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| | HB3223 Enrolled | | LRB102 10689 CMG 16018 b |
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1 | | AN ACT concerning education.
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2 | | Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
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3 | | represented in the General Assembly:
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4 | | Section 5. The School Code is amended by changing Sections |
5 | | 10-22.6, 10-22.6a, 13A-11, 22-60, 26-2a, 27A-5, and 34-18.24 |
6 | | and by adding Article 26A as follows:
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7 | | (105 ILCS 5/10-22.6) (from Ch. 122, par. 10-22.6)
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8 | | Sec. 10-22.6. Suspension or expulsion of pupils; school |
9 | | searches.
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10 | | (a) To expel pupils guilty of gross disobedience or |
11 | | misconduct, including gross disobedience or misconduct |
12 | | perpetuated by electronic means, pursuant to subsection (b-20) |
13 | | of this Section, and
no action shall lie against them for such |
14 | | expulsion. Expulsion shall
take place only after the parents |
15 | | or guardians have been requested to appear at a
meeting of the |
16 | | board, or with a hearing officer appointed by it, to
discuss |
17 | | their child's behavior. Such request shall be made by |
18 | | registered
or certified mail and shall state the time, place |
19 | | and purpose of the
meeting. The board, or a hearing officer |
20 | | appointed by it, at such
meeting shall state the reasons for |
21 | | dismissal and the date on which the
expulsion is to become |
22 | | effective. If a hearing officer is appointed by
the board, he |
23 | | shall report to the board a written summary of the evidence
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1 | | heard at the meeting and the board may take such action thereon |
2 | | as it
finds appropriate. If the board acts to expel a pupil, |
3 | | the written expulsion decision shall detail the specific |
4 | | reasons why removing the pupil from the learning environment |
5 | | is in the best interest of the school. The expulsion decision |
6 | | shall also include a rationale as to the specific duration of |
7 | | the expulsion. An expelled pupil may be immediately |
8 | | transferred to an alternative program in the manner provided |
9 | | in Article 13A or 13B of this Code. A pupil must not be denied |
10 | | transfer because of the expulsion, except in cases in which |
11 | | such transfer is deemed to cause a threat to the safety of |
12 | | students or staff in the alternative program.
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13 | | (b) To suspend or by policy to authorize the |
14 | | superintendent of
the district or the principal, assistant |
15 | | principal, or dean of students
of any school to suspend pupils |
16 | | guilty of gross disobedience or misconduct, or
to suspend |
17 | | pupils guilty of gross disobedience or misconduct on the |
18 | | school bus
from riding the school bus, pursuant to subsections |
19 | | (b-15) and (b-20) of this Section, and no action
shall lie |
20 | | against them for such suspension. The board may by policy
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21 | | authorize the superintendent of the district or the principal, |
22 | | assistant
principal, or dean of students of any
school to |
23 | | suspend pupils guilty of such acts for a period not to exceed
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24 | | 10 school days. If a pupil is suspended due to gross |
25 | | disobedience or misconduct
on a school bus, the board may |
26 | | suspend the pupil in excess of 10
school
days for safety |
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1 | | reasons. |
2 | | Any suspension shall be reported immediately to the
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3 | | parents or guardians guardian of a pupil along with a full |
4 | | statement of the
reasons for such suspension and a notice of |
5 | | their right to a review. The school board must be given a |
6 | | summary of the notice, including the reason for the suspension |
7 | | and the suspension length. Upon request of the
parents or |
8 | | guardians guardian , the school board or a hearing officer |
9 | | appointed by
it shall review such action of the superintendent |
10 | | or principal, assistant
principal, or dean of students. At |
11 | | such
review, the parents or guardians guardian of the pupil |
12 | | may appear and discuss the
suspension with the board or its |
13 | | hearing officer. If a hearing officer
is appointed by the |
14 | | board, he shall report to the board a written summary
of the |
15 | | evidence heard at the meeting. After its hearing or upon |
16 | | receipt
of the written report of its hearing officer, the |
17 | | board may take such
action as it finds appropriate. If a |
18 | | student is suspended pursuant to this subsection (b), the |
19 | | board shall, in the written suspension decision, detail the |
20 | | specific act of gross disobedience or misconduct resulting in |
21 | | the decision to suspend. The suspension decision shall also |
22 | | include a rationale as to the specific duration of the |
23 | | suspension. A pupil who is suspended in excess of 20 school |
24 | | days may be immediately transferred to an alternative program |
25 | | in the manner provided in Article 13A or 13B of this Code. A |
26 | | pupil must not be denied transfer because of the suspension, |
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1 | | except in cases in which such transfer is deemed to cause a |
2 | | threat to the safety of students or staff in the alternative |
3 | | program.
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4 | | (b-5) Among the many possible disciplinary interventions |
5 | | and consequences available to school officials, school |
6 | | exclusions, such as out-of-school suspensions and expulsions, |
7 | | are the most serious. School officials shall limit the number |
8 | | and duration of expulsions and suspensions to the greatest |
9 | | extent practicable, and it is recommended that they use them |
10 | | only for legitimate educational purposes. To ensure that |
11 | | students are not excluded from school unnecessarily, it is |
12 | | recommended that school officials consider forms of |
13 | | non-exclusionary discipline prior to using out-of-school |
14 | | suspensions or expulsions. |
15 | | (b-10) Unless otherwise required by federal law or this |
16 | | Code, school boards may not institute zero-tolerance policies |
17 | | by which school administrators are required to suspend or |
18 | | expel students for particular behaviors. |
19 | | (b-15) Out-of-school suspensions of 3 days or less may be |
20 | | used only if the student's continuing presence in school would |
21 | | pose a threat to school safety or a disruption to other |
22 | | students' learning opportunities. For purposes of this |
23 | | subsection (b-15), "threat to school safety or a disruption to |
24 | | other students' learning opportunities" shall be determined on |
25 | | a case-by-case basis by the school board or its designee. |
26 | | School officials shall make all reasonable efforts to resolve |
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1 | | such threats, address such disruptions, and minimize the |
2 | | length of suspensions to the greatest extent practicable. |
3 | | (b-20) Unless otherwise required by this Code, |
4 | | out-of-school suspensions of longer than 3 days, expulsions, |
5 | | and disciplinary removals to alternative schools may be used |
6 | | only if other appropriate and available behavioral and |
7 | | disciplinary interventions have been exhausted and the |
8 | | student's continuing presence in school would either (i) pose |
9 | | a
threat to the safety of other students, staff, or members of
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10 | | the school community or (ii) substantially disrupt, impede, or
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11 | | interfere with the operation of the school. For purposes of |
12 | | this subsection (b-20), "threat to the safety of other |
13 | | students, staff, or members of the school community" and |
14 | | "substantially disrupt, impede, or interfere with the |
15 | | operation of the school" shall be determined on a case-by-case |
16 | | basis by school officials. For purposes of this subsection |
17 | | (b-20), the determination of whether "appropriate and |
18 | | available behavioral and disciplinary interventions have been |
19 | | exhausted" shall be made by school officials. School officials |
20 | | shall make all reasonable efforts to resolve such threats, |
21 | | address such disruptions, and minimize the length of student |
22 | | exclusions to the greatest extent practicable. Within the |
23 | | suspension decision described in subsection (b) of this |
24 | | Section or the expulsion decision described in subsection (a) |
25 | | of this Section, it shall be documented whether other |
26 | | interventions were attempted or whether it was determined that |
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1 | | there were no other appropriate and available interventions. |
2 | | (b-25) Students who are suspended out-of-school for longer |
3 | | than 4 school days shall be provided appropriate and available |
4 | | support services during the period of their suspension. For |
5 | | purposes of this subsection (b-25), "appropriate and available |
6 | | support services" shall be determined by school authorities. |
7 | | Within the suspension decision described in subsection (b) of |
8 | | this Section, it shall be documented whether such services are |
9 | | to be provided or whether it was determined that there are no |
10 | | such appropriate and available services. |
11 | | A school district may refer students who are expelled to |
12 | | appropriate and available support services. |
13 | | A school district shall create a policy to facilitate the |
14 | | re-engagement of students who are suspended out-of-school, |
15 | | expelled, or returning from an alternative school setting. |
16 | | (b-30) A school district shall create a policy by which |
17 | | suspended pupils, including those pupils suspended from the |
18 | | school bus who do not have alternate transportation to school, |
19 | | shall have the opportunity to make up work for equivalent |
20 | | academic credit. It shall be the responsibility of a pupil's |
21 | | parents or guardians parent or guardian to notify school |
22 | | officials that a pupil suspended from the school bus does not |
23 | | have alternate transportation to school. |
24 | | (b-35) In all suspension review hearings conducted
under |
25 | | subsection (b) or expulsion hearings conducted
under |
26 | | subsection (a), a student may disclose any factor to be |
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1 | | considered in mitigation, including his or her status as
a |
2 | | parent, expectant parent, or victim of domestic or sexual |
3 | | violence, as defined in Article 26A. A representative of the
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4 | | parent's or guardian's choice, or of the student's choice if |
5 | | emancipated, must be permitted to represent
the student |
6 | | throughout the proceedings and to address the school board or |
7 | | its appointed hearing officer. With the
approval of the |
8 | | student's parent or guardian, or of the student if |
9 | | emancipated, a support person
must be permitted to accompany |
10 | | the student to any disciplinary
hearings or proceedings. The |
11 | | representative or support person must comply with any rules of |
12 | | the school district's hearing process. If the representative |
13 | | or support person violates the rules or engages in behavior or |
14 | | advocacy that harasses, abuses, or intimidates either party, a |
15 | | witness, or anyone else in attendance at the hearing, the |
16 | | representative or support person may be prohibited from |
17 | | further participation in the hearing or proceeding. A |
18 | | suspension or expulsion proceeding
under this subsection |
19 | | (b-35) must be conducted independently
from any ongoing |
20 | | criminal investigation or proceeding, and an absence of |
21 | | pending or possible criminal charges, criminal investigations, |
22 | | or proceedings may not be a factor in school
disciplinary |
23 | | decisions. |
24 | | (b-40) During a suspension review hearing conducted
under |
25 | | subsection (b) or an expulsion hearing conducted
under |
26 | | subsection (a) that involves allegations of sexual
violence by |
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1 | | the student who is subject to discipline, neither
the student |
2 | | nor his or her representative shall directly
question nor have |
3 | | direct contact with the alleged victim. The
student who is |
4 | | subject to discipline or his or her
representative may, at the |
5 | | discretion and direction of the
school board or its appointed |
6 | | hearing officer, suggest
questions to be posed by the school |
7 | | board or its appointed
hearing officer to the alleged victim. |
8 | | (c) The Department of Human Services
shall be invited to |
9 | | send a representative to consult with the board at
such |
10 | | meeting whenever there is evidence that mental illness may be |
11 | | the
cause for expulsion or suspension.
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12 | | (c-5) School districts shall make reasonable efforts to |
13 | | provide ongoing professional development to teachers, |
14 | | administrators, school board members, school resource |
15 | | officers, and staff on the adverse consequences of school |
16 | | exclusion and justice-system involvement, effective classroom |
17 | | management strategies, culturally responsive discipline, the |
18 | | appropriate and available supportive services for the |
19 | | promotion of student attendance and engagement, and |
20 | | developmentally appropriate disciplinary methods that promote |
21 | | positive and healthy school climates. |
22 | | (d) The board may expel a student for a definite period of |
23 | | time not to
exceed 2 calendar years, as determined on a |
24 | | case-by-case basis.
