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92nd General Assembly

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Public Act 92-0053

HB0478 Enrolled                                LRB9203724EGfg

    AN ACT in relation to public employee benefits.

    Be it enacted by the People of  the  State  of  Illinois,
represented in the General Assembly:

    Section  5.   The  Illinois  Pension  Code  is amended by
changing Sections 1-113, 13-213, 13-302, 13-306,  and  13-308
as follows:

    (40 ILCS 5/1-113) (from Ch. 108 1/2, par. 1-113)
    Sec.  1-113.  Investment  authority  of  certain  pension
funds,  not including those established under Article 3 or 4.
The  investment  authority  of  a  board  of  trustees  of  a
retirement system or pension fund established under this Code
shall, if  so  provided  in  the  Article  establishing  such
retirement  system  or  pension  fund,  embrace the following
investments:
    (1)  Bonds, notes and other  direct  obligations  of  the
United  States Government; bonds, notes and other obligations
of any United States Government  agency  or  instrumentality,
whether  or not guaranteed; and obligations the principal and
interest of  which  are  guaranteed  unconditionally  by  the
United  States  Government or by an agency or instrumentality
thereof.
    (2)  Obligations of the Inter-American Development  Bank,
the  International  Bank  for Reconstruction and Development,
the  African  Development  Bank,  the  International  Finance
Corporation, and the Asian Development Bank.
    (3)  Obligations  of  any  state,  or  of  any  political
subdivision in Illinois, or of any  county  or  city  in  any
other  state having a population as shown by the last federal
census of not less than 30,000 inhabitants provided that such
political subdivision is  not  permitted  by  law  to  become
indebted  in  excess  of  10%  of  the  assessed valuation of
property therein and has not defaulted for  a  period  longer
than  30 days in the payment of interest and principal on any
of its general obligations or indebtedness during a period of
10 calendar years immediately preceding such investment.
    (4)  Nonconvertible bonds, debentures,  notes  and  other
corporate  obligations of any corporation created or existing
under the laws of the United States or any state, district or
territory thereof, provided there has been no default on  the
obligations  of  the corporation or its predecessor(s) during
the 5 calendar years immediately preceding the purchase.   Up
to  5%  of  the  assets  of  a pension fund established under
Article 9 of this Code  may  be  invested  in  nonconvertible
bonds,  debentures, notes, and other corporate obligations of
corporations created or existing under the laws of a  foreign
country,   provided   there   has  been  no  default  on  the
obligations of the corporation or its predecessors during the
5 calendar years immediately preceding the date of purchase.
    (5)  Obligations guaranteed by the Government of  Canada,
or  by any Province of Canada, or by any Canadian city with a
population of not less than 150,000 inhabitants, provided (a)
they are payable in United States  currency  and  are  exempt
from  any Canadian withholding tax; (b) the investment in any
one issue of  bonds  shall  not  exceed  10%  of  the  amount
outstanding;  and  (c) the total investments at book value in
Canadian securities shall be  limited  to  5%  of  the  total
investment account of the board at book value.
    (5.1)  Direct  obligations of the State of Israel for the
payment of money, or obligations for  the  payment  of  money
which  are  guaranteed  as  to  the  payment of principal and
interest by the State of Israel, or common or preferred stock
or notes issued by a bank owned or controlled in whole or  in
part by the State of Israel, on the following conditions:
         (a)  The total investments in such obligations shall
    not  exceed  5%  of  the  book  value  of  the  aggregate
    investments owned by the board;
         (b)  The  State of Israel shall not be in default in
    the payment of principal or interest on any of its direct
    general obligations on the date of such investment;
         (c)  The bonds, stock or notes, and interest thereon
    shall be payable in currency of the United States;
         (d)  The bonds shall (1) contain an option  for  the
    redemption thereof after 90 days from date of purchase or
    (2)  either  become  due  5  years from the date of their
    purchase or be subject to redemption 120 days  after  the
    date of notice for redemption;
         (e)  The  investment  in  these obligations has been
