Public Act 094-0586
 
HB3628 Enrolled LRB094 10953 RAS 41538 b

    AN ACT concerning children.
 
    Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
represented in the General Assembly:
 
    Section 5. The Child Care Act of 1969 is amended by
changing Sections 2, 2.05, 2.08, 4, 7, 8, 11, 11.1, and 12 and
by adding Sections 2.24, 2.25, 2.26, 2.27, 7.4, 7.5, 7.6, 7.7,
7.8, 7.9, 8.3, 8.4, 9.1a, 9.1b, 14.6, and 14.7 as follows:
 
    (225 ILCS 10/2)  (from Ch. 23, par. 2212)
    Sec. 2. Terms used in this Act, unless the context
otherwise requires, have the meanings ascribed to them in
Sections 2.01 through 2.27 2.21.
(Source: P.A. 86-278; 86-386.)
 
    (225 ILCS 10/2.05)  (from Ch. 23, par. 2212.05)
    Sec. 2.05. "Facility for child care" or "child care
facility" means any person, group of persons, agency,
association, or organization, corporation, institution,
center, or group, whether established for gain or otherwise,
who or which receives or arranges for care or placement of one
or more children, unrelated to the operator of the facility,
apart from the parents, with or without the transfer of the
right of custody in any facility as defined in this Act,
established and maintained for the care of children. "Child
care facility" includes a relative who is licensed as a foster
family home under Section 4 of this Act.
(Source: P.A. 89-21, eff. 7-1-95.)
 
    (225 ILCS 10/2.08)  (from Ch. 23, par. 2212.08)
    Sec. 2.08.
    "Child welfare agency" means a public or private child care
facility, receiving any child or children for the purpose of
placing or arranging for the placement or free care of the
child or children in foster family homes, unlicensed
pre-adoptive and adoptive homes, or other facilities for child
care, apart from the custody of the child's or children's
parents. The term "child welfare agency" includes all agencies
established and maintained by a municipality or other political
subdivision of the State of Illinois to protect, guard, train
or care for children outside their own homes and all agencies,
persons, groups of persons, associations, organizations,
corporations, institutions, centers, or groups providing
adoption services, but does not include any circuit court or
duly appointed juvenile probation officer or youth counselor of
the court, who receives and places children under an order of
the court.
(Source: P.A. 76-63.)
 
    (225 ILCS 10/2.24 new)
    Sec. 2.24. "Adoption services" includes any one or more of
the following services performed for any type of compensation
or thing of value, directly or indirectly: (i) arranging for
the placement of or placing out a child, (ii) identifying a
child for adoption, (iii) matching adoptive parents with
biological parents, (iv) arranging or facilitating an
adoption, (v) taking or acknowledging consents or surrenders
for termination of parental rights for purposes of adoption, as
defined in the Adoption Act, (vi) performing background studies
on a child or adoptive parents, (vii) making determinations of
the best interests of a child and the appropriateness of
adoptive placement for the child, or (viii) post-placement
monitoring of a child prior to adoption. "Adoption services"
does not include the following: (1) the provision of legal
services by a licensed attorney for which the attorney must be
licensed as an attorney under Illinois law, (2)
adoption-related services performed by public governmental
entities or entities or persons performing investigations by
court appointment as described in subsection A of Section 6 of
the Adoption Act, (3) prospective biological parents or
adoptive parents operating on their own behalf, (4) the
provision of general education and training on
adoption-related topics, or (5) post-adoption services,
including supportive services to families to promote the
well-being of members of adoptive families or birth families.
 
    (225 ILCS 10/2.25 new)
    Sec. 2.25. "Unlicensed pre-adoptive and adoptive home"
means any home that is not licensed by the Department as a
foster family home and that receives a child or children for
the purpose of adopting the child or children.
 
    (225 ILCS 10/2.26 new)
    Sec. 2.26. "Eligible agency" means a licensed child welfare
agency that (i) is currently fully accredited by the Council on
Accreditation for Children and Family Services (COA) for
adoption services and (ii) has had no Department substantiated
licensing violations or COA accrediting violations that affect
the health, safety, morals, or welfare of children served by
that agency for the 4 years immediately preceding a
determination of eligibility.
 
    (225 ILCS 10/2.27 new)
    Sec. 2.27. "Deemed compliant" means that an eligible agency
is presumed to be in compliance with requirements, provided
that the Department has determined that current COA standards
are at least substantially equivalent to those requirements.
This presumption of compliance may be rebutted by Department
substantiated evidence to the contrary. The Department may
require periodic certification of COA accreditation from
eligible agencies.
 
    (225 ILCS 10/4)  (from Ch. 23, par. 2214)
    Sec. 4. License requirement; application; notice.
    (a) Any person, group of persons or corporation who or
which receives children or arranges for care or placement of
one or more children unrelated to the operator must apply for a
license to operate one of the types of facilities defined in
Sections 2.05 through 2.19 and in Section 2.22 of this Act. Any
relative who receives a child or children for placement by the
Department on a full-time basis may apply for a license to
operate a foster family home as defined in Section 2.17 of this
Act.
    (a-5) Any agency, person, group of persons, association,
organization, corporation, institution, center, or group
providing adoption services must be licensed by the Department
as a child welfare agency as defined in Section 2.08 of this
Act. "Providing adoption services" as used in this Act,
includes facilitating or engaging in adoption services.
    (b) Application for a license to operate a child care
facility must be made to the Department in the manner and on
forms prescribed by it. An application to operate a foster
family home shall include, at a minimum: a completed written
form; written authorization by the applicant and all adult
members of the applicant's household to conduct a criminal
background investigation; medical evidence in the form of a
medical report, on forms prescribed by the Department, that the
applicant and all members of the household are free from
communicable diseases or physical and mental conditions that
affect their ability to provide care for the child or children;
the names and addresses of at least 3 persons not related to
the applicant who can attest to the applicant's moral
character; and fingerprints submitted by the applicant and all
adult members of the applicant's household.
    (c) The Department shall notify the public when a child
care institution, maternity center, or group home licensed by
the Department undergoes a change in (i) the range of care or
services offered at the facility, (ii) the age or type of
children served, or (iii) the area within the facility used by
children. The Department shall notify the public of the change
in a newspaper of general circulation in the county or
municipality in which the applicant's facility is or is
proposed to be located.
    (d) If, upon examination of the facility and investigation
of persons responsible for care of children, the Department is
satisfied that the facility and responsible persons reasonably
meet standards prescribed for the type of facility for which
application is made, it shall issue a license in proper form,
designating on that license the type of child care facility
and, except for a child welfare agency, the number of children
to be served at any one time.
    (e) The Department shall not issue or renew the license of
any child welfare agency providing adoption services, unless
the agency (i) is officially recognized by the United States
Internal Revenue Service as a tax-exempt organization
described in Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code of
1986 (or any successor provision of federal tax law) and (ii)
is in compliance with all of the standards necessary to
maintain its status as an organization described in Section
501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 (or any
successor provision of federal tax law). The Department shall
grant a grace period of 24 months from the effective date of
this amendatory Act of the 94th General Assembly for existing
child welfare agencies providing adoption services to obtain
501(c)(3) status. The Department shall permit an existing child
welfare agency that converts from its current structure in
order to be recognized as a 501(c)(3) organization as required
by this Section to either retain its current license or
transfer its current license to a newly formed entity, if the
creation of a new entity is required in order to comply with
this Section, provided that the child welfare agency
demonstrates that it continues to meet all other licensing
requirements and that the principal officers and directors and
programs of the converted child welfare agency or newly
organized child welfare agency are substantially the same as
the original. The Department shall have the sole discretion to
grant a one year extension to any agency unable to obtain
501(c)(3) status within the timeframe specified in this
subsection (e), provided that such agency has filed an
application for 501(c)(3) status with the Internal Revenue
Service within the 2-year timeframe specified in this
subsection (e).
(Source: P.A. 89-21, eff. 7-1-95; 90-90, eff. 7-11-97; 90-608,
eff. 6-30-98.)
 
