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Public Act 100-0477 |
HB2482 Enrolled | LRB100 08531 HLH 18656 b |
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AN ACT concerning State government.
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Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
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represented in the General Assembly:
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Section 5. The Open Meetings Act is amended by changing |
Sections 2.01 and 7 as follows:
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(5 ILCS 120/2.01) (from Ch. 102, par. 42.01)
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Sec. 2.01. All meetings required by this Act to be public |
shall be held at
specified times and places which are |
convenient and open
to the public. No meeting
required by this |
Act to be public shall be held on a legal holiday unless
the |
regular meeting day falls on that holiday.
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A quorum of members of a public body must be physically |
present at the location of an open meeting. If, however, an |
open meeting of a public body (i) with statewide jurisdiction, |
(ii) that is an Illinois library system with jurisdiction over |
a specific geographic area of more than 4,500 square miles, |
(iii) that is a municipal transit district with jurisdiction |
over a specific geographic area of more than 4,500 square |
miles, or (iv) that is a local workforce investment area with |
jurisdiction over a specific geographic area of more than 4,500 |
square miles is held simultaneously at one of its offices and |
one or more other locations in a public building, which may |
include other of its offices, through an interactive video |
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conference and the public body provides public notice and |
public access as required under this Act for all locations, |
then members physically present in those locations all count |
towards determining a quorum. "Public building", as used in |
this Section, means any building or portion thereof owned or |
leased by any public body. The requirement that a quorum be |
physically present at the location of an open meeting shall not |
apply, however, to State advisory boards or bodies that do not |
have authority to make binding recommendations or |
determinations or to take any other substantive action.
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A quorum of members of a public body that is not (i) a |
public body with statewide jurisdiction, (ii) an Illinois |
library system with jurisdiction over a specific geographic |
area of more than 4,500 square miles, (iii) a municipal transit |
district with jurisdiction over a specific geographic area of |
more than 4,500 square miles, or (iv) a local workforce |
innovation investment area with jurisdiction over a specific |
geographic area of more than 4,500 square miles must be |
physically present at the location of a closed meeting. Other |
members who are not physically present at a closed meeting of |
such a public body may participate in the meeting by means of a |
video or audio conference.
For the purposes of this Section, |
"local workforce innovation investment area" means any local |
workforce innovation investment area or areas designated by the |
Governor pursuant to the federal Workforce
Innovation and |
Opportunity Act Workforce Investment Act of 1998 or its |
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reauthorizing legislation. |
(Source: P.A. 98-992, eff. 8-18-14.)
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(5 ILCS 120/7)
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Sec. 7. Attendance by a means other than physical presence. |
(a) If a
quorum of the members of the public body is |
physically present as required by Section 2.01, a majority of |
the public body may allow a member of that body to attend the |
meeting by other means if the member is prevented from |
physically
attending because of: (i) personal illness or |
disability; (ii) employment purposes or
the
business of the |
public body; or (iii) a family or other emergency.
"Other |
means" is by video or audio conference.
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(b) If a member wishes to attend a meeting by other means, |
the
member must notify the
recording secretary or clerk of the
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public body before the meeting unless
advance notice is |
impractical.
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(c) A majority of the public body may allow a member to |
attend a meeting by other means only in accordance with and to |
the extent allowed by rules adopted by the public body. The |
rules must conform to the requirements and restrictions of this |
Section, may further limit the extent to which attendance by |
other means is allowed, and may provide for the giving of |
additional notice to the public or further facilitate public |
access to meetings.
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(d) The limitations of this Section shall not apply to (i) |
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closed meetings of (A) public bodies with statewide |
jurisdiction, (B) Illinois library systems with jurisdiction |
over a specific geographic area of more than 4,500 square |
miles, (C) municipal transit districts with jurisdiction over a |
specific geographic area of more than 4,500 square miles, or |
(D) local workforce innovation investment areas with |
jurisdiction over a specific geographic area of more than 4,500 |
square miles or (ii) open or closed meetings of State advisory |
boards or bodies that do not have authority to make binding |
recommendations or determinations or to take any other |
substantive action. State advisory boards or bodies, public |
bodies with statewide jurisdiction, Illinois library systems |
with jurisdiction over a specific geographic area of more than |
4,500 square miles, municipal transit districts with |
jurisdiction over a specific geographic area of more than 4,500 |
square miles, and local workforce investment areas with |
jurisdiction over a specific geographic area of more than 4,500 |
square miles, however, may permit members to attend meetings by |
other means only in accordance with and to the extent allowed |
by specific procedural rules adopted by the body.
For the |
purposes of this Section, "local workforce innovation |
investment area" means any local workforce innovation |
investment area or areas designated by the Governor pursuant to |
the federal Workforce
Innovation and Opportunity Act Workforce |
Investment Act of 1998 or its reauthorizing legislation.
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(Source: P.A. 98-992, eff. 8-18-14.) |
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Section 10. The Civil Administrative Code of Illinois is |
amended by changing Section 5-550 as follows:
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(20 ILCS 5/5-550) (was 20 ILCS 5/6.23)
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Sec. 5-550. In the Department of Human Services. A State |
Rehabilitation
Council, hereinafter referred to as the |
Council, is hereby established for
the purpose of complying |
with the requirements of 34 CFR 361.16 and advising the |
Secretary of Human Services and the vocational rehabilitation
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administrator of the provisions of the federal Rehabilitation |
Act of 1973 and
the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 in |
matters concerning individuals
with disabilities and the |
provision of vocational rehabilitation services. The Council
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shall consist of members appointed by the Governor after |
soliciting
recommendations from organizations representing a |
broad
range of individuals with disabilities and organizations |
interested in
individuals with disabilities. However, the |
Governor may delegate his appointing authority under this |
Section to the Council by executive order. |
The Council shall consist of the following appointed |
members:
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(1) One representative of a parent training center |
established in
accordance with the federal Individuals |
with Disabilities Education Act.
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(2) One representative of the Client Assistance |
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Program.
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(3) One vocational rehabilitation counselor who has |
knowledge of and
experience with vocational rehabilitation |
programs.
If an employee of the Department of Human |
Services is appointed under this item, then he or she shall |
serve
as an ex officio, nonvoting member.
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(4) One representative of community rehabilitation |
program service
providers.
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(5) Four representatives of business, industry, and |
labor.
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(6) At least two but not more than five representatives |
of disability advocacy groups representing a
cross section |
of the following:
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(A) individuals with physical, cognitive, sensory, |
and mental
disabilities; and
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(B) parents, family members, guardians, advocates, |
or authorized
representative of individuals with |
disabilities who have difficulty in
representing |
themselves or who are unable, due to their |
disabilities, to
represent themselves.
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(7) One current or former applicant for, or recipient |
of, vocational
rehabilitation services.
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(8) One representative from secondary or higher |
education.
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(9) One representative of the State Workforce |
Innovation Investment Board.
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(10) One representative of the Illinois State Board of |
Education who is
knowledgeable about the Individuals with |
Disabilities Education Act.
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(11) The chairperson of, or a member designated by, the |
Statewide Independent Living Council established under |
Section 12a of the Rehabilitation of Persons with |
Disabilities Act. |
(12) The chairperson of, or a member designated by, the |
Blind Services Planning Council established under Section |
7 of the Bureau for the Blind Act. |
(13) The vocational rehabilitation administrator, as |
defined in Section 1b of the Rehabilitation of Persons with |
Disabilities Act, who shall serve as an ex officio, |
nonvoting member.
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The Council shall select a Chairperson.
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The Chairperson and a majority of the
members of the |
Council shall be persons who are individuals with disabilities. |
At least one
member shall be a senior citizen age 60 or over, |
and at least one member shall be at least 18 but not more than |
25 years old. A majority of the
Council members shall not be |
employees of the Department of Human Services.
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Members appointed to the Council for full terms on or after |
the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 98th General |
Assembly shall be appointed for terms of 3 years. No Council |
member, other than the vocational rehabilitation administrator |
and the representative of the Client Assistance Program, shall |
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serve for more than 2 consecutive terms as a representative of |
one of the 13 enumerated categories. If an individual, other |
than the vocational rehabilitation administrator and the |
representative of the Client Assistance Program, has completed |
2 consecutive terms and is eligible to seek appointment as a |
representative of one of the other enumerated categories, then |
that individual may be appointed to serve as a representative |
of one of those other enumerated categories after a meaningful |
break in Council service, as defined by the Council through its |
by-laws. |
Vacancies for unexpired terms shall be filled. Individuals |
appointed by the appointing authority to fill an unexpired term |
shall complete the remainder of the vacated term. When the |
initial term of a person appointed to fill a vacancy is |
completed, the individual appointed to fill that vacancy may be |
re-appointed by the appointing authority to the vacated |
position for one subsequent term. |
If an excessive number of expired terms and vacated terms |
combine to place an undue burden on the Council, the appointing |
authority may appoint members for terms of 1, 2, or 3 years. |
The appointing authority shall determine the terms of Council |
members to ensure the number of terms expiring each year is as |
close to equal as possible. |
Notwithstanding the foregoing, a member who is serving on |
the Council on the effective date of this amendatory Act of the |
98th General Assembly and whose term expires as a result of the |
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changes made by this amendatory Act of the 98th General |
Assembly may complete the unexpired portion of his or her term. |
Members shall be reimbursed in accordance with State laws, |
rules, and rates
for expenses incurred in the performance of |
their approved, Council-related duties,
including expenses for |
travel, child care, or personal assistance services. A
member |
who is not employed or who must forfeit wages from other |
employment may
be paid reasonable compensation, as determined |
by the Department, for each day the member is engaged in
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performing approved duties of the Council.
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The Council
shall meet at least 4 times per year at times |
and places designated by the Chairperson
upon 10 days written |
notice to the members. Special meetings may
be called by the |
Chairperson or 7 members of the
Council upon 7 days written
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notice to the other members. Nine members shall constitute a
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quorum.
No member of the Council shall cast a vote on any |
matter that would provide
direct financial benefit to the |
member or otherwise give the appearance of a
conflict of |
interest under Illinois law.
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The
Council shall prepare and submit to the
vocational |
rehabilitation
administrator
the reports and findings
that the |
vocational rehabilitation administrator may request or
that |
the Council deems fit.
