State of Illinois
90th General Assembly
Legislation

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90_HB1393

      SEE INDEX
          Amends  and repeals various Acts and Sections of Acts  to
      revise  statutes  held  unconstitutional  by the U.S. Supreme
      Court, the Illinois Supreme Court, the U.S. Court of Appeals,
      Seventh Circuit, and federal district courts in Illinois.
                                                     LRB9001889OBpk
                                               LRB9001889OBpk
 1        AN ACT to revise the law with respect  to  statutes  that
 2    the courts have held unconstitutional.
 3        Be  it  enacted  by  the People of the State of Illinois,
 4    represented in the General Assembly:
 5        Section 5.  The Illinois Public Labor  Relations  Act  is
 6    amended  by  changing  Sections  3,  5,  and 6 to exclude the
 7    Illinois Supreme Court and its  employees  from  the  Act  in
 8    response   to   the   Illinois   Supreme  Court  decision  in
 9    Administrative Office of the Illinois  Courts  v.  State  and
10    Municipal Teamsters, Chauffeurs and Helpers Union, Local 726,
11    International  Brotherhood of Teamsters, AFL-CIO, 167 Ill. 2d
12    180  (1995),  which  decision  held  that  inclusion  of  the
13    Illinois Supreme Court and its employees in this Act violates
14    the separation of powers doctrine, the  amended  Sections  to
15    read as follows:
16        (5 ILCS 315/3) (from Ch. 48, par. 1603)
17        (Text of Section before amendment by P.A. 89-685)
18        Sec.  3.  Definitions.   As  used in this Act, unless the
19    context otherwise requires:
20        (a)  "Board"  or  "Governing  Board"  means  either   the
21    Illinois  State  Labor  Relations Board or the Illinois Local
22    Labor Relations Board.
23        (b)  "Collective bargaining" means bargaining over  terms
24    and  conditions  of  employment,  including hours, wages, and
25    other conditions of employment, as detailed in Section 7  and
26    which are not excluded by Section 4.
27        (c)  "Confidential  employee"  means  an employee who, in
28    the regular course of his or her duties, assists and acts  in
29    a  confidential capacity to persons who formulate, determine,
30    and effectuate  management  policies  with  regard  to  labor
31    relations or who, in the regular course of his or her duties,
                            -2-                LRB9001889OBpk
 1    has   authorized   access  to  information  relating  to  the
 2    effectuation  or  review   of   the   employer's   collective
 3    bargaining policies.
 4        (d)  "Craft  employees"  means skilled journeymen, crafts
 5    persons, and their apprentices and helpers.
 6        (e)  "Essential services employees"  means  those  public
 7    employees   performing   functions   so  essential  that  the
 8    interruption or termination of the function will constitute a
 9    clear and present danger to the  health  and  safety  of  the
10    persons in the affected community.
11        (f)  "Exclusive  representative",  except with respect to
12    non-State fire  fighters  and  paramedics  employed  by  fire
13    departments  and  fire  protection districts, non-State peace
14    officers, and peace  officers  in  the  Department  of  State
15    Police,  means  the  labor  organization  that  has  been (i)
16    designated by the Board as the representative of  a  majority
17    of  public  employees  in  an  appropriate bargaining unit in
18    accordance with the procedures contained in  this  Act,  (ii)
19    historically  recognized  by  the  State  of  Illinois or any
20    political subdivision of the State before July 1,  1984  (the
21    effective  date  of this Act) as the exclusive representative
22    of the employees in an appropriate bargaining unit, or  (iii)
23    after   July  1,  1984  (the  effective  date  of  this  Act)
24    recognized by an employer upon evidence,  acceptable  to  the
25    Board, that the labor organization has been designated as the
26    exclusive representative by a majority of the employees in an
27    appropriate bargaining unit.
28        With  respect  to  non-State fire fighters and paramedics
29    employed by fire departments and fire  protection  districts,
30    non-State   peace   officers,   and  peace  officers  in  the
31    Department of State Police, "exclusive representative"  means
32    the  labor  organization  that has been (i) designated by the
33    Board as the representative of a majority of  peace  officers
34    or  fire  fighters  in  an  appropriate  bargaining  unit  in
                            -3-                LRB9001889OBpk
 1    accordance  with  the  procedures contained in this Act, (ii)
 2    historically recognized by  the  State  of  Illinois  or  any
 3    political  subdivision  of  the  State before January 1, 1986
 4    (the effective date of this amendatory Act of  1985)  as  the
 5    exclusive  representative by a majority of the peace officers
 6    or fire fighters in an appropriate bargaining unit, or  (iii)
 7    after  January 1, 1986 (the effective date of this amendatory
 8    Act  of  1985)  recognized  by  an  employer  upon  evidence,
 9    acceptable to the Board, that the labor organization has been
10    designated as the exclusive representative by a  majority  of
11    the  peace  officers  or  fire  fighters  in  an  appropriate
12    bargaining unit.
13        (g)  "Fair  share  agreement"  means an agreement between
14    the employer and an employee organization under which all  or
15    any  of  the  employees  in  a collective bargaining unit are
16    required to pay their proportionate share of the costs of the
17    collective bargaining process, contract  administration,  and
18    pursuing matters affecting wages, hours, and other conditions
19    of employment, but not to exceed the amount of dues uniformly
20    required  of  members.  The amount certified by the exclusive
21    representative shall not include any fees  for  contributions
22    related  to  the  election  or  support  of any candidate for
23    political  office.  Nothing  in  this  subsection  (g)  shall
24    preclude  an  employee  from   making   voluntary   political
25    contributions  in  conjunction  with  his  or  her fair share
26    payment.
27        (g-1)  "Fire fighter" means, for the purposes of this Act
28    only, any person who has been or is hereafter appointed to  a
29    fire  department or fire protection district or employed by a
30    state university and sworn or commissioned  to  perform  fire
31    fighter duties or paramedic duties, except that the following
32    persons are not included: part-time fire fighters, auxiliary,
33    reserve  or  voluntary  fire fighters, including paid on-call
34    fire fighters,  clerks  and  dispatchers  or  other  civilian
                            -4-                LRB9001889OBpk
 1    employees  of  a  fire department or fire protection district
 2    who are  not  routinely  expected  to  perform  fire  fighter
 3    duties, or elected officials.
 4        (g-2)  "General  Assembly of the State of Illinois" means
 5    the legislative branch of the  government  of  the  State  of
 6    Illinois,   as   provided   for   under  Article  IV  of  the
 7    Constitution of the State of Illinois, and  includes  but  is
 8    not  limited to the House of Representatives, the Senate, the
 9    Speaker of the House of Representatives, the Minority  Leader
10    of the House of Representatives, the President of the Senate,
11    the  Minority  Leader  of  the Senate, the Joint Committee on
12    Legislative Support  Services  and  any  legislative  support
13    services   agency   listed   in  the  Legislative  Commission
14    Reorganization Act of 1984.
15        (h)  "Governing body" means, in the case  of  the  State,
16    the   State  Labor  Relations  Board,  the  Director  of  the
17    Department of Central Management Services, and  the  Director
18    of the Department of Labor; the county board in the case of a
19    county;   the   corporate   authorities  in  the  case  of  a
20    municipality; and the appropriate body authorized to  provide
21    for  expenditures  of its funds in the case of any other unit
22    of government.
23        (i)  "Labor organization" means any organization in which
24    public employees participate and that exists for the purpose,
25    in whole or in  part,  of  dealing  with  a  public  employer
26    concerning  wages,  hours,  and other terms and conditions of
27    employment, including the settlement of grievances.
28        (j)  "Managerial employee" means  an  individual  who  is
29    engaged  predominantly  in executive and management functions
30    and is charged  with  the  responsibility  of  directing  the
31    effectuation of management policies and practices.
32        (k)  "Peace  officer" means, for the purposes of this Act
33    only, any persons who have been or are hereafter appointed to
34    a  police  force,  department,  or  agency   and   sworn   or
                            -5-                LRB9001889OBpk
 1    commissioned  to  perform  police  duties,  except  that  the
 2    following   persons   are   not  included:  part-time  police
 3    officers,  special  police  officers,  auxiliary  police   as
 4    defined  by Section 3.1-30-20 of the Illinois Municipal Code,
 5    night  watchmen,  "merchant  police",  temporary   employees,
 6    traffic guards or wardens, civilian parking meter and parking
 7    facilities personnel or other individuals specially appointed
 8    to  aid  or  direct  traffic  at  or  near  schools or public
 9    functions or to aid in civil  defense  or  disaster,  parking
10    enforcement  employees  who  are  not  commissioned  as peace
11    officers and who are not armed  and  who  are  not  routinely
12    expected  to  effect  arrests, parking lot attendants, clerks
13    and dispatchers or  other  civilian  employees  of  a  police
14    department  who are not routinely expected to effect arrests,
15    or elected officials.
16        (l)  "Person" includes one  or  more  individuals,  labor
17    organizations,  public employees, associations, corporations,
18    legal  representatives,  trustees,  trustees  in  bankruptcy,
19    receivers,  or  the  State  of  Illinois  or  any   political
20    subdivision  of  the  State  or  governing body, but does not
21    include the General Assembly of the State of Illinois or  any
22    individual  employed  by the General Assembly of the State of
23    Illinois.
24        (m)  "Professional employee" means any  employee  engaged
25    in  work  predominantly  intellectual and varied in character
26    rather than routine mental, manual,  mechanical  or  physical
27    work;  involving  the  consistent  exercise of discretion and
28    adjustment in its performance; of such a character  that  the
29    output   produced   or  the  result  accomplished  cannot  be
30    standardized in relation to  a  given  period  of  time;  and
31    requiring  advanced  knowledge  in  a  field  of  science  or
32    learning  customarily  acquired  by  a  prolonged  course  of
33    specialized   intellectual   instruction   and  study  in  an
34    institution  of   higher   learning   or   a   hospital,   as
                            -6-                LRB9001889OBpk
 1    distinguished  from  a  general  academic  education  or from
 2    apprenticeship or from training in the performance of routine
 3    mental, manual, or physical processes; or  any  employee  who
 4    has   completed   the  courses  of  specialized  intellectual
 5    instruction and study prescribed in this subsection  (m)  and
 6    is  performing  related  work  under  the  supervision  of  a
 7    professional  person  to  qualify  to  become  a professional
 8    employee as defined in this subsection (m).
 9        (n)  "Public employee" or "employee", for the purposes of
10    this Act, means any individual employed by a public employer,
11    including interns and  residents  at  public  hospitals,  but
12    excluding  all  of  the  following:  employees of the General
13    Assembly  of  the  State  of  Illinois;  elected   officials;
14    executive  heads  of  a  department;  members  of  boards  or
15    commissions;  employees  of  any  agency, board or commission
16    created by this Act; employees appointed to  State  positions
17    of  a  temporary or emergency nature; all employees of school
18    districts   and   higher   education   institutions    except
19    firefighters   and   peace   officers  employed  by  a  state
20    university;  managerial  employees;   short-term   employees;
21    confidential    employees;   independent   contractors;   and
22    supervisors except as provided in this Act.
23        Notwithstanding Section 9, subsection (c), or  any  other
24    provisions  of this Act, all peace officers above the rank of
25    captain  in   municipalities   with   more   than   1,000,000
26    inhabitants shall be excluded from this Act.
27        (o)  "Public  employer"  or "employer" means the State of
28    Illinois; any political subdivision of  the  State,  unit  of
29    local  government  or  school district; authorities including
30    departments,  divisions,  bureaus,  boards,  commissions,  or
31    other agencies of the  foregoing  entities;  and  any  person
32    acting  within  the scope of his or her authority, express or
33    implied, on behalf of those  entities  in  dealing  with  its
34    employees.  "Public  employer"  or "employer" as used in this
                            -7-                LRB9001889OBpk
 1    Act, however, does not mean and shall not include the General
 2    Assembly of the State of Illinois and  educational  employers
 3    or  employers  as  defined  in the Illinois Educational Labor
 4    Relations Act, except with respect to a state  university  in
 5    its  employment  of  firefighters  and peace officers. County
 6    boards and county sheriffs shall be designated  as  joint  or
 7    co-employers  of  county  peace  officers appointed under the
 8    authority of a county sheriff.  Nothing  in  this  subsection
 9    (o)  shall  be  construed  to  prevent the State Board or the
10    Local Board from determining  that  employers  are  joint  or
11    co-employers.
12        (p)  "Security   employee"   means  an  employee  who  is
13    responsible for the supervision and  control  of  inmates  at
14    correctional   facilities.   The  term  also  includes  other
15    non-security  employees  in  bargaining  units   having   the
16    majority  of  employees being responsible for the supervision
17    and control of inmates at correctional facilities.
18        (q)  "Short-term  employee"  means  an  employee  who  is
19    employed for less that 2 consecutive calendar quarters during
20    a calendar year and who does not have a reasonable  assurance
21    that  he  or she will be rehired by the same employer for the
22    same service in a subsequent calendar year.
23        (r)  "Supervisor" is an employee whose principal work  is
24    substantially  different from that of his or her subordinates
25    and who has authority, in the interest of  the  employer,  to
26    hire, transfer, suspend, lay off, recall, promote, discharge,
27    direct,  reward,  or  discipline  employees,  to adjust their
28    grievances, or to effectively recommend any of those actions,
29    if the exercise of that authority is not of a merely  routine
30    or  clerical  nature,  but  requires  the  consistent  use of
31    independent  judgment.  Except   with   respect   to   police
32    employment,   the   term  "supervisor"  includes  only  those
33    individuals who devote a preponderance  of  their  employment
34    time   to   exercising   that  authority,  State  supervisors
                            -8-                LRB9001889OBpk
 1    notwithstanding.  In  addition,  in  determining  supervisory
 2    status in police employment, rank shall not be determinative.
 3    The  Board  shall  consider,  as  evidence of bargaining unit
 4    inclusion or exclusion, the common law  enforcement  policies
 5    and   relationships   between   police   officer   ranks  and
 6    certification under applicable civil service law, ordinances,
 7    personnel codes,  or  Division  2.1  of  Article  10  of  the
 8    Illinois  Municipal  Code, but these factors shall not be the
 9    sole or  predominant  factors  considered  by  the  Board  in
10    determining police supervisory status.
11        Notwithstanding   the   provisions   of   the   preceding
12    paragraph,  in determining supervisory status in fire fighter
13    employment, no fire fighter shall be excluded as a supervisor
14    who has established representation rights under Section 9  of
15    this  Act.   Further,  in  new  fire fighter units, employees
16    shall consist of fire fighters of the rank of company officer
17    and below. If a company  officer  otherwise  qualifies  as  a
18    supervisor  under the preceding paragraph, however, he or she
19    shall not be included in the fire fighter unit.  If there  is
20    no  rank  between  that  of  chief  and  the  highest company
21    officer, the employer may designate a position on each  shift
22    as  a  Shift  Commander,  and  the  persons  occupying  those
23    positions  shall  be supervisors.  All other ranks above that
24    of company officer shall be supervisors.
25        (s) (1)  "Unit" means a class of jobs or  positions  that
26    are held by employees whose collective interests may suitably
27    be   represented  by  a  labor  organization  for  collective
28    bargaining.  Except with respect to non-State  fire  fighters
29    and   paramedics   employed  by  fire  departments  and  fire
30    protection districts, non-State  peace  officers,  and  peace
31    officers in the Department of State Police, a bargaining unit
32    determined  by the Board shall not include both employees and
33    supervisors, or  supervisors  only,  except  as  provided  in
34    paragraph   (2)   of  this  subsection  (s)  and  except  for
                            -9-                LRB9001889OBpk
 1    bargaining units in existence on July 1, 1984 (the  effective
 2    date  of  this Act).  With respect to non-State fire fighters
 3    and  paramedics  employed  by  fire  departments   and   fire
 4    protection  districts,  non-State  peace  officers, and peace
 5    officers in the Department of State Police, a bargaining unit
 6    determined by the Board shall not  include  both  supervisors
 7    and  nonsupervisors,  or supervisors only, except as provided
 8    in paragraph (2)  of  this  subsection  (s)  and  except  for
 9    bargaining  units  in  existence  on  January  1,  1986  (the
10    effective date of this amendatory Act of 1985).  A bargaining
11    unit  determined by the Board to contain peace officers shall
12    contain  no  employees  other  than  peace  officers   unless
13    otherwise   agreed   to   by   the  employer  and  the  labor
14    organization     or     labor     organizations     involved.
15    Notwithstanding any other provision of this Act, a bargaining
16    unit, including  a  historical  bargaining  unit,  containing
17    sworn  peace  officers of the Department of Natural Resources
18    (formerly designated the Department  of  Conservation)  shall
19    contain  no  employees  other  than such sworn peace officers
20    upon the effective date of this amendatory  Act  of  1990  or
21    upon   the  expiration  date  of  any  collective  bargaining
22    agreement  in  effect  upon  the  effective  date   of   this
23    amendatory  Act  of  1990  covering  both  such  sworn  peace
24    officers and other employees.
25        (2)  Notwithstanding  the  exclusion  of supervisors from
26    bargaining  units  as  provided  in  paragraph  (1)  of  this
27    subsection (s), a public employer may  agree  to  permit  its
28    supervisory  employees  to  form  bargaining  units  and  may
29    bargain with those units.  This Act shall apply if the public
30    employer chooses to bargain under this subsection.
31    (Source: P.A.  89-108,  eff.  7-7-95;  89-409, eff. 11-15-95;
32    89-445, eff. 2-7-96; 89-626, eff. 8-9-96; revised 10-3-96.)
33        (Text of Section after amendment by P.A. 89-685)
34        Sec. 3.  Definitions.  As used in this  Act,  unless  the
                            -10-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1    context otherwise requires:
 2        (a)  "Board"   or  "Governing  Board"  means  either  the
 3    Illinois State Labor Relations Board or  the  Illinois  Local
 4    Labor Relations Board.
 5        (b)  "Collective  bargaining" means bargaining over terms
 6    and conditions of employment,  including  hours,  wages,  and
 7    other  conditions of employment, as detailed in Section 7 and
 8    which are not excluded by Section 4.
 9        (c)  "Confidential employee" means an  employee  who,  in
10    the  regular course of his or her duties, assists and acts in
11    a confidential capacity to persons who formulate,  determine,
12    and  effectuate  management  policies  with  regard  to labor
13    relations or who, in the regular course of his or her duties,
14    has  authorized  access  to  information  relating   to   the
15    effectuation   or   review   of   the  employer's  collective
16    bargaining policies.
17        (d)  "Craft employees" means skilled  journeymen,  crafts
18    persons, and their apprentices and helpers.
19        (e)  "Essential  services  employees"  means those public
20    employees  performing  functions  so   essential   that   the
21    interruption or termination of the function will constitute a
22    clear  and  present  danger  to  the health and safety of the
23    persons in the affected community.
24        (f)  "Exclusive representative", except with  respect  to
25    non-State  fire  fighters  and  paramedics  employed  by fire
26    departments and fire protection  districts,  non-State  peace
27    officers,  and  peace  officers  in  the  Department of State
28    Police, means  the  labor  organization  that  has  been  (i)
29    designated  by  the Board as the representative of a majority
30    of public employees in  an  appropriate  bargaining  unit  in
31    accordance  with  the  procedures contained in this Act, (ii)
32    historically recognized by  the  State  of  Illinois  or  any
33    political  subdivision  of the State before July 1, 1984 (the
34    effective date of this Act) as the  exclusive  representative
                            -11-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1    of  the employees in an appropriate bargaining unit, or (iii)
 2    after  July  1,  1984  (the  effective  date  of  this   Act)
 3    recognized  by  an  employer upon evidence, acceptable to the
 4    Board, that the labor organization has been designated as the
 5    exclusive representative by a majority of the employees in an
 6    appropriate bargaining unit.
 7        With respect to non-State fire  fighters  and  paramedics
 8    employed  by  fire departments and fire protection districts,
 9    non-State  peace  officers,  and  peace   officers   in   the
10    Department  of State Police, "exclusive representative" means
11    the labor organization that has been (i)  designated  by  the
12    Board  as  the representative of a majority of peace officers
13    or  fire  fighters  in  an  appropriate  bargaining  unit  in
14    accordance with the procedures contained in  this  Act,  (ii)
15    historically  recognized  by  the  State  of  Illinois or any
16    political subdivision of the State  before  January  1,  1986
17    (the  effective  date  of this amendatory Act of 1985) as the
18    exclusive representative by a majority of the peace  officers
19    or  fire fighters in an appropriate bargaining unit, or (iii)
20    after January 1, 1986 (the effective date of this  amendatory
21    Act  of  1985)  recognized  by  an  employer  upon  evidence,
22    acceptable to the Board, that the labor organization has been
23    designated  as  the exclusive representative by a majority of
24    the  peace  officers  or  fire  fighters  in  an  appropriate
25    bargaining unit.
26        (g)  "Fair share agreement" means  an  agreement  between
27    the  employer and an employee organization under which all or
28    any of the employees in  a  collective  bargaining  unit  are
29    required to pay their proportionate share of the costs of the
30    collective  bargaining  process, contract administration, and
31    pursuing matters affecting wages, hours, and other conditions
32    of employment, but not to exceed the amount of dues uniformly
33    required of members. The amount certified  by  the  exclusive
34    representative  shall  not include any fees for contributions
                            -12-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1    related to the election  or  support  of  any  candidate  for
 2    political  office.  Nothing  in  this  subsection  (g)  shall
 3    preclude   an   employee   from  making  voluntary  political
 4    contributions in conjunction  with  his  or  her  fair  share
 5    payment.
 6        (g-1)  "Fire fighter" means, for the purposes of this Act
 7    only,  any person who has been or is hereafter appointed to a
 8    fire department or fire protection district or employed by  a
 9    state  university  and  sworn or commissioned to perform fire
10    fighter duties or paramedic duties, except that the following
11    persons are not included: part-time fire fighters, auxiliary,
12    reserve or voluntary fire fighters,  including  paid  on-call
13    fire  fighters,  clerks  and  dispatchers  or  other civilian
14    employees of a fire department or  fire  protection  district
15    who  are  not  routinely  expected  to  perform  fire fighter
16    duties, or elected officials.
17        (g-2)  "General Assembly of the State of Illinois"  means
18    the  legislative  branch  of  the  government of the State of
19    Illinois,  as  provided  for  under   Article   IV   of   the
20    Constitution  of  the  State of Illinois, and includes but is
21    not limited to the House of Representatives, the Senate,  the
22    Speaker  of the House of Representatives, the Minority Leader
23    of the House of Representatives, the President of the Senate,
24    the Minority Leader of the Senate,  the  Joint  Committee  on
25    Legislative  Support  Services  and  any  legislative support
26    services  agency  listed  in   the   Legislative   Commission
27    Reorganization Act of 1984.
28        (h)  "Governing  body"  means,  in the case of the State,
29    the  State  Labor  Relations  Board,  the  Director  of   the
30    Department  of  Central Management Services, and the Director
31    of the Department of Labor; the county board in the case of a
32    county;  the  corporate  authorities  in  the   case   of   a
33    municipality;  and the appropriate body authorized to provide
34    for expenditures of its funds in the case of any  other  unit
                            -13-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1    of government.
 2        (i)  "Labor organization" means any organization in which
 3    public employees participate and that exists for the purpose,
 4    in  whole  or  in  part,  of  dealing  with a public employer
 5    concerning wages, hours, and other terms  and  conditions  of
 6    employment, including the settlement of grievances.
 7        (j)  "Managerial  employee"  means  an  individual who is
 8    engaged predominantly in executive and  management  functions
 9    and  is  charged  with  the  responsibility  of directing the
10    effectuation of management policies and practices.
11        (k)  "Peace officer" means, for the purposes of this  Act
12    only, any persons who have been or are hereafter appointed to
13    a   police   force,   department,  or  agency  and  sworn  or
14    commissioned  to  perform  police  duties,  except  that  the
15    following  persons  are  not   included:   part-time   police
16    officers,   special  police  officers,  auxiliary  police  as
17    defined by Section 3.1-30-20 of the Illinois Municipal  Code,
18    night watchmen, "merchant police", court security officers as
19    defined  by  Section 3-6012.1 of the Counties Code, temporary
20    employees, traffic guards or wardens, civilian parking  meter
21    and   parking   facilities  personnel  or  other  individuals
22    specially appointed to aid  or  direct  traffic  at  or  near
23    schools  or  public  functions  or to aid in civil defense or
24    disaster,  parking  enforcement   employees   who   are   not
25    commissioned  as peace officers and who are not armed and who
26    are not routinely expected to  effect  arrests,  parking  lot
27    attendants,   clerks   and   dispatchers  or  other  civilian
28    employees of  a  police  department  who  are  not  routinely
29    expected to effect arrests, or elected officials.
30        (l)  "Person"  includes  one  or  more individuals, labor
31    organizations, public employees, associations,  corporations,
32    legal  representatives,  trustees,  trustees  in  bankruptcy,
33    receivers,   or  the  State  of  Illinois  or  any  political
34    subdivision of the State or  governing  body,  but  does  not
                            -14-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1    include  the General Assembly of the State of Illinois or any
 2    individual employed by the General Assembly of the  State  of
 3    Illinois  or  the  Illinois  Supreme  Court or any individual
 4    employed by the Illinois Supreme Court.
 5        (m)  "Professional employee" means any  employee  engaged
 6    in  work  predominantly  intellectual and varied in character
 7    rather than routine mental, manual,  mechanical  or  physical
 8    work;  involving  the  consistent  exercise of discretion and
 9    adjustment in its performance; of such a character  that  the
10    output   produced   or  the  result  accomplished  cannot  be
11    standardized in relation to  a  given  period  of  time;  and
12    requiring  advanced  knowledge  in  a  field  of  science  or
13    learning  customarily  acquired  by  a  prolonged  course  of
14    specialized   intellectual   instruction   and  study  in  an
15    institution  of   higher   learning   or   a   hospital,   as
16    distinguished  from  a  general  academic  education  or from
17    apprenticeship or from training in the performance of routine
18    mental, manual, or physical processes; or  any  employee  who
19    has   completed   the  courses  of  specialized  intellectual
20    instruction and study prescribed in this subsection  (m)  and
21    is  performing  related  work  under  the  supervision  of  a
22    professional  person  to  qualify  to  become  a professional
23    employee as defined in this subsection (m).
24        (n)  "Public employee" or "employee", for the purposes of
25    this Act, means any individual employed by a public employer,
26    including interns and  residents  at  public  hospitals,  but
27    excluding  all  of  the  following:  employees of the General
28    Assembly of the State of Illinois; employees of the  Illinois
29    Supreme  Court;  elected  officials;  executive  heads  of  a
30    department;  members  of  boards or commissions; employees of
31    any  agency,  board  or  commission  created  by  this   Act;
32    employees  appointed  to  State  positions  of a temporary or
33    emergency nature;  all  employees  of  school  districts  and
34    higher  education  institutions except firefighters and peace
                            -15-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1    officers  employed  by   a   state   university;   managerial
 2    employees;   short-term  employees;  confidential  employees;
 3    independent contractors; and supervisors except  as  provided
 4    in this Act.
 5        Notwithstanding  Section  9, subsection (c), or any other
 6    provisions of this Act, all peace officers above the rank  of
 7    captain   in   municipalities   with   more   than  1,000,000
 8    inhabitants shall be excluded from this Act.
 9        (o)  "Public employer" or "employer" means the  State  of
10    Illinois;  any  political  subdivision  of the State, unit of
11    local government or school  district;  authorities  including
12    departments,  divisions,  bureaus,  boards,  commissions,  or
13    other  agencies  of  the  foregoing  entities; and any person
14    acting within the scope of his or her authority,  express  or
15    implied,  on  behalf  of  those  entities in dealing with its
16    employees. "Public employer" or "employer" as  used  in  this
17    Act, however, does not mean and shall not include the General
18    Assembly  of  the  State  of  Illinois,  the Illinois Supreme
19    Court, and educational employers or employers as  defined  in
20    the  Illinois  Educational  Labor  Relations Act, except with
21    respect  to  a  state  university  in   its   employment   of
22    firefighters  and  peace  officers.  County boards and county
23    sheriffs shall be designated  as  joint  or  co-employers  of
24    county  peace  officers  appointed  under  the authority of a
25    county sheriff.  Nothing in  this  subsection  (o)  shall  be
26    construed  to prevent the State Board or the Local Board from
27    determining that employers are joint or co-employers.
28        (p)  "Security  employee"  means  an  employee   who   is
29    responsible  for  the  supervision  and control of inmates at
30    correctional  facilities.   The  term  also  includes   other
31    non-security   employees   in  bargaining  units  having  the
32    majority of employees being responsible for  the  supervision
33    and control of inmates at correctional facilities.
34        (q)  "Short-term  employee"  means  an  employee  who  is
                            -16-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1    employed for less that 2 consecutive calendar quarters during
 2    a  calendar year and who does not have a reasonable assurance
 3    that he or she will be rehired by the same employer  for  the
 4    same service in a subsequent calendar year.
 5        (r)  "Supervisor"  is an employee whose principal work is
 6    substantially different from that of his or her  subordinates
 7    and  who  has  authority, in the interest of the employer, to
 8    hire, transfer, suspend, lay off, recall, promote, discharge,
 9    direct, reward, or  discipline  employees,  to  adjust  their
10    grievances, or to effectively recommend any of those actions,
11    if  the exercise of that authority is not of a merely routine
12    or clerical  nature,  but  requires  the  consistent  use  of
13    independent   judgment.   Except   with   respect  to  police
14    employment,  the  term  "supervisor"  includes   only   those
15    individuals  who  devote  a preponderance of their employment
16    time  to  exercising  that   authority,   State   supervisors
17    notwithstanding.   In  addition,  in  determining supervisory
18    status in police employment, rank shall not be determinative.
19    The Board shall consider,  as  evidence  of  bargaining  unit
20    inclusion  or  exclusion, the common law enforcement policies
21    and  relationships   between   police   officer   ranks   and
22    certification under applicable civil service law, ordinances,
23    personnel  codes,  or  Division  2.1  of  Article  10  of the
24    Illinois Municipal Code, but these factors shall not  be  the
25    sole  or  predominant  factors  considered  by  the  Board in
26    determining police supervisory status.
27        Notwithstanding   the   provisions   of   the   preceding
28    paragraph, in determining supervisory status in fire  fighter
29    employment, no fire fighter shall be excluded as a supervisor
30    who  has established representation rights under Section 9 of
31    this Act.  Further, in  new  fire  fighter  units,  employees
32    shall consist of fire fighters of the rank of company officer
33    and  below.  If  a  company  officer otherwise qualifies as a
34    supervisor under the preceding paragraph, however, he or  she
                            -17-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1    shall  not be included in the fire fighter unit.  If there is
 2    no rank  between  that  of  chief  and  the  highest  company
 3    officer,  the employer may designate a position on each shift
 4    as  a  Shift  Commander,  and  the  persons  occupying  those
 5    positions shall be supervisors.  All other ranks  above  that
 6    of company officer shall be supervisors.
 7        (s) (1)  "Unit"  means  a class of jobs or positions that
 8    are held by employees whose collective interests may suitably
 9    be  represented  by  a  labor  organization  for   collective
10    bargaining.   Except  with respect to non-State fire fighters
11    and  paramedics  employed  by  fire  departments   and   fire
12    protection  districts,  non-State  peace  officers, and peace
13    officers in the Department of State Police, a bargaining unit
14    determined by the Board shall not include both employees  and
15    supervisors,  or  supervisors  only,  except  as  provided in
16    paragraph  (2)  of  this  subsection  (s)  and   except   for
17    bargaining  units in existence on July 1, 1984 (the effective
18    date of this Act).  With respect to non-State  fire  fighters
19    and   paramedics   employed  by  fire  departments  and  fire
20    protection districts, non-State  peace  officers,  and  peace
21    officers in the Department of State Police, a bargaining unit
22    determined  by  the  Board shall not include both supervisors
23    and nonsupervisors, or supervisors only, except  as  provided
24    in  paragraph  (2)  of  this  subsection  (s)  and except for
25    bargaining  units  in  existence  on  January  1,  1986  (the
26    effective date of this amendatory Act of 1985).  A bargaining
27    unit determined by the Board to contain peace officers  shall
28    contain   no  employees  other  than  peace  officers  unless
29    otherwise  agreed  to  by  the   employer   and   the   labor
30    organization     or     labor     organizations     involved.
31    Notwithstanding any other provision of this Act, a bargaining
32    unit,  including  a  historical  bargaining  unit, containing
33    sworn peace officers of the Department of  Natural  Resources
34    (formerly  designated  the  Department of Conservation) shall
                            -18-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1    contain no employees other than  such  sworn  peace  officers
 2    upon  the  effective  date  of this amendatory Act of 1990 or
 3    upon  the  expiration  date  of  any  collective   bargaining
 4    agreement   in   effect  upon  the  effective  date  of  this
 5    amendatory  Act  of  1990  covering  both  such  sworn  peace
 6    officers and other employees.
