103RD GENERAL ASSEMBLY
State of Illinois
2023 and 2024
HB5889

 

Introduced 11/12/2024, by Rep. Dagmara Avelar

 

SYNOPSIS AS INTRODUCED:
 
30 ILCS 708/10
30 ILCS 708/15
30 ILCS 708/25
30 ILCS 708/30
30 ILCS 708/50
30 ILCS 708/60
30 ILCS 708/65
30 ILCS 708/97  was 30 ILCS 708/520

    Amends the Grant Accountability and Transparency Act. Makes various changes concerning references to the Code of Federal Regulations. Defines the following terms: "assistance listing", "assistance listing number", "fringe benefits", "Illinois Stop Payment List", and "Unique Entity Identifier". Makes changes to the definition of "direct costs". Provides that, with certain exceptions, the frequency of reports by recipients and subrecipients with respect to performance goals, indicators, and milestones required shall not be more frequent than quarterly. Provides that the Governor's Office of Management and Budget shall promote best practices for disseminating information about grant opportunities to grant-making agencies statewide, with an emphasis on reaching previously underserved communities and grantees. Provides that provisions requiring nonprofit organizations to maintain separate accounts for State grant funds do not apply to grant payments that are made as reimbursements. Makes other changes.


LRB103 42005 HLH 75757 b

 

 

A BILL FOR

 

HB5889LRB103 42005 HLH 75757 b

1    AN ACT concerning State government.
 
2    Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
3represented in the General Assembly:
 
4    Section 5. The Grant Accountability and Transparency Act
5is amended by changing Sections 10, 15, 25, 30, 50, 60, 65, and
697 as follows:
 
7    (30 ILCS 708/10)
8    Sec. 10. Purpose. The purpose of this Act is to establish
9uniform administrative requirements, cost principles, and
10audit requirements for State and federal pass-through awards
11to non-federal entities. State awarding agencies shall not
12impose additional or inconsistent requirements, except as
13provided in 2 CFR Part 200, Subpart B - General Provisions 2
14CFR 200.102, unless specifically required by State or federal
15statute. This Act and the rules adopted under this Act do not
16apply to private awards.
17    This Act and the rules adopted under this Act provide the
18basis for a systematic and periodic collection and uniform
19submission to the Governor's Office of Management and Budget
20of information of all State and federal financial assistance
21programs by State grant-making agencies. This Act also
22establishes policies related to the delivery of this
23information to the public, including through the use of

 

 

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1electronic media.
2(Source: P.A. 98-706, eff. 7-16-14.)
 
3    (30 ILCS 708/15)
4    Sec. 15. Definitions. As used in this Act:
5    "Allowable cost" means a cost allowable to a project if:
6        (1) the costs are reasonable and necessary for the
7    performance of the award;
8        (2) the costs are allocable to the specific project;
9        (3) the costs are treated consistently in like
10    circumstances to both federally-financed and other
11    activities of the non-federal entity;
12        (4) the costs conform to any limitations of the cost
13    principles or the sponsored agreement;
14        (5) the costs are accorded consistent treatment; a
15    cost may not be assigned to a State or federal award as a
16    direct cost if any other cost incurred for the same
17    purpose in like circumstances has been allocated to the
18    award as an indirect cost;
19        (6) the costs are determined to be in accordance with
20    generally accepted accounting principles;
21        (7) the costs are not included as a cost or used to
22    meet federal cost-sharing or matching requirements of any
23    other program in either the current or prior period;
24        (8) the costs of one State or federal grant are not
25    used to meet the match requirements of another State or

 

 

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1    federal grant; and
2        (9) the costs are adequately documented.
3    "Assistance listings" means the publicly available listing
4of federal assistance programs managed and administered by the
5General Services Administration, formerly known as the Catalog
6of Federal Domestic Assistance (CFDA).
7    "Assistance listing number" or "ALN" means a unique number
8assigned to identify a federal assistance listing, formerly
9known as the CFDA Number.
10    "Auditee" means any non-federal entity that expends State
11or federal awards that must be audited.
12    "Auditor" means an auditor who is a public accountant or a
13federal, State, or local government audit organization that
14meets the general standards specified in generally-accepted
15government auditing standards. "Auditor" does not include
16internal auditors of nonprofit organizations.
17    "Auditor General" means the Auditor General of the State
18of Illinois.
19    "Award" means financial assistance that provides support
20or stimulation to accomplish a public purpose. "Awards"
21include grants and other agreements in the form of money, or
22property in lieu of money, by the State or federal government
23to an eligible recipient. "Award" does not include: technical
24assistance that provides services instead of money; other
25assistance in the form of loans, loan guarantees, interest
26subsidies, or insurance; direct payments of any kind to

 

 

