State of Illinois
90th General Assembly
Legislation

   [ Search ]   [ Legislation ]   [ Bill Summary ]
[ Home ]   [ Back ]   [ Bottom ]


[ Introduced ][ Engrossed ][ House Amendment 001 ]

90_HB1627sam002

                                           LRB9003972PTcwam01
 1                    AMENDMENT TO HOUSE BILL 1627
 2        AMENDMENT NO.     .  Amend House Bill 1627  by  replacing
 3    the title with the following:
 4        "AN ACT concerning governmental ethics."; and
 5    by  replacing  everything  after the enacting clause with the
 6    following:
 7        "Section 1.  Short title.  This Act may be cited  as  the
 8    State Gift Ban Act.
 9        Section 5.  Definitions.  As used in this Act:
10        "Commission"  means  an ethics commission created by this
11    Act.
12        "Employee"   means   all   full-time,   part-time,    and
13    contractual  employees,  appointed and elected officials, and
14    directors of a governmental entity. "Employee" does not  mean
15    a  non-salaried  appointed  or  elected official of a unit of
16    local government, home rule unit, or school district.
17        "Gift"  means  any  gratuity,  discount,   entertainment,
18    hospitality,   loan,   forbearance,   or  other  tangible  or
19    intangible item having  monetary  value  including,  but  not
20    limited  to, cash, food and drink, and honoraria for speaking
21    engagements  related  to  or   attributable   to   government
                            -2-            LRB9003972PTcwam01
 1    employment  or  the official position of an employee, member,
 2    officer, or judge.
 3        "Governmental   entity"   means   each   office,   board,
 4    commission,  agency,  department,   authority,   institution,
 5    university,  body politic and corporate, administrative unit,
 6    and corporate outgrowth of the  executive,  legislative,  and
 7    judicial branches of State government, whether created by the
 8    Illinois  Constitution,  by or in accordance with statute, or
 9    by executive order of the Governor, including units of  local
10    government, home rule units, and school districts.
11        "Judge"  means judges and associate judges of the Supreme
12    Court, Appellate Courts, and Circuit Courts.
13        "Member" means a member of the General Assembly.
14        "Officer" means a State constitutional officer.
15        "Political  organization"  means  a   party,   committee,
16    association,  fund,  or  other  organization  (whether or not
17    incorporated)  organized  and  operated  primarily  for   the
18    purpose  of directly or indirectly accepting contributions or
19    making expenditures, or both, for the function of influencing
20    or  attempting  to  influence  the   selection,   nomination,
21    election,  or  appointment  of any individual to any federal,
22    state, or local  public  office  or  office  in  a  political
23    organization,    or   the   election   of   Presidential   or
24    Vice-Presidential electors, whether or  not the individual or
25    electors are selected, nominated, elected, or appointed.  The
26    term includes the  making  of  expenditures  relating  to  an
27    office  described in the preceding sentence that, if incurred
28    by the individual, would be allowable as a federal income tax
29    deduction for trade or business expenses.
30        "Prohibited source" means any person or entity who:
31             (1)  is seeking official action (i) by  the  member,
32        officer,  or judge or (ii) in the case of an employee, by
33        the  employee  or  by   the   member,   officer,   judge,
34        governmental  entity,  or  other  employee  directing the
                            -3-            LRB9003972PTcwam01
 1        employee;
 2             (2)  does business or seeks to do business (i)  with
 3        the  member, officer,  or judge or (ii) in the case of an
 4        employee, with the employee or with the member,  officer,
 5        judge,  governmental  entity, or other employee directing
 6        the employee;
 7             (3)   conducts  activities  regulated  (i)  by   the
 8        member,  officer,  or  judge  (ii)  or  in the case of an
 9        employee, by the employee  or  by  the  member,  officer,
10        judge,  governmental  entity, or other employee directing
11        the employee;
12             (4)   has  interests  that  may   be   substantially
13        affected  by  the  performance  or non-performance of the
14        official duties of  the  member,  officer,  employee,  or
15        judge; or
16             (5)  is registered or required to be registered with
17        the  Secretary  of  State under the Lobbyist Registration
18        Act.
19        "Ultimate jurisdictional authority" means the following:
20             (1)  For  members,   the   appropriate   legislative
21        leader:  President  of the Senate, Minority Leader of the
22        Senate, Speaker  of  the  House  of  Representatives,  or
23        Minority Leader of the House of Representatives.
24             (2)  For  State employees who are professional staff
25        or  employees  of  the  Senate,  the  Senate   Operations
26        Commission.
27             (3)  For  State employees who are professional staff
28        or employees of the House of Representatives, the Speaker
29        of the House of Representatives.
30             (4)  For State employees who are  employees  of  the
31        legislative   support   services   agencies,   the  Joint
32        Committee on Legislative Support Services.
33             (5)  For judges, the Chief Justice  of  the  Supreme
34        Court.
                            -4-            LRB9003972PTcwam01
 1             (6)  For State employees of the judicial branch, the
 2        Administrative Office of the Illinois Courts.
 3             (7)  For  State  employees  of  an  executive branch
 4        constitutional officer, the appropriate executive  branch
 5        constitutional officer.
 6             (8)  For  State employees not under the jurisdiction
 7        of paragraph (1), (2), (3), (4), (5), (6),  or  (7),  the
 8        Governor.
 9             (9)  For officers, the General Assembly.
10             (10)  For  employees  of  units of local government,
11        including home rule  units,  and  school  districts,  the
12        corporate  authorities of the unit of local government or
13        school district.
14        Section 10.  Gift ban. Except as  otherwise  provided  in
15    this  Act,  no  member,  officer,  employee,  or judge shall,
16    directly or indirectly, solicit or accept any gift  from  any
17    prohibited  source  or  in  violation of any federal or State
18    statute or regulation.   This ban  applies  to  and  includes
19    spouses  of  and  immediate  family  living  with the member,
20    officer, employee, or judge. No prohibited source shall offer
21    or make a gift that violates this Section.
