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Public Act 102-0009 |
HB3743 Enrolled | LRB102 14600 SPS 19953 b |
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AN ACT concerning regulation.
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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 Department of State Police Law of the
Civil |
Administrative Code of Illinois is amended by changing Section |
2605-53 as follows: |
(20 ILCS 2605/2605-53) |
Sec. 2605-53. 9-1-1 system; sexual assault and sexual |
abuse. |
(a) The Office of the Statewide 9-1-1 Administrator, in |
consultation with the Office of the Attorney General and the |
Illinois Law Enforcement Training Standards Board, shall: |
(1) develop comprehensive guidelines for |
evidence-based, trauma-informed, victim-centered handling |
of sexual assault or sexual abuse calls by Public Safety |
Answering Point telecommunicators tele-communicators ; and |
(2) adopt rules and minimum standards for an |
evidence-based, trauma-informed, victim-centered training |
curriculum for handling of sexual assault or sexual abuse |
calls for Public Safety Answering Point telecommunicators |
tele-communicators ("PSAP"). |
(a-5) Within one year after the effective date of this |
amendatory Act of the 102nd General Assembly, the Office of |
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the Statewide 9-1-1 Administrator, in consultation with the |
Statewide 9-1-1 Advisory Board, shall: |
(1) develop comprehensive guidelines for training on |
emergency dispatch procedures, including but not limited |
to emergency medical dispatch, and the delivery of 9-1-1 |
services and professionalism for public safety |
telecommunicators and public safety telecommunicator |
supervisors; and |
(2) adopt rules and minimum standards for continuing |
education on emergency dispatch procedures, including but |
not limited to emergency medical dispatch, and the |
delivery of 9-1-1 services and professionalism for public |
safety telecommunicators and public safety |
telecommunicator Supervisors; and |
(a-10) The Office of the Statewide 9-1-1 Administrator may |
as necessary establish by rule appropriate testing and |
certification processes consistent with the training required |
by this Section. |
(b) Training requirements: |
(1) Newly hired PSAP telecommunicators |
tele-communicators must complete the sexual assault and |
sexual abuse training curriculum established in subsection |
(a) of this Section prior to handling emergency calls. |
(2) All existing PSAP telecommunicators |
tele-communicators shall complete the sexual assault and |
sexual abuse training curriculum established in subsection |
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(a) of this Section within 2 years of the effective date of |
this amendatory Act of the 99th General Assembly.
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(3) Newly hired public safety telecommunicators shall |
complete the emergency dispatch procedures training |
curriculum established in subsection (a-5) of this Section |
prior to independently handling emergency calls within one |
year of the Statewide 9-1-1 Administrator establishing the |
required guidelines, rules, and standards. |
(4) All public safety telecommunicators and public |
safety telecommunicator supervisors who were not required |
to complete new hire training prior to handling emergency |
calls, must either demonstrate proficiency or complete the |
training established in subsection (a-5) of this Section |
within one year of the Statewide 9-1-1 Administrator |
establishing the required guidelines, rules, and |
standards. |
(5) Upon completion of the training required in either |
paragraph (3) or (4) of subsection (b) whichever is |
applicable, all public safety telecommunicators and public |
safety telecommunicator supervisors shall complete the |
continuing education training regarding the delivery of |
9-1-1 services and professionalism biennially. |
(c) The Illinois State Police may adopt rules for the |
administration of this Section. |
(Source: P.A. 99-801, eff. 1-1-17 .) |
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Section 10. The Emergency Telephone System Act is amended |
by changing Sections 2, 3, 5, 6, 7, 8, 10, 10.3, 14, 15.2, |
15.2a, 15.3, 15.3a, 15.4, 15.4a, 15.6, 15.6a, 15.6b, 17.5, 19, |
20, 30, 40, and 99 and by adding Sections 6.2, 7.1, 11.5, and |
45 as follows:
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(50 ILCS 750/2) (from Ch. 134, par. 32)
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(Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2021)
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Sec. 2. Definitions. As used in this Act, unless the |
context otherwise requires: |
"9-1-1 network" means the network used for the delivery of |
9-1-1 calls and messages over dedicated and redundant |
facilities to a primary or backup 9-1-1 PSAP that meets the |
appropriate grade of service P.01 grade of service standards |
for basic 9-1-1 and enhanced 9-1-1 services or meets national |
I3 industry call delivery standards for Next Generation 9-1-1 |
services . |
"9-1-1 system" means the geographic area that has been |
granted an order of authority by the Commission or the |
Statewide 9-1-1 Administrator to use "9-1-1" as the primary |
emergency telephone number , including but not limited to the |
network, software applications, databases, CPE components and |
operational and management procedures required to provide |
9-1-1 service . |
"9-1-1 Authority" means includes an Emergency Telephone |
System Board, Joint Emergency Telephone System Board that |
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provides for the management and operation of a 9-1-1 system , |
and a qualified governmental entity . "9-1-1 Authority" |
includes the Department of State Police only to the extent it |
provides 9-1-1 services under this Act. |
"9-1-1 System Manager" means the manager, director, |
