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92nd General Assembly

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Public Act 92-0510

HB1356 Re-Enrolled                             LRB9203588LBmg

    AN ACT concerning speech.

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

    Section   5.   The  School  Code  is  amended by changing
Section 21-14 and adding  Sections  14-1.09b,  14-1.09c,  and
14-6.03 as follows:

    (105 ILCS 5/14-1.09b new)
    Sec.   14-1.09b.    Speech-language   pathologist.    For
purposes   of  supervision  of  a  speech-language  pathology
assistant, "speech-language pathologist" means a  person  who
has   received   a   license   pursuant   to   the   Illinois
Speech-Language  Pathology  and  Audiology  Practice  Act  to
engage in the practice of speech-language pathology.

    (105 ILCS 5/14-1.09c new)
    Sec.   14-1.09c.   Speech-language  pathology  assistant.
"Speech-language pathology assistant" means a person who  has
received  a  license  to assist a speech-language pathologist
pursuant  to  the  Illinois  Speech-Language  Pathology   and
Audiology Practice Act.

    (105 ILCS 5/14-6.03 new)
    Sec. 14-6.03.  Speech-language pathology assistants.
    (a)  Except  as otherwise provided in this subsection, on
or after January 1, 2002, no person shall perform the  duties
of   a  speech-language  pathology  assistant  without  first
applying for and receiving a license for  that  purpose  from
the  Department of Professional Regulation. A person employed
as  a  speech-language  pathology  assistant  in  any  class,
service, or program authorized by this  Article  may  perform
only  those  duties  authorized  by  this  Section  under the
supervision of a speech-language pathologist as  provided  in
this  Section. This Section does not apply to speech-language
pathology paraprofessionals approved by the  State  Board  of
Education.
    (b)  A  speech-language  pathology  assistant  may not be
assigned his  or  her  own  student  caseload.   The  student
caseload   limit   of   a   speech-language  pathologist  who
supervises any speech-language pathology assistants shall  be
determined  by  the  severity  of  the  needs of the students
served  by  the  speech-language  pathologist.   A  full-time
speech-language pathologist's caseload limit may  not  exceed
80  students  (60  students on or after September 1, 2003) at
any time.  The caseload limit of a part-time  speech-language
pathologist  shall  be determined by multiplying the caseload
limit  of  a  full-time  speech-language  pathologist  by   a
percentage  that  equals  the  number  of hours worked by the
part-time speech-language pathologist divided by  the  number
of hours worked by a full-time speech-language pathologist in
that   school  district.   Employment  of  a  speech-language
pathology assistant may not increase or decrease the caseload
of the supervising speech-language pathologist.
    (c)  A  school  district  that  intends  to  utilize  the
services  of  a  speech-language  pathology  assistant   must
provide  written  notification  to  the parent or guardian of
each  student  who  will  be  served  by  a   speech-language
pathology assistant.
    (d)  The  scope  of  responsibility  of a speech-language
pathology assistant shall be  limited  to  supplementing  the
role  of  the speech-language pathologist in implementing the
treatment   program   established   by   a    speech-language
pathologist.   The  functions and duties of a speech-language
pathology assistant shall be limited to the following:
         (1) Conducting  speech-language  screening,  without
    interpretation, and using screening protocols selected by
    the supervising speech-language pathologist.
         (2)  Providing   direct   treatment   assistance  to
    students  under  the  supervision  of  a  speech-language
    pathologist.
         (3)  Following and implementing documented treatment
    plans   or   protocols   developed   by   a   supervising
    speech-language pathologist.
         (4)  Documenting  student  progress  toward  meeting
    established objectives, and reporting the information  to
    a supervising speech-language pathologist.
         (5)  Assisting  a speech-language pathologist during
    assessments, including, but  not  limited  to,  assisting
    with   formal  documentation,  preparing  materials,  and
    performing   clerical   duties    for    a    supervising
    speech-language pathologist.
         (6)  Acting   as   an  interpreter  for  non-English
    speaking students and their family members when competent
    to do so.
         (7)  Scheduling  activities  and  preparing  charts,
    records, graphs, and data.
         (8) Performing checks and maintenance of  equipment,
    including, but not limited to, augmentative communication
    devices.
         (9)   Assisting   with   speech-language   pathology
    research  projects,  in-service  training,  and family or
    community education.
    (e)  A speech-language pathology assistant may not:
         (1)  perform   standardized    or    nonstandardized
    diagnostic  tests  or  formal  or informal evaluations or
    interpret test results;
         (2)  screen or  diagnose  students  for  feeding  or
    swallowing disorders;
         (3)  participate   in   parent   conferences,   case
    conferences,  or  any  interdisciplinary team without the
    presence of the supervising speech-language pathologist;
         (4)  provide student or family counseling;
         (5)  write,   develop,   or   modify   a   student's
    individualized treatment plan;
         (6)  assist  with  students  without  following  the
    individualized treatment plan prepared by the supervising
    speech-language pathologist;
         (7)  sign any formal documents,  such  as  treatment
    plans, reimbursement forms, or reports;
         (8)  select students for services;
         (9)  discharge a student from services;
         (10)  disclose clinical or confidential information,
    either  orally  or  in  writing, to anyone other than the
    supervising speech-language pathologist;
         (11)  make referrals for additional services;
         (12)  counsel or consult with the  student,  family,
    or others regarding the student's status or service;
         (13)  represent   himself   or   herself   to  be  a
    speech-language pathologist or a speech therapist;
         (14)  use a checklist or tabulate results of feeding
    or swallowing evaluations; or
         (15)  demonstrate    swallowing    strategies     or
    precautions to students, family, or staff.
    (f)  A speech-language pathology assistant shall practice
only  under  the supervision of a speech-language pathologist
who has at least  2  years  experience  in  addition  to  the
supervised  professional experience required under subsection
(f) of Section 8 of the  Illinois  Speech-Language  Pathology
and  Audiology  Practice  Act.  A speech-language pathologist
who supervises a  speech-language  pathology  assistant  must
have  completed  at  least  10 clock hours of training in the
supervision of speech-language  pathology  assistants.    The
State  Board  of  Education shall promulgate rules describing
the supervision training requirements.  The rules may allow a
speech-language pathologist to apply to the  State  Board  of
Education  for  an  exemption  from this training requirement
based upon prior supervisory experience.
    (g)  A speech-language pathology assistant must be  under
the  direct  supervision  of a speech-language pathologist at
least 30% of the speech-language pathology assistant's actual
student contact time per student for the  first  90  days  of
initial  employment as a speech-language pathology assistant.
Thereafter, the speech-language pathology assistant  must  be
under the direct supervision of a speech-language pathologist
at  least  20%  of  the speech-language pathology assistant's
actual student contact time per student.   Supervision  of  a
speech-language   pathology   assistant  beyond  the  minimum
requirements  of  this  subsection  may  be  imposed  at  the
discretion of the supervising speech-language pathologist.  A
supervising speech-language pathologist must be available  to
communicate   with   a  speech-language  pathology  assistant
whenever the assistant is in contact with a student.
    (h)  A  speech-language  pathologist  that  supervises  a
speech-language  pathology  assistant  must  document  direct
supervision   activities.    At   a   minimum,    supervision
documentation  must  provide  (i)  information  regarding the
quality  of   the   speech-language   pathology   assistant's
performance  of  assigned  duties  and (ii) verification that
clinical activity is limited  to  duties  specified  in  this
Section.
    (i)  A    full-time   speech-language   pathologist   may
supervise  no   more   than   2   speech-language   pathology
assistants.  A speech-language pathologist that does not work
full-time  may  supervise  no  more  than one speech-language
pathology assistant.

