97TH GENERAL ASSEMBLY
State of Illinois
2011 and 2012
HB3860

 

Introduced 10/25/2011, by Rep. John E. Bradley

 

SYNOPSIS AS INTRODUCED:
 
See Index

    Creates the Tax-Exempt Hospital Responsibility Act. Sets forth the terms under which a hospital must provide full charity care and discounted care to Illinois residents in order to maintain the hospital's tax-exempt status under various tax Acts; amends each of those tax Acts to provide that a hospital may qualify for an exemption from the tax imposed by the Act only if the hospital is in compliance with the Tax-Exempt Hospital Responsibility Act. Sets forth uniform procedures for a hospital's provision of charity care. Sets forth patient rights and responsibilities. Requires a tax-exempt hospital to furnish aggregate annual charity care in an amount equal to at least 8% of the hospital's total operating costs. Requires hospitals to submit an annual report to the Attorney General. Makes the Attorney General responsible for implementing and enforcing the Tax-Exempt Hospital Responsibility Act. Preempts home rule. Creates the Tax-Exempt Hospital Responsibility Act Enforcement Fund, to be used in connection with enforcement of the Act. Amends the Freedom of Information Act to make records of charity care applications and determinations under the Tax-Exempt Hospital Responsibility Act exempt from inspection and copying. Amends the Illinois Finance Authority Act. Provides that none of the specified powers of the Illinois Finance Authority shall be exercised for the benefit of any hospital as defined in the Tax-Exempt Hospital Responsibility Act if that hospital is not in compliance with that Act. Amends the Community Benefits Act. Makes changes including (i) adding references to the Tax-Exempt Hospital Responsibility Act, (ii) providing for a maximum late filing fee of $10,000 (instead of $100), and (iii) giving the Attorney General rulemaking authority. Effective immediately.


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FISCAL NOTE ACT MAY APPLY
HOME RULE NOTE ACT MAY APPLY
STATE MANDATES ACT MAY REQUIRE REIMBURSEMENT

 

 

A BILL FOR

 

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1    AN ACT concerning regulation.
 
2    Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
3represented in the General Assembly:
 
4    Section 1. Short title. This Act may be cited as the
5Tax-Exempt Hospital Responsibility Act.
 
6    Section 5. Purpose; findings.
7    (a) The purpose of this Act is to advance public health and
8welfare through the establishment, implementation, and
9enforcement of clear standards for delivery by Illinois
10tax-exempt hospitals of charity health care services to
11financially qualified persons.
12    (b) The Illinois General Assembly finds that:
13        (1) Numerous Illinois not-for-profit hospital
14    organizations have been classified under Illinois law as
15    charitable organizations and, as such, have benefited from
16    various tax exemptions granted by the General Assembly.
17        (2) Article IX, Section 6 of the Illinois Constitution
18    of 1970 states: "The General Assembly by law may exempt
19    from taxation only . . . property used exclusively for . .
20    . charitable purposes." The Illinois Supreme Court
21    consistently has held that, in order to satisfy the
22    constitutional requirement of Article IX, Section 6, a
23    hospital claiming the benefit of a charitable exemption for

 

 

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1    its property must unequivocally demonstrate, among other
2    things, that charity is dispensed to all who need and apply
3    for it and that no obstacles of any character are placed in
4    the way of those who need and would avail themselves of
5    such benefits.
6        (3) In conferring a property tax exemption under
7    Article IX, Section 6, the General Assembly may require
8    hospitals claiming the benefit of this exemption to
9    publicize the availability of charity care, to adhere to
10    various procedures in the delivery of charity care, to keep
11    records regarding the level of charity care provided, and
12    to report this information to the State.
13        (4) Increasingly, financially needy patients have
14    experienced significant obstacles to accessing charity
15    care at many Illinois hospitals benefiting from State tax
16    exemption.
17        (5) Many Illinois hospitals benefiting from State tax
18    exemption apply only a small portion of their overall costs
19    to the delivery of charity care services to financially
20    qualified patients.
21        (6) Patients, hospitals, and government bodies alike
22    will benefit from clearly-articulated standards regarding
23    the charity care obligations for tax-exempt Illinois
24    hospitals.
25        (7) The Attorney General, as the chief legal officer
26    for the State, should have primary authority and

 

 

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1    responsibility for implementation and enforcement of this
2    Act.
 
3    Section 10. Definitions. In this Act, unless the context
4requires otherwise:
5    "Bad debt" means an account receivable based on services
6furnished to any patient which: (i) is regarded as
7uncollectible following reasonable collection action; (ii) is
8charged as a credit loss; (iii) is not the obligation of any
9federal or State government unit; and (iv) is not charity care.
10    "Charge" means the price set by a hospital for a specific
11service or supply provided by the hospital.
12    "Charity care" means medically necessary services provided
13without charge or at a reduced charge to patients who meet
14eligibility criteria no more restrictive than those set forth
15in Sections 15 and 20 of this Act. Charity care must not be
16recorded by a hospital or community medical center as revenue,
17as an account receivable, or as bad debt, and the care must be
18rendered with no expectation of payment. If the requirements
19and procedures set forth in Sections 15 and 20 of this Act are
20followed, the care will be deemed rendered by a hospital with
21no expectation of payment. Categories of charity care include
22full charity care, discounted care, and crime victim discounted
23care.
24    "Collection action" means any activity by which a hospital,
25a designated agent or assignee of the hospital, or a purchaser

 

 

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1of the patient account receivable requests payment for services
2from a patient or a patient's guarantor. Collection actions
3include, without limitation, pre-admission or pre-treatment
4deposits, billing statements, letters, electronic mail,
5telephone and personal contacts related to hospital bills,
6court summonses and complaints, and any other activity related
7to collecting a hospital bill.
8    "Community medical clinic" means a "community provider" as
9defined in Section 5 of the Community Health Center Expansion
10Act or a "free medical clinic" as defined in Section 30 of the
11Good Samaritan Act.
12    "Cost" means the actual expense a hospital incurs to
13provide each service or supply.
14    "Cost-to-charge ratio" means the ratio of a hospital's
15total cost of providing patient care to its total charges for
16patient care, as reported in its most recently settled Medicare
17Cost Report.
18    "Discounted care" means medically necessary services
19provided as charity care to a patient who meets the eligibility
20criteria set forth in subdivision (a)(2)(A) of Section 15 of
21this Act at discounted rates as set forth in subdivision
22(a)(2)(B) of Section 15 of this Act.
23    "Effective date of eligibility" means the later of the date
24on which medically necessary services are rendered or the date
25of discharge from the hospital.
26    "Family" means the patient, the patient's spouse, and any

 

 

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1dependents living in the patient's household.
2    "Family income" means the sum of a family's annual earnings
3and cash benefits from all sources before taxes, less payments
4made for alimony and child support or received as retirement
5benefits.
6    "Federal poverty income guidelines" means the poverty
7guidelines updated periodically in the Federal Register by the
8United States Department of Health and Human Services under
9authority of 42 U.S.C. 9902(2).
10    "Full charity care" means medically necessary services
11provided as charity care at no charge to a patient in
12accordance with subsection (a) of Section 15 of this Act.
13    "Hospital" means any institution required to be licensed by
14the State of Illinois pursuant to the Hospital Licensing Act or
15the University of Illinois Hospital Act, and any hospital
16maintained by the State or any department or agency thereof.
17    "Medically necessary service" means a service or supply
18that is reasonably expected to prevent, diagnose, prevent the
19worsening of, alleviate, correct, or cure a condition that
20endangers life, causes suffering or pain, causes physical
21deformity or malfunction, threatens to cause or aggravate a
22handicap, or results in illness or infirmity. "Medically
23necessary service" includes any inpatient or outpatient
24hospital service mandated under Title XIX of the federal Social
25Security Act and emergency care. "Medically necessary service"
26does not include any of the following:

 

 

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1        (1) Non-medical services such as social and vocational
2    services.
3        (2) Elective cosmetic surgery, but not plastic surgery
4    designed to correct disfigurement caused by injury,
5    illness, or congenital defect or deformity.
6    "Resident" means a person living in the State of Illinois,
7regardless of United States citizenship status, with the
8intention of remaining in Illinois indefinitely. A resident is
9not required to maintain a fixed address. Relocation to
10Illinois for the sole purpose of receiving health care benefits
11does not satisfy the residency requirement.
12    "Tax-exempt hospital" means a hospital that has been
13organized as a not-for-profit corporation or charitable trust
14under Illinois law or the laws of any other state or country
15and that has been deemed a charitable organization exempt under
16Illinois law from State property tax, retailers' occupation
17tax, income tax, use tax, service use tax, or service
18occupation tax and is eligible to issue tax exempt bonds under
19Illinois law or the laws of any other state or country.
20    "Uninsured" or "uninsured patient" means a patient who is
21not covered under a policy of health insurance and is not a
22beneficiary under a public or private health insurance, health
23benefit, or other health coverage program.
 
24    Section 15. Charity care service provision obligations for
25tax-exempt hospitals. Unless exempted under Section 35 of this

 

 

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1Act, each tax-exempt hospital must provide charity care to
2eligible Illinois residents as follows:
3    (a) Types of charity care.
4        (1) Full charity care.
5            (A) Eligibility. Tax-exempt hospitals must provide
6        full charity care to any uninsured Illinois residents
7        who apply for charity care and have family income equal
8        to or less than 150% of the federal poverty income
9        guidelines.
10            (B) Billing. Tax-exempt hospitals must not issue
11        or cause to be issued any bill or invoice statement to
12        any patient who qualifies for full charity care
13        pursuant to subdivision (a)(1)(A) of this Section 15.
14        (2) Discounted Care.
15            (A) Eligibility. Tax-exempt hospitals must provide
16        discounted care to any uninsured Illinois resident who
17        applies for charity care and has family income of more
18        than 150% and not more than 250% of the federal poverty
19        income guidelines. To the extent that the cost of
20        medically necessary services exceeds $10,000 in any
21        12-month period, the patient is eligible for full
22        charity care with respect to the amount of such cost
23        that exceeds $10,000 during that 12-month period.
24            (B) Billing. Tax-exempt hospitals must limit any
25        bill or invoice statement sent to any patient who
26        qualifies for discounted care pursuant to subdivision

 

 

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1        (a)(2)(A) of this Section 15 as follows:
2                (i) For a patient with a family income of more
3            than 150% and not more than 175% of the federal
4            poverty income guidelines, the amount billed to
5            the patient for discounted care must not exceed 20%
6            of the hospital's cost of providing medically
7            necessary services to such patient.
8                (ii) For a patient with a family income of more
9            than 175% and not more than 200% of the federal
10            poverty income guidelines, the amount billed to
11            the patient for discounted care must not exceed 25%
12            of the hospital's cost of providing medically
13            necessary services to such patient.
14                (iii) For a patient with a family income of
15            more than 200% and not more than 225% of the
16            federal poverty income guidelines, the amount
17            billed to the patient for discounted care must not
18            exceed 30% of the hospital's cost of providing
19            medically necessary services to such patient.
20                (iv) For a patient with a family income of more
21            than 225% and not more than 250% of the federal
22            property income guidelines, the amount billed to
23            the patient for discounted care must not exceed 35%
24            of the hospital's cost of providing medically
25            necessary services to such patient.
26            (C) Payment plan. If a patient has indicated an

 

 

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1        inability to pay the full amount of a bill or invoice
2        for discounted care in one payment, the tax-exempt
3        hospital must offer the patient a reasonable payment
4        plan without interest. The hospital may require the
5        patient to provide reasonable verification of his or
6        her inability to pay the full amount of the bill or
7        invoice in one payment.
8    (b) Uniform procedures for charity care service provision.
9        (1) Initial screening, identification of uninsured
10    residents, and billing procedure. Tax-exempt hospitals
11    must screen each patient, on or prior to the effective date
12    of eligibility, to determine whether he or she is
13    uninsured. If a patient is determined to be uninsured, the
14    patient or the patient's representative shall be provided
15    an application for charity care no later than the effective
16    date of eligibility. Tax-exempt hospitals must refrain
17    from issuing any bill or invoice statement to a patient who
18    is an uninsured Illinois resident until at least 60 days
19    after the effective date of eligibility and, if the patient
20    files a charity care application before the end of that 60
21    days, must further refrain from issuing any bill or invoice
22    until the hospital determines the patient's eligibility
23    for charity care pursuant to this Act.
24        (2) Application for charity care.
25            (A) Tax-exempt hospitals must use an application
26        form developed by the Attorney General to determine

 

 

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1        eligibility for charity care. The Attorney General
2        shall ensure that the application form is easy to
3        understand and that it requests only information that
4        is reasonably necessary to determine eligibility. The
5        Attorney General shall specify the documentation and
6        information an applicant must submit in order to verify
7        eligibility for charity care.
8            (B) Each hospital must translate and distribute
9        the charity care application form in accordance with
10        the Language Assistance Services Act and, in any event,
11        must translate the application form into the
12        non-English languages most frequently used in the
13        service area of the hospital and make those
14        translations of the form available, in accordance with
15        standards adopted by rule of the Attorney General.
16        (3) Timing of charity care application. A patient, or
17    the patient's representative, may submit a charity care
18    application to a tax-exempt hospital within 60 days after
19    the effective date of eligibility.
20        (4) Determination of charity care eligibility. Each
21    tax-exempt hospital must deliver to the patient written
22    notice of a charity care eligibility determination within
23    14 days after receipt of a completed charity care
24    application. A tax-exempt hospital must not deny or delay
25    patient care while a patient's application for charity care
26    is pending.

 

 

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1        (5) Notification. Tax-exempt hospitals must provide
2    notification of the availability of charity care as
3    follows:
4            (A) Each hospital must post signs in the inpatient,
5        outpatient, emergency, admissions, and registration
6        areas of the facility, and in the business office areas
7        that are customarily used by patients, that
8        conspicuously inform patients of the availability of
9        charity care and the location within the hospital at
10        which to apply for charity care. Signs must be in
11        English and also in the languages other than English
12        that are most frequently spoken in a hospital's service
13        area, in accordance with standards adopted by rule of
14        the Attorney General.
15            (B) Each hospital must post a notice in a prominent
16        place on its website that charity care is available at
17        the facility. The notice must include a brief
18        description of the charity care application process
19        and a copy of the application form. The notice must be
20        in the same languages as the signs that are required
21        pursuant to subdivision (b)(5)(A) of this Section 15.
22            (C) Each hospital must provide individual notice,
23        in the appropriate language, of the availability of
24        charity care to any patient who is identified as
25        uninsured.
26            (D) Each hospital must provide notice, or ensure

 

 

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1        that notice is provided, of the availability of charity
2        care in any patient bill invoice statement or
3        collection action issued by the hospital or by a
4        collection agent, assignee, or account purchaser that
5        the hospital retains or with which the hospital has
6        contracted.
7            (E) Each hospital must, on a quarterly basis,
8        publish notice in a newspaper of general circulation in
9        the hospital's service area, indicating that charity
10        care is available at the facility. The notice must
11        include a brief description of the charity care
12        application process. Each hospital must provide a
13        similar notice to all community medical centers
14        located in its service area. These notices must be
15        provided in the same languages as the signs that are
16        required pursuant to subdivision (b)(5)(A) of this
17        Section 15.
18            (F) All of the notifications required by this
19        subdivision (b)(5) must include contact information
20        for the filing with the Attorney General's Office of
21        complaints regarding possible violations of this Act.
22            (G) All of the notifications required by this
23        subdivision (b)(5) must comply with requirements as to
24        content and form established by the Attorney General.
25    (c) Patient rights and responsibilities.
26        (1) Patient rights. Tax-exempt hospitals must

 

 

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1    distribute to every patient, on or prior to the effective
2    date of eligibility, a written statement regarding charity
3    care in a form and with content developed by the Attorney
4    General's Office. This statement must include, without
5    limitation, each patient's right to:
6            (A) apply for charity care within 60 days after the
7        effective date of eligibility;
8            (B) receive a determination, in writing, on his or
9        her charity care application within 14 days after
10        submitting a completed application;
11            (C) enter into a payment plan if determined
12        eligible for discounted care; and
13            (D) register a complaint with the Attorney General
14        pursuant to Section 40 of this Act.
15        (2) Patient responsibilities.
16            (A) Patients seeking or receiving charity care
17        from any tax-exempt hospital must:
18                (i) Cooperate with the hospital to provide the
19            information and documentation necessary to apply
20            for other public or private existing programs or
21            resources that may be available to pay for health
22            care including, without limitation, Medicare,
23            Medicaid, or the State Children's Health Insurance
24            Program.
25                (ii) Promptly provide the hospital with
26            accurate and complete documentation and

 

 

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1            information as required under this Act.
2                (iii) Promptly notify the hospital of any
3            significant change in financial status that is
4            likely to adversely affect eligibility for charity
5            care.
6            (B) A patient who qualifies for discounted care
7        must cooperate with the hospital to establish a
8        reasonable payment plan that takes into account
9        available income and assets, the amount of the
10        discounted bill or bills, and any prior payments and
11        must make a good faith effort to comply with this
12        payment plan. The patient is responsible for promptly
13        communicating to the hospital any change in financial
14        situation that may impact his or her ability to pay the
15        discounted hospital bills or to honor the provisions of
16        the payment plan.
 
17    Section 20. Crime victim discounted care. If a tax-exempt
18hospital accepts payment for medically necessary services from
19an award to any patient pursuant to the Crime Victims
20Compensation Act, such payment shall be deemed to be in full
21and final satisfaction of any outstanding charges owed by the
22patient for those services, and the tax-exempt hospital shall
23thereafter be prohibited from sending any bill or invoice
24statement for those services.
 

 

 

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1    Section 25. Aggregate annual charity care obligations for
2tax-exempt hospitals.
3    (a) Unless exempted under Section 35, each tax-exempt
4hospital shall furnish aggregate annual charity care in an
5amount equal to at least 8% of the hospital's total operating
6costs as reported each year in the most recently settled
7Medicare Cost Report.
8    (b) A tax-exempt hospital may for any fiscal year
9demonstrate compliance with the requirement of subsection (a)
10of this Section 25 by documenting the costs of one or more of
11the following:
12        (1) Provision of charity care to eligible patients of
13    the hospital.
14        (2) Provision of charity care to eligible patients at
15    one or more community medical clinics operated by the
16    hospital.
17        (3) Provision by the hospital of charity care to
18    eligible patients, in a setting or settings other than the
19    hospital or a community medical clinic operated by the
20    hospital, provided each such setting is approved in advance
21    by the Attorney General. The Attorney General shall adopt
22    rules delineating this approval process.
23        (4) If a tax-exempt hospital accepts payment for
24    medically necessary services from an award to any patient
25    pursuant to the Crime Victims Compensation Act, that
26    portion of the tax-exempt hospital's costs for those

 

 

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1    medically necessary services which is not covered by the
2    award.
3        (5) If a tax-exempt hospital receives payments for
4    medically necessary services from the State of Illinois
5    pursuant to Section 5-5 of the Illinois Public Aid Code and
6    rules issued pursuant to that Section, that portion of the
7    tax-exempt hospital's costs for those medically necessary
8    services which is not covered by the payments.
 
