State of Illinois
90th General Assembly
Legislation

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[ Introduced ][ Engrossed ][ House Amendment 002 ]
[ House Amendment 003 ][ Senate Amendment 001 ]

90_SB0345enr

      5 ILCS 160/3.5 new
      20 ILCS 505/35.3 new
          Amends the Children and  Family  Services  Act.  Provides
      that  all  records  concerning  foster  placement  and foster
      parent identifying  information  shall  be  confidential  and
      shall  not  be disclosed except as specifically authorized by
      this Act, a specific court order accompanied by an  order  of
      protection,  or  upon written consent of the foster parent or
      parents. Provides that it is a Class A misdemeanor to permit,
      assist  or  encourage  the  unauthorized   release   of   any
      information  contained  in  such  records.  Amends  the State
      Records Act. Provides  that  all  records  concerning  foster
      placement and foster parent identifying information shall not
      be considered records under this Act and can only be released
      in  accordance  with  the  Children  and Family Services Act.
      Effective immediately.
                                                     LRB9000198SMcc
SB345 Enrolled                                 LRB9000198SMcc
 1        AN ACT concerning records relating to minors.
 2        Be it enacted by the People of  the  State  of  Illinois,
 3    represented in the General Assembly:
 4        Section  5.  The  State  Records Act is amended by adding
 5    Section 3.5 as follows:
 6        (5 ILCS 160/3.5 new)
 7        Sec. 3.5. Confidentiality of  foster  placement  records.
 8    All  records  concerning  foster  placement and foster parent
 9    identifying information shall not be considered records under
10    this Act. These records shall be released only in  accordance
11    with Section 35.3 of the Children and Family Services Act.
12        Section  10.  The  Children  and  Family  Services Act is
13    amended by changing Section 35.1 and by adding  Section  35.3
14    as follows:
15        (20 ILCS 505/35.1) (from Ch. 23, par. 5035.1)
16        Sec.  35.1.  The case and clinical records of patients in
17    Department supervised facilities, wards  of  the  Department,
18    children  receiving  or  applying for child welfare services,
19    persons receiving or  applying  for  other  services  of  the
20    Department,  and  Department  reports  of  injury or abuse to
21    children shall not be open to the general public.  Such  case
22    and clinical records and reports or the information contained
23    therein  shall be disclosed by the Director of the Department
24    only  to  proper  law  enforcement   officials,   individuals
25    authorized  by  court,  the  Illinois General Assembly or any
26    committee or commission thereof, and to  such  other  persons
27    and  for such reasons as the Director shall designate by rule
28    or  regulation.   This  Section  does  not   apply   to   the
29    Department's  fiscal  records,  other  records  of  a  purely
SB345 Enrolled             -2-                 LRB9000198SMcc
 1    administrative  nature,  or  any  forms,  documents  or other
 2    records required of facilities subject to  licensure  by  the
 3    Department  except  as  may  otherwise  be provided under the
 4    Child Care Act of 1969.
 5        Nothing contained in this Act  prevents  the  sharing  or
 6    disclosure  of  information or records relating or pertaining
 7    to  juveniles  subject  to  the  provisions  of  the  Serious
 8    Habitual Offender  Comprehensive  Action  Program  when  that
 9    information is used to assist in the early identification and
10    treatment of habitual juvenile offenders.
11        Nothing  contained  in  this  Act prevents the sharing or
12    disclosure of information or records relating  or  pertaining
13    to  the  death  of  a  minor  under  the care of or receiving
14    services from the Department and under  the  jurisdiction  of
15    the  juvenile  court  with  the  juvenile  court, the State's
16    Attorney, and the minor's attorney.
17    (Source: P.A. 87-928.)
18        (20 ILCS 505/35.3 new)
19        Sec. 35.3.  Confidentiality of foster parent  identifying
20    information.    Because foster parents accept placements into
21    their residences, it is the policy of the State  of  Illinois
22    to  protect  foster  parents' addresses and telephone numbers
23    from  disclosure.   The  Department  shall  adopt  rules   to
24    effectuate this policy and provide sufficient prior notice of
25    any authorized disclosure for foster parents to seek an order
26    of protection under Section 2-25 of the Juvenile Court Act of
27    1987.
28        Section  11.  The  Child Death Review Team Act is amended
29    by changing Section 30 as follows:
30        (20 ILCS 515/30)
31        Sec. 30.  Public access to information.
SB345 Enrolled             -3-                 LRB9000198SMcc
 1        (a)  Meetings of child death review teams shall be closed
 2    to the public.  Meetings of child death review teams are  not
 3    subject  to  the Open Meetings Act (5 ILCS 120/1 et seq.), as
 4    provided in that Act.
 5        (b)  Records and information provided to  a  child  death
 6    review   team,   and   records  maintained  by  a  team,  are
 7    confidential and not subject to the  Freedom  of  Information
 8    Act (5 ILCS 140/1 et seq.), as provided in that Act.
 9        Nothing  contained  in  this  subsection (b) prevents the
10    sharing or disclosure of records, other than  those  produced
11    by  a  Child Death Review Team, relating or pertaining to the
12    death of a minor under the care of or receiving services from
13    the Department of Children and Family Services and under  the
14    jurisdiction  of  the juvenile court with the juvenile court,
15    the State's Attorney, and the minor's attorney.
16        (c)  Members of a child death review team are not subject
17    to  examination,  in  any  civil  or   criminal   proceeding,
18    concerning  information  presented  to members of the team or
19    opinions  formed  by  members  of  the  team  based  on  that
20    information.  A person may, however, be  examined  concerning
21    information  provided  to  a  child death review team that is
22    otherwise available to the public.
23        (d)  Records and information produced by  a  child  death
24    review  team are not subject to discovery or subpoena and are
25    not  admissible  as  evidence  in  any  civil   or   criminal
26    proceeding.   Those  records  and  information  are, however,
27    subject to discovery or a subpoena,  and  are  admissible  as
28    evidence,  to  the extent they are otherwise available to the
29    public.
30    (Source: P.A. 88-614, eff. 9-7-94.)
31        Section 13.  The Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act
32    is amended by changing Sections 7.7, 7.14, 7.15, 7.16, 9, 11,
33    and 11.1 and by adding Section 4.2 as follows:
SB345 Enrolled             -4-                 LRB9000198SMcc
 1        (325 ILCS 5/4.2 new)
 2        Sec. 4.2.  Departmental report on death of child.
 3        (a)  In the case of the death of a child whose  care  and
 4    custody  or  custody and guardianship has been transferred to
 5    the Department, or in the case of a child  abuse  or  neglect
 6    report  made to the central register involving the death of a
 7    child, the Department shall (i) investigate or provide for an
 8    investigation of the cause of and  circumstances  surrounding
 9    the  death,  (ii) review the investigation, and (iii) prepare
10    and issue a report on the death.
11        (b)  The report shall include (i)  the  cause  of  death,
12    whether  from natural or other causes, (ii) identification of
13    child protective or other services provided or actions  taken
14    regarding  the  child  and  his  or  her  family,  (iii)  any
15    extraordinary   or   pertinent   information  concerning  the
16    circumstances of the child's death, (iv) whether the child or
17    the child's family had received assistance, care, or services
18    from the social services district prior to the child's death,
19    (v) any action or further  investigation  undertaken  by  the
20    Department  since  the  death  of  the  child,  and  (vi)  as
21    appropriate,  recommendations  for  State  administrative  or
22    policy changes.
23        The  report  shall  contain  no  information  that  would
24    identify the name of the deceased child, his or her siblings,
25    the parent or other person legally responsible for the child,
26    or  any  other  members  of  the child's household, but shall
27    refer instead to the  case,  which  may  be  denoted  in  any
28    fashion  determined appropriate by the Department.  In making
29    a  fatality  report  available  to  the  public  pursuant  to
30    subsection (c) of this Section, the Department may respond to
31    a child specific request  for  a  report  if  the  Department
32    determines  that  the  disclosure is not contrary to the best
33    interests of the deceased child's siblings or other  children
34    in  the  household.   Except  as it may apply directly to the
SB345 Enrolled             -5-                 LRB9000198SMcc
 1    cause of the death of the  child,  nothing  in  this  Section
 2    shall be deemed to authorize the release or disclosure to the
 3    public  of  the  substance  or  content of any psychological,
 4    psychiatric,  therapeutic,  clinical,  or  medical   reports,
 5    evaluation,  or  like  materials or information pertaining to
 6    the child or the child's family.
 7        (c)  No later than 6 months after the date of  the  death
 8    of  the  child, the Department shall complete its report. The
 9    Department shall notify the  President  of  the  Senate,  the
10    Minority  Leader  of  the Senate, the Speaker of the House of
11    Representatives,  the  Minority  Leader  of  the   House   of
12    Representatives,  and the members of the Senate and the House
13    of  Representatives  in  whose  district  the  child's  death
14    occurred upon the completion of each report and shall  submit
15    an  annual  cumulative report to the Governor and the General
16    Assembly incorporating the data  in  the  above  reports  and
17    including  appropriate  findings  and  recommendations.   The
18    reports  concerning  the  death of a child and the cumulative
19    reports  shall  be  made  available  to  the   public   after
20    completion or submittal.
21        (d)  To  enable the Department to prepare the report, the
22    Department  may  request  and  shall  timely   receive   from
23    departments, boards, bureaus, or other agencies of the State,
24    or  any of its political subdivisions, or any duly authorized
25    agency, or any other agency which provided assistance,  care,
26    or  services  to  the deceased child any information they are
27    authorized to provide.
28        (325 ILCS 5/7.7) (from Ch. 23, par. 2057.7)
29        Sec. 7.7.  There shall be a central register of all cases
30    of suspected child abuse or neglect reported  and  maintained
31    by  the  Department under this Act.  Through the recording of
32    initial, preliminary, and final reports, the central register
33    shall  be  operated  in  such  a  manner  as  to  enable  the
SB345 Enrolled             -6-                 LRB9000198SMcc
 1    Department to:  (1) immediately identify  and   locate  prior
 2    reports  of  child abuse or neglect; (2) continuously monitor
 3    the current status of all reports of child abuse  or  neglect
 4    being  provided  services  under  this Act; and (3) regularly
 5    evaluate the effectiveness  of  existing  laws  and  programs
 6    through the development and analysis of statistical and other
 7    information.