    (225 ILCS 10/7)  (from Ch. 23, par. 2217)
    Sec. 7. (a) The Department must prescribe and publish
minimum standards for licensing that apply to the various types
of facilities for child care defined in this Act and that are
equally applicable to like institutions under the control of
the Department and to foster family homes used by and under the
direct supervision of the Department. The Department shall seek
the advice and assistance of persons representative of the
various types of child care facilities in establishing such
standards. The standards prescribed and published under this
Act take effect as provided in the Illinois Administrative
Procedure Act, and are restricted to regulations pertaining to
the following matters and to any rules and regulations required
or permitted by any other Section of this Act:
        (1) The operation and conduct of the facility and
    responsibility it assumes for child care;
        (2) The character, suitability and qualifications of
    the applicant and other persons directly responsible for
    the care and welfare of children served. All child day care
    center licensees and employees who are required to report
    child abuse or neglect under the Abused and Neglected Child
    Reporting Act shall be required to attend training on
    recognizing child abuse and neglect, as prescribed by
    Department rules;
        (3) The general financial ability and competence of the
    applicant to provide necessary care for children and to
    maintain prescribed standards;
        (4) The number of individuals or staff required to
    insure adequate supervision and care of the children
    received. The standards shall provide that each child care
    institution, maternity center, day care center, group
    home, day care home, and group day care home shall have on
    its premises during its hours of operation at least one
    staff member certified in first aid, in the Heimlich
    maneuver and in cardiopulmonary resuscitation by the
    American Red Cross or other organization approved by rule
    of the Department. Child welfare agencies shall not be
    subject to such a staffing requirement. The Department may
    offer, or arrange for the offering, on a periodic basis in
    each community in this State in cooperation with the
    American Red Cross, the American Heart Association or other
    appropriate organization, voluntary programs to train
    operators of foster family homes and day care homes in
    first aid and cardiopulmonary resuscitation;
        (5) The appropriateness, safety, cleanliness and
    general adequacy of the premises, including maintenance of
    adequate fire prevention and health standards conforming
    to State laws and municipal codes to provide for the
    physical comfort, care and well-being of children
    received;
        (6) Provisions for food, clothing, educational
    opportunities, program, equipment and individual supplies
    to assure the healthy physical, mental and spiritual
    development of children served;
        (7) Provisions to safeguard the legal rights of
    children served;
        (8) Maintenance of records pertaining to the
    admission, progress, health and discharge of children,
    including, for day care centers and day care homes, records
    indicating each child has been immunized as required by
    State regulations. The Department shall require proof that
    children enrolled in a facility have been immunized against
    Haemophilus Influenzae B (HIB);
        (9) Filing of reports with the Department;
        (10) Discipline of children;
        (11) Protection and fostering of the particular
    religious faith of the children served;
        (12) Provisions prohibiting firearms on day care
    center premises except in the possession of peace officers;
        (13) Provisions prohibiting handguns on day care home
    premises except in the possession of peace officers or
    other adults who must possess a handgun as a condition of
    employment and who reside on the premises of a day care
    home;
        (14) Provisions requiring that any firearm permitted
    on day care home premises, except handguns in the
    possession of peace officers, shall be kept in a
    disassembled state, without ammunition, in locked storage,
    inaccessible to children and that ammunition permitted on
    day care home premises shall be kept in locked storage
    separate from that of disassembled firearms, inaccessible
    to children;
        (15) Provisions requiring notification of parents or
    guardians enrolling children at a day care home of the
    presence in the day care home of any firearms and
    ammunition and of the arrangements for the separate, locked
    storage of such firearms and ammunition.
    (b) If, in a facility for general child care, there are
children diagnosed as mentally ill, mentally retarded or
physically handicapped, who are determined to be in need of
special mental treatment or of nursing care, or both mental
treatment and nursing care, the Department shall seek the
advice and recommendation of the Department of Human Services,
the Department of Public Health, or both Departments regarding
the residential treatment and nursing care provided by the
institution.
    (c) The Department shall investigate any person applying to
be licensed as a foster parent to determine whether there is
any evidence of current drug or alcohol abuse in the
prospective foster family. The Department shall not license a
person as a foster parent if drug or alcohol abuse has been
identified in the foster family or if a reasonable suspicion of
such abuse exists, except that the Department may grant a
foster parent license to an applicant identified with an
alcohol or drug problem if the applicant has successfully
participated in an alcohol or drug treatment program, self-help
group, or other suitable activities.
    (d) The Department, in applying standards prescribed and
published, as herein provided, shall offer consultation
through employed staff or other qualified persons to assist
applicants and licensees in meeting and maintaining minimum
requirements for a license and to help them otherwise to
achieve programs of excellence related to the care of children
served. Such consultation shall include providing information
concerning education and training in early childhood
development to providers of day care home services. The
Department may provide or arrange for such education and
training for those providers who request such assistance.
    (e) The Department shall distribute copies of licensing
standards to all licensees and applicants for a license. Each
licensee or holder of a permit shall distribute copies of the
appropriate licensing standards and any other information
required by the Department to child care facilities under its
supervision. Each licensee or holder of a permit shall maintain
appropriate documentation of the distribution of the
standards. Such documentation shall be part of the records of
the facility and subject to inspection by authorized
representatives of the Department.
    (f) The Department shall prepare summaries of day care
licensing standards. Each licensee or holder of a permit for a
day care facility shall distribute a copy of the appropriate
summary and any other information required by the Department,
to the legal guardian of each child cared for in that facility
at the time when the child is enrolled or initially placed in
the facility. The licensee or holder of a permit for a day care
facility shall secure appropriate documentation of the
distribution of the summary and brochure. Such documentation
shall be a part of the records of the facility and subject to
inspection by an authorized representative of the Department.
    (g) The Department shall distribute to each licensee and
holder of a permit copies of the licensing or permit standards
applicable to such person's facility. Each licensee or holder
of a permit shall make available by posting at all times in a
common or otherwise accessible area a complete and current set
of licensing standards in order that all employees of the
facility may have unrestricted access to such standards. All
employees of the facility shall have reviewed the standards and
any subsequent changes. Each licensee or holder of a permit
shall maintain appropriate documentation of the current review
of licensing standards by all employees. Such records shall be
part of the records of the facility and subject to inspection
by authorized representatives of the Department.
    (h) Any standards involving physical examinations,
immunization, or medical treatment shall include appropriate
exemptions for children whose parents object thereto on the
grounds that they conflict with the tenets and practices of a
recognized church or religious organization, of which the
parent is an adherent or member, and for children who should
not be subjected to immunization for clinical reasons.
(Source: P.A. 89-274, eff. 1-1-96; 89-507, eff. 7-1-97; 89-648,
eff. 8-9-96; 90-14, eff. 7-1-97.)
 
