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95TH GENERAL ASSEMBLY
State of Illinois
2007 and 2008 HB4204
Introduced , by Rep. LaShawn K. Ford SYNOPSIS AS INTRODUCED: |
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Amends the Children and Family Services Act and the Juvenile Court Act of 1987. Provides that the Department of Children and Family Services shall establish, by contracts with private or public vendors, regional crisis residential centers with semi-secure facilities. Provides that these facilities shall be structured group care facilities licensed under rules adopted by the Department of Children and Family Services and shall have an average of at least 4 adult staff members and in no event less than 3 adult staff members to every 8 minors. Provides that a minor requiring authoritative intervention or a truant minor in need of supervision may be placed in a regional crisis residential center or a secure crisis residential center. Provides that within available funds appropriated for this purpose, the Department of Children and Family Services shall establish, by contracts with private or public vendors, regional crisis residential centers with secure facilities. Provides that these facilities shall be facilities licensed under rules adopted by the Department. Provides that these centers may also include semi-secure facilities. Provides that a minor admitted to a secure facility shall remain in the facility for at least 24 hours after admission but for not more than 5 consecutive days. Provides that if the minor admitted is transferred between secure and semi-secure facilities, the aggregate length of time spent in all such centers or facilities may not exceed 5 consecutive days per admission. Changes the requirements for which a minor may be adjudicated as requiring authoritative intervention.
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A BILL FOR
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HB4204 |
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LRB095 14861 RLC 41129 b |
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| AN ACT concerning minors.
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| Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
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| represented in the General Assembly:
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| Section 5. The Children and Family Services Act is amended |
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| by changing Section 5 as follows:
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| (20 ILCS 505/5) (from Ch. 23, par. 5005)
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| (Text of Section after amendment by P.A. 95-642 ) |
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| Sec. 5. Direct child welfare services; Department of |
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| Children and Family
Services. To provide direct child welfare |
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| services when not available
through other public or private |
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| child care or program facilities.
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| (a) For purposes of this Section:
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| (1) "Children" means persons found within the State who |
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| are under the
age of 18 years. The term also includes |
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| persons under age 19 who:
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| (A) were committed to the Department pursuant to |
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| the
Juvenile Court Act or the Juvenile Court Act of |
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| 1987, as amended, prior to
the age of 18 and who |
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| continue under the jurisdiction of the court; or
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| (B) were accepted for care, service and training by
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| the Department prior to the age of 18 and whose best |
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| interest in the
discretion of the Department would be |
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| served by continuing that care,
service and training |
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HB4204 |
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LRB095 14861 RLC 41129 b |
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| because of severe emotional disturbances, physical
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| disability, social adjustment or any combination |
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| thereof, or because of the
need to complete an |
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| educational or vocational training program.
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| (2) "Homeless youth" means persons found within the
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| State who are under the age of 19, are not in a safe and |
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| stable living
situation and cannot be reunited with their |
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| families.
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| (3) "Child welfare services" means public social |
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| services which are
directed toward the accomplishment of |
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| the following purposes:
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| (A) protecting and promoting the health, safety |
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| and welfare of
children,
including homeless, dependent |
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| or neglected children;
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| (B) remedying, or assisting in the solution
of |
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| problems which may result in, the neglect, abuse, |
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| exploitation or
delinquency of children;
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| (C) preventing the unnecessary separation of |
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| children
from their families by identifying family |
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| problems, assisting families in
resolving their |
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| problems, and preventing the breakup of the family
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| where the prevention of child removal is desirable and |
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| possible when the
child can be cared for at home |
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| without endangering the child's health and
safety;
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| (D) restoring to their families children who have |
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| been
removed, by the provision of services to the child |
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HB4204 |
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LRB095 14861 RLC 41129 b |
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| and the families when the
child can be cared for at |
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| home without endangering the child's health and
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| safety;
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| (E) placing children in suitable adoptive homes, |
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| in
cases where restoration to the biological family is |
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| not safe, possible or
appropriate;
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| (F) assuring safe and adequate care of children |
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| away from their
homes, in cases where the child cannot |
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| be returned home or cannot be placed
for adoption. At |
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| the time of placement, the Department shall consider
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| concurrent planning,
as described in subsection (l-1) |
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| of this Section so that permanency may
occur at the |
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| earliest opportunity. Consideration should be given so |
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| that if
reunification fails or is delayed, the |
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| placement made is the best available
placement to |
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| provide permanency for the child;
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| (G) (blank);
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| (H) (blank); and
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| (I) placing and maintaining children in facilities |
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| that provide
separate living quarters for children |
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| under the age of 18 and for children
18 years of age |
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| and older, unless a child 18 years of age is in the |
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| last
year of high school education or vocational |
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| training, in an approved
individual or group treatment |
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| program, in a licensed shelter facility,
or secure |
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| child care facility.
The Department is not required to |
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HB4204 |
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LRB095 14861 RLC 41129 b |
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| place or maintain children:
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| (i) who are in a foster home, or
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| (ii) who are persons with a developmental |
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| disability, as defined in
the Mental
Health and |
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| Developmental Disabilities Code, or
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| (iii) who are female children who are |
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| pregnant, pregnant and
parenting or parenting, or
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| (iv) who are siblings, in facilities that |
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| provide separate living quarters for children 18
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| years of age and older and for children under 18 |
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| years of age.
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| (b) Nothing in this Section shall be construed to authorize |
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| the
expenditure of public funds for the purpose of performing |
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| abortions.
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| (c) The Department shall establish and maintain |
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| tax-supported child
welfare services and extend and seek to |
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| improve voluntary services
throughout the State, to the end |
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| that services and care shall be available
on an equal basis |
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| throughout the State to children requiring such services.
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| (d) The Director may authorize advance disbursements for |
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| any new program
initiative to any agency contracting with the |
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| Department. As a
prerequisite for an advance disbursement, the |
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| contractor must post a
surety bond in the amount of the advance |
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| disbursement and have a
purchase of service contract approved |
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| by the Department. The Department
may pay up to 2 months |
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| operational expenses in advance. The amount of the
advance |
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LRB095 14861 RLC 41129 b |
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| disbursement shall be prorated over the life of the contract
or |
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| the remaining months of the fiscal year, whichever is less, and |
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| the
installment amount shall then be deducted from future |
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| bills. Advance
disbursement authorizations for new initiatives |
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| shall not be made to any
agency after that agency has operated |
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| during 2 consecutive fiscal years.
The requirements of this |
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| Section concerning advance disbursements shall
not apply with |
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| respect to the following: payments to local public agencies
for |
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| child day care services as authorized by Section 5a of this |
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| Act; and
youth service programs receiving grant funds under |
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| Section 17a-4.
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| (e) (Blank).
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| (f) (Blank).
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| (g) The Department shall establish rules and regulations |
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| concerning
its operation of programs designed to meet the goals |
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| of child safety and
protection,
family preservation, family |
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| reunification, and adoption, including but not
limited to:
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| (1) adoption;
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| (2) foster care;
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| (3) family counseling;
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| (4) protective services;
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| (5) (blank);
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| (6) homemaker service;
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| (7) return of runaway children;
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| (8) (blank);
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| (9) placement under Section 5-7 of the Juvenile Court |
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LRB095 14861 RLC 41129 b |
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| Act or
Section 2-27, 3-28, 4-25 or 5-740 of the Juvenile |
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| Court Act of 1987 in
accordance with the federal Adoption |
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| Assistance and Child Welfare Act of
1980; and
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| (10) interstate services.
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| Rules and regulations established by the Department shall |
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| include
provisions for training Department staff and the staff |
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| of Department
grantees, through contracts with other agencies |
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| or resources, in alcohol
and drug abuse screening techniques |
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| approved by the Department of Human
Services, as a successor to |
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| the Department of Alcoholism and Substance Abuse,
for the |
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| purpose of identifying children and adults who
should be |
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| referred to an alcohol and drug abuse treatment program for
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| professional evaluation.
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| (h) If the Department finds that there is no appropriate |
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| program or
facility within or available to the Department for a |
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| ward and that no
licensed private facility has an adequate and |
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| appropriate program or none
agrees to accept the ward, the |
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| Department shall create an appropriate
individualized, |
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| program-oriented plan for such ward. The
plan may be developed |
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| within the Department or through purchase of services
by the |
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| Department to the extent that it is within its statutory |
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| authority
to do.
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| (i) Service programs shall be available throughout the |
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| State and shall
include but not be limited to the following |
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| services:
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| (1) case management;
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LRB095 14861 RLC 41129 b |
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| (2) homemakers;
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| (3) counseling;
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| (4) parent education;
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| (5) day care; and
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| (6) emergency assistance and advocacy.
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| In addition, the following services may be made available |
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| to assess and
meet the needs of children and families:
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| (1) comprehensive family-based services;
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| (2) assessments;
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| (3) respite care; and
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| (4) in-home health services.
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| The Department shall provide transportation for any of the |
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| services it
makes available to children or families or for |
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| which it refers children
or families.
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| (j) The Department may provide categories of financial |
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| assistance and
education assistance grants, and shall
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| establish rules and regulations concerning the assistance and |
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| grants, to
persons who
adopt physically or mentally |
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| handicapped, older and other hard-to-place
children who (i) |
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| immediately prior to their adoption were legal wards of
the |
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| Department
or (ii) were determined eligible for financial |
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| assistance with respect to a
prior adoption and who become |
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| available for adoption because the
prior adoption has been |
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| dissolved and the parental rights of the adoptive
parents have |
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| been
terminated or because the child's adoptive parents have |
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| died.
The Department may continue to provide financial |
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HB4204 |
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LRB095 14861 RLC 41129 b |
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| assistance and education assistance grants for a child who was |
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| determined eligible for financial assistance under this |
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| subsection (j) in the interim period beginning when the child's |
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| adoptive parents died and ending with the finalization of the |
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| new adoption of the child by another adoptive parent or |
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| parents. The Department may also provide categories of |
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| financial
assistance and education assistance grants, and
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| shall establish rules and regulations for the assistance and |
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| grants, to persons
appointed guardian of the person under |
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| Section 5-7 of the Juvenile Court
Act or Section 2-27, 3-28, |
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| 4-25 or 5-740 of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987
for children |
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| who were wards of the Department for 12 months immediately
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| prior to the appointment of the guardian.
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| The amount of assistance may vary, depending upon the needs |
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| of the child
and the adoptive parents,
as set forth in the |
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| annual
assistance agreement. Special purpose grants are |
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| allowed where the child
requires special service but such costs |
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| may not exceed the amounts
which similar services would cost |
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| the Department if it were to provide or
secure them as guardian |
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| of the child.
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| Any financial assistance provided under this subsection is
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| inalienable by assignment, sale, execution, attachment, |
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| garnishment, or any
other remedy for recovery or collection of |
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| a judgment or debt.
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| (j-5) The Department shall not deny or delay the placement |
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| of a child for
adoption
if an approved family is available |
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LRB095 14861 RLC 41129 b |
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| either outside of the Department region
handling the case,
or |
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| outside of the State of Illinois.
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| (k) The Department shall accept for care and training any |
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| child who has
been adjudicated neglected or abused, or |
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| dependent committed to it pursuant
to the Juvenile Court Act or |
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| the Juvenile Court Act of 1987.
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| (l) Before July 1, 2000, the Department may provide, and |
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| beginning
July 1, 2000, the Department shall
offer family |
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| preservation services, as defined in Section 8.2 of the Abused
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| and
Neglected Child
Reporting Act, to help families, including |
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| adoptive and extended families.
Family preservation
services |
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| shall be offered (i) to prevent the
placement
of children in
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| substitute care when the children can be cared for at home or |
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| in the custody of
the person
responsible for the children's |
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| welfare,
(ii) to
reunite children with their families, or (iii) |
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| to
maintain an adoptive placement. Family preservation |
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| services shall only be
offered when doing so will not endanger |
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| the children's health or safety. With
respect to children who |
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| are in substitute care pursuant to the Juvenile Court
Act of |
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| 1987, family preservation services shall not be offered if a |
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| goal other
than those of subdivisions (A), (B), or (B-1) of |
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| subsection (2) of Section 2-28
of
that Act has been set.
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| Nothing in this paragraph shall be construed to create a |
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| private right of
action or claim on the part of any individual |
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| or child welfare agency.
