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Public Act 101-0645 |
SB1857 Enrolled | LRB101 11098 RJF 56313 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 Illinois Notary Public Act is amended by |
changing Section 1-105 as follows: |
(5 ILCS 312/1-105) |
(Section scheduled to be repealed on July 1, 2020) |
Sec. 1-105. Notarization Task Force on Best Practices and |
Verification Standards to Implement Electronic Notarization. |
(a) The General Assembly finds and declares that: |
(1) As more and more citizens throughout the State of |
Illinois rely on electronic devices they also increasingly |
depend on electronic documentation. Any assertion that |
e-mails or word processing documents are necessarily |
"informal and not legally binding" has been dispelled by |
national legislation such as the federal "E-Sign" law in |
2000 and the Uniform Electronic Transactions Act, which has |
been virtually universally adopted throughout the United |
States. Increasingly, laws have bestowed upon electronic |
documents the same legal effect as paper instruments. |
(2) Moreover, institutions, businesses, and commerce |
have gradually put more of their faith in electronic |
commerce and information technology in order to facilitate |
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formal and informal interactions that are oftentimes |
mission-critical and sensitive. In order to meet the |
growing demand for electronic commerce that is both |
convenient and secure, understanding the processes and |
technology is critical and the need for an electronic or |
remote notarization - the process of notarizing a signature |
on an electronic document by electronic methods - is |
becoming a necessity. |
(b) As used in this Section, "Task Force" means the |
Notarization Task Force on Best Practices and Verification |
Standards to Implement Electronic Notarization. |
(c) There is created a Notarization Task Force on Best |
Practices and Verification Standards to Implement Electronic |
Notarization to review and report on national standards for |
best practices in relation to electronic notarization, |
including security concerns and fraud prevention. The goal of |
the Task Force is to investigate and provide recommendations on |
national and State initiatives to implement electronic |
notarization in such a manner that increases the availability |
to notary public services, protects consumers, and maintains |
the integrity of the notarization seal and signature. |
(d) The Task Force's report shall include, but not be |
limited to, standards for an electronic signature, including |
encryption and decryption; the application process for |
electronic notarial commission; and the training of notaries on |
electronic notarization standards and best practices prior to |
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the commission of an electronic notary's electronic signature. |
The report shall also evaluate and make a recommendation on |
fees for notary application and commission, on which documents |
and acts can be attested to by electronic notaries, and on |
security measures that will protect the integrity of the |
electronic notary's electronic signature, as well as standards |
that the Secretary of State may rely upon for revoking an |
electronic notarization. The report must make a recommendation |
on whether and to what extent this Act should be expanded and |
updated. |
(e) The Task Force shall meet no less than 5 times between |
the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 100th General |
Assembly and December 31, 2019. The Task Force shall prepare a |
report that summarizes its work and makes recommendations |
resulting from its review. The Task Force shall submit the |
report of its findings and recommendations to the Governor and |
the General Assembly no later than June 30, 2020. |
(f) The Task Force shall consist of the following 17 |
members: |
(1) one member appointed by the Secretary of State from |
the Index Department of the Office of the Secretary of |
State; |
(2) one member appointed by the Secretary of State from |
the Department of Information Technology of the Office of |
the Secretary of State; |
(3) one member appointed by the President of the |
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Senate; |
(4) one member appointed by the Minority Leader of the |
Senate; |
(5) one member appointed by the Speaker of the House of |
Representatives; |
(6) one member appointed by the Minority Leader of the |
House of Representatives; |
(7) one member appointed by the Attorney General; |
(8) one member appointed by the Secretary of State from |
nominations made by the president of a statewide |
organization representing state's attorneys; |
(9) one member appointed by the Secretary of State from |
nominations made by a statewide organization representing |
attorneys; |
(10) one member appointed by the Secretary of State |
from nominations made by an organization representing |
attorneys in a municipality of more than 1,000,000 |
inhabitants; |
(11) one member appointed by the Secretary of State |
from nominations made by a statewide organization |
representing bankers; |
(12) one member appointed by the Secretary of State |
from nominations made by a statewide organization |
representing community bankers; |
(13) one member appointed by the Secretary of State |
from nominations made by a statewide organization |
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representing credit unions; |
(14) one member appointed by the Secretary of State |
from nominations made by a statewide organization |
representing corporate fiduciaries; |
(15) one member appointed by the Secretary of State |
from nominations made by an organization representing |
realtors in a municipality of more than 1,000,000 |
inhabitants; |
(16) one member appointed by the Secretary of State |
from nominations made by a statewide organization |
representing realtors; and |
(17) one member appointed by the Secretary of State |
from nominations made by a statewide chapter of a national |
organization representing elder law attorneys. |
(g) The Secretary of State shall designate which member |
shall serve as chairperson and facilitate the Task Force. The |
members of the Task Force shall be appointed no later than 90 |
days after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the |
100th General Assembly. Vacancies in the membership of the Task |
Force shall be filled in the same manner as the original |
appointment. The members of the Task Force shall not receive |
compensation for serving as members of the Task Force. |
(h) The Office of the Secretary of State shall provide the |
Task Force with administrative and other support. |
(i) This Section is repealed on July 1, 2021 2020 .
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(Source: P.A. 100-440, eff. 8-25-17.) |
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Section 10. The Illinois Lottery Law is amended by changing |
Section 21.13 as follows: |
(20 ILCS 1605/21.13) |
Sec. 21.13. Scratch-off for Alzheimer's care, support, |
education, and awareness The End of Alzheimer's Begins With Me |
scratch-off game . |
(a) The Department shall offer a special instant |
scratch-off game for the benefit of Alzheimer's care, support, |
education, and awareness with the title of "The End of |
Alzheimer's Begins With Me" . The game shall commence on January |
1, 2020 or as soon thereafter, at the discretion of the |
Director, as is reasonably practical, and shall be discontinued |
on January 1, 2022 2021 . The operation of the game shall be |
governed by this Act and any rules adopted by the Department. |
If any provision of this Section is inconsistent with any other |
provision of this Act, then this Section governs. |
(b) The net revenue from the Alzheimer's care, support, |
education, and awareness "The End of Alzheimer's Begins With |
Me" scratch-off game shall be deposited into the Alzheimer's |
Awareness Fund. |
Moneys received for the purposes of this Section, |
including, without limitation, net revenue from the special |
instant scratch-off game and from gifts, grants, and awards |
from any public or private entity, must be deposited into the |
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Fund. Any interest earned on moneys in the Fund must be |
deposited into the Fund. |
For the purposes of this subsection, "net revenue" means |
the total amount for which tickets have been sold less the sum |
of the amount paid out in the prizes and the actual |
administrative expenses of the Department solely related to the |
scratch-off game under this Section. |
(c) During the time that tickets are sold for the |
Alzheimer's care, support, education, and awareness "The End of |
Alzheimer's Begins With Me" scratch-off game, the Department |
shall not unreasonably diminish the efforts devoted to |
marketing any other instant scratch-off lottery game. |
(d) The Department may adopt any rules necessary to |
implement and administer the provisions of this Section.
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(Source: P.A. 101-561, eff. 8-23-19.) |
Section 15. The Criminal Identification Act is amended by |
changing Section 5.2 as follows:
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(20 ILCS 2630/5.2)
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Sec. 5.2. Expungement, sealing, and immediate sealing. |
(a) General Provisions. |
(1) Definitions. In this Act, words and phrases have
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the meanings set forth in this subsection, except when a
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particular context clearly requires a different meaning. |
(A) The following terms shall have the meanings |
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ascribed to them in the Unified Code of Corrections, |
730 ILCS 5/5-1-2 through 5/5-1-22: |
(i) Business Offense (730 ILCS 5/5-1-2), |
(ii) Charge (730 ILCS 5/5-1-3), |
(iii) Court (730 ILCS 5/5-1-6), |
(iv) Defendant (730 ILCS 5/5-1-7), |
(v) Felony (730 ILCS 5/5-1-9), |
(vi) Imprisonment (730 ILCS 5/5-1-10), |
(vii) Judgment (730 ILCS 5/5-1-12), |
(viii) Misdemeanor (730 ILCS 5/5-1-14), |
(ix) Offense (730 ILCS 5/5-1-15), |
(x) Parole (730 ILCS 5/5-1-16), |
(xi) Petty Offense (730 ILCS 5/5-1-17), |
(xii) Probation (730 ILCS 5/5-1-18), |
(xiii) Sentence (730 ILCS 5/5-1-19), |
(xiv) Supervision (730 ILCS 5/5-1-21), and |
(xv) Victim (730 ILCS 5/5-1-22). |
(B) As used in this Section, "charge not initiated |
by arrest" means a charge (as defined by 730 ILCS |
5/5-1-3) brought against a defendant where the |
defendant is not arrested prior to or as a direct |
result of the charge. |
(C) "Conviction" means a judgment of conviction or |
sentence entered upon a plea of guilty or upon a |
verdict or finding of guilty of an offense, rendered by |
a legally constituted jury or by a court of competent |
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jurisdiction authorized to try the case without a jury. |
An order of supervision successfully completed by the |
petitioner is not a conviction. An order of qualified |
probation (as defined in subsection (a)(1)(J)) |
successfully completed by the petitioner is not a |
conviction. An order of supervision or an order of |
qualified probation that is terminated |
unsatisfactorily is a conviction, unless the |
unsatisfactory termination is reversed, vacated, or |
modified and the judgment of conviction, if any, is |
reversed or vacated. |
(D) "Criminal offense" means a petty offense, |
business offense, misdemeanor, felony, or municipal |
ordinance violation (as defined in subsection |
(a)(1)(H)). As used in this Section, a minor traffic |
offense (as defined in subsection (a)(1)(G)) shall not |
be considered a criminal offense. |
(E) "Expunge" means to physically destroy the |
records or return them to the petitioner and to |
obliterate the petitioner's name from any official |
index or public record, or both. Nothing in this Act |
shall require the physical destruction of the circuit |
court file, but such records relating to arrests or |
charges, or both, ordered expunged shall be impounded |
as required by subsections (d)(9)(A)(ii) and |
(d)(9)(B)(ii). |
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(F) As used in this Section, "last sentence" means |
the sentence, order of supervision, or order of |
qualified probation (as defined by subsection |
(a)(1)(J)), for a criminal offense (as defined by |
subsection (a)(1)(D)) that terminates last in time in |
any jurisdiction, regardless of whether the petitioner |
has included the criminal offense for which the |
sentence or order of supervision or qualified |
probation was imposed in his or her petition. If |
multiple sentences, orders of supervision, or orders |
of qualified probation terminate on the same day and |
are last in time, they shall be collectively considered |
the "last sentence" regardless of whether they were |
ordered to run concurrently. |
(G) "Minor traffic offense" means a petty offense, |
business offense, or Class C misdemeanor under the |
Illinois Vehicle Code or a similar provision of a |
municipal or local ordinance. |
(G-5) "Minor Cannabis Offense" means a violation |
of Section 4 or 5 of the Cannabis Control Act |
concerning not more than 30 grams of any substance |
containing cannabis, provided the violation did not |
include a penalty enhancement under Section 7 of the |
Cannabis Control Act and is not associated with an |
arrest, conviction or other disposition for a violent |
crime as defined in subsection (c) of Section 3 of the |
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Rights of Crime Victims and Witnesses Act. |
(H) "Municipal ordinance violation" means an |
offense defined by a municipal or local ordinance that |
is criminal in nature and with which the petitioner was |
charged or for which the petitioner was arrested and |
released without charging. |
(I) "Petitioner" means an adult or a minor |
prosecuted as an
adult who has applied for relief under |
this Section. |
(J) "Qualified probation" means an order of |
probation under Section 10 of the Cannabis Control Act, |
Section 410 of the Illinois Controlled Substances Act, |
Section 70 of the Methamphetamine Control and |
Community Protection Act, Section 5-6-3.3 or 5-6-3.4 |
of the Unified Code of Corrections, Section |
12-4.3(b)(1) and (2) of the Criminal Code of 1961 (as |
those provisions existed before their deletion by |
Public Act 89-313), Section 10-102 of the Illinois |
Alcoholism and Other Drug Dependency Act, Section |
40-10 of the Substance Use Disorder Act, or Section 10 |
of the Steroid Control Act. For the purpose of this |
Section, "successful completion" of an order of |
qualified probation under Section 10-102 of the |
Illinois Alcoholism and Other Drug Dependency Act and |
Section 40-10 of the Substance Use Disorder Act means |
that the probation was terminated satisfactorily and |
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the judgment of conviction was vacated. |
(K) "Seal" means to physically and electronically |
maintain the records, unless the records would |
otherwise be destroyed due to age, but to make the |
records unavailable without a court order, subject to |
the exceptions in Sections 12 and 13 of this Act. The |
petitioner's name shall also be obliterated from the |
official index required to be kept by the circuit court |
clerk under Section 16 of the Clerks of Courts Act, but |
any index issued by the circuit court clerk before the |
entry of the order to seal shall not be affected. |
(L) "Sexual offense committed against a minor" |
includes, but is
not limited to, the offenses of |
indecent solicitation of a child
or criminal sexual |
abuse when the victim of such offense is
under 18 years |
of age. |
(M) "Terminate" as it relates to a sentence or |
order of supervision or qualified probation includes |
either satisfactory or unsatisfactory termination of |
the sentence, unless otherwise specified in this |
Section. A sentence is terminated notwithstanding any |
outstanding financial legal obligation. |
(2) Minor Traffic Offenses.
Orders of supervision or |
convictions for minor traffic offenses shall not affect a |
petitioner's eligibility to expunge or seal records |
pursuant to this Section. |
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(2.5) Commencing 180 days after July 29, 2016 (the |
effective date of Public Act 99-697), the law enforcement |
agency issuing the citation shall automatically expunge, |
on or before January 1 and July 1 of each year, the law |
enforcement records of a person found to have committed a |
civil law violation of subsection (a) of Section 4 of the |
Cannabis Control Act or subsection (c) of Section 3.5 of |
the Drug Paraphernalia Control Act in the law enforcement |
agency's possession or control and which contains the final |
satisfactory disposition which pertain to the person |
issued a citation for that offense.
The law enforcement |
agency shall provide by rule the process for access, |
review, and to confirm the automatic expungement by the law |
enforcement agency issuing the citation.