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1individuals; or contracts that must be entered into and
2administered under State or federal procurement laws and
3regulations.
4    "Budget" means the financial plan for the project or
5program that the awarding agency or pass-through entity
6approves during the award process or in subsequent amendments
7to the award. It may include the State or federal and
8non-federal share or only the State or federal share, as
9determined by the awarding agency or pass-through entity.
10    "Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance" or "CFDA" means a
11database that helps the federal government track all programs
12it has domestically funded.
13    "Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance number" or "CFDA
14number" means the number assigned to a federal program in the
15CFDA.
16    "Catalog of State Financial Assistance" means the single,
17authoritative, statewide, comprehensive source document of
18State financial assistance program information maintained by
19the Governor's Office of Management and Budget.
20    "Catalog of State Financial Assistance Number" means the
21number assigned to a State program in the Catalog of State
22Financial Assistance. The first 3 digits represent the State
23agency number and the last 4 digits represent the program.
24    "Cluster of programs" means a grouping of closely related
25programs that share common compliance requirements. The types
26of clusters of programs are research and development, student

 

 

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1financial aid, and other clusters. A "cluster of programs"
2shall be considered as one program for determining major
3programs and, with the exception of research and development,
4whether a program-specific audit may be elected.
5    "Cognizant agency for audit" means the federal agency
6designated to carry out the responsibilities described in 2
7CFR Part 200, Subpart F - Audit Requirements 2 CFR 200.513(a).
8    "Contract" means a legal instrument by which a non-federal
9entity purchases property or services needed to carry out the
10project or program under an award. "Contract" does not include
11a legal instrument, even if the non-federal entity considers
12it a contract, when the substance of the transaction meets the
13definition of an award or subaward.
14    "Contractor" means an entity that receives a contract, as
15defined in this Act.
16    "Cooperative agreement" means a legal instrument of
17financial assistance between an awarding agency or
18pass-through entity and a non-federal entity that:
19        (1) is used to enter into a relationship with the
20    principal purpose of transferring anything of value from
21    the awarding agency or pass-through entity to the
22    non-federal entity to carry out a public purpose
23    authorized by law, but is not used to acquire property or
24    services for the awarding agency's or pass-through
25    entity's direct benefit or use; and
26        (2) is distinguished from a grant in that it provides

 

 

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1    for substantial involvement between the awarding agency or
2    pass-through entity and the non-federal entity in carrying
3    out the activity contemplated by the award.
4    "Cooperative agreement" does not include a cooperative
5research and development agreement, nor an agreement that
6provides only direct cash assistance to an individual, a
7subsidy, a loan, a loan guarantee, or insurance.
8    "Corrective action" means action taken by the auditee that
9(i) corrects identified deficiencies, (ii) produces
10recommended improvements, or (iii) demonstrates that audit
11findings are either invalid or do not warrant auditee action.
12    "Cost objective" means a program, function, activity,
13award, organizational subdivision, contract, or work unit for
14which cost data is desired and for which provision is made to
15accumulate and measure the cost of processes, products, jobs,
16and capital projects. A "cost objective" may be a major
17function of the non-federal entity, a particular service or
18project, an award, or an indirect cost activity.
19    "Cost sharing" means the portion of project costs not paid
20by State or federal funds, unless otherwise authorized by
21statute.
22    "Development" is the systematic use of knowledge and
23understanding gained from research directed toward the
24production of useful materials, devices, systems, or methods,
25including design and development of prototypes and processes.
26    "Data Universal Numbering System number" means the 9-digit

 

 

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1number established and assigned by Dun and Bradstreet, Inc. to
2uniquely identify entities and, under federal law, is required
3for non-federal entities to apply for, receive, and report on
4a federal award.
5    "Direct costs" means:
6        (1) costs that can be identified specifically with a
7    particular final cost objective, such as a State or
8    federal or federal pass-through award or a particular
9    sponsored project, an instructional activity, or any other
10    institutional activity, or that can be directly assigned
11    to such activities relatively easily with a high degree of
12    accuracy; .
13        (2) costs charged directly to a State or federal award
14    that are for the compensation of employees who work on
15    that award, their related fringe benefits, or the costs of
16    materials and other items of expense incurred for the
17    State or federal award;
18        (3) costs that are directly related to a specific
19    award but that would otherwise be treated as indirect
20    costs;
21        (4) salaries of administrative and clerical staff only
22    if all the following conditions are met:
23            (A) the individual's services are integral to a
24        project or activity;
25            (B) the individual can be specifically identified
26        with the project or activity;

 

 

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1            (C) the costs are explicitly included in the
2        budget or have the prior written approval of the State
3        awarding agency; and
4            (D) the costs are not also recovered as indirect
5        costs.
6    Costs incurred for the same purpose in like circumstances
7must be treated consistently as either direct costs or
8indirect costs.
9    "Equipment" means tangible personal property (including
10information technology systems) having a useful life of more
11than one year and a per-unit acquisition cost that equals or
12exceeds the lesser of the capitalization level established by
13the non-federal entity for financial statement purposes, or
14$5,000.
15    "Executive branch" means that branch of State government
16that is under the jurisdiction of the Governor.
17    "Federal agency" has the meaning provided for "agency"
18under 5 U.S.C. 551(1) together with the meaning provided for
19"agency" by 5 U.S.C. 552(f).
20    "Federal award" means:
21        (1) the federal financial assistance that a
22    non-federal entity receives directly from a federal
23    awarding agency or indirectly from a pass-through entity;
24        (2) the cost-reimbursement contract under the Federal
25    Acquisition Regulations that a non-federal entity receives
26    directly from a federal awarding agency or indirectly from

