Sen. Robert Peters

Filed: 3/11/2021

 

 


 

 


 
10200SB0656sam001LRB102 13679 RJF 23172 a

1
AMENDMENT TO SENATE BILL 656

2    AMENDMENT NO. ______. Amend Senate Bill 656 by replacing
3everything after the enacting clause with the following:
 
4    "Section 5. The Department of Public Health Powers and
5Duties Law of the Civil Administrative Code of Illinois is
6amended by renumbering Section 2310-223 as follows:
 
7    (20 ILCS 2310/2310-222)
8    Sec. 2310-222 2310-223. Obstetric hemorrhage and
9hypertension training.
10    (a) As used in this Section, "birthing facility" means (1)
11a hospital, as defined in the Hospital Licensing Act, with
12more than one licensed obstetric bed or a neonatal intensive
13care unit; (2) a hospital operated by a State university; or
14(3) a birth center, as defined in the Alternative Health Care
15Delivery Act.
16    (b) The Department shall ensure that all birthing

 

 

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1facilities conduct continuing education yearly for providers
2and staff of obstetric medicine and of the emergency
3department and other staff that may care for pregnant or
4postpartum women. The continuing education shall include
5yearly educational modules regarding management of severe
6maternal hypertension and obstetric hemorrhage for units that
7care for pregnant or postpartum women. Birthing facilities
8must demonstrate compliance with these education and training
9requirements.
10    (c) The Department shall collaborate with the Illinois
11Perinatal Quality Collaborative or its successor organization
12to develop an initiative to improve birth equity and reduce
13peripartum racial and ethnic disparities. The Department shall
14ensure that the initiative includes the development of best
15practices for implicit bias training and education in cultural
16competency to be used by birthing facilities in interactions
17between patients and providers. In developing the initiative,
18the Illinois Perinatal Quality Collaborative or its successor
19organization shall consider existing programs, such as the
20Alliance for Innovation on Maternal Health and the California
21Maternal Quality Collaborative's pilot work on improving birth
22equity. The Department shall support the initiation of a
23statewide perinatal quality improvement initiative in
24collaboration with birthing facilities to implement strategies
25to reduce peripartum racial and ethnic disparities and to
26address implicit bias in the health care system.

 

 

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1    (d) The Department, in consultation with the Maternal
2Mortality Review Committee, shall make available to all
3birthing facilities best practices for timely identification
4of all pregnant and postpartum women in the emergency
5department and for appropriate and timely consultation of an
6obstetric provider to provide input on management and
7follow-up. Birthing facilities may use telemedicine for the
8consultation.
9    (e) The Department may adopt rules for the purpose of
10implementing this Section.
11(Source: P.A. 101-390, eff. 1-1-20; revised 10-7-19.)
 
12    Section 10. The Illinois Health Facilities Planning Act is
13amended by changing Sections 2, 3, 4, 5, 5.4, 6, 6.2, 8.5, 8.7,
1412, 12.3, 12.4, 13.1, 14, and 14.1 and by adding Sections 5.5,
155.6, 6.05, 14.05, and 14.2 as follows:
 
16    (20 ILCS 3960/2)  (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1152)
17    (Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2029)
18    Sec. 2. Purpose of the Act. This Act shall establish a
19procedure (1) which requires a person establishing,
20constructing or modifying a health care facility, as herein
21defined, to have the qualifications, background, character and
22financial resources to adequately provide a proper service for
23the community; (2) that promotes the orderly and economic
24development of health care facilities in the State of Illinois

 

 

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1that avoids unnecessary duplication of such facilities; (3)
2that promotes health equity including equitable access to
3quality health care through the development and preservation
4of safety net services; and (4) (3) that promotes planning for
5and development of health care facilities needed for
6comprehensive health care especially in areas where the health
7planning process has identified unmet needs.
8    The changes made to this Act by this amendatory Act of the
996th General Assembly are intended to accomplish the following
10objectives: to improve the financial ability of the public to
11obtain necessary health services; to establish an orderly and
12comprehensive health care delivery system that will guarantee
13the availability of quality health care to the general public;
14to maintain and improve the provision of essential health care
15services and increase the accessibility of those services to
16the medically underserved and indigent; to assure that the
17reduction and closure of health care services or facilities is
18performed in an orderly and timely manner, and that these
19actions are deemed to be in the best interests of the public;
20and to assess the financial burden to patients caused by
21unnecessary health care construction and modification.
22Evidence-based assessments, projections and decisions will be
23applied regarding capacity, quality, value and equity in the
24delivery of health care services in Illinois. The integrity of
25the Certificate of Need process is ensured through revised
26ethics and communications procedures. Cost containment and

 

 

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1support for safety net services must continue to be central
2tenets of the Certificate of Need process.
3    The changes made to this Act by this amendatory Act of the
4102nd General Assembly recognize a persistent problem of
5hospital service cuts and facility closures. These harm the
6health care safety net in Illinois and have negatively
7impacted access to hospital services in communities of color
8in particular. The changes are intended to accomplish the
9objective of protecting the public interest in equitable
10access to health care services.
11(Source: P.A. 99-527, eff. 1-1-17.)
 
12    (20 ILCS 3960/3)  (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1153)
13    (Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2029)
14    Sec. 3. Definitions. As used in this Act:
15    "Health care facilities" means and includes the following
16facilities, organizations, and related persons:
17        (1) An ambulatory surgical treatment center required
18    to be licensed pursuant to the Ambulatory Surgical
19    Treatment Center Act.
20        (2) An institution, place, building, or agency
21    required to be licensed pursuant to the Hospital Licensing
22    Act.
23        (3) Skilled and intermediate long term care facilities
24    licensed under the Nursing Home Care Act.
25            (A) If a demonstration project under the Nursing

 

 

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1        Home Care Act applies for a certificate of need to
2        convert to a nursing facility, it shall meet the
3        licensure and certificate of need requirements in
4        effect as of the date of application.
5            (B) Except as provided in item (A) of this
6        subsection, this Act does not apply to facilities
7        granted waivers under Section 3-102.2 of the Nursing
8        Home Care Act.
9        (3.5) Skilled and intermediate care facilities
10    licensed under the ID/DD Community Care Act or the MC/DD
11    Act. No permit or exemption is required for a facility
12    licensed under the ID/DD Community Care Act or the MC/DD
13    Act prior to the reduction of the number of beds at a
14    facility. If there is a total reduction of beds at a
15    facility licensed under the ID/DD Community Care Act or
16    the MC/DD Act, this is a discontinuation or closure of the
17    facility. If a facility licensed under the ID/DD Community
18    Care Act or the MC/DD Act reduces the number of beds or
19    discontinues the facility, that facility must notify the
20    Board as provided in Section 14.1 of this Act.
21        (3.7) Facilities licensed under the Specialized Mental
22    Health Rehabilitation Act of 2013.
23        (4) Hospitals, nursing homes, ambulatory surgical
24    treatment centers, or kidney disease treatment centers
25    maintained by the State or any department or agency
26    thereof.

 

 

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1        (5) Kidney disease treatment centers, including a
2    free-standing hemodialysis unit required to meet the
3    requirements of 42 CFR 494 in order to be certified for
4    participation in Medicare and Medicaid under Titles XVIII
5    and XIX of the federal Social Security Act.
6            (A) This Act does not apply to a dialysis facility
7        that provides only dialysis training, support, and
8        related services to individuals with end stage renal
9        disease who have elected to receive home dialysis.
10            (B) This Act does not apply to a dialysis unit
11        located in a licensed nursing home that offers or
12        provides dialysis-related services to residents with
13        end stage renal disease who have elected to receive
14        home dialysis within the nursing home.
15            (C) The Board, however, may require dialysis
16        facilities and licensed nursing homes under items (A)
17        and (B) of this subsection to report statistical
18        information on a quarterly basis to the Board to be
19        used by the Board to conduct analyses on the need for
20        proposed kidney disease treatment centers.
21        (6) An institution, place, building, or room used for
22    the performance of outpatient surgical procedures that is
23    leased, owned, or operated by or on behalf of an
24    out-of-state facility.
25        (7) An institution, place, building, or room used for
26    provision of a health care category of service, including,

 

 

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1    but not limited to, cardiac catheterization and open heart
2    surgery.
3        (8) An institution, place, building, or room housing
4    major medical equipment used in the direct clinical
5    diagnosis or treatment of patients, and whose project cost
6    is in excess of the capital expenditure minimum.
7    "Health care facilities" does not include the following
8entities or facility transactions:
9        (1) Federally-owned facilities.
10        (2) Facilities used solely for healing by prayer or
11    spiritual means.
12        (3) An existing facility located on any campus
13    facility as defined in Section 5-5.8b of the Illinois
14    Public Aid Code, provided that the campus facility
15    encompasses 30 or more contiguous acres and that the new
16    or renovated facility is intended for use by a licensed
17    residential facility.
18        (4) Facilities licensed under the Supportive
19    Residences Licensing Act or the Assisted Living and Shared
20    Housing Act.
21        (5) Facilities designated as supportive living
22    facilities that are in good standing with the program
23    established under Section 5-5.01a of the Illinois Public
24    Aid Code.
25        (6) Facilities established and operating under the
26    Alternative Health Care Delivery Act as a children's

 

 

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1    community-based health care center alternative health care
2    model demonstration program or as an Alzheimer's Disease
3    Management Center alternative health care model
4    demonstration program.
5        (7) The closure of an entity or a portion of an entity
6    licensed under the Nursing Home Care Act, the Specialized
7    Mental Health Rehabilitation Act of 2013, the ID/DD
8    Community Care Act, or the MC/DD Act, with the exception
9    of facilities operated by a county or Illinois Veterans
10    Homes, that elect to convert, in whole or in part, to an
11    assisted living or shared housing establishment licensed
12    under the Assisted Living and Shared Housing Act and with
13    the exception of a facility licensed under the Specialized
14    Mental Health Rehabilitation Act of 2013 in connection
15    with a proposal to close a facility and re-establish the
16    facility in another location.
17        (8) Any change of ownership of a health care facility
18    that is licensed under the Nursing Home Care Act, the
19    Specialized Mental Health Rehabilitation Act of 2013, the
20    ID/DD Community Care Act, or the MC/DD Act, with the
21    exception of facilities operated by a county or Illinois
22    Veterans Homes. Changes of ownership of facilities
23    licensed under the Nursing Home Care Act must meet the
24    requirements set forth in Sections 3-101 through 3-119 of
25    the Nursing Home Care Act.
26        (9) (Blank).