22        Section 15.  Exceptions.  The restriction in  Section  10
23    does not apply to the following:
24        (1)  Anything for which the member, officer, employee, or
25    judge pays the market value or anything not used and promptly
26    disposed of as provided in Section 25.
27        (2)  A  contribution,  as  defined  in  Article  9 of the
28    Election Code  that  is  lawfully  made  under  that  Act  or
29    attendance  at  a  fundraising event sponsored by a political
30    organization.
31        (3)  A gift from a relative, meaning those people related
32    to the individual as father, mother, son, daughter,  brother,
                            -5-            LRB9003972PTcwam01
 1    sister,  uncle,  aunt, great aunt, great uncle, first cousin,
 2    nephew,  niece,  husband,  wife,  grandfather,   grandmother,
 3    grandson,    granddaughter,   father-in-law,   mother-in-law,
 4    son-in-law, daughter-in-law,  brother-in-law,  sister-in-law,
 5    stepfather,  stepmother,  stepson, stepdaughter, stepbrother,
 6    stepsister, half brother,  half  sister,  and  including  the
 7    grandfather or grandmother of the individual's spouse and the
 8    individual's fiance or fiancee.
 9        (4)  Anything provided by an individual on the basis of a
10    personal  friendship unless the member, officer, employee, or
11    judge has reason to believe that,  under  the  circumstances,
12    the  gift  was  provided  because of the official position or
13    employment of the member, officer, employee, or judge and not
14    because of the personal friendship.
15        In determining whether a gift is provided on the basis of
16    personal friendship, the member, officer, employee, or  judge
17    shall  consider  the  circumstances  under which the gift was
18    offered, such as:
19             (i)  the history of  the  relationship  between  the
20        individual giving the gift and the recipient of the gift,
21        including  any  previous  exchange of gifts between those
22        individuals;
23             (ii)  whether to the actual knowledge of the member,
24        officer, employee, or judge the individual who  gave  the
25        gift  personally  paid  for  the  gift  or  sought  a tax
26        deduction or business reimbursement for the gift; and
27             (iii)  whether  to  the  actual  knowledge  of   the
28        member,  officer,  employee,  or judge the individual who
29        gave the gift also at the same  time  gave  the  same  or
30        similar  gifts  to other members, officers, employees, or
31        judges.
32        (5)  A commercially reasonable loan evidenced in  writing
33    with  repayment  due  by  a date certain made in the ordinary
34    course of the lender's business.
                            -6-            LRB9003972PTcwam01
 1        (6)  A contribution or other payments to a legal  expense
 2    fund  established  for  the  benefit  of  a  member, officer,
 3    employee, or judge that is otherwise lawfully made.
 4        (7)  Intra-office gifts.  For the purpose  of  this  Act,
 5    "intra-office gifts" means:
 6             (i)  any  gift  given to a member or employee of the
 7        legislative branch from another member or employee of the
 8        legislative branch;
 9             (ii)  any gift given to a judge or employee  of  the
10        judicial  branch  from  another  judge or employee of the
11        judicial branch;
12             (iii)  any gift given to an officer or  employee  of
13        the  executive branch from another officer or employee of
14        the executive branch;
15             (iv)  any gift given to an employee  of  a  unit  of
16        local  government,  home  rule  unit, or school district,
17        from another employee of that unit of  local  government,
18        home rule unit, or school district; or
19             (v)  any  gift  given  to  an  employee of any other
20        governmental entity  not  included  in  item  (i),  (ii),
21        (iii),   or   (iv),   from   another   employee  of  that
22        governmental entity.
23        (8)  Food,  refreshments,  lodging,  transportation,  and
24    other benefits:
25             (i)  resulting  from   the   outside   business   or
26        employment activities (or outside activities that are not
27        connected to the duties of the member, officer, employee,
28        or judge, as an office holder or employee) of the member,
29        officer,  employee,  judge,  or the spouse of the member,
30        officer, employee, or judge, if  the  benefits  have  not
31        been offered or enhanced because of the official position
32        or  employment of the member, officer, employee, or judge
33        and  are  customarily  provided  to  others  in   similar
34        circumstances;
                            -7-            LRB9003972PTcwam01
 1             (ii)  customarily provided by a prospective employer
 2        in connection with bona fide employment discussions; or
 3             (iii)  provided   by  a  political  organization  in
 4        connection with a fundraising or campaign event sponsored
 5        by that organization.
 6        (9)  Pension and other benefits resulting from  continued
 7    participation  in  an  employee  welfare  and  benefits  plan
 8    maintained by a former employer.
 9        (10)  Informational materials that are sent to the office
10    of  the  member,  officer,  employee, or judge in the form of
11    books,  articles,  periodicals,  other   written   materials,
12    audiotapes, videotapes, or other forms of communication.
13        (11)  Awards  or  prizes that are given to competitors in
14    contests or events  open  to  the  public,  including  random
15    drawings.
16        (12)  Honorary  degrees  (and  associated  travel,  food,
17    refreshments,  and entertainment provided in the presentation
18    of degrees and awards).
19        (13)  Training (including food and refreshments furnished
20    to all  attendees  as  an  integral  part  of  the  training)
21    provided  to  a  member,  officer, employee, or judge, if the
22    training is in the interest of the governmental entity.
23        (14)  Educational  missions,  including   meetings   with
24    government  officials either foreign or domestic, intended to
25    educate public officials on  matters  of  public  policy,  to
26    which  the member, officer, employee, or judge may be invited
27    to participate along with  other  federal,  state,  or  local
28    public officials and community leaders.