administrator, or coordinator who at the direction of his or |
her Emergency Telephone System Board is responsible for the |
implementation and execution of the order of authority issued |
by the Commission or the Statewide 9-1-1 Administrator through |
the programs, policies, procedures, and daily operations of |
the 9-1-1 system consistent with the provisions of this Act. |
"Administrator" means the Statewide 9-1-1 Administrator. |
"Advanced service" means any telecommunications service |
with or without dynamic bandwidth allocation, including, but |
not limited to, ISDN Primary Rate Interface (PRI), that, |
through the use of a DS-1, T-1, or other un-channelized or |
multi-channel transmission facility, is capable of |
transporting either the subscriber's inter-premises voice |
telecommunications services to the public switched network or |
the subscriber's 9-1-1 calls to the public agency. |
"Aggregator" means an entity that ingresses 9-1-1 calls of |
multiple traffic types or 9-1-1 calls from multiple |
originating service providers and combines them on a trunk |
group or groups (or equivalent egress connection arrangement |
to a 9-1-1 system provider's E9-1-1/NG9-1-1 network or |
system), and that uses the routing information provided in the |
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received call setup signaling to select the appropriate trunk |
group and proceeds to signal call setup toward the 9-1-1 |
system provider. "Aggregator" includes an originating service |
provider that provides aggregation functions for its own 9-1-1 |
calls. "Aggregator" also includes an aggregation network or an |
aggregation entity that provides aggregator services for other |
types of system providers, such as cloud-based services or |
enterprise networks as its client. |
"ALI" or "automatic location identification" means , in an |
E9-1-1 system, the automatic display at the public safety |
answering point of the caller's telephone number, the address |
or location of the caller's telephone , and supplementary |
emergency services information of the location from which a |
call originates . |
"ANI" or "automatic number identification" means the |
automatic display of the 10 digit telephone number associated |
with the caller's telephone number 9-1-1 calling party's |
number on the PSAP monitor . |
"Automatic alarm" and "automatic alerting device" mean any |
device that will access the 9-1-1 system for emergency |
services upon activation and does not provide for two-way |
communication . |
"Answering point" means a PSAP, SAP, Backup PSAP, Unmanned |
Backup Answering Point, or VAP. |
"Authorized entity" means an answering point or |
participating agency other than a decommissioned PSAP. |
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"Backup PSAP" means an a public safety answering point |
that meets the appropriate standards of service and serves as |
an alternate to the PSAP operating independently from the PSAP |
for enhanced systems and is at a different location , that has |
the capability to direct dispatch for the PSAP or otherwise |
transfer emergency calls directly to an authorized entity. and |
operates independently from the PSAP. A backup PSAP may accept |
overflow calls from the PSAP or be activated if the primary |
PSAP is disabled. |
"Board" means an Emergency Telephone System Board or a |
Joint Emergency Telephone System Board created pursuant to |
Section 15.4. |
"Carrier" includes a telecommunications carrier and a |
wireless carrier. |
"Commission" means the Illinois Commerce Commission. |
"Computer aided dispatch" or "CAD" means a computer-based |
system that aids public safety telecommunicators PSAP |
telecommunicators by automating selected dispatching and |
recordkeeping activities. |
"Direct dispatch dispatch method " means a 9-1-1 service |
wherein upon receipt of an emergency call, that provides for |
the direct dispatch by a public safety telecommunicator |
transmits - without delay, transfer, relay, or referral - all |
relevant available information to PSAP telecommunicator of the |
appropriate public safety personnel or emergency responders |
unit upon receipt of an emergency call and the decision as to |
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the proper action to be taken . |
"Decommissioned" means the revocation of a PSAPs authority |
to handle 9-1-1 calls as an answering point within the 9-1-1 |
network. |
"Department" means the Department of State Police. |
"DS-1, T-1, or similar un-channelized or multi-channel |
transmission facility" means a facility that can transmit and |
receive a bit rate of at least 1.544 megabits per second |
(Mbps). |
"Dynamic bandwidth allocation" means the ability of the |
facility or customer to drop and add channels, or adjust |
bandwidth, when needed in real time for voice or data |
purposes. |
"Emergency call" means any type of request for emergency |
assistance through a 9-1-1 network either to the digits 9-1-1 |
or the emergency 24/7 10-digit telephone number for all |
answering points. An emergency call is not limited to a voice |
telephone call. It could be a two-way video call, an |
interactive text, Teletypewriter (TTY), an SMS, an Instant |
Message, or any new mechanism for communications available in |
the future. An emergency call occurs when the request for |
emergency assistance is received by a public safety |
telecommunicator. |
"Enhanced 9-1-1" or "E9-1-1" means a telephone system that |
includes network switching, database and PSAP premise elements |
capable of providing automatic location identification data, |
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selective routing, selective transfer, fixed transfer, and a |
call back number, including any enhanced 9-1-1 service so |
designated by the Federal Communications Commission in its |
report and order in WC Dockets Nos. 04-36 and 05-196, or any |
successor proceeding. |
"ETSB" means an emergency telephone system board appointed |