 

 

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1    With the exception of those health care facilities
2specifically included in this Section, nothing in this Act
3shall be intended to include facilities operated as a part of
4the practice of a physician or other licensed health care
5professional, whether practicing in his individual capacity or
6within the legal structure of any partnership, medical or
7professional corporation, or unincorporated medical or
8professional group. Further, this Act shall not apply to
9physicians or other licensed health care professional's
10practices where such practices are carried out in a portion of
11a health care facility under contract with such health care
12facility by a physician or by other licensed health care
13professionals, whether practicing in his individual capacity
14or within the legal structure of any partnership, medical or
15professional corporation, or unincorporated medical or
16professional groups, unless the entity constructs, modifies,
17or establishes a health care facility as specifically defined
18in this Section. This Act shall apply to construction or
19modification and to establishment by such health care facility
20of such contracted portion which is subject to facility
21licensing requirements, irrespective of the party responsible
22for such action or attendant financial obligation.
23    "Person" means any one or more natural persons, legal
24entities, governmental bodies other than federal, or any
25combination thereof.
26    "Consumer" means any person other than a person (a) whose

 

 

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1major occupation currently involves or whose official capacity
2within the last 12 months has involved the providing,
3administering or financing of any type of health care
4facility, (b) who is engaged in health research or the
5teaching of health, (c) who has a material financial interest
6in any activity which involves the providing, administering or
7financing of any type of health care facility, or (d) who is or
8ever has been a member of the immediate family of the person
9defined by item (a), (b), or (c).
10    "State Board" or "Board" means the Health Facilities and
11Services Review Board.
12    "Construction or modification" means the establishment,
13erection, building, alteration, reconstruction,
14modernization, improvement, extension, discontinuation,
15change of ownership, of or by a health care facility, or the
16purchase or acquisition by or through a health care facility
17of equipment or service for diagnostic or therapeutic purposes
18or for facility administration or operation, or any capital
19expenditure made by or on behalf of a health care facility
20which exceeds the capital expenditure minimum; however, any
21capital expenditure made by or on behalf of a health care
22facility for (i) the construction or modification of a
23facility licensed under the Assisted Living and Shared Housing
24Act or (ii) a conversion project undertaken in accordance with
25Section 30 of the Older Adult Services Act shall be excluded
26from any obligations under this Act. For the purposes of this

 

 

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1paragraph and Act, any temporary suspension of a category of
2service by a hospital for a time period exceeding one month
3shall be considered a discontinuation of a category of
4service.
5    "Establish" means the construction of a health care
6facility or the replacement of an existing facility on another
7site or the initiation of a category of service.
8    "Major medical equipment" means medical equipment which is
9used for the provision of medical and other health services
10and which costs in excess of the capital expenditure minimum,
11except that such term does not include medical equipment
12acquired by or on behalf of a clinical laboratory to provide
13clinical laboratory services if the clinical laboratory is
14independent of a physician's office and a hospital and it has
15been determined under Title XVIII of the Social Security Act
16to meet the requirements of paragraphs (10) and (11) of
17Section 1861(s) of such Act. In determining whether medical
18equipment has a value in excess of the capital expenditure
19minimum, the value of studies, surveys, designs, plans,
20working drawings, specifications, and other activities
21essential to the acquisition of such equipment shall be
22included.
23    "Capital expenditure" means an expenditure: (A) made by or
24on behalf of a health care facility (as such a facility is
25defined in this Act); and (B) which under generally accepted
26accounting principles is not properly chargeable as an expense

 

 

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1of operation and maintenance, or is made to obtain by lease or
2comparable arrangement any facility or part thereof or any
3equipment for a facility or part; and which exceeds the
4capital expenditure minimum.
5    For the purpose of this paragraph, the cost of any
6studies, surveys, designs, plans, working drawings,
7specifications, and other activities essential to the
8acquisition, improvement, expansion, or replacement of any
9plant or equipment with respect to which an expenditure is
10made shall be included in determining if such expenditure
11exceeds the capital expenditures minimum. Unless otherwise
12interdependent, or submitted as one project by the applicant,
13components of construction or modification undertaken by means
14of a single construction contract or financed through the
15issuance of a single debt instrument shall not be grouped
16together as one project. Donations of equipment or facilities
17to a health care facility which if acquired directly by such
18facility would be subject to review under this Act shall be
19considered capital expenditures, and a transfer of equipment
20or facilities for less than fair market value shall be
21considered a capital expenditure for purposes of this Act if a
22transfer of the equipment or facilities at fair market value
23would be subject to review.
24    "Capital expenditure minimum" means $11,500,000 for
25projects by hospital applicants, $6,500,000 for applicants for
26projects related to skilled and intermediate care long-term

 

 

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1care facilities licensed under the Nursing Home Care Act, and
2$3,000,000 for projects by all other applicants, which shall
3be annually adjusted to reflect the increase in construction
4costs due to inflation, for major medical equipment and for
5all other capital expenditures.
6    "Financial commitment" means the commitment of at least
733% of total funds assigned to cover total project cost, which
8occurs by the actual expenditure of 33% or more of the total
9project cost or the commitment to expend 33% or more of the
10total project cost by signed contracts or other legal means.
11    "Non-clinical service area" means an area (i) for the
12benefit of the patients, visitors, staff, or employees of a
13health care facility and (ii) not directly related to the
14diagnosis, treatment, or rehabilitation of persons receiving
15services from the health care facility. "Non-clinical service
16areas" include, but are not limited to, chapels; gift shops;
17news stands; computer systems; tunnels, walkways, and
18elevators; telephone systems; projects to comply with life
19safety codes; educational facilities; student housing;
20patient, employee, staff, and visitor dining areas;
21administration and volunteer offices; modernization of
22structural components (such as roof replacement and masonry
23work); boiler repair or replacement; vehicle maintenance and
24storage facilities; parking facilities; mechanical systems for
25heating, ventilation, and air conditioning; loading docks; and
26repair or replacement of carpeting, tile, wall coverings,

 

 

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1window coverings or treatments, or furniture. Solely for the
2purpose of this definition, "non-clinical service area" does
3not include health and fitness centers.
4    "Areawide" means a major area of the State delineated on a
5geographic, demographic, and functional basis for health
6planning and for health service and having within it one or
7more local areas for health planning and health service. The
8term "region", as contrasted with the term "subregion", and
9the word "area" may be used synonymously with the term
10"areawide".
11    "Local" means a subarea of a delineated major area that on
12a geographic, demographic, and functional basis may be
13considered to be part of such major area. The term "subregion"
14may be used synonymously with the term "local".
15    "Physician" means a person licensed to practice in
16accordance with the Medical Practice Act of 1987, as amended.
17    "Licensed health care professional" means a person
18licensed to practice a health profession under pertinent
19licensing statutes of the State of Illinois.
20    "Director" means the Director of the Illinois Department
21of Public Health.
22    "Agency" or "Department" means the Illinois Department of
23Public Health.
24    "Alternative health care model" means a facility or
25program authorized under the Alternative Health Care Delivery
26Act.

 

 

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1    "Out-of-state facility" means a person that is both (i)
2licensed as a hospital or as an ambulatory surgery center
3under the laws of another state or that qualifies as a hospital
4or an ambulatory surgery center under regulations adopted
5pursuant to the Social Security Act and (ii) not licensed
6under the Ambulatory Surgical Treatment Center Act, the
7Hospital Licensing Act, or the Nursing Home Care Act.
8Affiliates of out-of-state facilities shall be considered
9out-of-state facilities. Affiliates of Illinois licensed
10health care facilities 100% owned by an Illinois licensed
11health care facility, its parent, or Illinois physicians
12licensed to practice medicine in all its branches shall not be
13considered out-of-state facilities. Nothing in this definition
14shall be construed to include an office or any part of an
15office of a physician licensed to practice medicine in all its
16branches in Illinois that is not required to be licensed under
17the Ambulatory Surgical Treatment Center Act.
18    "Change of ownership of a health care facility" means a
19change in the person who has ownership or control of a health
20care facility's physical plant and capital assets. A change in
21ownership is indicated by the following transactions: sale,
22transfer, acquisition, lease, change of sponsorship, or other
23means of transferring control.
24    "Related person" means any person that: (i) is at least
2550% owned, directly or indirectly, by either the health care
26facility or a person owning, directly or indirectly, at least

 

 

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150% of the health care facility; or (ii) owns, directly or
2indirectly, at least 50% of the health care facility.
3    "Charity care" means care provided by a health care
4facility for which the provider does not expect to receive
5payment from the patient or a third-party payer.
6    "Health disparities" means preventable differences in the
7burden of disease, injury, violence, or opportunities to
8achieve optimal health that are experienced by socially
9disadvantaged populations.
10    "Health equity" means a process of assurance of the
11conditions for optimal health for all people through focused
12and ongoing societal effort valuing all individuals and
13populations equally, recognizing and rectifying historical
14injustices, and providing resources according to need.
15    "Safety net services" means services provided by health
16care providers or organizations that deliver health care
17services to persons with barriers to mainstream health care
18due to lack of insurance, inability to pay, special needs,
19ethnic or cultural characteristics, or geographic isolation,
20and those that deliver services to communities or populations
21suffering from health disparities including disparities in
22health status and outcomes due to differences in social,
23economic, environmental, or healthcare resources. Safety net
24service providers include, but are not limited to, hospitals
25and private practice physicians that provide charity care,
26school-based health centers, migrant health clinics, rural

 

 

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1health clinics, federally qualified health centers, community
2health centers, public health departments, and community
3mental health centers.
4    "Safety net hospital" has the meaning ascribed to it under
5Section 5-5e.1 of the Illinois Public Aid Code.
6    "Emergency medical and trauma" means the emergency medical
7services, trauma services, and associated non-emergency
8medical services planned and coordinated in accordance with
9the Emergency Medical Services (EMS) Systems Act.
10    "Perinatal and maternal care" means obstetric and neonatal
11services under Subpart O of Hospital Licensing Requirements,
1277 IAC 250; resources and services associated with hospital
13perinatal care level designations under the Developmental
14Disability Prevention Act; and maternal care resources and
15services developed or identified under Sections 2310-222 and
162310-223 of the Department of Public Health Powers and Duties
17Law.
18    "Freestanding emergency center" means a facility subject
19to licensure under Section 32.5 of the Emergency Medical
20Services (EMS) Systems Act.
21    "Category of service" means a grouping by generic class of
22various types or levels of support functions, equipment, care,
23or treatment provided to patients or residents. Categories of
24service shall at minimum include , including, but not limited
25to, classes such as medical-surgical, pediatrics, obstetrics,
26intensive care, neonatal intensive care, acute mental illness,

 

 

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1comprehensive physical rehabilitation, long-term acute care,
2or cardiac catheterization, open heart surgery, kidney
3transplantation, general long term nursing care, long term
4care for the developmentally disabled (adult), long term care
5for the developmentally disabled (children), chronic mental
6illness care, in-center hemodialysis, and non-hospital
7ambulatory surgery. A category of service may include
8subcategories or levels of care that identify a particular
9degree or type of care within the category of service. Nothing
10in this definition shall be construed to include the practice
11of a physician or other licensed health care professional
12while functioning in an office providing for the care,
13diagnosis, or treatment of patients. A category of service
14that is subject to the Board's jurisdiction must be designated
15in rules adopted by the Board.
16    "State Board Staff Report" means the document that sets
17forth the review and findings of the State Board staff, as
18prescribed by the State Board, regarding applications subject
19to Board jurisdiction.
20(Source: P.A. 100-518, eff. 6-1-18; 100-581, eff. 3-12-18;
21100-957, eff. 8-19-18; 101-81, eff. 7-12-19; 101-650, eff.
227-7-20.)
 