29        (15)  Bequests,  inheritances,  and  other  transfers  at
30    death.
31        (16)  Anything   that   is   paid   for  by  the  federal
32    government, the State, a governmental entity, or  secured  by
33    the  government  or  governmental  entity  under a government
34    contract.
                            -8-            LRB9003972PTcwam01
 1        (17)  A gift of personal  hospitality  of  an  individual
 2    other  than  a  registered  lobbyist  or  agent  of a foreign
 3    principal, including hospitality extended for  a  nonbusiness
 4    purpose  by an individual, not a corporation or organization,
 5    at  the  personal  residence  of  that  individual   or   the
 6    individual's  family  or  on  property or facilities owned by
 7    that individual or the individual's family.
 8        (18)  Free  attendance  at  a   widely   attended   event
 9    permitted under Section 20.
10        (19)  Opportunities and benefits that are:
11             (i)  available   to   the   public  or  to  a  class
12        consisting  of  all  employees,  officers,  members,   or
13        judges,  whether  or  not  restricted  on  the  basis  of
14        geographic consideration;
15             (ii)  offered  to  members  of  a  group or class in
16        which membership is unrelated to employment  or  official
17        position;
18             (iii)  offered to members of an organization such as
19        an  employee's  association  or  credit  union,  in which
20        membership is related to employment or official  position
21        and similar opportunities are available to large segments
22        of the public through organizations of similar size;
23             (iv)  offered  to  any  group  or  class that is not
24        defined in a manner that specifically discriminates among
25        government employees on the basis of branch of government
26        or type of responsibility, or  on  a  basis  that  favors
27        those of higher rank or rate of pay;
28             (v)  in  the  form  of  loans  from  banks and other
29        financial institutions on terms  generally  available  to
30        the public; or
31             (vi)  in  the  form  of  reduced membership or other
32        fees for participation in organization activities offered
33        to all government employees by professional organizations
34        if  the  only  restrictions  on  membership   relate   to
                            -9-            LRB9003972PTcwam01
 1        professional qualifications.
 2        (20)  A   plaque,   trophy,   or   other   item  that  is
 3    substantially commemorative in nature and  that  is  extended
 4    for presentation.
 5        (21)  Food or refreshments of nominal value  and meals or
 6    beverages  consumed  on  the  premises  from  which they were
 7    purchased.
 8        (22)  Donations of products from the  district  that  the
 9    member represents that are intended primarily for promotional
10    purposes,  such  as  display or free distribution, and are of
11    minimal value to any individual recipient.
12        (23)  An item of nominal value such as a  greeting  card,
13    baseball cap, or a T-shirt.
14        Section 20.  Attendance at events.
15        (a)  A  member, officer, employee, or judge may accept an
16    offer of free attendance at  a  widely  attended  convention,
17    conference,   symposium,  forum,  panel  discussion,  dinner,
18    viewing, reception, or similar event, provided by the sponsor
19    of the event, if:
20             (1)  the  member,  officer,   employee,   or   judge
21        participates  in  the  event  as  a  speaker  or  a panel
22        participant,  by  presenting   information   related   to
23        government,   or  by  performing  a  ceremonial  function
24        appropriate to the  member's,  officer's,  employee's  or
25        judge's official position or employment; or
26             (2)  attendance  at  the event is appropriate to the
27        performance of  the  official  duties  or  representative
28        function of the member, officer, employee, or judge.
29        (b)  A member, officer, employee, or judge who attends an
30    event  described  in  subsection  (a)  may accept a sponsor's
31    unsolicited offer of free attendance  at  the  event  for  an
32    accompanying individual.
33        (c)  A member, officer, employee, or judge, or the spouse
                            -10-           LRB9003972PTcwam01
 1    or  dependent  thereof,  may  accept  a sponsor's unsolicited
 2    offer of free attendance at  a  charity  event,  except  that
 3    reimbursement  for  transportation  and  lodging  may  not be
 4    accepted in connection with the event.
 5        (d)  For  purposes  of  this  Section,  the  term   "free
 6    attendance" may include waiver of all or part of a conference
 7    or  other  fee, the provision of local transportation, or the
 8    provision   of   food,   refreshments,   entertainment,   and
 9    instructional materials furnished  to  all  attendees  as  an
10    integral  part  of  the  event.   The  term  does not include
11    entertainment collateral to the event, nor  does  it  include
12    food or refreshments taken other than in a group setting with
13    all or substantially all other attendees.
14        Section  25.  Disposition  of  gifts.  The recipient of a
15    gift that is given in violation of this Act may,  at  his  or
16    her discretion, return the item to the donor or give the item
17    to an appropriate charity.
18        Section 30.  Reimbursement.
19        (a)  A  reimbursement  (including  payment  in kind) to a
20    member, officer, employee, or judge  from  a  private  source
21    other  than  a  registered  lobbyist  or  agent  of a foreign
22    principal for necessary transportation, lodging, and  related
23    expenses  for  travel to a meeting, speaking engagement, fact
24    finding trip, or similar event in connection with the  duties
25    of  the  member,  officer,  employee,  or  judge as an office
26    holder or employee shall be deemed to be a  reimbursement  to
27    the governmental entity and not a gift prohibited by this Act
28    if the member, officer, employee, or judge:
29             (1)  discloses  the  expenses  reimbursed  or  to be
30        reimbursed and the authorization  to  the  Clerk  of  the
31        House  of  Representatives,  the Secretary of the Senate,
32        the  State  Comptroller,  fiscal  officer,   or   similar
                            -11-           LRB9003972PTcwam01
 1        authority as appropriate, within 30 days after the travel
 2        is completed.
 3             (2)  in  the  case  of an employee, receives advance
 4        authorization, from the member, officer, judge, or  other
 5        employee  under  whose  direct  supervision  the employee
 6        works to accept reimbursement.