    (225 ILCS 10/7.4 new)
    Sec. 7.4. Disclosures.
    (a) Every child welfare agency providing adoption services
and licensed by the Department shall provide to all prospective
clients and to the public written disclosures with respect to
its adoption services, policies, and practices, including
general eligibility criteria, fees, and the mutual rights and
responsibilities of clients, including biological parents and
adoptive parents. The written disclosure shall be posted on any
website maintained by the child welfare agency that relates to
adoption services. The Department shall adopt rules relating to
the contents of the written disclosures. Eligible agencies may
be deemed compliant with this subsection (a).
    (b) Every licensed child welfare agency providing adoption
services shall provide to all applicants, prior to application,
a written schedule of estimated fees, expenses, and refund
policies. Every child welfare agency providing adoption
services shall have a written policy that shall be part of its
standard adoption contract and state that it will not charge
additional fees and expenses beyond those disclosed in the
adoption contract unless additional fees are reasonably
required by the circumstances and are disclosed to the adoptive
parents or parent before they are incurred. The Department
shall adopt rules relating to the contents of the written
schedule and policy. Eligible agencies may be deemed compliant
with this subsection (b).
    (c) Every licensed child welfare agency providing adoption
services must make full and fair disclosure to its clients,
including biological parents and adoptive parents, of all
circumstances material to the placement of a child for
adoption. The Department shall adopt rules necessary for the
implementation and regulation of the requirements of this
subsection (c).
    (d) Every licensed child welfare agency providing adoption
services shall meet minimum standards set forth by the
Department concerning the taking or acknowledging of a consent
prior to taking or acknowledging a consent from a prospective
biological parent. The Department shall adopt rules concerning
the minimum standards required by agencies under this Section.
 
    (225 ILCS 10/7.5 new)
    Sec. 7.5. Adoptive parent training program. Every licensed
child welfare agency providing adoption services shall provide
prospective adoptive parents with a training program that
includes counseling and guidance for the purpose of promoting a
successful adoption in conjunction with placing a child for
adoption with the prospective adoptive parents and which must
be completed to the satisfaction of the licensed child welfare
agency prior to the finalization of the adoption. The training
may be provided by an agent or independent contractor of the
child welfare agency or by a Department-approved training
individual or entity. The Department shall adopt rules
concerning minimum hours, content, and agency documentation of
the training and rules concerning the approval of individuals
or entities conducting training under this Section. Eligible
agencies may be deemed compliant with this Section.
 
    (225 ILCS 10/7.6 new)
    Sec. 7.6. Annual report. Every licensed child welfare
agency providing adoption services shall file an annual report
with the Department and with the Attorney General on forms and
on a date prescribed by the Department. The annual reports for
the preceding 2 years must be made available, upon request, to
the public by the Department and every licensed agency and must
be included on the website of the Department. Each licensed
agency that maintains a website shall provide the reports on
its website. The annual report shall include all of the
following matters and all other matters required by the
Department:
        (1) a balance sheet and a statement of income and
    expenses for the year, certified by an independent public
    accountant; for purposes of this item (1), the audit report
    filed by an agency with the Department may be included in
    the annual report and, if so, shall be sufficient to comply
    with the requirement of this item (1);
        (2) non-identifying information concerning the
    placements made by the agency during the year, consisting
    of the number of adoptive families in the process of
    obtaining a foster family license, the number of adoptive
    families that are licensed and awaiting placement, the
    number of biological parents that the agency is actively
    working with, the number of placements, and the number of
    adoptions initiated during the year and the status of each
    matter at the end of the year;
        (3) any instance during the year in which the agency
    lost the right to provide adoption services in any State or
    country, had its license suspended for cause, or was the
    subject of other sanctions by any court, governmental
    agency, or governmental regulatory body relating to the
    provision of adoption services;
        (4) any actions related to licensure that were
    initiated against the agency during the year by a licensing
    or accrediting body;
        (5) any pending investigations by federal or State
    authorities;
        (6) any criminal charges, child abuse charges,
    malpractice complaints, or lawsuits against the agency or
    any of its employees, officers, or directors related to the
    provision of adoption services and the basis or disposition
    of the actions;
        (7) any instance in the year where the agency was found
    guilty of, or pled guilty to, any criminal or civil or
    administrative violation under federal, State, or foreign
    law that relates to the provision of adoption services;
        (8) any instance in the year where any employee,
    officer, or director of the agency was found guilty of any
    crime or was determined to have violated a civil law or
    administrative rule under federal, State, or foreign law
    relating to the provision of adoption services; and
        (9) any civil or administrative proceeding instituted
    by the agency during the year and relating to adoption
    services, excluding uncontested adoption proceedings and
    proceedings filed pursuant to Section 12a of the Adoption
    Act.
    Failure to disclose information required under this
Section may result in the suspension of the agency's license
for a period of 90 days. Subsequent violations may result in
revocation of the license.
    Information disclosed in accordance with this Section
shall be subject to the applicable confidentiality
requirements of this Act and the Adoption Act.
 
