102ND GENERAL ASSEMBLY
State of Illinois
2021 and 2022
HB5752

 

Introduced 11/16/2022, by Rep. Cyril Nichols

 

SYNOPSIS AS INTRODUCED:
 
5 ILCS 410/10
5 ILCS 410/15
20 ILCS 50/5
20 ILCS 65/20-15
20 ILCS 105/3.10
20 ILCS 301/5-10
20 ILCS 607/3-10
20 ILCS 1305/1-70
20 ILCS 2310/2310-215  was 20 ILCS 2310/55.62
20 ILCS 2630/4.5
30 ILCS 575/2
30 ILCS 577/35-5
30 ILCS 785/5
70 ILCS 210/23.1  from Ch. 85, par. 1243.1
105 ILCS 5/27-21  from Ch. 122, par. 27-21
105 ILCS 5/34-18  from Ch. 122, par. 34-18
110 ILCS 205/9.16  from Ch. 144, par. 189.16
110 ILCS 925/3.07  from Ch. 144, par. 1503.07
110 ILCS 930/2  from Ch. 144, par. 2302
110 ILCS 947/50
110 ILCS 947/65.30
110 ILCS 947/65.110
215 ILCS 5/500-50
305 ILCS 5/4-23
305 ILCS 5/12-4.48
505 ILCS 72/10
625 ILCS 5/11-212
720 ILCS 5/17-10.2  was 720 ILCS 5/17-29
775 ILCS 5/2-105  from Ch. 68, par. 2-105
805 ILCS 5/8.12

    Amends various Acts to add Arab persons to provisions referencing or defining minority groups and ethnicities.


LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

 

 

A BILL FOR

 

HB5752LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1    AN ACT concerning government.
 
2    Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
3represented in the General Assembly:
 
4    Section 5. The State Employment Records Act is amended by
5changing Sections 10 and 15 as follows:
 
6    (5 ILCS 410/10)
7    Sec. 10. Definitions. As used in this Act:
8    (a) "Agency work force" means those persons employed by a
9State agency who are part of the State work force.
10    (b) "Contractual services employee" means a person
11employed by the State, or a State supported institution of
12higher education, under a written contract and paid by a State
13system CO-2 voucher (or its administrative equivalent) whose
14daily duties and responsibilities are directly or indirectly
15supervised or managed by a person paid by a payroll warrant (or
16its administrative equivalent) funded by State funds or pass
17through funds.
18    (c) "Agency" or "State agency" means those entities
19included in the definition of "State agencies" in the Illinois
20State Auditing Act.
21    (d) "Minority" means a person who is any of the following:
22        (1) American Indian or Alaska Native (a person having
23    origins in any of the original peoples of North and South

 

 

HB5752- 2 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1    America, including Central America, and who maintains
2    tribal affiliation or community attachment).
3        (2) Asian (a person having origins in any of the
4    original peoples of the Far East, Southeast Asia, or the
5    Indian subcontinent, including, but not limited to,
6    Cambodia, China, India, Japan, Korea, Malaysia, Pakistan,
7    the Philippine Islands, Thailand, and Vietnam).
8        (3) Black or African American (a person having origins
9    in any of the black racial groups of Africa).
10        (4) Hispanic or Latino (a person of Cuban, Mexican,
11    Puerto Rican, South or Central American, or other Spanish
12    culture or origin, regardless of race).
13        (5) Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander (a
14    person having origins in any of the original peoples of
15    Hawaii, Guam, Samoa, or other Pacific Islands).
16        (6) Arab (a person having origins in any of the
17    original peoples of Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates,
18    Iraq, Bahrain, Jordan, Comoros, Kuwait, Lebanon, Libya,
19    Mauritania, Morocco, Djibouti, Somalia, Palestine, Oman,
20    Syria, Yemen, Qatar, Sudan, Tunisia, Egypt, or Algeria).
21    (e) "Professional employee" means a person employed to
22perform employment duties requiring academic training,
23evidenced by a graduate or advanced degree from an accredited
24institution of higher education, and who, in the performance
25of those employment duties, may only engage in active practice
26of the academic training received when licensed or certified

 

 

HB5752- 3 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1by the State of Illinois.
2    (f) "State employee" means any person employed within the
3State work force.
4    (g) "State work force" means all persons employed by the
5State of Illinois as evidenced by:
6        (1) the total number of all payroll warrants (or their
7    administrative equivalent) issued by the Comptroller to
8    pay:
9            (i) persons subject to the Personnel Code; and
10            (ii) for the sole purpose of providing accurate
11        statistical information, all persons exempt from the
12        Personnel Code; and
13        (2) the total number of payroll warrants (or their
14    administrative equivalent) funded by State appropriation
15    which are issued by educational institutions governed by
16    the Board of Trustees of the University of Illinois, the
17    Board of Trustees of Southern Illinois University, the
18    Board of Governors of State Colleges and Universities, and
19    the Board of Regents; and
20        (3) the total number of contractual payroll system
21    CO-2 vouchers (or their administrative equivalent) funded
22    by State revenues and issued by:
23            (i) the State Comptroller; and
24            (ii) the issuing agents of the educational
25        institutions listed in subdivision (2) of this
26        subsection (g).

 

 

HB5752- 4 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1"State work force" does not, however, include persons holding
2elective State office.
3(Source: P.A. 102-465, eff. 1-1-22.)
 
4    (5 ILCS 410/15)
5    Sec. 15. Reported information.
6    (a) State agencies shall, if necessary, consult with the
7Office of the Comptroller and the Governor's Office of
8Management and Budget to confirm the accuracy of information
9required by this Act. State agencies shall collect and
10maintain information and publish reports including but not
11limited to the following information arranged in the indicated
12categories:
13        (i) the total number of persons employed by the agency
14    who are part of the State work force, as defined by this
15    Act, and the number and statistical percentage of women,
16    minorities, and persons with physical disabilities
17    employed within the agency work force;
18        (ii) the total number of persons employed within the
19    agency work force receiving levels of State remuneration
20    within incremental levels of $10,000, and the number and
21    statistical percentage of minorities, women, and persons
22    with physical disabilities in the agency work force
23    receiving levels of State remuneration within incremented
24    levels of $10,000;
25        (iii) the number of open positions of employment or

 

 

HB5752- 5 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1    advancement in the agency work force, reported on a fiscal
2    year basis;
3        (iv) the number and percentage of open positions of
4    employment or advancement in the agency work force filled
5    by minorities, women, and persons with physical
6    disabilities, reported on a fiscal year basis;
7        (v) the total number of persons employed within the
8    agency work force as professionals, and the number and
9    percentage of minorities, women, and persons with physical
10    disabilities employed within the agency work force as
11    professional employees; and
12        (vi) the total number of persons employed within the
13    agency work force as contractual service employees, and
14    the number and percentage of minorities, women, and
15    persons with physical disabilities employed within the
16    agency work force as contractual services employees.
17    (b) The numbers and percentages of minorities required to
18be reported by this Section shall be identified by the
19following categories:
20        (1) American Indian or Alaska Native (a person having
21    origins in any of the original peoples of North and South
22    America, including Central America, and who maintains
23    tribal affiliation or community attachment).
24        (2) Asian (a person having origins in any of the
25    original peoples of the Far East, Southeast Asia, or the
26    Indian subcontinent, including, but not limited to,

 

 

HB5752- 6 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1    Cambodia, China, India, Japan, Korea, Malaysia, Pakistan,
2    the Philippine Islands, Thailand, and Vietnam).
3        (3) Black or African American (a person having origins
4    in any of the black racial groups of Africa).
5        (4) Hispanic or Latino (a person of Cuban, Mexican,
6    Puerto Rican, South or Central American, or other Spanish
7    culture or origin, regardless of race).
8        (5) Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander (a
9    person having origins in any of the original peoples of
10    Hawaii, Guam, Samoa, or other Pacific Islands).
11        (6) Arab (a person having origins in any of the
12    original peoples of Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates,
13    Iraq, Bahrain, Jordan, Comoros, Kuwait, Lebanon, Libya,
14    Mauritania, Morocco, Djibouti, Somalia, Palestine, Oman,
15    Syria, Yemen, Qatar, Sudan, Tunisia, Egypt, or Algeria).
16    Data concerning women shall be reported on a minority and
17nonminority basis. The numbers and percentages of persons with
18physical disabilities required to be reported under this
19Section shall be identified by categories as male and female.
20    (c) To accomplish consistent and uniform classification
21and collection of information from each State agency, and to
22ensure full compliance and that all required information is
23provided, the Index Department of the Office of the Secretary
24of State, in consultation with the Department of Human Rights,
25the Department of Central Management Services, and the Office
26of the Comptroller, shall develop appropriate forms to be used

 

 

HB5752- 7 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1by all State agencies subject to the reporting requirements of
2this Act.
3    All State agencies shall make the reports required by this
4Act using the forms developed under this subsection. The
5reports must be certified and signed by an official of the
6agency who is responsible for the information provided.
7(Source: P.A. 102-465, eff. 1-1-22.)
 
8    Section 10. The Uniform Racial Classification Act is
9amended by changing Section 5 as follows:
 
10    (20 ILCS 50/5)
11    Sec. 5. Uniform racial classification. Notwithstanding any
12other provision of law, except as otherwise required by
13federal law or regulation, whenever a State agency is required
14by law to compile or report statistical data using racial or
15ethnic classifications, that State agency shall use the
16following classifications: (i) White; (ii) Black or African
17American; (iii) American Indian or Alaska Native; (iv) Asian;
18(v) Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander; or (vi)
19Hispanic or Latino; or (vii) Arab.
20    For the purposes of this Act, "State agency" means the
21offices of the constitutional officers identified in Article V
22of the Illinois Constitution, executive agencies, and
23departments, boards, commissions, and authorities under the
24Governor.

 

 

HB5752- 8 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1(Source: P.A. 98-982, eff. 8-18-14.)
 
2    Section 15. The Data Governance and Organization to
3Support Equity and Racial Justice Act is amended by changing
4Section 20-15 as follows:
 
5    (20 ILCS 65/20-15)
6    Sec. 20-15. Data Governance and Organization to Support
7Equity and Racial Justice.
8    (a) On or before July 1, 2022 and each July 1 thereafter,
9the Board and the Department shall report statistical data on
10the racial, ethnic, age, sex, disability status, sexual
11orientation, gender identity, and primary or preferred
12language demographics of program participants for each major
13program administered by the Board or the Department. Except as
14provided in subsection (b), when reporting the data required
15under this Section, the Board or the Department shall use the
16same racial and ethnic classifications for each program, which
17shall include, but not be limited to, the following:
18        (1) American Indian and Alaska Native alone.
19        (2) Asian alone.
20        (3) Black or African American alone.
21        (4) Hispanic or Latino of any race.
22        (5) Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander alone.
23        (5.5) Arab alone.
24        (6) White alone.

 

 

HB5752- 9 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1        (7) Some other race alone.
2        (8) Two or more races.
3    The Board and the Department may further define, by rule,
4the racial and ethnic classifications, including, if
5necessary, a classification of "No Race Specified".
6    (c) If a program administered by the Board or the
7Department is subject to federal reporting requirements that
8include the collection and public reporting of statistical
9data on the racial and ethnic demographics of program
10participants, the Department may maintain the same racial and
11ethnic classifications used under the federal requirements if
12such classifications differ from the classifications listed in
13subsection (a).
14    (d) The Department of Innovation and Technology shall
15assist the Board and the Department by establishing common
16technological processes and procedures for the Board and the
17Department to:
18        (1) Catalog data.
19        (2) Identify similar fields in datasets.
20        (3) Manage data requests.
21        (4) Share data.
22        (5) Collect data.
23        (6) Improve and clean data.
24        (7) Match data across the Board and Departments.
25        (8) Develop research and analytic agendas.
26        (9) Report on program participation disaggregated by

 

 

HB5752- 10 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1    race and ethnicity.
2        (10) Evaluate equitable outcomes for underserved
3    populations in Illinois.
4        (11) Define common roles for data management.
5        (12) Ensure that all major programs can report
6    disaggregated data by race, ethnicity, age, sex,
7    disability status, sexual orientation, and gender
8    identity, and primary or preferred language.
9    The Board and the Department shall use the common
10technological processes and procedures established by the
11Department of Innovation and Technology.
12    (e) If the Board or the Department is unable to begin
13reporting the data required by subsection (a) by July 1, 2022,
14the Board or the Department shall state the reasons for the
15delay under the reporting requirements.
16    (f) By no later than March 31, 2022, the Board and the
17Department shall provide a progress report to the General
18Assembly to disclose: (i) the programs and datasets that have
19been cataloged for which race, ethnicity, age, sex, disability
20status, sexual orientation, gender identity, and primary or
21preferred language have been standardized; and (ii) to the
22extent possible, the datasets and programs that are
23outstanding for each agency and the datasets that are planned
24for the upcoming year. On or before March 31, 2023, and each
25year thereafter, the Board and Departments shall provide an
26updated report to the General Assembly.

 

 

HB5752- 11 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1    (g) By no later than October 31, 2021, the Governor's
2Office shall provide a plan to establish processes for input
3from the Board and the Department into processes outlined in
4subsection (b). The plan shall incorporate ongoing efforts at
5data interoperability within the Department and the governance
6established to support the P-20 Longitudinal Education Data
7System enacted by Public Act 96-107.
8    (h) Nothing in this Section shall be construed to limit
9the rights granted to individuals or data sharing protections
10established under existing State and federal data privacy and
11security laws.
12(Source: P.A. 101-654, eff. 3-8-21; 102-543, eff. 8-20-21.)
 
13    Section 20. The Illinois Act on the Aging is amended by
14changing Section 3.10 as follows:
 
15    (20 ILCS 105/3.10)
16    Sec. 3.10. "Minority senior citizen" means any person 55
17years of age or older for whom opportunities for employment
18and participation in community life are unavailable or
19severely limited and who is any of the following:
20        (1) American Indian or Alaska Native (a person having
21    origins in any of the original peoples of North and South
22    America, including Central America, and who maintains
23    tribal affiliation or community attachment).
24        (2) Asian (a person having origins in any of the

 

 

HB5752- 12 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1    original peoples of the Far East, Southeast Asia, or the
2    Indian subcontinent, including, but not limited to,
3    Cambodia, China, India, Japan, Korea, Malaysia, Pakistan,
4    the Philippine Islands, Thailand, and Vietnam).
5        (3) Black or African American (a person having origins
6    in any of the black racial groups of Africa).
7        (4) Hispanic or Latino (a person of Cuban, Mexican,
8    Puerto Rican, South or Central American, or other Spanish
9    culture or origin, regardless of race).
10        (5) Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander (a
11    person having origins in any of the original peoples of
12    Hawaii, Guam, Samoa, or other Pacific Islands).
13        (6) Arab (a person having origins in any of the
14    original peoples of Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates,
15    Iraq, Bahrain, Jordan, Comoros, Kuwait, Lebanon, Libya,
16    Mauritania, Morocco, Djibouti, Somalia, Palestine, Oman,
17    Syria, Yemen, Qatar, Sudan, Tunisia, Egypt, or Algeria).
18(Source: P.A. 102-465, eff. 1-1-22.)
 
19    Section 25. The Substance Use Disorder Act is amended by
20changing Section 5-10 as follows:
 
21    (20 ILCS 301/5-10)
22    Sec. 5-10. Functions of the Department.
23    (a) In addition to the powers, duties and functions vested
24in the Department by this Act, or by other laws of this State,

 

 

HB5752- 13 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1the Department shall carry out the following activities:
2        (1) Design, coordinate and fund comprehensive
3    community-based and culturally and gender-appropriate
4    services throughout the State. These services must include
5    prevention, early intervention, treatment, and other
6    recovery support services for substance use disorders that
7    are accessible and addresses the needs of at-risk
8    individuals and their families.
9        (2) Act as the exclusive State agency to accept,
10    receive and expend, pursuant to appropriation, any public
11    or private monies, grants or services, including those
12    received from the federal government or from other State
13    agencies, for the purpose of providing prevention, early
14    intervention, treatment, and other recovery support
15    services for substance use disorders.
16        (2.5) In partnership with the Department of Healthcare
17    and Family Services, act as one of the principal State
18    agencies for the sole purpose of calculating the
19    maintenance of effort requirement under Section 1930 of
20    Title XIX, Part B, Subpart II of the Public Health Service
21    Act (42 U.S.C. 300x-30) and the Interim Final Rule (45 CFR
22    96.134).
23        (3) Coordinate a statewide strategy for the
24    prevention, early intervention, treatment, and recovery
25    support of substance use disorders. This strategy shall
26    include the development of a comprehensive plan, submitted

 

 

HB5752- 14 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1    annually with the application for federal substance use
2    disorder block grant funding, for the provision of an
3    array of such services. The plan shall be based on local
4    community-based needs and upon data including, but not
5    limited to, that which defines the prevalence of and costs
6    associated with substance use disorders. This
7    comprehensive plan shall include identification of
8    problems, needs, priorities, services and other pertinent
9    information, including the needs of minorities and other
10    specific priority populations in the State, and shall
11    describe how the identified problems and needs will be
12    addressed. For purposes of this paragraph, the term
13    "minorities and other specific priority populations" may
14    include, but shall not be limited to, groups such as
15    women, children, intravenous drug users, persons with AIDS
16    or who are HIV infected, veterans, African-Americans,
17    Puerto Ricans, Hispanics, Asian Americans, Arabs, the
18    elderly, persons in the criminal justice system, persons
19    who are clients of services provided by other State
20    agencies, persons with disabilities and such other
21    specific populations as the Department may from time to
22    time identify. In developing the plan, the Department
23    shall seek input from providers, parent groups,
24    associations and interested citizens.
25        The plan developed under this Section shall include an
26    explanation of the rationale to be used in ensuring that

 

 

HB5752- 15 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1    funding shall be based upon local community needs,
2    including, but not limited to, the incidence and
3    prevalence of, and costs associated with, substance use
4    disorders, as well as upon demonstrated program
5    performance.
6        The plan developed under this Section shall also
7    contain a report detailing the activities of and progress
8    made through services for the care and treatment of
9    substance use disorders among pregnant women and mothers
10    and their children established under subsection (j) of
11    Section 35-5.
12        As applicable, the plan developed under this Section
13    shall also include information about funding by other
14    State agencies for prevention, early intervention,
15    treatment, and other recovery support services.
16        (4) Lead, foster and develop cooperation, coordination
17    and agreements among federal and State governmental
18    agencies and local providers that provide assistance,
19    services, funding or other functions, peripheral or
20    direct, in the prevention, early intervention, treatment,
21    and recovery support for substance use disorders. This
22    shall include, but shall not be limited to, the following:
23            (A) Cooperate with and assist other State
24        agencies, as applicable, in establishing and
25        conducting substance use disorder services among the
26        populations they respectively serve.

 

 

HB5752- 16 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1            (B) Cooperate with and assist the Illinois
2        Department of Public Health in the establishment,
3        funding and support of programs and services for the
4        promotion of maternal and child health and the
5        prevention and treatment of infectious diseases,
6        including but not limited to HIV infection, especially
7        with respect to those persons who are high risk due to
8        intravenous injection of illegal drugs, or who may
9        have been sexual partners of these individuals, or who
10        may have impaired immune systems as a result of a
11        substance use disorder.
12            (C) Supply to the Department of Public Health and
13        prenatal care providers a list of all providers who
14        are licensed to provide substance use disorder
15        treatment for pregnant women in this State.
16            (D) Assist in the placement of child abuse or
17        neglect perpetrators (identified by the Illinois
18        Department of Children and Family Services (DCFS)) who
19        have been determined to be in need of substance use
20        disorder treatment pursuant to Section 8.2 of the
21        Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act.
22            (E) Cooperate with and assist DCFS in carrying out
23        its mandates to:
24                (i) identify substance use disorders among its
25            clients and their families; and
26                (ii) develop services to deal with such

 

 

HB5752- 17 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1            disorders.
2        These services may include, but shall not be limited
3        to, programs to prevent or treat substance use
4        disorders with DCFS clients and their families,
5        identifying child care needs within such treatment,
6        and assistance with other issues as required.
7            (F) Cooperate with and assist the Illinois
8        Criminal Justice Information Authority with respect to
9        statistical and other information concerning the
10        incidence and prevalence of substance use disorders.
11            (G) Cooperate with and assist the State
12        Superintendent of Education, boards of education,
13        schools, police departments, the Illinois State
14        Police, courts and other public and private agencies
15        and individuals in establishing prevention programs
16        statewide and preparing curriculum materials for use
17        at all levels of education.
18            (H) Cooperate with and assist the Illinois
19        Department of Healthcare and Family Services in the
20        development and provision of services offered to
21        recipients of public assistance for the treatment and
22        prevention of substance use disorders.
23            (I) (Blank).
24        (5) From monies appropriated to the Department from
25    the Drunk and Drugged Driving Prevention Fund, reimburse
26    DUI evaluation and risk education programs licensed by the

 

 

HB5752- 18 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1    Department for providing indigent persons with free or
2    reduced-cost evaluation and risk education services
3    relating to a charge of driving under the influence of
4    alcohol or other drugs.
5        (6) Promulgate regulations to identify and disseminate
6    best practice guidelines that can be utilized by publicly
7    and privately funded programs as well as for levels of
8    payment to government funded programs that provide
9    prevention, early intervention, treatment, and other
10    recovery support services for substance use disorders and
11    those services referenced in Sections 15-10 and 40-5.
12        (7) In consultation with providers and related trade
13    associations, specify a uniform methodology for use by
14    funded providers and the Department for billing and
15    collection and dissemination of statistical information
16    regarding services related to substance use disorders.
17        (8) Receive data and assistance from federal, State
18    and local governmental agencies, and obtain copies of
19    identification and arrest data from all federal, State and
20    local law enforcement agencies for use in carrying out the
21    purposes and functions of the Department.
22        (9) Designate and license providers to conduct
23    screening, assessment, referral and tracking of clients
24    identified by the criminal justice system as having
25    indications of substance use disorders and being eligible
26    to make an election for treatment under Section 40-5 of

 

 

HB5752- 19 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1    this Act, and assist in the placement of individuals who
2    are under court order to participate in treatment.
3        (10) Identify and disseminate evidence-based best
4    practice guidelines as maintained in administrative rule
5    that can be utilized to determine a substance use disorder
6    diagnosis.
7        (11) (Blank).
8        (12) Make grants with funds appropriated from the Drug
9    Treatment Fund in accordance with Section 7 of the
10    Controlled Substance and Cannabis Nuisance Act, or in
11    accordance with Section 80 of the Methamphetamine Control
12    and Community Protection Act, or in accordance with
13    subsections (h) and (i) of Section 411.2 of the Illinois
14    Controlled Substances Act, or in accordance with Section
15    6z-107 of the State Finance Act.
16        (13) Encourage all health and disability insurance
17    programs to include substance use disorder treatment as a
18    covered service and to use evidence-based best practice
19    criteria as maintained in administrative rule and as
20    required in Public Act 99-0480 in determining the
21    necessity for such services and continued stay.
22        (14) Award grants and enter into fixed-rate and
23    fee-for-service arrangements with any other department,
24    authority or commission of this State, or any other state
25    or the federal government or with any public or private
26    agency, including the disbursement of funds and furnishing

 

 

HB5752- 20 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1    of staff, to effectuate the purposes of this Act.
2        (15) Conduct a public information campaign to inform
3    the State's Hispanic residents regarding the prevention
4    and treatment of substance use disorders.
5    (b) In addition to the powers, duties and functions vested
6in it by this Act, or by other laws of this State, the
7Department may undertake, but shall not be limited to, the
8following activities:
9        (1) Require all organizations licensed or funded by
10    the Department to include an education component to inform
11    participants regarding the causes and means of
12    transmission and methods of reducing the risk of acquiring
13    or transmitting HIV infection and other infectious
14    diseases, and to include funding for such education
15    component in its support of the program.
16        (2) Review all State agency applications for federal
17    funds that include provisions relating to the prevention,
18    early intervention and treatment of substance use
19    disorders in order to ensure consistency.
20        (3) Prepare, publish, evaluate, disseminate and serve
21    as a central repository for educational materials dealing
22    with the nature and effects of substance use disorders.
23    Such materials may deal with the educational needs of the
24    citizens of Illinois, and may include at least pamphlets
25    that describe the causes and effects of fetal alcohol
26    spectrum disorders.

