Sen. Mike Porfirio

Filed: 4/9/2026

 

 


 

 


 
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1
AMENDMENT TO SENATE BILL 3737

2    AMENDMENT NO. ______. Amend Senate Bill 3737 by replacing
3everything after the enacting clause with the following:
 
4
"ARTICLE 1. GENERAL PROVISIONS

 
5    Section 1-1. Short title; references to Act.
6    (a) Short title. This Act may be cited as the Service
7Member Education Rights Veneration Act.
8    (b) References to Act. This Act may be referred to as the
9SERVE Act.
 
10    Section 1-5. Legislative intent. As a guide to the
11interpretation and application of this Act, the public policy
12of the State is declared as follows:
13    (a) The General Assembly recognizes the common public
14interest in safeguarding and promoting participation in
15military service to the United States and the State by:

 

 

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1        (1) minimizing disadvantages to military service while
2    pursuing higher education;
3        (2) providing prompt readmission and preservation of
4    academic status for service member students returning from
5    military service in a manner that (A) minimizes disruption
6    to academic pursuits and (B) limits institutional legal
7    risk associated with developing and granting
8    accommodations; and
9        (3) prohibiting discrimination against and
10    interference with military service.
11    (b) This law shall be interpreted as comprising a
12foundation of protections guaranteed by this Act; therefore,
13nothing in this Act shall supersede, nullify, or diminish any
14federal or State law, including any local law or ordinance,
15contract, agreement, policy, plan, practice, or other matter
16that establishes a right or benefit that is more beneficial
17to, or is in addition to, a right or benefit provided in this
18Act.
19    (c) This Act shall be liberally construed to effectuate
20its purposes and provisions for the benefit of the service
21member student who has volunteered to serve this country and
22this State despite the risk of interruption in the pursuit of
23higher education. Such sacrifice benefits everyone but is made
24by relatively few.
25    (d) This Act requires institutions of higher education to
26think beyond their existing policy and practice to act in

 

 

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1practical ways that better accommodate service member students
2whose participation in military service presents individually
3unique and complicated challenges.
4    (e) The new service member benefits provided under this
5Act apply on and after the effective date of this Act.
 
6    Section 1-10. Definitions. As used in this Act:
7    "Academic military leave" means any period of leave of
8absence by a service member student to perform military
9service.
10    "Academic status" means a service member student's
11academic position in an institution of higher education in
12terms of academic program, enrollment status, credit or clock
13hours completed, academic standing, and academic progress.
14    "Academic program" means a set of academic requirements
15that lead to a degree, diploma, certificate, or any other such
16credential.
17    "Academic progress" means the degree to which a service
18member student is on track to graduate on time and is meeting
19the institution's academic standards for satisfactory
20completion of an academic program.
21    "Academic standing" means grade point average.
22    "Academic year division" means the method in which an
23institution divides the academic year, including semester,
24quarter, trimester, 4-1-4 system, 4-4-1 system, continuous or
25year-round, block, 3-term system, or any other such method of

 

 

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1determining the division of an academic year.
2    "Accommodation" means a mutually agreed upon modification
3between a service member student and the institution to
4academic coursework that creates an opportunity for a service
5member student to avoid negative impact on academic status
6because of academic military leave. "Accommodation" includes,
7but is not limited to, make-up work, flexible deadlines,
8alternative assignments, make-up exams, accessing missed
9lecture materials, remote participation, extended time for
10tasks, course adjustments, and opportunities to complete
11assignments, tasks, exams, and other course requirements
12earlier than their respective due dates.
13    "Appropriate military authority" means any commissioned,
14warrant, or noncommissioned officer authorized to issue orders
15for military service in the Armed Forces of the United States
16or the National Guard of any state or territory.
17    "Discrimination" means any unjust or prejudicial
18treatment, including, but not limited to, harassment, based on
19perceived or actual association or affiliation with military
20service.
21    "Enrollment status" means whether a service member student
22is full-time, part-time, half-time, withdrawn, degree-seeking,
23non-degree-seeking, a graduate, on leave, or in any other such
24matriculation relationship to the institution or program.
25    "Financial aid" means any moneys, including, but not
26limited to, grants, scholarships, work-study, and loans,