 

 

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1    a pass-through entity; or
2        (3) the instrument setting forth the terms and
3    conditions when the instrument is the grant agreement,
4    cooperative agreement, other agreement for assistance
5    covered in 2 CFR Part 200, Subpart A 2 CFR 200, Subpart A,
6    Acronyms and Definitions, or the cost-reimbursement
7    contract awarded under the Federal Acquisition
8    Regulations.
9    "Federal award" does not include other contracts that a
10federal agency uses to buy goods or services from a contractor
11or a contract to operate federal government owned,
12contractor-operated facilities.
13    "Federal awarding agency" means the federal agency that
14provides a federal award directly to a non-federal entity.
15    "Federal interest" means, for purposes of 2 CFR 200,
16Subpart D, Post Federal Award Requirements (Performance and
17Financial Monitoring and Reporting) or when used in connection
18with the acquisition or improvement of real property,
19equipment, or supplies under a federal award, the dollar
20amount that is the product of the federal share of total
21project costs and current fair market value of the property,
22improvements, or both, to the extent the costs of acquiring or
23improving the property were included as project costs.
24    "Federal program" means any of the following:
25        (1) All federal awards which are assigned a single
26    number in the assistance listings CFDA.

 

 

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1        (2) When no assistance listing CFDA number is
2    assigned, all federal awards to non-federal entities from
3    the same agency made for the same purpose should be
4    combined and considered one program.
5        (3) Notwithstanding paragraphs (1) and (2) of this
6    definition, a cluster of programs. The types of clusters
7    of programs are:
8            (A) research and development;
9            (B) student financial aid; and
10            (C) "other clusters", as described in the
11        definition of "cluster of programs".
12    "Federal share" means the portion of the total project
13costs that are paid by federal funds.
14    "Final cost objective" means a cost objective which has
15allocated to it both direct and indirect costs and, in the
16non-federal entity's accumulation system, is one of the final
17accumulation points, such as a particular award, internal
18project, or other direct activity of a non-federal entity.
19    "Financial assistance" means the following:
20        (1) For grants and cooperative agreements, "financial
21    assistance" means assistance that non-federal entities
22    receive or administer in the form of:
23            (A) grants;
24            (B) cooperative agreements;
25            (C) non-cash contributions or donations of
26        property, including donated surplus property;

 

 

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1            (D) direct appropriations;
2            (E) food commodities; and
3            (F) other financial assistance, except assistance
4        listed in paragraph (2) of this definition.
5        (2) "Financial assistance" includes assistance that
6    non-federal entities receive or administer in the form of
7    loans, loan guarantees, interest subsidies, and insurance.
8        (3) "Financial assistance" does not include amounts
9    received as reimbursement for services rendered to
10    individuals.
11    "Fixed amount awards" means a type of grant agreement
12under which the awarding agency or pass-through entity
13provides a specific level of support without regard to actual
14costs incurred under the award. "Fixed amount awards" reduce
15some of the administrative burden and record-keeping
16requirements for both the non-federal entity and awarding
17agency or pass-through entity. Accountability is based
18primarily on performance and results.
19    "Foreign public entity" means:
20        (1) a foreign government or foreign governmental
21    entity;
22        (2) a public international organization that is
23    entitled to enjoy privileges, exemptions, and immunities
24    as an international organization under the International
25    Organizations Immunities Act (22 U.S.C. 288-288f);
26        (3) an entity owned, in whole or in part, or

 

 

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1    controlled by a foreign government; or
2        (4) any other entity consisting wholly or partially of
3    one or more foreign governments or foreign governmental
4    entities.
5    "Foreign organization" means an entity that is:
6        (1) a public or private organization located in a
7    country other than the United States and its territories
8    that are subject to the laws of the country in which it is
9    located, irrespective of the citizenship of project staff
10    or place of performance;
11        (2) a private nongovernmental organization located in
12    a country other than the United States that solicits and
13    receives cash contributions from the general public;
14        (3) a charitable organization located in a country
15    other than the United States that is nonprofit and tax
16    exempt under the laws of its country of domicile and
17    operation, but is not a university, college, accredited
18    degree-granting institution of education, private
19    foundation, hospital, organization engaged exclusively in
20    research or scientific activities, church, synagogue,
21    mosque, or other similar entity organized primarily for
22    religious purposes; or
23        (4) an organization located in a country other than
24    the United States not recognized as a Foreign Public
25    Entity.
26    "Fringe benefits" has the same meaning as provided in 2