    (105 ILCS 5/21-14) (from Ch. 122, par. 21-14)
    Sec. 21-14. Registration and renewal of certificates.
    (a)  A limited four-year  certificate  or  a  certificate
issued  after  July  1,  1955,  shall  be  renewable  at  its
expiration  or  within  60  days  thereafter  by  the  county
superintendent of schools having supervision and control over
the  school  where  the  teacher  is  teaching upon certified
evidence of meeting the requirements for renewal as  required
by this Act and prescribed by the State Board of Education in
consultation  with the State Teacher Certification Board.  An
elementary supervisory certificate shall not  be  renewed  at
the  end  of  the  first  four-year  period  covered  by  the
certificate  unless  the  holder  thereof has filed certified
evidence with the State Teacher Certification Board  that  he
has  a master's degree or that he has earned 8 semester hours
of credit in the  field  of  educational  administration  and
supervision  in  a recognized institution of higher learning.
The holder shall continue to earn 8 semester hours of  credit
each  four-year  period  until  such  time as he has earned a
master's degree.
    All certificates not  renewed  or  registered  as  herein
provided  shall  lapse  after  a  period  of 5 years from the
expiration  of  the  last   year   of   registration.    Such
certificates  may  be  reinstated  for a one year period upon
payment  of  all   accumulated   registration   fees.    Such
reinstated certificates shall only be renewed: (1) by earning
5  semester  hours  of  credit in a recognized institution of
higher learning in the field of professional education or  in
courses  related to the holder's contractual teaching duties;
or (2) by presenting evidence  of  holding  a  valid  regular
certificate  of  some  other  type.   Any  certificate may be
voluntarily  surrendered  by  the  certificate   holder.    A
voluntarily  surrendered  certificate  shall  be treated as a
revoked certificate.
    (b)  When  those  teaching  certificates  issued   before
February  15,  2000  are  renewed  for  the  first time after
February 15, 2000, all such teaching  certificates  shall  be
exchanged  for  Standard Teaching Certificates as provided in
subsection (c) of Section 21-2.   All  Initial  and  Standard
Teaching  Certificates, including those issued to persons who
previously held teaching certificates issued before  February
15,  2000,  shall be renewable under the conditions set forth
in this subsection (b).
    Initial Teaching Certificates are  nonrenewable  and  are
valid   for   4   years   of  teaching.    Standard  Teaching
Certificates are renewable  every  5  years  as  provided  in
subsection  (c)  of  Section  21-2 and subsection (c) of this
Section.  For purposes of this Section, "teaching" is defined
as employment and performance  of  services  in  an  Illinois
public or State-operated elementary school, secondary school,
or  cooperative  or  joint agreement with a governing body or
board of control, in a certificated teaching position,  or  a
charter  school  operating  in  compliance  with  the Charter
Schools Law.
    (c)  In compliance with subsection (c) of Section 21-2 of
this  Code,  which  provides   that   a   Standard   Teaching
Certificate may be renewed by the State Teacher Certification
Board   based   upon   proof   of   continuing   professional
development,  the  State  Board  of  Education  and the State
Teacher Certification Board shall jointly:
         (1)  establish a  procedure  for  renewing  Standard
    Teaching  Certificates,  which  shall  include but not be
    limited to annual timelines for the renewal  process  and
    the  components  set forth in subsections (d) through (k)
    of this Section;
         (2)  establish   the   standards   for   certificate
    renewal;
         (3)  approve    the    providers    of    continuing
    professional development activities;
         (4)  determine the maximum credit for each  category
    of  continuing professional development activities, based
    upon   recommendations   submitted   by   a    continuing
    professional development activity task force, which shall
    consist  of  6  staff  members  from  the  State Board of
    Education,  appointed  by  the  State  Superintendent  of
    Education, and 6 teacher representatives, 3 of  whom  are
    selected  by  the Illinois Education Association and 3 of
    whom are selected by the Illinois Federation of Teachers;
         (5)  designate the type and amount of  documentation
    required to show that continuing professional development
    activities have been completed; and
         (6)  provide,  on  a  timely  basis  to all Illinois
    teachers, certificate holders,  regional  superintendents
    of schools, school districts, and others with an interest
    in continuing professional development, information about
    the  standards  and  requirements established pursuant to
    this subsection (c).
    (d)  Any  Standard  Teaching  Certificate  held   by   an
individual  employed  and  performing services in an Illinois
public or State-operated elementary school, secondary school,
or cooperative or joint agreement with a  governing  body  or
board  of  control  in  a certificated teaching position or a
charter school in compliance with  the  Charter  Schools  Law
must  be  maintained  Valid  and  Active  through certificate
renewal  activities  specified  in  the  certificate  renewal
procedure established pursuant  to  subsection  (c)  of  this
Section,  provided  that  a  holder  of  a  Valid  and Active
certificate who is only employed on either a part-time  basis
or  day-to-day  basis  as a substitute teacher shall pay only
the required registration fee to renew his or her certificate
and maintain it as Valid  and  Active.   All  other  Standard
Teaching  Certificates  held  may  be maintained as Valid and
Exempt through the registration process provided for  in  the
certificate   renewal   procedure   established  pursuant  to
subsection  (c)  of  this  Section.   A  Valid   and   Exempt
certificate must be immediately activated, through procedures
developed  jointly  by  the  State Board of Education and the
State  Teacher  Certification  Board,  upon  the  certificate
holder  becoming  employed  and  performing  services  in  an
Illinois  public   or   State-operated   elementary   school,
secondary  school,  or  cooperative or joint agreement with a
governing body or board of control in a certificated teaching
position or a charter school operating in compliance with the
Charter  Schools  Law.   A  holder  of  a  Valid  and  Exempt
certificate may  activate  his  or  her  certificate  through
procedures  provided for in the certificate renewal procedure
established pursuant to subsection (c) of this Section.
    (e)(1)  A Standard Teaching  Certificate  that  has  been
maintained  as  Valid  and  Active  for  the  5  years of the
certificate's validity shall be renewed as Valid  and  Active
upon  the  certificate  holder:  (i)  completing  at  least 8
semester hours of coursework as described in subdivision  (A)
of  paragraph  (3)  of  this  subsection (e); (ii) earning at
least  24  continuing  education  units   as   described   in
subdivision  (B)  of  paragraph  (3)  of this subsection (e);
(iii) completing the National Board for Professional Teaching
Standards  process  as  described  in  subdivision   (C)   of
paragraph  (3)  of  this  subsection (e); or (iv) earning 120
continuing  professional  development   units   ("CPDU")   as
described  in  subdivision  (D)  of  paragraph  (3)  of  this
subsection   (e).    The   maximum   continuing  professional
development   units   for   each   continuing    professional
development  activity  identified in subdivisions (E) through
(I) of paragraph (3) of this subsection (e) shall be  jointly
determined  by  the  State  Board  of Education and the State
Teacher Certification Board.  If,  however,  the  certificate
holder has maintained the certificate as Valid and Exempt for
a  portion  of  the  5-year period of validity, the number of
continuing professional development units needed to renew the
certificate as Valid  and  Active  shall  be  proportionately
reduced  by  the amount of time the certificate was Valid and
Exempt. Furthermore, if a certificate holder is employed  and
performs  teaching services on a part-time basis for all or a
portion of the certificate's 5-year period of  validity,  the
number of continuing professional development units needed to
renew the certificate as Valid and Active shall be reduced by
50%  for  the  amount of time the certificate holder has been
employed and  performed  teaching  services  on  a  part-time
basis.   Part-time  shall  be defined as less than 50% of the
school day or school term.
    (2)  Each Valid and Active Standard Teaching  Certificate
holder   shall   develop   a  certificate  renewal  plan  for
satisfying   the    continuing    professional    development
requirement provided for in subsection (c) of Section 21-2 of
this  Code.    Certificate holders with multiple certificates
shall develop a certificate renewal plan that addresses  only
that  certificate  or those certificates that are required of
his or her certificated teaching position, if the certificate
holder is employed and performing  services  in  an  Illinois
public or State-operated elementary school, secondary school,
or  cooperative  or  joint agreement with a governing body or
board of control, or that certificate or  those  certificates
most  closely related to his or her teaching position, if the
certificate holder is employed in a charter  school.   Except
as  otherwise  provided in this subsection (e), a certificate
renewal  plan  shall  include  a  minimum  of  3   individual
improvement  goals  developed  by  the certificate holder and
shall reflect purposes (A), (B),  and  (C)  and  may  reflect
purpose   (D)   of   the  following  continuing  professional
development purposes:
         (A)  Advance both the certificate holder's knowledge
    and skills as a  teacher  consistent  with  the  Illinois
    Professional  Teaching Standards and the Illinois Content
    Area Standards  in  the  certificate  holder's  areas  of
    certification,  endorsement,  or  teaching  assignment in
    order to keep the certificate  holder  current  in  those
    areas.
         (B)  Develop  the certificate holder's knowledge and
    skills  in  areas  determined  to  be  critical  for  all
    Illinois teachers, as  defined  by  the  State  Board  of
    Education, known as "State priorities".
         (C)  Address the knowledge, skills, and goals of the
    certificate  holder's  local  school improvement plan, if
    the  teacher  is  employed  in  an  Illinois  public   or
    State-operated  elementary  school,  secondary school, or
    cooperative or joint agreement with a governing  body  or
    board of control.
         (D)  Expand  knowledge  and  skills in an additional
    teaching field  or  toward  the  acquisition  of  another
    teaching  certificate, endorsement, or relevant education
    degree.
A certificate renewal plan must include a description of  how
these goals are to be achieved and an explanation of selected
continuing   professional   development   activities   to  be
completed, each of  which  must  meet  one  or  more  of  the
continuing  professional  development  purposes  specified in
this  paragraph  (2).   The  plan  shall  identify  potential
activities  and  include  projected   timelines   for   those
activities that will assure completion of the plan before the
expiration  of  the  5-year validity of the Standard Teaching
Certificate.  Except as otherwise provided in this subsection
(e), at least  50%  of  continuing  professional  development
units  must  relate to purposes (A) and (B) set forth in this
paragraph (2): the  advancement  of  a  certificate  holder's
knowledge  and  skills  as  a  teacher  consistent  with  the
Illinois  Professional  Teaching  Standards  and the Illinois
Content Area Standards in the certificate holder's  areas  of
certification,  endorsement,  or teaching assignment in order
to keep the certificate holder current in those areas and the
development of a certificate holder's knowledge and skills in
the State priorities that exist at the time  the  certificate
renewal plan is developed.
    A  speech-language  pathologist  or  audiologist  who  is
licensed  under  the  Illinois  Speech-Language Pathology and
Audiology  Practice  Act  and  who  has  met  the  continuing
education requirements of that Act and the rules  promulgated
under  that  Act  shall  be  deemed  to  have  satisfied  the
continuing  professional development requirements established
by the State Board of Education and the Teacher Certification
Board to renew a Standard Certificate.
    (3)  Continuing   professional   development   activities
included in a certificate renewal plan may include,  but  are
not limited to, the following activities:
         (A)  at  least  8 semester hours of coursework in an
    approved education-related program, of which at  least  2
    semester  hours  relate  to  the  continuing professional
    development purpose set forth in purpose (A) of paragraph
    (2) of this subsection (e), provided  that  such  a  plan
    need   not  include  any  other  continuing  professional
    development activities nor reflect or contain  activities
    related  to the other continuing professional development
    purposes set forth in paragraph (2)  of  this  subsection
    (e);
         (B)  continuing  education  units  that  satisfy the
    continuing professional development purposes set forth in
    paragraph  (2)  of  this  subsection   (e),   with   each
    continuing   education  unit  equal  to  5  clock  hours,
    provided that a plan that includes at least 24 continuing
    education units (or 120  clock/contact  hours)  need  not
    include  any  other  continuing  professional development
    activities;
         (C)  completion   of   the   National    Board    of
    Professional   Teaching   Standards   ("NBPTS")  process,
    provided that a plan  that  includes  completion  of  the
    NBPTS  process  need  not  include  any  other continuing
    professional  development  activities  nor   reflect   or
    contain activities related to the continuing professional
    development  purposes  set  forth  in  paragraph  (2)  of
    subsection (e) of this Section;
         (D)  completion   of   120  continuing  professional
    development   units   that   satisfy    the    continuing
    professional  development purposes set forth in paragraph
    (2) of  this  subsection  (e)  and  may  include  without
    limitation  the activities identified in subdivisions (E)
    through (I) of this paragraph (3);
         (E)  collaboration   and   partnership    activities
    related  to  improving the teacher's knowledge and skills
    as a teacher, including the following:
              (i)  participating  on  collaborative  planning
         and professional improvement teams and committees;
              (ii)  peer review and coaching;
              (iii)  mentoring in a formal mentoring program,
         including   service   as   a   consulting    teacher
         participating  in  a  remediation process formulated
         under Section 24A-5 of this Code;
              (iv)  participating in site-based management or
         decision making teams, relevant committees,  boards,
         or   task   forces   directly   related   to  school
         improvement plans;
              (v)  coordinating   community   resources    in
         schools,  if  the  project is a specific goal of the
         school improvement plan;
              (vi)  facilitating  parent  education  programs
         for a school, school district, or regional office of
         education directly related to student achievement or
         school improvement plans;
              (vii)  participating in  business,  school,  or
         community  partnerships  directly related to student
         achievement or school improvement plans;
              (viii)  supervising  a   student   teacher   or
         teacher education candidate in clinical supervision,
         provided  that  the  supervision may only be counted
         once during the course of 5 years;
         (F)  college or  university  coursework  related  to
    improving the teacher's knowledge and skills as a teacher
    as follows:
              (i)  completing   undergraduate   or   graduate
         credit   earned   from   a   regionally   accredited
         institution    in   coursework   relevant   to   the
         certificate  area  being   renewed,   provided   the
         coursework   meets  Illinois  Professional  Teaching
         Standards or Illinois  Content  Area  Standards  and
         supports  the  essential  characteristics of quality
         professional development; or
              (ii)  teaching college or university courses in
         areas  relevant  to  the  certificate   area   being
         renewed,  provided  that  the  teaching  may only be
         counted once during the course of 5 years;
         (G)  conferences, workshops,  institutes,  seminars,
    and   symposiums   related  to  improving  the  teacher's
    knowledge  and  skills  as  a  teacher,   including   the
    following:
              (i)  completing  non-university credit directly
         related to student achievement,  school  improvement
         plans, or State priorities;
              (ii)  participating   in   or   presenting   at
         workshops,  seminars,  conferences,  institutes, and
         symposiums;
              (iii)  training  as  external   reviewers   for
         Quality Assurance;
              (iv)  training   as   reviewers  of  university
         teacher preparation programs;
         (H)  other  educational   experiences   related   to
    improving   the  teacher's  knowledge  and  skills  as  a
    teacher, including the following:
              (i)  participating  in  action   research   and
         inquiry projects;
              (ii)  observing   programs   or   teaching   in
         schools,  related  businesses,  or  industry that is
         systematic, purposeful, and relevant to  certificate
         renewal;
              (iii)  traveling   related   to  ones  teaching
         assignment, directly related to student  achievement
         or school improvement plans and approved at least 30
         days  prior  to the travel experience, provided that
         the traveling shall not include time spent commuting
         to destinations where the learning  experience  will
         occur;
              (iv)  participating  in study groups related to
         student achievement or school improvement plans;
              (v)  serving on a  statewide  education-related
         committee,  including  but  not limited to the State
         Teacher  Certification   Board,   State   Board   of
         Education  strategic  agenda  teams,  or  the  State
         Advisory  Council  on  Education  of  Children  with
         Disabilities;
              (vi)  participating  in  work/learn programs or
         internships; or
         (I)  professional leadership experiences related  to
    improving   the  teacher's  knowledge  and  skills  as  a
    teacher, including the following:
              (i)  participating in curriculum development or
         assessment  activities   at   the   school,   school
         district,  regional  office  of education, State, or
         national level;
              (ii)  participating  in  team   or   department
         leadership in a school or school district;
              (iii)  participating  on  external  or internal
         school or school district review teams;
              (iv)  publishing educational articles, columns,
         or books relevant  to  the  certificate  area  being
         renewed; or
              (v)  participating    in   non-strike   related
         professional  association  or   labor   organization
         service   or   activities  related  to  professional
         development.
    (4)  A  certificate  renewal  plan  must   initially   be
approved  by  the  certificate  holder's  local  professional
development  committee,  as provided for in subsection (f) of
this  Section.   If  the   local   professional   development
committee  does not approve the certificate renewal plan, the
certificate holder  may  appeal  that  determination  to  the
regional   professional   development  review  committee,  as
provided for in paragraph  (2)  of  subsection  (g)  of  this
Section.   If  the  regional  professional development review
committee disagrees with the local  professional  development
committee's determination, the certificate renewal plan shall
be  deemed  approved  and  the  certificate  holder may begin
satisfying the continuing professional development activities
set  forth  in  the  plan.   If  the  regional   professional
development   review   committee   agrees   with   the  local
professional  development  committee's   determination,   the
certificate  renewal  plan  shall  be  deemed disapproved and
shall be returned to the  certificate  holder  to  develop  a
revised certificate renewal plan.  In all cases, the regional