 7        (2)  Notwithstanding the exclusion  of  supervisors  from
 8    bargaining  units  as  provided  in  paragraph  (1)  of  this
 9    subsection  (s),  a  public  employer may agree to permit its
10    supervisory  employees  to  form  bargaining  units  and  may
11    bargain with those units.  This Act shall apply if the public
12    employer chooses to bargain under this subsection.
13    (Source: P.A. 89-108, eff.  7-7-95;  89-409,  eff.  11-15-95;
14    89-445,  eff.  2-7-96;  89-626,  eff.  8-9-96;  89-685,  eff.
15    6-1-97; revised 1-14-97.)
16        (5 ILCS 315/5) (from Ch. 48, par. 1605)
17        Sec.  5.   Illinois Labor Relations Boards.  (a) There is
18    created the Illinois  State  Labor  Relations  Board  ("State
19    Board")   which   shall  have  jurisdiction  over  collective
20    bargaining matters between  employee  organizations  and  the
21    State  of  Illinois,  excluding  the  General Assembly of the
22    State of Illinois and the  Illinois  Supreme  Court,  between
23    employee  organizations  and  units  of  local government and
24    school districts with a population not in excess of 1 million
25    persons, and between employee organizations and the  Regional
26    Transportation Authority.  The State Board shall consist of 3
27    members  appointed  by  the  Governor,  with  the  advice and
28    consent of the Senate. The  Governor  shall  appoint  to  the
29    State Board only persons who have had a minimum of 5 years of
30    experience directly related to labor and employment relations
31    in  representing public employers, private employers or labor
32    organizations; or teaching labor or employment relations;  or
33    administering  executive orders or  regulations applicable to
                            -19-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1    labor or employment relations.  At the time  of  his  or  her
 2    appointment,  each  member  of  the  State  Board shall be an
 3    Illinois resident.  The Governor shall designate  one  member
 4    to  serve  as  the Chairman of the State Board.  The Chairman
 5    shall initially be appointed for a term  of  two  years.  The
 6    second  member  shall  serve  for  a term of 3 years, and the
 7    third member shall serve a term of 4 years.  Each  subsequent
 8    member  shall  be  appointed  for  a  term  of 4 years.  Upon
 9    expiration of the term of office of  any  appointive  member,
10    that  member  shall continue to serve until a successor shall
11    be appointed  and  qualified.    In  case  of  a  vacancy,  a
12    successor  shall  be  appointed  to  serve  for the unexpired
13    portion of the term.  The terms of members shall commence  on
14    the  4th  Monday  in  January  of the year they are appointed
15    except that if the Senate is not in session at the  time  the
16    initial  appointments  are  made,  the  Governor  shall  make
17    temporary  appointments  in  the  same  manner successors are
18    appointed to fill vacancies.  A temporary  appointment  shall
19    remain  in  effect  no longer than 20 calendar days after the
20    commencement of the next Senate session.
21        (b)  There is created the Illinois Local Labor  Relations
22    Board  ("Local  Board")  which  shall  have jurisdiction over
23    collective  bargaining  agreement  matters  between  employee
24    organizations and units of local government with a population
25    in excess of 1 million persons, but  excluding  the  Regional
26    Transportation  Authority.   The Local Board shall consist of
27    the Chairman of the State Board and two  additional  members,
28    one  appointed  by  the  Mayor of the City of Chicago and one
29    appointed by the  President  of  the  Cook  County  Board  of
30    Commissioners.  Appointees to the Local Board must have had a
31    minimum  of  5  years of experience directly related to labor
32    and employment relations in  representing  public  employers,
33    private  employers  or labor organizations; or teaching labor
34    or employment relations; or administering executive orders or
                            -20-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1    regulations applicable to labor or employment relations. Each
 2    member of the Local Board shall be an  Illinois  resident  at
 3    the  time  of  his  or  her appointment.  The Chairman of the
 4    State Board shall serve as the Chairman of the  Local  Board.
 5    The  member  initially appointed by the President of the Cook
 6    County Board shall serve for a term of 3 years and the member
 7    appointed by the Mayor of the City of Chicago shall serve for
 8    a term of 4 years.  Each subsequent member shall be appointed
 9    for a term of 4 years.  Upon expiration of the term of office
10    of any appointive member, the member shall continue to  serve
11    until  a  successor shall be appointed and qualified.  In the
12    case of a vacancy, a successor  shall  be  appointed  by  the
13    applicable  appointive  authority  to serve for the unexpired
14    portion of the term.  The terms of members shall commence  on
15    the 4th Monday in January of the year they are appointed.
16        (c)  Two  members  of  each  governing board shall at all
17    times constitute a quorum.  A vacancy on  a  governing  board
18    does  not  impair  the  right  of  the 2 remaining members to
19    exercise all of the powers of  that  board.   Each  governing
20    board  shall adopt an official seal which shall be judicially
21    noticed.  The salary of the Chairman  shall  be  $50,000  per
22    year,  or  as set by the Compensation Review Board, whichever
23    is greater, and that of the other members of the State  Board
24    and  the  Local Board shall be $45,000 per year, or as set by
25    the Compensation Review Board, whichever is greater.
26        (d)  No member shall hold any other public office  or  be
27    employed as a labor or management representative by the State
28    or   any  political  subdivision  of  the  State  or  of  any
29    department or agency thereof, or actively represent or act on
30    behalf of an employer  or  an  employee  organization  or  an
31    employer in labor relations matters.  Any member of the State
32    Board  may  be  removed  from  office  by  the  Governor  for
33    inefficiency,  neglect  of duty, misconduct or malfeasance in
34    office, and for no other cause,  and  only  upon  notice  and
                            -21-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1    hearing.   Any  member of the Local Board may be removed from
 2    office   by   the   applicable   appointive   authority   for
 3    inefficiency, neglect of duty, misconduct or  malfeasance  in
 4    office,  and  for  no  other  cause, and only upon notice and
 5    hearing.
 6        (e)  Each governing board  at  the  end  of  every  State
 7    fiscal  year  shall  make a report in writing to the Governor
 8    and the General Assembly, stating in detail the work  it  has
 9    done in hearing and deciding cases and otherwise.
10        (f)  In  order to accomplish the objectives and carry out
11    the duties prescribed by this Act, the  governing  boards  or
12    their  authorized  designees  may hold elections to determine
13    whether a labor organization has majority status; investigate
14    and attempt to resolve or  settle  charges  of  unfair  labor
15    practices; hold hearings in order to carry out its functions;
16    develop   and   effectuate   appropriate  impasse  resolution
17    procedures for purposes of resolving labor disputes;  require
18    the appearance of witnesses and the production of evidence on
19    any   matter   under   inquiry;   and  administer  oaths  and
20    affirmations.  The governing boards shall sign and report  in
21    full an opinion in every case which they decide.
22        (g)  Each  governing  board  may  appoint  or  employ  an
23    executive  director,  attorneys, hearing officers, mediators,
24    fact-finders, arbitrators, and such other employees  as  they
25    deem  necessary  to  perform  their functions.  The governing
26    boards shall prescribe the duties and qualifications of  such
27    persons  appointed  and, subject to the annual appropriation,
28    fix their  compensation  and  provide  for  reimbursement  of
29    actual  and necessary expenses incurred in the performance of
30    their duties.
31        (h)  Each  governing   board   shall   exercise   general
32    supervision  over all attorneys which it employs and over the
33    other persons employed to provide necessary support  services
34    for  such  attorneys.   The governing boards shall have final
                            -22-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1    authority in respect to complaints brought pursuant  to  this
 2    Act.
 3        (i)  The following rules and regulations shall be adopted
 4    by  the  governing  boards  meeting  in  joint  session:  (1)
 5    procedural rules and regulations which shall govern all Board
 6    proceedings;   (2)   procedures  for  election  of  exclusive
 7    bargaining representatives pursuant to Section 9, except  for
 8    the   determination  of  appropriate  bargaining  units;  (3)
 9    appointment of counsel pursuant to  subsection  (k)  of  this
10    Section.
11        (j)  Rules  and  regulations  may  be adopted, amended or
12    rescinded only upon a vote of four of the five members of the
13    State Board and the Local Board  meeting  in  joint  session.
14    The   adoption,   amendment   or   rescission  of  rules  and
15    regulations shall be in conformity with the  requirements  of
16    the Illinois Administrative Procedure Act.
17        (k)  The   Governing   Boards   in  joint  session  shall
18    promulgate  rules   and   regulations   providing   for   the
19    appointment  of  attorneys  or other Board representatives to
20    represent persons in unfair labor practice proceedings before
21    a governing board.   The  regulations  governing  appointment
22    shall  require  the  applicant to demonstrate an inability to
23    pay for  or  inability  to  otherwise  provide  for  adequate
24    representation  before  a  governing  board.  Such rules must
25    also provide: (1) that an attorney may not  be  appointed  in
26    cases  which,  in the opinion of a Board, are clearly without
27    merit; (2) the stage of the unfair labor proceeding at  which
28    counsel  will  be  appointed; and (3) the circumstances under
29    which a client will be allowed to select counsel.
30        (1)  The governing boards in joint session may promulgate
31    rules and regulations  which  allow  parties  in  proceedings
32    before  a governing board to be represented by counsel or any
33    other representative of the party's choice.
34        (m)  The Chairman of the governing boards shall serve  as
                            -23-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1    Chairman   of  a  joint  session  of  the  governing  boards.
 2    Attendance of at least one member from each governing  board,
 3    in  addition  to the Chairman, shall constitute a quorum at a
 4    joint session.  The governing  boards  shall  meet  in  joint
 5    session  within 60 days of the effective date of this Act and
 6    at least annually thereafter.
 7    (Source: P.A. 85-1440.)
 8        (5 ILCS 315/6) (from Ch. 48, par. 1606)
 9        Sec. 6.  Right  to  organize  and  bargain  collectively;
10    exclusive  representation;  and  fair share arrangements. (a)
11    Employees of the State and any political subdivision  of  the
12    State,  excluding  employees  of  the General Assembly of the
13    State of Illinois  and  employees  of  the  Illinois  Supreme
14    Court,  have, and are protected in the exercise of, the right
15    of self-organization, and may form, join or assist any  labor
16    organization, to bargain collectively through representatives
17    of  their own choosing on questions of wages, hours and other
18    conditions of employment, not excluded by Section 4  of  this
19    Act,   and  to  engage  in  other  concerted  activities  not
20    otherwise prohibited by law for the  purposes  of  collective
21    bargaining  or  other  mutual  aid  or  protection, free from
22    interference, restraint or coercion.   Employees  also  have,
23    and  are  protected  in the exercise of, the right to refrain
24    from  participating  in  any   such   concerted   activities.
25    Employees  may be required, pursuant to the terms of a lawful
26    fair share agreement, to pay  a  fee  which  shall  be  their
27    proportionate share of the costs of the collective bargaining
28    process,   contract   administration   and  pursuing  matters
29    affecting wages, hours and other conditions of employment  as
30    defined in Section 3(g).
31        (b)  Nothing  in  this  Act  prevents  an  employee  from
32    presenting  a  grievance  to  the  employer  and  having  the
33    grievance  heard  and  settled without the intervention of an
                            -24-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1    employee organization; provided that the exclusive bargaining
 2    representative is afforded the opportunity to be  present  at
 3    such  conference  and  that  any settlement made shall not be
 4    inconsistent with  the  terms  of  any  agreement  in  effect
 5    between   the   employer   and   the   exclusive   bargaining
 6    representative.
 7        (c)  A  labor organization designated by the Board as the
 8    representative  of the majority of  public  employees  in  an
 9    appropriate  unit in accordance with the procedures herein or
10    recognized by a public employer as the representative of  the
11    majority  of  public  employees in an appropriate unit is the
12    exclusive representative for the employees of such  unit  for
13    the purpose of collective bargaining with respect to rates of
14    pay,  wages,  hours  and  other  conditions of employment not
15    excluded by Section 4 of this Act.
16        (d)  Labor organizations recognized by a public  employer
17    as   the   exclusive   representative  or  so  designated  in
18    accordance with the provisions of this  Act  are  responsible
19    for representing the interests of all public employees in the
20    unit.    Nothing  herein  shall  be  construed  to  limit  an
21    exclusive representative's right to exercise  its  discretion
22    to  refuse  to  process  grievances  of  employees  that  are
23    unmeritorious.
24        (e)  When  a  collective  bargaining agreement is entered
25    into with an exclusive representative, it may include in  the
26    agreement  a  provision  requiring  employees  covered by the
27    agreement who are not members  of  the  organization  to  pay
28    their  proportionate  share  of  the  costs of the collective
29    bargaining  process,  contract  administration  and  pursuing
30    matters affecting wages, hours and conditions of  employment,
31    as  defined in Section 3 (g), but not to exceed the amount of
32    dues uniformly required of members.  The  organization  shall
33    certify   to   the  employer  the  amount  constituting  each
34    nonmember employee's  proportionate  share  which  shall  not
                            -25-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1    exceed dues uniformly required of members.  In such case, the
 2    proportionate share payment in this Section shall be deducted
 3    by  the employer from the earnings of the nonmember employees
 4    and paid to the employee organization.
 5        (f)  Only  the  exclusive  representative  may  negotiate
 6    provisions in a collective bargaining agreement providing for
 7    the payroll deduction of labor organization dues, fair  share
 8    payment,  initiation fees and assessments. Except as provided
 9    in subsection (e) of this Section, any such deductions  shall
10    only  be  made  upon an employee's written authorization, and
11    continued until revoked in writing  in  the  same  manner  or
12    until  the  termination  date  of  an  applicable  collective
13    bargaining  agreement.  Such  payments  shall  be paid to the
14    exclusive representative.
15        (g)  Agreements containing a fair  share  agreement  must
16    safeguard the right of nonassociation of employees based upon
17    bona  fide  religious  tenets  or  teachings  of  a church or
18    religious body of which such employees  are  members.    Such
19    employees  may  be  required  to pay an amount equal to their
20    fair share, determined under a lawful fair  share  agreement,
21    to  a  nonreligious  charitable  organization mutually agreed
22    upon by the employees affected and the  exclusive  bargaining
23    representative  to  which  such employees would otherwise pay
24    such  service  fee.   If  the  affected  employees  and   the
25    bargaining representative are unable to reach an agreement on
26    the  matter,  the  Board  may  establish  an approved list of
27    charitable organizations to which such payments may be made.
28    (Source: P.A. 85-1032.)
29        (10 ILCS 5/7-10.1 rep.)
30        Section 10.  The Election Code is  amended  by  repealing
31    Section 7-10.1, which requires a candidate or nominee to sign
32    a  loyalty  oath  and which was held to violate the First and
33    Fourteenth Amendments to the U.S. Constitution by the  United
                            -26-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1    States  District Court for the Northern District of Illinois,
 2    Eastern Division, in Communist Party of Illinois v.  Ogilvie,
 3    357 F. Supp. 105 (1972).
 4        Section  15.   The  Election  Code is amended by changing
 5    Sections   7-60,   7-60.1,   8-8,   and   10-5   to    remove
 6    cross-references to Section 7-10.1 of the Election Code which
 7    is repealed in the preceding Section, the amended Sections to
 8    read as follows:
 9        (10 ILCS 5/7-60) (from Ch. 46, par. 7-60)
10        Sec.  7-60.  Not less than 67 days before the date of the
11    general election, the State Board of Elections shall  certify
12    to  the county clerks the names of each of the candidates who
13    have been nominated as shown by the proclamation of the State
14    Board of Elections as a canvassing board  or  who  have  been
15    nominated  to  fill  a  vacancy  in nomination and direct the
16    election authority to place upon the official ballot for  the
17    general  election  the  names  of such candidates in the same
18    manner and in the same order as shown upon the certification,
19    except as otherwise provided in this Section.
20        Not less than 61 days before  the  date  of  the  general
21    election,  each  county clerk shall certify the names of each
22    of the candidates for county offices who have been  nominated
23    as  shown  by the proclamation of the county canvassing board
24    or who have been nominated to fill a  vacancy  in  nomination
25    and  declare  that  the  names  of  such  candidates  for the
26    respective offices shall be placed upon the  official  ballot
27    for  the  general election in the same manner and in the same
28    order as shown upon the certification,  except  as  otherwise
29    provided  by  this  Section.  Each county clerk shall place a
30    copy of the certification on file in his or her office and at
31    the same time issue to the State Board of Elections a copy of
32    such certification.  In addition, each county clerk in  whose
                            -27-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1    county  there is a board of election commissioners shall, not
 2    less than 61 days before the date of  the  general  election,
 3    issue to such board a copy of the certification that has been
 4    filed  in  the county clerk's office, together with a copy of
 5    the certification that has been issued to the  clerk  by  the
 6    State  Board  of  Elections,  with directions to the board of
 7    election commissioners to place upon the official ballot  for
 8    the  general election in that election jurisdiction the names
 9    of all candidates that are listed on such certifications,  in
10    the  same  manner  and  in  the same order as shown upon such
11    certifications, except as otherwise provided in this Section.
12        Whenever there are two or more persons nominated  by  the
13    same  political party for multiple offices for any board, the
14    name of the candidate of such  party  receiving  the  highest
15    number  of  votes  in the primary election as a candidate for
16    such office, as shown by the official election returns of the
17    primary, shall be certified first  under  the  name  of  such
18    offices,  and  the  names of the remaining candidates of such
19    party for such offices shall  follow  in  the  order  of  the
20    number  of votes received by them respectively at the primary
21    election as shown by the official election results.
22        No  person  who  is  shown  by  the  canvassing   board's
23    proclamation  to  have  been  nominated  at  the primary as a
24    write-in candidate shall  have  his  or  her  name  certified
25    unless  such  person  shall  have  filed  with the certifying
26    office or board within 10 days after the  canvassing  board's
27    proclamation  a  statement  of  candidacy pursuant to Section
28    7-10 and a statement pursuant to Section 7-10.1.
29        Each county clerk and  board  of  election  commissioners
30    shall  determine  by  a  fair  and impartial method of random
31    selection the order of  placement  of  established  political
32    party  candidates  for  the  general  election  ballot.  Such
33    determination shall be made  within  30  days  following  the
34    canvass  and  proclamation  of  the  results  of  the general
                            -28-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1    primary in the  office  of  the  county  clerk  or  board  of
 2    election  commissioners  and  shall  be  open  to the public.
 3    Seven days written notice of the time and place of conducting
 4    such random selection shall be given, by each  such  election
 5    authority,   to  the  County  Chairman  of  each  established
 6    political party, and to each organization of citizens  within
 7    the  election  jurisdiction  which  was  entitled, under this
 8    Article, at the next preceding election, to have pollwatchers
 9    present on the day  of  election.   Each  election  authority
10    shall  post  in  a conspicuous, open and public place, at the
11    entrance of the election authority office, notice of the time
12    and place of such lottery.   However,  a  board  of  election
13    commissioners  may elect to place established political party
14    candidates on the general election ballot in the  same  order
15    determined  by  the  county  clerk of the county in which the
16    city under the jurisdiction of such board is located.
17        Each certification shall indicate, where applicable,  the
18    following:
19        (1)  The  political  party  affiliation of the candidates
20    for the respective offices;
21        (2)  If there is to be more than one candidate elected to
22    an office from the State, political subdivision or district;
23        (3)  If the voter has the right to vote for more than one
24    candidate for an office;
25        (4)  The term of office, if a vacancy is to be filled for
26    less than a full term or if the offices to  be  filled  in  a
27    political subdivision are for different terms.
28        The  State Board of Elections or the county clerk, as the
29    case may be, shall issue an amended certification whenever it
30    is discovered that the original certification is in error.
31    (Source: P.A. 86-867; 86-875; 86-1028.)
32        (10 ILCS 5/7-60.1) (from Ch. 46, par. 7-60.1)
33        Sec. 7-60.1.  Certification of Candidates -  Consolidated
                            -29-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1    Election.    Each  local  election  official  of  a political
 2    subdivision in which  candidates  for  the  respective  local
 3    offices  are  nominated at the consolidated primary shall, no
 4    later than 5 days following the canvass and  proclamation  of
 5    the  results  of  the  consolidated  primary, certify to each
 6    election authority whose duty it is to prepare  the  official
 7    ballot  for  the  consolidated  election  in  that  political
 8    subdivision the names of each of the candidates who have been
 9    nominated  as  shown  by  the proclamation of the appropriate
10    canvassing board or who have been nominated to fill a vacancy
11    in nomination and direct the election authority to place upon
12    the official ballot for the consolidated election  the  names
13    of  such  candidates in the same manner and in the same order
14    as shown upon the certification, except as otherwise provided
15    by this Section.
16        Whenever there are two or more persons nominated  by  the
17    same  political party for multiple offices for any board, the
18    name of the candidate of such  party  receiving  the  highest
19    number  of  votes  in  the consolidated primary election as a
20    candidate for such consolidated primary, shall  be  certified
21    first  under  the  name  of such office, and the names of the
22    remaining candidates of such party  for  such  offices  shall
23    follow  in  the order of the number of votes received by them
24    respectively at the consolidated primary election as shown by
25    the official election results.
26        No  person  who  is  shown  by  the  canvassing   board's
27    proclamation  to  have  been  nominated  at  the consolidated
28    primary as a write-in candidate shall have his  or  her  name
29    certified  unless  such  person  shall  have  filed  with the
30    certifying office or board within 5 days after the canvassing
31    board's proclamation a statement  of  candidacy  pursuant  to
32    Section 7-10 and a statement pursuant to Section 7-10.1.
33        Each  board  of  election  commissioners of the cities in
34    which established political party candidates for city offices
                            -30-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1    are nominated at the consolidated primary shall determine  by
 2    a  fair and impartial method of random selection the order of
 3    placement of the established political party  candidates  for
 4    the  consolidated  ballot.   Such determination shall be made
 5    within 5 days following the canvass and proclamation  of  the
 6    results  of the consolidated primary and shall be open to the
 7    public.  Three days written notice of the time and  place  of
 8    conducting such random selection shall be given, by each such
 9    election   authority,   to   the   County  Chairman  of  each
10    established political party,  and  to  each  organization  of
11    citizens within the election jurisdiction which was entitled,
12    under  this  Article, at the next preceding election, to have
13    pollwatchers present on the day of election.   Each  election
14    authority shall post in a conspicuous, open and public place,
15    at  the  entrance of the election authority office, notice of
16    the time and place of such lottery.
17        Each local election official of a  political  subdivision
18    in  which  established  political  party  candidates  for the
19    respective local  offices  are  nominated  by  primary  shall
20    determine  by a fair and impartial method of random selection
21    the order of placement of  the  established  political  party
22    candidates  for  the consolidated election ballot and, in the
23    case of certain municipalities having  annual  elections,  on
24    the  general primary ballot for election.  Such determination
25    shall be made  prior  to  the  canvass  and  proclamation  of
26    results  of  the  consolidated  primary  or special municipal
27    primary, as the case may be,  in  the  office  of  the  local
28    election  official  and  shall  be open to the public.  Three
29    days written notice of the time and place of conducting  such
30    random  selection shall be given, by each such local election
31    official,  to  the  County  Chairman  of   each   established
32    political  party, and to each organization of citizens within
33    the election jurisdiction  which  was  entitled,  under  this
34    Article, at the next preceding election, to have pollwatchers
                            -31-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1    present on the day of election.  Each local election official
 2    shall  post in a conspicuous, open and public place notice of
 3    such lottery.  Immediately  thereafter,  the  local  election
 4    official   shall   certify  the  ballot  placement  order  so
 5    determined to the proper election  authorities  charged  with
 6    the  preparation  of  the  consolidated  election, or general
 7    primary,  ballot for that political subdivision.
 8        Not less than 61 days before the date of the consolidated
 9    election,  each  local  election  official  of  a   political
10    subdivision  in  which established political party candidates
11    for the respective  local  offices  have  been  nominated  by
12    caucus or have been nominated because no primary was required
13    to  be  held  shall  certify to each election authority whose
14    duty  it  is  to  prepare  the  official   ballot   for   the
15    consolidated election in that political subdivision the names
16    of each of the candidates whose certificates of nomination or
17    nomination  papers  have  been filed in his or her office and
18    direct the election authority  to  place  upon  the  official
19    ballot  for  the  consolidated  election  the  names  of such
20    candidates in the same manner and in the same order as  shown
21    upon  the certification.  Such local election official shall,
22    prior to certification, determine by  a  fair  and  impartial
23    method  of  random  selection  the  order of placement of the
24    established political party candidates for  the  consolidated
25    election  ballot.   Such  determination  shall be made in the
26    office of the local election official and shall  be  open  to
27    the  public.  Three days written notice of the time and place
28    of conducting such random selection shall be  given  by  each
29    such  local  election official to the county chairman of each
30    established political party,  and  to  each  organization  of
31    citizens within the election jurisdiction which was entitled,
32    under  this  Article, at the next preceding election, to have
33    pollwatchers present on the  day  of  election.   Each  local
34    election  official  shall  post  in  a  conspicuous, open and
                            -32-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1    public place, at the entrance of the office,  notice  of  the
 2    time  and place of such lottery.  The local election official
 3    shall certify the ballot placement  order  so  determined  as
 4    part  of  his  official  certification  of  candidates to the
 5    election authorities whose duty it is to prepare the official
 6    ballot  for  the  consolidated  election  in  that  political
 7    subdivision.
 8        The certification shall indicate, where  applicable,  the
 9    following:
10        (1)  The  political  party  affiliation of the candidates
11    for the respective offices;
12        (2)  If there is to be more than one candidate elected or
13    nominated to an office from the State, political  subdivision
14    or district;
15        (3)  If the voter has the right to vote for more than one
16    candidate for an office;
17        (4)  The term of office, if a vacancy is to be filled for
18    less  than  a  full  term or if the offices to be filled in a
19    political subdivision or district are for different terms.
20        The  local  election  official  shall  issue  an  amended
21    certification whenever it is  discovered  that  the  original
22    certification is in error.
23    (Source: P.A. 84-1308.)
24        (10 ILCS 5/8-8) (from Ch. 46, par. 8-8)
25        Sec.  8-8.  The name of no candidate for nomination shall
26    be printed upon the primary  ballot  unless  a  petition  for
27    nomination  shall  have  been filed in his behalf as provided
28    for in this Section. Each such petition shall  include  as  a
29    part  thereof the oath required by Section 7-10.1 of this Act
30    and a statement of candidacy by the candidate  filing  or  in
31    whose  behalf the petition is filed. This statement shall set
32    out the address of such candidate, the office for which he is
33    a candidate, shall state that the candidate  is  a  qualified
                            -33-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1    primary  voter of the party to which the petition relates, is
 2    qualified for the office specified and has filed a  statement
 3    of   economic   interests   as   required   by  the  Illinois
 4    Governmental Ethics Act, shall request that  the  candidate's
 5    name  be  placed  upon  the  official  ballot  and  shall  be
 6    subscribed  and  sworn  by such candidate before some officer
 7    authorized to take acknowledgment of deeds in this State  and
 8    may be in substantially the following form:
 9    State of Illinois)
10                     ) ss.
11    County ..........)
12        I,  ....,  being  first  duly sworn, say that I reside at
13    .... street in the city (or village of) .... in the county of
14    .... State of Illinois; that I am a qualified  voter  therein
15    and  am  a qualified primary voter of .... party; that I am a
16    candidate for nomination to the office of ....  to  be  voted
17    upon  at  the  primary election to be held on the .... day of
18    ...., 19..; that I am legally qualified to hold  such  office
19    and  that  I  have filed a statement of economic interests as
20    required by the Illinois Governmental Ethics Act and I hereby
21    request that my name be printed  upon  the  official  primary
22    ballot for nomination for such office.
23                                      Signed ....................
24        Subscribed  and sworn to (or affirmed) before me by ....,
25    who is to me personally known, this .... day of .... 19...
26                  Signed .... (Official Character)
27                     (Seal if officer has one.)
28        All petitions for nomination  for  the  office  of  State
29    Senator  shall  be signed by 1% or 600, whichever is greater,
30    of the qualified primary electors of the candidate's party in
31    his legislative district, except that for the  first  primary
32    following  a  redistricting  of  legislative  districts, such
33    petitions shall be signed by at least 600  qualified  primary
34    electors   of   the  candidate's  party  in  his  legislative
                            -34-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1    district.
 2        All  petitions  for  nomination   for   the   office   of
 3    Representative  in the General Assembly shall be signed by at
 4    least 1% or 300,  whichever  is  greater,  of  the  qualified
 5    primary  electors  of  the  candidate's  party  in his or her
 6    representative district, except that for  the  first  primary
 7    following  a  redistricting  of representative districts such
 8    petitions shall be signed by at least 300  qualified  primary
 9    electors   of   the   candidate's   party   in   his  or  her
10    representative district.
11        Opposite the signature of each qualified primary  elector
12    who  signs  a petition for nomination for the office of State
13    Representative or  State  Senator  such  elector's  residence
14    address  shall  be written or printed.  The residence address
15    required to be written or  printed  opposite  each  qualified
16    primary  elector's  name  shall include the street address or
17    rural route number of the signer, as the case may be, as well
18    as the signer's city, village or town.
19        For the purposes of this Section, the number  of  primary
20    electors  shall  be determined by taking the total vote cast,
21    in the  applicable  district,  for  the  candidate  for  such
22    political  party  who  received  the highest number of votes,
23    state-wide, at the last general  election  in  the  State  at
24    which  electors  for  President  of  the  United  States were
25    elected.
26        A "qualified primary elector" of a  party  may  not  sign
27    petitions  for  or be a candidate in the primary of more than
28    one party.
29        In the  affidavit  at  the  bottom  of  each  sheet,  the
30    petition  circulator,  who shall have been a registered voter
31    at all times he or she circulated the petition,  shall  state
32    his street address or rural route number, as the case may be,
33    as well as his city, village or town.
34        In  the  affidavit  at the bottom of each petition sheet,
                            -35-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1    the petition circulator shall either (1) indicate  the  dates
 2    on which he or she circulated that sheet, or (2) indicate the
 3    first  and  last  dates on which the sheet was circulated, or
 4    (3) certify that none of the signatures  on  the  sheet  were
 5    signed  more  than  90  days  preceding  the last day for the
 6    filing  of  the  petition.   No  petition  sheet   shall   be
 7    circulated  more than 90 days preceding the last day provided
 8    in Section 8-9 for the filing of such petition.
 9        All petition sheets which are filed with the State  Board
10    of  Elections  shall  be  the original sheets which have been
11    signed  by  the  voters  and  by  the  circulator,  and   not
12    photocopies or duplicates of such sheets.
13        The  person circulating the petition, or the candidate on
14    whose behalf the  petition  is  circulated,  may  strike  any
15    signature from the petition, provided that;
16             (1)  the person striking the signature shall initial
17        the  petition at the place where the signature is struck;
18        and
19             (2)  the person striking the signature shall sign  a
20        certification  listing the page number and line number of
21        each  signature   struck   from   the   petition.    Such
22        certification shall be filed as a part of the petition.
23    (Source: P.A. 86-867; 86-875; 86-1028; 86-1348; 87-1052.)
24        (10 ILCS 5/10-5) (from Ch. 46, par. 10-5)
25        Sec.  10-5.   All petitions for nomination shall, besides
26    containing the names of candidates, specify as to each:
27        1.  The office or offices  to  which  such  candidate  or
28    candidates shall be nominated.
29        2.    The  new  political  party,  if  any,  represented,
30    expressed in not more than 5 words. However, such party shall
31    not bear the same name  as,  nor  include  the  name  of  any
32    established  political party as defined in this Article. This
33    prohibition does not preclude any established political party
                            -36-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1    from making  nominations  in  those  cases  in  which  it  is
 2    authorized to do so.
 3        3.  The  place  of  residence  of  any  such candidate or
 4    candidates with the street and number thereof, if any. In the
 5    case of electors for  President  and  Vice-President  of  the
 6    United  States,  the  names  of  candidates for President and
 7    Vice-President may be added to the party name or appellation.
 8        Such certificate of nomination or  nomination  papers  in
 9    addition  shall  include as a part thereof, the oath required
10    by Section 7-10.1 of this Act and must include a statement of
11    candidacy for each of the candidates  named  therein,  except
12    candidates  for  electors for President and Vice-President of
13    the United States. Each such  statement  shall  set  out  the
14    address  of  such  candidate,  the  office  for which he is a
15    candidate, shall state that the candidate  is  qualified  for
16    the  office  specified and has filed (or will file before the
17    close of the petition filing period) a statement of  economic
18    interests  as  required  by  the Illinois Governmental Ethics
19    Act, shall request that the candidate's name be  placed  upon
20    the  official  ballot and shall be subscribed and sworn to by
21    such  candidate  before  some  officer  authorized  to   take
22    acknowledgments  of  deeds  in  this  State,  and  may  be in
23    substantially the following form:
24    State of Illinois)
25                     ) SS.
26    County of........)
27        I,...., being first duly sworn, say that I reside  at....
28    street,  in the city (or village) of.... in the county of....
29    State of Illinois; and that I am a qualified  voter  therein;
30    that I am a candidate for election to the office of.... to be
31    voted  upon  at  the  election  to  be  held  on  the.... day
32    of....,.....; and that I am legally qualified  to  hold  such
33    office  and  that I have filed (or will file before the close
34    of the  petition  filing  period)  a  statement  of  economic
                            -37-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1    interests  as  required  by  the Illinois Governmental Ethics
 2    Act, and I hereby request that my name be  printed  upon  the
 3    official ballot for election to such office.