 

 

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1CFR Part 200, Subpart E - Cost Principles.
2    "Generally Accepted Accounting Principles" has the meaning
3provided in accounting standards issued by the Government
4Accounting Standards Board and the Financial Accounting
5Standards Board.
6    "Generally Accepted Government Auditing Standards" means
7generally accepted government auditing standards issued by the
8Comptroller General of the United States that are applicable
9to financial audits.
10    "Grant agreement" means a legal instrument of financial
11assistance between an awarding agency or pass-through entity
12and a non-federal entity that:
13        (1) is used to enter into a relationship, the
14    principal purpose of which is to transfer anything of
15    value from the awarding agency or pass-through entity to
16    the non-federal entity to carry out a public purpose
17    authorized by law and not to acquire property or services
18    for the awarding agency or pass-through entity's direct
19    benefit or use; and
20        (2) is distinguished from a cooperative agreement in
21    that it does not provide for substantial involvement
22    between the awarding agency or pass-through entity and the
23    non-federal entity in carrying out the activity
24    contemplated by the award.
25    "Grant agreement" does not include an agreement that
26provides only direct cash assistance to an individual, a

 

 

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1subsidy, a loan, a loan guarantee, or insurance.
2    "Grant application" means a specified form that is
3completed by a non-federal entity in connection with a request
4for a specific funding opportunity or a request for financial
5support of a project or activity.
6    "Hospital" means a facility licensed as a hospital under
7the law of any state or a facility operated as a hospital by
8the United States, a state, or a subdivision of a state.
9    "Illinois Stop Payment List" or "Illinois Debarred and
10Suspended List" means the list maintained by the Governor's
11Office of Management and Budget that contains the names of
12those individuals and entities that are ineligible, either
13temporarily or permanently, from receiving an award of grant
14funds from the State.
15    "Indirect cost" means those costs incurred for a common or
16joint purpose benefitting more than one cost objective and not
17readily assignable to the cost objectives specifically
18benefitted without effort disproportionate to the results
19achieved.
20    "Inspector General" means the Office of the Executive
21Inspector General for Executive branch agencies.
22    "Loan" means a State or federal loan or loan guarantee
23received or administered by a non-federal entity. "Loan" does
24not include a "program income" as defined in 2 CFR 200, Subpart
25A, Acronyms and Definitions.
26    "Loan guarantee" means any State or federal government

 

 

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1guarantee, insurance, or other pledge with respect to the
2payment of all or a part of the principal or interest on any
3debt obligation of a non-federal borrower to a non-federal
4lender, but does not include the insurance of deposits,
5shares, or other withdrawable accounts in financial
6institutions.
7    "Local government" has the meaning provided for the term
8"units of local government" under Section 1 of Article VII of
9the Illinois Constitution and includes school districts.
10    "Major program" means a federal program determined by the
11auditor to be a major program in accordance with 2 CFR Part
12200, Subpart F - Audit Requirements 2 CFR 200.518 or a program
13identified as a major program by a federal awarding agency or
14pass-through entity in accordance with 2 CFR Part 200, Subpart
15F - Audit Requirements 2 CFR 200.503(e).
16    "Non-federal entity" means a state, local government,
17Indian tribe, institution of higher education, or
18organization, whether nonprofit or for-profit, that carries
19out a State or federal award as a recipient or subrecipient.
20    "Nonprofit organization" means any corporation, trust,
21association, cooperative, or other organization, not including
22institutions of higher education, that:
23        (1) is operated primarily for scientific, educational,
24    service, charitable, or similar purposes in the public
25    interest;
26        (2) is not organized primarily for profit; and

 

 

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1        (3) uses net proceeds to maintain, improve, or expand
2    the operations of the organization.
3    "Obligations", when used in connection with a non-federal
4entity's utilization of funds under an award, means orders
5placed for property and services, contracts and subawards
6made, and similar transactions during a given period that
7require payment by the non-federal entity during the same or a
8future period.
9    "Office of Management and Budget" means the Office of
10Management and Budget of the Executive Office of the
11President.
12    "Other clusters" has the meaning provided by the federal
13Office of Management and Budget in the compliance supplement
14or has the meaning as it is designated by a state for federal
15awards the state provides to its subrecipients that meet the
16definition of a cluster of programs. When designating an
17"other cluster", a state must identify the federal awards
18included in the cluster and advise the subrecipients of
19compliance requirements applicable to the cluster.
20    "Oversight agency for audit" means the federal awarding
21agency that provides the predominant amount of funding
22directly to a non-federal entity not assigned a cognizant
23agency for audit. When there is no direct funding, the
24awarding agency that is the predominant source of pass-through
25funding must assume the oversight responsibilities. The duties
26of the oversight agency for audit and the process for any

 

 

