Rep. Barbara Flynn Currie

Filed: 3/30/2017

 

 


 

 


 
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1
AMENDMENT TO HOUSE BILL 348

2    AMENDMENT NO. ______. Amend House Bill 348 by replacing
3everything after the enacting clause with the following:
 
4    "Section 5. The Illinois Constitutional Amendment Act is
5amended by changing Section 2 as follows:
 
6    (5 ILCS 20/2)  (from Ch. 1, par. 103)
7    Sec. 2.
8    (a) The General Assembly in submitting an amendment to the
9Constitution to the electors, or the proponents of an amendment
10to Article IV of the Constitution submitted by petition, shall
11prepare a brief explanation of such amendment, a brief argument
12in favor of the same, and the form in which such amendment will
13appear on the separate ballot as provided by Section 16-6 of
14the Election Code, as amended. The minority of the General
15Assembly, or if there is no minority, anyone designated by the
16General Assembly shall prepare a brief argument against such

 

 

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1amendment. The explanation, the arguments for and against each
2constitutional amendment, and the form in which the amendment
3will appear on the ballot (with striking and underscoring)
4shall be filed in the Office of the Secretary of State no later
5than July 1 of the year in which the amendment shall appear on
6the ballot.
7    (b) In the case of an amendment to Article IV of the
8Constitution initiated pursuant to Section 3 of Article XIV of
9the Constitution, the proponents of the amendment shall prepare
10a brief explanation of such amendment and a brief argument in
11favor of the same. For purposes of this subsection (b), the
12proponents shall be those persons so designated at the time of
13the filing of the petition as provided in Section 10-8 of the
14Election Code. A brief argument against such amendment shall be
15prepared by , and the opponents shall be those members of the
16General Assembly opposing such amendment, or if there are none,
17anyone designated by the General Assembly and such opponents
18shall prepare a brief argument against such amendment. The
19proponent's explanation and argument in favor of and the
20opponents argument against an amendment to Article IV initiated
21by petition must be submitted to the Attorney General by July
221, who may rewrite them for accuracy and fairness. The Attorney
23General is not authorized to accept an amended or supplemental
24filing of the explanation or the arguments for or against a
25constitutional amendment. The Attorney General shall prepare
26the form in which such amendment will appear on the ballot

 

 

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1(with striking and underscoring). The explanation, the
2arguments for and against each constitutional amendment, and
3the form in which the amendment will appear on the separate
4ballot (with striking and underscoring) shall be filed by the
5Attorney General in the Office office of the Secretary of State
6no later than 30 days after the State Board of Elections has
7certified the with the proposed amendment.
8    (c) Within 30 days of receipt of the information related to
9the amendment, the Office of the Secretary of State shall
10publish the materials on a publicly accessible Internet website
11controlled by the Office of the Secretary of State, including
12an electronic version that may be downloaded. Additionally, the
13Office shall provide an electronic copy to the State Board of
14Elections and each election authority in the State.
15    (d) No later than one month before the general election,
16each election authority shall publish the information related
17to the amendment that was received from the Secretary of State
18on their Internet website and shall electronically mail the
19information to any registered voter who has provided the Board
20or the election authority with an electronic mail address.
21    (e) At least one month before the general next election at
22which the amendment appears on the ballot of members of the
23General Assembly, following the passage of the proposed
24amendment, the Secretary of State shall publish the explanation
25of the amendment, the arguments for and against the amendment,
26the form in which the amendment will appear on the ballot (with

 

 

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1striking and underscoring), and a link to the information
2published on the website, in full in 8 point type, or the
3equivalent thereto, in at least one secular newspaper of
4general circulation in every county in this State in which a
5newspaper is published. In counties in which 2 or more
6newspapers are published, the Secretary of State shall cause
7such amendment to be published in at least 2 newspapers. In
8counties having a population of 500,000 or more, such amendment
9shall be published in not less than 6 newspapers of general
10circulation. After the first publication, the publication of
11such amendment shall be repeated once each week for 2
12consecutive weeks. In selecting newspapers in which to publish
13such amendment the Secretary of State shall have regard solely
14to the circulation of such newspapers, selecting secular
15newspapers in every case having the largest circulation. The
16proposed amendment shall have a notice prefixed thereto in said
17publications, that at such election the proposed amendment will
18be submitted to the electors for adoption or rejection, and at
19the end of the official publication, he shall also publish the
20form in which the proposed amendment will appear on the
21separate ballot. The Secretary of State shall fix the
22publication fees to be paid newspapers for making such
23publication, but in no case shall such publication fee exceed
24the amount charged by such newspapers to private individuals
25for a like publication.
26    (f) The General Assembly may, by resolution, direct the

 

 

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1Secretary of State to distribute to the electors a pamphlet
2containing In addition to the notice hereby required to be
3published, the Secretary of State shall also cause the existing
4form of the constitutional provision proposed to be amended,
5the proposed amendment (with striking and underscoring), the
6explanation of the same, the arguments for and against the
7same, and the form in which such amendment will appear on the
8separate ballot, to be published in pamphlet form in 8 point
9type or the equivalent thereto; and the Secretary of State
10shall mail such pamphlet to every mailing address in the State,
11addressed to the attention of the Postal Patron. The Secretary
12of State He shall also maintain a reasonable supply of such
13pamphlets so as to make them available to any person requesting
14one.
15(Source: P.A. 98-463, eff. 8-16-13.)".