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90_HB0432
20 ILCS 505/5 from Ch. 23, par. 5005
Amends the Children and Family Services Act. Provides
that, within 180 days after the effective date of this
amendatory Act, all children who had previously been placed
by the Department of Children and Family Services with
relative caregivers who remain unlicensed as foster family
homes shall be removed from those placements by the
Department.
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1 AN ACT to amend the Children and Family Services Act by
2 changing Section 5.
3 Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
4 represented in the General Assembly:
5 Section 5. The Children and Family Services Act is
6 amended by changing Section 5 as follows:
7 (20 ILCS 505/5) (from Ch. 23, par. 5005)
8 (Text of Section before amendment by P.A. 89-507)
9 Sec. 5. To provide direct child welfare services when
10 not available through other public or private child care or
11 program facilities.
12 (a) For purposes of this Section:
13 (1) "Children" means persons found within the State
14 who are under the age of 18 years. The term also
15 includes persons under age 19 who:
16 (A) were committed to the Department pursuant
17 to the Juvenile Court Act or the Juvenile Court Act
18 of 1987, as amended, prior to the age of 18 and who
19 continue under the jurisdiction of the court; or
20 (B) were accepted for care, service and
21 training by the Department prior to the age of 18
22 and whose best interest in the discretion of the
23 Department would be served by continuing that care,
24 service and training because of severe emotional
25 disturbances, physical disability, social adjustment
26 or any combination thereof, or because of the need
27 to complete an educational or vocational training
28 program.
29 (2) "Homeless youth" means persons found within the
30 State who are under the age of 19, are not in a safe and
31 stable living situation and cannot be reunited with their
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1 families.
2 (3) "Child welfare services" means public social
3 services which are directed toward the accomplishment of
4 the following purposes:
5 (A) protecting and promoting the welfare of
6 children, including homeless, dependent or neglected
7 children;
8 (B) preventing or remedying, or assisting in
9 the solution of problems which may result in, the
10 neglect, abuse, exploitation or delinquency of
11 children;
12 (C) preventing the unnecessary separation of
13 children from their families by identifying family
14 problems, assisting families in resolving their
15 problems, and preventing the breakup of the family
16 where the prevention of child removal is desirable
17 and possible;
18 (D) restoring to their families children who
19 have been removed, by the provision of services to
20 the child and the families;
21 (E) placing children in suitable adoptive
22 homes, in cases where restoration to the biological
23 family is not possible or appropriate;
24 (F) assuring adequate care of children away
25 from their homes, in cases where the child cannot be
26 returned home or cannot be placed for adoption;
27 (G) providing supportive services and living
28 maintenance which contribute to the physical,
29 emotional and social well-being of children who are
30 pregnant and unmarried;
31 (H) providing shelter and independent living
32 services for homeless youth; and
33 (I) placing and maintaining children in
34 facilities that provide separate living quarters for
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1 children under the age of 18 and for children 18
2 years of age and older, unless a child 18 years of
3 age is in the last year of high school education or
4 vocational training, in an approved individual or
5 group treatment program, or in a licensed shelter
6 facility. The Department is not required to place
7 or maintain children:
8 (i) who are in a foster home, or
9 (ii) who are persons with a developmental
10 disability, as defined in the Mental Health and
11 Developmental Disabilities Code, or
12 (iii) who are female children who are
13 pregnant, pregnant and parenting or parenting,
14 or
15 (iv) who are siblings,
16 in facilities that provide separate living quarters
17 for children 18 years of age and older and for
18 children under 18 years of age.
19 (b) Nothing in this Section shall be construed to
20 authorize the expenditure of public funds for the purpose of
21 performing abortions.
22 (c) The Department shall establish and maintain
23 tax-supported child welfare services and extend and seek to
24 improve voluntary services throughout the State, to the end
25 that services and care shall be available on an equal basis
26 throughout the State to children requiring such services.
27 (d) The Director may authorize advance disbursements for
28 any new program initiative to any agency contracting with the
29 Department. As a prerequisite for an advance disbursement,
30 the contractor must post a surety bond in the amount of the
31 advance disbursement and have a purchase of service contract
32 approved by the Department. The Department may pay up to 2
33 months operational expenses in advance. The amount of the
34 advance disbursement shall be prorated over the life of the
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1 contract or the remaining months of the fiscal year,
2 whichever is less, and the installment amount shall then be
3 deducted from future bills. Advance disbursement
4 authorizations for new initiatives shall not be made to any
5 agency after that agency has operated during 2 consecutive
6 fiscal years. The requirements of this Section concerning
7 advance disbursements shall not apply with respect to the
8 following: payments to local public agencies for child day
9 care services as authorized by Section 5a of this Act; and
10 youth service programs receiving grant funds under Section
11 17a-4.
12 (e) For the purpose of insuring effective state-wide
13 planning, development, and utilization of resources for the
14 day care of children, operated under various auspices, the
15 Department is hereby designated to coordinate all day care
16 activities for children of the State and shall:
17 (1) Develop on or before December 1, 1977, and
18 update every year thereafter, a state comprehensive
19 day-care plan for submission to the Governor which
20 identifies high-priority areas and groups, relating them
21 to available resources, and identifying the most
22 effective approaches to the use of existing day care
23 services. The State comprehensive day-care plan shall be
24 made available to the General Assembly following the
25 Governor's approval of the plan.
26 The plan shall include methods and procedures for
27 the development of additional day care resources for
28 children to meet the goal of reducing short-run and
29 long-run dependency and to provide necessary enrichment
30 and stimulation to the education of young children.
31 Recommendation shall be made for State policy on optimum
32 use of private and public, local, state and federal
33 resources, including an estimate of the resources needed
34 for the licensing and regulation of day care facilities.
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1 A written report shall be submitted to the Governor
2 and the General Assembly, annually, on April 15, and
3 shall include an evaluation of developments over the
4 preceding fiscal year, including cost-benefit analyses of
5 various arrangements. Beginning with the report in 1990
6 and every 2 years thereafter, the report shall also
7 include the following:
8 (A) An assessment of the child care services,
9 needs and available resources throughout the State
10 and an assessment of the adequacy of existing child
11 care services, including, but not limited to,
12 services assisted under this Act and under any other
13 program administered by other State agencies.
14 (B) A survey of day care facilities to
15 determine the number of qualified caregivers, as
16 defined by rule, attracted to vacant positions and
17 any problems encountered by facilities in attracting
18 and retaining capable caregivers.
19 (C) The average wages and salaries and fringe
20 benefit packages paid to caregivers throughout the
21 State, computed on a regional basis.
22 (D) The qualifications of new caregivers hired
23 at licensed day care facilities during the previous
24 2 year period.