 8        The  Department  shall maintain in the central register a
 9    listing  of  unfounded  reports  where  the  subject  of  the
10    unfounded report requests that the  record  not  be  expunged
11    because  the  subject alleges an intentional false report was
12    made.  Such a request must be made by the subject in  writing
13    to the Department, within 10 days of the investigation.
14        The   Department  shall  also  maintain  in  the  central
15    register a listing of unfounded reports where the report  was
16    classified  as  a  priority  one  or  priority  two report in
17    accordance with the Department's rules or the report was made
18    by a person mandated to report  suspected  abuse  or  neglect
19    under this Act.
20        The Department shall maintain in the central register for
21    3 years a listing of unfounded reports involving the death of
22    a  child,  the  sexual  abuse of a child, or serious physical
23    injury to a child as defined by the Department in rules.
24    (Source: P.A. 88-614, eff. 9-7-94.)
25        (325 ILCS 5/7.14) (from Ch. 23, par. 2057.14)
26        Sec. 7.14.  All reports in the central register shall  be
27    classified   in   one   of   three  categories:  "indicated",
28    "unfounded" or "undetermined", as the case may be.  After the
29    report is classified, the person  making  the  classification
30    shall  determine whether the child named in the report is the
31    subject of an action under Article II of the  Juvenile  Court
32    Act  of 1987.  If the child is the subject of an action under
33    Article II of the Juvenile Court Act,  the  Department  shall
SB345 Enrolled             -7-                 LRB9000198SMcc
 1    transmit  a  copy  of  the  report  to  the guardian ad litem
 2    appointed for the child under Section 2-17  of  the  Juvenile
 3    Court  Act.   All  information identifying the subjects of an
 4    unfounded  report  shall  be  expunged  from   the   register
 5    forthwith,  except  as  provided  in  Section  7.7. Unfounded
 6    reports may only be made available to  the  Child  Protective
 7    Service  Unit  when  investigating  a  subsequent  report  of
 8    suspected  abuse  or  maltreatment involving a child named in
 9    the unfounded report; and  to  the  subject  of  the  report,
10    provided  that the subject requests the report within 60 days
11    of being notified that the report was unfounded.   The  Child
12    Protective  Service  Unit  shall  not indicate the subsequent
13    report solely based upon the existence of the prior unfounded
14    report or reports.  Notwithstanding any  other  provision  of
15    law  to  the  contrary,  an  unfounded  report  shall  not be
16    admissible in any judicial or  administrative  proceeding  or
17    action. Identifying information on all other records shall be
18    removed  from  the  register  no later than 5 years after the
19    report is indicated. However, if another report  is  received
20    involving  the  same  child,  his  sibling or offspring, or a
21    child in the care of the persons responsible for the  child's
22    welfare, the identifying information may be maintained in the
23    register until 5 years after the subsequent case or report is
24    closed.
25        Notwithstanding  any  other  provision  of  this Section,
26    identifying information in indicated  reports  involving  the
27    sexual  abuse  of  a  child, the death of a child, or serious
28    physical injury to a child as defined by  the  Department  in
29    rules,  may  be retained longer than 5 years after the report
30    is indicated or  after  the  subsequent  case  or  report  is
31    closed,  and  may  not be removed from the register except as
32    provided by the Department in rules.
33    (Source: P.A. 86-904; 87-649.)
SB345 Enrolled             -8-                 LRB9000198SMcc
 1        (325 ILCS 5/7.15) (from Ch. 23, par. 2057.15)
 2        Sec. 7.15.  The central register may contain  such  other
 3    information   which   the  Department  determines  to  be  in
 4    furtherance of the purposes of this Act.    Pursuant  to  the
 5    provisions  of  Sections  7.14  and  7.16, the Department may
 6    amend,  expunge,  or  remove  from   the   central   register
 7    appropriate  records upon good cause shown and upon notice to
 8    the subjects of the report and the Child  Protective  Service
 9    Unit.
10    (Source: P.A. 81-1077.)
11        (325 ILCS 5/7.16) (from Ch. 23, par. 2057.16)
12        Sec.  7.16.  Within 60 days after the notification of the
13    completion   of   the   Child   Protective    Service    Unit
14    investigation,  determined  by  the  date of the notification
15    sent by the Department, a subject of a report may request the
16    Department  to  amend   the   record,   expunge   identifying
17    information from, or remove the record of the report from the
18    register.   Such  request shall be in writing and directed to
19    such person as the Department designates in the notification.
20    The Department shall disregard any request not made  in  such
21    manner.   If  the Department refuses to do so or does not act
22    within 30 days, the subject shall have the right to a hearing
23    within the Department to determine whether the record of  the
24    report should be amended, expunged, or removed on the grounds
25    that  it  is inaccurate or it is being maintained in a manner
26    inconsistent with this Act, except that  there  shall  be  no
27    such  right  to  a  hearing  on  the  ground  of the report's
28    inaccuracy if there has been a court finding of  child  abuse
29    or neglect, the report's accuracy being conclusively presumed
30    on  such  finding.   Such  hearing  shall  be  held  within a
31    reasonable  time  after  the  subject's  request  and  at   a
32    reasonable  place and hour.  The appropriate Child Protective
33    Service Unit shall be given notice of the hearing.   In  such
SB345 Enrolled             -9-                 LRB9000198SMcc
 1    hearings,  the burden of proving the accuracy and consistency
 2    of the record shall be on the Department and the  appropriate
 3    Child Protective Service Unit. The hearing shall be conducted
 4    by  the  Director or his  designee,  who is hereby authorized
 5    and empowered to order the amendment, expunction, or  removal
 6    of  the  record  to make it accurate and consistent with this
 7    Act. The decision shall be made, in writing, at the close  of
 8    the  hearing,  or within 30 days thereof, and shall state the
 9    reasons upon which it is based.  Decisions of the  Department
10    under  this  Section  are administrative decisions subject to
11    judicial review under the Administrative Review Law.
12        Should the Department grant the request of the subject of
13    the report pursuant to this Section either on  administrative
14    review  or after administrative hearing to amend an indicated
15    report to an unfounded report, the report shall  be  released
16    and  expunged  in  accordance with the standards set forth in
17    Section 7.14 of this Act.
18    (Source: P.A. 86-904.)
19        (325 ILCS 5/9) (from Ch. 23, par. 2059)
20        Sec. 9.  Any person, institution or  agency,  under  this
21    Act, participating in good faith in the making of a report or
22    referral,  or  in  the  investigation  of  such  a  report or
23    referral or in the taking of photographs and x-rays or in the
24    retaining a child  in  temporary  protective  custody  or  in
25    making  a  disclosure  of  information  concerning reports of
26    child abuse and neglect in compliance with Sections  4.2  and
27    11.1  of  this  Act  shall  have immunity from any liability,
28    civil, criminal or that otherwise might result by  reason  of
29    such  actions.   For the purpose of any proceedings, civil or
30    criminal, the good faith of any persons required to report or
31    refer, or permitted to report, cases of suspected child abuse
32    or neglect or permitted to refer individuals under  this  Act
33    or  required  to  disclose  information concerning reports of
SB345 Enrolled             -10-                LRB9000198SMcc
 1    child abuse and neglect in compliance with Sections  4.2  and
 2    11.1 of this Act, shall be presumed.
 3    (Source: P.A. 86-1004.)
 4        (325 ILCS 5/11) (from Ch. 23, par. 2061)
 5        Sec.  11.   All records concerning reports of child abuse
 6    and neglect or records concerning referrals  under  this  Act
 7    and  all  records  generated  as  a result of such reports or
 8    referrals, shall be confidential and shall not  be  disclosed
 9    except  as  specifically  authorized  by  this  Act  or other
10    applicable law.  It is  a  Class  A  misdemeanor  to  permit,
11    assist,   or   encourage  the  unauthorized  release  of  any
12    information contained in such reports, referrals or records.
13        Nothing contained in this Section prevents the sharing or
14    disclosure of records relating or pertaining to the death  of
15    a  minor  under  the  care  of or receiving services from the
16    Department of Children and Family  Services   and  under  the
17    jurisdiction  of  the juvenile court with the juvenile court,
18    the State's Attorney, and the minor's attorney.
19    (Source: P.A. 86-1004.)
20        (325 ILCS 5/11.1) (from Ch. 23, par. 2061.1)
21        (Text of Section before amendment by P.A. 89-507)
22        Sec. 11.1.  Access  to  records.   A  person  shall  have
23    access  to  the  records  described  in  Section  11  only in
24    furtherance  of  purposes   directly   connected   with   the
25    administration  of  this Act or the Intergovernmental Missing
26    Child Recovery Act of 1984.  Those persons and  purposes  for
27    access include:
28             (1)  Department  staff  in  the furtherance of their
29        responsibilities under this Act, or for  the  purpose  of
30        completing   background   investigations  on  persons  or
31        agencies licensed by the  Department  or  with  whom  the
32        Department  contracts  for the provision of child welfare
SB345 Enrolled             -11-                LRB9000198SMcc
 1        services.
 2             (2)  A law enforcement agency investigating known or
 3        suspected child abuse  or  neglect,  known  or  suspected
 4        involvement  with  child  pornography, known or suspected
 5        criminal sexual  assault,  known  or  suspected  criminal
 6        sexual abuse, or any other sexual offense when a child is
 7        alleged to be involved.
 8             (3)  The    Department    of   State   Police   when
 9        administering the  provisions  of  the  Intergovernmental
10        Missing Child Recovery Act of 1984.
11             (4)  A  physician who has before him a child whom he
12        reasonably suspects may be abused or neglected.
13             (5)  A person authorized under Section 5 of this Act
14        to place a child in  temporary  protective  custody  when
15        such  person  requires  the  information in the report or
16        record  to  determine  whether  to  place  the  child  in
17        temporary protective custody.
