Sen. Mike Jacobs

Filed: 5/8/2013

 

 


 

 


 
09800HB3035sam002LRB098 08955 OMW 45273 a

1
AMENDMENT TO HOUSE BILL 3035

2    AMENDMENT NO. ______. Amend House Bill 3035 by replacing
3everything after the enacting clause with the following:
 
4    "Section 5. The Disaster Relief Act is amended by changing
5Section 3 as follows:
 
6    (15 ILCS 30/3)  (from Ch. 127, par. 293.3)
7    Sec. 3. Whenever funds regularly appropriated to the State
8and local governmental bodies for disaster response and
9recovery are insufficient to provide services, and when the
10Governor has declared a disaster by proclamation in accordance
11with Section 7 of the Illinois Emergency Management Agency Act
12or any successor Act, the Governor may draw upon the Disaster
13Response and Recovery Relief Fund in order to provide services
14or to reimburse local governmental bodies furnishing services.
15The fund may be used for the payment of emergency employees,
16for the payment of the Illinois National Guard when called to

 

 

09800HB3035sam002- 2 -LRB098 08955 OMW 45273 a

1active duty, for disaster-related expenses of State Agencies
2and Departments, and for the emergency purchase or renting of
3equipment and commodities. The fund shall be used for
4furnishing emergency services and relief to the disaster area
5as a whole and shall not be used to provide private relief to
6persons sustaining property damages or personal injury as a
7result of a disaster.
8(Source: P.A. 87-168.)
 
9    Section 10. The State Police Act is amended by adding
10Section 12.6 as follows:
 
11    (20 ILCS 2610/12.6 new)
12    Sec. 12.6. Zero tolerance alcohol policy.
13    (a) It is the intent of the General Assembly to maintain a
14safe environment for the citizens of this State and to ensure
15that State Police officers are not impaired in a manner that
16endangers themselves or others. Therefore, it is declared to be
17the public policy of this State to provide a work environment
18free of the use of alcohol and unlawful drugs by on-duty State
19Police officers.
20    (b) The Department of State Police shall adopt rules to
21implement this Section.
22    (c) Any person employed by the Department of State Police
23as a State Police officer must comply with the alcohol use and
24testing requirements of the Department of State Police.

 

 

09800HB3035sam002- 3 -LRB098 08955 OMW 45273 a

1    (d) If a State Police officer's supervisor reasonably
2believes, based upon objective facts, that an officer's ability
3to perform his or her duties safely and efficiently while on
4duty may be impaired by the consumption of alcohol, the
5supervisor shall:
6        (1) prevent the officer from continuing work;
7        (2) inform the officer of the specific facts supporting
8    his or her belief and prepare a written record of those
9    facts;
10        (3) inform the officer that he or she will be tested
11    for alcohol;
12        (4) inform the officer that he or she may refuse the
13    test, but that refusal to submit to a test for alcohol,
14    ordered in accordance with Departmental procedures, shall
15    be construed as a positive result; and
16        (5) transport or cause the officer to be transported
17    safely away from the Department.
18    (e) A test shall be construed as a positive result if the
19test shows a result of a blood alcohol content higher than
200.00%.
21    (f) A person employed as a State Police officer who tests
22positive in a test for the purpose of determining the alcohol
23content of the person's blood while on duty according to the
24procedures of the State Police shall be referred to the
25Department of State Police Merit Board under this Act for
26appropriate discipline, if any, where the totality of the

 

 

09800HB3035sam002- 4 -LRB098 08955 OMW 45273 a

1circumstances shall be considered.
2    (g) Upon a finding that an officer has violated this
3Section, the Board shall appropriately discipline the officer.
4Any determination of appropriate discipline made according to
5this Section against an officer by the Board shall be subject
6to an appeals process, if any, afforded by the collective
7bargaining agreement governing the employment of the State
8Police officer.
9    (h) The provisions of this Section shall not apply to:
10        (1) an officer who has been assigned to consume alcohol
11    while on-duty and under appropriate supervision by a
12    superior officer for training purposes as approved by the
13    Director;
14        (2) an officer whose duty requirements run counter to
15    the provisions of this Section;
16        (3) an officer who has been assigned by the Director to
17    work undercover, while his or her identity as a police
18    officer must remain undisclosed for purposes of that
19    assignment; and
20        (4) an officer exempt under subsection (g) of Section
21    10-1 of Article 10 of the Liquor Control Act of 1934.
22    (i) To the extent this Section conflicts with a collective
23bargaining agreement in effect on the effective date of this
24amendatory Act of the 98th General Assembly, the conflicting
25provision of this Section shall not apply until that collective
26bargaining agreement expires or is renewed, renegotiated, or

 

 

09800HB3035sam002- 5 -LRB098 08955 OMW 45273 a

1superseded.
 