25 (E) Recommendations for increasing caregiver
26 wages and salaries to insure quality care for
27 children.
28 (F) Evaluation of the fee structure and income
29 eligibility for child care subsidized by the State.
30 The requirement for reporting to the General
31 Assembly shall be satisfied by filing copies of the
32 report with the Speaker, the Minority Leader and the
33 Clerk of the House of Representatives and the President,
34 the Minority Leader and the Secretary of the Senate and
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1 the Legislative Research Unit, as required by Section 3.1
2 of the General Assembly Organization Act, and filing such
3 additional copies with the State Government Report
4 Distribution Center for the General Assembly as is
5 required under paragraph (t) of Section 7 of the State
6 Library Act.
7 (2) Establish policies and procedures for
8 developing and implementing interagency agreements with
9 other agencies of the State providing child care services
10 or reimbursement for such services.
11 (3) In cooperation with other State agencies,
12 develop and implement a resource and referral system for
13 the State of Illinois either within the Department or by
14 contract with local or regional agencies. Funding for
15 implementation of this system may be provided through
16 Department appropriations or other inter-agency funding
17 arrangements. The resource and referral system shall
18 provide at least the following services:
19 (A) assembling and maintaining a data base on
20 the supply of child care services;
21 (B) providing information and referrals for
22 parents;
23 (C) coordinating the development of new child
24 care resources;
25 (D) providing technical assistance and
26 training to child care service providers; and
27 (E) recording and analyzing the demand for
28 child care services.
29 The Department shall complete implementation of this
30 resource and referral system in all regions of the State
31 by January 1, 1992.
32 (4) Conduct day care planning activities with the
33 following priorities:
34 (A) development of voluntary day care
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1 resources wherever possible, with the provision for
2 grants-in-aid only where demonstrated to be useful
3 and necessary as incentives or supports;
4 (B) emphasis on service to children of
5 recipients of public assistance where such service
6 will allow training or employment of the parent
7 toward achieving the goal of independence;
8 (C) maximum employment of recipients of public
9 assistance in day care centers and day care homes,
10 operated in conjunction with short-term work
11 training programs;
12 (D) care of children from families in stress
13 and crises whose members potentially may become, or
14 are in danger of becoming, non-productive and
15 dependent;
16 (E) expansion of family day care facilities
17 wherever possible;
18 (F) location of centers in economically
19 depressed neighborhoods, preferably in multi-service
20 centers with cooperation of other agencies;
21 (G) use of existing facilities free of charge
22 or for reasonable rental wherever possible in lieu
23 of construction;
24 (H) development of strategies for assuring a
25 more complete range of day care options, including
26 provision of day care services in homes, in schools
27 or in centers, which will enable a parent or parents
28 to complete a course of education or obtain or
29 maintain employment.
30 Emphasis shall be given to support services which
31 will help to ensure such parents' graduation from high
32 school and to services for participants in the Project
33 Chance program of job training conducted by the Illinois
34 Department of Public Aid.
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1 (5) Actively stimulate the development of public
2 and private resources at the local level. It shall also
3 seek the fullest utilization of federal funds directly or
4 indirectly available to the Department.
5 Where appropriate, existing non-governmental agencies or
6 associations shall be involved in planning by the Department.
7 (f) The Department, pursuant to a contract with the
8 Illinois Department of Public Aid, may provide child care
9 services to former recipients of assistance under The
10 Illinois Public Aid Code as authorized by Section 9-6.3 of
11 that Code.
12 (g) The Department shall establish rules and regulations
13 concerning its operation of programs designed to meet the
14 goals of child protection, family preservation, family
15 reunification, adoption and youth development, including but
16 not limited to:
17 (1) adoption;
18 (2) foster care;
19 (3) family counseling;
20 (4) protective services;
21 (5) service to unwed mothers;
22 (6) homemaker service;
23 (7) return of runaway children;
24 (8) independent living skills and shelter for
25 homeless youth;
26 (9) placement under Section 5-7 of the Juvenile
27 Court Act or Section 2-27, 3-28, 4-25 or 5-29 of the
28 Juvenile Court Act of 1987 in accordance with the federal
29 Adoption Assistance and Child Welfare Act of 1980; and
30 (10) interstate services.
31 Rules and regulations established by the Department shall
32 include provisions for training Department staff and the
33 staff of Department grantees, through contracts with other
34 agencies or resources, in alcohol and drug abuse screening
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1 techniques to identify children and adults who should be
2 referred to an alcohol and drug abuse treatment program for
3 professional evaluation.
4 (h) If the Department finds that there is no appropriate
5 program or facility within or available to the Department for
6 a ward and that no licensed private facility has an adequate
7 and appropriate program or none agrees to accept the ward,
8 the Department shall create an appropriate individualized,
9 program-oriented plan for such ward. The plan may be
10 developed within the Department or through purchase of
11 services by the Department to the extent that it is within
12 its statutory authority to do.
13 (i) Service programs shall be available throughout the
14 State and shall include but not be limited to the following
15 services:
16 (1) case management;
17 (2) homemakers;
18 (3) counseling;
19 (4) parent education;
20 (5) day care; and
21 (6) emergency assistance and advocacy.
22 In addition, the following services may be made available
23 to assess and meet the needs of children and families:
24 (1) comprehensive family-based services;
25 (2) assessments;
26 (3) respite care; and
27 (4) in-home health services.
28 The Department shall provide transportation for any of
29 the services it makes available to children or families or
30 for which it refers children or families.
31 (j) The Department may provide financial assistance, and
32 shall establish rules and regulations concerning such
33 assistance, to persons who adopt physically or mentally
34 handicapped, older and other hard-to-place children who
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1 immediately prior to their adoption were legal wards of the
2 Department. The Department may also provide financial
3 assistance, and shall establish rules and regulations for
4 such assistance, to persons appointed guardian of the person
5 under Section 5-7 of the Juvenile Court Act or Section 2-27,
6 3-28, 4-25 or 5-29 of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987 for
7 children who were wards of the Department for 12 months
8 immediately prior to the appointment of the successor
9 guardian and for whom the Department has set a goal of
10 permanent family placement with a foster family.
11 The amount of assistance may vary, depending upon the
12 needs of the child and the adoptive parents, but must be at
13 least $25 less than the monthly cost of care of the child in
14 a foster home, as set forth in the annual assistance
15 agreement. Special purpose grants are allowed where the
16 child requires special service but such costs may not exceed
17 the amounts which similar services would cost the Department
18 if it were to provide or secure them as guardian of the
19 child.