 

 

HB5752- 21 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1        (4) Develop and coordinate, with regional and local
2    agencies, education and training programs for persons
3    engaged in providing services for persons with substance
4    use disorders, which programs may include specific HIV
5    education and training for program personnel.
6        (5) Cooperate with and assist in the development of
7    education, prevention, early intervention, and treatment
8    programs for employees of State and local governments and
9    businesses in the State.
10        (6) Utilize the support and assistance of interested
11    persons in the community, including recovering persons, to
12    assist individuals and communities in understanding the
13    dynamics of substance use disorders, and to encourage
14    individuals with substance use disorders to voluntarily
15    undergo treatment.
16        (7) Promote, conduct, assist or sponsor basic
17    clinical, epidemiological and statistical research into
18    substance use disorders and research into the prevention
19    of those problems either solely or in conjunction with any
20    public or private agency.
21        (8) Cooperate with public and private agencies,
22    organizations and individuals in the development of
23    programs, and to provide technical assistance and
24    consultation services for this purpose.
25        (9) (Blank).
26        (10) (Blank).

 

 

HB5752- 22 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1        (11) Fund, promote, or assist entities dealing with
2    substance use disorders.
3        (12) With monies appropriated from the Group Home Loan
4    Revolving Fund, make loans, directly or through
5    subcontract, to assist in underwriting the costs of
6    housing in which individuals recovering from substance use
7    disorders may reside, pursuant to Section 50-40 of this
8    Act.
9        (13) Promulgate such regulations as may be necessary
10    to carry out the purposes and enforce the provisions of
11    this Act.
12        (14) Provide funding to help parents be effective in
13    preventing substance use disorders by building an
14    awareness of the family's role in preventing substance use
15    disorders through adjusting expectations, developing new
16    skills, and setting positive family goals. The programs
17    shall include, but not be limited to, the following
18    subjects: healthy family communication; establishing rules
19    and limits; how to reduce family conflict; how to build
20    self-esteem, competency, and responsibility in children;
21    how to improve motivation and achievement; effective
22    discipline; problem solving techniques; and how to talk
23    about drugs and alcohol. The programs shall be open to all
24    parents.
25(Source: P.A. 101-10, eff. 6-5-19; 102-538, eff. 8-20-21.)
 

 

 

HB5752- 23 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1    Section 30. The Brownfields Redevelopment and Intermodal
2Promotion Act is amended by changing Section 3-10 as follows:
 
3    (20 ILCS 607/3-10)
4    Sec. 3-10. Definitions. As used in this Act:
5    "Affected Municipality" means a municipality whose
6boundaries are partially or completely within the Brownfields
7Redevelopment Zone and where an Eligible Project will take
8place.
9    "Developer Agreement" means the agreement between an
10eligible developer or eligible employer and the Department
11under this Act.
12    "Brownfield" means real property, the expansion,
13redevelopment, or reuse of which may be complicated by the
14presence or potential presence of a hazardous substance,
15pollutant, or contaminant; for the purposes of this Act, a
16property will be considered a brownfield if a prospective
17purchaser seeking financing from a private financial
18institution is required by that institution to conduct a Phase
19I Environmental Site Assessment (ESA), as defined by ASTM
20Standard E-1527-05 ("Standard Practice for Environmental Site
21Assessments: Phase I Environmental Site Assessment Process").
22    "Department" means the Department of Commerce and Economic
23Opportunity.
24    "Director" means the Director of the Department of
25Commerce and Economic Opportunity.

 

 

HB5752- 24 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1    "Eligible Developer" means an individual, partnership,
2corporation, or other entity, currently and actively engaged
3in the development of logistics, warehousing, distribution, or
4light manufacturing facilities in North America, including the
5Managing Partner of the South Suburban Brownfields
6Redevelopment Zone, that owns, options, or otherwise directly
7controls a parcel of land that is included in a South Suburban
8Brownfields Redevelopment Zone Project.
9    "Eligible employer" means an individual, partnership,
10corporation, or other entity that employs or will employ
11full-time employees at finished facilities on property that is
12within the South Suburban Brownfields Redevelopment Zone.
13    "Employment goal" means the goal of achieving a minimum
14percentage of labor hours to be performed by employees who are
15a member of a minority group and who reside in one of the
16municipalities containing property that is part of the South
17Suburban Brownfields Redevelopment Zone.
18    "Full-time employee" means an individual who is employed
19for consideration for at least 35 hours each week or who
20renders any other standard of service generally accepted by
21industry custom or practice as full-time employment. An
22individual for whom a W-2 is issued by a Professional Employer
23Organization is a full-time employee if employed in the
24service of the eligible employer for consideration for at
25least 35 hours each week or who renders any other standard of
26service generally accepted by industry custom or practice as

 

 

HB5752- 25 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1full-time employment.
2    "Eligible Project" means those projects described in
3Section 3-35 of this Act.
4    "Incremental income tax" means the total amount withheld
5from the compensation of new employees under Article 7 of the
6Illinois Income Tax Act arising from employment by an eligible
7employer.
8    "Infrastructure" means roads and streets, bridges,
9sidewalks, street lights, water and sewer line extensions or
10improvements, storm water drainage and retention facilities,
11gas and electric utility line extensions or improvements, and
12rail improvements including signalization and siding
13construction or repair, on publicly owned land or other public
14improvements that are essential to the development of a
15Redevelopment Zone Project.
16    "Intermodal" means a type of international freight system
17that permits transshipping among sea, highway, rail and air
18modes of transportation through use of ANSI/International
19Organization for Standardization containers, line haul assets,
20and handling equipment.
21    "Intermodal terminal" means an integrated facility where
22trailers and containers are transferred between intermodal
23railcars and highway carriers, including domestic and
24international container shipments; or an integrated facility
25where dry or liquid bulk and packaged commodities are
26transferred between conventional railroad freight cars and

 

 

HB5752- 26 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1highway carriers.
2    "Managing Partner" means a representative of Cook County
3appointed by the President of the Board of Commissioners of
4Cook County or a duly created instrumentality of the County
5which enters into an agreement with the Department as
6described in subsection (c) of Section 3-30 of this Act
7regarding the overall management and use of Increment Funds
8and which is authorized by the County to undertake, or to enter
9into Development agreements with third parties to undertake,
10activities necessary for the redevelopment of parcels
11designated under this Act as part of a South Suburban
12Brownfields Redevelopment Zone. For the purposes of this
13definition, a "duly created instrumentality of the county" is
14a company that:
15        (1) is licensed to conduct business in the State of
16    Illinois;
17        (2) has (i) executed industrial developments of the
18    type described as "eligible projects" in Section 3-35 and
19    duly met all of its financial obligations entailed in
20    those projects and (ii) managed each of the types of tasks
21    described in Section 3-45 of this Act as "eligible
22    activities", performing those activities with results that
23    met or exceeded the objectives of the project, or
24    otherwise possesses the business experience described in
25    this item (2);
26        (3) is selected through a competitive Request for

 

 

HB5752- 27 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1    Proposals process conducted according to rules and
2    standards generally applicable to the selection of
3    professional service contractors by the government of Cook
4    County.
5    "Minority" means a person who is a citizen or lawful
6permanent resident of the United States and who is:
7        (i) African American, meaning a person whose origins
8    are in any of the Black racial groups of Africa, and who
9    has historically and consistently identified himself or
10    herself as being such a person;
11        (ii) Hispanic American or Latino American, meaning a
12    person whose origins are in Mexico, Central or South
13    America, or any of the Spanish speaking islands of the
14    Caribbean (for example Cuba and Puerto Rico), regardless
15    of race, and who has historically and consistently
16    identified himself or herself as being such a person;
17        (iii) Asian or Pacific Islander American, meaning a
18    person whose origins are in any of the original peoples of
19    the Far East, Southeast Asia, the islands of the Pacific
20    or the Northern Marianas, or the Indian Subcontinent, and
21    who has historically and consistently identified himself
22    or herself as being such a person; or
23        (iv) Native American, meaning a person having origins
24    in any of the original peoples of North America, and who
25    maintain tribal affiliation or demonstrate at least
26    one-quarter descent from such groups, and who has

 

 

HB5752- 28 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1    historically and consistently identified himself or
2    herself as being such a person; or .
3        (v) Arab, meaning a person having origins in any of
4    the original peoples of Saudi Arabia, United Arab
5    Emirates, Iraq, Bahrain, Jordan, Comoros, Kuwait, Lebanon,
6    Libya, Mauritania, Morocco, Djibouti, Somalia, Palestine,
7    Oman, Syria, Yemen, Qatar, Sudan, Tunisia, Egypt, or
8    Algeria, and who has historically and consistently
9    identified himself or herself as being such a person.
10    "New employee" means a full-time employee first employed
11by an eligible employer for a project that is the subject of an
12agreement between the Managing Partner and an eligible
13developer or eligible employer and who is hired after the
14eligible developer enters into the agreement, but does not
15include:
16        (1) an employee of the eligible employer who performs
17    a job that (i) existed for at least 6 months before the
18    employee was hired and (ii) was previously performed by
19    another employee;
20        (2) an employee of the eligible employer who was
21    previously employed in Illinois by a related member of the
22    eligible employer and whose employment was shifted to the
23    eligible employer after the eligible employer entered into
24    the agreement; or
25        (3) a child, grandchild, parent, or spouse, other than
26    a spouse who is legally separated from the individual, of

 

 

HB5752- 29 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1    any individual who has a direct or an indirect ownership
2    interest of at least 5% in the profits, capital, or value
3    of the eligible employer.
4    Notwithstanding item (2) of this definition, an employee
5may be considered a new employee under the agreement if the
6employee performs a job that was previously performed by an
7employee who was: (i) treated under the agreement as a new
8employee and (ii) promoted by the eligible employer to another
9job.
10    "Professional Employer Organization" means an employee
11leasing company, as defined in Section 206.1(A)(2) of the
12Unemployment Insurance Act.
13    "Related member" means a person or entity that, with
14respect to the eligible employer during any portion of the
15taxable year, is any one of the following:
16        (1) an individual stockholder, if the stockholder and
17    the members of the stockholder's family (as defined in
18    Section 318 of the Internal Revenue Code) own directly,
19    indirectly, beneficially, or constructively, in the
20    aggregate, at least 50% of the value of the eligible
21    employer's outstanding stock;
22        (2) a partnership, estate, or trust and any partner or
23    beneficiary, if the partnership, estate, or trust, and its
24    partners or beneficiaries own directly, indirectly,
25    beneficially, or constructively, in the aggregate, at
26    least 50% of the profits, capital, stock, or value of the

 

 

HB5752- 30 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1    eligible employer;
2        (3) a corporation, and any party related to the
3    corporation in a manner that would require an attribution
4    of stock from the corporation to the party or from the
5    party to the corporation under the attribution rules of
6    Section 318 of the Internal Revenue Code, if the taxpayer
7    owns directly, indirectly, beneficially, or constructively
8    at least 50% of the value of the corporation's outstanding
9    stock;
10        (4) a corporation and any party related to that
11    corporation in a manner that would require an attribution
12    of stock from the corporation to the party or from the
13    party to the corporation under the attribution rules of
14    Section 318 of the Internal Revenue Code, if the
15    corporation and all such related parties own in the
16    aggregate at least 50% of the profits, capital, stock, or
17    value of the eligible employer; or
18        (5) a person to or from whom there is attribution of
19    stock ownership in accordance with Section 1563(e) of the
20    Internal Revenue Code, except, for purposes of determining
21    whether a person is a related member under this
22    definition, 20% shall be substituted for 5% wherever 5%
23    appears in Section 1563(e) of the Internal Revenue Code.
24    "South Suburban Brownfields Advisory Council" or "Advisory
25Council" means a body comprised of representatives of Affected
26Municipalities, along with experts appointed by the President

 

 

HB5752- 31 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1of the Cook County Board of Commissioners and the Governor of
2Illinois, created to guide development within the South
3Suburban Brownfields Redevelopment Zone.
4    "South Suburban Brownfields Redevelopment Zone Project" or
5"Project" means an Eligible Project, as described in Section
63-35, to coordinate the redevelopment and re-use of industrial
7sites within the South Suburban Brownfields Redevelopment Zone
8in southern Cook County.
9    "South Suburban Brownfields Redevelopment Zone",
10"Brownfields Redevelopment Zone" or "Zone" means the area
11fully encompassing all properties, acreage, and structures,
12including sites that conform to the Environmental Protection
13Agency definition of Brownfield Industrial Sites, that are
14zoned for industrial uses by the applicable local zoning
15agency and which are located within the following South
16Suburban Cook County municipalities that surround the Canadian
17National and Union Pacific intermodal freight terminals in
18Harvey and Dolton, Illinois respectively: Dixmoor, Dolton,
19East Hazelcrest, Harvey, Hazelcrest, Homewood, Markham,
20Phoenix, Posen, Riverdale, South Holland and Thornton. The
21South Suburban Brownfields Advisory Council shall advise the
22Managing Partner in regard to the selection of Projects. The
23composition of the Advisory Council is determined as set forth
24in subsection (a) of Section 3-30 of this Act.
25(Source: P.A. 98-109, eff. 7-25-13.)
 

 

 

HB5752- 32 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1    Section 35. The Department of Human Services Act is
2amended by changing Section 1-70 as follows:
 
3    (20 ILCS 1305/1-70)
4    Sec. 1-70. Uniform demographic data collection.
5    (a) The Department shall collect and publicly report
6statistical data on the racial and ethnic demographics of
7program participants for each program administered by the
8Department. Except as provided in subsection (b), when
9collecting the data required under this Section, the
10Department shall use the same racial and ethnic
11classifications for each program, which shall include, but not
12be limited to, the following:
13        (1) American Indian and Alaska Native alone.
14        (2) Asian alone.
15        (3) Black or African American alone.
16        (4) Hispanic or Latino of any race.
17        (5) Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander alone.
18        (5.5) Arab alone.
19        (6) White alone.
20        (7) Some other race alone.
21        (8) Two or more races.
22    The Department may further define, by rule, the racial and
23ethnic classifications provided in this Section.
24    (b) If a program administered by the Department is subject
25to federal reporting requirements that include the collection

 

 

HB5752- 33 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1and public reporting of statistical data on the racial and
2ethnic demographics of program participants, the Department
3may maintain the same racial and ethnic classifications used
4under the federal requirements if such classifications differ
5from the classifications listed in subsection (a).
6    (c) The Department shall make all demographic information
7collected under this Section available to the public which at
8a minimum shall include posting the information for each
9program in a timely manner on the Department's official
10website. If the Department already has a mechanism or process
11in place to report information about program participation for
12any program administered by the Department, then the
13Department shall use that mechanism or process to include the
14demographic information collected under this Section. If the
15Department does not have a mechanism or process in place to
16report information about program participation for any program
17administered by the Department, then the Department shall
18create a mechanism or process to disseminate the demographic
19information collected under this Section.
20(Source: P.A. 100-275, eff. 1-1-18; 100-863, eff. 8-14-18.)
 
21    Section 40. The Department of Public Health Powers and
22Duties Law of the Civil Administrative Code of Illinois is
23amended by changing Section 2310-215 as follows:
 
24    (20 ILCS 2310/2310-215)  (was 20 ILCS 2310/55.62)

 

 

HB5752- 34 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1    Sec. 2310-215. Center for Minority Health Services.
2    (a) The Department shall establish a Center for Minority
3Health Services to advise the Department on matters pertaining
4to the health needs of minority populations within the State.
5    (b) The Center shall have the following duties:
6        (1) To assist in the assessment of the health needs of
7    minority populations in the State.
8        (2) To recommend treatment methods and programs that
9    are sensitive and relevant to the unique linguistic,
10    cultural, and ethnic characteristics of minority
11    populations.
12        (3) To provide consultation, technical assistance,
13    training programs, and reference materials to service
14    providers, organizations, and other agencies.
15        (4) To promote awareness of minority health concerns,
16    and encourage, promote, and aid in the establishment of
17    minority services.
18        (5) To disseminate information on available minority
19    services.
20        (6) To provide adequate and effective opportunities
21    for minority populations to express their views on
22    Departmental policy development and program
23    implementation.
24        (7) To coordinate with the Department on Aging and the
25    Department of Healthcare and Family Services to coordinate
26    services designed to meet the needs of minority senior

 

 

HB5752- 35 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1    citizens.
2        (8) To promote awareness of the incidence of
3    Alzheimer's disease and related dementias among minority
4    populations and to encourage, promote, and aid in the
5    establishment of prevention and treatment programs and
6    services relating to this health problem.
7    (c) For the purpose of this Section, "minority" shall mean
8and include any person or group of persons who are any of the
9following:
10        (1) American Indian or Alaska Native (a person having
11    origins in any of the original peoples of North and South
12    America, including Central America, and who maintains
13    tribal affiliation or community attachment).
14        (2) Asian (a person having origins in any of the
15    original peoples of the Far East, Southeast Asia, or the
16    Indian subcontinent, including, but not limited to,
17    Cambodia, China, India, Japan, Korea, Malaysia, Pakistan,
18    the Philippine Islands, Thailand, and Vietnam).
19        (3) Black or African American (a person having origins
20    in any of the black racial groups of Africa).
21        (4) Hispanic or Latino (a person of Cuban, Mexican,
22    Puerto Rican, South or Central American, or other Spanish
23    culture or origin, regardless of race).
24        (5) Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander (a
25    person having origins in any of the original peoples of
26    Hawaii, Guam, Samoa, or other Pacific Islands).

 

 

HB5752- 36 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1        (6) Arab (a person having origins in any of the
2    original peoples of Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates,
3    Iraq, Bahrain, Jordan, Comoros, Kuwait, Lebanon, Libya,
4    Mauritania, Morocco, Djibouti, Somalia, Palestine, Oman,
5    Syria, Yemen, Qatar, Sudan, Tunisia, Egypt, or Algeria).
6(Source: P.A. 102-465, eff. 1-1-22.)
 
7    Section 45. The Criminal Identification Act is amended by
8changing Section 4.5 as follows:
 
9    (20 ILCS 2630/4.5)
10    Sec. 4.5. Ethnic and racial data collection.
11    (a) Ethnic and racial data for every adult or juvenile
12arrested shall be collected at the following points of contact
13by the entity identified in this subsection or another entity
14authorized and qualified to collect and report on this data:
15        (1) at arrest or booking, by the supervising law
16    enforcement agency;
17        (2) upon admittance to the Department of Corrections,
18    by the Department of Corrections;
19        (3) upon admittance to the Department of Juvenile
20    Justice, by the Department of Juvenile Justice; and
21        (4) upon transfer from the Department of Juvenile
22    Justice to the Department of Corrections, by the
23    Department of Juvenile Justice.
24    (b) Ethnic and racial data shall be collected through

 

 

HB5752- 37 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1selection of one of the following categories:
2        (1) American Indian or Alaskan Native;
3        (2) Asian or Pacific Islander;
4        (3) Black or African American;
5        (4) White or Caucasian;
6        (5) Hispanic or Latino; or
7        (5.5) Arab; or
8        (6) Unknown.
9    (c) The collecting entity shall make a good-faith effort
10to collect race and ethnicity information as self-reported by
11the adult or juvenile. If the adult or juvenile is unable or
12unwilling to provide race and ethnicity information, the
13collecting entity shall make a good-faith effort to deduce the
14race and ethnicity of the adult or juvenile.
15(Source: P.A. 98-528, eff. 1-1-15; 99-78, eff. 7-20-15.)
 