professional  development  review committee shall immediately
notify both the local professional development committee  and
the certificate holder of its determination.
    (5)  A  certificate  holder  who  wishes  to  modify  the
continuing  professional  development  activities or goals in
his or her certificate renewal plan must submit the  proposed
modifications  to  his  or her local professional development
committee for approval prior  to  engaging  in  the  proposed
activities.   If the local professional development committee
does not approve the proposed modification,  the  certificate
holder   may   appeal  that  determination  to  the  regional
professional development review committee, as  set  forth  in
paragraph (4) of this subsection (e).
    (6)  When  a  certificate  holder  changes assignments or
school  districts  during  the   course   of   completing   a
certificate  renewal  plan,  the professional development and
continuing education credit earned pursuant to the plan shall
transfer to the new assignment or school district  and  count
toward the total requirements.  This certificate renewal plan
must  be  reviewed  by  the  appropriate  local  professional
development  committee  and  may  be  modified to reflect the
certificate  holder's  new  work  assignment  or  the  school
improvement  plan  of  the  new  school  district  or  school
building.
    (f)  Notwithstanding any other provisions of  this  Code,
each  school  district,  charter  school,  and cooperative or
joint agreement with a governing body  or  board  of  control
that   employs   certificated   staff,  shall  establish  and
implement, in conjunction with its exclusive  representative,
if   any,   one   or   more  local  professional  development
committees, as set forth in this subsection (f), which  shall
perform the following functions:
         (1)  review  and  approve  certificate renewal plans
    and any modifications  made  to  these  plans,  including
    transferred plans;
         (2)  maintain a file of approved certificate renewal
    plans;
         (3)  monitor   certificate   holders'   progress  in
    completing approved certificate renewal plans;
         (4)  assist  in  the  development  of   professional
    development   plans   based   upon  needs  identified  in
    certificate renewal plans;
         (5)  determine whether certificate holders have  met
    the  requirements  of their certificate renewal plans and
    notify certificate holders of its determination;
         (6)  provide   a   certificate   holder   with   the
    opportunity  to  address  the  committee  when   it   has
    determined  that  the  certificate holder has not met the
    requirements of his or her certificate renewal plan;
         (7)  issue and forward recommendations  for  renewal
    or  nonrenewal  of certificate holders' Standard Teaching
    Certificates to the appropriate  regional  superintendent
    of  schools,  based upon whether certificate holders have
    met  the  requirements  of  their  approved   certificate
    renewal   plans,   with  30-day  written  notice  of  its
    recommendation provided to the certificate  holder  prior
    to   forwarding   the   recommendation  to  the  regional
    superintendent of schools, provided  that  if  the  local
    professional  development  committee's  recommendation is
    for certificate nonrenewal, the written  notice  provided
    to the certificate holder shall include a return receipt;
    and
         (8)  reconsider  its  recommendation  of certificate
    nonrenewal, upon request of the certificate holder within
    30 days of receipt of written notification that the local
    professional  development  committee  will  make  such  a
    recommendation,   and    forward    to    the    regional
    superintendent  of  schools  its recommendation within 30
    days of receipt of the certificate holder's request.
    Each  local  professional  development  committee   shall
consist  of at least 3 classroom teachers; one superintendent
or  chief  administrator  of  the  school  district,  charter
school, or cooperative or  joint  agreement  or  his  or  her
designee;  and  one at-large member who shall be either (i) a
parent, (ii) a member of  the  business  community,  (iii)  a
community  member,  or (iv) an administrator, with preference
given to an individual chosen from among those persons listed
in  items  (i),  (ii),  and  (iii)   in   order   to   secure
representation  of an interest not already represented on the
committee.  If mutually agreed upon by the  school  district,
charter  school,  or  governing body or board of control of a
cooperative   or   joint   agreement   and   its    exclusive
representative,  if any, additional members may be added to a
local professional development  committee,  provided  that  a
majority  of  members  are  classroom  teachers.   The school
district, charter school,  or  governing  body  or  board  of
control of a cooperative or joint agreement and its exclusive
representative,  if  any, shall determine the term of service
of the members of a local professional development committee.
All individuals  selected  to  serve  on  local  professional
development  committees must be known to demonstrate the best
practices in teaching or their respective field of practice.
    The exclusive representative, if any,  shall  select  the
classroom   teacher   members   of   the  local  professional
development  committee.   If  no   exclusive   representative
exists,  then  the  classroom  teacher  members  of  a  local
professional  development  committee shall be selected by the
classroom teachers that come within  the  local  professional
development  committee's  authority.   The  school  district,
charter  school,  or  governing body or board of control of a
cooperative  or  joint   agreement   shall   select   the   2
non-classroom  teacher  members  (the superintendent or chief
administrator of the  school  district,  charter  school,  or
cooperative or joint agreement or his or her designee and the
at-large   member)   of   a  local  professional  development
committee.  Vacancies in positions on  a  local  professional
development  committee  shall be filled in the same manner as
the original selections.  The members of a local professional
development committee  shall  select  a  chairperson.   Local
professional   development   committee   meetings   shall  be
scheduled so as not  to  interfere  with  committee  members'
regularly  scheduled  teaching  duties, except when otherwise
permitted by the policies of or agreed to or approved by  the
school  district,  charter school, or governing body or board
of control of  a  cooperative  or  joint  agreement,  or  its
designee.
    The  board  of education or governing board shall convene
the first  meeting  of  the  local  professional  development
committee.   All  actions  taken  by  the  local professional
development  committee  shall  require  that  a  majority  of
committee members be present, and no committee action may  be
taken  unless  50%  or  more  of  those  present  are teacher
members.
    The State  Board  of  Education  and  the  State  Teacher
Certification  Board shall jointly provide local professional
development committee members with a training manual, and the
members shall certify that they have received  and  read  the
manual.
    Notwithstanding  any  other provisions of this subsection
(f), for a teacher employed  and  performing  services  in  a
nonpublic  or  State-operated elementary or secondary school,
all references to a local professional development  committee
shall  mean  the  regional  superintendent  of schools of the
regional office of education for the  geographic  area  where
the teaching is done.
    (g)(1)  Each  regional  superintendent  of  schools shall
review and concur or nonconcur with each  recommendation  for
renewal  or  nonrenewal of a Standard Teaching Certificate he
or  she  receives  from  a  local  professional   development
committee   or,   if   a   certificate   holder  appeals  the
recommendation  to  the  regional  professional   development
review   committee,   the   recommendation   for  renewal  or
nonrenewal he or she receives from  a  regional  professional
development  review  committee and, within 14 days of receipt
of  the  recommendation,  shall  provide  the  State  Teacher
Certification Board with verification of  the  following,  if
applicable:
         (A)  a   certificate  renewal  plan  was  filed  and
    approved   by   the   appropriate   local    professional
    development committee;
         (B)  the  professional  development  and  continuing
    education   activities   set   forth   in   the  approved
    certificate  renewal  plan   have   been   satisfactorily
    completed;
         (C)  the  local  professional  development committee
    has recommended the renewal of the  certificate  holder's
    Standard   Teaching   Certificate   and   forwarded   the
    recommendation,  along  with all supporting documentation
    as jointly required by the State Board of  Education  and
    the  State  Teacher  Certification Board, to the regional
    superintendent of schools;
         (D)  the certificate holder has appealed his or  her
    local professional development committee's recommendation
    of  nonrenewal  to  the regional professional development
    review committee and the result of that appeal;
         (E)  the  regional  superintendent  of  schools  has
    concurred or nonconcurred  with  the  local  professional
    development    committee's   or   regional   professional
    development review committee's recommendation to renew or
    nonrenew  the  certificate  holder's  Standard   Teaching
    Certificate and made a recommendation to that effect; and
         (F)  the   established   registration  fee  for  the
    Standard Teaching Certificate has been paid.
At the same  time  the  regional  superintendent  of  schools
provides  the  State  Teacher  Certification  Board  with the
notice required by this subsection (g), he or she shall  also
notify the certificate holder in writing that this notice has
been  provided  to  the  State  Teacher  Certification Board,
provided  that  if  the  notice  provided  by  the   regional
superintendent  of schools to the State Teacher Certification
Board includes a recommendation  of  certificate  nonrenewal,
the  written  notice provided to the certificate holder shall
be by certified mail, return receipt requested.
    (2)  Each certificate holder  shall  have  the  right  to
appeal  his or her local professional development committee's
recommendation of nonrenewal  to  the  regional  professional
development  review  committee,  within 14 days of receipt of
notice that the recommendation has been sent to the  regional
superintendent  of  schools.  Each regional superintendent of
schools shall establish a regional  professional  development
review  committee  or  committees for the purpose of advising
the regional superintendent of  schools,  upon  request,  and
handling  certificate  holder  appeals.  This committee shall
consist   of   at   least   4   classroom    teachers,    one
non-administrative   certificated   educational  employee,  2
administrators, and one at-large member who shall  be  either
(i)  a parent, (ii) a member of the business community, (iii)
a community member, or (iv) an administrator, with preference
given to an individual chosen from among those persons listed
in  items  (i),  (ii),  and  (iii)   in   order   to   secure
representation  of an interest not already represented on the
committee.  The teacher and  non-administrative  certificated
educational employee members of the review committee shall be
selected  by  their exclusive representative, if any, and the
administrators and at-large member shall be selected  by  the
regional    superintendent    of    schools.     A   regional
superintendent of schools may add additional members  to  the
committee,  provided  that the same proportion of teachers to
administrators and  at-large  members  on  the  committee  is
maintained.   Any  additional  teacher and non-administrative
certificated educational employee members shall  be  selected
by  their  exclusive  representative,  if  any.  Vacancies in
positions  on  a  regional  professional  development  review
committee shall be filled in the same manner as the  original
selections.   Committee  members shall serve staggered 3-year
terms.   All  individuals  selected  to  serve  on   regional
professional  development  review committees must be known to
demonstrate  the  best  practices  in   teaching   or   their
respective field of practice.
    The exclusive representative responsible for choosing the
individuals that serve on a regional professional development
review  committee  shall notify each school district, charter
school,  or  governing  body  or  board  of  control   of   a
cooperative  or  joint  agreement  employing  the individuals
chosen to serve and provide their names  to  the  appropriate
regional  superintendent  of  schools.  Regional professional
development review committee meetings shall be  scheduled  so
as  not  to  interfere  with the committee members' regularly
scheduled teaching duties, except when otherwise permitted by
the policies of or  agreed  to  or  approved  by  the  school
district,  charter  school,  or  governing  body  or board of
control of a cooperative or joint agreement, or its designee,
provided  that  the  school  district,  charter  school,   or
governing  body  or  board  of control shall not unreasonably
withhold permission for a committee member to attend regional
professional development review committee meetings.
    In a city having a population exceeding 500,000 that does
not have a regional office of education, one or more separate
regional professional development review committees shall  be
established as mutually agreed upon by the board of education
of  the  school  district  organized under Article 34 of this
Code and the exclusive representative.   The  composition  of
each   committee   shall  be  the  same  as  for  a  regional
professional  development  review  committee,   except   that
members  of  the  committee shall be jointly appointed by the
board of education  and  the  exclusive  representative.  All
other   provisions   of   this  Section  concerning  regional
professional development review  committees  shall  apply  to
these committees.
    The  regional  professional  development review committee
may require information in addition to that received  from  a
certificate holder's local professional development committee
or  request  that  the  certificate  holder appear before it,
shall either concur or nonconcur with  a  local  professional
development  committee's  recommendation  of  nonrenewal, and
shall forward to the regional superintendent of  schools  its
recommendation  of  renewal or nonrenewal.  All actions taken
by the regional  professional  development  review  committee
shall  require  a quorum and be by a simple majority of those
present  and  voting.    A  record  of  all  votes  shall  be
maintained.  The committee shall have 45 days from receipt of
a certificate holder's appeal to make its  recommendation  to
the regional superintendent of schools.
    The  State  Board  of  Education  and  the  State Teacher
Certification   Board   shall   jointly   provide    regional
professional  development  review  committee  members  with a
training manual, and the members shall be required to  attend
one  training seminar sponsored jointly by the State Board of
Education and the State Teacher Certification Board.
    (h)(1)  The  State  Teacher  Certification  Board   shall
review    the    regional    superintendent    of    schools'
recommendations   to  renew  or  nonrenew  Standard  Teaching
Certificates  and  notify  certificate  holders  in   writing
whether  their  certificates  have been renewed or nonrenewed
within 90 days of receipt of the  recommendations,  unless  a
certificate  holder has appealed a regional superintendent of
schools'  recommendation  of  nonrenewal,  as   provided   in
paragraph  (2)  of  this  subsection  (h).  The State Teacher
Certification Board shall verify that the certificate  holder
has  met  the  renewal criteria set forth in paragraph (1) of
subsection (g) of this Section.
    (2)  Each certificate holder  shall  have  the  right  to
appeal  a  regional superintendent of school's recommendation
to nonrenew his or her Standard Teaching Certificate  to  the
State  Teacher Certification Board, within 14 days of receipt
of notice that the  decision  has  been  sent  to  the  State
Teacher  Certification  Board,  which  shall  hold  an appeal
hearing within 60 days of receipt of the appeal.   When  such
an   appeal  is  taken,  the  certificate  holder's  Standard
Teaching Certificate shall continue to  be  valid  until  the
appeal    is   finally   determined.    The   State   Teacher
Certification Board shall review the regional  superintendent
of   school's   recommendation,   the  regional  professional
development review committee's recommendation,  if  any,  and
the local professional development committee's recommendation
and   all   relevant  documentation  to  verify  whether  the
certificate holder has met the renewal criteria set forth  in
paragraph  (1)  of subsection (g) of this Section.  The State
Teacher Certification Board may request that the  certificate
holder  appear  before  it.   All  actions taken by the State
Teacher Certification Board shall require a quorum and be  by
a  simple  majority of those present and voting.  A record of
all  votes  shall   be   maintained.    The   State   Teacher
Certification  Board  shall  notify the certificate holder in
writing, within 7 days of completing the review, whether  his
or  her  Standard  Teaching  Certificate  has been renewed or
nonrenewed, provided that if the State Teacher  Certification
Board  determines  to  nonrenew  a  certificate,  the written
notice  provided  to  the  certificate  holder  shall  be  by
certified mail, return receipt requested.    All  certificate
renewal   or   nonrenewal  decisions  of  the  State  Teacher
Certification Board are final and subject  to  administrative
review, as set forth in Section 21-24 of this Code.
    (i)  Holders  of  Master Teaching Certificates shall meet
the same requirements  and  follow  the  same  procedures  as
holders  of Standard Teaching Certificates, except that their
renewal cycle shall be as set  forth  in  subsection  (d)  of
Section 21-2 of this Code. A holder of a teaching certificate
endorsed  as  a  speech-language  pathologist  who  has  been
granted   the  Certificate  of  Clinical  Competence  by  the
American Speech-Language Hearing Association may renew his or
her Standard Teaching Certificate  pursuant  to  the  10-year
renewal  cycle set forth in subsection (d) of Section 21-2 of
this Code.
    (j)  Holders of Valid  and  Exempt  Standard  and  Master
Teaching  Certificates  who  are  not employed and performing
services in an Illinois public or  State-operated  elementary
school,  secondary  school, or cooperative or joint agreement
with a governing body or board of control, in a  certificated
teaching    position,    may   voluntarily   activate   their
certificates  by  developing  and  submitting  a  certificate
renewal plan to the regional superintendent of schools of the
regional office of education for the  geographic  area  where
their teaching is done, who, or whose designee, shall approve
the   plan  and  serve  as  the  certificate  holder's  local
professional  development   committee.    These   certificate
holders shall follow the same renewal criteria and procedures
as   all  other  Standard  and  Master  Teaching  Certificate
holders,   except   that   their   continuing    professional
development plans shall not be required to reflect or address
the   knowledge,   skills,   and  goals  of  a  local  school
improvement plan.
    (k)  Each school district, charter school, or cooperative
or joint agreement shall be paid an annual amount of not less
than $1,000, as determined by a formula based on  the  number
of Standard Teaching and Master Teaching Certificate holders,
subject  to  renewal  and  established by rule, not to exceed
$1,000,000  annually  for  all  school   districts,   charter
schools,   and   cooperatives   or   joint   agreements,  for
administrative costs associated with conducting the  meetings
of   the  local  professional  development  committee.   Each
regional office of education shall receive $2,000 annually to
pay school districts, charter  schools,  or  cooperatives  or
joint  agreements  for costs, as defined by rule, incurred in
staff attendance at regional professional development  review
committee  meetings  and  the training seminar required under
paragraph (2) of subsection (g) of this Section.
    (l)  The State Board of Education and the  State  Teacher
Certification   Board   shall   jointly   contract   with  an
independent party to conduct a  comprehensive  evaluation  of
the certificate renewal system pursuant to this Section.  The
first  report  of  this  evaluation shall be presented to the
General Assembly on January 1, 2005 and on January 1 of every
third year thereafter.
(Source: P.A. 90-548,  eff.  1-1-98;  90-653,  eff.  7-29-98;
90-811, eff. 1-26-99; 91-102, eff. 7-12-99.)

