Illinois General Assembly - Full Text of HB2590
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Full Text of HB2590  96th General Assembly

HB2590 96TH GENERAL ASSEMBLY


 


 
96TH GENERAL ASSEMBLY
State of Illinois
2009 and 2010
HB2590

 

Introduced 2/20/2009, by Rep. Paul D. Froehlich

 

SYNOPSIS AS INTRODUCED:
 
10 ILCS 5/28-1   from Ch. 46, par. 28-1

    Amends the Election Code. Provides that the limit of 3 public questions per election in a political subdivision does not apply when a fourth public question is non-advisory and initiated by electors if the first 3 public questions are advisory propositions initiated by resolution. Effective immediately.


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A BILL FOR

 

HB2590 LRB096 11361 JAM 21819 b

1     AN ACT concerning elections.
 
2     Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
3 represented in the General Assembly:
 
4     Section 5. The Election Code is amended by changing Section
5 28-1 as follows:
 
6     (10 ILCS 5/28-1)  (from Ch. 46, par. 28-1)
7     Sec. 28-1. The initiation and submission of all public
8 questions to be voted upon by the electors of the State or of
9 any political subdivision or district or precinct or
10 combination of precincts shall be subject to the provisions of
11 this Article.
12     Questions of public policy which have any legal effect
13 shall be submitted to referendum only as authorized by a
14 statute which so provides or by the Constitution. Advisory
15 questions of public policy shall be submitted to referendum
16 pursuant to Section 28-5 or pursuant to a statute which so
17 provides.
18     The method of initiating the submission of a public
19 question shall be as provided by the statute authorizing such
20 public question, or as provided by the Constitution.
21     All public questions shall be initiated, submitted and
22 printed on the ballot in the form required by Section 16-7 of
23 this Act, except as may otherwise be specified in the statute

 

 

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1 authorizing a public question.
2     Whenever a statute provides for the initiation of a public
3 question by a petition of electors, the provisions of such
4 statute shall govern with respect to the number of signatures
5 required, the qualifications of persons entitled to sign the
6 petition, the contents of the petition, the officer with whom
7 the petition must be filed, and the form of the question to be
8 submitted. If such statute does not specify any of the
9 foregoing petition requirements, the corresponding petition
10 requirements of Section 28-6 shall govern such petition.
11     Irrespective of the method of initiation, not more than 3
12 public questions other than (a) back door referenda, (b)
13 referenda to determine whether a disconnection may take place
14 where a city coterminous with a township is proposing to annex
15 territory from an adjacent township, (c) referenda held under
16 the provisions of the Property Tax Extension Limitation Law in
17 the Property Tax Code, or (d) referenda held under Section
18 2-3002 of the Counties Code may be submitted to referendum with
19 respect to a political subdivision at the same election, except
20 as otherwise provided in this Section.
21     If more than 3 propositions are timely initiated or
22 certified for submission at an election with respect to a
23 political subdivision, the first 3 validly initiated, by the
24 filing of a petition or by the adoption of a resolution or
25 ordinance of a political subdivision, as the case may be, shall
26 be printed on the ballot and submitted at that election. If 3

 

 

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1 advisory propositions have been placed on the ballot by
2 resolution, however, then a fourth proposition shall be
3 permitted if a non-advisory public question is subsequently
4 initiated by petition of electors. However, except as expressly
5 authorized by law not more than one proposition to change the
6 form of government of a municipality pursuant to Article VII of
7 the Constitution may be submitted at an election. If more than
8 one such proposition is timely initiated or certified for
9 submission at an election with respect to a municipality, the
10 first validly initiated shall be the one printed on the ballot
11 and submitted at that election.
12     No public question shall be submitted to the voters of a
13 political subdivision at any regularly scheduled election at
14 which such voters are not scheduled to cast votes for any
15 candidates for nomination for, election to or retention in
16 public office, except that if, in any existing or proposed
17 political subdivision in which the submission of a public
18 question at a regularly scheduled election is desired, the
19 voters of only a portion of such existing or proposed political
20 subdivision are not scheduled to cast votes for nomination for,
21 election to or retention in public office at such election, but
22 the voters in one or more other portions of such existing or
23 proposed political subdivision are scheduled to cast votes for
24 nomination for, election to or retention in public office at
25 such election, the public question shall be voted upon by all
26 the qualified voters of the entire existing or proposed

 

 

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1 political subdivision at the election.
2     Not more than 3 advisory public questions may be submitted
3 to the voters of the entire state at a general election. If
4 more than 3 such advisory propositions are initiated, the first
5 3 timely and validly initiated shall be the questions printed
6 on the ballot and submitted at that election; provided however,
7 that a question for a proposed amendment to Article IV of the
8 Constitution pursuant to Section 3, Article XIV of the
9 Constitution, or for a question submitted under the Property
10 Tax Cap Referendum Law, shall not be included in the foregoing
11 limitation.
12 (Source: P.A. 93-308, eff. 7-23-03.)
 
13     Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon
14 becoming law.