 

 

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1provided to help service member students in remunerating an
2institution of higher education. It includes veterans'
3education benefits such as those provided under the
4Servicemen's Readjustment Act of 1944 and the Illinois Veteran
5grant program under the Higher Education Student Assistance
6Act.
7    "Institution" or "institution of higher education" means a
8public or private college, university, or other institution
9that provides postsecondary education and awards degrees,
10diplomas, certificates, or other such credential.
11    "ISERRA Advocate" means the Illinois Service Member
12Employment and Reemployment Rights Act Advocate appointed by
13the Attorney General under Section 30-5 of the Service Member
14Employment and Reemployment Rights Act.
15    "Military accommodation" means specific accommodation
16granted by, and at the sole discretion of, appropriate
17military authority with respect to a service member student.
18It may be requested by the service member student or an
19institution and relates to the timing, frequency, and duration
20of impending academic military leave with the sole purpose to
21prevent or limit negative impact on a service member student's
22academic status.
23    "Military service" means a service member student receives
24orders in the Armed Forces of the United States, the National
25Guard of any state or territory regardless of status or
26voluntariness, or the Illinois State Guard as described in the

 

 

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1State Guard Act. "Military service" includes service under the
2authority of U.S.C. Titles 10, 14, or 32, or State Active Duty.
3"Military service" includes active and inactive duty.
4    "Reasonable efforts" means actions taken to accommodate
5service member students due to academic military leave, but
6does not require significant difficulty or expense on the
7operation of the institution of higher education or on
8educational standards.
9    "Service member student" means a person enrolled in an
10institution of higher education who is eligible to be ordered
11to military service.
12    "Volunteer orders" means reserve component voluntary
13active service as that term is defined in Section 1-10 of the
14Service Member Employment and Reemployment Rights Act.
 
15    Section 1-15. Applicability. This Act applies when
16military duty presents a conflict with academic status. This
17Act is not meant as a substitute for poor planning on the part
18of the service member student. This Act does not apply where
19there is no conflict between institutional and military
20service requirements. Nothing in this Act prohibits an
21institution from acting consistently with established policy
22and procedure for dealing with misconduct on the part of a
23service member student.
 
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ARTICLE 5. ACCOMMODATION AND READMISSION REQUIREMENTS

 

 

 

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1    Section 5-5. Readmission.
2    (a) Institutions shall accommodate a service member
3student's academic military leave and grant prompt readmission
4when the service member student:
5        (1) has not exceeded a cumulative academic military
6    leave period beyond 5 years;
7        (2) provides advance notice of academic military leave
8    to the institution; and
9        (3) provides notice of intent to return to the
10    institution.
11    (b) Prompt readmission. The institution must readmit a
12service member student on academic military leave into the
13next class, classes, or academic year division following the
14receipt of the notice of intent to return in accordance with
15the terms of the accommodation.
16    (c) Exemptions to readmission. A service member student's
17eligibility for readmission under this Act terminates upon the
18occurrence of any of the following events:
19        (1) A separation of such service member student from
20    military service with a dishonorable or bad conduct
21    discharge.
22        (2) A dismissal from military service in the case of a
23    service member student who is a commissioned or warrant
24    officer.
25        (3) A dropping of such service member student from the

 

 

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1    rolls.
2    (d) The service member student has an obligation to timely
3self-report to the institution when any of the exemptions to
4readmission listed in subsection (c) occur.
5    (e) A service member student shall provide documentation
6demonstrating applicability of exemptions upon request by the
7institution, subject to the following:
8        (1) The institution cannot request specific
9    documentation.
10        (2) Documentation provided shall be from appropriate
11    military authority.
12        (3) Documentation shall be provided as soon as
13    practicable.
14    (f) Rights and benefits under this Act shall not be
15withheld until an exemption becomes evident.
16    (g) Loss of readmission rights under this Act subjects the
17service member student to the institution's applicable
18policies and procedures.
19    (h) When an institution has reason to believe that an
20exemption may be applicable but is not reported, the
21institution shall notify the Attorney General's ISERRA
22Advocate. Upon receiving notification, the Attorney General
23shall investigate to determine if an exemption exists.
24Intentional failure to timely report an applicable exemption
25shall result in loss of readmission and preservation of
26academic status rights under this Act and subjects the service

 

 

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1member student to the institution's applicable policies and
2procedures. When failure to report involves the use of public
3funds, the Attorney General shall investigate to determine if
4any law has been violated and if recoupment of public funds is
5warranted. Results of any investigation may be shared with
6appropriate military authority at the discretion of the
7Attorney General.
 
