2-3.47) (from Ch. 122, par. 2-3.47)
    Sec.  2-3.47.  Comprehensive  Educational Plan. The State
Board of Education shall analyze the current and  anticipated
problems  and  deficiencies, present and future minimum needs
and requirements and  immediate  and  future  objectives  and
goals  of  elementary and secondary education in the State of
Illinois,  and  shall  design  and  prepare  a  Comprehensive
Educational Plan for the development, expansion, integration,
coordination, and improved and efficient utilization  of  the
personnel,  facilities,  revenues, curricula and standards of
elementary and secondary education for the public schools  in
the  areas of teaching (including preparation, certification,
compensation, classification, performance rating and tenure),
administration,  program  content  and  enrichment,   student
academic achievement, class size, transportation, educational
finance   and   budgetary   and   accounting  procedure,  and
educational policy and resource planning.  In formulating the
Comprehensive Educational Plan for elementary  and  secondary
education,  pre-school  through  grade 12, in this State, the
State  Board  of  Education  shall  give   consideration   to
disabled,  gifted, occupational, career and other specialized
areas of elementary  and  secondary  education,  and  further
shall  consider  the problems, requirements and objectives of
private elementary and secondary schools within the State  as
the   same   relate  to  the  present  and  future  problems,
deficiencies, needs, requirements, objectives  and  goals  of
the public school system of Illinois.  As an integral part of
the  Comprehensive  Educational  Plan,  the  State  Board  of
Education  shall  develop  an annual budget for education for
the entire State which details the required,  total  revenues
from all sources and the estimated total expenditures for all
purposes  under  the  Comprehensive  Educational  Plan.   The
budgets  shall  specify  the amount of revenue projected from
each source and the amount of expenditure estimated for  each
purpose  for  the  fiscal year, and shall specifically relate
and  identify   such   projected   revenues   and   estimated
expenditures  to  the  particular  problem, deficiency, need,
requirement, objective or goal set forth in the Comprehensive
Educational Plan to which such revenues for expenditures  are
attributable.  The State Board of Education shall prepare and
submit  to  the  General  Assembly and the Governor drafts of
proposed   legislation   to   implement   the   Comprehensive
Educational  Plan;  shall  engage  in  a  continuing   study,
analysis and evaluation of the Comprehensive Educational Plan
so  designed  and  prepared;  and  shall from time to time as
required with respect to such  annual  budgets,  and  as  the
State  Board of Education shall determine with respect to any
proposed amendments or  modifications  of  any  Comprehensive
Educational  Plan enacted by the General Assembly, submit its
drafts or recommendations for  proposed  legislation  to  the
General Assembly and the Governor.
(Source: P.A. 89-397, eff. 8-20-95; 90-372, eff. 7-1-98.)
    (105 ILCS 5/2-3.61) (from Ch. 122, par. 2-3.61)
    Sec.  2-3.61.   Summer school grants; gifted and remedial
education. From moneys appropriated for  such  purposes,  the
State  Board  of Education shall provide summer school grants
to qualifying school districts applying for such grants to be
used  by  such  districts,  in  strict  accordance  with  the
provisions  of  this  Section,  solely  for  the  purpose  of
enabling students who  are  "gifted  children"  or  "talented
children"  as  defined  in Section 14A-2 and students who, as
determined by the school district in accordance with criteria
established by the State Board of Education, are in  need  of
remedial   education   in   order  to  qualify  for  academic
advancement to attend summer school  without  having  to  pay
tuition,   fees   or   instructional   material  expenses.  A
qualifying district receiving a summer school grant  pursuant
to this Section shall use the grant moneys so received solely
for  the  purpose  of  employing  certificated  personnel  to
provide  instruction and to furnish necessary transportation,
text books and other instructional materials for students who
are gifted children, talented children or in need of remedial
education within the meaning of this Section and  who  attend
the  summer  school program of the district. All applications
for grants under this Section shall be made  on  forms  which
the  State  Board  of  Education  shall provide, and shall be
filed by the school districts  making  application  for  such
grants  with  the  State  Board  of  Education  prior  to the
beginning of a program.  The State Board of  Education  shall
adopt  rules regarding the procedure by which application may
be made for such grants, and  shall  establish  standards  by
which  to  evaluate  the  summer  school programs proposed by
applicant  school  districts  for  students  who  are  gifted
children, talented children or in need of remedial  education
within the meaning of this Section and for the payment of all
grants awarded pursuant to this Section.
(Source: P.A. 86-184.)

    (105 ILCS 5/2-3.62) (from Ch. 122, par. 2-3.62)
    Sec. 2-3.62.  Educational Service Centers.
    (a)  A  regional  network  of educational service centers
shall be established by  the  State  Board  of  Education  to
coordinate and combine existing services in a manner which is
practical  and  efficient  and  to  provide  new  services to
schools as provided in this Section.   Services  to  be  made
available   by  such  centers  shall  include  the  planning,
implementation and evaluation of:
         (1)  (blank); education for gifted children  through
    area   service   centers,   experimental   projects   and
    institutes as provided in Section 14A-6;
         (2)  computer  technology  education  including  the
    evaluation,   use  and  application  of  state-of-the-art
    technology in computer software as  provided  in  Section
    2-3.43;
         (3)  mathematics,  science and reading resources for
    teachers  including   continuing   education,   inservice
    training and staff development.
    The  centers  may provide training, technical assistance,
coordination and planning in  other  program  areas  such  as
school  improvement,  school accountability, career guidance,
early  childhood  education,   alcohol/drug   education   and
prevention,   family   life   -   sex  education,  electronic
transmission of data from  school  districts  to  the  State,
alternative  education  and  regional  special education, and
telecommunications systems that  provide  distance  learning.
Such  telecommunications  systems may be obtained through the
Department of Central Management Services pursuant to Section
405-270 of the Department of Central Management Services  Law
(20   ILCS   405/405-270).   The  programs  and  services  of
educational service centers may be offered to private  school
teachers  and  private  school  students  within each service
center  area  provided  public  schools  have  already   been
afforded adequate access to such programs and services.
    The  State  Board of Education shall promulgate rules and
regulations necessary to implement this Section.   The  rules
shall  include  detailed  standards which delineate the scope
and specific content of  programs  to  be  provided  by  each
Educational Service Center, as well as the specific planning,
implementation and evaluation services to be provided by each
Center  relative  to  its  programs.    The  Board shall also
provide the standards by which it will evaluate the  programs
provided by each Center.
    (b)  Centers serving Class 1 county school units shall be
governed  by  an 11-member board, 3 members of which shall be
public school teachers  nominated  by  the  local  bargaining
representatives  to  the  appropriate regional superintendent
for appointment and no more than 3 members of which shall  be
from  each  of  the  following  categories, including but not
limited to superintendents, regional superintendents,  school
board  members  and  a  representative  of  an institution of
higher  education.   The  members  of  the  board  shall   be
appointed   by  the  regional  superintendents  whose  school
districts are served by the educational service  center.  The
composition  of  the board will reflect the revisions of this
amendatory Act of 1989 as the  terms  of  office  of  current
members expire.
    (c)  The  centers  shall be of sufficient size and number
to assure delivery of services to all local school  districts
in the State.
    (d)  From  monies appropriated for this program the State
Board  of  Education  shall  provide  grants  to   qualifying
Educational  Service  Centers  applying  for  such  grants in
accordance with rules  and  regulations  promulgated  by  the
State Board of Education to implement this Section.
    (e)  The  governing  authority of each of the 18 regional
educational service centers shall appoint a family life - sex
education advisory board consisting of 2 parents, 2 teachers,
2 school administrators, 2 school  board  members,  2  health
care  professionals,  one  library system representative, and
the director of the regional educational service  center  who
shall   serve   as  chairperson  of  the  advisory  board  so
appointed.  Members  of  the  family  life  -  sex  education
advisory  boards  shall  serve without compensation.  Each of
the advisory boards appointed  pursuant  to  this  subsection
shall  develop a plan for regional teacher-parent family life
- sex education training sessions and shall  file  a  written
report  of  such  plan  with  the  governing  board  of their
regional educational service center.  The directors  of  each
of  the  regional educational service centers shall thereupon
meet, review each of the reports submitted  by  the  advisory
boards and combine those reports into a single written report
which  they  shall  file  with the Citizens Council on School
Problems prior to the end of the regular school term  of  the
1987-1988 school year.
    (f)  The  14  educational service centers serving Class I
county school units shall be disbanded on the first Monday of
August,  1995,  and  their  statutory  responsibilities   and
programs   shall  be  assumed  by  the  regional  offices  of
education, subject to rules and regulations developed by  the
State  Board  of  Education.  The regional superintendents of
schools elected  by  the  voters  residing  in  all  Class  I
counties  shall  serve  as the chief administrators for these
programs and  services.   By  rule  of  the  State  Board  of
Education,  the  10  educational  service  regions  of lowest
population shall  provide  such  services  under  cooperative
agreements with larger regions.
(Source: P.A. 91-239, eff. 1-1-00.)
    (105 ILCS 5/2-3.131 new)
    Sec.  2-3.131.  FY2004  transitional assistance payments.
If the amount that the State Board of Education will pay to a
school district from  fiscal  year  2004  appropriations,  as
estimated  by  the State Board of Education on April 1, 2004,
is less than the amount that the  State  Board  of  Education
paid   to   the   school   district  from  fiscal  year  2003
appropriations, then, subject  to  appropriation,  the  State
Board of Education shall make a fiscal year 2004 transitional
assistance  payment to the school district in an amount equal
to the difference between the estimated  amount  to  be  paid
from fiscal year 2004 appropriations and the amount paid from
fiscal year 2003 appropriations.

    (105 ILCS 5/18-8.05)
    Sec.  18-8.05.  Basis  for apportionment of general State
financial aid and  supplemental  general  State  aid  to  the
common schools for the 1998-1999 and subsequent school years.