16    Section 50. The Business Enterprise for Minorities, Women,
17and Persons with Disabilities Act is amended by changing
18Section 2 as follows:
 
19    (30 ILCS 575/2)
20    (Section scheduled to be repealed on June 30, 2024)
21    Sec. 2. Definitions.
22    (A) For the purpose of this Act, the following terms shall
23have the following definitions:
24        (1) "Minority person" shall mean a person who is a

 

 

HB5752- 38 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1    citizen or lawful permanent resident of the United States
2    and who is any of the following:
3            (a) American Indian or Alaska Native (a person
4        having origins in any of the original peoples of North
5        and South America, including Central America, and who
6        maintains tribal affiliation or community attachment).
7            (b) Asian (a person having origins in any of the
8        original peoples of the Far East, Southeast Asia, or
9        the Indian subcontinent, including, but not limited
10        to, Cambodia, China, India, Japan, Korea, Malaysia,
11        Pakistan, the Philippine Islands, Thailand, and
12        Vietnam).
13            (c) Black or African American (a person having
14        origins in any of the black racial groups of Africa).
15            (d) Hispanic or Latino (a person of Cuban,
16        Mexican, Puerto Rican, South or Central American, or
17        other Spanish culture or origin, regardless of race).
18            (e) Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander (a
19        person having origins in any of the original peoples
20        of Hawaii, Guam, Samoa, or other Pacific Islands).
21            (f) Arab (a person having origins in any of the
22        original peoples of Saudi Arabia, United Arab
23        Emirates, Iraq, Bahrain, Jordan, Comoros, Kuwait,
24        Lebanon, Libya, Mauritania, Morocco, Djibouti,
25        Somalia, Palestine, Oman, Syria, Yemen, Qatar, Sudan,
26        Tunisia, Egypt, or Algeria).

 

 

HB5752- 39 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1    
2        (2) "Woman" shall mean a person who is a citizen or
3    lawful permanent resident of the United States and who is
4    of the female gender.
5        (2.05) "Person with a disability" means a person who
6    is a citizen or lawful resident of the United States and is
7    a person qualifying as a person with a disability under
8    subdivision (2.1) of this subsection (A).
9        (2.1) "Person with a disability" means a person with a
10    severe physical or mental disability that:
11            (a) results from:
12            amputation,
13            arthritis,
14            autism,
15            blindness,
16            burn injury,
17            cancer,
18            cerebral palsy,
19            Crohn's disease,
20            cystic fibrosis,
21            deafness,
22            head injury,
23            heart disease,
24            hemiplegia,
25            hemophilia,
26            respiratory or pulmonary dysfunction,

 

 

HB5752- 40 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1            an intellectual disability,
2            mental illness,
3            multiple sclerosis,
4            muscular dystrophy,
5            musculoskeletal disorders,
6            neurological disorders, including stroke and
7        epilepsy,
8            paraplegia,
9            quadriplegia and other spinal cord conditions,
10            sickle cell anemia,
11            ulcerative colitis,
12            specific learning disabilities, or
13            end stage renal failure disease; and
14            (b) substantially limits one or more of the
15        person's major life activities.
16        Another disability or combination of disabilities may
17    also be considered as a severe disability for the purposes
18    of item (a) of this subdivision (2.1) if it is determined
19    by an evaluation of rehabilitation potential to cause a
20    comparable degree of substantial functional limitation
21    similar to the specific list of disabilities listed in
22    item (a) of this subdivision (2.1).
23        (3) "Minority-owned business" means a business which
24    is at least 51% owned by one or more minority persons, or
25    in the case of a corporation, at least 51% of the stock in
26    which is owned by one or more minority persons; and the

 

 

HB5752- 41 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1    management and daily business operations of which are
2    controlled by one or more of the minority individuals who
3    own it.
4        (4) "Women-owned business" means a business which is
5    at least 51% owned by one or more women, or, in the case of
6    a corporation, at least 51% of the stock in which is owned
7    by one or more women; and the management and daily
8    business operations of which are controlled by one or more
9    of the women who own it.
10        (4.1) "Business owned by a person with a disability"
11    means a business that is at least 51% owned by one or more
12    persons with a disability and the management and daily
13    business operations of which are controlled by one or more
14    of the persons with disabilities who own it. A
15    not-for-profit agency for persons with disabilities that
16    is exempt from taxation under Section 501 of the Internal
17    Revenue Code of 1986 is also considered a "business owned
18    by a person with a disability".
19        (4.2) "Council" means the Business Enterprise Council
20    for Minorities, Women, and Persons with Disabilities
21    created under Section 5 of this Act.
22        (4.3) "Commission" means, unless the context clearly
23    indicates otherwise, the Commission on Equity and
24    Inclusion created under the Commission on Equity and
25    Inclusion Act.
26        (5) "State contracts" means all contracts entered into

 

 

HB5752- 42 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1    by the State, any agency or department thereof, or any
2    public institution of higher education, including
3    community college districts, regardless of the source of
4    the funds with which the contracts are paid, which are not
5    subject to federal reimbursement. "State contracts" does
6    not include contracts awarded by a retirement system,
7    pension fund, or investment board subject to Section
8    1-109.1 of the Illinois Pension Code. This definition
9    shall control over any existing definition under this Act
10    or applicable administrative rule.
11        "State construction contracts" means all State
12    contracts entered into by a State agency or public
13    institution of higher education for the repair,
14    remodeling, renovation or construction of a building or
15    structure, or for the construction or maintenance of a
16    highway defined in Article 2 of the Illinois Highway Code.
17        (6) "State agencies" shall mean all departments,
18    officers, boards, commissions, institutions and bodies
19    politic and corporate of the State, but does not include
20    the Board of Trustees of the University of Illinois, the
21    Board of Trustees of Southern Illinois University, the
22    Board of Trustees of Chicago State University, the Board
23    of Trustees of Eastern Illinois University, the Board of
24    Trustees of Governors State University, the Board of
25    Trustees of Illinois State University, the Board of
26    Trustees of Northeastern Illinois University, the Board of

 

 

HB5752- 43 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1    Trustees of Northern Illinois University, the Board of
2    Trustees of Western Illinois University, municipalities or
3    other local governmental units, or other State
4    constitutional officers.
5        (7) "Public institutions of higher education" means
6    the University of Illinois, Southern Illinois University,
7    Chicago State University, Eastern Illinois University,
8    Governors State University, Illinois State University,
9    Northeastern Illinois University, Northern Illinois
10    University, Western Illinois University, the public
11    community colleges of the State, and any other public
12    universities, colleges, and community colleges now or
13    hereafter established or authorized by the General
14    Assembly.
15        (8) "Certification" means a determination made by the
16    Council or by one delegated authority from the Council to
17    make certifications, or by a State agency with statutory
18    authority to make such a certification, that a business
19    entity is a business owned by a minority, woman, or person
20    with a disability for whatever purpose. A business owned
21    and controlled by women shall be certified as a
22    "woman-owned business". A business owned and controlled by
23    women who are also minorities shall be certified as both a
24    "women-owned business" and a "minority-owned business".
25        (9) "Control" means the exclusive or ultimate and sole
26    control of the business including, but not limited to,

 

 

HB5752- 44 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1    capital investment and all other financial matters,
2    property, acquisitions, contract negotiations, legal
3    matters, officer-director-employee selection and
4    comprehensive hiring, operating responsibilities,
5    cost-control matters, income and dividend matters,
6    financial transactions and rights of other shareholders or
7    joint partners. Control shall be real, substantial and
8    continuing, not pro forma. Control shall include the power
9    to direct or cause the direction of the management and
10    policies of the business and to make the day-to-day as
11    well as major decisions in matters of policy, management
12    and operations. Control shall be exemplified by possessing
13    the requisite knowledge and expertise to run the
14    particular business and control shall not include simple
15    majority or absentee ownership.
16        (10) "Business" means a business that has annual gross
17    sales of less than $75,000,000 as evidenced by the federal
18    income tax return of the business. A firm with gross sales
19    in excess of this cap may apply to the Council for
20    certification for a particular contract if the firm can
21    demonstrate that the contract would have significant
22    impact on businesses owned by minorities, women, or
23    persons with disabilities as suppliers or subcontractors
24    or in employment of minorities, women, or persons with
25    disabilities.
26        (11) "Utilization plan" means a form and additional

 

 

HB5752- 45 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1    documentations included in all bids or proposals that
2    demonstrates a vendor's proposed utilization of vendors
3    certified by the Business Enterprise Program to meet the
4    targeted goal. The utilization plan shall demonstrate that
5    the Vendor has either: (1) met the entire contract goal or
6    (2) requested a full or partial waiver and made good faith
7    efforts towards meeting the goal.
8        (12) "Business Enterprise Program" means the Business
9    Enterprise Program of the Commission on Equity and
10    Inclusion.
11    (B) When a business is owned at least 51% by any
12combination of minority persons, women, or persons with
13disabilities, even though none of the 3 classes alone holds at
14least a 51% interest, the ownership requirement for purposes
15of this Act is considered to be met. The certification
16category for the business is that of the class holding the
17largest ownership interest in the business. If 2 or more
18classes have equal ownership interests, the certification
19category shall be determined by the business.
20(Source: P.A. 101-601, eff. 1-1-20; 101-657, eff. 1-1-22;
21102-29, eff. 6-25-21.)
 
22    Section 55. The State Construction Minority and Female
23Building Trades Act is amended by changing Section 35-5 as
24follows:
 

 

 

HB5752- 46 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1    (30 ILCS 577/35-5)
2    Sec. 35-5. Definitions. For the purposes of this Article:
3    "Under-represented minority" means a person who is any of
4the following:
5        (1) American Indian or Alaska Native (a person having
6    origins in any of the original peoples of North and South
7    America, including Central America, and who maintains
8    tribal affiliation or community attachment).
9        (2) Asian (a person having origins in any of the
10    original peoples of the Far East, Southeast Asia, or the
11    Indian subcontinent, including, but not limited to,
12    Cambodia, China, India, Japan, Korea, Malaysia, Pakistan,
13    the Philippine Islands, Thailand, and Vietnam).
14        (3) Black or African American (a person having origins
15    in any of the black racial groups of Africa).
16        (4) Hispanic or Latino (a person of Cuban, Mexican,
17    Puerto Rican, South or Central American, or other Spanish
18    culture or origin, regardless of race).
19        (5) Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander (a
20    person having origins in any of the original peoples of
21    Hawaii, Guam, Samoa, or other Pacific Islands).
22        (6) Arab (a person having origins in any of the
23    original peoples of Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates,
24    Iraq, Bahrain, Jordan, Comoros, Kuwait, Lebanon, Libya,
25    Mauritania, Morocco, Djibouti, Somalia, Palestine, Oman,
26    Syria, Yemen, Qatar, Sudan, Tunisia, Egypt, or Algeria).

 

 

HB5752- 47 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1    "Construction" means any constructing, altering,
2reconstructing, repairing, rehabilitating, refinishing,
3refurbishing, remodeling, remediating, renovating, custom
4fabricating, maintenance, landscaping, improving, wrecking,
5painting, decorating, demolishing, and adding to or
6subtracting from any building, structure, highway, roadway,
7street, bridge, alley, sewer, ditch, sewage disposal plant,
8water works, parking facility, railroad, excavation or other
9structure, project, development, real property or improvement,
10or to do any part thereof, whether or not the performance of
11the work herein described involves the addition to, or
12fabrication into, any structure, project, development, real
13property or improvement herein described of any material or
14article of merchandise. Construction shall also include moving
15construction related materials on the job site to or from the
16job site.
17(Source: P.A. 102-465, eff. 1-1-22.)
 
18    Section 60. The Inclusion of Women and Minorities in
19Clinical Research Act is amended by changing Section 5 as
20follows:
 
21    (30 ILCS 785/5)
22    Sec. 5. Definitions. In this Act:
23    "Grantee" means any qualified public, private, or
24not-for-profit agency or individual, including, but not

 

 

HB5752- 48 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1limited to, a college, university, hospital, laboratory,
2research institution, local health department, voluntary
3health agency, health maintenance organization, corporation,
4student, fellow, or entrepreneur, conducting clinical research
5using State funds. A grantee may also be a corporation that is
6headquartered in Illinois and that conducts research using
7State funds.
8    "Minority group" means a group that is a readily
9identifiable subset of the U.S. population that is
10distinguished by racial, ethnic, or cultural heritage and that
11is made up of persons who are any of the following:
12        (1) American Indian or Alaska Native (a person having
13    origins in any of the original peoples of North and South
14    America, including Central America, and who maintains
15    tribal affiliation or community attachment).
16        (2) Asian (a person having origins in any of the
17    original peoples of the Far East, Southeast Asia, or the
18    Indian subcontinent, including, but not limited to,
19    Cambodia, China, India, Japan, Korea, Malaysia, Pakistan,
20    the Philippine Islands, Thailand, and Vietnam).
21        (3) Black or African American (a person having origins
22    in any of the black racial groups of Africa).
23        (4) Hispanic or Latino (a person of Cuban, Mexican,
24    Puerto Rican, South or Central American, or other Spanish
25    culture or origin, regardless of race).
26        (5) Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander (a

 

 

HB5752- 49 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1    person having origins in any of the original peoples of
2    Hawaii, Guam, Samoa, or other Pacific Islands).
3        (6) Arab (a person having origins in any of the
4    original peoples of Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates,
5    Iraq, Bahrain, Jordan, Comoros, Kuwait, Lebanon, Libya,
6    Mauritania, Morocco, Djibouti, Somalia, Palestine, Oman,
7    Syria, Yemen, Qatar, Sudan, Tunisia, Egypt, or Algeria).
8    "Project of clinical research" includes a clinical trial.
9(Source: P.A. 102-465, eff. 1-1-22.)
 
10    Section 65. The Metropolitan Pier and Exposition Authority
11Act is amended by changing Section 23.1 as follows:
 
12    (70 ILCS 210/23.1)  (from Ch. 85, par. 1243.1)
13    Sec. 23.1. Affirmative action.
14    (a) The Authority shall, within 90 days after the
15effective date of this amendatory Act of 1984, establish and
16maintain an affirmative action program designed to promote
17equal employment opportunity and eliminate the effects of past
18discrimination. Such program shall include a plan, including
19timetables where appropriate, which shall specify goals and
20methods for increasing participation by women and minorities
21in employment, including employment related to the planning,
22organization, and staging of the games, by the Authority and
23by parties which contract with the Authority. The Authority
24shall submit a detailed plan with the General Assembly prior

 

 

HB5752- 50 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1to September 1 of each year. Such program shall also establish
2procedures and sanctions, which the Authority shall enforce to
3ensure compliance with the plan established pursuant to this
4Section and with State and federal laws and regulations
5relating to the employment of women and minorities. A
6determination by the Authority as to whether a party to a
7contract with the Authority has achieved the goals or employed
8the methods for increasing participation by women and
9minorities shall be determined in accordance with the terms of
10such contracts or the applicable provisions of rules and
11regulations of the Authority existing at the time such
12contract was executed, including any provisions for
13consideration of good faith efforts at compliance which the
14Authority may reasonably adopt.
15    (b) The Authority shall adopt and maintain minority-owned
16and women-owned business enterprise procurement programs under
17the affirmative action program described in subsection (a) for
18any and all work, including all contracting related to the
19planning, organization, and staging of the games, undertaken
20by the Authority. That work shall include, but is not limited
21to, the purchase of professional services, construction
22services, supplies, materials, and equipment. The programs
23shall establish goals of awarding not less than 25% of the
24annual dollar value of all contracts, purchase orders, or
25other agreements (collectively referred to as "contracts") to
26minority-owned businesses and 5% of the annual dollar value of

 

 

HB5752- 51 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1all contracts to women-owned businesses. Without limiting the
2generality of the foregoing, the programs shall require in
3connection with the prequalification or consideration of
4vendors for professional service contracts, construction
5contracts, and contracts for supplies, materials, equipment,
6and services that each proposer or bidder submit as part of his
7or her proposal or bid a commitment detailing how he or she
8will expend 25% or more of the dollar value of his or her
9contracts with one or more minority-owned businesses and 5% or
10more of the dollar value with one or more women-owned
11businesses. Bids or proposals that do not include such
12detailed commitments are not responsive and shall be rejected
13unless the Authority deems it appropriate to grant a waiver of
14these requirements. In addition the Authority may, in
15connection with the selection of providers of professional
16services, reserve the right to select a minority-owned or
17women-owned business or businesses to fulfill the commitment
18to minority and woman business participation. The commitment
19to minority and woman business participation may be met by the
20contractor or professional service provider's status as a
21minority-owned or women-owned business, by joint venture or by
22subcontracting a portion of the work with or purchasing
23materials for the work from one or more such businesses, or by
24any combination thereof. Each contract shall require the
25contractor or provider to submit a certified monthly report
26detailing the status of that contractor or provider's

 

 

HB5752- 52 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1compliance with the Authority's minority-owned and women-owned
2business enterprise procurement program. The Authority, after
3reviewing the monthly reports of the contractors and
4providers, shall compile a comprehensive report regarding
5compliance with this procurement program and file it quarterly
6with the General Assembly. If, in connection with a particular
7contract, the Authority determines that it is impracticable or
8excessively costly to obtain minority-owned or women-owned
9businesses to perform sufficient work to fulfill the
10commitment required by this subsection, the Authority shall
11reduce or waive the commitment in the contract, as may be
12appropriate. The Authority shall establish rules and
13regulations setting forth the standards to be used in
14determining whether or not a reduction or waiver is
15appropriate. The terms "minority-owned business" and
16"women-owned business" have the meanings given to those terms
17in the Business Enterprise for Minorities, Women, and Persons
18with Disabilities Act.
19    (c) The Authority shall adopt and maintain an affirmative
20action program in connection with the hiring of minorities and
21women on the Expansion Project and on any and all construction
22projects, including all contracting related to the planning,
23organization, and staging of the games, undertaken by the
24Authority. The program shall be designed to promote equal
25employment opportunity and shall specify the goals and methods
26for increasing the participation of minorities and women in a

 

 

HB5752- 53 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1representative mix of job classifications required to perform
2the respective contracts awarded by the Authority.
3    (d) In connection with the Expansion Project, the
4Authority shall incorporate the following elements into its
5minority-owned and women-owned business procurement programs
6to the extent feasible: (1) a major contractors program that
7permits minority-owned businesses and women-owned businesses
8to bear significant responsibility and risk for a portion of
9the project; (2) a mentor/protege program that provides
10financial, technical, managerial, equipment, and personnel
11support to minority-owned businesses and women-owned
12businesses; (3) an emerging firms program that includes
13minority-owned businesses and women-owned businesses that
14would not otherwise qualify for the project due to
15inexperience or limited resources; (4) a small projects
16program that includes participation by smaller minority-owned
17businesses and women-owned businesses on jobs where the total
18dollar value is $5,000,000 or less; and (5) a set-aside
19program that will identify contracts requiring the expenditure
20of funds less than $50,000 for bids to be submitted solely by
21minority-owned businesses and women-owned businesses.
22    (e) The Authority is authorized to enter into agreements
23with contractors' associations, labor unions, and the
24contractors working on the Expansion Project to establish an
25Apprenticeship Preparedness Training Program to provide for an
26increase in the number of minority and women journeymen and

 

 

HB5752- 54 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1apprentices in the building trades and to enter into
2agreements with Community College District 508 to provide
3readiness training. The Authority is further authorized to
4enter into contracts with public and private educational
5institutions and persons in the hospitality industry to
6provide training for employment in the hospitality industry.
7    (f) McCormick Place Advisory Board. There is created a
8McCormick Place Advisory Board composed as follows: 2 members
9shall be appointed by the Mayor of Chicago; 2 members shall be
10appointed by the Governor; 2 members shall be State Senators
11appointed by the President of the Senate; 2 members shall be
12State Senators appointed by the Minority Leader of the Senate;
132 members shall be State Representatives appointed by the
14Speaker of the House of Representatives; and 2 members shall
15be State Representatives appointed by the Minority Leader of
16the House of Representatives. The terms of all previously
17appointed members of the Advisory Board expire on the
18effective date of this amendatory Act of the 92nd General
19Assembly. A State Senator or State Representative member may
20appoint a designee to serve on the McCormick Place Advisory
21Board in his or her absence.
22    A "member of a minority group" shall mean a person who is a
23citizen or lawful permanent resident of the United States and
24who is any of the following:
25        (1) American Indian or Alaska Native (a person having
26    origins in any of the original peoples of North and South

 

 

HB5752- 55 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1    America, including Central America, and who maintains
2    tribal affiliation or community attachment).
3        (2) Asian (a person having origins in any of the
4    original peoples of the Far East, Southeast Asia, or the
5    Indian subcontinent, including, but not limited to,
6    Cambodia, China, India, Japan, Korea, Malaysia, Pakistan,
7    the Philippine Islands, Thailand, and Vietnam).
8        (3) Black or African American (a person having origins
9    in any of the black racial groups of Africa).
10        (4) Hispanic or Latino (a person of Cuban, Mexican,
11    Puerto Rican, South or Central American, or other Spanish
12    culture or origin, regardless of race).
13        (5) Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander (a
14    person having origins in any of the original peoples of
15    Hawaii, Guam, Samoa, or other Pacific Islands).
16        (6) Arab (a person having origins in any of the
17    original peoples of Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates,
18    Iraq, Bahrain, Jordan, Comoros, Kuwait, Lebanon, Libya,
19    Mauritania, Morocco, Djibouti, Somalia, Palestine, Oman,
20    Syria, Yemen, Qatar, Sudan, Tunisia, Egypt, or Algeria).
21    Members of the McCormick Place Advisory Board shall serve
222-year terms and until their successors are appointed, except
23members who serve as a result of their elected position whose
24terms shall continue as long as they hold their designated
25elected positions. Vacancies shall be filled by appointment
26for the unexpired term in the same manner as original

 

 

HB5752- 56 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1appointments are made. The McCormick Place Advisory Board
2shall elect its own chairperson.
3    Members of the McCormick Place Advisory Board shall serve
4without compensation but, at the Authority's discretion, shall
5be reimbursed for necessary expenses in connection with the
6performance of their duties.
7    The McCormick Place Advisory Board shall meet quarterly,
8or as needed, shall produce any reports it deems necessary,
9and shall:
10        (1) Work with the Authority on ways to improve the
11    area physically and economically;
12        (2) Work with the Authority regarding potential means
13    for providing increased economic opportunities to
14    minorities and women produced indirectly or directly from
15    the construction and operation of the Expansion Project;
16        (3) Work with the Authority to minimize any potential
17    impact on the area surrounding the McCormick Place
18    Expansion Project, including any impact on minority-owned
19    or women-owned businesses, resulting from the construction
20    and operation of the Expansion Project;
21        (4) Work with the Authority to find candidates for
22    building trades apprenticeships, for employment in the
23    hospitality industry, and to identify job training
24    programs;
25        (5) Work with the Authority to implement the
26    provisions of subsections (a) through (e) of this Section

 

 

HB5752- 57 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1    in the construction of the Expansion Project, including
2    the Authority's goal of awarding not less than 25% and 5%
3    of the annual dollar value of contracts to minority-owned
4    and women-owned businesses, the outreach program for
5    minorities and women, and the mentor/protege program for
6    providing assistance to minority-owned and women-owned
7    businesses.
8    (g) The Authority shall comply with subsection (e) of
9Section 5-42 of the Olympic Games and Paralympic Games (2016)
10Law. For purposes of this Section, the term "games" has the
11meaning set forth in the Olympic Games and Paralympic Games
12(2016) Law.
13(Source: P.A. 102-465, eff. 1-1-22.)
 