Commencing 180 |
days after July 29, 2016 (the effective date of Public Act |
99-697), the clerk of the circuit court shall expunge, upon |
order of the court, or in the absence of a court order on |
or before January 1 and July 1 of each year, the court |
records of a person found in the circuit court to have |
committed a civil law violation of subsection (a) of |
Section 4 of the Cannabis Control Act or subsection (c) of |
Section 3.5 of the Drug Paraphernalia Control Act in the |
clerk's possession or control and which contains the final |
satisfactory disposition which pertain to the person |
issued a citation for any of those offenses. |
(3) Exclusions. Except as otherwise provided in |
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subsections (b)(5), (b)(6), (b)(8), (e), (e-5), and (e-6) |
of this Section, the court shall not order: |
(A) the sealing or expungement of the records of |
arrests or charges not initiated by arrest that result |
in an order of supervision for or conviction of:
(i) |
any sexual offense committed against a
minor; (ii) |
Section 11-501 of the Illinois Vehicle Code or a |
similar provision of a local ordinance; or (iii) |
Section 11-503 of the Illinois Vehicle Code or a |
similar provision of a local ordinance, unless the |
arrest or charge is for a misdemeanor violation of |
subsection (a) of Section 11-503 or a similar provision |
of a local ordinance, that occurred prior to the |
offender reaching the age of 25 years and the offender |
has no other conviction for violating Section 11-501 or |
11-503 of the Illinois Vehicle Code or a similar |
provision of a local ordinance. |
(B) the sealing or expungement of records of minor |
traffic offenses (as defined in subsection (a)(1)(G)), |
unless the petitioner was arrested and released |
without charging. |
(C) the sealing of the records of arrests or |
charges not initiated by arrest which result in an |
order of supervision or a conviction for the following |
offenses: |
(i) offenses included in Article 11 of the |
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Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012 |
or a similar provision of a local ordinance, except |
Section 11-14 and a misdemeanor violation of |
Section 11-30 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the |
Criminal Code of 2012, or a similar provision of a |
local ordinance; |
(ii) Section 11-1.50, 12-3.4, 12-15, 12-30, |
26-5, or 48-1 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the |
Criminal Code of 2012, or a similar provision of a |
local ordinance; |
(iii) Sections 12-3.1 or 12-3.2 of the |
Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012, |
or Section 125 of the Stalking No Contact Order |
Act, or Section 219 of the Civil No Contact Order |
Act, or a similar provision of a local ordinance; |
(iv) Class A misdemeanors or felony offenses |
under the Humane Care for Animals Act; or |
(v) any offense or attempted offense that |
would subject a person to registration under the |
Sex Offender Registration Act. |
(D) (blank). |
(b) Expungement. |
(1) A petitioner may petition the circuit court to |
expunge the
records of his or her arrests and charges not |
initiated by arrest when each arrest or charge not |
initiated by arrest
sought to be expunged resulted in:
(i) |
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acquittal, dismissal, or the petitioner's release without |
charging, unless excluded by subsection (a)(3)(B);
(ii) a |
conviction which was vacated or reversed, unless excluded |
by subsection (a)(3)(B);
(iii) an order of supervision and |
such supervision was successfully completed by the |
petitioner, unless excluded by subsection (a)(3)(A) or |
(a)(3)(B); or
(iv) an order of qualified probation (as |
defined in subsection (a)(1)(J)) and such probation was |
successfully completed by the petitioner. |
(1.5) When a petitioner seeks to have a record of |
arrest expunged under this Section, and the offender has |
been convicted of a criminal offense, the State's Attorney |
may object to the expungement on the grounds that the |
records contain specific relevant information aside from |
the mere fact of the arrest. |
(2) Time frame for filing a petition to expunge. |
(A) When the arrest or charge not initiated by |
arrest sought to be expunged resulted in an acquittal, |
dismissal, the petitioner's release without charging, |
or the reversal or vacation of a conviction, there is |
no waiting period to petition for the expungement of |
such records. |
(B) When the arrest or charge not initiated by |
arrest
sought to be expunged resulted in an order of |
supervision, successfully
completed by the petitioner, |
the following time frames will apply: |
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(i) Those arrests or charges that resulted in |
orders of
supervision under Section 3-707, 3-708, |
3-710, or 5-401.3 of the Illinois Vehicle Code or a |
similar provision of a local ordinance, or under |
Section 11-1.50, 12-3.2, or 12-15 of the Criminal |
Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012, or a |
similar provision of a local ordinance, shall not |
be eligible for expungement until 5 years have |
passed following the satisfactory termination of |
the supervision. |
(i-5) Those arrests or charges that resulted |
in orders of supervision for a misdemeanor |
violation of subsection (a) of Section 11-503 of |
the Illinois Vehicle Code or a similar provision of |
a local ordinance, that occurred prior to the |
offender reaching the age of 25 years and the |
offender has no other conviction for violating |
Section 11-501 or 11-503 of the Illinois Vehicle |
Code or a similar provision of a local ordinance |
shall not be eligible for expungement until the |
petitioner has reached the age of 25 years. |
(ii) Those arrests or charges that resulted in |
orders
of supervision for any other offenses shall |
not be
eligible for expungement until 2 years have |
passed
following the satisfactory termination of |
the supervision. |
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(C) When the arrest or charge not initiated by |
arrest sought to
be expunged resulted in an order of |
qualified probation, successfully
completed by the |
petitioner, such records shall not be eligible for
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expungement until 5 years have passed following the |
satisfactory
termination of the probation. |
(3) Those records maintained by the Department for
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persons arrested prior to their 17th birthday shall be
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expunged as provided in Section 5-915 of the Juvenile Court
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Act of 1987. |
(4) Whenever a person has been arrested for or |
convicted of any
offense, in the name of a person whose |
identity he or she has stolen or otherwise
come into |
possession of, the aggrieved person from whom the identity
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was stolen or otherwise obtained without authorization,
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upon learning of the person having been arrested using his
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or her identity, may, upon verified petition to the chief |
judge of
the circuit wherein the arrest was made, have a |
court order
entered nunc pro tunc by the Chief Judge to |
correct the
arrest record, conviction record, if any, and |
all official
records of the arresting authority, the |
Department, other
criminal justice agencies, the |
prosecutor, and the trial
court concerning such arrest, if |
any, by removing his or her name
from all such records in |
connection with the arrest and
conviction, if any, and by |
inserting in the records the
name of the offender, if known |
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or ascertainable, in lieu of
the aggrieved's name. The |
records of the circuit court clerk shall be sealed until |
further order of
the court upon good cause shown and the |
name of the
aggrieved person obliterated on the official |
index
required to be kept by the circuit court clerk under
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Section 16 of the Clerks of Courts Act, but the order shall
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not affect any index issued by the circuit court clerk
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before the entry of the order. Nothing in this Section
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shall limit the Department of State Police or other
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criminal justice agencies or prosecutors from listing
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under an offender's name the false names he or she has
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used. |
(5) Whenever a person has been convicted of criminal
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sexual assault, aggravated criminal sexual assault,
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predatory criminal sexual assault of a child, criminal
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sexual abuse, or aggravated criminal sexual abuse, the
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victim of that offense may request that the State's
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Attorney of the county in which the conviction occurred
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file a verified petition with the presiding trial judge at
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the petitioner's trial to have a court order entered to |
seal
the records of the circuit court clerk in connection
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with the proceedings of the trial court concerning that
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offense. However, the records of the arresting authority
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and the Department of State Police concerning the offense
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shall not be sealed. The court, upon good cause shown,
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shall make the records of the circuit court clerk in
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connection with the proceedings of the trial court
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concerning the offense available for public inspection. |
(6) If a conviction has been set aside on direct review
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or on collateral attack and the court determines by clear
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and convincing evidence that the petitioner was factually
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innocent of the charge, the court that finds the petitioner |
factually innocent of the charge shall enter an
expungement |
order for the conviction for which the petitioner has been |
determined to be innocent as provided in subsection (b) of |
Section
5-5-4 of the Unified Code of Corrections. |
(7) Nothing in this Section shall prevent the |
Department of
State Police from maintaining all records of |
any person who
is admitted to probation upon terms and |
conditions and who
fulfills those terms and conditions |
pursuant to Section 10
of the Cannabis Control Act, Section |
410 of the Illinois
Controlled Substances Act, Section 70 |
of the
Methamphetamine Control and Community Protection |
Act,
Section 5-6-3.3 or 5-6-3.4 of the Unified Code of |
Corrections, Section 12-4.3 or subdivision (b)(1) of |
Section 12-3.05 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the |
Criminal Code of 2012, Section 10-102
of the Illinois |
Alcoholism and Other Drug Dependency Act,
Section 40-10 of |
the Substance Use Disorder Act, or Section 10 of the |
Steroid Control Act. |
(8) If the petitioner has been granted a certificate of |
innocence under Section 2-702 of the Code of Civil |
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Procedure, the court that grants the certificate of |
innocence shall also enter an order expunging the |
conviction for which the petitioner has been determined to |
be innocent as provided in subsection (h) of Section 2-702 |
of the Code of Civil Procedure. |
(c) Sealing. |
(1) Applicability. Notwithstanding any other provision |
of this Act to the contrary, and cumulative with any rights |
to expungement of criminal records, this subsection |
authorizes the sealing of criminal records of adults and of |
minors prosecuted as adults. Subsection (g) of this Section |
provides for immediate sealing of certain records. |
(2) Eligible Records. The following records may be |
sealed: |
(A) All arrests resulting in release without |
charging; |
(B) Arrests or charges not initiated by arrest |
resulting in acquittal, dismissal, or conviction when |
the conviction was reversed or vacated, except as |
excluded by subsection (a)(3)(B); |
(C) Arrests or charges not initiated by arrest |
resulting in orders of supervision, including orders |
of supervision for municipal ordinance violations, |
successfully completed by the petitioner, unless |
excluded by subsection (a)(3); |
(D) Arrests or charges not initiated by arrest |
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resulting in convictions, including convictions on |
municipal ordinance violations, unless excluded by |
subsection (a)(3); |
(E) Arrests or charges not initiated by arrest |
resulting in orders of first offender probation under |
Section 10 of the Cannabis Control Act, Section 410 of |
the Illinois Controlled Substances Act, Section 70 of |
the Methamphetamine Control and Community Protection |
Act, or Section 5-6-3.3 of the Unified Code of |
Corrections; and |
(F) Arrests or charges not initiated by arrest |
resulting in felony convictions unless otherwise |
excluded by subsection (a) paragraph (3) of this |
Section. |
(3) When Records Are Eligible to Be Sealed. Records |
identified as eligible under subsection (c)(2) may be |
sealed as follows: |
(A) Records identified as eligible under |
subsection (c)(2)(A) and (c)(2)(B) may be sealed at any |
time. |
(B) Except as otherwise provided in subparagraph |
(E) of this paragraph (3), records identified as |
eligible under subsection (c)(2)(C) may be sealed
2 |
years after the termination of petitioner's last |
sentence (as defined in subsection (a)(1)(F)). |
(C) Except as otherwise provided in subparagraph |
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(E) of this paragraph (3), records identified as |
eligible under subsections (c)(2)(D), (c)(2)(E), and |
(c)(2)(F) may be sealed 3 years after the termination |
of the petitioner's last sentence (as defined in |
subsection (a)(1)(F)). Convictions requiring public |
registration under the Arsonist Registration Act, the |
Sex Offender Registration Act, or the Murderer and |
Violent Offender Against Youth Registration Act may |
not be sealed until the petitioner is no longer |
required to register under that relevant Act. |
(D) Records identified in subsection |
(a)(3)(A)(iii) may be sealed after the petitioner has |
reached the age of 25 years. |
(E) Records identified as eligible under |
subsections (c)(2)(C), (c)(2)(D), (c)(2)(E), or |
(c)(2)(F) may be sealed upon termination of the |
petitioner's last sentence if the petitioner earned a |
high school diploma, associate's degree, career |
certificate, vocational technical certification, or |
bachelor's degree, or passed the high school level Test |
of General Educational Development, during the period |
of his or her sentence or mandatory supervised release. |
This subparagraph shall apply only to a petitioner who |
has not completed the same educational goal prior to |
the period of his or her sentence or mandatory |
supervised release. If a petition for sealing eligible |
|
records filed under this subparagraph is denied by the |
court, the time periods under subparagraph (B) or (C) |
shall apply to any subsequent petition for sealing |
filed by the petitioner. |
(4) Subsequent felony convictions. A person may not |
have
subsequent felony conviction records sealed as |
provided in this subsection
(c) if he or she is convicted |
of any felony offense after the date of the
sealing of |
prior felony convictions as provided in this subsection |
(c). The court may, upon conviction for a subsequent felony |
offense, order the unsealing of prior felony conviction |
records previously ordered sealed by the court. |
(5) Notice of eligibility for sealing. Upon entry of a |
disposition for an eligible record under this subsection |
(c), the petitioner shall be informed by the court of the |
right to have the records sealed and the procedures for the |
sealing of the records. |
(d) Procedure. The following procedures apply to |
expungement under subsections (b), (e), and (e-6) and sealing |
under subsections (c) and (e-5): |
(1) Filing the petition. Upon becoming eligible to |
petition for
the expungement or sealing of records under |
this Section, the petitioner shall file a petition |
requesting the expungement
or sealing of records with the |
clerk of the court where the arrests occurred or the |
charges were brought, or both. If arrests occurred or |
|
charges were brought in multiple jurisdictions, a petition |
must be filed in each such jurisdiction. The petitioner |
shall pay the applicable fee, except no fee shall be |
required if the petitioner has obtained a court order |
waiving fees under Supreme Court Rule 298 or it is |
otherwise waived. |
(1.5) County fee waiver pilot program.