(A)  General Provisions.
    (1)  The   provisions   of  this  Section  apply  to  the
1998-1999 and subsequent school years.  The system of general
State financial aid provided for in this Section is  designed
to  assure that, through a combination of State financial aid
and required local resources, the financial support  provided
each  pupil  in  Average Daily Attendance equals or exceeds a
prescribed per pupil Foundation Level.  This formula approach
imputes a level of per pupil Available  Local  Resources  and
provides  for  the  basis  to  calculate a per pupil level of
general State financial aid that,  when  added  to  Available
Local Resources, equals or exceeds the Foundation Level.  The
amount  of  per  pupil general State financial aid for school
districts,  in  general,  varies  in  inverse   relation   to
Available  Local Resources.  Per pupil amounts are based upon
each school district's Average Daily Attendance as that  term
is defined in this Section.
    (2)  In  addition  to general State financial aid, school
districts with specified levels or concentrations  of  pupils
from   low   income   households   are  eligible  to  receive
supplemental general State financial aid grants  as  provided
pursuant to subsection (H). The supplemental State aid grants
provided  for  school districts under subsection (H) shall be
appropriated for distribution to school districts as part  of
the  same  line item in which the general State financial aid
of school districts is appropriated under this Section.
    (3)  To receive financial assistance under this  Section,
school  districts  are required to file claims with the State
Board of Education, subject to the following requirements:
         (a)  Any school district which fails for  any  given
    school  year to maintain school as required by law, or to
    maintain a recognized school is not eligible to file  for
    such  school  year any claim upon the Common School Fund.
    In case of  nonrecognition  of  one  or  more  attendance
    centers   in   a   school  district  otherwise  operating
    recognized schools, the claim of the  district  shall  be
    reduced   in  the  proportion  which  the  Average  Daily
    Attendance in the attendance center or  centers  bear  to
    the  Average  Daily Attendance in the school district.  A
    "recognized school" means any public school  which  meets
    the standards as established for recognition by the State
    Board  of  Education.   A  school  district or attendance
    center not having recognition status  at  the  end  of  a
    school term is entitled to receive State aid payments due
    upon   a  legal  claim  which  was  filed  while  it  was
    recognized.
         (b)  School district claims filed under this Section
    are subject to Sections 18-9, 18-10, and 18-12, except as
    otherwise provided in this Section.
         (c)  If a  school  district  operates  a  full  year
    school  under  Section  10-19.1, the general State aid to
    the school district shall  be  determined  by  the  State
    Board  of  Education  in  accordance with this Section as
    near as may be applicable.
         (d)  (Blank).
    (4)  Except as provided in subsections (H) and  (L),  the
board  of  any  district receiving any of the grants provided
for in this Section may apply those  funds  to  any  fund  so
received   for   which  that  board  is  authorized  to  make
expenditures by law.
    School districts are not  required  to  exert  a  minimum
Operating  Tax  Rate in order to qualify for assistance under
this Section.
    (5)  As used in this Section the  following  terms,  when
capitalized, shall have the meaning ascribed herein:
         (a)  "Average  Daily  Attendance":  A count of pupil
    attendance  in  school,  averaged  as  provided  for   in
    subsection   (C)  and  utilized  in  deriving  per  pupil
    financial support levels.
         (b)  "Available Local Resources":  A computation  of
    local  financial  support,  calculated  on  the  basis of
    Average Daily Attendance and derived as provided pursuant
    to subsection (D).
         (c)  "Corporate   Personal   Property    Replacement
    Taxes":  Funds paid to local school districts pursuant to
    "An  Act  in  relation  to  the  abolition  of ad valorem
    personal property tax and  the  replacement  of  revenues
    lost thereby, and amending and repealing certain Acts and
    parts  of Acts in connection therewith", certified August
    14, 1979, as amended (Public Act 81-1st S.S.-1).
         (d)  "Foundation Level":  A prescribed level of  per
    pupil  financial  support  as  provided for in subsection
    (B).
         (e)  "Operating  Tax  Rate":   All  school  district
    property taxes extended for all purposes, except Bond and
    Interest, Summer School, Rent, Capital  Improvement,  and
    Vocational Education Building purposes.

(B)  Foundation Level.
    (1)  The  Foundation Level is a figure established by the
State representing the minimum level of per  pupil  financial
support  that  should  be  available to provide for the basic
education of each pupil in Average Daily Attendance.  As  set
forth  in  this  Section,  each school district is assumed to
exert  a  sufficient  local  taxing  effort  such  that,   in
combination with the aggregate of general State financial aid
provided  the  district,  an  aggregate  of  State  and local
resources are available to meet the basic education needs  of
pupils in the district.
    (2)  For  the 1998-1999 school year, the Foundation Level
of support is $4,225.  For the  1999-2000  school  year,  the
Foundation  Level  of  support  is $4,325.  For the 2000-2001
school year, the Foundation Level of support is $4,425.
    (3)  For the 2001-2002 school year and  2002-2003  school
year  each  school  year  thereafter, the Foundation Level of
support  is  $4,560  or  such  greater  amount  as   may   be
established by law by the General Assembly.
    (4)  For  the  2003-2004 school year and each school year
thereafter, the Foundation Level of support is $4,810 or such
greater amount as may be established by law  by  the  General
Assembly.

(C)  Average Daily Attendance.
    (1)  For   purposes  of  calculating  general  State  aid
pursuant to  subsection  (E),  an  Average  Daily  Attendance
figure  shall  be  utilized.   The  Average  Daily Attendance
figure for formula calculation purposes shall be the  monthly
average  of the actual number of pupils in attendance of each
school district, as further averaged for the best 3 months of
pupil attendance for each school district.  In compiling  the
figures  for  the  number  of  pupils  in  attendance, school
districts  and  the  State  Board  of  Education  shall,  for
purposes of general State  aid  funding,  conform  attendance
figures to the requirements of subsection (F).
    (2)  The  Average  Daily  Attendance  figures utilized in
subsection (E) shall be the requisite attendance data for the
school year immediately preceding the school year  for  which
general  State  aid is being calculated or the average of the
attendance data for the 3 preceding school  years,  whichever
is greater.  The Average Daily Attendance figures utilized in
subsection (H) shall be the requisite attendance data for the
school  year  immediately preceding the school year for which
general State aid is being calculated.

(D)  Available Local Resources.
    (1)  For  purposes  of  calculating  general  State   aid
pursuant  to  subsection  (E),  a representation of Available
Local Resources per  pupil,  as  that  term  is  defined  and
determined  in this subsection, shall be utilized.  Available
Local Resources per pupil shall include a  calculated  dollar
amount representing local school district revenues from local
property   taxes   and   from   Corporate  Personal  Property
Replacement Taxes,  expressed  on  the  basis  of  pupils  in
Average Daily Attendance.
    (2)  In  determining  a  school  district's  revenue from
local property taxes, the  State  Board  of  Education  shall
utilize  the  equalized  assessed  valuation  of  all taxable
property of each school district as of September  30  of  the
previous  year.   The  equalized  assessed valuation utilized
shall be obtained and determined as  provided  in  subsection
(G).
    (3)  For school districts maintaining grades kindergarten
through  12,  local  property tax revenues per pupil shall be
calculated  as  the  product  of  the  applicable   equalized
assessed  valuation for the district multiplied by 3.00%, and
divided by the district's Average  Daily  Attendance  figure.
For  school districts maintaining grades kindergarten through
8, local property tax revenues per pupil shall be  calculated
as the product of the applicable equalized assessed valuation
for  the  district  multiplied  by  2.30%, and divided by the
district's  Average  Daily  Attendance  figure.   For  school
districts maintaining grades 9 through 12, local property tax
revenues per pupil shall be the applicable equalized assessed
valuation of the district multiplied by 1.05%, and divided by
the district's Average Daily Attendance figure.
    (4)  The Corporate Personal  Property  Replacement  Taxes
paid to each school district during the calendar year 2 years
before  the  calendar  year  in  which  a school year begins,
divided by the  Average  Daily  Attendance  figure  for  that
district,  shall  be added to the local property tax revenues
per pupil as derived by the application  of  the  immediately
preceding  paragraph (3).  The sum of these per pupil figures
for each school district  shall  constitute  Available  Local
Resources  as  that term is utilized in subsection (E) in the
calculation of general State aid.

(E)  Computation of General State Aid.
    (1)  For each school year, the amount  of  general  State
aid  allotted  to  a school district shall be computed by the
State Board of Education as provided in this subsection.
    (2)  For any school district for  which  Available  Local
Resources  per  pupil  is less than the product of 0.93 times
the Foundation Level, general State  aid  for  that  district
shall  be  calculated  as  an  amount equal to the Foundation
Level minus Available  Local  Resources,  multiplied  by  the
Average Daily Attendance of the school district.
    (3)  For  any  school  district for which Available Local
Resources per pupil is equal to or greater than  the  product
of  0.93 times the Foundation Level and less than the product
of 1.75 times the Foundation Level, the general State aid per
pupil shall be a decimal proportion of the  Foundation  Level
derived   using   a  linear  algorithm.   Under  this  linear
algorithm, the calculated general State aid per  pupil  shall
decline   in  direct  linear  fashion  from  0.07  times  the
Foundation Level for a school district with  Available  Local
Resources  equal  to the product of 0.93 times the Foundation
Level, to 0.05  times  the  Foundation  Level  for  a  school
district  with Available Local Resources equal to the product
of 1.75  times  the  Foundation  Level.   The  allocation  of
general  State  aid  for  school  districts  subject  to this
paragraph 3 shall be the calculated  general  State  aid  per
pupil  figure  multiplied  by the Average Daily Attendance of
the school district.
    (4)  For any school district for  which  Available  Local
Resources  per  pupil  equals  or exceeds the product of 1.75
times the Foundation Level, the general  State  aid  for  the
school  district  shall  be calculated as the product of $218
multiplied by the Average  Daily  Attendance  of  the  school
district.
    (5)  The  amount  of  general  State  aid  allocated to a
school district for the 1999-2000  school  year  meeting  the
requirements  set  forth  in  paragraph (4) of subsection (G)
shall be increased by an amount equal to  the  general  State
aid  that  would  have  been received by the district for the
1998-1999 school year by utilizing the  Extension  Limitation
Equalized  Assessed  Valuation as calculated in paragraph (4)
of subsection (G) less the general State aid allotted for the
1998-1999 school year.  This amount shall  be  deemed  a  one
time  increase, and shall not affect any future general State
aid allocations.

(F)  Compilation of Average Daily Attendance.
    (1)  Each school district shall, by July 1 of each  year,
submit  to  the State Board of Education, on forms prescribed
by the State Board of Education, attendance figures  for  the
school  year  that began in the preceding calendar year.  The
attendance information  so  transmitted  shall  identify  the
average daily attendance figures for each month of the school
year.   Beginning  with  the general State aid claim form for
the 2002-2003 school year, districts shall calculate  Average
Daily  Attendance  as  provided in subdivisions (a), (b), and
(c) of this paragraph (1).
         (a)  In  districts  that  do  not  hold   year-round
    classes,  days  of attendance in August shall be added to
    the month of September and any days of attendance in June
    shall be added to the month of May.
         (b)  In  districts  in  which  all  buildings   hold
    year-round classes, days of attendance in July and August
    shall  be added to the month of September and any days of
    attendance in June shall be added to the month of May.
         (c)  In districts in which some buildings,  but  not
    all,  hold  year-round  classes,  for  the non-year-round
    buildings, days of attendance in August shall be added to
    the month of September and any days of attendance in June
    shall be added to the month of  May.  The  average  daily
    attendance for the year-round buildings shall be computed
    as  provided in subdivision (b) of this paragraph (1). To
    calculate the Average Daily Attendance for the  district,
    the average daily attendance for the year-round buildings
    shall  be  multiplied  by  the  days  in  session for the
    non-year-round buildings for each month and added to  the
    monthly attendance of the non-year-round buildings.
    Except  as  otherwise  provided  in this Section, days of
attendance by pupils shall be counted only  for  sessions  of
not  less  than  5  clock  hours of school work per day under
direct supervision of: (i)  teachers,  or  (ii)  non-teaching
personnel   or   volunteer   personnel   when   engaging   in
non-teaching   duties  and  supervising  in  those  instances
specified in subsection (a) of Section 10-22.34 and paragraph
10 of Section 34-18, with pupils of legal school age  and  in
kindergarten and grades 1 through 12.
    Days  of attendance by tuition pupils shall be accredited
only to the districts that pay the tuition  to  a  recognized
school.
    (2)  Days  of  attendance  by pupils of less than 5 clock
hours of school shall be subject to the following  provisions
in the compilation of Average Daily Attendance.
         (a)  Pupils  regularly  enrolled  in a public school
    for only a part of the school day may be counted  on  the
    basis  of  1/6 day for every class hour of instruction of
    40 minutes or more attended pursuant to such  enrollment,
    unless  a pupil is enrolled in a block-schedule format of
    80 minutes or more of  instruction,  in  which  case  the
    pupil  may  be  counted on the basis of the proportion of
    minutes of school work completed each day to the  minimum
    number of minutes that school work is required to be held
    that day.
         (b)  Days  of  attendance  may  be less than 5 clock
    hours on the opening and closing of the school term,  and
    upon  the first day of pupil attendance, if preceded by a
    day  or  days  utilized  as  an  institute  or  teachers'
    workshop.
         (c)  A session of 4  or  more  clock  hours  may  be
    counted  as a day of attendance upon certification by the
    regional  superintendent,  and  approved  by  the   State
    Superintendent  of  Education  to  the  extent  that  the
    district has been forced to use daily multiple sessions.
         (d)  A  session  of  3  or  more  clock hours may be
    counted as a day of attendance (1) when the remainder  of
    the school day or at least 2 hours in the evening of that
    day  is  utilized  for an in-service training program for
    teachers, up to a maximum of 5 days per  school  year  of
    which  a maximum of 4 days of such 5 days may be used for
    parent-teacher conferences, provided a district  conducts
    an  in-service  training  program  for teachers which has
    been approved by the State Superintendent  of  Education;
    or,  in  lieu of 4 such days, 2 full days may be used, in
    which event each such day may be  counted  as  a  day  of
    attendance;  and  (2)  when  days  in  addition  to those
    provided in item (1) are scheduled by a  school  pursuant
    to  its  school improvement plan adopted under Article 34
    or its revised or amended school improvement plan adopted
    under Article 2, provided that (i) such sessions of 3  or
    more  clock  hours  are  scheduled  to  occur  at regular
    intervals, (ii) the remainder of the school days in which
    such sessions occur are utilized for in-service  training
    programs   or  other  staff  development  activities  for
    teachers, and (iii) a sufficient  number  of  minutes  of
    school  work under the direct supervision of teachers are
    added to the school days between such regularly scheduled
    sessions to  accumulate  not  less  than  the  number  of
    minutes  by  which such sessions of 3 or more clock hours
    fall short of 5 clock hours. Any full days used  for  the
    purposes  of  this  paragraph shall not be considered for
    computing average daily attendance.  Days  scheduled  for
    in-service    training    programs,   staff   development
    activities,  or   parent-teacher   conferences   may   be
    scheduled  separately  for  different  grade  levels  and
    different attendance centers of the district.
         (e)  A  session  of  not less than one clock hour of
    teaching hospitalized or homebound pupils on-site  or  by
    telephone  to  the classroom may be counted as 1/2 day of
    attendance, however these pupils must receive 4  or  more
    clock  hours  of instruction to be counted for a full day
    of attendance.
         (f)  A session of at least  4  clock  hours  may  be
    counted  as  a  day of attendance for first grade pupils,
    and pupils in full day kindergartens, and a session of  2
    or  more hours may be counted as 1/2 day of attendance by
    pupils in kindergartens which provide  only  1/2  day  of
    attendance.
         (g)  For  children  with  disabilities who are below
    the age of 6 years and who cannot attend 2 or more  clock
    hours  because  of  their  disability  or  immaturity,  a
    session of not less than one clock hour may be counted as
    1/2  day  of  attendance; however for such children whose
    educational needs so require a session of 4 or more clock
    hours may be counted as a full day of attendance.
         (h)  A recognized kindergarten  which  provides  for
    only  1/2  day of attendance by each pupil shall not have
    more than 1/2 day of attendance counted in any  one  day.
    However, kindergartens may count 2 1/2 days of attendance
    in  any  5 consecutive school days.  When a pupil attends
    such a kindergarten for 2 half days  on  any  one  school
    day,  the  pupil  shall  have  the following day as a day
    absent from school, unless the  school  district  obtains
    permission  in  writing  from the State Superintendent of
    Education. Attendance at kindergartens which provide  for
    a  full  day of attendance by each pupil shall be counted
    the same as attendance by first grade  pupils.  Only  the
    first  year  of  attendance  in one kindergarten shall be
    counted, except in  case  of  children  who  entered  the
    kindergarten   in  their  fifth  year  whose  educational
    development requires a second  year  of  kindergarten  as
    determined  under  the rules and regulations of the State
    Board of Education.