 4                                          Signed.................
 5        Subscribed  and  sworn  to (or affirmed) before me by....
 6    who is to me personally known, this.... day of....,......
 7                                          Signed.................
 8                                             (Official Character)
 9    (Seal, if officer has one.)
10        In addition, a new political party  petition  shall  have
11    attached   thereto   a  certificate  stating  the  names  and
12    addresses of the party officers authorized to fill  vacancies
13    in nomination pursuant to Section 10-11.
14        Nomination  papers filed under this Section are not valid
15    if the candidate named therein fails to file a  statement  of
16    economic  interests  as required by the Illinois Governmental
17    Ethics Act in relation to his candidacy with the  appropriate
18    officer by the end of the period for the filing of nomination
19    papers  unless he has filed a statement of economic interests
20    in relation to the same governmental unit with  that  officer
21    during  the  same  calendar  year  as  the year in which such
22    nomination papers were filed.  If the  nomination  papers  of
23    any  candidate and the statement of economic interest of that
24    candidate are not required to be filed with the same officer,
25    the candidate must  file  with  the  officer  with  whom  the
26    nomination  papers  are filed a receipt from the officer with
27    whom the statement of economic interests is filed showing the
28    date on which such statement was filed.  Such  receipt  shall
29    be  so  filed not later than the last day on which nomination
30    papers may be filed.
31    (Source: P.A. 84-551.)
32        (10 ILCS 5/7-42 rep.)
33        Section 20.  The Election Code,  Section  7-42  of  which
                            -38-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1    allows  employees  to have 2 hours off from work without loss
 2    of pay to vote in primary elections,  a  provision  that  the
 3    Illinois  Supreme  Court held unconstitutional in McAlpine v.
 4    Dimick,  326  Ill.  240  (1927)  as  a  deprivation  of   the
 5    employer's  property  without  due  process,  is  amended  by
 6    repealing Section 7-42.
 7        Section  25.   The  Election  Code is amended by changing
 8    Section 7-43 to delete the restriction against voting at  the
 9    primary of a political party if one has voted at a primary of
10    another  political  party  within  the  preceding 23 calendar
11    months in response to  the  decision  of  the  United  States
12    District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern
13    Division,  in  Pontikes  v. Kusper, 345 F. Supp. 1104 (1972),
14    which decision held that  the  "23  month  rule"  violates  a
15    person's   constitutional   rights   to   vote  and  to  free
16    association, the amended Section to read as follows:
17        (10 ILCS 5/7-43) (from Ch. 46, par. 7-43)
18        Sec. 7-43.   Every person having resided in this State  6
19    months and in the precinct 30 days next preceding any primary
20    therein  who  shall  be a citizen of the United States of the
21    age of 18 or more years, shall be entitled to  vote  at  such
22    primary.
23        The   following   regulations   shall  be  applicable  to
24    primaries:
25        No person shall be entitled to vote at a primary:
26             (a)  Unless he declares his  party  affiliations  as
27        required by this Article.
28             (b)  Who   shall   have   signed  the  petition  for
29        nomination of a candidate of any party with which he does
30        not affiliate, when such candidate is to be voted for  at
31        the primary.
32             (c)  Who  shall have signed the nominating papers of
                            -39-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1        an independent candidate for any office for which  office
 2        candidates  for  nomination  are  to be voted for at such
 3        primary.
 4             (c.5)  If that person has participated in  the  town
 5        political  party  caucus,  under  Section  45-50  of  the
 6        Township  Code,  of another political party by signing an
 7        affidavit of voters attending the caucus within  45  days
 8        before  the  first day of the calendar month in which the
 9        primary is held.
10        (d)  If he has voted at a primary held under this Article
11    7 of another political party within a period of  23  calendar
12    months  next  preceding  the  calendar  month  in  which such
13    primary is held: Provided, Participation by a primary elector
14    in a primary of a political party which, under the provisions
15    of Section 7-2 of this Article, is a political party within a
16    city, village or incorporated town or town only and  entitled
17    hereunder to make nominations of candidates for city, village
18    or  incorporated  town or town offices only, and for no other
19    office or offices, shall not disqualify such primary  elector
20    from  participating  in  other  primaries  of his party: And,
21    provided, that no qualified voter  shall  be  precluded  from
22    participating  in  the primary of any purely city, village or
23    incorporated  town  or  town  political   party   under   the
24    provisions  of  Section 7-2 of this Article by reason of such
25    voter having voted at the primary of another political  party
26    within  a  period  of  23  calendar months next preceding the
27    calendar month in which he seeks to participate is held.
28        (e)  In cities, villages and incorporated towns having  a
29    board  of  election  commissioners  only voters registered as
30    provided by Article 6 of this Act shall be entitled  to  vote
31    at such primary.
32        (f)  No  person  shall  be  entitled to vote at a primary
33    unless he is registered under the provisions of Articles 4, 5
34    or 6 of this Act, when his registration is required by any of
                            -40-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1    said Articles to entitle him to vote  at  the  election  with
 2    reference to which the primary is held.
 3    (Source: P.A. 89-331, eff. 8-17-95.)
 4        Section  30.   The  Election  Code is amended by changing
 5    Section 10-2 to  reduce  the  minimum  number  of  signatures
 6    required  on a petition to establish a new political party in
 7    a district  or  political  subdivision  from  the  State-wide
 8    petition   signature   requirement   to   one-half   of  that
 9    requirement in response to the United  States  Supreme  Court
10    decision  in  Norman  v.  Reed,  112  S.Ct. 698 (1992), which
11    decision held that the present signature requirement violates
12    the First  and  Fourteenth  Amendment  rights  of  new  party
13    members, the amended Section to read as follows:
14        (10 ILCS 5/10-2) (from Ch. 46, par. 10-2)
15        Sec.  10-2.  The  term  "political party", as hereinafter
16    used  in  this  Article  10,  shall  mean  any   "established
17    political  party", as hereinafter defined and shall also mean
18    any political group which shall hereafter undertake  to  form
19    an  established political party in the manner provided for in
20    this Article 10: Provided, that no political organization  or
21    group  shall  be qualified as a political party hereunder, or
22    given a place on a ballot, which  organization  or  group  is
23    associated,  directly or indirectly, with Communist, Fascist,
24    Nazi  or  other  un-American  principles   and   engages   in
25    activities  or  propaganda  designed to teach subservience to
26    the political principles and ideals of foreign nations or the
27    overthrow by violence of the established constitutional  form
28    of government of the United States and the State of Illinois.
29        A political party which, at the last general election for
30    State  and  county  officers,  polled  for  its candidate for
31    Governor more than 5% of the entire vote cast  for  Governor,
32    is  hereby declared to be an "established political party" as
                            -41-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1    to the State and as to any district or political  subdivision
 2    thereof.
 3        A  political  party  which,  at  the last election in any
 4    congressional   district,   legislative   district,   county,
 5    township, municipality  or  other  political  subdivision  or
 6    district in the State, polled more than 5% of the entire vote
 7    cast  within  such territorial area or political subdivision,
 8    as the case may be, has voted as a unit for the  election  of
 9    officers  to  serve  the  respective territorial area of such
10    district or political subdivision, is hereby declared  to  be
11    an  "established  political party" within the meaning of this
12    Article as to such district or political subdivision.
13        Any group of persons hereafter desiring  to  form  a  new
14    political   party   throughout   the   State,   or   in   any
15    congressional,  legislative  or  judicial district, or in any
16    other district or in any political subdivision (other than  a
17    municipality) not entirely within a single county, shall file
18    with  the State Board of Elections a petition, as hereinafter
19    provided; and any such group of persons hereafter desiring to
20    form a new political party within any county shall file  such
21    petition with the county clerk; and any such group of persons
22    hereafter  desiring  to form a new political party within any
23    municipality or township or within any district of a unit  of
24    local government other than a county shall file such petition
25    with  the  local  election  official  or  Board  of  Election
26    Commissioners of such municipality, township or other unit of
27    local  government,  as the case may be. Any such petition for
28    the formation of a new political party throughout the  State,
29    or in any such district or political subdivision, as the case
30    may be, shall declare as concisely as may be the intention of
31    the  signers  thereof to form such new political party in the
32    State, or in such district or  political  subdivision;  shall
33    state in not more than 5 words the name of such new political
34    party;  shall  at the time of filing  contain a complete list
                            -42-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1    of candidates of such party for all offices to be  filled  in
 2    the  State,  or such district or political subdivision as the
 3    case may be, at the next ensuing election then  to  be  held;
 4    and,  if  such  new  political  party shall be formed for the
 5    entire State, shall be signed by 1% of the number  of  voters
 6    who voted at the next preceding Statewide general election or
 7    25,000  qualified  voters,  whichever  is  less.  If such new
 8    political party shall be formed for any district or political
 9    subdivision less than the entire State, such  petition  shall
10    be  signed  by  qualified  voters equaling in number not less
11    than 5% of the  number  of  voters  who  voted  at  the  next
12    preceding  regular  election  in  such  district or political
13    subdivision in which such district or  political  subdivision
14    voted  as  a  unit  for the election of officers to serve its
15    respective territorial area.  However, whenever  the  minimum
16    signature requirement for a district or political subdivision
17    new  political  party  petition  shall  equal  or  exceed the
18    minimum number of signatures  for  State-wide  new  political
19    party  petitions  at  the  next  preceding State-wide general
20    election, one-half of the such State-wide petition  signature
21    requirement  shall  be  the  minimum for the such district or
22    political subdivision new political party petition.
23        For the  first  election  following  a  redistricting  of
24    congressional  districts,  a petition to form a new political
25    party in a congressional district shall be signed by at least
26    5,000 qualified voters of the congressional  district.    For
27    the  first  election following a redistricting of legislative
28    districts, a petition to form a  new  political  party  in  a
29    legislative  district  shall  be  signed  by  at  least 3,000
30    qualified voters of the legislative district. For  the  first
31    election   following   a   redistricting   of  representative
32    districts, a petition to form a  new  political  party  in  a
33    representative  district  shall  be  signed by at least 1,500
34    qualified voters of the representative district.
                            -43-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1        For the first election following redistricting of  county
 2    board  districts,  or of municipal wards or districts, or for
 3    the first election following  the  initial  establishment  of
 4    such  districts  or  wards  in  a  county  or municipality, a
 5    petition to form a new political  party  in  a  county  board
 6    district  or  in a municipal ward or district shall be signed
 7    by qualified voters of the district or ward equal to not less
 8    than 5% of the total number of votes cast  at  the  preceding
 9    general  or  municipal  election, as the case may be, for the
10    county or municipal office voted on throughout the county  or
11    municipality  for  which  the  greatest total number of votes
12    were cast for  all  candidates,  divided  by  the  number  of
13    districts  or  wards,  but  in  any  event  not  less than 25
14    qualified voters of the district or ward.
15        In the case of a petition to form a new  political  party
16    within  a  political  subdivision in which officers are to be
17    elected from districts  and  at-large,  such  petition  shall
18    consist  of  separate components for each district from which
19    an officer  is  to  be  elected.   Each  component  shall  be
20    circulated   only   within   a   district  of  the  political
21    subdivision and signed only by  qualified  electors  who  are
22    residents of such district.  Each sheet of such petition must
23    contain a complete list of the names of the candidates of the
24    party   for  all  offices  to  be  filled  in  the  political
25    subdivision  at  large,  but  the  sheets   comprising   each
26    component shall also contain the names of those candidates to
27    be  elected  from the particular district.  Each component of
28    the petition for each district from which an officer is to be
29    elected must be signed by qualified voters  of  the  district
30    equalling  in number not less than 5% of the number of voters
31    who voted at the next  preceding  regular  election  in  such
32    district  at  which  an  officer  was  elected  to  serve the
33    district. The entire petition, including all components, must
34    be signed by a  total  of  qualified  voters  of  the  entire
                            -44-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1    political subdivision equalling in number not less than 5% of
 2    the  number of voters who voted at the next preceding regular
 3    election in such political subdivision at  which  an  officer
 4    was elected to serve the political subdivision at large.
 5        The   filing   of  such  petition  shall  constitute  the
 6    political group a new political party, for the  purpose  only
 7    of placing upon the ballot at such next ensuing election such
 8    list or an adjusted list in accordance with Section 10-11, of
 9    party  candidates  for offices to be voted for throughout the
10    State, or for offices to be voted for  in  such  district  or
11    political  subdivision  less  than the State, as the case may
12    be, under the name of and  as  the  candidates  of  such  new
13    political party.
14        If,  at  such ensuing election, the new political party's
15    candidate for Governor shall receive  more  than  5%  of  the
16    entire votes cast for Governor, then such new political party
17    shall become an "established political party" as to the State
18    and  as  to  every district or political subdivision thereof.
19    If, at such ensuing election, the other candidates of the new
20    political party, or any other candidate or candidates of  the
21    new  political  party  shall  receive more than 5% of all the
22    votes cast for the office or  offices  for  which  they  were
23    candidates at such election, in the State, or in any district
24    or  political  subdivision,  as  the case may be, then and in
25    that  event,  such  new  political  party  shall  become   an
26    "established political party" within the State or within such
27    district or political subdivision less than the State, as the
28    case  may  be, in which such candidate or candidates received
29    more than 5% of the votes cast for the office or offices  for
30    which  they were candidates. It shall thereafter nominate its
31    candidates for public offices to be filled in the  State,  or
32    such  district  or political subdivision, as the case may be,
33    under the provisions of the laws regulating the nomination of
34    candidates  of  established  political  parties  at   primary
                            -45-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1    elections   and   political  party  conventions,  as  now  or
 2    hereafter in force.
 3        A political party which  continues  to  receive  for  its
 4    candidate  for  Governor more than 5% of the entire vote cast
 5    for Governor, shall remain an "established  political  party"
 6    as  to  the  State  and  as  to  every  district or political
 7    subdivision thereof. But if the political  party's  candidate
 8    for Governor fails to receive more than 5% of the entire vote
 9    cast  for  Governor,  or  if  the  political  party  does not
10    nominate a candidate for Governor, the political party  shall
11    remain  an  "established political party" within the State or
12    within such district or political subdivision less  than  the
13    State, as the case may be, only so long as, and only in those
14    districts  or political subdivisions in which, the candidates
15    of that political party, or any candidate  or  candidates  of
16    that political party, continue to receive more than 5% of all
17    the  votes cast for the office or offices for which they were
18    candidates at succeeding general  or  consolidated  elections
19    within   the  State  or  within  any  district  or  political
20    subdivision, as the case may be.
21        Any such petition shall be filed at  the  same  time  and
22    shall  be  subject  to  the same requirements and to the same
23    provisions in  respect  to  objections  thereto  and  to  any
24    hearing or hearings upon such objections that are hereinafter
25    in  this  Article 10 contained in regard to the nomination of
26    any other candidate or candidates by petition.  If  any  such
27    new  political  party  shall become an "established political
28    party" in  the  manner  herein  provided,  the  candidate  or
29    candidates  of  such  new  political  party  nominated by the
30    petition hereinabove referred to for such  initial  election,
31    shall  have  power  to  select any such party committeeman or
32    committeemen as shall be necessary  for  the  creation  of  a
33    provisional   party  organization  and  provisional  managing
34    committee or committees for such party within the  State,  or
                            -46-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1    in  any  district  or  political subdivision in which the new
 2    political  party  has  become  established;  and  the   party
 3    committeeman  or  committeemen so selected shall constitute a
 4    provisional party organization for the  new  political  party
 5    and  shall have and exercise the powers conferred by law upon
 6    any party committeeman or committeemen to manage and  control
 7    the  affairs  of  such  new  political  party  until the next
 8    ensuing primary election at which  the  new  political  party
 9    shall   be   entitled   to   nominate  and  elect  any  party
10    committeeman  or  committeemen  in  the  State,  or  in  such
11    district or political subdivision under any parts of this Act
12    relating to the organization of political parties.
13        A candidate for whom a nomination paper has been filed as
14    a partisan candidate  at  a  primary  election,  and  who  is
15    defeated  for  his or her nomination at the primary election,
16    is  ineligible  for  nomination  as  a  candidate  of  a  new
17    political party for election in that general election.
18    (Source: P.A. 86-875.)
19        Section 35. The Election  Code  is  amended  by  changing
20    Section  10-5  to authorize a new political party to bear the
21    name of an  established  political  party  if  the  candidate
22    seeking  to  represent  the  new  party  has  received formal
23    permission to use the name  from  the  established  party  in
24    response  to  the decision of the United States Supreme Court
25    in Norman v. Reed, 112 S. Ct. 698 (1992), which decision held
26    that  the  current  law's  restriction  on  the  use  of   an
27    established    political    party's    name    violates   the
28    constitutional right of political  association,  the  amended
29    Section to read as follows:
30        (10 ILCS 5/10-5) (from Ch. 46, par. 10-5)
31        Sec.  10-5.   All petitions for nomination shall, besides
32    containing the names of candidates, specify as to each:
                            -47-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1        1.  The office or offices  to  which  such  candidate  or
 2    candidates shall be nominated.
 3        2.    The  new  political  party,  if  any,  represented,
 4    expressed in not more than 5 words. However, such party shall
 5    not bear the same name as,  nor  include  the  name  of,  any
 6    established political party as defined in this Article unless
 7    the  candidate  or  candidates  seeking  to represent the new
 8    political party have received formal permission  to  use  the
 9    name  from  the established political party. This prohibition
10    does not preclude any established political party from making
11    nominations in those cases in which it is  authorized  to  do
12    so.
13        3.   The  place  of  residence  of  any such candidate or
14    candidates with the street and number thereof, if any. In the
15    case of electors for  President  and  Vice-President  of  the
16    United  States,  the  names  of  candidates for President and
17    Vice-President may be added to the party name or appellation.
18        Such certificate of nomination or  nomination  papers  in
19    addition  shall  include as a part thereof, the oath required
20    by Section 7-10.1 of this Act and must include a statement of
21    candidacy for each of the candidates  named  therein,  except
22    candidates  for  electors for President and Vice-President of
23    the United States. Each such  statement  shall  set  out  the
24    address  of  such  candidate,  the  office  for which he is a
25    candidate, shall state that the candidate  is  qualified  for
26    the  office  specified and has filed (or will file before the
27    close of the petition filing period) a statement of  economic
28    interests  as  required  by  the Illinois Governmental Ethics
29    Act, shall request that the candidate's name be  placed  upon
30    the  official  ballot and shall be subscribed and sworn to by
31    such  candidate  before  some  officer  authorized  to   take
32    acknowledgments  of  deeds  in  this  State,  and  may  be in
33    substantially the following form:
34    State of Illinois)
                            -48-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1                     ) SS.
 2    County of........)
 3        I,...., being first duly sworn, say that I reside  at....
 4    street,  in the city (or village) of.... in the county of....
 5    State of Illinois; and that I am a qualified  voter  therein;
 6    that I am a candidate for election to the office of.... to be
 7    voted  upon  at  the  election  to  be  held  on  the.... day
 8    of....,.....; and that I am legally qualified  to  hold  such
 9    office  and  that I have filed (or will file before the close
10    of the  petition  filing  period)  a  statement  of  economic
11    interests  as  required  by  the Illinois Governmental Ethics
12    Act, and I hereby request that my name be  printed  upon  the
13    official ballot for election to such office.
14                                          Signed.................
15        Subscribed  and  sworn  to (or affirmed) before me by....
16    who is to me personally known, this.... day of....,......
17                                          Signed.................
18                                             (Official Character)
19    (Seal, if officer has one.)
20        In addition, a new political party  petition  shall  have
21    attached   thereto   a  certificate  stating  the  names  and
22    addresses of the party officers authorized to fill  vacancies
23    in nomination pursuant to Section 10-11.
24        Nomination  papers filed under this Section are not valid
25    if the candidate named therein fails to file a  statement  of
26    economic  interests  as required by the Illinois Governmental
27    Ethics Act in relation to his candidacy with the  appropriate
28    officer by the end of the period for the filing of nomination
29    papers  unless he has filed a statement of economic interests
30    in relation to the same governmental unit with  that  officer
31    during  the  same  calendar  year  as  the year in which such
32    nomination papers were filed.  If the  nomination  papers  of
33    any  candidate and the statement of economic interest of that
34    candidate are not required to be filed with the same officer,
                            -49-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1    the candidate must  file  with  the  officer  with  whom  the
 2    nomination  papers  are filed a receipt from the officer with
 3    whom the statement of economic interests is filed showing the
 4    date on which such statement was filed.  Such  receipt  shall
 5    be  so  filed not later than the last day on which nomination
 6    papers may be filed.
 7    (Source: P.A. 84-551.)
 8        Section 40.  The Election Code  is  amended  by  changing
 9    Section   29-14  to  prohibit  the  publication  of  campaign
10    literature with the intent to deceive the voters, to prohibit
11    the anonymous publication of campaign  literature  within  10
12    days  before  an  election,  and  to  delete an exemption for
13    certain items because of their size or shape in  response  to
14    the  Illinois  Supreme Court decision in People v. White, 116
15    Ill. 2d 171  (1987),  which  decision  held  that  the  broad
16    prohibition   of   the   anonymous  publication  of  campaign
17    literature violates the constitutional right  to  freedom  of
18    speech, the amended Section to read as follows:
19        (10 ILCS 5/29-14) (from Ch. 46, par. 29-14)
20        Sec. 29-14. Publication of political literature.
21        (a)  Any  person  or  group of persons, or any committee,
22    firm,  organization,  association,  league,  or  other   body
23    publishing,   circulating,   or  distributing  any  pamphlet,
24    circular,  handbill,  advertisement,   or   other   political
25    literature  soliciting votes for or against any candidate for
26    nomination or election to, or retention in, any public office
27    or soliciting votes in support of or  in  opposition  to  any
28    public question to be submitted for the ballot at an election
29    with  the  intent  to deceive the voters shall be guilty of a
30    Class A misdemeanor.
31        (b)  Any person or group of persons,  or  any  committee,
32    firm,   organization,  association,  league,  or  other  body
                            -50-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1    publishing,  circulating,  or  distributing  within  10  days
 2    before  an  election  any   pamphlet,   circular,   handbill,
 3    advertisement, or other political literature soliciting votes
 4    for  or  against any candidate for nomination or election to,
 5    or retention in, any public office  or  soliciting  votes  in
 6    support  of  or  in  opposition  to any public question to be
 7    submitted for the ballot at the an election  which  does  not
 8    have  printed  thereon  in plain type the name and address of
 9    the person or persons, or the names and business  address  of
10    the  committee,  firm,  organization, association, league, or
11    other body causing  the  such  matter  to  be  published  and
12    distributed,  the name of its chairman, director, manager, or
13    principal officer, as the case may be, and the  name  of  its
14    treasurer if a different person, shall be guilty of a Class A
15    misdemeanor.   If a political committee as defined in Article
16    9 has already filed its statement of  organization  with  the
17    State  Board  of  Elections  or with the county clerk, as the
18    case may be, or  is  registered  with  the  Federal  Election
19    Commission,  it  shall  not be necessary to print the name of
20    its chairman or its treasurer, or its  address  on  political
21    literature   that   which  it  causes  to  be  published  and
22    distributed, and the name of the political committee  printed
23    on  the literature shall be sufficient.  However this Section
24    shall not apply to palm cards, tickets, premiums  or  similar
25    campaign  items  which  because  of  size  or  shape  are not
26    adaptable to printing of attribution of source thereon.
27        Nothing in this subsection Section shall be construed  to
28    apply  to any matter published in any newspaper, magazine, or
29    journal recognized and circulating as such, which  matter  is
30    published  by the such newspaper, magazine, or journal on its
31    own behalf and upon its own responsibility and for  which  it
32    shall  not charge or receive any compensation whatsoever, nor
33    shall it apply to  any  publication  issued  by  any  legally
34    constituted  election  official  in the performance of his or
                            -51-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1    her duties.
 2        The attribution of source  required  by  this  subsection
 3    Section  shall  be  in  addition  to  the  notice required on
 4    political  literature  soliciting  funds  as  prescribed   by
 5    Section 9-9 of this Code.
 6    (Source: P.A. 81-1433.)
 7        (30 ILCS 560/Act rep.)
 8        Section  45.  The  Public  Works  Preference  Act,  which
 9    requires  that  only  Illinois laborers be hired for building
10    public works and was held unconstitutional  by  the  Illinois
11    Supreme  Court  in People ex rel Bernardi v. Leary Const. Co.
12    Inc., 102  Ill.  2d  295  (1984),  as   a  violation  of  the
13    privileges and immunities clause of the U.S. Constitution, is
14    repealed.
15        (35 ILCS 520/Act rep.)
16        Section  50.   The Cannabis and Controlled Substances Tax
17    Act is repealed in response to  the  Illinois  Supreme  Court
18    decision  in Wilson v. Department of Revenue, 169 Ill. 2d 306
19    (1996),  which  decision  held  that  the  Act  violates  the
20    constitutional prohibition against double jeopardy.
21        Section 55.  The Statewide Grand Jury Act is  amended  by
22    changing  Sections  2 and 3 to remove cross-references to the
23    Cannabis and Controlled Substances Tax Act which is  repealed
24    in  the  preceding  Section,  the amended Sections to read as
25    follows:
26        (725 ILCS 215/2) (from Ch. 38, par. 1702)
27        Sec. 2.  County grand juries and State's  Attorneys  have
28    always  had and shall continue to have primary responsibility
29    for investigating, indicting,  and  prosecuting  persons  who
30    violate the criminal laws of the State of Illinois.  However,
                            -52-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1    in  recent  years certain criminal enterprises have developed
 2    that require investigation, indictment, and prosecution on  a
 3    statewide  or multicounty level. These enterprises exist as a
 4    result of the allure of  profitability  present  in  narcotic
 5    activity,  the  unlawful  sale  and transfer of firearms, and
 6    streetgang related felonies. In order to weaken or  eliminate
 7    these enterprises, the profit must be removed. State statutes
 8    exist  that  can  accomplish  that  goal.  Among them are the
 9    offense of money  laundering,  the  Cannabis  and  Controlled
10    Substances  Tax Act, the Narcotics Profit Forfeiture Act, and
11    gunrunning.  Local prosecutors need  investigative  personnel
12    and  specialized  training  to  attack  and  eliminate  these
13    profits.  In  light  of  the transitory and complex nature of
14    conduct that constitutes these criminal activities, the  many
15    diverse  property  interests that may be acquired directly or
16    indirectly as a result of these criminal activities, and  the
17    many  places that illegally obtained property may be located,
18    it  is  the  purpose  of  this  Act  to  create  a   limited,
19    multicounty   Statewide   Grand   Jury   with   authority  to
20    investigate,  indict,  and  prosecute:   narcotic   activity,
21    including  cannabis  and  controlled  substance  trafficking,
22    narcotics  racketeering, and money laundering, and violations
23    of the  Cannabis  and  Controlled  Substances  Tax  Act;  the
24    unlawful  sale  and  transfer  of  firearms;  gunrunning; and
25    streetgang related felonies.
26    (Source: P.A. 88-677, eff. 12-15-94; 89-8, eff. 3-21-95.)
27        (725 ILCS 215/3) (from Ch. 38, par. 1703)
28        (Text of Section before amendment by P.A. 89-688)
29        Sec. 3.  Written application for  the  appointment  of  a
30    Circuit  Judge  to convene and preside over a Statewide Grand
31    Jury, with jurisdiction extending throughout the State, shall
32    be made to the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court.  Upon such
33    written application, the Chief Justice of the  Supreme  Court
                            -53-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1    shall  appoint  a  Circuit  Judge  from the circuit where the
 2    Statewide Grand Jury is being  sought  to  be  convened,  who
 3    shall  make a determination that the convening of a Statewide
 4    Grand Jury is necessary.
 5        In such application the Attorney General shall state that
 6    the convening of a Statewide Grand Jury is necessary  because
 7    of  an  alleged offense or offenses set forth in this Section
 8    involving more than one county of the State  and  identifying
 9    any such offense alleged; and
10             (a)  that  he  or  she  believes that the grand jury
11        function for the  investigation  and  indictment  of  the
12        offense  or offenses cannot effectively be performed by a
13        county grand jury together  with  the  reasons  for  such
14        belief, and
15             (b) (1)  that    each    State's    Attorney    with
16             jurisdiction  over  an  offense  or  offenses  to be
17             investigated has consented to the impaneling of  the
18             Statewide Grand Jury, or
19                  (2)  if  one  or  more of the State's Attorneys
20             having jurisdiction over an offense or  offenses  to
21             be  investigated  fails to consent to the impaneling
22             of the Statewide Grand Jury,  the  Attorney  General
23             shall  set  forth  good  cause  for  impaneling  the
24             Statewide Grand Jury.
25        If  the  Circuit Judge determines that the convening of a
26    Statewide Grand Jury is necessary, he or  she  shall  convene
27    and  impanel  the  Statewide  Grand  Jury  with  jurisdiction
28    extending  throughout  the  State  to  investigate and return
29    indictments:
30             (a)  For violations of any of the following  or  for
31        any  other  criminal  offense  committed in the course of
32        violating any of the following: the  Illinois  Controlled
33        Substances  Act,  the Cannabis Control Act, the Narcotics
34        Profit Forfeiture Act, or  the  Cannabis  and  Controlled
                            -54-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1        Substances  Tax Act; a streetgang related felony offense;
 2        Section 24-2.1,  24-2.2,  24-3,  24-3A,  24-3.1,  24-3.3,
 3        24-3.4,   24-4,   or   24-5   or  subsection  24-1(a)(4),
 4        24-1(a)(6),  24-1(a)(7),  24-1(a)(9),   24-1(a)(10),   or
 5        24-1(c)  of  the  Criminal  Code  of  1961;  or  a  money
 6        laundering   offense;  provided  that  the  violation  or
 7        offense involves Acts occurring in more than  one  county
 8        of this State; and
 9             (b)  For  the  offenses  of  perjury, subornation of
10        perjury, communicating with  jurors  and  witnesses,  and
11        harassment  of  jurors  and  witnesses, as they relate to
12        matters before the Statewide Grand Jury.
13        "Streetgang related" has the meaning ascribed  to  it  in
14    Section  10  of  the  Illinois  Streetgang  Terrorism Omnibus
15    Prevention Act.
16    (Source: P.A. 88-677, eff. 12-15-94; 89-8, eff. 3-21-95.)
17        (Text of Section after amendment by P.A. 89-688)
18        Sec. 3.  Written application for  the  appointment  of  a
19    Circuit  Judge  to convene and preside over a Statewide Grand
20    Jury, with jurisdiction extending throughout the State, shall
21    be made to the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court.  Upon such
22    written application, the Chief Justice of the  Supreme  Court
23    shall  appoint  a  Circuit  Judge  from the circuit where the
24    Statewide Grand Jury is being  sought  to  be  convened,  who
25    shall  make a determination that the convening of a Statewide
26    Grand Jury is necessary.
27        In such application the Attorney General shall state that
28    the convening of a Statewide Grand Jury is necessary  because
29    of  an  alleged offense or offenses set forth in this Section
30    involving more than one county of the State  and  identifying
31    any such offense alleged; and
32             (a)  that  he  or  she  believes that the grand jury
33        function for the  investigation  and  indictment  of  the
34        offense  or offenses cannot effectively be performed by a
                            -55-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1        county grand jury together  with  the  reasons  for  such
 2        belief, and
 3             (b) (1)  that    each    State's    Attorney    with
 4             jurisdiction  over  an  offense  or  offenses  to be
 5             investigated has consented to the impaneling of  the
 6             Statewide Grand Jury, or
 7                  (2)  if  one  or  more of the State's Attorneys
 8             having jurisdiction over an offense or  offenses  to
 9             be  investigated  fails to consent to the impaneling
10             of the Statewide Grand Jury,  the  Attorney  General
11             shall  set  forth  good  cause  for  impaneling  the
12             Statewide Grand Jury.
13        If  the  Circuit Judge determines that the convening of a
14    Statewide Grand Jury is necessary, he or  she  shall  convene
15    and  impanel  the  Statewide  Grand  Jury  with  jurisdiction
16    extending  throughout  the  State  to  investigate and return
17    indictments:
18             (a)  For violations of any of the following  or  for
19        any  other  criminal  offense  committed in the course of
20        violating any of the following: the  Illinois  Controlled
21        Substances   Act,   the  Cannabis  Control  Act,  or  the
22        Narcotics Profit Forfeiture  Act,  or  the  Cannabis  and
23        Controlled  Substances  Tax  Act;  a  streetgang  related
24        felony  offense;  Section  24-2.1,  24-2.2,  24-3, 24-3A,
25        24-3.1, 24-3.3,  24-3.4,  24-4,  or  24-5  or  subsection
26        24-1(a)(4),     24-1(a)(6),    24-1(a)(7),    24-1(a)(9),
27        24-1(a)(10), or 24-1(c) of the Criminal Code of 1961;  or
28        a  money  laundering offense; provided that the violation
29        or offense involves  Acts  occurring  in  more  than  one
30        county of this State; and
31             (b)  For  the  offenses  of  perjury, subornation of
32        perjury, communicating with  jurors  and  witnesses,  and
33        harassment  of  jurors  and  witnesses, as they relate to
34        matters before the Statewide Grand Jury.