23    (20 ILCS 3960/4)  (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1154)
24    (Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2029)
25    Sec. 4. Health Facilities and Services Review Board;

 

 

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1membership; appointment; term; compensation; quorum.
2    (a) There is created the Health Facilities and Services
3Review Board, which shall perform the functions described in
4this Act. The Department shall provide operational support to
5the Board as necessary, including the provision of office
6space, supplies, and clerical, financial, and accounting
7services. The Board may contract for functions or operational
8support as needed. The Board may also contract with experts
9related to specific health services or facilities and create
10technical advisory panels to assist in the development of
11criteria, standards, and procedures used in the evaluation of
12applications for permit and exemption.
13    (b) The State Board shall consist of 9 voting members. All
14members shall be residents of Illinois and at least 3 4 shall
15reside outside the Chicago Metropolitan Statistical Area.
16Consideration shall be given to potential appointees who
17reflect the ethnic and cultural diversity of the State.
18Neither Board members nor Board staff shall be convicted
19felons or have pled guilty to a felony.
20    Each member shall have a reasonable knowledge of the
21practice, procedures and principles of the health care
22delivery system in Illinois, including at least 5 members who
23shall be knowledgeable about health care delivery systems,
24health systems planning, finance, or the management of health
25care facilities currently regulated under the Act. One member
26shall be a representative of a non-profit health care consumer

 

 

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1advocacy organization and one member shall be representative
2of a trade or labor union representing health care workers. A
3spouse, parent, sibling, or child of a Board member cannot be
4an employee, agent, or under contract with services or
5facilities subject to the Act. Prior to appointment and in the
6course of service on the Board, members of the Board shall
7disclose the employment or other financial interest of any
8other relative of the member, if known, in service or
9facilities subject to the Act. Members of the Board shall
10declare any conflict of interest that may exist with respect
11to the status of those relatives and recuse themselves from
12voting on any issue for which a conflict of interest is
13declared. No person shall be appointed or continue to serve as
14a member of the State Board who is, or whose spouse, parent,
15sibling, or child is, a member of the Board of Directors of,
16has a financial interest in, or has a business relationship
17with a health care facility.
18    Notwithstanding any provision of this Section to the
19contrary, the term of office of each member of the State Board
20serving on the day before the effective date of this
21amendatory Act of the 96th General Assembly is abolished on
22the date upon which members of the 9-member Board, as
23established by this amendatory Act of the 96th General
24Assembly, have been appointed and can begin to take action as a
25Board.
26    (c) The State Board shall be appointed by the Governor,

 

 

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1with the advice and consent of the Senate. Not more than 5 of
2the appointments shall be of the same political party at the
3time of the appointment.
4    The Secretary of Human Services, the Director of
5Healthcare and Family Services, and the Director of Public
6Health, or their designated representatives, shall serve as
7ex-officio, non-voting members of the State Board.
8    (d) Of those 9 members initially appointed by the Governor
9following the effective date of this amendatory Act of the
1096th General Assembly, 3 shall serve for terms expiring July
111, 2011, 3 shall serve for terms expiring July 1, 2012, and 3
12shall serve for terms expiring July 1, 2013. Thereafter, each
13appointed member shall hold office for a term of 3 years,
14provided that any member appointed to fill a vacancy occurring
15prior to the expiration of the term for which his or her
16predecessor was appointed shall be appointed for the remainder
17of such term and the term of office of each successor shall
18commence on July 1 of the year in which his predecessor's term
19expires. Each member shall hold office until his or her
20successor is appointed and qualified. The Governor may
21reappoint a member for additional terms, but no member shall
22serve more than 3 terms, subject to review and re-approval
23every 3 years.
24    (e) State Board members, while serving on business of the
25State Board, shall receive actual and necessary travel and
26subsistence expenses while so serving away from their places

 

 

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1of residence. Until March 1, 2010, a member of the State Board
2who experiences a significant financial hardship due to the
3loss of income on days of attendance at meetings or while
4otherwise engaged in the business of the State Board may be
5paid a hardship allowance, as determined by and subject to the
6approval of the Governor's Travel Control Board.
7    (f) The Governor shall designate one of the members to
8serve as the Chairman of the Board, who shall be a person with
9expertise in health care delivery system planning, finance or
10management of health care facilities that are regulated under
11the Act. The Chairman shall annually review Board member
12performance and shall report the attendance record of each
13Board member to the General Assembly.
14    (g) The State Board, through the Chairman, shall prepare a
15separate and distinct budget approved by the General Assembly
16and shall hire and supervise its own professional staff
17responsible for carrying out the responsibilities of the
18Board.
19    (h) The State Board shall meet at least every 45 days, or
20as often as the Chairman of the State Board deems necessary, or
21upon the request of a majority of the members.
22    (i) Five members of the State Board shall constitute a
23quorum. The affirmative vote of 5 of the members of the State
24Board shall be necessary for any action requiring a vote to be
25taken by the State Board. A vacancy in the membership of the
26State Board shall not impair the right of a quorum to exercise

 

 

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1all the rights and perform all the duties of the State Board as
2provided by this Act.
3    (j) A State Board member shall disqualify himself or
4herself from the consideration of any application for a permit
5or exemption in which the State Board member or the State Board
6member's spouse, parent, sibling, or child: (i) has an
7economic interest in the matter; or (ii) is employed by,
8serves as a consultant for, or is a member of the governing
9board of the applicant or a party opposing the application.
10    (k) The Chairman, Board members, and Board staff must
11comply with the Illinois Governmental Ethics Act.
12(Source: P.A. 99-527, eff. 1-1-17; 100-681, eff. 8-3-18.)
 
13    (20 ILCS 3960/5)  (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1155)
14    (Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2029)
15    Sec. 5. Construction, modification, or establishment of
16health care facilities or acquisition of major medical
17equipment; permits or exemptions. No person shall construct,
18modify or establish a health care facility or acquire major
19medical equipment without first obtaining a permit or
20exemption from the State Board. The State Board shall not
21delegate to the staff of the State Board or any other person or
22entity the authority to grant permits or exemptions whenever
23the staff or other person or entity would be required to
24exercise any discretion affecting the decision to grant a
25permit or exemption. The State Board may, by rule, delegate

 

 

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1authority to the Chairman to grant permits or exemptions when
2applications meet all of the State Board's review criteria and
3are unopposed.
4    A permit or exemption shall be obtained prior to the
5acquisition of major medical equipment or to the construction
6or modification of a health care facility which:
7        (a) requires a total capital expenditure in excess of
8    the capital expenditure minimum; or
9        (b) substantially changes the scope or changes the
10    functional operation of the facility; or
11        (c) changes the bed capacity of a health care facility
12    by increasing the total number of beds or by distributing
13    beds among various categories of service or by relocating
14    beds from one physical facility or site to another by more
15    than 20 beds or more than 10% of total bed capacity as
16    defined by the State Board, whichever is less, over a
17    2-year period.
18    A permit shall be valid only for the defined construction
19or modifications, site, amount and person named in the
20application for such permit. The State Board may approve the
21transfer of an existing permit without regard to whether the
22permit to be transferred has yet been financially committed,
23except for permits to establish a new facility or category of
24service. A permit shall be valid until such time as the project
25has been completed, provided that the project commences and
26proceeds to completion with due diligence by the completion

 

 

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1date or extension date approved by the Board.
2    A permit holder must do the following: (i) submit the
3final completion and cost report for the project within 90
4days after the approved project completion date or extension
5date and (ii) submit annual progress reports no earlier than
630 days before and no later than 30 days after each anniversary
7date of the Board's approval of the permit until the project is
8completed. To maintain a valid permit and to monitor progress
9toward project commencement and completion, routine
10post-permit reports shall be limited to annual progress
11reports and the final completion and cost report. Annual
12progress reports shall include information regarding the
13committed funds expended toward the approved project. For
14projects to be completed in 12 months or less, the permit
15holder shall report financial commitment in the final
16completion and cost report. For projects to be completed
17between 12 to 24 months, the permit holder shall report
18financial commitment in the first annual report. For projects
19to be completed in more than 24 months, the permit holder shall
20report financial commitment in the second annual progress
21report. The report shall contain information regarding
22expenditures and financial commitments. The State Board may
23extend the financial commitment period after considering a
24permit holder's showing of good cause and request for
25additional time to complete the project.
26    The Certificate of Need process required under this Act is

 

 

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1designed to support equitable access to health care services,
2develop and protect safety net services, and restrain rising
3health care costs by preventing unnecessary construction or
4modification of health care facilities. The Board must assure
5that the establishment, construction, or modification of a
6health care facility or the acquisition of major medical
7equipment is consistent with the public interest and that the
8proposed project is consistent with the orderly and economic
9development or acquisition of those facilities and equipment
10and is in accord with the standards, criteria, or plans of need
11adopted and approved by the Board. The Board must assure
12decisions regarding hospital facility or service
13discontinuations are consistent with the health equity
14purposes of the Act and consider whether or not such facility
15or service discontinuations will worsen health disparities.
16Board decisions regarding the construction of health care
17facilities must consider capacity, quality, value, and equity.
18Projects may deviate from the costs, fees, and expenses
19provided in their project cost information for the project's
20cost components, provided that the final total project cost
21does not exceed the approved permit amount. Project
22alterations shall not increase the total approved permit
23amount by more than the limit set forth under the Board's
24rules.
25    The acquisition by any person of major medical equipment
26that will not be owned by or located in a health care facility

 

 

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1and that will not be used to provide services to inpatients of
2a health care facility shall be exempt from review provided
3that a notice is filed in accordance with exemption
4requirements.
5    Notwithstanding any other provision of this Act, no permit
6or exemption is required for the construction or modification
7of a non-clinical service area of a health care facility.
8(Source: P.A. 100-518, eff. 6-1-18; 100-681, eff. 8-3-18.)
 
9    (20 ILCS 3960/5.4)
10    (Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2029)
11    Sec. 5.4. Safety Net Impact Statement.
12    (a) General review criteria shall include a requirement
13that all health care facilities, with the exception of skilled
14and intermediate long-term care facilities licensed under the
15Nursing Home Care Act, provide a Safety Net Impact Statement,
16which shall be filed with an application for a substantive
17project or when the application proposes to discontinue a
18category of service.
19    (b) (Blank). For the purposes of this Section, "safety net
20services" are services provided by health care providers or
21organizations that deliver health care services to persons
22with barriers to mainstream health care due to lack of
23insurance, inability to pay, special needs, ethnic or cultural
24characteristics, or geographic isolation. Safety net service
25providers include, but are not limited to, hospitals and

 

 

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1private practice physicians that provide charity care,
2school-based health centers, migrant health clinics, rural
3health clinics, federally qualified health centers, community
4health centers, public health departments, and community
5mental health centers.
6    (c) As developed by the applicant, a Safety Net Impact
7Statement shall describe all of the following:
8        (1) The project's material impact, if any, on
9    essential safety net services in the community, including
10    safety net hospitals and critical access hospitals, to the
11    extent that it is feasible for an applicant to have such
12    knowledge.
13        (2) The project's impact on the ability of another
14    provider or health care system to cross-subsidize safety
15    net services, if reasonably known to the applicant.
16        (3) How the discontinuation of a facility or service
17    will might impact other the remaining safety net providers
18    in a given community, if reasonably known by the
19    applicant.
20        (4) How the discontinuation of a facility or service
21    will impact the Medicaid population.
22        (5) How the discontinuation of a facility or service
23    will impact the health status and outcomes of communities
24    or populations suffering from health disparities. This
25    should include consideration of disparities in healthcare
26    access and outcomes by income, race and ethnic identity,

 

 

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1    and preferred language, if reasonably known to the
2    applicant.
3    (d) Safety Net Impact Statements shall also include all of
4the following:
5        (1) For the 3 fiscal years prior to the application, a
6    certification describing the amount of charity care
7    provided by the applicant. The amount calculated by
8    hospital applicants shall be in accordance with the
9    reporting requirements for charity care reporting in the
10    Illinois Community Benefits Act. Non-hospital applicants
11    shall report charity care, at cost, in accordance with an
12    appropriate methodology specified by the Board.
13        (2) For the 3 fiscal years prior to the application, a
14    certification of the amount of care provided to Medicaid
15    patients. Hospital and non-hospital applicants shall
16    provide Medicaid information in a manner consistent with
17    the information reported each year to the State Board
18    regarding "Inpatients and Outpatients Served by Payor
19    Source" and "Inpatient and Outpatient Net Revenue by Payor
20    Source" as required by the Board under Section 13 of this
21    Act and published in the Annual Hospital Profile.
22        (3) Any information the applicant believes is directly
23    relevant to safety net services, including information
24    regarding teaching, research, and any other service.
25    (e) The Board staff shall publish a notice, that an
26application accompanied by a Safety Net Impact Statement has

 

 

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1been filed, in a newspaper having general circulation within
2the area affected by the application. If no newspaper has a
3general circulation within the county, the Board shall post
4the notice in 5 conspicuous places within the proposed area.
5    (f) Any person, community organization, provider, or
6health system or other entity wishing to comment upon or
7oppose the application may file a Safety Net Impact Statement
8Response with the Board, which shall provide additional
9information concerning a project's impact on safety net
10services in the community.
11    (g) Applicants shall be provided an opportunity to submit
12a reply to any Safety Net Impact Statement Response.
13    (h) The State Board Staff Report shall include a statement
14as to whether a Safety Net Impact Statement was filed by the
15applicant and whether it included information on charity care,
16the amount of care provided to Medicaid patients, and
17information on teaching, research, or any other service
18provided by the applicant directly relevant to safety net
19services. The report shall also indicate the names of the
20parties submitting responses and the number of responses and
21replies, if any, that were filed.
22(Source: P.A. 100-518, eff. 6-1-18.)
 