(G)  Equalized Assessed Valuation Data.
    (1)  For purposes of the calculation of  Available  Local
Resources  required  pursuant  to  subsection  (D), the State
Board of  Education  shall  secure  from  the  Department  of
Revenue  the value as equalized or assessed by the Department
of Revenue of all taxable property of every school  district,
together  with  (i) the applicable tax rate used in extending
taxes for the funds of the district as of September 30 of the
previous year and (ii)  the  limiting  rate  for  all  school
districts  subject  to  property tax extension limitations as
imposed under the Property Tax Extension Limitation Law.
    This equalized assessed valuation, as adjusted further by
the requirements of this subsection, shall be utilized in the
calculation of Available Local Resources.
    (2)  The equalized assessed valuation  in  paragraph  (1)
shall be adjusted, as applicable, in the following manner:
         (a)  For the purposes of calculating State aid under
    this  Section,  with  respect  to  any  part  of a school
    district within a redevelopment project area  in  respect
    to   which  a  municipality  has  adopted  tax  increment
    allocation  financing  pursuant  to  the  Tax   Increment
    Allocation  Redevelopment Act, Sections 11-74.4-1 through
    11-74.4-11  of  the  Illinois  Municipal  Code   or   the
    Industrial  Jobs Recovery Law, Sections 11-74.6-1 through
    11-74.6-50 of the Illinois Municipal Code, no part of the
    current equalized assessed  valuation  of  real  property
    located in any such project area which is attributable to
    an  increase  above  the total initial equalized assessed
    valuation of such property shall be used as part  of  the
    equalized  assessed valuation of the district, until such
    time as all redevelopment project costs have  been  paid,
    as  provided  in  Section  11-74.4-8 of the Tax Increment
    Allocation Redevelopment Act or in Section 11-74.6-35  of
    the Industrial Jobs Recovery Law.  For the purpose of the
    equalized  assessed  valuation of the district, the total
    initial  equalized  assessed  valuation  or  the  current
    equalized assessed valuation, whichever is  lower,  shall
    be  used  until  such  time  as all redevelopment project
    costs have been paid.
         (b)  The real property equalized assessed  valuation
    for  a  school  district shall be adjusted by subtracting
    from the real property value as equalized or assessed  by
    the  Department  of  Revenue  for  the district an amount
    computed by dividing the amount of any abatement of taxes
    under Section 18-170 of the Property Tax  Code  by  3.00%
    for  a  district  maintaining grades kindergarten through
    12,  by  2.30%  for   a   district   maintaining   grades
    kindergarten  through  8,  or  by  1.05%  for  a district
    maintaining grades 9 through 12 and adjusted by an amount
    computed by dividing the amount of any abatement of taxes
    under subsection (a) of Section 18-165  of  the  Property
    Tax  Code  by the same percentage rates for district type
    as specified in this subparagraph (b).
    (3)  For the 1999-2000 school year and each  school  year
thereafter, if a school district meets all of the criteria of
this subsection (G)(3), the school district's Available Local
Resources  shall be calculated under subsection (D) using the
district's Extension Limitation Equalized Assessed  Valuation
as calculated under this subsection (G)(3).
    For  purposes  of  this  subsection  (G)(3) the following
terms shall have the following meanings:
         "Budget Year":  The school year  for  which  general
    State aid is calculated and awarded under subsection (E).
         "Base  Tax Year": The property tax levy year used to
    calculate the Budget Year  allocation  of  general  State
    aid.
         "Preceding  Tax  Year":  The  property tax levy year
    immediately preceding the Base Tax Year.
         "Base Tax Year's Tax Extension": The product of  the
    equalized assessed valuation utilized by the County Clerk
    in  the  Base Tax Year multiplied by the limiting rate as
    calculated  by  the  County  Clerk  and  defined  in  the
    Property Tax Extension Limitation Law.
         "Preceding Tax Year's Tax Extension": The product of
    the equalized assessed valuation utilized by  the  County
    Clerk  in  the  Preceding  Tax  Year  multiplied  by  the
    Operating Tax Rate as defined in subsection (A).
         "Extension  Limitation  Ratio":  A  numerical ratio,
    certified by the County Clerk, in which the numerator  is
    the  Base Tax Year's Tax Extension and the denominator is
    the Preceding Tax Year's Tax Extension.
         "Operating Tax Rate":  The  operating  tax  rate  as
    defined in subsection (A).
    If a school district is subject to property tax extension
limitations  as  imposed  under  the  Property  Tax Extension
Limitation Law, the State Board of Education shall  calculate
the Extension Limitation Equalized Assessed Valuation of that
district.   For  the  1999-2000  school  year,  the Extension
Limitation Equalized Assessed Valuation of a school  district
as  calculated by the State Board of Education shall be equal
to the product of  the  district's  1996  Equalized  Assessed
Valuation and the district's Extension Limitation Ratio.  For
the  2000-2001  school  year and each school year thereafter,
the Extension Limitation Equalized Assessed  Valuation  of  a
school district as calculated by the State Board of Education
shall  be  equal  to  the  product  of the Equalized Assessed
Valuation last used in the calculation of general  State  aid
and   the  district's  Extension  Limitation  Ratio.  If  the
Extension Limitation Equalized Assessed Valuation of a school
district as calculated under this subsection (G)(3)  is  less
than   the   district's   equalized   assessed  valuation  as
calculated pursuant to subsections (G)(1)  and  (G)(2),  then
for  purposes of calculating the district's general State aid
for  the  Budget  Year  pursuant  to  subsection  (E),   that
Extension  Limitation  Equalized  Assessed Valuation shall be
utilized  to  calculate  the   district's   Available   Local
Resources under subsection (D).
    (4)  For  the  purposes  of calculating general State aid
for the 1999-2000 school year  only,  if  a  school  district
experienced   a   triennial  reassessment  on  the  equalized
assessed valuation used  in  calculating  its  general  State
financial  aid  apportionment  for the 1998-1999 school year,
the State Board of Education shall  calculate  the  Extension
Limitation  Equalized Assessed Valuation that would have been
used to calculate the district's 1998-1999 general State aid.
This amount shall equal the product of the equalized assessed
valuation  used  to  calculate  general  State  aid  for  the
1997-1998 school year and the district's Extension Limitation
Ratio.   If  the  Extension  Limitation  Equalized   Assessed
Valuation  of  the  school  district as calculated under this
paragraph (4) is less than the district's equalized  assessed
valuation  utilized  in  calculating the district's 1998-1999
general  State  aid  allocation,   then   for   purposes   of
calculating  the  district's  general  State  aid pursuant to
paragraph (5) of subsection (E),  that  Extension  Limitation
Equalized  Assessed  Valuation shall be utilized to calculate
the district's Available Local Resources.
    (5)  For school districts  having  a  majority  of  their
equalized  assessed  valuation  in  any  county  except Cook,
DuPage, Kane, Lake,  McHenry,  or  Will,  if  the  amount  of
general  State  aid  allocated to the school district for the
1999-2000 school year under the provisions of subsection (E),
(H), and (J) of this Section  is  less  than  the  amount  of
general State aid allocated to the district for the 1998-1999
school  year  under these subsections, then the general State
aid of the district for the 1999-2000 school year only  shall
be  increased  by  the difference between these amounts.  The
total payments made under this paragraph (5) shall not exceed
$14,000,000.   Claims  shall  be  prorated  if  they   exceed
$14,000,000.
(H)  Supplemental General State Aid.
    (1)  In  addition  to  the  general  State  aid  a school
district is allotted pursuant to subsection  (E),  qualifying
school  districts  shall receive a grant, paid in conjunction
with  a  district's  payments  of  general  State  aid,   for
supplemental  general  State aid based upon the concentration
level of  children  from  low-income  households  within  the
school  district.  Supplemental State aid grants provided for
school districts under this subsection shall be  appropriated
for distribution to school districts as part of the same line
item  in  which  the  general  State  financial aid of school
districts  is  appropriated  under  this  Section.   If   the
appropriation  in  any  fiscal year for general State aid and
supplemental general State aid is  insufficient  to  pay  the
amounts required under the general State aid and supplemental
general  State  aid  calculations,  then  the  State Board of
Education shall ensure that each school district receives the
full amount due for general State aid and  the  remainder  of
the  appropriation  shall  be  used  for supplemental general
State aid, which the State Board of Education shall calculate
and pay to eligible districts on a prorated basis.
    (1.5)  This paragraph (1.5) applies only to those  school
years  preceding  the  2003-2004 school year. For purposes of
this  subsection  (H),  the  term  "Low-Income  Concentration
Level" shall be the low-income eligible pupil count from  the
most recently available federal census divided by the Average
Daily Attendance of the school district. If, however, (i) the
percentage  decrease  from the 2 most recent federal censuses
in the low-income eligible  pupil  count  of  a  high  school
district  with fewer than 400 students exceeds by 75% or more
the percentage change in the total low-income eligible  pupil
count   of  contiguous  elementary  school  districts,  whose
boundaries are coterminous with the high school district,  or
(ii)  a  high school district within 2 counties and serving 5
elementary school districts, whose boundaries are coterminous
with the high school district, has a percentage decrease from
the 2 most recent federal censuses in the low-income eligible
pupil count and there is a percentage increase in  the  total
low-income   eligible  pupil  count  of  a  majority  of  the
elementary school districts in excess of 50% from the 2  most
recent  federal  censuses,  then  the  high school district's
low-income eligible pupil  count  from  the  earlier  federal
census  shall  be  the number used as the low-income eligible
pupil count for the high school  district,  for  purposes  of
this  subsection (H).  The changes made to this paragraph (1)
by Public Act 92-28 shall apply to supplemental general State
aid grants for school years preceding  the  2003-2004  school
year  that are paid in fiscal year 1999 or and in each fiscal
year thereafter  and to any State aid payments made in fiscal
year 1994 through fiscal year  1998  pursuant  to  subsection
1(n) of Section 18-8 of this Code (which was repealed on July
1,  1998),  and  any high school district that is affected by
Public Act 92-28  is  entitled  to  a  recomputation  of  its
supplemental general State aid grant or State aid paid in any
of  those  fiscal  years.   This  recomputation  shall not be
affected by any other funding.
    (1.10)  This paragraph (1.10) applies  to  the  2003-2004
school  year and each school year thereafter. For purposes of
this  subsection  (H),  the  term  "Low-Income  Concentration
Level"  shall,  for  each  fiscal  year,  be  the  low-income
eligible  pupil  count  as  of  July  1  of  the  immediately
preceding fiscal year (as determined  by  the  Department  of
Human Services based on the number of pupils who are eligible
for  at  least  one  of  the  following  low income programs:
Medicaid, KidCare, TANF, or Food Stamps, excluding pupils who
are eligible for  services  provided  by  the  Department  of
Children and Family Services, averaged over the 2 immediately
preceding  fiscal  years  for fiscal year 2004 and over the 3
immediately preceding  fiscal  years  for  each  fiscal  year
thereafter)  divided  by  the Average Daily Attendance of the
school district.
    (2)  Supplemental general  State  aid  pursuant  to  this
subsection   (H)   shall  be  provided  as  follows  for  the
1998-1999, 1999-2000, and 2000-2001 school years only:
         (a)  For any  school  district  with  a  Low  Income
    Concentration  Level  of  at least 20% and less than 35%,
    the grant for any school year shall be $800 multiplied by
    the low income eligible pupil count.
         (b)  For any  school  district  with  a  Low  Income
    Concentration  Level  of  at least 35% and less than 50%,
    the grant for the 1998-1999 school year shall  be  $1,100
    multiplied by the low income eligible pupil count.
         (c)  For  any  school  district  with  a  Low Income
    Concentration Level of at least 50% and  less  than  60%,
    the  grant  for  the  1998-99 school year shall be $1,500
    multiplied by the low income eligible pupil count.
         (d)  For any  school  district  with  a  Low  Income
    Concentration  Level  of  60%  or more, the grant for the
    1998-99 school year shall be $1,900 multiplied by the low
    income eligible pupil count.
         (e)  For the 1999-2000 school year,  the  per  pupil
    amount  specified  in  subparagraphs  (b),  (c),  and (d)
    immediately above shall be increased to  $1,243,  $1,600,
    and $2,000, respectively.
         (f)  For  the  2000-2001  school year, the per pupil
    amounts specified in  subparagraphs  (b),  (c),  and  (d)
    immediately  above  shall  be $1,273, $1,640, and $2,050,
    respectively.
    (2.5)  Supplemental general State aid  pursuant  to  this
subsection (H) shall be provided as follows for the 2002-2003
school year and each school year thereafter:
         (a)  For  any  school  district  with  a  Low Income
    Concentration Level of less than 10%, the grant for  each
    school  year  shall  be $355 multiplied by the low income
    eligible pupil count.
         (b)  For any  school  district  with  a  Low  Income
    Concentration  Level  of  at least 10% and less than 20%,
    the grant for each school year shall be  $675  multiplied
    by the low income eligible pupil count.
         (c)  For  any  school  district  with  a  Low Income
    Concentration Level of at least 20% and  less  than  35%,
    the grant for each school year shall be $1,330 multiplied
    by the low income eligible pupil count.
         (d)  For  any  school  district  with  a  Low Income
    Concentration Level of at least 35% and  less  than  50%,
    the grant for each school year shall be $1,362 multiplied
    by the low income eligible pupil count.
         (e)  For  any  school  district  with  a  Low Income
    Concentration Level of at least 50% and  less  than  60%,
    the grant for each school year shall be $1,680 multiplied
    by the low income eligible pupil count.
         (f)  For  any  school  district  with  a  Low Income
    Concentration Level of 60% or more, the  grant  for  each
    school  year shall be $2,080 multiplied by the low income
    eligible pupil count.
    (2.10)  Except  as   otherwise   provided,   supplemental
general  State  aid  pursuant to this subsection (H) shall be
provided as follows for the 2003-2004 school  year  and  each
school year thereafter:
         (a)  For  any  school  district  with  a  Low Income
    Concentration Level of 15% or less, the  grant  for  each
    school  year  shall  be $355 multiplied by the low income
    eligible pupil count.
         (b)  For any  school  district  with  a  Low  Income
    Concentration  Level greater than 15%, the grant for each
    school year shall be $294.25  added  to  the  product  of
    $2,700  and  the  square  of the Low Income Concentration
    Level, all multiplied by the low  income  eligible  pupil
    count.
    For the 2003-2004 school year only, the grant shall be no
less  than  the  grant for the 2002-2003 school year. For the
2004-2005 school year only, the grant shall be no  less  than
the  grant  for the 2002-2003 school year multiplied by 0.66.
For the 2005-2006 school year only, the  grant  shall  be  no
less  than the grant for the 2002-2003 school year multiplied
by 0.33.
    For the 2003-2004 school year only, the grant shall be no
greater than the grant received during the  2002-2003  school
year   added  to  the  product  of  0.25  multiplied  by  the
difference  between  the  grant   amount   calculated   under
subsection  (a) or (b) of this paragraph (2.10), whichever is
applicable, and  the  grant  received  during  the  2002-2003
school  year.  For  the 2004-2005 school year only, the grant
shall be no  greater  than  the  grant  received  during  the
2002-2003 school year added to the product of 0.50 multiplied
by  the  difference between the grant amount calculated under
subsection (a) or (b) of this paragraph (2.10), whichever  is
applicable,  and  the  grant  received  during  the 2002-2003
school year. For the 2005-2006 school year  only,  the  grant
shall  be  no  greater  than  the  grant  received during the
2002-2003 school year added to the product of 0.75 multiplied
by the difference between the grant amount  calculated  under
subsection  (a) or (b) of this paragraph (2.10), whichever is
applicable, and  the  grant  received  during  the  2002-2003
school year.
    (3)  School districts with an Average Daily Attendance of
more  than  1,000  and  less  than  50,000  that  qualify for
supplemental general State aid pursuant  to  this  subsection
shall  submit a plan to the State Board of Education prior to
October 30 of each year for the use of  the  funds  resulting
from  this  grant  of  supplemental general State aid for the
improvement of instruction in  which  priority  is  given  to
meeting  the education needs of disadvantaged children.  Such
plan  shall  be  submitted  in  accordance  with  rules   and
regulations promulgated by the State Board of Education.
    (4)  School districts with an Average Daily Attendance of
50,000  or  more  that qualify for supplemental general State
aid  pursuant  to  this  subsection  shall  be  required   to
distribute  from funds available pursuant to this Section, no
less than  $261,000,000  in  accordance  with  the  following
requirements:
         (a)  The  required  amounts  shall be distributed to
    the attendance centers within the district in  proportion
    to  the  number  of  pupils  enrolled  at each attendance
    center who are eligible to receive free or  reduced-price
    lunches  or  breakfasts under the federal Child Nutrition
    Act of 1966 and  under  the  National  School  Lunch  Act
    during the immediately preceding school year.
         (b)  The   distribution   of   these   portions   of
    supplemental  and  general  State  aid  among  attendance
    centers  according  to  these  requirements  shall not be
    compensated for or  contravened  by  adjustments  of  the
    total  of  other  funds  appropriated  to  any attendance
    centers, and the Board of Education shall utilize funding
    from one or several sources in order to  fully  implement
    this provision annually prior to the opening of school.
         (c)  Each attendance center shall be provided by the
    school  district  a  distribution of noncategorical funds
    and other categorical funds to which an attendance center
    is entitled under law in order that the general State aid
    and  supplemental   general   State   aid   provided   by
    application  of  this  subsection supplements rather than
    supplants the noncategorical funds and other  categorical
    funds  provided  by the school district to the attendance
    centers.
         (d)  Any funds made available under this  subsection
    that  by  reason of the provisions of this subsection are
    not required to be allocated and provided  to  attendance
    centers  may be used and appropriated by the board of the
    district for any lawful school purpose.
         (e)  Funds received by an attendance center pursuant
    to this subsection shall be used by the attendance center
    at the discretion  of  the  principal  and  local  school
    council for programs to improve educational opportunities
    at  qualifying schools through the following programs and
    services: early childhood education, reduced  class  size
    or  improved adult to student classroom ratio, enrichment
    programs, remedial  assistance,  attendance  improvement,
    and  other  educationally  beneficial  expenditures which
    supplement the regular and basic programs  as  determined
    by the State Board of Education. Funds provided shall not
    be  expended  for  any  political or lobbying purposes as
    defined by board rule.
         (f)  Each district subject to the provisions of this
    subdivision (H)(4) shall submit  an  acceptable  plan  to
    meet  the educational needs of disadvantaged children, in
    compliance with the requirements of  this  paragraph,  to
    the  State  Board  of  Education prior to July 15 of each
    year. This plan shall be consistent with the decisions of
    local school councils concerning the  school  expenditure
    plans  developed  in  accordance  with  part 4 of Section
    34-2.3.  The State Board shall approve or reject the plan
    within 60 days after its  submission.   If  the  plan  is
    rejected,  the  district  shall  give  written  notice of
    intent  to  modify  the  plan  within  15  days  of   the
    notification of rejection and then submit a modified plan
    within  30  days  after the date of the written notice of
    intent to modify.  Districts  may  amend  approved  plans
    pursuant  to  rules  promulgated  by  the  State Board of
    Education.
         Upon notification by the State  Board  of  Education
    that  the district has not submitted a plan prior to July
    15 or a modified plan within the  time  period  specified
    herein,  the  State  aid  funds  affected by that plan or
    modified plan shall be withheld by  the  State  Board  of
    Education until a plan or modified plan is submitted.
         If  the  district  fails  to distribute State aid to
    attendance centers in accordance with an  approved  plan,
    the  plan for the following year shall allocate funds, in
    addition  to  the  funds  otherwise  required   by   this
    subsection,   to  those  attendance  centers  which  were
    underfunded during the previous year in amounts equal  to
    such underfunding.
         For  purposes  of  determining  compliance with this
    subsection in relation to the requirements of  attendance
    center  funding,  each district subject to the provisions
    of this subsection shall submit as a separate document by
    December 1 of each year a report of expenditure data  for
    the  prior  year  in  addition to any modification of its
    current plan.  If it is determined that there has been  a
    failure to comply with the expenditure provisions of this
    subsection  regarding  contravention  or supplanting, the
    State Superintendent of Education shall, within  60  days
    of  receipt  of  the  report, notify the district and any
    affected local school council.  The district shall within
    45 days of receipt of that notification inform the  State
    Superintendent of Education of the remedial or corrective
    action  to be taken, whether  by amendment of the current
    plan, if feasible, or by adjustment in the plan  for  the
    following  year.   Failure  to  provide  the  expenditure
    report  or  the  notification  of  remedial or corrective
    action in a timely manner shall result in  a  withholding
    of the affected funds.
         The  State Board of Education shall promulgate rules
    and regulations  to  implement  the  provisions  of  this
    subsection.   No  funds  shall  be  released  under  this
    subdivision (H)(4) to any district that has not submitted
    a  plan  that  has  been  approved  by the State Board of
    Education.