 7        (b)  For  purposes  of  subsection   (a),   events,   the
 8    activities of which are substantially recreational in nature,
 9    shall  not  be considered to be in connection with the duties
10    of a member, officer, employee, or judge as an office  holder
11    or employee.
12        (c)  Each  advance  authorization to accept reimbursement
13    shall be signed by  the  member,  officer,  judge,  or  other
14    employee  under  whose  direct supervision the employee works
15    and shall include:
16             (1)  the name of the employee;
17             (2)  the name  of  the  person  who  will  make  the
18        reimbursement;
19             (3)  the time, place, and purpose of the travel; and
20             (4)  a   determination   that   the   travel  is  in
21        connection with the duties of the employee as an employee
22        and would not create the appearance that the employee  is
23        using public employment for private gain.
24        (d)  Each   disclosure   made  under  subsection  (a)  of
25    expenses reimbursed or to be reimbursed shall  be  signed  by
26    the  member,  officer, or judge (in the case of travel by the
27    member, officer, or judge) or by the member, officer,  judge,
28    or other employee under whose direct supervision the employee
29    works  (in  the  case  of  travel  by  an employee) and shall
30    include:
31             (1)  a good faith estimate of  total  transportation
32        expenses reimbursed or to be reimbursed;
33             (2)  a good faith estimate of total lodging expenses
34        reimbursed or to be reimbursed;
                            -12-           LRB9003972PTcwam01
 1             (3)  a  good  faith  estimate of total meal expenses
 2        reimbursed or to be reimbursed;
 3             (4)  a good faith estimate of  the  total  of  other
 4        expenses reimbursed or to be reimbursed; and
 5             (5)  a  determination  that  all  those expenses are
 6        necessary transportation, lodging, and related expenses.
 7        Section 35.  Ethics Officer. Each officer and the head of
 8    each governmental entity shall designate  an  Ethics  Officer
 9    for  the  office  or governmental entity. For the legislative
10    branch, the President and Minority Leader of the  Senate  and
11    the   Speaker   and   Minority   Leader   of   the  House  of
12    Representatives shall each appoint an ethics officer for  the
13    legislative  members  of their political party. This employee
14    should  be  someone  who  is  currently  the  Chief  Internal
15    Auditor,  Inspector  General,  Chief  Counsel,  or  similarly
16    situated person. Ethics Officers shall:
17             (1)  review  statements  of  economic  interest  and
18        disclosure forms of  members,  officers,  judges,  senior
19        employees,  and  contract  monitors before they are filed
20        with the  Secretary of State; and
21             (2)  provide   guidance   to   members,    officers,
22        employees,   and   judges   in   the  interpretation  and
23        implementation of this Act.
24        Section 40.  Further restrictions.  A governmental entity
25    may adopt or maintain policies that are more restrictive than
26    those set forth in this Act and shall continue to follow  any
27    existing    policies,  statutes, or regulations that are more
28    restrictive or are in addition to  those set  forth  in  this
29    Act.
30        Section 45.  Ethics Commissions.
31        (a)  An  Ethics  Commission is created for each branch of
                            -13-           LRB9003972PTcwam01
 1    government, and each commission shall have  6  commissioners.
 2    The  initial  appointments  to  each commission shall be made
 3    within 60 days after the effective date  of  this  Act.   The
 4    appointing  authorities  shall appoint commissioners who have
 5    experience holding  governmental  office  or  employment  and
 6    shall  appoint  commissioners from the general public or from
 7    within the appointing authority's branch of  government.   No
 8    more  than 3 commissioners appointed to each commission shall
 9    be  from  the  same  political  party.  The  appointee  shall
10    establish his or her political party affiliation  by  his  or
11    her last record of voting in a party primary election.
12             (1)  For  the  ethics  commission  of  the executive
13        branch, the Governor shall appoint the commissioners.
14             (2)  For the ethics commission  of  the  legislative
15        branch,  (i)  the  Speaker and the Minority Leader of the
16        House  of  Representatives  and  the  President  and  the
17        Minority Leader of the  Senate  shall  each  appoint  one
18        commissioner;  (ii)  the  President  of  the  Senate  and
19        whichever of the Speaker and Minority Leader of the House
20        of Representatives that is of the same political party as
21        the President shall jointly appoint one member; and (iii)
22        the 2 legislative leaders not making an appointment under
23        item (ii) shall jointly appoint one member.
24             (3)  For  the  ethics  commission  of  the  judicial
25        branch,  the  Chief  Justice  of  the Supreme Court shall
26        appoint the commissioners with the concurrence of 3 other
27        Supreme Court judges.
28        (b)  At the first  meeting  of  each  commission,  the  6
29    initial  appointees  shall draw lots to divide into 2 groups.
30    Commissioners of the first group shall  serve  2-year  terms,
31    and  commissioners  of  the second group shall serve one-year
32    terms. Thereafter commissioners shall be appointed to  2-year
33    terms.  Commissioners  may be reappointed to serve subsequent
34    terms.
                            -14-           LRB9003972PTcwam01
 1        (c)  The respective appointing authority  or  authorities
 2    may  remove  a  commissioner  appointed  by that authority or
 3    those authorities in case of incompetency, neglect  of  duty,
 4    or malfeasance in office after service on the commissioner by
 5    certified  mail,  return  receipt requested, of a copy of the
 6    written charges against the commissioner and  an  opportunity
 7    to  be  heard  in  person or by counsel upon not less than 10
 8    days' notice. Vacancies shall be filled  by  the  appropriate
 9    appointing authority or authorities.
10        (d)  Each  commission  shall  meet  at  least monthly and
11    otherwise as often as necessary to perform its duties. At the
12    first meeting of each  commission,  the  commissioners  shall
13    choose  a  chairperson  from  their number. Meetings shall be
14    held at the call of the chairperson or any  2  commissioners.