20 Any financial assistance provided under this subsection
21 is inalienable by assignment, sale, execution, attachment,
22 garnishment, or any other remedy for recovery or collection
23 of a judgment or debt.
24 (k) The Department shall accept for care and training
25 any child who has been adjudicated neglected or abused, or
26 dependent committed to it pursuant to the Juvenile Court Act
27 or the Juvenile Court Act of 1987.
28 (l) Before July 1, 2000, the Department may provide, and
29 beginning July 1, 2000, the Department shall provide, family
30 preservation services, as determined to be appropriate and in
31 the child's best interests and when the child will not be in
32 imminent risk of harm, to any family whose child has been
33 placed in substitute care, any persons who have adopted a
34 child and require post-adoption services, or any persons
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1 whose child or children are at risk of being placed outside
2 their home as documented by an "indicated" report of
3 suspected child abuse or neglect determined pursuant to the
4 Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act. Nothing in this
5 paragraph shall be construed to create a private right of
6 action or claim on the part of any individual or child
7 welfare agency.
8 The Department shall notify the child and his family of
9 the Department's responsibility to offer and provide family
10 preservation services as identified in the service plan. The
11 child and his family shall be eligible for services as soon
12 as the report is determined to be "indicated". The
13 Department may offer services to any child or family with
14 respect to whom a report of suspected child abuse or neglect
15 has been filed, prior to concluding its investigation under
16 Section 7.12 of the Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act.
17 However, the child's or family's willingness to accept
18 services shall not be considered in the investigation. The
19 Department may also provide services to any child or family
20 who is the subject of any report of suspected child abuse or
21 neglect or may refer such child or family to services
22 available from other agencies in the community, even if the
23 report is determined to be unfounded, if the conditions in
24 the child's or family's home are reasonably likely to subject
25 the child or family to future reports of suspected child
26 abuse or neglect. Acceptance of such services shall be
27 voluntary.
28 The Department may, at its discretion except for those
29 children also adjudicated neglected or dependent, accept for
30 care and training any child who has been adjudicated
31 addicted, as a truant minor in need of supervision or as a
32 minor requiring authoritative intervention, under the
33 Juvenile Court Act or the Juvenile Court Act of 1987, but no
34 such child shall be committed to the Department by any court
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1 without the approval of the Department. A minor charged with
2 a criminal offense under the Criminal Code of 1961 or
3 adjudicated delinquent shall not be placed in the custody of
4 or committed to the Department by any court, except a minor
5 less than 13 years of age committed to the Department under
6 Section 5-23 of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987.
7 (m) The Department may assume temporary custody of any
8 child if:
9 (1) it has received a written consent to such
10 temporary custody signed by the parents of the child or
11 by the parent having custody of the child if the parents
12 are not living together or by the guardian or custodian
13 of the child if the child is not in the custody of either
14 parent, or
15 (2) the child is found in the State and neither a
16 parent, guardian nor custodian of the child can be
17 located.
18 If the child is found in his or her residence without a
19 parent, guardian, custodian or responsible caretaker, the
20 Department may, instead of removing the child and assuming
21 temporary custody, place an authorized representative of the
22 Department in that residence until such time as a parent,
23 guardian or custodian enters the home and expresses a
24 willingness and apparent ability to resume permanent charge
25 of the child, or until a relative enters the home and is
26 willing and able to assume charge of the child until a
27 parent, guardian or custodian enters the home and expresses
28 such willingness and ability to resume permanent charge.
29 After a caretaker has remained in the home for a period not
30 to exceed 12 hours, the Department must follow those
31 procedures outlined in Section 2-9, 3-11, 4-8 or 5-9 of the
32 Juvenile Court Act of 1987.
33 The Department shall have the authority, responsibilities
34 and duties that a legal custodian of the child would have
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1 pursuant to subsection (9) of Section 1-3 of the Juvenile
2 Court Act of 1987. Whenever a child is taken into temporary
3 custody pursuant to an investigation under the Abused and
4 Neglected Child Reporting Act, or pursuant to a referral and
5 acceptance under the Juvenile Court Act of 1987 of a minor in
6 limited custody, the Department, during the period of
7 temporary custody and before the child is brought before a
8 judicial officer as required by Section 2-9, 3-11, 4-8 or 5-9
9 of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987, shall have the authority,
10 responsibilities and duties that a legal custodian of the
11 child would have under subsection (9) of Section 1-3 of the
12 Juvenile Court Act of 1987.
13 The Department shall ensure that any child taken into
14 custody is scheduled for an appointment for a medical
15 examination.
16 A parent, guardian or custodian of a child in the
17 temporary custody of the Department who would have custody of
18 the child if he were not in the temporary custody of the
19 Department may deliver to the Department a signed request
20 that the Department surrender the temporary custody of the
21 child. The Department may retain temporary custody of the
22 child for 10 days after the receipt of the request, during
23 which period the Department may cause to be filed a petition
24 pursuant to the Juvenile Court Act of 1987. If a petition is
25 so filed, the Department shall retain temporary custody of
26 the child until the court orders otherwise. If a petition is
27 not filed within the 10 day period, the child shall be
28 surrendered to the custody of the requesting parent, guardian
29 or custodian not later than the expiration of the 10 day
30 period, at which time the authority and duties of the
31 Department with respect to the temporary custody of the child
32 shall terminate.
33 (n) The Department may place children under 18 years of
34 age in licensed child care facilities when in the opinion of
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1 the Department, appropriate services aimed at family
2 preservation have been unsuccessful or unavailable and such
3 placement would be for their best interest. Payment for
4 board, clothing, care, training and supervision of any child
5 placed in a licensed child care facility may be made by the
6 Department, by the parents or guardians of the estates of
7 those children, or by both the Department and the parents or
8 guardians, except that no payments shall be made by the
9 Department for any child placed in a licensed child care
10 facility for board, clothing, care, training and supervision
11 of such a child that exceed the average per capita cost of
12 maintaining and of caring for a child in institutions for
13 dependent or neglected children operated by the Department.
14 However, such restriction on payments does not apply in cases
15 where children require specialized care and treatment for
16 problems of severe emotional disturbance, physical
17 disability, social adjustment, or any combination thereof and
18 suitable facilities for the placement of such children are
19 not available at payment rates within the limitations set
20 forth in this Section. All reimbursements for services
21 delivered shall be absolutely inalienable by assignment,
22 sale, attachment, garnishment or otherwise.