18             (6)  A person having  the  legal  responsibility  or
19        authorization to care for, treat, or supervise a child or
20        a  parent,  guardian, or other person responsible for the
21        child's welfare who is the subject of a report.
22             (7)  Except in  regard  to  harmful  or  detrimental
23        information  as  provided in Section 7.19, any subject of
24        the report, and if the subject of the report is a  minor,
25        his guardian or guardian ad litem.
26             (8)  A  court,  upon its finding that access to such
27        records may be necessary  for  the  determination  of  an
28        issue  before  such  court; however, such access shall be
29        limited  to  in  camera  inspection,  unless  the   court
30        determines  that  public  disclosure  of  the information
31        contained therein is necessary for the resolution  of  an
32        issue then pending before it.
33             (8.1)  A   probation  officer  or  other  authorized
34        representative  of  a   probation   or   court   services
SB345 Enrolled             -12-                LRB9000198SMcc
 1        department conducting an investigation ordered by a court
 2        under the Juvenile Court Act of l987.
 3             (9)  A  grand  jury,  upon  its  determination  that
 4        access to such records is necessary in the conduct of its
 5        official business.
 6             (10)  Any  person  authorized  by  the  Director, in
 7        writing, for audit or bona fide research purposes.
 8             (11)  Law enforcement agencies, coroners or  medical
 9        examiners, physicians, courts, school superintendents and
10        child   welfare   agencies   in   other  states  who  are
11        responsible for child abuse or neglect investigations  or
12        background investigations.
13             (12)  The Department of Professional Regulation, the
14        State  Board  of  Education and school superintendents in
15        Illinois, who may use or disclose  information  from  the
16        records  as they deem necessary to conduct investigations
17        or take disciplinary action, as provided by law.
18             (13)  A coroner or medical examiner who  has  reason
19        to  believe  that a child has died as the result of abuse
20        or neglect.
21             (14)  The Director of a State-operated facility when
22        an employee of that facility is  the  perpetrator  in  an
23        indicated report.
24             (15)  The operator of a licensed child care facility
25        or  a  facility  licensed by the Department of Alcoholism
26        and Substance Abuse  in  which  children  reside  when  a
27        current  or  prospective employee of that facility is the
28        perpetrator  in  an  indicated  child  abuse  or  neglect
29        report, pursuant to Section 4.3 of the Child Care Act  of
30        1969.
31             (16)  Members  of  a  multidisciplinary  team in the
32        furtherance of its responsibilities under subsection  (b)
33        of  Section  7.1.  All reports concerning child abuse and
34        neglect   made   available    to    members    of    such
SB345 Enrolled             -13-                LRB9000198SMcc
 1        multidisciplinary  teams  and  all records generated as a
 2        result of such reports shall be  confidential  and  shall
 3        not  be  disclosed,  except as specifically authorized by
 4        this Act or other  applicable  law.   It  is  a  Class  A
 5        misdemeanor   to   permit,   assist   or   encourage  the
 6        unauthorized release of any information contained in such
 7        reports or records.  Nothing contained  in  this  Section
 8        prevents  the  sharing  of reports or records relating or
 9        pertaining to the death of a minor under the care  of  or
10        receiving  services  from  the Department of Children and
11        Family  Services  and  under  the  jurisdiction  of   the
12        juvenile  court  with  the  juvenile  court,  the State's
13        Attorney, and the minor's attorney.
14             (17)  The Department of Rehabilitation Services,  as
15        provided   in   Section   17   of  the  Disabled  Persons
16        Rehabilitation Act.
17             (18)  Any  other  agency  or   investigative   body,
18        including  the  Department  of  Public Health and a local
19        board of health, authorized by State law  to  conduct  an
20        investigation  into  the  quality  of  care  provided  to
21        children  in  hospitals  and  other  State regulated care
22        facilities.  The access  to and  release  of  information
23        from such records shall be subject to the approval of the
24        Director of the Department or his designee.
25             (19)  The  person  appointed,  under Section 2-17 of
26        the Juvenile Court Act, as the guardian  ad  litem  of  a
27        minor  who  is  the  subject of a report or records under
28        this Act.
29             (20)  Nothing contained in  this  Act  prevents  the
30        sharing  or disclosure of information or records relating
31        or pertaining to juveniles subject to the  provisions  of
32        the   Serious   Habitual  Offender  Comprehensive  Action
33        Program when that information is used to  assist  in  the
34        early  identification  and treatment of habitual juvenile
SB345 Enrolled             -14-                LRB9000198SMcc
 1        offenders.
 2             (21)  To the extent that  persons  or  agencies  are
 3        given  access  to  information  pursuant to this Section,
 4        those persons or agencies may give  this  information  to
 5        and  receive this information from each other in order to
 6        facilitate an investigation conducted by those persons or
 7        agencies.
 8    (Source: P.A. 87-649; 87-928; 87-1184; 88-45.)
 9        (Text of Section after amendment by P.A. 89-507)
10        Sec. 11.1.  Access  to  records.   A  person  shall  have
11    access  to  the  records  described  in  Section  11  only in
12    furtherance  of  purposes   directly   connected   with   the
13    administration  of  this Act or the Intergovernmental Missing
14    Child Recovery Act of 1984.  Those persons and  purposes  for
15    access include:
16             (1)  Department  staff  in  the furtherance of their
17        responsibilities under this Act, or for  the  purpose  of
18        completing   background   investigations  on  persons  or
19        agencies licensed by the  Department  or  with  whom  the
20        Department  contracts  for the provision of child welfare
21        services.
22             (2)  A law enforcement agency investigating known or
23        suspected child abuse  or  neglect,  known  or  suspected
24        involvement  with  child  pornography, known or suspected
25        criminal sexual  assault,  known  or  suspected  criminal
26        sexual abuse, or any other sexual offense when a child is
27        alleged to be involved.
28             (3)  The    Department    of   State   Police   when
29        administering the  provisions  of  the  Intergovernmental
30        Missing Child Recovery Act of 1984.
31             (4)  A  physician who has before him a child whom he
32        reasonably suspects may be abused or neglected.
33             (5)  A person authorized under Section 5 of this Act
34        to place a child in  temporary  protective  custody  when
SB345 Enrolled             -15-                LRB9000198SMcc
 1        such  person  requires  the  information in the report or
 2        record  to  determine  whether  to  place  the  child  in
 3        temporary protective custody.
 4             (6)  A person having  the  legal  responsibility  or
 5        authorization to care for, treat, or supervise a child or
 6        a  parent,  guardian, or other person responsible for the
 7        child's welfare who is the subject of a report.
 8             (7)  Except in  regard  to  harmful  or  detrimental
 9        information  as  provided in Section 7.19, any subject of
10        the report, and if the subject of the report is a  minor,
11        his guardian or guardian ad litem.
12             (8)  A  court,  upon its finding that access to such
13        records may be necessary  for  the  determination  of  an
14        issue  before  such  court; however, such access shall be
15        limited  to  in  camera  inspection,  unless  the   court
16        determines  that  public  disclosure  of  the information
17        contained therein is necessary for the resolution  of  an
18        issue then pending before it.
19             (8.1)  A   probation  officer  or  other  authorized
20        representative  of  a   probation   or   court   services
21        department conducting an investigation ordered by a court
22        under the Juvenile Court Act of l987.
23             (9)  A  grand  jury,  upon  its  determination  that
24        access to such records is necessary in the conduct of its
25        official business.
26             (10)  Any  person  authorized  by  the  Director, in
27        writing, for audit or bona fide research purposes.
28             (11)  Law enforcement agencies, coroners or  medical
29        examiners, physicians, courts, school superintendents and
30        child   welfare   agencies   in   other  states  who  are
31        responsible for child abuse or neglect investigations  or
32        background investigations.
33             (12)  The Department of Professional Regulation, the
34        State  Board  of  Education and school superintendents in
SB345 Enrolled             -16-                LRB9000198SMcc
 1        Illinois, who may use or disclose  information  from  the
 2        records  as they deem necessary to conduct investigations
 3        or take disciplinary action, as provided by law.
 4             (13)  A coroner or medical examiner who  has  reason
 5        to  believe  that a child has died as the result of abuse
 6        or neglect.
 7             (14)  The Director of a State-operated facility when
 8        an employee of that facility is  the  perpetrator  in  an
 9        indicated report.
10             (15)  The operator of a licensed child care facility
11        or  a  facility  licensed  by  the  Department  of  Human
12        Services  (as  successor  to the Department of Alcoholism
13        and Substance Abuse) in  which  children  reside  when  a
14        current  or  prospective employee of that facility is the
15        perpetrator  in  an  indicated  child  abuse  or  neglect
16        report, pursuant to Section 4.3 of the Child Care Act  of
17        1969.
18             (16)  Members  of  a  multidisciplinary  team in the
19        furtherance of its responsibilities under subsection  (b)
20        of  Section  7.1.  All reports concerning child abuse and
21        neglect   made   available    to    members    of    such
22        multidisciplinary  teams  and  all records generated as a
23        result of such reports shall be  confidential  and  shall
24        not  be  disclosed,  except as specifically authorized by
25        this Act or other  applicable  law.   It  is  a  Class  A
26        misdemeanor   to   permit,   assist   or   encourage  the
27        unauthorized release of any information contained in such
28        reports or records.  Nothing contained  in  this  Section
29        prevents  the  sharing  of reports or records relating or
30        pertaining to the death of a minor under the care  of  or
31        receiving  services  from  the Department of Children and
32        Family  Services  and  under  the  jurisdiction  of   the
33        juvenile  court  with  the  juvenile  court,  the State's
34        Attorney, and the minor's attorney.
SB345 Enrolled             -17-                LRB9000198SMcc
 1             (17)  The Department of Human Services, as  provided
 2        in Section 17 of the Disabled Persons Rehabilitation Act.