by the corporate authorities of any county or municipality |
that provides for the management and operation of a 9-1-1 |
system. |
"Grade of service" means P.01 for enhanced 9-1-1 services |
or the NENA i3 Solution adopted standard for NG9-1-1. |
"Hearing-impaired individual" means a person with a |
permanent hearing loss who can regularly and routinely |
communicate by telephone only through the aid of devices which |
can send and receive written messages over the telephone |
network. |
"Hosted supplemental 9-1-1 service" means a database |
service that: |
(1) electronically provides information to 9-1-1 call |
takers when a call is placed to 9-1-1; |
(2) allows telephone subscribers to provide |
information to 9-1-1 to be used in emergency scenarios; |
(3) collects a variety of formatted data relevant to |
9-1-1 and first responder needs, which may include, but is |
not limited to, photographs of the telephone subscribers, |
physical descriptions, medical information, household |
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data, and emergency contacts; |
(4) allows for information to be entered by telephone |
subscribers through a secure website where they can elect |
to provide as little or as much information as they |
choose; |
(5) automatically displays data provided by telephone |
subscribers to 9-1-1 call takers for all types of |
telephones when a call is placed to 9-1-1 from a |
registered and confirmed phone number; |
(6) supports the delivery of telephone subscriber |
information through a secure internet connection to all |
emergency telephone system boards; |
(7) works across all 9-1-1 call taking equipment and |
allows for the easy transfer of information into a |
computer aided dispatch system; and |
(8) may be used to collect information pursuant to an |
Illinois Premise Alert Program as defined in the Illinois |
Premise Alert Program (PAP) Act. |
"Interconnected voice over Internet protocol provider" or |
"Interconnected VoIP provider" has the meaning given to that |
term under Section 13-235 of the Public Utilities Act. |
"Joint ETSB" means a Joint Emergency Telephone System |
Board established by intergovernmental agreement of two or |
more municipalities or counties, or a combination thereof, to |
provide for the management and operation of a 9-1-1 system. |
"Local public agency" means any unit of local government |
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or special purpose district located in whole or in part within |
this State that provides or has authority to provide |
firefighting, police, ambulance, medical, or other emergency |
services. |
"Mechanical dialer" means any device that accesses either |
manually or remotely triggers a dialing device to access the |
9-1-1 system without human intervention and does not provide |
for two-way communication . |
"Master Street Address Guide" or "MSAG" is a database of |
street names and house ranges within their associated |
communities defining emergency service zones (ESZs) and their |
associated emergency service numbers (ESNs) to enable proper |
routing of 9-1-1 calls. |
"Mobile telephone number" or "MTN" means the telephone |
number assigned to a wireless telephone at the time of initial |
activation. |
"Network connections" means the number of voice grade |
communications channels directly between a subscriber and a |
telecommunications carrier's public switched network, without |
the intervention of any other telecommunications carrier's |
switched network, which would be required to carry the |
subscriber's inter-premises traffic and which connection |
either (1) is capable of providing access through the public |
switched network to a 9-1-1 Emergency Telephone System, if one |
exists, or (2) if no system exists at the time a surcharge is |
imposed under Section 15.3, that would be capable of providing |
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access through the public switched network to the local 9-1-1 |
Emergency Telephone System if one existed. Where multiple |
voice grade communications channels are connected to a |
telecommunications carrier's public switched network through a |
private branch exchange (PBX) service, there shall be |
determined to be one network connection for each trunk line |
capable of transporting either the subscriber's inter-premises |
traffic to the public switched network or the subscriber's |
9-1-1 calls to the public agency. Where multiple voice grade |
communications channels are connected to a telecommunications |
carrier's public switched network through Centrex centrex type |
service, the number of network connections shall be equal to |
the number of PBX trunk equivalents for the subscriber's |
service or other multiple voice grade communication channels |
facility, as determined by reference to any generally |
applicable exchange access service tariff filed by the |
subscriber's telecommunications carrier with the Commission. |
"Network costs" means those recurring costs that directly |
relate to the operation of the 9-1-1 network as determined by |
the Statewide 9-1-1 Administrator with the advice of the |
Statewide 9-1-1 Advisory Board, which may include, but need |
not be limited to, some or all of the following: costs for |
interoffice trunks, selective routing charges, transfer lines |
and toll charges for 9-1-1 services, Automatic Location |
Information (ALI) database charges, independent local exchange |
carrier charges and non-system provider charges, carrier |
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charges for third party database for on-site customer premises |
equipment, back-up PSAP trunks for non-system providers, |
periodic database updates as provided by carrier (also known |
as "ALI data dump"), regional ALI storage charges, circuits |
for call delivery (fiber or circuit connection), NG9-1-1 |
costs, and all associated fees, taxes, and surcharges on each |
invoice. "Network costs" shall not include radio circuits or |
