August 28, 2018
To the Honorable Members of
The Illinois House of Representatives,
100th General Assembly:
Today I return Senate Bill 2921 with specific recommendations for
change.
This legislation amends the State Treasurer Act to authorize the
Treasurer to purchase and renovate a building and amends The State Finance Act
to divert funds collected from Illinois businesses under the deeply flawed
Revised Uniform Unclaimed Property Act (“RUUPA”) enacted last year over my veto
of SB 9. Under existing law, these moneys are dedicated for the funding of the
unfunded liabilities of the State retirement systems and Senate Bill 2921 would
divert a portion of the funds earmarked for the pension systems.
RUUPA is
problematic in a number of ways. It is improperly retroactive, has a statute of
limitations that is illusory, includes estimation provisions that will lead to unrealistic
and inflated assessments, authorizes the Treasurer to utilize third-party
contingent fee auditors to harm the business community, and in combination with
the foregoing imposes a stealth tax increase on Illinois businesses by
eliminating the longstanding business-to-business exemption.
The business community should not be subjected
to a hidden tax and the Treasurer should not be spending funds improperly
diverted from Illinois businesses to purchase and renovate a building. As we
reconsider the scope of the Treasurer’s Authority pursuant to RUUPA, we should
be looking to minimize the negative impact of this Act, as opposed to allowing
it to be used as a mechanism to fund the Treasurer’s building projects.
Therefore, pursuant to Section 9(e) of Article
IV of the Illinois Constitution of 1970, I hereby return Senate Bill 2921,
entitled “AN ACT concerning State government,” with the following specific
recommendations for change:
By deleting page 1, line 4 through page 6 line
21; and
On page 1, immediately after line 3, by
inserting the following:
“Section 5. The
Revised Uniform Unclaimed Property Act is amended by changing Sections 15-201,
15-610, 15-1006, 15-1009, and 15-1503 as follows:
(765 ILCS 1026/15-201)
Sec. 15-201. When
property presumed abandoned.
a) Subject to Section
15-210, the following property is presumed abandoned if it is unclaimed by the
apparent owner during the period specified below:
(1) a traveler's check, 15 years after issuance;
(2) a money order, 7 years after issuance;
(3) any instrument on which a financial organization or business association is
directly liable, 3 years after issuance;
(4) a state or
municipal bond, bearer bond, or original-issue-discount bond, 3 years after the
earliest of the date the bond matures or is called or the obligation to pay the
principal of the bond arises;
(5) a debt of a
business association, 3 years after the obligation to pay arises;
(6) a demand, savings,
or time deposit, 3 years after the later of maturity or the date of the last
indication of interest in the property by the apparent owner, except for a
deposit that is automatically renewable, 3 years after its initial date of
maturity unless the apparent owner consented in a record on file with the
holder to renewal at or about the time of the renewal;
(7) money or a credit
owed to a customer as a result of a retail business transaction, other than
in-store credit for returned merchandise, 3 years after the obligation arose;
(8) an amount owed by
an insurance company on a life or endowment insurance policy or an annuity
contract that has matured or terminated, 3 years after the obligation to pay
arose under the terms of the policy or contract or, if a policy or contract for
which an amount is owed on proof of death has not matured by proof of the death
of the insured or annuitant, as follows:
(A) with respect to an
amount owed on a life or endowment insurance policy, the earlier of:
(i) 3 years after the
death of the insured; or
(ii) 2 years after the insured has attained, or would have attained if living,
the limiting age under the mortality table on which the reserve for the policy
is based; and
(B) with respect to an
amount owed on an annuity contract, 3 years after the death of the annuitant.
(9) funds on deposit
or held in trust pursuant to the Illinois Funeral or Burial Funds Act, the
earliest of:
(A) 2 years after the
date of death of the beneficiary;
(B) one year after the
date the beneficiary has attained, or would have attained if living, the age of
105 where the holder does not know whether the beneficiary is deceased;
(C) 40 years after the
contract for prepayment was executed;
(10) property
distributable by a business association in the course of dissolution or
distributions from the termination of a retirement plan, one year after the property
becomes distributable;
(11) property held by
a court, including property received as proceeds of a class action, 3 years
after the property becomes distributable;
(12) property held by
a government or governmental subdivision, agency, or instrumentality,
including municipal bond interest and unredeemed principal under the
administration of a paying agent or indenture trustee, 3 years after the
property becomes distributable;
(13) wages,
commissions, bonuses, or reimbursements to which an employee is entitled, or
other compensation for personal services, including amounts held on a payroll
card, one year after the amount becomes payable;
(14) a deposit or
refund owed to a subscriber by a utility, one year after the deposit or refund
becomes payable, except that any capital credits or patronage capital retired,
returned, refunded or tendered to a member of an electric cooperative, as
defined in Section 3.4 of the Electric Supplier Act, or a telephone or
telecommunications cooperative, as defined in Section 13-212 of the Public
Utilities Act, that has remained unclaimed by the person appearing on the
records of the entitled cooperative for more than 2 years, shall not be subject
to, or governed by, any other provisions of this Act, but rather shall be used
by the cooperative for the benefit of the general membership of the
cooperative; and
(15) property not
specified in this Section or Sections 15-202 through 15-208, the earlier of 3
years after the owner first has a right to demand the property or the obligation
to pay or distribute the property arises.