(I)  General State Aid for Newly Configured School Districts.
    (1)  For  a  new  school  district  formed  by  combining
property  included  totally  within  2  or  more   previously
existing  school  districts,  for its first year of existence
the general State aid  and  supplemental  general  State  aid
calculated  under  this Section shall be computed for the new
district and for the previously existing districts for  which
property is totally included within the new district.  If the
computation on the basis of the previously existing districts
is  greater,  a supplementary payment equal to the difference
shall be made for the first 4 years of existence of  the  new
district.
    (2)  For  a  school  district  which  annexes  all of the
territory of one or more entire other school  districts,  for
the   first  year  during  which  the  change  of  boundaries
attributable to such annexation  becomes  effective  for  all
purposes as determined under Section 7-9 or 7A-8, the general
State aid and supplemental general State aid calculated under
this  Section  shall be computed for the annexing district as
constituted after the annexation and  for  the  annexing  and
each annexed district as constituted prior to the annexation;
and  if  the  computation  on  the  basis of the annexing and
annexed districts as constituted prior to the  annexation  is
greater,  a  supplementary  payment  equal  to the difference
shall be made for the first  4  years  of  existence  of  the
annexing school district as constituted upon such annexation.
    (3)  For  2  or  more school districts which annex all of
the territory of one or more entire other  school  districts,
and  for 2 or more community unit districts which result upon
the division (pursuant to petition under  Section  11A-2)  of
one  or more other unit school districts into 2 or more parts
and which together include all of the parts into  which  such
other  unit  school district or districts are so divided, for
the  first  year  during  which  the  change  of   boundaries
attributable to such annexation or division becomes effective
for  all  purposes as determined under Section 7-9 or 11A-10,
as the case may be, the general State  aid  and  supplemental
general  State  aid  calculated  under  this Section shall be
computed  for  each  annexing  or   resulting   district   as
constituted  after  the  annexation  or division and for each
annexing and annexed district,  or  for  each  resulting  and
divided  district,  as constituted prior to the annexation or
division; and if the aggregate of the general State  aid  and
supplemental  general  State  aid  as  so  computed  for  the
annexing  or  resulting  districts  as  constituted after the
annexation or division is less  than  the  aggregate  of  the
general  State  aid  and supplemental general State aid as so
computed for the annexing and annexed districts, or  for  the
resulting  and divided districts, as constituted prior to the
annexation or division, then a supplementary payment equal to
the difference shall be made and allocated between  or  among
the annexing or resulting districts, as constituted upon such
annexation  or  division,  for  the  first  4  years of their
existence.  The total difference payment shall  be  allocated
between  or  among the annexing or resulting districts in the
same ratio as the pupil enrollment from that portion  of  the
annexed  or divided district or districts which is annexed to
or included in each such annexing or resulting district bears
to the total pupil enrollment  from  the  entire  annexed  or
divided  district  or  districts, as such pupil enrollment is
determined for the school year last ending prior to the  date
when  the change of boundaries attributable to the annexation
or division becomes effective for all purposes.   The  amount
of  the total difference payment and the amount thereof to be
allocated to the annexing or  resulting  districts  shall  be
computed  by  the  State  Board  of Education on the basis of
pupil enrollment and other data which shall be  certified  to
the State Board of Education, on forms which it shall provide
for  that  purpose, by the regional superintendent of schools
for each educational service region in which the annexing and
annexed districts, or resulting  and  divided  districts  are
located.
    (3.5)  Claims   for   financial   assistance  under  this
subsection (I) shall not be recomputed  except  as  expressly
provided under this Section.
    (4)  Any supplementary payment made under this subsection
(I) shall be treated as separate from all other payments made
pursuant to this Section.