9    Section 30. Charity care reporting.
10    (a) Not later than the last day of the sixth month after
11the close of its fiscal year, each tax-exempt hospital must
12submit an annual charity care report to the Attorney General,
13with content and in a format specified by rule of the Attorney
14General.
15    (b) The annual charity care report submitted by each
16tax-exempt hospital must include, at a minimum, the following
17information for the applicable fiscal year:
18        (1) The total number of charity care applications
19    submitted to the hospital, separately itemizing
20    applications for full charity care, discounted care, and
21    crime victim discounted care.
22        (2) The total number of charity care applications
23    approved by the hospital, separately itemizing approved
24    applications for full charity care, discounted care, and
25    crime victim discounted care.

 

 

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1        (3) The total number of charity care applications
2    denied by the hospital and the reasons for such denials,
3    separately itemizing denied applications for full charity
4    care, discounted care, and crime victim discounted care.
5        (4) The total number of patients who received charity
6    care at the hospital, separately itemizing recipients of
7    full charity care, discounted care, and crime victim
8    discounted care, and categorizing services provided and
9    pertinent demographic attributes of recipients.
10        (5) A detailed description of the hospital's charity
11    care application process, including the identity of the
12    person or persons affiliated with the hospital responsible
13    for making determinations on charity care applications.
14        (6) The hospital's most recent complete set of audited
15    financial statements and its most recently filed and most
16    recently settled Medicare Cost Report.
17        (7) A statement that details the following:
18            (A) the aggregate dollar amount of charity care
19        furnished by the hospital, to be reported as the actual
20        cost of services provided based on the total
21        cost-to-charge ratio derived from the hospital's most
22        recently settled Medicare Cost Report;
23            (B) the amount of bad debt incurred by the hospital
24        in the reporting year, calculated at cost, which
25        identifies how much of the bad debt is attributable to
26        individual patients and how much is attributable to

 

 

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1        private third party payers;
2            (C) the hospital's net patient service revenue and
3        its investment income; and
4            (D) the total amount of funds available from any
5        source apart from those derived from patient service
6        revenue which are available for use by the hospital to
7        subsidize the cost of charity care during the
8        applicable fiscal year, and the amount of those funds
9        that were actually used during the applicable fiscal
10        year to subsidize the cost of charity care.
11    (c) Records of charity care applications and
12determinations shall be retained by tax-exempt hospitals for a
13period of 7 years. All records concerning charity care
14applications and determinations shall be confidential, except
15that the Attorney General shall, upon written request, be
16provided copies of such records by hospitals within 14 days of
17receipt of a written request for such records and may provide
18copies of the records to the Department of Revenue. Records of
19charity care applications and determinations shall be exempt
20from inspection and copying under the Freedom of Information
21Act.
22    (d) Hospitals must report any other information that the
23Attorney General deems necessary to ensure compliance with the
24provisions of this Act.
25    (e) The Attorney General shall issue a report to the public
26on an annual basis addressing the charity care information

 

 

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1reported by tax-exempt hospitals pursuant to this Section 30,
2with a separate analysis for each hospital.
 
3    Section 35. Exemption for critical access hospitals. Each
4hospital designated as a critical access hospital in accordance
5with federal statutory and regulatory Medicare requirements is
6exempt from the charity care requirements set forth in Sections
715, 20, 25, and 30 of this Act.
 
8    Section 40. Implementation and enforcement.
9    (a) Administration. The Attorney General shall be
10responsible for administering and ensuring compliance with
11this Act, including adoption or development of:
12        (1) any rules necessary for the implementation and
13    enforcement of this Act; and
14        (2) all forms, notifications, and applications
15    required to be provided by tax-exempt hospitals under this
16    Act.
17    The Illinois Administrative Procedure Act shall apply to
18all rules adopted by the Attorney General under this Act.
19    (b) Complaints. The Attorney General shall develop and
20implement a process for receiving and handling complaints from
21individuals regarding possible violations of this Act.
22    (c) Investigation. The Attorney General may conduct any
23investigation deemed necessary regarding possible violations
24of this Act, including, without limitation, the issuance of

 

 

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1subpoenas to:
2        (1) require a tax-exempt hospital to file a statement
3    or report, or answer interrogatories, in writing as to all
4    information relevant to the alleged violations;
5        (2) examine under oath any person in connection with
6    the alleged violations; and
7        (3) examine any record, book, document, account, or
8    paper necessary to investigate such alleged violations.
9    (d) Injunctive relief; monetary penalties.
10        (1) If the Attorney General determines that there
11    exists a reasonable basis to believe that a tax-exempt
12    hospital has violated this Act, the Attorney General may
13    bring an action in the name of the People of the State
14    against such tax-exempt hospital to obtain temporary,
15    preliminary, or permanent injunctive relief for any act,
16    omission, policy, or practice by the tax-exempt hospital
17    that violates this Act. The Attorney General may seek the
18    removal and replacement of any director, officer, agent, or
19    employee of a tax-exempt hospital who has approved,
20    authorized, or acquiesced in, directly or indirectly, a
21    violation of this Act. The Attorney General may also seek
22    the assessment of one or more of the civil monetary
23    penalties provided in subdivision (d)(2) of this Section
24    40.
25            (2)(A) A tax-exempt hospital that fails to post any
26        notice or provide any notification required under this

 

 

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1        Act is subject to a civil penalty of $1,000 per day for
2        each day that the required notice is not posted or
3        notification is not provided.
4            (B) A tax-exempt hospital that fails to provide
5        information to the public as required under this Act is
6        subject to a civil penalty of $1,000 per violation.
7            (C) A tax-exempt hospital that violates any
8        provision of this Act other than the provisions of
9        Section 25 is subject to a civil penalty of $10,000 per
10        violation and also may be ordered by a circuit court to
11        do either of the following:
12                (i) to the extent that a patient eligible for
13            charity care under this Act paid any money toward
14            the satisfaction of the hospital's charges
15            contrary to the provisions of this Act, reimburse
16            that patient for the money paid by the patient,
17            with interest; or
18                (ii) credit the account of a patient eligible
19            for charity care under this Act for any hospital
20            charges that were improperly charged to the
21            patient's account contrary to the provisions of
22            this Act.
23            (D) A tax-exempt hospital that does not meet its
24        aggregate annual charity care obligation under Section
25        25 is subject to a civil penalty equal to the amount of
26        its unpaid obligation, plus interest on that amount

 

 

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1        computed at the rate provided under Section 2-1303 of
2        the Code of Civil Procedure.
3        (3) In the event a circuit court grants relief against
4    a tax-exempt hospital for a violation of this Act, the
5    Attorney General shall refer the tax-exempt hospital to the
6    Illinois Department of Revenue for possible revocation of
7    the hospital's tax-exempt status under the Illinois Income
8    Tax Act, Use Tax Act, Service Use Tax Act, Service
9    Occupation Tax Act, Retailers' Occupation Tax Act, or
10    Property Tax Code and to the Illinois Finance Authority for
11    possible action regarding the hospital's eligibility to
12    benefit form any provisions of the Illinois Finance
13    Authority Act.
 
14    Section 45. Limitations. Nothing in this Act shall be used
15by any private or public third-party payor as a basis for
16reducing the third-party payor's rates or policies. Discounts
17authorized under this Act shall not be used by any private or
18public third-party payer to determine a hospital's usual and
19customary charges for any health care service. Nothing in this
20Act shall be construed as imposing an obligation on a hospital
21to provide, or refrain from providing, any particular service
22or treatment to an uninsured patient. Nothing in this Act shall
23prohibit hospitals from providing charity care to patients who
24do not meet the qualification criteria under this Act. Nothing
25in this Act shall be construed as imposing an obligation on a

 

 

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1hospital to file a lawsuit to collect payment on a patient's
2bill. This Act establishes new and additional legal obligations
3for all tax-exempt hospitals in the State of Illinois. Nothing
4in this Act shall be construed as relieving any hospital of any
5other legal obligation under the Illinois Constitution, or
6under any other statute or the common law, including, without
7limitation, obligations of tax-exempt hospitals to furnish
8charity care or community benefits, or as reducing any such
9obligation on the part of any hospital. No provision of this
10Act shall derogate from the common law or statutory authority
11of the Attorney General, nor shall any provision be construed
12as a limitation on the common law or statutory authority of the
13Attorney General to investigate hospitals or initiate
14enforcement actions against them, including, without
15limitation, the authority to investigate at any time charitable
16trusts for the purpose of determining and ascertaining whether
17they are being administered in accordance with Illinois law and
18with the terms and purposes thereof. No provision of this Act
19shall be construed as a limitation on the application of the
20doctrine of cy pres or any other legal doctrine applicable to
21charitable assets or charitable trusts.
 
22    Section 50. Home rule. A home rule unit may not regulate
23hospitals in a manner inconsistent with the provisions of this
24Act. This Section is a limitation under subsection (i) of
25Section 6 of Article VII of the Illinois Constitution on the

 

 

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1concurrent exercise by home rule units of powers and functions
2exercised by the State.
 
3    Section 55. Tax-Exempt Hospital Responsibility Act
4Enforcement Fund. There is hereby created the Tax-Exempt
5Hospital Responsibility Act Enforcement Fund as a special fund
6in the State treasury. All proceeds of an action or settlement
7of a claim or action brought under this Act, but excluding any
8moneys ordered paid to a patient or credited to a patient's
9account under subdivision (d)(2)(C)(i) or (d)(2)(C)(ii) of
10Section 40, shall be deposited in the Fund. Monies in the Fund
11shall be allocated, subject to appropriation, to the Attorney
12General's Office for enforcement of this Act.
 
13    Section 900. The Freedom of Information Act is amended by
14changing Section 7 as follows:
 
15    (5 ILCS 140/7)  (from Ch. 116, par. 207)
16    Sec. 7. Exemptions.
17    (1) When a request is made to inspect or copy a public
18record that contains information that is exempt from disclosure
19under this Section, but also contains information that is not
20exempt from disclosure, the public body may elect to redact the
21information that is exempt. The public body shall make the
22remaining information available for inspection and copying.
23Subject to this requirement, the following shall be exempt from

 

 

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1inspection and copying:
2        (a) Information specifically prohibited from
3    disclosure by federal or State law or rules and regulations
4    implementing federal or State law.
5        (b) Private information, unless disclosure is required
6    by another provision of this Act, a State or federal law or
7    a court order.
8        (b-5) Files, documents, and other data or databases
9    maintained by one or more law enforcement agencies and
10    specifically designed to provide information to one or more
11    law enforcement agencies regarding the physical or mental
12    status of one or more individual subjects.
13        (c) Personal information contained within public
14    records, the disclosure of which would constitute a clearly
15    unwarranted invasion of personal privacy, unless the
16    disclosure is consented to in writing by the individual
17    subjects of the information. "Unwarranted invasion of
18    personal privacy" means the disclosure of information that
19    is highly personal or objectionable to a reasonable person
20    and in which the subject's right to privacy outweighs any
21    legitimate public interest in obtaining the information.
22    The disclosure of information that bears on the public
23    duties of public employees and officials shall not be
24    considered an invasion of personal privacy.
25        (d) Records in the possession of any public body
26    created in the course of administrative enforcement

 

 

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1    proceedings, and any law enforcement or correctional
2    agency for law enforcement purposes, but only to the extent
3    that disclosure would:
4            (i) interfere with pending or actually and
5        reasonably contemplated law enforcement proceedings
6        conducted by any law enforcement or correctional
7        agency that is the recipient of the request;
8            (ii) interfere with active administrative
9        enforcement proceedings conducted by the public body
10        that is the recipient of the request;
11            (iii) create a substantial likelihood that a
12        person will be deprived of a fair trial or an impartial
13        hearing;
14            (iv) unavoidably disclose the identity of a
15        confidential source, confidential information
16        furnished only by the confidential source, or persons
17        who file complaints with or provide information to
18        administrative, investigative, law enforcement, or
19        penal agencies; except that the identities of
20        witnesses to traffic accidents, traffic accident
21        reports, and rescue reports shall be provided by
22        agencies of local government, except when disclosure
23        would interfere with an active criminal investigation
24        conducted by the agency that is the recipient of the
25        request;
26            (v) disclose unique or specialized investigative

 

 

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1        techniques other than those generally used and known or
2        disclose internal documents of correctional agencies
3        related to detection, observation or investigation of
4        incidents of crime or misconduct, and disclosure would
5        result in demonstrable harm to the agency or public
6        body that is the recipient of the request;
7            (vi) endanger the life or physical safety of law
8        enforcement personnel or any other person; or
9            (vii) obstruct an ongoing criminal investigation
10        by the agency that is the recipient of the request.
11        (e) Records that relate to or affect the security of
12    correctional institutions and detention facilities.
13        (f) Preliminary drafts, notes, recommendations,
14    memoranda and other records in which opinions are
15    expressed, or policies or actions are formulated, except
16    that a specific record or relevant portion of a record
17    shall not be exempt when the record is publicly cited and
18    identified by the head of the public body. The exemption
19    provided in this paragraph (f) extends to all those records
20    of officers and agencies of the General Assembly that
21    pertain to the preparation of legislative documents.
22        (g) Trade secrets and commercial or financial
23    information obtained from a person or business where the
24    trade secrets or commercial or financial information are
25    furnished under a claim that they are proprietary,
26    privileged or confidential, and that disclosure of the

 

 

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1    trade secrets or commercial or financial information would
2    cause competitive harm to the person or business, and only
3    insofar as the claim directly applies to the records
4    requested.
5        The information included under this exemption includes
6    all trade secrets and commercial or financial information
7    obtained by a public body, including a public pension fund,
8    from a private equity fund or a privately held company
9    within the investment portfolio of a private equity fund as
10    a result of either investing or evaluating a potential
11    investment of public funds in a private equity fund. The
12    exemption contained in this item does not apply to the
13    aggregate financial performance information of a private
14    equity fund, nor to the identity of the fund's managers or
15    general partners. The exemption contained in this item does
16    not apply to the identity of a privately held company
17    within the investment portfolio of a private equity fund,
18    unless the disclosure of the identity of a privately held
19    company may cause competitive harm.
20        Nothing contained in this paragraph (g) shall be
21    construed to prevent a person or business from consenting
22    to disclosure.
23        (h) Proposals and bids for any contract, grant, or
24    agreement, including information which if it were
25    disclosed would frustrate procurement or give an advantage
26    to any person proposing to enter into a contractor

 

 

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1    agreement with the body, until an award or final selection
2    is made. Information prepared by or for the body in
3    preparation of a bid solicitation shall be exempt until an
4    award or final selection is made.
5        (i) Valuable formulae, computer geographic systems,
6    designs, drawings and research data obtained or produced by
7    any public body when disclosure could reasonably be
8    expected to produce private gain or public loss. The
9    exemption for "computer geographic systems" provided in
10    this paragraph (i) does not extend to requests made by news
11    media as defined in Section 2 of this Act when the
12    requested information is not otherwise exempt and the only
13    purpose of the request is to access and disseminate
14    information regarding the health, safety, welfare, or
15    legal rights of the general public.
16        (j) The following information pertaining to
17    educational matters:
18            (i) test questions, scoring keys and other
19        examination data used to administer an academic
20        examination;
21            (ii) information received by a primary or
22        secondary school, college, or university under its
23        procedures for the evaluation of faculty members by
24        their academic peers;
25            (iii) information concerning a school or
26        university's adjudication of student disciplinary

 

 

HB3860- 30 -LRB097 14081 HLH 58744 b

1        cases, but only to the extent that disclosure would
2        unavoidably reveal the identity of the student; and
3            (iv) course materials or research materials used
4        by faculty members.
5        (k) Architects' plans, engineers' technical
6    submissions, and other construction related technical
7    documents for projects not constructed or developed in
8    whole or in part with public funds and the same for
9    projects constructed or developed with public funds,
10    including but not limited to power generating and
11    distribution stations and other transmission and
12    distribution facilities, water treatment facilities,
13    airport facilities, sport stadiums, convention centers,
14    and all government owned, operated, or occupied buildings,
15    but only to the extent that disclosure would compromise
16    security.
17        (l) Minutes of meetings of public bodies closed to the
18    public as provided in the Open Meetings Act until the
19    public body makes the minutes available to the public under
20    Section 2.06 of the Open Meetings Act.
21        (m) Communications between a public body and an
22    attorney or auditor representing the public body that would
23    not be subject to discovery in litigation, and materials
24    prepared or compiled by or for a public body in
25    anticipation of a criminal, civil or administrative
26    proceeding upon the request of an attorney advising the

 

 

HB3860- 31 -LRB097 14081 HLH 58744 b

1    public body, and materials prepared or compiled with
2    respect to internal audits of public bodies.
3        (n) Records relating to a public body's adjudication of
4    employee grievances or disciplinary cases; however, this
5    exemption shall not extend to the final outcome of cases in
6    which discipline is imposed.
7        (o) Administrative or technical information associated
8    with automated data processing operations, including but
9    not limited to software, operating protocols, computer
10    program abstracts, file layouts, source listings, object
11    modules, load modules, user guides, documentation
12    pertaining to all logical and physical design of
13    computerized systems, employee manuals, and any other
14    information that, if disclosed, would jeopardize the
15    security of the system or its data or the security of
16    materials exempt under this Section.
17        (p) Records relating to collective negotiating matters
18    between public bodies and their employees or
19    representatives, except that any final contract or
20    agreement shall be subject to inspection and copying.
21        (q) Test questions, scoring keys, and other
22    examination data used to determine the qualifications of an
23    applicant for a license or employment.
24        (r) The records, documents, and information relating
25    to real estate purchase negotiations until those
26    negotiations have been completed or otherwise terminated.