23 (o) The Department shall establish an administrative
24 review and appeal process for children and families who
25 request or receive child welfare services from the
26 Department. Children who are wards of the Department and are
27 placed by private child welfare agencies, and foster families
28 with whom those children are placed, shall be afforded the
29 same procedural and appeal rights as children and families in
30 the case of placement by the Department, including the right
31 to an initial review of a private agency decision by that
32 agency. The Department shall insure that any private child
33 welfare agency, which accepts wards of the Department for
34 placement, affords those rights to children and foster
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1 families. The Department shall accept for administrative
2 review and an appeal hearing a complaint made by a child or
3 foster family concerning a decision following an initial
4 review by a private child welfare agency. An appeal of a
5 decision concerning a change in the placement of a child
6 shall be conducted in an expedited manner.
7 (p) There is hereby created the Department of Children
8 and Family Services Emergency Assistance Fund from which the
9 Department may provide special financial assistance to
10 families which are in economic crisis when such assistance is
11 not available through other public or private sources and the
12 assistance is deemed necessary to prevent dissolution of the
13 family unit or to reunite families which have been separated
14 due to child abuse and neglect. The Department shall
15 establish administrative rules specifying the criteria for
16 determining eligibility for and the amount and nature of
17 assistance to be provided. The Department may also enter
18 into written agreements with private and public social
19 service agencies to provide emergency financial services to
20 families referred by the Department. Special financial
21 assistance payments shall be available to a family no more
22 than once during each fiscal year and the total payments to a
23 family may not exceed $500 during a fiscal year.
24 (q) The Department may receive and use, in their
25 entirety, for the benefit of children any gift, donation or
26 bequest of money or other property which is received on
27 behalf of such children, or any financial benefits to which
28 such children are or may become entitled while under the
29 jurisdiction or care of the Department.
30 The Department shall set up and administer no-cost,
31 interest-bearing savings accounts in appropriate financial
32 institutions ("individual accounts") for children for whom
33 the Department is legally responsible and who have been
34 determined eligible for Veterans' Benefits, Social Security
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1 benefits, assistance allotments from the armed forces, court
2 ordered payments, parental voluntary payments, Supplemental
3 Security Income, Railroad Retirement payments, Black Lung
4 benefits, or other miscellaneous payments. Interest earned
5 by each individual account shall be credited to the account,
6 unless disbursed in accordance with this subsection.
7 In disbursing funds from children's individual accounts,
8 the Department shall:
9 (1) Establish standards in accordance with State
10 and federal laws for disbursing money from children's
11 individual accounts. In all circumstances, the
12 Department's "Guardianship Administrator" or his or her
13 designee must approve disbursements from children's
14 individual accounts. The Department shall be responsible
15 for keeping complete records of all disbursements for
16 each individual account for any purpose.
17 (2) Calculate on a monthly basis the amounts paid
18 from State funds for the child's board and care, medical
19 care not covered under Medicaid, and social services; and
20 utilize funds from the child's individual account, as
21 covered by regulation, to reimburse those costs.
22 Monthly, disbursements from all children's individual
23 accounts, up to 1/12 of $13,000,000, shall be deposited
24 by the Department into the General Revenue Fund and the
25 balance over 1/12 of $13,000,000 into the DCFS Children's
26 Services Fund.
27 (3) Maintain any balance remaining after
28 reimbursing for the child's costs of care, as specified
29 in item (2). The balance shall accumulate in accordance
30 with relevant State and federal laws and shall be
31 disbursed to the child or his or her guardian, or to the
32 issuing agency.
33 (r) The Department shall promulgate regulations
34 encouraging all adoption agencies to voluntarily forward to
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1 the Department or its agent names and addresses of all
2 persons who have applied for and have been approved for
3 adoption of a hard-to-place or handicapped child and the
4 names of such children who have not been placed for adoption.
5 A list of such names and addresses shall be maintained by the
6 Department or its agent, and coded lists which maintain the
7 confidentiality of the person seeking to adopt the child and
8 of the child shall be made available, without charge, to
9 every adoption agency in the State to assist the agencies in
10 placing such children for adoption. The Department may
11 delegate to an agent its duty to maintain and make available
12 such lists. The Department shall ensure that such agent
13 maintains the confidentiality of the person seeking to adopt
14 the child and of the child.
15 (s) The Department of Children and Family Services may
16 establish and implement a program to reimburse Department and
17 private child welfare agency foster parents licensed by the
18 Department of Children and Family Services for damages
19 sustained by the foster parents as a result of the malicious
20 or negligent acts of foster children, as well as providing
21 third party coverage for such foster parents with regard to
22 actions of foster children to other individuals. Such
23 coverage will be secondary to the foster parent liability
24 insurance policy, if applicable. The program shall be funded
25 through appropriations from the General Revenue Fund,
26 specifically designated for such purposes.
27 (t) The Department shall perform home studies and
28 investigations and shall exercise supervision over visitation
29 as ordered by a court pursuant to the Illinois Marriage and
30 Dissolution of Marriage Act or the Adoption Act only if:
31 (1) an order entered by an Illinois court
32 specifically directs the Department to perform such
33 services; and
34 (2) the court has ordered one or both of the
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1 parties to the proceeding to reimburse the Department for
2 its reasonable costs for providing such services in
3 accordance with Department rules, or has determined that
4 neither party is financially able to pay.
5 The Department shall provide written notification to the
6 court of the specific arrangements for supervised visitation
7 and projected monthly costs within 60 days of the court
8 order. The Department shall send to the court information
9 related to the costs incurred except in cases where the court
10 has determined the parties are financially unable to pay. The
11 court may order additional periodic reports as appropriate.
12 (u) Whenever the Department places a child in a licensed
13 foster home, group home, child care institution, or in a
14 relative home, the Department shall provide to the caretaker:
15 (1) available detailed information concerning the
16 child's educational and health history, copies of
17 immunization records (including insurance and medical
18 card information), a history of the child's previous
19 placements, if any, and reasons for placement changes
20 excluding any information that identifies or reveals the
21 location of any previous caretaker;
22 (2) a copy of the child's portion of the client
23 service plan, including any visitation arrangement, and
24 all amendments or revisions to it as related to the
25 child; and
26 (3) information containing details of the child's
27 individualized educational plan when the child is
28 receiving special education services.
29 The caretaker shall be informed of any known social or
30 behavioral information (including, but not limited to, fire
31 setting, perpetuation of sexual abuse, destructive behavior,
32 and substance abuse) necessary to care for and safeguard the
33 child.