The Council shall select jointly with |
the
vocational rehabilitation
administrator
a pool of
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qualified persons to serve as impartial hearing officers.
The |
Council shall, with the vocational rehabilitation unit in the |
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Department,
jointly develop, agree to, and review annually |
State goals and priorities and
jointly submit annual reports of |
progress to the federal Commissioner of
the
Rehabilitation |
Services Administration.
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To the extent that there is a disagreement between the |
Council and the unit
within the
Department of Human Services |
responsible for the administration of the
vocational |
rehabilitation program, regarding the resources
necessary to |
carry out the functions of the Council as set forth in this
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Section, the
disagreement shall be resolved by the Governor.
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(Source: P.A. 98-76, eff. 7-15-13; 99-143, eff. 7-27-15.)
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Section 15. The Department of Commerce and Economic |
Opportunity Law of the
Civil Administrative Code of Illinois is |
amended by changing Section 605-750 as follows: |
(20 ILCS 605/605-750) |
Sec. 605-750. Posting requirements; Illinois Workforce |
Innovation Investment Board. The Department must comply with |
the Internet posting requirements set forth in Section 7.2 of |
the Illinois Workforce Innovation Investment Board Act. The |
information must be posted on the Department's Internet website |
no later than 30 days
after the Department receives the |
information from the
Illinois Workforce Innovation Investment |
Board.
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(Source: P.A. 97-356, eff. 1-1-12.) |
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Section 20. The Illinois Emergency Employment Development |
Act is amended by changing Section 2 as follows:
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(20 ILCS 630/2) (from Ch. 48, par. 2402)
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Sec. 2. For the purposes of this Act, the following words |
have the
meanings ascribed to them in this Section.
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(a) "Advisory Committee" means the 21st Century Workforce |
Development Fund Advisory Committee. |
(b) "Coordinator" means the Illinois Emergency Employment
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Development Coordinator appointed under Section 3.
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(c) "Department" means the Illinois Department of Commerce |
and Economic Opportunity. |
(d) "Director" means the Director of Commerce and Economic |
Opportunity. |
(e) "Eligible business" means a for-profit business.
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(f) "Eligible employer" means an eligible nonprofit |
agency, or
an eligible business.
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(g) "Eligible job applicant" means a person who (1) has |
been a resident
of this State for at least one year; and (2) is |
unemployed;
and (3) is not
receiving and is not qualified to |
receive unemployment compensation or
workers' compensation; |
and (4) is determined by the employment
administrator to be |
likely to be available for employment by an eligible
employer |
for the duration of the job.
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(h) "Eligible nonprofit agency" means an organization |
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exempt from
taxation under the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, |
Section 501(c)(3).
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(i) "Employment administrator" means the administrative |
entity designated by the Coordinator, and approved by the |
Advisory Committee, to administer the provisions of this Act in |
each service delivery area. With approval of the Advisory |
Committee, the Coordinator may designate an administrative |
entity authorized under the Workforce
Innovation and |
Opportunity Act Workforce Investment Act or private, public, or |
non-profit entities that have proven effectiveness in |
providing training, workforce development, and job placement |
services to low-income individuals.
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(j) "Fringe benefits" means all non-salary costs for each |
person employed under the program, including, but not limited |
to, workers compensation, unemployment insurance, and health |
benefits, as would be provided to non-subsidized employees |
performing similar work. |
(k) "Household" means a group of persons living at the same |
residence
consisting of, at a maximum, spouses and the minor |
children of each.
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(l) "Program" means the Illinois Emergency Employment |
Development
Program created by this Act consisting of new job |
creation in the private sector.
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(m) "Service delivery area" means an area designated as a |
Local Workforce Investment Area by the State. |
(n) "Workforce
Innovation and Opportunity Act" "Workforce |
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Investment Act" means the federal Workforce
Innovation and |
Opportunity Act Workforce Investment Act of 1998 , any |
amendments to that Act, and any other applicable federal |
statutes. |
(Source: P.A. 99-576, eff. 7-15-16.)
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Section 25. The Department of Employment Security Law of |
the
Civil Administrative Code of Illinois is amended by |
changing Section 1005-155 as follows: |
(20 ILCS 1005/1005-155)
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Sec. 1005-155. Illinois worknet Employment and Training |
Centers report. The
Department
of Employment Security, or the |
State agency responsible for the oversight of
the
federal |
Workforce
Innovation and Opportunity Act Workforce Investment |
Act of 1998 if that agency is not the Department
of
Employment |
Security, shall prepare a report for the Governor and the
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General Assembly regarding the progress of the Illinois |
Employment and
Training Centers in serving individuals with |
disabilities. The report must
include,
but is not limited to, |
the following: (i) the number of individuals referred to
the
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Illinois Employment and Training Centers by the Department of |
Human Services
Office of Rehabilitation Services; (ii) the |
total number of individuals with disabilities
served by the |
Illinois Employment and Training Centers; (iii) the number of
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individuals with disabilities served in federal Workforce
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Innovation and Opportunity Act Workforce Investment Act of 1998
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employment and training
programs; (iv) the number of |
individuals with disabilities annually placed in
jobs
by the |
Illinois Employment and Training Centers; and (v) the number of
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individuals with disabilities referred by the Illinois |
Employment and Training
Centers to the Department of Human |
Services Office of Rehabilitation Services.
The report is due
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by December 31, 2004 based on the previous State program year
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of July 1
through June 30,
and is due annually thereafter. |
"Individuals with disabilities" are defined as
those who
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self-report as being qualified as disabled under the 1973 |
Rehabilitation Act or
the
1990 Americans
with Disabilities Act, |
for the purposes of this Law.
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(Source: P.A. 99-143, eff. 7-27-15.) |
Section 30. The Illinois Guaranteed Job Opportunity Act is |
amended by changing Section 35 as follows:
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(20 ILCS 1510/35)
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Sec. 35. Local Job Projects.
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(a) General authority. The Department may accept |
applications and issue
grants for operation of projects under |
this Act.
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(b) Project. Subject to appropriation, no more than 3 small
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projects may be selected to pilot a subsidized employment to |
Temporary
Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) program for |
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participants for a period of
not more than 6 months. The |
selected projects shall demonstrate their ability
to move |
clients from
participation in the project to unsubsidized |
employment. The Department may
refer TANF participants to other |
subsidized employment programs available
through the federal |
Workforce
Innovation and Opportunity Act Workforce Investment |
Act (WIA) One Stops or through other
community-based programs.
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(c) Political affiliation prohibited. No manager or other |
officer
or employee of the job project assisted
under this Act |
may apply a political affiliation test in selecting eligible
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participation for employment in the project.
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(d) Limitations.
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(1) Not more than 10% of the total expenses in any |
fiscal year of the job
project may be used for |
transportation and equipment.
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(2) (Blank).
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(e) Minimum hours per week employed. No eligible
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participant employed
in a job project assisted under this Act |
may be employed on the
project for less than 30 hours per week.
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(f) (Blank).
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(Source: P.A. 93-46, eff. 7-1-03.)
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Section 35. The Rehabilitation of Persons with |
Disabilities Act is amended by changing Section 3 as follows:
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(20 ILCS 2405/3) (from Ch. 23, par. 3434)
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Sec. 3. Powers and duties. The Department shall have the |
powers and
duties enumerated
herein:
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(a) To co-operate with the federal government in the |
administration
of the provisions of the federal Rehabilitation |
Act of 1973, as amended,
of the Workforce
Innovation and |
Opportunity Act Workforce Investment Act of 1998 ,
and of the |
federal Social Security Act to the extent and in the manner
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provided in these Acts.
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(b) To prescribe and supervise such courses of vocational |
training
and provide such other services as may be necessary |
for the habilitation
and rehabilitation of persons with one or |
more disabilities, including the
administrative activities |
under subsection (e) of this Section, and to
co-operate with |
State and local school authorities and other recognized
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agencies engaged in habilitation, rehabilitation and |
comprehensive
rehabilitation services; and to cooperate with |
the Department of Children
and Family Services regarding the |
care and education of children with one
or more disabilities.
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(c) (Blank).
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(d) To report in writing, to the Governor, annually on or |
before the
first day of December, and at such other times and |
in such manner and
upon such subjects as the Governor may |
require. The annual report shall
contain (1) a statement of the |
existing condition of comprehensive
rehabilitation services, |
habilitation and rehabilitation in the State;
(2) a statement |
of suggestions and recommendations with reference to the
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development of comprehensive rehabilitation services, |
habilitation and
rehabilitation in the State; and (3) an |
itemized statement of the
amounts of money received from |
federal, State and other sources, and of
the objects and |
purposes to which the respective items of these several
amounts |
have been devoted.
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(e) (Blank).
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(f) To establish a program of services to prevent the |
unnecessary
institutionalization of persons in need of long |
term care and who meet the criteria for blindness or disability |
as defined by the Social Security Act, thereby enabling them to
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remain in their own homes. Such preventive
services include any |
or all of the following:
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(1) personal assistant services;
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(2) homemaker services;
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(3) home-delivered meals;
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(4) adult day care services;
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(5) respite care;
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(6) home modification or assistive equipment;
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(7) home health services;
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(8) electronic home response;
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(9) brain injury behavioral/cognitive services;
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(10) brain injury habilitation;
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(11) brain injury pre-vocational services; or
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(12) brain injury supported employment.
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The Department shall establish eligibility
standards for |
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such services taking into consideration the unique
economic and |
social needs of the population for whom they are to
be |
provided. Such eligibility standards may be based on the |
recipient's
ability to pay for services; provided, however, |
that any portion of a
person's income that is equal to or less |
than the "protected income" level
shall not be considered by |
the Department in determining eligibility. The
"protected |
income" level shall be determined by the Department, shall |
never be
less than the federal poverty standard, and shall be |
adjusted each year to
reflect changes in the Consumer Price |
Index For All Urban Consumers as
determined by the United |
States Department of Labor. The standards must
provide that a |
person may not have more than $10,000 in assets to be eligible |
for the services, and the Department may increase or decrease |
the asset limitation by rule. The Department may not decrease |
the asset level below $10,000.