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| The Department shall notify the child and his family of the
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LRB095 14861 RLC 41129 b |
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| Department's
responsibility to offer and provide family |
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| preservation services as
identified in the service plan. The |
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| child and his family shall be eligible
for services as soon as |
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| the report is determined to be "indicated". The
Department may |
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| offer services to any child or family with respect to whom a
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| report of suspected child abuse or neglect has been filed, |
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| prior to
concluding its investigation under Section 7.12 of the |
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| Abused and Neglected
Child Reporting Act. However, the child's |
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| or family's willingness to
accept services shall not be |
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| considered in the investigation. The
Department may also |
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| provide services to any child or family who is the
subject of |
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| any report of suspected child abuse or neglect or may refer |
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| such
child or family to services available from other agencies |
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| in the community,
even if the report is determined to be |
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| unfounded, if the conditions in the
child's or family's home |
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| are reasonably likely to subject the child or
family to future |
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| reports of suspected child abuse or neglect. Acceptance
of such |
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| services shall be voluntary.
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| The Department may, at its discretion except for those |
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| children also
adjudicated neglected or dependent, accept for |
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| care and training any child
who has been adjudicated addicted, |
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| as a truant minor in need of
supervision or as a minor |
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| requiring authoritative intervention, under the
Juvenile Court |
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| Act or the Juvenile Court Act of 1987, but no such child
shall |
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| be committed to the Department by any court without the |
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| approval of
the Department. A minor charged with a criminal |
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LRB095 14861 RLC 41129 b |
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| offense under the Criminal
Code of 1961 or adjudicated |
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| delinquent shall not be placed in the custody of or
committed |
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| to the Department by any court, except a minor less than 15 |
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| years
of age committed to the Department under Section 5-710 of |
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| the Juvenile Court
Act
of 1987 or a minor for whom an |
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| independent basis of abuse, neglect, or dependency exists, |
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| which must be defined by departmental rule. An independent |
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| basis exists when the allegations or adjudication of abuse, |
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| neglect, or dependency do not arise from the same facts, |
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| incident, or circumstances which give rise to a charge or |
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| adjudication of delinquency.
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| (l-1) The legislature recognizes that the best interests of |
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| the child
require that
the child be placed in the most |
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| permanent living arrangement as soon as is
practically
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| possible. To achieve this goal, the legislature directs the |
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| Department of
Children and
Family Services to conduct |
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| concurrent planning so that permanency may occur at
the
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| earliest opportunity. Permanent living arrangements may |
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| include prevention of
placement of a child outside the home of |
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| the family when the child can be cared
for at
home without |
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| endangering the child's health or safety; reunification with |
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| the
family,
when safe and appropriate, if temporary placement |
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| is necessary; or movement of
the child
toward the most |
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| permanent living arrangement and permanent legal status.
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| When determining reasonable efforts to be made with respect |
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| to a child, as
described in this
subsection, and in making such |
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LRB095 14861 RLC 41129 b |
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| reasonable efforts, the child's health and
safety shall be the
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| paramount concern.
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| When a child is placed in foster care, the Department shall |
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| ensure and
document that reasonable efforts were made to |
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| prevent or eliminate the need to
remove the child from the |
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| child's home. The Department must make
reasonable efforts to |
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| reunify the family when temporary placement of the child
occurs
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| unless otherwise required, pursuant to the Juvenile Court Act |
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| of 1987.
At any time after the dispositional hearing where the |
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| Department believes
that further reunification services would |
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| be ineffective, it may request a
finding from the court that |
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| reasonable efforts are no longer appropriate. The
Department is |
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| not required to provide further reunification services after |
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| such
a
finding.
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| A decision to place a child in substitute care shall be |
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| made with
considerations of the child's health, safety, and |
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| best interests. At the
time of placement, consideration should |
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| also be given so that if reunification
fails or is delayed, the |
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| placement made is the best available placement to
provide |
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| permanency for the child.
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| The Department shall adopt rules addressing concurrent |
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| planning for
reunification and permanency. The Department |
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| shall consider the following
factors when determining |
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| appropriateness of concurrent planning:
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| (1) the likelihood of prompt reunification;
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| (2) the past history of the family;
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LRB095 14861 RLC 41129 b |
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| (3) the barriers to reunification being addressed by |
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| the family;
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| (4) the level of cooperation of the family;
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| (5) the foster parents' willingness to work with the |
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| family to reunite;
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| (6) the willingness and ability of the foster family to |
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| provide an
adoptive
home or long-term placement;
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| (7) the age of the child;
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| (8) placement of siblings.
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| (m) The Department may assume temporary custody of any |
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| child if:
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| (1) it has received a written consent to such temporary |
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| custody
signed by the parents of the child or by the parent |
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| having custody of the
child if the parents are not living |
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| together or by the guardian or
custodian of the child if |
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| the child is not in the custody of either
parent, or
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| (2) the child is found in the State and neither a |
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| parent,
guardian nor custodian of the child can be located.
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| If the child is found in his or her residence without a parent, |
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| guardian,
custodian or responsible caretaker, the Department |
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| may, instead of removing
the child and assuming temporary |
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| custody, place an authorized
representative of the Department |
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| in that residence until such time as a
parent, guardian or |
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| custodian enters the home and expresses a willingness
and |
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| apparent ability to ensure the child's health and safety and |
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| resume
permanent
charge of the child, or until a
relative |
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LRB095 14861 RLC 41129 b |
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| enters the home and is willing and able to ensure the child's |
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| health
and
safety and assume charge of the
child until a |
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| parent, guardian or custodian enters the home and expresses
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| such willingness and ability to ensure the child's safety and |
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| resume
permanent charge. After a caretaker has remained in the |
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| home for a period not
to exceed 12 hours, the Department must |
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| follow those procedures outlined in
Section 2-9, 3-11, 4-8, or |
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| 5-415 of the Juvenile Court Act
of 1987.
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| The Department shall have the authority, responsibilities |
10 |
| and duties that
a legal custodian of the child would have |
11 |
| pursuant to subsection (9) of
Section 1-3 of the Juvenile Court |
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| Act of 1987. Whenever a child is taken
into temporary custody |
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| pursuant to an investigation under the Abused and
Neglected |
14 |
| Child Reporting Act, or pursuant to a referral and acceptance
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| under the Juvenile Court Act of 1987 of a minor in limited |
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| custody, the
Department, during the period of temporary custody |
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| and before the child
is brought before a judicial officer as |
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| required by Section 2-9, 3-11,
4-8, or 5-415 of the Juvenile |
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| Court Act of 1987, shall have
the authority, responsibilities |
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| and duties that a legal custodian of the child
would have under |
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| subsection (9) of Section 1-3 of the Juvenile Court Act of
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| 1987.
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| The Department shall ensure that any child taken into |
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| custody
is scheduled for an appointment for a medical |
25 |
| examination.
|
26 |
| A parent, guardian or custodian of a child in the temporary |
|
|
|
HB4204 |
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LRB095 14861 RLC 41129 b |
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|
1 |
| custody of the
Department who would have custody of the child |
2 |
| if he were not in the
temporary custody of the Department may |
3 |
| deliver to the Department a signed
request that the Department |
4 |
| surrender the temporary custody of the child.
The Department |
5 |
| may retain temporary custody of the child for 10 days after
the |
6 |
| receipt of the request, during which period the Department may |
7 |
| cause to
be filed a petition pursuant to the Juvenile Court Act |
8 |
| of 1987. If a
petition is so filed, the Department shall retain |
9 |
| temporary custody of the
child until the court orders |
10 |
| otherwise. If a petition is not filed within
the 10 day period, |
11 |
| the child shall be surrendered to the custody of the
requesting |
12 |
| parent, guardian or custodian not later than the expiration of
|
13 |
| the 10 day period, at which time the authority and duties of |
14 |
| the Department
with respect to the temporary custody of the |
15 |
| child shall terminate.
|
16 |
| (m-1) The Department may place children under 18 years of |
17 |
| age in a secure
child care facility licensed by the Department |
18 |
| that cares for children who are
in need of secure living |
19 |
| arrangements for their health, safety, and well-being
after a |
20 |
| determination is made by the facility director and the Director |
21 |
| or the
Director's designate prior to admission to the facility |
22 |
| subject to Section
2-27.1 of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987. |
23 |
| This subsection (m-1) does not apply
to a child who is subject |
24 |
| to placement in a correctional facility operated
pursuant to |
25 |
| Section 3-15-2 of the Unified Code of Corrections, unless the
|
26 |
| child is a ward who was placed under the care of the Department |
|
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HB4204 |
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LRB095 14861 RLC 41129 b |
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|
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| before being
subject to placement in a correctional facility |
2 |
| and a court of competent
jurisdiction has ordered placement of |
3 |
| the child in a secure care facility.
|
4 |
| (n) The Department may place children under 18 years of age |
5 |
| in
licensed child care facilities when in the opinion of the |
6 |
| Department,
appropriate services aimed at family preservation |
7 |
| have been unsuccessful and
cannot ensure the child's health and |
8 |
| safety or are unavailable and such
placement would be for their |
9 |
| best interest. Payment
for board, clothing, care, training and |
10 |
| supervision of any child placed in
a licensed child care |
11 |
| facility may be made by the Department, by the
parents or |
12 |
| guardians of the estates of those children, or by both the
|
13 |
| Department and the parents or guardians, except that no |
14 |
| payments shall be
made by the Department for any child placed |
15 |
| in a licensed child care
facility for board, clothing, care, |
16 |
| training and supervision of such a
child that exceed the |
17 |
| average per capita cost of maintaining and of caring
for a |
18 |
| child in institutions for dependent or neglected children |
19 |
| operated by
the Department. However, such restriction on |
20 |
| payments does not apply in
cases where children require |
21 |
| specialized care and treatment for problems of
severe emotional |
22 |
| disturbance, physical disability, social adjustment, or
any |
23 |
| combination thereof and suitable facilities for the placement |
24 |
| of such
children are not available at payment rates within the |
25 |
| limitations set
forth in this Section. All reimbursements for |
26 |
| services delivered shall be
absolutely inalienable by |
|
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LRB095 14861 RLC 41129 b |
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|
1 |
| assignment, sale, attachment, garnishment or
otherwise.
|
2 |
| (o) The Department shall establish an administrative |
3 |
| review and appeal
process for children and families who request |
4 |
| or receive child welfare
services from the Department. Children |
5 |
| who are wards of the Department and
are placed by private child |
6 |
| welfare agencies, and foster families with whom
those children |
7 |
| are placed, shall be afforded the same procedural and appeal
|
8 |
| rights as children and families in the case of placement by the |
9 |
| Department,
including the right to an initial review of a |
10 |
| private agency decision by
that agency. The Department shall |
11 |
| insure that any private child welfare
agency, which accepts |
12 |
| wards of the Department for placement, affords those
rights to |
13 |
| children and foster families. The Department shall accept for
|
14 |
| administrative review and an appeal hearing a complaint made by |
15 |
| (i) a child
or foster family concerning a decision following an |
16 |
| initial review by a
private child welfare agency or (ii) a |
17 |
| prospective adoptive parent who alleges
a violation of |
18 |
| subsection (j-5) of this Section. An appeal of a decision
|
19 |
| concerning a change in the placement of a child shall be |
20 |
| conducted in an
expedited manner.
|
21 |
| (p) There is hereby created the Department of Children and |
22 |
| Family
Services Emergency Assistance Fund from which the |
23 |
| Department may provide
special financial assistance to |
24 |
| families which are in economic crisis when
such assistance is |
25 |
| not available through other public or private sources
and the |
26 |
| assistance is deemed necessary to prevent dissolution of the |
|
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HB4204 |
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LRB095 14861 RLC 41129 b |
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| family
unit or to reunite families which have been separated |
2 |
| due to child abuse and
neglect. The Department shall establish |
3 |
| administrative rules specifying
the criteria for determining |
4 |
| eligibility for and the amount and nature of
assistance to be |
5 |
| provided. The Department may also enter into written
agreements |
6 |
| with private and public social service agencies to provide
|
7 |
| emergency financial services to families referred by the |
8 |
| Department.