    Section   10.  The Illinois Speech-Language Pathology and
Audiology Practice Act is amended  by  changing  Sections  3,
3.5,  7,  8,  10, 11, 13, 16, 16.5, 18, 26, 27, 28, 29, 29.5,
and 31a and adding Sections 8.5, 8.6, 8.7 and 8.8 as follows:

    (225 ILCS 110/3) (from Ch. 111, par. 7903)
    Sec. 3.  Definitions.  The following  words  and  phrases
shall  have  the  meaning  ascribed  to  them in this Section
unless the context clearly indicates otherwise:
    (a)  "Department" means the  Department  of  Professional
Regulation.
    (b)  "Director"   means   the  Director  of  Professional
Regulation.
    (c)  "Board" means the Board of Speech-Language Pathology
and Audiology established under Section 5 of this Act.
    (d)  "Speech-Language Pathologist" means a person who has
received a license pursuant to this Act and  who  engages  in
the practice of speech-language pathology.
    (e)  "Audiologist"  means  a  person  who  has received a
license pursuant to this Act and who engages in the  practice
of audiology.
    (f)  "Public  member"  means a person who is not a health
professional.  For purposes of board membership,  any  person
with  a significant financial interest in a health service or
profession is not a public member.
    (g)  "The practice of audiology" is  the  application  of
nonmedical  methods  and  procedures  for the identification,
measurement, testing,  appraisal,  prediction,  habilitation,
rehabilitation,   or   instruction  related  to  hearing  and
disorders of hearing.  These procedures are for  the  purpose
of counseling, consulting and rendering or offering to render
services  or  for participating in the planning, directing or
conducting  of  programs  that   are   designed   to   modify
communicative   disorders   involving   speech,  language  or
auditory function related to hearing loss.  The  practice  of
audiology  may  include,  but  shall  not  be limited to, the
following:
         (1)  any task, procedure, act, or practice  that  is
    necessary  for  the  evaluation  of hearing or vestibular
    function;
         (2)  training in the use of amplification, including
    hearing aids;
         (3)  performing basic speech and language  screening
    tests and procedures consistent with audiology training.
    (h)  "The  practice  of speech-language pathology" is the
application of nonmedical  methods  and  procedures  for  the
identification,  measurement, testing, appraisal, prediction,
habilitation, rehabilitation,  and  modification  related  to
communication  development,  and disorders or disabilities of
speech,  language,  voice,  swallowing,  and  other   speech,
language  and  voice related disorders.  These procedures are
for the purpose of counseling, consulting  and  rendering  or
offering  to  render  services,  or  for participating in the
planning,  directing  or  conducting  of  programs  that  are
designed to modify communicative disorders and conditions  in
individuals   or  groups  of  individuals  involving  speech,
language, voice and swallowing function.
    "The  practice  of   speech-language   pathology"   shall
include, but shall not be limited to, the following:
         (1)  hearing     screening     tests    and    aural
    rehabilitation procedures consistent with speech-language
    pathology training;
         (2)  tasks, procedures, acts or practices  that  are
    necessary  for the evaluation of, and training in the use
    of,  augmentative  communication  systems,  communication
    variation, cognitive rehabilitation, non-spoken  language
    production and comprehension.
    (i)  "Speech-language pathology assistant" means a person
who  has  received a license pursuant to this Act to assist a
speech-language pathologist in the manner  provided  in  this
Act.
(Source: P.A. 90-69, eff. 7-8-97.)