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1reassignments are described in 2 CFR Part 200, Subpart F -
2Audit Requirements 2 CFR 200.513(b).
3    "Pass-through entity" means a non-federal entity that
4provides a subaward to a subrecipient to carry out part of a
5program.
6    "Private award" means an award from a person or entity
7other than a State or federal entity. Private awards are not
8subject to the provisions of this Act.
9    "Property" means real property or personal property.
10    "Project cost" means total allowable costs incurred under
11an award and all required cost sharing and voluntary committed
12cost sharing, including third-party contributions.
13    "Public institutions of higher education" has the meaning
14provided in Section 1 of the Board of Higher Education Act.
15    "Recipient" means a non-federal entity that receives an
16award directly from an awarding agency to carry out an
17activity under a program. "Recipient" does not include
18subrecipients or individuals who are beneficiaries of the
19award.
20    "Research and Development" means all research activities,
21both basic and applied, and all development activities that
22are performed by non-federal entities.
23    "Single Audit Act" means the federal Single Audit Act
24Amendments of 1996 (31 U.S.C. 7501-7507).
25    "State agency" means an Executive branch agency. For
26purposes of this Act, "State agency" does not include public

 

 

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1institutions of higher education.
2    "State award" means the financial assistance that a
3non-federal entity receives from the State and that is funded
4with either State funds or federal funds; in the latter case,
5the State is acting as a pass-through entity.
6    "State awarding agency" means a State agency that provides
7an award to a non-federal entity.
8    "State grant-making agency" has the same meaning as "State
9awarding agency".
10    "State interest" means the acquisition or improvement of
11real property, equipment, or supplies under a State award, the
12dollar amount that is the product of the State share of the
13total project costs and current fair market value of the
14property, improvements, or both, to the extent the costs of
15acquiring or improving the property were included as project
16costs.
17    "State program" means any of the following:
18        (1) All State awards which are assigned a single
19    number in the Catalog of State Financial Assistance.
20        (2) When no Catalog of State Financial Assistance
21    number is assigned, all State awards to non-federal
22    entities from the same agency made for the same purpose
23    are considered one program.
24        (3) A cluster of programs as defined in this Section.
25    "State share" means the portion of the total project costs
26that are paid by State funds.

 

 

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1    "Stop payment order" means a communication from a State
2grant-making agency to the Office of the Comptroller,
3following procedures set out by the Office of the Comptroller,
4causing the cessation of payments to a recipient or
5subrecipient as a result of the recipient's or subrecipient's
6failure to comply with one or more terms of the grant or
7subaward.
8    "Stop payment procedure" means the procedure created by
9the Office of the Comptroller which effects a stop payment
10order and the lifting of a stop payment order upon the request
11of the State grant-making agency.
12    "Student Financial Aid" means federal awards under those
13programs of general student assistance, such as those
14authorized by Title IV of the Higher Education Act of 1965, as
15amended (20 U.S.C. 1070-1099d), that are administered by the
16United States Department of Education and similar programs
17provided by other federal agencies. "Student Financial Aid"
18does not include federal awards under programs that provide
19fellowships or similar federal awards to students on a
20competitive basis or for specified studies or research.
21    "Subaward" means a State or federal award provided by a
22pass-through entity to a subrecipient for the subrecipient to
23carry out part of a federal award received by the pass-through
24entity. "Subaward" does not include payments to a contractor
25or payments to an individual that is a beneficiary of a federal
26program. A "subaward" may be provided through any form of

 

 

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1legal agreement, including an agreement that the pass-through
2entity considers a contract.
3    "Subrecipient" means a non-federal entity that receives a
4State or federal subaward from a pass-through entity to carry
5out part of a State or federal program. "Subrecipient" does
6not include an individual that is a beneficiary of such
7program. A "subrecipient" may also be a recipient of other
8State or federal awards directly from a State or federal
9awarding agency.
10    "Suspension" means a post-award action by the State or
11federal agency or pass-through entity that temporarily
12withdraws the State or federal agency's or pass-through
13entity's financial assistance sponsorship under an award,
14pending corrective action by the recipient or subrecipient or
15pending a decision to terminate the award.
16    "Uniform Administrative Requirements, Costs Principles,
17and Audit Requirements for Federal Awards" means those rules
18applicable to grants contained in 2 CFR Part 200.
19    "Unique Entity Identifier" means the number that is
20established and assigned by the federal government on the
21System for Award Management website (SAM.gov) to uniquely
22identify entities and, under federal law, is required for
23nonfederal entities to apply for, receive, and report on a
24federal award.
25    "Voluntary committed cost sharing" means cost sharing
26specifically pledged on a voluntary basis in the proposal's

 

 

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1budget or the award on the part of the non-federal entity and
2that becomes a binding requirement of the award.
3(Source: P.A. 103-616, eff. 7-1-24.)
 