Special financial assistance payments shall be |
9 |
| available to a family no
more than once during each fiscal year |
10 |
| and the total payments to a
family may not exceed $500 during a |
11 |
| fiscal year.
|
12 |
| (q) The Department may receive and use, in their entirety, |
13 |
| for the
benefit of children any gift, donation or bequest of |
14 |
| money or other
property which is received on behalf of such |
15 |
| children, or any financial
benefits to which such children are |
16 |
| or may become entitled while under
the jurisdiction or care of |
17 |
| the Department.
|
18 |
| The Department shall set up and administer no-cost, |
19 |
| interest-bearing accounts in appropriate financial |
20 |
| institutions
for children for whom the Department is legally |
21 |
| responsible and who have been
determined eligible for Veterans' |
22 |
| Benefits, Social Security benefits,
assistance allotments from |
23 |
| the armed forces, court ordered payments, parental
voluntary |
24 |
| payments, Supplemental Security Income, Railroad Retirement
|
25 |
| payments, Black Lung benefits, or other miscellaneous |
26 |
| payments. Interest
earned by each account shall be credited to |
|
|
|
HB4204 |
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LRB095 14861 RLC 41129 b |
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|
1 |
| the account, unless
disbursed in accordance with this |
2 |
| subsection.
|
3 |
| In disbursing funds from children's accounts, the |
4 |
| Department
shall:
|
5 |
| (1) Establish standards in accordance with State and |
6 |
| federal laws for
disbursing money from children's |
7 |
| accounts. In all
circumstances,
the Department's |
8 |
| "Guardianship Administrator" or his or her designee must
|
9 |
| approve disbursements from children's accounts. The |
10 |
| Department
shall be responsible for keeping complete |
11 |
| records of all disbursements for each account for any |
12 |
| purpose.
|
13 |
| (2) Calculate on a monthly basis the amounts paid from |
14 |
| State funds for the
child's board and care, medical care |
15 |
| not covered under Medicaid, and social
services; and |
16 |
| utilize funds from the child's account, as
covered by |
17 |
| regulation, to reimburse those costs. Monthly, |
18 |
| disbursements from
all children's accounts, up to 1/12 of |
19 |
| $13,000,000, shall be
deposited by the Department into the |
20 |
| General Revenue Fund and the balance over
1/12 of |
21 |
| $13,000,000 into the DCFS Children's Services Fund.
|
22 |
| (3) Maintain any balance remaining after reimbursing |
23 |
| for the child's costs
of care, as specified in item (2). |
24 |
| The balance shall accumulate in accordance
with relevant |
25 |
| State and federal laws and shall be disbursed to the child |
26 |
| or his
or her guardian, or to the issuing agency.
|
|
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|
HB4204 |
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LRB095 14861 RLC 41129 b |
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1 |
| (r) The Department shall promulgate regulations |
2 |
| encouraging all adoption
agencies to voluntarily forward to the |
3 |
| Department or its agent names and
addresses of all persons who |
4 |
| have applied for and have been approved for
adoption of a |
5 |
| hard-to-place or handicapped child and the names of such
|
6 |
| children who have not been placed for adoption. A list of such |
7 |
| names and
addresses shall be maintained by the Department or |
8 |
| its agent, and coded
lists which maintain the confidentiality |
9 |
| of the person seeking to adopt the
child and of the child shall |
10 |
| be made available, without charge, to every
adoption agency in |
11 |
| the State to assist the agencies in placing such
children for |
12 |
| adoption. The Department may delegate to an agent its duty to
|
13 |
| maintain and make available such lists. The Department shall |
14 |
| ensure that
such agent maintains the confidentiality of the |
15 |
| person seeking to adopt the
child and of the child.
|
16 |
| (s) The Department of Children and Family Services may |
17 |
| establish and
implement a program to reimburse Department and |
18 |
| private child welfare
agency foster parents licensed by the |
19 |
| Department of Children and Family
Services for damages |
20 |
| sustained by the foster parents as a result of the
malicious or |
21 |
| negligent acts of foster children, as well as providing third
|
22 |
| party coverage for such foster parents with regard to actions |
23 |
| of foster
children to other individuals. Such coverage will be |
24 |
| secondary to the
foster parent liability insurance policy, if |
25 |
| applicable. The program shall
be funded through appropriations |
26 |
| from the General Revenue Fund,
specifically designated for such |
|
|
|
HB4204 |
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LRB095 14861 RLC 41129 b |
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|
1 |
| purposes.
|
2 |
| (t) The Department shall perform home studies and |
3 |
| investigations and
shall exercise supervision over visitation |
4 |
| as ordered by a court pursuant
to the Illinois Marriage and |
5 |
| Dissolution of Marriage Act or the Adoption
Act only if:
|
6 |
| (1) an order entered by an Illinois court specifically
|
7 |
| directs the Department to perform such services; and
|
8 |
| (2) the court has ordered one or both of the parties to
|
9 |
| the proceeding to reimburse the Department for its |
10 |
| reasonable costs for
providing such services in accordance |
11 |
| with Department rules, or has
determined that neither party |
12 |
| is financially able to pay.
|
13 |
| The Department shall provide written notification to the |
14 |
| court of the
specific arrangements for supervised visitation |
15 |
| and projected monthly costs
within 60 days of the court order. |
16 |
| The Department shall send to the court
information related to |
17 |
| the costs incurred except in cases where the court
has |
18 |
| determined the parties are financially unable to pay. The court |
19 |
| may
order additional periodic reports as appropriate.
|
20 |
| (u) In addition to other information that must be provided, |
21 |
| whenever the Department places a child with a prospective |
22 |
| adoptive parent or parents or in a licensed foster home,
group |
23 |
| home, child care institution, or in a relative home, the |
24 |
| Department
shall provide to the prospective adoptive parent or |
25 |
| parents or other caretaker:
|
26 |
| (1) available detailed information concerning the |
|
|
|
HB4204 |
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LRB095 14861 RLC 41129 b |
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|
1 |
| child's educational
and health history, copies of |
2 |
| immunization records (including insurance
and medical card |
3 |
| information), a history of the child's previous |
4 |
| placements,
if any, and reasons for placement changes |
5 |
| excluding any information that
identifies or reveals the |
6 |
| location of any previous caretaker;
|
7 |
| (2) a copy of the child's portion of the client service |
8 |
| plan, including
any visitation arrangement, and all |
9 |
| amendments or revisions to it as
related to the child; and
|
10 |
| (3) information containing details of the child's |
11 |
| individualized
educational plan when the child is |
12 |
| receiving special education services.
|
13 |
| The caretaker shall be informed of any known social or |
14 |
| behavioral
information (including, but not limited to, |
15 |
| criminal background, fire
setting, perpetuation of
sexual |
16 |
| abuse, destructive behavior, and substance abuse) necessary to |
17 |
| care
for and safeguard the children to be placed or currently |
18 |
| in the home. The Department may prepare a written summary of |
19 |
| the information required by this paragraph, which may be |
20 |
| provided to the foster or prospective adoptive parent in |
21 |
| advance of a placement. The foster or prospective adoptive |
22 |
| parent may review the supporting documents in the child's file |
23 |
| in the presence of casework staff. In the case of an emergency |
24 |
| placement, casework staff shall at least provide known |
25 |
| information verbally, if necessary, and must subsequently |
26 |
| provide the information in writing as required by this |
|
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|
HB4204 |
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LRB095 14861 RLC 41129 b |
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|
1 |
| subsection.
|
2 |
| The information described in this subsection shall be |
3 |
| provided in writing. In the case of emergency placements when |
4 |
| time does not allow prior review, preparation, and collection |
5 |
| of written information, the Department shall provide such |
6 |
| information as it becomes available. Within 10 business days |
7 |
| after placement, the Department shall obtain from the |
8 |
| prospective adoptive parent or parents or other caretaker a |
9 |
| signed verification of receipt of the information provided. |
10 |
| Within 10 business days after placement, the Department shall |
11 |
| provide to the child's guardian ad litem a copy of the |
12 |
| information provided to the prospective adoptive parent or |
13 |
| parents or other caretaker. The information provided to the |
14 |
| prospective adoptive parent or parents or other caretaker shall |
15 |
| be reviewed and approved regarding accuracy at the supervisory |
16 |
| level.
|
17 |
| (u-5) Effective July 1, 1995, only foster care placements |
18 |
| licensed as
foster family homes pursuant to the Child Care Act |
19 |
| of 1969 shall be eligible to
receive foster care payments from |
20 |
| the Department.
Relative caregivers who, as of July 1, 1995, |
21 |
| were approved pursuant to approved
relative placement rules |
22 |
| previously promulgated by the Department at 89 Ill.
Adm. Code |
23 |
| 335 and had submitted an application for licensure as a foster |
24 |
| family
home may continue to receive foster care payments only |
25 |
| until the Department
determines that they may be licensed as a |
26 |
| foster family home or that their
application for licensure is |
|
|
|
HB4204 |
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LRB095 14861 RLC 41129 b |
|
|
1 |
| denied or until September 30, 1995, whichever
occurs first.
|
2 |
| (v) The Department shall access criminal history record |
3 |
| information
as defined in the Illinois Uniform Conviction |
4 |
| Information Act and information
maintained in the adjudicatory |
5 |
| and dispositional record system as defined in
Section 2605-355 |
6 |
| of the
Department of State Police Law (20 ILCS 2605/2605-355)
|
7 |
| if the Department determines the information is necessary to |
8 |
| perform its duties
under the Abused and Neglected Child |
9 |
| Reporting Act, the Child Care Act of 1969,
and the Children and |
10 |
| Family Services Act. The Department shall provide for
|
11 |
| interactive computerized communication and processing |
12 |
| equipment that permits
direct on-line communication with the |
13 |
| Department of State Police's central
criminal history data |
14 |
| repository. The Department shall comply with all
certification |
15 |
| requirements and provide certified operators who have been
|
16 |
| trained by personnel from the Department of State Police. In |
17 |
| addition, one
Office of the Inspector General investigator |
18 |
| shall have training in the use of
the criminal history |
19 |
| information access system and have
access to the terminal. The |
20 |
| Department of Children and Family Services and its
employees |
21 |
| shall abide by rules and regulations established by the |
22 |
| Department of
State Police relating to the access and |
23 |
| dissemination of
this information.
|
24 |
| (v-1) Prior to final approval for placement of a child, the |
25 |
| Department shall conduct a criminal records background check of |
26 |
| the prospective foster or adoptive parent, including |
|
|
|
HB4204 |
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LRB095 14861 RLC 41129 b |
|
|
1 |
| fingerprint-based checks of national crime information |
2 |
| databases. Final approval for placement shall not be granted if |
3 |
| the record check reveals a felony conviction for child abuse or |
4 |
| neglect, for spousal abuse, for a crime against children, or |
5 |
| for a crime involving violence, including rape, sexual assault, |
6 |
| or homicide, but not including other physical assault or |
7 |
| battery, or if there is a felony conviction for physical |
8 |
| assault, battery, or a drug-related offense committed within |
9 |
| the past 5 years. |
10 |
| (v-2) Prior to final approval for placement of a child, the |
11 |
| Department shall check its child abuse and neglect registry for |
12 |
| information concerning prospective foster and adoptive |
13 |
| parents, and any adult living in the home. If any prospective |
14 |
| foster or adoptive parent or other adult living in the home has |
15 |
| resided in another state in the preceding 5 years, the |
16 |
| Department shall request a check of that other state's child |
17 |
| abuse and neglect registry.
|
18 |
| (w) Within 120 days of August 20, 1995 (the effective date |
19 |
| of Public Act
89-392), the Department shall prepare and submit |
20 |
| to the Governor and the
General Assembly, a written plan for |
21 |
| the development of in-state licensed
secure child care |
22 |
| facilities that care for children who are in need of secure
|
23 |
| living
arrangements for their health, safety, and well-being. |
24 |
| For purposes of this
subsection, secure care facility shall |
25 |
| mean a facility that is designed and
operated to ensure that |
26 |
| all entrances and exits from the facility, a building
or a |
|
|
|
HB4204 |
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LRB095 14861 RLC 41129 b |
|
|
1 |
| distinct part of the building, are under the exclusive control |
2 |
| of the
staff of the facility, whether or not the child has the |
3 |
| freedom of movement
within the perimeter of the facility, |
4 |
| building, or distinct part of the
building. The plan shall |
5 |
| include descriptions of the types of facilities that
are needed |
6 |
| in Illinois; the cost of developing these secure care |
7 |
| facilities;
the estimated number of placements; the potential |
8 |
| cost savings resulting from
the movement of children currently |
9 |
| out-of-state who are projected to be
returned to Illinois; the |
10 |
| necessary geographic distribution of these
facilities in |
11 |
| Illinois; and a proposed timetable for development of such
|
12 |
| facilities. |
13 |
| (x) The Department shall carry out the duties prescribed in |
14 |
| Sections 3-6.1 through 3-6.5 of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987. |
15 |
| (Source: P.A. 94-215, eff. 1-1-06; 94-1010, eff. 10-1-06; |
16 |
| 95-10, eff. 6-30-07; 95-601, eff. 9-11-07; 95-642, eff. 6-1-08; |
17 |
| revised 10-30-07.)