    (225 ILCS 110/3.5)
    Sec. 3.5. Exemptions. This Act does not prohibit:
         (a)  The  practice  of  speech-language pathology or
    audiology  by  students  in  their  course  of  study  in
    programs approved by the Department when acting under the
    direction and  supervision  of  licensed  speech-language
    pathologists or audiologists.
         (b)  The    performance   of   any   speech-language
    pathology  service   by   a   speech-language   pathology
    assistant or a speech-language pathology paraprofessional
    an  appropriately  trained  person  if  such  service  is
    performed  under  the supervision and full responsibility
    of  a  licensed  speech-language  pathologist.  A  speech
    language  pathology  assistant  may  perform  only  those
    duties authorized by Section 8.7 under the supervision of
    a speech-language pathologist as provided in Section 8.8.
         (b-5)  The performance of an audiology service by an
    appropriately trained person if that service is performed
    under  the  supervision  and  full  responsibility  of  a
    licensed audiologist.
         (c)  The performance of audiometric testing for  the
    purpose   of   industrial   hearing  conservation  by  an
    audiometric  technician  certified  by  the  Council   of
    Accreditation   for   Occupational  Hearing  Conservation
    (CAOHC).
         (d)  The performance of an audiometric screening  by
    an  audiometric  screenings  technician  certified by the
    Department of Public Health.
         (e)  The selling or practice of fitting, dispensing,
    or servicing hearing instruments by a hearing  instrument
    dispenser  licensed under the Hearing Instrument Consumer
    Protection Act.
         (f)  A person licensed in this State under any other
    Act from engaging in the practice for which he or she  is
    licensed.
         (g)  The  performance of vestibular function testing
    by an appropriately trained person under the  supervision
    of  a  physician licensed to practice medicine in all its
    branches.
(Source: P.A. 90-69, eff. 7-8-97.)

    (225 ILCS 110/7) (from Ch. 111, par. 7907)
    Sec. 7. Licensure requirement. On or after June 1,  1989,
no   person   shall  practice  speech-language  pathology  or
audiology without first applying for and obtaining a  license
for  such  purpose from the Department. Except as provided in
this Section, on or after January 1, 2002,  no  person  shall
perform   the  functions  and  duties  of  a  speech-language
pathology assistant without first applying for and  obtaining
a license for that purpose from the Department.
(Source: P.A. 90-69, eff. 7-8-97.)

    (225 ILCS 110/8) (from Ch. 111, par. 7908)
    Sec.   8.    Qualifications   for  licenses  to  practice
speech-language pathology or audiology. The Department  shall
require  that  each  applicant  for  a  license  to  practice
speech-language pathology or audiology shall:
         (a)  (Blank);
         (b)  be at least 21 years of age;
         (c)  not  have violated any provisions of Section 16
    of this Act;
         (d)  present satisfactory evidence  of  receiving  a
    master's degree in speech-language pathology or audiology
    from  a  program  approved by the Department.  Nothing in
    this Act shall be construed to prevent any  program  from
    establishing higher standards than specified in this Act;
         (e)  pass   an   examination   authorized   by   the
    Department  in the theory and practice of the profession,
    provided that the Department may recognize a  certificate
    granted    by    the   American   Speech-Language-Hearing
    Association in lieu of such examination; and
         (f)  have completed the equivalent of  9  months  of
    full-time, supervised professional experience.
    Applicants  have  3 years from the date of application to
complete the application process. If the process has not been
completed within 3 years, the application  shall  be  denied,
the  fee  shall  be forfeited, and the applicant must reapply
and  meet  the  requirements  in  effect  at  the   time   of
reapplication.
(Source: P.A. 89-387, eff. 8-20-95; 90-69, eff. 7-8-97.)