14    Section 70. The School Code is amended by changing
15Sections 27-21 and 34-18 as follows:
 
16    (105 ILCS 5/27-21)  (from Ch. 122, par. 27-21)
17    Sec. 27-21. History of United States. History of the
18United States shall be taught in all public schools and in all
19other educational institutions in this State supported or
20maintained, in whole or in part, by public funds. The teaching
21of history shall have as one of its objectives the imparting to
22pupils of a comprehensive idea of our democratic form of
23government and the principles for which our government stands
24as regards other nations, including the studying of the place

 

 

HB5752- 58 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1of our government in world-wide movements and the leaders
2thereof, with particular stress upon the basic principles and
3ideals of our representative form of government. The teaching
4of history shall include a study of the role and contributions
5of African Americans and other ethnic groups, including, but
6not restricted to, Polish, Lithuanian, German, Hungarian,
7Irish, Bohemian, Russian, Albanian, Italian, Czech, Slovak,
8French, Scots, Hispanics, Asian Americans, Arabs, etc., in the
9history of this country and this State. To reinforce the study
10of the role and contributions of Hispanics, such curriculum
11shall include the study of the events related to the forceful
12removal and illegal deportation of Mexican-American U.S.
13citizens during the Great Depression. In public schools only,
14the teaching of history shall include a study of the roles and
15contributions of lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender
16people in the history of this country and this State. The
17teaching of history also shall include a study of the role of
18labor unions and their interaction with government in
19achieving the goals of a mixed free enterprise system.
20Beginning with the 2020-2021 school year, the teaching of
21history must also include instruction on the history of
22Illinois. The teaching of history shall include the
23contributions made to society by Americans of different faith
24practices, including, but not limited to, Muslim Americans,
25Jewish Americans, Christian Americans, Hindu Americans, Sikh
26Americans, Buddhist Americans, and any other collective

 

 

HB5752- 59 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1community of faith that has shaped America. No pupils shall be
2graduated from the eighth grade of any public school unless he
3or she has received such instruction in the history of the
4United States and gives evidence of having a comprehensive
5knowledge thereof, which may be administered remotely.
6(Source: P.A. 101-227, eff. 7-1-20; 101-341, eff. 1-1-20;
7101-643, eff. 6-18-20; 102-411, eff. 1-1-22.)
 
8    (105 ILCS 5/34-18)  (from Ch. 122, par. 34-18)
9    Sec. 34-18. Powers of the board. The board shall exercise
10general supervision and jurisdiction over the public education
11and the public school system of the city, and, except as
12otherwise provided by this Article, shall have power:
13        1. To make suitable provision for the establishment
14    and maintenance throughout the year or for such portion
15    thereof as it may direct, not less than 9 months and in
16    compliance with Section 10-19.05, of schools of all grades
17    and kinds, including normal schools, high schools, night
18    schools, schools for defectives and delinquents, parental
19    and truant schools, schools for the blind, the deaf, and
20    persons with physical disabilities, schools or classes in
21    manual training, constructural and vocational teaching,
22    domestic arts, and physical culture, vocation and
23    extension schools and lecture courses, and all other
24    educational courses and facilities, including
25    establishing, equipping, maintaining and operating

 

 

HB5752- 60 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1    playgrounds and recreational programs, when such programs
2    are conducted in, adjacent to, or connected with any
3    public school under the general supervision and
4    jurisdiction of the board; provided that the calendar for
5    the school term and any changes must be submitted to and
6    approved by the State Board of Education before the
7    calendar or changes may take effect, and provided that in
8    allocating funds from year to year for the operation of
9    all attendance centers within the district, the board
10    shall ensure that supplemental general State aid or
11    supplemental grant funds are allocated and applied in
12    accordance with Section 18-8, 18-8.05, or 18-8.15. To
13    admit to such schools without charge foreign exchange
14    students who are participants in an organized exchange
15    student program which is authorized by the board. The
16    board shall permit all students to enroll in
17    apprenticeship programs in trade schools operated by the
18    board, whether those programs are union-sponsored or not.
19    No student shall be refused admission into or be excluded
20    from any course of instruction offered in the common
21    schools by reason of that student's sex. No student shall
22    be denied equal access to physical education and
23    interscholastic athletic programs supported from school
24    district funds or denied participation in comparable
25    physical education and athletic programs solely by reason
26    of the student's sex. Equal access to programs supported

 

 

HB5752- 61 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1    from school district funds and comparable programs will be
2    defined in rules promulgated by the State Board of
3    Education in consultation with the Illinois High School
4    Association. Notwithstanding any other provision of this
5    Article, neither the board of education nor any local
6    school council or other school official shall recommend
7    that children with disabilities be placed into regular
8    education classrooms unless those children with
9    disabilities are provided with supplementary services to
10    assist them so that they benefit from the regular
11    classroom instruction and are included on the teacher's
12    regular education class register;
13        2. To furnish lunches to pupils, to make a reasonable
14    charge therefor, and to use school funds for the payment
15    of such expenses as the board may determine are necessary
16    in conducting the school lunch program;
17        3. To co-operate with the circuit court;
18        4. To make arrangements with the public or
19    quasi-public libraries and museums for the use of their
20    facilities by teachers and pupils of the public schools;
21        5. To employ dentists and prescribe their duties for
22    the purpose of treating the pupils in the schools, but
23    accepting such treatment shall be optional with parents or
24    guardians;
25        6. To grant the use of assembly halls and classrooms
26    when not otherwise needed, including light, heat, and

 

 

HB5752- 62 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1    attendants, for free public lectures, concerts, and other
2    educational and social interests, free of charge, under
3    such provisions and control as the principal of the
4    affected attendance center may prescribe;
5        7. To apportion the pupils to the several schools;
6    provided that no pupil shall be excluded from or
7    segregated in any such school on account of his color,
8    race, sex, or nationality. The board shall take into
9    consideration the prevention of segregation and the
10    elimination of separation of children in public schools
11    because of color, race, sex, or nationality. Except that
12    children may be committed to or attend parental and social
13    adjustment schools established and maintained either for
14    boys or girls only. All records pertaining to the
15    creation, alteration or revision of attendance areas shall
16    be open to the public. Nothing herein shall limit the
17    board's authority to establish multi-area attendance
18    centers or other student assignment systems for
19    desegregation purposes or otherwise, and to apportion the
20    pupils to the several schools. Furthermore, beginning in
21    school year 1994-95, pursuant to a board plan adopted by
22    October 1, 1993, the board shall offer, commencing on a
23    phased-in basis, the opportunity for families within the
24    school district to apply for enrollment of their children
25    in any attendance center within the school district which
26    does not have selective admission requirements approved by

 

 

HB5752- 63 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1    the board. The appropriate geographical area in which such
2    open enrollment may be exercised shall be determined by
3    the board of education. Such children may be admitted to
4    any such attendance center on a space available basis
5    after all children residing within such attendance
6    center's area have been accommodated. If the number of
7    applicants from outside the attendance area exceed the
8    space available, then successful applicants shall be
9    selected by lottery. The board of education's open
10    enrollment plan must include provisions that allow
11    low-income students to have access to transportation
12    needed to exercise school choice. Open enrollment shall be
13    in compliance with the provisions of the Consent Decree
14    and Desegregation Plan cited in Section 34-1.01;
15        8. To approve programs and policies for providing
16    transportation services to students. Nothing herein shall
17    be construed to permit or empower the State Board of
18    Education to order, mandate, or require busing or other
19    transportation of pupils for the purpose of achieving
20    racial balance in any school;
21        9. Subject to the limitations in this Article, to
22    establish and approve system-wide curriculum objectives
23    and standards, including graduation standards, which
24    reflect the multi-cultural diversity in the city and are
25    consistent with State law, provided that for all purposes
26    of this Article courses or proficiency in American Sign

 

 

HB5752- 64 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1    Language shall be deemed to constitute courses or
2    proficiency in a foreign language; and to employ
3    principals and teachers, appointed as provided in this
4    Article, and fix their compensation. The board shall
5    prepare such reports related to minimal competency testing
6    as may be requested by the State Board of Education and, in
7    addition, shall monitor and approve special education and
8    bilingual education programs and policies within the
9    district to ensure that appropriate services are provided
10    in accordance with applicable State and federal laws to
11    children requiring services and education in those areas;
12        10. To employ non-teaching personnel or utilize
13    volunteer personnel for: (i) non-teaching duties not
14    requiring instructional judgment or evaluation of pupils,
15    including library duties; and (ii) supervising study
16    halls, long distance teaching reception areas used
17    incident to instructional programs transmitted by
18    electronic media such as computers, video, and audio,
19    detention and discipline areas, and school-sponsored
20    extracurricular activities. The board may further utilize
21    volunteer non-certificated personnel or employ
22    non-certificated personnel to assist in the instruction of
23    pupils under the immediate supervision of a teacher
24    holding a valid certificate, directly engaged in teaching
25    subject matter or conducting activities; provided that the
26    teacher shall be continuously aware of the

 

 

HB5752- 65 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1    non-certificated persons' activities and shall be able to
2    control or modify them. The general superintendent shall
3    determine qualifications of such personnel and shall
4    prescribe rules for determining the duties and activities
5    to be assigned to such personnel;
6        10.5. To utilize volunteer personnel from a regional
7    School Crisis Assistance Team (S.C.A.T.), created as part
8    of the Safe to Learn Program established pursuant to
9    Section 25 of the Illinois Violence Prevention Act of
10    1995, to provide assistance to schools in times of
11    violence or other traumatic incidents within a school
12    community by providing crisis intervention services to
13    lessen the effects of emotional trauma on individuals and
14    the community; the School Crisis Assistance Team Steering
15    Committee shall determine the qualifications for
16    volunteers;
17        11. To provide television studio facilities in not to
18    exceed one school building and to provide programs for
19    educational purposes, provided, however, that the board
20    shall not construct, acquire, operate, or maintain a
21    television transmitter; to grant the use of its studio
22    facilities to a licensed television station located in the
23    school district; and to maintain and operate not to exceed
24    one school radio transmitting station and provide programs
25    for educational purposes;
26        12. To offer, if deemed appropriate, outdoor education

 

 

HB5752- 66 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1    courses, including field trips within the State of
2    Illinois, or adjacent states, and to use school
3    educational funds for the expense of the said outdoor
4    educational programs, whether within the school district
5    or not;
6        13. During that period of the calendar year not
7    embraced within the regular school term, to provide and
8    conduct courses in subject matters normally embraced in
9    the program of the schools during the regular school term
10    and to give regular school credit for satisfactory
11    completion by the student of such courses as may be
12    approved for credit by the State Board of Education;
13        14. To insure against any loss or liability of the
14    board, the former School Board Nominating Commission,
15    Local School Councils, the Chicago Schools Academic
16    Accountability Council, or the former Subdistrict Councils
17    or of any member, officer, agent, or employee thereof,
18    resulting from alleged violations of civil rights arising
19    from incidents occurring on or after September 5, 1967 or
20    from the wrongful or negligent act or omission of any such
21    person whether occurring within or without the school
22    premises, provided the officer, agent, or employee was, at
23    the time of the alleged violation of civil rights or
24    wrongful act or omission, acting within the scope of his
25    or her employment or under direction of the board, the
26    former School Board Nominating Commission, the Chicago

 

 

HB5752- 67 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1    Schools Academic Accountability Council, Local School
2    Councils, or the former Subdistrict Councils; and to
3    provide for or participate in insurance plans for its
4    officers and employees, including, but not limited to,
5    retirement annuities, medical, surgical and
6    hospitalization benefits in such types and amounts as may
7    be determined by the board; provided, however, that the
8    board shall contract for such insurance only with an
9    insurance company authorized to do business in this State.
10    Such insurance may include provision for employees who
11    rely on treatment by prayer or spiritual means alone for
12    healing, in accordance with the tenets and practice of a
13    recognized religious denomination;
14        15. To contract with the corporate authorities of any
15    municipality or the county board of any county, as the
16    case may be, to provide for the regulation of traffic in
17    parking areas of property used for school purposes, in
18    such manner as is provided by Section 11-209 of the
19    Illinois Vehicle Code;
20        16. (a) To provide, on an equal basis, access to a high
21    school campus and student directory information to the
22    official recruiting representatives of the armed forces of
23    Illinois and the United States for the purposes of
24    informing students of the educational and career
25    opportunities available in the military if the board has
26    provided such access to persons or groups whose purpose is

 

 

HB5752- 68 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1    to acquaint students with educational or occupational
2    opportunities available to them. The board is not required
3    to give greater notice regarding the right of access to
4    recruiting representatives than is given to other persons
5    and groups. In this paragraph 16, "directory information"
6    means a high school student's name, address, and telephone
7    number.
8        (b) If a student or his or her parent or guardian
9    submits a signed, written request to the high school
10    before the end of the student's sophomore year (or if the
11    student is a transfer student, by another time set by the
12    high school) that indicates that the student or his or her
13    parent or guardian does not want the student's directory
14    information to be provided to official recruiting
15    representatives under subsection (a) of this Section, the
16    high school may not provide access to the student's
17    directory information to these recruiting representatives.
18    The high school shall notify its students and their
19    parents or guardians of the provisions of this subsection
20    (b).
21        (c) A high school may require official recruiting
22    representatives of the armed forces of Illinois and the
23    United States to pay a fee for copying and mailing a
24    student's directory information in an amount that is not
25    more than the actual costs incurred by the high school.
26        (d) Information received by an official recruiting

 

 

HB5752- 69 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1    representative under this Section may be used only to
2    provide information to students concerning educational and
3    career opportunities available in the military and may not
4    be released to a person who is not involved in recruiting
5    students for the armed forces of Illinois or the United
6    States;
7        17. (a) To sell or market any computer program
8    developed by an employee of the school district, provided
9    that such employee developed the computer program as a
10    direct result of his or her duties with the school
11    district or through the utilization of school district
12    resources or facilities. The employee who developed the
13    computer program shall be entitled to share in the
14    proceeds of such sale or marketing of the computer
15    program. The distribution of such proceeds between the
16    employee and the school district shall be as agreed upon
17    by the employee and the school district, except that
18    neither the employee nor the school district may receive
19    more than 90% of such proceeds. The negotiation for an
20    employee who is represented by an exclusive bargaining
21    representative may be conducted by such bargaining
22    representative at the employee's request.
23        (b) For the purpose of this paragraph 17:
24            (1) "Computer" means an internally programmed,
25        general purpose digital device capable of
26        automatically accepting data, processing data and

 

 

HB5752- 70 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1        supplying the results of the operation.
2            (2) "Computer program" means a series of coded
3        instructions or statements in a form acceptable to a
4        computer, which causes the computer to process data in
5        order to achieve a certain result.
6            (3) "Proceeds" means profits derived from the
7        marketing or sale of a product after deducting the
8        expenses of developing and marketing such product;
9        18. To delegate to the general superintendent of
10    schools, by resolution, the authority to approve contracts
11    and expenditures in amounts of $10,000 or less;
12        19. Upon the written request of an employee, to
13    withhold from the compensation of that employee any dues,
14    payments, or contributions payable by such employee to any
15    labor organization as defined in the Illinois Educational
16    Labor Relations Act. Under such arrangement, an amount
17    shall be withheld from each regular payroll period which
18    is equal to the pro rata share of the annual dues plus any
19    payments or contributions, and the board shall transmit
20    such withholdings to the specified labor organization
21    within 10 working days from the time of the withholding;
22        19a. Upon receipt of notice from the comptroller of a
23    municipality with a population of 500,000 or more, a
24    county with a population of 3,000,000 or more, the Cook
25    County Forest Preserve District, the Chicago Park
26    District, the Metropolitan Water Reclamation District, the

 

 

HB5752- 71 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1    Chicago Transit Authority, or a housing authority of a
2    municipality with a population of 500,000 or more that a
3    debt is due and owing the municipality, the county, the
4    Cook County Forest Preserve District, the Chicago Park
5    District, the Metropolitan Water Reclamation District, the
6    Chicago Transit Authority, or the housing authority by an
7    employee of the Chicago Board of Education, to withhold,
8    from the compensation of that employee, the amount of the
9    debt that is due and owing and pay the amount withheld to
10    the municipality, the county, the Cook County Forest
11    Preserve District, the Chicago Park District, the
12    Metropolitan Water Reclamation District, the Chicago
13    Transit Authority, or the housing authority; provided,
14    however, that the amount deducted from any one salary or
15    wage payment shall not exceed 25% of the net amount of the
16    payment. Before the Board deducts any amount from any
17    salary or wage of an employee under this paragraph, the
18    municipality, the county, the Cook County Forest Preserve
19    District, the Chicago Park District, the Metropolitan
20    Water Reclamation District, the Chicago Transit Authority,
21    or the housing authority shall certify that (i) the
22    employee has been afforded an opportunity for a hearing to
23    dispute the debt that is due and owing the municipality,
24    the county, the Cook County Forest Preserve District, the
25    Chicago Park District, the Metropolitan Water Reclamation
26    District, the Chicago Transit Authority, or the housing

 

 

HB5752- 72 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1    authority and (ii) the employee has received notice of a
2    wage deduction order and has been afforded an opportunity
3    for a hearing to object to the order. For purposes of this
4    paragraph, "net amount" means that part of the salary or
5    wage payment remaining after the deduction of any amounts
6    required by law to be deducted and "debt due and owing"
7    means (i) a specified sum of money owed to the
8    municipality, the county, the Cook County Forest Preserve
9    District, the Chicago Park District, the Metropolitan
10    Water Reclamation District, the Chicago Transit Authority,
11    or the housing authority for services, work, or goods,
12    after the period granted for payment has expired, or (ii)
13    a specified sum of money owed to the municipality, the
14    county, the Cook County Forest Preserve District, the
15    Chicago Park District, the Metropolitan Water Reclamation
16    District, the Chicago Transit Authority, or the housing
17    authority pursuant to a court order or order of an
18    administrative hearing officer after the exhaustion of, or
19    the failure to exhaust, judicial review;
20        20. The board is encouraged to employ a sufficient
21    number of certified school counselors to maintain a
22    student/counselor ratio of 250 to 1 by July 1, 1990. Each
23    counselor shall spend at least 75% of his work time in
24    direct contact with students and shall maintain a record
25    of such time;
26        21. To make available to students vocational and

 

 

HB5752- 73 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1    career counseling and to establish 5 special career
2    counseling days for students and parents. On these days
3    representatives of local businesses and industries shall
4    be invited to the school campus and shall inform students
5    of career opportunities available to them in the various
6    businesses and industries. Special consideration shall be
7    given to counseling minority students as to career
8    opportunities available to them in various fields. For the
9    purposes of this paragraph, minority student means a
10    person who is any of the following:
11        (a) American Indian or Alaska Native (a person having
12    origins in any of the original peoples of North and South
13    America, including Central America, and who maintains
14    tribal affiliation or community attachment).
15        (b) Asian (a person having origins in any of the
16    original peoples of the Far East, Southeast Asia, or the
17    Indian subcontinent, including, but not limited to,
18    Cambodia, China, India, Japan, Korea, Malaysia, Pakistan,
19    the Philippine Islands, Thailand, and Vietnam).
20        (c) Black or African American (a person having origins
21    in any of the black racial groups of Africa).
22        (d) Hispanic or Latino (a person of Cuban, Mexican,
23    Puerto Rican, South or Central American, or other Spanish
24    culture or origin, regardless of race).
25        (e) Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander (a
26    person having origins in any of the original peoples of

 

 