b) Notwithstanding
anything to the contrary in this Section 15-201, and subject to Section 15-210,
a deceased owner cannot indicate interest in his or her property. If the owner
is deceased and the abandonment period for the owner's property specified in
this Section 15-201 is greater than 2 years, then the property, other than an
amount owed by an insurance company on a life or endowment insurance policy or
an annuity contract that has matured or terminated, shall instead be presumed
abandoned 2 years from the date of the owner's last indication of interest in
the property.
c) Notwithstanding
anything to the contrary in this Section, any property due or owed by a
business association resulting from a transaction occurring in the normal and
ordinary course of business is exempt from this Act.
(765 ILCS 1026/15-610)
Sec. 15-610. Periods
of limitation and repose.
(a) Expiration,
before, on, or after the effective date of this Act, of a period of limitation
on an owner's right to receive or recover property, whether specified by
contract, statute, or court order, does not prevent the property from being
presumed abandoned or affect the duty of a holder under this Act to file a
report or pay or deliver property to the administrator.
(b) An action or
proceeding may not be maintained by the administrator to enforce this Act in
regard to the reporting, delivery, or payment of property more than 5 10
years after the holder filed a non-fraudulent report with the
administrator. The parties may agree to extend the limitation period in this
subsection specifically identified the property in a report filed with
the administrator or gave express notice to the administrator of a dispute
regarding the property. In the absence of such a report or other express
notice, the period of limitation is tolled. The period of limitation is also
tolled by the filing of a report that is fraudulent.
(c) The administrator
may not commence an action, proceeding, or examination with respect to a duty
of a holder under this Act more than 10 years after the duty arose.
(765 ILCS
1026/15-1006)
Sec. 15-1006. Failure
of person examined to retain records.
(a) If a person subject to
examination under Section 15-1002 does not retain the records required by
Section 15-404, the administrator may use estimation techniques that conform
to either generally accepted auditing standards or generally accepted accounting
principles to determine the amount of unclaimed property. In the conduct of an
examination, the State shall not request of a holder any records that relate to
property that is not subject to this Act. Estimation techniques used shall
incorporate a "net" method to extrapolation, meaning the numerator
shall consist of only property located in Illinois or Illinois-sourced property
and the denominator shall be a reasonable surrogate, such as sales or payroll
determine the value of property due using a reasonable method of estimation
based on all information available to the administrator, including
extrapolation and use of statistical sampling when appropriate and necessary,
consistent with examination procedures and standards adopted under Section
15-1003. A payment made based on estimation under this Section is a penalty
for failure to maintain the records required by Section 15-404 and does not
relieve a person from an obligation to report and deliver property to a State
in which the holder is domiciled.
(b) Within 60 business
days of the receipt of a final examination report, a holder may request a
hearing to contest the use or validity of estimation techniques. The
examination shall become final upon the failure of the holder to request a
hearing as provided in this Section. If a hearing is held, the State Treasurer
shall issue an order approving or disapproving the use or validity of the
estimation techniques. The order shall be a final order under the
Administrative Review Law.
(765 ILCS 1026/15-1009)
Sec. 15-1009.
Administrator's contract with another to conduct examination.
(a) The administrator
may contract with a person to conduct an examination under this Article. The
contract shall be awarded pursuant to a request for proposals issued in
compliance with the procurement rules of the administrator.
(b) If the
administrator contracts with a person under subsection (a):
(1) the contract may
provide for compensation of the person based on a fixed fee, or hourly
fee, or contingent fee; and
(2)(Blank) a
contingent fee arrangement may not provide for a payment that exceeds 15% of
the amount or value of property paid or delivered as a result of the
examination; and
(3) as authorized in
the State Officers and Employees Money Disposition Act, the administrator may
permit the deduction of fees from property recovered during an examination
under this Article prior to depositing funds received under this Act into the
Unclaimed Property Trust Fund.
(c) A contract under
subsection (a) is a public record under the Freedom of Information Act.
(765 ILCS
1026/15-1503)
Sec. 15-1503. Transitional provision.
(a) (Blank) An initial report filed under
this Act for property that was not required to be reported before the effective
date of this Act, but that is required to be reported under this Act, must
include all items of property that would have been presumed abandoned during
the 5-year period preceding the effective date of this Act as if this Act had
been in effect during that period.
(b) This Act does not relieve a holder of a duty that
arose before the effective date of this Act to report, pay, or deliver
property. Subject to subsection (b) of Section 15-610, a A holder
that did not comply with the law governing unclaimed property before the
effective date of this Act is subject to applicable provisions for enforcement
and penalties in effect before the effective date of this Act.
With these changes, Senate Bill 2921 will have my
approval. I respectfully request your concurrence.
Sincerely,
Bruce Rauner
GOVERNOR