15    Official   action   by   the  commission  shall  require  the
16    affirmative vote of  4  commissioners,  and  a  quorum  shall
17    consist  of  4 commissioners. Commissioners may be reimbursed
18    for  their  reasonable  expenses  actually  incurred  in  the
19    performance of their duties.
20        Section 50.  Staff.  Each commission may employ  at  most
21    10 necessary staff persons and may contract for services that
22    cannot be satisfactorily performed by the staff.
23        Section  55.   Powers  and duties.  Each commission shall
24    have the following powers and duties:
25        (1)  To promulgate procedures  and  rules  governing  the
26    performance of its duties and the exercise of its powers.
27        (2)  Upon  receipt  of  a  signed  written  complaint, to
28    investigate, to conduct research, conduct closed hearings and
29    deliberations, issue recommendations, and impose a fine.
30        (3)  To act only upon the receipt of a complaint alleging
31    violation of this Act and not upon its own prerogative.
32        (4)  To receive information from the public pertaining to
                            -15-           LRB9003972PTcwam01
 1    its investigations and to require additional information  and
 2    documents from persons who may have violated this Act.
 3        (5)  To  subpoena  witnesses and compel the production of
 4    books and papers pertinent to an investigation authorized  by
 5    this Act.
 6        (6)   To  request that the Attorney General provide legal
 7    advice without charge to the commission.
 8        (7)  To prepare and publish manuals and guides explaining
 9    the duties of individuals covered by this Act.
10        (8)   To  prepare   public   information   materials   to
11    facilitate  compliance,  implementation,  and  enforcement of
12    this Act.
13        (9)   To  submit   to   the   commissioner's   respective
14    appointing  authority  or  authorities  an annual statistical
15    report  for  each  year  consisting  of  (i)  the  number  of
16    complaints filed, (ii) the number  of  complaints  deemed  to
17    sufficiently  allege  a  violation  of  this  Act,  (iii) the
18    recommendation, fine, or decision issued for each  complaint,
19    (iv) the number of complaints resolved, and (v) the status of
20    pending complaints.
21        Section 60.  Complaint procedure.
22        (a)   Complaints alleging the violation of this Act shall
23    be filed with the appropriate ethics commission as follows:
24             (1)  If the complaint  alleges  a  violation  by  an
25        officer  or  employee  of  the  executive branch of State
26        government, then the complaint shall be  filed  with  the
27        executive ethics commission.
28             (2)  If the complaint alleges a violation by a judge
29        or  employee  of  the judicial branch of government, then
30        the complaint shall be filed  with  the  judicial  ethics
31        commission.
32             (3)  If  the  complaint  alleges  a  violation  by a
33        member or employee of the  legislative  branch  of  State
                            -16-           LRB9003972PTcwam01
 1        government or any employee not included within paragraphs
 2        (1)  or  (2),  then the complaint shall be filed with the
 3        legislative ethics commission.
 4        Any complaint received  by  or  incident  reported  to  a
 5    member,  officer,  employee,  judge,  or  governmental entity
 6    alleging the violation of this Act shall be forwarded to  the
 7    appropriate  commission.  The complaint shall not be properly
 8    filed until submitted to the appropriate commission.
 9        (b)  Within  3  days  after  the  receipt  of  an  ethics
10    complaint,  the  commission  shall  send  by  certified mail,
11    return receipt requested, a notice to the respondent  that  a
12    complaint  has  been filed against him or her. The commission
13    shall send by certified mail,  return  receipt  requested,  a
14    confirmation   of   the  receipt  of  the  complaint  to  the
15    complainant  within  3  days  after  the  submittal  to   the
16    commission.
17        (c)   The  commission  shall meet to review the complaint
18    and shall issue notice to the complainant and the  respondent
19    of   the  commission's  ruling  on  the  sufficiency  of  the
20    complaint within 7 days after receiving  the  complaint.   If
21    the complaint is deemed to sufficiently allege a violation of
22    this  Act,  then the commission's notice to the parties shall
23    include a hearing date scheduled within  4  weeks  after  the
24    complaint's  receipt.   If  the  complaint  is  deemed not to
25    sufficiently allege a violation, then  the  commission  shall
26    send by certified mail, return receipt requested, a notice to
27    the parties of the decision to dismiss the complaint.
28        (d)   On the scheduled date, the commission shall conduct
29    a closed hearing on the complaint and allow both parties  the
30    opportunity to present testimony and evidence.
31        (e)   Within  6  weeks after the complaint's receipt, the
32    commission shall (i) dismiss the complaint or  (ii)  issue  a
33    recommendation  to the alleged violator and to the violator's
34    ultimate jurisdictional authority or impose a fine  upon  the
                            -17-           LRB9003972PTcwam01
 1    violator, or both.
 2        Section 65.  Enforcement.
 3        (a)  A  commission  may  recommend to a person's ultimate
 4    jurisdictional  authority  disciplinary  action  against  the
 5    person it determines to be in violation  of  this  Act.   The
 6    recommendation may prescribe the following courses of action:
 7             (1)  A public or private reprimand.
 8             (2)  To cease and desist the offensive action.
 9             (3)  A  return or refund of money or other items, or
10        an  amount  of  restitution  for  services,  received  in
11        violation of this Act.
12             (4)  Dismissal, removal from office, impeachment, or
13        expulsion.
14        (b)  A commission may impose fine of  up  to  $1,000  per
15    violation to be deposited into the General Revenue Fund.
16        (c)  The  ultimate  jurisdictional  authority of a person
17    who violates an ethics provision may take disciplinary action
18    against the person as recommended by a commission  or  as  it
19    deems  appropriate,  to  the  extent  it  is constitutionally
20    permissible for the ultimate jurisdictional authority to take
21    that action.