 

 

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1    With regard to a parcel involved in a pending or actually
2    and reasonably contemplated eminent domain proceeding
3    under the Eminent Domain Act, records, documents and
4    information relating to that parcel shall be exempt except
5    as may be allowed under discovery rules adopted by the
6    Illinois Supreme Court. The records, documents and
7    information relating to a real estate sale shall be exempt
8    until a sale is consummated.
9        (s) Any and all proprietary information and records
10    related to the operation of an intergovernmental risk
11    management association or self-insurance pool or jointly
12    self-administered health and accident cooperative or pool.
13    Insurance or self insurance (including any
14    intergovernmental risk management association or self
15    insurance pool) claims, loss or risk management
16    information, records, data, advice or communications.
17        (t) Information contained in or related to
18    examination, operating, or condition reports prepared by,
19    on behalf of, or for the use of a public body responsible
20    for the regulation or supervision of financial
21    institutions or insurance companies, unless disclosure is
22    otherwise required by State law.
23        (u) Information that would disclose or might lead to
24    the disclosure of secret or confidential information,
25    codes, algorithms, programs, or private keys intended to be
26    used to create electronic or digital signatures under the

 

 

HB3860- 33 -LRB097 14081 HLH 58744 b

1    Electronic Commerce Security Act.
2        (v) Vulnerability assessments, security measures, and
3    response policies or plans that are designed to identify,
4    prevent, or respond to potential attacks upon a community's
5    population or systems, facilities, or installations, the
6    destruction or contamination of which would constitute a
7    clear and present danger to the health or safety of the
8    community, but only to the extent that disclosure could
9    reasonably be expected to jeopardize the effectiveness of
10    the measures or the safety of the personnel who implement
11    them or the public. Information exempt under this item may
12    include such things as details pertaining to the
13    mobilization or deployment of personnel or equipment, to
14    the operation of communication systems or protocols, or to
15    tactical operations.
16        (w) (Blank).
17        (x) Maps and other records regarding the location or
18    security of generation, transmission, distribution,
19    storage, gathering, treatment, or switching facilities
20    owned by a utility, by a power generator, or by the
21    Illinois Power Agency.
22        (y) Information contained in or related to proposals,
23    bids, or negotiations related to electric power
24    procurement under Section 1-75 of the Illinois Power Agency
25    Act and Section 16-111.5 of the Public Utilities Act that
26    is determined to be confidential and proprietary by the

 

 

HB3860- 34 -LRB097 14081 HLH 58744 b

1    Illinois Power Agency or by the Illinois Commerce
2    Commission.
3        (z) Information about students exempted from
4    disclosure under Sections 10-20.38 or 34-18.29 of the
5    School Code, and information about undergraduate students
6    enrolled at an institution of higher education exempted
7    from disclosure under Section 25 of the Illinois Credit
8    Card Marketing Act of 2009.
9        (aa) Information the disclosure of which is exempted
10    under the Viatical Settlements Act of 2009.
11        (bb) Records and information provided to a mortality
12    review team and records maintained by a mortality review
13    team appointed under the Department of Juvenile Justice
14    Mortality Review Team Act.
15        (cc) Information regarding interments, entombments, or
16    inurnments of human remains that are submitted to the
17    Cemetery Oversight Database under the Cemetery Care Act or
18    the Cemetery Oversight Act, whichever is applicable.
19        (dd) Correspondence and records (i) that may not be
20    disclosed under Section 11-9 of the Public Aid Code or (ii)
21    that pertain to appeals under Section 11-8 of the Public
22    Aid Code.
23        (ee) (dd) The names, addresses, or other personal
24    information of persons who are minors and are also
25    participants and registrants in programs of park
26    districts, forest preserve districts, conservation

 

 

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1    districts, recreation agencies, and special recreation
2    associations.
3        (ff) (ee) The names, addresses, or other personal
4    information of participants and registrants in programs of
5    park districts, forest preserve districts, conservation
6    districts, recreation agencies, and special recreation
7    associations where such programs are targeted primarily to
8    minors.
9        (gg) Records of charity care applications and
10    determinations under the Tax-Exempt Hospital
11    Responsibility Act.
12    (2) A public record that is not in the possession of a
13public body but is in the possession of a party with whom the
14agency has contracted to perform a governmental function on
15behalf of the public body, and that directly relates to the
16governmental function and is not otherwise exempt under this
17Act, shall be considered a public record of the public body,
18for purposes of this Act.
19    (3) This Section does not authorize withholding of
20information or limit the availability of records to the public,
21except as stated in this Section or otherwise provided in this
22Act.
23(Source: P.A. 96-261, eff. 1-1-10; 96-328, eff. 8-11-09;
2496-542, eff. 1-1-10; 96-558, eff. 1-1-10; 96-736, eff. 7-1-10;
2596-863, eff. 3-1-10; 96-1378, eff. 7-29-10; 97-333, eff.
268-12-11; 97-385, eff. 8-15-11; 97-452, eff. 8-19-11; revised

 

 

HB3860- 36 -LRB097 14081 HLH 58744 b

19-2-11.)
 
2    Section 902. The Illinois Finance Authority Act is amended
3by changing Section 801-40 as follows:
 
4    (20 ILCS 3501/801-40)
5    Sec. 801-40. In addition to the powers otherwise authorized
6by law and in addition to the foregoing general corporate
7powers, the Authority shall also have the following additional
8specific powers to be exercised in furtherance of the purposes
9of this Act.
10    (a) The Authority shall have power (i) to accept grants,
11loans or appropriations from the federal government or the
12State, or any agency or instrumentality thereof, to be used for
13the operating expenses of the Authority, or for any purposes of
14the Authority, including the making of direct loans of such
15funds with respect to projects, and (ii) to enter into any
16agreement with the federal government or the State, or any
17agency or instrumentality thereof, in relationship to such
18grants, loans or appropriations.
19    (b) The Authority shall have power to procure and enter
20into contracts for any type of insurance and indemnity
21agreements covering loss or damage to property from any cause,
22including loss of use and occupancy, or covering any other
23insurable risk.
24    (c) The Authority shall have the continuing power to issue

 

 

HB3860- 37 -LRB097 14081 HLH 58744 b

1bonds for its corporate purposes. Bonds may be issued by the
2Authority in one or more series and may provide for the payment
3of any interest deemed necessary on such bonds, of the costs of
4issuance of such bonds, of any premium on any insurance, or of
5the cost of any guarantees, letters of credit or other similar
6documents, may provide for the funding of the reserves deemed
7necessary in connection with such bonds, and may provide for
8the refunding or advance refunding of any bonds or for accounts
9deemed necessary in connection with any purpose of the
10Authority. The bonds may bear interest payable at any time or
11times and at any rate or rates, notwithstanding any other
12provision of law to the contrary, and such rate or rates may be
13established by an index or formula which may be implemented or
14established by persons appointed or retained therefor by the
15Authority, or may bear no interest or may bear interest payable
16at maturity or upon redemption prior to maturity, may bear such
17date or dates, may be payable at such time or times and at such
18place or places, may mature at any time or times not later than
1940 years from the date of issuance, may be sold at public or
20private sale at such time or times and at such price or prices,
21may be secured by such pledges, reserves, guarantees, letters
22of credit, insurance contracts or other similar credit support
23or liquidity instruments, may be executed in such manner, may
24be subject to redemption prior to maturity, may provide for the
25registration of the bonds, and may be subject to such other
26terms and conditions all as may be provided by the resolution

 

 

HB3860- 38 -LRB097 14081 HLH 58744 b

1or indenture authorizing the issuance of such bonds. The holder
2or holders of any bonds issued by the Authority may bring suits
3at law or proceedings in equity to compel the performance and
4observance by any person or by the Authority or any of its
5agents or employees of any contract or covenant made with the
6holders of such bonds and to compel such person or the
7Authority and any of its agents or employees to perform any
8duties required to be performed for the benefit of the holders
9of any such bonds by the provision of the resolution
10authorizing their issuance, and to enjoin such person or the
11Authority and any of its agents or employees from taking any
12action in conflict with any such contract or covenant.
13Notwithstanding the form and tenor of any such bonds and in the
14absence of any express recital on the face thereof that it is
15non-negotiable, all such bonds shall be negotiable
16instruments. Pending the preparation and execution of any such
17bonds, temporary bonds may be issued as provided by the
18resolution. The bonds shall be sold by the Authority in such
19manner as it shall determine. The bonds may be secured as
20provided in the authorizing resolution by the receipts,
21revenues, income and other available funds of the Authority and
22by any amounts derived by the Authority from the loan agreement
23or lease agreement with respect to the project or projects; and
24bonds may be issued as general obligations of the Authority
25payable from such revenues, funds and obligations of the
26Authority as the bond resolution shall provide, or may be

 

 

HB3860- 39 -LRB097 14081 HLH 58744 b

1issued as limited obligations with a claim for payment solely
2from such revenues, funds and obligations as the bond
3resolution shall provide. The Authority may grant a specific
4pledge or assignment of and lien on or security interest in
5such rights, revenues, income, or amounts and may grant a
6specific pledge or assignment of and lien on or security
7interest in any reserves, funds or accounts established in the
8resolution authorizing the issuance of bonds. Any such pledge,
9assignment, lien or security interest for the benefit of the
10holders of the Authority's bonds shall be valid and binding
11from the time the bonds are issued without any physical
12delivery or further act, and shall be valid and binding as
13against and prior to the claims of all other parties having
14claims against the Authority or any other person irrespective
15of whether the other parties have notice of the pledge,
16assignment, lien or security interest. As evidence of such
17pledge, assignment, lien and security interest, the Authority
18may execute and deliver a mortgage, trust agreement, indenture
19or security agreement or an assignment thereof. A remedy for
20any breach or default of the terms of any such agreement by the
21Authority may be by mandamus proceedings in any court of
22competent jurisdiction to compel the performance and
23compliance therewith, but the agreement may prescribe by whom
24or on whose behalf such action may be instituted. It is
25expressly understood that the Authority may, but need not,
26acquire title to any project with respect to which it exercises

 

 

HB3860- 40 -LRB097 14081 HLH 58744 b

1its authority.
2    (d) With respect to the powers granted by this Act, the
3Authority may adopt rules and regulations prescribing the
4procedures by which persons may apply for assistance under this
5Act. Nothing herein shall be deemed to preclude the Authority,
6prior to the filing of any formal application, from conducting
7preliminary discussions and investigations with respect to the
8subject matter of any prospective application.
9    (e) The Authority shall have power to acquire by purchase,
10lease, gift or otherwise any property or rights therein from
11any person useful for its purposes, whether improved for the
12purposes of any prospective project, or unimproved. The
13Authority may also accept any donation of funds for its
14purposes from any such source. The Authority shall have no
15independent power of condemnation but may acquire any property
16or rights therein obtained upon condemnation by any other
17authority, governmental entity or unit of local government with
18such power.
19    (f) The Authority shall have power to develop, construct
20and improve either under its own direction, or through
21collaboration with any approved applicant, or to acquire
22through purchase or otherwise, any project, using for such
23purpose the proceeds derived from the sale of its bonds or from
24governmental loans or grants, and to hold title in the name of
25the Authority to such projects.
26    (g) The Authority shall have power to lease pursuant to a

 

 

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1lease agreement any project so developed and constructed or
2acquired to the approved tenant on such terms and conditions as
3may be appropriate to further the purposes of this Act and to
4maintain the credit of the Authority. Any such lease may
5provide for either the Authority or the approved tenant to
6assume initially, in whole or in part, the costs of
7maintenance, repair and improvements during the leasehold
8period. In no case, however, shall the total rentals from any
9project during any initial leasehold period or the total loan
10repayments to be made pursuant to any loan agreement, be less
11than an amount necessary to return over such lease or loan
12period (1) all costs incurred in connection with the
13development, construction, acquisition or improvement of the
14project and for repair, maintenance and improvements thereto
15during the period of the lease or loan; provided, however, that
16the rentals or loan repayments need not include costs met
17through the use of funds other than those obtained by the
18Authority through the issuance of its bonds or governmental
19loans; (2) a reasonable percentage additive to be agreed upon
20by the Authority and the borrower or tenant to cover a properly
21allocable portion of the Authority's general expenses,
22including, but not limited to, administrative expenses,
23salaries and general insurance, and (3) an amount sufficient to
24pay when due all principal of, interest and premium, if any on,
25any bonds issued by the Authority with respect to the project.
26The portion of total rentals payable under clause (3) of this

 

 

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1subsection (g) shall be deposited in such special accounts,
2including all sinking funds, acquisition or construction
3funds, debt service and other funds as provided by any
4resolution, mortgage or trust agreement of the Authority
5pursuant to which any bond is issued.
6    (h) The Authority has the power, upon the termination of
7any leasehold period of any project, to sell or lease for a
8further term or terms such project on such terms and conditions
9as the Authority shall deem reasonable and consistent with the
10purposes of the Act. The net proceeds from all such sales and
11the revenues or income from such leases shall be used to
12satisfy any indebtedness of the Authority with respect to such
13project and any balance may be used to pay any expenses of the
14Authority or be used for the further development, construction,
15acquisition or improvement of projects. In the event any
16project is vacated by a tenant prior to the termination of the
17initial leasehold period, the Authority shall sell or lease the
18facilities of the project on the most advantageous terms
19available. The net proceeds of any such disposition shall be
20treated in the same manner as the proceeds from sales or the
21revenues or income from leases subsequent to the termination of
22any initial leasehold period.
23    (i) The Authority shall have the power to make loans to
24persons to finance a project, to enter into loan agreements
25with respect thereto, and to accept guarantees from persons of
26its loans or the resultant evidences of obligations of the

 

 

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1Authority.
2    (j) The Authority may fix, determine, charge and collect
3any premiums, fees, charges, costs and expenses, including,
4without limitation, any application fees, commitment fees,
5program fees, financing charges or publication fees from any
6person in connection with its activities under this Act.
7    (k) In addition to the funds established as provided
8herein, the Authority shall have the power to create and
9establish such reserve funds and accounts as may be necessary
10or desirable to accomplish its purposes under this Act and to
11deposit its available monies into the funds and accounts.
12    (l) At the request of the governing body of any unit of
13local government, the Authority is authorized to market such
14local government's revenue bond offerings by preparing bond
15issues for sale, advertising for sealed bids, receiving bids at
16its offices, making the award to the bidder that offers the
17most favorable terms or arranging for negotiated placements or
18underwritings of such securities. The Authority may, at its
19discretion, offer for concurrent sale the revenue bonds of
20several local governments. Sales by the Authority of revenue
21bonds under this Section shall in no way imply State guarantee
22of such debt issue. The Authority may require such financial
23information from participating local governments as it deems
24necessary in order to carry out the purposes of this subsection
25(1).
26    (m) The Authority may make grants to any county to which

 

 

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1Division 5-37 of the Counties Code is applicable to assist in
2the financing of capital development, construction and
3renovation of new or existing facilities for hospitals and
4health care facilities under that Act. Such grants may only be
5made from funds appropriated for such purposes from the Build
6Illinois Bond Fund.
7    (n) The Authority may establish an urban development action
8grant program for the purpose of assisting municipalities in
9Illinois which are experiencing severe economic distress to
10help stimulate economic development activities needed to aid in
11economic recovery. The Authority shall determine the types of
12activities and projects for which the urban development action
13grants may be used, provided that such projects and activities
14are broadly defined to include all reasonable projects and
15activities the primary objectives of which are the development
16of viable urban communities, including decent housing and a
17suitable living environment, and expansion of economic
18opportunity, principally for persons of low and moderate
19incomes. The Authority shall enter into grant agreements from
20monies appropriated for such purposes from the Build Illinois
21Bond Fund. The Authority shall monitor the use of the grants,
22and shall provide for audits of the funds as well as recovery
23by the Authority of any funds determined to have been spent in
24violation of this subsection (n) or any rule or regulation
25promulgated hereunder. The Authority shall provide technical
26assistance with regard to the effective use of the urban

 

 

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1development action grants. The Authority shall file an annual
2report to the General Assembly concerning the progress of the
3grant program.
4    (o) The Authority may establish a Housing Partnership
5Program whereby the Authority provides zero-interest loans to
6municipalities for the purpose of assisting in the financing of
7projects for the rehabilitation of affordable multi-family
8housing for low and moderate income residents. The Authority
9may provide such loans only upon a municipality's providing
10evidence that it has obtained private funding for the
11rehabilitation project. The Authority shall provide 3 State
12dollars for every 7 dollars obtained by the municipality from
13sources other than the State of Illinois. The loans shall be
14made from monies appropriated for such purpose from the Build
15Illinois Bond Fund. The total amount of loans available under
16the Housing Partnership Program shall not exceed $30,000,000.
17State loan monies under this subsection shall be used only for
18the acquisition and rehabilitation of existing buildings
19containing 4 or more dwelling units. The terms of any loan made
20by the municipality under this subsection shall require
21repayment of the loan to the municipality upon any sale or
22other transfer of the project.
23    (p) The Authority may award grants to universities and
24research institutions, research consortiums and other
25not-for-profit entities for the purposes of: remodeling or
26otherwise physically altering existing laboratory or research

 

 

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1facilities, expansion or physical additions to existing
2laboratory or research facilities, construction of new
3laboratory or research facilities or acquisition of modern
4equipment to support laboratory or research operations
5provided that such grants (i) be used solely in support of
6project and equipment acquisitions which enhance technology
7transfer, and (ii) not constitute more than 60 percent of the
8total project or acquisition cost.
9    (q) Grants may be awarded by the Authority to units of
10local government for the purpose of developing the appropriate
11infrastructure or defraying other costs to the local government
12in support of laboratory or research facilities provided that
13such grants may not exceed 40% of the cost to the unit of local
14government.
15    (r) The Authority may establish a Direct Loan Program to
16make loans to individuals, partnerships or corporations for the
17purpose of an industrial project, as defined in Section 801-10
18of this Act. For the purposes of such program and not by way of
19limitation on any other program of the Authority, the Authority
20shall have the power to issue bonds, notes, or other evidences
21of indebtedness including commercial paper for purposes of
22providing a fund of capital from which it may make such loans.
23The Authority shall have the power to use any appropriations
24from the State made especially for the Authority's Direct Loan
25Program for additional capital to make such loans or for the
26purposes of reserve funds or pledged funds which secure the

 

 

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1Authority's obligations of repayment of any bond, note or other
2form of indebtedness established for the purpose of providing
3capital for which it intends to make such loans under the
4Direct Loan Program. For the purpose of obtaining such capital,
5the Authority may also enter into agreements with financial
6institutions and other persons for the purpose of selling loans
7and developing a secondary market for such loans. Loans made
8under the Direct Loan Program may be in an amount not to exceed
9$300,000 and shall be made for a portion of an industrial
10project which does not exceed 50% of the total project. No loan
11may be made by the Authority unless approved by the affirmative
12vote of at least 8 members of the board. The Authority shall
13establish procedures and publish rules which shall provide for
14the submission, review, and analysis of each direct loan
15application and which shall preserve the ability of each board
16member to reach an individual business judgment regarding the
17propriety of making each direct loan. The collective discretion
18of the board to approve or disapprove each loan shall be
19unencumbered. The Authority may establish and collect such fees
20and charges, determine and enforce such terms and conditions,
21and charge such interest rates as it determines to be necessary
22and appropriate to the successful administration of the Direct
23Loan Program. The Authority may require such interests in
24collateral and such guarantees as it determines are necessary
25to project the Authority's interest in the repayment of the
26principal and interest of each loan made under the Direct Loan