(J)  Supplementary Grants in Aid.
    (1)  Notwithstanding   any   other   provisions  of  this
Section, the amount of the aggregate  general  State  aid  in
combination  with  supplemental  general State aid under this
Section for which each school district is eligible  shall  be
no  less  than  the amount of the aggregate general State aid
entitlement that was received by the district  under  Section
18-8  (exclusive  of  amounts received under subsections 5(p)
and 5(p-5) of that Section)  for  the  1997-98  school  year,
pursuant  to the provisions of that Section as it was then in
effect.  If  a  school  district  qualifies  to   receive   a
supplementary  payment  made  under  this subsection (J), the
amount of the aggregate general State aid in combination with
supplemental general State aid under this Section which  that
district is eligible to receive for each school year shall be
no  less  than  the amount of the aggregate general State aid
entitlement that was received by the district  under  Section
18-8  (exclusive  of  amounts received under subsections 5(p)
and 5(p-5) of that Section) for the  1997-1998  school  year,
pursuant  to the provisions of that Section as it was then in
effect.
    (2)  If, as provided in paragraph (1) of this  subsection
(J),  a school district is to receive aggregate general State
aid in combination with supplemental general State aid  under
this  Section  for the 1998-99 school year and any subsequent
school year that in any such school year  is  less  than  the
amount  of  the  aggregate general State aid entitlement that
the district received for the 1997-98 school year, the school
district shall also receive, from  a  separate  appropriation
made  for  purposes  of  this subsection (J), a supplementary
payment that is equal to the amount of the difference in  the
aggregate State aid figures as described in paragraph (1).
    (3)  (Blank).

(K)  Grants to Laboratory and Alternative Schools.
    In  calculating  the  amount  to be paid to the governing
board of a  public  university  that  operates  a  laboratory
school  under  this Section or to any alternative school that
is operated by a  regional  superintendent  of  schools,  the
State Board of Education shall require by rule such reporting
requirements as it deems necessary.
    As  used  in  this  Section,  "laboratory school" means a
public school which is  created  and  operated  by  a  public
university and approved by the State Board of Education.  The
governing  board  of a public university which receives funds
from the State  Board  under  this  subsection  (K)  may  not
increase  the  number  of students enrolled in its laboratory
school from a single district, if that  district  is  already
sending  50 or more students, except under a mutual agreement
between the school board of a student's district of residence
and the university which operates the laboratory  school.   A
laboratory  school  may  not  have  more than 1,000 students,
excluding students with disabilities in a  special  education
program.
    As  used  in  this  Section, "alternative school" means a
public school which is created and  operated  by  a  Regional
Superintendent  of Schools and approved by the State Board of
Education.  Such alternative schools  may  offer  courses  of
instruction  for  which  credit  is  given  in regular school
programs, courses to prepare students  for  the  high  school
equivalency  testing  program  or vocational and occupational
training.   A regional superintendent of schools may contract
with a school district or a public community college district
to operate an  alternative  school.   An  alternative  school
serving  more  than  one  educational  service  region may be
established by the regional superintendents of schools of the
affected educational service regions.  An alternative  school
serving  more  than  one  educational  service  region may be
operated under such terms as the regional superintendents  of
schools of those educational service regions may agree.
    Each  laboratory  and  alternative  school shall file, on
forms provided by the State Superintendent of  Education,  an
annual  State  aid  claim  which  states  the  Average  Daily
Attendance  of  the  school's  students by month.  The best 3
months' Average Daily Attendance shall be computed  for  each
school.  The  general State aid entitlement shall be computed
by multiplying the applicable Average Daily Attendance by the
Foundation Level as determined under this Section.

(L)  Payments,   Additional   Grants   in   Aid   and   Other
Requirements.
    (1)  For a school district operating under the  financial
supervision  of  an  Authority created under Article 34A, the
general State aid otherwise payable to  that  district  under
this  Section,  but  not  the supplemental general State aid,
shall be reduced by an amount equal to  the  budget  for  the
operations  of the Authority as certified by the Authority to
the State Board of Education, and an  amount  equal  to  such
reduction  shall  be  paid  to the Authority created for such
district for its operating expenses in the manner provided in
Section 18-11.  The remainder of general State school aid for
any such district shall be paid in  accordance  with  Article
34A  when  that Article provides for a disposition other than
that provided by this Article.
    (2)  (Blank).
    (3)  Summer school.  Summer school payments shall be made
as provided in Section 18-4.3.

(M)  Education Funding Advisory Board.
    The Education Funding Advisory Board, hereinafter in this
subsection (M) referred to as the "Board", is hereby created.
The Board shall consist of 5 members who are appointed by the
Governor, by and with the advice and consent of  the  Senate.
The   members  appointed  shall  include  representatives  of
education, business, and  the  general  public.  One  of  the
members  so  appointed shall be designated by the Governor at
the time the appointment is made as the  chairperson  of  the
Board.  The initial members of the Board may be appointed any
time after the effective date of this amendatory Act of 1997.
The regular term of each member of the Board shall be  for  4
years  from  the third Monday of January of the year in which
the term of the member's appointment is to  commence,  except
that  of  the  5  initial  members  appointed to serve on the
Board, the member who is appointed as the  chairperson  shall
serve  for  a  term  that commences on the date of his or her
appointment and expires on the third Monday of January, 2002,
and the remaining 4 members,  by  lots  drawn  at  the  first
meeting  of  the  Board  that is held after all 5 members are
appointed, shall determine 2 of their  number  to  serve  for
terms   that   commence  on  the  date  of  their  respective
appointments and expire on the third Monday of January, 2001,
and 2 of their number to serve for terms that commence on the
date of their respective appointments and expire on the third
Monday of January, 2000.  All members appointed to  serve  on
the  Board  shall serve until their respective successors are
appointed and confirmed.  Vacancies shall be  filled  in  the
same  manner  as  original  appointments.   If  a  vacancy in
membership occurs at  a  time  when  the  Senate  is  not  in
session,  the  Governor  shall  make  a temporary appointment
until the next meeting of the Senate, when he  or  she  shall
appoint,  by and with the advice and consent of the Senate, a
person to fill that membership for the  unexpired  term.   If
the  Senate  is  not in session when the initial appointments
are made, those appointments shall be made as in the case  of
vacancies.
    The  Education  Funding  Advisory  Board  shall be deemed
established,  and  the  initial  members  appointed  by   the
Governor  to serve as members of the Board shall take office,
on the date that the Governor makes his or her appointment of
the fifth initial member of the Board, whether those  initial
members   are   then  serving  pursuant  to  appointment  and
confirmation or pursuant to temporary appointments  that  are
made by the Governor as in the case of vacancies.
    The  State  Board  of  Education shall provide such staff
assistance to the Education  Funding  Advisory  Board  as  is
reasonably  required  for the proper performance by the Board
of its responsibilities.
    For school years after the  2000-2001  school  year,  the
Education  Funding  Advisory  Board, in consultation with the
State Board  of  Education,  shall  make  recommendations  as
provided  in  this subsection (M) to the General Assembly for
the foundation level under subdivision (B)(3) of this Section
and for the supplemental general State aid grant level  under
subsection  (H)  of  this  Section  for  districts  with high
concentrations of children  from  poverty.   The  recommended
foundation  level  shall be determined based on a methodology
which  incorporates  the  basic  education  expenditures   of
low-spending  schools  exhibiting  high academic performance.
The  Education  Funding  Advisory  Board  shall   make   such
recommendations  to  the General Assembly on January 1 of odd
numbered years, beginning January 1, 2001.

(N)  (Blank).