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The services shall be provided, as established by the
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Department by rule, to eligible persons
to prevent unnecessary |
or premature institutionalization, to
the extent that the cost |
of the services, together with the
other personal maintenance |
expenses of the persons, are reasonably
related to the |
standards established for care in a group facility
appropriate |
to their condition. These non-institutional
services, pilot |
projects or experimental facilities may be provided as part of
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or in addition to those authorized by federal law or those |
funded and
administered by the Illinois Department on Aging. |
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The Department shall set rates and fees for services in a fair |
and equitable manner. Services identical to those offered by |
the Department on Aging shall be paid at the same rate.
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Personal assistants shall be paid at a rate negotiated
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between the State and an exclusive representative of personal
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assistants under a collective bargaining agreement. In no case
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shall the Department pay personal assistants an hourly wage
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that is less than the federal minimum wage.
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Solely for the purposes of coverage under the Illinois |
Public Labor
Relations
Act
(5 ILCS 315/), personal assistants |
providing
services under
the Department's Home Services |
Program shall be considered to be public
employees
and the |
State of Illinois shall be considered to be their employer as |
of the
effective date of
this amendatory Act of the 93rd |
General Assembly, but not before. Solely for the purposes of |
coverage under the Illinois Public Labor Relations Act, home |
care and home health workers who function as personal |
assistants and individual maintenance home health workers and |
who also provide services under the Department's Home Services |
Program shall be considered to be public employees, no matter |
whether the State provides such services through direct |
fee-for-service arrangements, with the assistance of a managed |
care organization or other intermediary, or otherwise, and the |
State of Illinois shall be considered to be the employer of |
those persons as of January 29, 2013 (the effective date of |
Public Act 97-1158), but not before except as otherwise |
|
provided under this subsection (f). The State
shall
engage in |
collective bargaining with an exclusive representative of home |
care and home health workers who function as personal |
assistants and individual maintenance home health workers |
working under the Home Services Program
concerning
their terms |
and conditions of employment that are within the State's |
control.
Nothing in
this paragraph shall be understood to limit |
the right of the persons receiving
services
defined in this |
Section to hire and fire
home care and home health workers who |
function as personal assistants
and individual maintenance |
home health workers working under the Home Services Program or |
to supervise them within the limitations set by the Home |
Services Program. The
State
shall not be considered to be the |
employer of
home care and home health workers who function as |
personal
assistants and individual maintenance home health |
workers working under the Home Services Program for any |
purposes not specifically provided in Public Act 93-204 or |
Public Act 97-1158, including but not limited to, purposes of |
vicarious liability
in tort and
purposes of statutory |
retirement or health insurance benefits. Home care and home |
health workers who function as personal assistants and |
individual maintenance home health workers and who also provide |
services under the Department's Home Services Program shall not |
be covered by the State Employees Group
Insurance Act
of 1971 |
(5 ILCS 375/).
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The Department shall execute, relative to nursing home |
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prescreening, as authorized by Section 4.03 of the Illinois Act |
on the Aging,
written inter-agency agreements with the |
Department on Aging and
the Department of Healthcare and Family |
Services, to effect the intake procedures
and eligibility |
criteria for those persons who may need long term care. On and |
after July 1, 1996, all nursing
home prescreenings for |
individuals 18 through 59 years of age shall be
conducted by |
the Department, or a designee of the
Department.
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The Department is authorized to establish a system of |
recipient cost-sharing
for services provided under this |
Section. The cost-sharing shall be based upon
the recipient's |
ability to pay for services, but in no case shall the
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recipient's share exceed the actual cost of the services |
provided. Protected
income shall not be considered by the |
Department in its determination of the
recipient's ability to |
pay a share of the cost of services. The level of
cost-sharing |
shall be adjusted each year to reflect changes in the |
"protected
income" level. The Department shall deduct from the |
recipient's share of the
cost of services any money expended by |
the recipient for disability-related
expenses.
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To the extent permitted under the federal Social Security |
Act, the Department, or the Department's authorized |
representative, may recover
the amount of moneys expended for |
services provided to or in behalf of a person
under this |
Section by a claim against the person's estate or against the |
estate
of the person's surviving spouse, but no recovery may be |
|
had until after the
death of the surviving spouse, if any, and |
then only at such time when there is
no surviving child who is |
under age 21 or blind or who has a permanent and total |
disability. This paragraph, however, shall not bar recovery, at |
the death of the
person, of moneys for services provided to the |
person or in behalf of the
person under this Section to which |
the person was not entitled; provided that
such recovery shall |
not be enforced against any real estate while
it is occupied as |
a homestead by the surviving spouse or other dependent, if no
|
claims by other creditors have been filed against the estate, |
or, if such
claims have been filed, they remain dormant for |
failure of prosecution or
failure of the claimant to compel |
administration of the estate for the purpose
of payment. This |
paragraph shall not bar recovery from the estate of a spouse,
|
under Sections 1915 and 1924 of the Social Security Act and |
Section 5-4 of the
Illinois Public Aid Code, who precedes a |
person receiving services under this
Section in death. All |
moneys for services
paid to or in behalf of the person under |
this Section shall be claimed for
recovery from the deceased |
spouse's estate. "Homestead", as used in this
paragraph, means |
the dwelling house and
contiguous real estate occupied by a |
surviving spouse or relative, as defined
by the rules and |
regulations of the Department of Healthcare and Family |
Services,
regardless of the value of the property.
|
The Department shall submit an annual report on programs |
and
services provided under this Section. The report shall be |
|
filed
with the Governor and the General Assembly on or before |
March
30
each year.
|
The requirement for reporting to the General Assembly shall |
be satisfied
by filing copies of the report with the Speaker, |
the Minority Leader and
the Clerk of the House of |
Representatives and the President, the Minority
Leader and the |
Secretary of the Senate and the Legislative Research Unit,
as |
required by Section 3.1 of the General Assembly Organization |
Act, and filing
additional copies with the State
Government |
Report Distribution Center for the General Assembly as
required |
under paragraph (t) of Section 7 of the State Library Act.
|
(g) To establish such subdivisions of the Department
as |
shall be desirable and assign to the various subdivisions the
|
responsibilities and duties placed upon the Department by law.
|
(h) To cooperate and enter into any necessary agreements |
with the
Department of Employment Security for the provision of |
job placement and
job referral services to clients of the |
Department, including job
service registration of such clients |
with Illinois Employment Security
offices and making job |
listings maintained by the Department of Employment
Security |
available to such clients.
|
(i) To possess all powers reasonable and necessary for
the |
exercise and administration of the powers, duties and
|
responsibilities of the Department which are provided for by |
law.
|
(j) (Blank).
|
|
(k) (Blank).
|
(l) To establish, operate and maintain a Statewide Housing |
Clearinghouse
of information on available, government |
subsidized housing accessible to
persons with disabilities and |
available privately owned housing accessible to
persons with |
disabilities. The information shall include but not be limited |
to the
location, rental requirements, access features and |
proximity to public
transportation of available housing. The |
Clearinghouse shall consist
of at least a computerized database |
for the storage and retrieval of
information and a separate or |
shared toll free telephone number for use by
those seeking |
information from the Clearinghouse. Department offices and
|
personnel throughout the State shall also assist in the |
operation of the
Statewide Housing Clearinghouse. Cooperation |
with local, State and federal
housing managers shall be sought |
and extended in order to frequently and
promptly update the |
Clearinghouse's information.
|
(m) To assure that the names and case records of persons |
who received or
are
receiving services from the Department, |
including persons receiving vocational
rehabilitation, home |
services, or other services, and those attending one of
the |
Department's schools or other supervised facility shall be |
confidential and
not be open to the general public. Those case |
records and reports or the
information contained in those |
records and reports shall be disclosed by the
Director only to |
proper law enforcement officials, individuals authorized by a
|
|
court, the General Assembly or any committee or commission of |
the General
Assembly, and other persons and for reasons as the |
Director designates by rule.
Disclosure by the Director may be |
only in accordance with other applicable
law.
|
(Source: P.A. 98-1004, eff. 8-18-14; 99-143, eff. 7-27-15.)
|
Section 40. The Illinois Workforce Investment Board Act is |
amended by changing Sections 1, 2.5, 3, 4.5, 5, 6, 7, 7.2, 7.5, |
and 8 as follows:
|
(20 ILCS 3975/1) (from Ch. 48, par. 2101)
|
Sec. 1. Short title. This Act may be cited as the Illinois |
Workforce Innovation Investment Board Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 92-588, eff. 7-1-02.)
|
(20 ILCS 3975/2.5)
|
Sec. 2.5. Purpose.
|
(a) Beginning on the effective date of this amendatory Act |
of the 92nd
General Assembly, the Illinois Human Resource |
Investment Council shall be known
as the Illinois Workforce |
Investment Board. Beginning on the effective date of this |
amendatory Act of the 100th
General Assembly, the Illinois |
Workforce Investment Board shall be known
as the Illinois |
Workforce Innovation Board. The Illinois Workforce
Innovation |
Investment Board is
the State advisory board pertaining to |
workforce preparation policy. The
Board shall ensure that |
|
Illinois' workforce preparation
services and programs
are |
coordinated and integrated and shall measure and evaluate the |
overall
performance and results of these programs. The Board |
shall
further
cooperation between government and the private |
sector to meet the workforce
preparation
needs of employers and |
workers in Illinois. The Board shall
provide ongoing
oversight |
of programs and needed information about the functioning of |
labor
markets in Illinois.
|
(b) The Board shall help Illinois create and
maintain a |
workforce with the skills and abilities that will keep the |
economy
productive.
|
(c) The Board shall meet the requirements of the federal
|
Workforce
Innovation and Opportunity Act Workforce Investment |
Act of 1998 .
|
(Source: P.A. 92-588, eff. 7-1-02.)
|
(20 ILCS 3975/3) (from Ch. 48, par. 2103)
|
Sec. 3. Illinois Workforce Innovation Investment Board.