 

 

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1Program.
2    (s) The Authority may guarantee private loans to third
3parties up to a specified dollar amount in order to promote
4economic development in this State.
5    (t) The Authority may adopt rules and regulations as may be
6necessary or advisable to implement the powers conferred by
7this Act.
8    (u) The Authority shall have the power to issue bonds,
9notes or other evidences of indebtedness, which may be used to
10make loans to units of local government which are authorized to
11enter into loan agreements and other documents and to issue
12bonds, notes and other evidences of indebtedness for the
13purpose of financing the protection of storm sewer outfalls,
14the construction of adequate storm sewer outfalls, and the
15provision for flood protection of sanitary sewage treatment
16plans, in counties that have established a stormwater
17management planning committee in accordance with Section
185-1062 of the Counties Code. Any such loan shall be made by the
19Authority pursuant to the provisions of Section 820-5 to 820-60
20of this Act. The unit of local government shall pay back to the
21Authority the principal amount of the loan, plus annual
22interest as determined by the Authority. The Authority shall
23have the power, subject to appropriations by the General
24Assembly, to subsidize or buy down a portion of the interest on
25such loans, up to 4% per annum.
26    (v) The Authority may accept security interests as provided

 

 

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1in Sections 11-3 and 11-3.3 of the Illinois Public Aid Code.
2    (w) Moral Obligation. In the event that the Authority
3determines that monies of the Authority will not be sufficient
4for the payment of the principal of and interest on its bonds
5during the next State fiscal year, the Chairperson, as soon as
6practicable, shall certify to the Governor the amount required
7by the Authority to enable it to pay such principal of and
8interest on the bonds. The Governor shall submit the amount so
9certified to the General Assembly as soon as practicable, but
10no later than the end of the current State fiscal year. This
11subsection shall apply only to any bonds or notes as to which
12the Authority shall have determined, in the resolution
13authorizing the issuance of the bonds or notes, that this
14subsection shall apply. Whenever the Authority makes such a
15determination, that fact shall be plainly stated on the face of
16the bonds or notes and that fact shall also be reported to the
17Governor. In the event of a withdrawal of moneys from a reserve
18fund established with respect to any issue or issues of bonds
19of the Authority to pay principal or interest on those bonds,
20the Chairperson of the Authority, as soon as practicable, shall
21certify to the Governor the amount required to restore the
22reserve fund to the level required in the resolution or
23indenture securing those bonds. The Governor shall submit the
24amount so certified to the General Assembly as soon as
25practicable, but no later than the end of the current State
26fiscal year. The Authority shall obtain written approval from

 

 

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1the Governor for any bonds and notes to be issued under this
2Section. In addition to any other bonds authorized to be issued
3under Sections 825-60, 825-65(e), 830-25 and 845-5, the
4principal amount of Authority bonds outstanding issued under
5this Section 801-40(w) or under 20 ILCS 3850/1-80 or 30 ILCS
6360/2-6(c), which have been assumed by the Authority, shall not
7exceed $150,000,000. This subsection (w) shall in no way be
8applied to any bonds issued by the Authority on behalf of the
9Illinois Power Agency under Section 825-90 of this Act.
10    (x) The Authority may enter into agreements or contracts
11with any person necessary or appropriate to place the payment
12obligations of the Authority under any of its bonds in whole or
13in part on any interest rate basis, cash flow basis, or other
14basis desired by the Authority, including without limitation
15agreements or contracts commonly known as "interest rate swap
16agreements", "forward payment conversion agreements", and
17"futures", or agreements or contracts to exchange cash flows or
18a series of payments, or agreements or contracts, including
19without limitation agreements or contracts commonly known as
20"options", "puts", or "calls", to hedge payment, rate spread,
21or similar exposure; provided that any such agreement or
22contract shall not constitute an obligation for borrowed money
23and shall not be taken into account under Section 845-5 of this
24Act or any other debt limit of the Authority or the State of
25Illinois.
26    (y) The Authority shall publish summaries of projects and

 

 

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1actions approved by the members of the Authority on its
2website. These summaries shall include, but not be limited to,
3information regarding the:
4        (1) project;
5        (2) Board's action or actions;
6        (3) purpose of the project;
7        (4) Authority's program and contribution;
8        (5) volume cap;
9        (6) jobs retained;
10        (7) projected new jobs;
11        (8) construction jobs created;
12        (9) estimated sources and uses of funds;
13        (10) financing summary;
14        (11) project summary;
15        (12) business summary;
16        (13) ownership or economic disclosure statement;
17        (14) professional and financial information;
18        (15) service area; and
19        (16) legislative district.
20    The disclosure of information pursuant to this subsection
21shall comply with the Freedom of Information Act.
22    (z) No power of the Authority set forth in this Section
23shall be exercised for the benefit of any hospital as defined
24in the Tax-Exempt Hospital Responsibility Act if that hospital
25is not in compliance with that Act.
26(Source: P.A. 95-470, eff. 8-27-07; 95-481, eff. 8-28-07;

 

 

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195-876, eff. 8-21-08; 96-795, eff. 7-1-10 (see Section 5 of
2P.A. 96-793 for the effective date of changes made by P.A.
396-795).)
 
4    Section 903. The State Finance Act is amended by adding
5Section 5.809 as follows:
 
6    (30 ILCS 105/5.809 new)
7    Sec. 5.809. The Tax-Exempt Hospital Responsibility Act
8Enforcement Fund.
 
9    Section 905. The Illinois Income Tax Act is amended by
10changing Section 205 as follows:
 
11    (35 ILCS 5/205)  (from Ch. 120, par. 2-205)
12    Sec. 205. Exempt organizations.
13    (a) Charitable, etc. organizations. The base income of an
14organization which is exempt from the federal income tax by
15reason of the Internal Revenue Code shall not be determined
16under section 203 of this Act, but shall be its unrelated
17business taxable income as determined under section 512 of the
18Internal Revenue Code, without any deduction for the tax
19imposed by this Act. The standard exemption provided by section
20204 of this Act shall not be allowed in determining the net
21income of an organization to which this subsection applies. A
22hospital as defined in the Tax-Exempt Hospital Responsibility

 

 

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1Act may qualify for the exemption under this subsection only if
2it is in compliance with that Act.
3    (b) Partnerships. A partnership as such shall not be
4subject to the tax imposed by subsection 201 (a) and (b) of
5this Act, but shall be subject to the replacement tax imposed
6by subsection 201 (c) and (d) of this Act and shall compute its
7base income as described in subsection (d) of Section 203 of
8this Act. For taxable years ending on or after December 31,
92004, an investment partnership, as defined in Section
101501(a)(11.5) of this Act, shall not be subject to the tax
11imposed by subsections (c) and (d) of Section 201 of this Act.
12A partnership shall file such returns and other information at
13such time and in such manner as may be required under Article 5
14of this Act. The partners in a partnership shall be liable for
15the replacement tax imposed by subsection 201 (c) and (d) of
16this Act on such partnership, to the extent such tax is not
17paid by the partnership, as provided under the laws of Illinois
18governing the liability of partners for the obligations of a
19partnership. Persons carrying on business as partners shall be
20liable for the tax imposed by subsection 201 (a) and (b) of
21this Act only in their separate or individual capacities.
22    (c) Subchapter S corporations. A Subchapter S corporation
23shall not be subject to the tax imposed by subsection 201 (a)
24and (b) of this Act but shall be subject to the replacement tax
25imposed by subsection 201 (c) and (d) of this Act and shall
26file such returns and other information at such time and in

 

 

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1such manner as may be required under Article 5 of this Act.
2    (d) Combat zone, terrorist attack, and certain other
3deaths. An individual relieved from the federal income tax for
4any taxable year by reason of section 692 of the Internal
5Revenue Code shall not be subject to the tax imposed by this
6Act for such taxable year.
7    (e) Certain trusts. A common trust fund described in
8Section 584 of the Internal Revenue Code, and any other trust
9to the extent that the grantor is treated as the owner thereof
10under sections 671 through 678 of the Internal Revenue Code
11shall not be subject to the tax imposed by this Act.
12    (f) Certain business activities. A person not otherwise
13subject to the tax imposed by this Act shall not become subject
14to the tax imposed by this Act by reason of:
15        (1) that person's ownership of tangible personal
16    property located at the premises of a printer in this State
17    with which the person has contracted for printing, or
18        (2) activities of the person's employees or agents
19    located solely at the premises of a printer and related to
20    quality control, distribution, or printing services
21    performed by a printer in the State with which the person
22    has contracted for printing.
23    (g) A nonprofit risk organization that holds a certificate
24of authority under Article VIID of the Illinois Insurance Code
25is exempt from the tax imposed under this Act with respect to
26its activities or operations in furtherance of the powers

 

 

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1conferred upon it under that Article VIID of the Illinois
2Insurance Code.
3(Source: P.A. 97-507, eff. 8-23-11.)
 
4    Section 910. The Use Tax Act is amended by changing Section
53-5 as follows:
 
6    (35 ILCS 105/3-5)
7    Sec. 3-5. Exemptions. Use of the following tangible
8personal property is exempt from the tax imposed by this Act:
9    (1) Personal property purchased from a corporation,
10society, association, foundation, institution, or
11organization, other than a limited liability company, that is
12organized and operated as a not-for-profit service enterprise
13for the benefit of persons 65 years of age or older if the
14personal property was not purchased by the enterprise for the
15purpose of resale by the enterprise.
16    (2) Personal property purchased by a not-for-profit
17Illinois county fair association for use in conducting,
18operating, or promoting the county fair.
19    (3) Personal property purchased by a not-for-profit arts or
20cultural organization that establishes, by proof required by
21the Department by rule, that it has received an exemption under
22Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code and that is
23organized and operated primarily for the presentation or
24support of arts or cultural programming, activities, or

 

 

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1services. These organizations include, but are not limited to,
2music and dramatic arts organizations such as symphony
3orchestras and theatrical groups, arts and cultural service
4organizations, local arts councils, visual arts organizations,
5and media arts organizations. On and after the effective date
6of this amendatory Act of the 92nd General Assembly, however,
7an entity otherwise eligible for this exemption shall not make
8tax-free purchases unless it has an active identification
9number issued by the Department.
10    (4) Personal property purchased by a governmental body, by
11a corporation, society, association, foundation, or
12institution organized and operated exclusively for charitable,
13religious, or educational purposes, or by a not-for-profit
14corporation, society, association, foundation, institution, or
15organization that has no compensated officers or employees and
16that is organized and operated primarily for the recreation of
17persons 55 years of age or older. A limited liability company
18may qualify for the exemption under this paragraph only if the
19limited liability company is organized and operated
20exclusively for educational purposes. A hospital as defined in
21the Tax-Exempt Hospital Responsibility Act may qualify for the
22exemption under this paragraph only if it is in compliance with
23that Act. On and after July 1, 1987, however, no entity
24otherwise eligible for this exemption shall make tax-free
25purchases unless it has an active exemption identification
26number issued by the Department.

 

 

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1    (5) Until July 1, 2003, a passenger car that is a
2replacement vehicle to the extent that the purchase price of
3the car is subject to the Replacement Vehicle Tax.
4    (6) Until July 1, 2003 and beginning again on September 1,
52004 through August 30, 2014, graphic arts machinery and
6equipment, including repair and replacement parts, both new and
7used, and including that manufactured on special order,
8certified by the purchaser to be used primarily for graphic
9arts production, and including machinery and equipment
10purchased for lease. Equipment includes chemicals or chemicals
11acting as catalysts but only if the chemicals or chemicals
12acting as catalysts effect a direct and immediate change upon a
13graphic arts product.
14    (7) Farm chemicals.
15    (8) Legal tender, currency, medallions, or gold or silver
16coinage issued by the State of Illinois, the government of the
17United States of America, or the government of any foreign
18country, and bullion.
19    (9) Personal property purchased from a teacher-sponsored
20student organization affiliated with an elementary or
21secondary school located in Illinois.
22    (10) A motor vehicle of the first division, a motor vehicle
23of the second division that is a self-contained motor vehicle
24designed or permanently converted to provide living quarters
25for recreational, camping, or travel use, with direct walk
26through to the living quarters from the driver's seat, or a

 

 

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1motor vehicle of the second division that is of the van
2configuration designed for the transportation of not less than
37 nor more than 16 passengers, as defined in Section 1-146 of
4the Illinois Vehicle Code, that is used for automobile renting,
5as defined in the Automobile Renting Occupation and Use Tax
6Act.
7    (11) Farm machinery and equipment, both new and used,
8including that manufactured on special order, certified by the
9purchaser to be used primarily for production agriculture or
10State or federal agricultural programs, including individual
11replacement parts for the machinery and equipment, including
12machinery and equipment purchased for lease, and including
13implements of husbandry defined in Section 1-130 of the
14Illinois Vehicle Code, farm machinery and agricultural
15chemical and fertilizer spreaders, and nurse wagons required to
16be registered under Section 3-809 of the Illinois Vehicle Code,
17but excluding other motor vehicles required to be registered
18under the Illinois Vehicle Code. Horticultural polyhouses or
19hoop houses used for propagating, growing, or overwintering
20plants shall be considered farm machinery and equipment under
21this item (11). Agricultural chemical tender tanks and dry
22boxes shall include units sold separately from a motor vehicle
23required to be licensed and units sold mounted on a motor
24vehicle required to be licensed if the selling price of the
25tender is separately stated.
26    Farm machinery and equipment shall include precision

 

 

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1farming equipment that is installed or purchased to be
2installed on farm machinery and equipment including, but not
3limited to, tractors, harvesters, sprayers, planters, seeders,
4or spreaders. Precision farming equipment includes, but is not
5limited to, soil testing sensors, computers, monitors,
6software, global positioning and mapping systems, and other
7such equipment.
8    Farm machinery and equipment also includes computers,
9sensors, software, and related equipment used primarily in the
10computer-assisted operation of production agriculture
11facilities, equipment, and activities such as, but not limited
12to, the collection, monitoring, and correlation of animal and
13crop data for the purpose of formulating animal diets and
14agricultural chemicals. This item (11) is exempt from the
15provisions of Section 3-90.
16    (12) Fuel and petroleum products sold to or used by an air
17common carrier, certified by the carrier to be used for
18consumption, shipment, or storage in the conduct of its
19business as an air common carrier, for a flight destined for or
20returning from a location or locations outside the United
21States without regard to previous or subsequent domestic
22stopovers.
23    (13) Proceeds of mandatory service charges separately
24stated on customers' bills for the purchase and consumption of
25food and beverages purchased at retail from a retailer, to the
26extent that the proceeds of the service charge are in fact

 

 

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1turned over as tips or as a substitute for tips to the
2employees who participate directly in preparing, serving,
3hosting or cleaning up the food or beverage function with
4respect to which the service charge is imposed.
5    (14) Until July 1, 2003, oil field exploration, drilling,
6and production equipment, including (i) rigs and parts of rigs,
7rotary rigs, cable tool rigs, and workover rigs, (ii) pipe and
8tubular goods, including casing and drill strings, (iii) pumps
9and pump-jack units, (iv) storage tanks and flow lines, (v) any
10individual replacement part for oil field exploration,
11drilling, and production equipment, and (vi) machinery and
12equipment purchased for lease; but excluding motor vehicles
13required to be registered under the Illinois Vehicle Code.
14    (15) Photoprocessing machinery and equipment, including
15repair and replacement parts, both new and used, including that
16manufactured on special order, certified by the purchaser to be
17used primarily for photoprocessing, and including
18photoprocessing machinery and equipment purchased for lease.
19    (16) Until July 1, 2003, coal exploration, mining,
20offhighway hauling, processing, maintenance, and reclamation
21equipment, including replacement parts and equipment, and
22including equipment purchased for lease, but excluding motor
23vehicles required to be registered under the Illinois Vehicle
24Code.
25    (17) Until July 1, 2003, distillation machinery and
26equipment, sold as a unit or kit, assembled or installed by the

 

 

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1retailer, certified by the user to be used only for the
2production of ethyl alcohol that will be used for consumption
3as motor fuel or as a component of motor fuel for the personal
4use of the user, and not subject to sale or resale.
5    (18) Manufacturing and assembling machinery and equipment
6used primarily in the process of manufacturing or assembling
7tangible personal property for wholesale or retail sale or
8lease, whether that sale or lease is made directly by the
9manufacturer or by some other person, whether the materials
10used in the process are owned by the manufacturer or some other
11person, or whether that sale or lease is made apart from or as
12an incident to the seller's engaging in the service occupation
13of producing machines, tools, dies, jigs, patterns, gauges, or
14other similar items of no commercial value on special order for
15a particular purchaser.
16    (19) Personal property delivered to a purchaser or
17purchaser's donee inside Illinois when the purchase order for
18that personal property was received by a florist located
19outside Illinois who has a florist located inside Illinois
20deliver the personal property.
21    (20) Semen used for artificial insemination of livestock
22for direct agricultural production.
23    (21) Horses, or interests in horses, registered with and
24meeting the requirements of any of the Arabian Horse Club
25Registry of America, Appaloosa Horse Club, American Quarter
26Horse Association, United States Trotting Association, or

 

 

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1Jockey Club, as appropriate, used for purposes of breeding or
2racing for prizes. This item (21) is exempt from the provisions
3of Section 3-90, and the exemption provided for under this item
4(21) applies for all periods beginning May 30, 1995, but no
5claim for credit or refund is allowed on or after January 1,
62008 for such taxes paid during the period beginning May 30,
72000 and ending on January 1, 2008.
8    (22) Computers and communications equipment utilized for
9any hospital purpose and equipment used in the diagnosis,
10analysis, or treatment of hospital patients purchased by a
11lessor who leases the equipment, under a lease of one year or
12longer executed or in effect at the time the lessor would
13otherwise be subject to the tax imposed by this Act, to a
14hospital that has been issued an active tax exemption
15identification number by the Department under Section 1g of the
16Retailers' Occupation Tax Act. If the equipment is leased in a
17manner that does not qualify for this exemption or is used in
18any other non-exempt manner, the lessor shall be liable for the
19tax imposed under this Act or the Service Use Tax Act, as the
20case may be, based on the fair market value of the property at
21the time the non-qualifying use occurs. No lessor shall collect
22or attempt to collect an amount (however designated) that
23purports to reimburse that lessor for the tax imposed by this
24Act or the Service Use Tax Act, as the case may be, if the tax
25has not been paid by the lessor. If a lessor improperly
26collects any such amount from the lessee, the lessee shall have