From August 9, |
2019 (the effective date of Public Act 101-306) through |
December 31, 2020, in a county of 3,000,000 or more |
inhabitants, no fee shall be required to be paid by a |
petitioner if the records sought to be expunged or sealed |
were arrests resulting in release without charging or |
arrests or charges not initiated by arrest resulting in |
acquittal, dismissal, or conviction when the conviction |
was reversed or vacated, unless excluded by subsection |
(a)(3)(B). The provisions of this paragraph (1.5), other |
than this sentence, are inoperative on and after January 1, |
2022 2021 . |
(2) Contents of petition. The petition shall be
|
verified and shall contain the petitioner's name, date of
|
birth, current address and, for each arrest or charge not |
initiated by
arrest sought to be sealed or expunged, the |
case number, the date of
arrest (if any), the identity of |
the arresting authority, and such
other information as the |
court may require. During the pendency
of the proceeding, |
the petitioner shall promptly notify the
circuit court |
|
clerk of any change of his or her address. If the |
petitioner has received a certificate of eligibility for |
sealing from the Prisoner Review Board under paragraph (10) |
of subsection (a) of Section 3-3-2 of the Unified Code of |
Corrections, the certificate shall be attached to the |
petition. |
(3) Drug test. The petitioner must attach to the |
petition proof that the petitioner has passed a test taken |
within 30 days before the filing of the petition showing |
the absence within his or her body of all illegal |
substances as defined by the Illinois Controlled |
Substances Act, the Methamphetamine Control and Community |
Protection Act, and the Cannabis Control Act if he or she |
is petitioning to: |
(A) seal felony records under clause (c)(2)(E); |
(B) seal felony records for a violation of the |
Illinois Controlled Substances Act, the |
Methamphetamine Control and Community Protection Act, |
or the Cannabis Control Act under clause (c)(2)(F); |
(C) seal felony records under subsection (e-5); or |
(D) expunge felony records of a qualified |
probation under clause (b)(1)(iv). |
(4) Service of petition. The circuit court clerk shall |
promptly
serve a copy of the petition and documentation to |
support the petition under subsection (e-5) or (e-6) on the |
State's Attorney or
prosecutor charged with the duty of |
|
prosecuting the
offense, the Department of State Police, |
the arresting
agency and the chief legal officer of the |
unit of local
government effecting the arrest. |
(5) Objections. |
(A) Any party entitled to notice of the petition |
may file an objection to the petition. All objections |
shall be in writing, shall be filed with the circuit |
court clerk, and shall state with specificity the basis |
of the objection. Whenever a person who has been |
convicted of an offense is granted
a pardon by the |
Governor which specifically authorizes expungement, an |
objection to the petition may not be filed. |
(B) Objections to a petition to expunge or seal |
must be filed within 60 days of the date of service of |
the petition. |
(6) Entry of order. |
(A) The Chief Judge of the circuit wherein the |
charge was brought, any judge of that circuit |
designated by the Chief Judge, or in counties of less |
than 3,000,000 inhabitants, the presiding trial judge |
at the petitioner's trial, if any, shall rule on the |
petition to expunge or seal as set forth in this |
subsection (d)(6). |
(B) Unless the State's Attorney or prosecutor, the |
Department of
State Police, the arresting agency, or |
the chief legal officer
files an objection to the |
|
petition to expunge or seal within 60 days from the |
date of service of the petition, the court shall enter |
an order granting or denying the petition. |
(C) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, |
the court shall not deny a petition for sealing under |
this Section because the petitioner has not satisfied |
an outstanding legal financial obligation established, |
imposed, or originated by a court, law enforcement |
agency, or a municipal, State, county, or other unit of |
local government, including, but not limited to, any |
cost, assessment, fine, or fee. An outstanding legal |
financial obligation does not include any court |
ordered restitution to a victim under Section 5-5-6 of |
the Unified Code of Corrections, unless the |
restitution has been converted to a civil judgment. |
Nothing in this subparagraph (C) waives, rescinds, or |
abrogates a legal financial obligation or otherwise |
eliminates or affects the right of the holder of any |
financial obligation to pursue collection under |
applicable federal, State, or local law. |
(7) Hearings. If an objection is filed, the court shall |
set a date for a hearing and notify the petitioner and all |
parties entitled to notice of the petition of the hearing |
date at least 30 days prior to the hearing. Prior to the |
hearing, the State's Attorney shall consult with the |
Department as to the appropriateness of the relief sought |
|
in the petition to expunge or seal. At the hearing, the |
court shall hear evidence on whether the petition should or |
should not be granted, and shall grant or deny the petition |
to expunge or seal the records based on the evidence |
presented at the hearing. The court may consider the |
following: |
(A) the strength of the evidence supporting the |
defendant's conviction; |
(B) the reasons for retention of the conviction |
records by the State; |
(C) the petitioner's age, criminal record history, |
and employment history; |
(D) the period of time between the petitioner's |
arrest on the charge resulting in the conviction and |
the filing of the petition under this Section; and |
(E) the specific adverse consequences the |
petitioner may be subject to if the petition is denied. |
(8) Service of order. After entering an order to |
expunge or
seal records, the court must provide copies of |
the order to the
Department, in a form and manner |
prescribed by the Department,
to the petitioner, to the |
State's Attorney or prosecutor
charged with the duty of |
prosecuting the offense, to the
arresting agency, to the |
chief legal officer of the unit of
local government |
effecting the arrest, and to such other
criminal justice |
agencies as may be ordered by the court. |
|
(9) Implementation of order. |
(A) Upon entry of an order to expunge records |
pursuant to (b)(2)(A) or (b)(2)(B)(ii), or both: |
(i) the records shall be expunged (as defined |
in subsection (a)(1)(E)) by the arresting agency, |
the Department, and any other agency as ordered by |
the court, within 60 days of the date of service of |
the order, unless a motion to vacate, modify, or |
reconsider the order is filed pursuant to |
paragraph (12) of subsection (d) of this Section; |
(ii) the records of the circuit court clerk |
shall be impounded until further order of the court |
upon good cause shown and the name of the |
petitioner obliterated on the official index |
required to be kept by the circuit court clerk |
under Section 16 of the Clerks of Courts Act, but |
the order shall not affect any index issued by the |
circuit court clerk before the entry of the order; |
and |
(iii) in response to an inquiry for expunged |
records, the court, the Department, or the agency |
receiving such inquiry, shall reply as it does in |
response to inquiries when no records ever |
existed. |
(B) Upon entry of an order to expunge records |
pursuant to (b)(2)(B)(i) or (b)(2)(C), or both: |
|
(i) the records shall be expunged (as defined |
in subsection (a)(1)(E)) by the arresting agency |
and any other agency as ordered by the court, |
within 60 days of the date of service of the order, |
unless a motion to vacate, modify, or reconsider |
the order is filed pursuant to paragraph (12) of |
subsection (d) of this Section; |
(ii) the records of the circuit court clerk |
shall be impounded until further order of the court |
upon good cause shown and the name of the |
petitioner obliterated on the official index |
required to be kept by the circuit court clerk |
under Section 16 of the Clerks of Courts Act, but |
the order shall not affect any index issued by the |
circuit court clerk before the entry of the order; |
(iii) the records shall be impounded by the
|
Department within 60 days of the date of service of |
the order as ordered by the court, unless a motion |
to vacate, modify, or reconsider the order is filed |
pursuant to paragraph (12) of subsection (d) of |
this Section; |
(iv) records impounded by the Department may |
be disseminated by the Department only as required |
by law or to the arresting authority, the State's |
Attorney, and the court upon a later arrest for the |
same or a similar offense or for the purpose of |
|
sentencing for any subsequent felony, and to the |
Department of Corrections upon conviction for any |
offense; and |
(v) in response to an inquiry for such records |
from anyone not authorized by law to access such |
records, the court, the Department, or the agency |
receiving such inquiry shall reply as it does in |
response to inquiries when no records ever |
existed. |
(B-5) Upon entry of an order to expunge records |
under subsection (e-6): |
(i) the records shall be expunged (as defined |
in subsection (a)(1)(E)) by the arresting agency |
and any other agency as ordered by the court, |
within 60 days of the date of service of the order, |
unless a motion to vacate, modify, or reconsider |
the order is filed under paragraph (12) of |
subsection (d) of this Section; |
(ii) the records of the circuit court clerk |
shall be impounded until further order of the court |
upon good cause shown and the name of the |
petitioner obliterated on the official index |
required to be kept by the circuit court clerk |
under Section 16 of the Clerks of Courts Act, but |
the order shall not affect any index issued by the |
circuit court clerk before the entry of the order; |
|
(iii) the records shall be impounded by the
|
Department within 60 days of the date of service of |
the order as ordered by the court, unless a motion |
to vacate, modify, or reconsider the order is filed |
under paragraph (12) of subsection (d) of this |
Section; |
(iv) records impounded by the Department may |
be disseminated by the Department only as required |
by law or to the arresting authority, the State's |
Attorney, and the court upon a later arrest for the |
same or a similar offense or for the purpose of |
sentencing for any subsequent felony, and to the |
Department of Corrections upon conviction for any |
offense; and |
(v) in response to an inquiry for these records |
from anyone not authorized by law to access the |
records, the court, the Department, or the agency |
receiving the inquiry shall reply as it does in |
response to inquiries when no records ever |
existed. |
(C) Upon entry of an order to seal records under |
subsection
(c), the arresting agency, any other agency |
as ordered by the court, the Department, and the court |
shall seal the records (as defined in subsection |
(a)(1)(K)). In response to an inquiry for such records, |
from anyone not authorized by law to access such |
|
records, the court, the Department, or the agency |
receiving such inquiry shall reply as it does in |
response to inquiries when no records ever existed. |
(D) The Department shall send written notice to the |
petitioner of its compliance with each order to expunge |
or seal records within 60 days of the date of service |
of that order or, if a motion to vacate, modify, or |
reconsider is filed, within 60 days of service of the |
order resolving the motion, if that order requires the |
Department to expunge or seal records. In the event of |
an appeal from the circuit court order, the Department |
shall send written notice to the petitioner of its |
compliance with an Appellate Court or Supreme Court |
judgment to expunge or seal records within 60 days of |
the issuance of the court's mandate. The notice is not |
required while any motion to vacate, modify, or |
reconsider, or any appeal or petition for |
discretionary appellate review, is pending. |
(E) Upon motion, the court may order that a sealed |
judgment or other court record necessary to |
demonstrate the amount of any legal financial |
obligation due and owing be made available for the |
limited purpose of collecting any legal financial |
obligations owed by the petitioner that were |
established, imposed, or originated in the criminal |
proceeding for which those records have been sealed. |
|
The records made available under this subparagraph (E) |
shall not be entered into the official index required |
to be kept by the circuit court clerk under Section 16 |
of the Clerks of Courts Act and shall be immediately |
re-impounded upon the collection of the outstanding |
financial obligations. |
(F) Notwithstanding any other provision of this |
Section, a circuit court clerk may access a sealed |
record for the limited purpose of collecting payment |
for any legal financial obligations that were |
established, imposed, or originated in the criminal |
proceedings for which those records have been sealed. |
(10) Fees. The Department may charge the petitioner a |
fee equivalent to the cost of processing any order to |
expunge or seal records. Notwithstanding any provision of |
the Clerks of Courts Act to the contrary, the circuit court |
clerk may charge a fee equivalent to the cost associated |
with the sealing or expungement of records by the circuit |
court clerk. From the total filing fee collected for the |
petition to seal or expunge, the circuit court clerk shall |
deposit $10 into the Circuit Court Clerk Operation and |
Administrative Fund, to be used to offset the costs |
incurred by the circuit court clerk in performing the |
additional duties required to serve the petition to seal or |
expunge on all parties. The circuit court clerk shall |
collect and forward the Department of State Police portion |
|
of the fee to the Department and it shall be deposited in |
the State Police Services Fund. If the record brought under |
an expungement petition was previously sealed under this |
Section, the fee for the expungement petition for that same |
record shall be waived. |
(11) Final Order. No court order issued under the |
expungement or sealing provisions of this Section shall |
become final for purposes of appeal until 30 days after |
service of the order on the petitioner and all parties |
entitled to notice of the petition. |
(12) Motion to Vacate, Modify, or Reconsider. Under |
Section 2-1203 of the Code of Civil Procedure, the |
petitioner or any party entitled to notice may file a |
motion to vacate, modify, or reconsider the order granting |
or denying the petition to expunge or seal within 60 days |
of service of the order. If filed more than 60 days after |
service of the order, a petition to vacate, modify, or |
reconsider shall comply with subsection (c) of Section |
2-1401 of the Code of Civil Procedure. Upon filing of a |
motion to vacate, modify, or reconsider, notice of the |
motion shall be served upon the petitioner and all parties |
entitled to notice of the petition. |
(13) Effect of Order. An order granting a petition |
under the expungement or sealing provisions of this Section |
shall not be considered void because it fails to comply |
with the provisions of this Section or because of any error |
|
asserted in a motion to vacate, modify, or reconsider. The |
circuit court retains jurisdiction to determine whether |
the order is voidable and to vacate, modify, or reconsider |
its terms based on a motion filed under paragraph (12) of |
this subsection (d). |
(14) Compliance with Order Granting Petition to Seal |
Records. Unless a court has entered a stay of an order |
granting a petition to seal, all parties entitled to notice |
of the petition must fully comply with the terms of the |
order within 60 days of service of the order even if a |
party is seeking relief from the order through a motion |
filed under paragraph (12) of this subsection (d) or is |
appealing the order. |
(15) Compliance with Order Granting Petition to |
Expunge Records. While a party is seeking relief from the |
order granting the petition to expunge through a motion |
filed under paragraph (12) of this subsection (d) or is |
appealing the order, and unless a court has entered a stay |
of that order, the parties entitled to notice of the |
petition must seal, but need not expunge, the records until |
there is a final order on the motion for relief or, in the |
case of an appeal, the issuance of that court's mandate. |
(16) The changes to this subsection (d) made by Public |
Act 98-163 apply to all petitions pending on August 5, 2013 |
(the effective date of Public Act 98-163) and to all orders |
ruling on a petition to expunge or seal on or after August |
|
5, 2013 (the effective date of Public Act 98-163). |
(e) Whenever a person who has been convicted of an offense |
is granted
a pardon by the Governor which specifically |
authorizes expungement, he or she may,
upon verified petition |
to the Chief Judge of the circuit where the person had
been |
convicted, any judge of the circuit designated by the Chief |
Judge, or in
counties of less than 3,000,000 inhabitants, the |
presiding trial judge at the
defendant's trial, have a court |
order entered expunging the record of
arrest from the official |
records of the arresting authority and order that the
records |
of the circuit court clerk and the Department be sealed until
|
further order of the court upon good cause shown or as |
otherwise provided
herein, and the name of the defendant |
obliterated from the official index
requested to be kept by the |
circuit court clerk under Section 16 of the Clerks
of Courts |
Act in connection with the arrest and conviction for the |
offense for
which he or she had been pardoned but the order |
shall not affect any index issued by
the circuit court clerk |
before the entry of the order. All records sealed by
the |
Department may be disseminated by the Department only to the |
arresting authority, the State's Attorney, and the court upon a |
later
arrest for the same or similar offense or for the purpose |
of sentencing for any
subsequent felony. Upon conviction for |
any subsequent offense, the Department
of Corrections shall |
have access to all sealed records of the Department
pertaining |
to that individual. Upon entry of the order of expungement, the
|
|
circuit court clerk shall promptly mail a copy of the order to |
the
person who was pardoned. |
(e-5) Whenever a person who has been convicted of an |
offense is granted a certificate of eligibility for sealing by |
the Prisoner Review Board which specifically authorizes |
sealing, he or she may, upon verified petition to the Chief |
Judge of the circuit where the person had been convicted, any |
judge of the circuit designated by the Chief Judge, or in |
counties of less than 3,000,000 inhabitants, the presiding |
trial judge at the petitioner's trial, have a court order |
entered sealing the record of arrest from the official records |
of the arresting authority and order that the records of the |
circuit court clerk and the Department be sealed until further |
order of the court upon good cause shown or as otherwise |
provided herein, and the name of the petitioner obliterated |
from the official index requested to be kept by the circuit |
court clerk under Section 16 of the Clerks of Courts Act in |
connection with the arrest and conviction for the offense for |
which he or she had been granted the certificate but the order |
shall not affect any index issued by the circuit court clerk |
before the entry of the order. All records sealed by the |
Department may be disseminated by the Department only as |
required by this Act or to the arresting authority, a law |
enforcement agency, the State's Attorney, and the court upon a |
later arrest for the same or similar offense or for the purpose |
of sentencing for any subsequent felony. Upon conviction for |
|
any subsequent offense, the Department of Corrections shall |
have access to all sealed records of the Department pertaining |
to that individual. Upon entry of the order of sealing, the |
circuit court clerk shall promptly mail a copy of the order to |
the person who was granted the certificate of eligibility for |
sealing. |
(e-6) Whenever a person who has been convicted of an |
offense is granted a certificate of eligibility for expungement |
by the Prisoner Review Board which specifically authorizes |
expungement, he or she may, upon verified petition to the Chief |
Judge of the circuit where the person had been convicted, any |
judge of the circuit designated by the Chief Judge, or in |
counties of less than 3,000,000 inhabitants, the presiding |
trial judge at the petitioner's trial, have a court order |
entered expunging the record of arrest from the official |
records of the arresting authority and order that the records |
of the circuit court clerk and the Department be sealed until |
further order of the court upon good cause shown or as |
otherwise provided herein, and the name of the petitioner |
obliterated from the official index requested to be kept by the |
circuit court clerk under Section 16 of the Clerks of Courts |
Act in connection with the arrest and conviction for the |
offense for which he or she had been granted the certificate |
but the order shall not affect any index issued by the circuit |
court clerk before the entry of the order. All records sealed |
by the Department may be disseminated by the Department only as |
|
required by this Act or to the arresting authority, a law |
enforcement agency, the State's Attorney, and the court upon a |
later arrest for the same or similar offense or for the purpose |
of sentencing for any subsequent felony. Upon conviction for |
any subsequent offense, the Department of Corrections shall |
have access to all expunged records of the Department |
pertaining to that individual. Upon entry of the order of |
expungement, the circuit court clerk shall promptly mail a copy |
of the order to the person who was granted the certificate of |
eligibility for expungement. |
(f) Subject to available funding, the Illinois Department
|
of Corrections shall conduct a study of the impact of sealing,
|
especially on employment and recidivism rates, utilizing a
|
random sample of those who apply for the sealing of their
|
criminal records under Public Act 93-211. At the request of the
|
Illinois Department of Corrections, records of the Illinois
|
Department of Employment Security shall be utilized as
|
appropriate to assist in the study. The study shall not
|
disclose any data in a manner that would allow the
|
identification of any particular individual or employing unit.