                            -56-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1        "Streetgang related" has the meaning ascribed  to  it  in
 2    Section  10  of  the  Illinois  Streetgang  Terrorism Omnibus
 3    Prevention Act.
 4        Upon written application by the Attorney General for  the
 5    convening  of  an  additional Statewide Grand Jury, the Chief
 6    Justice of the Supreme Court shall appoint  a  Circuit  Judge
 7    from  the  circuit  for  which the additional Statewide Grand
 8    Jury is  sought.   The  Circuit  Judge  shall  determine  the
 9    necessity   for   an   additional  Statewide  Grand  Jury  in
10    accordance with the provisions of this Section.  No more than
11    2 Statewide Grand Juries may be empaneled at any time.
12    (Source: P.A. 88-677,  eff.  12-15-94;  89-8,  eff.  3-21-95;
13    89-688, eff. 6-1-97.)
14        (35 ILCS 200/20-180 rep.)
15        (35 ILCS 200/20-185 rep.)
16        Section   60.  The   Property  Tax  Code  is  amended  by
17    repealing Sections 20-180  and  20-185  in  response  to  the
18    Illinois  Supreme  Court's decision in George D. Hardin, Inc.
19    v. Village of Mt. Prospect,  99  Ill.  2d  96  (1983),  which
20    decision  held  that  these Sections, which permit delinquent
21    real estate taxes, special assessments, and bonds secured  by
22    uncollectible  revenues  to be declared "uncollectible" after
23    30 years and permit  the  use  of  any  remaining  funds  for
24    similar  purposes  (in  the  case  of special assessments) or
25    general corporate purposes (in the  case  of  bonds  declared
26    "Cancelled-Revenue  Uncollectible"),  are an unconstitutional
27    impairment of contractual obligations.
28        Section 65.  The Fire Protection District Act is  amended
29    by  changing  Section  14.14 to delete the provision limiting
30    the Section's application to counties of a certain population
31    in response to the Illinois Supreme Court decision in  In  re
32    Petition  of  the  Village  of  Vernon Hills, 168 Ill. 2d 117
                            -57-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1    (1995),  which  decision  held  that  the  county  population
 2    limitation made the Section an  unconstitutional  special  or
 3    local law, the amended Section to read as follows:
 4        (70 ILCS 705/14.14) (from Ch. 127 1/2, par. 34.14)
 5        Sec. 14.14.  Disconnection and transfer.
 6        (a)  In  a  county having a population of between 500,000
 7    and 750,000, Territory within the boundaries  of  a  non-home
 8    rule municipality that receives fire protection services from
 9    more   than   a   single  fire  protection  district  may  be
10    disconnected  from   one   fire   protection   district   and
11    transferred  to  the  district  that provides services to the
12    area comprising more than 80% of the municipality's  assessed
13    valuation.   To  disconnect  that  territory,  the  board  of
14    trustees  of  one  of  the  affected districts, the corporate
15    authorities of the municipality,  or  5%  of  the  owners  of
16    property  within  the territory to be disconnected may file a
17    petition in the court  in  which  the  district  (from  which
18    disconnection  is  sought)  was  organized, setting forth the
19    following:
20             (1)  The description of the territory sought  to  be
21        transferred.
22             (2)  A statement that:
23                  (A)  more than 80% of the assessed valuation of
24             the municipality lies within one district;
25                  (B)  more  than  90%  of  the  residents of the
26             municipality reside within that same district;
27                  (C)  the territory to be  transferred  contains
28             less  than  10%  of the total assessed valuation and
29             total number of residents of the affected district;
30                  (D)  the territory to be  transferred  consists
31             of   all   the  territory  within  the  municipality
32             serviced by the district from which disconnection is
33             sought;
                            -58-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1                  (E)  the district to which the territory is  to
 2             be  transferred agrees to the transfer, as evidenced
 3             by passage of a resolution by its board of trustees;
 4                  (F)  the transfer will not impair  the  ability
 5             of  the  affected districts to render fully adequate
 6             fire protection services to their residents; and
 7                  (G)  the transfer will not cause the  territory
 8             within the affected districts to be noncontiguous.
 9        (b)  The   petition   praying   that   the  territory  be
10    transferred shall be signed and sworn to by the petitioner or
11    petitioners.  Upon the filing  of  the  petition,  the  court
12    shall  set  the petition for hearing on a day not less than 2
13    weeks or more than 4  weeks  from  the  date  of  filing  the
14    petition.  The court shall give 2 weeks notice of the hearing
15    in  the  manner  provided  in  Section  1  of  this  Act. The
16    municipality  and  affected  districts  shall  be   necessary
17    parties  to  the proceedings and shall be served with summons
18    in the manner prescribed for  a  party  defendant  under  the
19    Civil Practice Law.
20        (c)  Any  property  owner  in  the  municipality  or  the
21    affected districts may file objections and at the hearing may
22    appear  and  contest  the transfer and the matters averred in
23    the petition, and both  the  objectors  and  petitioners  may
24    offer any competent evidence in regard to the petition.
25        (d)  If  the court, upon hearing the petition, finds that
26    the allegations contained in the petition are true, then  the
27    court   shall  enter  an  order  transferring  the  property.
28    Thereupon, the territory shall cease to be a part of the fire
29    protection district in which the territory lies.  The circuit
30    clerk shall transmit a certified copy of  the  order  to  the
31    county clerk and to the Office of the State Fire Marshal.
32        (e)  The  territory to be transferred shall remain liable
33    for   its   proportionate   share   of   outstanding   bonded
34    indebtedness, if any,  of  the  district  from  which  it  is
                            -59-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1    transferred as of the date of transfer.
 2    (Source: P.A. 87-825.)
 3        Section  70.  The Fire Protection District Act is amended
 4    by  changing  Section  19a  to   eliminate   the   population
 5    limitation  that  applied the Section only to counties with a
 6    population of more  than  600,000  but  less  than  1,000,000
 7    inhabitants, which provision the Illinois Supreme Court in In
 8    re  Belmont Fire Protection District, 111 Ill. 2d 373 (1986),
 9    held unconstitutional as  special  legislation,  the  amended
10    Section to read as follows:
11        (70 ILCS 705/19a) (from Ch. 127 1/2, par. 38.2a)
12        Sec.  19a.  (a) In any county having a population of more
13    than 600,000  but  less  than  1,000,000,  territory  located
14    within  the corporate limits of any municipality and which is
15    included within the limits of any  fire  protection  district
16    may  be  disconnected  from  the  district and transferred to
17    another district providing  fire  protection  service  within
18    such  municipality  and to which the territory is contiguous,
19    in the manner hereinafter set forth, if: (1) the municipality
20    does not provide fire protection service; (2)  the  territory
21    comprises  all  of that portion of a fire protection district
22    located within such municipality;  (3)  the  territory  would
23    receive  equal or greater benefits from the district to which
24    it seeks to be transferred; (4) the  district  to  which  the
25    transfer  is  sought  to  be  made  provides  fire protection
26    service  to  more  than  70%  of   the   territory   of   the
27    municipality;  and  (5) the trustees of the district to which
28    the transfer is sought to be  made  do  not  file  a  written
29    refusal  to  accept the territory within the time hereinafter
30    specified.
31        (b)  Territory  disconnected  pursuant  to  this  Section
32    shall remain liable for its proportionate share of the bonded
                            -60-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1    indebtedness outstanding as of the date of disconnection,  if
 2    any,  of  the  district  from  which it was disconnected, and
 3    shall  assume   a   proportionate   share   of   the   bonded
 4    indebtedness,  if  any,  of  the  district  to  which  it  is
 5    transferred.
 6        (c)  Five  percent  or  more of the legal voters residing
 7    within the limits of the territory proposed to be transferred
 8    may file a petition, in the court of  the  county  where  the
 9    district  to  which  it seeks to be transferred is organized,
10    setting forth: the description of the territory sought to  be
11    transferred;   that  the  territory  is  located  within  the
12    corporate limits of a  municipality;  that  the  district  to
13    which the transfer is sought provides fire protection service
14    within such municipality; that the territory is contiguous to
15    the district to which the transfer is sought to be made; that
16    such  municipality  does not provide fire protection service;
17    that the territory comprises all of that portion  of  a  fire
18    protection  district  located  within such municipality; that
19    the territory will receive equal or greater benefits from the
20    district to which it seeks the transfer; that the district to
21    which the  transfer  is  sought  to  be  made  provides  fire
22    protection  service to more than 70% of the territory of such
23    municipality;  and  the  amount  of  any  outstanding  bonded
24    indebtedness against the district or districts in  which  the
25    territory  is  then situated which has been incurred pursuant
26    to this Act;  and  praying  that  the  question  whether  the
27    transfer  shall  be  made,  and  whether  the  voters of such
28    territory shall remain liable for a  proportionate  share  of
29    the  bonded  indebtedness  outstanding  as of the date of the
30    transfer,  if  any,  of  the  district  from  which  it   was
31    transferred  and  also  assume  a  proportionate share of the
32    bonded indebtedness, if any, of the  district  to  which  the
33    transfer  is  to  be  made, be submitted to the voters of the
34    territory sought to be transferred.
                            -61-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1        (d)  Upon the filing of the petition, the court shall set
 2    a day for hearing, not less than 2  weeks  nor  more  than  4
 3    weeks  from the filing thereof, and the court, or the circuit
 4    clerk or sheriff upon order of the court, shall give 2  weeks
 5    notice  of  such  hearing  in  one  or  more  daily or weekly
 6    newspapers of general circulation in the county  or  in  each
 7    county  wherein  the  district  or  districts  from which the
 8    territory sought to  be  transferred  is  organized,  and  by
 9    posting  at  least  10  copies  of  the notice in conspicuous
10    places in the district or in each of the districts from which
11    the territory is sought to be transferred,  and  in  addition
12    shall cause a copy of the notice to be personally served upon
13    each of the trustees of the district to which the transfer is
14    sought  to  be made at least one week before the date set for
15    the hearing.  In such notice, or in any  accompanying  notice
16    to  be  served  upon the trustees at the same time, a recital
17    shall be made stating that the trustees may at any time prior
18    to the date of the hearing, or within such additional time as
19    may be granted by the court upon request in writing filed  on
20    or  before  such  date,  file a written refusal to accept the
21    territory  as  part  of  their   district.    However,   such
22    notification  need  not be given to the trustees if they file
23    in  the  proceeding  their  written  appearances  or  written
24    consent to a transfer of the territory to their district.
25        (e)  At any time prior to the date set for  the  hearing,
26    or  within  such  additional  time  as  may be granted by the
27    court, the trustees of the district to which the transfer  is
28    sought  to  be  made may file a written refusal to accept the
29    territory as part of their  district  and  in  case  of  such
30    refusal  the  court  shall  enter  an  order  dismissing  the
31    petition  for  the transfer.  The trustees may withdraw their
32    refusal at any time prior to the entry of an order dismissing
33    the petition.  In case the trustees fail to  file  a  written
34    refusal  within  the time hereinbefore authorized, they shall
                            -62-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1    be deemed to have consented to a transfer of the territory to
 2    their district, and consent once given may not  be  withdrawn
 3    without leave of court for good cause shown.  In case of such
 4    consent,  the  court  shall proceed with the matter as herein
 5    provided, but if the court finds that any of  the  conditions
 6    herein  required for the making of a transfer do not exist it
 7    shall enter an order dismissing the petition.  In taking  any
 8    action  upon  the  petition,  the findings of the court shall
 9    become a part of the court record in the case.
10        (f)  All property owners in the district from  which  the
11    transfer  is  sought, and all persons interested therein, may
12    file objections, and at the hearing may  appear  and  contest
13    the  transfer  and  the  matters averred in the petition, and
14    objectors and petitioners may offer any competent evidence in
15    regard thereto.  In addition,  all  persons  residing  in  or
16    interested  in  any of the property situated in the territory
17    sought to be transferred shall  have  an  opportunity  to  be
18    heard regarding the location and boundary of the territory to
19    be  voted  upon  for  such transfer, and may make suggestions
20    about such matters.
21        (g)  If the court shall, upon hearing the petition,  find
22    that  the  territory  described in the petition would receive
23    equal or greater benefits by being so  transferred  and  meet
24    the  conditions  hereinbefore  set forth, it shall certify to
25    the proper election officials the  question  of  whether  the
26    territory  shall  be  transferred,  and  its  order, and such
27    officials shall submit that question at an election  in  such
28    territory  in  accordance with the general election law.  The
29    proposition shall be in substantially the following form:
30    -------------------------------------------------------------
31        For making the transfer from the
32    .......... Fire Protection
33    District to the .......... Fire
34    Protection District, remaining liable
                            -63-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1    for a proportionate share of the bonded
 2    indebtedness outstanding as of the date
 3    of disconnection, if any, of the district
 4    from which disconnection is proposed,
 5    and also assuming a proportionate
 6    share of the bonded indebtedness, if
 7    any, of the district to which transfer
 8    is proposed.
 9    -------------------------------------------------------------
10        Against making the transfer from
11    the .......... Fire Protection
12    District to the ..........
13    Fire Protection District, remaining
14    liable for a proportionate share of
15    the bonded indebtedness outstanding
16    as of the date of disconnection, if
17    any, of the district from which
18    disconnection is proposed, and also
19    assuming a proportionate share of the
20    bonded indebtedness, if any, of the
21    district to which the transfer is proposed.
22    -------------------------------------------------------------
23        (h)  If a majority of the votes cast upon the question of
24    making the transfer shall be in favor of  the  transfer,  the
25    territory  shall  thenceforth  cease to be a part of the fire
26    protection  district  or  districts  to  which  it  has  been
27    attached and shall  become  an  integral  part  of  the  fire
28    protection  district  to  which  the transfer shall have been
29    sought and  shall  be  subject  to  all  the  enjoyments  and
30    responsibilities  of  the  latter  district.  In each case in
31    which a transfer  is  effected  pursuant  to  the  provisions
32    hereof,  the  circuit  clerk  in  whose  court  the  transfer
33    proceedings  have  been conducted shall certify copies of all
34    orders entered in effecting such transfer and  file  or  send
                            -64-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1    them  to  the proper county clerk or clerks for filing and to
 2    the Office of the State Fire Marshal.
 3    (Source: P.A. 85-556.)
 4        Section 75.  The  School  Code  is  amended  by  changing
 5    Section  24-2  to  eliminate  Good  Friday  as a legal school
 6    holiday, which  provision  was  held  unconstitutional  as  a
 7    violation   of   the   establishment   clause   of  the  U.S.
 8    Constitution by the United States Court of Appeals  in  Metzl
 9    v.  Leininger,  57  F.  3d  618  (7th Cir. 1995), the amended
10    Section to read as follows:
11        (105 ILCS 5/24-2) (from Ch. 122, par. 24-2)
12        Sec. 24-2.  Holidays.  Teachers shall not be required  to
13    teach  on  Saturdays;  nor  shall  teachers  or  other school
14    employees, other than noncertificated school employees  whose
15    presence  is  necessary  because  of  an emergency or for the
16    continued operation and maintenance of school  facilities  or
17    property, be required to work on legal school holidays, which
18    are  January  1, New Year's Day; the third Monday in January,
19    the Birthday of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.; February 12, the
20    Birthday of President Abraham Lincoln; the  first  Monday  in
21    March  (to  be  known  as  Casimir  Pulaski's birthday); Good
22    Friday; the day designated as Memorial Day  by  federal  law;
23    July  4,  Independence  Day;  the  first Monday in September,
24    Labor Day;  the  second  Monday  in  October,  Columbus  Day;
25    November 11, Veteran's Day; the Thursday in November commonly
26    called  Thanksgiving  Day;  and  December  25, Christmas Day.
27    School boards may grant special holidays  whenever  in  their
28    judgment  such  action  is  advisable,  except that no school
29    board or board of education in a  school  district  having  a
30    population  exceeding  500,000 the board of education may not
31    designate or observe as a legal or special holiday  on  which
32    teachers  or  other school employees are not required to work
                            -65-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1    the days on  which  general  elections  for  members  of  the
 2    Illinois  House  of  Representatives  are  held. No deduction
 3    shall be made from the  time  or  compensation  of  a  school
 4    employee on account of any legal or special holiday.
 5        Commemorative   holidays,   which   recognize   specified
 6    patriotic, civic, cultural or historical persons, activities,
 7    or  events,  are  regular school days. Commemorative holidays
 8    are: January 28 (to be known as  Christa  McAuliffe  Day  and
 9    observed  as  a commemoration of space exploration), February
10    15 (the birthday of Susan B. Anthony), March 29 (Viet Nam War
11    Veterans Day), the school day immediately preceding Veteran's
12    Day (Korean War Veterans Day),  October  1  (Recycling  Day),
13    December  7  (Pearl  Harbor  Veterans  Day)  and  any  day so
14    appointed by the President or Governor.   School  boards  may
15    establish  commemorative  holidays whenever in their judgment
16    such  action  is  advisable.  School  boards  shall   include
17    instruction  relative to commemorated persons, activities, or
18    events on the commemorative holiday  or  at  any  other  time
19    during  the  school  year  and at any point in the curriculum
20    when such instruction may be deemed  appropriate.  The  State
21    Board of Education shall prepare and make available to school
22    boards   instructional  materials  relative  to  commemorated
23    persons, activities, or events which may be  used  by  school
24    boards  in conjunction with any instruction provided pursuant
25    to this paragraph.
26        City of Chicago School District 299 shall observe March 4
27    of each year as a commemorative holiday.  This holiday  shall
28    be  known  as Mayors' Day which shall be a day to commemorate
29    and be reminded of the past Chief Executive Officers  of  the
30    City  of Chicago, and in particular the late Mayor Richard J.
31    Daley and the late Mayor Harold Washington.  If March 4 falls
32    on a Saturday or Sunday, Mayors' Day shall be observed on the
33    following Monday.
34    (Source: P.A.  89-610,  eff.  8-6-96;  89-622,  eff.  8-9-96;
                            -66-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1    revised 9-9-96.)
 2        Section  80.   The University of Illinois Trustees Act is
 3    amended by changing Section 1 to replace provisions  removing
 4    the   sitting   elected   trustees  from  office  before  the
 5    expiration of their terms in response to the Illinois Supreme
 6    Court decision in Tully v. Edgar, 171  Ill.  2d  297  (1996),
 7    which  decision  held that the removal of the sitting elected
 8    trustees from office violates  the  constitutional  right  to
 9    vote, the amended Section to read as follows:
10        (110 ILCS 310/1) (from Ch. 144, par. 41)
11        Sec.  1.   The  Board  of  Trustees  of the University of
12    Illinois  shall  consist  of  9  trustees  appointed  by  the
13    Governor, by and with the advice and consent of  the  Senate,
14    the  Governor,  and  one  nonvoting  student member from each
15    campus of the University of Illinois.
16        Each nonvoting student member shall serve a term  of  one
17    year,  beginning on July 1 of each year or on the date of his
18    or her selection, whichever is later,  and  expiring  on  the
19    next  succeeding June 30.  The student members shall have all
20    of the privileges of membership, including the right to  make
21    and  second  motions  and to attend executive sessions, other
22    than the right  to  vote.   The  method  of  selecting  these
23    student  members  shall  be determined by campus-wide student
24    referendum. Nonvoting student members shall not be considered
25    members for the  purpose  of  determining  a  quorum  at  any
26    meeting of the board or any of its committees.
27        The  term of Each elected trustee who is in office on the
28    effective date of  this  amendatory  Act  of  1995  shall  be
29    succeeded  in  that office, upon the expiration of his or her
30    elected term, by a trustee who is appointed by the  Governor,
31    by  and  with  the  advice  and  consent  of the Senate.  The
32    successors in office of all  of  the  trustees  initially  so
                            -67-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1    appointed shall likewise be appointed by the Governor, by and
 2    with  the  advice and consent of the Senate. terminate on the
 3    second Monday in January, 1996,  or  when  a  quorum  of  the
 4    trustees  initially to be appointed under this amendatory Act
 5    of 1995 is appointed and qualified, whichever last occurs.
 6        No more than 5 of the members appointed by  the  Governor
 7    shall  be affiliated with the same political party.  The term
 8    of office of each appointed trustee shall be 6 years from the
 9    second third Monday in January of  each  odd  numbered  year;
10    provided that year, except that of the 3 9 trustees initially
11    appointed  by  the  Governor  to succeed the 3 trustees whose
12    elected terms expired on the second Monday of January 1997, 3
13    shall serve be appointed for terms that commence on the  date
14    of  their  appointment  and  expire  on  the second Monday in
15    January, 2003 1997; the 3 trustees who are appointed  by  the
16    Governor to succeed the 3 trustees whose elected terms expire
17    on  the second Monday of January, 1999 shall be appointed for
18    terms that commence on the  date  of  their  appointment  and
19    expire  on the second Monday in January, 2005 1999; and the 3
20    trustees who are appointed by the Governor to succeed  the  3
21    trustees  whose  elected terms expire on the second Monday of
22    January, 2001 shall be appointed for terms that  commence  on
23    the date of their appointment and expire on the second Monday
24    in  January, 2007 2001.  Upon expiration of the terms of each
25    of the 9 members initially  so  appointed  by  the  Governor,
26    their respective successors shall be appointed for terms of 6
27    years  from the second Monday in January of each odd numbered
28    year and until their respective successors are appointed  and
29    confirmed qualified.
30        A  vacancy  in  the  office  of  an  elected or appointed
31    trustee Vacancies shall be filled for the unexpired  term  in
32    the  same  manner as original appointments are required to be
33    made under this amendatory Act of  1997.   If  a  vacancy  in
34    membership  occurs  at  a  time  when  the  Senate  is not in
                            -68-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1    session, the Governor shall make temporary appointments until
 2    the next meeting of the Senate, when he shall appoint persons
 3    to  fill  such  memberships  for  the  remainder   of   their
 4    respective  terms.   If  the  Senate  is  not in session when
 5    appointments for a full term are made, appointments shall  be
 6    made as in the case of vacancies.
 7        No  action of the board shall be invalidated by reason of
 8    any vacancies on the board, or by reason of  any  failure  to
 9    select nonvoting student members.
10    (Source:  P.A.  89-4,  eff.  7-1-95  (eff.  date changed from
11    1-1-96 by P.A. 89-24); 89-5, eff. 1-1-96.)
12        (220 ILCS 5/8-402.1 rep.)
13        Section 85.  The  Public  Utilities  Act  is  amended  by
14    repealing  Section  8-402.1,  which requires public utilities
15    and the Illinois Commerce Commission, in complying  with  the
16    federal  Clean  Air  Act  Amendments  of  1990,  to take into
17    account the need to use coal mined in Illinois and which  was
18    held  to  violate  the  commerce  clause of the United States
19    Constitution by the United  States  District  Court  for  the
20    Northern  District of Illinois, Eastern Division, in Alliance
21    for Clean Coal v. Craig, 840 F. Supp. 554 (1993).
22        Section 90.  The  Public  Utilities  Act  is  amended  by
23    changing   Sections   9-212,   9-214,  and  9-220  to  remove
24    cross-references to Section 8-402.1 of the  Public  Utilities
25    Act  which  Section is repealed in the preceding Section, the
26    amended Sections to read as follows:
27        (220 ILCS 5/9-212) (from Ch. 111 2/3, par. 9-212)
28        Sec. 9-212.  No new electric utility generating plant  or
29    gas  production facility, or significant addition to existing
30    facilities or plant, shall be included in  a  utility's  rate
31    base  unless and until the utility proves, and the Commission
                            -69-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1    determines, that such plant or facility is both  prudent  and
 2    used and useful in providing utility service to the utility's
 3    customers.  For purposes of this Section, prudency shall mean
 4    that at the time of certification, initiation of construction
 5    and  each  subsequent  evaluation of any construction project
 6    until  the  time  of  completion,  based  on   the   evidence
 7    introduced  in  any  hearings  and  all information which was
 8    known or should have been known at  the  time,  and  relevant
 9    planning  and  certification  criteria,  it  was  prudent and
10    reasonable to conclude  that  the  generating  or  production
11    facility  would  be  used  and useful in providing service to
12    customers at the time of completion.  If the  Commission  has
13    issued  a certificate of public convenience and necessity for
14    the completed facility and, to the extent that the Commission
15    approves continued construction upon reevaluation  subsequent
16    to  certification,  such actions shall constitute prima facie
17    evidence of the prudency of construction.  If the  Commission
18    determines  as  a  result of reevaluation during construction
19    that the facility should not be completed, such determination
20    shall  constitute  prima  facie  evidence   that   subsequent
21    construction expenditures were imprudent.
22        A  generation  or  production facility is used and useful
23    only if, and only to the extent that, it is necessary to meet
24    customer demand or economically beneficial  in  meeting  such
25    demand.   No generation or production facility shall be found
26    used and useful until and unless it is capable of  generation
27    or production at significant operating levels on a consistent
28    and  sustainable basis. Any pollution control devices for the
29    control of sulfur dioxide  emissions  installed  or  used  in
30    accordance with, and up to the cost specified in, an order or
31    supplemental  order  of  the  Commission  entered pursuant to
32    subsection (e) of Section 8-402.1 shall be deemed prudent and
33    shall, upon being placed  into  operation  on  a  consistent,
34    sustainable  basis  by the public utility, be deemed used and
                            -70-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1    useful.
 2    (Source: P.A. 87-173.)
 3        (220 ILCS 5/9-214) (from Ch. 111 2/3, par. 9-214)
 4        Sec. 9-214. (a) As used in this Section:
 5             (1)  "CWIP" means those assets which are recorded as
 6        construction work in progress on a public utility's books
 7        of accounts maintained in accordance with the  applicable
 8        regulations and orders of the Commission.
 9             (2)  "Rate  base"  means  the original cost value of
10        the property on which a return is allowed.
11             (3)  "CWIP ratio" means the fraction, expressed as a
12        percentage, calculated by dividing  the  amount  of  CWIP
13        included in a public utility's rate base by the utility's
14        rate base.
15             (4)  "Existing   CWIP"  means  the  amount  of  CWIP
16        included in the rate base on December 1, 1983.
17        (b)  In any determination under Section 9-201,  9-202  or
18    9-250  of this Act in a proceeding begun on or after December
19    1, 1983:
20             (1)  For any public utility with  a  CWIP  ratio  on
21        December  1, 1983, which is less than 15%, the Commission
22        shall not include  in  the  rate  base  for  such  public
23        utility an amount for CWIP to exceed 80% of existing CWIP
24        for the period from December 1, 1983 through December 31,
25        1984,  and  60%  of  existing  CWIP  for  the period from
26        January 1, 1985 through December  31,  1985  and  40%  of
27        existing CWIP for the period from January 1, 1986 through
28        December  31,  1986,  and  20%  of  existing CWIP for the
29        period from January 1, 1987 through December 31, 1987.
30             (2)  For any public utility with  a  CWIP  ratio  on
31        December  1,  1983 which is greater than or equal to 15%,
32        the Commission shall not include in  the  rate  base  for
33        such  public  utility an amount for CWIP in excess of the
                            -71-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1        amount of CWIP included in the rate base on  December  1,
 2        1983,  plus  50%  of  the  allowed  construction expenses
 3        incurred by the public utility from the date of the  most
 4        recent  rate  determination  by  the  Commission prior to
 5        December 1, 1983.
 6        (c)  The limitations set forth in paragraph (b)  of  this
 7    Section  shall  not  be  interpreted  as  an expansion of the
 8    Commission's authority to include CWIP in the rate base,  but
 9    rather solely as a limitation thereon.
10        (d)  The  Commission shall not include an amount for CWIP
11    in the rate base for any public utility for the period  after
12    December 31, 1988.
13        (e)  Notwithstanding the provisions of paragraphs (b) and
14    (d)  of  this  Section the Commission may include in the rate
15    base of a public utility an amount  for  CWIP  for  a  public
16    utility's  investment  which  is  scheduled  to  be placed in
17    service  within  12  months  of  the   date   of   the   rate
18    determination.    For  the purposes of this paragraph nuclear
19    generating facilities shall be considered to  be  in  service
20    upon the commencement of electric generation.
21        (f)  Notwithstanding  the provisions of paragraph (b) and
22    (d), the Commission may include in the rate base of a  public
23    utility  an  amount of CWIP for a public utility's investment
24    in pollution  control  devices  for  the  control  of  sulfur
25    dioxide  emissions  and the purification of water and sewage;
26    provided, however, that upon application by a public  utility
27    which  is  constructing one or more pollution control devices
28    for the control of sulfur dioxide  emissions  as  part  of  a
29    Clean  Air  Act  compliance  plan  approved by the Commission
30    pursuant to subsection (e) of Section 8-402.1, the Commission
31    shall include in such public utility's rate base an amount of
32    CWIP equal to its investment in such pollution control device
33    or devices, but not to exceed  the  estimated  cost  of  such
34    facilities   specified   in   the   Commission's   order   or
                            -72-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1    supplemental  order  pursuant  to  subsection  (e) of Section
 2    8-402.1. For purposes of  this  subsection  (f),  the  public
 3    utility's  investment  shall  not  include  the amount of any
 4    state, federal or other grants provided to the public utility
 5    to fund the design, acquisition,  construction,  installation
 6    and  testing  of pollution control devices for the control of
 7    sulfur dioxide emissions.
 8        (g)  Except  for  those  amounts  of  CWIP  described  in
 9    paragraphs (e) and (f) of this Section, the Commission  shall
10    consider, in any rate filing subsequent to the coming on line
11    of  any  new utility plant where CWIP funds have been allowed
12    in  rate  base,  a  rate  moderation  plan  directed  towards
13    allowing an appropriate return  to  ratepayers  for  previous
14    amounts attributable to CWIP funds.
15        The  Commission  shall conduct an investigation and study
16    of the costs and benefits to ratepayers of the  inclusion  of
17    construction work in progress in rate base.  Such study shall
18    include  a  full  opportunity for participation by the public
19    through notice and hearings.  If  the  Commission  determines
20    that  in  certain circumstances the inclusion of CWIP in rate
21    base would be  demonstrably  beneficial  to  ratepayers,  the
22    Commission  shall report its findings with recommendations to
23    the General Assembly by December 31, 1988.
24    (Source: P.A. 87-173.)
25        (220 ILCS 5/9-220) (from Ch. 111 2/3, par. 9-220)
26        Sec. 9-220. Notwithstanding  the  provisions  of  Section
27    9-201,  the Commission may authorize the increase or decrease
28    of rates and charges based upon changes in the cost  of  fuel
29    used  in  the  generation  or  production  of electric power,
30    changes in the cost of purchased power,  or  changes  in  the
31    cost  of  purchased  gas  through  the  application  of  fuel
32    adjustment  clauses or purchased gas adjustment clauses.  The
33    Commission may also authorize the  increase  or  decrease  of
                            -73-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1    rates   and  charges  based  upon  expenditures  or  revenues
 2    resulting from the purchase or sale  of  emission  allowances
 3    created  under  the federal Clean Air Act Amendments of 1990,
 4    P.L. 101-549 as defined in Section 8-402.1, through such fuel
 5    adjustment clauses, as a cost of fuel.  For the  purposes  of
 6    this  paragraph,  cost  of  fuel  used  in  the generation or
 7    production of electric power shall include the amount of  any
 8    fees paid by the utility for the implementation and operation
 9    of  a  process  for  the desulfurization of the flue gas when
10    burning high sulfur coal at any location within the State  of
11    Illinois irrespective of the attainment status designation of
12    such  location,  except  for  any  fees or costs related to a
13    service contract which is part of a utility's Clean  Air  Act
14    compliance  plan approved pursuant to Section 8-402.1, to the
15    extent  that  recovery  of  comparable  costs  would  not  be
16    permitted under  this  Section  if  incurred  directly  by  a
17    utility  owning  and operating such a facility; but shall not
18    include transportation costs of  coal.  except  as  otherwise
19    provided  in  this paragraph.  Such costs of fuel shall, when
20    requested by a utility or at the conclusion of the  utility's
21    next  general electric rate proceeding, whichever shall first
22    occur, include transportation costs of coal  purchased  under
23    existing  coal  purchase  contracts.   For  purposes  of this
24    paragraph "existing coal purchase contracts" means  contracts
25    for  the  purchase of coal in effect on the effective date of
26    this amendatory Act of 1991, as such contracts may thereafter
27    be amended, but only to the extent that  any  such  amendment
28    does  not  increase  the  aggregate  quantity  of  coal to be
29    purchased under such contract.   Cost  shall  be  based  upon
30    uniformly   applied   accounting  principles.  Annually,  the
31    Commission  shall  initiate  public  hearings  to   determine
32    whether  the  clauses  reflect  actual costs of fuel, gas, or
33    power, or coal transportation purchased to determine  whether
34    such  purchases  were  prudent,  and to reconcile any amounts
                            -74-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1    collected with the actual costs of fuel, power,  or  gas,  or
 2    coal   transportation  prudently  purchased.   In  each  such
 3    proceeding, the burden of proof shall be upon the utility  to
 4    establish  the  prudence prudency of its cost of fuel, power,
 5    or gas, or coal transportation purchases and costs.