|
(a) The Illinois Workforce Innovation Investment Board |
shall include:
|
(1) the Governor;
|
(2) 2 members of the House of Representatives appointed |
by the Speaker of
the
House and 2 members of the Senate |
appointed by the President of the Senate;
and
|
(3) for appointments made prior to the effective date |
of this amendatory Act of the 100th General Assembly, |
|
persons appointed by the Governor, with the advice and |
consent of the
Senate
(except in the case of a person |
holding an office or employment described in
subparagraph |
(F) when appointment to the office or employment requires |
the
advice and consent of the Senate), from among the |
following:
|
(A) representatives of business in this State who |
(i) are owners of
businesses, chief executives or |
operating officers of businesses, or
other business |
executives or employers with optimum policymaking or
|
hiring authority, including members of local boards |
described in Section
117(b)(2)(A)(i) of the federal |
Workforce Investment Act of 1998; (ii)
represent |
businesses with employment opportunities that reflect |
the
employment opportunities in the State; and (iii) |
are appointed from
among individuals nominated by |
State business organizations and
business trade |
associations;
|
(B) chief elected officials from cities and |
counties;
|
(C) representatives of labor organizations who |
have been nominated by
State labor federations;
|
(D) representatives of individuals or |
organizations that have experience
with youth |
activities;
|
(E) representatives of individuals or |
|
organizations that have experience
and expertise in |
the delivery of workforce investment activities,
|
including chief executive officers of community |
colleges and
community-based organizations within the |
State;
|
(F) the lead State agency officials with |
responsibility for the programs
and
activities that |
are described in Section 121(b) of the federal |
Workforce
Investment Act of 1998 and carried out by |
one-stop partners and, in
any case in which no lead |
State agency official has responsibility for such a
|
program, service, or activity, a representative in the |
State with
expertise in such program, service, or |
activity; and
|
(G) any other representatives and State agency |
officials that the
Governor
may appoint, including, |
but not limited to, one or more representatives of
|
local
public education, post-secondary institutions, |
secondary or post-secondary
vocational education |
institutions, and community-based
organizations ; and .
|
(4) for appointments made on or after the effective |
date of this amendatory Act of the 100th General Assembly, |
persons appointed by the Governor in accordance with |
Section 101 of the federal Workforce
Innovation and |
Opportunity Act, subject to the advice and consent of the |
Senate (except in the case of a person holding an office or |
|
employment with the Department of Commerce and Economic |
Opportunity, the Illinois Community College Board, the |
Department of Employment Security, or the Department of |
Human Services when appointment to the office or employment |
requires the consent of the Senate). |
(b) (Blank). Members of the Board that represent |
organizations, agencies, or other
entities must be
individuals |
with optimum policymaking authority within the organization,
|
agency, or
entity. The members of the Board must represent |
diverse regions of the State,
including
urban, rural, and |
suburban areas.
|
(c) (Blank). A majority of the members of the Board must be |
representatives
described in subparagraph (A) of paragraph (3) |
of subsection (a). There must
be
at least 2 members from each |
of the categories described in subparagraphs (D)
and (E) of |
paragraph
(3) of subsection (a). There must be at least 3 |
members from the category
described in
subparagraph (C) of |
paragraph (3) of subsection (a). A majority of any
committee |
the Board
may establish for the purpose of general oversight, |
control, supervision, or
management of the Board's business |
must be representatives described in
subparagraph (A) of |
paragraph (3) of subsection (a); any such committee must
also |
include at least one representative from each of the categories |
described
in subparagraphs (C) through (E) of paragraph (3) of |
subsection (a) and may
include one or more representatives from |
any other categories described in
paragraph (3) of subsection |
|
(a).
|
(d) The Governor shall select a chairperson as provided in |
the federal Workforce
Innovation and Opportunity Act for the |
Board from among the
representatives
described in subparagraph |
(A) of paragraph (3) of subsection (a) .
|
(d-5) (Blank).
|
(e) Except as otherwise provided in this subsection, this |
amendatory Act
of the
92nd General
Assembly does not affect the |
tenure of any member appointed to and serving on
the
Illinois |
Human Resource Investment Council on the effective date of this
|
amendatory Act
of the 92nd General Assembly. Members of the |
Board nominated for appointment in
2000, 2001, or 2002 shall |
serve for fixed and staggered terms, as designated
by the |
Governor, expiring
no later than July 1 of the second calendar |
year succeeding their respective
appointments
or until their |
successors are appointed and qualified. Members of the
Board |
nominated for appointment after 2002
shall
serve for terms |
expiring on July 1 of the second
calendar year succeeding their |
respective appointments, or until their
successors are |
appointed and qualified.
A State official or employee serving |
on the Board under subparagraph (F) of
paragraph
(3) of |
subsection (a) by virtue of his or her State office or |
employment shall
serve
during the
term of that office or |
employment. A vacancy is created in situations
including, but |
not
limited to, those in which an individual serving on the |
Board ceases to satisfy
all of the
requirements for appointment |
|
under the provision under which he or she was
appointed.
The |
Governor may at any time make
appointments to fill vacancies |
for the balance of an unexpired term.
Vacancies shall be filled |
in the same manner as the original appointment.
Members shall |
serve without compensation, but shall be reimbursed for
|
necessary expenses incurred in the performance of their duties.
|
(f) The Board shall meet at least 4 times per
calendar
year |
at
times and in places that it deems necessary. The
Board shall |
be
subject to the Open Meetings Act and, to the extent required |
by that
law,
its meetings shall be publicly announced and open |
and accessible to the
general public. The Board shall adopt any |
rules
and operating
procedures that it deems necessary to carry |
out its responsibilities
under
this Act and under the federal |
Workforce
Innovation and Opportunity Act Workforce Investment |
Act of 1998 .
|
(Source: P.A. 92-588, eff. 7-1-02.)
|
(20 ILCS 3975/4.5)
|
Sec. 4.5. Duties.
|
(a) The Board must perform all the functions of a state |
workforce
innovation investment
board under
the federal |
Workforce
Innovation and Opportunity Act Workforce Investment |
Act of 1998 , any amendments to that Act, and
any
other |
applicable federal statutes. The Board must also perform all |
other
functions that are
not inconsistent with the federal |
Workforce
Innovation and Opportunity Act Workforce Investment |
|
Act of 1998 or this Act
and that
are assumed by the Board under |
its bylaws or assigned to it by the Governor.
|
(b) The Board must cooperate with the General Assembly and |
make
recommendations
to the
Governor and the General Assembly |
concerning legislation necessary to improve
upon
statewide and |
local workforce development investment systems in order to |
increase
occupational skill
attainment, employment, retention, |
or earnings of participants and thereby
improve the
quality of |
the workforce, reduce welfare dependency, and enhance the
|
productivity and
competitiveness of the State. The Board must |
annually submit a report to the
General
Assembly on the |
progress of the State in achieving state performance measures
|
under the
federal Workforce
Innovation and Opportunity Act |
Workforce Investment Act of 1998 , including information on the |
levels
of performance achieved by the State with respect to the |
core indicators of
performance and the customer satisfaction |
indicator
under that Act. The report must include any other
|
items that
the Governor may be required to report to the |
Secretary of the United States
Department
of Labor under |
Section 136(d) of the federal Workforce Investment Act of
1998 .
|
(b-5) The Board shall implement a method for measuring the |
progress of the
State's workforce development system by using |
benchmarks specified in the federal Workforce
Innovation and |
Opportunity Act. specified benchmarks. Those
benchmarks are: |
(i) the educational level of working adults;
(ii) the |
percentage of the adult workforce in education and training;
|
|
(iii) adult literacy;
(iv) the percentage of high school |
graduates transitioning to education or
training;
(v) the high |
school dropout rate;
(vi) the number of youth transitioning |
from 8th grade to 9th grade;
(vii) the percentage of |
individuals and families at economic
self-sufficiency;
(viii) |
the average growth in pay;
(ix) net job growth; and
(x) |
productivity per employee.
|
The Board shall identify the most significant early
|
indicators for each benchmark, establish a mechanism to collect |
data and
track the benchmarks on an annual basis, and then use |
the results to set goals
for each benchmark, to inform |
planning, and to ensure the effective use of
State resources.
|
(c) Nothing in this Act shall be construed to require or
|
allow the
Board to assume or supersede the statutory authority |
granted
to, or impose
any duties or requirements on, the State
|
Board of Education, the Board of Higher Education, the Illinois |
Community
College Board, any State agencies created under the |
Civil Administrative Code
of Illinois, or any local education |
agencies.
|
(d) No actions taken by the Illinois Human Resource |
Investment Council
before the effective date of this amendatory |
Act of the 92nd General Assembly
and no rights, powers, duties, |
or obligations from those actions are impaired
solely by this |
amendatory Act of the 92nd General Assembly. All actions taken
|
by the Illinois Human Resource Investment Council before the |
effective date of
this amendatory Act of the 92nd General |
|
Assembly are ratified and validated.
|
(Source: P.A. 92-588, eff. 7-1-02; 93-331, eff. 1-1-04.)
|
(20 ILCS 3975/5) (from Ch. 48, par. 2105)
|
Sec. 5. Plans; expenditures. The plans and decisions of the |
Board shall be
subject to
approval by the Governor. All funds |
received by the State pursuant to the
federal Job Training |
Partnership Act or the federal Workforce
Innovation and |
Opportunity Act Workforce Investment Act
of 1998 shall be |
expended only pursuant to appropriation.
|
(Source: P.A. 92-588, eff. 7-1-02.)
|
(20 ILCS 3975/6) (from Ch. 48, par. 2106)
|
Sec. 6. Programs and services, conflict of interest. In |
order to assure
objective management and oversight, the
Board |
shall not operate programs or provide services directly
to
|
eligible participants, but shall exist solely to plan, |
coordinate and
monitor the provisions of such programs and |
services.
|
A member of the Board may not (1) vote on a matter under |
consideration by
the
Board that (a) regards the provision of |
services by the member or by an entity
that the
member |
represents or (b) would provide direct financial benefit to the |
member
or the
immediate family of the member or (2) engage in |
any other activity determined
by the
Governor to constitute a |
conflict of interest as specified in the State plan
established |
|
under
the federal Workforce Investment Act of 1998 .
|
(Source: P.A. 92-588, eff. 7-1-02.)
|
(20 ILCS 3975/7) (from Ch. 48, par. 2107)
|
Sec. 7. Personnel. The Board is authorized to obtain the
|
services of any
professional, technical and clerical personnel |
that may be necessary
to carry
out its functions under this Act |
and under the federal Workforce
Innovation and Opportunity Act |
Workforce Investment
Act of 1998 .
|
(Source: P.A. 92-588, eff. 7-1-02.)