2    Section 15. The Illinois Emergency Management Agency Act is
3amended by changing Sections 8 and 9 as follows:
 
4    (20 ILCS 3305/8)  (from Ch. 127, par. 1058)
5    Sec. 8. Mobile Support Teams.
6    (a) The Governor or Director may cause to be created Mobile
7Support Teams to aid and to reinforce the Illinois Emergency
8Management Agency, and emergency services and disaster
9agencies in areas stricken by disaster. Each mobile support
10team shall have a leader, selected by the Director who will be
11responsible, under the direction and control of the Director,
12for the organization, administration, and training, and
13operation of the mobile support team.
14    (b) Personnel of a mobile support team while on duty
15pursuant to such a call or while engaged in regularly scheduled
16training or exercises, whether within or without the State,
17shall either:
18        (1) If they are paid employees of the State, have the
19    powers, duties, rights, privileges and immunities and
20    receive the compensation incidental to their employment.
21        (2) If they are paid employees of a political
22    subdivision or body politic of this State, and whether
23    serving within or without that political subdivision or
24    body politic, have the powers, duties, rights, privileges

 

 

09800HB3035sam002- 6 -LRB098 08955 OMW 45273 a

1    and immunities, and receive the compensation incidental to
2    their employment.
3        (3) If they are not employees of the State, political
4    subdivision or body politic, or being such employees, are
5    not normally paid for their services, be entitled to at
6    least one dollar per year compensation from the State.
7    Personnel of a mobile support team who suffer disease,
8injury or death arising out of or in the course of emergency
9duty, shall for the purposes of benefits under the Workers'
10Compensation Act or Workers' Occupational Diseases Act only, be
11deemed to be employees of this State. If the person diseased,
12injured or killed is an employee described in item (3) above,
13the computation of benefits payable under either of those Acts
14shall be based on income commensurate with comparable State
15employees doing the same type of work or income from the
16person's regular employment, whichever is greater.
17    All personnel of mobile support teams shall, while on duty
18under such call, be reimbursed by this State for all actual and
19necessary travel and subsistence expenses.
20    (c) The State shall reimburse each political subdivision or
21body politic from the Disaster Response and Recovery Relief
22Fund for the compensation paid and the actual and necessary
23travel, subsistence and maintenance expenses of paid employees
24of the political subdivision or body politic while serving,
25outside of its geographical boundaries pursuant to such a call,
26as members of a mobile support team, and for all payments made

 

 

09800HB3035sam002- 7 -LRB098 08955 OMW 45273 a

1for death, disease or injury of those paid employees arising
2out of and incurred in the course of that duty, and for all
3losses of or damage to supplies and equipment of the political
4subdivision or body politic resulting from the operations.
5    (d) Whenever mobile support teams or units of another
6state, while the Governor has the emergency powers provided for
7under Section 7 of this Act, render aid to this State under the
8orders of the Governor of its home state and upon the request
9of the Governor of this State, all questions relating to
10reimbursement by this State to the other state and its citizens
11in regard to the assistance so rendered shall be determined by
12the mutual aid agreements or interstate compacts described in
13subparagraph (5) of paragraph (c) of Section 6 as are existing
14at the time of the assistance rendered or are entered into
15thereafter and under Section 303 (d) of the Federal Civil
16Defense Act of 1950.
17    (e) No personnel of mobile support teams of this State may
18be ordered by the Governor to operate in any other state unless
19a request for the same has been made by the Governor or duly
20authorized representative of the other state.
21(Source: P.A. 92-73, eff. 1-1-02.)
 