22        (d)  If after a hearing the commission finds no violation
23    of this Act, the commission may dismiss the complaint.
24        Section 70.  Criminal action; penalty.
25        (a)  After issuing a recommendation  to  the  appropriate
26    parties,  a  commission  may refer the recommendation and the
27    accompanying documents generated from the complaint procedure
28    to the Department of State Police  or other  law  enforcement
29    entity   or   to  the  proper  prosecutorial,  investigatory,
30    disciplinary, or similar entity if the commission deems  that
31    the allegations may constitute a criminal action.
32        (b)  An  individual  who  knowingly  violates this Act is
                            -18-           LRB9003972PTcwam01
 1    guilty of a Class A misdemeanor.
 2        Section 75.  Review.  A commission's decision to  dismiss
 3    a   complaint   or   its   recommendation   is  not  a  final
 4    administrative decision, but its imposition of a  fine  is  a
 5    final  administrative  decision  subject  to  judicial review
 6    under the Administrative Review Law  of  the  Code  of  Civil
 7    Procedure.
 8        Section  80.   Exemption.   The proceedings conducted and
 9    documents generated  under  this  Act  are  exempt  from  the
10    provisions  of  the  Open  Meetings  Act  and  the Freedom of
11    Information Act.
12        Section 85.  Home rule preemption.  A home rule unit  may
13    not  regulate  the prohibition of gifts to members, officers,
14    employees, or judges or the enforcement of  these  provisions
15    in  a  manner  inconsistent with this Act.  This Section is a
16    limitation under subsection (i) of Section 6 of  Article  VII
17    of  the  Illinois  Constitution on the concurrent exercise by
18    home rule units of powers  and  functions  exercised  by  the
19    State.
20        Section  90.  Severability.   The  provisions of this Act
21    are severable under Section 1.31 of the Statute on Statutes.
22        Section 95.  Effect on Executive Order or  similar  rule.
23    This  Act  supersedes  the ethics reforms provided for in (i)
24    Part I (Ban On  Gifts  To  State  Employees  From  Prohibited
25    Sources)  contained  in Executive Order No. 2 (1997) and (ii)
26    any  other  executive,  administrative,  or  similar   order,
27    policy,  or  rule  promulgated  by an officer, member, judge,
28    employee, or governmental entity that conflicts  with  or  is
29    less restrictive than this Act.
                            -19-           LRB9003972PTcwam01
 1        Section   205.  The  Open  Meetings  Act  is  amended  by
 2    changing Section 1.02 as follows:
 3        (5 ILCS 120/1.02) (from Ch. 102, par. 41.02)
 4        Sec. 1.02.  For the purposes of this Act:
 5        "Meeting" means any gathering of a majority of  a  quorum
 6    of the commissioners of a public body held for the purpose of
 7    discussing public business.
 8        "Public   body"   includes  all  legislative,  executive,
 9    administrative or advisory bodies  of  the  state,  counties,
10    townships,   cities,  villages,  incorporated  towns,  school
11    districts  and  all  other  municipal  corporations,  boards,
12    bureaus, committees or commissions of  this  State,  and  any
13    subsidiary  bodies  of any of the foregoing including but not
14    limited to committees and subcommittees which  are  supported
15    in  whole  or  in  part  by  tax revenue, or which expend tax
16    revenue,  except  the  General  Assembly  and  committees  or
17    commissions thereof. "Public body"  includes  tourism  boards
18    and  convention  or  civic  center boards located in counties
19    that are contiguous to the Mississippi River with populations
20    of more than 250,000 but less  than  300,000.  "Public  body"
21    does  not include a child death review team established under
22    the Child Death Review Team Act or a  commission  established
23    under the State Gift Ban Act.
24    (Source: P.A. 90-517, eff. 8-22-97.)
25        Section  210.  The  Freedom of Information Act is amended
26    by changing Section 7 as follows:
27        (5 ILCS 140/7) (from Ch. 116, par. 207)
28        Sec. 7.  Exemptions.
29        (1)  The following shall be exempt  from  inspection  and
30    copying:
31             (a)  Information    specifically   prohibited   from
                            -20-           LRB9003972PTcwam01
 1        disclosure  by  federal  or  State  law  or   rules   and
 2        regulations adopted under federal or State law.
 3             (b)  Information    that,    if   disclosed,   would
 4        constitute a clearly  unwarranted  invasion  of  personal
 5        privacy, unless the disclosure is consented to in writing
 6        by  the  individual  subjects  of  the  information.  The
 7        disclosure of information that bears on the public duties
 8        of public employees and officials shall not be considered
 9        an invasion of personal  privacy.   Information  exempted
10        under  this  subsection  (b)  shall  include  but  is not
11        limited to:
12                  (i)  files and personal information  maintained
13             with   respect   to  clients,  patients,  residents,
14             students  or  other  individuals  receiving  social,
15             medical,   educational,    vocational,    financial,
16             supervisory  or  custodial care or services directly
17             or  indirectly  from  federal  agencies  or   public
18             bodies;
19                  (ii)  personnel  files and personal information
20             maintained with respect to employees, appointees  or
21             elected  officials  of any public body or applicants
22             for those positions;
23                  (iii)  files    and    personal     information
24             maintained with respect to any applicant, registrant
25             or  licensee  by any public body cooperating with or
26             engaged    in    professional    or     occupational
27             registration, licensure or discipline;
28                  (iv)  information  required  of any taxpayer in
29             connection with the assessment or collection of  any
30             tax unless disclosure is otherwise required by State
31             statute; and
32                  (v)  information   revealing  the  identity  of
33             persons  who  file  complaints   with   or   provide
34             information  to  administrative,  investigative, law
                            -21-           LRB9003972PTcwam01
 1             enforcement or penal  agencies;  provided,  however,
 2             that   identification   of   witnesses   to  traffic
 3             accidents,  traffic  accident  reports,  and  rescue
 4             reports  may  be  provided  by  agencies  of   local
 5             government,  except  in  a case for which a criminal
 6             investigation is  ongoing,  without  constituting  a
 7             clearly  unwarranted   per  se  invasion of personal
 8             privacy under this subsection.