|
(20 ILCS 3975/7.2) |
Sec. 7.2. Posting requirements; Department of Commerce and |
Economic Opportunity's website. On and after the effective date |
of this amendatory Act of the 97th General Assembly, the |
Illinois Workforce Innovation Investment Board must annually |
submit to the Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity |
the following information to be posted on the Department's |
official Internet website: |
(1) All agendas and meeting minutes for meetings of the |
Illinois Workforce Innovation Investment Board. |
(2) All line-item budgets for the local workforce |
investment areas located within the State. |
(3) A listing of all contracts and contract values for |
all workforce development training and service providers. |
The information required under this Section must be posted |
|
on the Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity's |
Internet website no later than 30 days after the Department |
receives the information from the Illinois Workforce |
Innovation Investment Board.
|
(Source: P.A. 97-356, eff. 1-1-12.) |
(20 ILCS 3975/7.5) |
Sec. 7.5. Procurement. The Illinois Workforce Innovation |
Investment Board is subject to the Illinois Procurement Code, |
to the extent consistent with all applicable federal laws.
|
(Source: P.A. 97-356, eff. 1-1-12.)
|
(20 ILCS 3975/8) (from Ch. 48, par. 2108)
|
Sec. 8. Audits. The Illinois Workforce Innovation |
Investment Board and any recipient of
funds under this Act
|
shall be subject to audits conducted by the Auditor General |
with respect
to all funds appropriated for the purposes of this |
Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 92-588, eff. 7-1-02.)
|
Section 45. The Commission on the Elimination of Poverty |
Act is amended by changing Section 15 as follows: |
(20 ILCS 4080/15)
|
Sec. 15. Members. The Commission on the Elimination of |
Poverty shall be composed of no more than 26 voting members |
|
including 2 members of the Illinois House of Representatives, |
one appointed by the Speaker of the House and one appointed by |
the House Minority Leader; 2 members of the Illinois Senate, |
one appointed by the Senate President and one appointed by the |
Senate Minority Leader; one representative of the Office of the |
Governor appointed by the Governor; one representative of the |
Office of the Lieutenant Governor appointed by the Lieutenant |
Governor; and 20 public members, 4 of whom shall be appointed |
by the Governor, 4 of whom shall be appointed by the Speaker of |
the House, 4 of whom shall be appointed by the House Minority |
Leader, 4 of whom shall be appointed by the Senate President, |
and 4 of whom shall be appointed by the Senate Minority Leader. |
It shall be determined by lot who will appoint which public |
members of the Commission. The public members shall include a |
representative of a service-based human rights organization; 2 |
representatives from anti-poverty organizations, including one |
that focuses on rural poverty; 2 individuals who have |
experienced extreme poverty; a representative of an |
organization that advocates for health care access, |
affordability and availability; a representative of an |
organization that advocates for persons with mental illness; a |
representative of an organization that advocates for children |
and youth; a representative of an organization that advocates |
for quality and equality in education; a representative of an |
organization that advocates for people who are homeless; a |
representative of a statewide anti-hunger organization; a |
|
person with a disability; a representative of an organization |
that advocates for persons with disabilities; a representative |
of an organization that advocates for immigrants; a |
representative of a statewide faith-based organization that |
provides direct social services in Illinois; a representative |
of an organization that advocates for economic security for |
women; a representative of an organization that advocates for |
older adults; a representative of a labor organization that |
represents primarily low and middle-income wage earners; a |
representative of a municipal or county government; and a |
representative of township government. The appointed members |
shall reflect the racial, gender, and geographic diversity of |
the State and shall include representation from regions of the |
State experiencing the highest rates of extreme poverty. |
The following officials shall serve as ex-officio members: |
the Secretary of Human Services or his or her designee; the |
Director of Corrections or his or her designee; the Director of |
Healthcare and Family Services or his or her designee; the |
Director of Human Rights or his or her designee; the Director |
of Children and Family Services or his or her designee; the |
Director of Commerce and Economic Opportunity or his or her |
designee; the State Superintendent of Education or his or her |
designee; the Director of Aging or his or her designee; the |
Director of Public Health or his or her designee; and the |
Director of Employment Security or his or her designee. The |
State Workforce Innovation Investment Board, the |
|
African-American Family Commission, and the Latino Family |
Commission shall each designate a liaison to serve ex-officio |
on the Commission.
|
Members shall serve without compensation, but, subject to |
the availability of funds, public members may be reimbursed for |
reasonable and necessary travel expenses connected to |
Commission business. |
Commission members shall be appointed within 60 days after |
the effective date of this Act. The Commission shall hold its |
initial meeting within 30 days after at least 50% of the |
members have been appointed. |
The representative of the Office of the Governor and the |
representative of a service-based human rights organization |
shall serve as co-chairs of the Commission. |
At the first meeting of the Commission, the members shall |
select a 7-person Steering Committee that includes the |
co-chairs. |
The Commission may establish committees that address |
specific issues or populations and may appoint individuals with |
relevant expertise who are not appointed members of the |
Commission to serve on committees as needed. |
Subject to appropriation, the office of the Governor, or a |
designee of the Governor's choosing, shall provide |
administrative support to the Commission.
|
(Source: P.A. 95-833, eff. 8-15-08; 96-64, eff. 7-23-09.) |
|
Section 55. The Higher Education Student Assistance Act is |
amended by changing Section 35 as follows:
|
(110 ILCS 947/35)
|
Sec. 35. Monetary award program.
|
(a) The Commission shall, each year, receive and consider |
applications
for grant assistance under this Section. Subject |
to a separate
appropriation for such purposes, an applicant is |
eligible for a grant under
this Section when the Commission |
finds that the applicant:
|
(1) is a resident of this State and a citizen or |
permanent resident
of the United States; and
|
(2) in the absence of grant assistance, will be |
deterred by
financial considerations from completing an |
educational program at the
qualified institution of his or |
her choice.
|
(b) The Commission shall award renewals only upon the |
student's application
and upon the Commission's finding that |
the applicant:
|
(1) has remained a student in good standing;
|
(2) remains a resident of this State; and
|
(3) is in a financial situation that continues to |
warrant assistance.
|
(c) All grants shall be applicable only to tuition and |
necessary fee costs. The Commission shall determine the grant
|
amount for each student, which shall not exceed the smallest of
|
|
the following amounts:
|
(1) subject to appropriation, $5,468 for fiscal year |
2009, $5,968 for fiscal year 2010, and $6,468 for fiscal |
year 2011 and each fiscal year thereafter, or such lesser |
amount as
the Commission finds to be available, during an |
academic year;
|
(2) the amount which equals 2 semesters or 3 quarters |
tuition
and other necessary fees required generally by the |
institution of all
full-time undergraduate students; or
|
(3) such amount as the Commission finds to be |
appropriate in view of
the applicant's financial |
resources.
|
Subject to appropriation, the maximum grant amount for |
students not subject to subdivision (1) of this subsection (c) |
must be increased by the same percentage as any increase made |
by law to the maximum grant amount under subdivision (1) of |
this subsection (c). |
"Tuition and other necessary fees" as used in this Section |
include the
customary charge for instruction and use of |
facilities in general, and the
additional fixed fees charged |
for specified purposes, which are required
generally of |
nongrant recipients for each academic period for which the |
grant
applicant actually enrolls, but do not include fees |
payable only once or
breakage fees and other contingent |
deposits which are refundable in whole or in
part. The |
Commission may prescribe, by rule not inconsistent with this
|
|
Section, detailed provisions concerning the computation of |
tuition and other
necessary fees.
|
(d) No applicant, including those presently receiving |
scholarship
assistance under this Act, is eligible for monetary |
award program
consideration under this Act after receiving a |
baccalaureate degree or
the equivalent of 135 semester credit |
hours of award payments.
|
(e) The Commission, in determining the number of grants to |
be offered,
shall take into consideration past experience with |
the rate of grant funds
unclaimed by recipients. The Commission |
shall notify applicants that grant
assistance is contingent |
upon the availability of appropriated funds.
|
(e-5) The General Assembly finds and declares that it is an |
important purpose of the Monetary Award Program to facilitate |
access to college both for students who pursue postsecondary |
education immediately following high school and for those who |
pursue postsecondary education later in life, particularly |
Illinoisans who are dislocated workers with financial need and |
who are seeking to improve their economic position through |
education. For the 2015-2016 and 2016-2017 academic years, the |
Commission shall give additional and specific consideration to |
the needs of dislocated workers with the intent of allowing |
applicants who are dislocated workers an opportunity to secure |
financial assistance even if applying later than the general |
pool of applicants. The Commission's consideration shall |
include, in determining the number of grants to be offered, an |
|
estimate of the resources needed to serve dislocated workers |
who apply after the Commission initially suspends award |
announcements for the upcoming regular academic year, but prior |
to the beginning of that academic year. For the purposes of |
this subsection (e-5), a dislocated worker is defined as in the |
federal Workforce
Innovation and Opportunity Act Workforce |
Investment Act of 1998 . |
(f) The Commission may request appropriations for deposit |
into the
Monetary Award Program Reserve Fund. Monies deposited |
into the Monetary Award
Program Reserve Fund may be expended |
exclusively for one purpose: to make
Monetary Award Program |
grants to eligible students. Amounts on deposit in the
Monetary |
Award Program Reserve Fund may not exceed 2% of the current |
annual
State appropriation for the Monetary Award Program.
|
The purpose of the Monetary Award Program Reserve Fund is |
to enable the
Commission each year to assure as many students |
as possible of their
eligibility for a Monetary Award Program |
grant and to do so before commencement
of the academic year. |
Moneys deposited in this Reserve Fund are intended to
enhance |
the Commission's management of the Monetary Award Program, |
minimizing
the necessity, magnitude, and frequency of |
adjusting award amounts and ensuring
that the annual Monetary |
Award Program appropriation can be fully utilized.
|
(g) The Commission shall determine the eligibility of and |
make grants to
applicants enrolled at qualified for-profit |
institutions in accordance with the
criteria set forth in this |
|
Section. The eligibility of applicants enrolled at
such |
for-profit institutions shall be limited as follows:
|
(1) Beginning with the academic year 1997, only to |
eligible first-time
freshmen and
first-time transfer |
students who have attained an associate degree.