 3             (18)  Any   other   agency  or  investigative  body,
 4        including the Department of Public  Health  and  a  local
 5        board  of  health,  authorized by State law to conduct an
 6        investigation  into  the  quality  of  care  provided  to
 7        children in hospitals  and  other  State  regulated  care
 8        facilities.   The  access   to and release of information
 9        from such records shall be subject to the approval of the
10        Director of the Department or his designee.
11             (19)  The person appointed, under  Section  2-17  of
12        the  Juvenile  Court  Act,  as the guardian ad litem of a
13        minor who is the subject of a  report  or  records  under
14        this Act.
15             (20)  Nothing  contained  in  this  Act prevents the
16        sharing or disclosure of information or records  relating
17        or  pertaining  to juveniles subject to the provisions of
18        the  Serious  Habitual  Offender   Comprehensive   Action
19        Program  when  that  information is used to assist in the
20        early identification and treatment of  habitual  juvenile
21        offenders.
22             (21)  To  the  extent  that  persons or agencies are
23        given access to information  pursuant  to  this  Section,
24        those  persons  or  agencies may give this information to
25        and receive this information from each other in order  to
26        facilitate an investigation conducted by those persons or
27        agencies.
28    (Source: P.A. 88-45; 89-507, eff. 7-1-97.)
29        Section 15.  The Juvenile Court Act of 1987 is amended by
30    changing Section 2-25 as follows:
31        (705 ILCS 405/2-25) (from Ch. 37, par. 802-25)
32        Sec. 2-25.  Order of protection.
SB345 Enrolled             -18-                LRB9000198SMcc
 1        (1)  The  court  may  make  an  order  of  protection  in
 2    assistance of or as a condition of any other order authorized
 3    by  this  Act.  The order of protection shall be based on the
 4    best interests of the minor  and  may  set  forth  reasonable
 5    conditions of behavior to be observed for a specified period.
 6    Such an order may require a person:
 7             (a)  To stay away from the home or the minor;
 8             (b)  To permit a parent to visit the minor at stated
 9        periods;
10             (c)  To  abstain  from offensive conduct against the
11        minor, his parent or any person to whom  custody  of  the
12        minor is awarded;
13             (d)  To  give  proper  attention  to the care of the
14        home;
15             (e)  To cooperate in good faith with  an  agency  to
16        which  custody  of  a  minor is entrusted by the court or
17        with an agency or  association  to  which  the  minor  is
18        referred by the court;
19             (f)  To  prohibit and prevent any contact whatsoever
20        with the respondent minor by a  specified  individual  or
21        individuals  who  are  alleged  in  either  a criminal or
22        juvenile proceeding to have caused injury to a respondent
23        minor or a sibling of a respondent minor;
24             (g)  To refrain from acts of commission or  omission
25        that  tend  to  make  the home not a proper place for the
26        minor.
27             (h)  To refrain contacting the minor and the  foster
28        parents in any manner that is not specified in writing in
29        the case plan.
30        (2)  The  court  shall  enter  an  order of protection to
31    prohibit and prevent any contact between a  respondent  minor
32    or  a sibling of a respondent minor and any person named in a
33    petition  seeking  an  order  of  protection  who  has   been
34    convicted of heinous battery under Section 12-4.1, aggravated
SB345 Enrolled             -19-                LRB9000198SMcc
 1    battery  of  a  child  under  Section 12-4.3, criminal sexual
 2    assault  under  Section  12-13,  aggravated  criminal  sexual
 3    assault  under  Section  12-14,  predatory  criminal   sexual
 4    assault  of  a  child  under Section 12-14.1, criminal sexual
 5    abuse under Section  12-15,  or  aggravated  criminal  sexual
 6    abuse  under  Section  12-16 of the Criminal Code of 1961, or
 7    has been convicted of an offense that resulted in  the  death
 8    of  a  child,  or has violated a previous order of protection
 9    under this Section.
10        (3)  When the court issues an order of protection against
11    any person as provided  by  this  Section,  the  court  shall
12    direct  a  copy  of such order to the Sheriff of that county.
13    The Sheriff shall furnish a copy of the order  of  protection
14    to  the  Department of State Police with 24 hours of receipt,
15    in the form and  manner  required  by  the  Department.   The
16    Department  of  State Police shall maintain a complete record
17    and index of such orders of protection  and  make  this  data
18    available to all local law enforcement agencies.
19        (4)  After notice and opportunity for hearing afforded to
20    a  person subject to an order of protection, the order may be
21    modified or extended for a further specified period  or  both
22    or  may  be  terminated  if  the  court  finds  that the best
23    interests of the minor and the public will be served thereby.
24        (5)  An order of protection may be  sought  at  any  time
25    during  the  course  of  any proceeding conducted pursuant to
26    this Act if such an order is in the  best  interests  of  the
27    minor.   Any  person  against  whom an order of protection is
28    sought may retain counsel to represent him at a hearing,  and
29    has rights to be present at the hearing, to be informed prior
30    to  the  hearing  in  writing of the contents of the petition
31    seeking a protective order and of the date, place and time of
32    such hearing, and to cross examine witnesses  called  by  the
33    petitioner   and   to   present  witnesses  and  argument  in
34    opposition to the relief sought in the petition.
SB345 Enrolled             -20-                LRB9000198SMcc
 1        (6)  Diligent efforts shall be made by the petitioner  to
 2    serve  any  person  or  persons  against  whom  any  order of
 3    protection is sought with written notice of the  contents  of
 4    the  petition  seeking  a  protective  order and of the date,
 5    place and time at which the hearing on the petition is to  be
 6    held.  When a protective order is being sought in conjunction
 7    with a temporary custody hearing, if the court finds that the
 8    person  against whom the protective order is being sought has
 9    been notified of the hearing or that  diligent  efforts  have
10    been  made  to  notify  such  person, the court may conduct a
11    hearing.  If a protective order is sought at any  time  other
12    than  in  conjunction  with  a temporary custody hearing, the
13    court may not conduct  a  hearing  on  the  petition  in  the
14    absence of the person against whom the order is sought unless
15    the  petitioner  has notified such person by personal service
16    at least  3 days before  the  hearing  or  has  sent  written
17    notice  by  first  class  mail  to  such  person's last known
18    address at least 5 days before the hearing.
19        (7)  A person against whom  an  order  of  protection  is
20    being  sought  who  is  neither  a  parent,  guardian,  legal
21    custodian or responsible relative as described in Section 1-5
22    is  not  a party or respondent as defined in that Section and
23    shall not be entitled to the rights  provided  therein.  Such
24    person  does  not  have a right to appointed counsel or to be
25    present at any hearing other than the hearing  in  which  the
26    order  of  protection  is  being sought or a hearing directly
27    pertaining to that order.  Unless the court orders otherwise,
28    such person does not have a right to inspect the court file.
29        (8)  All protective orders  entered  under  this  Section
30    shall  be  in  writing.   Unless  the person against whom the
31    order was obtained was present in court when  the  order  was
32    issued,  the  sheriff,  other  law  enforcement  official  or
33    special  process  server shall promptly serve that order upon
34    that person and file proof of such  service,  in  the  manner
SB345 Enrolled             -21-                LRB9000198SMcc
 1    provided  for  service  of process in civil proceedings.  The
 2    person against whom the protective  order  was  obtained  may
 3    seek  a  modification of the order by filing a written motion
 4    to modify the order within 7 days after actual receipt by the
 5    person of a copy of the order.  Any modification of the order
 6    granted by the court must be determined to be consistent with
 7    the best interests of the minor.
 8    (Source: P.A.  88-7;  89-428,  eff.  12-13-95;  89-462,  eff.
 9    5-29-96.)
10        Section  20.   The  Adoption  Act  is amended by changing
11    Sections 1, 8, and 12.1 as follows:
12        (750 ILCS 50/1) (from Ch. 40, par. 1501)
13        (Text of Section before amendment by P.A. 89-704)
14        Sec. 1.  Definitions.  When used in this Act, unless  the
15    context otherwise requires:
16        A.  "Child"  means  a  person  under legal age subject to
17    adoption under this Act.
18        B.  "Related child" means a  child  subject  to  adoption
19    where either or both of the adopting parents stands in any of
20    the   following  relationships  to  the  child  by  blood  or
21    marriage: parent, grand-parent, brother, sister, step-parent,
22    step-grandparent,  step-brother,  step-sister,  uncle,  aunt,
23    great-uncle, great-aunt, or cousin of first degree.  A  child
24    whose  parent  has  executed  a  final irrevocable consent to
25    adoption or a final irrevocable  surrender  for  purposes  of
26    adoption,  or whose parent has had his or her parental rights
27    terminated, is not a related child to that person.
28        C.  "Agency" for the purpose of this Act means  a  public
29    child welfare agency or a licensed child welfare agency.
30        D.  "Unfit  person" means any person whom the court shall
31    find to be unfit to have  a  child,  without  regard  to  the
32    likelihood  that  the child will be placed for adoption.  The
SB345 Enrolled             -22-                LRB9000198SMcc
 1    grounds of unfitness are any one or more of the following:
 2             (a)  Abandonment of the child.
 3             (b)  Failure to  maintain  a  reasonable  degree  of
 4        interest,  concern  or  responsibility  as to the child's
 5        welfare.
 6             (c)  Desertion of the child for more than  3  months
 7        next   preceding   the   commencement   of  the  Adoption
 8        proceeding.
 9             (d)  Substantial neglect of the child if  continuous
10        or repeated.
11             (e)  Extreme or repeated cruelty to the child.
12             (f)  Two  or  more findings of physical abuse to any
13        children under Section 4-8 of the Juvenile Court  Act  or
14        Section 2-21 of the Juvenile Court Act of  1987, the most
15        recent  of  which  was  determined  by the juvenile court
16        hearing  the  matter  to  be  supported  by   clear   and
17        convincing evidence; a criminal conviction resulting from
18        the  death  of  any  child  by physical child abuse; or a
19        finding of physical child abuse resulting from the  death
20        of  any child under Section 4-8 of the Juvenile Court Act
21        or Section 2-21 of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987.
22             (g)  Failure to protect the  child  from  conditions
23        within his environment injurious to the child's welfare.