toll charges that are other than for 9-1-1 services. |
"Next generation 9-1-1" or "NG9-1-1" means a secure an |
Internet Protocol-based (IP-based) open-standards system |
comprised of hardware, software, data, and operational |
policies and procedures that: managed ESInets, functional |
elements and applications, and databases that replicate |
traditional E9-1-1 features and functions and provide |
additional capabilities. "NG9-1-1" systems are designed to |
provide access to emergency services from all connected |
communications sources, and provide multimedia data |
capabilities for PSAPs and other emergency services |
organizations. |
(A) provides standardized interfaces from |
emergency call and message services to support |
emergency communications; |
(B) processes all types of emergency calls, |
including voice, text, data, and multimedia |
information; |
(C) acquires and integrates additional emergency |
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call data useful to call routing and handling; |
(D) delivers the emergency calls, messages, and |
data to the appropriate public safety answering point |
and other appropriate emergency entities based on the |
location of the caller; |
(E) supports data, video, and other communications |
needs for coordinated incident response and |
management; and |
(F) interoperates with services and networks used |
by first responders to facilitate emergency response. |
"NG9-1-1 costs" means those recurring costs that directly |
relate to the Next Generation 9-1-1 service as determined by |
the Statewide 9-1-1 Administrator with the advice of the |
Statewide 9-1-1 Advisory Board, which may include including , |
but need not be limited to, costs for NENA i3 Core Components |
(Border Control Function (BCF), Emergency Call Routing |
Function (ECRF), Location Validation Function (LVF), Emergency |
Services Routing Proxy (ESRP), Policy Store/Policy Routing |
Functions (PSPRF) and Location Information Servers (LIS)), |
Statewide ESInet, software external to the PSAP (data |
collection, identity management, aggregation and GIS |
functionality), and gateways (legacy 9-1-1 tandems or gateways |
or both). Emergency System Routing Proxy (ESRP), Emergency |
Call Routing Function/Location Validation Function (ECRF/LVF), |
Spatial Information Function (SIF), the Border Control |
Function (BCF), and the Emergency Services Internet Protocol |
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networks (ESInets), legacy network gateways, and all |
associated fees, taxes, and surcharges on each invoice. |
"Originating service provider" or "OSP" means the entity |
that provides services to end users that may be used to |
originate voice or nonvoice 9-1-1 requests for assistance and |
who would interconnect, in any of various fashions, to the |
9-1-1 system provider for purposes of delivering 9-1-1 traffic |
to the public safety answering points. |
"Private branch exchange" or "PBX" means a private |
telephone system and associated equipment located on the |
user's property that provides communications between internal |
stations and external networks. |
"Private business switch service" means network and |
premises based systems including a VoIP, Centrex type service, |
or PBX service, even though key telephone systems or |
equivalent telephone systems registered with the Federal |
Communications Commission under 47 CFR C.F.R. Part 68 are |
directly connected to Centrex type and PBX systems. "Private |
business switch service" does not include key telephone |
systems or equivalent telephone systems registered with the |
Federal Communications Commission under 47 CFR C.F.R. Part 68 |
when not used in conjunction with a VoIP, Centrex type, or PBX |
systems. "Private business switch service" typically includes, |
but is not limited to, private businesses, corporations, and |
industries where the telecommunications service is primarily |
for conducting business. |
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"Private residential switch service" means network and |
premise based systems including a VoIP, Centrex type service, |
or PBX service or key telephone systems or equivalent |
telephone systems registered with the Federal Communications |
Commission under 47 C.F.R. Part 68 that are directly connected |
to a VoIP, Centrex type service, or PBX systems equipped for |
switched local network connections or 9-1-1 system access to |
residential end users through a private telephone switch. |
"Private residential switch service" does not include key |
telephone systems or equivalent telephone systems registered |
with the Federal Communications Commission under 47 C.F.R. |
Part 68 when not used in conjunction with a VoIP, Centrex type, |
or PBX systems. "Private residential switch service" typically |
includes, but is not limited to, apartment complexes, |
condominiums, and campus or university environments where |
shared tenant service is provided and where the usage of the |
telecommunications service is primarily residential. |
"Public agency" means the State, and any unit of local |
government or special purpose district located in whole or in |
part within this State, that provides or has authority to |
provide firefighting, police, ambulance, medical, or other |
emergency services. |
"Public safety agency" means a functional division of a |
public agency that provides firefighting, police, medical, or |
other emergency services to respond to and manage emergency |
incidents. For the purpose of providing wireless service to |
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users of 9-1-1 emergency services, as expressly provided for |
in this Act, the Department of State Police may be considered a |
public safety agency. |
"Public safety answering point" or "PSAP" means the |
primary answering location of an emergency call that meets the |
appropriate standards of service and is responsible for |
receiving and processing is a set of call-takers authorized by |