HB5752- 74 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1    Hawaii, Guam, Samoa, or other Pacific Islands).
2        (f) Arab (a person having origins in any of the
3    original peoples of Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates,
4    Iraq, Bahrain, Jordan, Comoros, Kuwait, Lebanon, Libya,
5    Mauritania, Morocco, Djibouti, Somalia, Palestine, Oman,
6    Syria, Yemen, Qatar, Sudan, Tunisia, Egypt, or Algeria).
7        Counseling days shall not be in lieu of regular school
8    days;
9        22. To report to the State Board of Education the
10    annual student dropout rate and number of students who
11    graduate from, transfer from, or otherwise leave bilingual
12    programs;
13        23. Except as otherwise provided in the Abused and
14    Neglected Child Reporting Act or other applicable State or
15    federal law, to permit school officials to withhold, from
16    any person, information on the whereabouts of any child
17    removed from school premises when the child has been taken
18    into protective custody as a victim of suspected child
19    abuse. School officials shall direct such person to the
20    Department of Children and Family Services or to the local
21    law enforcement agency, if appropriate;
22        24. To develop a policy, based on the current state of
23    existing school facilities, projected enrollment, and
24    efficient utilization of available resources, for capital
25    improvement of schools and school buildings within the
26    district, addressing in that policy both the relative

 

 

HB5752- 75 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1    priority for major repairs, renovations, and additions to
2    school facilities and the advisability or necessity of
3    building new school facilities or closing existing schools
4    to meet current or projected demographic patterns within
5    the district;
6        25. To make available to the students in every high
7    school attendance center the ability to take all courses
8    necessary to comply with the Board of Higher Education's
9    college entrance criteria effective in 1993;
10        26. To encourage mid-career changes into the teaching
11    profession, whereby qualified professionals become
12    certified teachers, by allowing credit for professional
13    employment in related fields when determining point of
14    entry on the teacher pay scale;
15        27. To provide or contract out training programs for
16    administrative personnel and principals with revised or
17    expanded duties pursuant to this Code in order to ensure
18    they have the knowledge and skills to perform their
19    duties;
20        28. To establish a fund for the prioritized special
21    needs programs, and to allocate such funds and other lump
22    sum amounts to each attendance center in a manner
23    consistent with the provisions of part 4 of Section
24    34-2.3. Nothing in this paragraph shall be construed to
25    require any additional appropriations of State funds for
26    this purpose;

 

 

HB5752- 76 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1        29. (Blank);
2        30. Notwithstanding any other provision of this Act or
3    any other law to the contrary, to contract with third
4    parties for services otherwise performed by employees,
5    including those in a bargaining unit, and to layoff those
6    employees upon 14 days written notice to the affected
7    employees. Those contracts may be for a period not to
8    exceed 5 years and may be awarded on a system-wide basis.
9    The board may not operate more than 30 contract schools,
10    provided that the board may operate an additional 5
11    contract turnaround schools pursuant to item (5.5) of
12    subsection (d) of Section 34-8.3 of this Code, and the
13    governing bodies of contract schools are subject to the
14    Freedom of Information Act and Open Meetings Act;
15        31. To promulgate rules establishing procedures
16    governing the layoff or reduction in force of employees
17    and the recall of such employees, including, but not
18    limited to, criteria for such layoffs, reductions in force
19    or recall rights of such employees and the weight to be
20    given to any particular criterion. Such criteria shall
21    take into account factors, including, but not limited to,
22    qualifications, certifications, experience, performance
23    ratings or evaluations, and any other factors relating to
24    an employee's job performance;
25        32. To develop a policy to prevent nepotism in the
26    hiring of personnel or the selection of contractors;

 

 

HB5752- 77 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1        33. (Blank); and
2        34. To establish a Labor Management Council to the
3    board comprised of representatives of the board, the chief
4    executive officer, and those labor organizations that are
5    the exclusive representatives of employees of the board
6    and to promulgate policies and procedures for the
7    operation of the Council.
8    The specifications of the powers herein granted are not to
9be construed as exclusive, but the board shall also exercise
10all other powers that may be requisite or proper for the
11maintenance and the development of a public school system, not
12inconsistent with the other provisions of this Article or
13provisions of this Code which apply to all school districts.
14    In addition to the powers herein granted and authorized to
15be exercised by the board, it shall be the duty of the board to
16review or to direct independent reviews of special education
17expenditures and services. The board shall file a report of
18such review with the General Assembly on or before May 1, 1990.
19(Source: P.A. 101-12, eff. 7-1-19; 101-88, eff. 1-1-20;
20102-465, eff. 1-1-22; 102-558, eff. 8-20-21.)
 
21    Section 75. The Board of Higher Education Act is amended
22by changing Section 9.16 as follows:
 
23    (110 ILCS 205/9.16)  (from Ch. 144, par. 189.16)
24    Sec. 9.16. Underrepresentation of certain groups in higher

 

 

HB5752- 78 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1education. To require public institutions of higher education
2to develop and implement methods and strategies to increase
3the participation of minorities, women and individuals with
4disabilities who are traditionally underrepresented in
5education programs and activities. For the purpose of this
6Section, minorities shall mean persons who are citizens of the
7United States or lawful permanent resident aliens of the
8United States and who are any of the following:
9        (1) American Indian or Alaska Native (a person having
10    origins in any of the original peoples of North and South
11    America, including Central America, and who maintains
12    tribal affiliation or community attachment).
13        (2) Asian (a person having origins in any of the
14    original peoples of the Far East, Southeast Asia, or the
15    Indian subcontinent, including, but not limited to,
16    Cambodia, China, India, Japan, Korea, Malaysia, Pakistan,
17    the Philippine Islands, Thailand, and Vietnam).
18        (3) Black or African American (a person having origins
19    in any of the black racial groups of Africa).
20        (4) Hispanic or Latino (a person of Cuban, Mexican,
21    Puerto Rican, South or Central American, or other Spanish
22    culture or origin, regardless of race).
23        (5) Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander (a
24    person having origins in any of the original peoples of
25    Hawaii, Guam, Samoa, or other Pacific Islands).
26        (6) Arab (a person having origins in any of the

 

 

HB5752- 79 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1    original peoples of Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates,
2    Iraq, Bahrain, Jordan, Comoros, Kuwait, Lebanon, Libya,
3    Mauritania, Morocco, Djibouti, Somalia, Palestine, Oman,
4    Syria, Yemen, Qatar, Sudan, Tunisia, Egypt, or Algeria).
5    The Board shall adopt any rules necessary to administer
6this Section. The Board shall also do the following:
7    (a) require all public institutions of higher education to
8develop and submit plans for the implementation of this
9Section;
10    (b) conduct periodic review of public institutions of
11higher education to determine compliance with this Section;
12and if the Board finds that a public institution of higher
13education is not in compliance with this Section, it shall
14notify the institution of steps to take to attain compliance;
15    (c) provide advice and counsel pursuant to this Section;
16    (d) conduct studies of the effectiveness of methods and
17strategies designed to increase participation of students in
18education programs and activities in which minorities, women
19and individuals with disabilities are traditionally
20underrepresented, and monitor the success of students in such
21education programs and activities;
22    (e) encourage minority student recruitment and retention
23in colleges and universities. In implementing this paragraph,
24the Board shall undertake but need not be limited to the
25following: the establishment of guidelines and plans for
26public institutions of higher education for minority student

 

 

HB5752- 80 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1recruitment and retention, the review and monitoring of
2minority student programs implemented at public institutions
3of higher education to determine their compliance with any
4guidelines and plans so established, the determination of the
5effectiveness and funding requirements of minority student
6programs at public institutions of higher education, the
7dissemination of successful programs as models, and the
8encouragement of cooperative partnerships between community
9colleges and local school attendance centers which are
10experiencing difficulties in enrolling minority students in
11four-year colleges and universities;
12    (f) mandate all public institutions of higher education to
13submit data and information essential to determine compliance
14with this Section. The Board shall prescribe the format and
15the date for submission of this data and any other education
16equity data; and
17    (g) report to the General Assembly and the Governor
18annually with a description of the plans submitted by each
19public institution of higher education for implementation of
20this Section, including financial data relating to the most
21recent fiscal year expenditures for specific minority
22programs, the effectiveness of such plans and programs and the
23effectiveness of the methods and strategies developed by the
24Board in meeting the purposes of this Section, the degree of
25compliance with this Section by each public institution of
26higher education as determined by the Board pursuant to its

 

 

HB5752- 81 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1periodic review responsibilities, and the findings made by the
2Board in conducting its studies and monitoring student success
3as required by paragraph d) of this Section. With respect to
4each public institution of higher education such report also
5shall include, but need not be limited to, information with
6respect to each institution's minority program budget
7allocations; minority student admission, retention and
8graduation statistics; admission, retention, and graduation
9statistics of all students who are the first in their
10immediate family to attend an institution of higher education;
11number of financial assistance awards to undergraduate and
12graduate minority students; and minority faculty
13representation. This paragraph shall not be construed to
14prohibit the Board from making, preparing or issuing
15additional surveys or studies with respect to minority
16education in Illinois.
17(Source: P.A. 102-465, eff. 1-1-22.)
 
18    Section 80. The Dental Student Grant Act is amended by
19changing Section 3.07 as follows:
 
20    (110 ILCS 925/3.07)  (from Ch. 144, par. 1503.07)
21    Sec. 3.07. "Racial minority" means a person who is any of
22the following:
23        (1) American Indian or Alaska Native (a person having
24    origins in any of the original peoples of North and South

 

 

HB5752- 82 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1    America, including Central America, and who maintains
2    tribal affiliation or community attachment).
3        (2) Asian (a person having origins in any of the
4    original peoples of the Far East, Southeast Asia, or the
5    Indian subcontinent, including, but not limited to,
6    Cambodia, China, India, Japan, Korea, Malaysia, Pakistan,
7    the Philippine Islands, Thailand, and Vietnam).
8        (3) Black or African American (a person having origins
9    in any of the black racial groups of Africa).
10        (4) Hispanic or Latino (a person of Cuban, Mexican,
11    Puerto Rican, South or Central American, or other Spanish
12    culture or origin, regardless of race).
13        (5) Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander (a
14    person having origins in any of the original peoples of
15    Hawaii, Guam, Samoa, or other Pacific Islands).
16        (6) Arab (a person having origins in any of the
17    original peoples of Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates,
18    Iraq, Bahrain, Jordan, Comoros, Kuwait, Lebanon, Libya,
19    Mauritania, Morocco, Djibouti, Somalia, Palestine, Oman,
20    Syria, Yemen, Qatar, Sudan, Tunisia, Egypt, or Algeria).
21(Source: P.A. 102-465, eff. 1-1-22.)
 
22    Section 85. The Diversifying Higher Education Faculty in
23Illinois Act is amended by changing Section 2 as follows:
 
24    (110 ILCS 930/2)  (from Ch. 144, par. 2302)

 

 

HB5752- 83 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1    Sec. 2. Definitions. As used in this Act, unless the
2context otherwise requires:
3    "Board" means the Board of Higher Education.
4    "DFI" means the Diversifying Higher Education Faculty in
5Illinois Program of financial assistance to minorities who are
6traditionally underrepresented as participants in
7postsecondary education. The program shall assist them in
8pursuing a graduate or professional degree and shall also
9assist program graduates to find employment at an Illinois
10institution of higher education, including a community
11college, in a faculty or staff position.
12    "Program Board" means the entity created to administer the
13grant program authorized by this Act.
14    "Qualified institution of higher education" means a
15qualifying publicly or privately operated educational
16institution located within Illinois (i) that offers
17instruction leading toward or prerequisite to an academic or
18professional degree beyond the baccalaureate degree, excluding
19theological schools, and (ii) that is authorized to operate in
20the State of Illinois.
21    "Racial minority" means a person who is a citizen of the
22United States or a lawful permanent resident alien of the
23United States and who is any of the following:
24        (1) American Indian or Alaska Native (a person having
25    origins in any of the original peoples of North and South
26    America, including Central America, and who maintains

 

 

HB5752- 84 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1    tribal affiliation or community attachment).
2        (2) Asian (a person having origins in any of the
3    original peoples of the Far East, Southeast Asia, or the
4    Indian subcontinent, including, but not limited to,
5    Cambodia, China, India, Japan, Korea, Malaysia, Pakistan,
6    the Philippine Islands, Thailand, and Vietnam).
7        (3) Black or African American (a person having origins
8    in any of the black racial groups of Africa).
9        (4) Hispanic or Latino (a person of Cuban, Mexican,
10    Puerto Rican, South or Central American, or other Spanish
11    culture or origin, regardless of race).
12        (5) Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander (a
13    person having origins in any of the original peoples of
14    Hawaii, Guam, Samoa, or other Pacific Islands).
15        (6) Arab (a person having origins in any of the
16    original peoples of Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates,
17    Iraq, Bahrain, Jordan, Comoros, Kuwait, Lebanon, Libya,
18    Mauritania, Morocco, Djibouti, Somalia, Palestine, Oman,
19    Syria, Yemen, Qatar, Sudan, Tunisia, Egypt, or Algeria).
20(Source: P.A. 102-465, eff. 1-1-22.)
 
21    Section 90. The Higher Education Student Assistance Act is
22amended by changing Sections 50, 65.30, and 65.110 as follows:
 
23    (110 ILCS 947/50)
24    Sec. 50. Minority Teachers of Illinois scholarship

 

 

HB5752- 85 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1program.
2    (a) As used in this Section:
3        "Eligible applicant" means a minority student who has
4    graduated from high school or has received a high school
5    equivalency certificate and has maintained a cumulative
6    grade point average of no less than 2.5 on a 4.0 scale, and
7    who by reason thereof is entitled to apply for
8    scholarships to be awarded under this Section.
9        "Minority student" means a student who is any of the
10    following:
11            (1) American Indian or Alaska Native (a person
12        having origins in any of the original peoples of North
13        and South America, including Central America, and who
14        maintains tribal affiliation or community attachment).
15            (2) Asian (a person having origins in any of the
16        original peoples of the Far East, Southeast Asia, or
17        the Indian subcontinent, including, but not limited
18        to, Cambodia, China, India, Japan, Korea, Malaysia,
19        Pakistan, the Philippine Islands, Thailand, and
20        Vietnam).
21            (3) Black or African American (a person having
22        origins in any of the black racial groups of Africa).
23            (4) Hispanic or Latino (a person of Cuban,
24        Mexican, Puerto Rican, South or Central American, or
25        other Spanish culture or origin, regardless of race).
26            (5) Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander (a

 

 

HB5752- 86 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1        person having origins in any of the original peoples
2        of Hawaii, Guam, Samoa, or other Pacific Islands).
3            (6) Arab (a person having origins in any of the
4        original peoples of Saudi Arabia, United Arab
5        Emirates, Iraq, Bahrain, Jordan, Comoros, Kuwait,
6        Lebanon, Libya, Mauritania, Morocco, Djibouti,
7        Somalia, Palestine, Oman, Syria, Yemen, Qatar, Sudan,
8        Tunisia, Egypt, or Algeria).
9        "Qualified bilingual minority applicant" means a
10    qualified student who demonstrates proficiency in a
11    language other than English by (i) receiving a State Seal
12    of Biliteracy from the State Board of Education or (ii)
13    receiving a passing score on an educator licensure target
14    language proficiency test.
15        "Qualified student" means a person (i) who is a
16    resident of this State and a citizen or permanent resident
17    of the United States; (ii) who is a minority student, as
18    defined in this Section; (iii) who, as an eligible
19    applicant, has made a timely application for a minority
20    teaching scholarship under this Section; (iv) who is
21    enrolled on at least a half-time basis at a qualified
22    Illinois institution of higher learning; (v) who is
23    enrolled in a course of study leading to teacher
24    licensure, including alternative teacher licensure, or, if
25    the student is already licensed to teach, in a course of
26    study leading to an additional teaching endorsement or a

 

 

HB5752- 87 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1    master's degree in an academic field in which he or she is
2    teaching or plans to teach or who has received one or more
3    College and Career Pathway Endorsements pursuant to
4    Section 80 of the Postsecondary and Workforce Readiness
5    Act and commits to enrolling in a course of study leading
6    to teacher licensure, including alternative teacher
7    licensure; (vi) who maintains a grade point average of no
8    less than 2.5 on a 4.0 scale; and (vii) who continues to
9    advance satisfactorily toward the attainment of a degree.
10    (b) In order to encourage academically talented Illinois
11minority students to pursue teaching careers at the preschool
12or elementary or secondary school level and to address and
13alleviate the teacher shortage crisis in this State described
14under the provisions of the Transitions in Education Act, each
15qualified student shall be awarded a minority teacher
16scholarship to any qualified Illinois institution of higher
17learning. However, preference may be given to qualified
18applicants enrolled at or above the junior level.
19    (c) Each minority teacher scholarship awarded under this
20Section shall be in an amount sufficient to pay the tuition and
21fees and room and board costs of the qualified Illinois
22institution of higher learning at which the recipient is
23enrolled, up to an annual maximum of $5,000; except that in the
24case of a recipient who does not reside on-campus at the
25institution at which he or she is enrolled, the amount of the
26scholarship shall be sufficient to pay tuition and fee

 

 

HB5752- 88 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1expenses and a commuter allowance, up to an annual maximum of
2$5,000. However, if at least $2,850,000 is appropriated in a
3given fiscal year for the Minority Teachers of Illinois
4scholarship program, then, in each fiscal year thereafter,
5each scholarship awarded under this Section shall be in an
6amount sufficient to pay the tuition and fees and room and
7board costs of the qualified Illinois institution of higher
8learning at which the recipient is enrolled, up to an annual
9maximum of $7,500; except that in the case of a recipient who
10does not reside on-campus at the institution at which he or she
11is enrolled, the amount of the scholarship shall be sufficient
12to pay tuition and fee expenses and a commuter allowance, up to
13an annual maximum of $7,500.
14    (d) The total amount of minority teacher scholarship
15assistance awarded by the Commission under this Section to an
16individual in any given fiscal year, when added to other
17financial assistance awarded to that individual for that year,
18shall not exceed the cost of attendance at the institution at
19which the student is enrolled. If the amount of minority
20teacher scholarship to be awarded to a qualified student as
21provided in subsection (c) of this Section exceeds the cost of
22attendance at the institution at which the student is
23enrolled, the minority teacher scholarship shall be reduced by
24an amount equal to the amount by which the combined financial
25assistance available to the student exceeds the cost of
26attendance.

 

 

HB5752- 89 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1    (e) The maximum number of academic terms for which a
2qualified student can receive minority teacher scholarship
3assistance shall be 8 semesters or 12 quarters.
4    (f) In any academic year for which an eligible applicant
5under this Section accepts financial assistance through the
6Paul Douglas Teacher Scholarship Program, as authorized by
7Section 551 et seq. of the Higher Education Act of 1965, the
8applicant shall not be eligible for scholarship assistance
9awarded under this Section.
10    (g) All applications for minority teacher scholarships to
11be awarded under this Section shall be made to the Commission
12on forms which the Commission shall provide for eligible
13applicants. The form of applications and the information
14required to be set forth therein shall be determined by the
15Commission, and the Commission shall require eligible
16applicants to submit with their applications such supporting
17documents or recommendations as the Commission deems
18necessary.
19    (h) Subject to a separate appropriation for such purposes,
20payment of any minority teacher scholarship awarded under this
21Section shall be determined by the Commission. All scholarship
22funds distributed in accordance with this subsection shall be
23paid to the institution and used only for payment of the
24tuition and fee and room and board expenses incurred by the
25student in connection with his or her attendance at a
26qualified Illinois institution of higher learning. Any

 

 

HB5752- 90 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1minority teacher scholarship awarded under this Section shall
2be applicable to 2 semesters or 3 quarters of enrollment. If a
3qualified student withdraws from enrollment prior to
4completion of the first semester or quarter for which the
5minority teacher scholarship is applicable, the school shall
6refund to the Commission the full amount of the minority
7teacher scholarship.
8    (i) The Commission shall administer the minority teacher
9scholarship aid program established by this Section and shall
10make all necessary and proper rules not inconsistent with this
11Section for its effective implementation.
12    (j) When an appropriation to the Commission for a given
13fiscal year is insufficient to provide scholarships to all
14qualified students, the Commission shall allocate the
15appropriation in accordance with this subsection. If funds are
16insufficient to provide all qualified students with a
17scholarship as authorized by this Section, the Commission
18shall allocate the available scholarship funds for that fiscal
19year to qualified students who submit a complete application
20form on or before a date specified by the Commission based on
21the following order of priority:
22        (1) To students who received a scholarship under this
23    Section in the prior academic year and who remain eligible
24    for a minority teacher scholarship under this Section.
25        (2) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (k), to
26    students who demonstrate financial need, as determined by

 

 

HB5752- 91 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1    the Commission.
2    (k) Notwithstanding paragraph (2) of subsection (j), at
3least 35% of the funds appropriated for scholarships awarded
4under this Section in each fiscal year shall be reserved for
5qualified male minority applicants, with priority being given
6to qualified Black male applicants beginning with fiscal year
72023. If the Commission does not receive enough applications
8from qualified male minorities on or before January 1 of each
9fiscal year to award 35% of the funds appropriated for these
10scholarships to qualified male minority applicants, then the
11Commission may award a portion of the reserved funds to
12qualified female minority applicants in accordance with
13subsection (j).
14    Beginning with fiscal year 2023, if at least $2,850,000
15but less than $4,200,000 is appropriated in a given fiscal
16year for scholarships awarded under this Section, then at
17least 10% of the funds appropriated shall be reserved for
18qualified bilingual minority applicants, with priority being
19given to qualified bilingual minority applicants who are
20enrolled in an educator preparation program with a
21concentration in bilingual, bicultural education. Beginning
22with fiscal year 2023, if at least $4,200,000 is appropriated
23in a given fiscal year for the Minority Teachers of Illinois
24scholarship program, then at least 30% of the funds
25appropriated shall be reserved for qualified bilingual
26minority applicants, with priority being given to qualified

 

 