    approved in writing by investment counsel employed by the
    board, which counsel shall be a national or state bank or
    trust company authorized to do a trust  business  in  the
    State  of  Illinois,  or  an investment advisor qualified
    under the Federal Investment Advisors  Act  of  1940  and
    registered under the Illinois Securities Act of 1953;
         (f)  The  fund or system making the investment shall
    have at least $5,000,000 of net present assets.
    (6)  Notes secured by mortgages under Sections 203,  207,
220  and 221 of the National Housing Act which are insured by
the Federal Housing Commissioner, or his  successor  assigns,
or   debentures   issued  by  such  Commissioner,  which  are
guaranteed as  to  principal  and  interest  by  the  Federal
Housing  Administration,  or  agency  of  the  United  States
Government,  provided  the  aggregate  investment  shall  not
exceed  20%  of  the total investment account of the board at
book value, and provided further that the investment in  such
notes  under  Sections  220  and 221 shall in no event exceed
one-half of  the  maximum  investment  in  notes  under  this
paragraph.
    (7)  Loans to veterans guaranteed in whole or part by the
United  States Government pursuant to Title III of the Act of
Congress known  as  the  "Servicemen's  Readjustment  Act  of
1944,"   58   Stat.   284,  38  U.S.C.  693,  as  amended  or
supplemented from time  to  time,  provided  such  guaranteed
loans are liens upon real estate.
    (8)  Common  and  preferred  stocks  and convertible debt
securities authorized for investment of trust funds under the
laws of the State of Illinois, provided:
         (a)  the  common  stocks,  except  as  provided   in
    subparagraph  (g),  are  listed  on a national securities
    exchange or board of trade, as  defined  in  the  federal
    Securities  Exchange  Act  of  1934,  or  quoted  in  the
    National  Association  of  Securities  Dealers  Automated
    Quotation System (NASDAQ);
         (b)  the  securities are of a corporation created or
    existing under the laws  of  the  United  States  or  any
    state,  district  or territory thereof, except that up to
    5% of the assets of  a  pension  fund  established  under
    Article  9  of  this  Code  may be invested in securities
    issued by corporations created or existing under the laws
    of a foreign country, if those securities  are  otherwise
    in conformance with this paragraph (8);
         (c)  the corporation is not in arrears on payment of
    dividends on its preferred stock;
         (d)  the   total   book  value  of  all  stocks  and
    convertible debt owned by any pension fund or  retirement
    system  shall  not exceed 40% of the aggregate book value
    of all investments of such  pension  fund  or  retirement
    system,  except  for  a pension fund or retirement system
    governed by Article 9, 13, or 17, where the total of  all
    stocks  and  convertible debt shall not exceed 50% of the
    aggregate book value of all fund investments, and  except
    for  a  pension  fund  or  retirement  system governed by
    Article 13, where the total market value  of  all  stocks
    and   convertible  debt  shall  not  exceed  65%  of  the
    aggregate market value of all fund investments;
         (e)  the book value of stock  and  convertible  debt
    investments in any one corporation shall not exceed 5% of
    the  total investment account at book value in which such
    securities are held, determined as of  the  date  of  the
    investment,  and  the investments in the stock of any one
    corporation shall not exceed 5% of the total  outstanding
    stock  of  such  corporation,  and the investments in the
    convertible debt of any one corporation shall not  exceed
    5%  of  the  total  amount  of  such  debt  that  may  be
    outstanding;
         (f)  the  straight  preferred  stocks or convertible
    preferred stocks  and  convertible  debt  securities  are
    issued  or guaranteed by a corporation whose common stock
    qualifies for investment by the board; and
         (g)  that any common stocks not listed or quoted  as
    provided  in  subdivision  8(a)  above  be limited to the
    following types of institutions: (a) any bank which is  a
    member  of  the  Federal  Deposit  Insurance  Corporation
    having   capital  funds  represented  by  capital  stock,
    surplus and undivided profits of  at  least  $20,000,000;
    (b)  any  life  insurance  company  having  capital funds
    represented by capital stock, special surplus  funds  and
    unassigned  surplus  totalling  at least $50,000,000; and