a governing body and operating under common management that |
receive 9-1-1 calls and asynchronous event notifications for a |
defined geographic area and processes those calls and events |
according to a specified operational policy. |
"PSAP representative" means the manager or supervisor of a |
Public Safety Answering Point (PSAP) who oversees the daily |
operational functions and is responsible for the overall |
management and administration of the PSAP. |
"Public safety telecommunicator" means any person employed |
in a full-time or part-time capacity at an answering point |
whose duties or responsibilities include answering, receiving, |
or transferring an emergency call for dispatch to the |
appropriate emergency responder. |
"Public safety telecommunicator supervisor" means any |
person employed in a full-time or part-time capacity at an |
answering point or by a 9-1-1 Authority, whose primary duties |
or responsibilities are to direct, administer, or manage any |
public safety telecommunicator and whose responsibilities |
include answering, receiving, or transferring an emergency |
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call for dispatch to the appropriate responders. |
"Qualified governmental entity" means a unit of local |
government authorized to provide 9-1-1 services pursuant to |
this Act where no emergency telephone system board exists. |
"Referral method " means a 9-1-1 service in which the |
public safety telecommunicator PSAP telecommunicator provides |
the calling party with the telephone number of the appropriate |
public safety agency or other provider of emergency services. |
"Regular service" means any telecommunications service, |
other than advanced service, that is capable of transporting |
either the subscriber's inter-premises voice |
telecommunications services to the public switched network or |
the subscriber's 9-1-1 calls to the public agency. |
"Relay method " means a 9-1-1 service in which the public |
safety telecommunicator PSAP telecommunicator takes the |
pertinent information from a caller and relays that |
information to the appropriate public safety agency or other |
provider of emergency services. |
"Remit period" means the billing period, one month in |
duration, for which a wireless carrier remits a surcharge and |
provides subscriber information by zip code to the Department, |
in accordance with Section 20 of this Act. |
"Secondary Answering Point" or "SAP" means a location, |
other than a PSAP, that is able to receive the voice, data, and |
call back number of E9-1-1 or NG9-1-1 emergency calls |
transferred from a PSAP and completes the call taking process |
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by dispatching police, medical, fire, or other emergency |
responders. |
"Statewide wireless emergency 9-1-1 system" means all |
areas of the State where an emergency telephone system board |
or, in the absence of an emergency telephone system board, a |
qualified governmental entity, has not declared its intention |
for one or more of its public safety answering points to serve |
as a primary wireless 9-1-1 public safety answering point for |
its jurisdiction. The operator of the statewide wireless |
emergency 9-1-1 system shall be the Department of State |
Police. |
"System" means the communications equipment and related |
software applications required to produce a response by the |
appropriate emergency public safety agency or other provider |
of emergency services as a result of an emergency call being |
placed to 9-1-1. |
"System provider" means the contracted entity providing |
9-1-1 network and database services. |
"Telecommunications carrier" means those entities included |
within the definition specified in Section 13-202 of the |
Public Utilities Act, and includes those carriers acting as |
resellers of telecommunications services. "Telecommunications |
carrier" includes telephone systems operating as mutual |
concerns. "Telecommunications carrier" does not include a |
wireless carrier. |
"Telecommunications technology" means equipment that can |
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send and receive written messages over the telephone network. |
"Transfer method " means a 9-1-1 service in which the |
public safety telecommunicator, who receives an emergency PSAP |
telecommunicator receiving a call , transmits, redirects, or |
conferences transfers that call to the appropriate public |
safety agency or other provider of emergency services. |
Transfer shall not include a relay or referral of the |
information without transferring the caller. |
"Transmitting messages" shall have the meaning given to |
that term under Section 8-11-2 of the Illinois Municipal Code. |
"Trunk line" means a transmission path, or group of |
transmission paths, connecting a subscriber's PBX to a |
telecommunications carrier's public switched network. In the |
case of regular service, each voice grade communications |
channel or equivalent amount of bandwidth capable of |
transporting either the subscriber's inter-premises voice |
telecommunications services to the public switched network or |
the subscriber's 9-1-1 calls to the public agency shall be |
considered a trunk line, even if it is bundled with other |
channels or additional bandwidth. In the case of advanced |
service, each DS-1, T-1, or other un-channelized or |
multi-channel transmission facility that is capable of |
transporting either the subscriber's inter-premises voice |
telecommunications services to the public switched network or |
the subscriber's 9-1-1 calls to the public agency shall be |
considered a single trunk line, even if it contains multiple |
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voice grade communications channels or otherwise supports 2 or |
more voice grade calls at a time; provided, however, that each |
additional increment of up to 24 voice grade channels of |
transmission capacity that is capable of transporting either |