 

 

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1a legal right to claim a refund of that amount from the lessor.
2If, however, that amount is not refunded to the lessee for any
3reason, the lessor is liable to pay that amount to the
4Department.
5    (23) Personal property purchased by a lessor who leases the
6property, under a lease of one year or longer executed or in
7effect at the time the lessor would otherwise be subject to the
8tax imposed by this Act, to a governmental body that has been
9issued an active sales tax exemption identification number by
10the Department under Section 1g of the Retailers' Occupation
11Tax Act. If the property is leased in a manner that does not
12qualify for this exemption or used in any other non-exempt
13manner, the lessor shall be liable for the tax imposed under
14this Act or the Service Use Tax Act, as the case may be, based
15on the fair market value of the property at the time the
16non-qualifying use occurs. No lessor shall collect or attempt
17to collect an amount (however designated) that purports to
18reimburse that lessor for the tax imposed by this Act or the
19Service Use Tax Act, as the case may be, if the tax has not been
20paid by the lessor. If a lessor improperly collects any such
21amount from the lessee, the lessee shall have a legal right to
22claim a refund of that amount from the lessor. If, however,
23that amount is not refunded to the lessee for any reason, the
24lessor is liable to pay that amount to the Department.
25    (24) Beginning with taxable years ending on or after
26December 31, 1995 and ending with taxable years ending on or

 

 

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1before December 31, 2004, personal property that is donated for
2disaster relief to be used in a State or federally declared
3disaster area in Illinois or bordering Illinois by a
4manufacturer or retailer that is registered in this State to a
5corporation, society, association, foundation, or institution
6that has been issued a sales tax exemption identification
7number by the Department that assists victims of the disaster
8who reside within the declared disaster area.
9    (25) Beginning with taxable years ending on or after
10December 31, 1995 and ending with taxable years ending on or
11before December 31, 2004, personal property that is used in the
12performance of infrastructure repairs in this State, including
13but not limited to municipal roads and streets, access roads,
14bridges, sidewalks, waste disposal systems, water and sewer
15line extensions, water distribution and purification
16facilities, storm water drainage and retention facilities, and
17sewage treatment facilities, resulting from a State or
18federally declared disaster in Illinois or bordering Illinois
19when such repairs are initiated on facilities located in the
20declared disaster area within 6 months after the disaster.
21    (26) Beginning July 1, 1999, game or game birds purchased
22at a "game breeding and hunting preserve area" as that term is
23used in the Wildlife Code. This paragraph is exempt from the
24provisions of Section 3-90.
25    (27) A motor vehicle, as that term is defined in Section
261-146 of the Illinois Vehicle Code, that is donated to a

 

 

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1corporation, limited liability company, society, association,
2foundation, or institution that is determined by the Department
3to be organized and operated exclusively for educational
4purposes. For purposes of this exemption, "a corporation,
5limited liability company, society, association, foundation,
6or institution organized and operated exclusively for
7educational purposes" means all tax-supported public schools,
8private schools that offer systematic instruction in useful
9branches of learning by methods common to public schools and
10that compare favorably in their scope and intensity with the
11course of study presented in tax-supported schools, and
12vocational or technical schools or institutes organized and
13operated exclusively to provide a course of study of not less
14than 6 weeks duration and designed to prepare individuals to
15follow a trade or to pursue a manual, technical, mechanical,
16industrial, business, or commercial occupation.
17    (28) Beginning January 1, 2000, personal property,
18including food, purchased through fundraising events for the
19benefit of a public or private elementary or secondary school,
20a group of those schools, or one or more school districts if
21the events are sponsored by an entity recognized by the school
22district that consists primarily of volunteers and includes
23parents and teachers of the school children. This paragraph
24does not apply to fundraising events (i) for the benefit of
25private home instruction or (ii) for which the fundraising
26entity purchases the personal property sold at the events from

 

 

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1another individual or entity that sold the property for the
2purpose of resale by the fundraising entity and that profits
3from the sale to the fundraising entity. This paragraph is
4exempt from the provisions of Section 3-90.
5    (29) Beginning January 1, 2000 and through December 31,
62001, new or used automatic vending machines that prepare and
7serve hot food and beverages, including coffee, soup, and other
8items, and replacement parts for these machines. Beginning
9January 1, 2002 and through June 30, 2003, machines and parts
10for machines used in commercial, coin-operated amusement and
11vending business if a use or occupation tax is paid on the
12gross receipts derived from the use of the commercial,
13coin-operated amusement and vending machines. This paragraph
14is exempt from the provisions of Section 3-90.
15    (30) Beginning January 1, 2001 and through June 30, 2011,
16food for human consumption that is to be consumed off the
17premises where it is sold (other than alcoholic beverages, soft
18drinks, and food that has been prepared for immediate
19consumption) and prescription and nonprescription medicines,
20drugs, medical appliances, and insulin, urine testing
21materials, syringes, and needles used by diabetics, for human
22use, when purchased for use by a person receiving medical
23assistance under Article V of the Illinois Public Aid Code who
24resides in a licensed long-term care facility, as defined in
25the Nursing Home Care Act, or in a licensed facility as defined
26in the ID/DD Community Care Act or the Specialized Mental

 

 

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1Health Rehabilitation Act.
2    (31) Beginning on the effective date of this amendatory Act
3of the 92nd General Assembly, computers and communications
4equipment utilized for any hospital purpose and equipment used
5in the diagnosis, analysis, or treatment of hospital patients
6purchased by a lessor who leases the equipment, under a lease
7of one year or longer executed or in effect at the time the
8lessor would otherwise be subject to the tax imposed by this
9Act, to a hospital that has been issued an active tax exemption
10identification number by the Department under Section 1g of the
11Retailers' Occupation Tax Act. If the equipment is leased in a
12manner that does not qualify for this exemption or is used in
13any other nonexempt manner, the lessor shall be liable for the
14tax imposed under this Act or the Service Use Tax Act, as the
15case may be, based on the fair market value of the property at
16the time the nonqualifying use occurs. No lessor shall collect
17or attempt to collect an amount (however designated) that
18purports to reimburse that lessor for the tax imposed by this
19Act or the Service Use Tax Act, as the case may be, if the tax
20has not been paid by the lessor. If a lessor improperly
21collects any such amount from the lessee, the lessee shall have
22a legal right to claim a refund of that amount from the lessor.
23If, however, that amount is not refunded to the lessee for any
24reason, the lessor is liable to pay that amount to the
25Department. This paragraph is exempt from the provisions of
26Section 3-90.

 

 

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1    (32) Beginning on the effective date of this amendatory Act
2of the 92nd General Assembly, personal property purchased by a
3lessor who leases the property, under a lease of one year or
4longer executed or in effect at the time the lessor would
5otherwise be subject to the tax imposed by this Act, to a
6governmental body that has been issued an active sales tax
7exemption identification number by the Department under
8Section 1g of the Retailers' Occupation Tax Act. If the
9property is leased in a manner that does not qualify for this
10exemption or used in any other nonexempt manner, the lessor
11shall be liable for the tax imposed under this Act or the
12Service Use Tax Act, as the case may be, based on the fair
13market value of the property at the time the nonqualifying use
14occurs. No lessor shall collect or attempt to collect an amount
15(however designated) that purports to reimburse that lessor for
16the tax imposed by this Act or the Service Use Tax Act, as the
17case may be, if the tax has not been paid by the lessor. If a
18lessor improperly collects any such amount from the lessee, the
19lessee shall have a legal right to claim a refund of that
20amount from the lessor. If, however, that amount is not
21refunded to the lessee for any reason, the lessor is liable to
22pay that amount to the Department. This paragraph is exempt
23from the provisions of Section 3-90.
24    (33) On and after July 1, 2003 and through June 30, 2004,
25the use in this State of motor vehicles of the second division
26with a gross vehicle weight in excess of 8,000 pounds and that

 

 

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1are subject to the commercial distribution fee imposed under
2Section 3-815.1 of the Illinois Vehicle Code. Beginning on July
31, 2004 and through June 30, 2005, the use in this State of
4motor vehicles of the second division: (i) with a gross vehicle
5weight rating in excess of 8,000 pounds; (ii) that are subject
6to the commercial distribution fee imposed under Section
73-815.1 of the Illinois Vehicle Code; and (iii) that are
8primarily used for commercial purposes. Through June 30, 2005,
9this exemption applies to repair and replacement parts added
10after the initial purchase of such a motor vehicle if that
11motor vehicle is used in a manner that would qualify for the
12rolling stock exemption otherwise provided for in this Act. For
13purposes of this paragraph, the term "used for commercial
14purposes" means the transportation of persons or property in
15furtherance of any commercial or industrial enterprise,
16whether for-hire or not.
17    (34) Beginning January 1, 2008, tangible personal property
18used in the construction or maintenance of a community water
19supply, as defined under Section 3.145 of the Environmental
20Protection Act, that is operated by a not-for-profit
21corporation that holds a valid water supply permit issued under
22Title IV of the Environmental Protection Act. This paragraph is
23exempt from the provisions of Section 3-90.
24    (35) Beginning January 1, 2010, materials, parts,
25equipment, components, and furnishings incorporated into or
26upon an aircraft as part of the modification, refurbishment,

 

 

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1completion, replacement, repair, or maintenance of the
2aircraft. This exemption includes consumable supplies used in
3the modification, refurbishment, completion, replacement,
4repair, and maintenance of aircraft, but excludes any
5materials, parts, equipment, components, and consumable
6supplies used in the modification, replacement, repair, and
7maintenance of aircraft engines or power plants, whether such
8engines or power plants are installed or uninstalled upon any
9such aircraft. "Consumable supplies" include, but are not
10limited to, adhesive, tape, sandpaper, general purpose
11lubricants, cleaning solution, latex gloves, and protective
12films. This exemption applies only to those organizations that
13(i) hold an Air Agency Certificate and are empowered to operate
14an approved repair station by the Federal Aviation
15Administration, (ii) have a Class IV Rating, and (iii) conduct
16operations in accordance with Part 145 of the Federal Aviation
17Regulations. The exemption does not include aircraft operated
18by a commercial air carrier providing scheduled passenger air
19service pursuant to authority issued under Part 121 or Part 129
20of the Federal Aviation Regulations.
21    (36) Tangible personal property purchased by a
22public-facilities corporation, as described in Section
2311-65-10 of the Illinois Municipal Code, for purposes of
24constructing or furnishing a municipal convention hall, but
25only if the legal title to the municipal convention hall is
26transferred to the municipality without any further

 

 

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1consideration by or on behalf of the municipality at the time
2of the completion of the municipal convention hall or upon the
3retirement or redemption of any bonds or other debt instruments
4issued by the public-facilities corporation in connection with
5the development of the municipal convention hall. This
6exemption includes existing public-facilities corporations as
7provided in Section 11-65-25 of the Illinois Municipal Code.
8This paragraph is exempt from the provisions of Section 3-90.
9(Source: P.A. 96-116, eff. 7-31-09; 96-339, eff. 7-1-10;
1096-532, eff. 8-14-09; 96-759, eff. 1-1-10; 96-1000, eff.
117-2-10; 97-38, eff. 6-28-11; 97-227, eff. 1-1-12; 97-431, eff.
128-16-11; revised 9-12-11.)
 
13    Section 915. The Service Use Tax Act is amended by changing
14Section 2 as follows:
 
15    (35 ILCS 110/2)  (from Ch. 120, par. 439.32)
16    Sec. 2. "Use" means the exercise by any person of any right
17or power over tangible personal property incident to the
18ownership of that property, but does not include the sale or
19use for demonstration by him of that property in any form as
20tangible personal property in the regular course of business.
21"Use" does not mean the interim use of tangible personal
22property nor the physical incorporation of tangible personal
23property, as an ingredient or constituent, into other tangible
24personal property, (a) which is sold in the regular course of

 

 

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1business or (b) which the person incorporating such ingredient
2or constituent therein has undertaken at the time of such
3purchase to cause to be transported in interstate commerce to
4destinations outside the State of Illinois.
5    "Purchased from a serviceman" means the acquisition of the
6ownership of, or title to, tangible personal property through a
7sale of service.
8    "Purchaser" means any person who, through a sale of
9service, acquires the ownership of, or title to, any tangible
10personal property.
11    "Cost price" means the consideration paid by the serviceman
12for a purchase valued in money, whether paid in money or
13otherwise, including cash, credits and services, and shall be
14determined without any deduction on account of the supplier's
15cost of the property sold or on account of any other expense
16incurred by the supplier. When a serviceman contracts out part
17or all of the services required in his sale of service, it
18shall be presumed that the cost price to the serviceman of the
19property transferred to him or her by his or her subcontractor
20is equal to 50% of the subcontractor's charges to the
21serviceman in the absence of proof of the consideration paid by
22the subcontractor for the purchase of such property.
23    "Selling price" means the consideration for a sale valued
24in money whether received in money or otherwise, including
25cash, credits and service, and shall be determined without any
26deduction on account of the serviceman's cost of the property

 

 

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1sold, the cost of materials used, labor or service cost or any
2other expense whatsoever, but does not include interest or
3finance charges which appear as separate items on the bill of
4sale or sales contract nor charges that are added to prices by
5sellers on account of the seller's duty to collect, from the
6purchaser, the tax that is imposed by this Act.
7    "Department" means the Department of Revenue.
8    "Person" means any natural individual, firm, partnership,
9association, joint stock company, joint venture, public or
10private corporation, limited liability company, and any
11receiver, executor, trustee, guardian or other representative
12appointed by order of any court.
13    "Sale of service" means any transaction except:
14        (1) a retail sale of tangible personal property taxable
15    under the Retailers' Occupation Tax Act or under the Use
16    Tax Act.
17        (2) a sale of tangible personal property for the
18    purpose of resale made in compliance with Section 2c of the
19    Retailers' Occupation Tax Act.
20        (3) except as hereinafter provided, a sale or transfer
21    of tangible personal property as an incident to the
22    rendering of service for or by any governmental body, or
23    for or by any corporation, society, association,
24    foundation or institution organized and operated
25    exclusively for charitable, religious or educational
26    purposes or any not-for-profit corporation, society,

 

 

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1    association, foundation, institution or organization which
2    has no compensated officers or employees and which is
3    organized and operated primarily for the recreation of
4    persons 55 years of age or older. A limited liability
5    company may qualify for the exemption under this paragraph
6    only if the limited liability company is organized and
7    operated exclusively for educational purposes. A hospital
8    as defined in the Tax-Exempt Hospital Responsibility Act
9    may qualify for the exemption under this paragraph only if
10    it is in compliance with that Act.
11        (4) a sale or transfer of tangible personal property as
12    an incident to the rendering of service for interstate
13    carriers for hire for use as rolling stock moving in
14    interstate commerce or by lessors under a lease of one year
15    or longer, executed or in effect at the time of purchase of
16    personal property, to interstate carriers for hire for use
17    as rolling stock moving in interstate commerce so long as
18    so used by such interstate carriers for hire, and equipment
19    operated by a telecommunications provider, licensed as a
20    common carrier by the Federal Communications Commission,
21    which is permanently installed in or affixed to aircraft
22    moving in interstate commerce.
23        (4a) a sale or transfer of tangible personal property
24    as an incident to the rendering of service for owners,
25    lessors, or shippers of tangible personal property which is
26    utilized by interstate carriers for hire for use as rolling

 

 

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1    stock moving in interstate commerce so long as so used by
2    interstate carriers for hire, and equipment operated by a
3    telecommunications provider, licensed as a common carrier
4    by the Federal Communications Commission, which is
5    permanently installed in or affixed to aircraft moving in
6    interstate commerce.
7        (4a-5) on and after July 1, 2003 and through June 30,
8    2004, a sale or transfer of a motor vehicle of the second
9    division with a gross vehicle weight in excess of 8,000
10    pounds as an incident to the rendering of service if that
11    motor vehicle is subject to the commercial distribution fee
12    imposed under Section 3-815.1 of the Illinois Vehicle Code.
13    Beginning on July 1, 2004 and through June 30, 2005, the
14    use in this State of motor vehicles of the second division:
15    (i) with a gross vehicle weight rating in excess of 8,000
16    pounds; (ii) that are subject to the commercial
17    distribution fee imposed under Section 3-815.1 of the
18    Illinois Vehicle Code; and (iii) that are primarily used
19    for commercial purposes. Through June 30, 2005, this
20    exemption applies to repair and replacement parts added
21    after the initial purchase of such a motor vehicle if that
22    motor vehicle is used in a manner that would qualify for
23    the rolling stock exemption otherwise provided for in this
24    Act. For purposes of this paragraph, "used for commercial
25    purposes" means the transportation of persons or property
26    in furtherance of any commercial or industrial enterprise

 

 

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1    whether for-hire or not.
2        (5) a sale or transfer of machinery and equipment used
3    primarily in the process of the manufacturing or
4    assembling, either in an existing, an expanded or a new
5    manufacturing facility, of tangible personal property for
6    wholesale or retail sale or lease, whether such sale or
7    lease is made directly by the manufacturer or by some other
8    person, whether the materials used in the process are owned
9    by the manufacturer or some other person, or whether such
10    sale or lease is made apart from or as an incident to the
11    seller's engaging in a service occupation and the
12    applicable tax is a Service Use Tax or Service Occupation
13    Tax, rather than Use Tax or Retailers' Occupation Tax.
14        (5a) the repairing, reconditioning or remodeling, for
15    a common carrier by rail, of tangible personal property
16    which belongs to such carrier for hire, and as to which
17    such carrier receives the physical possession of the
18    repaired, reconditioned or remodeled item of tangible
19    personal property in Illinois, and which such carrier
20    transports, or shares with another common carrier in the
21    transportation of such property, out of Illinois on a
22    standard uniform bill of lading showing the person who
23    repaired, reconditioned or remodeled the property to a
24    destination outside Illinois, for use outside Illinois.
25        (5b) a sale or transfer of tangible personal property
26    which is produced by the seller thereof on special order in

 

 