34 (u-5) Effective July 1, 1995, only foster care
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1 placements licensed as foster family homes pursuant to the
2 Child Care Act of 1969 shall be eligible to receive foster
3 care payments from the Department. Relative caregivers who,
4 as of July 1, 1995, were approved pursuant to approved
5 relative placement rules previously promulgated by the
6 Department at 89 Ill. Adm. Code 335 and had submitted an
7 application for licensure as a foster family home may
8 continue to receive foster care payments only until the
9 Department determines that they may be licensed as a foster
10 family home or that their application for licensure is denied
11 or until September 30, 1995, whichever occurs first.
12 (u-10) Within 180 days after the effective date of this
13 amendatory Act of 1997, all children who had previously been
14 placed by the Department with relative caregivers who remain
15 unlicensed as foster family homes shall be removed from those
16 placements by the Department.
17 (v) The Department shall access criminal history record
18 information as defined in the Illinois Uniform Conviction
19 Information Act and information maintained in the
20 adjudicatory and dispositional record system as defined in
21 subdivision (A)19 of Section 55a of the Civil Administrative
22 Code of Illinois if the Department determines the information
23 is necessary to perform its duties under the Abused and
24 Neglected Child Reporting Act, the Child Care Act of 1969,
25 and the Children and Family Services Act. The Department
26 shall provide for interactive computerized communication and
27 processing equipment that permits direct on-line
28 communication with the Department of State Police's central
29 criminal history data repository. The Department shall
30 comply with all certification requirements and provide
31 certified operators who have been trained by personnel from
32 the Department of State Police. In addition, one Office of
33 the Inspector General investigator shall have training in the
34 use of the criminal history information access system and
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1 have access to the terminal. The Department of Children and
2 Family Services and its employees shall abide by rules and
3 regulations established by the Department of State Police
4 relating to the access and dissemination of this information.
5 (w) Within 120 days of August 20, 1995 (the effective
6 date of Public Act 89-392), the Department shall prepare and
7 submit to the Governor and the General Assembly, a written
8 plan for the development of in-state licensed secure child
9 care facilities that care for children who are in need of
10 secure living arrangements for their health, safety, and
11 well-being. For purposes of this subsection, secure care
12 facility shall mean a facility that is designed and operated
13 to ensure that all entrances and exits from the facility, a
14 building or a distinct part of the building, are under the
15 exclusive control of the staff of the facility, whether or
16 not the child has the freedom of movement within the
17 perimeter of the facility, building, or distinct part of the
18 building. The plan shall include descriptions of the types
19 of facilities that are needed in Illinois; the cost of
20 developing these secure care facilities; the estimated number
21 of placements; the potential cost savings resulting from the
22 movement of children currently out-of-state who are projected
23 to be returned to Illinois; the necessary geographic
24 distribution of these facilities in Illinois; and a proposed
25 timetable for development of such facilities.
26 (Source: P.A. 88-380; 88-398; 88-487; 88-614, eff. 9-7-94;
27 88-670, eff. 12-2-94; 89-21, eff. 6-6-95; 89-392, eff.
28 8-20-95; 89-626, eff. 8-9-96.)
29 (Text of Section after amendment by P.A. 89-507)
30 Sec. 5. Direct child welfare services; Department of
31 Children and Family Services. To provide direct child welfare
32 services when not available through other public or private
33 child care or program facilities.
34 (a) For purposes of this Section:
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1 (1) "Children" means persons found within the State
2 who are under the age of 18 years. The term also
3 includes persons under age 19 who:
4 (A) were committed to the Department pursuant
5 to the Juvenile Court Act or the Juvenile Court Act
6 of 1987, as amended, prior to the age of 18 and who
7 continue under the jurisdiction of the court; or
8 (B) were accepted for care, service and
9 training by the Department prior to the age of 18
10 and whose best interest in the discretion of the
11 Department would be served by continuing that care,
12 service and training because of severe emotional
13 disturbances, physical disability, social adjustment
14 or any combination thereof, or because of the need
15 to complete an educational or vocational training
16 program.
17 (2) "Homeless youth" means persons found within the
18 State who are under the age of 19, are not in a safe and
19 stable living situation and cannot be reunited with their
20 families.
21 (3) "Child welfare services" means public social
22 services which are directed toward the accomplishment of
23 the following purposes:
24 (A) protecting and promoting the welfare of
25 children, including homeless, dependent or neglected
26 children;
27 (B) remedying, or assisting in the solution of
28 problems which may result in, the neglect, abuse,
29 exploitation or delinquency of children;
30 (C) preventing the unnecessary separation of
31 children from their families by identifying family
32 problems, assisting families in resolving their
33 problems, and preventing the breakup of the family
34 where the prevention of child removal is desirable
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1 and possible;
2 (D) restoring to their families children who
3 have been removed, by the provision of services to
4 the child and the families;
5 (E) placing children in suitable adoptive
6 homes, in cases where restoration to the biological
7 family is not possible or appropriate;
8 (F) assuring adequate care of children away
9 from their homes, in cases where the child cannot be
10 returned home or cannot be placed for adoption;
11 (G) (blank);
12 (H) (blank); and
13 (I) placing and maintaining children in
14 facilities that provide separate living quarters for
15 children under the age of 18 and for children 18
16 years of age and older, unless a child 18 years of
17 age is in the last year of high school education or
18 vocational training, in an approved individual or
19 group treatment program, or in a licensed shelter
20 facility. The Department is not required to place
21 or maintain children:
22 (i) who are in a foster home, or
23 (ii) who are persons with a developmental
24 disability, as defined in the Mental Health and
25 Developmental Disabilities Code, or
26 (iii) who are female children who are
27 pregnant, pregnant and parenting or parenting,
28 or
29 (iv) who are siblings,
30 in facilities that provide separate living quarters
31 for children 18 years of age and older and for
32 children under 18 years of age.
33 (b) Nothing in this Section shall be construed to
34 authorize the expenditure of public funds for the purpose of
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1 performing abortions.
2 (c) The Department shall establish and maintain
3 tax-supported child welfare services and extend and seek to
4 improve voluntary services throughout the State, to the end
5 that services and care shall be available on an equal basis
6 throughout the State to children requiring such services.
7 (d) The Director may authorize advance disbursements for
8 any new program initiative to any agency contracting with the
9 Department. As a prerequisite for an advance disbursement,
10 the contractor must post a surety bond in the amount of the
11 advance disbursement and have a purchase of service contract
12 approved by the Department. The Department may pay up to 2
13 months operational expenses in advance. The amount of the
14 advance disbursement shall be prorated over the life of the
15 contract or the remaining months of the fiscal year,
16 whichever is less, and the installment amount shall then be
17 deducted from future bills. Advance disbursement
18 authorizations for new initiatives shall not be made to any
19 agency after that agency has operated during 2 consecutive
20 fiscal years. The requirements of this Section concerning
21 advance disbursements shall not apply with respect to the
22 following: payments to local public agencies for child day
23 care services as authorized by Section 5a of this Act; and
24 youth service programs receiving grant funds under Section
25 17a-4.