the subscriber's inter-premises voice telecommunications |
services to the public switched network or the subscriber's |
9-1-1 calls to the public agency shall be considered an |
additional trunk line. |
"Unmanned backup answering point PSAP " means an a public |
safety answering point that serves as an alternate to the PSAP |
at an alternate location and is typically unmanned but can be |
activated if the primary PSAP is disabled. |
"Virtual answering point" or "VAP" means a temporary or |
nonpermanent location that is capable of receiving an |
emergency call, contains a fully functional worksite that is |
not bound to a specific location, but rather is portable and |
scalable, connecting public safety telecommunicators emergency |
call takers or dispatchers to the work process, and is capable |
of completing the call dispatching process. |
"Voice-impaired individual" means a person with a |
permanent speech disability which precludes oral |
communication, who can regularly and routinely communicate by |
telephone only through the aid of devices which can send and |
receive written messages over the telephone network. |
"Wireless carrier" means a provider of two-way cellular, |
broadband PCS, geographic area 800 MHZ and 900 MHZ Commercial |
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Mobile Radio Service (CMRS), Wireless Communications Service |
(WCS), or other Commercial Mobile Radio Service (CMRS), as |
defined by the Federal Communications Commission, offering |
radio communications that may provide fixed, mobile, radio |
location, or satellite communication services to individuals |
or businesses within its assigned spectrum block and |
geographical area or that offers real-time, two-way voice |
service that is interconnected with the public switched |
network, including a reseller of such service. |
"Wireless enhanced 9-1-1" means the ability to relay the |
telephone number of the originator of a 9-1-1 call and |
location information from any mobile handset or text telephone |
device accessing the wireless system to the designated |
wireless public safety answering point as set forth in the |
order of the Federal Communications Commission, FCC Docket No. |
94-102, adopted June 12, 1996, with an effective date of |
October 1, 1996, and any subsequent amendment thereto. |
"Wireless public safety answering point" means the |
functional division of a 9-1-1 authority accepting wireless |
9-1-1 calls. |
"Wireless subscriber" means an individual or entity to |
whom a wireless service account or number has been assigned by |
a wireless carrier, other than an account or number associated |
with prepaid wireless telecommunication service.
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(Source: P.A. 99-6, eff. 1-1-16; 100-20, eff. 7-1-17 .)
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(50 ILCS 750/3) (from Ch. 134, par. 33)
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(Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2021)
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Sec. 3.
(a) By July 1, 2017, every local public agency |
shall be within the jurisdiction of a 9-1-1 system.
|
(b) Within 18 months of the awarding of a contract to a |
vendor certified under Section 13-900 of the Public Utilities |
Act to provide Next Generation 9-1-1 service By December 31, |
2021 , every 9-1-1 system in Illinois , except in a municipality |
with a population over 500,000, shall provide Next Generation |
9-1-1 service. A municipality with a population over 500,000 |
shall provide Next Generation 9-1-1 service by December 31, |
2023. |
(c) Nothing in this Act shall be construed to prohibit or
|
discourage in any way the formation of multijurisdictional or |
regional
systems, and any system established pursuant to this |
Act may include the
territory of more than one public agency or |
may include a segment of the
territory of a public agency.
|
(Source: P.A. 100-20, eff. 7-1-17; 101-639, eff. 6-12-20.)
|
(50 ILCS 750/5) (from Ch. 134, par. 35)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2021)
|
Sec. 5.
The digits "9-1-1" shall be the primary emergency |
telephone
number within the system, but a public agency or |
public safety agency
shall maintain a separate secondary |
10-digit seven digit emergency
backup number for at least 6 |
six months after the "9-1-1" system is
established and in |
|
operation, and shall maintain a separate number for
|
nonemergency telephone calls.
|
(Source: P.A. 100-20, eff. 7-1-17 .)
|
(50 ILCS 750/6) (from Ch. 134, par. 36)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2021)
|
Sec. 6. Capabilities of system; pay telephones. All |
systems shall be
designed to meet the specific
requirements of |
each community and public agency served by the system.
Every |
system shall be designed to have
the capability to of |
utilizing the direct dispatch or to method, relay method, |
transfer method, or referral method in response to emergency |
calls. The
General Assembly finds and declares that the most |
critical aspect of the
design of any system is the procedure |
established for handling a
telephone request for emergency |
services.
|
In addition, to maximize efficiency and utilization of the |
system,
all pay telephones within each system shall
enable a |
caller to dial "9-1-1" for emergency services without the
|
necessity of inserting a coin. This paragraph does not apply |
to pay
telephones
located in penal
institutions, as defined in |
Section 2-14 of the Criminal Code of 2012, that
have
been |
designated for the exclusive use of committed persons.
|
(Source: P.A. 99-6, eff. 1-1-16; 100-20, eff. 7-1-17 .)
|
(50 ILCS 750/6.2 new) |
|
Sec. 6.2. Every 9-1-1 system shall be able to accept text |
to 9-1-1 no later than January 1, 2023. The Illinois State |
Police shall adopt rules for the implementation of this |
Section.
|
(50 ILCS 750/7) (from Ch. 134, par. 37)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2021)
|
Sec. 7.