22    (20 ILCS 3305/9)  (from Ch. 127, par. 1059)
23    Sec. 9. Financing.
24    (a) It is the intent of the Legislature and declared to be
25the policy of the State that funds to meet disasters shall

 

 

09800HB3035sam002- 8 -LRB098 08955 OMW 45273 a

1always be available.
2    (b) It is the legislative intent that the first recourse
3shall be to funds regularly appropriated to State and political
4subdivision departments and agencies. If the Governor finds
5that the demands placed upon these funds in coping with a
6particular disaster are unreasonably great, the Governor may
7make funds available from the Disaster Response and Recovery
8Relief Fund. If monies available from the Fund are
9insufficient, and if the Governor finds that other sources of
10money to cope with the disaster are not available or are
11insufficient, the Governor shall request the General Assembly
12to enact legislation as it may deem necessary to transfer and
13expend monies appropriated for other purposes or borrow, for a
14term not to exceed 2 years from the United States government or
15other public or private source. If the General Assembly is not
16sitting in regular session to enact such legislation for the
17transfer, expenditure or loan of such monies, and the President
18of the Senate and the Speaker of the House certify that the
19Senate and House are not in session, the Governor is authorized
20to carry out those decisions, by depositing transfers or loan
21proceeds into and making expenditures from the Disaster
22Response and Recovery Relief Fund, until such time as a quorum
23of the General Assembly can convene in a regular or
24extraordinary session. The General Assembly shall, to the
25extent moneys become available, restore moneys used from other
26sources under this Section.

 

 

09800HB3035sam002- 9 -LRB098 08955 OMW 45273 a

1    (c) Nothing contained in this Section shall be construed to
2limit the Governor's authority to apply for, administer and
3expend grants, gifts or payments in aid of disaster mitigation,
4preparedness, response or recovery.
5(Source: P.A. 92-73, eff. 1-1-02; 93-249, eff. 7-22-03.)
 
6    Section 20. The Emergency Management Assistance Compact
7Act is amended by adding Section 10 as follows:
 
8    (45 ILCS 151/10 new)
9    Sec. 10. Reimbursements and expenses. The Illinois
10Emergency Management Agency as the authorized representative
11of the State may use the Disaster Response and Recovery Fund to
12deposit any reimbursements received from a party state and to
13pay any expenses incurred relating to this Act.
 
14    Section 25. The Counties Code is amended by adding Sections
153-7018 and 3-6040 as follows:
 
16    (55 ILCS 5/3-6040 new)
17    Sec. 3-6040. Zero tolerance alcohol policy.
18    (a) It is the intent of the General Assembly to maintain a
19safe environment for the citizens of this State and to ensure
20that deputy sheriffs are not impaired in a manner that
21endangers themselves or others. Therefore, it is declared to be
22the public policy of this State to provide a work environment

 

 

09800HB3035sam002- 10 -LRB098 08955 OMW 45273 a

1free of the use of alcohol and unlawful drugs by on-duty deputy
2sheriffs.
3    (b) The sheriff shall adopt rules to implement this
4Section.
5    (c) Any person employed by the sheriff as a deputy sheriff
6must comply with the alcohol use and testing requirements of
7the sheriff.
8    (d) If a deputy sheriff's supervisor reasonably believes,
9based upon objective facts, that the deputy sheriff's ability
10to perform his or her duties safely and efficiently while on
11duty may be impaired by the consumption of alcohol, the
12supervisor shall:
13        (1) prevent the deputy sheriff from continuing work;
14        (2) inform the deputy sheriff of the specific facts
15    supporting his or her belief and prepare a written record
16    of those facts;
17        (3) inform the deputy sheriff that he or she will be
18    tested for alcohol;
19        (4) inform the deputy sheriff that he or she may refuse
20    the test, but that refusal to submit to a test for alcohol,
21    ordered in accordance with the procedures of the sheriff's
22    office, shall be construed as a positive result; and
23        (5) transport or cause the deputy sheriff to be
24    transported safely away from the sheriff's office.
25    (e) A test shall be construed as a positive result if the
26test shows a result of a blood alcohol content higher than

 

 