8    Section 5-10. Academic military leave.
9    (a) Permission. A service member student is not required
10to get permission from his or her institution for academic
11military leave. The service member student is only required to
12provide advance notice of pending military service in
13accordance with this Act. Advance notice entitles a service
14member student to academic military leave.
15    (b) Conditions. An institution of higher education may not
16impose conditions for academic military leave not otherwise
17imposed under this Act or other applicable law.
18        (1) This subsection shall not be construed to prevent
19    an institution from providing conditions as part of
20    academic accommodation.
21        (2) This subsection shall not be construed to prevent
22    an institution from establishing reasonable policies,
23    procedures, and practices in furtherance of this Act.
24    (c) Military accommodation. A service member student is
25not required to accommodate an institution's needs as to the

 

 

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1timing, frequency, or duration of academic military leave;
2however, institutions are permitted and encouraged to request
3accommodations that benefit the service member student in
4advance of such academic military leave, subject to the
5following:
6        (1) Such requests shall be in collaboration with and
7    in the best interest of service member students.
8        (2) Such requests shall be directed to the attention
9    of the appropriate military authority.
10        (3) The accommodation of such requests is subject to
11    military law and discretion.
12    (d) Academic obligation not excused. Academic military
13leave alone does not excuse a service member student from any
14academic obligation except at the sole discretion of the
15institution as part of an accommodation.
 
16    Section 5-15. Accommodation.
17    (a) Notice of pending academic military leave entitles
18service member students to institutional accommodation.
19    (b) Accommodations. Accommodation made by an institution
20of higher education under this Act:
21        (1) Shall be mutually agreed upon and conditioned on
22    tasks that both sides must complete to fulfill the
23    agreement.
24        (2) Shall be in writing such as in an email, letter, or
25    some other written form.

 

 

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1        (3) Shall not violate any law prohibiting
2    discrimination.
3        (4) Shall not violate any rights granted by this Act
4    or other law.
5        (5) Shall be created with the purpose of compliance
6    with this Act.
7        (6) Shall benefit the service member student.
8        (7) Shall be tailored to the unique academic status,
9    military requirements, and circumstantial constraints
10    specific to each service member student who finds himself
11    or herself in a position warranting accommodation.
12        (8) Shall be amendable when a material condition
13    changes or upon agreement by the institution and the
14    service member student.
15        (9) Shall present a reasonable opportunity for the
16    service member student to maintain academic status as
17    follows:
18            (A) Readmission into the same academic program is
19        subject to the following:
20                (i) If the specific academic program is no
21            longer offered but the coursework can be
22            completed, then the service member student shall
23            be given the opportunity to complete the
24            coursework for that academic program.
25                (ii) If the coursework is not available, then
26            the service member student shall be admitted into

 

 

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1            the academic program that is most similar to his
2            or her original academic program.
3            (B) Readmission to the same academic enrollment
4        status.
5            (C) Readmission with the same number of credit
6        hours or clock hours unless the service member student
7        is readmitted to a different academic program to which
8        the completed credit hours or clock hours are not
9        transferable.
10            (D) Readmission with the same academic standing
11        subject to changes in grade point average resulting
12        from any accommodation.
13            (E) Readmission with the same academic progress.
14        (10) The specifics and nature of any accommodation
15    shall be at the sole discretion of the institution of
16    higher education in consultation with the service member
17    student.
18        (11) Shall be reasonable under the circumstances.
19        (12) Shall not require, plan, or depend on the
20    performance of coursework during academic military leave
21    subject to the provision that nothing in this subsection
22    prevents a service member student from performing
23    coursework during academic military leave on the service
24    member student's own initiative.
25    (c) Accommodations shall not create a broad rule, policy,
26or practice applicable beyond the terms of the specific

 

 