26 (e) (Blank).
27 (f) (Blank).
28 (g) The Department shall establish rules and regulations
29 concerning its operation of programs designed to meet the
30 goals of child protection, family preservation, family
31 reunification, and adoption, including but not limited to:
32 (1) adoption;
33 (2) foster care;
34 (3) family counseling;
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1 (4) protective services;
2 (5) (blank);
3 (6) homemaker service;
4 (7) return of runaway children;
5 (8) (blank);
6 (9) placement under Section 5-7 of the Juvenile
7 Court Act or Section 2-27, 3-28, 4-25 or 5-29 of the
8 Juvenile Court Act of 1987 in accordance with the federal
9 Adoption Assistance and Child Welfare Act of 1980; and
10 (10) interstate services.
11 Rules and regulations established by the Department shall
12 include provisions for training Department staff and the
13 staff of Department grantees, through contracts with other
14 agencies or resources, in alcohol and drug abuse screening
15 techniques to identify children and adults who should be
16 referred to an alcohol and drug abuse treatment program for
17 professional evaluation.
18 (h) If the Department finds that there is no appropriate
19 program or facility within or available to the Department for
20 a ward and that no licensed private facility has an adequate
21 and appropriate program or none agrees to accept the ward,
22 the Department shall create an appropriate individualized,
23 program-oriented plan for such ward. The plan may be
24 developed within the Department or through purchase of
25 services by the Department to the extent that it is within
26 its statutory authority to do.
27 (i) Service programs shall be available throughout the
28 State and shall include but not be limited to the following
29 services:
30 (1) case management;
31 (2) homemakers;
32 (3) counseling;
33 (4) parent education;
34 (5) day care; and
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1 (6) emergency assistance and advocacy.
2 In addition, the following services may be made available
3 to assess and meet the needs of children and families:
4 (1) comprehensive family-based services;
5 (2) assessments;
6 (3) respite care; and
7 (4) in-home health services.
8 The Department shall provide transportation for any of
9 the services it makes available to children or families or
10 for which it refers children or families.
11 (j) The Department may provide financial assistance, and
12 shall establish rules and regulations concerning such
13 assistance, to persons who adopt physically or mentally
14 handicapped, older and other hard-to-place children who
15 immediately prior to their adoption were legal wards of the
16 Department. The Department may also provide financial
17 assistance, and shall establish rules and regulations for
18 such assistance, to persons appointed guardian of the person
19 under Section 5-7 of the Juvenile Court Act or Section 2-27,
20 3-28, 4-25 or 5-29 of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987 for
21 children who were wards of the Department for 12 months
22 immediately prior to the appointment of the successor
23 guardian and for whom the Department has set a goal of
24 permanent family placement with a foster family.
25 The amount of assistance may vary, depending upon the
26 needs of the child and the adoptive parents, but must be at
27 least $25 less than the monthly cost of care of the child in
28 a foster home, as set forth in the annual assistance
29 agreement. Special purpose grants are allowed where the
30 child requires special service but such costs may not exceed
31 the amounts which similar services would cost the Department
32 if it were to provide or secure them as guardian of the
33 child.
34 Any financial assistance provided under this subsection
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1 is inalienable by assignment, sale, execution, attachment,
2 garnishment, or any other remedy for recovery or collection
3 of a judgment or debt.
4 (k) The Department shall accept for care and training
5 any child who has been adjudicated neglected or abused, or
6 dependent committed to it pursuant to the Juvenile Court Act
7 or the Juvenile Court Act of 1987.
8 (l) Before July 1, 2000, the Department may provide, and
9 beginning July 1, 2000, the Department shall provide, family
10 preservation services, as determined to be appropriate and in
11 the child's best interests and when the child will not be in
12 imminent risk of harm, to any family whose child has been
13 placed in substitute care, any persons who have adopted a
14 child and require post-adoption services, or any persons
15 whose child or children are at risk of being placed outside
16 their home as documented by an "indicated" report of
17 suspected child abuse or neglect determined pursuant to the
18 Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act. Nothing in this
19 paragraph shall be construed to create a private right of
20 action or claim on the part of any individual or child
21 welfare agency.
22 The Department shall notify the child and his family of
23 the Department's responsibility to offer and provide family
24 preservation services as identified in the service plan. The
25 child and his family shall be eligible for services as soon
26 as the report is determined to be "indicated". The
27 Department may offer services to any child or family with
28 respect to whom a report of suspected child abuse or neglect
29 has been filed, prior to concluding its investigation under
30 Section 7.12 of the Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act.
31 However, the child's or family's willingness to accept
32 services shall not be considered in the investigation. The
33 Department may also provide services to any child or family
34 who is the subject of any report of suspected child abuse or
-27- LRB9001897DNcc
1 neglect or may refer such child or family to services
2 available from other agencies in the community, even if the
3 report is determined to be unfounded, if the conditions in
4 the child's or family's home are reasonably likely to subject
5 the child or family to future reports of suspected child
6 abuse or neglect. Acceptance of such services shall be
7 voluntary.
8 The Department may, at its discretion except for those
9 children also adjudicated neglected or dependent, accept for
10 care and training any child who has been adjudicated
11 addicted, as a truant minor in need of supervision or as a
12 minor requiring authoritative intervention, under the
13 Juvenile Court Act or the Juvenile Court Act of 1987, but no
14 such child shall be committed to the Department by any court
15 without the approval of the Department. A minor charged with
16 a criminal offense under the Criminal Code of 1961 or
17 adjudicated delinquent shall not be placed in the custody of
18 or committed to the Department by any court, except a minor
19 less than 13 years of age committed to the Department under
20 Section 5-23 of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987.
21 (m) The Department may assume temporary custody of any
22 child if:
23 (1) it has received a written consent to such
24 temporary custody signed by the parents of the child or
25 by the parent having custody of the child if the parents
26 are not living together or by the guardian or custodian
27 of the child if the child is not in the custody of either
28 parent, or
29 (2) the child is found in the State and neither a
30 parent, guardian nor custodian of the child can be
31 located.
32 If the child is found in his or her residence without a
33 parent, guardian, custodian or responsible caretaker, the
34 Department may, instead of removing the child and assuming
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1 temporary custody, place an authorized representative of the
2 Department in that residence until such time as a parent,
3 guardian or custodian enters the home and expresses a
4 willingness and apparent ability to resume permanent charge
5 of the child, or until a relative enters the home and is
6 willing and able to assume charge of the child until a
7 parent, guardian or custodian enters the home and expresses
8 such willingness and ability to resume permanent charge.