(O)  References.
    (1)  References in other laws to the various subdivisions
of Section 18-8 as that Section existed before its repeal and
replacement by this Section 18-8.05 shall be deemed to  refer
to  the  corresponding provisions of this Section 18-8.05, to
the extent that those references remain applicable.
    (2)  References in other laws to State  Chapter  1  funds
shall  be  deemed  to refer to the supplemental general State
aid provided under subsection (H) of this Section.
(Source: P.A. 91-24, eff. 7-1-99; 91-93, eff. 7-9-99;  91-96,
eff.  7-9-99;  91-111,  eff.  7-14-99;  91-357, eff. 7-29-99;
91-533,  eff.  8-13-99;  92-7,  eff.  6-29-01;  92-16,   eff.
6-28-01; 92-28, eff. 7-1-01; 92-29, eff. 7-1-01; 92-269, eff.
8-7-01;  92-604,  eff.  7-1-02; 92-636, eff. 7-11-02; 92-651,
eff. 7-11-02; revised 7-26-02.)

    (105 ILCS 5/27A-11.5)
    Sec. 27A-11.5.  State  financing.   The  State  Board  of
Education  shall make the following funds available to school
districts and charter schools:
         (1)  From a separate appropriation made to the State
    Board for purposes of this  subdivision  (1),  the  State
    Board  shall  make  transition  impact  aid  available to
    school districts that approve a  new  charter  school  or
    that have funds withheld by the State Board to fund a new
    charter school that is chartered by the State Board.  The
    amount  of  the  aid  shall  equal  90% of the per capita
    funding paid to the charter school during the first  year
    of  its  initial  charter  term,  65%  of  the per capita
    funding paid to the charter school during the second year
    of its initial term, and 35% of the  per  capita  funding
    paid  to  the charter school during the third year of its
    initial term.  This transition impact aid shall  be  paid
    to   the   local   school   board   in   equal  quarterly
    installments, with the payment of the installment for the
    first  quarter  being  made  by  August  1st  immediately
    preceding the first,  second,  and  third  years  of  the
    initial term.  The district shall file an application for
    this  aid  with the State Board in a format designated by
    the State Board.  If the appropriation is insufficient in
    any year to pay all approved claims, the impact aid shall
    be prorated. However, for fiscal  year  2004,  the  State
    Board  of  Education  shall  pay approved claims only for
    charter schools with a valid  charter  granted  prior  to
    June 1, 2003. If any funds remain after these claims have
    been  paid, then the State Board of Education may pay all
    other approved claims on a pro rata  basis.    Transition
    impact  aid  shall  be  paid  beginning  in the 1999-2000
    school year for charter schools that are  in  the  first,
    second,  or third year of their initial term.  Transition
    impact aid shall not be paid for any charter school  that
    is  proposed  and  created  by  one  or  more  boards  of
    education,  as  authorized under the provisions of Public
    Act 91-405.
         (2)  From a  separate  appropriation  made  for  the
    purpose  of  this  subdivision (2), the State Board shall
    make grants to charter  schools  to  pay  their  start-up
    costs  of  acquiring  educational materials and supplies,
    textbooks, furniture, and other equipment  needed  during
    their  initial  term.   The  State  Board  shall annually
    establish the time and manner of  application  for  these
    grants,  which shall not exceed $250 per student enrolled
    in the charter school.
         (3)  The Charter  Schools  Revolving  Loan  Fund  is
    created as a special fund in the State treasury.  Federal
    funds,  such  other  funds  as  may be made available for
    costs  associated  with  the  establishment  of   charter
    schools  in  Illinois,  and  amounts  repaid  by  charter
    schools  that  have  received  a  loan  from  the Charter
    Schools Revolving Loan Fund shall be deposited  into  the
    Charter  Schools  Revolving  Loan Fund, and the moneys in
    the  Charter  Schools  Revolving  Loan  Fund   shall   be
    appropriated  to  the  State  Board  and  used to provide
    interest-free loans  to  charter  schools.   These  funds
    shall   be  used  to  pay  start-up  costs  of  acquiring
    educational materials and supplies, textbooks, furniture,
    and other equipment needed in the  initial  term  of  the
    charter   school  and  for  acquiring  and  remodeling  a
    suitable physical plant, within the initial term  of  the
    charter  school.   Loans shall be limited to one loan per
    charter school and shall  not  exceed  $250  per  student
    enrolled  in  the charter school.  A loan shall be repaid
    by the end of the initial term  of  the  charter  school.
    The State Board may deduct amounts necessary to repay the
    loan  from funds due to the charter school or may require
    that the local school board that authorized  the  charter
    school  deduct  such  amounts  from funds due the charter
    school and  remit  these  amounts  to  the  State  Board,
    provided  that  the  local  school  board  shall  not  be
    responsible  for  repayment of the loan.  The State Board
    may use up to 3% of the appropriation to contract with  a
    non-profit entity to administer the loan program.
         (4)  A  charter  school  may  apply for and receive,
    subject to the same  restrictions  applicable  to  school
    districts, any grant administered by the State Board that
    is available for school districts.
(Source: P.A. 91-407, eff. 8-3-99; 92-16, eff. 6-28-01.)

    (105 ILCS 5/Art. 14A rep.)
    Section  5-10.  The  School  Code is amended by repealing
Article 14A.

                         Article 10

    Section 10-5.  The School Code  is  amended  by  changing
Section 10-22.20 as follows:

    (105 ILCS 5/10-22.20) (from Ch. 122, par. 10-22.20)
    Sec.  10-22.20.  Classes  for  adults  and  youths  whose
schooling   has   been   interrupted;  conditions  for  State
reimbursement; use of child care facilities.
    (a)  To establish special classes for the instruction (1)
of persons of age 21 years or over, and (2) of  persons  less
than age 21 and not otherwise in attendance in public school,
for  the  purpose  of  providing adults in the community, and
youths  whose  schooling  has  been  interrupted,  with  such
additional basic education, vocational  skill  training,  and
other  instruction  as  may  be  necessary  to increase their
qualifications for employment or other means of  self-support
and  their ability to meet their responsibilities as citizens
including  courses  of  instruction  regularly  accepted  for
graduation  from  elementary  or   high   schools   and   for
Americanization  and  General  Educational Development Review
classes.
    The board  shall  pay  the  necessary  expenses  of  such
classes  out of school funds of the district, including costs
of student transportation and such  facilities  or  provision
for  child-care  as  may  be necessary in the judgment of the
board  to  permit  maximum  utilization  of  the  courses  by
students with  children,  and  other  special  needs  of  the
students  directly related to such instruction.  The expenses
thus incurred shall be subject  to  State  reimbursement,  as
provided  in  this  Section.   The  board  may make a tuition
charge for persons taking instruction who are not subject  to
State  reimbursement,  such  tuition charge not to exceed the
per capita cost of such classes.
    The cost of such instruction,  including  the  additional
expenses   herein  authorized,  incurred  for  recipients  of
financial aid under the Illinois  Public  Aid  Code,  or  for
persons   for  whom  education  and  training  aid  has  been
authorized under Section 9-8 of that Code, shall  be  assumed
in  its  entirety from funds appropriated by the State to the
Illinois Community College Board.
    (b)  The Illinois Community College Board shall establish
the standards for the courses of instruction reimbursed under
this Section.  The Illinois  Community  College  Board  shall
supervise  the  administration of the programs.  The Illinois
Community  College  Board  shall  determine   the   cost   of
instruction  in  accordance with standards established by the
the Illinois Community College Board, including therein other
incidental costs as herein authorized, which shall  serve  as
the  basis  of  State  reimbursement  in  accordance with the
provisions of  this Section. In the approval of programs  and
the  determination  of  the cost of instruction, the Illinois
Community  College  Board  shall  provide  for  the   maximum
utilization  of federal funds for such programs. The Illinois
Community College Board shall also provide for:
         (1)  the development of an index of need for program
    planning and for area funding allocations, as defined  by
    the Illinois Community College Board;
         (2)  the    method    for   calculating   hours   of
    instruction, as defined by the Illinois Community College
    Board, claimable for reimbursement and a method to  phase
    in  the calculation and for adjusting the calculations in
    cases where the services of a program are interrupted due
    to  circumstances  beyond  the  control  of  the  program
    provider;
         (3)  a  plan  for  the  reallocation  of  funds   to
    increase  the  amount  allocated  for  grants  based upon
    program performance as set forth in subsection (d) below;
    and
         (4)  the development of  standards  for  determining
    grants  based upon performance as set forth in subsection
    (d) below and a plan for the phased-in implementation  of
    those standards.
    For   instruction   provided   by  school  districts  and
community  college  districts  beginning  July  1,  1996  and
thereafter, reimbursement provided by the Illinois  Community
College Board for classes authorized by this Section shall be
provided   from  funds  appropriated  for  the  reimbursement
criteria set forth in subsection (c) below.
    (c)  Upon the annual approval of the  Illinois  Community
College  Board,  reimbursement  shall  be  first provided for
transportation, child care services, and other special  needs
of the students directly related to instruction and then from
the  funds  remaining  an  amount equal to the product of the
total credit hours or units of instruction  approved  by  the
Illinois   Community   College   Board,   multiplied  by  the
following:
         (1)  For  adult   basic   education,   the   maximum
    reimbursement  per credit hour or per unit of instruction
    shall be  equal  to  the  general  state  aid  per  pupil
    foundation level established in subsection (B) of Section
    18-8.05, divided by 60;
         (2)  The  maximum  reimbursement  per credit hour or
    per unit of instruction in subparagraph (1)  above  shall
    be  weighted  for students enrolled in classes defined as
    vocational skills and approved by the Illinois  Community
    College Board by 1.25;
         (3)  The  maximum  reimbursement  per credit hour or
    per unit of instruction in subparagraph (1)  above  shall
    be  multiplied  by  .90  for students enrolled in classes
    defined  as  adult  secondary  education   programs   and
    approved by the Illinois Community College Board;
         (4)  (Blank)  For  community  college  districts the
    maximum reimbursement per credit  hour  in  subparagraphs
    (1),  (2),  and  (3)  above shall be reduced by the Adult
    Basic Education/Adult Secondary  Education/English  As  A
    Second  Language  credit  hour  grant  rate prescribed in
    Section 2-16.02 of the Public Community College  Act,  as
    pro-rated to the appropriation level; and
         (5)  Programs receiving funds under the formula that
    was  in  effect  during  the 1994-1995 program year which
    continue to be approved and which generate at  least  80%
    of  the  hours  claimable  in  1994-95, or in the case of
    programs not approved in 1994-95  at  least  80%  of  the
    hours  claimable  in  1995-96,  shall  have  funding  for
    subsequent  years  based upon 100% of the 1995-96 formula
    funding level for 1996-97, 90%  of  the  1995-96  formula
    funding  level  for  1997-98,  80% of the 1995-96 formula
    funding level for 1998-99, and 70% of the 1995-96 formula
    funding level for 1999-2000.  For  any  approved  program
    which  generates  less than 80% of the claimable hours in
    its base year, the level  of  funding  pursuant  to  this
    paragraph  shall be reduced proportionately.  Funding for
    program years after 1999-2000 shall be determined by  the
    Illinois Community College Board.
    (d)  Upon  its  annual  approval,, the Illinois Community
College Board shall provide grants to eligible  programs  for
supplemental  activities  to improve or expand services under
the  Adult  Education  Act.    Eligible  programs  shall   be
determined based upon performance outcomes of students in the
programs as set by the Illinois Community College Board.
    (e)  Reimbursement  under  this  Section shall not exceed
the actual costs of the approved program.
    If the amount  appropriated  to  the  Illinois  Community
College  Board  for  reimbursement under this Section is less
than the amount required under this  Act,  the  apportionment
shall be proportionately reduced.
    School  districts  and  community  college  districts may
assess students up to $3.00  per  credit  hour,  for  classes
other than Adult Basic Education level programs, if needed to
meet program costs.
    (f)  An  education  plan  shall  be  established for each
adult or youth whose schooling has been interrupted  and  who
is participating in the instructional programs provided under
this Section.
    Each  school  board  and  community college shall keep an
accurate and detailed account of the students assigned to and
receiving instruction under this Section who are  subject  to
State  reimbursement  and  shall  submit  reports of services
provided commencing with fiscal year 1997 as required by  the
Illinois Community College Board.
    For  classes authorized under this Section, a credit hour
or unit of  instruction  is  equal  to  15  hours  of  direct
instruction for students enrolled in approved adult education
programs  at  midterm  and  making  satisfactory progress, in
accordance  with  standards  established  by   the   Illinois
Community College Board.
    (g)  Upon  proof  submitted to the Illinois Department of
Human Services of the payment of all claims  submitted  under
this  Section,  that Department shall apply for federal funds
made available therefor and any  federal  funds  so  received
shall  be  paid  into  the  General Revenue Fund in the State
Treasury.
    School districts or community colleges providing  classes
under  this Section shall submit applications to the Illinois
Community College Board for preapproval  in  accordance  with
the  standards  established by the Illinois Community College
Board.  Payments shall be  made  by  the  Illinois  Community
College   Board   based   upon  approved  programs.   Interim
expenditure reports may be required by the Illinois Community
College Board.  Final claims for the  school  year  shall  be
submitted  to the regional superintendents for transmittal to
the  Illinois  Community  College  Board.    Final   adjusted
payments shall be made by September 30.
    If  a school district or community college district fails
to provide, or is providing  unsatisfactory  or  insufficient
classes  under  this  Section, the Illinois Community College
Board may  enter  into  agreements  with  public  or  private
educational  or  other agencies other than the public schools
for the establishment of such classes.
    (h)  If a school district or community  college  district
establishes   child-care   facilities  for  the  children  of
participants in classes established under  this  Section,  it
may  extend  the use of these facilities to students who have
obtained employment and to other  persons  in  the  community
whose  children require care and supervision while the parent
or other person in charge of  the  children  is  employed  or
otherwise absent from the home during all or part of the day.
It may make the facilities available before and after as well
as  during  regular  school hours to school age and preschool
age children who may benefit thereby, including children  who
require  care  and  supervision  pending  the return of their
parent  or  other  person  in  charge  of  their  care   from
employment or other activity requiring absence from the home.
    The  Illinois  Community  College  Board shall pay to the
board the cost of care in the facilities for any child who is
a recipient of financial aid under the  Illinois  Public  Aid
Code.
    The  board  may  charge  for care of children for whom it
cannot make claim under the provisions of this Section.   The
charge  shall  not  exceed per capita cost, and to the extent
feasible, shall  be  fixed  at  a  level  which  will  permit
utilization  by  employed  parents of low or moderate income.
It may also permit any  other  State  or  local  governmental
agency  or  private  agency  providing  care  for children to
purchase care.
    After  July  1,  1970  when  the  provisions  of  Section
10-20.20 become operative in  the  district,  children  in  a
child-care  facility shall be transferred to the kindergarten
established under that Section for such portion of the day as
may be required for the kindergarten program,  and  only  the
prorated  costs  of  care and training provided in the Center
for the remaining period shall be  charged  to  the  Illinois
Department  of  Human  Services  or other persons or agencies
paying for such care.
    (i)  The provisions of this Section shall also  apply  to
school districts having a population exceeding 500,000.
    (j)  In  addition  to  claiming  reimbursement under this
Section, a school district may claim general State aid  under
Section  18-8.05 for any student under age 21 who is enrolled
in courses accepted for graduation from  elementary  or  high
school  and  who  otherwise meets the requirements of Section
18-8.05.
(Source: P.A.  90-14,  eff.  7-1-97;  90-548,  eff.   1-1-98;
90-802, eff. 12-15-98; 91-830, eff. 7-1-01; revised 2-17-03.)