09800HB3035sam002- 11 -LRB098 08955 OMW 45273 a

10.00%.
2    (f) A person employed as a deputy sheriff who tests
3positive in a test for the purpose of determining the alcohol
4content of the person's blood while on duty according to the
5procedures of the sheriff shall be referred to the sheriff for
6appropriate discipline, if any, where the totality of the
7circumstances shall be considered.
8    (g) Upon a finding that a deputy sheriff has violated this
9Section, the sheriff shall appropriately discipline the deputy
10sheriff. Any determination of appropriate discipline made
11according to this Section against a deputy sheriff by the
12sheriff shall be subject to an appeals process, if any,
13afforded by the collective bargaining agreement governing the
14employment of the deputy sheriff.
15    (h) The provisions of this Section shall not apply to:
16        (1) a deputy sheriff who has been assigned to consume
17    alcohol while on-duty and under appropriate supervision
18    for training purposes as approved by the sheriff;
19        (2) a deputy sheriff whose duty requirements run
20    counter to the provisions of this Section;
21        (3) a deputy sheriff who has been assigned by the
22    sheriff to work undercover, while his or her identity as a
23    deputy sheriff must remain undisclosed for purposes of that
24    assignment; and
25        (4) a deputy sheriff exempt under subsection (g) of
26    Section 10-1 of Article 10 of the Liquor Control Act of

 

 

09800HB3035sam002- 12 -LRB098 08955 OMW 45273 a

1    1934.
2    (i) To the extent this Section conflicts with a collective
3bargaining agreement in effect on the effective date of this
4amendatory Act of the 98th General Assembly, the conflicting
5provision of this Section shall not apply until that collective
6bargaining agreement expires or is renewed, renegotiated, or
7superseded.
 
8    (55 ILCS 5/3-7018 new)
9    Sec. 3-7018. Zero tolerance alcohol policy.
10    (a) It is the intent of the General Assembly to maintain a
11safe environment for the citizens of this State and to ensure
12that Cook County deputy sheriffs are not impaired in a manner
13that endangers themselves or others. Therefore, it is declared
14to be the public policy of this State to provide a work
15environment free of the use of alcohol and unlawful drugs by
16on-duty Cook County deputy sheriffs.
17    (b) The Cook County Sheriff shall adopt rules to implement
18this Section.
19    (c) Any person employed by the Cook County Sheriff as a
20deputy sheriff must comply with the alcohol use and testing
21requirements of the Cook County Sheriff.
22    (d) If a Cook County deputy sheriff's supervisor reasonably
23believes, based upon objective facts, that the Cook County
24deputy sheriff's ability to perform his or her duties safely
25and efficiently while on duty may be impaired by the

 

 

09800HB3035sam002- 13 -LRB098 08955 OMW 45273 a

1consumption of alcohol, the supervisor shall:
2        (1) prevent the Cook County deputy sheriff from
3    continuing work;
4        (2) inform the Cook County deputy sheriff of the
5    specific facts supporting his or her belief and prepare a
6    written record of those facts;
7        (3) inform the Cook County deputy sheriff that he or
8    she will be tested for alcohol;
9        (4) inform the Cook County deputy sheriff that he or
10    she may refuse the test, but that refusal to submit to a
11    test for alcohol, ordered in accordance with the procedures
12    of the Cook County Sheriff's office, shall be construed as
13    a positive result; and
14        (5) transport or cause the Cook County deputy sheriff
15    to be transported safely away from the Cook County
16    Sheriff's office.
17    (e) A test shall be construed as a positive result if the
18test shows a result of a blood alcohol content higher than
190.00%.
20    (f) A person employed as a Cook County deputy sheriff who
21tests positive in a test for the purpose of determining the
22alcohol content of the person's blood while on duty according
23to the procedures of the Cook County Sheriff shall be referred
24to the Cook County Sheriff Merit Board for appropriate
25discipline, if any, where the totality of the circumstances
26shall be considered.

 

 