The General Assembly finds that, because of |
overlapping
jurisdiction of public agencies, public safety |
agencies and telephone
service areas, the Administrator, with |
the advice and recommendation of the Statewide 9-1-1 Advisory |
Board, shall establish a general overview or plan
to |
effectuate the purposes of this Act within the time frame |
provided in
this Act. The General Assembly further finds and |
declares that direct dispatch should be used if possible to |
shorten the time required for the public to request and |
receive emergency aid. The Administrator shall minimize the |
use of transfer, relay, and referral of an emergency call if |
possible and encourage Backup PSAPs to be able to direct |
dispatch. Transfer, relay, and referral of an emergency call |
to an entity other than an answering point or the Illinois |
State Police shall not be used in response to emergency calls |
unless exigent circumstances exist. In order to insure that |
proper preparation and implementation
of emergency telephone |
systems are accomplished by all public agencies as required |
under this Act, the Department, with the
advice and assistance |
|
of
the Attorney General, shall secure compliance by public |
agencies as
provided in this Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 99-6, eff. 1-1-16; 100-20, eff. 7-1-17 .)
|
(50 ILCS 750/7.1 new) |
Sec. 7.1. Training. |
(a) Each 9-1-1 Authority, as well as its answering points, |
shall ensure its public safety telecommunicators and public |
safety telecommunicator Supervisors comply with the training, |
testing, and certification requirements established pursuant |
to Section 2605-53 of the Department of State Police Law. |
(b) Each 9-1-1 Authority, as well as its answering points, |
shall maintain a record regarding its public safety |
telecommunicators and public safety telecommunicator |
Supervisors compliance with this Section for at least 7 years |
and shall make the training records available for inspection |
by the Administrator upon request. |
(c) Costs incurred for the development of standards, |
training, testing and certification shall be expenses paid by |
the Department from the funds available to the Administrator |
and the Statewide 9-1-1 Advisory Board under Section 30 of |
this Act. Nothing in this subsection shall prohibit the use of |
grants or other nonsurcharge funding sources available for |
this purpose.
|
(50 ILCS 750/8) (from Ch. 134, par. 38)
|
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2021)
|
Sec. 8.
The Administrator, with the advice and |
recommendation of the Statewide 9-1-1 Advisory Board, shall |
coordinate the implementation of systems established under |
this Act. To assist with this coordination, all systems |
authorized to operate under this Act shall register with the |
Administrator information regarding its composition and |
organization, including, but not limited to, identification of |
the
9-1-1 System Manager and all answering points. |
Decommissioned PSAPs shall not be registered and are not part |
of the 9-1-1 system in Illinois PSAPs, SAPs, VAPs, Backup |
PSAPs, and Unmanned Backup PSAPs . The Department may adopt |
rules for the administration of this Section.
|
(Source: P.A. 99-6, eff. 1-1-16; 100-20, eff. 7-1-17 .)
|
(50 ILCS 750/10) (from Ch. 134, par. 40) |
(Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2021) |
Sec. 10. (a) The Administrator, with the advice and |
recommendation of the Statewide 9-1-1 Advisory Board, shall |
establish uniform technical and operational standards for all |
9-1-1 systems in Illinois. All findings, orders, decisions, |
rules, and regulations issued or promulgated by the Commission |
under this Act or any other Act establishing or conferring |
power on the Commission with respect to emergency |
telecommunications services, shall continue in force. |
Notwithstanding the provisions of this Section, where |
|
applicable, the Administrator shall, with the advice and |
recommendation of the Statewide 9-1-1 Advisory Board, amend |
the Commission's findings, orders, decisions, rules, and |
regulations to conform to the specific provisions of this Act |
as soon as practicable after the effective date of this |
amendatory Act of the 99th General Assembly. |
(a-5) All 9-1-1 systems are responsible for complying with |
the uniform technical and operational standards adopted by the |
Administrator and the Illinois State Police with the advice |
and recommendation of the Statewide 9-1-1 Advisory Board. |
(b) The Department may adopt emergency rules necessary to |
implement the provisions of this amendatory Act of the 99th |
General Assembly under subsection (t) of Section 5-45 of the |
Illinois Administrative Procedure Act. |
(c) Nothing in this Act shall deprive the Commission of |
any authority to regulate the provision by telecommunication |
carriers or 9-1-1 system service providers of |
telecommunication or other services under the Public Utilities |
Act. |
(d) For rules that implicate both the regulation of 9-1-1 |
authorities under this Act and the regulation of |
telecommunication carriers and 9-1-1 system service providers |
under the Public Utilities Act, the Department and the |
Commission may adopt joint rules necessary for implementation. |
(e) Any findings, orders, or decisions of the |
Administrator under this Section shall be deemed a final |
|
administrative decision and shall be subject to judicial |
review under the Administrative Review Law. |
(Source: P.A. 99-6, eff. 1-1-16; 100-20, eff. 7-1-17 .)
|
(50 ILCS 750/10.3)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2021)
|
Sec. 10.3. Notice of address change. The Emergency |
Telephone System Board or qualified governmental entity
in
any
|
county implementing a 9-1-1 system that changes any person's |
address (when the
person
whose address has changed has not |
moved to a new residence) shall notify
the person (i) of the |
person's new address and (ii) that the person should
contact |
the local
election authority to determine if the person should |
re-register to vote.