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1accommodation applicable to a specific service member student,
2except at the sole discretion of the institution of higher
3education.
4    (d) Reimbursement. All expenses, including, but not
5limited to, tuition, fees, and penalties, charged by the
6institution are fully refundable for any academic year
7division the institution determines that withdrawal, due to
8military service, is the only appropriate accommodation based
9on the characteristics of the academic military leave in
10question subject to the following:
11        (1) Financial aid. Financial aid shall be credited for
12    the academic year division requiring withdrawal due to
13    military service, unless expressly prohibited by the terms
14    of such financial aid or impossible or unreasonable under
15    the circumstances.
16        (2) Scholarship, grant, or loan. A service member
17    student's eligibility for a State-supported scholarship,
18    grant, or loan for attendance at an institution shall not
19    be adversely affected by the service member student's
20    failure to complete coursework because of the service
21    member student's military service.
22        (3) Housing under the control of the institution. The
23    service member student may be charged for any period in
24    which student housing is occupied by the service member
25    student and subject to the federal Servicemembers Civil
26    Relief Act (50 U.S.C. 3900 et seq.).

 

 

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1        (4) Textbooks. If a service member student must
2    withdraw from any course due to military service, the
3    service member student shall receive the maximum price,
4    based on condition, for physical textbooks purchased from
5    the bookstore under the control of and associated with the
6    institution. Such students shall receive a full refund for
7    electronic books.
8        (5) All other expenses. All other expenses charged by
9    the institution and that the service member student has
10    used or taken advantage of shall be reimbursed pro rata.
11    If determining the pro rata share is not possible, then
12    the service member student shall be reimbursed the full
13    amount.
14    (e) Withdrawal due to military service. A service member
15student who is unable to continue in a course due to military
16service shall be allowed to withdraw with no impact upon the
17final grade point average of the service member student. Such
18withdrawal shall be identified on any academic transcript as
19"withdrawal due to military service" so as not to prejudice
20the service member student. If the service member student is
21required to withdraw, such withdrawal shall not disadvantage
22the service member student as to readmission or re-enrollment.
23    (f) Academic military leave does not count toward any
24limit on attendance.
25    (g) Mutual accommodation. Any requirement of academic
26status is deemed met if the service member student requests

 

 

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1and the institution grants a different academic program,
2enrollment status, credit or clock hours, or academic
3progress. Such accommodation shall not be recognized if made
4in lieu of the service member student's preferred benefit
5under law, policy, practice, or agreement.
6    (h) Re-enrollment not possible. If the institution
7determines that the service member student is not prepared to
8resume in the same academic status as required in this Act due
9to standards outside their control, the institution must make
10reasonable efforts to help the service member student become
11prepared to resume in the same academic status, including, but
12not limited to, providing refresher courses, refresher
13training, and an opportunity to retake any examination. Such
14efforts shall be at no extra cost to service member students.
15If, after reasonable efforts on the part of the institution,
16the service member student is unable to resume in the same
17academic status, then the obligation to readmit the service
18member student in the same academic status is deemed to have
19been met.
20    (i) Rejection of accommodation. Rejection of accommodation
21that meets the requirements of this Act by a service member
22student shall subject the service member student to the
23institution's applicable policies and procedures. Good faith
24negotiations on the part of the service member student or
25representative do not constitute rejection of the
26accommodation.

 

 

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1    (j) Burden of proof. The institution of higher education
2carries the burden to show, by a preponderance of the
3evidence, that:
4        (1) the service member student is re-enrolled in the
5    same or most similar academic program and status;
6        (2) reasonable efforts have been made to prepare the
7    service member student to resume in the same or most
8    similar academic program and status;
9        (3) reasonable efforts made have failed through no
10    fault of the institution; and
11        (4) no other reasonable efforts are available to the
12    institution.
 