24             (h)  Other  neglect  of,  or  misconduct  toward the
25        child; provided that in making a finding of unfitness the
26        court hearing the adoption proceeding shall not be  bound
27        by  any  previous finding, order or judgment affecting or
28        determining the rights of the parents  toward  the  child
29        sought  to be adopted in any other proceeding except such
30        proceedings terminating parental rights as shall  be  had
31        under  either  this  Act,  the  Juvenile Court Act or the
32        Juvenile Court Act of 1987.
33             (i)  Depravity.
34             (j)  Open and notorious adultery or fornication.
SB345 Enrolled             -23-                LRB9000198SMcc
 1             (j-1)  Conviction  of   first   degree   murder   in
 2        violation  of  paragraph  1  or  2  of  subsection (a) of
 3        Section 9-1 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or conviction of
 4        second degree murder in violation of  subsection  (a)  of
 5        Section  9-2  of the Criminal Code of 1961 of a parent of
 6        the child to be adopted shall  create  a  presumption  of
 7        unfitness   that  may  be  overcome  only  by  clear  and
 8        convincing evidence.
 9             (k)  Habitual drunkenness  or  addiction  to  drugs,
10        other  than those prescribed by a physician, for at least
11        one year immediately prior to  the  commencement  of  the
12        unfitness proceeding.
13             (l)  Failure  to  demonstrate a reasonable degree of
14        interest, concern or responsibility as to the welfare  of
15        a  new  born  child  during  the  first 30 days after its
16        birth.
17             (m)  Failure by a parent to make reasonable  efforts
18        to  correct  the  conditions  that were the basis for the
19        removal  of  the  child  from  the  parent,  or  to  make
20        reasonable progress toward the return of the child to the
21        parent  within  12  months  after  an   adjudication   of
22        neglected  minor,  abused  minor or dependent minor under
23        the Juvenile Court Act or the Juvenile Court Act of 1987.
24             (n)  Evidence  of  intent  to  forego  his  or   her
25        parental  rights,  whether  or not the child is a ward of
26        the court, (1) as manifested by his or her failure for  a
27        period  of  12  months:  (i)  to visit the child, (ii) to
28        communicate with the child or agency, although able to do
29        so and not prevented from doing so by  an  agency  or  by
30        court  order,  or  (iii) to maintain contact with or plan
31        for the future of the child, although physically able  to
32        do  so,  or  (2)  as  manifested by the father's failure,
33        where he and the mother of the child  were  unmarried  to
34        each  other  at  the  time  of  the child's birth, (i) to
SB345 Enrolled             -24-                LRB9000198SMcc
 1        commence legal proceedings  to  establish  his  paternity
 2        under  the  Illinois  Parentage Act of 1984 or the law of
 3        the jurisdiction of the child's birth within 30  days  of
 4        being informed, pursuant to Section 12a of this Act, that
 5        he  is  the  father or the likely father of the child or,
 6        after being so informed where the child is not yet  born,
 7        within  30  days  of the child's birth, or (ii) to make a
 8        good faith effort to  pay  a  reasonable  amount  of  the
 9        expenses related to the birth of the child and to provide
10        a  reasonable  amount  for  the  financial support of the
11        child, the court to consider  in  its  determination  all
12        relevant circumstances, including the financial condition
13        of both parents; provided that the ground for termination
14        provided  in  this  subparagraph (n)(2)(ii) shall only be
15        available where the petition is brought by the mother  or
16        the husband of the mother.
17             Contact or communication by a parent with his or her
18        child  that  does  not  demonstrate affection and concern
19        does not constitute reasonable contact and planning under
20        subdivision (n).  In  the  absence  of  evidence  to  the
21        contrary,  the  ability  to  visit, communicate, maintain
22        contact, pay expenses and plan for the  future  shall  be
23        presumed.   The  subjective intent of the parent, whether
24        expressed or otherwise, unsupported by  evidence  of  the
25        foregoing  parental  acts  manifesting that intent, shall
26        not preclude a determination that the parent has intended
27        to forego his or her parental  rights.   In  making  this
28        determination,  the  court  may  consider  but  shall not
29        require a showing of diligent efforts  by  an  authorized
30        agency  to  encourage  the  parent  to  perform  the acts
31        specified in subdivision (n).
32             It shall be an affirmative defense to any allegation
33        under paragraph (2) of this subsection that the  father's
34        failure was due to circumstances beyond his control or to
SB345 Enrolled             -25-                LRB9000198SMcc
 1        impediments  created  by  the  mother or any other person
 2        having legal custody.  Proof of that fact need only be by
 3        a preponderance of the evidence.
 4             (o)  repeated or continuous failure by the  parents,
 5        although  physically and financially able, to provide the
 6        child with adequate food, clothing, or shelter.
 7             (p)  inability      to      discharge       parental
 8        responsibilities  supported  by competent evidence from a
 9        psychiatrist,  licensed  clinical   social   worker,   or
10        clinical   psychologist   of  mental  impairment,  mental
11        illness or mental retardation as defined in Section 1-116
12        of the Mental Health and Developmental Disabilities Code,
13        or developmental disability as defined in  Section  1-106
14        of  that  Code,  and there is sufficient justification to
15        believe  that  the  inability   to   discharge   parental
16        responsibilities  shall  extend  beyond a reasonable time
17        period.  However,  this  subdivision  (p)  shall  not  be
18        construed  so  as  to  permit  a licensed clinical social
19        worker to conduct  any  medical  diagnosis  to  determine
20        mental illness or mental impairment.
21             (q)  a  finding of physical abuse of the child under
22        Section 4-8 of the Juvenile Court Act or Section 2-21  of
23        the  Juvenile Court Act of 1987 and a criminal conviction
24        of aggravated battery of the child.
25        E.  "Parent" means the father or mother of  a  legitimate
26    or illegitimate child.  For the purpose of this Act, a person
27    who  has executed a final and irrevocable consent to adoption
28    or  a  final  and  irrevocable  surrender  for  purposes   of
29    adoption,  or whose parental rights have been terminated by a
30    court, is not a parent of the child who was  the  subject  of
31    the consent or surrender.
32        F.  A  person  is  available for adoption when the person
33    is:
34             (a)  a child who has been surrendered  for  adoption
SB345 Enrolled             -26-                LRB9000198SMcc
 1        to  an  agency  and  to  whose  adoption  the  agency has
 2        thereafter consented;
 3             (b)  a child to whose adoption a  person  authorized
 4        by  law,  other  than  his  parents, has consented, or to
 5        whose adoption no consent is required pursuant to Section
 6        8 of this Act;
 7             (c)  a child who is in the custody  of  persons  who
 8        intend  to  adopt  him  through  placement  made  by  his
 9        parents; or
10             (d)  an  adult who meets the conditions set forth in
11        Section 3 of this Act.
12        A person who would otherwise be  available  for  adoption
13    shall not be deemed unavailable for adoption solely by reason
14    of his or her death.
15        G.  The  singular  includes  the  plural  and  the plural
16    includes the singular and the "male" includes  the  "female",
17    as the context of this Act may require.
18        H.  "Adoption   disruption"   occurs   when  an  adoptive
19    placement does not prove successful and it becomes  necessary
20    for  the  child  to  be  removed  from  placement  before the
21    adoption is finalized.
22        I.  "Foreign placing agency" is an agency  or  individual
23    operating in a country or territory outside the United States
24    that  is  authorized  by  its  country  to place children for
25    adoption either directly with families in the  United  States
26    or through United States based international agencies.
27        J.  "Immediate  relatives"  means the biological parents,
28    the parents of the biological parents  and  siblings  of  the
29    biological parents;
30        K.  "Intercountry adoption" is a process by which a child
31    from a country other than the United States is adopted.
32        L.  "Intercountry Adoption Coordinator" is a staff person
33    of  the  Department of Children and Family Services appointed
34    by the Director to coordinate the provision  of  services  by
SB345 Enrolled             -27-                LRB9000198SMcc
 1    the  public  and  private  sector  to  prospective parents of
 2    foreign-born children.
 3        M.  "Interstate Compact on the Placement of Children"  is
 4    a  law enacted by most states for the purpose of establishing
 5    uniform procedures for handling the interstate  placement  of
 6    children in foster homes, adoptive homes, or other child care
 7    facilities.
 8        N.  "Non-Compact  state"  means  a  state  that  has  not
 9    enacted the Interstate Compact on the Placement of Children.
10        O.  "Preadoption   requirements"   are   any   conditions
11    established  by  the  laws  or  regulations  of  the  Federal
12    Government  or  of  each  state that must be met prior to the
13    placement of a child in an adoptive home.
14        P.  "Abused  child"  means  a  child  whose   parent   or
15    immediate  family  member,  or any person responsible for the
16    child's welfare,  or any individual residing in the same home
17    as the child, or a paramour of the child's parent:
18             (a)  inflicts, causes to be inflicted, or allows  to
19        be  inflicted  upon  the  child physical injury, by other
20        than accidental means, that causes death,  disfigurement,
21        impairment  of  physical  or emotional health, or loss or
22        impairment of any bodily function;
23             (b)  creates a substantial risk of  physical  injury
24        to  the  child by other than accidental means which would
25        be likely to cause death,  disfigurement,  impairment  of
26        physical  or  emotional  health, or loss or impairment of
27        any bodily function;
28             (c)  commits or  allows  to  be  committed  any  sex
29        offense against the child, as sex offenses are defined in
30        the Criminal Code of 1961 and extending those definitions
31        of  sex  offenses  to  include children under 18 years of
32        age;
33             (d)  commits or allows to be  committed  an  act  or
34        acts of torture upon the child; or
SB345 Enrolled             -28-                LRB9000198SMcc
 1             (e)  inflicts excessive corporal punishment.
 2        Q.  "Neglected  child"  means  any  child whose parent or
 3    other person  responsible for the child's  welfare  withholds
 4    or   denies  nourishment  or  medically  indicated  treatment
 5    including food or care denied solely  on  the  basis  of  the
 6    present  or  anticipated  mental  or  physical  impairment as
 7    determined by a physician acting  alone  or  in  consultation
 8    with  other  physicians  or  otherwise  does  not provide the
 9    proper or necessary support, education as required by law, or
10    medical or other remedial care recognized under State law  as
11    necessary  for  a child's well-being, or other care necessary
12    for his or her well-being, including adequate food,  clothing
13    and  shelter;  or  who  is abandoned by his or her parents or
14    other person responsible for the child's welfare.