4    (30 ILCS 708/25)
5    Sec. 25. Supplemental rules. On or before July 1, 2017,
6the Governor's Office of Management and Budget, with the
7advice and technical assistance of the Illinois Single Audit
8Commission, shall adopt supplemental rules pertaining to the
9following:
10        (1) Criteria to define mandatory formula-based grants
11    and discretionary grants.
12        (2) The award of one-year grants for new applicants.
13        (3) The award of competitive grants in 3-year terms
14    (one-year initial terms with the option to renew for up to
15    2 additional years) to coincide with the federal award.
16        (4) The issuance of grants, including:
17            (A) public notice of announcements of funding
18        opportunities;
19            (B) the development of uniform grant applications;
20            (C) State agency review of merit of proposals and
21        risk posed by applicants;
22            (D) specific conditions for individual recipients
23        (including the use of a fiscal agent and additional
24        corrective conditions);
25            (E) certifications and representations;

 

 

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1            (F) pre-award costs;
2            (G) performance measures and statewide prioritized
3        goals under Section 50-25 of the State Budget Law of
4        the Civil Administrative Code of Illinois, commonly
5        referred to as "Budgeting for Results"; and
6            (H) for mandatory formula grants, the merit of the
7        proposal and the risk posed should result in
8        additional reporting, monitoring, or measures such as
9        reimbursement-basis only.
10        (5) The development of uniform budget requirements,
11    which shall include:
12            (A) mandatory submission of budgets as part of the
13        grant application process;
14            (B) mandatory requirements regarding contents of
15        the budget including, at a minimum, common detail line
16        items specified under guidelines issued by the
17        Governor's Office of Management and Budget;
18            (C) a requirement that the budget allow
19        flexibility to add lines describing costs that are
20        common for the services provided as outlined in the
21        grant application;
22            (D) a requirement that the budget include
23        information necessary for analyzing cost and
24        performance for use in Budgeting for Results; and
25            (E) caps, which may be equal to, but shall not be
26        greater than, the caps allowed by federal agencies, on

 

 

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1        the amount of salaries that may be charged to grants
2        based on the limitations imposed by federal agencies.
3        (6) The development of pre-qualification requirements
4    for applicants, including the fiscal condition of the
5    organization and the provision of the following
6    information:
7            (A) organization name;
8            (B) Federal Employee Identification Number;
9            (C) Unique Entity Identifier Data Universal
10        Numbering System (DUNS) number;
11            (D) fiscal condition;
12            (E) whether the applicant is in good standing with
13        the Secretary of State;
14            (F) past performance in administering grants, if
15        applicable;
16            (G) whether the applicant is on the Debarred and
17        Suspended List maintained by the Governor's Office of
18        Management and Budget;
19            (H) whether the applicant is on the federal
20        Excluded Parties List; and
21            (I) whether the applicant is on the Sanctioned
22        Party List maintained by the Illinois Department of
23        Healthcare and Family Services.
24    Nothing in this Act affects the provisions of the Fiscal
25Control and Internal Auditing Act nor the requirement that the
26management of each State agency is responsible for maintaining

 

 

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1effective internal controls under that Act.
2    For public institutions of higher education, the
3provisions of this Section apply only to awards funded by
4federal pass-through awards from a State agency to public
5institutions of higher education.
6(Source: P.A. 101-81, eff. 7-12-19; 102-626, eff. 8-27-21.)
 
7    (30 ILCS 708/30)
8    Sec. 30. Catalog of State Financial Assistance. The
9Catalog of State Financial Assistance is a single,
10authoritative, statewide, comprehensive source document of
11State financial assistance program information. The Catalog
12shall contain, at a minimum, the following information:
13        (1) An introductory section that contains Catalog
14    highlights, an explanation of how to use the Catalog, an
15    explanation of the Catalog and its contents, and suggested
16    grant proposal writing methods and grant application
17    procedures.
18        (2) A comprehensive indexing system that categorizes
19    programs by issuing agency, eligible applicant,
20    application deadlines, function, popular name, and subject
21    area.
22        (3) Comprehensive appendices showing State assistance
23    programs that require coordination through this Act and
24    regulatory, legislative, and Executive Order authority for
25    each program, commonly used abbreviations and acronyms,

 

 

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1    agency regional and local office addresses, and sources of
2    additional information.
3        (4) A list of programs that have been added to or
4    deleted from the Catalog and the various program numbers
5    and title changes.
6        (5) Program number, title, and popular name, if
7    applicable.
8        (6) The name of the State department or agency or
9    independent agency and primary organization sub-unit
10    administering the program.
11        (7) The enabling legislation, including popular name
12    of the Act, titles and Sections, Public Act number, and
13    citation to the Illinois Compiled Statutes.
14        (8) The type or types of financial and nonfinancial
15    assistance offered by the program.
16        (9) Uses and restrictions placed upon the program.
17        (10) Eligibility requirements, including applicant
18    eligibility criteria, beneficiary eligibility criteria,
19    and required credentials and documentation.
20        (11) Objectives and goals of the program.
21        (12) Information regarding application and award
22    processing; application deadlines; range of approval or
23    disapproval time; appeal procedure; and availability of a
24    renewal or extension of assistance.
25        (13) Assistance considerations, including an
26    explanation of the award formula, matching requirements,