|
The study shall be made available to the General Assembly no
|
later than September 1, 2010.
|
(g) Immediate Sealing. |
(1) Applicability. Notwithstanding any other provision |
of this Act to the contrary, and cumulative with any rights |
to expungement or sealing of criminal records, this |
|
subsection authorizes the immediate sealing of criminal |
records of adults and of minors prosecuted as adults. |
(2) Eligible Records. Arrests or charges not initiated |
by arrest resulting in acquittal or dismissal with |
prejudice, except as excluded by subsection (a)(3)(B), |
that occur on or after January 1, 2018 (the effective date |
of Public Act 100-282), may be sealed immediately if the |
petition is filed with the circuit court clerk on the same |
day and during the same hearing in which the case is |
disposed. |
(3) When Records are Eligible to be Immediately Sealed. |
Eligible records under paragraph (2) of this subsection (g) |
may be sealed immediately after entry of the final |
disposition of a case, notwithstanding the disposition of |
other charges in the same case. |
(4) Notice of Eligibility for Immediate Sealing. Upon |
entry of a disposition for an eligible record under this |
subsection (g), the defendant shall be informed by the |
court of his or her right to have eligible records |
immediately sealed and the procedure for the immediate |
sealing of these records. |
(5) Procedure. The following procedures apply to |
immediate sealing under this subsection (g). |
(A) Filing the Petition. Upon entry of the final |
disposition of the case, the defendant's attorney may |
immediately petition the court, on behalf of the |
|
defendant, for immediate sealing of eligible records |
under paragraph (2) of this subsection (g) that are |
entered on or after January 1, 2018 (the effective date |
of Public Act 100-282). The immediate sealing petition |
may be filed with the circuit court clerk during the |
hearing in which the final disposition of the case is |
entered. If the defendant's attorney does not file the |
petition for immediate sealing during the hearing, the |
defendant may file a petition for sealing at any time |
as authorized under subsection (c)(3)(A). |
(B) Contents of Petition. The immediate sealing |
petition shall be verified and shall contain the |
petitioner's name, date of birth, current address, and |
for each eligible record, the case number, the date of |
arrest if applicable, the identity of the arresting |
authority if applicable, and other information as the |
court may require. |
(C) Drug Test. The petitioner shall not be required |
to attach proof that he or she has passed a drug test. |
(D) Service of Petition. A copy of the petition |
shall be served on the State's Attorney in open court. |
The petitioner shall not be required to serve a copy of |
the petition on any other agency. |
(E) Entry of Order. The presiding trial judge shall |
enter an order granting or denying the petition for |
immediate sealing during the hearing in which it is |
|
filed. Petitions for immediate sealing shall be ruled |
on in the same hearing in which the final disposition |
of the case is entered. |
(F) Hearings. The court shall hear the petition for |
immediate sealing on the same day and during the same |
hearing in which the disposition is rendered. |
(G) Service of Order. An order to immediately seal |
eligible records shall be served in conformance with |
subsection (d)(8). |
(H) Implementation of Order. An order to |
immediately seal records shall be implemented in |
conformance with subsections (d)(9)(C) and (d)(9)(D). |
(I) Fees. The fee imposed by the circuit court |
clerk and the Department of State Police shall comply |
with paragraph (1) of subsection (d) of this Section. |
(J) Final Order. No court order issued under this |
subsection (g) shall become final for purposes of |
appeal until 30 days after service of the order on the |
petitioner and all parties entitled to service of the |
order in conformance with subsection (d)(8). |
(K) Motion to Vacate, Modify, or Reconsider. Under |
Section 2-1203 of the Code of Civil Procedure, the |
petitioner, State's Attorney, or the Department of |
State Police may file a motion to vacate, modify, or |
reconsider the order denying the petition to |
immediately seal within 60 days of service of the |
|
order. If filed more than 60 days after service of the |
order, a petition to vacate, modify, or reconsider |
shall comply with subsection (c) of Section 2-1401 of |
the Code of Civil Procedure. |
(L) Effect of Order. An order granting an immediate |
sealing petition shall not be considered void because |
it fails to comply with the provisions of this Section |
or because of an error asserted in a motion to vacate, |
modify, or reconsider. The circuit court retains |
jurisdiction to determine whether the order is |
voidable, and to vacate, modify, or reconsider its |
terms based on a motion filed under subparagraph (L) of |
this subsection (g). |
(M) Compliance with Order Granting Petition to |
Seal Records. Unless a court has entered a stay of an |
order granting a petition to immediately seal, all |
parties entitled to service of the order must fully |
comply with the terms of the order within 60 days of |
service of the order. |
(h) Sealing; trafficking victims. |
(1) A trafficking victim as defined by paragraph (10) |
of subsection (a) of Section 10-9 of the Criminal Code of |
2012 shall be eligible to petition for immediate sealing of |
his or her criminal record upon the completion of his or |
her last sentence if his or her participation in the |
underlying offense was a direct result of human trafficking |
|
under Section 10-9 of the Criminal Code of 2012 or a severe |
form of trafficking under the federal Trafficking Victims |
Protection Act. |
(2) A petitioner under this subsection (h), in addition |
to the requirements provided under paragraph (4) of |
subsection (d) of this Section, shall include in his or her |
petition a clear and concise statement that: (A) he or she |
was a victim of human trafficking at the time of the |
offense; and (B) that his or her participation in the |
offense was a direct result of human trafficking under |
Section 10-9 of the Criminal Code of 2012 or a severe form |
of trafficking under the federal Trafficking Victims |
Protection Act. |
(3) If an objection is filed alleging that the |
petitioner is not entitled to immediate sealing under this |
subsection (h), the court shall conduct a hearing under |
paragraph (7) of subsection (d) of this Section and the |
court shall determine whether the petitioner is entitled to |
immediate sealing under this subsection (h). A petitioner |
is eligible for immediate relief under this subsection (h) |
if he or she shows, by a preponderance of the evidence, |
that: (A) he or she was a victim of human trafficking at |
the time of the offense; and (B) that his or her |
participation in the offense was a direct result of human |
trafficking under Section 10-9 of the Criminal Code of 2012 |
or a severe form of trafficking under the federal |
|
Trafficking Victims Protection Act. |
(i) Minor Cannabis Offenses under the Cannabis Control Act. |
(1) Expungement of Arrest Records of Minor Cannabis |
Offenses. |
(A) The Department of State Police and all law |
enforcement agencies within the State shall |
automatically expunge all criminal history records of |
an arrest, charge not initiated by arrest, order of |
supervision, or order of qualified probation for a |
Minor Cannabis Offense committed prior to June 25, 2019 |
(the effective date of Public Act 101-27) if: |
(i) One year or more has elapsed since the date |
of the arrest or law enforcement interaction |
documented in the records; and |
(ii) No criminal charges were filed relating |
to the arrest or law enforcement interaction or |
criminal charges were filed and subsequently |
dismissed or vacated or the arrestee was |
acquitted. |
(B) If the law enforcement agency is unable to |
verify satisfaction of condition (ii) in paragraph |
(A), records that satisfy condition (i) in paragraph |
(A) shall be automatically expunged. |
(C) Records shall be expunged by the law |
enforcement agency under the following timelines: |
(i) Records created prior to June 25, 2019 (the |
|
effective date of Public Act 101-27), but on or |
after January 1, 2013, shall be automatically |
expunged prior to January 1, 2021; |
(ii) Records created prior to January 1, 2013, |
but on or after January 1, 2000, shall be |
automatically expunged prior to January 1, 2023; |
(iii) Records created prior to January 1, 2000 |
shall be automatically expunged prior to January |
1, 2025. |
In response to an inquiry for expunged records, the |
law enforcement agency receiving such inquiry shall |
reply as it does in response to inquiries when no |
records ever existed; however, it shall provide a |
certificate of disposition or confirmation that the |
record was expunged to the individual whose record was |
expunged if such a record exists. |
(D) Nothing in this Section shall be construed to |
restrict or modify an individual's right to have that |
individual's records expunged except as otherwise may |
be provided in this Act, or diminish or abrogate any |
rights or remedies otherwise available to the |
individual. |
(2) Pardons Authorizing Expungement of Minor Cannabis |
Offenses. |
(A) Upon June 25, 2019 (the effective date of |
Public Act 101-27), the Department of State Police |
|
shall review all criminal history record information |
and identify all records that meet all of the following |
criteria: |
(i) one or more convictions for a Minor |
Cannabis Offense; |
(ii) the conviction identified in paragraph |
(2)(A)(i) did not include a penalty enhancement |
under Section 7 of the Cannabis Control Act; and |
(iii) the conviction identified in paragraph |
(2)(A)(i) is not associated with a conviction for a |
violent crime as defined in subsection (c) of |
Section 3 of the Rights of Crime Victims and |
Witnesses Act. |
(B) Within 180 days after June 25, 2019 (the |
effective date of Public Act 101-27), the Department of |
State Police shall notify the Prisoner Review Board of |
all such records that meet the criteria established in |
paragraph (2)(A). |
(i) The Prisoner Review Board shall notify the |
State's Attorney of the county of conviction of |
each record identified by State Police in |
paragraph (2)(A) that is classified as a Class 4 |
felony. The State's Attorney may provide a written |
objection to the Prisoner Review Board on the sole |
basis that the record identified does not meet the |
criteria established in paragraph (2)(A). Such an |
|
objection must be filed within 60 days or by such |
later date set by Prisoner Review Board in the |
notice after the State's Attorney received notice |
from the Prisoner Review Board. |
(ii) In response to a written objection from a |
State's Attorney, the Prisoner Review Board is |
authorized to conduct a non-public hearing to |
evaluate the information provided in the |
objection. |
(iii) The Prisoner Review Board shall make a |
confidential and privileged recommendation to the |
Governor as to whether to grant a pardon |
authorizing expungement for each of the records |
identified by the Department of State Police as |
described in paragraph (2)(A). |
(C) If an individual has been granted a pardon |
authorizing expungement as described in this Section, |
the Prisoner Review Board, through the Attorney |
General, shall file a petition for expungement with the |
Chief Judge of the circuit or any judge of the circuit |
designated by the Chief Judge where the individual had |
been convicted. Such petition may include more than one |
individual. Whenever an individual who has been |
convicted of an offense is granted a pardon by the |
Governor that specifically authorizes expungement, an |
objection to the petition may not be filed. Petitions |
|
to expunge under this subsection (i) may include more |
than one individual. Within 90 days of the filing of |
such a petition, the court shall enter an order |
expunging the records of arrest from the official |
records of the arresting authority and order that the |
records of the circuit court clerk and the Department |
of State Police be expunged and the name of the |
defendant obliterated from the official index |
requested to be kept by the circuit court clerk under |
Section 16 of the Clerks of Courts Act in connection |
with the arrest and conviction for the offense for |
which the individual had received a pardon but the |
order shall not affect any index issued by the circuit |
court clerk before the entry of the order. Upon entry |
of the order of expungement, the circuit court clerk |
shall promptly provide a copy of the order and a |
certificate of disposition to the individual who was |
pardoned to the individual's last known address or by |
electronic means (if available) or otherwise make it |
available to the individual upon request. |
(D) Nothing in this Section is intended to diminish |
or abrogate any rights or remedies otherwise available |
to the individual. |
(3) Any individual may file a motion to vacate and |
expunge a conviction for a misdemeanor or Class 4 felony |
violation of Section 4 or Section 5 of the Cannabis Control |
|
Act. Motions to vacate and expunge under this subsection |
(i) may be filed with the circuit court, Chief Judge of a |
judicial circuit or any judge of the circuit designated by |
the Chief Judge. The circuit court clerk shall promptly |
serve a copy of the motion to vacate and expunge, and any |
supporting documentation, on the State's Attorney or |
prosecutor charged with the duty of prosecuting the |
offense. When considering such a motion to vacate and |
expunge, a court shall consider the following: the reasons |
to retain the records provided by law enforcement, the |