    (225 ILCS 110/8.5 new)
    Sec.    8.5.     Qualifications   for   licenses   as   a
speech-language  pathology  assistant.   (a)  A   person   is
qualified  to  be  licensed  as  a  speech-language pathology
assistant if that person has  applied  in  writing  on  forms
prescribed by the Department, has paid the required fees, and
meets both of the following criteria:
         (1)  Is  of  good  moral  character.  In determining
    moral   character,   the   Department   may   take   into
    consideration any felony conviction of the applicant, but
    such a conviction shall not operate  automatically  as  a
    complete bar to licensure.
         (2)  Has   received   an  associate  degree  from  a
    speech-language pathology assistant program that has been
    approved by the Department and  that  meets  the  minimum
    requirements set forth in Section 8.6.
    (b)  Until January 1, 2004, a person holding a bachelor's
level  degree  in communication disorders who was employed to
assist a speech-language pathologist on the effective date of
this amendatory Act of the 92nd  General  Assembly  shall  be
eligible  to receive a license as a speech-language pathology
assistant  from  the  Department  upon  completion  of  forms
prescribed by the Department and the payment of the  required
fee.
    (225 ILCS 110/8.6 new)
    Sec.   8.6.   Minimum  Requirements  for  Speech-language
pathology assistant programs.
    (a)  An applicant  for  licensure  as  a  speech-language
pathology assistant must have earned 60 semester credit hours
in a program of study that includes general education and the
specific knowledge and skills for a speech-language pathology
assistant.   The  curriculum  of  a speech-language pathology
assistant program must include all of the following  content,
as further provided by rule promulgated by the Department:
         (1)  Thirty-six  semester  credit  hours  in general
    education.
         (2)  Twenty-four semester credit hours in  technical
    content areas designed to provide students with knowledge
    and   skills   required   for  speech-language  pathology
    assistants, which must include (i) an overview of  normal
    processes   of   communication;   (ii)   an  overview  of
    communication    disorders;    (iii)    instruction    in
    speech-language   pathology    assistant-level    service
    delivery   practices;   (iv)   instruction  in  workplace
    behaviors;  (v)  cultural  and  linguistic   factors   in
    communication; and (vi) observation.
         (3)  Completion  of at least 100 hours of supervised
    field  work  experiences   supervised   by   a   licensed
    speech-language pathologist at least 50% of the time when
    the  student  is  engaged  in contact with the patient or
    client.  An applicant must  obtain  written  verification
    demonstrating successful completion of the required field
    work  experience,  including a description of the setting
    in which the training was received and an  assessment  of
    the student's technical proficiency.
    (b)  The  Department may promulgate rules that change the
curriculum requirements of subsection (a) in order to reflect
the  guidelines  for  speech-language   pathology   assistant
programs  recommended by the American Speech-Language Hearing
Association.

    (225 ILCS 110/8.7 new)
    Sec.   8.7.    Duties   of   speech-language    pathology
assistants.
    (a)  The   scope  of  responsibility  of  speech-language
pathology assistants shall be limited  to  supplementing  the
role  of  a  speech-language  pathologist in implementing the
treatment  program   established   by   the   speech-language
pathologist.   The  functions and duties of a speech-language
pathology assistant shall be:
         (1)  conducting speech-language  screening,  without
    interpretation,  and  using screening protocols developed
    by the supervising speech-language pathologist;
         (2)  providing  direct   treatment   assistance   to
    patients  or  clients,  if  authorized  by  and under the
    supervision of a speech-language pathologist;
         (3)  following and implementing documented treatment
    plans   or   protocols   developed   by   a   supervising
    speech-language pathologist;
         (4)  documenting patient or client  progress  toward
    meeting   established   objectives   and   reporting  the
    information to a supervising speech-language pathologist;
         (5)  assisting a speech-language pathologist  during
    assessments,  including,  but  not  limited to, assisting
    with  formal  documentation,  preparing  materials,   and
    performing    clerical    duties    for   a   supervising
    speech-language pathologist;
         (6)  acting  as  an  interpreter   for   non-English
    speaking  patients  or  clients  and their family members
    when competent to do so;
         (7)  scheduling  activities  and  preparing  charts,
    records, graphs, and data;
         (8)  performing checks and maintenance of equipment,
    including, but not limited to, augmentative communication
    devices; and
         (9)  assisting   with   speech-language    pathology
    research  projects,  in-service  training,  and family or
    community education;
    (b)  A speech-language pathology assistant may not:
         (1)  perform   standardized    or    nonstandardized
    diagnostic  tests  or  formal  or informal evaluations or
    interpret test results;
         (2)  screen or  diagnose  patients  or  clients  for
    feeding or swallowing disorders;
         (3)  participate   in   parent   conferences,   case
    conferences,  or  any  interdisciplinary team without the
    presence of the supervising speech-language pathologist;
         (4)  provide patient or client or family counseling;
         (5)  write,  develop,  or  modify  a  patient's   or
    client's individualized treatment plan;
         (6)  assist   with   patients   or  clients  without
    following the individualized treatment plan  prepared  by
    the supervising speech-language pathologist;
         (7)  sign  any  formal  documents  such as treatment
    plans, reimbursement forms, or reports;
         (8)  select patients or clients for services;
         (9)  discharge a patient or client from services;
         (10) disclose clinical or confidential  information,
    either  orally  or  in  writing, to anyone other than the
    supervising speech-language pathologist;
         (11)  make referrals for additional services;
         (12)  counsel or consult with the patient or client,
    family, or others regarding  the  patient's  or  client's
    status or service;
         (13)  represent   himself   or   herself   to  be  a
    speech-language pathologist;



         (14)  use a checklist or tabulate results of feeding
    or swallowing evaluations; or
         (15)   demonstrate    swallowing    strategies    or
    precautions to patients, family, or staff.

    (225 ILCS 110/8.8 new)
    Sec.   8.8.   Supervision  of  speech-language  pathology
assistants.
    (a)  A speech-language pathology assistant shall practice
only under the supervision of a  speech-language  pathologist
who  has  at  least  2  years  experience  in addition to the
supervised professional experience required under  subsection
(f)  of  Section 8 of this Act. A speech-language pathologist
who supervises a  speech-language  pathology  assistant  must
have  completed  at  least  10 clock hours of training in the
supervision of  speech-language  pathology  assistants.   The
Department  shall promulgate rules describing the supervision
training requirements.  The rules may allow a speech-language
pathologist to apply to the Board for an exemption from  this
training requirement based upon prior supervisory experience.
    (b)  A  speech-language pathology assistant must be under
the direct supervision of a  speech-language  pathologist  at
least 30% of the speech-language pathology assistant's actual
patient  or  client contact time per patient or client during
the first 90 days of initial employment as a  speech-language
pathology assistant.  Thereafter, a speech-language pathology
assistant   must   be  under  the  direct  supervision  of  a
speech-language   pathologist   at   least   20%    of    the
speech-language   pathology  assistant's  actual  patient  or
client contact time per patient or client. Supervision  of  a
speech-language   pathology   assistant  beyond  the  minimum
requirements  of  this  subsection  may  be  imposed  at  the
discretion of the  supervising  speech-language  pathologist.
A  supervising  speech-language pathologist must be available
to communicate with  a  speech-language  pathology  assistant
whenever  the  assistant  is  in  contact  with  a patient or
client.
    (c)  A  speech-language  pathologist  that  supervises  a
speech-language  pathology  assistant  must  document  direct
supervision   activities.    At   a   minimum,    supervision
documentation  must  provide  (i)  information  regarding the
quality  of   the   speech-language   pathology   assistant's
performance  of  assigned  duties, and (ii) verification that
clinical activity is limited to duties specified  in  Section
8.7.
    (d)  A    full-time   speech-language   pathologist   may
supervise  no   more   than   2   speech-language   pathology
assistants.  A speech-language pathologist that does not work
full-time  may  supervise  no  more  than one speech-language
pathology assistant.
    (e) For purposes of this  Section,  "direct  supervision"
means   on-site,   in-view  observation  and  guidance  by  a
speech-language pathologist while  an  assigned  activity  is
performed by the speech-language pathology assistant.

    (225 ILCS 110/10) (from Ch. 111, par. 7910)
    Sec.   10.   List  of  Speech-Language  Pathologists  and
Audiologists.  The Department shall maintain a  list  of  the
names  and  addresses  of  the  speech-language pathologists,
speech-language pathology assistants, and audiologists.  Such
lists shall also be mailed by the Department  to  any  person
upon request and payment of the required fee.
(Source: P.A. 85-1391.)