9 After a caretaker has remained in the home for a period not
10 to exceed 12 hours, the Department must follow those
11 procedures outlined in Section 2-9, 3-11, 4-8 or 5-9 of the
12 Juvenile Court Act of 1987.
13 The Department shall have the authority, responsibilities
14 and duties that a legal custodian of the child would have
15 pursuant to subsection (9) of Section 1-3 of the Juvenile
16 Court Act of 1987. Whenever a child is taken into temporary
17 custody pursuant to an investigation under the Abused and
18 Neglected Child Reporting Act, or pursuant to a referral and
19 acceptance under the Juvenile Court Act of 1987 of a minor in
20 limited custody, the Department, during the period of
21 temporary custody and before the child is brought before a
22 judicial officer as required by Section 2-9, 3-11, 4-8 or 5-9
23 of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987, shall have the authority,
24 responsibilities and duties that a legal custodian of the
25 child would have under subsection (9) of Section 1-3 of the
26 Juvenile Court Act of 1987.
27 The Department shall ensure that any child taken into
28 custody is scheduled for an appointment for a medical
29 examination.
30 A parent, guardian or custodian of a child in the
31 temporary custody of the Department who would have custody of
32 the child if he were not in the temporary custody of the
33 Department may deliver to the Department a signed request
34 that the Department surrender the temporary custody of the
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1 child. The Department may retain temporary custody of the
2 child for 10 days after the receipt of the request, during
3 which period the Department may cause to be filed a petition
4 pursuant to the Juvenile Court Act of 1987. If a petition is
5 so filed, the Department shall retain temporary custody of
6 the child until the court orders otherwise. If a petition is
7 not filed within the 10 day period, the child shall be
8 surrendered to the custody of the requesting parent, guardian
9 or custodian not later than the expiration of the 10 day
10 period, at which time the authority and duties of the
11 Department with respect to the temporary custody of the child
12 shall terminate.
13 (n) The Department may place children under 18 years of
14 age in licensed child care facilities when in the opinion of
15 the Department, appropriate services aimed at family
16 preservation have been unsuccessful or unavailable and such
17 placement would be for their best interest. Payment for
18 board, clothing, care, training and supervision of any child
19 placed in a licensed child care facility may be made by the
20 Department, by the parents or guardians of the estates of
21 those children, or by both the Department and the parents or
22 guardians, except that no payments shall be made by the
23 Department for any child placed in a licensed child care
24 facility for board, clothing, care, training and supervision
25 of such a child that exceed the average per capita cost of
26 maintaining and of caring for a child in institutions for
27 dependent or neglected children operated by the Department.
28 However, such restriction on payments does not apply in cases
29 where children require specialized care and treatment for
30 problems of severe emotional disturbance, physical
31 disability, social adjustment, or any combination thereof and
32 suitable facilities for the placement of such children are
33 not available at payment rates within the limitations set
34 forth in this Section. All reimbursements for services
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1 delivered shall be absolutely inalienable by assignment,
2 sale, attachment, garnishment or otherwise.
3 (o) The Department shall establish an administrative
4 review and appeal process for children and families who
5 request or receive child welfare services from the
6 Department. Children who are wards of the Department and are
7 placed by private child welfare agencies, and foster families
8 with whom those children are placed, shall be afforded the
9 same procedural and appeal rights as children and families in
10 the case of placement by the Department, including the right
11 to an initial review of a private agency decision by that
12 agency. The Department shall insure that any private child
13 welfare agency, which accepts wards of the Department for
14 placement, affords those rights to children and foster
15 families. The Department shall accept for administrative
16 review and an appeal hearing a complaint made by a child or
17 foster family concerning a decision following an initial
18 review by a private child welfare agency. An appeal of a
19 decision concerning a change in the placement of a child
20 shall be conducted in an expedited manner.
21 (p) There is hereby created the Department of Children
22 and Family Services Emergency Assistance Fund from which the
23 Department may provide special financial assistance to
24 families which are in economic crisis when such assistance is
25 not available through other public or private sources and the
26 assistance is deemed necessary to prevent dissolution of the
27 family unit or to reunite families which have been separated
28 due to child abuse and neglect. The Department shall
29 establish administrative rules specifying the criteria for
30 determining eligibility for and the amount and nature of
31 assistance to be provided. The Department may also enter
32 into written agreements with private and public social
33 service agencies to provide emergency financial services to
34 families referred by the Department. Special financial
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1 assistance payments shall be available to a family no more
2 than once during each fiscal year and the total payments to a
3 family may not exceed $500 during a fiscal year.
4 (q) The Department may receive and use, in their
5 entirety, for the benefit of children any gift, donation or
6 bequest of money or other property which is received on
7 behalf of such children, or any financial benefits to which
8 such children are or may become entitled while under the
9 jurisdiction or care of the Department.
10 The Department shall set up and administer no-cost,
11 interest-bearing savings accounts in appropriate financial
12 institutions ("individual accounts") for children for whom
13 the Department is legally responsible and who have been
14 determined eligible for Veterans' Benefits, Social Security
15 benefits, assistance allotments from the armed forces, court
16 ordered payments, parental voluntary payments, Supplemental
17 Security Income, Railroad Retirement payments, Black Lung
18 benefits, or other miscellaneous payments. Interest earned
19 by each individual account shall be credited to the account,
20 unless disbursed in accordance with this subsection.
21 In disbursing funds from children's individual accounts,
22 the Department shall:
23 (1) Establish standards in accordance with State
24 and federal laws for disbursing money from children's
25 individual accounts. In all circumstances, the
26 Department's "Guardianship Administrator" or his or her
27 designee must approve disbursements from children's
28 individual accounts. The Department shall be responsible
29 for keeping complete records of all disbursements for
30 each individual account for any purpose.
31 (2) Calculate on a monthly basis the amounts paid
32 from State funds for the child's board and care, medical
33 care not covered under Medicaid, and social services; and
34 utilize funds from the child's individual account, as
-32- LRB9001897DNcc
1 covered by regulation, to reimburse those costs.
2 Monthly, disbursements from all children's individual
3 accounts, up to 1/12 of $13,000,000, shall be deposited
4 by the Department into the General Revenue Fund and the
5 balance over 1/12 of $13,000,000 into the DCFS Children's
6 Services Fund.
7 (3) Maintain any balance remaining after
8 reimbursing for the child's costs of care, as specified
9 in item (2). The balance shall accumulate in accordance
10 with relevant State and federal laws and shall be
11 disbursed to the child or his or her guardian, or to the
12 issuing agency.