|
18 |
| Section 10. The Juvenile Court Act of 1987 is amended by |
19 |
| changing Sections 1-3, 3-3, 3-4, 3-5, 3-6, 3-7, 3-24, 3-28, and |
20 |
| 3-33.5 and by adding Sections 3-6.1, 3-6.2, 3-6.3, 3-6.4, and |
21 |
| 3-6.5 as follows:
|
22 |
| (705 ILCS 405/1-3) (from Ch. 37, par. 801-3)
|
23 |
| Sec. 1-3. Definitions. Terms used in this Act, unless the |
24 |
| context
otherwise requires, have the following meanings |
|
|
|
HB4204 |
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LRB095 14861 RLC 41129 b |
|
|
1 |
| ascribed to them:
|
2 |
| (1) "Adjudicatory hearing" means a hearing to
determine |
3 |
| whether the allegations of a petition under Section 2-13, 3-15 |
4 |
| or
4-12 that a minor under 18 years of age is abused, neglected |
5 |
| or dependent, or
requires authoritative intervention, or |
6 |
| addicted, respectively, are supported
by a preponderance of the |
7 |
| evidence or whether the allegations of a petition
under Section |
8 |
| 5-520 that a minor is delinquent are proved beyond a reasonable
|
9 |
| doubt.
|
10 |
| (2) "Adult" means a person 21 years of age or older.
|
11 |
| (3) "Agency" means a public or private child care facility
|
12 |
| legally authorized or licensed by this State for placement or |
13 |
| institutional
care or for both placement and institutional |
14 |
| care.
|
15 |
| (4) "Association" means any organization, public or
|
16 |
| private, engaged in welfare functions which include services to |
17 |
| or on behalf of
children but does not include "agency" as |
18 |
| herein defined.
|
19 |
| (4.05) Whenever a "best interest" determination is
|
20 |
| required, the following factors shall be considered in the |
21 |
| context of the
child's age and developmental needs:
|
22 |
| (a) the physical safety and welfare of the child, |
23 |
| including food, shelter,
health, and clothing;
|
24 |
| (b) the development of the child's identity;
|
25 |
| (c) the child's background and ties, including |
26 |
| familial,
cultural, and religious;
|
|
|
|
HB4204 |
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LRB095 14861 RLC 41129 b |
|
|
1 |
| (d) the child's sense of attachments, including:
|
2 |
| (i) where the child actually feels love, |
3 |
| attachment, and a sense of
being valued (as opposed to |
4 |
| where adults believe the child should
feel such love, |
5 |
| attachment, and a sense of being valued);
|
6 |
| (ii) the child's sense of security;
|
7 |
| (iii) the child's sense of familiarity;
|
8 |
| (iv) continuity of affection for the child;
|
9 |
| (v) the least disruptive placement alternative for |
10 |
| the child;
|
11 |
| (e) the child's wishes and long-term goals;
|
12 |
| (f) the child's community ties, including church, |
13 |
| school, and friends;
|
14 |
| (g) the child's need for permanence which includes the |
15 |
| child's need for
stability and continuity of relationships |
16 |
| with parent figures and with siblings
and other relatives;
|
17 |
| (h) the uniqueness of every family and child;
|
18 |
| (i) the risks attendant to entering and being in |
19 |
| substitute care; and
|
20 |
| (j) the preferences of the persons available to care |
21 |
| for the child.
|
22 |
| (4.06) "Chronic runaway" means a minor requiring |
23 |
| authoritative intervention under Section 3-3. |
24 |
| (4.1) "Chronic truant" shall have the definition
ascribed |
25 |
| to it in Section 26-2a of the School Code.
|
26 |
| (5) "Court" means the circuit court in a session or |
|
|
|
HB4204 |
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LRB095 14861 RLC 41129 b |
|
|
1 |
| division
assigned to hear proceedings under this Act.
|
2 |
| (5.1) "Crisis residential center" means a secure or |
3 |
| semi-secure facility established under Section 3-6.1. |
4 |
| (6) "Dispositional hearing" means a hearing to
determine |
5 |
| whether a minor should be adjudged to be a ward of the court, |
6 |
| and to
determine what order of disposition should be made in |
7 |
| respect to a minor
adjudged to be a ward of the court.
|
8 |
| (7) "Emancipated minor" means any minor 16 years of age or |
9 |
| over who has
been completely or partially emancipated under the |
10 |
| Emancipation of
Minors Act or
under this Act.
|
11 |
| (8) "Guardianship of the person" of a minor
means the duty |
12 |
| and authority to act in the best interests of the minor, |
13 |
| subject
to residual parental rights and responsibilities, to |
14 |
| make important decisions
in matters having a permanent effect |
15 |
| on the life and development of the minor
and to be concerned |
16 |
| with his or her general welfare. It includes but is not
|
17 |
| necessarily limited to:
|
18 |
| (a) the authority to consent to marriage, to enlistment |
19 |
| in the armed
forces of the United States, or to a major |
20 |
| medical, psychiatric, and
surgical treatment; to represent |
21 |
| the minor in legal actions; and to make
other decisions of |
22 |
| substantial legal significance concerning the minor;
|
23 |
| (b) the authority and duty of reasonable visitation, |
24 |
| except to the
extent that these have been limited in the |
25 |
| best interests of the minor by
court order;
|
26 |
| (c) the rights and responsibilities of legal custody |
|
|
|
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LRB095 14861 RLC 41129 b |
|
|
1 |
| except where legal
custody has been vested in another |
2 |
| person or agency; and
|
3 |
| (d) the power to consent to the adoption of the minor, |
4 |
| but only if
expressly conferred on the guardian in |
5 |
| accordance with Section 2-29, 3-30, or
4-27.
|
6 |
| (9) "Legal custody" means the relationship created by an
|
7 |
| order of court in the best interests of the minor which imposes |
8 |
| on the
custodian the responsibility of physical possession of a |
9 |
| minor and the duty to
protect, train and discipline him and to |
10 |
| provide him with food, shelter,
education and ordinary medical |
11 |
| care, except as these are limited by residual
parental rights |
12 |
| and responsibilities and the rights and responsibilities of the
|
13 |
| guardian of the person, if any.
|
14 |
| (10) "Minor" means a person under the age of 21 years |
15 |
| subject to
this Act.
|
16 |
| (10.5) "Multidisciplinary team" means a group formed to |
17 |
| provide assistance and support to a minor who is an at-risk |
18 |
| youth or a child in need of services and his or her parent. The |
19 |
| team shall include the parent, a Department of Children and |
20 |
| Family Services case worker, a local government representative |
21 |
| when authorized by the local government, and when appropriate, |
22 |
| members from the mental health and substance abuse disciplines. |
23 |
| The team may also include, but is not limited to, the following |
24 |
| persons: educators, law enforcement personnel, probation |
25 |
| officers, employers, persons representing religious |
26 |
| organizations, therapists, medical personnel, social service |
|
|
|
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LRB095 14861 RLC 41129 b |
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|
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| providers, placement providers, and extended family members. |
2 |
| The team members shall be volunteers who do not receive |
3 |
| compensation while acting in a capacity as a team member, |
4 |
| unless the member's employer chooses to provide compensation or |
5 |
| the member is a State employee. |
6 |
| (11) "Parent" means the father or mother of a child and
|
7 |
| includes any adoptive parent. It also includes a man (i)
whose |
8 |
| paternity
is presumed or has been established under the law of |
9 |
| this or another
jurisdiction or (ii) who has registered with |
10 |
| the Putative Father Registry in
accordance with Section 12.1 of |
11 |
| the Adoption Act and whose paternity has not
been ruled out |
12 |
| under the law of this or another jurisdiction. It does not
|
13 |
| include a
parent whose rights in respect to the
minor have been |
14 |
| terminated in any manner provided by law.
|
15 |
| (11.1) "Permanency goal" means a goal set by the court as |
16 |
| defined in
subdivision (2) of Section 2-28.
|
17 |
| (11.2) "Permanency hearing" means a hearing to set the |
18 |
| permanency goal and
to review and determine (i) the |
19 |
| appropriateness of the services contained in
the plan and |
20 |
| whether those services have been provided, (ii) whether |
21 |
| reasonable
efforts have been made by all the parties to the |
22 |
| service plan to achieve the
goal, and (iii) whether the plan |
23 |
| and goal have been achieved.
|
24 |
| (12) "Petition" means the petition provided for in Section
|
25 |
| 2-13, 3-15, 4-12 or 5-520, including any supplemental petitions |
26 |
| thereunder
in Section 3-15, 4-12 or 5-520.
|
|
|
|
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LRB095 14861 RLC 41129 b |
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|
1 |
| (13) "Residual parental
rights and responsibilities" means |
2 |
| those rights and responsibilities remaining
with the parent |
3 |
| after the transfer of legal custody or guardianship of the
|
4 |
| person, including, but not necessarily limited to, the right to |
5 |
| reasonable
visitation (which may be limited by the court in the |
6 |
| best interests of the
minor as provided in subsection (8)(b) of |
7 |
| this Section), the right to consent
to adoption, the right to |
8 |
| determine the minor's religious affiliation, and the
|
9 |
| responsibility for his support.
|
10 |
| (13.1) "Secure facility" or "secure crisis residential |
11 |
| center" means a crisis residential center, or portion thereof, |
12 |
| that has locking doors, locking windows, or a secured |
13 |
| perimeter, designed and operated to prevent a child from |
14 |
| leaving without permission of the facility staff. |
15 |
| (13.2) "Semi-secure facility" means any facility, |
16 |
| including but not limited to crisis residential centers or |
17 |
| specialized foster family homes, operated in a manner to |
18 |
| reasonably ensure that minors placed there will not run away. |
19 |
| Pursuant to rules established by the Department of Children and |
20 |
| Family Services, the facility administrator shall establish |
21 |
| reasonable hours for residents to come and go from the facility |
22 |
| such that no residents are free to come and go at all hours of |
23 |
| the day and night. To prevent residents from taking |
24 |
| unreasonable actions, the facility administrator, where |
25 |
| appropriate, may condition a resident's leaving the facility |
26 |
| upon the resident being accompanied by the administrator or the |
|
|
|
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| administrator's designee and the resident may be required to |
2 |
| notify the administrator or the administrator's designee of any |
3 |
| intent to leave, his or her intended destination, and the |
4 |
| probable time of his or her return to the center. |
5 |
| (14) "Shelter" means the temporary care of a minor in
|
6 |
| physically unrestricting facilities pending court disposition |
7 |
| or execution of
court order for placement.
|
8 |
| (15) "Station adjustment" means the informal
handling of an |
9 |
| alleged offender by a juvenile police officer.
|
10 |
| (16) "Ward of the court" means a minor who is so
adjudged |
11 |
| under Section 2-22, 3-23, 4-20 or 5-705, after a finding of the
|
12 |
| requisite jurisdictional facts, and thus is subject to the |
13 |
| dispositional powers
of the court under this Act.
|
14 |
| (17) "Juvenile police officer" means a sworn
police officer |
15 |
| who has completed a Basic Recruit Training Course, has been
|
16 |
| assigned to the position of juvenile police officer by his or |
17 |
| her chief law
enforcement officer and has completed the |
18 |
| necessary juvenile officers training
as prescribed by the |
19 |
| Illinois Law Enforcement Training Standards Board, or in
the |
20 |
| case of a State police officer, juvenile officer
training |
21 |
| approved by the Director of the Department of State Police.
|
22 |
| (18) "Secure child care facility" means any child care |
23 |
| facility licensed
by the Department of Children and Family |
24 |
| Services to provide secure living
arrangements for children |
25 |
| under 18 years of age who are subject to placement in
|
26 |
| facilities under the Children and Family Services Act and who |
|
|
|
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|
1 |
| are not subject
to placement in facilities for whom standards |
2 |
| are established by the Department
of Corrections under Section |
3 |
| 3-15-2 of the Unified Code of Corrections.
"Secure child care |
4 |
| facility" also means a
facility that is designed and operated |
5 |
| to ensure that all entrances and
exits
from the facility, a |
6 |
| building, or a distinct part of the building are under the
|
7 |
| exclusive control of the staff of the facility, whether or not |
8 |
| the child has
the freedom of movement within the perimeter of |
9 |
| the facility, building, or
distinct part of the building.
|
10 |
| (Source: P.A. 95-331, eff. 8-21-07.)
|
11 |
| (705 ILCS 405/3-3) (from Ch. 37, par. 803-3)
|
12 |
| Sec. 3-3. Minor requiring authoritative intervention. |
13 |
| Those requiring
authoritative intervention include any minor |
14 |
| under 18 years of age (1) who
is (a) absent from home without |
15 |
| consent of parent, guardian
or custodian, or (b) beyond the |
16 |
| control of his or her parent, guardian or
custodian, in |
17 |
| circumstances which constitute a substantial or immediate |
18 |
| danger
to the minor's physical safety; and (2) who, after being |
19 |
| taken into
limited custody for the period provided for in this |
20 |
| Section and
offered interim crisis intervention services, |
21 |
| where available, refuses to
return home after the minor and his |
22 |
| or her parent, guardian or custodian
cannot agree to an |
23 |
| arrangement for an alternative voluntary residential
placement |
24 |
| or to the continuation of such placement.