|
(2) Beginning with the academic year 1998, only to |
eligible freshmen
students,
transfer students who have |
attained an associate degree, and students who
receive a |
grant under paragraph (1) for the academic year 1997 and |
whose grants
are being renewed for the academic year 1998.
|
(3) Beginning with the academic year 1999, to all |
eligible students.
|
(Source: P.A. 98-967, eff. 8-15-14.)
|
Section 60. The Illinois Public Aid Code is amended by |
changing Section 9A-3 as follows:
|
(305 ILCS 5/9A-3) (from Ch. 23, par. 9A-3)
|
Sec. 9A-3. Establishment of Program and Level of Services.
|
(a) The Illinois Department shall establish and maintain a |
program to
provide recipients with services consistent with the |
purposes and
provisions of this Article. The program offered in |
different counties of
the State may vary depending on the |
resources available to the State to
provide a program under |
this Article, and no program may be offered in some
counties, |
depending on the resources available. Services may be provided
|
|
directly by the Illinois Department or through contract. |
References to the
Illinois Department or staff of the
Illinois |
Department shall include contractors when the Illinois |
Department
has entered into contracts for these purposes. The |
Illinois Department
shall provide each
recipient who |
participates with such services available under the program
as |
are necessary to achieve his employability plan as specified in |
the
plan.
|
(b) The Illinois Department, in operating the program, |
shall cooperate
with public and private education and |
vocational training or retraining
agencies or facilities, the |
Illinois State Board of Education, the Illinois
Community |
College Board, the Departments of Employment
Security and |
Commerce and Economic Opportunity or other sponsoring
|
organizations funded under the federal Workforce
Innovation |
and Opportunity Act Workforce Investment Act
and other public |
or licensed private employment agencies.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-598, eff. 8-26-03; 94-793, eff. 5-19-06.)
|
Section 65. The Afterschool Youth Development Project Act |
is amended by changing Section 15 as follows: |
(325 ILCS 27/15)
|
Sec. 15. Illinois Youth Development Council. |
(a) Creation. In order to effectively achieve the policy |
established in this Act, the Illinois Youth Development Council |
|
shall be created. The purpose of the Council is to provide |
oversight and coordination to the State's public funds |
currently invested to support positive youth development |
programs and activities and to set systemwide policies and |
priorities to accomplish the following 5 major objectives: (i) |
set afterschool program expansion priorities, such as |
addressing gaps in programming for specific ages and |
populations; (ii) create outcome measures and require all |
afterschool programs to be evaluated to ensure that outcomes |
are being met; (iii) oversee the establishment of a statewide |
program improvement system that provides technical assistance |
and capacity building to increase program participation and |
quality systemwide; (iv) monitor and assess afterschool |
program quality through outcome measures; and (v) establish |
State policy to support the attainment of outcomes. The Council |
shall be created within the Department of Human Services. |
(b) Governance. The Illinois Youth Development Council |
shall reflect the regional, racial, socioeconomic, and |
cultural diversity of the State to ensure representation of the |
needs of all Illinois youth. The Council shall be composed of |
no less than 28 and no more than 32 members. The Council may |
establish a defined length of term for membership on the |
Council. |
(1) Membership. The Council shall include |
representation from both public and private organizations |
comprised of the following: |
|
(A) Four members of the General Assembly: one |
appointed by the President of the Senate, one appointed |
by the Minority Leader of the Senate, one appointed by |
the Speaker of the House of Representatives, and one |
appointed by the Minority Leader of the House of |
Representatives. |
(B) The chief administrators of the following |
State agencies: the Department of Human Services; the |
Illinois State Board of Education; the Department of |
Children and Family Services; the Department of Public |
Health; the Department of Juvenile Justice; the |
Department of Healthcare and Family Services; the |
Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity; the |
Illinois Board of Higher Education; and the Illinois |
Community College Board. |
(C) The Chair of the Illinois Workforce Innovation |
Investment Board and the Executive Director of the |
Illinois Violence Prevention Authority. |
The following Council members shall be appointed by the |
Governor: |
(D) Two officials from a unit of local government. |
(E) At least 3 representatives of direct youth |
service providers and faith-based providers. |
(F) Three young people who are between the ages of |
16 and 21 and who are members of the Youth Advisory |
Group as established in paragraph (2) of this |
|
subsection. |
(G) Two parents of children between the ages of 6 |
and 19. |
(H) One academic researcher in the field of youth |
development. |
(I) Additional public members that include local |
government stakeholders and nongovernmental |
stakeholders with an interest in youth development and |
afterschool programs, including representation from |
the following private sector fields and |
constituencies: child and youth advocacy; children and |
youth with special needs; child and adolescent health; |
business; and law enforcement. |
Persons may be nominated by organizations representing |
the fields outlined in this Section. The Governor shall |
designate one of the Council members who is a nongovernment |
stakeholder to serve as co-chairperson. The Council shall |
create a subcommittee of additional direct youth service |
providers as well as other subcommittees as deemed |
necessary. |
(2) Youth Advisory Group. To ensure that the Council is |
responsive to the needs and priorities of Illinois' young |
people, the Council shall establish an independent Youth |
Advisory Group, which shall be composed of a diverse body |
of 15 youths between the ages of 14 and 19 from across the |
State. Members that surpass the age of 19 while serving on |
|
the Youth Advisory Group may complete the term of the |
appointment. The Youth Advisory Group shall be charged |
with: (i) presenting recommendations to the Council 4 times |
per year on issues related to afterschool and youth |
development programming and policy; and (ii) reviewing key |
programmatic, funding, and policy decisions made by the |
Council. To develop priorities and recommendations, the |
Youth Advisory Group may engage students from across the |
State via focus groups, on-line surveys, and other means. |
The Youth Advisory Group shall be administered by the |
Department of Human Services and facilitated by an |
independent, established youth organization with expertise |
in youth civic engagement. This youth civic engagement |
organization shall administer the application requirements |
and process and shall nominate 30 youth. The Department of |
Human Services shall select 15 of the nominees for the |
Youth Advisory Group, 3 of whom shall serve on the Council. |
(c) Activities. The major objectives of the Council shall |
be accomplished through the following activities: |
(1) Publishing an annual plan that sets system goals |
for Illinois' afterschool funding that include key |
indicators, performance standards, and outcome measures |
and that outlines funding evaluation and reporting |
requirements. |
(2) Developing and maintaining a system and processes |
to collect and report consistent program and outcome data |
|
on all afterschool programs funded by State and local |
government. |
(3) Developing linkages between afterschool data |
systems and other statewide youth program outcome data |
systems (e.g. schools, post-secondary education, juvenile |
justice, etc.). |
(4) Developing procedures for implementing an |
evaluation of the statewide system of program providers, |
including programs established by this Act. |
(5) Reviewing evaluation results and data reports to |
inform future investments and allocations and to shape |
State policy. |
(6) Developing technical assistance and |
capacity-building infrastructure and ensuring appropriate |
workforce development strategies across agencies for those |
who will be working in afterschool programs. |
(7) Reviewing and making public recommendations to the |
Governor and the General Assembly with respect to the |
budgets for State youth services to ensure the adequacy of |
those budgets and alignment to system goals outlined in the |
plan described in paragraph (1) of this subsection. |
(8) Developing and overseeing execution of a research |
agenda to inform future program planning. |
(9) Providing strategic advice to other State |
agencies, the Illinois General Assembly, and Illinois' |
Constitutional Officers on afterschool-related activities |
|
statewide. |
(10) Approving awards of grants to demonstration |
projects as outlined in Section 20 of this Act. |
(d) Accountability. The Council shall annually report to |
the Governor and the General Assembly on the Council's progress |
towards its goals and objectives.
The Department of Human |
Services shall provide resources to the Council, including |
administrative services and data collection and shall be |
responsible for conducting procurement processes required by |
the Act. The Department may contract with vendors to provide |
all or a portion of any necessary resources.
|
(Source: P.A. 96-1302, eff. 7-27-10.) |
Section 70. The Unemployment Insurance Act is amended by |
changing Sections 500 and 502 as follows:
|
(820 ILCS 405/500) (from Ch. 48, par. 420)
|
Sec. 500. Eligibility for benefits. An unemployed |
individual shall
be eligible to receive benefits with respect |
to any week only if the
Director finds that:
|
A. He has registered for work at and thereafter has |
continued to
report at an employment office in accordance with |
such regulations as
the Director may prescribe, except that the |
Director may, by regulation,
waive or alter either or both of |
the requirements of this subsection as
to individuals attached |
to regular jobs, and as to such other types of
cases or |
|
situations with respect to which he finds that compliance with
|
such requirements would be oppressive or inconsistent with the |
purposes
of this Act, provided that no such regulation shall |
conflict with
Section 400 of this Act.
|
B. He has made a claim for benefits with respect to such |
week in
accordance with such regulations as the Director may |
prescribe.
|
C. He is able to work, and is available for work; provided |
that
during the period in question he was actively seeking work |
and he has
certified such. Whenever requested to do so by the |
Director, the individual
shall, in the manner the Director |
prescribes by regulation, inform the
Department of the places |
at
which he has sought work during the period in question.
|
Nothing in this subsection shall limit
the Director's approval |
of alternate methods of demonstrating an active
search for work
|
based on regular reporting to a trade union office.
|
1. If an otherwise eligible individual is unable to |
work or is
unavailable for work on any normal workday of |
the week, he shall be
eligible to receive benefits with |
respect to such week reduced by
one-fifth of his weekly |
benefit amount for each day of such inability to
work or |
unavailability for work. For the purposes of this |
paragraph, an
individual who reports on a day subsequent to |
his designated report day
shall be deemed unavailable for |
work on his report day if his failure to
report on that day |
is without good cause, and on each intervening day,
if any, |
|
on which his failure to report is without good cause. As |
used
in the preceding sentence, "report day" means the day |
which has been
designated for the individual to report to |
file his claim for benefits
with respect to any week. This |
paragraph shall not be construed so as
to effect any change |
in the status of part-time workers as defined in
Section |
407.