23    (20 ILCS 3960/5.5 new)
24    Sec. 5.5. Emergency Medicine and Trauma Systems Impact
25Statement.

 

 

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1    (a) Review criteria shall include a requirement that all
2general acute hospitals applying to discontinue a facility,
3intensive care services, or another category of service
4relevant to emergency medical service and trauma systems
5identified by rule by the Board include in its application an
6Emergency Medicine and Trauma Systems Impact Statement.
7    (b) As developed by the applicant, an Emergency Medicine
8and Trauma Systems Impact Statement shall describe all of the
9following:
10        (1) How the discontinuation of the facility or service
11    will impact the availability of emergency medical and
12    trauma services for area populations, specifically
13    including those that experience difficulty accessing
14    health services or experience health disparities.
15        (2) How the discontinuation of the facility or service
16    might impact the remaining providers of emergency medical
17    and trauma services in the area, to the extent known by the
18    applicant.
19    (c) Emergency Medicine and Trauma Systems Impact
20Statements shall also include all of the following:
21        (1) A list of each resource identified in any
22    emergency medical service system program plan that will
23    cease to exist as a result of the facility or service
24    discontinuation, with a description of its utilization in
25    the most recent 2 years for which data is available.
26        (2) A list of each resource identified in any trauma

 

 

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1    or stroke center designation that will cease to exist as a
2    result of the facility or service discontinuation, with a
3    description of its utilization in the most recent 2 years
4    for which data is available.
5        (3) If any resource listed pursuant to paragraphs (1)
6    or (2) above was on diversion or bypass status or
7    otherwise not available during the 2 years, the statement
8    must list the times and reasons it was on bypass.
9    (d) The Board staff shall publish a notice, that an
10application accompanied by an Emergency Medicine and Trauma
11Systems Impact Statement has been filed, in a newspaper having
12general circulation within the area affected by the
13application. If no newspaper has a general circulation within
14the county, the Board shall post the notice in 5 conspicuous
15places within the proposed area.
16    (e) Any person, community organization, provider, or
17health system or other entity wishing to comment upon or
18oppose the application may file an Emergency Medical and
19Trauma Systems Impact Statement Response with the Board, which
20shall provide additional information concerning a project's
21impact on emergency medical and trauma services in the
22community.
23    (f) Applicants shall be provided an opportunity to submit
24a reply to any Emergency Medical and Trauma Systems Impact
25Statement Response.
26    (g) The State Board Staff Report shall include a statement

 

 

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1as to whether an Emergency Medical and Trauma Systems Impact
2Statement was filed by the applicant and whether it included
3information described in subsections (b) and (c) above. The
4report shall indicate whether the list of resources identified
5pursuant to subsection (c) is accurate and complete. The
6report shall also indicate the names of the parties submitting
7responses and the number of responses and replies, if any,
8that were filed.
 
9    (20 ILCS 3960/5.6 new)
10    Sec. 5.6. Maternal and Child Health Impact Statement.
11    (a) Review criteria shall include a requirement that all
12general acute hospitals applying to discontinue a facility,
13obstetric services, pediatric services, neonatal intensive
14care services, or any other category of service relevant to
15maternal and child health identified by rule by the Board
16include in its application an Emergency Medicine and Trauma
17Systems Impact Statement.
18    (b) As developed by the applicant, a Maternal and Child
19Health Impact Statement shall describe all of the following:
20        (1) How the discontinuation of the facility or service
21    will impact the availability of perinatal and maternal
22    care services for area populations, specifically including
23    those that experience difficulty accessing health services
24    or experience health disparities.
25        (2) How the discontinuation of the facility or service

 

 

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1    might impact the remaining providers of perinatal and
2    maternal care services in the area, to the extent known by
3    the applicant.
4    (c) Maternal and Child Health Impact Statements shall also
5include all of the following:
6        (1) A list of each resource identified in any
7    obstetric and neonatal service plan, hospital perinatal
8    care level designation, or maternal care level designation
9    that will cease to exist as a result of the facility or
10    service discontinuation, with a description of its
11    utilization in the most recent 2 years for which data is
12    available.
13        (2) A list of any resource that was developed through
14    initiatives set forth in Section 2310-222 of the
15    Department of Public Health Powers and Duties Law to
16    improve birth equity and reduce postpartum racial and
17    ethnic disparities, or that serves similar purposes that
18    will cease to exist as a result of the facility or service
19    discontinuation.
20    (d) The Board staff shall publish a notice, that an
21application accompanied by a Maternal and Child Health Impact
22Statement has been filed, in a newspaper having general
23circulation within the area affected by the application. If no
24newspaper has a general circulation within the county, the
25Board shall post the notice in 5 conspicuous places within the
26proposed area.

 

 

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1    (e) Any person, community organization, provider, or
2health system or other entity wishing to comment upon or
3oppose the application may file a Maternal and Child Health
4Impact Statement Response with the Board, which shall provide
5additional information concerning a project's impact on
6perinatal and maternal care services in the community.
7    (f) Applicants shall be provided an opportunity to submit
8a reply to any Maternal and Child Health Impact Statement
9Response.
10    (g) The State Board Staff Report shall include a statement
11as to whether a Maternal and Child Health Impact Statement was
12filed by the applicant and whether it included information
13described in paragraphs (b) and (c) above. The report shall
14indicate whether the list of resources identified pursuant to
15paragraph (c) is accurate and complete. The report shall also
16indicate the names of the parties submitting responses and the
17number of responses and replies, if any, that were filed.
 
18    (20 ILCS 3960/6)  (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1156)
19    (Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2029)
20    Sec. 6. Application for permit or exemption; exemption
21regulations.
22    (a) An application for a permit or exemption shall be made
23to the State Board upon forms provided by the State Board. This
24application shall contain such information as the State Board
25deems necessary. The State Board shall not require an

 

 

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1applicant to file a Letter of Intent before an application is
2filed. Such application shall include affirmative evidence on
3which the State Board or Chairman may make its decision on the
4approval or denial of the permit or exemption.
5    (b) The State Board shall establish by regulation the
6procedures and requirements regarding issuance of exemptions.
7An exemption shall be approved when information required by
8the Board by rule is submitted. Projects eligible for an
9exemption, rather than a permit, shall be include, but are not
10limited to, change of ownership of a health care facility and
11discontinuation of a category of service, other than a
12hospital, or a health care facility maintained by the State or
13any agency or department thereof or a nursing home maintained
14by a county. The Board may accept an application for an
15exemption for the discontinuation of a category of service at
16any other a health care facility only once in a 6-month period
17following (1) the previous application for exemption at the
18same health care facility or (2) the final decision of the
19Board regarding the discontinuation of a category of service
20at the same health care facility, whichever occurs later. A
21discontinuation of a category of service shall otherwise
22require an application for a permit if an application for an
23exemption has already been accepted within the 6-month period.
24For a change of ownership among related persons of a health
25care facility, the State Board shall provide by rule for an
26expedited process for obtaining an exemption. For the purposes

 

 

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1of this Section, "change of ownership among related persons"
2means a transaction in which the parties to the transaction
3are under common control or ownership before and after the
4transaction is complete.
5    (c) All applications shall be signed by the applicant and
6shall be verified by any 2 officers thereof.
7    (c-5) Any written review or findings of the Board staff
8set forth in the State Board Staff Report concerning an
9application for a permit must be made available to the public
10and the applicant at least 14 calendar days before the meeting
11of the State Board at which the review or findings are
12considered. The applicant and members of the public may
13submit, to the State Board, written responses regarding the
14facts set forth in the review or findings of the Board staff.
15Members of the public and the applicant shall have until 10
16days before the meeting of the State Board to submit any
17written response concerning the Board staff's written review
18or findings. The Board staff may revise any findings to
19address corrections of factual errors cited in the public
20response. At the meeting, the State Board may, in its
21discretion, permit the submission of other additional written
22materials.
23    (d) Upon receipt of an application for a permit, the State
24Board shall approve and authorize the issuance of a permit if
25it finds (1) that the applicant is fit, willing, and able to
26provide a proper standard of health care service for the

 

 

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1community with particular regard to the qualification,
2background and character of the applicant, (2) that economic
3feasibility is demonstrated in terms of effect on the existing
4and projected operating budget of the applicant and of the
5health care facility; in terms of the applicant's ability to
6establish and operate such facility in accordance with
7licensure regulations promulgated under pertinent state laws;
8and in terms of the projected impact on the total health care
9expenditures in the facility and community, (3) that
10safeguards are provided that assure that the establishment,
11construction or modification of the health care facility or
12acquisition of major medical equipment is consistent with the
13public interest, (4) that the project will not plausibly
14increase health disparities, and (5) (4) that the proposed
15project is consistent with the orderly and economic
16development of such facilities and equipment and is in accord
17with standards, criteria, or plans of need adopted and
18approved pursuant to the provisions of Section 12 of this Act.
19    (d-5) For an application for a permit to discontinue a
20hospital facility or service, the State Board shall consider:
21        (1) how the discontinuation of the facility or service
22    will impact safety net services;
23        (2) the emergency medical and trauma system impact, if
24    applicable;
25        (3) the maternal and child health impact, if
26    applicable; and

 

 

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1        (4) the economic feasibility, based on the resources
2    of the applicant and related persons, of continued
3    operation as an alternative.
4    (e) The State Board may attach conditions to issuance of a
5permit. For a discontinuation of a hospital facility or
6service, the State Board is expressly permitted to attach
7conditions requiring that certain public support or subsidies
8received by the hospital must be repaid.
9(Source: P.A. 100-518, eff. 6-1-18; 100-681, eff. 8-3-18;
10101-83, eff. 7-15-19.)
 
11    (20 ILCS 3960/6.05 new)
12    Sec. 6.05. Hospital closure during a pandemic. The State
13Board shall not issue a permit or take any other action that
14would allow closure of a general acute care hospital to
15proceed during a public health emergency declared pursuant to
16the Illinois Emergency Management Act as the result of an
17infectious disease pandemic.
 