petitioner's age, the petitioner's age at the time of |
offense, the time since the conviction, and the specific |
adverse consequences if denied. An individual may file such |
a petition after the completion of any non-financial |
sentence or non-financial condition imposed by the |
conviction. Within 60 days of the filing of such motion, a |
State's Attorney may file an objection to such a petition |
along with supporting evidence. If a motion to vacate and |
expunge is granted, the records shall be expunged in |
accordance with subparagraphs (d)(8) and (d)(9)(A) of this |
Section. An agency providing civil legal aid, as defined by |
Section 15 of the Public Interest Attorney Assistance Act, |
assisting individuals seeking to file a motion to vacate |
and expunge under this subsection may file motions to |
vacate and expunge with the Chief Judge of a judicial |
circuit or any judge of the circuit designated by the Chief |
|
Judge, and the motion may include more than one individual. |
Motions filed by an agency providing civil legal aid |
concerning more than one individual may be prepared, |
presented, and signed electronically. |
(4) Any State's Attorney may file a motion to vacate |
and expunge a conviction for a misdemeanor or Class 4 |
felony violation of Section 4 or Section 5 of the Cannabis |
Control Act. Motions to vacate and expunge under this |
subsection (i) may be filed with the circuit court, Chief |
Judge of a judicial circuit or any judge of the circuit |
designated by the Chief Judge, and may include more than |
one individual. Motions filed by a State's Attorney |
concerning more than one individual may be prepared, |
presented, and signed electronically. When considering |
such a motion to vacate and expunge, a court shall consider |
the following: the reasons to retain the records provided |
by law enforcement, the individual's age, the individual's |
age at the time of offense, the time since the conviction, |
and the specific adverse consequences if denied. Upon entry |
of an order granting a motion to vacate and expunge records |
pursuant to this Section, the State's Attorney shall notify |
the Prisoner Review Board within 30 days. Upon entry of the |
order of expungement, the circuit court clerk shall |
promptly provide a copy of the order and a certificate of |
disposition to the individual whose records will be |
expunged to the individual's last known address or by |
|
electronic means (if available) or otherwise make |
available to the individual upon request. If a motion to |
vacate and expunge is granted, the records shall be |
expunged in accordance with subparagraphs (d)(8) and |
(d)(9)(A) of this Section. |
(5) In the public interest, the State's Attorney of a |
county has standing to file motions to vacate and expunge |
pursuant to this Section in the circuit court with |
jurisdiction over the underlying conviction. |
(6) If a person is arrested for a Minor Cannabis |
Offense as defined in this Section before June 25, 2019 |
(the effective date of Public Act 101-27) and the person's |
case is still pending but a sentence has not been imposed, |
the person may petition the court in which the charges are |
pending for an order to summarily dismiss those charges |
against him or her, and expunge all official records of his |
or her arrest, plea, trial, conviction, incarceration, |
supervision, or expungement. If the court determines, upon |
review, that:
(A) the person was arrested before June 25, |
2019 (the effective date of Public Act 101-27) for an |
offense that has been made eligible for expungement;
(B) |
the case is pending at the time; and
(C) the person has not |
been sentenced of the minor cannabis violation eligible for |
expungement under this subsection, the court shall |
consider the following: the reasons to retain the records |
provided by law enforcement, the petitioner's age, the |
|
petitioner's age at the time of offense, the time since the |
conviction, and the specific adverse consequences if |
denied. If a motion to dismiss and expunge is granted, the |
records shall be expunged in accordance with subparagraph |
(d)(9)(A) of this Section. |
(7) A person imprisoned solely as a result of one or |
more convictions for Minor Cannabis Offenses under this |
subsection (i) shall be released from incarceration upon |
the issuance of an order under this subsection. |
(8) The Department of State Police shall allow a person |
to use the access and review process, established in the |
Department of State Police, for verifying that his or her |
records relating to Minor Cannabis Offenses of the Cannabis |
Control Act eligible under this Section have been expunged. |
(9) No conviction vacated pursuant to this Section |
shall serve as the basis for damages for time unjustly |
served as provided in the Court of Claims Act. |
(10) Effect of Expungement. A person's right to expunge |
an expungeable offense shall not be limited under this |
Section. The effect of an order of expungement shall be to |
restore the person to the status he or she occupied before |
the arrest, charge, or conviction. |
(11) Information. The Department of State Police shall |
post general information on its website about the |
expungement process described in this subsection (i). |
(Source: P.A. 100-201, eff. 8-18-17; 100-282, eff. 1-1-18; |
|
100-284, eff. 8-24-17; 100-287, eff. 8-24-17; 100-692, eff. |
8-3-18; 100-759, eff. 1-1-19; 100-776, eff. 8-10-18; 100-863, |
eff. 8-14-18; 101-27, eff. 6-25-19; 101-81, eff. 7-12-19; |
101-159, eff. 1-1-20; 101-306, eff. 8-9-19; 101-593, eff. |
12-4-19.)
|
Section 20. The Criminal Diversion Racial Impact Data |
Collection Act is amended by changing Section 20 as follows: |
(20 ILCS 2637/20)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2020) |
Sec. 20. Repeal. This Act is repealed on December 31, 2021 |
2020 .
|
(Source: P.A. 99-666, eff. 1-1-17 .) |
Section 23. The Illinois Holocaust and Genocide Commission |
Act is amended by changing Section 95 as follows: |
(20 ILCS 5010/95) |
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2021)
|
Sec. 95. Repeal. This Act is repealed on January 1, 2022 |
2021 .
|
(Source: P.A. 96-1063, eff. 1-1-11.) |
Section 25. The Language Access to Government Services Task |
Force Act is amended by changing Section 25 as follows: |
|
(20 ILCS 5095/25) |
(Section scheduled to be repealed on July 1, 2020)
|
Sec. 25. Repeal. This Act is repealed on July 1, 2021 2020 .
|
(Source: P.A. 100-320, eff. 8-24-17; 100-1145, eff. 12-10-18.) |
Section 30. The Protection of Individuals with |
Disabilities in the Criminal
Justice System Task Force Act of |
2019 is amended by changing Section 20 as follows: |
(20 ILCS 5150/20) |
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2022)
|
Sec. 20. Report. The Task Force shall submit a report
with |
its findings and recommendations to the Governor, the
Attorney |
General, and to the General Assembly on or before
September 30, |
2021 2020 .
|
(Source: P.A. 101-391, eff. 8-16-19.) |
Section 35. The State Finance Act is amended by changing |
Sections 5.857 and 6z-100 as follows: |
(30 ILCS 105/5.857) |
(Section scheduled to be repealed on July 1, 2020) |
Sec. 5.857. The Capital Development Board Revolving Fund. |
This Section is repealed July 1, 2021 2020 .
|
(Source: P.A. 100-23, eff. 7-6-17; 100-587, eff. 6-4-18; |
|
101-10, eff. 6-5-19.) |
(30 ILCS 105/6z-100) |
(Section scheduled to be repealed on July 1, 2020) |
Sec. 6z-100. Capital Development Board Revolving Fund; |
payments into and use. All monies received by the Capital |
Development Board for publications or copies issued by the |
Board, and all monies received for contract administration |
fees, charges, or reimbursements owing to the Board shall be |
deposited into a special fund known as the Capital Development |
Board Revolving Fund, which is hereby created in the State |
treasury. The monies in this Fund shall be used by the Capital |
Development Board, as appropriated, for expenditures for |
personal services, retirement, social security, contractual |
services, legal services, travel, commodities, printing, |
equipment, electronic data processing, or telecommunications. |
Unexpended moneys in the Fund shall not be transferred or |
allocated by the Comptroller or Treasurer to any other fund, |
nor shall the Governor authorize the transfer or allocation of |
those moneys to any other fund. This Section is repealed July |
1, 2021 2020 .
|
(Source: P.A. 100-23, eff. 7-6-17; 100-587, eff. 6-4-18; |
101-10, eff. 6-5-19.) |
Section 40. The Illinois Procurement Code is amended by |
changing Sections 1-15.93 and 30-30 as follows: |
|
(30 ILCS 500/1-15.93) |
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2021) |
Sec. 1-15.93. Single prime. "Single prime" means the |
design-bid-build procurement delivery method for a building |
construction project in which the Capital Development Board is |
the construction agency procuring 2 or more subdivisions of |
work enumerated in paragraphs (1) through (5) of subsection (a) |
of Section 30-30 of this Code under a single contract. This |
Section is repealed on January 1, 2022 2021 .
|
(Source: P.A. 101-369, eff. 12-15-19 .)
|
(30 ILCS 500/30-30)
|
Sec. 30-30. Design-bid-build construction. |
(a) The provisions of this subsection are operative through |
December 31, 2021 2020 . |
For
building construction contracts in excess of
$250,000, |
separate specifications may be prepared for all
equipment, |
labor, and materials in
connection with the following 5 |
subdivisions of the work to be
performed:
|
(1) plumbing;
|
(2) heating, piping, refrigeration, and automatic
|
temperature control systems,
including the testing and |
balancing of those systems;
|
(3) ventilating and distribution systems for
|
conditioned air, including the testing
and balancing of |
|
those systems;
|
(4) electric wiring; and
|
(5) general contract work.
|
The specifications may be so drawn as to permit separate |
and
independent bidding upon
each of the 5 subdivisions of |
work. All contracts awarded
for any part thereof may
award the |
5 subdivisions of work separately to responsible and
reliable |
persons, firms, or
corporations engaged in these classes of |
work. The contracts, at
the discretion of the
construction |
agency, may be assigned to the successful bidder on
the general |
contract work or
to the successful bidder on the subdivision of |
work designated by
the construction agency before
the bidding |
as the prime subdivision of work, provided that all
payments |
will be made directly
to the contractors for the 5 subdivisions |
of work upon compliance
with the conditions of the
contract.
|
Beginning on the effective date of this amendatory Act of |
the 101st General Assembly and through December 31, 2020, for |
single prime projects: (i) the bid of the successful low bidder |
shall identify the name of the subcontractor, if any, and the |
bid proposal costs for each of the 5 subdivisions of work set |
forth in this Section; (ii) the contract entered into with the |
successful bidder shall provide that no identified |
subcontractor may be terminated without the written consent of |
the Capital Development Board; (iii) the contract shall comply |
with the disadvantaged business practices of the Business |
Enterprise for Minorities, Women, and Persons with |
|
Disabilities Act and the equal employment practices of Section |
2-105 of the Illinois Human Rights Act; and (iv) the Capital |
Development Board shall submit an annual report to the General |
Assembly and Governor on the bidding, award, and performance of |
all single prime projects. |
For building construction projects with a total |
construction cost valued at $5,000,000 or less, the Capital |
Development Board shall not use the single prime procurement |
delivery method for more than 50% of the total number of |
projects bid for each fiscal year. Any project with a total |
construction cost valued greater than $5,000,000 may be bid |
using single prime at the discretion of the Executive Director |
of the Capital Development Board. |
(b) The provisions of this subsection are operative on and |
after January 1, 2022 2021 .
For building construction contracts |
in excess of $250,000, separate specifications shall be |
prepared for all equipment, labor, and materials in connection |
with the following 5 subdivisions of the work to be performed: |
(1) plumbing; |
(2) heating, piping, refrigeration, and automatic |
temperature control systems, including the testing and |
balancing of those systems; |
(3) ventilating and distribution systems for |
conditioned air, including the testing and balancing of |
those systems; |
(4) electric wiring; and |
|
(5) general contract work. |
The specifications must be so drawn as to permit separate |
and independent bidding upon each of the 5 subdivisions of |
work. All contracts awarded for any part thereof shall award |
the 5 subdivisions of work separately to responsible and |
reliable persons, firms, or corporations engaged in these |
classes of work. The contracts, at the discretion of the |
construction agency, may be assigned to the successful bidder |
on the general contract work or to the successful bidder on the |
subdivision of work designated by the construction agency |
before the bidding as the prime subdivision of work, provided |
that all payments will be made directly to the contractors for |
the 5 subdivisions of work upon compliance with the conditions |
of the contract. |
(Source: P.A. 100-391, eff. 8-25-17; 101-369, eff. 12-15-19 .)
|
Section 45. The State Property Control Act is amended by |
changing Section 7.4 as follows:
|
(30 ILCS 605/7.4)
|
Sec. 7.4. James R. Thompson Center. |
(a) Notwithstanding any other
provision of this Act or any |
other law to the contrary, the administrator is
authorized |
under this Section to
dispose of the
James R. Thompson Center |
located in Chicago, Illinois.