Any minor taken into |
25 |
| limited custody for the reasons specified in this
Section may |
|
|
|
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LRB095 14861 RLC 41129 b |
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|
1 |
| not be adjudicated a minor requiring authoritative |
2 |
| intervention
until the following number of days have elapsed |
3 |
| from his or her having been
taken into limited custody: 21 days |
4 |
| for the first instance of being taken
into limited custody and |
5 |
| 5 days for the second or , third , or fourth instances
of being |
6 |
| taken into limited custody. For the fourth fifth or any |
7 |
| subsequent instance
of being taken into limited custody for the |
8 |
| reasons specified in this Section,
the minor may be adjudicated |
9 |
| as requiring authoritative intervention without
any specified |
10 |
| period of time expiring after his or her being taken into
|
11 |
| limited custody, without the minor's being offered interim |
12 |
| crisis intervention
services, and without the minor's being |
13 |
| afforded an opportunity to agree
to an arrangement for an |
14 |
| alternative voluntary residential placement.
Notwithstanding |
15 |
| any other provision of this Section, for the first instance
in |
16 |
| which a minor is taken into limited custody where one year has |
17 |
| elapsed
from the last instance of his having been taken into |
18 |
| limited custody, the
minor may not be adjudicated a minor |
19 |
| requiring authoritative intervention
until 21 days have passed |
20 |
| since being taken into limited custody.
|
21 |
| (Source: P.A. 85-601.)
|
22 |
| (705 ILCS 405/3-4) (from Ch. 37, par. 803-4)
|
23 |
| Sec. 3-4. Taking into limited custody.
|
24 |
| (a) A law enforcement officer may, without a warrant, take |
25 |
| into limited
custody a minor who the law enforcement officer |
|
|
|
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LRB095 14861 RLC 41129 b |
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|
1 |
| reasonably determines is (i)
absent from home without consent |
2 |
| of the minor's parent, guardian or custodian,
or (ii) beyond |
3 |
| the control of his or her parent, guardian or custodian, in
|
4 |
| circumstances which constitute a substantial or immediate |
5 |
| danger to the minor's
physical safety.
|
6 |
| (b) A law enforcement officer who takes a minor into |
7 |
| limited custody shall
(i) immediately inform the minor of the |
8 |
| reasons for such limited custody,
and (ii) make a prompt, |
9 |
| reasonable effort to inform the minor's parents,
guardian, or |
10 |
| custodian that the minor has been taken into limited custody
|
11 |
| and where the minor is being kept.
|
12 |
| (c) If the minor consents, the law enforcement officer |
13 |
| shall make a
reasonable effort to transport, arrange for the |
14 |
| transportation of or
otherwise release the minor to the parent, |
15 |
| guardian or custodian. Upon
release of a minor who is believed |
16 |
| to need or would benefit from medical,
psychological, |
17 |
| psychiatric or social services, the law enforcement officer
may |
18 |
| inform the minor and the person to whom the minor is released |
19 |
| of the
nature and location of appropriate services and shall, |
20 |
| if requested, assist
in establishing contact between the family |
21 |
| and an agency or association
providing such services.
|
22 |
| (d) If the law enforcement officer is unable by all |
23 |
| reasonable efforts
to contact a parent, custodian, relative or |
24 |
| other responsible person; or
if the person contacted lives an |
25 |
| unreasonable distance away; or if the
minor refuses to be taken |
26 |
| to his or her home or other appropriate residence; or
if the |
|
|
|
HB4204 |
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LRB095 14861 RLC 41129 b |
|
|
1 |
| officer is otherwise unable despite all reasonable efforts to |
2 |
| make
arrangements for the safe release of the minor taken into |
3 |
| limited custody,
the law enforcement officer shall take or make |
4 |
| reasonable arrangements for
transporting the minor to an agency |
5 |
| or association providing crisis
intervention services, or, |
6 |
| where appropriate, to a crisis residential center, secure |
7 |
| crisis residential center, or mental health or
developmental |
8 |
| disabilities facility for screening for voluntary or |
9 |
| involuntary
admission under Section 3-500 et seq. of the |
10 |
| Illinois Mental Health and
Developmental Disabilities Code; |
11 |
| provided that where no crisis intervention
services exist, the |
12 |
| minor may be transported for services to court service
|
13 |
| departments or probation departments under the court's |
14 |
| administration.
|
15 |
| (e) No minor shall be involuntarily subject to limited |
16 |
| custody for more
than 6 hours from the time of the minor's |
17 |
| initial contact with the law
enforcement officer.
|
18 |
| (f) No minor taken into limited custody shall be placed in |
19 |
| a jail, municipal
lockup, detention center or secure |
20 |
| correctional facility , but may be ordered to a crisis |
21 |
| residential center or to a secure crisis residential center .
|
22 |
| (g) The taking of a minor into limited custody under this |
23 |
| Section is
not an arrest nor does it constitute a police |
24 |
| record; and the records of
law enforcement officers concerning |
25 |
| all minors taken into limited custody
under this Section shall |
26 |
| be maintained separate from the records of arrest
and may not |
|
|
|
HB4204 |
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LRB095 14861 RLC 41129 b |
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|
1 |
| be inspected by or disclosed to the public except by order of
|
2 |
| the court. However, such records may be disclosed to the agency |
3 |
| or association
providing interim crisis intervention services |
4 |
| for the minor.
|
5 |
| (h) Any law enforcement agency, juvenile officer or other |
6 |
| law enforcement
officer acting reasonably and in good faith in |
7 |
| the care of a minor in limited
custody shall be immune from any |
8 |
| civil or criminal liability resulting from
such custody.
|
9 |
| (Source: P.A. 87-1154.)
|
10 |
| (705 ILCS 405/3-5) (from Ch. 37, par. 803-5)
|
11 |
| Sec. 3-5. Interim crisis intervention services.
|
12 |
| (a) Any minor who
is taken into limited custody, or who |
13 |
| independently requests
or is referred for assistance, may be |
14 |
| provided crisis intervention services
by an agency or |
15 |
| association, as defined in this Act,
provided the association |
16 |
| or agency staff (i) immediately investigate the
circumstances |
17 |
| of the minor and the facts surrounding the minor being taken
|
18 |
| into custody and promptly explain these
facts and circumstances |
19 |
| to the minor, and (ii) make a reasonable effort
to inform the |
20 |
| minor's parent, guardian or custodian of the fact that the
|
21 |
| minor has been taken into limited custody and where the minor |
22 |
| is being
kept, and (iii) if the minor consents, make a |
23 |
| reasonable effort
to transport, arrange for the transportation |
24 |
| of, or otherwise release the
minor to the parent, guardian or |
25 |
| custodian. Upon release of the child who
is believed to need or |
|
|
|
HB4204 |
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LRB095 14861 RLC 41129 b |
|
|
1 |
| benefit from medical, psychological, psychiatric
or social |
2 |
| services, the association or agency may inform the minor and |
3 |
| the
person to whom the minor is released of the nature and |
4 |
| location of appropriate
services and shall, if requested, |
5 |
| assist in establishing contact between
the family and other |
6 |
| associations or agencies providing such services. If the
agency |
7 |
| or association is unable by all reasonable efforts to contact a |
8 |
| parent,
guardian or custodian, or if the person contacted lives |
9 |
| an unreasonable
distance away, or if the minor refuses to be |
10 |
| taken to his or her home
or other appropriate residence, or if |
11 |
| the agency or association is otherwise
unable despite all |
12 |
| reasonable efforts to make arrangements for the safe
return of |
13 |
| the minor, or the minor is assessed and determined to be a |
14 |
| chronic truant or a chronic runaway, the minor may be taken to |
15 |
| a temporary living
arrangement which is in compliance with the |
16 |
| Child Care Act of 1969 , which is a crisis residential center or |
17 |
| a secure crisis residential center, or which
is with persons |
18 |
| agreed to by the parents and the agency or association.
|
19 |
| (b) An agency or association is authorized to permit a |
20 |
| minor to be sheltered
in a temporary living arrangement |
21 |
| provided the agency seeks to effect the
minor's return home or |
22 |
| alternative living arrangements agreeable to the
minor and the |
23 |
| parent, guardian or custodian
as soon as practicable. No minor |
24 |
| shall be sheltered in a temporary living arrangement for more |
25 |
| than 48 hours, excluding Saturdays, Sundays, and |
26 |
| court-designated holidays, except in a crisis residential |
|
|
|
HB4204 |
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LRB095 14861 RLC 41129 b |
|
|
1 |
| center or a secure crisis residential center, when the agency |
2 |
| has reported the minor as neglected or abused because the |
3 |
| parent, guardian, or custodian refuses to permit the child to |
4 |
| return home, provided that in all other instances the minor may |
5 |
| be sheltered when the agency obtains the consent of the parent, |
6 |
| guardian, or custodian or documents its unsuccessful efforts to |
7 |
| obtain the consent or authority of the parent, guardian, or |
8 |
| custodian, including recording the date and the staff involved |
9 |
| in all telephone calls, telegrams, letters, and personal |
10 |
| contacts to obtain the consent or authority, in which instances |
11 |
| the minor may be so sheltered for not more than 21 days. If the |
12 |
| parent, guardian or custodian refuses to
permit the minor to |
13 |
| return home, and no other living arrangement agreeable
to the |
14 |
| parent, guardian, or custodian can be made, and the parent, |
15 |
| guardian, or custodian has not made any other appropriate |
16 |
| living arrangement for the child, the agency
may deem the minor |
17 |
| to be neglected and report the neglect to the Department
of |
18 |
| Children
and Family Services as provided in the Abused and |
19 |
| Neglected Child Reporting
Act. The
Child Protective Service |
20 |
| Unit of the Department of Children and Family Services
shall
|
21 |
| begin an investigation of the report within 24 hours after |
22 |
| receiving the report
and shall
determine whether to
file a |
23 |
| petition alleging that the minor is neglected or abused as
|
24 |
| described in Section 2-3 of this Act. The Subject to |
25 |
| appropriation, the Department may take the minor into temporary |
26 |
| protective custody at any time after receiving the report, |
|
|
|
HB4204 |
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LRB095 14861 RLC 41129 b |
|
|
1 |
| provided that the Department shall take temporary protective |
2 |
| custody within 48 hours of receiving the report if its |
3 |
| investigation is not completed. If the Department of Children |
4 |
| and Family Services determines that the minor is not a |
5 |
| neglected minor because the minor is an immediate physical |
6 |
| danger to himself, herself, or others living in the home, then |
7 |
| the Department shall take immediate steps to either secure the |
8 |
| minor's immediate admission to a mental health facility, crisis |
9 |
| residential center, or secure crisis residential center, |
10 |
| arrange for law enforcement authorities to take temporary |
11 |
| custody of the minor as a delinquent minor, or take other |
12 |
| appropriate action to assume protective custody in order to |
13 |
| safeguard the minor or others living in the home from immediate |
14 |
| physical danger.
|
15 |
| (c) Any agency or association or employee thereof acting |
16 |
| reasonably and
in good faith in the care of a minor being |
17 |
| provided interim crisis
intervention services and shelter care |
18 |
| shall be immune from any civil or
criminal liability resulting |
19 |
| from such care.
|
20 |
| (Source: P.A. 95-443, eff. 1-1-08.)
|
21 |
| (705 ILCS 405/3-6) (from Ch. 37, par. 803-6)
|
22 |
| Sec. 3-6. Alternative voluntary residential placement. (a) |
23 |
| A minor and
his or her parent, guardian or custodian may agree |
24 |
| to an arrangement for
alternative voluntary residential |
25 |
| placement, in compliance with the "Child
Care Act of 1969", |
|
|
|
HB4204 |
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LRB095 14861 RLC 41129 b |
|
|
1 |
| including placement in a crisis residential center or a secure |
2 |
| crisis residential center, without court order. Such placement |
3 |
| may continue as
long as there is agreement.