    (225 ILCS 10/7.7 new)
    Sec. 7.7. Certain waivers prohibited. Licensed child
welfare agencies providing adoption services shall not require
biological or adoptive parents to sign any document that
purports to waive claims against an agency for intentional or
reckless acts or omissions or for gross negligence. Nothing in
this Section shall require an agency to assume risks that are
not within the reasonable control of the agency.
 
    (225 ILCS 10/7.8 new)
    Sec. 7.8. Preferential treatment in child placement
prohibited. No licensed child welfare agency providing
adoption services may give preferential treatment to its board
members, contributors, volunteers, employees, agents,
consultants, or independent contractors or to their relatives
with respect to the placement of a child or any matters
relating to adoption services. The Department shall define
"preferential treatment" by rule and shall adopt any rules
necessary to implement this Section. Eligible agencies may be
deemed compliant with this Section.
 
    (225 ILCS 10/7.9 new)
    Sec. 7.9. Excessive fees in adoption services prohibited.
Adoption services fees must be based on the costs associated
with service delivery, and clients may be charged fees only for
services provided. The Department shall define "excessive
fees" by rule and shall adopt any rules necessary to implement
this Section. Eligible agencies may be deemed compliant with
this Section.
 
    (225 ILCS 10/8)  (from Ch. 23, par. 2218)
    Sec. 8. The Department may revoke or refuse to renew the
license of any child care facility or child welfare agency or
refuse to issue full license to the holder of a permit should
the licensee or holder of a permit:
    (1) fail to maintain standards prescribed and published by
the Department;
    (2) violate any of the provisions of the license issued;
    (3) furnish or make any misleading or any false statement
or report to the Department;
    (4) refuse to submit to the Department any reports or
refuse to make available to the Department any records required
by the Department in making investigation of the facility for
licensing purposes;
    (5) fail or refuse to submit to an investigation by the
Department;
    (6) fail or refuse to admit authorized representatives of
the Department at any reasonable time for the purpose of
investigation;
    (7) fail to provide, maintain, equip and keep in safe and
sanitary condition premises established or used for child care
as required under standards prescribed by the Department, or as
otherwise required by any law, regulation or ordinance
applicable to the location of such facility;
    (8) refuse to display its license or permit;
    (9) be the subject of an indicated report under Section 3
of the Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act or fail to
discharge or sever affiliation with the child care facility of
an employee or volunteer at the facility with direct contact
with children who is the subject of an indicated report under
Section 3 of that Act;
    (10) fail to comply with the provisions of Section 7.1;
    (11) fail to exercise reasonable care in the hiring,
training and supervision of facility personnel;
    (12) fail to report suspected abuse or neglect of children
within the facility, as required by the Abused and Neglected
Child Reporting Act;
    (13) fail to comply with Section 5.1 or 5.2 of this Act; or
    (14) be identified in an investigation by the Department as
an addict or alcoholic, as defined in the Alcoholism and Other
Drug Abuse and Dependency Act, or be a person whom the
Department knows has abused alcohol or drugs, and has not
successfully participated in treatment, self-help groups or
other suitable activities, and the Department determines that
because of such abuse the licensee, holder of the permit, or
any other person directly responsible for the care and welfare
of the children served, does not comply with standards relating
to character, suitability or other qualifications established
under Section 7 of this Act.
(Source: P.A. 91-357, eff. 7-29-99; 91-413, eff. 1-1-00.)
 
    (225 ILCS 10/8.3 new)
    Sec. 8.3. Tax exempt agency.
    (a) The Department shall revoke or refuse to renew the
license of any child welfare agency providing adoption services
that is not (i) officially recognized by the United States
Internal Revenue Service as a tax-exempt organization
described in Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code of
1986 (or any successor provision of federal tax law) and (ii)
in compliance with all of the standards necessary to maintain
its status as an organization described in Section 501(c)(3) of
the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 (or any successor provision
of federal tax law).
    (b) The Department shall grant a grace period of 24 months
from the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 94th
General Assembly for existing child welfare agencies providing
adoption services to obtain 501(c)(3) status. The Department
shall permit an existing child welfare agency that converts
from its current structure in order to be recognized as a
501(c)(3) organization as required by this Section to either
retain its current license or transfer its current license to a
newly formed entity, if the creation of a new entity is
required in order to comply with this Section, provided that
the child welfare agency demonstrates that it continues to meet
all other licensing requirements and that the principal
officers and directors and programs of the converted child
welfare agency or newly organized child welfare agency are
substantially the same as the original. The Department shall
have the sole discretion to grant a one year extension to any
agency unable to obtain 501(c)(3) status within the timeframe
specified in this Section, provided that such agency has filed
an application for 501(c)(3) status with the Internal Revenue
Service within the 2-year timeframe specified in this Section.
    (c) Nothing in this Section shall prohibit a licensed child
welfare agency from using the services of any person, group of
persons, agency, association, organization, corporation,
institution, center, or group as an independent contractor to
perform services on behalf of the licensed agency, provided
that the licensed agency has a written agreement with the
independent contractor specifying the terms of remuneration,
the services to be performed, the personnel performing those
services, and the qualifications of the personnel, in addition
to any other information or requirements the Department may
specify by rule. The licensed agency is not exempt, by reason
of the use of the contractor, from compliance with all of the
provisions of this Act. The Department has the authority to
disapprove the use of any contractor if the Department is not
satisfied with the agency's agreement with the contractor, the
personnel of the contractor who are performing the services, or
the qualifications of the personnel or if the contractor
violates any provision of this Act or the Adoption Act.
 
    (225 ILCS 10/8.4 new)
    Sec. 8.4. Cessation or dissolution of an agency. In the
event that a licensed child welfare agency ceases to exist or
dissolves its corporate entity as an agency, and in so doing
ceases to provide adoption services as defined in this Act, all
records pertaining to adoption services, as that term is
defined in Section 2.24 of this Act, shall be forwarded to
another licensed child welfare agency with notice to the
Department or to the Department within 30 days after such
cessation or dissolution. This Section shall be interpreted in
a manner consistent with rules adopted by the Department
governing child welfare agencies.
 
    (225 ILCS 10/9.1a new)
    Sec. 9.1a. Complaint registry.
    (a) The Department shall establish a complaint registry to
assist in the monitoring of licensed child welfare agencies
providing adoption services, which shall record and track the
resolution and disposition of substantiated licensing
violations.
    (b) The Department shall establish and maintain a statewide
toll-free telephone number and post information on its website
where the public can access information contained in the
complaint registry, as it pertains to the past history and
record of any licensed child welfare agency providing adoption
services. This information shall include, but shall not be
limited to, Department substantiated licensing violations
against a child welfare agency providing adoption services and
Department findings of any license violations against a child
welfare agency providing adoption services.
    (c) Information disclosed in accordance with this Section
shall be subject to the applicable confidentiality
requirements of this Act and the Adoption Act.
 