 

 

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1    and the length and time phasing of the assistance, and
2    whether the program is eligible for interest under the
3    State Prompt Payment Act.
4        (14) Post-assistance requirements, including any
5    reports, audits, and records that may be required.
6        (15) Program accomplishments (where available)
7    describing quantitative measures of program performance.
8        (16) Regulations, guidelines, and literature
9    containing citations to the Illinois Administrative Code,
10    the Code of Federal Regulations, and other pertinent
11    informational materials.
12        (17) The names, telephone numbers, and e-mail
13    addresses of persons to be contacted for detailed program
14    information at the headquarters, regional, and local
15    levels.
16(Source: P.A. 98-706, eff. 7-16-14.)
 
17    (30 ILCS 708/50)
18    Sec. 50. State grant-making agency responsibilities.
19    (a) The specific requirements and responsibilities of
20State grant-making agencies and non-federal entities are set
21forth in this Act. State agencies making State awards to
22non-federal entities must adopt by rule the language in 2 CFR
23Part 200, Subpart C through Subpart F unless different
24provisions are required by law.
25    (b) Each State grant-making agency shall appoint a Chief

 

 

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1Accountability Officer who shall serve as a liaison to the
2Grant Accountability and Transparency Unit and who shall be
3responsible for the State agency's implementation of and
4compliance with the rules.
5    (c) In order to effectively measure the performance of its
6recipients and subrecipients, each State grant-making agency
7shall:
8        (1) require its recipients and subrecipients to relate
9    financial data to performance accomplishments of the award
10    and, when applicable, must require recipients and
11    subrecipients to provide cost information to demonstrate
12    cost-effective practices. The recipient's and
13    subrecipient's performance should be measured in a way
14    that will help the State agency to improve program
15    outcomes, share lessons learned, and spread the adoption
16    of promising practices; and
17        (2) provide recipients and subrecipients with clear
18    performance goals, indicators, and milestones and must
19    establish performance reporting frequency and content to
20    not only allow the State agency to understand the
21    recipient's progress, but also to facilitate
22    identification of promising practices among recipients and
23    subrecipients and build the evidence upon which the State
24    agency's program and performance decisions are made. The
25    frequency of reports on performance goals, indicators, and
26    milestones required under this Section shall not be more

 

 

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1    frequent than quarterly. Nothing in this Section is
2    intended to prohibit more frequent reporting to assess
3    items such as service needs, gaps, or capacity, as
4    indicated by a corrective action plan or by a risk
5    assessment.
6        (3) (c-5) Each State grant-making agency shall, when
7    it is in the best interests of the State, request that the
8    Office of the Comptroller issue a stop payment order in
9    accordance with Section 105 of this Act.
10        (4) (c-6) Upon notification by the Grant Transparency
11    and Accountability Unit that a stop payment order has been
12    requested by a State grant-making agency, each State
13    grant-making agency who has issued a grant to that
14    recipient or subrecipient shall determine if it remains in
15    the best interests of the State to continue to issue
16    payments to the recipient or subrecipient.
17    (d) The Governor's Office of Management and Budget shall
18provide such advice and technical assistance to the State
19grant-making agencies as is necessary or indicated in order to
20ensure compliance with this Act.
21    (e) In accordance with this Act and the Illinois State
22Collection Act of 1986, refunds required under the Grant Funds
23Recovery Act may be referred to the Comptroller's offset
24system.
25(Source: P.A. 100-997, eff. 8-20-18.)
 

 

 

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1    (30 ILCS 708/60)
2    Sec. 60. Grant Accountability and Transparency Unit
3responsibilities.
4    (a) The Grant Accountability and Transparency Unit within
5the Governor's Office of Management and Budget shall be
6responsible for:
7        (1) The development of minimum requirements applicable
8    to the staff of grant applicants to manage and execute
9    grant awards for programmatic and administrative purposes,
10    including grant management specialists with:
11            (A) general and technical competencies;
12            (B) programmatic expertise;
13            (C) fiscal expertise and systems necessary to
14        adequately account for the source and application of
15        grant funds for each program; and
16            (D) knowledge of compliance requirements.
17        (2) The development of minimum training requirements,
18    including annual training requirements.
19        (3) Accurate, current, and complete disclosure of the
20    financial results of each funded award, as set forth in
21    the financial monitoring and reporting Section of 2 CFR
22    Part 200.
23        (4) Development of criteria for requiring the
24    retention of a fiscal agent and for becoming a fiscal
25    agent.
26        (5) Development of disclosure requirements in the

 

 