|
4 |
| (b) If the minor and his or her parent, guardian or |
5 |
| custodian cannot agree
to an arrangement for alternative |
6 |
| voluntary residential placement in
the first instance, or |
7 |
| cannot agree to the continuation of such placement,
and the |
8 |
| minor refuses to return home, the minor or his or her parent, |
9 |
| guardian
or custodian, or a person properly acting at the |
10 |
| minor's request, may file
with the court a petition alleging |
11 |
| that the minor requires authoritative
intervention as |
12 |
| described in Section 3-3.
|
13 |
| (Source: P.A. 85-601.)
|
14 |
| (705 ILCS 405/3-6.1 new) |
15 |
| Sec. 3-6.1. Crisis residential centers. |
16 |
| (a) The Department of Children and Family Services shall |
17 |
| establish, by contracts with private or public vendors, |
18 |
| regional crisis residential centers with semi-secure |
19 |
| facilities. These facilities shall be structured group care |
20 |
| facilities licensed under rules adopted by the Department and |
21 |
| shall have an average of at least 4 adult staff members and in |
22 |
| no event less than 3 adult staff members to every 8 minors. |
23 |
| (b) Within available funds appropriated for this purpose, |
24 |
| the Department shall establish, by contracts with private or |
25 |
| public vendors, regional crisis residential centers with |
|
|
|
HB4204 |
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LRB095 14861 RLC 41129 b |
|
|
1 |
| secure facilities. These facilities shall be facilities |
2 |
| licensed under rules adopted by the Department. These centers |
3 |
| may also include semi-secure facilities and to such extent |
4 |
| shall be subject to subsection (a) of this Section. |
5 |
| (c) The Department shall, in addition to the facilities |
6 |
| established under subsections (a) and (b) of this Section, |
7 |
| establish additional crisis residential centers pursuant to |
8 |
| contract with licensed private group care facilities. |
9 |
| (d) The staff at the facilities established under this |
10 |
| Section shall be trained so that they may effectively counsel |
11 |
| minors admitted to the centers, provide treatment, |
12 |
| supervision, and structure to the minors that recognize the |
13 |
| need for support and the varying circumstances that cause |
14 |
| minors to leave their families, and carry out the |
15 |
| responsibilities stated in Section 3-6.2. The responsibilities |
16 |
| stated in Section 3-6.2 may, in any of the centers, be carried |
17 |
| out by the Department. |
18 |
| (e) The secure facilities located within crisis |
19 |
| residential centers shall be operated to conform with the |
20 |
| definition in Section 1-3. The facilities shall have an average |
21 |
| of no less than one adult staff member to every 10 minors. The |
22 |
| staffing ratio shall continue to ensure the safety of the |
23 |
| minors. |
24 |
| (f) If a secure crisis residential center is located in or |
25 |
| adjacent to a secure juvenile detention facility, the center |
26 |
| shall be operated in a manner that prevents in-person contact |
|
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| between the residents of the center and the persons held in |
2 |
| such facility. |
3 |
| (705 ILCS 405/3-6.2 new) |
4 |
| Sec. 3-6.2. Duty to inform parents; transportation to |
5 |
| minor's home or out-of-home placement; notice to Department of |
6 |
| Children and Family Services. |
7 |
|
(a) The administrator of a designated crisis residential |
8 |
| center or the Department of Children and Family Services shall |
9 |
| perform the duties under subsection (c) of this Section: |
10 |
| (1) upon admitting a minor who has been brought to the |
11 |
| center by a law enforcement officer under Section 3-7; |
12 |
| (2) upon admitting a minor who has run away from home |
13 |
| or has requested admittance to the center; |
14 |
| (3) upon learning from a person that the person is |
15 |
| providing shelter to a minor absent from home; or |
16 |
| (4) upon learning that a minor has been placed with a |
17 |
| responsible adult pursuant to Section 3-28. |
18 |
| (b) Transportation expenses of the minor shall be at the |
19 |
| parent's expense to the extent of his or her ability to pay, |
20 |
| with any unmet transportation expenses assumed by the |
21 |
| Department. |
22 |
| (c) When any of the circumstances under subsection (a) of |
23 |
| this Section are present, the administrator of a center or the |
24 |
| Department of Children and Family Services shall perform the |
25 |
| following duties: |
|
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|
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|
1 |
| (1) immediately notify the minor's parent of the |
2 |
| minor's whereabouts, physical and emotional condition, and |
3 |
| the circumstances surrounding his or her placement; |
4 |
| (2) initially notify the parent that it is the |
5 |
| paramount concern of the family reconciliation service |
6 |
| personnel to achieve a reconciliation between the parent |
7 |
| and minor to reunify the family and inform the parent as to |
8 |
| the procedures to be followed under this Act;
|
9 |
| (3) inform the parent whether a referral to the |
10 |
| Department of Children and Family Services has been made |
11 |
| and, if so, inform the parent of the standard pursuant to |
12 |
| Section 2-3 governing abuse and neglect of minors in this |
13 |
| State; and either |
14 |
| (4)(A) arrange transportation for the minor to the |
15 |
| residence of the parent, as soon as practicable, when the |
16 |
| minor and his or her parent agrees to the minor's return |
17 |
| home or when the parent produces a copy of a court order |
18 |
| entered under this Act requiring the minor to reside in the |
19 |
| parent's home; or |
20 |
| (B) arrange transportation for the minor to: (i) an |
21 |
| out-of-home placement which may include a licensed group |
22 |
| care facility or foster family when agreed to by the minor |
23 |
| and parent; or (ii) a certified or licensed mental health |
24 |
| or chemical dependency program of the parent's choice. |
25 |
| (d) If the administrator of the crisis residential center |
26 |
| performs the duties listed in subsection (c) of this Section, |
|
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| he or she shall also notify the Department of Children and |
2 |
| Family Services that a minor has been admitted to the crisis |
3 |
| residential center. |
4 |
| (705 ILCS 405/3-6.3 new) |
5 |
| Sec. 3-6.3. Minor admitted to secure facility; maximum |
6 |
| hours of custody; evaluation for semi-secure facility or |
7 |
| release to Department of Children and Family Services. |
8 |
| (a) A minor admitted to a secure facility shall remain in |
9 |
| the facility for at least 24 hours after admission but for not |
10 |
| more than 5 consecutive days. If the minor admitted under this |
11 |
| Section is transferred between secure and semi-secure |
12 |
| facilities, the aggregate length of time spent in all such |
13 |
| centers or facilities may not exceed 5 consecutive days per |
14 |
| admission. |
15 |
| (b)(1)(i) The facility administrator shall determine |
16 |
| within 24 hours after a minor's admission to a secure facility |
17 |
| whether the minor is likely to remain in a semi-secure facility |
18 |
| and may transfer the minor to a semi-secure facility or release |
19 |
| the minor to the Department of Children and Family Services. |
20 |
| The determination shall be based on: (A) the need for continued |
21 |
| assessment, protection, and treatment of the minor in a secure |
22 |
| facility; and (B) the likelihood the minor would remain at a |
23 |
| semi-secure facility until his or her parents can take the |
24 |
| minor home or a petition can be filed under this Article. |
25 |
| (ii) In making the determination the administrator shall |
|
|
|
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| consider the following information if known: (A) The minor's |
2 |
| age and maturity; (B) the minor's condition upon arrival at the |
3 |
| center; (C) the circumstances that led to the minor's being |
4 |
| taken to the center; (D) whether the minor's behavior endangers |
5 |
| the health, safety, or welfare of the minor or any other |
6 |
| person; (E) the minor's history of running away; and (F) the |
7 |
| minor's willingness to cooperate in the assessment. |
8 |
| (2) If the administrator of a secure facility determines |
9 |
| the minor is unlikely to remain in a semi-secure facility, the |
10 |
| administrator shall keep the minor in the secure facility |
11 |
| pursuant to this Article and in order to provide for space for |
12 |
| the minor may transfer another minor who has been in the |
13 |
| facility for at least 72 hours to a semi-secure facility. The |
14 |
| administrator shall only make a transfer of a minor after |
15 |
| determining that the minor who may be transferred is likely to |
16 |
| remain at the semi-secure facility. |
17 |
| (3) A crisis residential center administrator is |
18 |
| authorized to transfer a minor to a crisis residential center |
19 |
| in the area where the minor's parents reside or where the |
20 |
| minor's lawfully prescribed residence is located. |
21 |
| (4) An administrator may transfer a minor from a |
22 |
| semi-secure facility to a secure facility whenever he or she |
23 |
| reasonably believes that the minor is likely to leave the |
24 |
| semi-secure facility and not return and after full |
25 |
| consideration of all factors in clauses (1) and (2) of this |
26 |
| subsection (b). |
|
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| (c) If no parent is available or willing to remove the |
2 |
| minor during the first 72 hours following admission, the |
3 |
| Department of Children and Family Services shall consider the |
4 |
| filing of a petition under Section 3-15. |
5 |
| (d) Notwithstanding the provisions of subsection (a) of |
6 |
| this Section, the parents may remove the minor at any time |
7 |
| during the 5 day period unless the staff of the crisis |
8 |
| residential center has reasonable cause to believe that the |
9 |
| minor is absent from the home because he or she is abused or |
10 |
| neglected or if allegations of abuse or neglect have been made |
11 |
| against the parents. The Department of Children and Family |
12 |
| Services or any agency legally charged with the supervision of |
13 |
| a minor may remove a minor from a crisis residential center at |
14 |
| any time after the first 24-hour period after admission has |
15 |
| elapsed and only after full consideration by all parties of the |
16 |
| factors in subsection (b) of this Section. |
17 |
| (e) Crisis residential center staff shall make reasonable |
18 |
| efforts to protect the minor and achieve a reconciliation of |
19 |
| the family. If a reconciliation and voluntary return of the |
20 |
| minor has not been achieved within 48 hours from the time of |
21 |
| admission, and if the administrator of the center does not |
22 |
| consider it likely that reconciliation will be achieved within |
23 |
| the 5-day period, then the administrator shall inform the |
24 |
| parent and minor of: |
25 |
| (1) the availability of counseling services; |
26 |
| (2) the right to file a minor in need of services |
|
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| petition for an out-of-home placement, the right of a |
2 |
| parent to file a petition under Section 3-15, and the right |
3 |
| of the parent and minor to obtain assistance in filing the |
4 |
| petition; |
5 |
| (3) the right to request the facility administrator or |
6 |
| his or her designee to form a multidisciplinary team; |
7 |
| (4) the right to request a review of any out-of-home |
8 |
| placement; |
9 |
| (5) the right to request a mental health or chemical |
10 |
| dependency evaluation by a county-designated professional |
11 |
| or a private treatment facility; and |
12 |
| (6) the right to request treatment in a program to |
13 |
| address the minor's at-risk behavior. |
14 |
| (f) At no time shall information regarding a parent's or |
15 |
| minor's rights be withheld. The Department of Children and |
16 |
| Family Services shall develop and distribute to all law |
17 |
| enforcement agencies and to each crisis residential center |
18 |
| administrator a written statement delineating the services and |
19 |
| rights. The administrator of the facility or his or her |
20 |
| designee shall provide every resident and parent with a copy of |
21 |
| the statement. |
22 |
| (g) Except for willful and wanton misconduct, a crisis |
23 |
| residential center and any person employed at the center acting |
24 |
| in good faith in carrying out the provisions of this Section |
25 |
| are immune from criminal or civil liability for such actions.