    (225 ILCS 10/9.1b new)
    Sec. 9.1b. Complaint procedures. All child welfare
agencies providing adoption services shall be required by the
Department to have complaint policies and procedures that shall
be provided in writing to their prospective clients, including
biological parents, adoptive parents, and adoptees that they
have served, at the earliest time possible, and, in the case of
biological and adoptive parents, prior to placement or prior to
entering into any written contract with the clients. These
complaint procedures must be filed with the Department within 6
months after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the
94th General Assembly. Failure to comply with this Section may
result in the suspension of licensure for a period of 90 days.
Subsequent violations may result in licensure revocation. The
Department shall adopt rules that describe the complaint
procedures required by each agency. These rules shall include
without limitation prompt complaint response time, recording
of the complaints, prohibition of agency retaliation against
the person making the complaint, and agency reporting of all
complaints to the Department in a timely manner. Any agency
that maintains a website shall post the prescribed complaint
procedures and its license number, as well as the statewide
toll-free complaint registry telephone number, on its website.
 
    (225 ILCS 10/11)  (from Ch. 23, par. 2221)
    Sec. 11. Whenever the Department is advised, or has reason
to believe, that any person, group of persons or corporation is
operating a child welfare agency or a child care facility
without a license or permit, it shall make an investigation to
ascertain the facts. If the Department is denied access, it
shall request intervention of local, county or State law
enforcement agencies to seek an appropriate court order or
warrant to examine the premises. A person or entity preventing
the Department from carrying out its duties under this Section
shall be guilty of a violation of this Act and shall be subject
to such penalties related thereto. If it finds that the child
welfare agency or child care facility is being, or has been
operated without a license or permit, it shall report the
results of its investigation to the Attorney General, and to
the appropriate State's Attorney for investigation and, if
appropriate, prosecution.
    Operating a child welfare agency or child care facility
without a license constitutes a Class A misdemeanor, followed
by a business offense, if the operator continues to operate the
facility and no effort is made to obtain a license. The
business offense fine shall not exceed $10,000 and each day of
a violation is a separate offense.
(Source: P.A. 85-215.)
 
    (225 ILCS 10/11.1)  (from Ch. 23, par. 2221.1)
    Sec. 11.1. Referrals to law enforcement.
    (a) If the Department has reasonable cause to believe Upon
request of the Director, the Attorney General or the State's
Attorney of the county in which the violation occurred, shall
initiate injunction proceedings whenever it appears that any
person, group of persons, or corporation, agency, association,
organization, institution, center, or group is engaged or about
to engage in any acts or practices that which constitute or
will constitute a violation of this Act, the Department shall
inform the Attorney General or the State's Attorney of the
appropriate county, who may initiate the appropriate civil or
criminal proceedings or any rule or regulation prescribed under
authority thereof. Upon a proper showing, any circuit court may
enter a permanent or preliminary injunction or temporary
restraining order without bond to enforce this Act or any rule
or regulation prescribed thereunder in addition to the
penalties and other remedies provided in this Act.
    (b) If the Department has reasonable cause to believe that
any person, group of persons, corporation, agency,
association, organization, institution, center, or group is
engaged or is about to engage in any act or practice that
constitutes or may constitute a violation of any rule adopted
under the authority of this Act, the Department may inform the
Attorney General or the State's Attorney of the appropriate
county, who may initiate the appropriate civil or criminal
proceedings. Upon a proper showing, any circuit court may enter
a permanent or preliminary injunction or temporary restraining
order without bond to enforce this Act or any rule prescribed
under this Act, in addition to the penalties and other remedies
provided in this Act.
(Source: P.A. 84-548.)
 
    (225 ILCS 10/12)  (from Ch. 23, par. 2222)
    Sec. 12. Advertisements.
    (a) In this Section, "advertise" means communication by any
public medium originating or distributed in this State,
including, but not limited to, newspapers, periodicals,
telephone book listings, outdoor advertising signs, radio, or
television.
    (b) A child care facility or child welfare agency licensed
or operating under a permit issued by the Department may
publish advertisements for the services that the facility is
specifically licensed or issued a permit under this Act to
provide. A person, group of persons, agency, association,
organization, corporation, institution, center, or group who
advertises or causes to be published any advertisement
offering, soliciting, or promising to perform adoption
services as defined in Section 2.24 of this Act is guilty of a
Class A misdemeanor and shall be subject to a fine not to
exceed $10,000 or 9 months imprisonment for each advertisement,
unless that person, group of persons, agency, association,
organization, corporation, institution, center, or group is
(i) licensed or operating under a permit issued by the
Department as a child care facility or child welfare agency,
(ii) a biological parent or a prospective adoptive parent
acting on his or her own behalf, or (iii) a licensed attorney
advertising his or her availability to provide legal services
relating to adoption, as permitted by law.
    (c) Every advertisement published after the effective date
of this amendatory Act of the 94th General Assembly shall
include the Department-issued license number of the facility or
agency.
    (d) Any licensed child welfare agency providing adoption
services that, after the effective date of this amendatory Act
of the 94th General Assembly, causes to be published an
advertisement containing reckless or intentional
misrepresentations concerning adoption services or
circumstances material to the placement of a child for adoption
is guilty of a Class A misdemeanor and is subject to a fine not
to exceed $10,000 or 9 months imprisonment for each
advertisement.
    (e) An out-of-state agency that is not licensed in Illinois
and that has a written interagency agreement with one or more
Illinois licensed child welfare agencies may advertise under
this Section, provided that (i) the out-of-state agency must be
officially recognized by the United States Internal Revenue
Service as a tax-exempt organization under 501(c)(3) of the
Internal Revenue Code of 1986 (or any successor provision of
federal tax law), (ii) the out-of-state agency provides only
international adoption services and is covered by the
Intercountry Adoption Act of 2000, (iii) the out-of-state
agency displays, in the advertisement, the license number of at
least one of the Illinois licensed child welfare agencies with
which it has a written agreement, and (iv) the advertisements
pertain only to international adoption services. Subsection
(d) of this Section shall apply to any out-of-state agencies
described in this subsection (e).
    (f) An advertiser, publisher, or broadcaster, including,
but not limited to, newspapers, periodicals, telephone book
publishers, outdoor advertising signs, radio stations, or
television stations, who knowingly or recklessly advertises or
publishes any advertisement offering, soliciting, or promising
to perform adoption services, as defined in Section 2.24 of
this Act, on behalf of a person, group of persons, agency,
association, organization, corporation, institution, center,
or group, not authorized to advertise under subsection (b) or
subsection (e) of this Section, is guilty of a Class A
misdemeanor and is subject to a fine not to exceed $10,000 or 9
months imprisonment for each advertisement.
    (g) The Department shall maintain a website listing child
welfare agencies licensed by the Department that provide
adoption services and other general information for biological
parents and adoptive parents. The website shall include, but
not be limited to, agency addresses, phone numbers, e-mail
addresses, website addresses, annual reports as referenced in
Section 7.6 of this Act, agency license numbers, the Birth
Parent Bill of Rights, the Adoptive Parents Bill of Rights, and
the Department's complaint registry established under Section
9.1a of this Act. The Department shall adopt any rules
necessary to implement this Section. A child care facility
licensed or operating under a permit issued by the Department
may publish advertisements of the services for which it is
specifically licensed or issued a permit under this Act. No
person, unless licensed or holding a permit as a child care
facility, may cause to be published any advertisement
soliciting a child or children for care or placement or
offering a child or children for care or placement.
(Source: P.A. 76-63.)
 