|
2. An individual shall be considered to be unavailable |
for work on
days listed as whole holidays in "An Act to |
revise the law in relation
to promissory notes, bonds, due |
bills and other instruments in writing,"
approved March 18, |
1874, as amended; on days which are holidays in his
|
religion or faith, and on days which are holidays according |
to the
custom of his trade or occupation, if his failure to |
work on such day is
a result of the holiday. In determining |
the claimant's eligibility for
benefits and the amount to |
be paid him, with respect to the week in
which such holiday |
occurs, he shall have attributed to him as additional
|
earnings for that week an amount equal to one-fifth of his |
weekly
benefit amount for each normal work day on which he |
does not work
because of a holiday of the type above |
enumerated.
|
3. An individual shall be deemed unavailable for work |
if, after his
separation from his most recent employing |
unit, he has removed himself
to and remains in a locality |
where opportunities for work are
substantially less |
|
favorable than those in the locality he has left.
|
4. An individual shall be deemed unavailable for work |
with respect
to any week which occurs in a period when his |
principal occupation is
that of a student in attendance at, |
or on vacation from, a public or
private school.
|
5. Notwithstanding any other provisions of this Act, an |
individual
shall not be deemed unavailable for work or to |
have failed actively to
seek work, nor shall he be |
ineligible for benefits by reason of the
application of the |
provisions of Section 603, with respect to any week,
|
because he is enrolled in and is in regular attendance at a |
training
course approved for him by the Director:
|
(a) but only if, with respect to
that week, the |
individual presents,
upon request,
to the claims |
adjudicator referred to
in Section 702 a statement |
executed by a responsible person connected
with the |
training course, certifying that the individual was in
|
full-time attendance at such course during the week. |
The Director may
approve such course for an individual |
only if he finds that (1)
reasonable work opportunities |
for which the individual is fitted by
training and |
experience do not exist in his locality; (2) the |
training course
relates to an occupation or skill for |
which there are, or are
expected to be in the immediate |
future, reasonable work opportunities in
his locality; |
(3) the training course is offered by a competent and
|
|
reliable agency, educational institution, or employing |
unit; (4)
the individual has the required |
qualifications and aptitudes to complete the
course |
successfully; and (5) the individual is not receiving |
and is not
eligible (other than because he has claimed |
benefits under this Act) for
subsistence payments or |
similar assistance under any public or private
|
retraining program: Provided, that the Director shall |
not disapprove
such course solely by reason of clause |
(5) if the subsistence payment or
similar assistance is |
subject to reduction by an amount equal to any
benefits |
payable to the individual under this Act in the absence |
of the
clause. In the event that an individual's weekly |
unemployment
compensation benefit is less than his |
certified training allowance, that
person shall be |
eligible to receive his entire unemployment |
compensation
benefits, plus such supplemental training |
allowances that would make an
applicant's total weekly |
benefit identical to the original certified
training |
allowance.
|
(b) The Director shall have the authority to grant |
approval pursuant to
subparagraph (a) above prior to an |
individual's formal admission into a
training course. |
Requests for approval shall not be made more than 30 |
days
prior to the actual starting date of such course. |
Requests shall be made
at the appropriate unemployment |
|
office.
|
(c) The Director shall for purposes of paragraph C |
have the authority
to issue a blanket approval of |
training programs implemented pursuant to
the federal |
Workforce
Innovation and Opportunity Act Workforce |
Investment Act of 1998 if both the training program and |
the criteria for an individual's
participation in such |
training meet the requirements of this paragraph C.
|
(d) Notwithstanding the requirements of |
subparagraph (a), the Director
shall have the |
authority to issue blanket approval of training |
programs
implemented under the terms of a collective |
bargaining agreement.
|
6. Notwithstanding any other provisions of this Act, an |
individual shall
not be deemed unavailable for work or to |
have failed actively to seek work,
nor shall he be |
ineligible for benefits, by reason of the application of
|
the provisions of Section 603 with respect to any week |
because he is in
training approved under Section 236 (a)(1) |
of the federal Trade Act of 1974,
nor shall an individual |
be ineligible for benefits under the provisions
of Section |
601 by reason of leaving work voluntarily to enter such |
training
if the work left is not of a substantially equal |
or higher skill level than
the individual's past adversely |
affected employment as defined under the
federal Trade Act |
of 1974 and the wages for such work are less than 80% of |
|
his
average weekly wage as determined under the federal |
Trade Act of 1974.
|
D. If his benefit year begins prior to July 6, 1975 or |
subsequent to
January 2, 1982, he has been unemployed for a |
waiting period of 1 week
during such benefit year. If his |
benefit year begins on or after July 6,
l975, but prior to |
January 3, 1982, and his unemployment
continues for more than |
three weeks during such benefit year, he shall
be eligible for |
benefits with respect to each week of such unemployment,
|
including the first week thereof. An individual shall be deemed |
to be
unemployed within the meaning of this subsection while |
receiving public
assistance as remuneration for services |
performed on work projects
financed from funds made available |
to governmental agencies for such
purpose. No week shall be |
counted as a week of unemployment for the
purposes of this |
subsection:
|
1. Unless it occurs within the benefit year which |
includes the week
with respect to which he claims payment |
of benefits, provided that, for
benefit years beginning |
prior to January 3, 1982, this
requirement shall not |
interrupt the payment of benefits for consecutive
weeks of |
unemployment; and provided further that the week |
immediately
preceding a benefit year, if part of one |
uninterrupted period of
unemployment which continues into |
such benefit year, shall be deemed
(for the purpose of this |
subsection only and with respect to benefit years
beginning |
|
prior to January 3, 1982, only) to be within such benefit
|
year, as well as within the preceding benefit year, if the |
unemployed
individual would, except for the provisions of |
the first paragraph and
paragraph 1 of this subsection and |
of Section 605, be eligible for and
entitled to benefits |
for such week.
|
2. If benefits have been paid with respect thereto.
|
3. Unless the individual was eligible for benefits with |
respect
thereto except for the requirements of this |
subsection and of Section
605.
|
E. With respect to any benefit year beginning prior to |
January 3, 1982,
he has been paid during his base period wages |
for insured work not
less than the amount specified in Section |
500E of this Act as amended
and in effect on October 5, 1980. |
With respect to any benefit year
beginning on or after January |
3, 1982, he has been paid during his base
period wages for |
insured work equal to not less than $1,600, provided that
he |
has been paid wages for insured work equal to at least $440 |
during that
part of his base period which does not include the |
calendar quarter in
which the wages paid to him were highest.
|
F. During that week he has participated in reemployment |
services to which
he has been referred, including but not |
limited to job search assistance
services, pursuant to a |
profiling system established by the Director by rule in
|
conformity with Section 303(j)(1) of the federal Social |
Security Act, unless
the Director determines that:
|
|
1. the individual has completed such services; or
|
2. there is justifiable cause for the claimant's |
failure to participate in
such services.
|
This subsection F is added by this amendatory Act of 1995 |
to clarify
authority already provided under subsections A and C |
in connection with the
unemployment insurance claimant |
profiling system required under subsections
(a)(10) and (j)(1) |
of Section 303 of the federal Social Security Act as a
|
condition of federal
funding for the administration of the |
Unemployment Insurance Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 92-396, eff. 1-1-02.)
|
(820 ILCS 405/502) |
Sec. 502. Eligibility for benefits under the Short-Time |
Compensation Program. |
A. The Director may by rule establish a short-time |
compensation program consistent with this Section. No |
short-time compensation shall be payable except as authorized |
by rule. |
B. As used in this Section: |
"Affected unit" means a specified plant, department, |
shift, or other definable unit that includes 2 or more workers |
to which an approved short-time compensation plan applies. |
"Health and retirement benefits" means employer-provided |
health benefits and retirement benefits under a defined benefit |
pension plan (as defined in Section 414(j) of the Internal |
|
Revenue Code) or contributions under a defined contribution |
plan (defined in Section 414(i) of the Internal Revenue Code), |
which are incidents of employment in addition to the cash |
remuneration earned. |
"Short-time compensation" means the unemployment benefits |
payable to employees in an affected unit under an approved |
short-time compensation plan, as distinguished from the |
unemployment benefits otherwise payable under this Act. |
"Short-time compensation plan" means a plan submitted by an |
employer, for approval by the Director, under which the |
employer requests the payment of short-time compensation to |
workers in an affected unit of the employer to avert layoffs. |
"Usual weekly hours of work" means the usual hours of work |
for full-time or part-time employees in the affected unit when |
that unit is operating on its regular basis, not to exceed 40 |
hours and not including hours of overtime work. |
"Unemployment insurance" means the unemployment benefits |
payable under this Act other than short-time compensation and |
includes any amounts payable pursuant to an agreement under any |
Federal law providing for compensation, assistance, or |
allowances with respect to unemployment. |
C. An employer wishing to participate in the short-time |
compensation program shall submit a signed written short-time |
compensation plan to the Director for approval. The Director |
shall develop an application form to request approval of a |
short-time compensation plan and an approval process. The |
|
application shall include: |
1. The employer's unemployment insurance account |
number, the affected unit covered by the plan, including |
the number of full-time or part-time workers in such unit, |
the percentage of workers in the affected unit covered by |
the plan, identification of each individual employee in the |
affected unit by name and social security number, and any |
other information required by the Director to identify plan |
participants. |
2. A description of how workers in the affected unit |
will be notified of the employer's participation in the |
short-time compensation plan if such application is |
approved, including how the employer will notify those |
workers in a collective bargaining unit as well as any |
workers in the affected unit who are not in a collective |
bargaining unit. If the employer will not provide advance |
notice to workers in the affected unit, the employer shall |
explain in a statement in the application why it is not |
feasible to provide such notice. |
3. The employer's certification that it has the |
approval of the plan from all collective bargaining |
representatives of employees in the affected unit and has |
notified all employees in the affected unit who are not in |
a collective bargaining unit of the plan. |
4. The employer's certification that it will not hire |
additional part-time or full-time employees for, or |
|
transfer employees to, the affected unit, while the program |
is in operation. |
5. A requirement that the employer identify the usual |
weekly hours of work for employees in the affected unit and |
the specific percentage by which their hours will be |
reduced during all weeks covered by the plan. An |
application shall specify the percentage of reduction for |
which a short-time compensation application may be |
approved which shall be not less than 20% and not more than |
60%. If the plan includes any week for which the employer |
regularly provides no work (due to a holiday or other plant |
closing), then such week shall be identified in the |
application. |
6. Certification by the employer that, if the employer |
provides health and retirement benefits to any employee |
whose usual weekly hours of work are reduced under the |
program, such benefits will continue to be provided to the |
employee participating in the short-time compensation |
program under the same terms and conditions as though the |
usual weekly hours of work of such employee had not been |
reduced or to the same extent as other employees not |
participating in the short-time compensation program. For |