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1    such a way as to have made the applicable tax the Service
2    Occupation Tax or the Service Use Tax, rather than the
3    Retailers' Occupation Tax or the Use Tax, for an interstate
4    carrier by rail which receives the physical possession of
5    such property in Illinois, and which transports such
6    property, or shares with another common carrier in the
7    transportation of such property, out of Illinois on a
8    standard uniform bill of lading showing the seller of the
9    property as the shipper or consignor of such property to a
10    destination outside Illinois, for use outside Illinois.
11        (6) until July 1, 2003, a sale or transfer of
12    distillation machinery and equipment, sold as a unit or kit
13    and assembled or installed by the retailer, which machinery
14    and equipment is certified by the user to be used only for
15    the production of ethyl alcohol that will be used for
16    consumption as motor fuel or as a component of motor fuel
17    for the personal use of such user and not subject to sale
18    or resale.
19        (7) at the election of any serviceman not required to
20    be otherwise registered as a retailer under Section 2a of
21    the Retailers' Occupation Tax Act, made for each fiscal
22    year sales of service in which the aggregate annual cost
23    price of tangible personal property transferred as an
24    incident to the sales of service is less than 35%, or 75%
25    in the case of servicemen transferring prescription drugs
26    or servicemen engaged in graphic arts production, of the

 

 

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1    aggregate annual total gross receipts from all sales of
2    service. The purchase of such tangible personal property by
3    the serviceman shall be subject to tax under the Retailers'
4    Occupation Tax Act and the Use Tax Act. However, if a
5    primary serviceman who has made the election described in
6    this paragraph subcontracts service work to a secondary
7    serviceman who has also made the election described in this
8    paragraph, the primary serviceman does not incur a Use Tax
9    liability if the secondary serviceman (i) has paid or will
10    pay Use Tax on his or her cost price of any tangible
11    personal property transferred to the primary serviceman
12    and (ii) certifies that fact in writing to the primary
13    serviceman.
14    Tangible personal property transferred incident to the
15completion of a maintenance agreement is exempt from the tax
16imposed pursuant to this Act.
17    Exemption (5) also includes machinery and equipment used in
18the general maintenance or repair of such exempt machinery and
19equipment or for in-house manufacture of exempt machinery and
20equipment. For the purposes of exemption (5), each of these
21terms shall have the following meanings: (1) "manufacturing
22process" shall mean the production of any article of tangible
23personal property, whether such article is a finished product
24or an article for use in the process of manufacturing or
25assembling a different article of tangible personal property,
26by procedures commonly regarded as manufacturing, processing,

 

 

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1fabricating, or refining which changes some existing material
2or materials into a material with a different form, use or
3name. In relation to a recognized integrated business composed
4of a series of operations which collectively constitute
5manufacturing, or individually constitute manufacturing
6operations, the manufacturing process shall be deemed to
7commence with the first operation or stage of production in the
8series, and shall not be deemed to end until the completion of
9the final product in the last operation or stage of production
10in the series; and further, for purposes of exemption (5),
11photoprocessing is deemed to be a manufacturing process of
12tangible personal property for wholesale or retail sale; (2)
13"assembling process" shall mean the production of any article
14of tangible personal property, whether such article is a
15finished product or an article for use in the process of
16manufacturing or assembling a different article of tangible
17personal property, by the combination of existing materials in
18a manner commonly regarded as assembling which results in a
19material of a different form, use or name; (3) "machinery"
20shall mean major mechanical machines or major components of
21such machines contributing to a manufacturing or assembling
22process; and (4) "equipment" shall include any independent
23device or tool separate from any machinery but essential to an
24integrated manufacturing or assembly process; including
25computers used primarily in a manufacturer's computer assisted
26design, computer assisted manufacturing (CAD/CAM) system; or

 

 

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1any subunit or assembly comprising a component of any machinery
2or auxiliary, adjunct or attachment parts of machinery, such as
3tools, dies, jigs, fixtures, patterns and molds; or any parts
4which require periodic replacement in the course of normal
5operation; but shall not include hand tools. Equipment includes
6chemicals or chemicals acting as catalysts but only if the
7chemicals or chemicals acting as catalysts effect a direct and
8immediate change upon a product being manufactured or assembled
9for wholesale or retail sale or lease. The purchaser of such
10machinery and equipment who has an active resale registration
11number shall furnish such number to the seller at the time of
12purchase. The user of such machinery and equipment and tools
13without an active resale registration number shall prepare a
14certificate of exemption for each transaction stating facts
15establishing the exemption for that transaction, which
16certificate shall be available to the Department for inspection
17or audit. The Department shall prescribe the form of the
18certificate.
19    Any informal rulings, opinions or letters issued by the
20Department in response to an inquiry or request for any opinion
21from any person regarding the coverage and applicability of
22exemption (5) to specific devices shall be published,
23maintained as a public record, and made available for public
24inspection and copying. If the informal ruling, opinion or
25letter contains trade secrets or other confidential
26information, where possible the Department shall delete such

 

 

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1information prior to publication. Whenever such informal
2rulings, opinions, or letters contain any policy of general
3applicability, the Department shall formulate and adopt such
4policy as a rule in accordance with the provisions of the
5Illinois Administrative Procedure Act.
6    On and after July 1, 1987, no entity otherwise eligible
7under exemption (3) of this Section shall make tax free
8purchases unless it has an active exemption identification
9number issued by the Department.
10    The purchase, employment and transfer of such tangible
11personal property as newsprint and ink for the primary purpose
12of conveying news (with or without other information) is not a
13purchase, use or sale of service or of tangible personal
14property within the meaning of this Act.
15    "Serviceman" means any person who is engaged in the
16occupation of making sales of service.
17    "Sale at retail" means "sale at retail" as defined in the
18Retailers' Occupation Tax Act.
19    "Supplier" means any person who makes sales of tangible
20personal property to servicemen for the purpose of resale as an
21incident to a sale of service.
22    "Serviceman maintaining a place of business in this State",
23or any like term, means and includes any serviceman:
24        1. having or maintaining within this State, directly or
25    by a subsidiary, an office, distribution house, sales
26    house, warehouse or other place of business, or any agent

 

 

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1    or other representative operating within this State under
2    the authority of the serviceman or its subsidiary,
3    irrespective of whether such place of business or agent or
4    other representative is located here permanently or
5    temporarily, or whether such serviceman or subsidiary is
6    licensed to do business in this State;
7        1.1. beginning July 1, 2011, having a contract with a
8    person located in this State under which the person, for a
9    commission or other consideration based on the sale of
10    service by the serviceman, directly or indirectly refers
11    potential customers to the serviceman by a link on the
12    person's Internet website. The provisions of this
13    paragraph 1.1 shall apply only if the cumulative gross
14    receipts from sales of service by the serviceman to
15    customers who are referred to the serviceman by all persons
16    in this State under such contracts exceed $10,000 during
17    the preceding 4 quarterly periods ending on the last day of
18    March, June, September, and December;
19        1.2. beginning July 1, 2011, having a contract with a
20    person located in this State under which:
21            A. the serviceman sells the same or substantially
22        similar line of services as the person located in this
23        State and does so using an identical or substantially
24        similar name, trade name, or trademark as the person
25        located in this State; and
26            B. the serviceman provides a commission or other

 

 

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1        consideration to the person located in this State based
2        upon the sale of services by the serviceman.
3    The provisions of this paragraph 1.2 shall apply only if
4    the cumulative gross receipts from sales of service by the
5    serviceman to customers in this State under all such
6    contracts exceed $10,000 during the preceding 4 quarterly
7    periods ending on the last day of March, June, September,
8    and December;
9        2. soliciting orders for tangible personal property by
10    means of a telecommunication or television shopping system
11    (which utilizes toll free numbers) which is intended by the
12    retailer to be broadcast by cable television or other means
13    of broadcasting, to consumers located in this State;
14        3. pursuant to a contract with a broadcaster or
15    publisher located in this State, soliciting orders for
16    tangible personal property by means of advertising which is
17    disseminated primarily to consumers located in this State
18    and only secondarily to bordering jurisdictions;
19        4. soliciting orders for tangible personal property by
20    mail if the solicitations are substantial and recurring and
21    if the retailer benefits from any banking, financing, debt
22    collection, telecommunication, or marketing activities
23    occurring in this State or benefits from the location in
24    this State of authorized installation, servicing, or
25    repair facilities;
26        5. being owned or controlled by the same interests

 

 

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1    which own or control any retailer engaging in business in
2    the same or similar line of business in this State;
3        6. having a franchisee or licensee operating under its
4    trade name if the franchisee or licensee is required to
5    collect the tax under this Section;
6        7. pursuant to a contract with a cable television
7    operator located in this State, soliciting orders for
8    tangible personal property by means of advertising which is
9    transmitted or distributed over a cable television system
10    in this State; or
11        8. engaging in activities in Illinois, which
12    activities in the state in which the supply business
13    engaging in such activities is located would constitute
14    maintaining a place of business in that state.
15(Source: P.A. 96-1544, eff. 3-10-11.)
 
16    Section 920. The Service Occupation Tax Act is amended by
17changing Section 2 as follows:
 
18    (35 ILCS 115/2)  (from Ch. 120, par. 439.102)
19    Sec. 2. "Transfer" means any transfer of the title to
20property or of the ownership of property whether or not the
21transferor retains title as security for the payment of amounts
22due him from the transferee.
23    "Cost Price" means the consideration paid by the serviceman
24for a purchase valued in money, whether paid in money or

 

 

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1otherwise, including cash, credits and services, and shall be
2determined without any deduction on account of the supplier's
3cost of the property sold or on account of any other expense
4incurred by the supplier. When a serviceman contracts out part
5or all of the services required in his sale of service, it
6shall be presumed that the cost price to the serviceman of the
7property transferred to him by his or her subcontractor is
8equal to 50% of the subcontractor's charges to the serviceman
9in the absence of proof of the consideration paid by the
10subcontractor for the purchase of such property.
11    "Department" means the Department of Revenue.
12    "Person" means any natural individual, firm, partnership,
13association, joint stock company, joint venture, public or
14private corporation, limited liability company, and any
15receiver, executor, trustee, guardian or other representative
16appointed by order of any court.
17    "Sale of Service" means any transaction except:
18    (a) A retail sale of tangible personal property taxable
19under the Retailers' Occupation Tax Act or under the Use Tax
20Act.
21    (b) A sale of tangible personal property for the purpose of
22resale made in compliance with Section 2c of the Retailers'
23Occupation Tax Act.
24    (c) Except as hereinafter provided, a sale or transfer of
25tangible personal property as an incident to the rendering of
26service for or by any governmental body or for or by any

 

 

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1corporation, society, association, foundation or institution
2organized and operated exclusively for charitable, religious
3or educational purposes or any not-for-profit corporation,
4society, association, foundation, institution or organization
5which has no compensated officers or employees and which is
6organized and operated primarily for the recreation of persons
755 years of age or older. A limited liability company may
8qualify for the exemption under this paragraph only if the
9limited liability company is organized and operated
10exclusively for educational purposes. A hospital as defined in
11the Tax-Exempt Hospital Responsibility Act may qualify for the
12exemption under this paragraph only if it is in compliance with
13that Act.
14    (d) A sale or transfer of tangible personal property as an
15incident to the rendering of service for interstate carriers
16for hire for use as rolling stock moving in interstate commerce
17or lessors under leases of one year or longer, executed or in
18effect at the time of purchase, to interstate carriers for hire
19for use as rolling stock moving in interstate commerce, and
20equipment operated by a telecommunications provider, licensed
21as a common carrier by the Federal Communications Commission,
22which is permanently installed in or affixed to aircraft moving
23in interstate commerce.
24    (d-1) A sale or transfer of tangible personal property as
25an incident to the rendering of service for owners, lessors or
26shippers of tangible personal property which is utilized by

 

 

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1interstate carriers for hire for use as rolling stock moving in
2interstate commerce, and equipment operated by a
3telecommunications provider, licensed as a common carrier by
4the Federal Communications Commission, which is permanently
5installed in or affixed to aircraft moving in interstate
6commerce.
7    (d-1.1) On and after July 1, 2003 and through June 30,
82004, a sale or transfer of a motor vehicle of the second
9division with a gross vehicle weight in excess of 8,000 pounds
10as an incident to the rendering of service if that motor
11vehicle is subject to the commercial distribution fee imposed
12under Section 3-815.1 of the Illinois Vehicle Code. Beginning
13on July 1, 2004 and through June 30, 2005, the use in this
14State of motor vehicles of the second division: (i) with a
15gross vehicle weight rating in excess of 8,000 pounds; (ii)
16that are subject to the commercial distribution fee imposed
17under Section 3-815.1 of the Illinois Vehicle Code; and (iii)
18that are primarily used for commercial purposes. Through June
1930, 2005, this exemption applies to repair and replacement
20parts added after the initial purchase of such a motor vehicle
21if that motor vehicle is used in a manner that would qualify
22for the rolling stock exemption otherwise provided for in this
23Act. For purposes of this paragraph, "used for commercial
24purposes" means the transportation of persons or property in
25furtherance of any commercial or industrial enterprise whether
26for-hire or not.

 

 

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1    (d-2) The repairing, reconditioning or remodeling, for a
2common carrier by rail, of tangible personal property which
3belongs to such carrier for hire, and as to which such carrier
4receives the physical possession of the repaired,
5reconditioned or remodeled item of tangible personal property
6in Illinois, and which such carrier transports, or shares with
7another common carrier in the transportation of such property,
8out of Illinois on a standard uniform bill of lading showing
9the person who repaired, reconditioned or remodeled the
10property as the shipper or consignor of such property to a
11destination outside Illinois, for use outside Illinois.
12    (d-3) A sale or transfer of tangible personal property
13which is produced by the seller thereof on special order in
14such a way as to have made the applicable tax the Service
15Occupation Tax or the Service Use Tax, rather than the
16Retailers' Occupation Tax or the Use Tax, for an interstate
17carrier by rail which receives the physical possession of such
18property in Illinois, and which transports such property, or
19shares with another common carrier in the transportation of
20such property, out of Illinois on a standard uniform bill of
21lading showing the seller of the property as the shipper or
22consignor of such property to a destination outside Illinois,
23for use outside Illinois.
24    (d-4) Until January 1, 1997, a sale, by a registered
25serviceman paying tax under this Act to the Department, of
26special order printed materials delivered outside Illinois and

 

 

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1which are not returned to this State, if delivery is made by
2the seller or agent of the seller, including an agent who
3causes the product to be delivered outside Illinois by a common
4carrier or the U.S. postal service.
5    (e) A sale or transfer of machinery and equipment used
6primarily in the process of the manufacturing or assembling,
7either in an existing, an expanded or a new manufacturing
8facility, of tangible personal property for wholesale or retail
9sale or lease, whether such sale or lease is made directly by
10the manufacturer or by some other person, whether the materials
11used in the process are owned by the manufacturer or some other
12person, or whether such sale or lease is made apart from or as
13an incident to the seller's engaging in a service occupation
14and the applicable tax is a Service Occupation Tax or Service
15Use Tax, rather than Retailers' Occupation Tax or Use Tax.
16    (f) Until July 1, 2003, the sale or transfer of
17distillation machinery and equipment, sold as a unit or kit and
18assembled or installed by the retailer, which machinery and
19equipment is certified by the user to be used only for the
20production of ethyl alcohol that will be used for consumption
21as motor fuel or as a component of motor fuel for the personal
22use of such user and not subject to sale or resale.
23    (g) At the election of any serviceman not required to be
24otherwise registered as a retailer under Section 2a of the
25Retailers' Occupation Tax Act, made for each fiscal year sales
26of service in which the aggregate annual cost price of tangible

 

 

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1personal property transferred as an incident to the sales of
2service is less than 35% (75% in the case of servicemen
3transferring prescription drugs or servicemen engaged in
4graphic arts production) of the aggregate annual total gross
5receipts from all sales of service. The purchase of such
6tangible personal property by the serviceman shall be subject
7to tax under the Retailers' Occupation Tax Act and the Use Tax
8Act. However, if a primary serviceman who has made the election
9described in this paragraph subcontracts service work to a
10secondary serviceman who has also made the election described
11in this paragraph, the primary serviceman does not incur a Use
12Tax liability if the secondary serviceman (i) has paid or will
13pay Use Tax on his or her cost price of any tangible personal
14property transferred to the primary serviceman and (ii)
15certifies that fact in writing to the primary serviceman.
16    Tangible personal property transferred incident to the
17completion of a maintenance agreement is exempt from the tax
18imposed pursuant to this Act.
19    Exemption (e) also includes machinery and equipment used in
20the general maintenance or repair of such exempt machinery and
21equipment or for in-house manufacture of exempt machinery and
22equipment. For the purposes of exemption (e), each of these
23terms shall have the following meanings: (1) "manufacturing
24process" shall mean the production of any article of tangible
25personal property, whether such article is a finished product
26or an article for use in the process of manufacturing or

 

 

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1assembling a different article of tangible personal property,
2by procedures commonly regarded as manufacturing, processing,
3fabricating, or refining which changes some existing material
4or materials into a material with a different form, use or
5name. In relation to a recognized integrated business composed
6of a series of operations which collectively constitute
7manufacturing, or individually constitute manufacturing
8operations, the manufacturing process shall be deemed to
9commence with the first operation or stage of production in the
10series, and shall not be deemed to end until the completion of
11the final product in the last operation or stage of production
12in the series; and further for purposes of exemption (e),
13photoprocessing is deemed to be a manufacturing process of
14tangible personal property for wholesale or retail sale; (2)
15"assembling process" shall mean the production of any article
16of tangible personal property, whether such article is a
17finished product or an article for use in the process of
18manufacturing or assembling a different article of tangible
19personal property, by the combination of existing materials in
20a manner commonly regarded as assembling which results in a
21material of a different form, use or name; (3) "machinery"
22shall mean major mechanical machines or major components of
23such machines contributing to a manufacturing or assembling
24process; and (4) "equipment" shall include any independent
25device or tool separate from any machinery but essential to an
26integrated manufacturing or assembly process; including

 

 

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1computers used primarily in a manufacturer's computer assisted
2design, computer assisted manufacturing (CAD/CAM) system; or
3any subunit or assembly comprising a component of any machinery
4or auxiliary, adjunct or attachment parts of machinery, such as
5tools, dies, jigs, fixtures, patterns and molds; or any parts
6which require periodic replacement in the course of normal
7operation; but shall not include hand tools. Equipment includes
8chemicals or chemicals acting as catalysts but only if the
9chemicals or chemicals acting as catalysts effect a direct and
10immediate change upon a product being manufactured or assembled
11for wholesale or retail sale or lease. The purchaser of such
12machinery and equipment who has an active resale registration
13number shall furnish such number to the seller at the time of
14purchase. The purchaser of such machinery and equipment and
15tools without an active resale registration number shall
16furnish to the seller a certificate of exemption for each
17transaction stating facts establishing the exemption for that
18transaction, which certificate shall be available to the
19Department for inspection or audit.
20    Except as provided in Section 2d of this Act, the rolling
21stock exemption applies to rolling stock used by an interstate
22carrier for hire, even just between points in Illinois, if such
23rolling stock transports, for hire, persons whose journeys or
24property whose shipments originate or terminate outside
25Illinois.
26    Any informal rulings, opinions or letters issued by the

 

 

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1Department in response to an inquiry or request for any opinion
2from any person regarding the coverage and applicability of
3exemption (e) to specific devices shall be published,
4maintained as a public record, and made available for public
5inspection and copying. If the informal ruling, opinion or
6letter contains trade secrets or other confidential
7information, where possible the Department shall delete such
8information prior to publication. Whenever such informal
9rulings, opinions, or letters contain any policy of general
10applicability, the Department shall formulate and adopt such
11policy as a rule in accordance with the provisions of the
12Illinois Administrative Procedure Act.
13    On and after July 1, 1987, no entity otherwise eligible
14under exemption (c) of this Section shall make tax free
15purchases unless it has an active exemption identification
16number issued by the Department.
17    "Serviceman" means any person who is engaged in the
18occupation of making sales of service.
19    "Sale at Retail" means "sale at retail" as defined in the
20Retailers' Occupation Tax Act.
21    "Supplier" means any person who makes sales of tangible
22personal property to servicemen for the purpose of resale as an
23incident to a sale of service.
24(Source: P.A. 92-484, eff. 8-23-01; 93-23, eff. 6-20-03; 93-24,
25eff. 6-20-03; 93-1033, eff. 9-3-04.)
 

