Illinois General Assembly - Full Text of Public Act 095-0497
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Public Act 095-0497


 

Public Act 0497 95TH GENERAL ASSEMBLY



 


 
Public Act 095-0497
 
SB1244 Enrolled LRB095 04959 HLH 25025 b

    AN ACT concerning local government.
 
    Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
represented in the General Assembly:
 
    Section 5. The Township Code is amended by adding Section
14a as follows:
 
    (60 ILCS 1/14a new)
    Sec. 14a. Reimbursement for specialized rescue services. A
township that provides fire protection services may fix,
charge, and collect reasonable fees for specialized rescue
services provided by the township. The total amount collected
may not exceed the reasonable cost of providing those
specialized rescue services and may not, in any event, exceed
$125 per hour per vehicle and $35 per hour per firefighter. The
fee may be charged to any of the following parties, but only
after there has been a finding of fault against that party by
the Occupational Safety and Health Administration or the
Illinois Department of Labor:
        (a) the owner of the property on which the specialized
    rescue services occurred;
        (b) any person involved in an activity that caused or
    contributed to the emergency;
        (c) an individual who is rescued during the emergency
    and his or her employer if the person was acting in
    furtherance of the employer's interests;
        (d) in cases involving the recovery of property, any
    person having control or custody of the property at the
    time of the emergency.
    For the purposes of this Section, the term "specialized
rescue services" includes, but is not limited to, structural
collapse, tactical rescue, high angle rescue, underwater
rescue and recovery, confined space rescue, below grade rescue,
and trench rescue.
 
    Section 10. The Illinois Municipal Code is amended by
adding Section 11-6-5 as follows:
 
    (65 ILCS 5/11-6-5 new)
    Sec. 11-6-5. Reimbursement for specialized rescue
services. The corporate authorities of a municipality that
operates a fire department may fix, charge, and collect
reasonable fees for specialized rescue services provided by the
department. The total amount collected may not exceed the
reasonable cost of providing those specialized rescue services
and may not, in any event, exceed $125 per hour per vehicle and
$35 per hour per firefighter. The fee may be charged to any of
the following parties, but only after there has been a finding
of fault against that party by the Occupational Safety and
Health Administration or the Illinois Department of Labor:
        (a) the owner of the property on which the specialized
    rescue services occurred;
        (b) any person involved in an activity that caused or
    contributed to the emergency;
        (c) an individual who is rescued during the emergency
    and his or her employer if the person was acting in
    furtherance of the employer's interests;
        (d) in cases involving the recovery of property, any
    person having control or custody of the property at the
    time of the emergency.
    For the purposes of this Section, the term "specialized
rescue services" includes, but is not limited to, structural
collapse, tactical rescue, high angle rescue, underwater
rescue and recovery, confined space rescue, below grade rescue,
and trench rescue.
 
    Section 15. The Fire Protection District Act is amended by
changing Section 22 and by adding Section 25 as follows:
 