 6        The Commission shall have authority to  promulgate  rules
 7    and   regulations   to  carry  out  the  provisions  of  this
 8    paragraph.
 9    (Source: P.A. 87-173; 88-488.)
10        Section 95.  The Children  and  Family  Services  Act  is
11    amended  by  changing Section 5 to permit relative caregivers
12    who were approved or preapproved as  relative  caregivers  by
13    DCFS  on  July  1,  1995,  to continue to receive foster care
14    payments until DCFS has approved or denied their applications
15    for licensure as foster  family  homes  in  response  to  the
16    United  States Court of Appeals, Seventh Circuit, decision in
17    Youakim v. McDonald, 71 F. 3d 1274  (7th  Cir.  1995),  which
18    decision  held  that  it  was  a  denial  of  due  process to
19    discontinue payments to  approved  and  preapproved  relative
20    caregivers   until  DCFS  acted  on  their  applications  for
21    licensure as foster family care homes, the amended Section to
22    read as follows:
23        (20 ILCS 505/5) (from Ch. 23, par. 5005)
24        (Text of Section before amendment by P.A. 89-507)
25        Sec. 5.  To provide direct child  welfare  services  when
26    not  available  through other public or private child care or
27    program facilities.
28        (a)  For purposes of this Section:
29             (1)  "Children" means persons found within the State
30        who are under  the  age  of  18  years.   The  term  also
31        includes persons under age 19 who:
32                  (A)  were  committed to the Department pursuant
                            -75-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1             to the Juvenile Court Act or the Juvenile Court  Act
 2             of  1987, as amended, prior to the age of 18 and who
 3             continue under the jurisdiction of the court; or
 4                  (B)  were  accepted   for  care,  service   and
 5             training  by  the  Department prior to the age of 18
 6             and whose best interest in  the  discretion  of  the
 7             Department  would be served by continuing that care,
 8             service and training  because  of  severe  emotional
 9             disturbances, physical disability, social adjustment
10             or  any  combination thereof, or because of the need
11             to complete an educational  or  vocational  training
12             program.
13             (2)  "Homeless youth" means persons found within the
14        State  who are under the age of 19, are not in a safe and
15        stable living situation and cannot be reunited with their
16        families.
17             (3)  "Child welfare services"  means  public  social
18        services  which are directed toward the accomplishment of
19        the following purposes:
20                  (A)  protecting and promoting  the  welfare  of
21             children, including homeless, dependent or neglected
22             children;
23                  (B)  preventing  or  remedying, or assisting in
24             the solution of problems which may  result  in,  the
25             neglect,   abuse,  exploitation  or  delinquency  of
26             children;
27                  (C)  preventing the unnecessary  separation  of
28             children  from  their families by identifying family
29             problems,  assisting  families  in  resolving  their
30             problems, and preventing the breakup of  the  family
31             where  the  prevention of child removal is desirable
32             and possible;
33                  (D)  restoring to their families  children  who
34             have  been  removed, by the provision of services to
                            -76-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1             the child and the families;
 2                  (E)  placing  children  in  suitable   adoptive
 3             homes,  in cases where restoration to the biological
 4             family is not possible or appropriate;
 5                  (F)  assuring adequate care  of  children  away
 6             from their homes, in cases where the child cannot be
 7             returned home or cannot be placed for adoption;
 8                  (G)  providing  supportive  services and living
 9             maintenance  which  contribute  to   the   physical,
10             emotional  and social well-being of children who are
11             pregnant and unmarried;
12                  (H)  providing shelter and  independent  living
13             services for homeless youth; and
14                  (I)  placing   and   maintaining   children  in
15             facilities that provide separate living quarters for
16             children under the age of 18  and  for  children  18
17             years  of  age and older, unless a child 18 years of
18             age is in the last year of high school education  or
19             vocational  training,  in  an approved individual or
20             group treatment program, or in  a  licensed  shelter
21             facility.    The Department is not required to place
22             or maintain children:
23                       (i)  who are in a foster home, or
24                       (ii)  who are persons with a developmental
25                  disability, as defined in the Mental Health and
26                  Developmental Disabilities Code, or
27                       (iii)  who are  female  children  who  are
28                  pregnant,  pregnant and parenting or parenting,
29                  or
30                       (iv)  who are siblings,
31             in facilities that provide separate living  quarters
32             for  children  18  years  of  age  and older and for
33             children under 18 years of age.
34        (b)  Nothing  in  this  Section  shall  be  construed  to
                            -77-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1    authorize the expenditure of public funds for the purpose  of
 2    performing abortions.
 3        (c)  The   Department   shall   establish   and  maintain
 4    tax-supported child welfare services and extend and  seek  to
 5    improve  voluntary  services throughout the State, to the end
 6    that services and care shall be available on an  equal  basis
 7    throughout the State to children requiring such services.
 8        (d)  The Director may authorize advance disbursements for
 9    any new program initiative to any agency contracting with the
10    Department.   As a prerequisite for an advance  disbursement,
11    the  contractor  must post a surety bond in the amount of the
12    advance disbursement and have a purchase of service  contract
13    approved  by  the Department.  The Department may pay up to 2
14    months operational expenses in advance.  The  amount  of  the
15    advance  disbursement  shall be prorated over the life of the
16    contract  or  the  remaining  months  of  the  fiscal   year,
17    whichever  is  less, and the installment amount shall then be
18    deducted   from   future   bills.     Advance    disbursement
19    authorizations  for  new initiatives shall not be made to any
20    agency after that agency has operated  during  2  consecutive
21    fiscal  years.    The requirements of this Section concerning
22    advance disbursements shall not apply  with  respect  to  the
23    following:   payments  to local public agencies for child day
24    care services as authorized by Section 5a of  this  Act;  and
25    youth  service  programs  receiving grant funds under Section
26    17a-4.
27        (e)  For the purpose  of  insuring  effective  state-wide
28    planning,  development,  and utilization of resources for the
29    day care of children, operated under  various  auspices,  the
30    Department  is  hereby  designated to coordinate all day care
31    activities for children of the State and shall:
32             (1)  Develop on or  before  December  1,  1977,  and
33        update  every  year  thereafter,  a  state  comprehensive
34        day-care  plan  for  submission  to  the  Governor  which
                            -78-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1        identifies  high-priority areas and groups, relating them
 2        to  available  resources,  and   identifying   the   most
 3        effective  approaches  to  the  use  of existing day care
 4        services. The State comprehensive day-care plan shall  be
 5        made  available  to  the  General  Assembly following the
 6        Governor's approval  of the plan.
 7             The plan shall include methods  and  procedures  for
 8        the  development  of  additional  day  care resources for
 9        children to meet  the  goal  of  reducing  short-run  and
10        long-run  dependency  and to provide necessary enrichment
11        and stimulation  to  the  education  of  young  children.
12        Recommendation  shall be made for State policy on optimum
13        use of private  and  public,  local,  state  and  federal
14        resources,  including an estimate of the resources needed
15        for the licensing and regulation of day care facilities.
16             A written report shall be submitted to the  Governor
17        and  the  General  Assembly,  annually,  on April 15, and
18        shall include an  evaluation  of  developments  over  the
19        preceding fiscal year, including cost-benefit analyses of
20        various  arrangements.  Beginning with the report in 1990
21        and every 2  years  thereafter,  the  report  shall  also
22        include the following:
23                  (A)  An  assessment of the child care services,
24             needs and available resources throughout  the  State
25             and  an assessment of the adequacy of existing child
26             care  services,  including,  but  not  limited   to,
27             services assisted under this Act and under any other
28             program administered by other State agencies.
29                  (B)  A   survey   of  day  care  facilities  to
30             determine the number  of  qualified  caregivers,  as
31             defined  by  rule, attracted to vacant positions and
32             any problems encountered by facilities in attracting
33             and retaining capable caregivers.
34                  (C)  The average wages and salaries and  fringe
                            -79-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1             benefit  packages  paid to caregivers throughout the
 2             State, computed on a regional basis.
 3                  (D)  The qualifications of new caregivers hired
 4             at licensed day care facilities during the  previous
 5             2 year period.
 6                  (E)  Recommendations  for  increasing caregiver
 7             wages  and  salaries  to  insure  quality  care  for
 8             children.
 9                  (F)  Evaluation of the fee structure and income
10             eligibility for child care subsidized by the State.
11             The  requirement  for  reporting  to   the   General
12        Assembly  shall  be  satisfied  by  filing  copies of the
13        report with the Speaker,  the  Minority  Leader  and  the
14        Clerk  of the House of Representatives and the President,
15        the Minority Leader and the Secretary of the  Senate  and
16        the Legislative Research Unit, as required by Section 3.1
17        of the General Assembly Organization Act, and filing such
18        additional   copies  with  the  State  Government  Report
19        Distribution  Center  for  the  General  Assembly  as  is
20        required under paragraph (t) of Section 7  of  the  State
21        Library Act.
22             (2)  Establish    policies    and   procedures   for
23        developing and implementing interagency  agreements  with
24        other agencies of the State providing child care services
25        or reimbursement for such services.
26             (3)  In   cooperation  with  other  State  agencies,
27        develop and implement a resource and referral system  for
28        the  State of Illinois either within the Department or by
29        contract with local or regional  agencies.   Funding  for
30        implementation  of  this  system  may be provided through
31        Department appropriations or other  inter-agency  funding
32        arrangements.  The  resource  and  referral  system shall
33        provide at least the following services:
34                  (A)  assembling and maintaining a data base  on
                            -80-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1             the supply of child care services;
 2                  (B)  providing  information  and  referrals for
 3             parents;
 4                  (C)  coordinating the development of new  child
 5             care resources;
 6                  (D)  providing    technical    assistance   and
 7             training to child care service providers; and
 8                  (E)  recording and  analyzing  the  demand  for
 9             child care services.
10             The Department shall complete implementation of this
11        resource  and referral system in all regions of the State
12        by January 1, 1992.
13             (4)  Conduct day care planning activities  with  the
14        following priorities:
15                  (A)  development    of   voluntary   day   care
16             resources wherever possible, with the provision  for
17             grants-in-aid  only  where demonstrated to be useful
18             and necessary as incentives or supports;
19                  (B)  emphasis  on  service   to   children   of
20             recipients  of  public assistance where such service
21             will allow training  or  employment  of  the  parent
22             toward achieving the goal of independence;
23                  (C)  maximum employment of recipients of public
24             assistance  in  day care centers and day care homes,
25             operated  in  conjunction   with   short-term   work
26             training programs;
27                  (D)  care  of  children from families in stress
28             and crises whose members potentially may become,  or
29             are   in  danger  of  becoming,  non-productive  and
30             dependent;
31                  (E)  expansion of family  day  care  facilities
32             wherever possible;
33                  (F)  location   of   centers   in  economically
34             depressed neighborhoods, preferably in multi-service
                            -81-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1             centers with cooperation of other agencies;
 2                  (G)  use of existing facilities free of  charge
 3             or  for  reasonable rental wherever possible in lieu
 4             of construction;
 5                  (H)  development of strategies for  assuring  a
 6             more  complete  range of day care options, including
 7             provision of day care services in homes, in  schools
 8             or in centers, which will enable a parent or parents
 9             to  complete  a  course  of  education  or obtain or
10             maintain employment.
11             Emphasis shall be given to  support  services  which
12        will  help  to  ensure such parents' graduation from high
13        school and to services for participants  in  the  Project
14        Chance  program of job training conducted by the Illinois
15        Department of Public Aid.
16             (5)  Actively stimulate the  development  of  public
17        and  private resources at the local level.  It shall also
18        seek the fullest utilization of federal funds directly or
19        indirectly available to the Department.
20        Where appropriate, existing non-governmental agencies  or
21    associations shall be involved in planning by the Department.
22        (f)  The  Department,  pursuant  to  a  contract with the
23    Illinois Department of Public Aid,  may  provide  child  care
24    services   to  former  recipients  of  assistance  under  The
25    Illinois Public Aid Code as authorized by  Section  9-6.3  of
26    that Code.
27        (g)  The Department shall establish rules and regulations
28    concerning  its  operation  of  programs designed to meet the
29    goals  of  child  protection,  family  preservation,   family
30    reunification,  adoption and youth development, including but
31    not limited to:
32             (1)  adoption;
33             (2)  foster care;
34             (3)  family counseling;
                            -82-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1             (4)  protective services;
 2             (5)  service to unwed mothers;
 3             (6)  homemaker service;
 4             (7)  return of runaway children;
 5             (8)  independent  living  skills  and  shelter   for
 6        homeless youth;
 7             (9)  placement  under  Section  5-7  of the Juvenile
 8        Court Act or Section 2-27, 3-28,  4-25  or  5-29  of  the
 9        Juvenile Court Act of 1987 in accordance with the federal
10        Adoption Assistance and Child Welfare Act of 1980; and
11             (10)  interstate services.
12        Rules and regulations established by the Department shall
13    include  provisions  for  training  Department  staff and the
14    staff of Department grantees, through  contracts  with  other
15    agencies  or  resources,  in alcohol and drug abuse screening
16    techniques to identify children  and  adults  who  should  be
17    referred  to  an alcohol and drug abuse treatment program for
18    professional evaluation.
19        (h)  If the Department finds that there is no appropriate
20    program or facility within or available to the Department for
21    a ward and that no licensed private facility has an  adequate
22    and  appropriate  program  or none agrees to accept the ward,
23    the Department shall create  an  appropriate  individualized,
24    program-oriented  plan  for  such  ward.   The  plan  may  be
25    developed  within  the  Department  or  through  purchase  of
26    services  by  the  Department to the extent that it is within
27    its statutory authority to do.
28        (i)  Service programs shall be available  throughout  the
29    State  and  shall include but not be limited to the following
30    services:
31             (1)  case management;
32             (2)  homemakers;
33             (3)  counseling;
34             (4)  parent education;
                            -83-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1             (5)  day care; and
 2             (6)  emergency assistance and advocacy.
 3        In addition, the following services may be made available
 4    to assess and meet the needs of children and families:
 5             (1)  comprehensive family-based services;
 6             (2)  assessments;
 7             (3)  respite care; and
 8             (4)  in-home health services.
 9        The Department shall provide transportation  for  any  of
10    the  services  it  makes available to children or families or
11    for which it refers children or families.
12        (j)  The Department may provide financial assistance, and
13    shall  establish  rules  and  regulations   concerning   such
14    assistance,  to  persons  who  adopt  physically  or mentally
15    handicapped,  older  and  other  hard-to-place  children  who
16    immediately prior to their adoption were legal wards  of  the
17    Department.    The  Department  may  also  provide  financial
18    assistance, and shall establish  rules  and  regulations  for
19    such  assistance, to persons appointed guardian of the person
20    under Section 5-7 of the Juvenile Court Act or Section  2-27,
21    3-28,  4-25  or  5-29  of  the Juvenile Court Act of 1987 for
22    children who were wards  of  the  Department  for  12  months
23    immediately   prior  to  the  appointment  of  the  successor
24    guardian and for whom  the  Department  has  set  a  goal  of
25    permanent family placement with a foster family.
26        The  amount  of  assistance  may vary, depending upon the
27    needs of the child and the adoptive parents, but must  be  at
28    least  $25 less than the monthly cost of care of the child in
29    a  foster  home,  as  set  forth  in  the  annual  assistance
30    agreement.  Special purpose  grants  are  allowed  where  the
31    child  requires special service but such costs may not exceed
32    the amounts which similar services would cost the  Department
33    if  it  were  to  provide  or  secure them as guardian of the
34    child.
                            -84-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1        Any financial assistance provided under  this  subsection
 2    is  inalienable  by  assignment, sale, execution, attachment,
 3    garnishment, or any other remedy for recovery  or  collection
 4    of a judgment or debt.
 5        (k)  The  Department  shall  accept for care and training
 6    any child who has been adjudicated neglected  or  abused,  or
 7    dependent  committed to it pursuant to the Juvenile Court Act
 8    or the Juvenile Court Act of 1987.
 9        (l)  Before July 1, 2000, the Department may provide, and
10    beginning July 1, 2000, the Department shall provide,  family
11    preservation services, as determined to be appropriate and in
12    the  child's best interests and when the child will not be in
13    imminent risk of harm, to any family  whose  child  has  been
14    placed  in  substitute  care,  any persons who have adopted a
15    child and require  post-adoption  services,  or  any  persons
16    whose  child  or children are at risk of being placed outside
17    their  home  as  documented  by  an  "indicated"  report   of
18    suspected  child  abuse or neglect determined pursuant to the
19    Abused and Neglected Child Reporting  Act.  Nothing  in  this
20    paragraph  shall  be  construed  to create a private right of
21    action or claim on  the  part  of  any  individual  or  child
22    welfare agency.
23        The  Department  shall notify the child and his family of
24    the Department's responsibility to offer and  provide  family
25    preservation services as identified in the service plan.  The
26    child  and  his family shall be eligible for services as soon
27    as  the  report  is  determined  to  be   "indicated".    The
28    Department  may  offer  services  to any child or family with
29    respect to whom a report of suspected child abuse or  neglect
30    has  been  filed, prior to concluding its investigation under
31    Section 7.12 of the Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act.
32    However,  the  child's  or  family's  willingness  to  accept
33    services shall not be considered in the  investigation.   The
34    Department  may  also provide services to any child or family
                            -85-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1    who is the subject of any report of suspected child abuse  or
 2    neglect  or  may  refer  such  child  or  family  to services
 3    available from other agencies in the community, even  if  the
 4    report  is  determined  to be unfounded, if the conditions in
 5    the child's or family's home are reasonably likely to subject
 6    the child or family to  future  reports  of  suspected  child
 7    abuse  or  neglect.   Acceptance  of  such  services shall be
 8    voluntary.
 9        The Department may, at its discretion  except  for  those
10    children  also adjudicated neglected or dependent, accept for
11    care  and  training  any  child  who  has  been   adjudicated
12    addicted,  as  a  truant minor in need of supervision or as a
13    minor  requiring  authoritative   intervention,   under   the
14    Juvenile  Court Act or the Juvenile Court Act of 1987, but no
15    such child shall be committed to the Department by any  court
16    without the approval of the Department.  A minor charged with
17    a  criminal  offense  under  the  Criminal  Code  of  1961 or
18    adjudicated delinquent shall not be placed in the custody  of
19    or  committed  to the Department by any court, except a minor
20    less than 13 years of age committed to the  Department  under
21    Section 5-23 of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987.
22        (m)  The  Department  may assume temporary custody of any
23    child if:
24             (1)  it has  received  a  written  consent  to  such
25        temporary  custody  signed by the parents of the child or
26        by the parent having custody of the child if the  parents
27        are  not  living together or by the guardian or custodian
28        of the child if the child is not in the custody of either
29        parent, or
30             (2)  the child is found in the State and  neither  a
31        parent,  guardian  nor  custodian  of  the  child  can be
32        located.
33    If the child is found in  his  or  her  residence  without  a
34    parent,  guardian,  custodian  or  responsible caretaker, the
                            -86-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1    Department may, instead of removing the  child  and  assuming
 2    temporary  custody, place an authorized representative of the
 3    Department in that residence until such  time  as  a  parent,
 4    guardian  or  custodian  enters  the  home  and  expresses  a
 5    willingness  and  apparent ability to resume permanent charge
 6    of the child, or until a relative  enters  the  home  and  is
 7    willing  and  able  to  assume  charge  of  the child until a
 8    parent, guardian or custodian enters the home  and  expresses
 9    such  willingness  and  ability  to  resume permanent charge.
10    After a caretaker has remained in the home for a  period  not
11    to   exceed  12  hours,  the  Department  must  follow  those
12    procedures outlined in Section 2-9, 3-11, 4-8 or 5-9  of  the
13    Juvenile Court Act of 1987.
14        The Department shall have the authority, responsibilities
15    and  duties  that  a  legal custodian of the child would have
16    pursuant to subsection (9) of Section  1-3  of  the  Juvenile
17    Court  Act of 1987.  Whenever a child is taken into temporary
18    custody pursuant to an investigation  under  the  Abused  and
19    Neglected  Child Reporting Act, or pursuant to a referral and
20    acceptance under the Juvenile Court Act of 1987 of a minor in
21    limited  custody,  the  Department,  during  the  period   of
22    temporary  custody  and  before the child is brought before a
23    judicial officer as required by Section 2-9, 3-11, 4-8 or 5-9
24    of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987, shall have the  authority,
25    responsibilities  and  duties  that  a legal custodian of the
26    child would have under subsection (9) of Section 1-3  of  the
27    Juvenile Court Act of 1987.
28        The  Department  shall  ensure  that any child taken into
29    custody  is  scheduled  for  an  appointment  for  a  medical
30    examination.
31        A parent,  guardian  or  custodian  of  a  child  in  the
32    temporary custody of the Department who would have custody of
33    the  child  if  he  were  not in the temporary custody of the
34    Department may deliver to the  Department  a  signed  request
                            -87-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1    that  the  Department  surrender the temporary custody of the
 2    child.  The Department may retain temporary  custody  of  the
 3    child  for  10  days after the receipt of the request, during
 4    which period the Department may cause to be filed a  petition
 5    pursuant to the Juvenile Court Act of 1987.  If a petition is
 6    so  filed,  the  Department shall retain temporary custody of
 7    the child until the court orders otherwise.  If a petition is
 8    not filed within the  10  day  period,  the  child  shall  be
 9    surrendered to the custody of the requesting parent, guardian
10    or  custodian  not  later  than  the expiration of the 10 day
11    period, at  which  time  the  authority  and  duties  of  the
12    Department with respect to the temporary custody of the child
13    shall terminate.
14        (n)  The  Department may place children under 18 years of
15    age in licensed child care facilities when in the opinion  of
16    the   Department,   appropriate   services  aimed  at  family
17    preservation have been unsuccessful or unavailable  and  such
18    placement  would  be  for  their  best interest.  Payment for
19    board, clothing, care, training and supervision of any  child
20    placed  in  a licensed child care facility may be made by the
21    Department, by the parents or guardians  of  the  estates  of
22    those  children, or by both the Department and the parents or
23    guardians, except that no  payments  shall  be  made  by  the
24    Department  for  any  child  placed  in a licensed child care
25    facility for board, clothing, care, training and  supervision
26    of  such  a  child that exceed the average per capita cost of
27    maintaining and of caring for a  child  in  institutions  for
28    dependent  or  neglected children operated by the Department.
29    However, such restriction on payments does not apply in cases
30    where children require specialized  care  and  treatment  for
31    problems    of   severe   emotional   disturbance,   physical
32    disability, social adjustment, or any combination thereof and
33    suitable facilities for the placement of  such  children  are
34    not  available  at  payment  rates within the limitations set
                            -88-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1    forth  in  this  Section.  All  reimbursements  for  services
 2    delivered shall  be  absolutely  inalienable  by  assignment,
 3    sale, attachment, garnishment or otherwise.
 4        (o)  The  Department  shall  establish  an administrative
 5    review and appeal  process  for  children  and  families  who
 6    request   or   receive   child   welfare  services  from  the
 7    Department.  Children who are wards of the Department and are
 8    placed by private child welfare agencies, and foster families
 9    with whom those children are placed, shall  be  afforded  the
10    same procedural and appeal rights as children and families in
11    the  case of placement by the Department, including the right
12    to an  initial review of a private agency  decision  by  that
13    agency.   The  Department shall insure that any private child
14    welfare agency, which accepts wards  of  the  Department  for
15    placement,  affords  those  rights  to  children  and  foster
16    families.   The  Department  shall  accept for administrative
17    review and an appeal hearing a complaint made by a  child  or
18    foster  family  concerning  a  decision  following an initial
19    review by a private child welfare agency.   An  appeal  of  a
20    decision  concerning  a  change  in  the placement of a child
21    shall be conducted in an expedited manner.
22        (p)  There is hereby created the Department  of  Children
23    and  Family Services Emergency Assistance Fund from which the
24    Department  may  provide  special  financial  assistance   to
25    families which are in economic crisis when such assistance is
26    not available through other public or private sources and the
27    assistance  is deemed necessary to prevent dissolution of the
28    family unit or to reunite families which have been  separated
29    due  to  child  abuse  and  neglect.   The  Department  shall
30    establish  administrative  rules  specifying the criteria for
31    determining eligibility for and  the  amount  and  nature  of
32    assistance  to  be  provided.   The Department may also enter
33    into  written  agreements  with  private  and  public  social
34    service agencies to provide emergency financial  services  to
                            -89-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1    families  referred  by  the  Department.    Special financial
 2    assistance payments shall be available to a  family  no  more
 3    than once during each fiscal year and the total payments to a
 4    family may not exceed $500 during a fiscal year.
 5        (q)  The   Department  may  receive  and  use,  in  their
 6    entirety, for the benefit of children any gift,  donation  or
 7    bequest  of  money  or  other  property  which is received on
 8    behalf of such children, or any financial benefits  to  which
 9    such  children  are  or  may  become entitled while under the
10    jurisdiction or care of the Department.
11        The Department  shall  set  up  and  administer  no-cost,
12    interest-bearing  savings  accounts  in appropriate financial
13    institutions ("individual accounts") for  children  for  whom
14    the  Department  is  legally  responsible  and  who have been
15    determined eligible for Veterans' Benefits,  Social  Security
16    benefits,  assistance allotments from the armed forces, court
17    ordered payments, parental voluntary  payments,  Supplemental
18    Security  Income,  Railroad  Retirement  payments, Black Lung
19    benefits, or other miscellaneous payments.   Interest  earned
20    by  each individual account shall be credited to the account,
21    unless disbursed in accordance with this subsection.
22        In disbursing funds from children's individual  accounts,
23    the Department shall:
24             (1)  Establish  standards  in  accordance with State
25        and federal laws for  disbursing  money  from  children's
26        individual   accounts.    In   all   circumstances,   the
27        Department's  "Guardianship  Administrator" or his or her
28        designee  must  approve  disbursements  from   children's
29        individual accounts.  The Department shall be responsible
30        for  keeping  complete  records  of all disbursements for
31        each individual account for any purpose.
32             (2)  Calculate on a monthly basis the  amounts  paid
33        from  State funds for the child's board and care, medical
34        care not covered under Medicaid, and social services; and
                            -90-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1        utilize funds from the  child's  individual  account,  as
 2        covered   by   regulation,   to  reimburse  those  costs.
 3        Monthly, disbursements  from  all  children's  individual
 4        accounts,  up  to 1/12 of $13,000,000, shall be deposited
 5        by the Department into the General Revenue Fund  and  the
 6        balance over 1/12 of $13,000,000 into the DCFS Children's
 7        Services Fund.
 8             (3)  Maintain    any    balance    remaining   after
 9        reimbursing for the child's costs of care,  as  specified
10        in  item  (2). The balance shall accumulate in accordance
11        with  relevant  State  and  federal  laws  and  shall  be
12        disbursed to the child or his or her guardian, or to  the
13        issuing agency.
14        (r)  The    Department   shall   promulgate   regulations
15    encouraging all adoption agencies to voluntarily  forward  to
16    the  Department  or  its  agent  names  and  addresses of all
17    persons who have applied  for  and  have  been  approved  for
18    adoption  of  a  hard-to-place  or  handicapped child and the
19    names of such children who have not been placed for adoption.
20    A list of such names and addresses shall be maintained by the
21    Department or its agent, and coded lists which  maintain  the
22    confidentiality  of the person seeking to adopt the child and
23    of the child shall be  made  available,  without  charge,  to
24    every  adoption agency in the State to assist the agencies in
25    placing  such  children  for  adoption.  The  Department  may
26    delegate to an agent its duty to maintain and make  available
27    such  lists.   The  Department  shall  ensure that such agent
28    maintains the confidentiality of the person seeking to  adopt
29    the child and of the child.
30        (s)  The  Department  of Children and Family Services may
31    establish and implement a program to reimburse Department and
32    private child welfare agency foster parents licensed  by  the
33    Department  of  Children  and  Family  Services  for  damages
34    sustained  by the foster parents as a result of the malicious
                            -91-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1    or negligent acts of foster children, as  well  as  providing
 2    third  party  coverage for such foster parents with regard to
 3    actions  of  foster  children  to  other  individuals.   Such
 4    coverage will be secondary to  the  foster  parent  liability
 5    insurance policy, if applicable.  The program shall be funded
 6    through   appropriations   from  the  General  Revenue  Fund,
 7    specifically designated for such purposes.
 8        (t)  The  Department  shall  perform  home  studies   and
 9    investigations and shall exercise supervision over visitation
10    as  ordered  by a court pursuant to the Illinois Marriage and
11    Dissolution of Marriage Act or the Adoption Act only if:
12             (1)  an  order  entered   by   an   Illinois   court
13        specifically  directs  the  Department  to  perform  such
14        services; and
15             (2)  the  court  has  ordered  one  or  both  of the
16        parties to the proceeding to reimburse the Department for
17        its reasonable  costs  for  providing  such  services  in
18        accordance  with Department rules, or has determined that
19        neither party is financially able to pay.
20        The Department shall provide written notification to  the
21    court  of the specific arrangements for supervised visitation
22    and projected monthly costs  within  60  days  of  the  court
23    order.  The  Department  shall  send to the court information
24    related to the costs incurred except in cases where the court
25    has determined the parties are financially unable to pay. The
26    court may order additional periodic reports as appropriate.
27        (u)  Whenever the Department places a child in a licensed
28    foster home, group home, child  care  institution,  or  in  a
29    relative home, the Department shall provide to the caretaker:
30             (1)  available  detailed  information concerning the
31        child's  educational  and  health  history,   copies   of
32        immunization  records  (including  insurance  and medical
33        card information), a  history  of  the  child's  previous
34        placements,  if  any,  and  reasons for placement changes
                            -92-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1        excluding any information that identifies or reveals  the
 2        location of any previous caretaker;
 3             (2)  a  copy  of  the  child's portion of the client
 4        service plan, including any visitation  arrangement,  and
 5        all  amendments  or  revisions  to  it  as related to the
 6        child; and
 7             (3)  information containing details of  the  child's
 8        individualized   educational   plan  when  the  child  is
 9        receiving special education services.
10        The caretaker shall be informed of any  known  social  or
11    behavioral  information  (including, but not limited to, fire
12    setting, perpetuation of sexual abuse, destructive  behavior,
13    and  substance abuse) necessary to care for and safeguard the
14    child.
15        (u-5)  Effective  July  1,   1995,   only   foster   care
16    placements  licensed  as  foster family homes pursuant to the
17    Child Care Act of 1969 shall be eligible  to  receive  foster
18    care  payments  from the Department. Relative caregivers who,
19    as of July  1,  1995,  were  approved  pursuant  to  approved
20    relative   placement  rules  previously  promulgated  by  the
21    Department at 89 Ill. Adm. Code  335  and  had  submitted  an
22    application  for  licensure  as  a  foster  family  home  may
23    continue  to  receive  foster  care  payments  only until the
24    Department determines that they may be licensed as  a  foster
25    family home or that their application for licensure is denied
26    or until September 30, 1995, whichever occurs first.
27        (v)  The  Department shall access criminal history record
28    information  as defined in the  Illinois  Uniform  Conviction
29    Information   Act   and   information   maintained   in   the
30    adjudicatory  and  dispositional  record system as defined in
31    subdivision (A)19 of Section 55a of the Civil  Administrative
32    Code of Illinois if the Department determines the information
33    is  necessary  to  perform  its  duties  under the Abused and
34    Neglected Child Reporting Act, the Child Care  Act  of  1969,
                            -93-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1    and  the  Children  and  Family Services Act.  The Department
 2    shall provide for interactive computerized communication  and
 3    processing    equipment    that    permits   direct   on-line
 4    communication with the Department of State  Police's  central
 5    criminal  history  data  repository.   The  Department  shall
 6    comply   with  all  certification  requirements  and  provide
 7    certified operators who have been trained by  personnel  from
 8    the  Department  of State Police.  In addition, one Office of
 9    the Inspector General investigator shall have training in the
10    use of the criminal history  information  access  system  and
11    have  access to the terminal.  The Department of Children and
12    Family Services and its employees shall abide  by  rules  and
13    regulations  established  by  the  Department of State Police
14    relating to the access and dissemination of this information.
15        (w)  Within 120 days of August 20,  1995  (the  effective
16    date  of Public Act 89-392), the Department shall prepare and
17    submit to the Governor and the General  Assembly,  a  written
18    plan  for  the  development of in-state licensed secure child
19    care facilities that care for children who  are  in  need  of
20    secure  living  arrangements  for  their  health, safety, and
21    well-being.  For purposes of  this  subsection,  secure  care
22    facility  shall mean a facility that is designed and operated
23    to ensure that all entrances and exits from the  facility,  a
24    building  or  a  distinct part of the building, are under the
25    exclusive control of the staff of the  facility,  whether  or
26    not  the  child  has  the  freedom  of  movement  within  the
27    perimeter  of the facility, building, or distinct part of the
28    building.  The plan shall include descriptions of  the  types
29    of  facilities  that  are  needed  in  Illinois;  the cost of
30    developing these secure care facilities; the estimated number
31    of placements; the potential cost savings resulting from  the
32    movement of children currently out-of-state who are projected
33    to   be   returned  to  Illinois;  the  necessary  geographic
34    distribution of these facilities in Illinois; and a  proposed
                            -94-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1    timetable for development of such facilities.