The administrator may sell the |
property
as provided in subsection (b), and, either as a |
|
condition of the sale or thereafter
enter into a
leaseback or |
other agreement
that
directly or indirectly gives the State a |
right to use, control, and
possess the
property.
|
(b) The administrator shall dispose of the property using a |
competitive sealed proposal process that includes, at a |
minimum, the following: |
(1) Engagement Prior to Request for Proposal. The |
administrator may, prior to soliciting requests for |
proposals, enter into discussions with interested |
purchasers in order to assess existing market conditions, |
demands and likely development scenarios provided that no |
such interested purchasers shall have any role in drafting |
any request for proposals nor shall any request for |
proposal be provided to any interested purchaser prior to |
its general public distribution. The administrator may |
issue a request for qualifications that requests |
interested purchasers to provide such information as the |
administrator reasonably deems necessary in order to |
evaluate the qualifications of such interested purchasers |
including the ability of interested purchasers to acquire |
and develop the property, all as reasonably determined by |
the administrator. |
(2) Request for proposals. Proposals to acquire and |
develop the property shall be solicited through a request |
for proposals. Such request for proposals shall include |
such requirements and factors as the administrator shall |
|
determine are necessary or advisable with respect to the |
disposition of the James R. Thompson Center, including |
soliciting proposals designating a portion of the property |
after the development or redevelopment thereof in honor of |
Governor James R. Thompson. |
(3) Public notice. Public notice of any request for |
qualification or request for proposals shall be published |
in the Illinois Procurement Bulletin at least 14 calendar |
days before the date by which such requests are due. The |
administrator may advertise the request in any other manner |
or publication which it reasonably determines may increase |
the scope and nature of responses to the request. In the |
event the administrator shall have already identified |
qualified purchasers pursuant to a request for |
qualification process as set forth above, notice of the |
request for proposals may be delivered only to such |
qualified purchasers. |
(4) Opening of proposals. Proposals shall be opened |
publicly on the date, time and location designated in the |
Illinois Procurement Bulletin, but proposals shall be |
opened in a manner to avoid disclosure of contents to |
competing purchasers during the process of negotiation. A |
record of proposals shall be prepared and shall be open for |
public inspection after contract award, but prior to |
contract execution. |
(5) Evaluation factors. Proposals shall be submitted |
|
in 2 parts: (i) items except price, and (ii) covering |
price. The first part of all proposals shall be evaluated |
and ranked independently of the second part of all |
proposals. |
(6) Discussion with interested purchasers and |
revisions of offers or proposals. After the opening of the |
proposals, and under such guidelines as the administrator |
may elect to establish in the request for proposals, the |
administrator and his or her designees may engage in |
discussions with interested purchasers who submitted |
offers or proposals that the administrator determines are |
reasonably susceptible of being selected for award for the |
purpose of clarifying and assuring full understanding of |
and responsiveness to the solicitation requirements. Those |
purchasers shall be accorded fair and equal treatment with |
respect to any opportunity for discussion and revision of |
proposals. Revisions may be permitted after submission and |
before award for the purpose of obtaining best and final |
offers. In conducting discussions there shall be no |
disclosure of any information derived from proposals |
submitted by competing purchasers. If information is |
disclosed to any purchaser, it shall be provided to all |
competing purchasers. |
(7) Award. Awards shall be made to the interested |
purchaser whose proposal is determined in writing to be the |
most advantageous to the State, taking into consideration |
|
price and the evaluation factors set forth in the request |
for proposals. The contract file shall contain the basis on |
which the award is made.
|
(b-5) Any contract to dispose of the property is subject to |
the following conditions: |
(1) A commitment from the purchaser to make any |
applicable payments to the City of Chicago with respect to |
additional zoning density; |
(2) A commitment from the purchaser to enter into an |
agreement with the City of Chicago and the Chicago Transit |
Authority regarding the existing operation of the Chicago |
Transit Authority facility currently located on the |
property, substantially similar to the existing agreement |
between the City of Chicago, the Chicago Transit Authority, |
and the State of Illinois, and such agreement must be |
executed prior to assuming title to the property; and |
(3) A commitment from the purchaser to designate a |
portion of the property after the development or |
redevelopment thereof in honor of Governor James R. |
Thompson. |
(b-10) The administrator shall have authority to order such |
surveys, abstracts of
title, or
commitments for title |
insurance, environmental reports, property condition reports, |
or any other materials as the administrator may, in his or her |
reasonable discretion, be
deemed
necessary to demonstrate to |
prospective purchasers or bidders good
and
marketable title
in |
|
and the existing conditions or characteristics of the property |
offered for sale under
this
Section. All conveyances of
|
property
made by the administrator under this Section
shall be |
by
quit claim deed.
|
(c) All moneys received from the sale of real property |
under this
Section shall be deposited into the General Revenue |
Fund, provided that any obligations of the State to the |
purchaser acquiring the property, a contractor involved in the |
sale of the property, or a unit of local government may be |
remitted from the proceeds during the closing process and need |
not be deposited in the State treasury prior to closing.
|
(d) The administrator is authorized to enter into any |
agreements and execute
any
documents necessary to exercise the |
authority granted by this Section.
|
(e) Any agreement to
dispose
of the James R. Thompson |
Center located in Chicago, Illinois
pursuant to the authority |
granted by this Section must be entered
into no later than |
April 5, 2022 2 years after the effective date of this |
amendatory Act of
the 100th
General Assembly . |
(f) The provisions of this Section are subject to the |
Freedom of Information Act, and nothing shall be construed to |
waive the ability of a public body to assert any applicable |
exemptions.
|
(Source: P.A. 100-1184, eff. 4-5-19.)
|
Section 50. The Illinois Income Tax Act is amended by |
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changing Section 218 as follows: |
(35 ILCS 5/218) |
Sec. 218. Credit for student-assistance contributions. |
(a) For taxable years ending on or after December 31, 2009 |
and on or before December 30, 2021 2020 , each taxpayer who, |
during the taxable year, makes a contribution (i) to a |
specified individual College Savings Pool Account under |
Section 16.5 of the State Treasurer Act or (ii) to the Illinois |
Prepaid Tuition Trust Fund in an amount matching a contribution |
made in the same taxable year by an employee of the taxpayer to |
that Account or Fund is entitled to a credit against the tax |
imposed under subsections (a) and (b) of Section 201 in an |
amount equal to 25% of that matching contribution, but not to |
exceed $500 per contributing employee per taxable year. |
(b) For partners, shareholders of Subchapter S |
corporations, and owners of limited liability companies, if the |
liability company is treated as a partnership for purposes of |
federal and State income taxation, there is allowed a credit |
under this Section to be determined in accordance with the |
determination of income and distributive share of income under |
Sections 702 and 704 and Subchapter S of the Internal Revenue |
Code. |
(c) The credit may not be carried back. If the amount of |
the credit exceeds the tax liability for the year, the excess |
may be carried forward and applied to the tax liability of the |
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5 taxable years following the excess credit year. The tax |
credit shall be applied to the earliest year for which there is |
a tax liability. If there are credits for more than one year |
that are available to offset a liability, the earlier credit |
shall be applied first.
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(d) A taxpayer claiming the credit under this Section must |
maintain and record any information that the Illinois Student |
Assistance Commission, the Office of the State Treasurer, or |
the Department may require regarding the matching contribution |
for which the credit is claimed.
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(Source: P.A. 96-198, eff. 8-10-09.) |
Section 55. The Illinois Pension Code is amended by |
changing Section 16-118 as follows:
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(40 ILCS 5/16-118) (from Ch. 108 1/2, par. 16-118)
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Sec. 16-118. Retirement. "Retirement": Entry upon a |
retirement annuity
or receipt of a single-sum retirement |
benefit granted under this Article
after termination of active |
service as a teacher.
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(a) An annuitant receiving a retirement annuity other than |
a disability
retirement annuity may accept employment as a |
teacher from a school board
or other employer specified in |
Section 16-106 without impairing retirement
status, if that |
employment: |
(1) is not within the school year during which
service |
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was terminated; and |
(2) does not exceed the following: |
(i) before July 1, 2001, 100 paid days or 500 paid
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hours in any school year; |
(ii) during the period beginning July 1, 2001 |
through
June 30, 2011, 120 paid days or 600 paid hours |
in each school year; |
(iii) during the period beginning July 1, 2011 |
through
June 30, 2018, 100 paid days or 500 paid hours |
in each school year; |
(iv) beginning July 1, 2018 through June 30, 2021 |
2020 , 120 paid days or 600 paid hours in each school |
year, but not more than 100 paid days in the same |
classroom; and |
(v) beginning July 1, 2021 2020 , 100 paid days or |
500 paid hours in each school year. |
Where
such permitted employment is partly on a daily and |
partly on an hourly basis,
a day shall be considered as 5 |
hours.
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(b) Subsection (a) does not apply to an annuitant who |
returns to teaching
under the program established in Section |
16-150.1, for the duration of his or
her participation in that |
program.
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(Source: P.A. 100-596, eff. 7-1-18.)
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Section 60. The Environmental Protection Act is amended by |
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changing Section 28.5 as follows:
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(415 ILCS 5/28.5)
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Sec. 28.5. Clean Air Act rules; fast-track.
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(a) This Section applies through December 31, 2021 2019 and |
applies solely to the adoption of rules proposed by
the Agency |
and required to be adopted by the State under the Clean Air Act
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as amended by the Clean Air Act Amendments of 1990 (CAAA).
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(b) For purposes of this Section, a "fast-track" rulemaking |
proceeding
is a proceeding to promulgate a rule that the CAAA |
requires to be adopted. For the purposes of this Section, |
"requires to be adopted" refers only to those
regulations or |
parts of regulations for which the United States Environmental
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Protection Agency is empowered to impose sanctions against the |
State for failure to adopt such rules. All fast-track rules |
must be adopted under
procedures set forth in this Section, |
unless another provision of this Act
specifies the method for |
adopting a specific rule.
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(c) When the CAAA requires rules other than identical in |
substance rules
to be adopted, upon request by the Agency, the |
Board must adopt rules under
fast-track rulemaking |
requirements.
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(d) The Agency must submit its fast-track rulemaking |
proposal in the
following form:
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(1) The Agency must file the rule in a form that meets |
the
requirements of the Illinois Administrative Procedure |
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Act and regulations
promulgated thereunder.
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(2) The cover sheet of the proposal shall prominently |
state that the
rule is being proposed under this Section.
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(3) The proposal shall clearly identify the provisions |
and portions of
the federal statute, regulations, |
guidance, policy statement, or other
documents upon which |
the rule is based.
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(4) The supporting documentation for the rule shall |
summarize the basis of the rule.
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(5) The Agency must describe in general the alternative |
selected
and the basis for the alternative.
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(6) The Agency must file a summary of economic and |
technical data
upon which it relied in drafting the rule.
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(7) The Agency must provide a list of any documents |
upon which it
directly relied in drafting the rule or upon |
which it intends to rely at
the hearings and must provide |
such documents to the Board. Additionally,
the Agency must |
make such documents available at an appropriate
location |
for inspection and copying at the expense of the interested |
party.
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(8) The Agency must include in its submission a |
description of the
geographical area to which the rule is |
intended to apply, a description of
the process or |
processes affected, an identification by classes of the
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entities expected to be affected, and a list of sources |
expected to be affected
by the rule to the extent known to |
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the Agency.
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(e) Within 14 days of receipt of the proposal, the Board |
must file the
rule for first notice under the Illinois |
Administrative Procedure Act and must
schedule all required |
hearings on the proposal and cause public notice to be
given in |
accordance with the Illinois Administrative Procedure Act and |
the
CAAA.
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(f) The Board must set 3 hearings on the proposal, each of |
which shall
be scheduled to continue from day to day, excluding |
weekends and State and
federal holidays, until completed. The |
Board must
require the written submission of all testimony at |
least 10 days before a
hearing, with simultaneous service to |
all participants of record in the
proceeding as of 15 days |
prior to hearing, unless a waiver is granted by
the Board for |
good cause. In order to further expedite the hearings,
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presubmitted testimony shall be accepted into the record |
without the reading of
the testimony at hearing, provided that |
the witness swears to the testimony and
is available for |
questioning, and the Board must make every effort to conduct
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the proceedings expeditiously and avoid duplication and |
extraneous material.
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(1) The first hearing shall be held within 55 days of |
receipt of the
rule and shall be confined to testimony by |
and questions of the Agency's
witnesses concerning the |
scope, applicability, and basis of the rule.
Within 7 days |
after the first hearing, any person may request that the
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second hearing be held.
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(A) If, after the first hearing, the Agency and |
affected entities are
in agreement on the rule, the |
United States Environmental Protection Agency
has not |
informed the Board of any unresolved objection to the |
rule, and no
other interested party contests the rule |
or asks for the opportunity to present
additional |
evidence, the Board may cancel the additional |
hearings. When the
Board adopts the final order under |
these circumstances, it shall be based on
the Agency's |
proposal as agreed to by the parties.
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(B) If, after the first hearing, the Agency and |
affected entities are in
agreement upon a portion of |
the rule, the United States Environmental
Protection |
Agency has not informed the Board of any unresolved |
objections
to that agreed portion of the rule, and no |
other interested party contests
that agreed portion of |
the rule or asks for the opportunity to present
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additional evidence, the Board must proceed to the |
second hearing, as
provided in paragraph (2) of |
subsection (g) of this Section, but the
hearing shall |
be limited in scope to the unresolved portion of the |
proposal.
When the Board adopts the final order under |
these circumstances, it shall
be based on such portion |
of the Agency's proposal as agreed to by the parties.
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(2) The second hearing shall be scheduled to commence |
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within 30 days
of the first day of the first hearing and |
shall be devoted to presentation of
testimony, documents, |
and comments by affected entities and all other
interested |
parties.
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(3) The third hearing shall be scheduled to commence |
within 14 days
after the first day of the second hearing |
and shall be devoted solely to any
Agency response to the |
material submitted at the second hearing and to any
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response by other parties. The third hearing shall be |
cancelled if the Agency
indicates to the Board that it does |
not intend to introduce any additional
material.
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(g) In any fast-track rulemaking proceeding, the Board must |
accept
evidence and comments on the economic impact of any |
provision of the rule
and must consider the economic impact of |
the rule based on the record.
The Board may order an economic |
impact study in a manner that will not
prevent adoption of the |
rule within the time required by subsection (n)
of this |
Section.
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(h) In all fast-track rulemakings under this Section, the |
Board must
take into account factors set forth in subsection |
(a) of Section 27 of
this Act.
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(i) The Board must adopt rules in the fast-track rulemaking |
docket
under the requirements of this Section that the CAAA |
requires to be
adopted, and may consider a non-required rule in |
a second docket that shall
proceed under Title VII of this Act.