A student who
is determined to have |
25 | | brought one of the following objects to school, any |
26 | | school-sponsored activity
or event, or any activity or event |
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1 | | that bears a reasonable relationship to school shall be |
2 | | expelled for a period of not less than
one year: |
3 | | (1) A firearm. For the purposes of this Section, |
4 | | "firearm" means any gun, rifle, shotgun, weapon as defined |
5 | | by Section 921 of Title 18 of the United States Code, |
6 | | firearm as defined in Section 1.1 of the Firearm Owners |
7 | | Identification Card Act, or firearm as defined in Section |
8 | | 24-1 of the Criminal Code of 2012. The expulsion period |
9 | | under this subdivision (1) may be modified by the |
10 | | superintendent, and the superintendent's determination may |
11 | | be modified by the board on a case-by-case basis. |
12 | | (2) A knife, brass knuckles or other knuckle weapon |
13 | | regardless of its composition, a billy club, or any other |
14 | | object if used or attempted to be used to cause bodily |
15 | | harm, including "look alikes" of any firearm as defined in |
16 | | subdivision (1) of this subsection (d). The expulsion |
17 | | requirement under this subdivision (2) may be modified by |
18 | | the superintendent, and the superintendent's determination |
19 | | may be modified by the board on a case-by-case basis. |
20 | | Expulsion
or suspension
shall be construed in a
manner |
21 | | consistent with the federal Individuals with Disabilities |
22 | | Education
Act. A student who is subject to suspension or |
23 | | expulsion as provided in this
Section may be eligible for a |
24 | | transfer to an alternative school program in
accordance with |
25 | | Article 13A of the School Code.
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26 | | (d-5) The board may suspend or by regulation
authorize the |
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1 | | superintendent of the district or the principal, assistant
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2 | | principal, or dean of students of any
school to suspend a |
3 | | student for a period not to exceed
10 school days or may expel |
4 | | a student for a definite period of time not to
exceed 2 |
5 | | calendar years, as determined on a case-by-case basis, if (i) |
6 | | that student has been determined to have made an explicit |
7 | | threat on an Internet website against a school employee, a |
8 | | student, or any school-related personnel, (ii) the Internet |
9 | | website through which the threat was made is a site that was |
10 | | accessible within the school at the time the threat was made or |
11 | | was available to third parties who worked or studied within |
12 | | the school grounds at the time the threat was made, and (iii) |
13 | | the threat could be reasonably interpreted as threatening to |
14 | | the safety and security of the threatened individual because |
15 | | of his or her duties or employment status or status as a |
16 | | student inside the school.
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17 | | (e) To maintain order and security in the schools, school |
18 | | authorities may
inspect and search places and areas such as |
19 | | lockers, desks, parking lots, and
other school property and |
20 | | equipment owned or controlled by the school, as well
as |
21 | | personal effects left in those places and areas by students, |
22 | | without notice
to or the consent of the student, and without a |
23 | | search warrant. As a matter of
public policy, the General |
24 | | Assembly finds that students have no reasonable
expectation of |
25 | | privacy in these places and areas or in their personal effects
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26 | | left in these places and areas. School authorities may request |
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1 | | the assistance
of law enforcement officials for the purpose of |
2 | | conducting inspections and
searches of lockers, desks, parking |
3 | | lots, and other school property and
equipment owned or |
4 | | controlled by the school for illegal drugs, weapons, or
other
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5 | | illegal or dangerous substances or materials, including |
6 | | searches conducted
through the use of specially trained dogs. |
7 | | If a search conducted in accordance
with this Section produces |
8 | | evidence that the student has violated or is
violating either |
9 | | the law, local ordinance, or the school's policies or rules,
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10 | | such evidence may be seized by school authorities, and |
11 | | disciplinary action may
be taken. School authorities may also |
12 | | turn over such evidence to law
enforcement authorities.
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13 | | (f) Suspension or expulsion may include suspension or |
14 | | expulsion from
school and all school activities and a |
15 | | prohibition from being present on school
grounds.
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16 | | (g) A school district may adopt a policy providing that if |
17 | | a student
is suspended or expelled for any reason from any |
18 | | public or private school
in this or any other state, the |
19 | | student must complete the entire term of
the suspension or |
20 | | expulsion in an alternative school program under Article 13A |
21 | | of this Code or an alternative learning opportunities program |
22 | | under Article 13B of this Code before being admitted into the |
23 | | school
district if there is no threat to the safety of students |
24 | | or staff in the alternative program. A school district that |
25 | | adopts a policy under this subsection (g) must include a |
26 | | provision allowing for consideration of any mitigating |
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1 | | factors, including, but not limited to, a student's status as |
2 | | a parent, expectant parent, or victim of domestic or sexual |
3 | | violence, as defined in Article 26A.
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4 | | (h) School officials shall not advise or encourage |
5 | | students to drop out voluntarily due to behavioral or academic |
6 | | difficulties. |
7 | | (i) A student may not be issued a monetary fine or fee as a |
8 | | disciplinary consequence, though this shall not preclude |
9 | | requiring a student to provide restitution for lost, stolen, |
10 | | or damaged property. |
11 | | (j) Subsections (a) through (i) of this Section shall |
12 | | apply to elementary and secondary schools, charter schools, |
13 | | special charter districts, and school districts organized |
14 | | under Article 34 of this Code. |
15 | | (k) The expulsion of children enrolled in programs funded |
16 | | under Section 1C-2 of this Code is subject to the requirements |
17 | | under paragraph (7) of subsection (a) of Section 2-3.71 of |
18 | | this Code. |
19 | | (l) Beginning with the 2018-2019 school year, an in-school |
20 | | suspension program provided by a school district for any |
21 | | students in kindergarten through grade 12 may focus on |
22 | | promoting non-violent conflict resolution and positive |
23 | | interaction with other students and school personnel. A school |
24 | | district may employ a school social worker or a licensed |
25 | | mental health professional to oversee an in-school suspension |
26 | | program in kindergarten through grade 12. |
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1 | | (Source: P.A. 100-105, eff. 1-1-18; 100-810, eff. 1-1-19; |
2 | | 100-863, eff. 8-14-18; 100-1035, eff. 8-22-18; 101-81, eff. |
3 | | 7-12-19.)
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4 | | (105 ILCS 5/10-22.6a) (from Ch. 122, par. 10-22.6a)
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5 | | Sec. 10-22.6a. Home instruction; correspondence courses. |
6 | | (a) To provide by home instruction, correspondence courses |
7 | | or
otherwise courses of instruction for a pupil who is pupils |
8 | | who are unable to attend school
because of pregnancy or |
9 | | pregnancy-related conditions, the fulfillment of parenting |
10 | | obligations related to the health of the child, or health and |
11 | | safety concerns arising from domestic or sexual violence, as |
12 | | defined in Article 26A . Such instruction shall be provided to |
13 | | the pupil at each of the following times:
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14 | | (1) Before before the birth of the child when the |
15 | | pupil's physician, physician assistant, or advanced |
16 | | practice registered nurse has
indicated to the district, |
17 | | in writing, that the pupil is medically unable
to attend |
18 | | regular classroom instruction . and |
19 | | (2) For for up to 3 months
following the birth of the |
20 | | child or a miscarriage . |
21 | | (3) When the pupil must care for his or her ill child |
22 | | if (i) the child's physician, physician assistant, or |
23 | | advanced practice registered nurse has indicated to the |
24 | | district, in writing, that the child has a serious health |
25 | | condition that would require the pupil to be absent from |
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1 | | school for 2 or more consecutive weeks and (ii) the pupil |
2 | | or the pupil's parent or guardian indicates to the |
3 | | district, in writing, that the pupil is needed to provide |
4 | | care to the child during this period. In this paragraph |
5 | | (3), "serious health condition" means an illness, injury, |
6 | | impairment, or physical or mental health condition that |
7 | | involves inpatient care in a hospital, hospice, or |
8 | | residential medical care facility or continuing treatment |
9 | | by a health care provider that is not controlled by |
10 | | medication alone. |
11 | | (4) The pupil must treat physical or mental health |
12 | | complications or address safety concerns arising from |
13 | | domestic or sexual violence when a healthcare provider or |
14 | | an employee of the pupil's domestic or sexual violence |
15 | | organization, as defined in Article 26A has indicated to |
16 | | the district, in writing, that the care is needed by the |
17 | | pupil and will cause the pupil's absence from school for 2 |
18 | | or more consecutive weeks. |
19 | | A school district may reassess home instruction provided to a |
20 | | pupil under paragraph (3) or (4) every 2 months to determine |
21 | | the pupil's continuing need for instruction under this |
22 | | Section .
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23 | | The instruction course shall be designed to offer |
24 | | educational experiences
that are equivalent to those given to |
25 | | pupils at the same grade level in
the district and that are |
26 | | designed to enable the pupil to return to the classroom.
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1 | | (b) Notwithstanding any other provision of this Code or |
2 | | State law to the contrary, if a pupil is unable to attend |
3 | | regular classes because of the reasons set forth in subsection |
4 | | (a) and has participated in instruction under this Section |
5 | | that is administered by the school or the school district, |
6 | | then the pupil may not be penalized for grading purposes or be |
7 | | denied course completion, a return to regular classroom |
8 | | instruction, grade level advancement, or graduation solely on |
9 | | the basis of the pupil's participation in instruction under |
10 | | this Section or the pupil's absence from the regular education |
11 | | program during the period of instruction under this Section. A |
12 | | school or school district may not use instruction under this |
13 | | Section to replace making support services available so that |
14 | | pupils who are parents, expectant parents, or victims of |
15 | | domestic or sexual violence may receive regular classroom |
16 | | instruction. |
17 | | (Source: P.A. 100-443, eff. 8-25-17.)
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18 | | (105 ILCS 5/13A-11)
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19 | | Sec. 13A-11. Chicago public schools.
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20 | | (a) The Chicago Board of Education may
establish |
21 | | alternative schools within Chicago and may contract with third
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22 | | parties for services otherwise performed by employees, |
23 | | including those in a
bargaining unit, in accordance with |
24 | | Sections 34-8.1, 34-18, and 34-49.
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25 | | (b) Alternative schools operated by third parties within |
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1 | | Chicago shall be
exempt from all provisions of this Code, |
2 | | except provisions concerning:
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3 | | (1) student civil rights;
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4 | | (2) staff civil rights;
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5 | | (3) health and safety;
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6 | | (4) performance and financial audits;
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7 | | (5) the assessments required under Section 2-3.64a-5 |
8 | | of this Code;
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9 | | (6) Chicago learning outcomes;
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10 | | (7) Sections 2-3.25a through 2-3.25j of this Code;
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11 | | (8) the Inspector General; and
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12 | | (9) Section 34-2.4b of this Code ; and |
13 | | (10) Article 26A and any other provision of this Code |
14 | | concerning students who are parents, expectant parents, or |
15 | | victims of domestic or sexual violence, as defined in |
16 | | Article 26A .
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17 | | (Source: P.A. 98-972, eff. 8-15-14.)
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18 | | (105 ILCS 5/22-60) |
19 | | Sec. 22-60. Unfunded mandates prohibited. |
20 | | (a) No public school district or private school is |
21 | | obligated to comply with the following types of mandates |
22 | | unless a separate appropriation has been enacted into law |
23 | | providing full funding for the mandate for the school year |
24 | | during which the mandate is required: |
25 | | (1) Any mandate in this Code enacted after the |
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1 | | effective date of this amendatory Act of the 96th General |
2 | | Assembly. |
3 | | (2) Any regulatory mandate promulgated by the State |
4 | | Board of Education and adopted by rule after the effective |
5 | | date of this amendatory Act of the 96th General Assembly |
6 | | other than those promulgated with respect to this Section |
7 | | or statutes already enacted on or before the effective |
8 | | date of this amendatory Act of the 96th General Assembly. |
9 | | (b) If the amount appropriated to fund a mandate described |
10 | | in subsection (a) of this Section does not fully fund the |
11 | | mandated activity, then the school district or private school |
12 | | may choose to discontinue or modify the mandated activity to |
13 | | ensure that the costs of compliance do not exceed the funding |
14 | | received. |
15 | | Before discontinuing or modifying the mandate, the school |
16 | | district shall petition its regional superintendent of schools |
17 | | on or before February 15 of each year to request to be exempt |
18 | | from implementing the mandate in a school or schools in the |
19 | | next school year. The petition shall include all legitimate |
20 | | costs associated with implementing and operating the mandate, |
21 | | the estimated reimbursement from State and federal sources, |
22 | | and any unique circumstances the school district can verify |
23 | | that exist that would cause the implementation and operation |
24 | | of such a mandate to be cost prohibitive. |
25 | | The regional superintendent of schools shall review the |
26 | | petition. In accordance with the Open Meetings Act, he or she |
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1 | | shall convene a public hearing to hear testimony from the |
2 | | school district and interested community members. The regional |
3 | | superintendent shall, on or before March 15 of each year, |
4 | | inform the school district of his or her decision, along with |
5 | | the reasons why the exemption was granted or denied, in |
6 | | writing. The regional superintendent must also send |
7 | | notification to the State Board of Education detailing which |
8 | | school districts requested an exemption and the results. |
9 | | If the regional superintendent grants an exemption to the |
10 | | school district, then the school district is relieved from the |
11 | | requirement to establish and implement the mandate in the |
12 | | school or schools granted an exemption for the next school |
13 | | year.