18    (20 ILCS 3960/6.2)
19    (Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2029)
20    Sec. 6.2. Review of permits; State Board Staff Reports.
21Upon receipt of an application for a permit to establish,
22construct, or modify a health care facility, the State Board
23staff shall notify the applicant in writing within 10 working
24days either that the application is or is not substantially

 

 

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1complete. If the application is substantially complete, the
2State Board staff shall notify the applicant of the beginning
3of the review process. If the application is not substantially
4complete, the Board staff shall explain within the 10-day
5period why the application is incomplete.
6    The State Board staff shall afford a reasonable amount of
7time as established by the State Board, but not to exceed 180
8120 days, for the review of the application. The 180-day
9120-day period begins on the day the application is found to be
10substantially complete, as that term is defined by the State
11Board. During the 180-day 120-day period, the applicant may
12request an extension. An applicant may modify the application
13at any time before a final administrative decision has been
14made on the application.
15    The State Board staff shall submit its State Board Staff
16Report to the State Board for its decision-making regarding
17approval or denial of the permit.
18    When an application for a permit is initially reviewed by
19State Board staff, as provided in this Section, the State
20Board shall, upon request by the applicant or an interested
21person, afford an opportunity for a public hearing within a
22reasonable amount of time after receipt of the complete
23application, but not to exceed 90 days after receipt of the
24complete application. Notice of the hearing shall be made
25promptly, not less than 10 days before the hearing, by
26certified mail to the applicant and, not less than 10 days

 

 

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1before the hearing, by publication in a newspaper of general
2circulation in the area or community to be affected. The
3hearing shall be held in the area or community in which the
4proposed project is to be located and shall be for the purpose
5of allowing the applicant and any interested person to present
6public testimony concerning the approval, denial, renewal, or
7revocation of the permit. All interested persons attending the
8hearing shall be given a reasonable opportunity to present
9their views or arguments in writing or orally, and a record of
10all of the testimony shall accompany any findings of the State
11Board staff. The State Board shall adopt reasonable rules and
12regulations governing the procedure and conduct of the
13hearings.
14(Source: P.A. 99-114, eff. 7-23-15; 100-681, eff. 8-3-18.)
 
15    (20 ILCS 3960/8.5)
16    (Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2029)
17    Sec. 8.5. Certificate of exemption for change of ownership
18of a health care facility; discontinuation of a category of
19service; public notice and public hearing.
20    (a) Upon a finding that an application for a change of
21ownership is complete, the State Board shall publish a legal
22notice on 3 consecutive days in a newspaper of general
23circulation in the area or community to be affected and afford
24the public an opportunity to request a hearing. If the
25application is for a facility located in a Metropolitan

 

 

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1Statistical Area, an additional legal notice shall be
2published in a newspaper of limited circulation, if one
3exists, in the area in which the facility is located. If the
4newspaper of limited circulation is published on a daily
5basis, the additional legal notice shall be published on 3
6consecutive days. The applicant shall pay the cost incurred by
7the Board in publishing the change of ownership notice in
8newspapers as required under this subsection. The legal notice
9shall also be posted on the Health Facilities and Services
10Review Board's web site and sent to the State Representative
11and State Senator of the district in which the health care
12facility is located. An application for change of ownership of
13a hospital shall not be deemed complete without a signed
14certification that for a period of 2 years after the change of
15ownership transaction is effective, the hospital will not
16adopt a charity care policy that is more restrictive than the
17policy in effect during the year prior to the transaction. An
18application for change of ownership of a hospital shall not be
19deemed complete without a signed certification that for a
20period of 1 year after the change of ownership transaction is
21effective, the hospital will not pursue facility closure or
22discontinuation of any category of service. An application for
23a change of ownership need not contain signed transaction
24documents so long as it includes the following key terms of the
25transaction: names and background of the parties; structure of
26the transaction; the person who will be the licensed or

 

 

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1certified entity after the transaction; the ownership or
2membership interests in such licensed or certified entity both
3prior to and after the transaction; fair market value of
4assets to be transferred; and the purchase price or other form
5of consideration to be provided for those assets. The issuance
6of the certificate of exemption shall be contingent upon the
7applicant submitting a statement to the Board within 90 days
8after the closing date of the transaction, or such longer
9period as provided by the Board, certifying that the change of
10ownership has been completed in accordance with the key terms
11contained in the application. If such key terms of the
12transaction change, a new application shall be required.
13    Where a change of ownership is among related persons, and
14there are no other changes being proposed at the health care
15facility that would otherwise require a permit or exemption
16under this Act, the applicant shall submit an application
17consisting of a standard notice in a form set forth by the
18Board briefly explaining the reasons for the proposed change
19of ownership. Once such an application is submitted to the
20Board and reviewed by the Board staff, the Board Chair shall
21take action on an application for an exemption for a change of
22ownership among related persons within 45 days after the
23application has been deemed complete, provided the application
24meets the applicable standards under this Section. If the
25Board Chair has a conflict of interest or for other good cause,
26the Chair may request review by the Board. Notwithstanding any

 

 

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1other provision of this Act, for purposes of this Section, a
2change of ownership among related persons means a transaction
3where the parties to the transaction are under common control
4or ownership before and after the transaction is completed.
5    Nothing in this Act shall be construed as authorizing the
6Board to impose any conditions, obligations, or limitations,
7other than those required by this Section, with respect to the
8issuance of an exemption for a change of ownership, including,
9but not limited to, the time period before which a subsequent
10change of ownership of the health care facility could be
11sought, or the commitment to continue to offer for a specified
12time period any services currently offered by the health care
13facility.
14    (a-3) (Blank).
15    (a-5) Upon a finding that an application to discontinue a
16category of service is complete and provides the requested
17information, as specified by the State Board, an exemption
18shall be issued. No later than 30 days after the issuance of
19the exemption, the health care facility must give written
20notice of the discontinuation of the category of service to
21the State Senator and State Representative serving the
22legislative district in which the health care facility is
23located. No later than 90 days after a discontinuation of a
24category of service, the applicant must submit a statement to
25the State Board certifying that the discontinuation is
26complete.

 

 

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1    (b) If a public hearing is requested, it shall be held at
2least 15 days but no more than 30 days after the date of
3publication of the legal notice in the community in which the
4facility is located. The hearing shall be held in the affected
5area or community in a place of reasonable size and
6accessibility and a full and complete written transcript of
7the proceedings shall be made. All interested persons
8attending the hearing shall be given a reasonable opportunity
9to present their positions in writing or orally. The applicant
10shall provide a summary or describe the proposed change of
11ownership at the public hearing.
12    (c) For the purposes of this Section "newspaper of limited
13circulation" means a newspaper intended to serve a particular
14or defined population of a specific geographic area within a
15Metropolitan Statistical Area such as a municipality, town,
16village, township, or community area, but does not include
17publications of professional and trade associations.
18    (d) The changes made to this Section by this amendatory
19Act of the 101st General Assembly shall apply to all
20applications submitted after the effective date of this
21amendatory Act of the 101st General Assembly.
22(Source: P.A. 100-201, eff. 8-18-17; 101-83, eff. 7-15-19.)
 
23    (20 ILCS 3960/8.7)
24    (Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2029)
25    Sec. 8.7. Application for permit for discontinuation of a

 

 

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1health care facility or category of service; public notice and
2public hearing.
3    (a) Upon a finding that an application to close a health
4care facility or discontinue a category of service is
5complete, the State Board shall publish a legal notice on 3
6consecutive days in a newspaper of general circulation in the
7area or community to be affected and afford the public an
8opportunity to request a hearing. If the application is for a
9facility located in a Metropolitan Statistical Area, an
10additional legal notice shall be published in a newspaper of
11limited circulation, if one exists, in the area in which the
12facility is located. If the newspaper of limited circulation
13is published on a daily basis, the additional legal notice
14shall be published on 3 consecutive days. The legal notice
15shall also be posted on the Health Facilities and Services
16Review Board's website and sent to the State Representative
17and State Senator of the district in which the health care
18facility is located. In addition, the health care facility
19shall provide notice of closure to the local media that the
20health care facility would routinely notify about facility
21events.
22    An application to close a health care facility shall only
23be deemed complete if it includes evidence that the health
24care facility provided written notice at least 30 days prior
25to filing the application of its intent to do so to the
26municipality in which it is located, the State Representative

 

 

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1and State Senator of the district in which the health care
2facility is located, the State Board, the Director of Public
3Health, and the Director of Healthcare and Family Services.
4The changes made to this subsection by this amendatory Act of
5the 101st General Assembly shall apply to all applications
6submitted after the effective date of this amendatory Act of
7the 101st General Assembly.
8    (b) An application to close a hospital facility, or
9discontinue a hospital service if applicable, shall only be
10deemed complete when the applicant includes a list of public
11support or subsidies it has received without repaying or
12fulfilling obligations or any other public subsidies it has
13received in the past 5 years, including hospital assessment
14funded supplemental payments, capital development grants,
15public health grants, economic development grants and
16supports, and any other categories the Board may identify by
17rule. In cases of service discontinuation, this requirement
18applies if the support or subsidy is specific to the service.
19    (c) In cases of hospital facility or service
20discontinuation, a public response to a safety net impact
21statement under subsection (f) of Section 5.4, emergency
22medicine and trauma system impact statement under subsection
23(e) of Section 5.5, or maternal and child health impact
24statement under subsection (e) of Section 5.6 may request an
25investigative hearing by the full board under the procedures
26set forth in Section 13. Such request shall be granted unless

 

 

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1the Board finds the applicant has shown a likelihood there
2will be no impact on the services that are the subject of the
3request.
4    (d) No later than 30 days after issuance of a permit to
5close a health care facility or discontinue a category of
6service, the permit holder shall give written notice of the
7closure or discontinuation to the State Senator and State
8Representative serving the legislative district in which the
9health care facility is located.
10    (e) (c) If there is a pending lawsuit that challenges an
11application to discontinue a health care facility that either
12names the Board as a party or alleges fraud in the filing of
13the application, the Board may defer action on the application
14until there is no longer such a lawsuit pending for up to 6
15months after the date of the initial deferral of the
16application.
17    (f) (d) The changes made to this Section by this
18amendatory Act of the 101st General Assembly shall apply to
19all applications submitted after the effective date of this
20amendatory Act of the 101st General Assembly.
21(Source: P.A. 101-83, eff. 7-15-19; 101-650, eff. 7-7-20.)
 