 2    (Source: P.A.  88-380;  88-398;  88-487; 88-614, eff. 9-7-94;
 3    88-670,  eff.  12-2-94;  89-21,  eff.  6-6-95;  89-392,  eff.
 4    8-20-95; 89-626, eff. 8-9-96.)
 5        (Text of Section after amendment by P.A. 89-507)
 6        Sec. 5.  Direct child  welfare  services;  Department  of
 7    Children and Family Services. To provide direct child welfare
 8    services  when  not available through other public or private
 9    child care or program facilities.
10        (a)  For purposes of this Section:
11             (1)  "Children" means persons found within the State
12        who are under  the  age  of  18  years.   The  term  also
13        includes persons under age 19 who:
14                  (A)  were  committed to the Department pursuant
15             to the Juvenile Court Act or the Juvenile Court  Act
16             of  1987, as amended, prior to the age of 18 and who
17             continue under the jurisdiction of the court; or
18                  (B)  were  accepted   for  care,  service   and
19             training  by  the  Department prior to the age of 18
20             and whose best interest in  the  discretion  of  the
21             Department  would be served by continuing that care,
22             service and training  because  of  severe  emotional
23             disturbances, physical disability, social adjustment
24             or  any  combination thereof, or because of the need
25             to complete an educational  or  vocational  training
26             program.
27             (2)  "Homeless youth" means persons found within the
28        State  who are under the age of 19, are not in a safe and
29        stable living situation and cannot be reunited with their
30        families.
31             (3)  "Child welfare services"  means  public  social
32        services  which are directed toward the accomplishment of
33        the following purposes:
34                  (A)  protecting and promoting  the  welfare  of
                            -95-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1             children, including homeless, dependent or neglected
 2             children;
 3                  (B)  remedying, or assisting in the solution of
 4             problems  which  may  result in, the neglect, abuse,
 5             exploitation or delinquency of children;
 6                  (C)  preventing the unnecessary  separation  of
 7             children  from  their families by identifying family
 8             problems,  assisting  families  in  resolving  their
 9             problems, and preventing the breakup of  the  family
10             where  the  prevention of child removal is desirable
11             and possible;
12                  (D)  restoring to their families  children  who
13             have  been  removed, by the provision of services to
14             the child and the families;
15                  (E)  placing  children  in  suitable   adoptive
16             homes,  in cases where restoration to the biological
17             family is not possible or appropriate;
18                  (F)  assuring adequate care  of  children  away
19             from their homes, in cases where the child cannot be
20             returned home or cannot be placed for adoption;
21                  (G)  (blank);
22                  (H)  (blank); and
23                  (I)  placing   and   maintaining   children  in
24             facilities that provide separate living quarters for
25             children under the age of 18  and  for  children  18
26             years  of  age and older, unless a child 18 years of
27             age is in the last year of high school education  or
28             vocational  training,  in  an approved individual or
29             group treatment program, or in  a  licensed  shelter
30             facility.    The Department is not required to place
31             or maintain children:
32                       (i)  who are in a foster home, or
33                       (ii)  who are persons with a developmental
34                  disability, as defined in the Mental Health and
                            -96-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1                  Developmental Disabilities Code, or
 2                       (iii)  who are  female  children  who  are
 3                  pregnant,  pregnant and parenting or parenting,
 4                  or
 5                       (iv)  who are siblings,
 6             in facilities that provide separate living  quarters
 7             for  children  18  years  of  age  and older and for
 8             children under 18 years of age.
 9        (b)  Nothing  in  this  Section  shall  be  construed  to
10    authorize the expenditure of public funds for the purpose  of
11    performing abortions.
12        (c)  The   Department   shall   establish   and  maintain
13    tax-supported child welfare services and extend and  seek  to
14    improve  voluntary  services throughout the State, to the end
15    that services and care shall be available on an  equal  basis
16    throughout the State to children requiring such services.
17        (d)  The Director may authorize advance disbursements for
18    any new program initiative to any agency contracting with the
19    Department.   As a prerequisite for an advance  disbursement,
20    the  contractor  must post a surety bond in the amount of the
21    advance disbursement and have a purchase of service  contract
22    approved  by  the Department.  The Department may pay up to 2
23    months operational expenses in advance.  The  amount  of  the
24    advance  disbursement  shall be prorated over the life of the
25    contract  or  the  remaining  months  of  the  fiscal   year,
26    whichever  is  less, and the installment amount shall then be
27    deducted   from   future   bills.     Advance    disbursement
28    authorizations  for  new initiatives shall not be made to any
29    agency after that agency has operated  during  2  consecutive
30    fiscal  years.    The requirements of this Section concerning
31    advance disbursements shall not apply  with  respect  to  the
32    following:   payments  to local public agencies for child day
33    care services as authorized by Section 5a of  this  Act;  and
34    youth  service  programs  receiving grant funds under Section
                            -97-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1    17a-4.
 2        (e)  (Blank).
 3        (f)  (Blank).
 4        (g)  The Department shall establish rules and regulations
 5    concerning its operation of programs  designed  to  meet  the
 6    goals   of  child  protection,  family  preservation,  family
 7    reunification, and adoption, including but not limited to:
 8             (1)  adoption;
 9             (2)  foster care;
10             (3)  family counseling;
11             (4)  protective services;
12             (5)  (blank);
13             (6)  homemaker service;
14             (7)  return of runaway children;
15             (8)  (blank);
16             (9)  placement under Section  5-7  of  the  Juvenile
17        Court  Act  or  Section  2-27,  3-28, 4-25 or 5-29 of the
18        Juvenile Court Act of 1987 in accordance with the federal
19        Adoption Assistance and Child Welfare Act of 1980; and
20             (10)  interstate services.
21        Rules and regulations established by the Department shall
22    include provisions for  training  Department  staff  and  the
23    staff  of  Department  grantees, through contracts with other
24    agencies or resources, in alcohol and  drug  abuse  screening
25    techniques  to  identify  children  and  adults who should be
26    referred to an alcohol and drug abuse treatment  program  for
27    professional evaluation.
28        (h)  If the Department finds that there is no appropriate
29    program or facility within or available to the Department for
30    a  ward and that no licensed private facility has an adequate
31    and appropriate program or none agrees to  accept  the  ward,
32    the  Department  shall  create an appropriate individualized,
33    program-oriented  plan  for  such  ward.   The  plan  may  be
34    developed  within  the  Department  or  through  purchase  of
                            -98-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1    services by the Department to the extent that  it  is  within
 2    its statutory authority to do.
 3        (i)  Service  programs  shall be available throughout the
 4    State and shall include but not be limited to  the  following
 5    services:
 6             (1)  case management;
 7             (2)  homemakers;
 8             (3)  counseling;
 9             (4)  parent education;
10             (5)  day care; and
11             (6)  emergency assistance and advocacy.
12        In addition, the following services may be made available
13    to assess and meet the needs of children and families:
14             (1)  comprehensive family-based services;
15             (2)  assessments;
16             (3)  respite care; and
17             (4)  in-home health services.
18        The  Department  shall  provide transportation for any of
19    the services it makes available to children  or  families  or
20    for which it refers children or families.
21        (j)  The Department may provide financial assistance, and
22    shall   establish   rules  and  regulations  concerning  such
23    assistance, to  persons  who  adopt  physically  or  mentally
24    handicapped,  older  and  other  hard-to-place  children  who
25    immediately  prior  to their adoption were legal wards of the
26    Department.   The  Department  may  also  provide   financial
27    assistance,  and  shall  establish  rules and regulations for
28    such assistance, to persons appointed guardian of the  person
29    under  Section 5-7 of the Juvenile Court Act or Section 2-27,
30    3-28, 4-25 or 5-29 of the Juvenile  Court  Act  of  1987  for
31    children  who  were  wards  of  the  Department for 12 months
32    immediately  prior  to  the  appointment  of  the   successor
33    guardian  and  for  whom  the  Department  has  set a goal of
34    permanent family placement with a foster family.
                            -99-               LRB9001889OBpk
 1        The amount of assistance may  vary,  depending  upon  the
 2    needs  of  the child and the adoptive parents, but must be at
 3    least $25 less than the monthly cost of care of the child  in
 4    a  foster  home,  as  set  forth  in  the  annual  assistance
 5    agreement.   Special  purpose  grants  are  allowed where the
 6    child requires special service but such costs may not  exceed
 7    the  amounts which similar services would cost the Department
 8    if it were to provide or  secure  them  as  guardian  of  the
 9    child.
10        Any  financial  assistance provided under this subsection
11    is inalienable by assignment,  sale,  execution,  attachment,
12    garnishment,  or  any other remedy for recovery or collection
13    of a judgment or debt.
14        (k)  The Department shall accept for  care  and  training
15    any  child  who  has been adjudicated neglected or abused, or
16    dependent committed to it pursuant to the Juvenile Court  Act
17    or the Juvenile Court Act of 1987.
18        (l)  Before July 1, 2000, the Department may provide, and
19    beginning  July 1, 2000, the Department shall provide, family
20    preservation services, as determined to be appropriate and in
21    the child's best interests and when the child will not be  in
22    imminent  risk  of  harm,  to any family whose child has been
23    placed in substitute care, any persons  who  have  adopted  a
24    child  and  require  post-adoption  services,  or any persons
25    whose child or children are at risk of being  placed  outside
26    their   home  as  documented  by  an  "indicated"  report  of
27    suspected child abuse or neglect determined pursuant  to  the
28    Abused  and  Neglected  Child  Reporting Act. Nothing in this
29    paragraph shall be construed to create  a  private  right  of
30    action  or  claim  on  the  part  of  any individual or child
31    welfare agency.
32        The Department shall notify the child and his  family  of
33    the  Department's  responsibility to offer and provide family
34    preservation services as identified in the service plan.  The
                            -100-              LRB9001889OBpk
 1    child and his family shall be eligible for services  as  soon
 2    as   the   report  is  determined  to  be  "indicated".   The
 3    Department may offer services to any  child  or  family  with
 4    respect  to whom a report of suspected child abuse or neglect
 5    has been filed, prior to concluding its  investigation  under
 6    Section 7.12 of the Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act.
 7    However,  the  child's  or  family's  willingness  to  accept
 8    services  shall  not be considered in the investigation.  The
 9    Department may also provide services to any child  or  family
10    who  is the subject of any report of suspected child abuse or
11    neglect or  may  refer  such  child  or  family  to  services
12    available  from  other agencies in the community, even if the
13    report is determined to be unfounded, if  the  conditions  in
14    the child's or family's home are reasonably likely to subject
15    the  child  or  family  to  future reports of suspected child
16    abuse or neglect.   Acceptance  of  such  services  shall  be
17    voluntary.
18        The  Department  may,  at its discretion except for those
19    children also adjudicated neglected or dependent, accept  for
20    care   and  training  any  child  who  has  been  adjudicated
21    addicted, as a truant minor in need of supervision  or  as  a
22    minor   requiring   authoritative   intervention,  under  the
23    Juvenile Court Act or the Juvenile Court Act of 1987, but  no
24    such  child shall be committed to the Department by any court
25    without the approval of the Department.  A minor charged with
26    a criminal  offense  under  the  Criminal  Code  of  1961  or
27    adjudicated  delinquent shall not be placed in the custody of
28    or committed to the Department by any court, except  a  minor
29    less  than  13 years of age committed to the Department under
30    Section 5-23 of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987.
31        (m)  The Department may assume temporary custody  of  any
32    child if:
33             (1)  it  has  received  a  written  consent  to such
34        temporary custody signed by the parents of the  child  or
                            -101-              LRB9001889OBpk
 1        by  the parent having custody of the child if the parents
 2        are not living together or by the guardian  or  custodian
 3        of the child if the child is not in the custody of either
 4        parent, or
 5             (2)  the  child  is found in the State and neither a
 6        parent, guardian  nor  custodian  of  the  child  can  be
 7        located.
 8    If  the  child  is  found  in  his or her residence without a
 9    parent, guardian, custodian  or  responsible  caretaker,  the
10    Department  may,  instead  of removing the child and assuming
11    temporary custody, place an authorized representative of  the
12    Department  in  that  residence  until such time as a parent,
13    guardian  or  custodian  enters  the  home  and  expresses  a
14    willingness and apparent ability to resume  permanent  charge
15    of  the  child,  or  until  a relative enters the home and is
16    willing and able to  assume  charge  of  the  child  until  a
17    parent,  guardian  or custodian enters the home and expresses
18    such willingness and  ability  to  resume  permanent  charge.
19    After  a  caretaker has remained in the home for a period not
20    to  exceed  12  hours,  the  Department  must  follow   those
21    procedures  outlined  in Section 2-9, 3-11, 4-8 or 5-9 of the
22    Juvenile Court Act of 1987.
23        The Department shall have the authority, responsibilities
24    and duties that a legal custodian of  the  child  would  have
25    pursuant  to  subsection  (9)  of Section 1-3 of the Juvenile
26    Court Act of 1987.  Whenever a child is taken into  temporary
27    custody  pursuant  to  an  investigation under the Abused and
28    Neglected Child Reporting Act, or pursuant to a referral  and
29    acceptance under the Juvenile Court Act of 1987 of a minor in
30    limited   custody,  the  Department,  during  the  period  of
31    temporary custody and before the child is  brought  before  a
32    judicial officer as required by Section 2-9, 3-11, 4-8 or 5-9
33    of  the Juvenile Court Act of 1987, shall have the authority,
34    responsibilities and duties that a  legal  custodian  of  the
                            -102-              LRB9001889OBpk
 1    child  would  have under subsection (9) of Section 1-3 of the
 2    Juvenile Court Act of 1987.
 3        The Department shall ensure that  any  child  taken  into
 4    custody  is  scheduled  for  an  appointment  for  a  medical
 5    examination.
 6        A  parent,  guardian  or  custodian  of  a  child  in the
 7    temporary custody of the Department who would have custody of
 8    the child if he were not in  the  temporary  custody  of  the
 9    Department  may  deliver  to  the Department a signed request
10    that the Department surrender the temporary  custody  of  the
11    child.    The  Department may retain temporary custody of the
12    child for 10 days after the receipt of  the  request,  during
13    which  period the Department may cause to be filed a petition
14    pursuant to the Juvenile Court Act of 1987.  If a petition is
15    so filed, the Department shall retain  temporary  custody  of
16    the child until the court orders otherwise.  If a petition is
17    not  filed  within  the  10  day  period,  the child shall be
18    surrendered to the custody of the requesting parent, guardian
19    or custodian not later than the  expiration  of  the  10  day
20    period,  at  which  time  the  authority  and  duties  of the
21    Department with respect to the temporary custody of the child
22    shall terminate.
23        (n)  The Department may place children under 18 years  of
24    age  in licensed child care facilities when in the opinion of
25    the  Department,  appropriate  services   aimed   at   family
26    preservation  have  been unsuccessful or unavailable and such
27    placement would be for  their  best  interest.   Payment  for
28    board,  clothing, care, training and supervision of any child
29    placed in a licensed child care facility may be made  by  the
30    Department,  by  the  parents  or guardians of the estates of
31    those children, or by both the Department and the parents  or
32    guardians,  except  that  no  payments  shall  be made by the
33    Department for any child placed  in  a  licensed  child  care
34    facility  for board, clothing, care, training and supervision
                            -103-              LRB9001889OBpk
 1    of such a child that exceed the average per  capita  cost  of
 2    maintaining  and  of  caring  for a child in institutions for
 3    dependent or neglected children operated by  the  Department.
 4    However, such restriction on payments does not apply in cases
 5    where  children  require  specialized  care and treatment for
 6    problems   of   severe   emotional   disturbance,    physical
 7    disability, social adjustment, or any combination thereof and
 8    suitable  facilities  for  the placement of such children are
 9    not available at payment rates  within  the  limitations  set
10    forth  in  this  Section.  All  reimbursements  for  services
11    delivered  shall  be  absolutely  inalienable  by assignment,
12    sale, attachment, garnishment or otherwise.
13        (o)  The Department  shall  establish  an  administrative
14    review  and  appeal  process  for  children  and families who
15    request  or  receive  child   welfare   services   from   the
16    Department.  Children who are wards of the Department and are
17    placed by private child welfare agencies, and foster families
18    with  whom  those  children are placed, shall be afforded the
19    same procedural and appeal rights as children and families in
20    the case of placement by the Department, including the  right
21    to  an   initial  review of a private agency decision by that
22    agency.  The Department shall insure that any  private  child
23    welfare  agency,  which  accepts  wards of the Department for
24    placement,  affords  those  rights  to  children  and  foster
25    families.  The Department  shall  accept  for  administrative
26    review  and  an appeal hearing a complaint made by a child or
27    foster family concerning  a  decision  following  an  initial
28    review  by  a  private  child welfare agency.  An appeal of a
29    decision concerning a change in  the  placement  of  a  child
30    shall be conducted in an expedited manner.
31        (p)  There  is  hereby created the Department of Children
32    and Family Services Emergency Assistance Fund from which  the
33    Department   may  provide  special  financial  assistance  to
34    families which are in economic crisis when such assistance is
                            -104-              LRB9001889OBpk
 1    not available through other public or private sources and the
 2    assistance is deemed necessary to prevent dissolution of  the
 3    family  unit or to reunite families which have been separated
 4    due  to  child  abuse  and  neglect.   The  Department  shall
 5    establish administrative rules specifying  the  criteria  for
 6    determining  eligibility  for  and  the  amount and nature of
 7    assistance to be provided.  The  Department  may  also  enter
 8    into  written  agreements  with  private  and  public  social
 9    service  agencies  to provide emergency financial services to
10    families referred  by  the  Department.    Special  financial
11    assistance  payments  shall  be available to a family no more
12    than once during each fiscal year and the total payments to a
13    family may not exceed $500 during a fiscal year.
14        (q)  The  Department  may  receive  and  use,  in   their
15    entirety,  for  the benefit of children any gift, donation or
16    bequest of money or  other  property  which  is  received  on
17    behalf  of  such children, or any financial benefits to which
18    such children are or may  become  entitled  while  under  the
19    jurisdiction or care of the Department.
20        The  Department  shall  set  up  and  administer no-cost,
21    interest-bearing savings accounts  in  appropriate  financial
22    institutions  ("individual  accounts")  for children for whom
23    the Department is  legally  responsible  and  who  have  been
24    determined  eligible  for Veterans' Benefits, Social Security
25    benefits, assistance allotments from the armed forces,  court
26    ordered  payments,  parental voluntary payments, Supplemental
27    Security Income, Railroad  Retirement  payments,  Black  Lung
28    benefits,  or  other miscellaneous payments.  Interest earned
29    by each individual account shall be credited to the  account,
30    unless disbursed in accordance with this subsection.
31        In  disbursing funds from children's individual accounts,
32    the Department shall:
33             (1)  Establish standards in  accordance  with  State
34        and  federal  laws  for  disbursing money from children's
                            -105-              LRB9001889OBpk
 1        individual   accounts.    In   all   circumstances,   the
 2        Department's "Guardianship Administrator" or his  or  her
 3        designee   must  approve  disbursements  from  children's
 4        individual accounts.  The Department shall be responsible
 5        for keeping complete records  of  all  disbursements  for
 6        each individual account for any purpose.
 7             (2)  Calculate  on  a monthly basis the amounts paid
 8        from State funds for the child's board and care,  medical
 9        care not covered under Medicaid, and social services; and
10        utilize  funds  from  the  child's individual account, as
11        covered  by  regulation,  to   reimburse   those   costs.
12        Monthly,  disbursements  from  all  children's individual
13        accounts, up to 1/12 of $13,000,000, shall  be  deposited
14        by  the  Department into the General Revenue Fund and the
15        balance over 1/12 of $13,000,000 into the DCFS Children's
16        Services Fund.
17             (3)  Maintain   any    balance    remaining    after
18        reimbursing  for  the child's costs of care, as specified
19        in item (2). The balance shall accumulate  in  accordance
20        with  relevant  State  and  federal  laws  and  shall  be
21        disbursed  to the child or his or her guardian, or to the
22        issuing agency.
23        (r)  The   Department   shall   promulgate    regulations
24    encouraging  all  adoption agencies to voluntarily forward to
25    the Department or  its  agent  names  and  addresses  of  all
26    persons  who  have  applied  for  and  have been approved for
27    adoption of a hard-to-place  or  handicapped  child  and  the
28    names of such children who have not been placed for adoption.
29    A list of such names and addresses shall be maintained by the
30    Department  or  its agent, and coded lists which maintain the
31    confidentiality of the person seeking to adopt the child  and
32    of  the  child  shall  be  made available, without charge, to
33    every adoption agency in the State to assist the agencies  in
34    placing  such  children  for  adoption.  The  Department  may
                            -106-              LRB9001889OBpk
 1    delegate  to an agent its duty to maintain and make available
 2    such lists.  The Department  shall  ensure  that  such  agent
 3    maintains  the confidentiality of the person seeking to adopt
 4    the child and of the child.
 5        (s)  The Department of Children and Family  Services  may
 6    establish and implement a program to reimburse Department and
 7    private  child  welfare agency foster parents licensed by the
 8    Department  of  Children  and  Family  Services  for  damages
 9    sustained by the foster parents as a result of the  malicious
10    or  negligent  acts  of foster children, as well as providing
11    third party coverage for such foster parents with  regard  to
12    actions  of  foster  children  to  other  individuals.   Such
13    coverage  will  be  secondary  to the foster parent liability
14    insurance policy, if applicable.  The program shall be funded
15    through  appropriations  from  the  General   Revenue   Fund,
16    specifically designated for such purposes.
17        (t)  The   Department  shall  perform  home  studies  and
18    investigations and shall exercise supervision over visitation
19    as ordered by a court pursuant to the Illinois  Marriage  and
20    Dissolution of Marriage Act or the Adoption Act only if:
21             (1)  an   order   entered   by   an  Illinois  court
22        specifically  directs  the  Department  to  perform  such
23        services; and
24             (2)  the court  has  ordered  one  or  both  of  the
25        parties to the proceeding to reimburse the Department for
26        its  reasonable  costs  for  providing  such  services in
27        accordance with Department rules, or has determined  that
28        neither party is financially able to pay.
29        The  Department shall provide written notification to the
30    court of the specific arrangements for supervised  visitation
31    and  projected  monthly  costs  within  60  days of the court
32    order. The Department shall send  to  the  court  information
33    related to the costs incurred except in cases where the court
34    has determined the parties are financially unable to pay. The
                            -107-              LRB9001889OBpk
 1    court may order additional periodic reports as appropriate.
 2        (u)  Whenever the Department places a child in a licensed
 3    foster  home,  group  home,  child  care institution, or in a
 4    relative home, the Department shall provide to the caretaker:
 5             (1)  available detailed information  concerning  the
 6        child's   educational   and  health  history,  copies  of
 7        immunization records  (including  insurance  and  medical
 8        card  information),  a  history  of  the child's previous
 9        placements, if any, and  reasons  for  placement  changes
10        excluding  any information that identifies or reveals the
11        location of any previous caretaker;
12             (2)  a copy of the child's  portion  of  the  client
13        service  plan,  including any visitation arrangement, and
14        all amendments or revisions  to  it  as  related  to  the
15        child; and
16             (3)  information  containing  details of the child's
17        individualized  educational  plan  when  the   child   is
18        receiving special education services.
19        The  caretaker  shall  be informed of any known social or
20    behavioral information (including, but not limited  to,  fire
21    setting,  perpetuation of sexual abuse, destructive behavior,
22    and substance abuse) necessary to care for and safeguard  the
23    child.
24        (u-5)  Effective   July   1,   1995,   only  foster  care
25    placements licensed as foster family homes  pursuant  to  the
26    Child  Care  Act  of 1969 shall be eligible to receive foster
27    care  payments  from  the   Department.   However,   relative
28    caregivers  who,  as  of  July  1,  1995,  were  approved  or
29    preapproved  pursuant  to  approved  relative placement rules
30    previously promulgated by the Department at 89 Ill. Adm. Code
31    335 and had submitted  an  application  for  licensure  as  a
32    foster  family  home  may  continue  to  receive  foster care
33    payments only until the Department determines that  they  may
34    be licensed as a foster family home or that their application
                            -108-              LRB9001889OBpk
 1    for   licensure  is  denied  or  until  September  30,  1995,
 2    whichever occurs first.
 3        (v)  The Department shall access criminal history  record
 4    information    as  defined in the Illinois Uniform Conviction
 5    Information   Act   and   information   maintained   in   the
 6    adjudicatory and dispositional record system  as  defined  in
 7    subdivision  (A)19 of Section 55a of the Civil Administrative
 8    Code of Illinois if the Department determines the information
 9    is necessary to perform  its  duties  under  the  Abused  and
10    Neglected  Child  Reporting  Act, the Child Care Act of 1969,
11    and the Children and Family  Services  Act.   The  Department
12    shall  provide for interactive computerized communication and
13    processing   equipment   that    permits    direct    on-line
14    communication  with  the Department of State Police's central
15    criminal  history  data  repository.   The  Department  shall
16    comply  with  all  certification  requirements  and   provide
17    certified  operators  who have been trained by personnel from
18    the Department of State Police.  In addition, one  Office  of
19    the Inspector General investigator shall have training in the
20    use  of  the  criminal  history information access system and
21    have access to the terminal.  The Department of Children  and
22    Family  Services  and  its employees shall abide by rules and
23    regulations established by the  Department  of  State  Police
24    relating to the access and dissemination of this information.
25        (w)  Within  120  days  of August 20, 1995 (the effective
26    date of Public Act 89-392), the Department shall prepare  and
27    submit  to  the  Governor and the General Assembly, a written
28    plan for the development of in-state  licensed  secure  child
29    care  facilities  that  care  for children who are in need of
30    secure living arrangements  for  their  health,  safety,  and
31    well-being.   For  purposes  of  this subsection, secure care
32    facility shall mean a facility that is designed and  operated
33    to  ensure  that all entrances and exits from the facility, a
34    building or a distinct part of the building,  are  under  the
                            -109-              LRB9001889OBpk
 1    exclusive  control  of  the staff of the facility, whether or
 2    not  the  child  has  the  freedom  of  movement  within  the
 3    perimeter of the facility, building, or distinct part of  the
 4    building.   The  plan shall include descriptions of the types
 5    of facilities that  are  needed  in  Illinois;  the  cost  of
 6    developing these secure care facilities; the estimated number
 7    of  placements; the potential cost savings resulting from the
 8    movement of children currently out-of-state who are projected
 9    to  be  returned  to  Illinois;  the   necessary   geographic
10    distribution  of these facilities in Illinois; and a proposed
11    timetable for development of such facilities.
12    (Source: P.A. 88-380; 88-398; 88-487;  88-614,  eff.  9-7-94;
13    88-670,  eff.  12-2-94;  89-21,  eff.  6-6-95;  89-392,  eff.
14    8-20-95; 89-507, eff. 7-1-97; 89-626, eff. 8-9-96.)
15        Section 100.  The Illinois Dental Practice Act is amended
16    by  changing  Section  32  to  add  that  the  provision that
17    sanctions  imposed  by   the   Department   of   Professional
18    Regulation  shall  remain  in  full  force  and effect during
19    judicial proceedings is subject to the equitable powers of  a
20    court  of  competent jurisdiction in response to the Illinois
21    Supreme Court decision in  Ardt  v.  Illinois  Department  of
22    Professional  Regulation,  154  Ill.  2d  138  (1992),  which
23    decision  held  that the statute's restriction of the court's
24    inherent  equitable  power  to  issue  a  stay  violates  the
25    separation of powers doctrine, the amended Section to read as
26    follows:
27        (225 ILCS 25/32) (from Ch. 111, par. 2332)
28        Sec. 32.  Administrative Review  Law;  application.   All
29    final  administrative decisions of the Department are subject
30    to  judicial  review  pursuant  to  the  provisions  of   the
31    Administrative  Review  Law,  and  the rules adopted pursuant
32    thereto.  The term "administrative decision" is defined as in
                            -110-              LRB9001889OBpk
 1    Section 3-101 of the Code of Civil Procedure.
 2        Proceedings for judicial review shall be commenced in the
 3    circuit court of the county in which the party  applying  for
 4    review  resides,  but  if the party is not a resident of this
 5    State, the venue shall be in Sangamon County.
 6        The Department shall  not  be  required  to  certify  any
 7    record  to the court or file any answer in court or otherwise
 8    appear in any court in a judicial review  proceeding,  unless
 9    there is filed in the court with the complaint a receipt from
10    the   Department   acknowledging  payment  of  the  costs  of
11    furnishing and certifying the record, which  costs  shall  be
12    computed  at  the  rate  of  20 cents per page of the record.
13    Exhibits shall be certified without cost.    Failure  on  the
14    part  of  the  plaintiff  to file a receipt in court shall be
15    grounds for dismissal of the action.  During the pendency and
16    hearing of any and all judicial  proceedings  incident  to  a
17    disciplinary action any sanctions imposed upon the respondent
18    by the Department because of acts or omissions related to the
19    delivery   of   direct  patient  care  as  specified  in  the
20    Department's final administrative decision, shall as a matter
21    of public policy remain in full force and effect in order  to
22    protect  the  public  pending  final resolution of any of the
23    proceedings, subject to the equitable powers of  a  court  of
24    competent jurisdiction.
25    (Source: P.A.  88-184;  89-80,  eff.  6-30-95;  89-116,  eff.
26    7-7-95.)
27        Section  105.   The Liquor Control Act of 1934 is amended
28    by changing Section 9-2 to  delete  provisions  permitting  a
29    precinct  referendum  on  the  question of prohibiting retail
30    liquor sales  at  a  particular  street  address  within  the
31    precinct  in  response  to  the decision of the United States
32    District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern
33    Division, in 87 South Rothschild Liquor Mart  v.  Kozubowski,
                            -111-              LRB9001889OBpk
 1    752  F.  Supp.  839  (1990), which decision held that a local
 2    option referendum targeting a single  establishment  violates
 3    due process, the amended Section to read as follows:
 4        (235 ILCS 5/9-2) (from Ch. 43, par. 167)
 5        Sec.  9-2.   When  any  legal voters of a precinct in any
 6    city, village or  incorporated  town  of  more  than  200,000
 7    inhabitants,  as  determined  by  the  last preceding Federal
 8    census, desire to pass upon the question of whether the  sale
 9    at  retail  of  alcoholic  liquor  shall be prohibited in the
10    precinct  or  at  a  particular  street  address  within  the
11    precinct, they shall, at least 90 days  before  an  election,
12    file  in  the  office  of  the clerk of such city, village or
13    incorporated  town,  a  petition  directed  to   the   clerk,
14    containing  the  signatures of not less than 25% of the legal
15    voters registered with the board of election commissioners or
16    county  clerk,  as  the  case  may  be,  from  the  precinct.
17    Provided, however, that when the petition seeks  to  prohibit
18    the sale at retail of alcoholic liquor at a particular street
19    address  of  a licensed establishment within the precinct the
20    petition shall contain the signatures of not less than 40% of
21    the legal voters requested from that precinct.  The  petition
22    shall  request that the proposition "Shall the sale at retail
23    of alcoholic liquor  be  prohibited  in  (or  at)  ....?"  be
24    submitted  to  the voters of the precinct at the next ensuing
25    election at which such proposition may  be  voted  upon.  The
26    submission  of the question to the voters of such precinct at
27    such election shall be mandatory when the petition  has  been
28    filed in proper form with the clerk.  If more than one set of
29    petitions  are  presented  to the clerk for submission at the
30    same election, the petition presented first  shall  be  given
31    preference; however, the clerk shall provisionally accept any
32    other   set   of   petitions   setting  forth  the  same  (or
33    substantially the same) proposition.  If  the  first  set  of
                            -112-              LRB9001889OBpk
 1    petitions for a proposition is found to be in proper form and
 2    is not found to be invalid, it shall be accepted by the clerk
 3    and  all  provisionally  accepted  sets  of petitions setting
 4    forth the same (or substantially the same) proposition  shall
 5    be  rejected by the clerk.  If the first set of petitions for
 6    a proposition is found not to be in proper form or  is  found
 7    to  be  invalid,  the clerk shall (i) reject the first set of
 8    petitions, (ii) accept the first provisionally  accepted  set
 9    of  petitions  that  is in proper form and is not found to be
10    invalid, and (iii) reject all  other  provisionally  accepted
11    sets  of  petitions  setting forth the same (or substantially
12    the same) proposition. Notice of the filing of  the  petition
13    and  the  result  of  the  election  shall  be  given  to the
14    Secretary of State  at  his  offices  in  both,  Chicago  and
15    Springfield, Illinois. A return of the result of the election
16    shall   be  made  to  the  clerk  of  the  city,  village  or
17    incorporated town in which the  precinct  is  located.  If  a
18    majority  of  the  voters  voting  upon such proposition vote
19    "YES", the sale  at  retail  of  alcoholic  liquor  shall  be
20    prohibited  in  the precinct or at the street address. If the
21    sale at retail of alcoholic liquor  at  a  particular  street
22    address  is  prohibited pursuant to this Section, the license
23    for any establishment at that street address shall  be  void,
24    and  no person may apply for a license for the sale at retail
25    of alcoholic  liquor  at  an  establishment  at  that  street
26    address  unless  such prohibition is discontinued pursuant to
27    Section 9-10.
28        In cities, villages and incorporated towns of 200,000  or
29    less  population, as determined by the last preceding Federal
30    census, the vote upon the question of prohibiting the sale at
31    retail of alcoholic liquor, or alcoholic  liquor  other  than
32    beer  containing  not  more  than 4% of alcohol by volume, or
33    alcoholic liquor containing more than 4% of alcohol by weight
34    in the original  package  and  not  for  consumption  on  the
                            -113-              LRB9001889OBpk
 1    premises, shall be by the voters of the political subdivision
 2    as  a  unit. When any legal voters of such a city, village or
 3    incorporated town desire to pass upon the question of whether
 4    the sale at retail of alcoholic liquor shall be prohibited in
 5    the municipality, they shall, at  least  90  days  before  an
 6    election,   file   in   the   office  of  the  clerk  of  the
 7    municipality, a petition directed to  the  clerk,  containing
 8    the  signatures  of  not  less  than  25% of the legal voters
 9    registered with the board of election commissioners or county
10    clerk, as  the  case  may  be,  from  the  municipality.  The
11    petition  shall request that the proposition, "Shall the sale
12    at retail of  alcoholic  liquor  be  prohibited  in....?"  be
13    submitted  to  the  voters  of  the  municipality at the next
14    ensuing election at which the proposition may be voted  upon.