If the regional superintendent of schools does not grant |
14 | | an exemption, then the school district shall implement the |
15 | | mandate in accordance with the applicable law or rule by the |
16 | | first student attendance day of the next school year. However, |
17 | | the school district or a resident of the school district may on |
18 | | or before April 15 appeal the decision of the regional |
19 | | superintendent to the State Superintendent of Education. The |
20 | | State Superintendent shall hear appeals on the decisions of |
21 | | regional superintendents of schools no later than May 15 of |
22 | | each year. The State Superintendent shall make a final |
23 | | decision at the conclusion of the hearing on the school |
24 | | district's request for an exemption from the mandate. If the |
25 | | State Superintendent grants an exemption, then the school |
26 | | district is relieved from the requirement to implement a |
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1 | | mandate in the school or schools granted an exemption for the |
2 | | next school year. If the State Superintendent does not grant |
3 | | an exemption, then the school district shall implement the |
4 | | mandate in accordance with the applicable law or rule by the |
5 | | first student attendance day of the next school year. |
6 | | If a school district or private school discontinues or |
7 | | modifies a mandated activity due to lack of full funding from |
8 | | the State, then the school district or private school shall |
9 | | annually maintain and update a list of discontinued or |
10 | | modified mandated activities. The list shall be provided to |
11 | | the State Board of Education upon request. |
12 | | (c) This Section does not apply to (i) any new statutory or |
13 | | regulatory mandates related to revised learning standards |
14 | | developed through the Common Core State Standards Initiative |
15 | | and assessments developed to align with those standards or |
16 | | actions specified in this State's Phase 2 Race to the Top Grant |
17 | | application if the application is approved by the United |
18 | | States Department of Education , or (ii) new statutory or |
19 | | regulatory mandates from the Race to the Top Grant through the |
20 | | federal American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 imposed |
21 | | on school districts designated as being in the lowest |
22 | | performing 5% of schools within the Race to the Top Grant |
23 | | application , or (iii) any changes made to this Code by this |
24 | | amendatory Act of the 102nd General Assembly . |
25 | | (d) In any instances in which this Section conflicts with |
26 | | the State Mandates Act, the State Mandates Act shall prevail.
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1 | | (Source: P.A. 96-1441, eff. 8-20-10.) |
2 | | (105 ILCS 5/26-2a) (from Ch. 122, par. 26-2a) |
3 | | Sec. 26-2a. A "truant" is defined as a child who is subject |
4 | | to compulsory school
attendance and who is absent without |
5 | | valid cause, as defined under this Section, from such |
6 | | attendance for more than 1% but less than 5% of the past 180 |
7 | | school days. |
8 | | "Valid cause" for absence shall be illness, attendance at |
9 | | a verified medical or therapeutic appointment, appointment |
10 | | with a victim services provider, observance of a religious
|
11 | | holiday, death in the immediate family,
or family emergency , |
12 | | and shall include such other situations beyond the control
of |
13 | | the student as determined by the board of education in each |
14 | | district ,
or such other circumstances which cause reasonable |
15 | | concern to the parent
for the mental, emotional, or physical |
16 | | health or safety of the student. For purposes of a student who |
17 | | is an expectant parent, or parent, or victim of domestic or |
18 | | sexual violence, "valid cause" for absence includes (i) the |
19 | | fulfillment of a parenting responsibility, including, but not |
20 | | limited to, arranging and providing child care, caring for a |
21 | | sick child, attending prenatal or other medical appointments |
22 | | for the expectant student, and attending medical appointments |
23 | | for a child, and (ii) addressing circumstances resulting from |
24 | | domestic or sexual violence, including, but not limited to, |
25 | | experiencing domestic or sexual violence, recovering from |
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1 | | physical or psychological injuries, seeking medical attention, |
2 | | seeking services from a domestic or sexual violence |
3 | | organization, as defined in Article 26A, seeking psychological |
4 | | or other counseling, participating in safety planning, |
5 | | temporarily or permanently relocating, seeking legal |
6 | | assistance or remedies, or taking any other action to increase |
7 | | the safety or health of the student or to protect the student |
8 | | from future domestic or sexual violence. A school district may |
9 | | require a student to verify his or her claim of domestic or |
10 | | sexual violence under Section 26A-45 prior to the district |
11 | | approving a valid cause for an absence of 3 or more consecutive |
12 | | days that is related to domestic or sexual violence. |
13 | | "Chronic or habitual truant" shall be defined as a child |
14 | | who is subject to compulsory
school attendance and who is |
15 | | absent without valid cause from such attendance
for 5% or more |
16 | | of the previous 180 regular attendance days. |
17 | | "Truant minor" is defined as a chronic truant to whom |
18 | | supportive
services, including prevention, diagnostic, |
19 | | intervention and remedial
services, alternative programs and |
20 | | other school and community resources
have been provided and |
21 | | have failed to result in the cessation of chronic
truancy, or |
22 | | have been offered and refused. |
23 | | A "dropout" is defined as any child enrolled in grades 9 |
24 | | through 12 whose
name has been removed from the district |
25 | | enrollment roster for any reason
other than the student's |
26 | | death, extended illness, removal for medical non-compliance, |
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1 | | expulsion, aging out, graduation, or completion of a
program |
2 | | of studies and who has not transferred to another public or |
3 | | private school and is not known to be home-schooled by his or |
4 | | her parents or guardians or continuing school in another |
5 | | country. |
6 | | "Religion" for the purposes of this Article, includes all |
7 | | aspects of
religious observance and practice, as well as |
8 | | belief. |
9 | | (Source: P.A. 100-810, eff. 1-1-19; 100-918, eff. 8-17-18; |
10 | | 101-81, eff. 7-12-19.) |
11 | | (105 ILCS 5/Art. 26A heading new) |
12 | | ARTICLE 26A. CHILDREN AND STUDENTS WHO ARE PARENTS, |
13 | | EXPECTANT PARENTS, OR VICTIMS OF |
14 | | DOMESTIC OR SEXUAL VIOLENCE |
15 | | (105 ILCS 5/26A-1 new) |
16 | | Sec. 26A-1. Scope of Article. This Article applies to all |
17 | | school districts and schools governed by this Code, including |
18 | | schools operating under Article 13, 13A, 13B, 27A, 32, 33, or |
19 | | 34. However, this Article does not apply to the Department of |
20 | | Juvenile Justice School District. |
21 | | (105 ILCS 5/26A-5 new) |
22 | | Sec. 26A-5. Purpose. The purpose of this Article is to |
23 | | ensure that Illinois schools have policies, procedures, or |
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1 | | both, in place that enable children and students who are |
2 | | parents, expectant parents, or victims of domestic or sexual |
3 | | violence to be identified by schools in a manner respectful of |
4 | | their privacy and safety, treated with dignity and regard, and |
5 | | provided the protection, instruction, and related services |
6 | | necessary to enable them to meet State educational standards |
7 | | and successfully attain a school diploma. This Article shall |
8 | | be interpreted liberally to aid in this purpose. Nothing in |
9 | | this Article precludes or may be used to preclude a mandated |
10 | | reporter from reporting child abuse or child neglect as |
11 | | required under the Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act. |
12 | | (105 ILCS 5/26A-10 new) |
13 | | Sec. 26A-10. Definitions. In this Article: |
14 | | "Confidential" means information or facts expected and |
15 | | intended to be kept private or protected by an existing |
16 | | privilege in the Code of Civil Procedure. Confidential |
17 | | information may be disclosed by a school or school district if |
18 | | such disclosure is required by State or federal law or is |
19 | | necessary to complete proceedings relevant to this Article. |
20 | | Designation of student information as confidential applies to |
21 | | the school and school district and does not limit a student's |
22 | | right to speak about the student's experiences. |
23 | | "Consent" includes, at a minimum, a recognition that (i) |
24 | | consent is a freely given agreement to sexual activity, (ii) |
25 | | an individual's lack of verbal or physical resistance or |
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1 | | submission resulting from the use of threat of force does not |
2 | | constitute consent, (iii) an individual's manner of dress does |
3 | | not constitute consent, (iv) an individual's consent to past |
4 | | sexual activity does not constitute consent to future sexual |
5 | | activity, (v) an individual's consent to engage in one type of |
6 | | sexual activity with one person does not constitute consent to |
7 | | engage in any other type of sexual activity or sexual activity |
8 | | with another person, (vi) an individual can withdraw consent |
9 | | at any time, and (vii) an individual cannot consent to sexual |
10 | | activity if that individual is unable to understand the nature |
11 | | of the activity or give knowing consent due to the |
12 | | circumstances that include, but are not limited to, all the |
13 | | following: |
14 | | (1) The individual is incapacitated due to the use or |
15 | | influence of alcohol or drugs. |
16 | | (2) The individual is asleep or unconscious. |
17 | | (3) The individual is under the age of consent. |
18 | | (4) The individual is incapacitated due to a mental |
19 | | disability. |
20 | | "Domestic or sexual violence" means domestic violence, |
21 | | gender-based harassment, sexual activity without consent, |
22 | | sexual assault, sexual violence, or stalking. Domestic or |
23 | | sexual violence may occur through electronic communication. |
24 | | Domestic or sexual violence exists regardless of when or where |
25 | | the violence occurred, whether or not the violence is the |
26 | | subject of a criminal investigation or the perpetrator has |
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1 | | been criminally charged or convicted of a crime, whether or |
2 | | not an order of protection or a no-contact order is pending |
3 | | before or has been issued by a court, or whether or not any |
4 | | domestic or sexual violence took place on school grounds, |
5 | | during regular school hours, or during a school-sponsored |
6 | | event. |
7 | | "Domestic or sexual violence organization" means a |
8 | | nonprofit, nongovernmental organization that provides |
9 | | assistance to victims of domestic or sexual violence or |
10 | | advocates for those victims, including an organization |
11 | | carrying out a domestic or sexual violence program, an |
12 | | organization operating a shelter or a rape crisis center or |
13 | | providing counseling services, an accredited children's |
14 | | advocacy center, an organization that provides services to or |
15 | | advocates on behalf of children and students who are gay, |
16 | | lesbian, bisexual, transgender, or gender nonconforming, an |
17 | | organization that provides services to or advocates on behalf |
18 | | of children and students who are parents or expectant parents, |
19 | | or an organization seeking to eliminate domestic or sexual |
20 | | violence or to address the consequences of that violence for |
21 | | its victims through legislative advocacy or policy change, |
22 | | public education, or service collaboration. |
23 | | "Domestic violence" means abuse, as defined in the |
24 | | Illinois Domestic Violence Act of 1986, by family or household |
25 | | members, as defined in the Illinois Domestic Violence Act of |
26 | | 1986. |
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1 | | "Electronic communication" includes communications via |
2 | | telephone, mobile phone, computer, email, video recorder, fax |
3 | | machine, telex, pager, apps or applications, or any other |
4 | | electronic communication or cyberstalking under Section 12-7.5 |
5 | | of the Criminal Code of 2012. |
6 | | "Expectant parent" means a student who (i) is pregnant and |
7 | | (ii) has not yet received a diploma for completion of a |
8 | | secondary education, as defined in Section 22-22. |
9 | | "Gender-based harassment" means any harassment or |
10 | | discrimination on the basis of an individual's actual or |