    (225 ILCS 110/11) (from Ch. 111, par. 7911)
    Sec.   11.    Expiration,   renewal  and  restoration  of
licenses.
    (a)  The expiration date  and  renewal  period  for  each
license  issued  under  this  Act  shall  be  set by rule.  A
speech-language   pathologist,   speech-language    pathology
assistant,  or  audiologist may renew such license during the
month preceding the expiration date  thereof  by  paying  the
required fee.
    (a-5)  All  renewal  applicants  shall  provide  proof of
having met the continuing education requirements set forth in
the rules of the Department.  At a minimum, the  rules  shall
require    a   renewal   applicant   for   licensure   as   a
speech-language pathologist or audiologist to  provide  proof
of completing at least 20 clock hours of continuing education
during  the  2-year  licensing  cycle  for which he or she is
currently licensed. An audiologist who has met the continuing
education requirements of  the  Hearing  Instrument  Consumer
Protection  Act  during  an  equivalent licensing cycle under
this Act shall be deemed to have met the continuing education
requirements of this Act.  At  a  minimum,  the  rules  shall
require    a   renewal   applicant   for   licensure   as   a
speech-language  pathology  assistant  to  provide  proof  of
completing at least 10 clock hours  of  continuing  education
during  the 2-year period for which he or she currently holds
a license. The  Department  shall  provide  by  rule  for  an
orderly  process  for the reinstatement of licenses that have
not been renewed for failure to meet the continuing education
requirements.  The continuing education requirements  may  be
waived in cases of extreme hardship as defined by rule of the
Department.
    The  Department  shall  establish by rule a means for the
verification  of  completion  of  the  continuing   education
required   by   this   Section.   This  verification  may  be
accomplished  through  audits  of   records   maintained   by
licensees,  by  requiring  the filing of continuing education
certificates  with  the  Department,  or   by   other   means
established by the Department.
    (b)  Inactive status.
         (1)  Any  licensee  who  notifies  the Department in
    writing on forms prescribed by the Department  may  elect
    to  place  his  or  her license on an inactive status and
    shall, subject to rules of  the  Department,  be  excused
    from payment of renewal fees until he or she notifies the
    Department  in  writing  of  his  or her desire to resume
    active status.
         (2)  Any  licensee   requesting   restoration   from
    inactive  status shall be required to (i) pay the current
    renewal fee; and (ii) demonstrate  that  he  or  she  has
    obtained   the  equivalent  of  20  hours  of  continuing
    education if the licensee has been inactive for  5  years
    or more.
         (3)  Any  licensee  whose  license is in an inactive
    status shall  not  practice  in  the  State  of  Illinois
    without first restoring his or her license.
         (4)  Any  licensee  who shall engage in the practice
    while  the  license  is  lapsed  or  inactive  shall   be
    considered to be practicing without a license which shall
    be grounds for discipline under Section 16 of this Act.
    (c)  Any   speech-language  pathologist,  speech-language
pathology assistant, or audiologist whose license has expired
may have his or her license restored at  any  time  within  5
years  after  the  expiration  thereof,  upon  payment of the
required fee.
    (d)  Any person whose license  has  been  expired  for  5
years  or more may have his or her license restored by making
application to the Department and filing proof acceptable  to
the  Department  of  his  or  her  fitness to have his or her
license restored,  including  sworn  evidence  certifying  to
active lawful practice in another jurisdiction, and by paying
the  required  restoration  fee.   A  person practicing on an
expired license is deemed to be practicing without a license.
    (e)  If a  person  whose  license  has  expired  has  not
maintained  active  practice  in  another  jurisdiction,  the
Department   shall   determine,   by  an  evaluation  process
established by rule, his or  her  fitness  to  resume  active
status  and  may  require  the person to complete a period of
evaluated clinical experience,  and  may  require  successful
completion of an examination.
    (f)  Any person whose license has expired while he or she
has  been  engaged  (1) in federal or State service on active
duty, or (2) in training or education under  the  supervision
of  the  United  States  preliminary  to  induction  into the
military service,  may  have  his  or  her  license  restored
without  paying  any  lapsed  renewal  or restoration fee, if
within 2 years after termination of such service, training or
education  he  or   she   furnishes   the   Department   with
satisfactory  proof  that  he  or she has been so engaged and
that his or her service, training or education  has  been  so
terminated.
(Source: P.A. 90-69, eff. 7-8-97.)

    (225 ILCS 110/13) (from Ch. 111, par. 7913)
    Sec. 13. Licensing applicants from other States.
    Upon  payment  of the required fee, an applicant who is a
speech-language   pathologist,   speech-language    pathology
assistant,  or audiologist licensed under the laws of another
state or  territory  of  the  United  States,  shall  without
examination   be  granted  a  license  as  a  speech-language
pathologist,   speech-language   pathology   assistant,    or
audiologist by the Department:
    (a)  whenever the requirements of such state or territory
of   the   United  States  were  at  the  date  of  licensure
substantially equal to the requirements then in force in this
State; or
    (b)  whenever  such  requirements  of  another  state  or
territory of the United States together with educational  and
professional  qualifications, as distinguished from practical
experience, of the applicant since  obtaining  a  license  as
speech-language    pathologist,   speech-language   pathology
assistant, or audiologist in such state or territory  of  the
United  States are substantially equal to the requirements in
force in Illinois at the time of application for licensure as
a  speech-language  pathologist,  speech-language   pathology
assistant, or audiologist.
    Applicants  have  3 years from the date of application to
complete the application process. If the process has not been
completed within 3 years, the application  shall  be  denied,
the  fee  shall  be forfeited, and the applicant must reapply
and  meet  the  requirements  in  effect  at  the   time   of
reapplication.
(Source: P.A. 90-69, eff. 7-8-97.)

    (225 ILCS 110/16) (from Ch. 111, par. 7916)
    Sec. 16.  Refusal, revocation or suspension of licenses.
    (1)  The  Department may refuse to issue or renew, or may
revoke, suspend, place on probation,  censure,  reprimand  or
take  other  disciplinary  action  as the Department may deem
proper,  including  fines  not  to  exceed  $5,000  for  each
violation,  with  regard  to  any  license  for  any  one  or
combination of the following causes:
         (a)  Fraud in procuring the license.
         (b)  Habitual intoxication or addiction to  the  use
    of drugs.
         (c)  Willful  or repeated violations of the rules of
    the Department of Public Health.
         (d)  Division of fees or agreeing to split or divide
    the  fees  received  for  speech-language  pathology   or
    audiology  services  with  any  person  for  referring an
    individual, or assisting in the care or treatment  of  an
    individual,  without  the  knowledge of the individual or
    his or her legal representative.
         (e)  Employing,  procuring,  inducing,   aiding   or
    abetting  a  person  not  licensed  as  a speech-language
    pathologist or audiologist to engage in the  unauthorized
    practice of speech-language pathology or audiology.
         (e-5)  Employing,  procuring,  inducing,  aiding, or
    abetting a  person  not  licensed  as  a  speech-language
    pathology  assistant  to perform the functions and duties
    of a speech-language pathology assistant.
         (f)  Making   any   misrepresentations   or    false
    promises,  directly or indirectly, to influence, persuade
    or induce patronage.
         (g)  Professional connection or association with, or
    lending his or  her  name  to  another  for  the  illegal
    practice  of  speech-language  pathology  or audiology by
    another, or professional connection or  association  with
    any person, firm or corporation holding itself out in any
    manner contrary to this Act.
         (h)  Obtaining  or  seeking to obtain checks, money,
    or any other things  of  value  by  false  or  fraudulent
    representations,  including  but not limited to, engaging
    in  such  fraudulent  practice  to  defraud  the  medical
    assistance program of the Department of Public Aid.
         (i)  Practicing under a name other than his  or  her
    own.
         (j)  Improper,    unprofessional   or   dishonorable
    conduct of a character likely to deceive, defraud or harm
    the public.
         (k)  Conviction in this  or  another  state  of  any
    crime  which  is a felony under the laws of this State or
    conviction of  a  felony  in  a  federal  court,  if  the
    Department  determines,  after  investigation,  that such
    person has not been sufficiently rehabilitated to warrant
    the public trust.
         (1)  Permitting  a   person   under   his   or   her
    supervision  to  perform  any  function not authorized by
    this Act.
         (m)  A violation of any provision  of  this  Act  or
    rules promulgated thereunder.
         (n)  Revocation  by  another  state, the District of
    Columbia, territory, or foreign nation of  a  license  to
    practice  speech-language  pathology  or  audiology  or a
    license  to  practice  as  a  speech-language   pathology
    assistant  in  its  jurisdiction  if  at least one of the
    grounds for  that  revocation  is  the  same  as  or  the
    equivalent of one of the grounds for revocation set forth
    herein.
         (o)  Willfully  failing  to  report  an  instance of
    suspected child abuse  or  neglect  as  required  by  the
    Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act.
         (p)  Gross  or  repeated  malpractice  resulting  in
    injury or death of an individual.
         (q)  Willfully  making  or  filing  false records or
    reports in his  or  her  practice  as  a  speech-language
    pathologist,   speech-language  pathology  assistant,  or
    audiologist, including, but not limited to, false records
    to support claims against the public  assistance  program
    of the Illinois Department of Public Aid.
         (r)  Professional incompetence as manifested by poor
    standards of care or mental incompetence as declared by a
    court of competent jurisdiction.
         (s)  Repeated  irregularities  in  billing  a  third
    party  for  services  rendered  to  an  individual.   For
    purposes  of  this  Section,  "irregularities in billing"
    shall include:
              (i)  reporting  excessive   charges   for   the
         purpose  of  obtaining  a total payment in excess of
         that  usually  received   by   the   speech-language
         pathologist, speech-language pathology assistant, or
         audiologist for the services rendered;
              (ii)  reporting   charges   for   services  not
         rendered; or
              (iii)  incorrectly reporting services  rendered
         for the purpose of obtaining payment not earned.
         (t)  (Blank).
         (u)  Violation    of    the   Health   Care   Worker
    Self-Referral Act.
         (v)  Physical illness, including but not limited  to
    deterioration  through the aging process or loss of motor
    skill, mental illness, or disability that results in  the
    inability  to  practice  the  profession  with reasonable
    judgment, skill, or safety.
         (w)  Violation of the  Hearing  Instrument  Consumer
    Protection Act.
         (x) Failure by a speech-language pathology assistant
    and  supervising  speech-language  pathologist  to comply
    with the supervision requirements set  forth  in  Section
    8.8.
         (y)   Wilfully   exceeding   the   scope  of  duties
    customarily  undertaken  by    speech-language  pathology
    assistants set forth in Section 8.7 that results  in,  or
    may result in, harm to the public.
    (2)  The  Department  shall  deny  a  license  or renewal
authorized by this Act to any person who has defaulted on  an
educational loan guaranteed by the Illinois State Scholarship
Commission;  however,  the  Department may issue a license or
renewal if the  aforementioned  persons  have  established  a
satisfactory  repayment  record as determined by the Illinois
State Scholarship Commission.
    (3)  The  entry  of  an  order   by   a   circuit   court
establishing that any person holding a license under this Act
is  subject to involuntary admission or judicial admission as
provided  for  in  the  Mental   Health   and   Developmental
Disabilities  Code,  operates  as  an automatic suspension of
that license.  That  person  may  have  his  or  her  license
restored  only upon the determination by a circuit court that
the patient is no longer subject to involuntary admission  or
judicial  admission  and  the issuance of an order so finding
and  discharging  the   patient,   and   upon   the   Board's
recommendation   to   the  Department  that  the  license  be
restored. Where the circumstances so indicate, the Board  may
recommend  to  the  Department that it require an examination
prior to restoring any license automatically suspended  under
this subsection.
    (4)  The  Department  may  refuse to issue or may suspend
the license of any person who fails to file a return,  or  to
pay the tax, penalty, or interest shown in a filed return, or
to  pay  any final assessment of the tax penalty or interest,
as required by any tax Act administered by the Department  of
Revenue,  until such time as the requirements of any such tax
Act are satisfied.
    (5)  In enforcing this Section, the Board upon a  showing
of  a possible violation may compel an individual licensed to
practice under this Act, or who  has  applied  for  licensure
pursuant  to  this  Act,  to  submit  to a mental or physical
examination, or both, as required by and at  the  expense  of
the   Department.    The  examining  physicians  or  clinical
psychologists shall be those specifically designated  by  the
Board.  The individual to be examined may have, at his or her
own  expense,  another  physician or clinical psychologist of
his  or  her  choice  present  during  all  aspects  of  this
examination.  Failure of any individual to submit to a mental
or physical examination, when directed, shall be grounds  for
suspension of his or her license until the individual submits
to  the  examination  if  the  Board  finds, after notice and
hearing, that the refusal to submit to  the  examination  was
without reasonable cause.
    If  the  Board  finds  an  individual  unable to practice
because of the reasons set forth in this Section,  the  Board
may require that individual to submit to care, counseling, or
treatment by physicians or clinical psychologists approved or
designated by the Board, as a condition, term, or restriction
for  continued, reinstated, or renewed licensure to practice;
or, in lieu of care, counseling, or treatment, the Board  may
recommend   to   the   Department  to  file  a  complaint  to
immediately suspend,  revoke,  or  otherwise  discipline  the
license  of  the individual. Any individual whose license was
granted,  continued,  reinstated,  renewed,  disciplined   or
supervised    subject   to   such   terms,   conditions,   or
restrictions, and  who  fails  to  comply  with  such  terms,
conditions,   or  restrictions,  shall  be  referred  to  the
Director for a determination as  to  whether  the  individual
shall  have his or her license suspended immediately, pending
a hearing by the Board.
    In instances in which the Director immediately suspends a
person's license  under  this  Section,  a  hearing  on  that
person's license must be convened by the Board within 15 days
after the suspension and completed without appreciable delay.
The  Board  shall  have  the  authority to review the subject
individual's record of treatment and counseling regarding the
impairment to the  extent  permitted  by  applicable  federal
statutes  and regulations safeguarding the confidentiality of
medical records.
    An individual licensed under this Act and affected  under
this  Section shall be afforded an opportunity to demonstrate
to the Board that he or she can resume practice in compliance
with acceptable and prevailing standards under the provisions
of his or her license.
(Source: P.A. 90-69, eff. 7-8-97; 91-949, eff. 2-9-01.)
    (225 ILCS 110/16.5)
    Sec. 16.5. Advertising. A person licensed under this  Act
as a speech-language pathologist or audiologist may advertise
the availability of professional services in the public media
or  on  the  premises  where  such  professional services are
rendered as permitted by law,  provided  the  advertising  is
truthful  and not misleading or deceptive. The Department may
adopt rules consistent with this Section.
(Source: P.A. 90-69, eff. 7-8-97.)