15    The   submission  of  the  question  to  the  voters  of  the
16    municipality at such election shall  be  mandatory  when  the
17    petition  has  been  filed in proper form with the clerk.  If
18    more than one set of petitions are presented to the clerk for
19    submission at the same election, setting forth  the  same  or
20    different propositions, the petition presented first shall be
21    given  preference  and  the  clerk shall refuse to accept any
22    other set of petitions.  Notice of the filing of the petition
23    and the  result  of  the  election  shall  be  given  to  the
24    Secretary  of  State  at  his  offices  in  both  Chicago and
25    Springfield, Illinois. A return of the result of the election
26    shall  be  made  to  the  clerk  of  the  city,  village   or
27    incorporated  town.  If  a majority of the voters voting upon
28    the proposition vote "Yes", the sale at retail  of  alcoholic
29    liquor shall be prohibited in the municipality.
30        In the event a municipality does not vote to prohibit the
31    sale  at retail of alcoholic liquor, the council or governing
32    body shall ascertain  and  determine  what  portions  of  the
33    municipality   are   predominantly  residence  districts.  No
34    license permitting the sale of  alcoholic  liquors  shall  be
                            -114-              LRB9001889OBpk
 1    issued  by the local liquor commissioner or licensing officer
 2    permitting the sale of alcoholic liquors at any place  within
 3    the  residence  district  so  determined, unless the owner or
 4    owners of at least two-thirds of the frontage,  200  feet  in
 5    each  direction  along the street and streets adjacent to the
 6    place of business for which a license is  sought,  file  with
 7    the  local  liquor  commissioner or licensing officer, his or
 8    their written consent to the use of such place for  the  sale
 9    of alcoholic liquors.
10        In  each  township  or  road  district  lying outside the
11    corporate limits of a city, village or incorporated town,  or
12    in  a part of a township or road district lying partly within
13    and partly outside a city, village or incorporated town,  the
14    vote  of  such township, road district or part thereof, shall
15    be as a unit. When any legal voters of any such township,  or
16    part thereof, in counties under township organization, or any
17    legal  voters  of  such  road  district  or  part thereof, in
18    counties not under township organization, desire to vote upon
19    the proposition as to whether the sale at retail of alcoholic
20    liquor shall be prohibited in such township or road  district
21    or  part  thereof,  they  shall,  at  least 90 days before an
22    election, file in the office of the township or road district
23    clerk, of the township or  road  district  within  which  the
24    election  is to be held, a petition directed to the clerk and
25    containing the signatures of not less than 25% of  the  legal
26    voters registered with the county clerk from such township or
27    road district or part thereof. The submission of the question
28    to the voters of the township, road district or part thereof,
29    at  the  next  ensuing  election  shall be mandatory when the
30    petition has been filed in proper form with  the  clerk.   If
31    more than one set of petitions are presented to the clerk for
32    submission  at  the  same election, setting forth the same or
33    different propositions, the petition presented first shall be
34    given preference and the clerk shall  refuse  to  accept  any
                            -115-              LRB9001889OBpk
 1    other  set  of  petitions.   A  return  of the result of such
 2    election shall be made to the clerk of the township  or  road
 3    district  in  which the territory is situated, and shall also
 4    be made to the Secretary of State  at  his  offices  in  both
 5    Chicago and Springfield, Illinois.
 6    (Source: P.A. 88-613, eff. 1-1-95.)
 7        Section  110.  The Illinois Public Aid Code is amended by
 8    changing  Section  10-2  to  delete  a  provision exempting a
 9    parent of a child age 18 or older and under 21 from liability
10    for support of that child when that child is not living  with
11    the  parent  in  response  to  the  Illinois  Supreme Court's
12    decision in Jacobson v. Department of Public Aid, 171 Ill. 2d
13    314 (1996), which decision held that to require a  parent  of
14    such  a child to pay support if that child is living with the
15    parent and to exempt the parent of such a child  who  is  not
16    living  with  the parent is a denial of equal protection, the
17    amended Section to read as follows:
18        (305 ILCS 5/10-2) (from Ch. 23, par. 10-2)
19        Sec. 10-2.  Extent of Liability.  A husband is liable for
20    the support of his wife and a wife for  the  support  of  her
21    husband. The parents are severally liable  for the support of
22    any  child  under  age 21, except that a parent is not liable
23    for a child age 18 or over if such child is not  living  with
24    the parent or parents, and a parent is not liable for a child
25    of  any  age  if the child has married and is not living with
26    the parent or parents. A child  shall  be  considered  to  be
27    living  with  the  parent  or parents if such child is absent
28    from the parent's or parents' home only in order to regularly
29    attend  a  school,  college  or  university  or  to   receive
30    technical  training  designed  for  preparation  for  gainful
31    employment.  The  term  "child"  includes a child born out of
32    wedlock, or legally adopted child, but the liability  of  the
                            -116-              LRB9001889OBpk
 1    father   of  a  child  born  out  of  wedlock  shall  not  be
 2    enforceable unless he has been determined to be  the  child's
 3    father  in a judicial or administrative proceeding, or he has
 4    or shall acknowledge paternity of  the  child  in  accordance
 5    with  Section 10-17.7 of this Code or Section 12 of the Vital
 6    Records Act.
 7        In addition to the primary obligation of support  imposed
 8    upon  responsible  relatives, such relatives, if individually
 9    or together in any combination they have sufficient income or
10    other resources to support a needy person,  in  whole  or  in
11    part,  shall  be  liable for any financial aid extended under
12    this Code to a person for whose support they are responsible,
13    including amounts expended for funeral and burial costs.
14    (Source: P.A. 88-687, eff. 1-24-95; 89-641, eff. 8-9-96.)
15        Section  115.  The Illinois Public Demonstrations Law  is
16    amended  by  adding  Section  2.5  to  define  "principal law
17    enforcement officer" in  response  to  the  Illinois  Supreme
18    Court's decision in People v. Bossie, 108 Ill. 2d 236 (1985),
19    which  decision held the Act unconstitutionally vague because
20    of the lack of a definition  of  "principal  law  enforcement
21    officer", the amended Section to read as follows:
22        (430 ILCS 70/2.5 new)
23        Sec.  2.5.  Definition.   In  this  Law,  "principal  law
24    enforcement officer" means the following:
25             (1)  In  the  case of a march, assembly, meeting, or
26        gathering to be held in whole or in part on  roadways  in
27        one  or  more municipalities, the term means the chief of
28        police of each such municipality.
29             (2)  In the case of a march, assembly,  meeting,  or
30        gathering  to  be held in whole or in part on roadways in
31        the unincorporated area of one or more counties, the term
32        means the sheriff of each such county.
                            -117-              LRB9001889OBpk
 1        Section 120.  The Fish and Aquatic Life Code  is  amended
 2    by  changing  Sections  5-25  and  20-35  to  except  certain
 3    violations of the Code from the provision that violations for
 4    profit or commercial purposes are felony offenses in response
 5    to the Illinois Supreme Court decision in People v. Hamm, 149
 6    Ill. 2d 201 (1992), which decision held that the elevation of
 7    certain  violations  of  the Code to felony offenses when the
 8    additional facts of legally commercially fishing  and  taking
 9    more  than  $300  worth  of fish are present violates the due
10    process  and  proportionate  penalties  provisions   of   the
11    Illinois  Constitution,  the  amended  Sections  to  read  as
12    follows:
13        (515 ILCS 5/5-25) (from Ch. 56, par. 5-25)
14        Sec. 5-25.  Protected aquatic life.
15        (a)  Any  person  who, for profit or commercial purposes,
16    knowingly captures or  kills,  possesses,  offers  for  sale,
17    sells,   offers  to  barter,  barters,  offers  to  purchase,
18    purchases, delivers for shipment,  ships,  exports,  imports,
19    causes  to  be  shipped,  exported, or imported, delivers for
20    transportation,  transports  or  causes  to  be  transported,
21    carries or causes to be carried, or  receives  for  shipment,
22    transportation, carriage, or export any aquatic life, in part
23    or  in  whole  of  any of the species protected by this Code,
24    contrary to the provisions of the Code, except  for  Sections
25    20-65 and 20-110, and that aquatic life, in whole or in part,
26    is  valued  in  excess  of  a  total  of  $300,  as per value
27    specified in subsection (c) of this Section, commits a  Class
28    3 felony.
29        (b)  Possession  of  aquatic  life,  in whole or in part,
30    captured or killed in  violation  of  this  Code,  valued  in
31    excess  of  $600, as per value specified in subsection (c) of
32    this Section, shall be considered  prima  facie  evidence  of
33    possession for profit or commercial purposes.
                            -118-              LRB9001889OBpk
 1        (c)  For  purposes  of  this  Section,  the  value of all
 2    aquatic life  and  their  hybrids  protected  by  this  Code,
 3    whether dressed or not dressed, is as follows:
 4             (1)  For  each  muskellunge, northern pike, walleye,
 5        striped bass, sauger, largemouth bass,  smallmouth  bass,
 6        spotted  bass,  trout  (all species), salmon (all species
 7        other than chinook caught from August 1 through  December
 8        31), and sturgeon of a weight, dressed or not dressed, of
 9        one  pound  or  more,  $4 for each pound or fraction of a
10        pound.  For each individual fish with a  dressed  or  not
11        dressed  weight of less than one pound, $4.  For parts of
12        fish processed past the dressed state, $8 per pound.
13             (2)  For  each  warmouth,  rock  bass,  white  bass,
14        yellow bass,  sunfish  (all  species  except  largemouth,
15        smallmouth,   and   spotted   bass),  bluegill,  crappie,
16        bullheads, pickerels,  yellow  perch,  and  catfish  (all
17        species)  of  a  weight,  dressed  or not dressed, of one
18        pound or more, $4 for each pound or fraction of  a  pound
19        of  fish.  For each individual fish with a dressed or not
20        dressed weight of less than one pound, $4.  For parts  of
21        fish processed past the dressed state, $8 per pound.
22             (3)  For  processed  turtle parts, $6 for each pound
23        or fraction of a pound. For each non-processed turtle, $8
24        per turtle.
25             (4)  For frogs,  toads,  salamanders,  lizards,  and
26        snakes, $2 per animal in whole or in part.
27             (5)  For  goldeye,  mooneye,  carp, carpsuckers (all
28        species), suckers (all species), redhorse (all  species),
29        buffalo  (all  species),  freshwater drum, skipjack, shad
30        (all species),  alewife,  smelt,  gar,  bowfin,  mussels,
31        chinook  salmon caught from August 1 through December 31,
32        and all other aquatic life protected by  this  Code,  not
33        listed  in paragraphs (1), (2), (3), or (4) of subsection
34        (b) of this Section, $1 per pound, in part or in whole.
                            -119-              LRB9001889OBpk
 1    (Source: P.A. 89-66, eff. 1-1-96.)
 2        (515 ILCS 5/20-35) (from Ch. 56, par. 20-35)
 3        Sec. 20-35.  Offenses.  Except as prescribed  in  Section
 4    5-25  and  unless otherwise provided in this Code, any person
 5    who is found guilty of violating any  of  the  provisions  of
 6    this Code, including administrative rules, shall be guilty of
 7    a petty offense.
 8        Any  person who violates any of the provisions of Section
 9    10-80,  including  administrative  rules  relating  to   that
10    Section, shall be guilty of a Class B misdemeanor.
11        Any  person who violates any of the provisions of Section
12    1-200 or 10-55 of this Code, including  administrative  rules
13    relating  to  those  Sections,  shall  be guilty of a Class A
14    misdemeanor.
15        Any person who violates any of  the  provisions  of  this
16    Code,  including  administrative  rules,  during  the 5 years
17    following the revocation of his or her  license,  permit,  or
18    privileges  under Section 20-105 shall be guilty of a Class A
19    misdemeanor.
20        Any person  who  violates  Section  5-25  of  this  Code,
21    including  administrative  rules,  except when the underlying
22    violation of Section 5-25 is a violation of Section 20-65  or
23    20-110, shall be guilty of a Class 3 felony.
24        Offenses  committed by minors under the direct control or
25    with the consent of a parent  or  guardian  may  subject  the
26    parent  or  guardian  to  the  penalties  prescribed  in this
27    Section or as otherwise provided in this Code.
28        In addition to any fines imposed under this  Section,  or
29    as  otherwise  provided in this Code, any person found guilty
30    of unlawfully taking or possessing any aquatic life protected
31    by this Code shall be  assessed  a  civil  penalty  for  that
32    aquatic  life  in  accordance  with  the values prescribed in
33    Section 5-25 of  this  Code.  This  civil  penalty  shall  be
                            -120-              LRB9001889OBpk
 1    imposed  at  the  time of the conviction by the Circuit Court
 2    for  the  county  where  the  offense  was  committed.    All
 3    penalties  provided  for in this Section shall be remitted to
 4    the Department in accordance with the provisions  of  Section
 5    1-180 of this Code.
 6    (Source: P.A. 87-798; 87-833; 87-895.)
 7        Section  125.   The  Illinois  Vehicle Code is amended by
 8    changing Section 4-104  to exempt a vehicle  owner  convicted
 9    of  altering  a  temporary registration permit for his or her
10    own vehicle from the penalty applicable to persons  convicted
11    of  possessing  an  altered  temporary registration permit in
12    response to the Illinois Supreme Court decision in People  v.
13    Morris,  136  Ill. 2d 157 (1990), which decision held that in
14    the case of a defendant who alters a  temporary  registration
15    permit  for  his or her own vehicle the classification of the
16    offense at the same level as possession  of  a  stolen  motor
17    vehicle  violates  due  process and the proportionate penalty
18    requirement, the amended Section to read as follows:
19        (625 ILCS 5/4-104) (from Ch. 95 1/2, par. 4-104)
20        Sec. 4-104.  Offenses relating to  possession  of  titles
21    and registration.
22        (a)  It is a violation of this Chapter for:
23             1.  A   person  to  possess  without  authority  any
24        manufacturers statement of origin, certificate of  title,
25        salvage   certificate,   junking   certificate,   display
26        certificate  of  title, registration card, license plate,
27        registration sticker or  temporary  registration  permit,
28        whether blank or otherwise;
29             2.  A    person   to   possess   any   manufacturers
30        certificate  of  origin,  salvage  certificate,   junking
31        certificate,  certificate  of  title, display certificate
32        without complete assignment;
                            -121-              LRB9001889OBpk
 1             3.  A person to possess any manufacturers  statement
 2        of  origin,  salvage  certificate,  junking  certificate,
 3        display  certificate  or  certificate of title, temporary
 4        registration permit, registration card, license plate  or
 5        registration  sticker  knowing  it  to  have been stolen,
 6        converted, altered, forged or counterfeited;
 7             4.  A person to display or affix to  a  vehicle  any
 8        certificate  of title, manufacturers statement of origin,
 9        salvage   certificate,   junking   certificate,   display
10        certificate, temporary registration permit,  registration
11        card,   license   plate   or   registration  sticker  not
12        authorized by law for use on such vehicle;
13             5.  A  person  to  permit  another,   not   entitled
14        thereto,  to  use or have possession of any manufacturers
15        statement  of  origin,   salvage   certificate,   junking
16        certificate, display certificate or certificate of title,
17        registration  card, license plate, temporary registration
18        permit, or registration sticker;
19             6.  A person to fail  to  mail  or  deliver  to  the
20        proper  person  within  a reasonable period of time after
21        receipt from the Secretary of State, any  certificate  of
22        title,  salvage certificate, junking certificate, display
23        certificate, registration  card,  temporary  registration
24        permit,  license  plate  or  registration  sticker.  If a
25        person mails or delivers reasonable notice to the  proper
26        person  after  receipt  from  the  Secretary  of State, a
27        presumption of delivery within  a  reasonable  period  of
28        time  shall  exist;  provided,  however,  the delivery is
29        made, either by mail or otherwise, within  20  days  from
30        the date of receipt from the Secretary of State.
31        (b)  Sentence:
32             1.  A  person convicted of a violation of subsection
33        1 or 2 of paragraph (a) of this Section is  guilty  of  a
34        Class 4 felony.
                            -122-              LRB9001889OBpk
 1             2.  A  person convicted of a violation of subsection
 2        3 of paragraph (a) of this Section is guilty of a Class 2
 3        felony,  except  that  an  owner  of  a  vehicle  who  is
 4        convicted of altering a temporary registration permit for
 5        that vehicle is guilty of a Class C misdemeanor.
 6             3.  A person convicted  of  a  violation  of  either
 7        subsection  4  or  5  of paragraph (a) of this Section is
 8        guilty of a Class A misdemeanor  and  upon  a  second  or
 9        subsequent  conviction of such a violation is guilty of a
10        Class 4 felony.
11             4.  A person convicted of a violation of  subsection
12        6  of  paragraph (a) of this Section is guilty of a petty
13        offense.
14    (Source: P.A. 87-854; 87-1225; 88-45.)
15        Section 130.  The Illinois Vehicle  Code  is  amended  by
16    changing  Section 4-209  to require notification of the owner
17    of an impounded abandoned vehicle by  certified  mail  for  a
18    determination  of  disposition  of the vehicle in response to
19    the decision of the United  States  District  Court  for  the
20    Northern  District  of Illinois, Eastern Division, in Kohn v.
21    Mucia, 776 F. Supp. 348  (1991),  which  decision  held  that
22    notification by regular first class mail instead of certified
23    mail  violates  due  process,  the amended Section to read as
24    follows:
25        (625 ILCS 5/4-209) (from Ch. 95 1/2, par. 4-209)
26        Sec. 4-209.  Disposal of unclaimed vehicles more  than  7
27    years  of  age;  disposal  of abandoned or unclaimed vehicles
28    without notice.
29        (a)  When  the  identity   of   the   registered   owner,
30    lienholder,   or   other   legally  entitled  persons  of  an
31    abandoned, lost, or unclaimed vehicle of 7 years  of  age  or
32    newer  cannot be determined by any means provided for in this
                            -123-              LRB9001889OBpk
 1    Chapter, the vehicle may be sold as provided in Section 4-208
 2    without  notice  to  any  person  whose  identity  cannot  be
 3    determined.
 4        (b)  When an abandoned vehicle of more than  7  years  of
 5    age  is  impounded  as specified by this Chapter, or when any
 6    such vehicle is towed at the request or with the  consent  of
 7    the  owner or operator and is subsequently abandoned, it will
 8    be kept in custody or storage for a minimum of  10  days  for
 9    the  purpose  of  determining  the identity of the registered
10    owner, lienholder, or other  legally  entitled  persons,  and
11    contacting the registered owner, lienholder, or other legally
12    entitled  persons  by  the  U.  S. mail, public service or in
13    person  for  a  determination  of   disposition,;   and,   an
14    examination  of  the  State  Police  stolen vehicle files for
15    theft  and  wanted  information.    For  purposes   of   this
16    subsection,   the  registered  owner,  lienholder,  or  other
17    legally entitled persons  shall  be  contacted  by  certified
18    mail,  return  receipt  requested,  by  public service, or in
19    person for a determination of  disposition  of  the  vehicle,
20    except  that  if  the  registered owner, lienholder, or other
21    legally  entitled  persons  were  previously   contacted   by
22    certified mail, return receipt requested, pursuant to Section
23    4-205  with  respect  to the impoundment of the vehicle, then
24    the registered owner, lienholder, or other  legally  entitled
25    persons  may  be contacted for purposes of this subsection by
26    regular first class mail instead of certified  mail.  At  the
27    expiration  of  the  10  day  period,  without the benefit of
28    disposition information being received  from  the  registered
29    owner,  lienholder,  or  other  legally entitled persons, the
30    vehicle may be disposed of in either of the following ways:
31             (1)  The law enforcement agency having  jurisdiction
32        will  authorize  the  disposal  of the vehicle as junk or
33        salvage.
34             (2)  The towing service may sell the vehicle in  the
                            -124-              LRB9001889OBpk
 1        manner  provided  in Section 4-208 of this Code, provided
 2        that this paragraph (2) shall not apply to vehicles towed
 3        by order or authorization of a law enforcement agency.
 4        (c)  A vehicle  classified  as  an  antique  vehicle  may
 5    however be sold to a person desiring to restore it.
 6    (Source: P.A. 89-433, eff. 12-15-95.)
 7        Section  135.   The  Illinois  Vehicle Code is amended by
 8    changing Section 8-105  to  delete  the  provision  making  a
 9    surety  bond  filed  by  an  operator  of a motor vehicle for
10    transportation of passengers for hire or a medical  transport
11    vehicle  a  lien  on  the operator's scheduled real estate in
12    response to the Illinois Supreme Court decision in Weksler v.
13    Collins, 317 Ill. 132 (1925), which decision held that making
14    such a surety bond a lien is an arbitrary discrimination  and
15    unreasonable, the amended Section to read as follows:
16        (625 ILCS 5/8-105) (from Ch. 95 1/2, par. 8-105)
17        Sec. 8-105. Action on bond. The surety bond shall, by its
18    terms, inure to the benefit of the person recovering any such
19    judgment,  and shall provide that an action may be brought in
20    any court of competent jurisdiction upon  such  bond  by  the
21    owner  of  any  such  judgment;  and  such bond, for the full
22    amount thereof shall, by its terms, be a lien for the benefit
23    of the beneficiaries of said bond  on  such  real  estate  so
24    scheduled,  and  shall  be  recorded  in  the  office  of the
25    recorder in each county in which such real estate is located.
26    (Source: P.A. 83-358.)
27        Section 140.  The Illinois Vehicle  Code  is  amended  by
28    changing  Section  11-501.6  to  require  probable  cause  of
29    alcohol  or  drug  use  before  administering alcohol or drug
30    tests to a driver who was at fault in  a  death  or  personal
31    injury  auto  accident  in  response  to the Illinois Supreme
                            -125-              LRB9001889OBpk
 1    Court decision in King v. Ryan, 153 Ill. 2d 449 (1992),  that
 2    held  administering  such  tests  without probable cause that
 3    alcohol or drug  use  occurred  is  an  illegal  search,  the
 4    amended Section to read as follows:
 5        (625 ILCS 5/11-501.6) (from Ch. 95 1/2, par. 11-501.6)
 6        Sec.  11-501.6.  Driver involvement in personal injury or
 7    fatal motor vehicle accident; chemical test.
 8        (a)  Any person who drives or is in actual control  of  a
 9    motor  vehicle upon the public highways of this State and who
10    has been involved in a personal injury or fatal motor vehicle
11    accident, shall be deemed to have given consent to  a  breath
12    test using a portable device as approved by the Department of
13    Public  Health  or  to  a  chemical  test  or tests of blood,
14    breath, or urine for the purpose of determining  the  alcohol
15    or  other  drug content of such person's blood if arrested as
16    evidenced by the issuance of a Uniform Traffic Ticket for any
17    violation of the Illinois Vehicle Code or a similar provision
18    of  a  local  ordinance,  with  the  exception  of  equipment
19    violations contained in Chapter 12 of this Code,  or  similar
20    provisions  of  local  ordinances,  and  if there is probable
21    cause to believe the person is under the influence of alcohol
22    or any other drug or combination of drugs.  The test or tests
23    shall be administered  at  the  direction  of  the  arresting
24    officer.   The  law  enforcement agency employing the officer
25    shall  designate  which  of  the  aforesaid  tests  shall  be
26    administered.  A urine test may be administered even after  a
27    blood   or   breath  test  or  both  has  been  administered.
28    Compliance with this Section does  not  relieve  such  person
29    from the requirements of Section 11-501.1 of this Code.
30        (b)  Any  person  who  is  dead,  unconscious  or  who is
31    otherwise in a condition rendering such person  incapable  of
32    refusal  shall  be  deemed  not to have withdrawn the consent
33    provided by subsection (a) of this Section.  In addition,  if
                            -126-              LRB9001889OBpk
 1    a  driver  of  a  vehicle is receiving medical treatment as a
 2    result of a motor vehicle accident, any physician licensed to
 3    practice medicine, registered nurse or a phlebotomist  acting
 4    under  the  direction  of a licensed physician shall withdraw
 5    blood for testing  purposes  to  ascertain  the  presence  of
 6    alcohol  or  other  drugs, upon the specific request of a law
 7    enforcement  officer.  However,  no  such  testing  shall  be
 8    performed until, in the opinion of the medical  personnel  on
 9    scene, the withdrawal can be made without interfering with or
10    endangering the well-being of the patient.
11        (c)  A  person  requested to submit to a test as provided
12    above  shall  be  warned  by  the  law  enforcement   officer
13    requesting  the test that a refusal to submit to the test, or
14    submission to the test resulting in an alcohol  concentration
15    of  0.10  or  more,  or  any  amount of a drug, substance, or
16    compound resulting from the unlawful use  or  consumption  of
17    cannabis,  as  covered  by  the  Cannabis  Control  Act  or a
18    controlled  substance  listed  in  the  Illinois   Controlled
19    Substances  Act  as detected in such person's blood or urine,
20    may result in the suspension of such  person's  privilege  to
21    operate  a  motor vehicle. The length of the suspension shall
22    be the same as outlined  in  Section  6-208.1  of  this  Code
23    regarding statutory summary suspensions.
24        (d)  If  the  person refuses testing or submits to a test
25    which discloses an alcohol concentration of 0.10 or more,  or
26    any  amount of a drug, substance or compound in such person's
27    blood or urine resulting from the unlawful use or consumption
28    of  cannabis  listed  in  the  Cannabis  Control  Act,  or  a
29    controlled  substance  listed  in  the  Illinois   Controlled
30    Substances Act, the law enforcement officer shall immediately
31    submit  a  sworn  report  to the Secretary of State on a form
32    prescribed by the Secretary,  certifying  that  the  test  or
33    tests  were  requested  pursuant  to  subsection  (a) and the
34    person refused to submit to a test or tests or  submitted  to
                            -127-              LRB9001889OBpk
 1    testing  which  disclosed an alcohol concentration of 0.10 or
 2    more, or any amount of a drug, substance, or compound in such
 3    person's blood or urine, resulting from the unlawful  use  or
 4    consumption of cannabis listed in the Cannabis Control Act or
 5    a  controlled  substance  listed  in  the Illinois Controlled
 6    Substances Act.
 7        Upon receipt of the sworn report  of  a  law  enforcement
 8    officer,  the  Secretary  shall  enter  the suspension to the
 9    individual's driving  record  and  the  suspension  shall  be
10    effective  on  the  46th day following the date notice of the
11    suspension was given to the person.
12        The law enforcement officer submitting the  sworn  report
13    shall serve immediate notice of this suspension on the person
14    and  such  suspension  shall  be  effective  on  the 46th day
15    following the date notice was given.
16        The cases where the blood alcohol concentration of .10 or
17    more, or  any  amount  of  a  drug,  substance,  or  compound
18    resulting from the unlawful use or consumption of cannabis as
19    listed in the Cannabis Control Act, or a controlled substance
20    listed   in   the  Illinois  Controlled  Substances  Act,  is
21    established by  a  subsequent  analysis  of  blood  or  urine
22    collected  at the time of arrest, the arresting officer shall
23    give notice as provided in this Section or by deposit in  the
24    United States mail of such notice in an envelope with postage
25    prepaid  and addressed to such person at his address as shown
26    on the Uniform Traffic Ticket and  the  suspension  shall  be
27    effective  on  the  46th  day  following  the date notice was
28    given.
29        Upon receipt of the sworn report  of  a  law  enforcement
30    officer,   the  Secretary  shall  also  give  notice  of  the
31    suspension to the driver by mailing a notice of the effective
32    date of the suspension to the  individual.   However,  should
33    the  sworn  report  be defective by not containing sufficient
34    information or be completed  in  error,  the  notice  of  the
                            -128-              LRB9001889OBpk
 1    suspension  shall  not  be mailed to the person or entered to
 2    the driving record, but rather  the  sworn  report  shall  be
 3    returned to the issuing law enforcement agency.
 4        (e)  A  driver may contest this suspension of his driving
 5    privileges by requesting an administrative hearing  with  the
 6    Secretary  in accordance with Section 2-118 of this Code.  At
 7    the conclusion of a hearing held under Section 2-118 of  this
 8    Code,  the  Secretary  may  rescind,  continue, or modify the
 9    order of suspension.  If the Secretary does not  rescind  the
10    order,  a  restricted  driving  permit  may be granted by the
11    Secretary upon application being made and good  cause  shown.
12    A  restricted  driving permit may be granted to relieve undue
13    hardship to allow driving for  employment,  educational,  and
14    medical  purposes  as outlined in Section 6-206 of this Code.
15    The provisions of Section 6-206 of this Code shall apply.
16        (f)  (Blank)
17        (g)  For the purposes of this Section, a personal  injury
18    shall  include  any type A injury as indicated on the traffic
19    accident report completed by a law enforcement  officer  that
20    requires   immediate   professional  attention  in  either  a
21    doctor's office or a medical facility.  A type A injury shall
22    include severely bleeding wounds, distorted extremities,  and
23    injuries  that  require  the injured party to be carried from
24    the scene.
25    (Source: P.A. 88-211.)
26        Section 145.  The Juvenile Court Act of 1987  is  amended
27    by changing Section 1-15 to delete a provision requiring that
28    a party, properly served, who wishes to object to the court's
29    jurisdiction  on  the  grounds that a necessary party was not
30    properly served must raise that objection before the start of
31    the adjudicatory hearing in response to the Illinois  Supreme
32    Court  decision  in  In  re  C.R.H., 163 Ill. 2d. 263 (1994),
33    which decision held that such provision violates due  process
                            -129-              LRB9001889OBpk
 1    and interferes with the powers of reviewing courts guaranteed
 2    by  the  separation  of powers clause, the amended Section to
 3    read as follows:
 4        (705 ILCS 405/1-15) (from Ch. 37, par. 801-15)
 5        Sec. 1-15.  Wrong Venue or Inadequate Service.
 6        (a) All objections of improper  venue  are  waived  by  a
 7    party  respondent  unless  a  motion  to transfer to a proper
 8    venue is made by that party respondent before the start of an
 9    adjudicatory hearing conducted under any Article of this Act.
10    No order or judgment is void because of a claim that  it  was
11    rendered  in  the  wrong venue unless that claim is raised in
12    accordance with this Section.
13        (b)  A party respondent  who  either  has  been  properly
14    served,  or  who  appears  before  the court personally or by
15    counsel  at  the  adjudicatory  hearing  or  at  any  earlier
16    proceeding on a petition for wardship under this Act  leading
17    to that adjudicatory hearing, and who wishes to object to the
18    court's  jurisdiction on the ground that some necessary party
19    either has not been served or has not  been  properly  served
20    must  raise  that  claim before the start of the adjudicatory
21    hearing conducted under any Article of this Act.  No order or
22    judgment is void because of a  claim  of  inadequate  service
23    unless that claim is raised in accordance with this Section.
24    (Source: P.A. 86-1012; 86-1475.)