15        A child shall not be considered neglected or  abused  for
16    the  sole  reason  that  the  child's  parent or other person
17    responsible for his or her  welfare  depends  upon  spiritual
18    means  through  prayer  alone  for  the  treatment or cure of
19    disease or remedial care as provided under Section 4  of  the
20    Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act.
21        R.  "Putative  father"  means  a man who may be a child's
22    father, but who (1) is not married to the child's  mother  on
23    or  before  the  date that the child was or is to be born and
24    (2)  has not established paternity of the child  in  a  court
25    proceeding  before  the filing of a petition for the adoption
26    of the child.  The term includes a male who is less  than  18
27    years  of  age.  "Putative father" does not mean a man who is
28    the child's father as a result of criminal  sexual  abuse  or
29    assault  as  defined under Article 12 of the Criminal Code of
30    1961.
31    (Source: P.A.  88-20;  88-550,  eff.  7-3-94;  88-691,   eff.
32    1-24-95; 89-235, eff. 8-4-95.)
33        (Text of Section after amendment by P.A. 89-704)
34        Sec.  1.  Definitions.  When used in this Act, unless the
SB345 Enrolled             -29-                LRB9000198SMcc
 1    context otherwise requires:
 2        A.  "Child" means a person under  legal  age  subject  to
 3    adoption under this Act.
 4        B.  "Related  child"  means  a  child subject to adoption
 5    where either or both of the adopting parents stands in any of
 6    the  following  relationships  to  the  child  by  blood   or
 7    marriage: parent, grand-parent, brother, sister, step-parent,
 8    step-grandparent,  step-brother,  step-sister,  uncle,  aunt,
 9    great-uncle,  great-aunt, or cousin of first degree.  A child
10    whose parent has executed  a  final  irrevocable  consent  to
11    adoption  or  a  final  irrevocable surrender for purposes of
12    adoption, or whose parent has had his or her parental  rights
13    terminated, is not a related child to that person, unless the
14    consent is void pursuant to subsection O of Section 10.
15        C.  "Agency"  for  the purpose of this Act means a public
16    child welfare agency or a licensed child welfare agency.
17        D.  "Unfit person" means any person whom the court  shall
18    find  to  be  unfit  to  have  a child, without regard to the
19    likelihood that the child will be placed for  adoption.   The
20    grounds of unfitness are any one or more of the following:
21             (a)  Abandonment of the child.
22             (b)  Failure  to  maintain  a  reasonable  degree of
23        interest, concern or responsibility  as  to  the  child's
24        welfare.
25             (c)  Desertion  of  the child for more than 3 months
26        next  preceding  the   commencement   of   the   Adoption
27        proceeding.
28             (d)  Substantial  neglect of the child if continuous
29        or repeated.
30             (d-1)  Substantial   neglect,   if   continuous   or
31        repeated, of any child residing in  the  household  which
32        resulted in the death of that child.
33             (e)  Extreme or repeated cruelty to the child.
34             (f)  Two  or  more findings of physical abuse to any
SB345 Enrolled             -30-                LRB9000198SMcc
 1        children under Section 4-8 of the Juvenile Court  Act  or
 2        Section 2-21 of the Juvenile Court Act of  1987, the most
 3        recent  of  which  was  determined  by the juvenile court
 4        hearing  the  matter  to  be  supported  by   clear   and
 5        convincing  evidence;  a criminal conviction or a finding
 6        of not guilty by reason of insanity  resulting  from  the
 7        death  of any child by physical child abuse; or a finding
 8        of physical child abuse resulting from the death  of  any
 9        child  under  Section  4-8  of  the Juvenile Court Act or
10        Section 2-21 of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987.
11             (g)  Failure to protect the  child  from  conditions
12        within his environment injurious to the child's welfare.
13             (h)  Other  neglect  of,  or  misconduct  toward the
14        child; provided that in making a finding of unfitness the
15        court hearing the adoption proceeding shall not be  bound
16        by  any  previous finding, order or judgment affecting or
17        determining the rights of the parents  toward  the  child
18        sought  to be adopted in any other proceeding except such
19        proceedings terminating parental rights as shall  be  had
20        under  either  this  Act,  the  Juvenile Court Act or the
21        Juvenile Court Act of 1987.
22             (i)  Depravity.
23             (j)  Open and notorious adultery or fornication.
24             (j-1)  Conviction  of   first   degree   murder   in
25        violation  of  paragraph  1  or  2  of  subsection (a) of
26        Section 9-1 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or conviction of
27        second degree murder in violation of  subsection  (a)  of
28        Section  9-2  of the Criminal Code of 1961 of a parent of
29        the child to be adopted shall  create  a  presumption  of
30        unfitness   that  may  be  overcome  only  by  clear  and
31        convincing evidence.
32             (k)  Habitual drunkenness  or  addiction  to  drugs,
33        other  than those prescribed by a physician, for at least
34        one year immediately prior to  the  commencement  of  the
SB345 Enrolled             -31-                LRB9000198SMcc
 1        unfitness proceeding.
 2             (l)  Failure  to  demonstrate a reasonable degree of
 3        interest, concern or responsibility as to the welfare  of
 4        a  new  born  child  during  the  first 30 days after its
 5        birth.
 6             (m)  Failure by a parent to make reasonable  efforts
 7        to  correct  the  conditions  that were the basis for the
 8        removal  of  the  child  from  the  parent,  or  to  make
 9        reasonable progress toward the return of the child to the
10        parent  within  12  months  after  an   adjudication   of
11        neglected  minor,  abused  minor or dependent minor under
12        the Juvenile Court Act or the Juvenile Court Act of 1987.
13             (n)  Evidence  of  intent  to  forego  his  or   her
14        parental  rights,  whether  or not the child is a ward of
15        the court, (1) as manifested by his or her failure for  a
16        period  of  12  months:  (i)  to visit the child, (ii) to
17        communicate with the child or agency, although able to do
18        so and not prevented from doing so by  an  agency  or  by
19        court  order,  or  (iii) to maintain contact with or plan
20        for the future of the child, although physically able  to
21        do  so,  or  (2)  as  manifested by the father's failure,
22        where he and the mother of the child  were  unmarried  to
23        each  other  at  the  time  of  the child's birth, (i) to
24        commence legal proceedings  to  establish  his  paternity
25        under  the  Illinois  Parentage Act of 1984 or the law of
26        the jurisdiction of the child's birth within 30  days  of
27        being informed, pursuant to Section 12a of this Act, that
28        he  is  the  father or the likely father of the child or,
29        after being so informed where the child is not yet  born,
30        within  30  days  of the child's birth, or (ii) to make a
31        good faith effort to  pay  a  reasonable  amount  of  the
32        expenses related to the birth of the child and to provide
33        a  reasonable  amount  for  the  financial support of the
34        child, the court to consider  in  its  determination  all
SB345 Enrolled             -32-                LRB9000198SMcc
 1        relevant circumstances, including the financial condition
 2        of both parents; provided that the ground for termination
 3        provided  in  this  subparagraph (n)(2)(ii) shall only be
 4        available where the petition is brought by the mother  or
 5        the husband of the mother.
 6             Contact or communication by a parent with his or her
 7        child  that  does  not  demonstrate affection and concern
 8        does not constitute reasonable contact and planning under
 9        subdivision (n).  In  the  absence  of  evidence  to  the
10        contrary,  the  ability  to  visit, communicate, maintain
11        contact, pay expenses and plan for the  future  shall  be
12        presumed.   The  subjective intent of the parent, whether
13        expressed or otherwise, unsupported by  evidence  of  the
14        foregoing  parental  acts  manifesting that intent, shall
15        not preclude a determination that the parent has intended
16        to forego his or her parental  rights.   In  making  this
17        determination,  the  court  may  consider  but  shall not
18        require a showing of diligent efforts  by  an  authorized
19        agency  to  encourage  the  parent  to  perform  the acts
20        specified in subdivision (n).
21             It shall be an affirmative defense to any allegation
22        under paragraph (2) of this subsection that the  father's
23        failure was due to circumstances beyond his control or to
24        impediments  created  by  the  mother or any other person
25        having legal custody.  Proof of that fact need only be by
26        a preponderance of the evidence.
27             (o)  repeated or continuous failure by the  parents,
28        although  physically and financially able, to provide the
29        child with adequate food, clothing, or shelter.
30             (p)  inability      to      discharge       parental
31        responsibilities  supported  by competent evidence from a
32        psychiatrist,  licensed  clinical   social   worker,   or
33        clinical   psychologist   of  mental  impairment,  mental
34        illness or mental retardation as defined in Section 1-116
SB345 Enrolled             -33-                LRB9000198SMcc
 1        of the Mental Health and Developmental Disabilities Code,
 2        or developmental disability as defined in  Section  1-106
 3        of  that  Code,  and there is sufficient justification to
 4        believe  that  the  inability   to   discharge   parental
 5        responsibilities  shall  extend  beyond a reasonable time
 6        period.  However,  this  subdivision  (p)  shall  not  be
 7        construed  so  as  to  permit  a licensed clinical social
 8        worker to conduct  any  medical  diagnosis  to  determine
 9        mental illness or mental impairment.
10             (q)  a  finding of physical abuse of the child under
11        Section 4-8 of the Juvenile Court Act or Section 2-21  of
12        the  Juvenile Court Act of 1987 and a criminal conviction
13        of aggravated battery of the child.
14        E.  "Parent" means the father or mother of  a  legitimate
15    or illegitimate child.  For the purpose of this Act, a person
16    who  has executed a final and irrevocable consent to adoption
17    or  a  final  and  irrevocable  surrender  for  purposes   of
18    adoption,  or whose parental rights have been terminated by a
19    court, is not a parent of the child who was  the  subject  of
20    the consent or surrender, unless the consent is void pursuant
21    to subsection O of Section 10.