13    Section 5-20. Five-year limit.
14    (a) Five-year limit. In computing the 5-year limit, the
15academic military leave shall not include any of the following
16military service:
17        (1) service that is required, beyond 5 years, to
18    complete an initial period of obligated military service;
19        (2) periods in which the service member student was
20    unable to obtain orders releasing the service member
21    student from military service before the expiration of the
22    5-year period and such inability was through no fault of
23    the service member student; or
24        (3) performed by a service member student who is:
25            (A) ordered to or retained on active duty under

 

 

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1        Section 688, 12301(a), 12301(g), 12302, 12304, or
2        12305 of Title 10 of the United States Code or under
3        Section 2127, 2128, 2308, 2309, 2314, or 712 of Title
4        14 of the United States Code;
5            (B) ordered to or retained on active duty, other
6        than for training, under any provision of law because
7        of war or emergency declared by the President,
8        Congress, the Secretary of a military department, or
9        the Governor of the State;
10            (C) ordered to active duty, other than for
11        training, in support, as determined by the Secretary
12        of a military department, of an operational mission
13        for which personnel have been ordered to active duty
14        under Section 12304 of Title 10 of the United States
15        Code;
16            (D) ordered to active duty in support, as
17        determined by the Secretary of a military department,
18        of a critical mission or requirement of military
19        service;
20            (E) called into federal service as a member of the
21        National Guard under Chapter 15 of Title 10 or under
22        Section 12406 of Title 10 of the United States Code; or
23            (F) called into State Active Duty.
24    (b) Documentation. It is the responsibility of the
25institution to determine the applicability of the 5-year limit
26by maintaining records of periods of academic military leave;

 

 

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1however, institutions may request documentation necessary to
2determine if the 5-year rule has been exceeded. Upon request,
3a service member student shall provide the documentation as
4soon as practicable. The institution cannot request specific
5documentation. The documentation provided shall be from an
6appropriate military authority. The institution's requests for
7documentation are subject to the following:
8        (1) The request must be reasonable.
9        (2) A service member student must be permitted to
10    continue course work unless and until the documentation,
11    once provided, demonstrates the 5-year limit has been
12    exceeded.
13    (c) Exceeding the 5-year limit. Exceeding the 5-year limit
14does not obligate an institution to deny readmission.
15Readmission and conditions thereof are at the sole discretion
16of the institution.
17    (d) The institution may notify the Attorney General's
18ISERRA Advocate when the documentation is not provided timely.
19The Attorney General shall take steps necessary to ensure the
20appropriate documentation is provided.
 
21    Section 5-25. Advance notice.
22    (a) Advance notice entitles a service member student to an
23accommodation and shall be provided in accordance with the
24following:
25        (1) Notice must be provided in advance of military

 

 

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1    service unless circumstances make such advance notice
2    impossible or unreasonable under the circumstances. In
3    this case, advance notice shall be provided as soon as it
4    becomes practicable under the circumstances.
5        (2) Notice shall be written but may be verbal if
6    written notice is not reasonable under the circumstances.
7    No required format or rule for timeliness may be imposed.
8        (3) Notice shall be provided by the service member
9    student, spouse of such service member student, or
10    appropriate military authority.
11        (4) Notice shall be provided to each applicable
12    instructor or, if designated by the institution, to the
13    appropriate official.
14    (b) Failure to provide advance notice. Failure to provide
15advance notice subjects the service member student to the
16applicable institution's policies and procedures.
17    (c) Exception; military necessity. No notice is required
18if the giving of such notice is precluded by military
19necessity, such as when such military service is classified or
20when notice may compromise or adversely affect a military
21mission, operation, or exercise if known by the public as
22determined by appropriate military authority in writing. Such
23writing need only declare military necessity without further
24explanation and may be provided at any time with a notice of
25intent to return.
 

 

 

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1    Section 5-30. Notice of intent to return. Notice of intent
2to return shall be provided to the institution placing the
3service member student on academic military leave consistent
4with the following:
5        (1) Intent to return is presumed for academic military
6    leave less than 31 days.
7        (2) Intent to return is presumed when return is part
8    of an established accommodation.
9        (3) Notice of intent to return may be provided at any
10    time between advance notice and within 3 years from the
11    end of the academic military leave period.
12        (4) Notice of intent to return requirement is not met
13    when it is provided later than 3 years after the
14    completion of military service unless a service member
15    student is hospitalized or convalescing from an illness or
16    injury incurred in or aggravated during such military
17    service. In this case, notice of intent to return is not
18    met when it is provided later than 2 years after the end of
19    the period reasonably necessary for recovery of such
20    illness or injury.
21        (5) Failure to provide notice of intent to return
22    subjects the service member student to the institution's
23    established policies and procedures.
24        (6) Notice of intent to return shall be provided to
25    each applicable instructor or, when designated by the
26    institution, to the appropriate official.