    (c)  any  fire  or  casualty  insurance  company,  or   a
    combination  thereof, having capital funds represented by
    capital stock, net surplus and voluntary reserves  of  at
    least $50,000,000.
    (9)  Withdrawable accounts of State chartered and federal
chartered  savings  and  loan  associations  insured  by  the
Federal  Savings  and Loan Insurance Corporation; deposits or
certificates of deposit in State and national  banks  insured
by  the  Federal  Deposit  Insurance  Corporation;  and share
accounts or share certificate accounts in a State or  federal
credit  union,  the accounts of which are insured as required
by the Illinois Credit Union Act or the Federal Credit  Union
Act, as applicable.
    No  bank  or  savings  and loan association shall receive
investment funds as permitted by this subsection (9),  unless
it has complied with the requirements established pursuant to
Section 6 of the Public Funds Investment Act.
    (10)  Trading,  purchase  or  sale  of  listed options on
underlying securities owned by the board.
    (11)  Contracts  and  agreements   supplemental   thereto
providing  for  investments  in the general account of a life
insurance company authorized to do business in Illinois.
    (12)  Conventional mortgage pass-through securities which
are  evidenced  by  interests  in   Illinois   owner-occupied
residential  mortgages,  having  not  less than an "A" rating
from at least one national securities  rating  service.  Such
mortgages  may  have loan-to-value ratios up to 95%, provided
that any amount over  80%  is  insured  by  private  mortgage
insurance.    The  pool of such mortgages shall be insured by
mortgage guaranty or equivalent insurance, in accordance with
industry standards.
    (13)  Pooled or commingled funds managed by a national or
State bank which is authorized to do a trust business in  the
State  of Illinois, shares of registered investment companies
as defined in the federal  Investment  Company  Act  of  1940
which are registered under that Act, and separate accounts of
a  life  insurance  company  authorized  to  do  business  in
Illinois,  where  such pooled or commingled funds, shares, or
separate  accounts  are  comprised  of  common  or  preferred
stocks, bonds, or money market instruments.
    (14)  Pooled or commingled funds managed by a national or
state bank which is authorized to do a trust business in  the
State  of  Illinois,  separate  accounts  managed  by  a life
insurance company authorized to do business in Illinois,  and
commingled  group  trusts  managed  by  an investment adviser
registered under the federal Investment Advisors Act of  1940
(15  U.S.C.  80b-1 et seq.) and under the Illinois Securities
Law of 1953, where such pooled or commingled funds,  separate
accounts  or  commingled  group  trusts are comprised of real
estate or loans upon real estate secured by first  or  second
mortgages.  The total investment in such pooled or commingled
funds,  commingled  group  trusts and separate accounts shall
not exceed 10% of the aggregate book value of all investments
owned by the fund.
    (15)  Investment companies which (a)  are  registered  as
such  under  the  Investment  Company  Act  of  1940, (b) are
diversified, open-end management investment companies and (c)
invest only in money market instruments.
    (16)  Up to 10% of the assets of the fund may be invested
in investments not included in paragraphs (1) through (15) of
this Section, provided that such investments comply with  the
requirements  and  restrictions  set forth in Sections 1-109,
1-109.1, 1-109.2, 1-110 and 1-111 of this Code.
    The board shall have the authority  to  enter  into  such
agreements  and to execute such documents as it determines to
be necessary to complete any investment transaction.
    Any limitations herein set forth shall be applicable only
at the time of purchase and shall not require the liquidation
of any investment at any time.
    All investments shall be clearly held and  accounted  for
to  indicate  ownership  by such board. Such board may direct
the registration of securities in its own name or in the name
of a nominee created for the express purpose of  registration
of  securities  by  a national or state bank or trust company
authorized to conduct  a  trust  business  in  the  State  of
Illinois.
    Investments  shall  be  carried  at  cost  or  at a value
determined in accordance with generally  accepted  accounting
principles and accounting procedures approved by such board.
(Source:  P.A.  90-12,  eff.  6-13-97;  90-507, eff. 8-22-97;
90-511, eff. 8-22-97; 90-655, eff. 7-30-98.)