|
26 |
| No contract may provide reimbursement or compensation to a |
|
|
|
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LRB095 14861 RLC 41129 b |
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| crisis residential center's secure facility for any service |
2 |
| delivered or provided to a resident minor after 5 consecutive |
3 |
| days of residence. |
4 |
| (705 ILCS 405/3-6.4 new)
|
5 |
| Sec. 3-6.4. Crisis residential centers; removal from; |
6 |
| services available; unauthorized leave. |
7 |
|
(a) If a resident of a center becomes by his or her |
8 |
| behavior disruptive to the facility's program, such resident |
9 |
| may be immediately removed to a separate area within the |
10 |
| facility and counseled on an individual basis until such time |
11 |
| as the minor regains his or her composure. The Department of |
12 |
| Children and Family Services may set rules establishing |
13 |
| additional procedures for dealing with severely disruptive |
14 |
| minors on the premises. |
15 |
| (b) When the minor resides in this facility, all services |
16 |
| deemed necessary to the minor's reentry to normal family life |
17 |
| shall be made available to the minor as required by law. In |
18 |
| assessing the minor and providing these services, the facility |
19 |
| staff shall: |
20 |
| (1) interview the minor as soon as possible; |
21 |
| (2) contact the minor's parents and arrange for a |
22 |
| counseling interview with the minor and his or her parents |
23 |
| as soon as possible; |
24 |
| (3) conduct counseling interviews with the minor and |
25 |
| his or her parents, to the end that resolution of the minor |
|
|
|
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LRB095 14861 RLC 41129 b |
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| and parent conflict is attained and the minor is returned |
2 |
| home as soon as possible; |
3 |
| (4) provide additional crisis counseling as needed, to |
4 |
| the end that placement of the minor in the crisis |
5 |
| residential center will be required for the shortest time |
6 |
| possible, but not to exceed 5 consecutive days; and |
7 |
| (5) convene, when appropriate, a multidisciplinary |
8 |
| team. |
9 |
| (c) Based on the assessments done under subsection (b) of |
10 |
| this Section the facility staff may refer any minor who, as the |
11 |
| result of a mental or emotional disorder, or intoxication by |
12 |
| alcohol or other drugs, is suicidal, seriously assaultive, or |
13 |
| seriously destructive toward others, or otherwise similarly |
14 |
| evidences an immediate need for emergency medical evaluation |
15 |
| and possible care, for evaluation to a mental health |
16 |
| professional, or to a chemical dependency specialist pursuant |
17 |
| to the Alcoholism and Other Drug Abuse and Dependency Act |
18 |
| (whenever such action is deemed appropriate and consistent with |
19 |
| law). |
20 |
| (d) A minor taking unauthorized leave from a facility shall |
21 |
| be apprehended and returned to it by law enforcement officers |
22 |
| or other persons designated as having this authority as |
23 |
| provided in this Article. If returned to the facility after |
24 |
| having taken unauthorized leave for a period of more than 24 |
25 |
| hours a minor shall be supervised by such a facility for a |
26 |
| period, pursuant to this Article, which, unless where otherwise |
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LRB095 14861 RLC 41129 b |
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| provided, may not exceed 5 consecutive days on the premises. |
2 |
| Costs of housing minors admitted to crisis residential centers |
3 |
| shall be assumed by the Department for a period not to exceed 5 |
4 |
| consecutive days. |
5 |
| (705 ILCS 405/3-6.5 new)
|
6 |
| Sec. 3-6.5. Parental right to remove minor; reconciliation |
7 |
| effort; information to parent and minor; written statement of |
8 |
| services and rights; crisis residential center immunity from |
9 |
| liability. |
10 |
| (a) Crisis residential centers shall compile yearly |
11 |
| records which shall be transmitted to the Department of |
12 |
| Children and Family Services and which shall contain |
13 |
| information regarding population profiles of the minors |
14 |
| admitted to the centers during each past calendar year. Such |
15 |
| information shall include but shall not be limited to the |
16 |
| following: |
17 |
| (1) the number, age, and sex of minors admitted to |
18 |
| custody; |
19 |
| (2) who brought the minors to the center; |
20 |
| (3) services provided to minors admitted to the center; |
21 |
| (4) the circumstances which necessitated the minors |
22 |
| being brought to the center;
|
23 |
| (5) the ultimate disposition of cases; |
24 |
| (6) the number of minors admitted to custody who ran |
25 |
| away from the center and their ultimate disposition, if |
|
|
|
HB4204 |
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LRB095 14861 RLC 41129 b |
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1 |
| any; |
2 |
| (7) length of stay. |
3 |
| (b) The Department of Children and Family Services may |
4 |
| require the provision of additional information and may require |
5 |
| each center to provide all such necessary information in a |
6 |
| uniform manner.
A center may, in addition to being licensed as |
7 |
| such, also be licensed as a family foster home or group care |
8 |
| facility and may house on the premises minors assigned for |
9 |
| foster or group care. |
10 |
| (c) The administrator of a designated crisis residential |
11 |
| center or the Department of Children and Family Services shall |
12 |
| perform the duties under this subsection: |
13 |
| (1) upon admitting a minor who has been brought to the |
14 |
| center by a law enforcement officer under Section 3-7; |
15 |
| (2) upon admitting a child who has run away from home |
16 |
| or has requested admittance to the center; |
17 |
| (3) upon learning from a person that the person is |
18 |
| providing shelter to a child absent from home; or |
19 |
| (4) upon learning that a child has been placed with a |
20 |
| responsible adult pursuant to Section 3-28. |
21 |
| (d) Transportation expenses of the child shall be at the |
22 |
| parent's expense to the extent of his or her ability to pay, |
23 |
| with any unmet transportation expenses assumed by the |
24 |
| Department of Children and family Services. |
25 |
| (e) When any of the circumstances under subsection (c) of |
26 |
| this Section are present, the administrator of a center or the |
|
|
|
HB4204 |
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LRB095 14861 RLC 41129 b |
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1 |
| Department shall perform the following duties: |
2 |
| (1) immediately notify the child's parent of the |
3 |
| child's whereabouts, physical and emotional condition, and |
4 |
| the circumstances surrounding his or her placement; |
5 |
| (2) initially notify the parent that it is the |
6 |
| paramount concern of the family reconciliation service |
7 |
| personnel to achieve a reconciliation between the parent |
8 |
| and child to reunify the family and inform the parent as to |
9 |
| the procedures to be followed under this Article; |
10 |
| (3) inform the parent whether a referral to children's |
11 |
| protective services has been made and, if so, inform the |
12 |
| parent of the standard pursuant to Section 2-3 governing |
13 |
| abuse and neglect of a minor in this State; and either |
14 |
| (4)(i) arrange transportation for the child to the |
15 |
| residence of the parent, as soon as practicable, when the |
16 |
| child and his or her parent agrees to the child's return |
17 |
| home or when the parent produces a copy of a court order |
18 |
| entered under this Article requiring the child to reside in |
19 |
| the parent's home; or
(ii) arrange transportation for the |
20 |
| child to: (A) an out-of-home placement which may include a |
21 |
| licensed group care facility or foster family when agreed |
22 |
| to by the child and parent; or (B) a certified or licensed |
23 |
| mental health or chemical dependency program of the |
24 |
| parent's choice. |
25 |
| (f) If the administrator of the crisis residential center |
26 |
| performs the duties listed in subsection (c) of this Section, |
|
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|
HB4204 |
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LRB095 14861 RLC 41129 b |
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1 |
| he or she shall also notify he Department that a child has been |
2 |
| admitted to the crisis residential center.
|
3 |
| (705 ILCS 405/3-7) (from Ch. 37, par. 803-7)
|
4 |
| Sec. 3-7. Taking into temporary custody.
|
5 |
| (1) A law enforcement officer may, without a warrant, take |
6 |
| into
temporary custody a minor (a) whom the officer with |
7 |
| reasonable cause
believes to be a minor requiring authoritative |
8 |
| intervention; (b) who has been
adjudged a ward of the court and |
9 |
| has escaped from any commitment ordered by
the court under this |
10 |
| Act; or (c) who is found in any street or public place
|
11 |
| suffering from any sickness or injury which requires care, |
12 |
| medical
treatment or hospitalization.
|
13 |
| (2) Whenever a petition has been filed under Section 3-15 |
14 |
| and the
court finds that the conduct and behavior of the minor |
15 |
| may endanger the
health, person, welfare, or property of |
16 |
| himself or others or that the
circumstances of his home |
17 |
| environment may endanger his health, person,
welfare or |
18 |
| property, a warrant may be issued immediately to take the minor
|
19 |
| into custody.
|
20 |
| (3) The taking of a minor into temporary custody under this |
21 |
| Section is
not an arrest nor does it constitute a police |
22 |
| record.
|
23 |
| (4) No minor taken into temporary custody shall be placed |
24 |
| in a jail,
municipal lockup, detention center, or secure |
25 |
| correctional facility. |
|
|
|
HB4204 |
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LRB095 14861 RLC 41129 b |
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|
1 |
| (5) A minor taken into temporary custody may be placed in a |
2 |
| crisis residential center or a secure crisis residential |
3 |
| center.
|
4 |
| (Source: P.A. 87-1154.)
|
5 |
| (705 ILCS 405/3-24) (from Ch. 37, par. 803-24)
|
6 |
| Sec. 3-24. Kinds of dispositional orders.
|
7 |
| (1) The following kinds of orders of disposition may be |
8 |
| made in respect to
wards of the court: A minor found to be |
9 |
| requiring authoritative intervention
under Section 3-3 may be |
10 |
| (a) committed to the Department of Children and Family
|
11 |
| Services, subject to Section 5 of the Children and Family |
12 |
| Services Act; (b)
placed under supervision and released to his |
13 |
| or her parents, guardian or legal
custodian; (c) placed in |
14 |
| accordance with Section 3-28 with or without also
being placed |
15 |
| under supervision. Conditions of supervision may be modified or
|
16 |
| terminated by the court if it deems that the best interests of |
17 |
| the minor and
the public will be served thereby; (d) ordered |
18 |
| partially or completely
emancipated in accordance with the |
19 |
| provisions of the Emancipation of
Minors Act; or (e) subject to |
20 |
| having his or her driver's license or driving
privilege |
21 |
| suspended for such time as determined by the Court but only |
22 |
| until he
or she attains 18 years of age ; or (f) placed in a |
23 |
| crisis residential center or a secure crisis residential |
24 |
| center .
|
25 |
| (2) Any order of disposition may provide for protective |
|
|
|
HB4204 |
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LRB095 14861 RLC 41129 b |
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1 |
| supervision
under Section 3-25 and may include an order of |
2 |
| protection under Section 3-26.
|
3 |
| (3) Unless the order of disposition expressly so provides, |
4 |
| it does
not operate to close proceedings on the pending |
5 |
| petition, but is subject
to modification until final closing |
6 |
| and discharge of the proceedings
under Section 3-32.
|
7 |
| (4) In addition to any other order of disposition, the |
8 |
| court may order
any person found to be a minor requiring |
9 |
| authoritative intervention under
Section 3-3 to make |
10 |
| restitution, in monetary or non-monetary form, under
the terms |
11 |
| and conditions of Section 5-5-6 of the Unified Code of
|
12 |
| Corrections, except that the "presentence hearing" referred to |
13 |
| therein
shall be the dispositional hearing for purposes of this |
14 |
| Section. The
parent, guardian or legal custodian of the minor |
15 |
| may pay some or all of
such restitution on the minor's behalf.
|
16 |
| (5) Any order for disposition where the minor is committed |
17 |
| or placed in
accordance with Section 3-28 shall provide for the |
18 |
| parents or guardian of
the estate of such minor to pay to the |
19 |
| legal custodian or guardian of the
person of the minor such |
20 |
| sums as are determined by the custodian or guardian
of the |
21 |
| person of the minor as necessary for the minor's needs. Such |
22 |
| payments
may not exceed the maximum amounts provided for by |
23 |
| Section 9.1 of the
Children and Family Services Act.
|
24 |
| (6) Whenever the order of disposition requires the minor to |
25 |
| attend
school or participate in a program of training, the |
26 |
| truant officer or
designated school official shall regularly |
|
|
|
HB4204 |
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LRB095 14861 RLC 41129 b |
|
|
1 |
| report to the court if the minor
is a chronic or habitual |
2 |
| truant under Section 26-2a of the School Code.
|
3 |
| (7) The court must impose upon a minor under an order of |
4 |
| continuance
under supervision or an order of disposition under |
5 |
| this Article III, as a
condition of the order, a fee of $25 for |
6 |
| each month or partial month of
supervision with a probation |
7 |
| officer. If the court determines the inability of
the minor, or |
8 |
| the parent, guardian, or legal custodian of the minor to pay |
9 |
| the
fee, the court may impose a lesser fee. The court may not |
10 |
| impose the fee on a
minor who is made a ward of the State under |
11 |
| this Act. The fee may be imposed
only upon a minor who is |
12 |
| actively supervised by the probation and court
services |
13 |
| department. The fee must be collected by the clerk of the |
14 |
| circuit
court. The clerk of the circuit court must pay all |
15 |
| monies collected from this
fee to the county treasurer for |
16 |
| deposit into the probation and court services
fund under |
17 |
| Section 15.1 of the Probation and Probation Officers Act.
|
18 |
| (Source: P.A. 95-331, eff. 8-21-07.)
|
19 |
| (705 ILCS 405/3-28) (from Ch. 37, par. 803-28)
|
20 |
| Sec. 3-28. Placement; legal custody or guardianship.