09800HB3035sam002- 14 -LRB098 08955 OMW 45273 a

1    (g) Upon a finding that a Cook County deputy sheriff has
2violated this Section, the Board shall appropriately
3discipline the Cook County deputy sheriff. Any determination of
4appropriate discipline made according to this Section against a
5Cook County deputy sheriff by the Board shall be subject to an
6appeals process, if any, afforded by the collective bargaining
7agreement governing the employment of the Cook County deputy
8sheriff.
9    (h) The provisions of this Section shall not apply to:
10        (1) a Cook County deputy sheriff who has been assigned
11    to consume alcohol while on-duty and under appropriate
12    supervision for training purposes as approved by the Cook
13    County Sheriff;
14        (2) a Cook County deputy sheriff whose duty
15    requirements run counter to the provisions of this Section;
16        (3) a Cook County deputy sheriff who has been assigned
17    by the Cook County Sheriff to work undercover, while his or
18    her identity as a Cook County deputy sheriff must remain
19    undisclosed for purposes of that assignment; and
20        (4) a Cook County deputy sheriff exempt under
21    subsection (g) of Section 10-1 of Article 10 of the Liquor
22    Control Act of 1934.
23    (i) To the extent this Section conflicts with a collective
24bargaining agreement in effect on the effective date of this
25amendatory Act of the 98th General Assembly, the conflicting
26provision of this Section shall not apply until that collective

 

 

09800HB3035sam002- 15 -LRB098 08955 OMW 45273 a

1bargaining agreement expires or is renewed, renegotiated, or
2superseded.
3    (j) A home rule unit may not regulate the discipline of a
4Cook County deputy sheriff who tests positive during a test for
5the purpose of determining the alcohol content of the person's
6blood in a manner that is inconsistent with this Section. This
7Section is a limitation under subsection (i) of Section 6 of
8Article VII of the Illinois Constitution on the concurrent
9exercise by home rule units of power and functions exercised by
10the State.
 
11    Section 30. The Illinois Municipal Code is amended by
12adding Section 10-3-13 as follows:
 
13    (65 ILCS 5/10-3-13 new)
14    Sec. 10-3-13. Zero tolerance alcohol policy.
15    (a) It is the intent of the General Assembly to maintain a
16safe environment for the citizens of this State and to ensure
17that policemen are not impaired in a manner that endangers
18themselves or others. Therefore, it is declared to be the
19public policy of this State to provide a work environment free
20of the use of alcohol and unlawful drugs by on-duty policemen.
21    (b) The chief of police shall adopt rules to implement this
22Section.
23    (c) Any person employed by the police department of a
24municipality as a policeman must comply with the alcohol use

 

 

09800HB3035sam002- 16 -LRB098 08955 OMW 45273 a

1and testing requirements of the police department.
2    (d) If a policeman's supervisor reasonably believes, based
3upon objective facts, that the policeman's ability to perform
4his or her duties safely and efficiently while on duty may be
5impaired by the consumption of alcohol, the supervisor shall:
6        (1) prevent the policeman from continuing work;
7        (2) inform the policeman of the specific facts
8    supporting his or her belief and prepare a written record
9    of those facts;
10        (3) inform the policeman that he or she will be tested
11    for alcohol;
12        (4) inform the policeman that he or she may refuse the
13    test, but that refusal to submit to a test for alcohol,
14    ordered in accordance with the procedures of the police
15    department, shall be construed as a positive result; and
16        (5) transport or cause the policeman to be transported
17    safely away from the police department.
18    (e) A test shall be construed as a positive result if the
19test shows a result of a blood alcohol content higher than
200.00%.
21    (f) A person employed as a policeman who tests positive in
22a test for the purpose of determining the alcohol content of
23the person's blood while on duty according to the procedures of
24the police department shall be referred to the chief of police
25or other appropriate board or official for appropriate
26discipline, if any, where the totality of the circumstances

 

 

09800HB3035sam002- 17 -LRB098 08955 OMW 45273 a

1shall be considered.
2    (g) Upon a finding that a policeman has violated this
3Section, the chief of police or other appropriate board or
4official shall appropriately discipline the policeman. Any
5determination of appropriate discipline made according to this
6Section against a policeman by the chief of police or other
7appropriate board or official shall be subject to an appeals
8process, if any, afforded by the collective bargaining
9agreement governing the employment of the policeman.
10    (h) The provisions of this Section shall not apply to:
11        (1) a policeman who has been assigned to consume
12    alcohol while on-duty and under appropriate supervision
13    for training purposes as approved by the chief of police;
14        (2) a policeman whose duty requirements run counter to
15    the provisions of this Section;
16        (3) a policeman who has been assigned by the chief of
17    police to work undercover, while his or her identity as a
18    policeman must remain undisclosed for purposes of that
19    assignment; and
20        (4) a policeman exempt under subsection (g) of Section
21    10-1 of Article 10 of the Liquor Control Act of 1934.
22    (i) To the extent this Section conflicts with a collective
23bargaining agreement in effect on the effective date of this
24amendatory Act of the 98th General Assembly, the conflicting
25provision of this Section shall not apply until that collective
26bargaining agreement expires or is renewed, renegotiated, or