    (40 ILCS 5/13-213) (from Ch. 108 1/2, par. 13-213)
    Sec. 13-213.  "Contributions": Any moneys paid or payable
to into the Fund by the District or by any employee,  or  any
salary deduction hereunder.
(Source: P.A. 87-794.)

    (40 ILCS 5/13-302) (from Ch. 108 1/2, par. 13-302)
    Sec. 13-302.  Computation of retirement annuity.
    (a)  Computation  of  annuity.  An employee who withdraws
from service on or after July 1, 1989 and who has met the age
and service requirements and other conditions for eligibility
set forth in Section 13-301 of this Article  is  entitled  to
receive  a  retirement  annuity  for  life  equal  to 2.2% of
average final salary for  each  of  the  first  20  years  of
service,  and  2.4%  of average final salary for each year of
service in excess of 20.  The retirement  annuity  shall  not
exceed 80% of average final salary.
    (b)  Early  retirement  discount.  If an employee retires
prior to attainment of age 60 with  less  than  30  years  of
service,  the  annuity computed above shall be reduced by 1/2
of 1% for each full month between the date the annuity begins
and attainment of age 60, or each full  month  by  which  the
employee's service is less than 30 years, whichever is less.
However,  where  the employee first enters service after June
13, 1997 the effective date of this amendatory  Act  of  1997
and  does  not have at least 10 years of service exclusive of
credit under Article 20, the annuity computed above shall  be
reduced by 1/2 of 1% for each full month between the date the
annuity begins and attainment of age 60.
    (c)  (Blank).   Early  retirement  without  discount.  An
employee who has attained age 50 and retires  after  December
31,  1987  and before June 30, 1997, and who retires within 6
months of the last day  for  which  retirement  contributions
were required, may elect at the time of application to make a
one-time  employee contribution to the Fund and thereby avoid
the early retirement reduction specified in  subsection  (b).
The exercise of the election shall also obligate the employer
to make a one-time nonrefundable contribution to the Fund.
    The one-time employee and employer contributions shall be
a percentage of the retiring employee's last full-time annual
salary,  calculated  as the total amount paid during the last
260 work days immediately prior to the date of withdrawal, or
if not full-time then the full time equivalent, and based  on
the  employee's  age and service at retirement.  The employee
contribution rate shall be 7% multiplied by the lesser of the
following 2 numbers: (1) the  number  of  years,  or  portion
thereof,  that  the  employee is less than age 60; or (2) the
number of years, or  portion  thereof,  that  the  employee's
service  is  less  than  30 years.  The employer contribution
shall be at the  rate  of  20%  for  each  year,  or  portion
thereof, that the participant is less than age 60.
    Upon   receipt   of  the  application,  the  Board  shall
determine   the   corresponding   employee    and    employer
contributions.   The  annuity shall not be payable under this
subsection until both the required  contributions  have  been
received  by  the  Fund.  However, the date the contributions
are received shall  not  be  considered  in  determining  the
effective date of retirement.
    The number of employees who may retire under this Section
in any year may be limited at the option of the District to a
specified  percentage  of those eligible, not lower than 30%,
with the right to participate to  be  allocated  among  those
applying  on  the  basis  of  seniority in the service of the
employer.
    An   employee   who   has   terminated   employment   and
subsequently re-enters service shall not be entitled to early
retirement without discount under this subsection unless  the
employee  continues  in  service  for  at least 4 years after
re-entry.
    (c-1)  Early  retirement  without  discount;   retirement
after June 29, 1997.  An employee who (i) has attained age 55
(age 50 if the employee first entered service before June 13,
1997)  the  effective  date  of this amendatory Act of 1997),
(ii) has at least 10 years of  service  exclusive  of  credit
under  Article  20,  (iii)  retires  after  June 29, 1997 and
before January 1, 2003, and (iv) retires within 6  months  of
the   last   day  for  which  retirement  contributions  were
required, may elect at the time  of  application  to  make  a
one-time  employee contribution to the Fund and thereby avoid
the early retirement reduction specified in  subsection  (b).
The exercise of the election shall also obligate the employer
to make a one-time nonrefundable contribution to the Fund.
    The one-time employee and employer contributions shall be
a  percentage  of  the  retiring employee's highest full-time
annual salary, calculated  as  the  total  amount  of  salary
included in the highest 26 consecutive pay periods as used in
the  average  final  salary  calculation,  and  based  on the
employee's age and service at retirement.  The employee  rate
shall  be  7%  multiplied  by  the  lesser of the following 2
numbers: (1) the number of years, or  portion  thereof,  that
the employee is less than age 60; or (2) the number of years,
or  portion thereof, that the employee's service is less than
30 years.  The employer contribution shall be at the rate  of