11 | | perceived sex or gender, including unwelcome sexual advances, |
12 | | requests for sexual favors, other verbal or physical conduct |
13 | | of a sexual nature, or unwelcome conduct, including verbal, |
14 | | nonverbal, or physical conduct that is not sexual in nature |
15 | | but is related to a student's status as a parent, expectant |
16 | | parent, or victim of domestic or sexual violence. |
17 | | "Harassment" means any unwelcome conduct on the basis of a |
18 | | student's actual or perceived race, gender, color, religion, |
19 | | national origin, ancestry, sex, marital status, order of |
20 | | protection status, disability, sexual orientation, gender |
21 | | identity, pregnancy, or citizenship status that has the |
22 | | purpose or effect of substantially interfering with the |
23 | | individual's academic performance or creating an intimidating, |
24 | | hostile, or offensive learning environment. |
25 | | "Perpetrator" means an individual who commits or is |
26 | | alleged to have committed any act of domestic or sexual |
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1 | | violence. The term "perpetrator" must be used with caution |
2 | | when applied to children, particularly young children. |
3 | | "Poor academic performance" means a student who has (i) |
4 | | scored in the 50th percentile or below on a school |
5 | | district-administered standardized test, (ii) received a score |
6 | | on a State assessment that does not meet standards in one or |
7 | | more of the fundamental learning areas under Section 27-1, as |
8 | | applicable for the student's grade level, or (iii) not met |
9 | | grade-level expectations on a school district-designated |
10 | | assessment. |
11 | | "Representative" means an adult who is authorized to act |
12 | | on behalf of a student during a proceeding, including an |
13 | | attorney, parent, or guardian. |
14 | | "School" means a school district or school governed by |
15 | | this Code, including a school operating under Article 13, 13A, |
16 | | 13B, 27A, 32, 33, or 34, other than the Department of Juvenile |
17 | | Justice School District. "School" includes any other entity |
18 | | responsible for administering public schools, such as |
19 | | cooperatives, joint agreements, charter schools, special |
20 | | charter districts, regional offices of education, local |
21 | | agencies, or the Department of Human Services, and nonpublic |
22 | | schools recognized by the State Board of Education. |
23 | | "Sexual activity" means any knowingly touching or fondling |
24 | | by one person, either directly or through clothing, of the sex |
25 | | organs, anus, mouth, or breast of another person for the |
26 | | purpose of sexual gratification or arousal. |
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1 | | "Sexual assault" or "sexual violence" means any conduct of |
2 | | an adult or minor child proscribed in Article 11 of the |
3 | | Criminal Code of 2012, except for Sections 11-35, 11-40, and |
4 | | 11-45 of the Criminal Code of 2012, including conduct |
5 | | committed by a perpetrator who is a stranger to the victim and |
6 | | conduct by a perpetrator who is known or related by blood or |
7 | | marriage to the victim. |
8 | | "Stalking" means any conduct proscribed in Section 12-7.3, |
9 | | 12-7.4, or 12-7.5 of the Criminal Code of 2012, including |
10 | | stalking committed by a perpetrator who is a stranger to the |
11 | | victim and stalking committed by a perpetrator who is known or |
12 | | related by blood or marriage to the victim. |
13 | | "Student" or "pupil" means any child who has not yet |
14 | | received a diploma for completion of a secondary education. |
15 | | "Student" includes, but is not limited to, an unaccompanied |
16 | | minor not in the physical custody of a parent or guardian. |
17 | | "Student at risk of academic failure" means a student who |
18 | | is at risk of failing to meet the Illinois Learning Standards |
19 | | or failing to graduate from elementary or high school and who |
20 | | demonstrates a need for educational support or social services |
21 | | beyond those provided by the regular school program. |
22 | | "Student parent" means a student who is a custodial or |
23 | | noncustodial parent taking an active role in the care and |
24 | | supervision of a child and who has not yet received a diploma |
25 | | for completion of a secondary education. |
26 | | "Support person" means any person whom the victim has |
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1 | | chosen to include in proceedings for emotional support or |
2 | | safety. A support person does not participate in proceedings |
3 | | but is permitted to observe and support the victim with parent |
4 | | or guardian approval. "Support person" may include, but is not |
5 | | limited to, an advocate, clergy, a counselor, and a parent or |
6 | | guardian. If a student is age 18 years or older, the student |
7 | | has the right to choose a support person without parent or |
8 | | guardian approval. |
9 | | "Survivor-centered" means a systematic focus on the needs |
10 | | and concerns of a survivor of sexual violence, domestic |
11 | | violence, dating violence, or stalking that (i) ensures the |
12 | | compassionate and sensitive delivery of services in a |
13 | | nonjudgmental manner, (ii) ensures an understanding of how |
14 | | trauma affects survivor behavior, (iii) maintains survivor |
15 | | safety, privacy, and, if possible, confidentiality, and (iv) |
16 | | recognizes that a survivor is not responsible for the sexual |
17 | | violence, domestic violence, dating violence, or stalking. |
18 | | "Trauma-informed response" means a response involving an |
19 | | understanding of the complexities of sexual violence, domestic |
20 | | violence, dating violence, or stalking through training |
21 | | centered on the neurobiological impact of trauma, the |
22 | | influence of societal myths and stereotypes surrounding sexual |
23 | | violence, domestic violence, dating violence, or stalking, and |
24 | | understanding the behavior of perpetrators. |
25 | | "Victim" means an individual who has been subjected to one |
26 | | or more acts of domestic or sexual violence. |
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1 | | (105 ILCS 5/26A-15 new) |
2 | | Sec. 26A-15. Ensuring Success in School Task Force. |
3 | | (a) The Ensuring Success in School Task Force is created |
4 | | to draft and publish model policies and intergovernmental |
5 | | agreements for inter-district transfers; draft and publish |
6 | | model complaint resolution procedures as required in |
7 | | subsection (c) of Section 26A-25; identify current mandatory |
8 | | educator and staff training and additional new trainings |
9 | | needed to meet the requirements as required in Section 26A-25 |
10 | | and Section 26A-35. These recommended policies and agreements |
11 | | shall be survivor-centered and rooted in trauma-informed |
12 | | responses and used to support all students, from |
13 | | pre-kindergarten through grade 12, who are survivors of |
14 | | domestic or sexual violence, regardless of whether the |
15 | | perpetrator is school-related or not, or who are parenting or |
16 | | pregnant, regardless of whether the school is a public school, |
17 | | nonpublic school, or charter school. |
18 | | (b) The Task Force shall be representative of the |
19 | | geographic, racial, ethnic, sexual orientation, gender |
20 | | identity, and cultural diversity of this State. The Task Force |
21 | | shall consist of all of the following members, who must be |
22 | | appointed no later than 60 days after the effective date of |
23 | | this amendatory Act of the 102nd General Assembly: |
24 | | (1) One Representative appointed by the Speaker of the |
25 | | House of Representatives. |
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1 | | (2) One Representative appointed by the Minority |
2 | | Leader of the House of Representatives. |
3 | | (3) One Senator appointed by the President of the |
4 | | Senate. |
5 | | (4) One Senator appointed by the Minority Leader of |
6 | | the Senate. |
7 | | (5) One member who represents a State-based |
8 | | organization that advocates for lesbian, gay, bisexual, |
9 | | transgender, and queer people appointed by the State |
10 | | Superintendent of Education. |
11 | | (6) One member who represents a State-based, |
12 | | nonprofit, nongovernmental organization that advocates for |
13 | | survivors of domestic violence appointed by the State |
14 | | Superintendent of Education. |
15 | | (7) One member who represents a statewide, nonprofit, |
16 | | nongovernmental organization that advocates for survivors |
17 | | of sexual violence appointed by the State Superintendent |
18 | | of Education. |
19 | | (8) One member who represents a statewide, nonprofit, |
20 | | nongovernmental organization that offers free legal |
21 | | services, including victim's rights representation, to |
22 | | survivors of domestic violence or sexual violence |
23 | | appointed by the State Superintendent of Education. |
24 | | (9) One member who represents an organization that |
25 | | advocates for pregnant or parenting youth appointed by the |
26 | | State Superintendent of Education. |
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1 | | (10) One member who represents a youth-led |
2 | | organization with expertise in domestic and sexual |
3 | | violence appointed by the State Superintendent of |
4 | | Education. |
5 | | (11) One member who represents the Children's Advocacy |
6 | | Centers of Illinois appointed by the State Superintendent |
7 | | of Education. |
8 | | (12) One representative of the State Board of |
9 | | Education appointed by the State Superintendent of |
10 | | Education. |
11 | | (13) One member who represents a statewide |
12 | | organization of social workers appointed by the State |
13 | | Superintendent of Education. |
14 | | (14) One member who represents a statewide |
15 | | organization for school psychologists appointed by the |
16 | | State Superintendent of Education. |
17 | | (15) One member who represents a statewide |
18 | | organization of school counselors appointed by the State |
19 | | Superintendent of Education. |
20 | | (16) One member who represents a statewide |
21 | | professional teachers' organization appointed by the State |
22 | | Superintendent of Education. |
23 | | (17) One member who represents a different statewide |
24 | | professional teachers' organization appointed by the State |
25 | | Superintendent of Education. |
26 | | (18) One member who represents a statewide |
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1 | | organization for school boards appointed by the State |
2 | | Superintendent of Education. |
3 | | (19) One member who represents a statewide |
4 | | organization for school principals appointed by the State |
5 | | Superintendent of Education. |
6 | | (20) One member who represents a school district |
7 | | organized under Article 34 appointed by the State |
8 | | Superintendent of Education. |
9 | | (21) One member who represents an association |
10 | | representing rural school superintendents appointed by the |
11 | | State Superintendent of Education. |
12 | | (c) The Task Force shall first meet at the call of the |
13 | | State Superintendent of Education, and each subsequent meeting |
14 | | shall be called by the chairperson, who shall be designated by |
15 | | the State Superintendent of Education. The State Board of |
16 | | Education shall provide administrative and other support to |
17 | | the Task Force. Members of the Task Force shall serve without |
18 | | compensation. |
19 | | (d) On or before June 30, 2024, the Task Force shall report |
20 | | its work, including model policies, guidance recommendations, |
21 | | and agreements, to the Governor and the General Assembly. The |
22 | | report must include all of the following: |
23 | | (1) Model school and district policies to facilitate |
24 | | inter-district transfers for student survivors of domestic |
25 | | or sexual violence, expectant parents, and parents. These |
26 | | policies shall place high value on being accessible and |
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1 | | expeditious for student survivors and pregnant and |
2 | | parenting students. |
3 | | (2) Model school and district policies to ensure |
4 | | confidentiality and privacy considerations for student |
5 | | survivors of domestic or sexual violence, expectant |
6 | | parents, and parents. These policies must include guidance |
7 | | regarding appropriate referrals for nonschool-based |
8 | | services. |
9 | | (3) Model school and district complaint resolution |
10 | | procedures as prescribed by Section 26A-25. |
11 | | (4) Guidance for schools and districts regarding which |
12 | | mandatory training that is currently required for educator |
13 | | licenses or under State or federal law would be suitable |
14 | | to fulfill training requirements for resource personnel as |
15 | | prescribed by Section 26A-35 and for the staff tasked with |
16 | | implementing the complaint resolution procedure as |