    (225 ILCS 10/14.6 new)
    Sec. 14.6. Agency payment of salaries or other
compensation.
    (a) A licensed child welfare agency may pay salaries or
other compensation to its officers, employees, agents,
contractors, or any other persons acting on its behalf for
providing adoption services, provided that all of the following
limitations apply:
        (1) The fees, wages, salaries, or other compensation of
    any description paid to the officers, employees,
    contractors, or any other person acting on behalf of a
    child welfare agency providing adoption services shall not
    be unreasonably high in relation to the services actually
    rendered. Every form of compensation shall be taken into
    account in determining whether fees, wages, salaries, or
    compensation are unreasonably high, including, but not
    limited to, salary, bonuses, deferred and non-cash
    compensation, retirement funds, medical and liability
    insurance, loans, and other benefits such as the use,
    purchase, or lease of vehicles, expense accounts, and food,
    housing, and clothing allowances.
        (2) Any earnings, if applicable, or compensation paid
    to the child welfare agency's directors, stockholders, or
    members of its governing body shall not be unreasonably
    high in relation to the services rendered.
        (3) Persons providing adoption services for a child
    welfare agency may be compensated only for services
    actually rendered and only on a fee-for-service, hourly
    wage, or salary basis.
    (b) The Department may adopt rules setting forth the
criteria to determine what constitutes unreasonably high fees
and compensation as those terms are used in this Section. In
determining the reasonableness of fees, wages, salaries, and
compensation under paragraphs (1) and (2) of subsection (a) of
this Section, the Department shall take into account the
location, number, and qualifications of staff, workload
requirements, budget, and size of the agency or person and
available norms for compensation within the adoption
community. Every licensed child welfare agency providing
adoption services shall provide the Department and the Attorney
General with a report, on an annual basis, providing a
description of the fees, wages, salaries and other compensation
described in paragraphs (1), (2), and (3) of this Section.
Nothing in the Adoption Compensation Prohibition Act shall be
construed to prevent a child welfare agency from charging fees
or the payment of salaries and compensation as limited in this
Section and any applicable Section of this Act or the Adoption
Act.
    (c) This Section does not apply to international adoption
services performed by those child welfare agencies governed by
the 1993 Hague Convention on Protection of Children and
Cooperation in Respect of Intercountry Adoption and the
Intercountry Adoption Act of 2000.
    (d) Eligible agencies may be deemed compliant with this
Section.
 
    (225 ILCS 10/14.7 new)
    Sec. 14.7. Payments to biological parents.
    (a) Payment of reasonable living expenses by a child
welfare agency shall not obligate the biological parents to
place the child for adoption. In the event that the biological
parents choose not to place the child for adoption, the child
welfare agency shall have no right to seek reimbursement from
the biological parents, or from any relative of the biological
parents, of moneys paid to, or on behalf of, the biological
parents, except as provided in subsection (b) of this Section.
    (b) Notwithstanding subsection (a) of this Section, a child
welfare agency may seek reimbursement of reasonable living
expenses from a person who receives such payments only if the
person who accepts payment of reasonable living expenses before
the child's birth, as described in subsection (a) of this
Section, knows that the person on whose behalf they are
accepting payment is not pregnant at the time of the receipt of
such payments or the person receives reimbursement for
reasonable living expenses simultaneously from more than one
child welfare agency without the agencies' knowledge.
 
    Section 10. The Adoption Compensation Prohibition Act is
amended by changing Sections 1, 2, 3, 4, and 4.1 and by adding
Section 4.9 as follows:
 
    (720 ILCS 525/1)  (from Ch. 40, par. 1701)
    Sec. 1. No person and no agency, association, corporation,
institution, society, or other organization, except a child
welfare agency as defined by the Child Care Act of 1969, as now
or hereafter amended, shall request, receive or accept any
compensation or thing of value, directly or indirectly, for
providing adoption services, as defined in Section 2.24 of the
Child Care Act of 1969 placing out of a child.
(Source: P.A. 86-820.)
 
    (720 ILCS 525/2)  (from Ch. 40, par. 1702)
    Sec. 2. No person shall pay or give any compensation or
thing of value, directly or indirectly, for providing adoption
services, as defined in Section 2.24 of the Child Care Act of
1969, including placing out of a child to any person or to any
agency, association, corporation, institution, society, or
other organization except a child welfare agency as defined by
the Child Care Act of 1969, as now or hereafter amended.
(Source: P.A. 86-820.)
 
    (720 ILCS 525/3)  (from Ch. 40, par. 1703)
    Sec. 3. Definitions. As used in this Act: the term
    "Placing placing out" means to arrange for the free care or
placement of a child in a family other than that of the child's
parent, stepparent, grandparent, brother, sister, uncle or
aunt or legal guardian, for the purpose of adoption or for the
purpose of providing care.
    "Adoption services" has the meaning given that term in the
Child Care Act of 1969.
(Source: Laws 1955, p. 1881.)
 
    (720 ILCS 525/4)  (from Ch. 40, par. 1704)
    Sec. 4. The provisions of this Act shall not be construed
to prevent the payment of salaries or other compensation by a
licensed child welfare agency providing adoption services, as
that term is defined by the Child Care Act of 1969, as now or
hereafter amended, to the officers, or employees, agents,
contractors, or any other persons acting on behalf of the child
welfare agency, provided that such salaries and compensation
are consistent with subsection (a) of Section 14.5 of the Child
Care Act of 1969.
    The provisions of this Act shall not thereof; nor shall it
be construed to prevent the payment by a person with whom a
child has been placed for adoption out of reasonable and actual
medical fees or hospital charges for services rendered in
connection with the birth of such child, if such payment is
made to the physician or hospital who or which rendered the
services or to the biological natural mother of the child or to
prevent the receipt of such payment by such physician,
hospital, or mother.
(Source: P.A. 86-820.)
 