20%  for  each year, or portion thereof, that the participant
is less than age 60.
    Upon  receipt  of  the  application,  the   Board   shall
determine    the    corresponding   employee   and   employer
contributions.  The annuity shall not be payable  under  this
subsection  until  both  the required contributions have been
received by the Fund.  However, the  date  the  contributions
are  received  shall  not  be  considered  in determining the
effective date of retirement.
    The number of employees who may retire under this Section
in any year may be limited at the option of the District to a
specified percentage of those eligible, not lower  than  30%,
with  the  right  to  participate to be allocated among those
applying on the basis of seniority  in  the  service  of  the
employer.
    An   employee   who   has   terminated   employment   and
subsequently re-enters service shall not be entitled to early
retirement  without discount under this subsection unless the
employee continues in service for  at  least  4  years  after
re-entry.
    (d)  Annual  increase.  Except for employees retiring and
receiving a term annuity, an employee who retires on or after
July 1, 1985 but before the effective date of this amendatory
Act of the  92nd  General  Assembly  shall,  upon  the  first
payment  date  following the first anniversary of the date of
retirement, have the monthly annuity increased by 3%  of  the
amount   of   the  monthly  annuity  fixed  at  the  date  of
retirement.  Except for employees retiring  and  receiving  a
term  annuity,  an  employee  who  retires  on  or  after the
effective date of this amendatory Act  of  the  92nd  General
Assembly  shall,  on  the first day of the month in which the
first anniversary of the date of retirement occurs, have  the
monthly  annuity increased by 3% of the amount of the monthly
annuity fixed at the date of retirement.  The monthly annuity
shall be increased by an additional 3% on the same date  each
year  thereafter.   Beginning  January  1,  1993,  all annual
increases payable under this subsection (or  any  predecessor
provision,  regardless  of  the  date of retirement) shall be
calculated at the rate of 3% of the monthly  annuity  payable
at   the  time  of  the  increase,  including  any  increases
previously granted under this Article.
    Any employee who (i) retired before July 1, 1985 with  at
least  10  years  of  creditable service, (ii) is receiving a
retirement annuity under this  Article,  other  than  a  term
annuity, and (iii) has not received any annual increase under
this  subsection,  shall begin receiving the annual increases
provided under this subsection  (d)  beginning  on  the  next
annuity  payment  date  following  the effective date of this
amendatory Act of 1997.
    (e)  Minimum retirement annuity.   Beginning  January  1,
1993,  the  minimum  monthly retirement annuity shall be $500
for any annuitant having at least 10 years of  service  under
this Article, other than a term annuitant or an annuitant who
began  receiving  the  annuity  before attaining age 60.  Any
such annuitant who is receiving a  monthly  annuity  of  less
than  $500  shall  have the annuity increased to $500 on that
date.
    Beginning January 1, 1993, the minimum monthly retirement
annuity shall be $250 for any annuitant (other than a term or
reciprocal annuitant or an annuitant under subsection (d)  of
Section  13-301)  having  less than 10 years of service under
this Article, and  for  any  annuitant  (other  than  a  term
annuitant)  having  at  least  10 years of service under this
Article who began receiving the annuity before attaining  age
60.  Any such annuitant who is receiving a monthly annuity of
less  than  $250  shall have the annuity increased to $250 on
that date.
    Beginning on the first day of  the  month  following  the
month  in  which  this  amendatory  Act  of  the 92nd General
Assembly takes effect (and  without  regard  to  whether  the
annuitant  was  in  service on or after that effective date),
the minimum monthly  retirement  annuity  for  any  annuitant
having  at least 10 years of service, other than an annuitant
whose annuity is subject to  an  early  retirement  discount,
shall  be $500 plus $25 for each year of service in excess of
10, not to exceed $750 for an annuitant with 20 or more years
of service.  In  the  case  of  a  reciprocal  annuity,  this
minimum  shall  apply  only  if the annuitant has at least 10
years of service under this Article, and the  amount  of  the
minimum  annuity  shall  be  reduced  by  the  sum of all the
reciprocal  annuities  payable  to  the  annuitant  by  other
participating systems under Article 20 of this Code.
    Notwithstanding any other provision of  this  subsection,
beginning  on  the  first  annuity payment date following the
effective date of this amendatory Act  of  the  92nd  General
Assembly, an employee who retired before August 23, 1989 with
at  least  10  years of service under this Article but before
attaining  age  60  (regardless  of  whether  the  retirement
annuity was subject to an early retirement discount) shall be
entitled to the same minimum monthly retirement annuity under
this subsection as an employee who retired with at  least  10
years  of  service under this Article and after attaining age
60.
(Source: P.A. 90-12, eff. 6-13-97.)