17 | | prescribed by Section 26A-25. The guidance shall evaluate |
18 | | all relevant mandatory or recommended training, including, |
19 | | but not limited to, the training required under subsection |
20 | | (j) of Section 4 of the Abused and Neglected Child |
21 | | Reporting Act, Sections 3-11, 10-23.12, 10-23.13, and |
22 | | 27-23.7 of this Code, and subsections (d) and (f) of |
23 | | Section 10-22.39 of this Code. The guidance must also |
24 | | identify what gaps in training exist, including, but not |
25 | | limited to, training on trauma-informed responses and |
26 | | racial and gender equity, and make recommendations for |
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1 | | future training programs that should be required or |
2 | | recommended for the positions as prescribed by Sections |
3 | | 26A-25 and 26A-35. |
4 | | (e) The Task Force is dissolved upon submission of its |
5 | | report under subsection (d). |
6 | | (f) This Section is repealed on December 1, 2025. |
7 | | (105 ILCS 5/26A-20 new) |
8 | | Sec. 26A-20. Review and revision of policies and |
9 | | procedures. |
10 | | (a) No later than July 1, 2024 and every 2 years |
11 | | thereafter, each school district must review all existing |
12 | | policies and procedures and must revise any existing policies |
13 | | and procedures that may act as a barrier to the immediate |
14 | | enrollment and re-enrollment, attendance, graduation, and |
15 | | success in school of any student who is a student parent, |
16 | | expectant student parent, or victim of domestic or sexual |
17 | | violence or any policies or procedures that may compromise a |
18 | | criminal investigation relating to domestic or sexual violence |
19 | | or may re-victimize students. A school district must adopt new |
20 | | policies and procedures, as needed, to implement this Section |
21 | | and to ensure that immediate and effective steps are taken to |
22 | | respond to students who are student parents, expectant |
23 | | parents, or victims of domestic or sexual violence. |
24 | | (b) A school district's policy must be consistent with the |
25 | | model policy and procedures adopted by the State Board of |
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1 | | Education and under Public Act 101-531. |
2 | | (c) A school district's policy on the procedures that a |
3 | | student or his or her parent or guardian may follow if he or |
4 | | she chooses to report an incident of alleged domestic or |
5 | | sexual violence must, at a minimum, include all of the |
6 | | following: |
7 | | (1) The name and contact information for domestic or |
8 | | sexual violence and parenting resource personnel, the |
9 | | Title IX coordinator, school and school district resource |
10 | | officers or security, and a community-based domestic or |
11 | | sexual violence organization. |
12 | | (2) The name, title, and contact information for |
13 | | confidential resources and a description of what |
14 | | confidential reporting means. |
15 | | (3) An option for the student or the student's parent |
16 | | or guardian to electronically, anonymously, and |
17 | | confidentially report the incident. |
18 | | (4) An option for reports by third parties and |
19 | | bystanders. |
20 | | (5) Information regarding the various individuals, |
21 | | departments, or organizations to whom a student may report |
22 | | an incident of domestic or sexual violence, specifying for |
23 | | each individual or entity (i) the extent of the |
24 | | individual's or entity's reporting obligation to the |
25 | | school's or school district's administration, Title IX |
26 | | coordinator, or other personnel or entity, (ii) the |
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1 | | individual's or entity's ability to protect the student's |
2 | | privacy, and (iii) the extent of the individual's or |
3 | | entity's ability to have confidential communications with |
4 | | the student or his or her parent or guardian. |
5 | | (6) The adoption of a complaint resolution procedure |
6 | | as provided in Section 26A-25. |
7 | | (d) A school district must post its revised policies and |
8 | | procedures on its website, distribute them at the beginning of |
9 | | each school year to each student, and make copies available to |
10 | | each student and his or her parent or guardian for inspection |
11 | | and copying at no cost to the student or parent or guardian at |
12 | | each school within a school district. |
13 | | (105 ILCS 5/26A-25 new) |
14 | | Sec. 26A-25. Complaint resolution procedure. |
15 | | (a) On or before July 1, 2024, each school district must |
16 | | adopt one procedure to resolve complaints of violations of |
17 | | this amendatory Act of the 102nd General Assembly. The |
18 | | respondent must be one or more of the following: the school, |
19 | | school district, or school personnel. These procedures shall |
20 | | comply with the confidentiality provisions of Sections 26A-20 |
21 | | and 26A-30. The procedures must include, at minimum, all of |
22 | | the following: |
23 | | (1) The opportunity to consider the most appropriate |
24 | | means to execute the procedure considering school safety, |
25 | | the developmental level of students, methods to reduce |
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1 | | trauma during the procedure, and how to avoid multiple |
2 | | communications with students involved with an alleged |
3 | | incident of domestic or sexual violence. |
4 | | (2) Any proceeding, meeting, or hearing held to |
5 | | resolve complaints of any violation of this amendatory Act |
6 | | of the 102nd General Assembly must protect the privacy of |
7 | | the participating parties and witnesses. A school, school |
8 | | district, or school personnel may not disclose the |
9 | | identity of parties or witnesses, except as necessary to |
10 | | resolve the complaint or to implement interim protective |
11 | | measures and reasonable support services or when required |
12 | | by State or federal law. |
13 | | (3) Complainants alleging violations of this |
14 | | amendatory Act of the 102nd General Assembly must have the |
15 | | opportunity to request that the complaint resolution |
16 | | procedure begin promptly and proceed in a timely manner. |
17 | | (b) A school district must determine the individuals who |
18 | | will resolve complaints of violations of this amendatory Act |
19 | | of the 102nd General Assembly. |
20 | | (1) All individuals whose duties include resolution of |
21 | | complaints of violations of this amendatory Act of the |
22 | | 102nd General Assembly must complete a minimum of 8 hours |
23 | | of training on issues related to domestic and sexual |
24 | | violence and how to conduct the school's complaint |
25 | | resolution procedure, which may include the in-service |
26 | | training required under subsection (d) of Section |
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1 | | 10-22.39, before commencement of those duties, and must |
2 | | receive a minimum of 6 hours of such training annually |
3 | | thereafter. This training must be conducted by an |
4 | | individual or individuals with expertise in domestic or |
5 | | sexual violence in youth and expertise in developmentally |
6 | | appropriate communications with elementary and secondary |
7 | | school students regarding topics of a sexual, violent, or |
8 | | sensitive nature. |
9 | | (2) Each school must have a sufficient number of |
10 | | individuals trained to resolve complaints so that (i) a |
11 | | substitution can occur in the case of a conflict of |
12 | | interest or recusal, (ii) an individual with no prior |
13 | | involvement in the initial determination or finding may |
14 | | hear any appeal brought by a party, and (iii) the |
15 | | complaint resolution procedure proceeds in a timely |
16 | | manner. |
17 | | (3) The complainant and any witnesses shall (i) |
18 | | receive notice of the name of the individual with |
19 | | authority to make a finding or approve an accommodation in |
20 | | the proceeding before the individual may initiate contact |
21 | | with the complainant and any witnesses and (ii) have the |
22 | | opportunity to request a substitution if the participation |
23 | | of an individual with authority to make a finding or |
24 | | approve an accommodation poses a conflict of interest. |
25 | | (c) When the alleged violation of this amendatory Act of |
26 | | the 102nd General Assembly involves making a determination or |
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1 | | finding of responsibility of causing harm: |
2 | | (1) The individual making the finding must use a |
3 | | preponderance of evidence standard to determine whether |
4 | | the incident occurred. |
5 | | (2) The complainant and respondent and any witnesses |
6 | | may not directly or through a representative question one |
7 | | another. At the discretion of the individual resolving the |
8 | | complaint, the complainant and the respondent may suggest |
9 | | questions to be posed by the individual resolving the |
10 | | complaint and if the individual resolving the complaint |
11 | | decides to pose such questions. |
12 | | (3) A live hearing is not required. If the complaint |
13 | | resolution procedure includes a hearing, no student who is |
14 | | a witness, including the complainant, may be compelled to |
15 | | testify in the presence of a party or other witness. If a |
16 | | witness invokes this right to testify outside the presence |
17 | | of the other party or other witnesses, then the school |
18 | | district must provide an option by which each party may, |
19 | | at a minimum, hear such witnesses' testimony. |
20 | | (d) Each party and witness may request and must be allowed |
21 | | to have a representative or support persons of their choice |
22 | | accompany them to any meeting or proceeding related to the |
23 | | alleged violence or violation of this amendatory Act of the |
24 | | 102nd General Assembly if the involvement of the |
25 | | representative or support persons does not result in undue |
26 | | delay of the meeting or proceeding. This representative or |
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1 | | support persons must comply with any rules of the school |
2 | | district's complaint resolution procedure. If the |
3 | | representative or support persons violate the rules or engage |
4 | | in behavior or advocacy that harasses, abuses, or intimidates |
5 | | either part, a witness, or an individual resolving the |
6 | | complaint, the representative or support person may be |
7 | | prohibited from further participation in the meeting or |
8 | | proceeding. |
9 | | (e) The complainant, regardless of the level of |
10 | | involvement in the complaint resolution procedure, and the |
11 | | respondent must have the opportunity to provide or present |
12 | | evidence and witnesses on their behalf during the complaint |
13 | | resolution procedure. |
14 | | (f) The complainant and respondent and any named |
15 | | perpetrator directly impacted by the results of the complaint |
16 | | resolution procedure, are entitled to simultaneous written |
17 | | notification of the results of the complaint resolution |
18 | | procedure, including information regarding appeals rights and |
19 | | procedures, within 10 business days after a decision or sooner |
20 | | if required by State or federal law or district policy. |
21 | | (1) The complainant, respondents, and named |
22 | | perpetrator if directly impacted by the results of the |
23 | | complaint resolution procedure must, at a minimum, have |
24 | | the right to timely appeal the complaint resolution |
25 | | procedure's findings or remedies if a party alleges (i) a |
26 | | procedural error occurred, (ii) new information exists |
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1 | | that would substantially change the outcome of the |
2 | | proceeding, (iii) the remedy is not sufficiently related |
3 | | to the finding, or (iv) the decision is against the weight |
4 | | of the evidence. |
5 | | (2) An individual reviewing the findings or remedies |
6 | | may not have previously participated in the complaint |
7 | | resolution procedure and may not have a conflict of |
8 | | interest with either party. |
9 | | (3) The complainant and respondent and any |
10 | | perpetrators directly impacted by the results of the |
11 | | complaint resolution procedure must receive the appeal |
12 | | decision, in writing, within 10 business days, but never |
13 | | more than 15 business days, after the conclusion of the |
14 | | review of findings or remedies or sooner if required by |
15 | | State or federal law. |
16 | | (g) Each school district must have a procedure to |
17 | | determine interim protective measures and support services |
18 | | available pending the resolution of the complaint including |
19 | | the implementation of court orders. |
20 | | (105 ILCS 5/26A-30 new) |
21 | | Sec. 26A-30. Confidentiality. |
22 | | (a) Each school district must adopt and ensure that it has |
23 | | and implements a policy
to ensure that all information |