22        F.  A  person  is  available for adoption when the person
23    is:
24             (a)  a child who has been surrendered  for  adoption
25        to  an  agency  and  to  whose  adoption  the  agency has
26        thereafter consented;
27             (b)  a child to whose adoption a  person  authorized
28        by  law,  other  than  his  parents, has consented, or to
29        whose adoption no consent is required pursuant to Section
30        8 of this Act;
31             (c)  a child who is in the custody  of  persons  who
32        intend  to  adopt  him  through  placement  made  by  his
33        parents;
34             (c-1)  a  child  for  whom  a  parent  has  signed a
SB345 Enrolled             -34-                LRB9000198SMcc
 1        specific consent pursuant to subsection O of Section  10;
 2        or
 3             (d)  an  adult who meets the conditions set forth in
 4        Section 3 of this Act.
 5        A person who would otherwise be  available  for  adoption
 6    shall not be deemed unavailable for adoption solely by reason
 7    of his or her death.
 8        G.  The  singular  includes  the  plural  and  the plural
 9    includes the singular and the "male" includes  the  "female",
10    as the context of this Act may require.
11        H.  "Adoption   disruption"   occurs   when  an  adoptive
12    placement does not prove successful and it becomes  necessary
13    for  the  child  to  be  removed  from  placement  before the
14    adoption is finalized.
15        I.  "Foreign placing agency" is an agency  or  individual
16    operating in a country or territory outside the United States
17    that  is  authorized  by  its  country  to place children for
18    adoption either directly with families in the  United  States
19    or through United States based international agencies.
20        J.  "Immediate  relatives"  means the biological parents,
21    the parents of the biological parents  and  siblings  of  the
22    biological parents;
23        K.  "Intercountry adoption" is a process by which a child
24    from a country other than the United States is adopted.
25        L.  "Intercountry Adoption Coordinator" is a staff person
26    of  the  Department of Children and Family Services appointed
27    by the Director to coordinate the provision  of  services  by
28    the  public  and  private  sector  to  prospective parents of
29    foreign-born children.
30        M.  "Interstate Compact on the Placement of Children"  is
31    a  law enacted by most states for the purpose of establishing
32    uniform procedures for handling the interstate  placement  of
33    children in foster homes, adoptive homes, or other child care
34    facilities.
SB345 Enrolled             -35-                LRB9000198SMcc
 1        N.  "Non-Compact  state"  means  a  state  that  has  not
 2    enacted the Interstate Compact on the Placement of Children.
 3        O.  "Preadoption   requirements"   are   any   conditions
 4    established  by  the  laws  or  regulations  of  the  Federal
 5    Government  or  of  each  state that must be met prior to the
 6    placement of a child in an adoptive home.
 7        P.  "Abused  child"  means  a  child  whose   parent   or
 8    immediate  family  member,  or any person responsible for the
 9    child's welfare,  or any individual residing in the same home
10    as the child, or a paramour of the child's parent:
11             (a)  inflicts, causes to be inflicted, or allows  to
12        be  inflicted  upon  the  child physical injury, by other
13        than accidental means, that causes death,  disfigurement,
14        impairment  of  physical  or emotional health, or loss or
15        impairment of any bodily function;
16             (b)  creates a substantial risk of  physical  injury
17        to  the  child by other than accidental means which would
18        be likely to cause death,  disfigurement,  impairment  of
19        physical  or  emotional  health, or loss or impairment of
20        any bodily function;
21             (c)  commits or  allows  to  be  committed  any  sex
22        offense against the child, as sex offenses are defined in
23        the Criminal Code of 1961 and extending those definitions
24        of  sex  offenses  to  include children under 18 years of
25        age;
26             (d)  commits or allows to be  committed  an  act  or
27        acts of torture upon the child; or
28             (e)  inflicts excessive corporal punishment.
29        Q.  "Neglected  child"  means  any  child whose parent or
30    other person  responsible for the child's  welfare  withholds
31    or   denies  nourishment  or  medically  indicated  treatment
32    including food or care denied solely  on  the  basis  of  the
33    present  or  anticipated  mental  or  physical  impairment as
34    determined by a physician acting  alone  or  in  consultation
SB345 Enrolled             -36-                LRB9000198SMcc
 1    with  other  physicians  or  otherwise  does  not provide the
 2    proper or necessary support, education as required by law, or
 3    medical or other remedial care recognized under State law  as
 4    necessary  for  a child's well-being, or other care necessary
 5    for his or her well-being, including adequate food,  clothing
 6    and  shelter;  or  who  is abandoned by his or her parents or
 7    other person responsible for the child's welfare.
 8        A child shall not be considered neglected or  abused  for
 9    the  sole  reason  that  the  child's  parent or other person
10    responsible for his or her  welfare  depends  upon  spiritual
11    means  through  prayer  alone  for  the  treatment or cure of
12    disease or remedial care as provided under Section 4  of  the
13    Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act.
14        R.  "Putative  father"  means  a man who may be a child's
15    father, but who (1) is not married to the child's  mother  on
16    or  before  the  date that the child was or is to be born and
17    (2)  has not established paternity of the child  in  a  court
18    proceeding  before  the filing of a petition for the adoption
19    of the child.  The term includes a male who is less  than  18
20    years  of  age.  "Putative father" does not mean a man who is
21    the child's father as a result of criminal  sexual  abuse  or
22    assault  as  defined under Article 12 of the Criminal Code of
23    1961.
24    (Source: P.A.  88-20;  88-550,  eff.  7-3-94;  88-691,   eff.
25    1-24-95; 89-235, eff. 8-4-95; 89-704, eff. 1-1-98.)
26        (750 ILCS 50/8) (from Ch. 40, par. 1510)
27        Sec. 8.  Consents to adoption and surrenders for purposes
28    of adoption.
29        (a)  Except  as  hereinafter  provided  in  this  Section
30    consents or surrenders shall be required in all cases, unless
31    the  person  whose  consent  or  surrender would otherwise be
32    required shall be found by the court:
33             (1)  to be an unfit person as defined in  Section  1
SB345 Enrolled             -37-                LRB9000198SMcc
 1        of this Act, by clear and convincing evidence; or
 2             (2)  not  to be the biological or adoptive father of
 3        the child; or
 4             (3)  to have waived his parental rights to the child
 5        under Section 12a or 12.1 of this Act; or
 6             (4)  to be the parent  of  an  adult  sought  to  be
 7        adopted; or
 8             (5)  to  be  the  father of the child as a result of
 9        criminal sexual abuse or assault as defined under Article
10        12 of the Criminal Code of 1961.
11        (b)  Where consents  are  required  in  the  case  of  an
12    adoption  of  a  minor  child,  the consents of the following
13    persons shall be sufficient:
14             (1) (A)  The mother of the minor child; and
15             (B)  The father of the minor child, if the father:
16                  (i)  was married to the mother on the  date  of
17             birth  of  the  child  or within 300 days before the
18             birth of the child, except for a husband  or  former
19             husband  who  has been found by a court of competent
20             jurisdiction not to be the biological father of  the
21             child; or
22                  (ii)  is  the  father  of  the  child  under  a
23             judgment  for adoption, an order of parentage, or an
24             acknowledgment of parentage or paternity pursuant to
25             subsection  (a)  of  Section  5  of   the   Illinois
26             Parentage Act of 1984; or
27                  (iii)  in  the  case of a child placed with the
28             adopting parents less than  6  months  after  birth,
29             openly  lived with the child, the child's biological
30             mother, or both, and held  himself  out  to  be  the
31             child's  biological  father during the first 30 days
32             following the birth of the child; or
33                  (iv)  in the case of a child  placed  with  the
34             adopting  parents  less  than  6 months after birth,
SB345 Enrolled             -38-                LRB9000198SMcc
 1             made a good faith effort to pay a reasonable  amount
 2             of  the  expenses  related to the birth of the child
 3             and to provide a reasonable amount for the financial
 4             support of the child before  the  expiration  of  30
 5             days following the birth of the child, provided that
 6             the  court  may  consider  in  its determination all
 7             relevant  circumstances,  including  the   financial
 8             condition of both biological parents; or
 9                  (v)  in  the  case  of  a child placed with the
10             adopting parents more than 6 months after birth, has
11             maintained substantial and  continuous  or  repeated
12             contact  with  the  child  as manifested by: (I) the
13             payment by the father  toward  the  support  of  the
14             child of a fair and reasonable sum, according to the
15             father's   means,   and  either  (II)  the  father's
16             visiting the child at least monthly when  physically
17             and financially able to do so and not prevented from
18             doing  so  by the person or authorized agency having
19             lawful custody of the child, or (III)  the  father's
20             regular  communication  with  the  child or with the
21             person or agency having the care or custody  of  the
22             child,  when  physically  and  financially unable to
23             visit the child or prevented from doing  so  by  the
24             person or authorized agency having lawful custody of
25             the  child.   The  subjective  intent of the father,
26             whether  expressed  or  otherwise   unsupported   by
27             evidence  of acts specified in this sub-paragraph as
28             manifesting  such  intent,  shall  not  preclude   a
29             determination  that  the  father  failed to maintain
30             substantial and continuous or repeated contact  with
31             the child; or
32                  (vi)  in  the  case  of a child placed with the
33             adopting parents more than six months  after  birth,
34             openly  lived  with  the  child  for a period of six
SB345 Enrolled             -39-                LRB9000198SMcc
 1             months  within  the  one  year  period   immediately
 2             preceding  the  placement  of the child for adoption
 3             and openly held himself out to be the father of  the
 4             child; or
 5                  (vii)  has   timely  registered  with  Putative
 6             Father Registry, as provided in Section 12.1 of this
 7             Act, and prior to the expiration of 30 days from the
 8             date   of   such   registration,   commenced   legal
 9             proceedings  to  establish   paternity   under   the
10             Illinois  Parentage  Act of 1984 or under the law of
11             the jurisdiction of the child's birth; or
12             (2)  The legal guardian of the person of the  child,
13        if there is no surviving parent; or
14             (3)  An  agency,  if  the child has been surrendered
15        for adoption to such agency; or
16             (4)  Any person or agency having legal custody of  a
17        child  by  court  order  if  the  parental  rights of the
18        parents have been judicially terminated,  and  the  court
19        having  jurisdiction of the guardianship of the child has
20        authorized the consent to the adoption; or
21             (5)  The execution and verification of the  petition
22        by  any  petitioner  who  is  also  a parent of the child
23        sought to be adopted shall be sufficient evidence of such
24        parent's consent to the adoption.