    Section  10-10.   The  Adult  Education Act is amended by
changing Section 3-1 as follows:

    (105 ILCS 405/3-1) (from Ch. 122, par. 203-1)
    Sec. 3-1.  Apportionment for Adult Education Courses. Any
school  district  or  public   community   college   district
maintaining  adult  education  classes for the instruction of
persons over 21 years of age and youths under 21 years of age
whose schooling has been interrupted  shall  be  entitled  to
claim  an  apportionment in accordance with the provisions of
Section 10-22.20 of the School Code and Section 2-4  of  this
Act.  Any public community college district maintaining adult
education classes for the  instruction  of  persons  over  21
years of age and youths under 21 years of age whose schooling
has   been   interrupted   shall  be  entitled  to  claim  an
apportionment in accordance with the  provisions  of  Section
2-16.02 of the Public Community College Act.
    Reimbursement  as  herein  provided  shall  be limited to
courses regularly accepted for graduation from elementary  or
high  schools and for Americanization and General Educational
Development Review classes which are approved by the Board.
    If the amount appropriated for this purpose is less  than
the amount required under the provisions of this Section, the
apportionment  for  local  districts shall be proportionately
reduced.
(Source: P.A. 91-830, eff. 7-1-00.)

    Section 10-15.   The  Public  Community  College  Act  is
amended  by  changing Section 2-16.02 and adding Section 2-20
as follows:

    (110 ILCS 805/2-16.02) (from Ch. 122, par. 102-16.02)
    Sec. 2-16.02.  Grants.  Any  community  college  district
that  maintains  a  community college recognized by the State
Board shall receive, when eligible, grants enumerated in this
Section.  Funded semester credit hours or other  measures  or
both  as  specified  by  the  State  Board  shall  be used to
distribute grants to  community  colleges.   Funded  semester
credit  hours shall be defined, for purposes of this Section,
as the greater of (1) the number of semester credit hours, or
equivalent,  in  all  funded  instructional   categories   of
students  who  have  been certified as being in attendance at
midterm during the respective terms of the base  fiscal  year
or  (2)  the average of semester credit hours, or equivalent,
in all funded instructional categories of students  who  have
been  certified  as being in attendance at midterm during the
respective terms of the base fiscal  year  and  the  2  prior
fiscal  years.   For  purposes  of this Section, "base fiscal
year" means the fiscal year 2 years prior to the fiscal  year
for  which  the grants are appropriated.  Such students shall
have been residents of Illinois and shall have been  enrolled
in  courses that are part of instructional program categories
approved by the State Board and that are applicable toward an
associate degree or certificate. Courses  that  are  eligible
for  reimbursement  are  those courses for which the district
pays 50% or more  of  the  program  costs  from  unrestricted
revenue  sources,  with  the  exception of courses offered by
contract with the Department of Corrections  in  correctional
institutions. For the purposes of this Section, "unrestricted
revenue  sources"  means those revenues in which the provider
of the revenue imposes  no  financial  limitations  upon  the
district  as  it  relates  to  the  expenditure of the funds.
Courses are not eligible for reimbursement where the district
receives federal or State financing or both, except financing
through the State Board, for 50% or more of the program costs
with the exception of courses offered by  contract  with  the
Department of Corrections in correctional institutions.  Base
operating  grants  shall  be  paid  based on rates per funded
semester credit hour or equivalent calculated  by  the  State
Board  for  funded  instructional  categories  using  cost of
instruction,  enrollment,  inflation,  and   other   relevant
factors.  A  portion  of  the  base  operating grant shall be
allocated  on  the  basis  of  non-residential  gross  square
footage of space maintained by the district.
    Equalization grants shall  be  calculated  by  the  State
Board by determining a local revenue factor for each district
by:   (A)  adding  (1)  each  district's  Corporate  Personal
Property  Replacement  Fund  allocations from the base fiscal
year or the average of the base fiscal year and  prior  year,
whichever  is  less,  divided  by  the  applicable  statewide
average  tax rate to (2) the district's most recently audited
year's equalized assessed valuation or  the  average  of  the
most recently audited year and prior year, whichever is less,
(B)   then  dividing  by  the  district's  audited  full-time
equivalent resident students for the base fiscal year or  the
average  for  the  base   fiscal  year and the 2 prior fiscal
years, whichever is greater, and (C) then multiplying by  the
applicable statewide average tax rate.  The State Board shall
calculate  a statewide weighted average threshold by applying
the  same  methodology  to  the  totals  of  all   districts'
Corporate Personal Property Tax Replacement Fund allocations,
equalized   assessed   valuations,   and   audited  full-time
equivalent district resident students and multiplying by  the
applicable   statewide  average  tax  rate.   The  difference
between the statewide  weighted  average  threshold  and  the
local  revenue  factor, multiplied by the number of full-time
equivalent resident students, shall determine the  amount  of
equalization  funding  that  each  district  is  eligible  to
receive.   A  percentage  factor,  as determined by the State
Board, may be applied to the statewide threshold as a  method
for  allocating equalization funding.  A minimum equalization
grant of an amount per district as determined  by  the  State
Board shall be established for any community college district
which  qualifies  for  an  equalization  grant based upon the
preceding criteria, but becomes ineligible  for  equalization
funding,  or  would  have  received  a grant of less than the
minimum  equalization  grant,  due  to  threshold  prorations
applied to reduce equalization funding. As of July 1, 2004, a
community college district must maintain a  minimum  required
combined  in-district  tuition  and  universal  fee  rate per
semester credit  hour  equal  to  85%  of  the  State-average
combined   rate,  as  determined  by  the  State  Board,  for
equalization funding. As of July 1, 2004, a community college
district must maintain a minimum required operating tax  rate
equal  to  at least 95% of its maximum authorized tax rate to
qualify for equalization funding. This 95% minimum  tax  rate
requirement  shall  be  based  upon the maximum operating tax
rate as limited by the Property Tax Extension Limitation Law.
As of July 1, 1997, community college districts must maintain
a minimum required  in-district  tuition  rate  per  semester
credit  hour  as  determined  by  the  State Board.  For each
fiscal year between July 1, 1997 and June 30, 2001, districts
not meeting the minimum required rate will be  subject  to  a
percent  reduction  of  equalization funding as determined by
the State Board.  As of July 1, 2001, districts must meet the
required minimum in-district  tuition  rate  to  qualify  for
equalization funding.
    The State Board shall distribute such other grants as may
be authorized or appropriated by the General Assembly.
    Each  community college district entitled to State grants
under this Section must submit a report of its enrollment  to
the  State  Board not later than 30 days following the end of
each semester, quarter, or term in a format prescribed by the
State Board.  These semester  credit  hours,  or  equivalent,
shall  be certified by each district on forms provided by the
State  Board.   Each  district's  certified  semester  credit
hours, or  equivalent,  are  subject  to  audit  pursuant  to
Section 3-22.1.
    The State Board shall certify, prepare, and submit to the
State  Comptroller during August, November, February, and May
of each fiscal year vouchers setting forth an amount equal to
25% of the grants  approved  by  the  State  Board  for  base
operating  grants  and  equalization grants.  The State Board
shall prepare and submit to the  State  Comptroller  vouchers
for  payments  of other grants as appropriated by the General
Assembly.  If the amount appropriated for grants is different
from the amount provided for such grants under this Act,  the
grants   shall   be   proportionately  reduced  or  increased
accordingly.
    For the purposes  of  this  Section,  "resident  student"
means a student in a community college district who maintains
residency   in   that   district  or  meets  other  residency
definitions established by  the  State  Board,  and  who  was
enrolled  either in one of the approved instructional program
categories in that district, or in another community  college
district  to  which the resident's district is paying tuition
under Section 6-2 or with which the resident's  district  has
entered into a cooperative agreement in lieu of such tuition.
    For   the   purposes   of   this  Section,  a  "full-time
equivalent" student is equal to 30 semester credit hours.
    The Illinois Community College Board Contracts and Grants
Fund is hereby created  in  the  State  Treasury.   Items  of
income  to  this  fund  shall  include  any  grants,  awards,
endowments,  or  like  proceeds, and where appropriate, other
funds made available  through  contracts  with  governmental,
public,   and  private  agencies  or  persons.   The  General
Assembly shall from time to time make appropriations  payable
from  such fund for the support, improvement, and expenses of
the State Board and Illinois community college districts.
(Source: P.A. 89-141, eff.  7-14-95;  89-281,  eff.  8-10-95;
89-473,  eff.  6-18-96;  89-626,  eff.  8-9-96;  90-468, eff.
8-17-97; 90-486, eff. 8-17-97; 90-497, eff. 8-18-97;  90-587,
eff.  8-7-98  (contingent upon 90-720); 90-655, eff. 7-30-98;
90-720, eff. 8-7-98.)
    (110 ILCS 805/2-20 new)
    Sec. 2-20.  Deferred maintenance grants. For fiscal  year
2004 only, the State Board shall award a deferred maintenance
grant  only  to  a  district to which Article VII of this Act
applies, for that district's  general  purposes.  This  grant
shall  be  awarded  under  a  formula determined by the State
Board.