 9             (c)  Records  compiled  by  any  public   body   for
10        administrative   enforcement   proceedings  and  any  law
11        enforcement or correctional agency  for  law  enforcement
12        purposes  or  for  internal matters of a public body, but
13        only to the extent that disclosure would:
14                  (i)  interfere with  pending  or  actually  and
15             reasonably  contemplated law enforcement proceedings
16             conducted by any  law  enforcement  or  correctional
17             agency;
18                  (ii)  interfere   with  pending  administrative
19             enforcement  proceedings  conducted  by  any  public
20             body;
21                  (iii)  deprive a person of a fair trial  or  an
22             impartial hearing;
23                  (iv)  unavoidably  disclose  the  identity of a
24             confidential  source  or  confidential   information
25             furnished only by the confidential source;
26                  (v)  disclose     unique     or     specialized
27             investigative  techniques other than those generally
28             used and known or  disclose  internal  documents  of
29             correctional    agencies   related   to   detection,
30             observation or investigation of incidents  of  crime
31             or misconduct;
32                  (vi)  constitute   an   invasion   of  personal
33             privacy under subsection (b) of this Section;
34                  (vii)  endanger the life or physical safety  of
                            -22-           LRB9003972PTcwam01
 1             law enforcement personnel or any other person; or
 2                  (viii)  obstruct     an     ongoing    criminal
 3             investigation.
 4             (d)  Criminal history record information  maintained
 5        by  State  or local criminal justice agencies, except the
 6        following which shall be open for public  inspection  and
 7        copying:
 8                  (i)  chronologically      maintained     arrest
 9             information, such  as  traditional  arrest  logs  or
10             blotters;
11                  (ii)  the  name of a person in the custody of a
12             law enforcement agency and  the  charges  for  which
13             that person is being held;
14                  (iii)  court records that are public;
15                  (iv)  records   that  are  otherwise  available
16             under State or local law; or
17                  (v)  records in which the requesting  party  is
18             the  individual identified, except as provided under
19             part (vii) of paragraph (c)  of  subsection  (1)  of
20             this Section.
21             "Criminal  history  record  information"  means data
22        identifiable  to  an   individual   and   consisting   of
23        descriptions   or   notations   of  arrests,  detentions,
24        indictments, informations, pre-trial proceedings, trials,
25        or other formal events in the criminal justice system  or
26        descriptions  or notations of criminal charges (including
27        criminal violations of local  municipal  ordinances)  and
28        the   nature   of   any  disposition  arising  therefrom,
29        including sentencing, court or correctional  supervision,
30        rehabilitation  and  release.  The term does not apply to
31        statistical records and reports in which individuals  are
32        not  identified  and  from which their identities are not
33        ascertainable, or to information  that  is  for  criminal
34        investigative or intelligence purposes.
                            -23-           LRB9003972PTcwam01
 1             (e)  Records  that  relate to or affect the security
 2        of correctional institutions and detention facilities.
 3             (f)  Preliminary  drafts,  notes,   recommendations,
 4        memoranda   and  other  records  in  which  opinions  are
 5        expressed, or policies or actions are formulated,  except
 6        that  a  specific  record or relevant portion of a record
 7        shall not be exempt when the record is publicly cited and
 8        identified by the head of the public body. The  exemption
 9        provided  in  this  paragraph  (f)  extends  to all those
10        records of officers and agencies of the General  Assembly
11        that pertain to the preparation of legislative documents.
12             (g)  Trade   secrets  and  commercial  or  financial
13        information obtained from a person or business where  the
14        trade  secrets or information are proprietary, privileged
15        or confidential, or where disclosure of the trade secrets
16        or information may cause competitive harm, including  all
17        information  determined  to be confidential under Section
18        4002 of the Technology Advancement and  Development  Act.
19        Nothing   contained   in  this  paragraph  (g)  shall  be
20        construed to prevent a person or business from consenting
21        to disclosure.
22             (h)  Proposals and bids for any contract, grant,  or
23        agreement,   including   information  which  if  it  were
24        disclosed  would  frustrate  procurement   or   give   an
25        advantage  to  any  person  proposing  to  enter  into  a
26        contractor  agreement  with  the  body, until an award or
27        final selection is made.  Information prepared by or  for
28        the  body  in  preparation of a bid solicitation shall be
29        exempt until an award or final selection is made.
30             (i)  Valuable  formulae,   designs,   drawings   and
31        research  data  obtained  or  produced by any public body
32        when disclosure could reasonably be expected  to  produce
33        private gain or public loss.
34             (j)  Test   questions,   scoring   keys   and  other
                            -24-           LRB9003972PTcwam01
 1        examination  data  used   to   administer   an   academic
 2        examination   or  determined  the  qualifications  of  an
 3        applicant for a license or employment.
 4             (k)  Architects'  plans  and  engineers'   technical
 5        submissions  for projects not constructed or developed in
 6        whole or in part  with  public  funds  and  for  projects
 7        constructed or developed with public funds, to the extent
 8        that disclosure would compromise security.
 9             (l)  Library    circulation    and   order   records
10        identifying library users with specific materials.
11             (m)  Minutes of meetings of public bodies closed  to
12        the public as provided in the Open Meetings Act until the
13        public  body  makes  the  minutes available to the public
14        under Section 2.06 of the Open Meetings Act.