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(j) The Board is directed to take whatever measures are |
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available to it
to complete fast-track rulemaking as |
expeditiously as possible consistent
with the need for careful |
consideration. These measures shall include, but
not be limited |
to, having hearings transcribed on an expedited basis.
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(k) Following the hearings, the Board must close the record |
14 days
after the availability of the transcript.
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(l) The Board must not revise or otherwise change an Agency |
fast-track
rulemaking proposal without agreement of the Agency |
until after the end
of the hearing and comment period. Any |
revisions to an Agency
proposal shall be based on the record of |
the proceeding.
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(m) All rules adopted by the Board under this Section shall |
be based
solely on the record before it.
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(n) The Board must complete a fast-track rulemaking by |
adopting
a second notice order no later than 130 days after |
receipt of the proposal if
no third hearing is held and no |
later than 150 days if the third hearing is
held. If the order |
includes a rule, the Illinois Board must file the rule for
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second notice under the Illinois Administrative Procedure Act |
within 5 days
after adoption of the order.
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(o) Upon receipt of a statement of no objection to the rule |
from the
Joint Committee on Administrative Rules, the Board |
must adopt the final
order and submit the rule to the Secretary |
of State for publication and
certification within 21 days.
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(Source: P.A. 99-197, eff. 7-30-15.) |
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Section 65. The Clerks of Courts Act is amended by changing |
Sections 27.1b and 27.1c as follows: |
(705 ILCS 105/27.1b) |
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2021) |
Sec. 27.1b. Circuit court clerk fees. Notwithstanding any |
other provision of law, all fees charged by the clerks of the |
circuit court for the services described in this Section shall |
be established, collected, and disbursed in accordance with |
this Section. Except as otherwise specified in this Section, |
all fees under this Section shall be paid in advance and |
disbursed by each clerk on a monthly basis. In a county with a |
population of over 3,000,000, units of local government and |
school districts shall not be required to pay fees under this |
Section in advance and the clerk shall instead send an itemized |
bill to the unit of local government or school district, within |
30 days of the fee being incurred, and the unit of local |
government or school district shall be allowed at least 30 days |
from the date of the itemized bill to pay; these payments shall |
be disbursed by each clerk on a monthly basis. Unless otherwise |
specified in this Section, the amount of a fee shall be |
determined by ordinance or resolution of the county board and |
remitted to the county treasurer to be used for purposes |
related to the operation of the court system in the county. In |
a county with population of over 3,000,000, any amount retained |
by the clerk of the circuit court or remitted to the county |
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treasurer shall be subject to appropriation by the county |
board. |
(a) Civil cases. The fee for filing a complaint, petition, |
or other pleading initiating a civil action shall be as set |
forth in the applicable schedule under this subsection in |
accordance with case categories established by the Supreme |
Court in schedules. |
(1) SCHEDULE 1: not to exceed a total of $366 in a |
county with a population of 3,000,000 or more and not to |
exceed $316 in any other county, except as applied to units |
of local government and school districts in counties with |
more than 3,000,000 inhabitants an amount not to exceed |
$190 through December 31, 2021 and $184 on and after |
January 1, 2022. The fees collected under this schedule |
shall be disbursed as follows: |
(A) The clerk shall retain a sum, in an amount not |
to exceed $55 in a county with a population of |
3,000,000 or more and in an amount not to exceed $45 in |
any other county determined by the clerk with the |
approval of the Supreme Court, to be used for court |
automation, court document storage, and administrative |
purposes. |
(B) The clerk shall remit up to $21 to the State |
Treasurer. The State Treasurer shall deposit the |
appropriate amounts, in accordance with the clerk's |
instructions, as follows: |
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(i) up to $10, as specified by the Supreme |
Court in accordance with Part 10A of Article II of |
the Code of Civil Procedure, into the Mandatory |
Arbitration Fund; |
(ii) $2 into the Access to Justice Fund; and |
(iii) $9 into the Supreme Court Special |
Purposes Fund. |
(C) The clerk shall remit a sum to the County |
Treasurer, in an amount not to exceed $290 in a county |
with a population of 3,000,000 or more and in an amount |
not to exceed $250 in any other county, as specified by |
ordinance or resolution passed by the county board, for |
purposes related to the operation of the court system |
in the county. |
(2) SCHEDULE 2: not to exceed a total of $357 in a |
county with a population of 3,000,000 or more and not to |
exceed $266 in any other county, except as applied to units |
of local government and school districts in counties with |
more than 3,000,000 inhabitants an amount not to exceed |
$190 through December 31, 2021 and $184 on and after |
January 1, 2022. The fees collected under this schedule |
shall be disbursed as follows: |
(A) The clerk shall retain a sum, in an amount not |
to exceed $55 in a county with a population of |
3,000,000 or more and in an amount not to exceed $45 in |
any other county determined by the clerk with the |
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approval of the Supreme Court, to be used for court |
automation, court document storage, and administrative |
purposes. |
(B) The clerk shall remit up to $21 to the State |
Treasurer. The State Treasurer shall deposit the |
appropriate amounts, in accordance with the clerk's |
instructions, as follows: |
(i) up to $10, as specified by the Supreme |
Court in accordance with Part 10A of Article II of |
the Code of Civil Procedure, into the Mandatory |
Arbitration Fund; |
(ii) $2 into the Access to Justice Fund: and |
(iii) $9 into the Supreme Court Special |
Purposes Fund. |
(C) The clerk shall remit a sum to the County |
Treasurer, in an amount not to exceed $281 in a county |
with a population of 3,000,000 or more and in an amount |
not to exceed $200 in any other county, as specified by |
ordinance or resolution passed by the county board, for |
purposes related to the operation of the court system |
in the county. |
(3) SCHEDULE 3: not to exceed a total of $265 in a |
county with a population of 3,000,000 or more and not to |
exceed $89 in any other county, except as applied to units |
of local government and school districts in counties with |
more than 3,000,000 inhabitants an amount not to exceed |
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$190 through December 31, 2021 and $184 on and after |
January 1, 2022. The fees collected under this schedule |
shall be disbursed as follows: |
(A) The clerk shall retain a sum, in an amount not |
to exceed $55 in a county with a population of |
3,000,000 or more and in an amount not to exceed $22 in |
any other county determined by the clerk with the |
approval of the Supreme Court, to be used for court |
automation, court document storage, and administrative |
purposes. |
(B) The clerk shall remit $11 to the State |
Treasurer. The State Treasurer shall deposit the |
appropriate amounts in accordance with the clerk's |
instructions, as follows: |
(i) $2 into the Access to Justice Fund; and |
(ii) $9 into the Supreme Court Special |
Purposes Fund. |
(C) The clerk shall remit a sum to the County |
Treasurer, in an amount not to exceed $199 in a county |
with a population of 3,000,000 or more and in an amount |
not to exceed $56 in any other county, as specified by |
ordinance or resolution passed by the county board, for |
purposes related to the operation of the court system |
in the county. |
(4) SCHEDULE 4: $0. |
(b) Appearance. The fee for filing an appearance in a civil |
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action, including a cannabis civil law action under the |
Cannabis Control Act, shall be as set forth in the applicable |
schedule under this subsection in accordance with case |
categories established by the Supreme Court in schedules. |
(1) SCHEDULE 1: not to exceed a total of $230 in a |
county with a population of 3,000,000 or more and not to |
exceed $191 in any other county, except as applied to units |
of local government and school districts in counties with |
more than 3,000,000 inhabitants an amount not to exceed |
$75. The fees collected under this schedule shall be |
disbursed as follows: |
(A) The clerk shall retain a sum, in an amount not |
to exceed $50 in a county with a population of |
3,000,000 or more and in an amount not to exceed $45 in |
any other county determined by the clerk with the |
approval of the Supreme Court, to be used for court |
automation, court document storage, and administrative |
purposes. |
(B) The clerk shall remit up to $21 to the State |
Treasurer. The State Treasurer shall deposit the |
appropriate amounts, in accordance with the clerk's |
instructions, as follows: |
(i) up to $10, as specified by the Supreme |
Court in accordance with Part 10A of Article II of |
the Code of Civil Procedure, into the Mandatory |
Arbitration Fund; |
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(ii) $2 into the Access to Justice Fund; and |
(iii) $9 into the Supreme Court Special |
Purposes Fund. |
(C) The clerk shall remit a sum to the County |
Treasurer, in an amount not to exceed $159 in a county |
with a population of 3,000,000 or more and in an amount |
not to exceed $125 in any other county, as specified by |
ordinance or resolution passed by the county board, for |
purposes related to the operation of the court system |
in the county. |
(2) SCHEDULE 2: not to exceed a total of $130 in a |
county with a population of 3,000,000 or more and not to |
exceed $109 in any other county, except as applied to units |
of local government and school districts in counties with |
more than 3,000,000 inhabitants an amount not to exceed |
$75. The fees collected under this schedule shall be |
disbursed as follows: |
(A) The clerk shall retain a sum, in an amount not |
to exceed $50 in a county with a population of |
3,000,000 or more and in an amount not to exceed $10 in |
any other county determined by the clerk with the |
approval of the Supreme Court, to be used for court |
automation, court document storage, and administrative |
purposes. |
(B) The clerk shall remit $9 to the State |
Treasurer, which the State Treasurer shall deposit |
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into the Supreme Court Special Purpose Fund. |
(C) The clerk shall remit a sum to the County |
Treasurer, in an amount not to exceed $71 in a county |
with a population of 3,000,000 or more and in an amount |
not to exceed $90 in any other county, as specified by |
ordinance or resolution passed by the county board, for |
purposes related to the operation of the court system |
in the county. |
(3) SCHEDULE 3: $0. |
(b-5) Kane County and Will County. In Kane County and Will |
County civil cases, there is an additional fee of up to $30 as |
set by the county board under Section 5-1101.3 of the Counties |
Code to be paid by each party at the time of filing the first |
pleading, paper, or other appearance; provided that no |
additional fee shall be required if more than one party is |
represented in a single pleading, paper, or other appearance. |
Distribution of fees collected under this subsection (b-5) |
shall be as provided in Section 5-1101.3 of the Counties Code. |
(c) Counterclaim or third party complaint. When any |
defendant files a counterclaim or third party complaint, as |
part of the defendant's answer or otherwise, the defendant |
shall pay a filing fee for each counterclaim or third party |
complaint in an amount equal to the filing fee the defendant |
would have had to pay had the defendant brought a separate |
action for the relief sought in the counterclaim or third party |
complaint, less the amount of the appearance fee, if any, that |
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the defendant has already paid in the action in which the |
counterclaim or third party complaint is filed. |
(d) Alias summons. The clerk shall collect a fee not to |
exceed $6 in a county with a population of 3,000,000 or more |
and not to exceed $5 in any other county for each alias summons |
or citation issued by the clerk, except as applied to units of |
local government and school districts in counties with more |
than 3,000,000 inhabitants an amount not to exceed $5 for each |
alias summons or citation issued by the clerk. |
(e) Jury services. The clerk shall collect, in addition to |
other fees allowed by law, a sum not to exceed $212.50, as a |
fee for the services of a jury in every civil action not |
quasi-criminal in its nature and not a proceeding for the |
exercise of the right of eminent domain and in every other |
action wherein the right of trial by jury is or may be given by |
law. The jury fee shall be paid by the party demanding a jury |
at the time of filing the jury demand. If the fee is not paid by |
either party, no jury shall be called in the action or |
proceeding, and the action or proceeding shall be tried by the |
court without a jury. |
(f) Change of venue. In connection with a change of venue: |
(1) The clerk of the jurisdiction from which the case |
is transferred may charge a fee, not to exceed $40, for the |
preparation and certification of the record; and |
(2) The clerk of the jurisdiction to which the case is |
transferred may charge the same filing fee as if it were |
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the commencement of a new suit. |
(g) Petition to vacate or modify. |
(1) In a proceeding involving a petition to vacate or |
modify any final judgment or order filed within 30 days |
after the judgment or order was entered, except for an |
eviction case, small claims case, petition to reopen an |
estate, petition to modify, terminate, or enforce a |
judgment or order for child or spousal support, or petition |
to modify, suspend, or terminate an order for withholding, |
the fee shall not exceed $60 in a county with a population |
of 3,000,000 or more and shall not exceed $50 in any other |
county, except as applied to units of local government and |
school districts in counties with more than 3,000,000 |
inhabitants an amount not to exceed $50. |
(2) In a proceeding involving a petition to vacate or |
modify any final judgment or order filed more than 30 days |
after the judgment or order was entered, except for a |
petition to modify, terminate, or enforce a judgment or |
order for child or spousal support, or petition to modify, |
suspend, or terminate an order for withholding, the fee |
shall not exceed $75. |
(3) In a proceeding involving a motion to vacate or |
amend a final order, motion to vacate an ex parte judgment, |
judgment of forfeiture, or "failure to appear" or "failure |
to comply" notices sent to the Secretary of State, the fee |
shall equal $40. |
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(h) Appeals preparation. The fee for preparation of a |
record on appeal shall be based on the number of pages, as |
follows: |
(1) if the record contains no more than 100 pages, the |
fee shall not exceed $70 in a county with a population of |
3,000,000 or more and shall not exceed $50 in any other |
county; |
(2) if the record contains between 100 and 200 pages, |
the fee shall not exceed $100; and |
(3) if the record contains 200 or more pages, the clerk |
may collect an additional fee not to exceed 25 cents per |
page. |
(i) Remands. In any cases remanded to the circuit court |
from the Supreme Court or the appellate court for a new trial, |
the clerk shall reinstate the case with either its original |
number or a new number. The clerk shall not charge any new or |
additional fee for the reinstatement. Upon reinstatement, the |
clerk shall advise the parties of the reinstatement. Parties |
shall have the same right to a jury trial on remand and |
reinstatement that they had before the appeal, and no |
additional or new fee or charge shall be made for a jury trial |
after remand. |
(j) Garnishment, wage deduction, and citation. In |
garnishment affidavit, wage deduction affidavit, and citation |
petition proceedings: |
(1) if the amount in controversy in the proceeding is |
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not more than $1,000, the fee may not exceed $35 in a |
county with a population of 3,000,000 or more and may not |
exceed $15 in any other county, except as applied to units |
of local government and school districts in counties with |