    (720 ILCS 525/4.1)  (from Ch. 40, par. 1704.1)
    (Text of Section after amendment by P.A. 93-1063)
    Sec. 4.1. Payment of certain expenses.
    (a) A person or persons who have filed or intend to file a
petition to adopt a child under the Adoption Act shall be
permitted to pay the reasonable living expenses of the
biological parents of the child sought to be adopted, in
addition to those expenses set forth in Section 4, only in
accordance with the provisions of this Section.
    "Reasonable living expenses" means those expenses related
to activities of daily living and meeting basic needs,
including, but not limited to, the reasonable costs of lodging,
food, and clothing for the biological parents during the period
of the biological mother's pregnancy and for no more than 120
days prior to the biological mother's expected date of delivery
and for no more than 60 30 days after the birth of the child.
The term does not include expenses for lost wages, gifts,
educational expenses, or other similar expenses of the
biological parents.
    (b) The petitioners may seek leave of the court to pay the
reasonable living expenses of the biological parents. They
shall be permitted to pay the reasonable living expenses of the
biological parents only upon prior order of the circuit court
where the petition for adoption will be filed, or if the
petition for adoption has been filed in the circuit court where
the petition is pending.
    (c) Payments under this Section shall be permitted only in
those circumstances where there is a demonstrated need for the
payment of such expenses to protect the health of the
biological parents or the health of the child sought to be
adopted.
    (d) Payment of their reasonable living expenses, as
provided in this Section, shall not obligate the biological
parents to place the child for adoption. In the event the
biological parents choose not to place the child for adoption,
the petitioners shall have no right to seek reimbursement from
the biological parents, or from any relative or associate of
the biological parents, of moneys paid to, or on behalf of, the
biological parents pursuant to a court order under this
Section.
    (d-5) No person or entity shall offer, provide, or co-sign
a loan or any other credit accommodation, directly or
indirectly, with a biological parent or a relative or associate
of a biological parent based on the contingency of a surrender
or placement of a child for adoption.
    (e) Within 14 days after the completion of all payments for
reasonable living expenses of the biological parents under this
Section, the petitioners shall present a final accounting of
all those expenses to the court. The accounting shall include
vouchers for all moneys expended, copies of all checks written,
and receipts for all cash payments. The accounting shall also
include the verified statements of the petitioners, each
attorney of record, and the biological parents or parents to
whom or on whose behalf the payments were made attesting to the
accuracy of the accounting.
    (f) If the placement of a child for adoption is made in
accordance with the Interstate Compact on the Placement of
Children, and if the sending state permits the payment of any
expenses of biological parents that are not permitted under
this Act, then the payment of those expenses shall not be a
violation of this Act. In that event, the petitioners shall
file an accounting of all payments of the expenses of the
biological parent or parents with the court in which the
petition for adoption is filed or is to be filed. The
accounting shall include a copy of the statutory provisions of
the sending state that permit payments in addition to those
permitted by this Act and a copy of all orders entered in the
sending state that relate to expenses of the biological parents
paid by the petitioners in the sending state.
    (g) The petitioners shall be permitted to pay the
reasonable attorney's fees of the biological parents' attorney
in connection with proceedings under this Act or in connection
with proceedings for the adoption of the child. The attorney's
fees shall be paid only after a petition seeking leave to pay
those fees is filed with the court in which the adoption
proceeding is filed or to be filed. The court shall review the
petition for leave to pay attorney's fees, and if the court
determines that the fees requested are reasonable, the court
shall permit the petitioners to pay them. If the court
determines that the fees requested are not reasonable, the
court shall determine and set the reasonable attorney's fees of
the biological parents' attorney which may be paid by the
petitioners.
    (h) The court may appoint a guardian ad litem for an unborn
child to represent the interests of the child in proceedings
under this Section.
    (i) The provisions of this Section apply to a person who
has filed or intends to file a petition to adopt a child under
the Adoption Act. This Section does not apply to a licensed
child welfare agency, as that term is defined in the Child Care
Act of 1969, whose payments are governed by the Child Care Act
of 1969 and the Department rules adopted thereunder.
(Source: P.A. 93-1063, eff. 6-1-05.)
 
    (720 ILCS 525/4.9 new)
    Sec. 4.9. Injunctive relief.
    (a) Whenever it appears that any person, agency,
association, corporation, institution, society, or other
organization is engaged or about to engage in any acts or
practices that constitute or will constitute a violation of
this Act, the Department shall inform the Attorney General and
the State's Attorney of the appropriate county. Under such
circumstances, the Attorney General or the State's Attorney may
initiate injunction proceedings. Upon a proper showing, any
circuit court may enter a permanent or preliminary injunction
or temporary restraining order without bond to enforce this Act
or any rule adopted under this Act in addition to any other
penalties and other remedies provided in this Act.
    (b) Whenever it appears that any person, agency,
association, corporation, institution, society, or other
organization is engaged or is about to engage in any act or
practice that constitutes or will constitute a violation of any
rule adopted under the authority of this Act, the Department
may inform the Attorney General and the State's Attorney of the
appropriate county. Under such circumstances, the Attorney
General or the State's Attorney may initiate injunction
proceedings. Upon a proper showing, any circuit court may enter
a permanent or preliminary injunction or a temporary
restraining order without bond to enforce this Act or any rule
adopted under this Act, in addition to any other penalties and
remedies provided in this Act.
 