HB5752- 92 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1bilingual minority applicants who are enrolled in an educator
2preparation program with a concentration in bilingual,
3bicultural education. Beginning with fiscal year 2023, if at
4least $2,850,000 is appropriated in a given fiscal year for
5scholarships awarded under this Section but the Commission
6does not receive enough applications from qualified bilingual
7minority applicants on or before January 1 of that fiscal year
8to award at least 10% of the funds appropriated to qualified
9bilingual minority applicants, then the Commission may, in its
10discretion, award a portion of the reserved funds to other
11qualified students in accordance with subsection (j).
12    (l) Prior to receiving scholarship assistance for any
13academic year, each recipient of a minority teacher
14scholarship awarded under this Section shall be required by
15the Commission to sign an agreement under which the recipient
16pledges that, within the one-year period following the
17termination of the program for which the recipient was awarded
18a minority teacher scholarship, the recipient (i) shall begin
19teaching for a period of not less than one year for each year
20of scholarship assistance he or she was awarded under this
21Section; (ii) shall fulfill this teaching obligation at a
22nonprofit Illinois public, private, or parochial preschool,
23elementary school, or secondary school at which no less than
2430% of the enrolled students are minority students in the year
25during which the recipient begins teaching at the school or
26may instead, if the recipient received a scholarship as a

 

 

HB5752- 93 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1qualified bilingual minority applicant, fulfill this teaching
2obligation in a program in transitional bilingual education
3pursuant to Article 14C of the School Code or in a school in
4which 20 or more English learner students in the same language
5classification are enrolled; and (iii) shall, upon request by
6the Commission, provide the Commission with evidence that he
7or she is fulfilling or has fulfilled the terms of the teaching
8agreement provided for in this subsection.
9    (m) If a recipient of a minority teacher scholarship
10awarded under this Section fails to fulfill the teaching
11obligation set forth in subsection (l) of this Section, the
12Commission shall require the recipient to repay the amount of
13the scholarships received, prorated according to the fraction
14of the teaching obligation not completed, at a rate of
15interest equal to 5%, and, if applicable, reasonable
16collection fees. The Commission is authorized to establish
17rules relating to its collection activities for repayment of
18scholarships under this Section. All repayments collected
19under this Section shall be forwarded to the State Comptroller
20for deposit into the State's General Revenue Fund.
21    (n) A recipient of minority teacher scholarship shall not
22be considered in violation of the agreement entered into
23pursuant to subsection (l) if the recipient (i) enrolls on a
24full time basis as a graduate student in a course of study
25related to the field of teaching at a qualified Illinois
26institution of higher learning; (ii) is serving, not in excess

 

 

HB5752- 94 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1of 3 years, as a member of the armed services of the United
2States; (iii) is a person with a temporary total disability
3for a period of time not to exceed 3 years as established by
4sworn affidavit of a qualified physician; (iv) is seeking and
5unable to find full time employment as a teacher at an Illinois
6public, private, or parochial preschool or elementary or
7secondary school that satisfies the criteria set forth in
8subsection (l) of this Section and is able to provide evidence
9of that fact; (v) becomes a person with a permanent total
10disability as established by sworn affidavit of a qualified
11physician; (vi) is taking additional courses, on at least a
12half-time basis, needed to obtain licensure as a teacher in
13Illinois; or (vii) is fulfilling teaching requirements
14associated with other programs administered by the Commission
15and cannot concurrently fulfill them under this Section in a
16period of time equal to the length of the teaching obligation.
17    (o) Scholarship recipients under this Section who withdraw
18from a program of teacher education but remain enrolled in
19school to continue their postsecondary studies in another
20academic discipline shall not be required to commence
21repayment of their Minority Teachers of Illinois scholarship
22so long as they remain enrolled in school on a full-time basis
23or if they can document for the Commission special
24circumstances that warrant extension of repayment.
25    (p) If the Minority Teachers of Illinois scholarship
26program does not expend at least 90% of the amount

 

 

HB5752- 95 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1appropriated for the program in a given fiscal year for 3
2consecutive fiscal years and the Commission does not receive
3enough applications from the groups identified in subsection
4(k) on or before January 1 in each of those fiscal years to
5meet the percentage reserved for those groups under subsection
6(k), then up to 3% of amount appropriated for the program for
7each of next 3 fiscal years shall be allocated to increasing
8awareness of the program and for the recruitment of Black male
9applicants. The Commission shall make a recommendation to the
10General Assembly by January 1 of the year immediately
11following the end of that third fiscal year regarding whether
12the amount allocated to increasing awareness and recruitment
13should continue.
14    (q) Each qualified Illinois institution of higher learning
15that receives funds from the Minority Teachers of Illinois
16scholarship program shall host an annual information session
17at the institution about the program for teacher candidates of
18color in accordance with rules adopted by the Commission.
19Additionally, the institution shall ensure that each
20scholarship recipient enrolled at the institution meets with
21an academic advisor at least once per academic year to
22facilitate on-time completion of the recipient's educator
23preparation program.
24    (r) The changes made to this Section by Public Act 101-654
25this amendatory Act of the 101st General Assembly will first
26take effect with awards made for the 2022-2023 academic year.

 

 

HB5752- 96 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1(Source: P.A. 101-654, eff. 3-8-21; 102-465, eff. 1-1-22;
2revised 9-28-21.)
 
3    (110 ILCS 947/65.30)
4    Sec. 65.30. Equal opportunity scholarships.
5    (a) The Commission may annually award a number of
6scholarships to students who are interested in pursuing
7studies in educational administration. Such scholarships shall
8be issued to students who make application to the Commission
9and who agree to take courses at qualified institutions of
10higher learning that will allow them to complete a degree in
11educational administration.
12    (b) Scholarships awarded under this Section shall be
13issued pursuant to regulations promulgated by the Commission;
14provided that no rule or regulation promulgated by the State
15Board of Education prior to the effective date of this
16amendatory Act of 1993 pursuant to the exercise of any right,
17power, duty, responsibility or matter of pending business
18transferred from the State Board of Education to the
19Commission under this Section shall be affected thereby, and
20all such rules and regulations shall become the rules and
21regulations of the Commission until modified or changed by the
22Commission in accordance with law.
23    (c) Such scholarships shall be utilized for the payment of
24tuition and non-revenue bond fees at any qualified institution
25of higher learning. Such tuition and fees shall only be

 

 

HB5752- 97 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1available for courses that will enable the student to complete
2training in educational administration. The Commission shall
3determine which courses are eligible for tuition payments
4under this Section.
5    (d) The Commission may make tuition payments directly to
6the qualified institution of higher learning which the student
7attends for the courses prescribed or may make payments to the
8student. Any student who receives payments and who fails to
9enroll in the courses prescribed shall refund the payments to
10the Commission.
11    (e) The Commission, with the cooperation of the State
12Board of Education, shall assist students who have
13participated in the scholarship program established by this
14Section in finding employment in positions relating to
15educational administration.
16    (f) Appropriations for the scholarships outlined in this
17Section shall be made to the Commission from funds
18appropriated by the General Assembly.
19    (g) This Section is substantially the same as Section
2030-4d of the School Code, which Section is repealed by this
21amendatory Act of 1993, and shall be construed as a
22continuation of the equal opportunity scholarship program
23established under that prior law, and not as a new or different
24equal opportunity scholarship program. The State Board of
25Education shall transfer to the Commission, as the successor
26to the State Board of Education for all purposes of

 

 

HB5752- 98 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1administering and implementing the provisions of this Section,
2all books, accounts, records, papers, documents, contracts,
3agreements, and pending business in any way relating to the
4equal opportunity scholarship program continued under this
5Section; and all scholarships at any time awarded under that
6program by, and all applications for any such scholarship at
7any time made to, the State Board of Education shall be
8unaffected by the transfer to the Commission of all
9responsibility for the administration and implementation of
10the equal opportunity scholarship program continued under this
11Section. The State Board of Education shall furnish to the
12Commission such other information as the Commission may
13request to assist it in administering this Section.
14    (h) For purposes of this Section:
15        (1) "Qualified institution of higher learning" means
16    the University of Illinois; Southern Illinois University;
17    Chicago State University; Eastern Illinois University;
18    Governors State University; Illinois State University;
19    Northeastern Illinois University; Northern Illinois
20    University; Western Illinois University; the public
21    community colleges of the State; any other public
22    universities, colleges and community colleges now or
23    hereafter established or authorized by the General
24    Assembly; and any Illinois privately operated, not for
25    profit institution located in this State which provides at
26    least an organized 2-year program of collegiate grade in

 

 

HB5752- 99 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1    liberal arts or sciences, or both, directly applicable
2    toward the attainment of a baccalaureate or graduate
3    degree.
4        (2) "Racial minority" means a person who is any of the
5    following:
6            (1) American Indian or Alaska Native (a person
7        having origins in any of the original peoples of North
8        and South America, including Central America, and who
9        maintains tribal affiliation or community attachment).
10            (2) Asian (a person having origins in any of the
11        original peoples of the Far East, Southeast Asia, or
12        the Indian subcontinent, including, but not limited
13        to, Cambodia, China, India, Japan, Korea, Malaysia,
14        Pakistan, the Philippine Islands, Thailand, and
15        Vietnam).
16            (3) Black or African American (a person having
17        origins in any of the black racial groups of Africa).
18            (4) Hispanic or Latino (a person of Cuban,
19        Mexican, Puerto Rican, South or Central American, or
20        other Spanish culture or origin, regardless of race).
21            (5) Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander (a
22        person having origins in any of the original peoples
23        of Hawaii, Guam, Samoa, or other Pacific Islands).
24            (6) Arab (a person having origins in any of the
25        original peoples of Saudi Arabia, United Arab
26        Emirates, Iraq, Bahrain, Jordan, Comoros, Kuwait,

 

 

HB5752- 100 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1        Lebanon, Libya, Mauritania, Morocco, Djibouti,
2        Somalia, Palestine, Oman, Syria, Yemen, Qatar, Sudan,
3        Tunisia, Egypt, or Algeria).
4        (3) "Student" means a woman or racial minority.
5(Source: P.A. 102-465, eff. 1-1-22.)
 
6    (110 ILCS 947/65.110)
7    Sec. 65.110. Post-Master of Social Work School Social Work
8Professional Educator License scholarship.
9    (a) Subject to appropriation, beginning with awards for
10the 2022-2023 academic year, the Commission shall award
11annually up to 250 Post-Master of Social Work School Social
12Work Professional Educator License scholarships to a person
13who:
14        (1) holds a valid Illinois-licensed clinical social
15    work license or social work license;
16        (2) has obtained a master's degree in social work from
17    an approved program;
18        (3) is a United States citizen or eligible noncitizen;
19    and
20        (4) submits an application to the Commission for such
21    scholarship and agrees to take courses to obtain an
22    Illinois Professional Educator License with an endorsement
23    in School Social Work.
24    (b) If an appropriation for this Section for a given
25fiscal year is insufficient to provide scholarships to all

 

 

HB5752- 101 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1qualified applicants, the Commission shall allocate the
2appropriation in accordance with this subsection (b). If funds
3are insufficient to provide all qualified applicants with a
4scholarship as authorized by this Section, the Commission
5shall allocate the available scholarship funds for that fiscal
6year to qualified applicants who submit a complete application
7on or before a date specified by the Commission, based on the
8following order of priority:
9        (1) firstly, to students who received a scholarship
10    under this Section in the prior academic year and who
11    remain eligible for a scholarship under this Section;
12        (2) secondly, to new, qualified applicants who are
13    members of a racial minority, as defined in subsection
14    (c); and
15        (3) finally, to other new, qualified applicants in
16    accordance with this Section.
17    (c) Scholarships awarded under this Section shall be
18issued pursuant to rules adopted by the Commission. In
19awarding scholarships, the Commission shall give priority to
20those applicants who are members of a racial minority. Racial
21minorities are underrepresented as school social workers in
22elementary and secondary schools in this State, and the
23General Assembly finds that it is in the interest of this State
24to provide them with priority consideration for programs that
25encourage their participation in this field and thereby foster
26a profession that is more reflective of the diversity of

 

 

HB5752- 102 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1Illinois students and the parents they will serve. A more
2reflective workforce in school social work allows improved
3outcomes for students and a better utilization of services.
4Therefore, the Commission shall give priority to those
5applicants who are members of a racial minority. In this
6subsection (c), "racial minority" means a person who is a
7citizen of the United States or a lawful permanent resident
8alien of the United States and who is:
9        (1) Black (a person having origins in any of the black
10    racial groups in Africa);
11        (2) Hispanic (a person of Spanish or Portuguese
12    culture with origins in Mexico, South or Central America,
13    or the Caribbean Islands, regardless of race);
14        (3) Asian American (a person having origins in any of
15    the original peoples of the Far East, Southeast Asia, the
16    Indian Subcontinent, or the Pacific Islands); or
17        (4) American Indian or Alaskan Native (a person having
18    origins in any of the original peoples of North America);
19    or .
20        (5) Arab (a person having origins in any of the
21    original peoples of Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates,
22    Iraq, Bahrain, Jordan, Comoros, Kuwait, Lebanon, Libya,
23    Mauritania, Morocco, Djibouti, Somalia, Palestine, Oman,
24    Syria, Yemen, Qatar, Sudan, Tunisia, Egypt, or Algeria).
25    (d) Each scholarship shall be applied to the payment of
26tuition and mandatory fees at the University of Illinois,

 

 

HB5752- 103 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1Southern Illinois University, Chicago State University,
2Eastern Illinois University, Governors State University,
3Illinois State University, Northeastern Illinois University,
4Northern Illinois University, and Western Illinois University.
5Each scholarship may be applied to pay tuition and mandatory
6fees required to obtain an Illinois Professional Educator
7License with an endorsement in School Social Work.
8    (e) The Commission shall make tuition and fee payments
9directly to the qualified institution of higher learning that
10the applicant attends.
11    (f) Any person who has accepted a scholarship under this
12Section must, within one year after graduation or termination
13of enrollment in a Post-Master of Social Work Professional
14Education License with an endorsement in School Social Work
15program, begin working as a school social worker at a public or
16nonpublic not-for-profit preschool, elementary school, or
17secondary school located in this State for at least 2 of the 5
18years immediately following that graduation or termination,
19excluding, however, from the computation of that 5-year
20period: (i) any time up to 3 years spent in the military
21service, whether such service occurs before or after the
22person graduates; (ii) the time that person is a person with a
23temporary total disability for a period of time not to exceed 3
24years, as established by the sworn affidavit of a qualified
25physician; and (iii) the time that person is seeking and
26unable to find full-time employment as a school social worker

 

 

HB5752- 104 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1at a State public or nonpublic not-for-profit preschool,
2elementary school, or secondary school.
3    (g) If a recipient of a scholarship under this Section
4fails to fulfill the work obligation set forth in subsection
5(f), the Commission shall require the recipient to repay the
6amount of the scholarships received, prorated according to the
7fraction of the obligation not completed, at a rate of
8interest equal to 5%, and, if applicable, reasonable
9collection fees. The Commission is authorized to establish
10rules relating to its collection activities for repayment of
11scholarships under this Section. All repayments collected
12under this Section shall be forwarded to the State Comptroller
13for deposit into this State's General Revenue Fund.
14    A recipient of a scholarship under this Section is not
15considered to be in violation of the failure to fulfill the
16work obligation under subsection (f) if the recipient (i)
17enrolls on a full-time basis as a graduate student in a course
18of study related to the field of social work at a qualified
19Illinois institution of higher learning; (ii) is serving, not
20in excess of 3 years, as a member of the armed services of the
21United States; (iii) is a person with a temporary total
22disability for a period of time not to exceed 3 years, as
23established by the sworn affidavit of a qualified physician;
24(iv) is seeking and unable to find full-time employment as a
25school social worker at an Illinois public or nonpublic
26not-for-profit preschool, elementary school, or secondary

 

 

HB5752- 105 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1school that satisfies the criteria set forth in subsection (f)
2and is able to provide evidence of that fact; or (v) becomes a
3person with a permanent total disability, as established by
4the sworn affidavit of a qualified physician.
5(Source: P.A. 102-621, eff. 1-1-22.)
 
6    Section 95. The Illinois Insurance Code is amended by
7changing Section 500-50 as follows:
 
8    (215 ILCS 5/500-50)
9    (Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2027)
10    Sec. 500-50. Insurance producers; examination statistics.
11    (a) The use of examinations for the purpose of determining
12qualifications of persons to be licensed as insurance
13producers has a direct and far-reaching effect on persons
14seeking those licenses, on insurance companies, and on the
15public. It is in the public interest and it will further the
16public welfare to insure that examinations for licensing do
17not have the effect of unlawfully discriminating against
18applicants for licensing as insurance producers on the basis
19of race, color, national origin, or sex.
20    (b) As used in this Section, the following words have the
21meanings given in this subsection.
22    Examination. "Examination" means the examination in each
23line of insurance administered pursuant to Section 500-30.
24    Examinee. "Examinee" means a person who takes an

 

 

HB5752- 106 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1examination.
2    Part. "Part" means a portion of an examination for which a
3score is calculated.
4    Operational item. "Operational item" means a test question
5considered in determining an examinee's score.
6    Test form. "Test form" means the test booklet or
7instrument used for a part of an examination.
8    Pretest item. "Pretest item" means a prospective test
9question that is included in a test form in order to assess its
10performance, but is not considered in determining an
11examinee's score.
12    Minority group or examinees. "Minority group" or "minority
13examinees" means examinees who are American Indian or Alaska
14Native, Asian, Black or African American, Hispanic or Latino,
15or Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander, or Arab.
16    Correct-answer rate. "Correct-answer rate" for an item
17means the number of examinees who provided the correct answer
18on an item divided by the number of examinees who answered the
19item.
20    Correlation. "Correlation" means a statistical measure of
21the relationship between performance on an item and
22performance on a part of the examination.
23    (c) The Director shall ask each examinee to self-report on
24a voluntary basis on the answer sheet, application form, or by
25other appropriate means, the following information:
26        (1) race or ethnicity (American Indian or Alaska

 

 

HB5752- 107 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1    Native, Asian, Black or African American, Hispanic or
2    Latino, Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander, Arab,
3    or White);
4        (2) education (8th grade or less; less than 12th
5    grade; high school diploma or high school equivalency
6    certificate; some college, but no 4-year degree; or 4-year
7    degree or more); and
8        (3) gender (male or female).
9    The Director must advise all examinees that they are not
10required to provide this information, that they will not be
11penalized for not doing so, and that the Director will use the
12information provided exclusively for research and statistical
13purposes and to improve the quality and fairness of the
14examinations.
15    (d) No later than May 1 of each year, the Director must
16prepare, publicly announce, and publish an Examination Report
17of summary statistical information relating to each
18examination administered during the preceding calendar year.
19Each Examination Report shall show with respect to each
20examination:
21        (1) For all examinees combined and separately by race
22    or ethnicity, by educational level, by gender, by
23    educational level within race or ethnicity, by education
24    level within gender, and by race or ethnicity within
25    gender:
26            (A) number of examinees;

 

 

HB5752- 108 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1            (B) percentage and number of examinees who passed
2        each part;
3            (C) percentage and number of examinees who passed
4        all parts;
5            (D) mean scaled scores on each part; and
6            (E) standard deviation of scaled scores on each
7        part.
8        (2) For male examinees, female examinees, Black or
9    African American examinees, white examinees, American
10    Indian or Alaska Native examinees, Asian examinees,
11    Hispanic or Latino examinees, and Native Hawaiian or Other
12    Pacific Islander examinees, and Arab examinees,
13    respectively, with a high school diploma or high school
14    equivalency certificate, the distribution of scaled scores
15    on each part.
16    No later than May 1 of each year, the Director must prepare
17and make available on request an Item Report of summary
18statistical information relating to each operational item on
19each test form administered during the preceding calendar
20year. The Item Report shall show, for each operational item,
21for all examinees combined and separately for Black or African
22American examinees, white examinees, American Indian or Alaska
23Native examinees, Asian examinees, Hispanic or Latino
24examinees, and Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander
25examinees, and Arab examinees, the correct-answer rates and
26correlations.

 

 

HB5752- 109 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1    The Director is not required to report separate
2statistical information for any group or subgroup comprising
3fewer than 50 examinees.
4    (e) The Director must obtain a regular analysis of the
5data collected under this Section, and any other relevant
6information, for purposes of the development of new test
7forms. The analysis shall continue the implementation of the
8item selection methodology as recommended in the Final Report
9of the Illinois Insurance Producer's Licensing Examination
10Advisory Committee dated November 19, 1991, and filed with the
11Department unless some other methodology is determined by the
12Director to be as effective in minimizing differences between
13white and minority examinee pass-fail rates.
14    (f) The Director has the discretion to set cutoff scores
15for the examinations, provided that scaled scores on test
16forms administered after July 1, 1993, shall be made
17comparable to scaled scores on test forms administered in 1991
18by use of professionally acceptable methods so as to minimize
19changes in passing rates related to the presence or absence of
20or changes in equating or scaling equations or methods or
21content outlines. Each calendar year, the scaled cutoff score
22for each part of each examination shall fluctuate by no more
23than the standard error of measurement from the scaled cutoff
24score employed during the preceding year.
25    (g) No later than May 1, 2003 and no later than May 1 of
26every fourth year thereafter, the Director must release to the

 

 

HB5752- 110 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1public and make generally available one representative test
2form and set of answer keys for each part of each examination.
3    (h) The Director must maintain, for a period of 3 years
4after they are prepared or used, all registration forms, test
5forms, answer sheets, operational items and pretest items,
6item analyses, and other statistical analyses relating to the
7examinations. All personal identifying information regarding
8examinees and the content of test items must be maintained
9confidentially as necessary for purposes of protecting the
10personal privacy of examinees and the maintenance of test
11security.
12    (i) In administering the examinations, the Director must
13make such accommodations for examinees with disabilities as
14are reasonably warranted by the particular disability
15involved, including the provision of additional time if
16necessary to complete an examination or special assistance in
17taking an examination.
18    (j) For the purposes of this Section:
19        (1) "American Indian or Alaska Native" means a person
20    having origins in any of the original peoples of North and
21    South America, including Central America, and who
22    maintains tribal affiliation or community attachment.
23        (2) "Asian" means a person having origins in any of
24    the original peoples of the Far East, Southeast Asia, or
25    the Indian subcontinent, including, but not limited to,
26    Cambodia, China, India, Japan, Korea, Malaysia, Pakistan,

 

 

HB5752- 111 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1    the Philippine Islands, Thailand, and Vietnam.
2        (3) "Black or African American" means a person having
3    origins in any of the black racial groups of Africa.
4        (4) "Hispanic or Latino" means a person of Cuban,
5    Mexican, Puerto Rican, South or Central American, or other
6    Spanish culture or origin, regardless of race.
7        (5) "Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander" means
8    a person having origins in any of the original peoples of
9    Hawaii, Guam, Samoa, or other Pacific Islands.
10        (5.5) "Arab" means a person having origins in any of
11    the original peoples of Saudi Arabia, United Arab
12    Emirates, Iraq, Bahrain, Jordan, Comoros, Kuwait, Lebanon,
13    Libya, Mauritania, Morocco, Djibouti, Somalia, Palestine,
14    Oman, Syria, Yemen, Qatar, Sudan, Tunisia, Egypt, or
15    Algeria.
16        (6) "White" means a person having origins in any of
17    the original peoples of Europe, the Middle East, or North
18    Africa.
19(Source: P.A. 102-465, eff. 1-1-22.)
 