24 | | concerning a
student's status and related experiences as a |
25 | | parent, expectant parent, or victim of domestic or sexual |
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1 | | violence, or a student who is a named perpetrator of domestic |
2 | | or sexual violence, provided to or otherwise obtained by the |
3 | | school district or its employees or agents pursuant to this |
4 | | Code or otherwise, including a statement of the student or any |
5 | | other documentation, record, or corroborating evidence that |
6 | | the student has requested or obtained assistance, support, or |
7 | | services pursuant to this Code, shall be retained in the |
8 | | strictest of confidence by the school district or its |
9 | | employees or agents and may not be disclosed to any other |
10 | | individual outside of the district, including any other |
11 | | employee, except if such disclosure is (i) permitted by the |
12 | | Illinois School Student Records Act, the federal Family |
13 | | Educational Rights and Privacy Act of 1974, or other |
14 | | applicable State or federal laws, or (ii) requested or |
15 | | consented to, in writing, by the student or the student's |
16 | | parent or guardian if it is safe to obtain written consent from |
17 | | the student's parent or guardian. |
18 | | (b) Prior to disclosing information about a student's |
19 | | status as a parent, expectant parent, or victim of domestic or |
20 | | sexual violence, a school must notify the student and discuss |
21 | | and address any safety concerns related to the disclosure, |
22 | | including instances in which the student indicates or the
|
23 | | school or school district or its employees or agents are |
24 | | otherwise aware that the student's health or safety may be at |
25 | | risk if his or her status is disclosed to the student's parent |
26 | | or guardian, except as otherwise permitted by applicable State |
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1 | | or federal law, including the Abused and Neglected Child |
2 | | Reporting Act, the Illinois School Student Records Act, the |
3 | | federal Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act of 1974, and |
4 | | professional ethics policies that govern professional school |
5 | | personnel. |
6 | | (c) No student may be required to testify publicly |
7 | | concerning his or her status as a victim of domestic or sexual |
8 | | violence, allegations of domestic or sexual violence, his or |
9 | | her status as a parent or expectant parent, or the student's |
10 | | efforts to enforce any of his or her rights under provisions of |
11 | | this Code relating to students who are parents, expectant
|
12 | | parents, or victims of domestic or sexual violence. |
13 | | (d) In the case of domestic or sexual violence, except as |
14 | | permitted under State or federal law, or to the extent that a |
15 | | school official determines that the school official has an |
16 | | obligation to do so based on safety concerns or threats to the |
17 | | community, including the victim, a school district must not |
18 | | contact the person named to be the perpetrator, the |
19 | | perpetrator's family, or any other person named by the student |
20 | | or named by the student's parent or guardian to be unsafe to |
21 | | contact to verify the violence. A school district must not |
22 | | contact the perpetrator, the perpetrator's family, or any
|
23 | | other person named by the student or the student's parent or |
24 | | guardian to be unsafe for any other reason without providing |
25 | | prior written notice to the student's parent or guardian. |
26 | | Nothing in this Section prohibits the school or school |
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1 | | district from taking other steps to investigate the violence |
2 | | or from contacting persons not named by the student or the |
3 | | student's parent or guardian as unsafe to contact. Nothing in |
4 | | this Section prohibits the school or school district from |
5 | | taking reasonable steps to protect students. If the reasonable |
6 | | steps taken to protect students involve conduct that is |
7 | | prohibited under this subsection, the school must provide |
8 | | notice to the reporting student, in writing and in a |
9 | | developmentally appropriate communication format, of its |
10 | | intent to contact the parties named to be unsafe. |
11 | | (105 ILCS 5/26A-35 new) |
12 | | Sec. 26A-35. Domestic or sexual violence and parenting |
13 | | resource personnel. |
14 | | (a) Each school district shall designate or appoint at |
15 | | least one staff person at each school in the district who is |
16 | | employed at least part time at the school and who is a school |
17 | | social worker, school psychologist, school counselor, school |
18 | | nurse, or school administrator trained to address, in a |
19 | | survivor-centered, trauma responsive, culturally responsive, |
20 | | confidential, and sensitive manner, the needs of students who |
21 | | are parents, expectant parents, or victims of domestic or |
22 | | sexual violence. The designated or appointed staff person must |
23 | | have all of the following duties: |
24 | | (1) To connect students who are parents, expectant |
25 | | parents, or victims of domestic or sexual violence to |
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1 | | appropriate in-school services or other agencies, |
2 | | programs, or services as needed. |
3 | | (2) To coordinate the implementation of the school's |
4 | | and school district's policies, procedures, and protocols |
5 | | in cases involving student allegations of domestic or |
6 | | sexual violence. |
7 | | (3) To coordinate the implementation of the school's |
8 | | and school district's policies and procedures as set forth |
9 | | in provisions of this Code concerning students who are |
10 | | parents, expectant parents, or victims of domestic or |
11 | | sexual violence. |
12 | | (4) To assist students described in paragraph (1) in |
13 | | their efforts to exercise and preserve their rights as set |
14 | | forth in provisions of this Code concerning students who |
15 | | are parents, expectant parents, or victims of domestic or |
16 | | sexual violence. |
17 | | (5) To assist in providing staff development to |
18 | | establish a positive and sensitive learning environment |
19 | | for students described in paragraph (1). |
20 | | (b) A member of staff who is designated or appointed under |
21 | | subsection (a) must (i) be trained to understand, provide |
22 | | information and referrals, and address issues pertaining to |
23 | | youth who are parents, expectant parents, or victims of |
24 | | domestic or sexual violence, including the theories and |
25 | | dynamics of domestic and sexual violence, the necessity for |
26 | | confidentiality and the law, policy, procedures, and protocols |
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1 | | implementing confidentiality, and the notification of the |
2 | | student's parent or guardian regarding the student's status as |
3 | | a parent, expectant parent, or victim of domestic or sexual |
4 | | violence or the enforcement of the student's rights under this |
5 | | Code if the notice of the student's status or the involvement |
6 | | of the student's parent or guardian may put the health or |
7 | | safety of the student at risk, including the rights of minors |
8 | | to consent to counseling services and psychotherapy under the |
9 | | Mental Health and Developmental Disabilities Code, or (ii) at |
10 | | a minimum, have participated in an in-service training program |
11 | | under subsection (d) of Section 10-22.39 that includes |
12 | | training on the rights of minors to consent to counseling |
13 | | services and psychotherapy under the Mental Health and |
14 | | Developmental Disabilities Code within 12 months prior to his |
15 | | or her designation or appointment. |
16 | | (c) A school district must designate or appoint and train |
17 | | all domestic or sexual violence and parenting resource |
18 | | personnel, and the personnel must assist in implementing the |
19 | | duties as described in this Section no later than June 30, |
20 | | 2024, except in those school districts in which there exists a |
21 | | collective bargaining agreement on the effective date of this |
22 | | amendatory Act of the 102nd General Assembly and the |
23 | | implementation of this Section would be a violation of that |
24 | | collective bargaining agreement. If implementation of some |
25 | | activities required under this Section is prevented by an |
26 | | existing collective bargaining agreement, a school district |
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1 | | must comply with this Section to the fullest extent allowed by |
2 | | the existing collective bargaining agreement no later than |
3 | | June 30, 2024. In those instances in which a collective |
4 | | bargaining agreement that either fully or partially prevents |
5 | | full implementation of this Section expires after June 30, |
6 | | 2024, a school district must designate or appoint and train |
7 | | all domestic and sexual violence and parenting resource |
8 | | personnel, who shall implement the duties described in this |
9 | | Section no later than the effective date of the new collective |
10 | | bargaining agreement that immediately succeeds the collective |
11 | | bargaining agreement in effect on the effective date of this |
12 | | amendatory Act of the 102nd General Assembly. |
13 | | (105 ILCS 5/26A-40 new) |
14 | | Sec. 26A-40. Support and services. |
15 | | (a) To facilitate the full participation of students who |
16 | | are parents, expectant parents, or victims of domestic or |
17 | | sexual violence, each school district must provide those |
18 | | students with in-school support services and information |
19 | | regarding nonschool-based support services, and the ability to |
20 | | make up work missed on account of circumstances related to the |
21 | | student's status as a parent, expectant parent, or victim of |
22 | | domestic or sexual violence. Victims of domestic or sexual |
23 | | violence must have access to those supports and services |
24 | | regardless of when or where the violence for which they are |
25 | | seeking supports and services occurred. All supports and |
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1 | | services must be offered for as long as necessary to maintain |
2 | | the mental and physical well-being and safety of the student. |
3 | | Schools may periodically check on students receiving supports |
4 | | and services to determine whether each support and service |
5 | | continues to be necessary to maintain the mental and physical |
6 | | well-being and safety of the student or whether termination is |
7 | | appropriate. |
8 | | (b) Supports provided under subsection (a) shall
include, |
9 | | but are not limited to (i) the provision of
sufficiently |
10 | | private settings to ensure confidentiality and
time off from |
11 | | class for meetings with counselors or other
service providers, |
12 | | (ii) assisting the student with a student
success plan, (iii) |
13 | | transferring a victim of domestic or
sexual violence or the |
14 | | student perpetrator to a different
classroom or school, if |
15 | | available, (iv) changing a seating assignment, (v)
|
16 | | implementing in-school, school grounds, and bus safety
|
17 | | procedures, (vi) honoring court orders, including orders of
|
18 | | protection and no-contact orders to the fullest extent
|
19 | | possible, and (vii) providing any other supports that may
|
20 | | facilitate the full participation in the regular education
|
21 | | program of students who are parents, expectant parents, or
|
22 | | victims of domestic or sexual violence. |
23 | | (c) If a student who is a parent, expectant parent, or
|
24 | | victim of domestic or sexual violence is a student at risk of
|
25 | | academic failure or displays poor academic performance, the
|
26 | | student or the student's parent or guardian may request that
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1 | | the school district provide the student with or refer the
|
2 | | student to education and support services designed to assist
|
3 | | the student in meeting State learning standards. A school
|
4 | | district may either provide education or support services
|
5 | | directly or may collaborate with public or private State,
|
6 | | local, or community-based organizations or agencies that
|
7 | | provide these services. A school district must also inform
|
8 | | those students about support services of
nonschool-based |
9 | | organizations and agencies from which those
students typically |
10 | | receive services in the community. |
11 | | (d) Any student who is unable, because of circumstances
|
12 | | related to the student's status as a parent, expectant parent,
|
13 | | or victim of domestic or sexual violence, to participate in
|
14 | | classes on a particular day or days or at the particular time
|
15 | | of day must be excused in accordance with the procedures set |
16 | | forth in this Code.