|
21 |
| (1) If the court finds that the parents, guardian or legal |
22 |
| custodian
of a minor adjudged a ward of the court are unfit or |
23 |
| are unable, for
some reason other than financial circumstances |
24 |
| alone, to care for,
protect, train or discipline the minor or |
25 |
| are unwilling to do so, and that
appropriate services aimed at |
|
|
|
HB4204 |
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LRB095 14861 RLC 41129 b |
|
|
1 |
| family preservation and family reunification
have been |
2 |
| unsuccessful in rectifying the conditions which have led to |
3 |
| such
a finding of unfitness or inability to care for, protect, |
4 |
| train or
discipline the minor, and that it is in the best |
5 |
| interest of the minor to
take him from the custody of his |
6 |
| parents, guardian or custodian, the court may:
|
7 |
| (a) place him in the custody of a suitable relative or |
8 |
| other person;
|
9 |
| (b) place him under the guardianship of a probation |
10 |
| officer;
|
11 |
| (c) commit him to an agency for care or placement, |
12 |
| except an
institution under the authority of the Department |
13 |
| of Corrections or of
the Department of Children and Family |
14 |
| Services;
|
15 |
| (d) commit him to some licensed training school or |
16 |
| industrial school; or
|
17 |
| (e) commit him to any appropriate institution having |
18 |
| among its
purposes the care of delinquent children, |
19 |
| including a child protective
facility maintained by a Child |
20 |
| Protection District serving the county from
which |
21 |
| commitment is made, but not including any institution under |
22 |
| the
authority of the Department of Corrections or of the |
23 |
| Department of Children
and Family Services ; or .
|
24 |
| (f) placed in a crisis residential center or a secure |
25 |
| crisis residential center. |
26 |
| (2) When making such placement, the court, wherever |
|
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| possible, shall
select a person holding the same religious |
2 |
| belief as that of the minor
or a private agency controlled by |
3 |
| persons of like religious faith of the
minor and shall require |
4 |
| the Department of Children and Family Services to
otherwise |
5 |
| comply with Section 7 of the
Children and Family Services Act |
6 |
| in placing the child. In addition, whenever
alternative plans |
7 |
| for placement are
available, the court shall ascertain and |
8 |
| consider, to the extent
appropriate in the particular case, the |
9 |
| views and preferences of the minor.
|
10 |
| (3) When a minor is placed with a suitable relative or |
11 |
| other person,
the court shall appoint him the legal custodian |
12 |
| or guardian of the
person of the minor. When a minor is |
13 |
| committed to any agency, the court
shall appoint the proper |
14 |
| officer or representative thereof as legal
custodian or |
15 |
| guardian of the person of the minor. Legal custodians and
|
16 |
| guardians of the person of the minor have the respective rights |
17 |
| and
duties set forth in paragraph (9) of Section 1-3 except as |
18 |
| otherwise
provided by order of the court; but no guardian of |
19 |
| the person may consent
to adoption of the minor unless that |
20 |
| authority is conferred upon him in
accordance with Section |
21 |
| 3-30. An agency whose representative is appointed
guardian of |
22 |
| the person or legal custodian of the minor may place him in any
|
23 |
| child care facility, but such facility must be licensed under |
24 |
| the Child
Care Act of 1969 or have been approved by the |
25 |
| Department of Children and
Family Services as meeting the |
26 |
| standards established for such licensing. No
agency may place |
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LRB095 14861 RLC 41129 b |
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| such minor in a child care facility unless such placement
is in |
2 |
| compliance with the rules and regulations for placement under |
3 |
| this
Section promulgated by the Department of Children and |
4 |
| Family Services
under Section 5 of "An Act creating the |
5 |
| Department of Children and Family
Services, codifying its |
6 |
| powers and duties, and repealing certain Acts and
Sections |
7 |
| herein named". Like authority and restrictions shall be |
8 |
| conferred
by the court upon any probation officer who has been |
9 |
| appointed guardian of
the person of a minor.
|
10 |
| (4) No placement by any probation officer or agency whose |
11 |
| representative
is appointed guardian of the person or legal |
12 |
| custodian of a minor may be
made in any out of State child care |
13 |
| facility unless it complies with the
Interstate Compact on the |
14 |
| Placement of Children.
|
15 |
| (5) The clerk of the court shall issue to such legal |
16 |
| custodian or
guardian of the person a certified copy of the |
17 |
| order of the court, as proof
of his authority. No other process |
18 |
| is necessary as authority for the
keeping of the minor.
|
19 |
| (6) Custody or guardianship granted hereunder continues |
20 |
| until the
court otherwise directs, but not after the minor |
21 |
| reaches the age of 19
years except as set forth in Section |
22 |
| 3-32.
|
23 |
| (Source: P.A. 89-422.)
|
24 |
| (705 ILCS 405/3-33.5)
|
25 |
| Sec. 3-33.5. Truant minors in need of supervision.
|
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| (a) Definition. A
minor who is reported by the office of |
2 |
| the regional superintendent of schools,
or, in cities of over |
3 |
| 500,000 inhabitants, by the Office of Chronic Truant
|
4 |
| Adjudication, as a chronic truant may be subject to a petition |
5 |
| for adjudication and adjudged a
truant minor in need of |
6 |
| supervision, provided that prior to the filing of the petition, |
7 |
| the office
of the regional superintendent of schools, the |
8 |
| Office of Chronic Truant
Adjudication, or a community truancy |
9 |
| review board certifies that the local school has provided |
10 |
| appropriate truancy intervention services
to the truant minor |
11 |
| and his or her family. For purposes of this Section, "truancy |
12 |
| intervention services"
means services designed to assist the |
13 |
| minor's return to an educational program, and includes but is |
14 |
| not
limited to: assessments, counseling, mental health |
15 |
| services, shelter, optional and alternative education
|
16 |
| programs, tutoring, and educational advocacy. If, after review |
17 |
| by the regional office of education, the Office of Chronic |
18 |
| Truant
Adjudication, or
community truancy review board it is |
19 |
| determined the local
school did not provide the appropriate |
20 |
| interventions, then the minor shall be referred to a |
21 |
| comprehensive community
based youth service agency for truancy |
22 |
| intervention services. If the comprehensive community based |
23 |
| youth service
agency is incapable to provide intervention |
24 |
| services, then this requirement for services is
not applicable. |
25 |
| The comprehensive community based youth service agency shall |
26 |
| submit reports to the office of the
regional superintendent of |
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LRB095 14861 RLC 41129 b |
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| schools, the Office of Chronic Truant
Adjudication, or truancy |
2 |
| review board within 20, 40, and 80 school days of the initial |
3 |
| referral or at any other time requested by the
office of the |
4 |
| regional superintendent of schools, the Office of Chronic |
5 |
| Truant
Adjudication, or truancy review board, which reports |
6 |
| each shall certify the date of the minor's referral and the |
7 |
| extent of the
minor's progress and participation in truancy |
8 |
| intervention services provided by the comprehensive community |
9 |
| based youth service agency. In addition, if, after referral by |
10 |
| the office of the regional superintendent of
schools, the |
11 |
| Office of Chronic Truant
Adjudication, or community truancy |
12 |
| review board, the minor
declines or refuses to fully |
13 |
| participate in truancy intervention services provided by the |
14 |
| comprehensive community based
youth service agency, then the |
15 |
| agency shall immediately certify such facts to the office of |
16 |
| the regional
superintendent of schools, the Office of Chronic |
17 |
| Truant
Adjudication, or community truancy review board. |
18 |
| (a-1) There is a rebuttable presumption that a chronic |
19 |
| truant is a truant
minor in need of supervision. |
20 |
| (a-2) There is a rebuttable presumption that school records |
21 |
| of a minor's
attendance at school are authentic. |
22 |
| (a-3) For purposes of this Section, "chronic truant" means |
23 |
| a minor subject to compulsory school attendance and who is |
24 |
| absent without valid cause from such attendance for 10% or more |
25 |
| of the previous 180 regular attendance days and has the meaning
|
26 |
| ascribed to it in Section 26-2a of the School Code. |
|
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LRB095 14861 RLC 41129 b |
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| (a-4) For purposes of this Section, a "community truancy |
2 |
| review board" is a local community based board comprised of but |
3 |
| not limited to: representatives from local comprehensive |
4 |
| community based youth service agencies, representatives from |
5 |
| court service agencies, representatives from local schools, |
6 |
| representatives from health service agencies, and |
7 |
| representatives from local professional and community |
8 |
| organizations as deemed appropriate by the office of the |
9 |
| regional superintendent of schools, or, in cities of over |
10 |
| 500,000 inhabitants, by the Office of Chronic Truant
|
11 |
| Adjudication. The regional superintendent of schools, or, in |
12 |
| cities of over 500,000 inhabitants, the Office of Chronic |
13 |
| Truant
Adjudication, must approve the establishment and |
14 |
| organization of a community truancy review board and the |
15 |
| regional superintendent of schools or his or her designee, or, |
16 |
| in cities of over 500,000 inhabitants, the general |
17 |
| superintendent of schools or his or her designee, shall chair |
18 |
| the board. |
19 |
| (a-5) Nothing in this Section shall be construed to create |
20 |
| a private cause of action or right of recovery against a |
21 |
| regional office of education or the Office of Chronic Truant
|
22 |
| Adjudication, its superintendent, or its staff with respect to |
23 |
| truancy intervention services where the determination to |
24 |
| provide the services is made in good faith. |
25 |
| (b) Kinds of dispositional orders. A minor found to be a |
26 |
| truant minor
in need of supervision may be: |
|
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LRB095 14861 RLC 41129 b |
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|
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| (1) committed to the appropriate
regional |
2 |
| superintendent of schools for a student assistance team |
3 |
| staffing, a service plan, or referral to a comprehensive |
4 |
| community based youth service agency; |
5 |
| (2) required to comply with a service
plan as |
6 |
| specifically provided by the appropriate regional |
7 |
| superintendent of
schools; |
8 |
| (3) ordered to obtain counseling or other supportive |
9 |
| services; |
10 |
| (4) subject to a fine in an amount in excess of $5, but |
11 |
| not exceeding
$100, and each day of absence without valid |
12 |
| cause as defined in Section 26-2a
of The School Code is a |
13 |
| separate offense; |
14 |
| (5) required to perform some reasonable public service |
15 |
| work such as, but
not limited to, the picking up of litter |
16 |
| in public parks or along public
highways or the maintenance |
17 |
| of public facilities; or |
18 |
| (6) subject to having his or her driver's license or |
19 |
| driving privilege
suspended for a period of time as |
20 |
| determined by the court but only until he
or she attains 18 |
21 |
| years of age ; or . |
22 |
| (7) placed in a crisis residential center or a secure |
23 |
| crisis residential center. |
24 |
| A dispositional order may include a fine, public service, |
25 |
| or
suspension of a driver's license or privilege only if the |
26 |
| court has made an
express written finding that a truancy |
|
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LRB095 14861 RLC 41129 b |
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|
1 |
| prevention program has been offered by
the school, regional |
2 |
| superintendent of schools, or a comprehensive community based |
3 |
| youth service
agency to the truant minor in need of |
4 |
| supervision. |
5 |
| (c) Orders entered under this Section may be enforced by |
6 |
| contempt
proceedings.
|
7 |
| (Source: P.A. 94-1011, eff. 7-7-06.)
|
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| 1 |
|
INDEX
| 2 |
|
Statutes amended in order of appearance
|
| 3 |
| 20 ILCS 505/5 |
from Ch. 23, par. 5005 |
| 4 |
| 705 ILCS 405/1-3 |
from Ch. 37, par. 801-3 |
| 5 |
| 705 ILCS 405/3-3 |
from Ch. 37, par. 803-3 |
| 6 |
| 705 ILCS 405/3-4 |
from Ch. 37, par. 803-4 |
| 7 |
| 705 ILCS 405/3-5 |
from Ch. 37, par. 803-5 |
| 8 |
| 705 ILCS 405/3-6 |
from Ch. 37, par. 803-6 |
| 9 |
| 705 ILCS 405/3-6.1 new |
|
| 10 |
| 705 ILCS 405/3-6.2 new |
|
| 11 |
| 705 ILCS 405/3-6.3 new |
|
| 12 |
| 705 ILCS 405/3-6.4 new |
|
| 13 |
| 705 ILCS 405/3-6.5 new |
|
| 14 |
| 705 ILCS 405/3-7 |
from Ch. 37, par. 803-7 |
| 15 |
| 705 ILCS 405/3-24 |
from Ch. 37, par. 803-24 |
| 16 |
| 705 ILCS 405/3-28 |
from Ch. 37, par. 803-28 |
| 17 |
| 705 ILCS 405/3-33.5 |
|
|
|