25        (c)  Where surrenders to an agency are  required  in  the
26    case  of  a  placement  for  adoption  of a minor child by an
27    agency, the surrenders of  the  following  persons  shall  be
28    sufficient:
29             (1) (A)  The mother of the minor child; and
30             (B)  The father of the minor child, if the father;
31                  (i)  was  married  to the mother on the date of
32             birth of the child or within  300  days  before  the
33             birth  of  the child, except for a husband or former
34             husband who has been found by a court  of  competent
SB345 Enrolled             -40-                LRB9000198SMcc
 1             jurisdiction  not to be the biological father of the
 2             child; or
 3                  (ii)  is  the  father  of  the  child  under  a
 4             judgment for adoption, an order of parentage, or  an
 5             acknowledgment of parentage or paternity pursuant to
 6             subsection   (a)   of  Section  5  of  the  Illinois
 7             Parentage Act of 1984; or
 8                  (iii)  in the case of a child placed  with  the
 9             adopting  parents  less  than  6 months after birth,
10             openly lived with the child, the child's  biological
11             mother,  or  both,  and  held  himself out to be the
12             child's biological father during the first  30  days
13             following the birth of a child; or
14                  (iv)  in  the  case  of a child placed with the
15             adopting parents less than  6  months  after  birth,
16             made  a good faith effort to pay a reasonable amount
17             of the expenses related to the birth  of  the  child
18             and to provide a reasonable amount for the financial
19             support  of  the  child  before the expiration of 30
20             days following the birth of the child, provided that
21             the court may  consider  in  its  determination  all
22             relevant   circumstances,  including  the  financial
23             condition of both biological parents; or
24                  (v)  in the case of a  child  placed  with  the
25             adopting  parents  more than six months after birth,
26             has  maintained  substantial   and   continuous   or
27             repeated  contact  with  the child as manifested by:
28             (I) the payment by the father toward the support  of
29             the child of a fair and reasonable sum, according to
30             the  father's  means,  and  either (II) the father's
31             visiting the child at least monthly when  physically
32             and financially able to do so and not prevented from
33             doing  so  by the person or authorized agency having
34             lawful custody of the child or  (III)  the  father's
SB345 Enrolled             -41-                LRB9000198SMcc
 1             regular  communication  with  the  child or with the
 2             person or agency having the care or custody  of  the
 3             child,  when  physically  and  financially unable to
 4             visit the child or prevented from doing  so  by  the
 5             person or authorized agency having lawful custody of
 6             the  child.   The  subjective  intent of the father,
 7             whether  expressed  or  otherwise,  unsupported   by
 8             evidence  of acts specified in this sub-paragraph as
 9             manifesting  such  intent,  shall  not  preclude   a
10             determination  that  the  father  failed to maintain
11             substantial and continuous or repeated contact  with
12             the child; or
13                  (vi)  in  the  case  of a child placed with the
14             adopting parents more than six months  after  birth,
15             openly  lived  with  the  child  for a period of six
16             months  within  the  one  year  period   immediately
17             preceding  the  placement  of the child for adoption
18             and openly held himself out to be the father of  the
19             child; or
20                  (vii)  has  timely registered with the Putative
21             Father Registry, as provided in Section 12.1 of this
22             Act, and prior to the expiration of 30 days from the
23             date   of   such   registration,   commenced   legal
24             proceedings  to  establish   paternity   under   the
25             Illinois  Parentage Act of 1984, or under the law of
26             the jurisdiction of the child's birth.
27        (d)  In making a determination  under  subparagraphs  (b)
28    (1)  and  (c)  (1),  no showing shall be required of diligent
29    efforts by a person or agency  to  encourage  the  father  to
30    perform the acts specified therein.
31        (e)  In  the  case  of the adoption of an adult, only the
32    consent of such adult shall be required.
33    (Source: P.A.  88-550,  eff.  7-3-94;  89-315,  eff.  1-1-96;
34    89-641, eff. 8-9-96.)
SB345 Enrolled             -42-                LRB9000198SMcc
 1        (750 ILCS 50/12.1)
 2        Sec.  12.1.  Putative Father Registry.  The Department of
 3    Children and  Family  Services  shall  establish  a  Putative
 4    Father  Registry  for the purpose of determining the identity
 5    and location of a putative father of a minor child who is, or
 6    is expected to be, the subject of an adoption proceeding,  in
 7    order  to  provide  notice of such proceeding to the putative
 8    father.  The Department of Children and Family Services shall
 9    establish  rules  and  informational  material  necessary  to
10    implement the provisions of  this  Section.   The  Department
11    shall  have  the authority to set reasonable fees for the use
12    of the Registry.
13        (a)  The  Department   shall   maintain   the   following
14    information in the Registry:
15             (1)  With respect to the putative father:
16                  (i)  Name,  including  any other names by which
17             the putative father may be known  and  that  he  may
18             provide to the Registry;
19                  (ii)  Address  at  which  he may be served with
20             notice of a petition under this Act,  including  any
21             change of address;
22                  (iii)  Social Security Number;
23                  (iv)  Date of birth; and
24                  (v)  If  applicable,  a  certified  copy  of an
25             order by a court of this State or of  another  state
26             or  territory  of the United States adjudicating the
27             putative father to be the father of the child.
28             (2)  With respect to the mother of the child:
29                  (i)  Name, including all other names  known  to
30             the  putative  father  by  which  the  mother may be
31             known;
32                  (ii)  If known to the putative father, her last
33             address;
34                  (iii)  Social Security Number; and
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 1                  (iv)  Date of birth.
 2             (3)  If known to  the  putative  father,  the  name,
 3        gender,  place of birth, and date of birth or anticipated
 4        date of birth of the child.
 5             (4)  The  date  that  the  Department  received  the
 6        putative father's registration.
 7             (5)  Other information as the Department may by rule
 8        determine necessary for the orderly administration of the
 9        Registry.
10        (b)  A putative father may register with  the  Department
11    before  the  birth  of  the child but shall register no later
12    than 30 days after the birth of the child. All  registrations
13    shall  be  in  writing and signed by the putative father.  No
14    fee shall be  charged  for  the  initial  registration.   The
15    Department shall have no independent obligation to gather the
16    information to be maintained.
17        (c)  An  interested party, including persons intending to
18    adopt a child, a child welfare agency with  whom  the  mother
19    has  placed  or  has given written notice of her intention to
20    place a child for adoption, the mother of the  child,  or  an
21    attorney  representing  an  interested party may request that
22    the Department search the Registry  to  determine  whether  a
23    putative  father  is registered in relation to a child who is
24    or may be the subject to an adoption petition.
25        (d)  A search of  the  Registry  may  be  proven  by  the
26    production  of  a certified copy of the registration form, or
27    by the  certified  statement  of  the  administrator  of  the
28    Registry  that  after a search, no registration of a putative
29    father in relation to a child who is or may be the subject of
30    an adoption petition could be located.
31        (e)  Except as otherwise provided, information  contained
32    within   the  Registry  is  confidential  and  shall  not  be
33    published or open to public inspection.
34        (f)  A person who knowingly  or  intentionally  registers
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 1    false  information  under  this  Section  commits  a  Class B
 2    misdemeanor. A person who knowingly or intentionally releases
 3    confidential information in violation of this Section commits
 4    a Class B misdemeanor.
 5        (g)  Except as provided in  subsections  (b)  or  (c)  of
 6    Section  8  of  this  Act,  a  putative  father  who fails to
 7    register with the Putative Father  Registry  as  provided  in
 8    this   Section   is   barred   from  thereafter  bringing  or
 9    maintaining any action to assert any interest in  the  child,
10    unless he proves by clear and convincing evidence that:
11             (1)  it  was not possible for him to register within
12        the period of time specified in subsection  (b)  of  this
13        Section; and
14             (2)  his failure to register was through no fault of
15        his own; and
16             (3)  he  registered  within  10 days after it became
17        possible for him to file.
18        A lack of knowledge of the pregnancy or birth is  not  an
19    acceptable reason for failure to register.
20        (h)  Except  as  provided  in  subsection  (b)  or (c) of
21    Section 8 of this Act, failure to timely  register  with  the
22    Putative  Father  Registry (i) shall be deemed to be a waiver
23    and surrender of any right to notice of any  hearing  in  any
24    judicial  proceeding  for  the adoption of the child, and the
25    consent or surrender of that person to the  adoption  of  the
26    child   is   not  required,  and  (ii)  shall  constitute  an
27    abandonment of the child and shall be prima facie evidence of
28    sufficient grounds to support termination  of  such  father's
29    parental rights under this Act.
30        (i)  In  any  adoption  proceeding  pertaining to a child
31    born out of wedlock, if there is no showing that  a  putative
32    father  has  executed  a  consent  or surrender or waived his
33    rights regarding  the  proposed  adoption,  certification  as
34    specified  in  subsection  (d)  shall be filed with the court
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 1    prior to entry of a final judgment order of adoption.
 2        (j)  The Registry shall not be used to notify a  putative
 3    father  who  is the father of a child as a result of criminal
 4    sexual abuse or assault as defined under Article  12  of  the
 5    Criminal Code of 1961.
 6    (Source: P.A. 88-550, eff. 7-3-94; 89-315, eff. 1-1-96.)
 7        Section  95.  No  acceleration  or delay.  Where this Act
 8    makes changes in a statute that is represented in this Act by
 9    text that is not yet or no longer in effect (for  example,  a
10    Section  represented  by  multiple versions), the use of that
11    text does not accelerate or delay the taking  effect  of  (i)
12    the  changes made by this Act or (ii) provisions derived from
13    any other Public Act.
14        Section 99.  Effective date.  This Act takes effect  upon
15    becoming law.

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