 

 

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1        (7) Notice of intent to return shall be written and in
2    no particular format.
3        (8) Notice of intent to return may be waived by, and at
4    the sole discretion of, the institution. Waiver may be
5    verbal or written or established in policy or procedure.
 
6    Section 5-35. Discrimination.
7    (a) A person who is a member of, applies to be a member of,
8performs, has performed, applies to perform, or has an
9obligation to perform military service shall not be
10discriminated against by an institution of higher education,
11including its faculty and staff on the basis of that
12membership, application for membership, performance of
13service, obligation, or actual or perceived affiliation with
14military service.
15    (b) A person who is a spouse or dependent of a person
16described in subsection (a) shall not be discriminated against
17by an institution, faculty, or staff based on actual or
18perceived affiliation or association with such person
19described in subsection (a).
20    (c) Military service does not need to be the sole reason
21for discriminatory behavior to be discriminatory but must be,
22in part, a basis.
 
23    Section 5-40. Military spouse. The spouse of a service
24member called to military service may withdraw, without

 

 

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1penalty, when such service adversely interferes with the
2pursuit of higher education of such spouse. Withdrawal shall
3be marked as "withdrawal due to military service" so as not to
4prejudice such service member spouse. Such service member
5spouse shall be entitled to a full refund except for a pro rata
6share of services used.
 
7    Section 5-45. Notice of rights and duties.
8    (a) Each institution shall provide service member students
9entitled to rights and benefits under this Act with a notice of
10the rights, benefits, and obligations of service member
11students under this Act provided by the Attorney General's
12ISERRA Advocate.
13    (b) The requirement for the provision of notice under this
14Act may be met by the posting of the notice where the
15institution customarily places notices for service member
16students.
 
17
ARTICLE 10. COMPLIANCE

 
18    Section 10-5. Violation. Any violation of Article 5 is a
19violation of this Act.
 
20    Section 10-10. Circuit court action by the Attorney
21General.
22    (a) If the Attorney General has reason to believe that any

 

 

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1institution is engaged in a violation of this Act, then the
2Attorney General may commence a civil action in the name of the
3People of the State on behalf of persons within the State to
4enforce the provisions of this Act in any appropriate circuit
5court.
6    (b) Prior to initiating a civil action, the Attorney
7General shall conduct a preliminary investigation to determine
8whether there is reason to believe that any institution is
9engaged in a violation of this Act and whether the dispute can
10be resolved without litigation. In conducting this
11investigation, the Attorney General may:
12        (1) require the individual or entity to file a
13    statement or report in writing under oath or otherwise, as
14    to all information the Attorney General may consider
15    necessary;
16        (2) examine under oath any person alleged to have
17    participated in or with the knowledge of the alleged
18    violation; or
19        (3) issue subpoenas or conduct hearings in aid of any
20    investigation.
21    (c) Service by the Attorney General of any notice
22requiring a person to file a statement or report, or of a
23subpoena upon any person, shall be made:
24        (1) personally, by delivery of a duly executed copy
25    thereof to the person to be served or, if a person is not a
26    natural person, in the manner provided by the Civil

 

 

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1    Practice Law when a complaint is filed; or
2        (2) by mailing by certified mail, a duly executed copy
3    thereof to the person to be served at his or her last known
4    abode or principal place of business within this State.
5    (d) In lieu of civil action, the individual or entity
6alleged to have violated this Act may enter into an Assurance
7of Voluntary Compliance with respect to the alleged violation.
8Evidence of a violation of an Assurance of Voluntary
9Compliance shall be prima facie evidence of a violation of
10this Act in any subsequent proceeding brought by the Attorney
11General against the alleged violator.
12    (e) Whenever any person or institution fails to comply
13with any subpoena issued under this Section or whenever
14satisfactory copying or reproduction of any material requested
15in an investigation cannot be done, and the person or
16institution refuses to surrender the material, the Attorney
17General may file in any appropriate circuit court, and serve
18upon the person or institution, a petition for a court order
19for the enforcement of the subpoena or other request.
20    Any person or institution who has received a subpoena
21issued under subsection (b) may file in the appropriate
22circuit court, and serve upon the Attorney General, a petition
23for a court order to modify or set aside the subpoena or other
24requests. The petition must be filed either: (1) within 20
25days after the date of service of the subpoena or at any time
26before the return date specified in the subpoena, whichever