    (40 ILCS 5/13-306) (from Ch. 108 1/2, par. 13-306)
    Sec. 13-306.  Computation of surviving spouse's annuity.
    (a)  Computation of the annuity.  The surviving  spouse's
annuity  shall  be  equal  to  60%  of the retirement annuity
earned and accrued to the credit of  the  deceased  employee,
whether  death  occurs  while in service or after withdrawal,
plus 1% for each year of total service of the employee  to  a
maximum  of  85%;  provided,  however, that if the employee's
death arises out of and  in  the  course  of  the  employee's
service  to  the employer and is compensable under either the
Illinois  Workers'  Compensation  Act  or  Illinois  Workers'
Occupational Diseases Act, the surviving spouse's annuity  is
payable  regardless  of  the employee's length of service and
shall be not less than 50% of the employee's  salary  at  the
date of death.
    For  any  death  in service the early retirement discount
required under Section 13-302(b)  shall  not  be  applied  in
computing  the  retirement  annuity  upon  which is based the
surviving spouse's annuity.
    (b)  Reciprocal service.  For any employee  or  annuitant
who  retires  on or after July 1, 1985 and whose death occurs
after January 1, 1991, having at least 15  years  of  service
with the employer under this Article, and who was eligible at
the  time  of  death  or elected at the time of retirement to
have his or her retirement annuity calculated as provided  in
Section  20-131  of  this  Code, the surviving spouse benefit
shall be calculated as of the date of the employee's death as
indicated in subsection (a) as a percentage of the employee's
total benefit as if all service had been with  the  employer.
That  benefit shall then be reduced by the amounts payable by
each of the reciprocal funds as of the date of death so  that
the total surviving spouse benefit at that date will be equal
to  the benefit which would have been payable had all service
been with the employer under this Article.
    (c)  Discount for age differential.  The  annuity  for  a
surviving  spouse  shall be discounted by 0.25% for each full
month that the spouse is younger than the employee as of  the
date  of  withdrawal  from  service  or death in service to a
maximum discount of 60% of the surviving  spouse  annuity  as
calculated  under  subsections  (a),  (b),  and  (e)  of this
Section.  The discount shall be reduced by 10% for each  full
year  the  marriage  has  been in continuous effect as of the
date of withdrawal or death in service.  There  shall  be  no
discount if the marriage has been in continuous effect for 10
full  years  or  more  at  the time of withdrawal or death in
service.
    (d)  Annual increase.  On the first day of each  calendar
month  in which there occurs an anniversary of the employee's
date of retirement  or  date  of  death,  whichever  occurred
first,  the  surviving  spouse's  annuity,  other than a term
annuity under Section 13-307, shall be increased by an amount
equal to 3% of the amount of the annuity.  Beginning  January
1,  1993,  all annual increases payable under this subsection
(or any predecessor  provision  of  this  Article)  shall  be
calculated  at  the rate of 3% of the monthly annuity payable
at  the  time  of  the  increase,  including  any   increases
previously granted under this Article.
    Beginning  January  1,  1993, surviving spouse annuitants
whose deceased spouse died, retired or withdrew from  service
before  August  23,  1989  with  at least 10 years of service
under this Article shall be eligible for the annual increases
provided under this subsection.
    (e)  Minimum surviving spouse's annuity.
    (1)  Beginning  January  1,  1993,  the  minimum  monthly
surviving spouse's annuity shall be $500  for  any  annuitant
whose  deceased spouse had at least 10 years of service under
this Article, other than a surviving spouse  who  is  a  term
annuitant   or   whose  deceased  spouse  began  receiving  a
retirement annuity under this Article  before  attainment  of
age 60.  Any such surviving spouse annuitant who is receiving
a  monthly  annuity  of less than $500 shall have the annuity
increased to $500 on that date.
    Beginning January 1, 1993, the minimum monthly  surviving