defined benefit retirement plans, the hours that are |
reduced under the short-time compensation plan shall be |
credited for purposes of participation, vesting, and |
accrual of benefits as though the usual weekly hours of |
|
work had not been reduced. The dollar amount of employer |
contributions to a defined contribution plan that are based |
on a percentage of compensation may be less due to the |
reduction in the employee's compensation. Notwithstanding |
any other provision to the contrary, a certification that a |
reduction in health and retirement benefits is scheduled to |
occur during the duration of the plan and will be |
applicable equally to employees who are not participating |
in the short-time compensation program and to those |
employees who are participating satisfies this paragraph. |
7. Certification by the employer that the aggregate |
reduction in work hours is in lieu of layoffs (temporary or |
permanent layoffs, or both). The application shall include |
an estimate of the number of workers who would have been |
laid off in the absence of the short-time compensation |
plan. |
8. Agreement by the employer to: furnish reports to the |
Director relating to the proper conduct of the plan; allow |
the Director or his or her authorized representatives |
access to all records necessary to approve or disapprove |
the plan application, and after approval of a plan, to |
monitor and evaluate the plan; and follow any other |
directives the Director deems necessary for the agency to |
implement the plan and which are consistent with the |
requirements for plan applications. |
9. Certification by the employer that participation in |
|
the short-time compensation plan and its implementation is |
consistent with the employer's obligations under |
applicable Federal and Illinois laws. |
10. The effective date and duration of the plan, which |
shall expire no later than the end of the 12th full |
calendar month after the effective date. |
11. Any other provision added to the application by the |
Director that the United States Secretary of Labor |
determines to be appropriate for purposes of a short-time |
compensation program. |
D. The Director shall approve or disapprove a short-time |
compensation plan in writing within 45 days of its receipt and |
promptly communicate the decision to the employer. A decision |
disapproving the plan shall clearly identify the reasons for |
the disapproval. The disapproval shall be final, but the |
employer shall be allowed to submit another short-time |
compensation plan for approval not earlier than 30 days from |
the date of the disapproval. |
E. The short-time compensation plan shall be effective on |
the mutually agreed upon date by the employer and the Director, |
which shall be specified in the notice of approval to the |
employer. The plan shall expire on the date specified in the |
notice of approval, which shall be mutually agreed on by the |
employer and Director but no later than the end of the 12th |
full calendar month after its effective date. However, if a |
short-time compensation plan is revoked by the Director, the |
|
plan shall terminate on the date specified in the Director's |
written order of revocation. An employer may terminate a |
short-time compensation plan at any time upon written notice to |
the Director. Upon receipt of such notice from the employer, |
the Director shall promptly notify each member of the affected |
unit of the termination date. An employer may submit a new |
application to participate in another short-time compensation |
plan at any time after the expiration or termination date. |
F. The Director may revoke approval of a short-time |
compensation plan for good cause at any time, including upon |
the request of any of the affected unit's employees or their |
collective bargaining representative. The revocation order |
shall be in writing and shall specify the reasons for the |
revocation and the date the revocation is effective. The |
Director may periodically review the operation of each |
employer's short-time compensation plan to assure that no good |
cause exists for revocation of the approval of the plan. Good |
cause shall include, but not be limited to, failure to comply |
with the assurances given in the plan, termination of the |
approval of the plan by a collective bargaining representative |
of employees in the affected unit, unreasonable revision of |
productivity standards for the affected unit, conduct or |
occurrences tending to defeat the intent and effective |
operation of the short-time compensation plan, and violation of |
any criteria on which approval of the plan was based. |
G. An employer may request a modification of an approved |
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plan by filing a written request to the Director. The request |
shall identify the specific provisions proposed to be modified |
and provide an explanation of why the proposed modification is |
appropriate for the short-time compensation plan. The Director |
shall approve or disapprove the proposed modification in |
writing within 30 days of receipt and promptly communicate the |
decision to the employer. The Director, in his or her |
discretion, may approve a request for modification of the plan |
based on conditions that have changed since the plan was |
approved provided that the modification is consistent with and |
supports the purposes for which the plan was initially |
approved. A modification may not extend the expiration date of |
the original plan, and the Director must promptly notify the |
employer whether the plan modification has been approved and, |
if approved, the effective date of modification. An employer is |
not required to request approval of plan modification from the |
Director if the change is not substantial, but the employer |
must report every change to plan to the Director promptly and |
in writing. The Director may terminate an employer's plan if |
the employer fails to meet this reporting requirement. If the |
Director determines that the reported change is substantial, |
the Director shall require the employer to request a |
modification to the plan. |
H. An individual is eligible to receive short-time |
compensation with respect to any week only if the individual is |
eligible for unemployment insurance pursuant to subsection E of |
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Section 500, not otherwise disqualified for unemployment |
insurance, and: |
1. During the week, the individual is employed as a |
member of an affected unit under an approved short-time |
compensation plan, which was approved prior to that week, |
and the plan is in effect with respect to the week for |
which short-time compensation is claimed. |
2. Notwithstanding any other provision of this Act |
relating to availability for work and actively seeking |
work, the individual is available for the individual's |
usual hours of work with the short-time compensation |
employer, which may include, for purposes of this Section, |
participating in training to enhance job skills that is |
approved by the Director, including but not limited to as |
employer-sponsored training or training funded under the |
federal Workforce
Innovation and Opportunity Act Workforce |
Investment Act of 1998 . |
3. Notwithstanding any other provision of law, an |
individual covered by a short-time compensation plan is |
deemed unemployed in any week during the duration of such |
plan if the individual's remuneration as an employee in an |
affected unit is reduced based on a reduction of the |
individual's usual weekly hours of work under an approved |
short-time compensation plan. |
I. The short-time compensation weekly benefit amount shall |
be the product of the percentage of reduction in the |
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individual's usual weekly hours of work multiplied by the sum |
of the regular weekly benefit amount for a week of total |
unemployment plus any applicable dependent allowance pursuant |
to subsection C of Section 401. |
1. An individual may be eligible for short-time |
compensation or unemployment insurance, as appropriate, |
except that no individual shall be eligible for combined |
benefits (excluding any payments attributable to a |
dependent allowance pursuant to subsection C of Section |
401) in any benefit year in an amount more than the maximum |
benefit amount, nor shall an individual be paid short-time |
compensation benefits for more than 52 weeks under a |
short-time compensation plan. |
2. The short-time compensation paid to an individual |
(excluding any payments attributable to a dependent |
allowance pursuant to subsection C of Section 401) shall be |
deducted from the maximum benefit amount established for |
that individual's benefit year. |
3. Provisions applicable to unemployment insurance |
claimants shall apply to short-time compensation claimants |
to the extent that they are not inconsistent with |
short-time compensation provisions. An individual who |
files an initial claim for short-time compensation |
benefits shall receive a monetary determination. |
4. The following provisions apply to individuals who |
work for both a short-time compensation employer and |
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another employer during weeks covered by the approved |
short-time compensation plan: |
i. If combined hours of work in a week for both |
employers do not result in a reduction of at least 20% |
of the usual weekly hours of work with the short-time |
compensation employer, the individual shall not be |
entitled to benefits under this Section. |
ii. If combined hours of work for both employers |
results in a reduction equal to or greater than 20% of |
the usual weekly hours of work for the short-time |
compensation employer, the short-time compensation |
benefit amount payable to the individual is reduced for |
that week and is determined by multiplying the |
percentage by which the combined hours of work have |
been reduced by the sum of the weekly benefit amount |
for a week of total unemployment plus any applicable |
dependent allowance pursuant to subsection C of |
Section 401. A week for which benefits are paid under |
this subparagraph shall be reported as a week of |
short-time compensation. |
iii. If an individual worked the reduced |
percentage of the usual weekly hours of work for the |
short-time compensation employer and is available for |
all his or her usual hours of work with the short-time |
compensation employer, and the individual did not work |
any hours for the other employer either because of the |
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lack of work with that employer or because the |
individual is excused from work with the other |
employer, the individual shall be eligible for |
short-time compensation for that week. The benefit |
amount for such week shall be calculated as provided in |
the introductory clause of this subsection I. |
iv. An individual who is not provided any work |
during a week by the short-time compensation employer, |
or any other employer, and who is otherwise eligible |
for unemployment insurance shall be eligible for the |
amount of regular unemployment insurance determined |
without regard to this Section. |
v. An individual who is not provided any work by |
the short-time compensation employer during a week, |
but who works for another employer and is otherwise |
eligible may be paid unemployment insurance for that |
week subject to the disqualifying income and other |
provisions applicable to claims for regular |
unemployment insurance. |
J. Short-time compensation shall be charged to employers in |
the same manner as unemployment insurance is charged under |
Illinois law. Employers liable for payments in lieu of |
contributions shall have short-time compensation attributed to |
service in their employ in the same manner as unemployment |
insurance is attributed. Notwithstanding any other provision |
to the contrary, to the extent that short-term compensation |
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payments under this Section are reimbursed by the federal |
government, no benefit charges or payments in lieu of |
contributions shall be accrued by a participating employer. |
K. A short-time compensation plan shall not be approved for |
an employer that is delinquent in the filing of any reports |
required or the payment of contributions, payments in lieu of |
contributions, interest, or penalties due under this Act |
through the date of the employer's application. |
L. Overpayments of other benefits under this Act may be |
recovered from an individual receiving short-time compensation |
under this Act in the manner provided under Sections 900 and |
901. Overpayments under the short-time compensation plan may be |
recovered from an individual receiving other benefits under |
this Act in the manner provided under Sections 900 and 901. |
M. An individual who has received all of the short-time |
compensation or combined unemployment insurance and short-time |
compensation available in a benefit year shall be considered an |
exhaustee for purposes of extended benefits, as provided under |
the provisions of Section 409, and, if otherwise eligible under |
those provisions, shall be eligible to receive extended |
benefits.
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(Source: P.A. 98-1133, eff. 12-23-14.)
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Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon |
becoming law.
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