 

 

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1date is earlier, or (2) within a longer period as may be
2prescribed in writing by the Attorney General.
3    The petition shall specify each ground upon which the
4petitioner relies in seeking relief under this subsection and
5may be based upon any failure of the subpoena to comply with
6the provision of this Section or upon any constitutional or
7other legal right or privilege of the petitioner. During the
8pendency of the petition in the court, the court may stay, as
9it deems proper, the running of the time allowed for
10compliance with the subpoena or other request, in whole or in
11part, except that the petitioner shall comply with any portion
12of the subpoena or other request not sought to be modified or
13set aside.
 
14    Section 10-15. Remedies.
15    (a) A court in its discretion may award actual damages or
16any other relief that the court deems proper. Punitive damages
17are not authorized except in cases involving violations under
18Section 5-35 prohibiting discrimination, or in a case where
19intent to subvert the purpose of this Act can be shown. In no
20case may punitive damages exceed $100,000 per violation.
21Reasonable attorney's fees may be awarded to the prevailing
22party; however, prevailing defendants may only receive
23attorney's fees if the court makes a finding that the
24plaintiff acted in bad faith.
25    (b) The Attorney General may bring an action in the name of

 

 

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1the people of the State against any institution to restrain by
2preliminary or permanent injunction the use of any practice
3that violates this Act. In such an action, the court may award
4restitution. In addition, the court may assess a civil penalty
5not to exceed $25,000 per violation of this Act.
6    (c) If a court orders a party to make payments to the
7Attorney General and the payments are to be used for the
8operations of the Office of the Attorney General or if a party
9agrees to make payment to the Attorney General for the
10operations of the Office of the Attorney General as part of an
11Assurance of Voluntary Compliance, then the moneys paid under
12any of the conditions described in this subsection (c) shall
13be deposited into the Attorney General Court Ordered and
14Voluntary Compliance Payment Projects Fund. Moneys in the Fund
15shall be used, subject to the appropriation, for the
16performance of any function pertaining to the exercise of the
17duties of the Attorney General including, but not limited to,
18enforcement of any law of this State and conducting public
19education programs; however, any moneys in the Fund that are
20required by the court or by an agreement to be used for a
21particular purpose shall be used for that purpose.
22    (d) In any action brought under the provisions of this
23Act, the Attorney General is entitled to recover costs.
24    (e) If an investigation by the Attorney General finds that
25the institution has acted in bad faith, a report shall be sent
26to both State and federal entities that oversee colleges and

 

 

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1universities in any capacity.
 
2
ARTICLE 15. STATUTE OF LIMITATIONS, ISERRA ADVOCATE, RULES AND
3
ELECTION

 
4    Section 15-5. Statute of limitations. Any action brought
5under this Act by the Attorney General shall be commenced
6within 20 years after the date upon which the alleged
7violation occurred.
 
8    Section 15-20. ISERRA Advocate.
9    (a) The ISERRA Advocate appointed by the Attorney General
10under Section 30-5 of the Service Member Employment and
11Reemployment Rights Act shall enforce this Act on behalf of
12the Attorney General.
13    (b) Through the ISERRA Advocate, the Attorney General
14shall have the power to:
15        (1) establish and make available a program to provide
16    training to institutions and service member students;
17        (2) prepare and make available interpretive and
18    educational materials and programs;
19        (3) respond to informal inquiries made by
20    institutions, service member students, and interested
21    members of the public;
22        (4) prepare and make available the notice required
23    under Section 5-45 on the rights, benefits, and

 

 

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1    obligations under this Act; and
2        (5) investigate allegations of violations of this Act
3    on behalf of the Attorney General.
 
4    Section 15-25. Governor's election. In a time of national
5or State emergency, the Governor has the authority to
6designate persons as entitled to protections under this Act.".