spouse's  annuity shall be $250 for any annuitant (other than
a term or reciprocal annuitant or an annuitant survivor under
subsection (d) of Section 13-301) whose deceased  spouse  had
less than 10 years of service under this Article, and for any
annuitant (other than a term annuitant) whose deceased spouse
had at least 10 years of service under this Article and began
receiving  a  retirement  annuity  under  this Article before
attainment of age 60.  Any such  surviving  spouse  annuitant
who  is  receiving  a monthly annuity of less than $250 shall
have the annuity increased to $250 on that date.
    (2)  Beginning on the first day of  the  month  following
the  month  in  which this amendatory Act of the 92nd General
Assembly takes effect (and  without  regard  to  whether  the
deceased  spouse  was  in  service on or after that effective
date), the minimum monthly surviving spouse's annuity for any
annuitant whose deceased spouse had  at  least  10  years  of
service shall be the greater of the following:
         (A)  An amount equal to $500, plus $25 for each year
    of  the deceased spouse's service in excess of 10, not to
    exceed $750 for an annuitant whose deceased spouse had 20
    or more years of service.  This subdivision  (A)  is  not
    applicable  if  the deceased spouse received a retirement
    annuity that was subject to an early retirement discount.
         (B)  An amount equal to (i) 50%  of  the  retirement
    annuity  earned and accrued to the credit of the deceased
    spouse at the time of death, plus (ii) the amount of  any
    annual  increases  applicable  to  the surviving spouse's
    annuity  (including  the  amount  of   any   reversionary
    annuity)  under  subsection (d) before the effective date
    of this amendatory Act of the 92nd General Assembly.   In
    any  case  in  which a refund of excess contributions for
    the surviving spouse annuity has been paid  by  the  Fund
    and  the surviving spouse annuity is increased due to the
    application of this subdivision (B), the amount  of  that
    refund  shall  be  recovered  by  the  Fund  as an offset
    against the amount of the  increase  in  annuity  arising
    from the application of this subdivision (B).
    In  the case of a reciprocal annuity, the minimum annuity
calculated under this subdivision (e)(2) shall apply only  if
the deceased spouse of the annuitant had at least 10 years of
service  under  this  Article,  and the amount of the minimum
annuity shall be reduced by the sum  of  all  the  reciprocal
annuities  payable  to  the  annuitant by other participating
systems under Article 20 of this Code.
    The minimum annuity  calculated  under  this  subdivision
(e)(2)  is  in  addition  to  the  amount of any reversionary
annuity that may be payable.
    (3)  Beginning on the first day of  the  month  following
the  month  in  which this amendatory Act of the 92nd General
Assembly takes effect (and  without  regard  to  whether  the
deceased  spouse  was  in  service on or after that effective
date), any surviving spouse who is receiving a  term  annuity
under  Section  13-307  or  any predecessor provision of this
Article may have that term annuity recalculated and converted
to a minimum surviving spouse annuity under  this  subsection
(e).
    (4)  Notwithstanding   any   other   provision   of  this
subsection, beginning  on  the  first  annuity  payment  date
following  the  effective  date of this amendatory Act of the
92nd General Assembly, an  annuitant  whose  deceased  spouse
retired  before  August  23,  1989  with at least 10 years of
service under  this  Article  but  before  attaining  age  60
(regardless  of whether the retirement annuity was subject to
an early retirement discount) shall be entitled to  the  same
minimum   monthly   surviving  spouse's  annuity  under  this
subsection as an annuitant whose deceased spouse retired with
at least 10 years of service under  this  Article  and  after
attaining age 60.
    (5)  The  minimum  annuity provided under this subsection
(e) shall be subject  to  the  age  discount  provided  under
subsection (c) of this Section.
(Source: P.A. 90-12, eff. 6-13-97.)