    Section 10-20.  The Higher Education  Student  Assistance
Act is amended by changing Section 52 as follows:

    (110 ILCS 947/52)
    Sec.  52.  Illinois  Future  Teacher Corps ITEACH Teacher
Shortage Scholarship Program.
    (a)  In order to encourage academically talented Illinois
students, especially minority students,  to  pursue  teaching
careers,  especially  in  teacher shortage disciplines (which
shall be defined to include early childhood education) or  at
hard-to-staff  schools  (as  defined  by  the  Commission  in
consultation   with   the  State  Board  of  Education),  the
Commission   shall,   each   year,   receive   and   consider
applications for scholarship assistance under  this  Section.
An applicant is eligible for a scholarship under this Section
when the Commission finds that the applicant is:
         (1)  a United States citizen or eligible noncitizen;
         (2)  a resident of Illinois;
         (3)  a  high  school  graduate  or  a person who has
    received a General Educational Development Certificate;
         (4)  enrolled or accepted for enrollment at or above
    the junior level, on at least a half-time  basis,  at  an
    Illinois institution of higher learning; and
         (5)  pursuing   a   postsecondary  course  of  study
    leading to initial certification in  a  teacher  shortage
    discipline  or  pursuing additional course work needed to
    gain  State  Board  of  Education  approval   to   teach,
    including   alternative   teacher  certification,  in  an
    approved specialized area in  which  a  teacher  shortage
    exists.
    (b)  Recipients  shall  be selected from among applicants
qualified pursuant to subsection (a) based on  a  combination
of the following criteria as set forth by the Commission: (1)
academic  excellence;  (2)  status  as  a minority student as
defined in Section 50; and (3)  financial  need.   Preference
may  be given to previous recipients of assistance under this
Section, provided they continue to maintain  eligibility  and
maintain  satisfactory academic progress as determined by the
institution  of  higher  learning  at  which   they   enroll.
Preference may also be given to qualified applicants enrolled
at or above the junior level.
    (c)  Each scholarship awarded under this Section shall be
in  an amount sufficient to pay the tuition and fees and room
and  board  costs  of  the  Illinois  institution  of  higher
learning at which the recipient is enrolled, up to an  annual
maximum of $5,000; except that in the case of a recipient who
does  not  reside  on-campus  at  the  institution  of higher
learning at which he or she is enrolled, the  amount  of  the
scholarship  shall  be  sufficient  to  pay  tuition  and fee
expenses and a commuter allowance, up to an annual maximum of
$5,000. For recipients  who  agree  to  teach  in  a  teacher
shortage  discipline  or  at  a  hard-to-staff  school  under
subsection  (i)  of this Section, the Commission may, by rule
and subject to appropriation,  increase  the  annual  maximum
amount  to  $10,000. If a recipient agrees to teach in both a
teacher shortage discipline and  at  a  hard-to-staff  school
under  subsection  (i)  of  this  Section, the Commission may
increase the amount of the scholarship awarded by  up  to  an
additional $5,000.
    (d)  The  total  amount of scholarship assistance awarded
by the Commission under this Section to an individual in  any
given  fiscal  year, when added to other financial assistance
awarded to that individual for that year,  shall  not  exceed
the  cost of attendance at the institution of higher learning
at which the student is enrolled.
    (e)  A recipient may receive up to 4 8 semesters or 6  12
quarters of scholarship assistance under this Section.
    (f)  All  applications  for  scholarship assistance to be
awarded under this Section shall be made to the Commission in
a  form  as  set  forth  by  the  Commission.   The  form  of
application and the information  required  to  be  set  forth
therein  shall  be  determined  by  the  Commission,  and the
Commission shall require eligible applicants to  submit  with
their   applications   such   supporting   documents  as  the
Commission deems necessary.
    (g)  Subject to a separate appropriation  made  for  such
purposes,  payment  of  any  scholarship  awarded  under this
Section shall be determined by the Commission. There shall be
a separate appropriation made  for  scholarships  awarded  to
recipients   who   agree  to  teach  in  a  teacher  shortage
discipline or at a hard-to-staff school under subsection  (i)
of  this  Section.    The  Commission may use for scholarship
assistance under this Section (i) all funds appropriated  for
scholarships  under  this Section that were formerly known as
ITEACH Teacher  Shortage  Scholarships  and  (ii)  all  funds
appropriated for scholarships under Section 65.65 of this Act
(repealed   by  this  amendatory  Act  of  the  93rd  General
Assembly), formerly known as Illinois  Future  Teacher  Corps
Scholarships.
    All scholarship funds distributed in accordance with this
Section  shall  be  paid  to the institution on behalf of the
recipients.   Scholarship  funds  are  applicable  toward   2
semesters  or  3  quarters  of  enrollment within an academic
year.
    (h)  The Commission shall administer the  ITEACH  Teacher
Shortage  scholarship program established by this Section and
shall make all necessary and proper  rules  not  inconsistent
with this Section for its effective implementation.
    (i)  Prior  to  receiving  scholarship assistance for any
academic year, each recipient of a scholarship awarded  under
this  Section  shall be required by the Commission to sign an
agreement under which the recipient pledges that, within  the
one-year  period  following  the  termination of the academic
program for which the recipient was  awarded  a  scholarship,
the recipient: (i) shall begin teaching in a teacher shortage
discipline for a period of not less than 5 years one year for
each  year  of  scholarship  assistance  awarded  under  this
Section,  (ii)  shall  fulfill  this teaching obligation at a
nonprofit Illinois public, private, or parochial preschool or
an Illinois public elementary or secondary school, and  (iii)
shall, upon request of the Commission, provide the Commission
with  evidence  that he or she is fulfilling or has fulfilled
the terms of the teaching  agreement  provided  for  in  this
subsection.
    (j)  If  a  recipient of a scholarship awarded under this
Section fails to fulfill the teaching obligation set forth in
subsection (i) of this Section, the Commission shall  require
the  recipient  to  repay  the  amount  of  the  scholarships
received,  prorated according to the fraction of the teaching
obligation not completed, plus interest at a rate of  5%  and
if applicable, reasonable collection fees.  The Commission is
authorized  to  establish  rules  relating  to its collection
activities for repayment of scholarships under this  Section.
Payments received by the Commission under this subsection (j)
shall  be  remitted to the State Comptroller for deposit into
the General Revenue Fund,  except  that  that  portion  of  a
recipient's repayment that equals the amount in expenses that
the   Commission   has   reasonably  incurred  in  attempting
collection from that recipient shall be remitted to the State
Comptroller  for  deposit  into  the  Commission's   Accounts
Receivable Fund.
    (k)  A   recipient   of  a  scholarship  awarded  by  the
Commission under this Section shall not be  in  violation  of
the  agreement entered into pursuant to subsection (i) if the
recipient (i) enrolls on a  full-time  basis  as  a  graduate
student in a course of study related to the field of teaching
at  an  institution  of higher learning; (ii) is serving as a
member of the armed services of the United States;  (iii)  is
temporarily   totally   disabled,  as  established  by  sworn
affidavit of a qualified physician; or (iv)  is  seeking  and
unable  to find full-time employment as a teacher at a school
that satisfies the criteria set forth in subsection  (i)  and
is able to provide evidence of that fact.  Any such extension
of  the  period during which the teaching requirement must be
fulfilled shall be subject  to  limitations  of  duration  as
established by the Commission.
(Source: P.A. 91-670, eff. 12-22-99; 92-845, eff. 1-1-03.)

    Section  10-25.   The Illinois Vehicle Code is amended by
changing Section 3-648 as follows:

    (625 ILCS 5/3-648)
    Sec. 3-648.  Education license plates.
    (a)  The Secretary, upon receipt of an  application  made
in  the  form  prescribed by the Secretary, may issue special
registration plates designated as Education  license  plates.
The special plates issued under this Section shall be affixed
only  to  passenger  vehicles of the first division and motor
vehicles of the second division weighing not more than  8,000
pounds.   Plates  issued  under  this  Section  shall  expire
according  to the multi-year procedure established by Section
3-414.1 of this Code.
    (b)  The  design  and  color  of  the  plates  shall   be
determined by a contest that every elementary school pupil in
the  State  of  Illinois  is  eligible  to enter. The designs
submitted for the contest shall be judged  on  September  30,
2002, and the winning design shall be selected by a committee
composed  of  the  Secretary, the Director of State Police, 2
members of the Senate, one member chosen by the President  of
the  Senate  and  one  member  chosen  by the Senate Minority
Leader, and 2 members of the House  of  Representatives,  one
member  chosen  by  the  Speaker  of the House and one member
chosen by the House Minority Leader. The Secretary may  allow
the  plates  to  be  issued  as vanity or personalized plates
under Section 3-405.1  of  the  Code.   The  Secretary  shall
prescribe  stickers or decals as provided under Section 3-412
of this Code.
    (c)  An applicant for the special plate shall be  charged
a   $40  fee  for  original  issuance,  in  addition  to  the
appropriate registration fee. Of this $40 additional original
issuance fee, $15 shall be deposited into  the  Secretary  of
State Special License Plate Fund, to be used by the Secretary
to  help  defray the administrative processing costs, and $25
shall be deposited into the  Illinois  Future  Teacher  Corps
Scholarship  Fund.    For each registration renewal period, a
$40 fee, in addition to  the  appropriate  registration  fee,
shall  be  charged.  Of  this  $40 additional renewal fee, $2
shall be  deposited  into  the  Secretary  of  State  Special
License  Plate  Fund  and  $38  shall  be  deposited into the
Illinois Future Teacher Corps Scholarship Fund.  Each  fiscal
year, once deposits from the additional original issuance and
renewal  fees  into  the  Secretary  of State Special License
Plate Fund have reached $500,000, all  the  amounts  received
for  the  additional  fees for the balance of the fiscal year
shall be deposited into the  Illinois  Future  Teacher  Corps
Scholarship Fund.
    (d)  The  Illinois  Future Teacher Corps Scholarship Fund
is  created  as  a  special  fund  in  the  State   treasury.
Ninety-five  percent  of  the  moneys  in the Illinois Future
Teacher Corps Scholarship Fund shall be appropriated  to  the
Illinois Student Assistance Commission for scholarships under
Section   52   or  65.65  of  the  Higher  Education  Student
Assistance Act, and 5% of the moneys in the  Illinois  Future
Teacher  Corps  Scholarship Fund shall be appropriated to the
State Board of Education  for  grants  to  the  Golden  Apple
Foundation   for   Excellence   in   Teaching,  a  recognized
charitable organization that meets the requirements of  Title
26, Section 501(c)(3) of the United States Code.
(Source: P.A.  92-445,  eff.  8-17-01;  92-651, eff. 7-11-02;
92-845, eff. 1-1-03.)

    (110 ILCS 947/65.65 rep.)
    Section 10-30.  The Higher Education  Student  Assistance
Act is amended by repealing Section 65.65.

                         Article 99

    Section  99-99.  Effective date. This Act takes effect on
July 1, 2003.