 

 

09800HB3035sam002- 18 -LRB098 08955 OMW 45273 a

1superseded.
2    (j) A home rule unit may not regulate the discipline of a
3policeman who tests positive during a test for the purpose of
4determining the alcohol content of the person's blood in a
5manner that is inconsistent with this Section. This Section is
6a limitation under subsection (i) of Section 6 of Article VII
7of the Illinois Constitution on the concurrent exercise by home
8rule units of power and functions exercised by the State.
 
9    Section 35. The Illinois Vehicle Code is amended by adding
10Section 2-116.5 as follows:
 
11    (625 ILCS 5/2-116.5 new)
12    Sec. 2-116.5. Zero tolerance alcohol policy.
13    (a) Purpose. It is the intent of the General Assembly to
14maintain a safe environment for the citizens of this State and
15to ensure that Secretary of State Department of Police officers
16are not impaired in a manner that endangers themselves or
17others. Therefore, it is declared to be the public policy of
18this State to provide a work environment free of the use of
19alcohol and unlawful drugs by on-duty Secretary of State
20Department of Police officers.
21    (b) The Secretary shall adopt rules to implement this
22Section.
23    (c) Any person employed as a Secretary of State Department
24of Police officer must comply with the alcohol use and testing

 

 

09800HB3035sam002- 19 -LRB098 08955 OMW 45273 a

1requirements of the Secretary of State Department of Police.
2    (d) If a Secretary of State Department of Police officer's
3supervisor reasonably believes, based upon objective facts,
4that an officer's ability to perform his or her duties safely
5and efficiently while on duty may be impaired by the
6consumption of alcohol, the supervisor shall:
7        (1) prevent the officer from continuing work;
8        (2) inform the officer of the specific facts supporting
9    his or her belief and prepare a written record of those
10    facts;
11        (3) inform the officer that he or she will be tested
12    for alcohol;
13        (4) inform the officer that he or she may refuse the
14    test, but that refusal to submit to a test for alcohol,
15    ordered in accordance with Departmental procedures, shall
16    be construed as a positive result; and
17        (5) transport or cause the officer to be transported
18    safely away from the Department.
19    (e) A test shall be construed as a positive result if the
20test shows a result of a blood alcohol content higher than
210.00%.
22    (f) A person employed as a Secretary of State Department of
23Police officer who tests positive in a test for the purpose of
24determining the alcohol content of the person's blood while on
25duty according to the procedures of the Secretary of State
26Department of Police shall be referred to the Director of

 

 

09800HB3035sam002- 20 -LRB098 08955 OMW 45273 a

1Personnel as required by rule for appropriate discipline, if
2any, where the totality of the circumstances shall be
3considered.
4    (g) Upon a finding that an officer has violated this
5Section, the Director of Personnel shall appropriately
6discipline the officer. Any determination of appropriate
7discipline made according to this Section against an officer
8shall be subject to an appeals process, if any, afforded by the
9collective bargaining agreement governing the employment of
10the officer.
11    (h) The provisions of this Section shall not apply to:
12        (1) an officer who has been assigned to consume alcohol
13    while on-duty and under appropriate supervision by a
14    superior officer for training purposes as approved by the
15    Director;
16        (2) an officer whose duty requirements run counter to
17    the provision of this Section;
18        (3) an officer who has been assigned by the Director to
19    work undercover, while his or her identity as a police
20    officer must remain undisclosed for purposes of that
21    assignment; and
22        (4) an officer exempt under subsection (g) of Section
23    10-1 of Article 10 of the Liquor Control Act of 1934.
24    (i) To the extent this Section conflicts with a collective
25bargaining agreement in effect on the effective date of this
26amendatory Act of the 98th General Assembly, the conflicting

 

 

09800HB3035sam002- 21 -LRB098 08955 OMW 45273 a

1provision of this Section shall not apply until that collective
2bargaining agreement expires or is renewed, renegotiated, or
3superseded.
 
4    Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon
5becoming law.".