 

 

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1    Section 925. The Retailers' Occupation Tax Act is amended
2by changing Section 2-5 as follows:
 
3    (35 ILCS 120/2-5)
4    Sec. 2-5. Exemptions. Gross receipts from proceeds from the
5sale of the following tangible personal property are exempt
6from the tax imposed by this Act:
7    (1) Farm chemicals.
8    (2) Farm machinery and equipment, both new and used,
9including that manufactured on special order, certified by the
10purchaser to be used primarily for production agriculture or
11State or federal agricultural programs, including individual
12replacement parts for the machinery and equipment, including
13machinery and equipment purchased for lease, and including
14implements of husbandry defined in Section 1-130 of the
15Illinois Vehicle Code, farm machinery and agricultural
16chemical and fertilizer spreaders, and nurse wagons required to
17be registered under Section 3-809 of the Illinois Vehicle Code,
18but excluding other motor vehicles required to be registered
19under the Illinois Vehicle Code. Horticultural polyhouses or
20hoop houses used for propagating, growing, or overwintering
21plants shall be considered farm machinery and equipment under
22this item (2). Agricultural chemical tender tanks and dry boxes
23shall include units sold separately from a motor vehicle
24required to be licensed and units sold mounted on a motor
25vehicle required to be licensed, if the selling price of the

 

 

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1tender is separately stated.
2    Farm machinery and equipment shall include precision
3farming equipment that is installed or purchased to be
4installed on farm machinery and equipment including, but not
5limited to, tractors, harvesters, sprayers, planters, seeders,
6or spreaders. Precision farming equipment includes, but is not
7limited to, soil testing sensors, computers, monitors,
8software, global positioning and mapping systems, and other
9such equipment.
10    Farm machinery and equipment also includes computers,
11sensors, software, and related equipment used primarily in the
12computer-assisted operation of production agriculture
13facilities, equipment, and activities such as, but not limited
14to, the collection, monitoring, and correlation of animal and
15crop data for the purpose of formulating animal diets and
16agricultural chemicals. This item (2) (7) is exempt from the
17provisions of Section 2-70.
18    (3) Until July 1, 2003, distillation machinery and
19equipment, sold as a unit or kit, assembled or installed by the
20retailer, certified by the user to be used only for the
21production of ethyl alcohol that will be used for consumption
22as motor fuel or as a component of motor fuel for the personal
23use of the user, and not subject to sale or resale.
24    (4) Until July 1, 2003 and beginning again September 1,
252004 through August 30, 2014, graphic arts machinery and
26equipment, including repair and replacement parts, both new and

 

 

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1used, and including that manufactured on special order or
2purchased for lease, certified by the purchaser to be used
3primarily for graphic arts production. Equipment includes
4chemicals or chemicals acting as catalysts but only if the
5chemicals or chemicals acting as catalysts effect a direct and
6immediate change upon a graphic arts product.
7    (5) A motor vehicle of the first division, a motor vehicle
8of the second division that is a self contained motor vehicle
9designed or permanently converted to provide living quarters
10for recreational, camping, or travel use, with direct walk
11through access to the living quarters from the driver's seat,
12or a motor vehicle of the second division that is of the van
13configuration designed for the transportation of not less than
147 nor more than 16 passengers, as defined in Section 1-146 of
15the Illinois Vehicle Code, that is used for automobile renting,
16as defined in the Automobile Renting Occupation and Use Tax
17Act. This paragraph is exempt from the provisions of Section
182-70.
19    (6) Personal property sold by a teacher-sponsored student
20organization affiliated with an elementary or secondary school
21located in Illinois.
22    (7) Until July 1, 2003, proceeds of that portion of the
23selling price of a passenger car the sale of which is subject
24to the Replacement Vehicle Tax.
25    (8) Personal property sold to an Illinois county fair
26association for use in conducting, operating, or promoting the

 

 

HB3860- 97 -LRB097 14081 HLH 58744 b

1county fair.
2    (9) Personal property sold to a not-for-profit arts or
3cultural organization that establishes, by proof required by
4the Department by rule, that it has received an exemption under
5Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code and that is
6organized and operated primarily for the presentation or
7support of arts or cultural programming, activities, or
8services. These organizations include, but are not limited to,
9music and dramatic arts organizations such as symphony
10orchestras and theatrical groups, arts and cultural service
11organizations, local arts councils, visual arts organizations,
12and media arts organizations. On and after the effective date
13of this amendatory Act of the 92nd General Assembly, however,
14an entity otherwise eligible for this exemption shall not make
15tax-free purchases unless it has an active identification
16number issued by the Department.
17    (10) Personal property sold by a corporation, society,
18association, foundation, institution, or organization, other
19than a limited liability company, that is organized and
20operated as a not-for-profit service enterprise for the benefit
21of persons 65 years of age or older if the personal property
22was not purchased by the enterprise for the purpose of resale
23by the enterprise.
24    (11) Personal property sold to a governmental body, to a
25corporation, society, association, foundation, or institution
26organized and operated exclusively for charitable, religious,

 

 

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1or educational purposes, or to a not-for-profit corporation,
2society, association, foundation, institution, or organization
3that has no compensated officers or employees and that is
4organized and operated primarily for the recreation of persons
555 years of age or older. A limited liability company may
6qualify for the exemption under this paragraph only if the
7limited liability company is organized and operated
8exclusively for educational purposes. A hospital as defined in
9the Tax-Exempt Hospital Responsibility Act may qualify for the
10exemption under this paragraph only if it is in compliance with
11that Act. On and after July 1, 1987, however, no entity
12otherwise eligible for this exemption shall make tax-free
13purchases unless it has an active identification number issued
14by the Department.
15    (12) Tangible personal property sold to interstate
16carriers for hire for use as rolling stock moving in interstate
17commerce or to lessors under leases of one year or longer
18executed or in effect at the time of purchase by interstate
19carriers for hire for use as rolling stock moving in interstate
20commerce and equipment operated by a telecommunications
21provider, licensed as a common carrier by the Federal
22Communications Commission, which is permanently installed in
23or affixed to aircraft moving in interstate commerce.
24    (12-5) On and after July 1, 2003 and through June 30, 2004,
25motor vehicles of the second division with a gross vehicle
26weight in excess of 8,000 pounds that are subject to the

 

 

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1commercial distribution fee imposed under Section 3-815.1 of
2the Illinois Vehicle Code. Beginning on July 1, 2004 and
3through June 30, 2005, the use in this State of motor vehicles
4of the second division: (i) with a gross vehicle weight rating
5in excess of 8,000 pounds; (ii) that are subject to the
6commercial distribution fee imposed under Section 3-815.1 of
7the Illinois Vehicle Code; and (iii) that are primarily used
8for commercial purposes. Through June 30, 2005, this exemption
9applies to repair and replacement parts added after the initial
10purchase of such a motor vehicle if that motor vehicle is used
11in a manner that would qualify for the rolling stock exemption
12otherwise provided for in this Act. For purposes of this
13paragraph, "used for commercial purposes" means the
14transportation of persons or property in furtherance of any
15commercial or industrial enterprise whether for-hire or not.
16    (13) Proceeds from sales to owners, lessors, or shippers of
17tangible personal property that is utilized by interstate
18carriers for hire for use as rolling stock moving in interstate
19commerce and equipment operated by a telecommunications
20provider, licensed as a common carrier by the Federal
21Communications Commission, which is permanently installed in
22or affixed to aircraft moving in interstate commerce.
23    (14) Machinery and equipment that will be used by the
24purchaser, or a lessee of the purchaser, primarily in the
25process of manufacturing or assembling tangible personal
26property for wholesale or retail sale or lease, whether the

 

 

HB3860- 100 -LRB097 14081 HLH 58744 b

1sale or lease is made directly by the manufacturer or by some
2other person, whether the materials used in the process are
3owned by the manufacturer or some other person, or whether the
4sale or lease is made apart from or as an incident to the
5seller's engaging in the service occupation of producing
6machines, tools, dies, jigs, patterns, gauges, or other similar
7items of no commercial value on special order for a particular
8purchaser.
9    (15) Proceeds of mandatory service charges separately
10stated on customers' bills for purchase and consumption of food
11and beverages, to the extent that the proceeds of the service
12charge are in fact turned over as tips or as a substitute for
13tips to the employees who participate directly in preparing,
14serving, hosting or cleaning up the food or beverage function
15with respect to which the service charge is imposed.
16    (16) Petroleum products sold to a purchaser if the seller
17is prohibited by federal law from charging tax to the
18purchaser.
19    (17) Tangible personal property sold to a common carrier by
20rail or motor that receives the physical possession of the
21property in Illinois and that transports the property, or
22shares with another common carrier in the transportation of the
23property, out of Illinois on a standard uniform bill of lading
24showing the seller of the property as the shipper or consignor
25of the property to a destination outside Illinois, for use
26outside Illinois.

 

 

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1    (18) Legal tender, currency, medallions, or gold or silver
2coinage issued by the State of Illinois, the government of the
3United States of America, or the government of any foreign
4country, and bullion.
5    (19) Until July 1 2003, oil field exploration, drilling,
6and production equipment, including (i) rigs and parts of rigs,
7rotary rigs, cable tool rigs, and workover rigs, (ii) pipe and
8tubular goods, including casing and drill strings, (iii) pumps
9and pump-jack units, (iv) storage tanks and flow lines, (v) any
10individual replacement part for oil field exploration,
11drilling, and production equipment, and (vi) machinery and
12equipment purchased for lease; but excluding motor vehicles
13required to be registered under the Illinois Vehicle Code.
14    (20) Photoprocessing machinery and equipment, including
15repair and replacement parts, both new and used, including that
16manufactured on special order, certified by the purchaser to be
17used primarily for photoprocessing, and including
18photoprocessing machinery and equipment purchased for lease.
19    (21) Until July 1, 2003, coal exploration, mining,
20offhighway hauling, processing, maintenance, and reclamation
21equipment, including replacement parts and equipment, and
22including equipment purchased for lease, but excluding motor
23vehicles required to be registered under the Illinois Vehicle
24Code.
25    (22) Fuel and petroleum products sold to or used by an air
26carrier, certified by the carrier to be used for consumption,

 

 

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1shipment, or storage in the conduct of its business as an air
2common carrier, for a flight destined for or returning from a
3location or locations outside the United States without regard
4to previous or subsequent domestic stopovers.
5    (23) A transaction in which the purchase order is received
6by a florist who is located outside Illinois, but who has a
7florist located in Illinois deliver the property to the
8purchaser or the purchaser's donee in Illinois.
9    (24) Fuel consumed or used in the operation of ships,
10barges, or vessels that are used primarily in or for the
11transportation of property or the conveyance of persons for
12hire on rivers bordering on this State if the fuel is delivered
13by the seller to the purchaser's barge, ship, or vessel while
14it is afloat upon that bordering river.
15    (25) Except as provided in item (25-5) of this Section, a
16motor vehicle sold in this State to a nonresident even though
17the motor vehicle is delivered to the nonresident in this
18State, if the motor vehicle is not to be titled in this State,
19and if a drive-away permit is issued to the motor vehicle as
20provided in Section 3-603 of the Illinois Vehicle Code or if
21the nonresident purchaser has vehicle registration plates to
22transfer to the motor vehicle upon returning to his or her home
23state. The issuance of the drive-away permit or having the
24out-of-state registration plates to be transferred is prima
25facie evidence that the motor vehicle will not be titled in
26this State.

 

 

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1    (25-5) The exemption under item (25) does not apply if the
2state in which the motor vehicle will be titled does not allow
3a reciprocal exemption for a motor vehicle sold and delivered
4in that state to an Illinois resident but titled in Illinois.
5The tax collected under this Act on the sale of a motor vehicle
6in this State to a resident of another state that does not
7allow a reciprocal exemption shall be imposed at a rate equal
8to the state's rate of tax on taxable property in the state in
9which the purchaser is a resident, except that the tax shall
10not exceed the tax that would otherwise be imposed under this
11Act. At the time of the sale, the purchaser shall execute a
12statement, signed under penalty of perjury, of his or her
13intent to title the vehicle in the state in which the purchaser
14is a resident within 30 days after the sale and of the fact of
15the payment to the State of Illinois of tax in an amount
16equivalent to the state's rate of tax on taxable property in
17his or her state of residence and shall submit the statement to
18the appropriate tax collection agency in his or her state of
19residence. In addition, the retailer must retain a signed copy
20of the statement in his or her records. Nothing in this item
21shall be construed to require the removal of the vehicle from
22this state following the filing of an intent to title the
23vehicle in the purchaser's state of residence if the purchaser
24titles the vehicle in his or her state of residence within 30
25days after the date of sale. The tax collected under this Act
26in accordance with this item (25-5) shall be proportionately

 

 

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1distributed as if the tax were collected at the 6.25% general
2rate imposed under this Act.
3    (25-7) Beginning on July 1, 2007, no tax is imposed under
4this Act on the sale of an aircraft, as defined in Section 3 of
5the Illinois Aeronautics Act, if all of the following
6conditions are met:
7        (1) the aircraft leaves this State within 15 days after
8    the later of either the issuance of the final billing for
9    the sale of the aircraft, or the authorized approval for
10    return to service, completion of the maintenance record
11    entry, and completion of the test flight and ground test
12    for inspection, as required by 14 C.F.R. 91.407;
13        (2) the aircraft is not based or registered in this
14    State after the sale of the aircraft; and
15        (3) the seller retains in his or her books and records
16    and provides to the Department a signed and dated
17    certification from the purchaser, on a form prescribed by
18    the Department, certifying that the requirements of this
19    item (25-7) are met. The certificate must also include the
20    name and address of the purchaser, the address of the
21    location where the aircraft is to be titled or registered,
22    the address of the primary physical location of the
23    aircraft, and other information that the Department may
24    reasonably require.
25    For purposes of this item (25-7):
26    "Based in this State" means hangared, stored, or otherwise

 

 

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1used, excluding post-sale customizations as defined in this
2Section, for 10 or more days in each 12-month period
3immediately following the date of the sale of the aircraft.
4    "Registered in this State" means an aircraft registered
5with the Department of Transportation, Aeronautics Division,
6or titled or registered with the Federal Aviation
7Administration to an address located in this State.
8    This paragraph (25-7) is exempt from the provisions of
9Section 2-70.
10    (26) Semen used for artificial insemination of livestock
11for direct agricultural production.
12    (27) Horses, or interests in horses, registered with and
13meeting the requirements of any of the Arabian Horse Club
14Registry of America, Appaloosa Horse Club, American Quarter
15Horse Association, United States Trotting Association, or
16Jockey Club, as appropriate, used for purposes of breeding or
17racing for prizes. This item (27) is exempt from the provisions
18of Section 2-70, and the exemption provided for under this item
19(27) applies for all periods beginning May 30, 1995, but no
20claim for credit or refund is allowed on or after January 1,
212008 (the effective date of Public Act 95-88) for such taxes
22paid during the period beginning May 30, 2000 and ending on
23January 1, 2008 (the effective date of Public Act 95-88).
24    (28) Computers and communications equipment utilized for
25any hospital purpose and equipment used in the diagnosis,
26analysis, or treatment of hospital patients sold to a lessor

 

 

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1who leases the equipment, under a lease of one year or longer
2executed or in effect at the time of the purchase, to a
3hospital that has been issued an active tax exemption
4identification number by the Department under Section 1g of
5this Act.
6    (29) Personal property sold to a lessor who leases the
7property, under a lease of one year or longer executed or in
8effect at the time of the purchase, to a governmental body that
9has been issued an active tax exemption identification number
10by the Department under Section 1g of this Act.
11    (30) Beginning with taxable years ending on or after
12December 31, 1995 and ending with taxable years ending on or
13before December 31, 2004, personal property that is donated for
14disaster relief to be used in a State or federally declared
15disaster area in Illinois or bordering Illinois by a
16manufacturer or retailer that is registered in this State to a
17corporation, society, association, foundation, or institution
18that has been issued a sales tax exemption identification
19number by the Department that assists victims of the disaster
20who reside within the declared disaster area.
21    (31) Beginning with taxable years ending on or after
22December 31, 1995 and ending with taxable years ending on or
23before December 31, 2004, personal property that is used in the
24performance of infrastructure repairs in this State, including
25but not limited to municipal roads and streets, access roads,
26bridges, sidewalks, waste disposal systems, water and sewer

 

 

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1line extensions, water distribution and purification
2facilities, storm water drainage and retention facilities, and
3sewage treatment facilities, resulting from a State or
4federally declared disaster in Illinois or bordering Illinois
5when such repairs are initiated on facilities located in the
6declared disaster area within 6 months after the disaster.
7    (32) Beginning July 1, 1999, game or game birds sold at a
8"game breeding and hunting preserve area" as that term is used
9in the Wildlife Code. This paragraph is exempt from the
10provisions of Section 2-70.
11    (33) A motor vehicle, as that term is defined in Section
121-146 of the Illinois Vehicle Code, that is donated to a
13corporation, limited liability company, society, association,
14foundation, or institution that is determined by the Department
15to be organized and operated exclusively for educational
16purposes. For purposes of this exemption, "a corporation,
17limited liability company, society, association, foundation,
18or institution organized and operated exclusively for
19educational purposes" means all tax-supported public schools,
20private schools that offer systematic instruction in useful
21branches of learning by methods common to public schools and
22that compare favorably in their scope and intensity with the
23course of study presented in tax-supported schools, and
24vocational or technical schools or institutes organized and
25operated exclusively to provide a course of study of not less
26than 6 weeks duration and designed to prepare individuals to

 

 

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1follow a trade or to pursue a manual, technical, mechanical,
2industrial, business, or commercial occupation.
3    (34) Beginning January 1, 2000, personal property,
4including food, purchased through fundraising events for the
5benefit of a public or private elementary or secondary school,
6a group of those schools, or one or more school districts if
7the events are sponsored by an entity recognized by the school
8district that consists primarily of volunteers and includes
9parents and teachers of the school children. This paragraph
10does not apply to fundraising events (i) for the benefit of
11private home instruction or (ii) for which the fundraising
12entity purchases the personal property sold at the events from
13another individual or entity that sold the property for the
14purpose of resale by the fundraising entity and that profits
15from the sale to the fundraising entity. This paragraph is
16exempt from the provisions of Section 2-70.
17    (35) Beginning January 1, 2000 and through December 31,
182001, new or used automatic vending machines that prepare and
19serve hot food and beverages, including coffee, soup, and other
20items, and replacement parts for these machines. Beginning
21January 1, 2002 and through June 30, 2003, machines and parts
22for machines used in commercial, coin-operated amusement and
23vending business if a use or occupation tax is paid on the
24gross receipts derived from the use of the commercial,
25coin-operated amusement and vending machines. This paragraph
26is exempt from the provisions of Section 2-70.