    (70 ILCS 705/22)  (from Ch. 127 1/2, par. 38.5)
    Sec. 22. The Board of Trustees of any fire protection
district incorporated under this Act is authorized under the
terms and conditions hereinafter set out, to provide emergency
ambulance service to or from points within or without the
district; to contract with providers of ambulance service; to
combine with other units of governments for the purpose of
providing ambulance service; to levy a tax for the provision of
such service and to adopt rules and regulations relating to
ambulance service within their jurisdiction.
    (a) It is declared as a matter of public policy:
        (1) That, in order to preserve, protect and promote the
    public health, safety and general welfare, adequate and
    continuing emergency ambulance service should be available
    to every citizen of Illinois;
        (2) That, insofar as it is economically feasible,
    emergency ambulance service should be provided by private
    enterprise; and
        (3) That, in the event adequate and continuing
    emergency ambulance services do not exist, fire protection
    districts should be authorized to provide, and shall cause
    to be provided, ambulance service as a public
    responsibility.
    (b) Whenever the Board of Trustees of a fire protection
district desires to levy a special tax to provide an ambulance
service, it shall certify the question to the proper election
officials, who shall submit that question at an election to the
voters of the district. The result of such referendum shall be
entered upon the records of the district. If a majority of the
votes on the proposition are in favor of such proposition, the
Board of Trustees may thereafter levy a special tax at a rate
not to exceed .30% of the value of all taxable property within
the district as equalized or assessed by the Department of
Revenue. The proposition shall be in substantially the
following form:
-------------------------------------------------------------
    Shall the .... Fire Protection
 District levy  a special tax at a rate     YES
 not to exceed .30% of the value of all
 taxable property within the district as --------------------
 equalized or assessed by the Department
 of Revenue for the purpose of providing    NO
 an ambulance service?
-------------------------------------------------------------
    (c) If it appears that a majority of all valid votes cast
on the proposition are in favor of levying a special tax to pay
for an ambulance, the Board of Trustees may levy and collect an
annual tax for the purpose of providing ambulance service under
this Act to be extended at a rate not to exceed .30% of the full
fair cash value of the taxable property within the governmental
unit as assessed or equalized by the Department of Revenue.
Such annual tax shall be in addition to the other taxes a fire
protection district may levy for its corporate purposes.
    (d) Any Board of trustees may:
        1. Provide or operate an emergency ambulance service;
        2. Contract with a private person, hospital,
    corporation or another governmental unit for the provision
    and operation of emergency ambulance service or subsidize
    the service thereof;
        3. Limit the number of ambulance services;
        4. Within its jurisdiction, fix, charge and collect
    fees for emergency ambulance service within or outside of
    the fire protection district not exceeding the reasonable
    cost of the service;
        5. Establish necessary regulations not inconsistent
    with the statutes or regulations of the Department of
    Public Health relating to ambulance service;
        6. The trustees shall have the power identified in
    paragraphs 3 and 5 only if the district shall have passed
    the referendum provided for herein.
    (e) When any Board of Trustees is authorized prior to
January 1, 1978 to levy and collect an annual tax, for the
purpose of providing ambulance service, at any rate not
exceeding .25% of the full fair cash value of the taxable
property within the governmental unit as equalized or assessed
by the Department of Revenue, such Board of Trustees may by
resolution increase its authority to tax for ambulance purposes
to a rate not to exceed .30%. Such resolution shall be
effective 30 days after its adoption. Notice of such resolution
shall be published twice in a newspaper having a general
circulation within the district at least 20 days and again at
least 10 days prior to the effective date of the resolution.
Such notice shall state that the voters of that fire protection
district, which district shall be described in the notice, have
until 30 days after the adoption of the resolution to file a
petition with the Board of Trustees praying that the question
of the adoption of the resolution be submitted to a vote of the
electors of such territory, and that, if no such petition is
filed, the resolution shall become effective 30 days after its
adoption. The notice also shall state the specific number of
voters required to sign the petition and the date of the
prospective referendum. The district secretary shall provide a
petition form to any individual requesting one. If such a
petition, signed by the voters of the district equal to 10% or
more of the registered voters of the district, is so filed with
the Board of Trustees, then the question of the adoption of the
resolution shall be certified to the proper election officials,
who shall submit the question to a vote of the electors of the
district at an election in accordance with the general election
law. If such a petition is filed, the resolution does not take
effect unless a majority of the votes cast upon the question of
the adoption of the resolution is in favor of adoption.
However, if such a petition is determined to be invalid, the
resolution shall take effect.
    The result of the election shall be entered upon the
records of the district. If a majority of the voters vote in
favor of such resolution, the resolution shall be effective
immediately. The proposition shall be in substantially the
following form:
-------------------------------------------------------------
    Shall the Board of Trustees of
the .... Fire Protection District               YES
be authorized to increase the
special  tax for ambulance service
to a rate  not to exceed .30% of           ------------------
the value of all taxable property
within the district as equalized or
assessed by the Department of Revenue           NO
for the purpose of providing such service?
-------------------------------------------------------------
    In this Section, "ambulance service" includes, without
limitation, pre-hospital medical services. "Pre-hospital
medical services" includes emergency services performed by a
paramedic or other on-board emergency personnel that are within
the scope of the provider's license. This amendatory Act of the
95th General Assembly is declarative of existing law.
(Source: P.A. 86-1253; 87-767.)
 
    (70 ILCS 705/25 new)
    Sec. 25. Reimbursement for specialized rescue services. A
fire protection district may fix, charge, and collect
reasonable fees for specialized rescue services provided by the
district. The total amount collected may not exceed the
reasonable cost of providing those specialized rescue services
and may not, in any event, exceed $125 per hour per vehicle and
$35 per hour per firefighter. The fee may be charged to any of
the following parties, but only after there has been a finding
of fault against that party by the Occupational Safety and
Health Administration or the Illinois Department of Labor:
        (a) the owner of the property on which the specialized
    rescue services occurred;
        (b) any person involved in an activity that caused or
    contributed to the emergency;
        (c) an individual who is rescued during the emergency
    and his or her employer if the person was acting in
    furtherance of the employer's interests;
        (d) in cases involving the recovery of property, any
    person having control or custody of the property at the
    time of the emergency.
    For the purposes of this Section, the term "specialized
rescue services" includes, but is not limited to, structural
collapse, tactical rescue, high angle rescue, underwater
rescue and recovery, confined space rescue, below grade rescue,
and trench rescue.

Effective Date: 1/1/2008