15             (n)  Communications between a  public  body  and  an
16        attorney  or  auditor  representing  the public body that
17        would not be subject  to  discovery  in  litigation,  and
18        materials prepared or compiled by or for a public body in
19        anticipation  of  a  criminal,  civil  or  administrative
20        proceeding  upon  the request of an attorney advising the
21        public body, and  materials  prepared  or  compiled  with
22        respect to internal audits of public bodies.
23             (o)  Information  received by a primary or secondary
24        school, college or university under  its  procedures  for
25        the evaluation of faculty commissioners by their academic
26        peers.
27             (p)  Administrative    or    technical   information
28        associated with  automated  data  processing  operations,
29        including   but   not   limited  to  software,  operating
30        protocols,  computer  program  abstracts,  file  layouts,
31        source  listings,  object  modules,  load  modules,  user
32        guides,  documentation  pertaining  to  all  logical  and
33        physical  design  of   computerized   systems,   employee
34        manuals,  and  any  other information that, if disclosed,
                            -25-           LRB9003972PTcwam01
 1        would jeopardize the security of the system or  its  data
 2        or the security of materials exempt under this Section.
 3             (q)  Documents  or  materials relating to collective
 4        negotiating  matters  between  public  bodies  and  their
 5        employees  or  representatives,  except  that  any  final
 6        contract or agreement shall be subject to inspection  and
 7        copying.
 8             (r)  Drafts,  notes,  recommendations  and memoranda
 9        pertaining to the financing and marketing transactions of
10        the public body. The records of ownership,  registration,
11        transfer, and exchange of municipal debt obligations, and
12        of   persons  to  whom  payment  with  respect  to  these
13        obligations is made.
14             (s)  The records, documents and information relating
15        to  real  estate  purchase   negotiations   until   those
16        negotiations have been completed or otherwise terminated.
17        With regard to a parcel involved in a pending or actually
18        and  reasonably  contemplated  eminent  domain proceeding
19        under  Article  VII  of  the  Code  of  Civil  Procedure,
20        records,  documents  and  information  relating  to  that
21        parcel shall be exempt except as  may  be  allowed  under
22        discovery  rules  adopted  by the Illinois Supreme Court.
23        The records, documents and information relating to a real
24        estate sale shall be exempt until a sale is consummated.
25             (t)  Any and all proprietary information and records
26        related to the operation  of  an  intergovernmental  risk
27        management  association or self-insurance pool or jointly
28        self-administered  health  and  accident  cooperative  or
29        pool.
30             (u)  Information    concerning    a     university's
31        adjudication   of   student   or  employee  grievance  or
32        disciplinary cases, to the extent that  disclosure  would
33        reveal  the  identity  of  the  student  or  employee and
34        information concerning any public body's adjudication  of
                            -26-           LRB9003972PTcwam01
 1        student  or  employee  grievances  or disciplinary cases,
 2        except for the final outcome of the cases.
 3             (v)  Course materials or research materials used  by
 4        faculty commissioners.
 5             (w)  Information  related  solely  to  the  internal
 6        personnel rules and practices of a public body.
 7             (x)  Information   contained   in   or   related  to
 8        examination, operating, or condition reports prepared by,
 9        on behalf of, or for the use of a public body responsible
10        for  the   regulation   or   supervision   of   financial
11        institutions or insurance companies, unless disclosure is
12        otherwise required by State law.
13             (y)  Information   the   disclosure   of   which  is
14        restricted under Section 5-108 of  the  Public  Utilities
15        Act.
16             (z)  Manuals  or instruction to staff that relate to
17        establishment or collection of liability  for  any  State
18        tax  or that relate to investigations by a public body to
19        determine violation of any criminal law.
20             (aa)  Applications, related documents,  and  medical
21        records    received    by    the    Experimental    Organ
22        Transplantation   Procedures   Board   and  any  and  all
23        documents or other records prepared by  the  Experimental
24        Organ  Transplantation  Procedures  Board  or  its  staff
25        relating to applications it has received.
26             (bb)  Insurance  or  self  insurance  (including any
27        intergovernmental risk  management  association  or  self
28        insurance   pool)   claims,   loss   or  risk  management
29        information, records, data, advice or communications.
30             (cc)  Information and records held by the Department
31        of  Public  Health  and  its  authorized  representatives
32        relating  to  known  or  suspected  cases   of   sexually
33        transmissible  disease  or any information the disclosure
34        of  which  is  restricted  under  the  Illinois  Sexually
                            -27-           LRB9003972PTcwam01
 1        Transmissible Disease Control Act.
 2             (dd)  Information  the  disclosure   of   which   is
 3        exempted under Section 30 of the Radon Industry Licensing
 4        Act.
 5             (ee)  Firm  performance evaluations under Section 55
 6        of the Architectural,  Engineering,  and  Land  Surveying
 7        Qualifications Based Selection Act.
 8             (ff)  Security  portions  of  system  safety program
 9        plans, investigation reports, surveys, schedules,  lists,
10        data,  or information compiled, collected, or prepared by
11        or  for  the  Regional  Transportation  Authority   under
12        Section 2.11 of the Regional Transportation Authority Act
13        or  the  State  of  Missouri  under  the Bi-State Transit
14        Safety Act.
15             (gg)  Information  the  disclosure   of   which   is
16        exempted under Section 80 of the State Gift Ban Act.
17        (2)  This  Section  does  not  authorize  withholding  of
18    information  or  limit  the  availability  of  records to the
19    public,  except  as  stated  in  this  Section  or  otherwise
20    provided in this Act.
21    (Source: P.A. 90-262, eff.  7-30-97;  90-273,  eff.  7-30-97;
22    revised 10-16-97.)
23        (5 ILCS 420/3-101 rep.)
24        Section  215.  The  Illinois  Governmental  Ethics Act is
25    amended by repealing Section  3-101.
26        Section 999.  Effective  date.   This  Act  takes  effect
27    January 1, 1998.".

[ Top ]