 

 

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1    (35-5) Beginning August 23, 2001 and through June 30, 2011,
2food for human consumption that is to be consumed off the
3premises where it is sold (other than alcoholic beverages, soft
4drinks, and food that has been prepared for immediate
5consumption) and prescription and nonprescription medicines,
6drugs, medical appliances, and insulin, urine testing
7materials, syringes, and needles used by diabetics, for human
8use, when purchased for use by a person receiving medical
9assistance under Article V of the Illinois Public Aid Code who
10resides in a licensed long-term care facility, as defined in
11the Nursing Home Care Act, or a licensed facility as defined in
12the ID/DD Community Care Act or the Specialized Mental Health
13Rehabilitation Act.
14    (36) Beginning August 2, 2001, computers and
15communications equipment utilized for any hospital purpose and
16equipment used in the diagnosis, analysis, or treatment of
17hospital patients sold to a lessor who leases the equipment,
18under a lease of one year or longer executed or in effect at
19the time of the purchase, to a hospital that has been issued an
20active tax exemption identification number by the Department
21under Section 1g of this Act. This paragraph is exempt from the
22provisions of Section 2-70.
23    (37) Beginning August 2, 2001, personal property sold to a
24lessor who leases the property, under a lease of one year or
25longer executed or in effect at the time of the purchase, to a
26governmental body that has been issued an active tax exemption

 

 

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1identification number by the Department under Section 1g of
2this Act. This paragraph is exempt from the provisions of
3Section 2-70.
4    (38) Beginning on January 1, 2002 and through June 30,
52016, tangible personal property purchased from an Illinois
6retailer by a taxpayer engaged in centralized purchasing
7activities in Illinois who will, upon receipt of the property
8in Illinois, temporarily store the property in Illinois (i) for
9the purpose of subsequently transporting it outside this State
10for use or consumption thereafter solely outside this State or
11(ii) for the purpose of being processed, fabricated, or
12manufactured into, attached to, or incorporated into other
13tangible personal property to be transported outside this State
14and thereafter used or consumed solely outside this State. The
15Director of Revenue shall, pursuant to rules adopted in
16accordance with the Illinois Administrative Procedure Act,
17issue a permit to any taxpayer in good standing with the
18Department who is eligible for the exemption under this
19paragraph (38). The permit issued under this paragraph (38)
20shall authorize the holder, to the extent and in the manner
21specified in the rules adopted under this Act, to purchase
22tangible personal property from a retailer exempt from the
23taxes imposed by this Act. Taxpayers shall maintain all
24necessary books and records to substantiate the use and
25consumption of all such tangible personal property outside of
26the State of Illinois.

 

 

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1    (39) Beginning January 1, 2008, tangible personal property
2used in the construction or maintenance of a community water
3supply, as defined under Section 3.145 of the Environmental
4Protection Act, that is operated by a not-for-profit
5corporation that holds a valid water supply permit issued under
6Title IV of the Environmental Protection Act. This paragraph is
7exempt from the provisions of Section 2-70.
8    (40) Beginning January 1, 2010, materials, parts,
9equipment, components, and furnishings incorporated into or
10upon an aircraft as part of the modification, refurbishment,
11completion, replacement, repair, or maintenance of the
12aircraft. This exemption includes consumable supplies used in
13the modification, refurbishment, completion, replacement,
14repair, and maintenance of aircraft, but excludes any
15materials, parts, equipment, components, and consumable
16supplies used in the modification, replacement, repair, and
17maintenance of aircraft engines or power plants, whether such
18engines or power plants are installed or uninstalled upon any
19such aircraft. "Consumable supplies" include, but are not
20limited to, adhesive, tape, sandpaper, general purpose
21lubricants, cleaning solution, latex gloves, and protective
22films. This exemption applies only to those organizations that
23(i) hold an Air Agency Certificate and are empowered to operate
24an approved repair station by the Federal Aviation
25Administration, (ii) have a Class IV Rating, and (iii) conduct
26operations in accordance with Part 145 of the Federal Aviation

 

 

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1Regulations. The exemption does not include aircraft operated
2by a commercial air carrier providing scheduled passenger air
3service pursuant to authority issued under Part 121 or Part 129
4of the Federal Aviation Regulations.
5    (41) Tangible personal property sold to a
6public-facilities corporation, as described in Section
711-65-10 of the Illinois Municipal Code, for purposes of
8constructing or furnishing a municipal convention hall, but
9only if the legal title to the municipal convention hall is
10transferred to the municipality without any further
11consideration by or on behalf of the municipality at the time
12of the completion of the municipal convention hall or upon the
13retirement or redemption of any bonds or other debt instruments
14issued by the public-facilities corporation in connection with
15the development of the municipal convention hall. This
16exemption includes existing public-facilities corporations as
17provided in Section 11-65-25 of the Illinois Municipal Code.
18This paragraph is exempt from the provisions of Section 2-70.
19(Source: P.A. 96-116, eff. 7-31-09; 96-339, eff. 7-1-10;
2096-532, eff. 8-14-09; 96-759, eff. 1-1-10; 96-1000, eff.
217-2-10; 97-38, eff. 6-28-11; 97-73, eff. 6-30-11; 97-227, eff.
221-1-12; 97-431, eff. 8-16-11; revised 9-12-11.)
 
23    Section 930. The Property Tax Code is amended by changing
24Section 15-65 as follows:
 

 

 

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1    (35 ILCS 200/15-65)
2    Sec. 15-65. Charitable purposes. All property of the
3following is exempt when actually and exclusively used for
4charitable or beneficent purposes, and not leased or otherwise
5used with a view to profit:
6        (a) Institutions of public charity.
7        (b) Beneficent and charitable organizations
8    incorporated in any state of the United States, including
9    organizations whose owner, and no other person, uses the
10    property exclusively for the distribution, sale, or resale
11    of donated goods and related activities and uses all the
12    income from those activities to support the charitable,
13    religious or beneficent activities of the owner, whether or
14    not such activities occur on the property.
15        (c) Old people's homes, facilities for persons with a
16    developmental disability, and not-for-profit organizations
17    providing services or facilities related to the goals of
18    educational, social and physical development, if, upon
19    making application for the exemption, the applicant
20    provides affirmative evidence that the home or facility or
21    organization is an exempt organization under paragraph (3)
22    of Section 501(c) of the Internal Revenue Code or its
23    successor, and either: (i) the bylaws of the home or
24    facility or not-for-profit organization provide for a
25    waiver or reduction, based on an individual's ability to
26    pay, of any entrance fee, assignment of assets, or fee for

 

 

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1    services, or (ii) the home or facility is qualified, built
2    or financed under Section 202 of the National Housing Act
3    of 1959, as amended.
4        An applicant that has been granted an exemption under
5    this subsection on the basis that its bylaws provide for a
6    waiver or reduction, based on an individual's ability to
7    pay, of any entrance fee, assignment of assets, or fee for
8    services may be periodically reviewed by the Department to
9    determine if the waiver or reduction was a past policy or
10    is a current policy. The Department may revoke the
11    exemption if it finds that the policy for waiver or
12    reduction is no longer current.
13        If a not-for-profit organization leases property that
14    is otherwise exempt under this subsection to an
15    organization that conducts an activity on the leased
16    premises that would entitle the lessee to an exemption from
17    real estate taxes if the lessee were the owner of the
18    property, then the leased property is exempt.
19        (d) Not-for-profit health maintenance organizations
20    certified by the Director of the Illinois Department of
21    Insurance under the Health Maintenance Organization Act,
22    including any health maintenance organization that
23    provides services to members at prepaid rates approved by
24    the Illinois Department of Insurance if the membership of
25    the organization is sufficiently large or of indefinite
26    classes so that the community is benefited by its

 

 

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1    operation. No exemption shall apply to any hospital or
2    health maintenance organization which has been adjudicated
3    by a court of competent jurisdiction to have denied
4    admission to any person because of race, color, creed, sex
5    or national origin.
6        (e) All free public libraries.
7        (f) Historical societies.
8    Property otherwise qualifying for an exemption under this
9Section shall not lose its exemption because the legal title is
10held (i) by an entity that is organized solely to hold that
11title and that qualifies under paragraph (2) of Section 501(c)
12of the Internal Revenue Code or its successor, whether or not
13that entity receives rent from the charitable organization for
14the repair and maintenance of the property, (ii) by an entity
15that is organized as a partnership or limited liability
16company, in which the charitable organization, or an affiliate
17or subsidiary of the charitable organization, is a general
18partner of the partnership or managing member of the limited
19liability company, for the purposes of owning and operating a
20residential rental property that has received an allocation of
21Low Income Housing Tax Credits for 100% of the dwelling units
22under Section 42 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as
23amended, or (iii) for any assessment year including and
24subsequent to January 1, 1996 for which an application for
25exemption has been filed and a decision on which has not become
26final and nonappealable, by a limited liability company

 

 

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1organized under the Limited Liability Company Act provided that
2(A) the limited liability company's sole member or members, as
3that term is used in Section 1-5 of the Limited Liability
4Company Act, are the institutions of public charity that
5actually and exclusively use the property for charitable and
6beneficent purposes; (B) the limited liability company is a
7disregarded entity for federal and Illinois income tax purposes
8and, as a result, the limited liability company is deemed
9exempt from income tax liability by virtue of the Internal
10Revenue Code Section 501(c)(3) status of its sole member or
11members; and (C) the limited liability company does not lease
12the property or otherwise use it with a view to profit. A
13hospital as defined in the Tax-Exempt Hospital Responsibility
14Act may qualify for the exemption under this Section only if it
15is in compliance with that Act.
16(Source: P.A. 96-763, eff. 8-25-09.)
 
17    Section 935. The Community Benefits Act is amended by
18changing Sections 5, 10, 15, 20, and 25 and by adding Section
1945 as follows:
 
20    (210 ILCS 76/5)
21    Sec. 5. Applicability. This Act does not apply to a
22hospital operated by a unit of government, a hospital located
23outside of a metropolitan statistical area, or a hospital with
24100 or fewer beds. Hospitals that are owned or operated by or

 

 

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1affiliated with a health system shall be deemed to be in
2compliance with this Act if the health system has met the
3requirements of this Act. Each hospital owned or operated by or
4affiliated with a health system must demonstrate compliance
5separately from any other hospital owned or operated by or
6affiliated with the health system.
7(Source: P.A. 93-480, eff. 8-8-03.)
 
8    (210 ILCS 76/10)
9    Sec. 10. Definitions. As used in this Act:
10    "Charity care" means charity care as defined in the
11Tax-Exempt Hospital Responsibility Act care provided by a
12health care provider for which the provider does not expect to
13receive payment from the patient or a third party payer.
14    "Community benefits" means the unreimbursed cost to a
15hospital or health system of providing charity care, language
16assistant services, government-sponsored indigent health care,
17donations, volunteer services, education, government-sponsored
18program services, research, and subsidized health services and
19collecting bad debts. "Community benefits" does not include the
20cost of paying any taxes or other governmental assessments.
21    "Government sponsored indigent health care" means the
22unreimbursed cost to a hospital or health system of Medicare,
23providing health care services to recipients of Medicaid, and
24other federal, State, or local indigent health care programs,
25eligibility for which is based on financial need.

 

 

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1    "Health system" means an entity that owns or operates at
2least one hospital.
3    "Nonprofit hospital" means a hospital that is organized as
4a not-for-profit nonprofit corporation, including religious
5organizations, or a charitable trust under Illinois law or the
6laws of any other state or country.
7    "Subsidized health services" means those services provided
8by a hospital in response to community needs for which the
9reimbursement is less than the hospital's cost of providing the
10services that must be subsidized by other hospital or nonprofit
11supporting entity revenue sources. "Subsidized health
12services" includes, but is not limited to, emergency and trauma
13care, neonatal intensive care, community health clinics, and
14collaborative efforts with local government or private
15agencies to prevent illness and improve wellness, such as
16immunization programs.
17(Source: P.A. 93-480, eff. 8-8-03.)
 
18    (210 ILCS 76/15)
19    Sec. 15. Organizational mission statement; community
20benefits plan. A nonprofit hospital must shall develop:
21        (1) an organizational mission statement that
22    identifies the hospital's commitment to serving the health
23    care needs of the community; and
24        (2) a community benefits plan defined as an operational
25    plan for serving the community's health care needs that:

 

 

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1            (A) sets out goals and objectives for providing
2        community benefits that include charity care and
3        government sponsored indigent health care; and
4            (B) identifies the populations and communities
5        served by the hospital.
6(Source: P.A. 93-480, eff. 8-8-03.)
 
7    (210 ILCS 76/20)
8    Sec. 20. Annual charity care report and for community
9benefits report plan.
10    (a) Each nonprofit hospital must shall prepare an annual
11charity care report in accordance with Section 30 of the
12Tax-Exempt Hospital Responsibility Act and an annual report of
13its the community benefits plan. The annual report of the
14community benefits plan must include, in addition to the
15community benefits plan itself, all of the following background
16information:
17        (1) The hospital's mission statement.
18        (2) A disclosure of the health care needs of the
19    community that were considered in developing the
20    hospital's community benefits plan.
21        (3) A disclosure of the amount and types of community
22    benefits actually provided, including charity care.
23    Charity care must be reported separate from other community
24    benefits as part of the annual charity care report. In
25    reporting charity care, the hospital must report the actual

 

 

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1    cost of services provided, based on the total cost to
2    charge ratio derived from the hospital's Medicare cost
3    report (CMS 2552-96 Worksheet C, Part 1, PPS Inpatient
4    Ratios), not the charges for the services. The filing of an
5    annual charity care report under Section 30 of the
6    Tax-Exempt Hospital Responsibility Act shall satisfy a
7    nonprofit hospital's charity care reporting requirements
8    under this paragraph with respect to the provision of
9    charity care.
10        (4) Audited annual financial reports for its most
11    recently completed fiscal year. Submission of a nonprofit
12    hospital's most recent set of audited financial statements
13    as part of the hospital's filing of its annual charity care
14    report, as mandated by subdivision (b)(6) of Section 30 of
15    the Tax-Exempt Hospital Responsibility Act, shall satisfy
16    the hospital's financial reporting requirements under this
17    paragraph.
18    (b) Each nonprofit hospital must shall annually file the
19annual a report of its the community benefits plan with the
20Attorney General. The report must be filed not later than the
21last day of the sixth month after the close of the hospital's
22fiscal year, beginning with the hospital fiscal year that ends
23in 2004.
24    (c) Each nonprofit hospital shall prepare a statement that
25notifies the public that the annual report of the community
26benefits plan is:

 

 

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1        (1) public information;
2        (2) filed with the Attorney General; and
3        (3) available to the public on request from the
4    Attorney General.
5    This statement shall be made available to the public.
6    (d) The obligations of a hospital under this Act, except
7for the filing of its audited financial report, shall take
8effect beginning with the hospital's fiscal year that begins
9after the effective date of this Act. Within 60 days of the
10effective date of this Act, a hospital shall file the audited
11annual financial report that has been completed for its most
12recently completed fiscal year. Thereafter, a hospital shall
13include its audited annual financial report for its most
14recently completed fiscal year in its annual report of its
15community benefits plan.
16(Source: P.A. 93-480, eff. 8-8-03.)
 
17    (210 ILCS 76/25)
18    Sec. 25. Failure to file annual report. The Attorney
19General may assess a late filing fee against a nonprofit
20hospital that fails to make a report of the community benefits
21plan as required under this Act in an amount not to exceed
22$10,000 $100. The Attorney General may grant extensions for
23good cause. No penalty may be assessed against a hospital under
24this Section until 30 business days have elapsed after written
25notification to the hospital of its failure to file a report.

 

 

HB3860- 122 -LRB097 14081 HLH 58744 b

1(Source: P.A. 93-480, eff. 8-8-03.)
 
2    (210 ILCS 76/45 new)
3    Sec. 45. Attorney General's rulemaking authority. The
4Attorney General has authority to adopt rules to implement and
5enforce the provisions of this Act.
 
6    Section 995. No acceleration or delay. Where this Act makes
7changes in a statute that is represented in this Act by text
8that is not yet or no longer in effect (for example, a Section
9represented by multiple versions), the use of that text does
10not accelerate or delay the taking effect of (i) the changes
11made by this Act or (ii) provisions derived from any other
12Public Act.
 
13    Section 999. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon
14becoming law.

 

 

HB3860- 123 -LRB097 14081 HLH 58744 b

1 INDEX
2 Statutes amended in order of appearance
3    New Act
4    5 ILCS 140/7from Ch. 116, par. 207
5    20 ILCS 3501/801-40
6    30 ILCS 105/5.809 new
7    35 ILCS 5/205from Ch. 120, par. 2-205
8    35 ILCS 105/3-5
9    35 ILCS 110/2from Ch. 120, par. 439.32
10    35 ILCS 115/2from Ch. 120, par. 439.102
11    35 ILCS 120/2-5
12    35 ILCS 200/15-65
13    210 ILCS 76/5
14    210 ILCS 76/10
15    210 ILCS 76/15
16    210 ILCS 76/20
17    210 ILCS 76/25
18    210 ILCS 76/45 new