    (40 ILCS 5/13-308) (from Ch. 108 1/2, par. 13-308)
    Sec. 13-308.  Child's annuity.

    (a)  Eligibility.   A  child's  annuity shall be provided
for each unmarried child under the  age  of  18  years  whose
employee  parent  dies  while  in  service, or whose deceased
parent is an annuitant or former employee with  at  least  10
years  of  creditable  service  who  did not take a refund of
employee contributions.
    For purposes  of  this  Section,  "employee"  includes  a
former  employee, and "child" means the issue of an employee,
or a child adopted by an  employee  if  the  proceedings  for
adoption  were  instituted  at  least  one  year prior to the
employee's death.
    Payments shall cease when a child attains the age  of  18
years  or marries, whichever first occurs.  The annuity shall
not be payable unless the employee has been  employed  as  an
employee  for  at  least  36  months  from  the  date  of the
employee's original entry into service (at least 24 months in
the case of an employee who first entered service before  the
effective  date  of this amendatory Act of 1997) and at least
12 months from the date of  the  employee's  latest  re-entry
into  service; provided, however, that if death arises out of
and  in  the  course  of  service  to  the  employer  and  is
compensable under either the Illinois  Workers'  Compensation
Act  or  Illinois  Workers'  Occupational  Diseases  Act, the
annuity is payable regardless of  the  employee's  length  of
service.
    (b)  Amount.   A  child's  annuity shall be $500 $250 per
month for one child and $350 per month  for  each  additional
child,  up  to a maximum of $2,500 per month for all children
of the employee, as provided in this Section, if a parent  of
the child is living.  The child's annuity shall be $1,000 per
month  for  one  child,  and  $500  $350  per  month for each
additional child, up to a maximum of $2,500 for all  children
of  the  employee,  when  neither parent is alive.  The total
amount payable to all  children  of  the  employee  shall  be
divided  equally  among  those children.  Any child's annuity
which  commenced  prior  to  the  effective  date   of   this
amendatory  Act  of  the  92nd General Assembly 1991 shall be
increased upon the first day of the month following the month
in which that the effective date occurs, to  the  amount  set
forth herein.
    (c)  Payment.   A  child's  annuity  shall be paid to the
child's parent or other person who shall be providing for the
child  without  requiring  formal  letters  of  guardianship,
unless another person shall be appointed by a court of law as
guardian.
(Source: P.A. 90-12, eff. 6-13-97.)

    Section 90.  The State Mandates Act is amended by  adding
Section 8.25 as follows:

    (30 ILCS 805/8.25 new)
    Sec.  8.25.  Exempt  mandate.  Notwithstanding Sections 6
and 8 of this Act, no reimbursement by the State is  required
for  the  implementation  of  any  mandate  created  by  this
amendatory Act of the 92nd General Assembly.

    Section  99.  Effective date.  This Act takes effect upon
becoming law.
    Passed in the General Assembly May 18, 2001.
    Approved July 12, 2001.
    Effective July 12, 2001.

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