more than 3,000,000 inhabitants an amount not to exceed |
$15; |
(2) if the amount in controversy in the proceeding is |
greater than $1,000 and not more than $5,000, the fee may |
not exceed $45 in a county with a population of 3,000,000 |
or more and may not exceed $30 in any other county, except |
as applied to units of local government and school |
districts in counties with more than 3,000,000 inhabitants |
an amount not to exceed $30; and |
(3) if the amount in controversy in the proceeding is |
greater than $5,000, the fee may not exceed $65 in a county |
with a population of 3,000,000 or more and may not exceed |
$50 in any other county, except as applied to units of |
local government and school districts in counties with more |
than 3,000,000 inhabitants an amount not to exceed $50. |
(j-5) Debt collection. In any proceeding to collect a debt |
subject to the exception in item (ii) of subparagraph (A-5) of |
paragraph (1) of subsection (z) of this Section, the circuit |
court shall order and the clerk shall collect from each |
judgment debtor a fee of: |
(1) $35 if the amount in controversy in the proceeding |
is not more than $1,000; |
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(2) $45 if the amount in controversy in the proceeding |
is greater than $1,000 and not more than $5,000; and |
(3) $65 if the amount in controversy in the proceeding |
is greater than $5,000. |
(k) Collections. |
(1) For all collections made of others, except the |
State and county and except in maintenance or child support |
cases, the clerk may collect a fee of up to 2.5% of the |
amount collected and turned over. |
(2) In child support and maintenance cases, the clerk |
may collect an annual fee of up to $36 from the person |
making payment for maintaining child support records and |
the processing of support orders to the State of Illinois |
KIDS system and the recording of payments issued by the |
State Disbursement Unit for the official record of the |
Court. This fee is in addition to and separate from amounts |
ordered to be paid as maintenance or child support and |
shall be deposited into a Separate Maintenance and Child |
Support Collection Fund, of which the clerk shall be the |
custodian, ex officio, to be used by the clerk to maintain |
child support orders and record all payments issued by the |
State Disbursement Unit for the official record of the |
Court. The clerk may recover from the person making the |
maintenance or child support payment any additional cost |
incurred in the collection of this annual fee. |
(3) The clerk may collect a fee of $5 for |
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certifications made to the Secretary of State as provided |
in Section 7-703 of the Illinois Vehicle Code, and this fee |
shall be deposited into the Separate Maintenance and Child |
Support Collection Fund. |
(4) In proceedings
to foreclose the lien of delinquent |
real estate taxes, State's Attorneys
shall receive a fee of |
10%
of the total amount realized from the sale of real |
estate sold in the
proceedings. The clerk shall collect the |
fee from the total amount realized from
the sale of the |
real estate sold in the proceedings and remit to the County |
Treasurer to be credited to the earnings of the Office of |
the State's Attorney. |
(l) Mailing. The fee for the clerk mailing documents shall |
not exceed $10 plus the cost of postage. |
(m) Certified copies. The fee for each certified copy of a |
judgment, after the first copy, shall not exceed $10. |
(n) Certification, authentication, and reproduction. |
(1) The fee for each certification or authentication |
for taking the acknowledgment of a deed or other instrument |
in writing with the seal of office shall not exceed $6. |
(2) The fee for reproduction of any document contained |
in the clerk's files shall not exceed: |
(A) $2 for the first page; |
(B) 50 cents per page for the next 19 pages; and |
(C) 25 cents per page for all additional pages. |
(o) Record search. For each record search, within a |
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division or municipal district, the clerk may collect a search |
fee not to exceed $6 for each year searched. |
(p) Hard copy. For each page of hard copy print output, |
when case records are maintained on an automated medium, the |
clerk may collect a fee not to exceed $10 in a county with a |
population of 3,000,000 or more and not to exceed $6 in any |
other county, except as applied to units of local government |
and school districts in counties with more than 3,000,000 |
inhabitants an amount not to exceed $6. |
(q) Index inquiry and other records. No fee shall be |
charged for a single plaintiff and defendant index inquiry or |
single case record inquiry when this request is made in person |
and the records are maintained in a current automated medium, |
and when no hard copy print output is requested. The fees to be |
charged for management records, multiple case records, and |
multiple journal records may be specified by the Chief Judge |
pursuant to the guidelines for access and dissemination of |
information approved by the Supreme Court. |
(r) Performing a marriage. There shall be a $10 fee for |
performing a marriage in court. |
(s) Voluntary assignment. For filing each deed of voluntary |
assignment, the clerk shall collect a fee not to exceed $20. |
For recording a deed of voluntary assignment, the clerk shall |
collect a fee not to exceed 50 cents for each 100 words. |
Exceptions filed to claims presented to an assignee of a debtor |
who has made a voluntary assignment for the benefit of |
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creditors shall be considered and treated, for the purpose of |
taxing costs therein, as actions in which the party or parties |
filing the exceptions shall be considered as party or parties |
plaintiff, and the claimant or claimants as party or parties |
defendant, and those parties respectively shall pay to the |
clerk the same fees as provided by this Section to be paid in |
other actions. |
(t) Expungement petition. The clerk may collect a fee not |
to exceed $60 for each expungement petition filed and an |
additional fee not to exceed $4 for each certified copy of an |
order to expunge arrest records. |
(u) Transcripts of judgment. For the filing of a transcript |
of judgment, the clerk may collect the same fee as if it were |
the commencement of a new suit. |
(v) Probate filings. |
(1) For each account (other than one final account) |
filed in the estate of a decedent, or ward, the fee shall |
not exceed $25. |
(2) For filing a claim in an estate when the amount |
claimed is greater than $150 and not more than $500, the |
fee shall not exceed $40 in a county with a population of |
3,000,000 or more and shall not exceed $25 in any other |
county; when the amount claimed is greater than $500 and |
not more than $10,000, the fee shall not exceed $55 in a |
county with a population of 3,000,000 or more and shall not |
exceed $40 in any other county; and when the amount claimed |
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is more than $10,000, the fee shall not exceed $75 in a |
county with a population of 3,000,000 or more and shall not |
exceed $60 in any other county; except the court in |
allowing a claim may add to the amount allowed the filing |
fee paid by the claimant. |
(3) For filing in an estate a claim, petition, or |
supplemental proceeding based upon an action seeking |
equitable relief including the construction or contest of a |
will, enforcement of a contract to make a will, and |
proceedings involving testamentary trusts or the |
appointment of testamentary trustees, the fee shall not |
exceed $60. |
(4) There shall be no fee for filing in an estate: (i) |
the appearance of any person for the purpose of consent; or |
(ii) the appearance of an executor, administrator, |
administrator to collect, guardian, guardian ad litem, or |
special administrator. |
(5) For each jury demand, the fee shall not exceed |
$137.50. |
(6) For each certified copy of letters of office, of |
court order, or other certification, the fee shall not |
exceed
$2 per page. |
(7) For each exemplification, the fee shall not exceed |
$2, plus the fee for certification. |
(8) The executor, administrator, guardian, petitioner, |
or other interested person or his or her attorney shall pay |
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the cost of publication by the clerk directly to the |
newspaper. |
(9) The person on whose behalf a charge is incurred for |
witness, court reporter, appraiser, or other miscellaneous |
fees shall pay the same directly to the person entitled |
thereto. |
(10) The executor, administrator, guardian, |
petitioner, or other interested person or his or her |
attorney shall pay to the clerk all postage charges |
incurred by the clerk in mailing petitions, orders, |
notices, or other documents pursuant to the provisions of |
the Probate Act of 1975. |
(w) Corrections of numbers. For correction of the case |
number, case title, or attorney computer identification |
number, if required by rule of court, on any document filed in |
the clerk's office, to be charged against the party that filed |
the document, the fee shall not exceed $25. |
(x) Miscellaneous. |
(1) Interest earned on any fees collected by the clerk |
shall be turned over to the county general fund as an |
earning of the office. |
(2) For any check, draft, or other bank instrument |
returned to the clerk for non-sufficient funds, account |
closed, or payment stopped, the clerk shall collect a fee |
of $25. |
(y) Other fees. Any fees not covered in this Section shall |
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be set by rule or administrative order of the circuit court |
with the approval of the Administrative Office of the Illinois |
Courts. The clerk of the circuit court may provide services in |
connection with the operation of the clerk's office, other than |
those services mentioned in this Section, as may be requested |
by the public and agreed to by the clerk and approved by the |
Chief Judge. Any charges for additional services shall be as |
agreed to between the clerk and the party making the request |
and approved by the Chief Judge. Nothing in this subsection |
shall be construed to require any clerk to provide any service |
not otherwise required by law. |
(y-5) Unpaid fees. Unless a court ordered payment schedule |
is implemented or the fee
requirements of this Section are |
waived under a court order, the clerk of
the circuit court may |
add to any unpaid fees and costs under this Section a |
delinquency
amount equal to 5% of the unpaid fees that remain |
unpaid after 30 days, 10% of
the unpaid fees that remain unpaid |
after 60 days, and 15% of the unpaid fees
that remain unpaid |
after 90 days. Notice to those parties may be made by
signage |
posting or publication. The additional delinquency amounts |
collected under this Section shall
be deposited into the |
Circuit Court Clerk Operations and Administration Fund and used |
to defray additional administrative costs incurred by the clerk |
of the
circuit court in collecting unpaid fees and costs. |
(z) Exceptions. |
(1) No fee authorized by this Section shall apply to: |
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(A) police departments or other law enforcement |
agencies. In this Section, "law enforcement agency" |
means: an agency of the State or agency of a unit of |
local government which is vested by law or ordinance |
with the duty to maintain public order and to enforce |
criminal laws or ordinances; the Attorney General; or |
any State's Attorney; |
(A-5) any unit of local government or school |
district, except in counties having a population of |
500,000 or more the county board may by resolution set |
fees for units of local government or school districts |
no greater than the minimum fees applicable in counties |
with a population less than 3,000,000; provided |
however, no fee may be charged to any unit of local |
government or school district in connection with any |
action which, in whole or in part, is: (i) to enforce |
an ordinance; (ii) to collect a debt; or (iii) under |
the Administrative Review Law; |
(B) any action instituted by the corporate |
authority of a municipality with more than 1,000,000 |
inhabitants under Section 11-31-1 of the Illinois |
Municipal Code and any action instituted under |
subsection (b) of Section 11-31-1 of the Illinois |
Municipal Code by a private owner or tenant of real |
property within 1,200 feet of a dangerous or unsafe |
building seeking an order compelling the owner or |
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owners of the building to take any of the actions |
authorized under that subsection; |
(C) any commitment petition or petition for an |
order authorizing the administration of psychotropic |
medication or electroconvulsive therapy under the |
Mental Health and Developmental Disabilities Code; |
(D) a petitioner in any order of protection |
proceeding, including, but not limited to, fees for |
filing, modifying, withdrawing, certifying, or |
photocopying petitions for orders of protection, |
issuing alias summons, any related filing service, or |
certifying, modifying, vacating, or photocopying any |
orders of protection; or |
(E) proceedings for the appointment of a |
confidential intermediary under the Adoption Act. |
(2) No fee other than the filing fee contained in the |
applicable schedule in subsection (a) shall be charged to |
any person in connection with an adoption proceeding. |
(3) Upon good cause shown, the court may waive any fees |
associated with a special needs adoption. The term "special |
needs adoption" has the meaning provided by the Illinois |
Department of Children and Family Services. |
(aa) This Section is repealed on January 1, 2022 2021 .
|
(Source: P.A. 100-987, eff. 7-1-19; 100-994, eff. 7-1-19; |
100-1161, eff. 7-1-19 .) |
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(705 ILCS 105/27.1c) |
(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2021) |
Sec. 27.1c. Assessment report. |
(a) Not later than February 29, 2020, the clerk of the |
circuit court shall submit to the Administrative Office of the |
Illinois Courts a report for the period July 1, 2019 through |
December 31, 2019 containing, with respect to each of the 4 |
categories of civil cases established by the Supreme Court |
pursuant to Section 27.1b of this Act: |
(1) the total number of cases that were filed; |
(2) the amount of filing fees that were collected |
pursuant to subsection (a) of Section 27.1b; |
(3) the amount of appearance fees that were collected |
pursuant to subsection (b) of Section 27.1b; |
(4) the amount of fees collected pursuant to subsection |
(b-5) of Section 27.1b; |
(5) the amount of filing fees collected for |
counterclaims or third party complaints pursuant to |
subsection (c) of Section 27.1b; |
(6) the nature and amount of any fees collected |
pursuant to subsection (y) of Section 27.1b; and |
(7) the number of cases for which, pursuant to Section |
5-105 of the Code of Civil Procedure, there were waivers of |
fees, costs, and charges of 25%, 50%, 75%, or 100%, |
respectively, and the associated amount of fees, costs, and |
charges that were waived. |
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(b) The Administrative Office of the Illinois Courts shall |
publish the reports submitted under this Section on its |
website. |
(c) This Section is repealed on January 1, 2022 2021 .
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(Source: P.A. 100-1161, eff. 7-1-19 .) |
Section 70. The Criminal and Traffic Assessment Act is |
amended by changing Section 20-5 as follows: |
(705 ILCS 135/20-5)
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(Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2021) |
Sec. 20-5. Repeal. This Act is repealed on January 1, 2022 |
2021 .
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(Source: P.A. 100-987, eff. 7-1-19 .) |
Section 75. The Code of Criminal Procedure of 1963 is |
amended by changing Sections 106F-20 and 106F-25 as follows: |
(725 ILCS 5/106F-20) |
(Section scheduled to be repealed on July 1, 2020) |
Sec. 106F-20. Task Force; meetings; duties. |
(a) The Task Force on Children of Incarcerated Parents |
shall meet at least 4 times beginning within 30 days after the |
effective date of this amendatory Act of the 101st General |
Assembly. The first meeting shall be held no later than August |
1, 2019. |
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(b) The Task Force shall review available research, best |
practices, and effective interventions to formulate |
recommendations. |
(c) The Task Force shall produce a report detailing the |
Task Force's findings and recommendations and needed |
resources. The Task Force shall submit a report of its findings |
and recommendations to the General Assembly and the Governor by |
March 1, 2021 2020 . |
(d) (Blank).
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(Source: P.A. 101-480, eff. 8-23-19; 101-606, eff. 12-13-19.) |
(725 ILCS 5/106F-25) |
(Section scheduled to be repealed on July 1, 2020) |
Sec. 106F-25. Repeal. This Article is repealed on January |
1, 2022 July 1, 2020 .
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(Source: P.A. 101-606, eff. 12-13-19.)
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Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon |
becoming law.
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