20    Section 100. The Illinois Public Aid Code is amended by
21changing Sections 4-23 and 12-4.48 as follows:
 
22    (305 ILCS 5/4-23)
23    Sec. 4-23. Civil rights impact statement.
24    (a) The Department of Human Services must submit to the

 

 

HB5752- 112 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1Governor and the General Assembly on January 1 of each
2even-numbered year a written report that details the disparate
3impact of various provisions of the TANF program on people of
4different racial or ethnic groups who identify themselves in
5an application for benefits as any of the following:
6        (1) American Indian or Alaska Native (a person having
7    origins in any of the original peoples of North and South
8    America, including Central America, and who maintains
9    tribal affiliation or community attachment).
10        (2) Asian (a person having origins in any of the
11    original peoples of the Far East, Southeast Asia, or the
12    Indian subcontinent, including, but not limited to,
13    Cambodia, China, India, Japan, Korea, Malaysia, Pakistan,
14    the Philippine Islands, Thailand, and Vietnam).
15        (3) Black or African American (a person having origins
16    in any of the black racial groups of Africa).
17        (4) Hispanic or Latino (a person of Cuban, Mexican,
18    Puerto Rican, South or Central American, or other Spanish
19    culture or origin, regardless of race).
20        (5) Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander (a
21    person having origins in any of the original peoples of
22    Hawaii, Guam, Samoa, or other Pacific Islands).
23        (5.5) Arab (a person having origins in any of the
24    original peoples of Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates,
25    Iraq, Bahrain, Jordan, Comoros, Kuwait, Lebanon, Libya,
26    Mauritania, Morocco, Djibouti, Somalia, Palestine, Oman,

 

 

HB5752- 113 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1    Syria, Yemen, Qatar, Sudan, Tunisia, Egypt, or Algeria).
2        (6) White (a person having origins in any of the
3    original peoples of Europe, the Middle East, or North
4    Africa).
5    (b) The report must at least compare the number of persons
6in each group:
7        (1) who are receiving TANF assistance;
8        (2) whose 60-month lifetime limit on receiving
9    assistance has expired;
10        (3) who have left TANF due to earned income;
11        (4) who have left TANF due to non-compliance with
12    program rules;
13        (5) whose TANF grants have been reduced by sanctions
14    for non-compliance with program rules;
15        (6) who have returned to TANF 6 months after leaving
16    due to earned income;
17        (7) who have returned to TANF 12 months after leaving
18    due to earned income;
19        (8) who have one or more children excluded from
20    receiving TANF cash assistance due to the child exclusion
21    rule;
22        (9) who have been granted an exemption from work
23    requirements; and
24        (10) who are participating in post-secondary education
25    activities.
26(Source: P.A. 102-465, eff. 1-1-22.)
 

 

 

HB5752- 114 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1    (305 ILCS 5/12-4.48)
2    Sec. 12-4.48. Long-Term Services and Supports Disparities
3Task Force.
4    (a) The Department of Healthcare and Family Services shall
5establish a Long-Term Services and Supports Disparities Task
6Force.
7    (b) Members of the Task Force shall be appointed by the
8Director of the Department of Healthcare and Family Services
9and shall include representatives of the following agencies,
10organizations, or groups:
11        (1) The Governor's office.
12        (2) The Department of Healthcare and Family Services.
13        (3) The Department of Human Services.
14        (4) The Department on Aging.
15        (5) The Department of Human Rights.
16        (6) Area Agencies on Aging.
17        (7) The Department of Public Health.
18        (8) Managed Care Plans.
19        (9) The for-profit urban nursing home or assisted
20    living industry.
21        (10) The for-profit rural nursing home or assisted
22    living industry.
23        (11) The not-for-profit nursing home or assisted
24    living industry.
25        (12) The home care association or home care industry.

 

 

HB5752- 115 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1        (13) The adult day care association or adult day care
2    industry.
3        (14) An association representing workers who provide
4    long-term services and supports.
5        (15) A representative of providers that serve the
6    predominantly ethnic minority populations.
7        (16) Case Management Organizations.
8        (17) Three consumer representatives which may include
9    a consumer of long-term services and supports or an
10    individual who advocates for such consumers. For purposes
11    of this provision, "consumer representative" means a
12    person who is not an elected official and who has no
13    financial interest in a health or long-term care delivery
14    system.
15    (c) The Task Force shall not meet unless all consumer
16representative positions are filled. The Task Force shall
17reflect diversity in race, ethnicity, and gender.
18    (d) The Chair of the Task Force shall be appointed by the
19Director of the Department of Healthcare and Family Services.
20    (e) The Director of the Department of Healthcare and
21Family Services shall assign appropriate staff and resources
22to support the efforts of the Task Force. The Task Force shall
23meet as often as necessary but not less than 4 times per
24calendar year.
25    (f) The Task Force shall promote and facilitate
26communication, coordination, and collaboration among relevant

 

 

HB5752- 116 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1State agencies and communities of color, limited
2English-speaking communities, and the private and public
3entities providing services to those communities.
4    (g) The Task Force shall do all of the following:
5        (1) Document the number and types of Long-Term
6    Services and Supports (LTSS) providers in the State and
7    the number of clients served in each setting.
8        (2) Document the number and racial profiles of
9    residents using LTSS, including, but not limited to,
10    residential nursing facilities, assisted living
11    facilities, adult day care, home health services, and
12    other home and community based long-term care services.
13        (3) Document the number and profiles of family or
14    informal caregivers who provide care for minority elders.
15        (4) Compare data over multiple years to identify
16    trends in the delivery of LTSS for each racial or ethnic
17    category including: Alaskan Native or American Indian,
18    Asian or Pacific Islander, black or African American,
19    Hispanic, Arab, or white.
20        (5) Identify any racial disparities in the provision
21    of care in various LTSS settings and determine factors
22    that might influence the disparities found.
23        (6) Identify any disparities uniquely experienced in
24    metropolitan or rural areas and make recommendations to
25    address these areas.
26        (7) Assess whether the LTSS industry, including

 

 

HB5752- 117 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1    managed care plans and independent providers, is equipped
2    to offer culturally sensitive, competent, and
3    linguistically appropriate care to meet the needs of a
4    diverse aging population and their informal and formal
5    caregivers.
6        (8) Consider whether to recommend that the State
7    require all home and community based services as a
8    condition of licensure to report data similar to that
9    gathered under the Minimum Data Set and required when a
10    new resident is admitted to a nursing home.
11        (9) Identify and prioritize recommendations for
12    actions to be taken by the State to address disparity
13    issues identified in the course of these studies.
14        (10) Monitor the progress of the State in eliminating
15    racial disparities in the delivery of LTSS.
16    (h) The Task Force shall conduct public hearings,
17inquiries, studies, and other forms of information gathering
18to identify how the actions of State government contribute to
19or reduce racial disparities in long-term care settings.
20    (i) The Task Force shall report its findings and
21recommendations to the Governor and the General Assembly no
22later than one year after the effective date of this
23amendatory Act of the 98th General Assembly. Annual reports
24shall be issued every year thereafter and shall include
25documentation of progress made to eliminate disparities in
26long-term care service settings.

 

 

HB5752- 118 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1(Source: P.A. 98-825, eff. 8-1-14; 99-78, eff. 7-20-15.)
 
2    Section 105. The Farmer Equity Act is amended by changing
3Section 10 as follows:
 
4    (505 ILCS 72/10)
5    Sec. 10. Definitions. In this Act:
6    "Department" means the Department of Agriculture.
7    "Director" means the Director of Agriculture.
8    "Socially disadvantaged farmers" means a farmer who is a
9member of a socially disadvantaged group.
10    "Socially disadvantaged group" means a group whose members
11have been subjected to racial, ethnic, or gender prejudice
12because of their identity as members of a group without regard
13to that member's personal qualities. "Socially disadvantaged
14group" includes, but is not limited to, African Americans,
15Native Indians, Alaskan Natives, Hispanics, Asian Americans,
16and Pacific Islanders, and Arabs.
17    "Urbanized area" means a geographic location with a
18population of at least 50,000 people.
19(Source: P.A. 100-1039, eff. 8-23-18.)
 
20    Section 110. The Illinois Vehicle Code is amended by
21changing Section 11-212 as follows:
 
22    (625 ILCS 5/11-212)

 

 

HB5752- 119 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1    Sec. 11-212. Traffic and pedestrian stop statistical
2study.
3    (a) Whenever a State or local law enforcement officer
4issues a uniform traffic citation or warning citation for an
5alleged violation of the Illinois Vehicle Code, he or she
6shall record at least the following:
7        (1) the name, address, gender, and the officer's
8    subjective determination of the race of the person
9    stopped; the person's race shall be selected from the
10    following list: American Indian or Alaska Native, Asian,
11    Black or African American, Hispanic or Latino, Native
12    Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander, Arab, or White;
13        (2) the alleged traffic violation that led to the stop
14    of the motorist;
15        (3) the make and year of the vehicle stopped;
16        (4) the date and time of the stop, beginning when the
17    vehicle was stopped and ending when the driver is free to
18    leave or taken into physical custody;
19        (5) the location of the traffic stop;
20        (5.5) whether or not a consent search contemporaneous
21    to the stop was requested of the vehicle, driver,
22    passenger, or passengers; and, if so, whether consent was
23    given or denied;
24        (6) whether or not a search contemporaneous to the
25    stop was conducted of the vehicle, driver, passenger, or
26    passengers; and, if so, whether it was with consent or by

 

 

HB5752- 120 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1    other means;
2        (6.2) whether or not a police dog performed a sniff of
3    the vehicle; and, if so, whether or not the dog alerted to
4    the presence of contraband; and, if so, whether or not an
5    officer searched the vehicle; and, if so, whether or not
6    contraband was discovered; and, if so, the type and amount
7    of contraband;
8        (6.5) whether or not contraband was found during a
9    search; and, if so, the type and amount of contraband
10    seized; and
11        (7) the name and badge number of the issuing officer.
12    (b) Whenever a State or local law enforcement officer
13stops a motorist for an alleged violation of the Illinois
14Vehicle Code and does not issue a uniform traffic citation or
15warning citation for an alleged violation of the Illinois
16Vehicle Code, he or she shall complete a uniform stop card,
17which includes field contact cards, or any other existing form
18currently used by law enforcement containing information
19required pursuant to this Act, that records at least the
20following:
21        (1) the name, address, gender, and the officer's
22    subjective determination of the race of the person
23    stopped; the person's race shall be selected from the
24    following list: American Indian or Alaska Native, Asian,
25    Black or African American, Hispanic or Latino, Native
26    Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander, Arab, or White;

 

 

HB5752- 121 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1        (2) the reason that led to the stop of the motorist;
2        (3) the make and year of the vehicle stopped;
3        (4) the date and time of the stop, beginning when the
4    vehicle was stopped and ending when the driver is free to
5    leave or taken into physical custody;
6        (5) the location of the traffic stop;
7        (5.5) whether or not a consent search contemporaneous
8    to the stop was requested of the vehicle, driver,
9    passenger, or passengers; and, if so, whether consent was
10    given or denied;
11        (6) whether or not a search contemporaneous to the
12    stop was conducted of the vehicle, driver, passenger, or
13    passengers; and, if so, whether it was with consent or by
14    other means;
15        (6.2) whether or not a police dog performed a sniff of
16    the vehicle; and, if so, whether or not the dog alerted to
17    the presence of contraband; and, if so, whether or not an
18    officer searched the vehicle; and, if so, whether or not
19    contraband was discovered; and, if so, the type and amount
20    of contraband;
21        (6.5) whether or not contraband was found during a
22    search; and, if so, the type and amount of contraband
23    seized; and
24        (7) the name and badge number of the issuing officer.
25    (b-5) For purposes of this subsection (b-5), "detention"
26means all frisks, searches, summons, and arrests. Whenever a

 

 

HB5752- 122 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1law enforcement officer subjects a pedestrian to detention in
2a public place, he or she shall complete a uniform pedestrian
3stop card, which includes any existing form currently used by
4law enforcement containing all the information required under
5this Section, that records at least the following:
6        (1) the gender, and the officer's subjective
7    determination of the race of the person stopped; the
8    person's race shall be selected from the following list:
9    American Indian or Alaska Native, Asian, Black or African
10    American, Hispanic or Latino, Native Hawaiian or Other
11    Pacific Islander, Arab, or White;
12        (2) all the alleged reasons that led to the stop of the
13    person;
14        (3) the date and time of the stop;
15        (4) the location of the stop;
16        (5) whether or not a protective pat down or frisk was
17    conducted of the person; and, if so, all the alleged
18    reasons that led to the protective pat down or frisk, and
19    whether it was with consent or by other means;
20        (6) whether or not contraband was found during the
21    protective pat down or frisk; and, if so, the type and
22    amount of contraband seized;
23        (7) whether or not a search beyond a protective pat
24    down or frisk was conducted of the person or his or her
25    effects; and, if so, all the alleged reasons that led to
26    the search, and whether it was with consent or by other

 

 

HB5752- 123 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1    means;
2        (8) whether or not contraband was found during the
3    search beyond a protective pat down or frisk; and, if so,
4    the type and amount of contraband seized;
5        (9) the disposition of the stop, such as a warning, a
6    ticket, a summons, or an arrest;
7        (10) if a summons or ticket was issued, or an arrest
8    made, a record of the violations, offenses, or crimes
9    alleged or charged; and
10        (11) the name and badge number of the officer who
11    conducted the detention.
12    This subsection (b-5) does not apply to searches or
13inspections for compliance authorized under the Fish and
14Aquatic Life Code, the Wildlife Code, the Herptiles-Herps Act,
15or searches or inspections during routine security screenings
16at facilities or events.
17    (c) The Illinois Department of Transportation shall
18provide a standardized law enforcement data compilation form
19on its website.
20    (d) Every law enforcement agency shall, by March 1 with
21regard to data collected during July through December of the
22previous calendar year and by August 1 with regard to data
23collected during January through June of the current calendar
24year, compile the data described in subsections (a), (b), and
25(b-5) on the standardized law enforcement data compilation
26form provided by the Illinois Department of Transportation and

 

 

HB5752- 124 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1transmit the data to the Department.
2    (e) The Illinois Department of Transportation shall
3analyze the data provided by law enforcement agencies required
4by this Section and submit a report of the previous year's
5findings to the Governor, the General Assembly, the Racial
6Profiling Prevention and Data Oversight Board, and each law
7enforcement agency no later than July 1 of each year. The
8Illinois Department of Transportation may contract with an
9outside entity for the analysis of the data provided. In
10analyzing the data collected under this Section, the analyzing
11entity shall scrutinize the data for evidence of statistically
12significant aberrations. The following list, which is
13illustrative, and not exclusive, contains examples of areas in
14which statistically significant aberrations may be found:
15        (1) The percentage of minority drivers, passengers, or
16    pedestrians being stopped in a given area is substantially
17    higher than the proportion of the overall population in or
18    traveling through the area that the minority constitutes.
19        (2) A substantial number of false stops including
20    stops not resulting in the issuance of a traffic ticket or
21    the making of an arrest.
22        (3) A disparity between the proportion of citations
23    issued to minorities and proportion of minorities in the
24    population.
25        (4) A disparity among the officers of the same law
26    enforcement agency with regard to the number of minority

 

 

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1    drivers, passengers, or pedestrians being stopped in a
2    given area.
3        (5) A disparity between the frequency of searches
4    performed on minority drivers or pedestrians and the
5    frequency of searches performed on non-minority drivers or
6    pedestrians.
7    (f) Any law enforcement officer identification information
8and driver or pedestrian identification information that is
9compiled by any law enforcement agency or the Illinois
10Department of Transportation pursuant to this Act for the
11purposes of fulfilling the requirements of this Section shall
12be confidential and exempt from public inspection and copying,
13as provided under Section 7 of the Freedom of Information Act,
14and the information shall not be transmitted to anyone except
15as needed to comply with this Section. This Section shall not
16exempt those materials that, prior to the effective date of
17this amendatory Act of the 93rd General Assembly, were
18available under the Freedom of Information Act. This
19subsection (f) shall not preclude law enforcement agencies
20from reviewing data to perform internal reviews.
21    (g) Funding to implement this Section shall come from
22federal highway safety funds available to Illinois, as
23directed by the Governor.
24    (h) The Illinois Criminal Justice Information Authority,
25in consultation with law enforcement agencies, officials, and
26organizations, including Illinois chiefs of police, the

 

 

HB5752- 126 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1Illinois State Police, the Illinois Sheriffs Association, and
2the Chicago Police Department, and community groups and other
3experts, shall undertake a study to determine the best use of
4technology to collect, compile, and analyze the traffic stop
5statistical study data required by this Section. The
6Department shall report its findings and recommendations to
7the Governor and the General Assembly by March 1, 2022.
8    (h-1) The Traffic and Pedestrian Stop Data Use and
9Collection Task Force is hereby created.
10        (1) The Task Force shall undertake a study to
11    determine the best use of technology to collect, compile,
12    and analyze the traffic stop statistical study data
13    required by this Section.
14        (2) The Task Force shall be an independent Task Force
15    under the Illinois Criminal Justice Information Authority
16    for administrative purposes, and shall consist of the
17    following members:
18            (A) 2 academics or researchers who have studied
19        issues related to traffic or pedestrian stop data
20        collection and have education or expertise in
21        statistics;
22            (B) one professor from an Illinois university who
23        specializes in policing and racial equity;
24            (C) one representative from the Illinois State
25        Police;
26            (D) one representative from the Chicago Police

 

 

HB5752- 127 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1        Department;
2            (E) one representative from the Illinois Chiefs of
3        Police;
4            (F) one representative from the Illinois Sheriffs
5        Association;
6            (G) one representative from the Chicago Fraternal
7        Order of Police;
8            (H) one representative from the Illinois Fraternal
9        Order of Police;
10            (I) the Executive Director of the American Civil
11        Liberties Union of Illinois, or his or her designee;
12        and
13            (J) 5 representatives from different community
14        organizations who specialize in civil or human rights,
15        policing, or criminal justice reform work, and that
16        represent a range of minority interests or different
17        parts of the State.
18        (3) The Illinois Criminal Justice Information
19    Authority may consult, contract, work in conjunction with,
20    and obtain any information from any individual, agency,
21    association, or research institution deemed appropriate by
22    the Authority.
23        (4) The Task Force shall report its findings and
24    recommendations to the Governor and the General Assembly
25    by March 1, 2022 and every 3 years after.
26    (h-5) For purposes of this Section:

 

 

HB5752- 128 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1        (1) "American Indian or Alaska Native" means a person
2    having origins in any of the original peoples of North and
3    South America, including Central America, and who
4    maintains tribal affiliation or community attachment.
5        (2) "Asian" means a person having origins in any of
6    the original peoples of the Far East, Southeast Asia, or
7    the Indian subcontinent, including, but not limited to,
8    Cambodia, China, India, Japan, Korea, Malaysia, Pakistan,
9    the Philippine Islands, Thailand, and Vietnam.
10        (2.5) "Badge" means an officer's department issued
11    identification number associated with his or her position
12    as a police officer with that department.
13        (3) "Black or African American" means a person having
14    origins in any of the black racial groups of Africa.
15        (4) "Hispanic or Latino" means a person of Cuban,
16    Mexican, Puerto Rican, South or Central American, or other
17    Spanish culture or origin, regardless of race.
18        (5) "Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander" means
19    a person having origins in any of the original peoples of
20    Hawaii, Guam, Samoa, or other Pacific Islands.
21        (5.5) "Arab" means a person having origins in any of
22    the original peoples of Saudi Arabia, United Arab
23    Emirates, Iraq, Bahrain, Jordan, Comoros, Kuwait, Lebanon,
24    Libya, Mauritania, Morocco, Djibouti, Somalia, Palestine,
25    Oman, Syria, Yemen, Qatar, Sudan, Tunisia, Egypt, or
26    Algeria.

 

 

HB5752- 129 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1        (6) "White" means a person having origins in any of
2    the original peoples of Europe, the Middle East, or North
3    Africa.
4    (i) (Blank).
5(Source: P.A. 101-24, eff. 6-21-19; 102-465, eff. 1-1-22;
6102-538, eff. 8-20-21; revised 9-21-21.)
 