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1    grant application pertaining to:
2            (A) related-party status between grantees and
3        grant-making agencies;
4            (B) past employment of applicant officers and
5        grant managers;
6            (C) disclosure of current or past employment of
7        members of immediate family; and
8            (D) disclosure of senior management of grantee
9        organization and their relationships with contracted
10        vendors.
11        (6) Implementation of rules prohibiting a grantee from
12    charging any cost allocable to a particular award or cost
13    objective to other State or federal awards to overcome
14    fund deficiencies, to avoid restrictions imposed by law or
15    terms of the federal awards, or for other reasons.
16        (7) Implementation of rules prohibiting a non-federal
17    entity from earning or keeping any profit resulting from
18    State or federal financial assistance, unless prior
19    approval has been obtained from the Governor's Office of
20    Management and Budget and is expressly authorized by the
21    terms and conditions of the award.
22        (8) Maintenance of an Illinois Stop Payment List or an
23    Illinois Debarred and Suspended List that contains the
24    names of those individuals and entities that are
25    ineligible, either temporarily or permanently, to receive
26    an award of grant funds from the State.

 

 

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1        (9) Ensuring the adoption of standardized rules for
2    the implementation of this Act by State grant-making
3    agencies. The Grant Accountability and Transparency Unit
4    shall provide such advice and technical assistance to the
5    State grant-making agencies as is necessary or indicated
6    in order to ensure compliance with this Act.
7        (10) Coordination of financial and Single Audit
8    reviews.
9        (11) Coordination of on-site reviews of grantees and
10    subrecipients.
11        (12) Maintenance of the Catalog of State Financial
12    Assistance, which shall be posted on an Internet website
13    maintained by the Governor's Office of Management and
14    Budget that is available to the public.
15        (13) Promotion of best practices for disseminating
16    information about grant opportunities to grant-making
17    agencies statewide, with an emphasis on reaching
18    previously underserved communities and grantees.
19    (b) The Grant Accountability and Transparency Unit shall
20have no power or authority regarding the approval,
21disapproval, management, or oversight of grants entered into
22or awarded by a State agency or by a public institution of
23higher education. The power or authority existing under law to
24grant or award grants by a State agency or by a public
25institution of higher education shall remain with that State
26agency or public institution of higher education. The Unit

 

 

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1shall be responsible for providing technical assistance to
2guide the Administrative Code amendments proposed by State
3grant-making agencies to comply with this Act and shall be
4responsible for establishing standardized policies and
5procedures for State grant-making agencies in order to ensure
6compliance with the Uniform Administrative Requirements, Cost
7Principles and Audit Requirements for Federal Awards set forth
8in 2 CFR Part 200, all of which must be adhered to by the State
9grant-making agencies throughout the life cycle of the grant.
10    (c) The powers and functions of grant making by State
11agencies or public institutions of higher education may not be
12transferred to, nor may prior grant approval be transferred
13to, any other person, office, or entity within the executive
14branch of State government.
15(Source: P.A. 100-676, eff. 1-1-19.)
 
16    (30 ILCS 708/65)
17    Sec. 65. Audit requirements.
18    (a) The standards set forth in Subpart F of 2 CFR Part 200
19and any other standards that apply directly to State or
20federal agencies shall apply to audits of fiscal years
21beginning on or after December 26, 2014.
22    (b) Books and records must be available for review or
23audit by appropriate officials of the pass-through entity, and
24the agency, the Auditor General, the Inspector General,
25appropriate officials of the agency, and the federal

 

 

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1Government Accountability Office.
2    (c) The Governor's Office of Management and Budget, with
3the advice and technical assistance of the Illinois Single
4Audit Commission, shall adopt rules that are reasonably
5consistent with 2 CFR Part 200 for audits of grants from a
6State or federal pass-through entity that are not subject to
7the Single Audit Act because (1) the amount of the federal
8awards expended during the entity's fiscal year award is less
9than the applicable amount specified in 2 CFR Part 200,
10Subpart F $750,000 or (2) the subrecipient is an exempt entity
11as specified in and that are reasonably consistent with 2 CFR
12Part 200, Subpart F.
13    (d) This Act does not affect the provisions of the
14Illinois State Auditing Act and does not address the external
15audit function of the Auditor General.
16(Source: P.A. 98-706, eff. 7-16-14.)
 
17    (30 ILCS 708/97)  (was 30 ILCS 708/520)
18    Sec. 97. Separate accounts for State grant funds.
19Notwithstanding any provision of law to the contrary, all
20grants for which advance payments are made and any grant
21agreement entered into, renewed, or extended on or after
22August 20, 2018 (the effective date of Public Act 100-997)
23that permits advanced payments, between a State grant-making
24agency and a nonprofit organization, shall require the
25nonprofit organization receiving grant funds to maintain those

 

 

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1funds in an account which is separate and distinct from any
2account holding non-grant funds. Except as otherwise provided
3in an agreement between a State grant-making agency and a
4nonprofit organization, the grant funds held in a separate
5account by a nonprofit organization shall not be used for
6non-grant-related activities, and any unused grant funds shall
7be returned to the State grant-making agency. This Section
8does not apply when grant payments are made as reimbursements.
9(Source: P.A. 100-997, eff. 8-20-18; 101-81, eff. 7-12-19.)