Upon student or parent or guardian's |
17 | | request, the
teachers and of the school administrative |
18 | | personnel and
officials shall make available to each student |
19 | | who is unable to
participate because of circumstances related |
20 | | to the student's
status as a parent, expectant parent, or |
21 | | victim of domestic or
sexual violence a meaningful opportunity |
22 | | to make up any
examination, study, or work requirement that |
23 | | the student has
missed because of the inability to participate |
24 | | on any
particular day or days or at any particular time of day. |
25 | | For a
student receiving homebound instruction, it is the
|
26 | | responsibility of the student and parent to work with the
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1 | | school or school district to meet academic standards for
|
2 | | matriculation, as defined by school district policy. Costs
|
3 | | assessed by the school district on the student for
|
4 | | participation in those activities shall be considered waivable
|
5 | | fees for any student whose parent or guardian is unable to
|
6 | | afford them, consistent with Section 10-20.13. Each school
|
7 | | district must adopt written policies for waiver
of those fees |
8 | | in accordance with rules adopted by the State
Board of |
9 | | Education. |
10 | | (e) If a school or school district employee or agent
|
11 | | becomes aware of or suspects a student's status as a parent,
|
12 | | expectant parent, or victim of domestic or sexual violence, it
|
13 | | is the responsibility of the employee or agent of the school or
|
14 | | school district to
refer the student to the school district's |
15 | | domestic
or sexual violence and parenting resource personnel |
16 | | set forth
in Section 26A-35. A school district must make |
17 | | respecting a
student's privacy, confidentiality, mental and |
18 | | physical
health, and safety a paramount concern. |
19 | | (f) Each school must honor a student's and a parent's or
|
20 | | guardian's decision to obtain education and support services
|
21 | | and nonschool-based support services, to
terminate the receipt |
22 | | of those education and support services,
or nonschool-based |
23 | | support services, or to
decline participation in those |
24 | | education and support services,
or nonschool-based support |
25 | | services. No
student is obligated to use education and support |
26 | | services,
or nonschool-based support services. In
developing |
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1 | | educational support services, the
privacy, mental and physical |
2 | | health, and safety of the student
shall be of paramount |
3 | | concern. No adverse or prejudicial
effects may result to any |
4 | | student because of the student's
availing of or declining the |
5 | | provisions of this Section as
long as the student is working |
6 | | with the school to meet academic
standards for matriculation |
7 | | as defined by school district
policy. |
8 | | (g) Any support services
must be available in any school |
9 | | or by home
or hospital instruction to the highest quality and |
10 | | fullest
extent possible for the individual setting. |
11 | | (h) School-based counseling
services, if available, must |
12 | | be offered to students
who are parents, expectant parents, or |
13 | | victims of domestic or
sexual violence consistent with the |
14 | | Mental Health and
Developmental Disabilities Code. At least |
15 | | once every school
year, each school district must inform, in |
16 | | writing, all school
personnel and all students 12 years of age |
17 | | or older of the
availability of counseling without parental or |
18 | | guardian
consent under Section 3-5A-105 (to be renumbered as |
19 | | Section
3-550 in a revisory bill as of the effective date of |
20 | | this
amendatory Act of the 102nd General Assembly) of the |
21 | | Mental
Health and Developmental Disabilities Code. This |
22 | | information
must also be provided to students immediately |
23 | | after any school
personnel becomes aware that a student is a |
24 | | parent, expectant
parent, or victim of domestic or sexual |
25 | | violence. |
26 | | (i) All domestic or sexual violence organizations and
|
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1 | | their staff and any other nonschool organization and its staff
|
2 | | shall maintain confidentiality under federal and State
laws |
3 | | and their professional ethics policies regardless of when
or |
4 | | where information, advice, counseling, or any other
|
5 | | interaction with students takes place. A school or school
|
6 | | district may not request or require those organizations or
|
7 | | individuals to breach confidentiality. |
8 | | (105 ILCS 5/26A-45 new) |
9 | | Sec. 26A-45. Verification. |
10 | | (a) For purposes of students asserting their rights under |
11 | | provisions relating to domestic or sexual violence in Sections |
12 | | 10-21.3a, 10-22.6, 10-22.6a, 26-2a, 26A-40, and 34-18.24, a |
13 | | school district may require verification of the claim. The |
14 | | student or the student's parents or guardians shall choose |
15 | | which form of verification to submit to the school district. A |
16 | | school district may only require one form of verification, |
17 | | unless the student is requesting a transfer to another school, |
18 | | in which case the school district may require 2 forms of |
19 | | verification. All forms of verification received by a school |
20 | | district under this subsection (a) must be kept in a |
21 | | confidential temporary file, in accordance with the Illinois |
22 | | School Student Records Act. Any one of the following shall be |
23 | | an acceptable form of verification of a student's claim of |
24 | | domestic or sexual violence: |
25 | | (1) A written statement from the student or anyone who |
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1 | | has knowledge of the circumstances that support the |
2 | | student's claim. This may be in the form of a complaint. |
3 | | (2) A police report, governmental agency record, or |
4 | | court record. |
5 | | (3) A statement or other documentation from a domestic |
6 | | or sexual violence organization or any other organization |
7 | | from which the student sought services or advice. |
8 | | (4) Documentation from a lawyer, clergy person, |
9 | | medical professional, or other professional from whom the |
10 | | student sought services or advice related to domestic or |
11 | | sexual violence. |
12 | | (5) Any other evidence, such as physical evidence of |
13 | | violence, which supports the claim. |
14 | | (b) A student or a student's parent or guardian who has |
15 | | provided acceptable verification that the student is or has |
16 | | been a victim of domestic or sexual violence may not be |
17 | | required to provide any additional verification if the |
18 | | student's efforts to assert rights under this Code stem from a |
19 | | claim involving the same perpetrator or the same incident of |
20 | | violence. No school or school district shall request or |
21 | | require additional documentation. |
22 | | (c) The person named to be the perpetrator, the
|
23 | | perpetrator's family, or any other person named by the student
|
24 | | or the student's parent or guardian to be unsafe to contact may
|
25 | | not be contacted to verify the violence, except to the extent |
26 | | that the district determines that it has an obligation to do so |
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1 | | based on federal or State law or safety concerns for the school |
2 | | community, including such concerns for the victim. Prior to |
3 | | making contact, a school must notify the student and his or his |
4 | | parent or guardian in writing and in a developmentally |
5 | | appropriate manner, and discuss
and address any safety |
6 | | concerns related to making such contact. |
7 | | (105 ILCS 5/26A-50 new) |
8 | | Sec. 26A-50. Prohibited practices. No school or school
|
9 | | district may take any adverse action against a student who is a
|
10 | | parent, expectant parent, or victim of domestic or sexual
|
11 | | violence because the student or his or her parent or guardian
|
12 | | (i) exercises or attempts to exercise his or her rights under
|
13 | | this amendatory Act of the 102nd General Assembly, (ii)
|
14 | | opposes practices that the student or his or her parent or
|
15 | | guardian believes to be in violation of this amendatory Act of
|
16 | | the 102nd General Assembly, or (iii) supports the exercise of
|
17 | | the rights of another under this amendatory Act of the 102nd
|
18 | | General Assembly. Exercising rights under this amendatory Act |
19 | | of the 102nd
General Assembly
includes, but is not limited to,
|
20 | | filing a complaint with the school district as set forth in |
21 | | this Code
or in any manner requesting, availing
himself or |
22 | | herself of, or declining any of the provisions of
this Code, |
23 | | including,
but not limited to, supports and services.
|
24 | | (105 ILCS 5/27A-5)
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1 | | Sec. 27A-5. Charter school; legal entity; requirements.
|
2 | | (a) A charter school shall be a public, nonsectarian, |
3 | | nonreligious, non-home
based, and non-profit school. A charter |
4 | | school shall be organized and operated
as a nonprofit |
5 | | corporation or other discrete, legal, nonprofit entity
|
6 | | authorized under the laws of the State of Illinois.
|
7 | | (b) A charter school may be established under this Article |
8 | | by creating a new
school or by converting an existing public |
9 | | school or attendance center to
charter
school status.
|
10 | | Beginning on April 16, 2003 (the effective date of Public Act |
11 | | 93-3), in all new
applications to establish
a charter
school |
12 | | in a city having a population exceeding 500,000, operation of |
13 | | the
charter
school shall be limited to one campus. The changes |
14 | | made to this Section by Public Act 93-3 do not apply to charter |
15 | | schools existing or approved on or before April 16, 2003 (the
|
16 | | effective date of Public Act 93-3). |
17 | | (b-5) In this subsection (b-5), "virtual-schooling" means |
18 | | a cyber school where students engage in online curriculum and |
19 | | instruction via the Internet and electronic communication with |
20 | | their teachers at remote locations and with students |
21 | | participating at different times. |
22 | | From April 1, 2013 through December 31, 2016, there is a |
23 | | moratorium on the establishment of charter schools with |
24 | | virtual-schooling components in school districts other than a |
25 | | school district organized under Article 34 of this Code. This |
26 | | moratorium does not apply to a charter school with |
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1 | | virtual-schooling components existing or approved prior to |
2 | | April 1, 2013 or to the renewal of the charter of a charter |
3 | | school with virtual-schooling components already approved |
4 | | prior to April 1, 2013.
|
5 | | (c) A charter school shall be administered and governed by |
6 | | its board of
directors or other governing body
in the manner |
7 | | provided in its charter. The governing body of a charter |
8 | | school
shall be subject to the Freedom of Information Act and |
9 | | the Open Meetings Act. No later than January 1, 2021 (one year |
10 | | after the effective date of Public Act 101-291), a charter |
11 | | school's board of directors or other governing body must |
12 | | include at least one parent or guardian of a pupil currently |
13 | | enrolled in the charter school who may be selected through the |
14 | | charter school or a charter network election, appointment by |
15 | | the charter school's board of directors or other governing |
16 | | body, or by the charter school's Parent Teacher Organization |
17 | | or its equivalent. |
18 | | (c-5) No later than January 1, 2021 (one year after the |
19 | | effective date of Public Act 101-291) or within the first year |
20 | | of his or her first term, every voting member of a charter |
21 | | school's board of directors or other governing body shall |
22 | | complete a minimum of 4 hours of professional development |
23 | | leadership training to ensure that each member has sufficient |
24 | | familiarity with the board's or governing body's role and |
25 | | responsibilities, including financial oversight and |
26 | | accountability of the school, evaluating the principal's and |
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1 | | school's performance, adherence to the Freedom of Information |
2 | | Act and the Open Meetings Act, and compliance with education |
3 | | and labor law. In each subsequent year of his or her term, a |
4 | | voting member of a charter school's board of directors or |
5 | | other governing body shall complete a minimum of 2 hours of |
6 | | professional development training in these same areas. The |
7 | | training under this subsection may be provided or certified by |
8 | | a statewide charter school membership association or may be |
9 | | provided or certified by other qualified providers approved by |
10 | | the State Board of Education.
|
11 | | (d) For purposes of this subsection (d), "non-curricular |
12 | | health and safety requirement" means any health and safety |
13 | | requirement created by statute or rule to provide, maintain, |
14 | | preserve, or safeguard safe or healthful conditions for |
15 | | students and school personnel or to eliminate, reduce, or |
16 | | prevent threats to the health and safety of students and |
17 | | school personnel. "Non-curricular health and safety |
18 | | requirement" does not include any course of study or |
19 | | specialized instructional requirement for which the State |
20 | | Board has established goals and learning standards or which is |
21 | | designed primarily to impart knowledge and skills for students |
22 | | to master and apply as an outcome of their education. |
23 | | A charter school shall comply with all non-curricular |
24 | | health and safety
requirements applicable to public schools |
25 | | under the laws of the State of
Illinois. On or before September |
26 | | 1, 2015, the State Board shall promulgate and post on its |
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1 | | Internet website a list of non-curricular health and safety |
2 | | requirements that a charter school must meet. The list shall |
3 | | be updated annually no later than September 1. Any charter |
4 | | contract between a charter school and its authorizer must |
5 | | contain a provision that requires the charter school to follow |
6 | | the list of all non-curricular health and safety requirements |
7 | | promulgated by the State Board and any non-curricular health |
8 | | and safety requirements added by the State Board to such list |
9 | | during the term of the charter. Nothing in this subsection (d) |
10 | | precludes an authorizer from including non-curricular health |
11 | | and safety requirements in a charter school contract that are |
12 | | not contained in the list promulgated by the State Board, |
13 | | including non-curricular health and safety requirements of the |
14 | | authorizing local school board.
|
15 | | (e) Except as otherwise provided in the School Code, a |
16 | | charter school shall
not charge tuition; provided that a |
17 | | charter school may charge reasonable fees
for textbooks, |
18 | | instructional materials, and student activities.
|
19 | | (f) A charter school shall be responsible for the |
20 | | management and operation
of its fiscal affairs including,
but |
21 | | not limited to, the preparation of its budget. An audit of each |
22 | | charter
school's finances shall be conducted annually by an |
23 | | outside, independent
contractor retained by the charter |
24 | | school. To ensure financial accountability for the use of |
25 | | public funds, on or before December 1 of every year of |
26 | | operation, each charter school shall submit to its authorizer |
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1 | | and the State Board a copy of its audit and a copy of the Form |
2 | | 990 the charter school filed that year with the federal |
3 | | Internal Revenue Service. In addition, if deemed necessary for |
4 | | proper financial oversight of the charter school, an |
5 | | authorizer may require quarterly financial statements from |
6 | | each charter school.