13 (r) The Department shall promulgate regulations
14 encouraging all adoption agencies to voluntarily forward to
15 the Department or its agent names and addresses of all
16 persons who have applied for and have been approved for
17 adoption of a hard-to-place or handicapped child and the
18 names of such children who have not been placed for adoption.
19 A list of such names and addresses shall be maintained by the
20 Department or its agent, and coded lists which maintain the
21 confidentiality of the person seeking to adopt the child and
22 of the child shall be made available, without charge, to
23 every adoption agency in the State to assist the agencies in
24 placing such children for adoption. The Department may
25 delegate to an agent its duty to maintain and make available
26 such lists. The Department shall ensure that such agent
27 maintains the confidentiality of the person seeking to adopt
28 the child and of the child.
29 (s) The Department of Children and Family Services may
30 establish and implement a program to reimburse Department and
31 private child welfare agency foster parents licensed by the
32 Department of Children and Family Services for damages
33 sustained by the foster parents as a result of the malicious
34 or negligent acts of foster children, as well as providing
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1 third party coverage for such foster parents with regard to
2 actions of foster children to other individuals. Such
3 coverage will be secondary to the foster parent liability
4 insurance policy, if applicable. The program shall be funded
5 through appropriations from the General Revenue Fund,
6 specifically designated for such purposes.
7 (t) The Department shall perform home studies and
8 investigations and shall exercise supervision over visitation
9 as ordered by a court pursuant to the Illinois Marriage and
10 Dissolution of Marriage Act or the Adoption Act only if:
11 (1) an order entered by an Illinois court
12 specifically directs the Department to perform such
13 services; and
14 (2) the court has ordered one or both of the
15 parties to the proceeding to reimburse the Department for
16 its reasonable costs for providing such services in
17 accordance with Department rules, or has determined that
18 neither party is financially able to pay.
19 The Department shall provide written notification to the
20 court of the specific arrangements for supervised visitation
21 and projected monthly costs within 60 days of the court
22 order. The Department shall send to the court information
23 related to the costs incurred except in cases where the court
24 has determined the parties are financially unable to pay. The
25 court may order additional periodic reports as appropriate.
26 (u) Whenever the Department places a child in a licensed
27 foster home, group home, child care institution, or in a
28 relative home, the Department shall provide to the caretaker:
29 (1) available detailed information concerning the
30 child's educational and health history, copies of
31 immunization records (including insurance and medical
32 card information), a history of the child's previous
33 placements, if any, and reasons for placement changes
34 excluding any information that identifies or reveals the
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1 location of any previous caretaker;
2 (2) a copy of the child's portion of the client
3 service plan, including any visitation arrangement, and
4 all amendments or revisions to it as related to the
5 child; and
6 (3) information containing details of the child's
7 individualized educational plan when the child is
8 receiving special education services.
9 The caretaker shall be informed of any known social or
10 behavioral information (including, but not limited to, fire
11 setting, perpetuation of sexual abuse, destructive behavior,
12 and substance abuse) necessary to care for and safeguard the
13 child.
14 (u-5) Effective July 1, 1995, only foster care
15 placements licensed as foster family homes pursuant to the
16 Child Care Act of 1969 shall be eligible to receive foster
17 care payments from the Department. Relative caregivers who,
18 as of July 1, 1995, were approved pursuant to approved
19 relative placement rules previously promulgated by the
20 Department at 89 Ill. Adm. Code 335 and had submitted an
21 application for licensure as a foster family home may
22 continue to receive foster care payments only until the
23 Department determines that they may be licensed as a foster
24 family home or that their application for licensure is denied
25 or until September 30, 1995, whichever occurs first.
26 (u-10) Within 180 days after the effective date of this
27 amendatory Act of 1997, all children who had previously been
28 placed by the Department with relative caregivers who remain
29 unlicensed as foster family homes shall be removed from those
30 placements by the Department.
31 (v) The Department shall access criminal history record
32 information as defined in the Illinois Uniform Conviction
33 Information Act and information maintained in the
34 adjudicatory and dispositional record system as defined in
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1 subdivision (A)19 of Section 55a of the Civil Administrative
2 Code of Illinois if the Department determines the information
3 is necessary to perform its duties under the Abused and
4 Neglected Child Reporting Act, the Child Care Act of 1969,
5 and the Children and Family Services Act. The Department
6 shall provide for interactive computerized communication and
7 processing equipment that permits direct on-line
8 communication with the Department of State Police's central
9 criminal history data repository. The Department shall
10 comply with all certification requirements and provide
11 certified operators who have been trained by personnel from
12 the Department of State Police. In addition, one Office of
13 the Inspector General investigator shall have training in the
14 use of the criminal history information access system and
15 have access to the terminal. The Department of Children and
16 Family Services and its employees shall abide by rules and
17 regulations established by the Department of State Police
18 relating to the access and dissemination of this information.
19 (w) Within 120 days of August 20, 1995 (the effective
20 date of Public Act 89-392), the Department shall prepare and
21 submit to the Governor and the General Assembly, a written
22 plan for the development of in-state licensed secure child
23 care facilities that care for children who are in need of
24 secure living arrangements for their health, safety, and
25 well-being. For purposes of this subsection, secure care
26 facility shall mean a facility that is designed and operated
27 to ensure that all entrances and exits from the facility, a
28 building or a distinct part of the building, are under the
29 exclusive control of the staff of the facility, whether or
30 not the child has the freedom of movement within the
31 perimeter of the facility, building, or distinct part of the
32 building. The plan shall include descriptions of the types
33 of facilities that are needed in Illinois; the cost of
34 developing these secure care facilities; the estimated number
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1 of placements; the potential cost savings resulting from the
2 movement of children currently out-of-state who are projected
3 to be returned to Illinois; the necessary geographic
4 distribution of these facilities in Illinois; and a proposed
5 timetable for development of such facilities.
6 (Source: P.A. 88-380; 88-398; 88-487; 88-614, eff. 9-7-94;
7 88-670, eff. 12-2-94; 89-21, eff. 6-6-95; 89-392, eff.
8 8-20-95; 89-507, eff. 7-1-97; 89-626, eff. 8-9-96.)
9 Section 95. No acceleration or delay. Where this Act
10 makes changes in a statute that is represented in this Act by
11 text that is not yet or no longer in effect (for example, a
12 Section represented by multiple versions), the use of that
13 text does not accelerate or delay the taking effect of (i)
14 the changes made by this Act or (ii) provisions derived from
15 any other Public Act.
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