    Section 15. The Adoption Act is amended by changing
Sections 4.1 and 21 as follows:
 
    (750 ILCS 50/4.1)  (from Ch. 40, par. 1506)
    Sec. 4.1. Except for children placed with relatives by the
Department of Children and Family Services pursuant to
subsection (b) of Section 7 of the Children and Family Services
Act, placements under this Act shall comply with the Child Care
Act of 1969 and the Interstate Compact on the Placement of
Children. Placements of children born outside the United States
or a territory thereof shall comply with rules promulgated by
the United States Department of Immigration and
Naturalization.
    Rules promulgated by the Department of Children and Family
Services shall include but not be limited to the following:
    (a) Any agency providing adoption services as defined in
Section 2.24 of the Child Care Act of 1969 which places such
children for adoption in this State:
        (i) Shall be licensed in this State as a child welfare
    agency as defined in Section 2.08 of the Child Care Act of
    1969; or
        (ii) Shall be licensed as a child placement agency in a
    state which is a party to the Interstate Compact on the
    Placement of Children and shall be approved by the
    Department to place children into Illinois in accordance
    with subsection (a-5) of this Section; or
        (iii) Shall be licensed as a child placement agency in
    a country other than the United States or, if located in
    such a country but not so licensed, shall provide
    information such as a license or court document which
    authorizes that agency to place children for adoption and
    to establish that such agency has legal authority to place
    children for adoption; or
        (iv) Shall be a child placement agency which is so
    licensed in a non-compact state and shall be approved by
    the Department to place children into Illinois in
    accordance with subsection (a-5) of this Section, if such
    agency first files with the Department of Children and
    Family Services a bond with surety in the amount of $5,000
    for each such child to ensure that such child shall not
    become a public charge upon this State. Such bond shall
    remain in effect until a judgment for adoption is entered
    with respect to such child pursuant to this Act. The
    Department of Children and Family Services may accept, in
    lieu of such bond, a written agreement with such agency
    which provides that such agency shall be liable for all
    costs associated with the placement of such child in the
    event a judgment judgement of adoption is not entered, upon
    such terms and conditions as the Department deems
    appropriate.
    The rules shall also provide that any agency that places
children for adoption in this State may not, in any policy or
practice relating to the placement of children for adoption,
discriminate against any child or prospective adoptive parent
on the basis of race.
    (a-5) Out-of-state private placing agencies that seek to
place children into Illinois for the purpose of foster care or
adoption shall provide all of the following to the Department:
        (i) A copy of the agency's current license or other
    form of authorization from the approving authority in the
    agency's state. If no such license or authorization is
    issued, the agency must provide a reference statement from
    the approving authority stating the agency is authorized to
    place children in foster care or adoption or both in its
    jurisdiction.
        (ii) A description of the program, including home
    studies, placements, and supervisions that the child
    placing agency conducts within its geographical area, and,
    if applicable, adoptive placements and the finalization of
    adoptions. The child placing agency must accept continued
    responsibility for placement planning and replacement if
    the placement fails.
        (iii) Notification to the Department of any
    significant child placing agency changes after approval.
        (iv) Any other information the Department may require.
    If the adoption is finalized prior to bringing or sending
the child to Illinois, Department approval of the out-of-state
child placing agency involved is not required under this
Section, nor is compliance with the Interstate Compact on the
Placement of Children.
    (b) As an alternative to requiring the bond provided for in
paragraph (a)(iv) of this Section, the Department of Children
and Family Services may require the filing of such a bond by
the individual or individuals seeking to adopt such a child
through placement of such child by a child placement agency
located in a state which is not a party to the Interstate
Compact on the Placement of Children.
    (c) In the case of any foreign-born child brought to the
United States for adoption in this State, the following
preadoption requirements shall be met:
        (1) Documentation that the child is legally free for
    adoption prior to entry into the United States shall be
    submitted.
        (2) A medical report on the child, by authorized
    medical personnel in the country of the child's origin,
    shall be provided when such personnel are available.
        (3) Verification that the adoptive family has been
    licensed as a foster family home pursuant to the Child Care
    Act of 1969, as now or hereafter amended, shall be
    provided.
        (4) A valid home study conducted by a licensed child
    welfare agency that complies with guidelines established
    by the United States Immigration and Naturalization
    Service at 8 CFR 204.4(d)(2)(i), as now or hereafter
    amended, shall be submitted. A home study is considered
    valid if it contains:
            (i) A factual evaluation of the financial,
        physical, mental and moral capabilities of the
        prospective parent or parents to rear and educate the
        child properly.
            (ii) A detailed description of the living
        accommodations where the prospective parent or parents
        currently reside.
            (iii) A detailed description of the living
        accommodations in the United States where the child
        will reside, if known.
            (iv) A statement or attachment recommending the
        proposed adoption signed by an official of the child
        welfare agency which has conducted the home study.
        (5) The placing agency located in a non-compact state
    or a family desiring to adopt through an authorized
    placement party in a non-compact state or a foreign country
    shall file with the Department of Children and Family
    Services a bond with surety in the amount of $5,000 as
    protection that a foreign-born child accepted for care or
    supervision not become a public charge upon the State of
    Illinois.
        (6) In lieu of the $5,000 bond, the placement agency
    may sign a binding agreement with the Department of
    Children and Family Services to assume full liability for
    all placements should, for any reason, the adoption be
    disrupted or not be completed, including financial and
    planning responsibility until the child is either returned
    to the country of its origin or placed with a new adoptive
    family in the United States and that adoption is finalized.
        (7) Compliance with the requirements of the Interstate
    Compact on the Placement of Children, when applicable,
    shall be demonstrated.
        (8) When a child is adopted in a foreign country and a
    final, complete and valid Order of Adoption is issued in
    that country, as determined by both the United States
    Department of State and the United States Department of
    Justice, this State shall not impose any additional
    preadoption requirements. The adoptive family, however,
    must comply with applicable requirements of the United
    States Department of Immigration and Naturalization as
    provided in 8 CFR 204.4 (d)(2)(ii), as now or hereafter
    amended.
    (d) The Department of Children and Family Services shall
maintain the office of Intercountry Adoption Coordinator,
shall maintain and protect the rights of families and children
participating in adoption of foreign born children, and shall
develop ongoing programs of support and services to such
families and children. The Intercountry Adoption Coordinator
shall determine that all preadoption requirements have been met
and report such information to the Department of Immigration
and Naturalization.
(Source: P.A. 89-21, eff. 7-1-95; 89-422; 89-626, eff. 8-9-96.)
 
    (750 ILCS 50/21)  (from Ch. 40, par. 1526)
    Sec. 21. Compensation for placing of children prohibited.
    No person, agency, association, corporation, institution,
society or other organization, except a child welfare agency as
defined by the "Child Care Act", approved July 10, 1957, as now
or hereafter amended, shall receive or accept, or pay or give
any compensation or thing of value, directly or indirectly, for
providing adoption services, as that term is defined in the
Child Care Act of 1969, including placing out of a child as is
more specifically provided in "An Act to prevent the payment or
receipt of compensation for placing out children for adoption
or for the purpose of providing care", approved July 14, 1955,
as now or hereafter amended.
(Source: Laws, 1959, p. 1269.)
 
    Section 95. No acceleration or delay. Where this Act makes
changes in a statute that is represented in this Act by text
that is not yet or no longer in effect (for example, a Section
represented by multiple versions), the use of that text does
not accelerate or delay the taking effect of (i) the changes
made by this Act or (ii) provisions derived from any other
Public Act.
 
    Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon
becoming law.