7    Section 115. The Criminal Code of 2012 is amended by
8changing Section 17-10.2 as follows:
 
9    (720 ILCS 5/17-10.2)  (was 720 ILCS 5/17-29)
10    Sec. 17-10.2. Businesses owned by minorities, females, and
11persons with disabilities; fraudulent contracts with
12governmental units.
13    (a) In this Section:
14        "Minority person" means a person who is any of the
15    following:
16        (1) American Indian or Alaska Native (a person having
17    origins in any of the original peoples of North and South
18    America, including Central America, and who maintains
19    tribal affiliation or community attachment).
20        (2) Asian (a person having origins in any of the
21    original peoples of the Far East, Southeast Asia, or the
22    Indian subcontinent, including, but not limited to,
23    Cambodia, China, India, Japan, Korea, Malaysia, Pakistan,
24    the Philippine Islands, Thailand, and Vietnam).

 

 

HB5752- 130 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1        (3) Black or African American (a person having origins
2    in any of the black racial groups of Africa).
3        (4) Hispanic or Latino (a person of Cuban, Mexican,
4    Puerto Rican, South or Central American, or other Spanish
5    culture or origin, regardless of race).
6        (5) Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander (a
7    person having origins in any of the original peoples of
8    Hawaii, Guam, Samoa, or other Pacific Islands).
9        (6) Arab (a person having origins in any of the
10    original peoples of Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates,
11    Iraq, Bahrain, Jordan, Comoros, Kuwait, Lebanon, Libya,
12    Mauritania, Morocco, Djibouti, Somalia, Palestine, Oman,
13    Syria, Yemen, Qatar, Sudan, Tunisia, Egypt, or Algeria).
14        "Female" means a person who is of the female gender.
15        "Person with a disability" means a person who is a
16    person qualifying as having a disability.
17        "Disability" means a severe physical or mental
18    disability that: (1) results from: amputation, arthritis,
19    autism, blindness, burn injury, cancer, cerebral palsy,
20    cystic fibrosis, deafness, head injury, heart disease,
21    hemiplegia, hemophilia, respiratory or pulmonary
22    dysfunction, an intellectual disability, mental illness,
23    multiple sclerosis, muscular dystrophy, musculoskeletal
24    disorders, neurological disorders, including stroke and
25    epilepsy, paraplegia, quadriplegia and other spinal cord
26    conditions, sickle cell anemia, specific learning

 

 

HB5752- 131 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1    disabilities, or end stage renal failure disease; and (2)
2    substantially limits one or more of the person's major
3    life activities.
4        "Minority owned business" means a business concern
5    that is at least 51% owned by one or more minority persons,
6    or in the case of a corporation, at least 51% of the stock
7    in which is owned by one or more minority persons; and the
8    management and daily business operations of which are
9    controlled by one or more of the minority individuals who
10    own it.
11        "Female owned business" means a business concern that
12    is at least 51% owned by one or more females, or, in the
13    case of a corporation, at least 51% of the stock in which
14    is owned by one or more females; and the management and
15    daily business operations of which are controlled by one
16    or more of the females who own it.
17        "Business owned by a person with a disability" means a
18    business concern that is at least 51% owned by one or more
19    persons with a disability and the management and daily
20    business operations of which are controlled by one or more
21    of the persons with disabilities who own it. A
22    not-for-profit agency for persons with disabilities that
23    is exempt from taxation under Section 501 of the Internal
24    Revenue Code of 1986 is also considered a "business owned
25    by a person with a disability".
26        "Governmental unit" means the State, a unit of local

 

 

HB5752- 132 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1    government, or school district.
2    (b) In addition to any other penalties imposed by law or by
3an ordinance or resolution of a unit of local government or
4school district, any individual or entity that knowingly
5obtains, or knowingly assists another to obtain, a contract
6with a governmental unit, or a subcontract or written
7commitment for a subcontract under a contract with a
8governmental unit, by falsely representing that the individual
9or entity, or the individual or entity assisted, is a minority
10owned business, female owned business, or business owned by a
11person with a disability is guilty of a Class 2 felony,
12regardless of whether the preference for awarding the contract
13to a minority owned business, female owned business, or
14business owned by a person with a disability was established
15by statute or by local ordinance or resolution.
16    (c) In addition to any other penalties authorized by law,
17the court shall order that an individual or entity convicted
18of a violation of this Section must pay to the governmental
19unit that awarded the contract a penalty equal to one and
20one-half times the amount of the contract obtained because of
21the false representation.
22(Source: P.A. 102-465, eff. 1-1-22.)
 
23    Section 120. The Illinois Human Rights Act is amended by
24changing Section 2-105 as follows:
 

 

 

HB5752- 133 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1    (775 ILCS 5/2-105)  (from Ch. 68, par. 2-105)
2    Sec. 2-105. Equal Employment Opportunities; Affirmative
3Action.
4    (A) Public Contracts. Every party to a public contract and
5every eligible bidder shall:
6        (1) Refrain from unlawful discrimination and
7    discrimination based on citizenship status in employment
8    and undertake affirmative action to assure equality of
9    employment opportunity and eliminate the effects of past
10    discrimination;
11        (2) Comply with the procedures and requirements of the
12    Department's regulations concerning equal employment
13    opportunities and affirmative action;
14        (3) Provide such information, with respect to its
15    employees and applicants for employment, and assistance as
16    the Department may reasonably request;
17        (4) Have written sexual harassment policies that shall
18    include, at a minimum, the following information: (i) the
19    illegality of sexual harassment; (ii) the definition of
20    sexual harassment under State law; (iii) a description of
21    sexual harassment, utilizing examples; (iv) the vendor's
22    internal complaint process including penalties; (v) the
23    legal recourse, investigative, and complaint process
24    available through the Department and the Commission; (vi)
25    directions on how to contact the Department and
26    Commission; and (vii) protection against retaliation as

 

 

HB5752- 134 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1    provided by Sections 6-101 and 6-101.5 of this Act. A copy
2    of the policies shall be provided to the Department upon
3    request. Additionally, each bidder who submits a bid or
4    offer for a State contract under the Illinois Procurement
5    Code shall have a written copy of the bidder's sexual
6    harassment policy as required under this paragraph (4). A
7    copy of the policy shall be provided to the State agency
8    entering into the contract upon request.
9    (B) State Agencies. Every State executive department,
10State agency, board, commission, and instrumentality shall:
11        (1) Comply with the procedures and requirements of the
12    Department's regulations concerning equal employment
13    opportunities and affirmative action. ;
14        (2) Provide such information and assistance as the
15    Department may request.
16        (3) Establish, maintain, and carry out a continuing
17    affirmative action plan consistent with this Act and the
18    regulations of the Department designed to promote equal
19    opportunity for all State residents in every aspect of
20    agency personnel policy and practice. For purposes of
21    these affirmative action plans, the race and national
22    origin categories to be included in the plans are:
23    American Indian or Alaska Native, Asian, Black or African
24    American, Hispanic or Latino, Native Hawaiian or Other
25    Pacific Islander, and Arab.
26        This plan shall include a current detailed status

 

 

HB5752- 135 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1    report:
2            (a) indicating, by each position in State service,
3        the number, percentage, and average salary of
4        individuals employed by race, national origin, sex and
5        disability, and any other category that the Department
6        may require by rule;
7            (b) identifying all positions in which the
8        percentage of the people employed by race, national
9        origin, sex and disability, and any other category
10        that the Department may require by rule, is less than
11        four-fifths of the percentage of each of those
12        components in the State work force;
13            (c) specifying the goals and methods for
14        increasing the percentage by race, national origin,
15        sex, and disability, and any other category that the
16        Department may require by rule, in State positions;
17            (d) indicating progress and problems toward
18        meeting equal employment opportunity goals, including,
19        if applicable, but not limited to, Department of
20        Central Management Services recruitment efforts,
21        publicity, promotions, and use of options designating
22        positions by linguistic abilities;
23            (e) establishing a numerical hiring goal for the
24        employment of qualified persons with disabilities in
25        the agency as a whole, to be based on the proportion of
26        people with work disabilities in the Illinois labor

 

 

HB5752- 136 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1        force as reflected in the most recent employment data
2        made available by the United States Census Bureau.
3        (4) If the agency has 1000 or more employees, appoint
4    a full-time Equal Employment Opportunity officer, subject
5    to the Department's approval, whose duties shall include:
6            (a) Advising the head of the particular State
7        agency with respect to the preparation of equal
8        employment opportunity programs, procedures,
9        regulations, reports, and the agency's affirmative
10        action plan.
11            (b) Evaluating in writing each fiscal year the
12        sufficiency of the total agency program for equal
13        employment opportunity and reporting thereon to the
14        head of the agency with recommendations as to any
15        improvement or correction in recruiting, hiring or
16        promotion needed, including remedial or disciplinary
17        action with respect to managerial or supervisory
18        employees who have failed to cooperate fully or who
19        are in violation of the program.
20            (c) Making changes in recruitment, training and
21        promotion programs and in hiring and promotion
22        procedures designed to eliminate discriminatory
23        practices when authorized.
24            (d) Evaluating tests, employment policies,
25        practices, and qualifications and reporting to the
26        head of the agency and to the Department any policies,

 

 

HB5752- 137 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1        practices and qualifications that have unequal impact
2        by race, national origin as required by Department
3        rule, sex, or disability or any other category that
4        the Department may require by rule, and to assist in
5        the recruitment of people in underrepresented
6        classifications. This function shall be performed in
7        cooperation with the State Department of Central
8        Management Services.
9            (e) Making any aggrieved employee or applicant for
10        employment aware of his or her remedies under this
11        Act.
12            In any meeting, investigation, negotiation,
13        conference, or other proceeding between a State
14        employee and an Equal Employment Opportunity officer,
15        a State employee (1) who is not covered by a collective
16        bargaining agreement and (2) who is the complaining
17        party or the subject of such proceeding may be
18        accompanied, advised and represented by (1) an
19        attorney licensed to practice law in the State of
20        Illinois or (2) a representative of an employee
21        organization whose membership is composed of employees
22        of the State and of which the employee is a member. A
23        representative of an employee, other than an attorney,
24        may observe but may not actively participate, or
25        advise the State employee during the course of such
26        meeting, investigation, negotiation, conference, or

 

 

HB5752- 138 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1        other proceeding. Nothing in this Section shall be
2        construed to permit any person who is not licensed to
3        practice law in Illinois to deliver any legal services
4        or otherwise engage in any activities that would
5        constitute the unauthorized practice of law. Any
6        representative of an employee who is present with the
7        consent of the employee, shall not, during or after
8        termination of the relationship permitted by this
9        Section with the State employee, use or reveal any
10        information obtained during the course of the meeting,
11        investigation, negotiation, conference, or other
12        proceeding without the consent of the complaining
13        party and any State employee who is the subject of the
14        proceeding and pursuant to rules and regulations
15        governing confidentiality of such information as
16        promulgated by the appropriate State agency.
17        Intentional or reckless disclosure of information in
18        violation of these confidentiality requirements shall
19        constitute a Class B misdemeanor.
20        (5) Establish, maintain, and carry out a continuing
21    sexual harassment program that shall include the
22    following:
23            (a) Develop a written sexual harassment policy
24        that includes at a minimum the following information:
25        (i) the illegality of sexual harassment; (ii) the
26        definition of sexual harassment under State law; (iii)

 

 

HB5752- 139 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1        a description of sexual harassment, utilizing
2        examples; (iv) the agency's internal complaint process
3        including penalties; (v) the legal recourse,
4        investigative, and complaint process available through
5        the Department and the Commission; (vi) directions on
6        how to contact the Department and Commission; and
7        (vii) protection against retaliation as provided by
8        Section 6-101 of this Act. The policy shall be
9        reviewed annually.
10            (b) Post in a prominent and accessible location
11        and distribute in a manner to assure notice to all
12        agency employees without exception the agency's sexual
13        harassment policy. Such documents may meet, but shall
14        not exceed, the 6th grade literacy level. Distribution
15        shall be effectuated within 90 days of the effective
16        date of this amendatory Act of 1992 and shall occur
17        annually thereafter.
18            (c) Provide training on sexual harassment
19        prevention and the agency's sexual harassment policy
20        as a component of all ongoing or new employee training
21        programs.
22        (6) Notify the Department 30 days before effecting any
23    layoff. Once notice is given, the following shall occur:
24            (a) No layoff may be effective earlier than 10
25        working days after notice to the Department, unless an
26        emergency layoff situation exists.

 

 

HB5752- 140 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1            (b) The State executive department, State agency,
2        board, commission, or instrumentality in which the
3        layoffs are to occur must notify each employee
4        targeted for layoff, the employee's union
5        representative (if applicable), and the State
6        Dislocated Worker Unit at the Department of Commerce
7        and Economic Opportunity.
8            (c) The State executive department, State agency,
9        board, commission, or instrumentality in which the
10        layoffs are to occur must conform to applicable
11        collective bargaining agreements.
12            (d) The State executive department, State agency,
13        board, commission, or instrumentality in which the
14        layoffs are to occur should notify each employee
15        targeted for layoff that transitional assistance may
16        be available to him or her under the Economic
17        Dislocation and Worker Adjustment Assistance Act
18        administered by the Department of Commerce and
19        Economic Opportunity. Failure to give such notice
20        shall not invalidate the layoff or postpone its
21        effective date.
22     As used in this subsection (B), "disability" shall be
23defined in rules promulgated under the Illinois Administrative
24Procedure Act.
25    (C) Civil Rights Violations. It is a civil rights
26violation for any public contractor or eligible bidder to:

 

 

HB5752- 141 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1        (1) fail to comply with the public contractor's or
2    eligible bidder's duty to refrain from unlawful
3    discrimination and discrimination based on citizenship
4    status in employment under subsection (A)(1) of this
5    Section; or
6        (2) fail to comply with the public contractor's or
7    eligible bidder's duties of affirmative action under
8    subsection (A) of this Section, provided however, that the
9    Department has notified the public contractor or eligible
10    bidder in writing by certified mail that the public
11    contractor or eligible bidder may not be in compliance
12    with affirmative action requirements of subsection (A). A
13    minimum of 60 days to comply with the requirements shall
14    be afforded to the public contractor or eligible bidder
15    before the Department may issue formal notice of
16    non-compliance.
17    (D) As used in this Section:
18        (1) "American Indian or Alaska Native" means a person
19    having origins in any of the original peoples of North and
20    South America, including Central America, and who
21    maintains tribal affiliation or community attachment.
22        (2) "Asian" means a person having origins in any of
23    the original peoples of the Far East, Southeast Asia, or
24    the Indian subcontinent, including, but not limited to,
25    Cambodia, China, India, Japan, Korea, Malaysia, Pakistan,
26    the Philippine Islands, Thailand, and Vietnam.

 

 

HB5752- 142 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1        (3) "Black or African American" means a person having
2    origins in any of the black racial groups of Africa.
3        (4) "Hispanic or Latino" means a person of Cuban,
4    Mexican, Puerto Rican, South or Central American, or other
5    Spanish culture or origin, regardless of race.
6        (5) "Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander" means
7    a person having origins in any of the original peoples of
8    Hawaii, Guam, Samoa, or other Pacific Islands.
9        (6) "Arab" means a person having origins in any of the
10    original peoples of Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates,
11    Iraq, Bahrain, Jordan, Comoros, Kuwait, Lebanon, Libya,
12    Mauritania, Morocco, Djibouti, Somalia, Palestine, Oman,
13    Syria, Yemen, Qatar, Sudan, Tunisia, Egypt, or Algeria.
14(Source: P.A. 102-362, eff. 1-1-22; 102-465, eff. 1-1-22;
15revised 9-22-21.)
 
16    Section 125. The Business Corporation Act of 1983 is
17amended by changing Section 8.12 as follows:
 
18    (805 ILCS 5/8.12)
19    Sec. 8.12. Female, minority, and LGBTQ directors.
20    (a) Findings and purpose. The General Assembly finds that
21women, minorities, and LGBTQ people are still largely
22underrepresented nationally in positions of corporate
23authority, such as serving as a director on a corporation's
24board of directors. This low representation could be

 

 

HB5752- 143 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1contributing to the disparity seen in wages made by females
2and minorities versus their white male counterparts. Increased
3representation of these individuals as directors on boards of
4directors for corporations may boost the Illinois economy,
5improve opportunities for women, minorities, and LGBTQ people
6in the workplace, and foster an environment in Illinois where
7the business community is representative of our residents.
8Therefore, it is the intent of the General Assembly to gather
9more data and study this issue within the State so that
10effective policy changes may be implemented to eliminate this
11disparity.
12    (b) As used in this Section:
13    "Annual report" means the report submitted annually to the
14Secretary of State pursuant to this Act.
15    "Female" means a person who is a citizen or lawful
16permanent resident of the United States and who
17self-identifies as a woman, without regard to the individual's
18designated sex at birth.
19    "Minority person" means a person who is a citizen or
20lawful permanent resident of the United States and who is any
21of the following races or ethnicities:
22        (1) American Indian or Alaska Native (a person having
23    origins in any of the original peoples of North and South
24    America, including Central America, and who maintains
25    tribal affiliation or community attachment).
26        (2) Asian (a person having origins in any of the

 

 

HB5752- 144 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1    original peoples of the Far East, Southeast Asia, or the
2    Indian subcontinent, including, but not limited to,
3    Cambodia, China, India, Japan, Korea, Malaysia, Pakistan,
4    the Philippine Islands, Thailand, and Vietnam).
5        (3) Black or African American (a person having origins
6    in any of the black racial groups of Africa). Terms such as
7    "Haitian" or "Negro" can be used in addition to "Black" or
8    "African American".
9        (4) Hispanic or Latino (a person of Cuban, Mexican,
10    Puerto Rican, South or Central American, or other Spanish
11    culture or origin, regardless of race).
12        (5) Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander (a
13    person having origins in any of the original peoples of
14    Hawaii, Guam, Samoa, or other Pacific Islands).
15        (6) Arab (a person having origins in any of the
16    original peoples of Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates,
17    Iraq, Bahrain, Jordan, Comoros, Kuwait, Lebanon, Libya,
18    Mauritania, Morocco, Djibouti, Somalia, Palestine, Oman,
19    Syria, Yemen, Qatar, Sudan, Tunisia, Egypt, or Algeria).
20    (6) "Publicly held domestic or foreign corporation" means
21a corporation with outstanding shares listed on a major United
22States stock exchange.
23    (c) Reporting to the Secretary of State. As soon as
24practical after August 27, 2019 (the effective date of Public
25Act 101-589) this amendatory Act of the 101st General
26Assembly, but no later than January 1, 2021, the following

 

 

HB5752- 145 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1information shall be provided in a corporation's annual report
2submitted to the Secretary of State under this Act and made
3available by the Secretary of State to the public online as it
4is received:
5        (1) Whether the corporation is a publicly held
6    domestic or foreign corporation with its principal
7    executive office located in Illinois.
8        (2) Where the corporation is a publicly held domestic
9    or foreign corporation with its principal executive office
10    located in Illinois, data on specific qualifications,
11    skills, and experience that the corporation considers for
12    its board of directors, nominees for the board of
13    directors, and executive officers.
14        (3) Where the corporation is a publicly held domestic
15    or foreign corporation with its principal executive office
16    located in Illinois, the self-identified gender of each
17    member of its board of directors.
18        (4) Where the corporation is a publicly held domestic
19    or foreign corporation with its principal executive office
20    located in Illinois, whether each member of its board of
21    directors self-identifies as a minority person and, if so,
22    which race or ethnicity to which the member belongs.
23        (5) Where the corporation is a publicly held domestic
24    or foreign corporation with its principal executive office
25    located in Illinois, the self-identified sexual
26    orientation of each member of its board of directors.

 

 

HB5752- 146 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

1        (6) Where the corporation is a publicly held domestic
2    or foreign corporation with its principal executive office
3    located in Illinois, the self-identified gender identity
4    of each member of its board of directors.
5        (7) 7 Where the corporation is a publicly held
6    domestic or foreign corporation with its principal
7    executive office located in Illinois, a description of the
8    corporation's process for identifying and evaluating
9    nominees for the board of directors, including whether
10    and, if so, how demographic diversity is considered.
11        (8) 8 Where the corporation is a publicly held
12    domestic or foreign corporation with its principal
13    executive office located in Illinois, a description of the
14    corporation's process for identifying and appointing
15    executive officers, including whether and, if so, how
16    demographic diversity is considered.
17        (9) 9 Where the corporation is a publicly held
18    domestic or foreign corporation with its principal
19    executive office located in Illinois, a description of the
20    corporation's policies and practices for promoting
21    diversity, equity, and inclusion among its board of
22    directors and executive officers.
23    Information reported under this subsection shall be
24updated in each annual report filed with the Secretary of
25State thereafter.
26    (d) Beginning no later than March 1, 2021, and every March

 

 

HB5752- 147 -LRB102 26826 RPS 37837 b

11 thereafter, the University of Illinois Systems shall review
2the information reported and published under subsection (c)
3and shall publish on its website a report that provides
4aggregate data on the demographic characteristics of the
5boards of directors and executive officers of corporations
6filing an annual report for the preceding year along with an
7individualized rating for each corporation. The report shall
8also identify strategies for promoting diversity and inclusion
9among boards of directors and corporate executive officers.
10    (e) The University of Illinois System shall establish a
11rating system assessing the representation of women,
12minorities, and LGBTQ people on corporate boards of directors
13of those corporations that are publicly held domestic or
14foreign corporations with their principal executive office
15located in Illinois based on the information gathered under
16this Section. The rating system shall consider, among other
17things: compliance with the demographic reporting obligations
18in subsection (c); the corporation's policies and practices
19for encouraging diversity in recruitment, board membership,
20and executive appointments; and the demographic diversity of
21board seats and executive positions.
22(Source: P.A. 101-589, eff. 8-27-19; 102-223, eff. 1-1-22;
23revised 11-24-21.)