22    (20 ILCS 3960/12)  (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1162)
23    (Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2029)
24    Sec. 12. Powers and duties of State Board. For purposes of
25this Act, the State Board shall exercise the following powers

 

 

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1and duties:
2        (1) Prescribe rules, regulations, standards, criteria,
3    procedures or reviews which may vary according to the
4    purpose for which a particular review is being conducted
5    or the type of project reviewed and which are required to
6    carry out the provisions and purposes of this Act.
7    Policies and procedures of the State Board shall take into
8    consideration the priorities and needs of medically
9    underserved areas and other health care services, giving
10    special consideration to the impact of projects on access
11    to safety net services.
12        (2) Adopt procedures for public notice and hearing on
13    all proposed rules, regulations, standards, criteria, and
14    plans required to carry out the provisions of this Act.
15        (3) (Blank).
16        (4) Develop criteria and standards for health care
17    facilities planning, conduct statewide inventories of
18    health care facilities, maintain an updated inventory on
19    the Board's web site reflecting the most recent bed and
20    service changes and updated need determinations when new
21    census data become available or new need formulae are
22    adopted, and develop health care facility plans which
23    shall be utilized in the review of applications for permit
24    under this Act. Such health facility plans shall be
25    coordinated by the Board with pertinent State Plans.
26    Inventories pursuant to this Section of skilled or

 

 

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1    intermediate care facilities licensed under the Nursing
2    Home Care Act, skilled or intermediate care facilities
3    licensed under the ID/DD Community Care Act, skilled or
4    intermediate care facilities licensed under the MC/DD Act,
5    facilities licensed under the Specialized Mental Health
6    Rehabilitation Act of 2013, or nursing homes licensed
7    under the Hospital Licensing Act shall be conducted on an
8    annual basis no later than July 1 of each year and shall
9    include among the information requested a list of all
10    services provided by a facility to its residents and to
11    the community at large and differentiate between active
12    and inactive beds.
13        In developing health care facility plans, the State
14    Board shall consider, but shall not be limited to, the
15    following:
16            (a) The size, composition and growth of the
17        population of the area to be served including Medicaid
18        population specifically;
19            (b) The number of existing and planned facilities
20        offering similar programs;
21            (c) The extent of utilization of existing
22        facilities including Medicaid utilization
23        specifically;
24            (d) The availability of facilities which may serve
25        as alternatives or substitutes;
26            (e) The availability of personnel necessary to the

 

 

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1        operation of the facility;
2            (f) Multi-institutional planning and the
3        establishment of multi-institutional systems where
4        feasible;
5            (g) The financial and economic feasibility of
6        proposed construction or modification; and
7            (g-5) Impact on safety net services including
8        safety net and critical access hospitals;
9            (h) In the case of health care facilities
10        established by a religious body or denomination, the
11        needs of the members of such religious body or
12        denomination may be considered to be public need; and .
13            (i) The presence and severity of health
14        disparities in the area and among the population to be
15        served. This at minimum must include consideration of
16        disparities in healthcare access and outcomes by
17        income, race and ethnic identity, and preferred
18        language.
19        The health care facility plans which are developed and
20    adopted in accordance with this Section shall form the
21    basis for the plan of the State to deal most effectively
22    with statewide health needs in regard to health care
23    facilities.
24        (5) Coordinate with other state agencies having
25    responsibilities affecting health care facilities,
26    including those of licensure and cost reporting.

 

 

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1        (6) Solicit, accept, hold and administer on behalf of
2    the State any grants or bequests of money, securities or
3    property for use by the State Board in the administration
4    of this Act; and enter into contracts consistent with the
5    appropriations for purposes enumerated in this Act.
6        (7) (Blank).
7        (7.5) Protect safety net services.
8        (8) Prescribe rules, regulations, standards, and
9    criteria for the conduct of an expeditious review of
10    applications for permits for projects of construction or
11    modification of a health care facility, which projects are
12    classified as emergency, substantive, or non-substantive
13    in nature.
14        Substantive projects shall include no more than the
15    following:
16            (a) Projects to construct (1) a new or replacement
17        facility located on a new site or (2) a replacement
18        facility located on the same site as the original
19        facility and the cost of the replacement facility
20        exceeds the capital expenditure minimum, which shall
21        be reviewed by the Board within 120 days;
22            (b) Projects proposing a (1) new service within an
23        existing healthcare facility or (2) discontinuation of
24        a service within an existing healthcare facility,
25        which shall be reviewed by the Board within 60 days; or
26            (c) Projects proposing a change in the bed

 

 

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1        capacity of a health care facility by an increase in
2        the total number of beds or by a redistribution of beds
3        among various categories of service or by a relocation
4        of beds from one physical facility or site to another
5        by more than 20 beds or more than 10% of total bed
6        capacity, as defined by the State Board, whichever is
7        less, over a 2-year period.
8        The Chairman may approve applications for exemption
9    that meet the criteria set forth in rules or refer them to
10    the full Board. The Chairman may approve any unopposed
11    application that meets all of the review criteria or refer
12    them to the full Board.
13        Such rules shall not prevent the conduct of a public
14    hearing upon the timely request of an interested party.
15    Such reviews shall not exceed 60 days from the date the
16    application is declared to be complete.
17        (9) Prescribe rules, regulations, standards, and
18    criteria pertaining to the granting of permits for
19    construction and modifications which are emergent in
20    nature and must be undertaken immediately to prevent or
21    correct structural deficiencies or hazardous conditions
22    that may harm or injure persons using the facility, as
23    defined in the rules and regulations of the State Board.
24    This procedure is exempt from public hearing requirements
25    of this Act.
26        (10) Prescribe rules, regulations, standards and

 

 

10200SB0656sam001- 55 -LRB102 13679 RJF 23172 a

1    criteria for the conduct of an expeditious review, not
2    exceeding 60 days, of applications for permits for
3    projects to construct or modify health care facilities
4    which are needed for the care and treatment of persons who
5    have acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) or related
6    conditions.
7        (10.5) Provide its rationale when voting on an item
8    before it at a State Board meeting in order to comply with
9    subsection (b) of Section 3-108 of the Code of Civil
10    Procedure.
11        (11) Issue written decisions upon request of the
12    applicant or an adversely affected party to the Board.
13    Requests for a written decision shall be made within 15
14    days after the Board meeting in which a final decision has
15    been made. A "final decision" for purposes of this Act is
16    the decision to approve or deny an application, or take
17    other actions permitted under this Act, at the time and
18    date of the meeting that such action is scheduled by the
19    Board. The transcript of the State Board meeting shall be
20    incorporated into the Board's final decision. The staff of
21    the Board shall prepare a written copy of the final
22    decision and the Board shall approve a final copy for
23    inclusion in the formal record. The Board shall consider,
24    for approval, the written draft of the final decision no
25    later than the next scheduled Board meeting. The written
26    decision shall identify the applicable criteria and

 

 

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1    factors listed in this Act and the Board's regulations
2    that were taken into consideration by the Board when
3    coming to a final decision. If the Board denies or fails to
4    approve an application for permit or exemption, the Board
5    shall include in the final decision a detailed explanation
6    as to why the application was denied and identify what
7    specific criteria or standards the applicant did not
8    fulfill.
9        (12) (Blank).
10        (13) Provide a mechanism for the public to comment on,
11    and request changes to, draft rules and standards.
12        (14) Implement public information campaigns to
13    regularly inform the general public about the opportunity
14    for public hearings and public hearing procedures.
15        (15) Establish a separate set of rules and guidelines
16    for long-term care that recognizes that nursing homes are
17    a different business line and service model from other
18    regulated facilities. An open and transparent process
19    shall be developed that considers the following: how
20    skilled nursing fits in the continuum of care with other
21    care providers, modernization of nursing homes,
22    establishment of more private rooms, development of
23    alternative services, and current trends in long-term care
24    services. The Chairman of the Board shall appoint a
25    permanent Health Services Review Board Long-term Care
26    Facility Advisory Subcommittee that shall develop and

 

 

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1    recommend to the Board the rules to be established by the
2    Board under this paragraph (15). The Subcommittee shall
3    also provide continuous review and commentary on policies
4    and procedures relative to long-term care and the review
5    of related projects. The Subcommittee shall make
6    recommendations to the Board no later than January 1, 2016
7    and every January thereafter pursuant to the
8    Subcommittee's responsibility for the continuous review
9    and commentary on policies and procedures relative to
10    long-term care. In consultation with other experts from
11    the health field of long-term care, the Board and the
12    Subcommittee shall study new approaches to the current bed
13    need formula and Health Service Area boundaries to
14    encourage flexibility and innovation in design models
15    reflective of the changing long-term care marketplace and
16    consumer preferences and submit its recommendations to the
17    Chairman of the Board no later than January 1, 2017. The
18    Subcommittee shall evaluate, and make recommendations to
19    the State Board regarding, the buying, selling, and
20    exchange of beds between long-term care facilities within
21    a specified geographic area or drive time. The Board shall
22    file the proposed related administrative rules for the
23    separate rules and guidelines for long-term care required
24    by this paragraph (15) by no later than September 30,
25    2011. The Subcommittee shall be provided a reasonable and
26    timely opportunity to review and comment on any review,

 

 

10200SB0656sam001- 58 -LRB102 13679 RJF 23172 a

1    revision, or updating of the criteria, standards,
2    procedures, and rules used to evaluate project
3    applications as provided under Section 12.3 of this Act.
4        The Chairman of the Board shall appoint voting members
5    of the Subcommittee, who shall serve for a period of 3
6    years, with one-third of the terms expiring each January,
7    to be determined by lot. Appointees shall include, but not
8    be limited to, recommendations from each of the 3
9    statewide long-term care associations, with an equal
10    number to be appointed from each. Compliance with this
11    provision shall be through the appointment and
12    reappointment process. All appointees serving as of April
13    1, 2015 shall serve to the end of their term as determined
14    by lot or until the appointee voluntarily resigns,
15    whichever is earlier.
16        One representative from the Department of Public
17    Health, the Department of Healthcare and Family Services,
18    the Department on Aging, and the Department of Human
19    Services may each serve as an ex-officio non-voting member
20    of the Subcommittee. The Chairman of the Board shall
21    select a Subcommittee Chair, who shall serve for a period
22    of 3 years.
23        (16) Prescribe the format of the State Board Staff
24    Report. A State Board Staff Report shall pertain to
25    applications that include, but are not limited to,
26    applications for permit or exemption, applications for

 

 

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1    permit renewal, applications for extension of the
2    financial commitment period, applications requesting a
3    declaratory ruling, or applications under the Health Care
4    Worker Self-Referral Act. State Board Staff Reports shall
5    compare applications to the relevant review criteria under
6    the Board's rules.
7        (17) Establish a separate set of rules and guidelines
8    for facilities licensed under the Specialized Mental
9    Health Rehabilitation Act of 2013. An application for the
10    re-establishment of a facility in connection with the
11    relocation of the facility shall not be granted unless the
12    applicant has a contractual relationship with at least one
13    hospital to provide emergency and inpatient mental health
14    services required by facility consumers, and at least one
15    community mental health agency to provide oversight and
16    assistance to facility consumers while living in the
17    facility, and appropriate services, including case
18    management, to assist them to prepare for discharge and
19    reside stably in the community thereafter. No new
20    facilities licensed under the Specialized Mental Health
21    Rehabilitation Act of 2013 shall be established after June
22    16, 2014 (the effective date of Public Act 98-651) except
23    in connection with the relocation of an existing facility
24    to a new location. An application for a new location shall
25    not be approved unless there are adequate community
26    services accessible to the consumers within a reasonable

 

 

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1    distance, or by use of public transportation, so as to
2    facilitate the goal of achieving maximum individual
3    self-care and independence. At no time shall the total
4    number of authorized beds under this Act in facilities
5    licensed under the Specialized Mental Health
6    Rehabilitation Act of 2013 exceed the number of authorized
7    beds on June 16, 2014 (the effective date of Public Act
8    98-651).
9        (18) Elect a Vice Chairman to preside over State Board
10    meetings and otherwise act in place of the Chairman when
11    the Chairman is unavailable.
12(Source: P.A. 100-518, eff. 6-1-18; 100-681, eff. 8-3-18;
13101-83, eff. 7-15-19.)
 