25        Section  150.   The  Criminal  Code of 1961 is amended by
26    changing Section 37-4 to exempt buildings found to be  public
27    nuisances solely on account of their use in the commission of
28    obscenity  from  the ex parte proceeding and one-year closure
29    and bond provisions in response to the Illinois Supreme Court
30    decision in People v. Sequoia Books, Inc., 127  Ill.  2d  271
31    (1989),  which decision held that those provisions as applied
32    to those buildings are an unconstitutional  prior  restraint,
                            -130-              LRB9001889OBpk
 1    the amended Section to read as follows:
 2        (720 ILCS 5/37-4) (from Ch. 38, par. 37-4)
 3        Sec.  37-4. Abatement of nuisance.)  The Attorney General
 4    of this State or the State's Attorney of the  county  wherein
 5    the  nuisance exists may commence an action to abate a public
 6    nuisance as described in Section 37-1 of  this  Act,  in  the
 7    name  of  the People of the State of Illinois, in the circuit
 8    court.  Except as otherwise provided in  this  Section,  upon
 9    being satisfied by affidavits or other sworn evidence that an
10    alleged  public nuisance exists, the court may without notice
11    or bond enter a temporary restraining  order  or  preliminary
12    injunction  to  enjoin  any  defendant  from maintaining such
13    nuisance and may enter an  order  restraining  any  defendant
14    from  removing  or  interfering  with  all  property  used in
15    connection  with  the  public  nuisance.    If   during   the
16    proceedings  and  hearings upon the merits, which shall be in
17    the manner of the Controlled Substance and Cannabis  Nuisance
18    Act  "An  Act  in  relation to places used for the purpose of
19    using, keeping or selling controlled substances or cannabis",
20    approved July 5, 1957,  the  existence  of  the  nuisance  is
21    established,   and   it  is  found  that  such  nuisance  was
22    maintained  with  the  intentional,  knowing,   reckless   or
23    negligent  permission  of the owner or the agent of the owner
24    managing  the  building,  the  court  shall  enter  an  order
25    restraining all persons from maintaining or  permitting  such
26    nuisance and from using the building for a period of one year
27    thereafter,  except as otherwise provided in this Section and
28    except that an owner, lessee or other  occupant  thereof  may
29    use  such  place if the owner shall give bond with sufficient
30    security or surety  approved  by  the  court,  in  an  amount
31    between $1,000 and $5,000 inclusive, payable to the People of
32    the  State  of  Illinois,  and  including a condition that no
33    offense specified in  Section  37-1  of  this  Act  shall  be
                            -131-              LRB9001889OBpk
 1    committed  at,  in  or  upon  the  property  described  and a
 2    condition  that  the  principal  obligor  and  surety  assume
 3    responsibility for any fine, costs or damages resulting  from
 4    such  an  offense thereafter.  The provisions of this Section
 5    authorizing  an  ex  parte  temporary  restraining  order  or
 6    preliminary injunction and authorizing an  order  restraining
 7    all  persons  from  using a building for a period of one year
 8    unless the owner of the building gives bond do not apply to a
 9    building that has been found to be a public  nuisance  solely
10    on  account  of  its  use in the commission of the offense of
11    obscenity under Section 11-20 of this Act or  the  commission
12    of an inchoate offense relative to that principal offense.
13    (Source: P.A. 83-342.)
14        Section  155.   The Code of Criminal Procedure of 1963 is
15    amended by  changing  Section  110-6.2  to  delete  mandatory
16    requirements  upon  the  judiciary concerning the granting or
17    denial of post-conviction bond in response  to  the  Illinois
18    Supreme  Court decision in People v. Williams 143 Ill. 2d 477
19    (1991), which decision held that such  requirements  conflict
20    with  Illinois  Supreme Court Rule 609(b) and are a violation
21    of the separation of powers, the amended Section to  read  as
22    follows:
23        (725 ILCS 5/110-6.2) (from Ch. 38, par. 110-6.2)
24        Sec. 110-6.2.  Post-conviction Detention.
25        (a)  The  court  shall  order  that a person who has been
26    found guilty of an offense and who is waiting  imposition  or
27    execution  of  sentence be held without bond unless the court
28    finds by clear and convincing evidence that the person is not
29    likely to flee or pose a danger to any other  person  or  the
30    community if released under Sections 110-5 and 110-10 of this
31    Act.
32        (b)  The court may shall order that a person who has been
                            -132-              LRB9001889OBpk
 1    found  guilty  of  an  offense  and  sentenced  to  a term of
 2    imprisonment shall be held without bond if unless  the  court
 3    finds by clear and convincing evidence that:
 4        (1)  the person is not likely to flee or pose a danger to
 5    the  safety  of any other person or the community if released
 6    on bond pending appeal; and
 7        (2)  that the appeal is not for purpose of delay and does
 8    not raise raises a substantial question of law or fact likely
 9    to result in reversal or an order for a new trial.
10    (Source: P.A. 86-984.)
11        (725 ILCS 5/122-8 rep.)
12        Section 160.  The Code of Criminal Procedure of  1963  is
13    amended  by  repealing Section 122-8, which requires that all
14    post-conviction matters be considered by a judge who was  not
15    involved   in   the  original  proceeding  that  resulted  in
16    conviction and which was held to violate  the  separation  of
17    powers  doctrine  by  the Illinois Supreme Court in People v.
18    Joseph, 113 Ill. 2d 36 (1986).
19        Section 165.  The Code of Civil Procedure is  amended  by
20    changing  Section  12-1006  to  delete a provision creating a
21    conclusive presumption that retirement plans that  intend  to
22    qualify  under  the  Internal  Revenue  Code or plans created
23    under the Illinois Pension Code are spendthrift trusts  under
24    Illinois  law  and  thus  come  under  the federal bankruptcy
25    exemption for spendthrift trusts, which  provision  was  held
26    unconstitutional  under  the  supremacy  clause  by  the U.S.
27    Bankruptcy Court in In re Kazi, 125 B.R.  981  (Bkrtcy.  S.D.
28    Ill.  (1991))  and  others,  the  amended  Section to read as
29    follows:
30        (735 ILCS 5/12-1006) (from Ch. 110, par. 12-1006)
31        Sec. 12-1006.  Exemption for retirement plans.
                            -133-              LRB9001889OBpk
 1        (a)  A debtor's interest in or right, whether  vested  or
 2    not, to the assets held in or to receive pensions, annuities,
 3    benefits,  distributions,  refunds of contributions, or other
 4    payments under a retirement plan  is  exempt  from  judgment,
 5    attachment, execution, distress for rent, and seizure for the
 6    satisfaction  of  debts  if  the plan (i) is intended in good
 7    faith to  qualify  as  a  retirement  plan  under  applicable
 8    provisions  of  the  Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as now or
 9    hereafter amended, or (ii) is a public employee pension  plan
10    created  under the Illinois Pension Code, as now or hereafter
11    amended.
12        (b)  "Retirement plan" includes the following:
13             (1)  a  stock  bonus,   pension,   profit   sharing,
14        annuity,  or  similar  plan  or  arrangement, including a
15        retirement  plan  for  self-employed  individuals  or   a
16        simplified employee pension plan;
17             (2)  a  government  or  church  retirement  plan  or
18        contract;
19             (3)  an  individual retirement annuity or individual
20        retirement account; and
21             (4)  a public employee pension  plan  created  under
22        the Illinois Pension Code, as now or hereafter amended.
23        (c)  (Blank)  A  retirement  plan that is (i) intended in
24    good  faith  to  qualify  as  a  retirement  plan  under  the
25    applicable provisions of the Internal Revenue Code  of  1986,
26    as  now  or  hereafter  amended,  or  (ii)  a public employee
27    pension plan created under the Illinois Pension Code, as  now
28    or  hereafter  amended,  is  conclusively  presumed  to  be a
29    spendthrift trust under the law of Illinois.
30        (d)  This Section  applies  to  interests  in  retirement
31    plans  held  by  debtors  subject  to  bankruptcy,  judicial,
32    administrative or other proceedings pending on or filed after
33    August 30, 1989.
34    (Source: P.A. 86-393; 86-1329.)
                            -134-              LRB9001889OBpk
 1        Section  170.   The Code of Civil Procedure is amended by
 2    changing  Section  13-202.1  to  delete  the  provision   for
 3    retroactive  application of the Section and revival of causes
 4    of action otherwise barred by the statute of  limitations  in
 5    response  to  the Illinois Supreme Court decision in Sepmeyer
 6    v. Holman, 162 Ill. 2d 249 (1994), which decision  held  that
 7    the  legislative  revival of a time-barred claim violates due
 8    process, the amended Section to read as follows:
 9        (735 ILCS 5/13-202.1) (from Ch. 110, par. 13-202.1)
10        Sec.  13-202.1.  No  limitations  on  certain  actions  -
11    Duties of Department of Corrections and State's Attorneys.
12        (a)  Notwithstanding any  other  provision  of  law,  any
13    action  for  damages against a person, however the action may
14    be designated, may be brought at any time if --
15             (1)  the action is based upon conduct  of  a  person
16        which  constituted the commission of first degree murder,
17        a Class X felony, or a Class 1 felony as these terms  are
18        utilized at the time of filing of the action; and
19             (2)  the  person  was  convicted of the first degree
20        murder, Class X felony, or Class 1 felony.
21        (b)  The provisions of this Section are fully  applicable
22    to  convictions  based  upon defendant's accountability under
23    Section 5-2 of the Criminal Code of 1961, approved  July  28,
24    1961, as amended.
25        (c)  Paragraphs  (a)  and  (b)  above  shall apply to any
26    cause  of  action  regardless  of  the  date  on  which   the
27    defendant's  conduct  is  alleged  to have occurred or of the
28    date of any conviction  resulting  therefrom.   In  addition,
29    this  Section shall be applied retroactively and shall revive
30    causes of actions which otherwise may have been barred  under
31    limitations  provisions  in  effect  prior  to  the enactment
32    and/or effect of P.A. 84-1450.
33        (d)  Whenever  there  is  any  settlement,   verdict   or
                            -135-              LRB9001889OBpk
 1    judgment   in  excess  of  $500  in  any  court  against  the
 2    Department of Corrections or any past or present employee  or
 3    official  in  favor  of any person for damages incurred while
 4    the person was committed to the  Department  of  Corrections,
 5    the  Department  within 14 days of the settlement, verdict or
 6    judgment shall notify the State's Attorney of the county from
 7    which the person  was  committed  to  the  Department.    The
 8    State's  Attorney  shall in turn within 14 days send the same
 9    notice to the person  or  persons  who  were  the  victim  or
10    victims  of  the  crime for which the offender was committed,
11    along with the information that the  victim  or  victims  may
12    contact  the  State's  Attorney  for  advice concerning their
13    rights to sue for damages under the law.   If  so  requested,
14    the  State's Attorney's office shall provide such advice, but
15    in  no  instance  may  the State's Attorney institute a civil
16    action for damages on behalf of the victim or victims.
17        No civil action may be  brought  by  anyone  against  the
18    Department  of  Corrections, a State's Attorney, a County, or
19    any past or present employee or agent thereof for any alleged
20    violation by any such entity or person  of  the  notification
21    requirements imposed by this paragraph (c).
22    (Source: P.A. 89-8, eff. 3-21-95.)
23        Section   175.    The  Mental  Health  and  Developmental
24    Disabilities  Confidentiality  Act  is  amended  by  changing
25    Section 10 to delete a  provision  authorizing  interlocutory
26    appeals  from  orders relating to disclosure of the record or
27    communications  of  a   recipient   of   mental   health   or
28    developmental   disabilities  services  in  response  to  the
29    Illinois   Supreme   Court    decision    in    Almgren    v.
30    Rush-Presbyterian-St.  Luke's Medical Center, 162 Ill. 2d 205
31    (1994), which decision held that the legislature's attempt to
32    provide for appeals from less than final  judgments  violates
33    the  separation  of  powers  doctrine, the amended Section to
                            -136-              LRB9001889OBpk
 1    read as follows:
 2        (740 ILCS 110/10) (from Ch. 91 1/2, par. 810)
 3        Sec.  10.  Disclosure  in  civil,  criminal,  and   other
 4    proceedings.
 5        (a)  Except  as  provided herein, in any civil, criminal,
 6    administrative,  or  legislative  proceeding,   or   in   any
 7    proceeding  preliminary thereto, a recipient, and a therapist
 8    on behalf and  in  the  interest  of  a  recipient,  has  the
 9    privilege to refuse to disclose and to prevent the disclosure
10    of the recipient's record or communications.
11             (1)  Records  and communications may be disclosed in
12        a civil, criminal or administrative proceeding  in  which
13        the  recipient  introduces  his  mental  condition or any
14        aspect of his services received for such condition as  an
15        element  of  his  claim  or  defense,  if and only to the
16        extent the court  in  which  the  proceedings  have  been
17        brought, or, in the case of an administrative proceeding,
18        the  court  to which an appeal or other action for review
19        of an administrative determination may be  taken,  finds,
20        after   in  camera  examination  of  testimony  or  other
21        evidence, that it  is  relevant,  probative,  not  unduly
22        prejudicial   or   inflammatory,  and  otherwise  clearly
23        admissible;   that   other   satisfactory   evidence   is
24        demonstrably unsatisfactory  as  evidence  of  the  facts
25        sought  to  be  established  by  such  evidence; and that
26        disclosure  is  more  important  to  the   interests   of
27        substantial  justice  than  protection from injury to the
28        therapist-recipient relationship or to the  recipient  or
29        other  whom  disclosure  is  likely to harm.  Except in a
30        criminal  proceeding  in  which  the  recipient,  who  is
31        accused  in  that  proceeding,  raises  the  defense   of
32        insanity,  no record or communication between a therapist
33        and a recipient shall be deemed relevant for purposes  of
                            -137-              LRB9001889OBpk
 1        this  subsection,  except the fact of treatment, the cost
 2        of services and the ultimate diagnosis unless  the  party
 3        seeking   disclosure   of   the   communication   clearly
 4        establishes  in the trial court a compelling need for its
 5        production.  However, for purposes of this  Act,  in  any
 6        action  brought  or  defended under the Illinois Marriage
 7        and Dissolution of Marriage Act,  or  in  any  action  in
 8        which  pain  and  suffering  is  an element of the claim,
 9        mental condition shall not be  deemed  to  be  introduced
10        merely  by  making  such  claim and shall be deemed to be
11        introduced only if the recipient  or  a  witness  on  his
12        behalf   first   testifies   concerning   the  record  or
13        communication.
14             (2)  Records or communications may be disclosed in a
15        civil proceeding after the  recipient's  death  when  the
16        recipient's   physical   or  mental  condition  has  been
17        introduced as an element of a claim  or  defense  by  any
18        party  claiming  or defending through or as a beneficiary
19        of the recipient, provided  the  court  finds,  after  in
20        camera  examination of the evidence, that it is relevant,
21        probative, and otherwise clearly admissible;  that  other
22        satisfactory  evidence  is  not  available  regarding the
23        facts sought to be established by such evidence; and that
24        disclosure  is  more  important  to  the   interests   of
25        substantial justice than protection from any injury which
26        disclosure is likely to cause.
27             (3)  In the event of a claim made or an action filed
28        by  a  recipient, or, following the recipient's death, by
29        any party claiming as a beneficiary of the recipient  for
30        injury caused in the course of providing services to that
31        recipient,  the  therapist  may  testify  as to pertinent
32        records or communications in any administrative, judicial
33        or discovery proceeding for the purpose of preparing  and
34        presenting a defense against the claim or action.
                            -138-              LRB9001889OBpk
 1             (3.1)  A  therapist  has the right to communicate at
 2        any time and in any fashion with his or her  own  counsel
 3        or  professional  liability  insurance  carrier, or both,
 4        concerning any care or treatment he or she  provided,  or
 5        assisted in providing, to any patient.
 6             (3.2)  A  therapist  has the right to communicate at
 7        any time and in any fashion with his or  her  present  or
 8        former   employer,   principal,   partner,   professional
 9        corporation, or professional liability insurance carrier,
10        or counsel for any of those entities, concerning any care
11        or   treatment   he  or  she  provided,  or  assisted  in
12        providing, to any patient within the scope of his or  her
13        employment,   affiliation,   or  other  agency  with  the
14        employer,    principal,    partner,    or    professional
15        corporation.
16             (4)  Records and communications  made  to  or  by  a
17        therapist in the course of examination ordered by a court
18        for  good  cause  shown  may,  if  otherwise relevant and
19        admissible,  be  disclosed  in  a  civil,  criminal,   or
20        administrative  proceeding  in  which  the recipient is a
21        party or in appropriate  pretrial  proceedings,  provided
22        such  court  has  found  that  the  recipient has been as
23        adequately and as effectively as possible informed before
24        submitting to such  examination  that  such  records  and
25        communications  would  not  be considered confidential or
26        privileged.  Such records  and  communications  shall  be
27        admissible  only  as  to issues involving the recipient's
28        physical or mental condition and only to the extent  that
29        these are germane to such proceedings.
30             (5)  Records  and communications may be disclosed in
31        a proceeding under the Probate Act of 1975, to  determine
32        a   recipient's  competency  or  need  for  guardianship,
33        provided that the disclosure is made only with respect to
34        that issue.
                            -139-              LRB9001889OBpk
 1             (6)  Records and  communications  may  be  disclosed
 2        when  such  are made during treatment which the recipient
 3        is ordered to undergo to render him fit to stand trial on
 4        a criminal charge, provided that the disclosure  is  made
 5        only with respect to the issue of fitness to stand trial.
 6             (7)  Records and communications of the recipient may
 7        be  disclosed  in  any civil or administrative proceeding
 8        involving the validity  of  or  benefits  under  a  life,
 9        accident,   health  or  disability  insurance  policy  or
10        certificate,  or  Health  Care  Service  Plan   Contract,
11        insuring  the  recipient,  but  only if and to the extent
12        that the recipient's mental condition,  or  treatment  or
13        services  in  connection therewith, is a material element
14        of any claim or  defense  of  any  party,  provided  that
15        information  sought or disclosed shall not be redisclosed
16        except  in  connection  with  the  proceeding  in   which
17        disclosure is made.
18             (8)  Records or communications may be disclosed when
19        such  are  relevant  to  a  matter in issue in any action
20        brought  under  this  Act  and  proceedings   preliminary
21        thereto, provided that any information so disclosed shall
22        not  be utilized for any other purpose nor be redisclosed
23        except in connection  with  such  action  or  preliminary
24        proceedings.
25             (9)  Records and communications of the recipient may
26        be disclosed in investigations of and trials for homicide
27        when  the  disclosure  relates  directly  to  the fact or
28        immediate circumstances of the homicide.
29             (10)  Records  and  communications  of  a   deceased
30        recipient  may  be  disclosed  to  a coroner conducting a
31        preliminary  investigation  into  the  recipient's  death
32        under Section 3-3013  of  the  Counties  Code.   However,
33        records  and  communications  of  the  deceased recipient
34        disclosed in an investigation shall be limited solely  to
                            -140-              LRB9001889OBpk
 1        the   deceased  recipient's  records  and  communications
 2        relating to the factual  circumstances  of  the  incident
 3        being investigated in a mental health facility.
 4        (b)  Before  a  disclosure  is made under subsection (a),
 5    any party to the proceeding or any  other  interested  person
 6    may   request   an   in   camera  review  of  the  record  or
 7    communications  to  be  disclosed.   The  court   or   agency
 8    conducting the proceeding may hold an in camera review on its
 9    own  motion,  except  that  this  provision does not apply to
10    paragraph (3.1) of subsection  (a)  (regarding  consultations
11    between   a   therapist   and  his  or  her  own  counsel  or
12    professional liability insurance carrier) or paragraph  (3.2)
13    of   subsection   (a)   (regarding  consultations  between  a
14    therapist  and  his  or  her  employer,  principal,  partner,
15    professional corporation, or professional liability insurance
16    carrier, or counsel  for  any  of  those  entities).    When,
17    contrary  to the express wish of the recipient, the therapist
18    asserts a privilege on  behalf  and  in  the  interest  of  a
19    recipient, the court may require that the therapist, in an in
20    camera  hearing, establish that disclosure is not in the best
21    interest of the recipient.  The court or agency  may  prevent
22    disclosure  or  limit  disclosure  to  the  extent that other
23    admissible evidence is sufficient to establish the  facts  in
24    issue,   except  that  a  court  may  not  prevent  or  limit
25    disclosures between a therapist and his or her own counsel or
26    between a therapist  and  his  or  her  employer,  principal,
27    partner,  professional corporation, or professional liability
28    insurance carrier, or counsel for any of those entities.  The
29    court or agency may enter such orders as may be necessary  in
30    order  to protect the confidentiality, privacy, and safety of
31    the recipient or of other persons.  Any order to disclose  or
32    to  not  disclose  shall  be  considered  a  final  order for
33    purposes of appeal and  shall  be  subject  to  interlocutory
34    appeal.
                            -141-              LRB9001889OBpk
 1        (c)  A  recipient's  records  and  communications  may be
 2    disclosed to  a  duly  authorized  committee,  commission  or
 3    subcommittee of the General Assembly which possesses subpoena
 4    and  hearing  powers,  upon  a  written request approved by a
 5    majority vote of the committee,  commission  or  subcommittee
 6    members.   The  committee,  commission  or  subcommittee  may
 7    request  records  only  for  the purposes of investigating or
 8    studying  possible  violations  of  recipient  rights.    The
 9    request  shall  state  the  purpose  for  which disclosure is
10    sought.
11        The facility shall notify the recipient, or his guardian,
12    and therapist in writing of any disclosure request under this
13    subsection within 5 business days after such  request.   Such
14    notification  shall  also  inform the recipient, or guardian,
15    and therapist of their right  to  object  to  the  disclosure
16    within 10 business days after receipt of the notification and
17    shall  include  the name, address and telephone number of the
18    committee, commission or subcommittee member or staff  person
19    with  whom  an objection shall be filed.  If no objection has
20    been filed within 15 business  days  after  the  request  for
21    disclosure,  the  facility  shall  disclose  the  records and
22    communications to the committee, commission or  subcommittee.
23    If  an objection has been filed within 15 business days after
24    the request for disclosure, the facility shall  disclose  the
25    records   and   communications   only  after  the  committee,
26    commission  or  subcommittee  has  permitted  the  recipient,
27    guardian or therapist to  present  his  objection  in  person
28    before  it  and  has  renewed its request for disclosure by a
29    majority vote of its members.
30        Disclosure under this subsection shall  not  occur  until
31    all   personally  identifiable  data  of  the  recipient  and
32    provider are removed from  the  records  and  communications.
33    Disclosure  under  this  subsection  shall  not  occur in any
34    public proceeding.
                            -142-              LRB9001889OBpk
 1        (d)  No  party  to   any   proceeding   described   under
 2    paragraphs  (1), (2), (3), (4), (7), or (8) of subsection (a)
 3    of this Section, nor his  or  her  attorney,  shall  serve  a
 4    subpoena   seeking   to   obtain   access   to   records   or
 5    communications   under   this  Act  unless  the  subpoena  is
 6    accompanied by a written order issued by a judge, authorizing
 7    the  disclosure  of  the  records  or  the  issuance  of  the
 8    subpoena. No person shall comply with a subpoena for  records
 9    or  communications  under  this  Act,  unless the subpoena is
10    accompanied by a written order authorizing  the  issuance  of
11    the subpoena or the disclosure of the records.
12        This  amendatory  Act of 1995 applies to causes of action
13    filed on or after its effective date.
14    (Source: P.A. 89-7, eff. 3-9-95.)
15        (745 ILCS 25/5 rep.)
16        Section 180.  The Tort Liability of Schools Act,  Section
17    5, subsection B of which was held unconstitutional as special
18    legislation  by  the  Illinois  Supreme  Court  in  Haymes v.
19    Catholic Bishop of Chicago, 41 Ill. 2d 336 (1968) because  it
20    provided  for  a  $10,000  limit  for  liability of nonpublic
21    schools when there was no such  liability  limit  for  public
22    schools    (Section   5,   subsection   A   previously   held
23    unconstitutional) or other units of government, is amended by
24    repealing Section 5.
25        Section 185.  The Illinois Marriage  and  Dissolution  of
26    Marriage  Act  is  amended by changing Section 501.1 to limit
27    the dissolution action stay from  disposing  of  property  to
28    marital  property  in  response to the Illinois Supreme Court
29    decision in Messenger v. Edgar, 157 Ill. 2d 162 (1993), which
30    decision held that the dissolution action  stay  applying  to
31    all  property  is a violation of the guarantee of substantive
32    due process, the amended Section to read as follows:
                            -143-              LRB9001889OBpk
 1        (750 ILCS 5/501.1) (from Ch. 40, par. 501.1)
 2        Sec. 501.1.  Dissolution action stay.
 3        (a)  Upon service of a summons and petition  or  praecipe
 4    filed under the Illinois Marriage and Dissolution of Marriage
 5    Act  or upon the filing of the respondent's appearance in the
 6    proceeding, whichever first occurs, a dissolution action stay
 7    shall be in effect against both parties and their agents  and
 8    employees,  without  bond  or  further  notice, until a final
 9    judgement is entered, the proceeding is dismissed,  or  until
10    further order of the court:
11             (1)  restraining  both  parties  from  transferring,
12        encumbering,  concealing, destroying, spending, damaging,
13        or in any way disposing of marital any property,  without
14        the  consent of the other party or an order of the court,
15        except  in  the  usual  course  of  business,   for   the
16        necessities  of  life, or for reasonable costs, expenses,
17        and attorney's fees arising from the proceeding, as  well
18        as  requiring each party to provide written notice to the
19        other party and his  or  her  attorney  of  any  proposed
20        extraordinary   expenditure   or   transaction  involving
21        marital property;
22             (2)  restraining  both   parties   from   physically
23        abusing,    harassing,    intimidating,    striking,   or
24        interfering with the personal liberty of the other  party
25        or the minor children of either party; and
26             (3)  restraining  both  parties  from  removing  any
27        minor child of either party from the State of Illinois or
28        from  concealing  any  such  child  from the other party,
29        without the consent of the other party or an order of the
30        court.
31        The restraint provided in this subsection  (a)  does  not
32    operate  to  make unavailable any of the remedies provided in
33    the Illinois Domestic Violence Act of 1986.
34        A restraint of the parties' actions  under  this  Section
                            -144-              LRB9001889OBpk
 1    does  not  affect  the  rights  of  a  bona fide purchaser or
 2    mortgagee whose interest in real property or whose beneficial
 3    interest in real property under an Illinois  land  trust  was
 4    acquired  before  the  filing  of  a lis pendens notice under
 5    Section 2-1901 of the Code of Civil Procedure.
 6        (b)  Notice of any proposed extraordinary expenditure  or
 7    transaction, as required by subsection (a), shall be given as
 8    soon  as  practicable,  but  not  less than 7 days before the
 9    proposed date for the carrying out  or  commencement  of  the
10    carrying out of the extraordinary expenditure or transaction,
11    except  in an emergency, in which event notice shall be given
12    as soon as practicable under the  circumstances.   If  proper
13    notice  is  given  and if the party receiving the notice does
14    not object by filing a petition for injunctive  relief  under
15    the  Code  of Civil Procedure within 7 days of receipt of the
16    notice,  the  carrying  out  of  the  proposed  extraordinary
17    expenditure  or  transaction  is  not  a  violation  of   the
18    dissolution  action  stay.  The dissolution action stay shall
19    remain in full force and effect against both parties  for  14
20    days  after  the  date of filing of a petition for injunctive
21    relief by the objecting party (or a  shorter  period  if  the
22    court  so orders); and no extension beyond that 14 day period
23    shall be granted by the court.  For good cause shown, a party
24    may file a petition for a reduction in time with  respect  to
25    any 7 day notice requirement under this subsection.
26        (c)  A  party  making  any  extraordinary  expenditure or
27    carrying out any extraordinary transaction involving  marital
28    property  after  a dissolution action stay is in effect shall
29    account promptly to the court and to the other party for  all
30    of  those  expenditures and transactions.  This obligation to
31    account applies throughout the pendency  of  the  proceeding,
32    irrespective  of  (i) any notice given by any party as to any
33    proposed extraordinary expenditure or transaction,  (ii)  any
34    filing of an objection and petition under this Section or the
                            -145-              LRB9001889OBpk
 1    absence  of  any such filing, or (iii) any court ruling as to
 2    an issue presented to it by either party.
 3        (d)  If the party making an extraordinary expenditure  or
 4    transaction  involving  marital  property  fails  to  provide
 5    proper  notice  or  if  despite proper notice the other party
 6    filed a petition and prevailed  on  that  petition,  and  the
 7    extraordinary expenditure or transaction results in a loss of
 8    income  or  reduction  in  the  amount  or  in  the  value of
 9    property, there is a presumption of dissipation of  property,
10    equal to the amount of the loss or reduction, charged against
11    the party for purposes of property distribution under Section
12    503.
13        (e)  In  a  proceeding  filed under this Act, the summons
14    shall  provide  notice  of  the  entry   of   the   automatic
15    dissolution  action  stay in a form as required by applicable
16    rules.
17    (Source: P.A. 87-881; 88-24.)
18        (820 ILCS 135/2.1 rep.)
19        (820 ILCS 135/2.2 rep.)
20        Section  190.   The  Burial  Rights  Act  is  amended  by
21    repealing Sections 2.1 and 2.2, which provide  for  interment
22    in  a  cemetery  according  to  the  tenets  and beliefs of a
23    religious  sect  of  which  the  decedent   was   a   member,
24    notwithstanding  that  a  labor  dispute has disrupted normal
25    interment services at the cemetery, and  which  was  held  to
26    violate   the   supremacy   clause   of   the  United  States
27    Constitution by the United  States  District  Court  for  the
28    Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division, in Cannon v.
29    Edgar, 825 F. Supp. 1349 (1993).
30        Section  900.   No acceleration or delay.  Where this Act
31    makes changes in a statute that is represented in this Act by
32    text that is not yet or no longer in effect (for  example,  a
                            -146-              LRB9001889OBpk
 1    Section  represented  by  multiple versions), the use of that
 2    text does not accelerate or delay the taking  effect  of  (i)
 3    the  changes made by this Act or (ii) provisions derived from
 4    any other Public Act.
 5        Section 950.  No revival or extension.  This Act does not
 6    revive or extend any Section or Act otherwise repealed.
                            -147-              LRB9001889OBpk
 1                                INDEX
 2               Statutes amended in order of appearance
 3    5 ILCS 315/3              from Ch. 48, par. 1603
 4    5 ILCS 315/5              from Ch. 48, par. 1605
 5    5 ILCS 315/6              from Ch. 48, par. 1606
 6    10 ILCS 5/7-10.1 rep.
 7    10 ILCS 5/7-60            from Ch. 46, par. 7-60
 8    10 ILCS 5/7-60.1          from Ch. 46, par. 7-60.1
 9    10 ILCS 5/8-8             from Ch. 46, par. 8-8
10    10 ILCS 5/10-5            from Ch. 46, par. 10-5
11    10 ILCS 5/7-42 rep.
12    10 ILCS 5/7-43            from Ch. 46, par. 7-43
13    10 ILCS 5/10-2            from Ch. 46, par. 10-2
14    10 ILCS 5/10-5            from Ch. 46, par. 10-5
15    10 ILCS 5/29-14           from Ch. 46, par. 29-14
16    30 ILCS 560/Act rep.
17    35 ILCS 520/Act rep.
18    725 ILCS 215/2            from Ch. 38, par. 1702
19    725 ILCS 215/3            from Ch. 38, par. 1703
20    35 ILCS 200/20-180 rep.
21    35 ILCS 200/20-185 rep.
22    70 ILCS 705/14.14         from Ch. 127 1/2, par. 34.14
23    70 ILCS 705/19a           from Ch. 127 1/2, par. 38.2a
24    105 ILCS 5/24-2           from Ch. 122, par. 24-2
25    110 ILCS 310/1            from Ch. 144, par. 41
26    220 ILCS 5/8-402.1 rep.
27    220 ILCS 5/9-212          from Ch. 111 2/3, par. 9-212
28    220 ILCS 5/9-214          from Ch. 111 2/3, par. 9-214
29    220 ILCS 5/9-220          from Ch. 111 2/3, par. 9-220
30    20 ILCS 505/5             from Ch. 23, par. 5005
31    225 ILCS 25/32            from Ch. 111, par. 2332
32    235 ILCS 5/9-2            from Ch. 43, par. 167
33    305 ILCS 5/10-2           from Ch. 23, par. 10-2
34    430 ILCS 70/2.5 new
                            -148-              LRB9001889OBpk
 1    515 ILCS 5/5-25           from Ch. 56, par. 5-25
 2    515 ILCS 5/20-35          from Ch. 56, par. 20-35
 3    625 ILCS 5/4-104          from Ch. 95 1/2, par. 4-104
 4    625 ILCS 5/4-209          from Ch. 95 1/2, par. 4-209
 5    625 ILCS 5/8-105          from Ch. 95 1/2, par. 8-105
 6    625 ILCS 5/11-501.6       from Ch. 95 1/2, par. 11-501.6
 7    705 ILCS 405/1-15         from Ch. 37, par. 801-15
 8    720 ILCS 5/37-4           from Ch. 38, par. 37-4
 9    725 ILCS 5/110-6.2        from Ch. 38, par. 110-6.2
10    725 ILCS 5/122-8 rep.
11    735 ILCS 5/12-1006        from Ch. 110, par. 12-1006
12    735 ILCS 5/13-202.1       from Ch. 110, par. 13-202.1
13    740 ILCS 110/10           from Ch. 91 1/2, par. 810
14    745 ILCS 25/5 rep.
15    750 ILCS 5/501.1          from Ch. 40, par. 501.1
16    820 ILCS 135/2.1 rep.
17    820 ILCS 135/2.2 rep.

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