|
7 | | (g) A charter school shall comply with all provisions of |
8 | | this Article, the Illinois Educational Labor Relations Act, |
9 | | all federal and State laws and rules applicable to public |
10 | | schools that pertain to special education and the instruction |
11 | | of English learners, and
its charter. A charter
school is |
12 | | exempt from all other State laws and regulations in this Code
|
13 | | governing public
schools and local school board policies; |
14 | | however, a charter school is not exempt from the following:
|
15 | | (1) Sections 10-21.9 and 34-18.5 of this Code |
16 | | regarding criminal
history records checks and checks of |
17 | | the Statewide Sex Offender Database and Statewide Murderer |
18 | | and Violent Offender Against Youth Database of applicants |
19 | | for employment;
|
20 | | (2) Sections 10-20.14, 10-22.6, 24-24, 34-19, and |
21 | | 34-84a of this Code regarding discipline of
students;
|
22 | | (3) the Local Governmental and Governmental Employees |
23 | | Tort Immunity Act;
|
24 | | (4) Section 108.75 of the General Not For Profit |
25 | | Corporation Act of 1986
regarding indemnification of |
26 | | officers, directors, employees, and agents;
|
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1 | | (5) the Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act;
|
2 | | (5.5) subsection (b) of Section 10-23.12 and |
3 | | subsection (b) of Section 34-18.6 of this Code; |
4 | | (6) the Illinois School Student Records Act;
|
5 | | (7) Section 10-17a of this Code regarding school |
6 | | report cards;
|
7 | | (8) the P-20 Longitudinal Education Data System Act; |
8 | | (9) Section 27-23.7 of this Code regarding bullying |
9 | | prevention; |
10 | | (10) Section 2-3.162 of this Code regarding student |
11 | | discipline reporting; |
12 | | (11) Sections 22-80 and 27-8.1 of this Code; |
13 | | (12) Sections 10-20.60 and 34-18.53 of this Code; |
14 | | (13) Sections 10-20.63 and 34-18.56 of this Code; |
15 | | (14) Section 26-18 of this Code; |
16 | | (15) Section 22-30 of this Code; |
17 | | (16) Sections 24-12 and 34-85 of this Code; |
18 | | (17) the Seizure Smart School Act; and |
19 | | (18) Section 2-3.64a-10 of this Code ; and . |
20 | | (19) Article 26A of this Code. |
21 | | The change made by Public Act 96-104 to this subsection |
22 | | (g) is declaratory of existing law. |
23 | | (h) A charter school may negotiate and contract with a |
24 | | school district, the
governing body of a State college or |
25 | | university or public community college, or
any other public or |
26 | | for-profit or nonprofit private entity for: (i) the use
of a |
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1 | | school building and grounds or any other real property or |
2 | | facilities that
the charter school desires to use or convert |
3 | | for use as a charter school site,
(ii) the operation and |
4 | | maintenance thereof, and
(iii) the provision of any service, |
5 | | activity, or undertaking that the charter
school is required |
6 | | to perform in order to carry out the terms of its charter.
|
7 | | However, a charter school
that is established on
or
after |
8 | | April 16, 2003 (the effective date of Public Act 93-3) and that |
9 | | operates
in a city having a population exceeding
500,000 may |
10 | | not contract with a for-profit entity to
manage or operate the |
11 | | school during the period that commences on April 16, 2003 (the
|
12 | | effective date of Public Act 93-3) and
concludes at the end of |
13 | | the 2004-2005 school year.
Except as provided in subsection |
14 | | (i) of this Section, a school district may
charge a charter |
15 | | school reasonable rent for the use of the district's
|
16 | | buildings, grounds, and facilities. Any services for which a |
17 | | charter school
contracts
with a school district shall be |
18 | | provided by the district at cost. Any services
for which a |
19 | | charter school contracts with a local school board or with the
|
20 | | governing body of a State college or university or public |
21 | | community college
shall be provided by the public entity at |
22 | | cost.
|
23 | | (i) In no event shall a charter school that is established |
24 | | by converting an
existing school or attendance center to |
25 | | charter school status be required to
pay rent for space
that is |
26 | | deemed available, as negotiated and provided in the charter |
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1 | | agreement,
in school district
facilities. However, all other |
2 | | costs for the operation and maintenance of
school district |
3 | | facilities that are used by the charter school shall be |
4 | | subject
to negotiation between
the charter school and the |
5 | | local school board and shall be set forth in the
charter.
|
6 | | (j) A charter school may limit student enrollment by age |
7 | | or grade level.
|
8 | | (k) If the charter school is approved by the State Board or |
9 | | Commission, then the charter school is its own local education |
10 | | agency. |
11 | | (Source: P.A. 100-29, eff. 1-1-18; 100-156, eff. 1-1-18; |
12 | | 100-163, eff. 1-1-18; 100-413, eff. 1-1-18; 100-468, eff. |
13 | | 6-1-18; 100-726, eff. 1-1-19; 100-863, eff. 8-14-18; 101-50, |
14 | | eff. 7-1-20; 101-81, eff. 7-12-19; 101-291, eff. 1-1-20; |
15 | | 101-531, eff. 8-23-19; 101-543, eff. 8-23-19; 101-654, eff. |
16 | | 3-8-21.) |
17 | | (105 ILCS 5/34-18.24)
|
18 | | Sec. 34-18.24. Transfer of students.
|
19 | | (a) The board shall
establish and
implement a
policy |
20 | | governing the transfer of a student from one attendance center |
21 | | to
another within the
school district upon the request of the |
22 | | student's parent or guardian.
A
student may not transfer to |
23 | | any of the following attendance centers, except by
change in
|
24 | | residence if the policy authorizes enrollment based on |
25 | | residence in an
attendance area
or unless approved by the |
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1 | | board on an individual basis:
|
2 | | (1) An attendance center that exceeds or as a result |
3 | | of the
transfer would
exceed its attendance capacity.
|
4 | | (2) An attendance center for which the board has |
5 | | established
academic
criteria for enrollment if the |
6 | | student does not meet the criteria.
|
7 | | (3) Any attendance center if the transfer would
|
8 | | prevent the school district from meeting its obligations |
9 | | under a State or
federal law,
court
order, or consent
|
10 | | decree
applicable to the school district.
|
11 | | (b) The board shall establish and implement a policy governing |
12 | | the
transfer of students within the school district from a |
13 | | persistently dangerous
attendance center to another attendance |
14 | | center in that district that is not
deemed to be
persistently |
15 | | dangerous.
In order to be considered a persistently dangerous |
16 | | attendance center, the
attendance center must meet all of the |
17 | | following criteria for 2 consecutive
years:
|
18 | | (1) Have greater than 3% of the students enrolled in |
19 | | the attendance center
expelled for violence-related |
20 | | conduct.
|
21 | | (2) Have one or more students expelled for bringing a |
22 | | firearm to school
as defined in 18 U.S.C. 921.
|
23 | | (3) Have at least 3% of the students enrolled in the |
24 | | attendance center
exercise the
individual option to |
25 | | transfer attendance centers pursuant to subsection (c) of
|
26 | | this
Section.
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1 | | (c) A student may transfer from one attendance center to
|
2 | | another attendance center within the district if the student |
3 | | is a victim of a
violent
crime as defined in Section 3 of the |
4 | | Rights of Crime Victims and Witnesses Act.
The violent crime |
5 | | must have occurred on school grounds during regular school
|
6 | | hours or during a school-sponsored event.
|
7 | | (d) (Blank).
|
8 | | (e) Notwithstanding any other provision of this Code, a |
9 | | student who is a victim of domestic or sexual violence, as |
10 | | defined in Article 26A, must be allowed to transfer to another |
11 | | school immediately and as needed if the student's continued |
12 | | attendance at a particular attendance center, school facility, |
13 | | or school location poses a risk to the student's mental or |
14 | | physical well-being or safety. A student who transfers to |
15 | | another school under this subsection (e) due to domestic or |
16 | | sexual violence must have full and immediate access to |
17 | | extracurricular activities and any programs or activities |
18 | | offered by or under the auspices of the school to which the |
19 | | student has transferred. The school district may not require a |
20 | | student who is a victim of domestic or sexual violence to |
21 | | transfer to another school. No adverse or prejudicial effects |
22 | | may result to any student who is a victim of domestic or sexual |
23 | | violence because of the student availing himself or herself of |
24 | | or declining the provisions of this subsection (e). The school |
25 | | district may require a student to verify his or her claim of |
26 | | domestic or sexual violence under Section 26A-45 before |
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1 | | approving a transfer to another school under this subsection |
2 | | (e). |
3 | | (Source: P.A. 100-1046, eff. 8-23-18.)
|
4 | | Section 10. The Illinois School Student Records Act is |
5 | | amended by changing Section 2 as follows:
|
6 | | (105 ILCS 10/2) (from Ch. 122, par. 50-2)
|
7 | | Sec. 2.
As used in this Act : ,
|
8 | | (a) "Student" means any person enrolled or previously |
9 | | enrolled in a school.
|
10 | | (b) "School" means any public preschool, day care center,
|
11 | | kindergarten, nursery, elementary or secondary educational |
12 | | institution,
vocational school, special educational facility |
13 | | or any other elementary or
secondary educational agency or |
14 | | institution and any person, agency or
institution which |
15 | | maintains school student records from more than one school,
|
16 | | but does not include a private or non-public school.
|
17 | | (c) "State Board" means the State Board of Education.
|
18 | | (d) "School Student Record" means any writing or
other |
19 | | recorded information concerning a student
and by which a |
20 | | student may be individually identified,
maintained by a school |
21 | | or at its direction or by an employee of a
school, regardless |
22 | | of how or where the information is stored.
The following shall |
23 | | not be deemed school student records under
this Act: writings |
24 | | or other recorded information maintained by an
employee of a |
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1 | | school or other person at the direction of a school for his or
|
2 | | her exclusive use; provided that all such writings and other |
3 | | recorded
information are destroyed not later than the |
4 | | student's graduation or permanent
withdrawal from the school; |
5 | | and provided further that no such records or
recorded |
6 | | information may be released or disclosed to any person except |
7 | | a person
designated by the school as
a substitute unless they |
8 | | are first incorporated
in a school student record and made |
9 | | subject to all of the
provisions of this Act.
School student |
10 | | records shall not include information maintained by
law |
11 | | enforcement professionals working in the school.
|
12 | | (e) "Student Permanent Record" means the minimum personal
|
13 | | information necessary to a school in the education of the |
14 | | student
and contained in a school student record. Such |
15 | | information
may include the student's name, birth date, |
16 | | address, grades
and grade level, parents' names and addresses, |
17 | | attendance
records, and such other entries as the State Board |
18 | | may
require or authorize.
|
19 | | (f) "Student Temporary Record" means all information |
20 | | contained in
a school student record but not contained in
the |
21 | | student permanent record. Such information may include
family |
22 | | background information, intelligence test scores, aptitude
|
23 | | test scores, psychological and personality test results, |
24 | | teacher
evaluations, and other information of clear relevance |
25 | | to the
education of the student, all subject to regulations of |
26 | | the State Board.
The information shall include all of the |
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1 | | following: |
2 | | (1) Information information provided under Section 8.6 |
3 | | of the
Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act and |
4 | | information contained in service logs maintained by a |
5 | | local education agency under subsection (d) of Section |
6 | | 14-8.02f of the School Code.
|
7 | | (2) Information In addition, the student temporary |
8 | | record shall include information regarding
serious |
9 | | disciplinary infractions that resulted in expulsion, |
10 | | suspension, or the
imposition of punishment or sanction. |
11 | | For purposes of this provision, serious
disciplinary |
12 | | infractions means: infractions involving drugs, weapons, |
13 | | or bodily
harm to another.
|
14 | | (3) Information concerning a student's status and
|
15 | | related experiences as a parent, expectant parent, or
|
16 | | victim of domestic or sexual violence, as defined in
|
17 | | Article 26A of the School Code, including a statement of
|
18 | | the student or any other documentation, record, or
|
19 | | corroborating evidence and the fact that the student has
|
20 | | requested or obtained assistance, support, or
services |
21 | | related to that status. Enforcement of this
paragraph (3) |
22 | | shall follow the procedures provided in
Section 26A-40 of |
23 | | the School Code. |
24 | | (g) "Parent" means a person who is the natural parent of |
25 | | the
student or other person who has the primary responsibility |
26 | | for the
care and upbringing of the student. All rights and |
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1 | | privileges accorded
to a parent under this Act shall become |
2 | | exclusively those of the student
upon his 18th birthday, |
3 | | graduation from secondary school, marriage
or entry into |
4 | | military service, whichever occurs first. Such
rights and |
5 | | privileges may also be exercised by the student
at any time |
6 | | with respect to the student's permanent school record.
|
7 | | (Source: P.A. 101-515, eff. 8-23-19; revised 12-3-19.)
|
8 | | Section 90. The State Mandates Act is amended by adding |
9 | | Section 8.45 as follows: |
10 | | (30 ILCS 805/8.45 new) |
11 | | Sec. 8.45. Exempt mandate. Notwithstanding Sections 6 and |
12 | | 8 of this Act, no reimbursement by the State is required for |
13 | | the implementation of any mandate created by this amendatory |
14 | | Act of the 102nd General Assembly.
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15 | | Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect July 1, |
16 | | 2025. |