14    (20 ILCS 3960/12.3)
15    (Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2029)
16    Sec. 12.3. Revision of criteria, standards, and rules. At
17least every 2 years, the State Board shall review, revise, and
18update the criteria, standards, and rules used to evaluate
19applications for permit and exemption. The Board may appoint
20temporary advisory committees made up of experts with
21professional competence in the subject matter of the proposed
22standards or criteria to assist in the development of
23revisions to requirements, standards, and criteria. In
24particular, the review of the criteria, standards, and rules
25shall consider:

 

 

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1        (1) Whether the requirements, criteria, and standards
2    reflect current industry standards and anticipated trends.
3        (2) Whether the criteria and standards can be reduced
4    or eliminated.
5        (3) Whether requirements, criteria, and standards can
6    be developed to authorize the construction of unfinished
7    space for future use when the ultimate need for such space
8    can be reasonably projected.
9        (4) Whether the criteria and standards take into
10    account issues related to population growth, and changing
11    demographics, Medicaid utilization, and the presence and
12    severity of health disparities in a community, which at
13    minimum must include consideration of disparities in
14    healthcare access and outcomes by income, race and ethnic
15    identity, and preferred language.
16        (5) Whether facility-defined service and planning
17    areas should be recognized.
18        (6) Whether categories of service that are subject to
19    review should be re-evaluated, including provisions
20    related to structural, functional, and operational
21    differences between long-term care facilities and acute
22    care facilities and that allow routine changes of
23    ownership, facility sales, and closure requests to be
24    processed on a more timely basis.
25    As of July 1, 2021 and thereafter, the State Board may not
26utilize need formulae for lines of service that do not factor

 

 

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1in disparities in incidence of health conditions or other
2demonstrated need for the service.
3(Source: P.A. 99-527, eff. 1-1-17; 100-681, eff. 8-3-18.)
 
4    (20 ILCS 3960/12.4)
5    (Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2029)
6    Sec. 12.4. Hospital reduction in health care services;
7notice. If a hospital reduces any of the Categories of Service
8as outlined in Title 77, Chapter II, Part 1110 in the Illinois
9Administrative Code, or any other service as defined by rule
10by the State Board, by 50% or more according to rules adopted
11by the State Board, then within 30 days after reducing the
12service, the hospital must give written notice of the
13reduction in service to the State Board, the Department of
14Public Health, and the State Senator and State Representative
15serving the legislative district in which the hospital is
16located. If the amount of the reduction is greater than or
17equal to 5% of service inventory in the region, the State Board
18shall cause the notice to be published in the publications and
19locations listed in subsection (a) of Section 8.7. Any party
20receiving notice may request a safety net impact statement,
21emergency medicine and trauma system impact statement, or
22maternal and child health impact statement, as described at:
23(i) subsections (c) and (d) of Section 5.4; (ii) subsections
24(b) and (c) of Section 5.5; and (iii) subsections (b) and (c)
25of Section 5.6, respectively, to be filed describing impact of

 

 

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1the reduction in services. The State Board shall adopt rules
2to implement this Section, including rules that specify (i)
3how each health care service is defined, if not already
4defined in the State Board's rules, and (ii) what constitutes
5a reduction in service of 50% or more.
6(Source: P.A. 100-681, eff. 8-3-18.)
 
7    (20 ILCS 3960/13.1)  (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1163.1)
8    (Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2029)
9    Sec. 13.1. Any person establishing, constructing, or
10modifying a health care facility or portion thereof without
11obtaining a required permit, or in violation of the terms of
12the required permit, shall not be eligible to apply for any
13necessary operating licenses or be eligible for payment by any
14State agency for services rendered in that facility until the
15required permit is obtained. In cases of any person
16discontinuing a hospital facility or category of service
17without obtaining a required permit, or in violation of the
18terms of the required permit, no related person shall be
19eligible to apply for any necessary operating licenses nor
20shall any related person be eligible for payment by any State
21agency for services rendered until the required permit is
22obtained.
23(Source: P.A. 88-18.)
 
24    (20 ILCS 3960/14)  (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1164)

 

 

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1    (Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2029)
2    Sec. 14. Any person who has discontinued a hospital or a
3category of service at a hospital without a permit or
4exemption issued under this Act or in violation of the terms of
5such a permit or exemption is guilty of a business offense and
6may be fined up to $1,000,000. Any person otherwise acquiring
7major medical equipment or establishing, constructing or
8modifying a health care facility without a permit issued under
9this Act or in violation of the terms of such a permit is
10guilty of a business offense and may be fined up to $100,000
11$25,000. The State's Attorneys of the several counties or the
12Attorney General shall represent the People of the State of
13Illinois in proceedings under this Section. The State's
14Attorneys of the several counties or the Attorney General may
15additionally maintain an action in the name of the People of
16the State of Illinois for injunction or other process against
17any person or governmental unit to restrain or prevent the
18acquisition of major medical equipment, or the establishment,
19construction or modification of a health care facility without
20the required permit, or to restrain or prevent the occupancy
21or utilization of the equipment acquired or facility which was
22constructed or modified without the required permit.
23Proceedings The prosecution of an offense under this Section,
24including the prosecution of an offense, shall not prohibit
25the imposition of any other sanction provided under this Act.
26(Source: P.A. 88-18.)
 

 

 

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1    (20 ILCS 3960/14.05 new)
2    Sec. 14.05. Right of action. Any person aggrieved by a
3violation of this Act, due to a negative impact on their access
4to health care or on their health due to diminished access to
5health care, involving the discontinuation of a hospital or a
6discontinuation of a category of service at a hospital without
7a permit or exemption as required by this Act shall have a
8right of action in a State circuit court or as a supplemental
9claim in federal district court against an offending party. A
10prevailing party may recover for each violation: (i) any
11actual damages; (ii) an injunction or other relief as the
12court may deem appropriate; and (iii) reasonable attorney's
13fees.
 
14    (20 ILCS 3960/14.1)
15    (Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2029)
16    Sec. 14.1. Denial of permit; other sanctions.
17    (a) The State Board may deny an application for a permit or
18may revoke or take other action as permitted by this Act with
19regard to a permit as the State Board deems appropriate,
20including the imposition of fines as set forth in this
21Section, for any one or a combination of the following:
22        (1) The acquisition of major medical equipment without
23    a permit or in violation of the terms of a permit.
24        (2) The establishment, construction, modification, or

 

 

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1    change of ownership of a health care facility without a
2    permit or exemption or in violation of the terms of a
3    permit.
4        (3) The violation of any provision of this Act or any
5    rule adopted under this Act.
6        (4) The failure, by any person subject to this Act, to
7    provide information requested by the State Board or Agency
8    within 30 days after a formal written request for the
9    information.
10        (5) The failure to pay any fine imposed under this
11    Section within 30 days of its imposition.
12    (a-5) For facilities licensed under the ID/DD Community
13Care Act, no permit shall be denied on the basis of prior
14operator history, other than for actions specified under item
15(2), (4), or (5) of Section 3-117 of the ID/DD Community Care
16Act. For facilities licensed under the MC/DD Act, no permit
17shall be denied on the basis of prior operator history, other
18than for actions specified under item (2), (4), or (5) of
19Section 3-117 of the MC/DD Act. For facilities licensed under
20the Specialized Mental Health Rehabilitation Act of 2013, no
21permit shall be denied on the basis of prior operator history,
22other than for actions specified under subsections (a) and (b)
23of Section 4-109 of the Specialized Mental Health
24Rehabilitation Act of 2013. For facilities licensed under the
25Nursing Home Care Act, no permit shall be denied on the basis
26of prior operator history, other than for: (i) actions

 

 

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1specified under item (2), (3), (4), (5), or (6) of Section
23-117 of the Nursing Home Care Act; (ii) actions specified
3under item (a)(6) of Section 3-119 of the Nursing Home Care
4Act; or (iii) actions within the preceding 5 years
5constituting a substantial and repeated failure to comply with
6the Nursing Home Care Act or the rules and regulations adopted
7by the Department under that Act. The State Board shall not
8deny a permit on account of any action described in this
9subsection (a-5) without also considering all such actions in
10the light of all relevant information available to the State
11Board, including whether the permit is sought to substantially
12comply with a mandatory or voluntary plan of correction
13associated with any action described in this subsection (a-5).
14    (b) Persons shall be subject to fines as provided in this
15subsection (b). The maximum fines imposed under this
16subsection (b) shall be annually adjusted and proportional
17with the increase in construction costs due to inflation, for
18major medical equipment and for all other capital
19expenditures. as follows:
20        (1) A permit holder who fails to comply with the
21    requirements of maintaining a valid permit shall be fined
22    an amount not to exceed 1% of the approved permit amount
23    plus an additional 1% of the approved permit amount for
24    each 30-day period, or fraction thereof, that the
25    violation continues.
26        (2) A permit holder who alters the scope of an

 

 

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1    approved project or whose project costs exceed the
2    allowable permit amount without first obtaining approval
3    from the State Board shall be fined an amount not to exceed
4    the sum of (i) the lesser of $40,000 $25,000 or 2% of the
5    approved permit amount and (ii) in those cases where the
6    approved permit amount is exceeded by more than
7    $1,000,000, an additional $40,000 $20,000 for each
8    $1,000,000, or fraction thereof, in excess of the approved
9    permit amount.
10        (2.5) A permit or exemption holder who fails to comply
11    with the post-permit and reporting requirements set forth
12    in Sections 5 and 8.5 shall be fined an amount not to
13    exceed $18,000 $10,000 plus an additional $18,000 $10,000
14    for each 30-day period, or fraction thereof, that the
15    violation continues. The accrued fine is not waived by the
16    permit or exemption holder submitting the required
17    information and reports. Prior to any fine beginning to
18    accrue, the Board shall notify, in writing, a permit or
19    exemption holder of the due date for the post-permit and
20    reporting requirements no later than 30 days before the
21    due date for the requirements. The exemption letter shall
22    serve as the notice for exemptions.
23        (3) A person who acquires major medical equipment or
24    who establishes a category of service without first
25    obtaining a permit or exemption, as the case may be, shall
26    be fined an amount not to exceed $18,000 $10,000 for each

 

 

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1    such acquisition or category of service established plus
2    an additional $18,000 $10,000 for each 30-day period, or
3    fraction thereof, that the violation continues.
4        (4) A person who constructs, modifies, establishes, or
5    changes ownership of a health care facility without first
6    obtaining a permit or exemption shall be fined an amount
7    not to exceed $40,000 $25,000 plus an additional $40,000
8    $25,000 for each 30-day period, or fraction thereof, that
9    the violation continues.
10        (5) A person who discontinues a health care facility
11    other than a hospital or a category of service at a health
12    care facility other than a hospital without first
13    obtaining a permit or exemption shall be fined an amount
14    not to exceed $25,000 $10,000 plus an additional $25,000
15    $10,000 for each 30-day period, or fraction thereof, that
16    the violation continues. For purposes of this subparagraph
17    (5), facilities licensed under the Nursing Home Care Act,
18    the ID/DD Community Care Act, or the MC/DD Act, with the
19    exceptions of facilities operated by a county or Illinois
20    Veterans Homes, are exempt from this permit requirement.
21    However, facilities licensed under the Nursing Home Care
22    Act, the ID/DD Community Care Act, or the MC/DD Act must
23    comply with Section 3-423 of the Nursing Home Care Act,
24    Section 3-423 of the ID/DD Community Care Act, or Section
25    3-423 of the MC/DD Act and must provide the Board and the
26    Department of Human Services with 30 days' written notice

 

 