    (225 ILCS 110/18) (from Ch. 111, par. 7918)
    Sec. 18.  Disciplinary actions.
    (a)  In case the licensee, after receiving notice,  fails
to  file an answer, his or her license may, in the discretion
of the Director, having first received the recommendation  of
the  Board,  be  suspended,  revoked,  placed on probationary
status or the Director may take whatever disciplinary  action
he  or  she  may  deem  proper, including limiting the scope,
nature, or extent of the person's practice or the  imposition
of  a  fine,  without  a  hearing, if the act or acts charged
constitute sufficient grounds for such action under this Act.
    (b)  The Director may temporarily suspend the license  of
a   speech-language  pathologist,  speech-language  pathology
assistant, or audiologist without a hearing, simultaneous  to
the  institution of proceedings for a hearing under this Act,
if the Director finds that evidence in his or her  possession
indicates     that     a    speech-language    pathologist's,
speech-language pathology assistant's,  or  an  audiologist's
continuation in practice would constitute an immediate danger
to  the  public.   In the event that the Director temporarily
suspends  the  license  of  a  speech-language   pathologist,
speech-language pathology assistant, or audiologist without a
hearing,  a  hearing by the Board must be held within 15 days
after such suspension  has  occurred  and  concluded  without
appreciable delay.
(Source: P.A. 90-69, eff. 7-8-97.)

    (225 ILCS 110/26) (from Ch. 111, par. 7926)
    Sec.  26.   Confidential Information - Disclosure. In all
hearings conducted  under  this  Act,  information  received,
pursuant  to  law,  relating to any information acquired by a
speech-language   pathologist,   speech-language    pathology
assistant,  or  audiologist  in  serving  any individual in a
professional capacity, and necessary to professionally  serve
such  individual,  shall  be deemed strictly confidential and
shall only be made available, either as part of the record of
a hearing hereunder or otherwise;
    (a)  when such record is required, in its  entirety,  for
purposes of judicial review pursuant to this Act; or
    (b)  upon  the express, written consent of the individual
served, or in the case of his or her death or disability, the
consent of his or her personal representative.
(Source: P.A. 85-1391.)

    (225 ILCS 110/27) (from Ch. 111, par. 7927)
    Sec. 27.  Reports of  Violations.   Any  person  licensed
under  this  Act,  or  any  other  person,  may report to the
Department any information such person may have which appears
to show that a speech-language  pathologist,  speech-language
pathology assistant, or audiologist is or may be in violation
of any of the provisions of this Act.
(Source: P.A. 85-1391.)

    (225 ILCS 110/28) (from Ch. 111, par. 7928)
    Sec.  28.  Injunction.  The  practice  of speech-language
pathology or audiology by any person not holding a valid  and
current  license  under  this  Act or a person performing the
functions and duties of a speech-language pathology assistant
without a valid  and  current  license  under  this  Act,  is
declared  to be inimical to the public welfare, to constitute
a public nuisance, and  to  cause  irreparable  harm  to  the
public  welfare.    The  Director,  the Attorney General, the
State's attorney of any county in the State or any person may
maintain an action in the name of the People of the State  of
Illinois,  and  may  apply  for  an injunction in any circuit
court to  enjoin  any  such  person  from  engaging  in  such
practice.   Upon  the  filing  of a verified petition in such
court, the court  or  any  judge  thereof,  if  satisfied  by
affidavit, or otherwise, that such person has been engaged in
such  practice without a valid and current license, may issue
a temporary injunction without notice or bond, enjoining  the
defendant from any such further practice. Only the showing of
nonlicensure,  by  affidavit  or  otherwise,  is necessary in
order for a temporary injunction to  issue.  A  copy  of  the
verified complaint shall be served upon the defendant and the
proceedings  shall  thereafter be conducted as in other civil
cases  except  as  modified  by  this  Section.  If   it   is
established that the defendant has been, or is engaged in any
such  unlawful practice, the court, or any judge thereof, may
enter  an  order  or  judgment  perpetually   enjoining   the
defendant  from  further  such  practice.  In all proceedings
hereunder, the court, in its discretion,  may  apportion  the
costs  among  the  parties  interested in the suit, including
cost of filing the complaint,  service  of  process,  witness
fees  and  expenses,  court  reporter  charges and reasonable
attorneys' fees. In  case  of  violation  of  any  injunction
issued under the provisions of this Section, the court or any
judge  thereof  may summarily try and punish the offender for
contempt of court. Such injunction proceedings  shall  be  in
addition  to,  and  not  in  lieu of, all penalties and other
remedies provided in this Act.
(Source: P.A. 90-69, eff. 7-8-97.)
    (225 ILCS 110/29) (from Ch. 111, par. 7929)
    Sec. 29.  Penalty  of  unlawful  practice  -  second  and
subsequent  offenses.  Any  person who practices or offers to
practice speech-language pathology or audiology  or  performs
the  functions  and  duties  of  a  speech-language pathology
assistant in this  State  without  being  licensed  for  that
purpose,  or  whose license has been suspended or revoked, or
who violates any of the provisions of this Act, for which  no
specific  penalty  has  been  provided herein, is guilty of a
Class A misdemeanor.
    Any person who has been previously convicted under any of
the provisions of this Act and who subsequently violates  any
of  the provisions of this Act is guilty of a Class 4 felony.
In addition, whenever any person is punished as a  subsequent
offender  under  this  Section, the Director shall proceed to
obtain a  permanent  injunction  against  such  person  under
Section 29 of this Act.
(Source: P.A. 85-1391.)

    (225 ILCS 110/29.5)
    Sec. 29.5. Unlicensed practice; civil penalty.
    (a)  Any   person  who  practices,  offers  to  practice,
attempts to  practice,  or  holds  oneself  out  to  practice
speech-language   pathology  or  audiology  or  performs  the
functions and duties of a speech-language pathology assistant
without being licensed under this Act shall, in  addition  to
any other penalty provided by law, pay a civil penalty to the
Department in an amount not to exceed $5,000 for each offense
as  determined  by the Department. The civil penalty shall be
assessed by  the  Department  after  a  hearing  is  held  in
accordance   with  the  provisions  set  forth  in  this  Act
regarding the provision of a hearing for the discipline of  a
licensee.
    (b)  The  Department  has  the  authority  and  power  to
investigate any and all unlicensed activity.
    (c)  The civil penalty shall be paid within 60 days after
the  effective  date of the order imposing the civil penalty.
The order shall constitute a judgment and may  be  filed  and
execution had thereon in the same manner as any judgment from
any court of record.
(Source: P.A. 90-69, eff. 7-8-97.)

    (225 ILCS 110/31a)
    Sec.   31a.  Advertising   services.   A  speech-language
pathologist or audiologist licensee shall  include  in  every
advertisement  for  services  regulated under this Act his or
her title as it  appears  on  the  license  or  the  initials
authorized under this Act.
(Source: P.A. 91-310, eff. 1-1-00.)
    Passed in the General Assembly May 22, 2001.
    Governor Amendatory Veto August 17, 2001.
    General Assembly Accepts Amendatory Veto November 28, 2001.
    Returned to Governor for Certification December 12, 2001.
    Governor Certifies Changes January 01, 2002.

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