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1    of their intent to close. Facilities licensed under the
2    ID/DD Community Care Act or the MC/DD Act also must
3    provide the Board and the Department of Human Services
4    with 30 days' written notice of their intent to reduce the
5    number of beds for a facility.
6        (5.5) A person who discontinues a hospital facility or
7    category of service without first obtaining a permit or
8    exemption shall be fined an amount not to exceed $100,000
9    plus an additional $100,000 for each 30-day period, or
10    fraction thereof, that the violation continues.
11        (6) A person subject to this Act who fails to provide
12    information requested by the State Board or Agency within
13    30 days of a formal written request shall be fined an
14    amount not to exceed $2,000 $1,000 plus an additional
15    $2,000 $1,000 for each 30-day period, or fraction thereof,
16    that the information is not received by the State Board or
17    Agency.
18    (b-5) Notwithstanding any other provision of this Act, the
19State board may not accept in-kind services or donations
20instead of or in combination with any fine imposed on a person
21due to their discontinuation of a hospital or a category of
22service at a hospital. The State Board may accept in-kind
23services or donations instead of or in combination with the
24imposition of a fine. This authorization is limited to cases
25where the non-compliant individual or entity has waived the
26right to an administrative hearing or opportunity to appear

 

 

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1before the Board regarding the non-compliant matter.
2    (c) Before imposing any fine authorized under this
3Section, the State Board shall afford the person or permit
4holder, as the case may be, an appearance before the State
5Board and an opportunity for a hearing before a hearing
6officer appointed by the State Board. The hearing shall be
7conducted in accordance with Section 10. Requests for an
8appearance before the State Board must be made within 30 days
9after receiving notice that a fine will be imposed.
10    (d) All fines collected under this Act shall be
11transmitted to the State Treasurer, who shall deposit them
12into the Illinois Health Facilities Planning Fund.
13    (e) Fines imposed under this Section shall continue to
14accrue until: (i) the date that the matter is referred by the
15State Board to the Board's legal counsel; or (ii) the date that
16the health care facility becomes compliant with the Act,
17whichever is earlier.
18(Source: P.A. 99-114, eff. 7-23-15; 99-180, eff. 7-29-15;
1999-527, eff. 1-1-17; 99-642, eff. 6-28-16; 100-681, eff.
208-3-18.)
 
21    (20 ILCS 3960/14.2 new)
22    Sec. 14.2. Receivership.
23    (a) Should a person attempt to discontinue a hospital
24facility or category of service without first obtaining a
25permit or exemption, the State Board may file a verified

 

 

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1petition to the circuit court for the county in which the
2facility is located for an order placing the facility under
3the control of a receiver.
4    (b) The court shall hold a hearing within 5 days after the
5filing of the petition. The petition and notice of the hearing
6shall be served on the owner, administrator or designated
7agent of the facility as provided under the Civil Practice
8Law, or the petition and notice of hearing shall be posted in a
9conspicuous place in the facility not later than 3 days before
10the time specified for the hearing, unless a different period
11is fixed by order of the court.
12    (c) The court may appoint any qualified person as
13receiver, except it shall not appoint any owner or related
14person of the facility which is in receivership as its
15receiver. The State Board shall maintain a list of such
16persons to operate facilities which the court may consider.
17    (d) The receiver shall make provisions for the continued
18health, safety, and welfare of all patients utilizing the
19facility.
20    (e) A receiver appointed under this Act:
21        (1) Shall exercise those powers and shall perform
22    those duties set out by the court.
23        (2) Shall operate the facility in such a manner as to
24    assure the safety and adequate health care for patients.
25        (3) Shall have the same rights to possession of the
26    building in which the facility is located and all goods

 

 

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1    and fixtures in the building at the time the petition for
2    receivership is filed as the owner would have had if the
3    receiver had not been appointed, and of all assets of the
4    facility. The receiver shall take such action as
5    reasonably necessary to protect or conserve the assets or
6    property of which the receiver takes possession, or the
7    proceeds from any transfer thereof, and may use them only
8    in the performance of the powers and duties set forth in
9    this Section and by order of the court.
10        (4) May use the building, fixtures, furnishing and any
11    accompanying consumable goods in the provision of care and
12    services to patients receiving services from the facility.
13    The receiver shall collect payments for all goods and
14    services provided to patients during the period of the
15    receivership at the same rate of payment charged by the
16    operator at the time the petition for receivership was
17    filed.
18        (5) May let contracts and hire agents and employees to
19    carry out the powers and duties of the receiver under this
20    Section.
21        (6) Shall honor all leases, mortgages and secured
22    transactions governing the building in which the facility
23    is located and all goods and fixtures in the building of
24    which the receiver has taken possession, but only to the
25    extent of payment which, in the case of a purchase
26    agreement, come due during the period of receivership.

 

 

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1        (7) Shall have full power to direct and manage and to
2    discharge employees of the facility, subject to any
3    contract rights they may have. The receiver shall pay
4    employees at minimum the same rate of compensation,
5    including benefits, that the employees would have received
6    from the obligation to employees not carried out by the
7    receiver.
8        (8) Shall report to the court any actions they believe
9    should be continued when the receivership is terminated.
10    (f) A person who is served with notice of an order of the
11court appointing a receiver and of the receiver's name and
12address shall be liable to pay the receiver for any goods or
13services provided by the receiver after the date of the date of
14the order if the person would have been liable for the goods or
15services as supplied by the owner. The receiver shall give a
16receipt for each payment and shall keep a copy of each receipt
17on file. The receiver shall deposit amounts received in a
18separate account and shall use this account for all
19disbursements. The receiver may bring an action to enforce the
20liability created by this subsection.
21    (g) If there are insufficient fund on hand to meet the
22expenses of performing the powers and duties conferred on the
23receiver, the State Board may reimburse the receiver for those
24expenses from funds appropriated for its ordinary and
25contingent expenses by the General Assembly.
26    (h) In any action or special proceeding brought against a

 

 

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1receiver in the receiver's official capacity for acts
2committed while carrying out powers and duties under this
3Section, the receiver shall be considered a public employee. A
4receiver may be held liable in a personal capacity only for the
5receivers own gross negligence, intentional acts, or breach of
6fiduciary duty.
7    (i) Other provisions of this Act notwithstanding, the
8Department may issue a license to a facility placed in
9receivership. The duration of a license issued under this
10Section is limited to the duration of the receivership.
11    (j) The court may terminate a receivership at any time if
12it determines that the receivership is no longer necessary
13because the conditions which gave rise to the receivership no
14longer exist, either because the person attempting to
15discontinue the hospital facility or category of service
16without first obtaining a permit has obtained a permit
17allowing them to do so, or because the person attempting to
18discontinue the hospital facility or category of service
19without first obtaining a permit has ceased attempting to
20discontinue the hospital facility or category of service
21without first obtaining a permit.
 
22    Section 15. The Illinois Public Aid Code is amended by
23changing Section 5A-17 as follows:
 
24    (305 ILCS 5/5A-17)

 

 

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1    Sec. 5A-17. Recovery of payments; liens.
2    (a) As a condition of receiving payments pursuant to
3subsections (d) and (k) of Section 5A-12.7 for State Fiscal
4Year 2021, a for-profit general acute care hospital that
5ceases to provide hospital services before July 1, 2021 and
6within 12 months of a change in the hospital's ownership
7status from not-for-profit to investor owned, shall be
8obligated to pay to the Department an amount equal to the
9payments received pursuant to subsections (d) and (k) of
10Section 5A-12.7 since the change in ownership status to the
11cessation of hospital services. The obligated amount shall be
12due immediately and must be paid to the Department within 10
13days of ceasing to provide services or pursuant to a payment
14plan approved by the Department unless the hospital requests a
15hearing under paragraph (d) of this Section. The obligation
16under this Section shall not apply to a hospital that ceases to
17provide services under circumstances that include:
18implementation of a transformation project approved by the
19Department under subsection (d-5) of Section 14-12;
20emergencies as declared by federal, State, or local
21government; actions approved or required by federal, State, or
22local government; actions taken in compliance with the
23Illinois Health Facilities Planning Act; or other
24circumstances beyond the control of the hospital provider or
25for the benefit of the community previously served by the
26hospital, as determined on a case-by-case basis by the

 

 

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1Department.
2    (a-5) As a condition of receiving payments pursuant to
3subsections (d) and (k) of Section 5A-12.7 for calendar year
42021, a general acute care hospital that ceases to provide
5hospital services before January 1, 2022 shall be obligated to
6pay to the Department an amount equal to the payments received
7pursuant to subsections (d) and (k) of Section 5A-12.7 up to
8the cessation of hospital services. The obligated amount shall
9be due immediately and must be paid to the Department within 30
10days of ceasing to provide services, or pursuant to a payment
11plan approved by the Department. The obligation under this
12Section shall not apply to a hospital that ceases to provide
13services under circumstances that include: (i) implementation
14of a transformation project approved under subsection (d-5) of
15Section 14-12; (ii) emergencies as declared by federal, State,
16or local government; (iii) actions approved or required by
17federal, State, or local government; (iv) actions taken in
18compliance with the Illinois Health Facilities Planning Act;
19or (v) other circumstances beyond the control of the hospital
20provider or for the benefit of the community previously served
21by the hospital, as determined on a case-by-case basis by the
22Department.
23    (b) The Illinois Department shall administer and enforce
24this Section and collect the obligations imposed under this
25Section using procedures employed in its administration of
26this Code generally. The Illinois Department, its Director,

 

 

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1and every hospital provider subject to this Section shall have
2the following powers, duties, and rights:
3        (1) The Illinois Department may initiate either
4    administrative or judicial proceedings, or both, to
5    enforce the provisions of this Section. Administrative
6    enforcement proceedings initiated hereunder shall be
7    governed by the Illinois Department's administrative
8    rules. Judicial enforcement proceedings initiated in
9    accordance with this Section shall be governed by the
10    rules of procedure applicable in the courts of this State.
11        (2) No proceedings for collection, refund, credit, or
12    other adjustment of an amount payable under this Section
13    shall be issued more than 3 years after the due date of the
14    obligation, except in the case of an extended period
15    agreed to in writing by the Illinois Department and the
16    hospital provider before the expiration of this limitation
17    period.
18        (3) Any unpaid obligation under this Section shall
19    become a lien upon the assets of the hospital. If any
20    hospital provider sells or transfers the major part of any
21    one or more of (i) the real property and improvements,
22    (ii) the machinery and equipment, or (iii) the furniture
23    or fixtures of any hospital that is subject to the
24    provisions of this Section, the seller or transferor shall
25    pay the Illinois Department the amount of any obligation
26    due from it under this Section up to the date of the sale

 

 

10200SB0656sam001- 79 -LRB102 13679 RJF 23172 a

1    or transfer. If the seller or transferor fails to pay any
2    amount due under this Section, the purchaser or transferee
3    of such asset shall be liable for the amount of the
4    obligation up to the amount of the reasonable value of the
5    property acquired by the purchaser or transferee. The
6    purchaser or transferee shall continue to be liable until
7    the purchaser or transferee pays the full amount of the
8    obligation up to the amount of the reasonable value of the
9    property acquired by the purchaser or transferee or until
10    the purchaser or transferee receives from the Illinois
11    Department a certificate showing that such assessment,
12    penalty, and interest have been paid or a certificate from
13    the Illinois Department showing that no amount is due from
14    the seller or transferor under this Section.
15    (c) In addition to any other remedy provided for, the
16Illinois Department may collect an unpaid obligation by
17withholding, as payment of the amount due, reimbursements or
18other amounts otherwise payable by the Illinois Department to
19the hospital provider.
20(Source: P.A. 101-650, eff. 7-7-20.)
 
21    Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon
22becoming law.".