|
(Source: P.A. 100-20, eff. 7-1-17 .)
|
(50 ILCS 750/11.5 new) |
Sec. 11.5. Aggregator and originating service provider |
responsibilities. |
(a) Each aggregator, and the originating service providers |
whose 9-1-1 calls are being aggregated by the aggregator, |
shall comply with their respective requirements in 83 Ill. |
Adm. Code Part 725.410. |
(b) Beginning July 1, 2021, each aggregator that is |
operating within the State must email the Office of the |
Statewide 9-1-1 Administrator to provide the following |
|
information that supports the implementation of and the |
migration to the Statewide NG9-1-1 system: |
(1) A company 9-1-1 contact, address, email, and phone |
number. |
(2) A list of originating service providers that the |
aggregator transports 9-1-1 calls for and then to the |
appropriate 9-1-1 system provider.
New or current |
aggregators must update the required information within 30 |
days of implementing any changes in information required |
by this subsection. |
(c) Each aggregator shall establish procedures for |
receiving No Record Found errors from the 9-1-1 System |
Provider, identifying the originating service provider who |
delivered the call to the aggregator, and referring the No |
Record Found errors to that originating service provider. |
(d) Each originating service provider shall establish |
procedures with the 9-1-1 system provider for preventing and |
resolving No Record Found errors in the 9-1-1 database and |
make every effort to ensure 9-1-1 calls are sent to the |
appropriate public safety answering point. |
(e) If a 9-1-1 system is being transitioned to NG9-1-1 |
service or to a new provider, each aggregator shall be |
responsible for coordinating any modifications that are needed |
to ensure that the originating service provider provides the |
required level of service to its customers. Each aggregator |
shall coordinate those network changes or additions for those |
|
migrations in a timely manner with the appropriate 9-1-1 |
system provider who shall be managing its respective |
implementation schedule and cut over. Each aggregator shall |
send notice to its originating service provider customers of |
the aggregator's successful turn up of the network changes or |
additions supporting the migration and include the necessary |
information for the originating service provider's migration |
(such as public safety answering point name, Federal |
Communications Commission Identification, and Emergency |
Services Routing Number). The notice shall be provided to the |
originating service providers within 2 weeks of acceptance |
testing and conversion activities between the aggregator and |
the 9-1-1 system provider. |
(f) The 9-1-1 system provider shall coordinate directly |
with the originating service providers (unless the aggregator |
separately agrees to coordinate with the originating service |
providers) for migration, but in no case shall that migration |
exceed 30 days after receipt of notice from the aggregator, |
unless agreed to by the originating service provider and 9-1-1 |
system provider. |
(g) Each aggregator shall coordinate test calls with the |
9-1-1 system provider and the 9-1-1 Authority when turning up |
new circuits or making network changes. Each originating |
service provider shall perform testing of its network and |
provisioning upon notification from the aggregator that the |
network has been tested and accepted with the 9-1-1 system |
|
provider. |
(h) Each aggregator and originating service provider |
customer shall deliver all 9-1-1 calls, audio, data, and |
location to the 9-1-1 system at a location determined by the |
State.
|
(50 ILCS 750/14) (from Ch. 134, par. 44)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2021)
|
Sec. 14.
The General Assembly declares that a major |
purpose of this Act is to ensure that 9-1-1 systems have |
redundant methods of dispatch for: (1) each public safety |
agency within its jurisdiction, herein known as participating |
agencies; and (2) 9-1-1 systems whose jurisdictional |
boundaries are contiguous, herein known as adjacent 9-1-1 |
systems, when an emergency request for service is received for |
a public safety agency that needs to be dispatched by the |
adjacent 9-1-1 system. Another primary purpose of this Section |
is to
eliminate instances in which a public safety agency |
refuses, once dispatched, to render aid outside of the |
jurisdictional boundaries
of the public safety agency. |
Therefore, in implementing a 9-1-1 system under this Act, all |
9-1-1 authorities
shall enter into call handling and aid |
outside jurisdictional boundaries agreements with each |
participating agency and adjacent 9-1-1 system. The
agreements |
shall provide a primary and secondary means of dispatch. It |
must also provide that, once an emergency unit is dispatched |
|
in response
to a request through the system, such unit shall |
render its services to the requesting
party without regard to |
whether the unit is operating outside its
normal |
jurisdictional boundaries. Certified notification of the
|
continuation of call handling and aid outside jurisdictional |
boundaries agreements shall be made among the involved parties |
on an annual basis. The Illinois State Police may adopt rules |
for the administration of this Section.
|
(Source: P.A. 100-20, eff. 7-1-17 .)
|
(50 ILCS 750/15.2) (from Ch. 134, par. 45.2)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2021)
|
Sec. 15.2.
Any person placing an "emergency call" to |
calling the number "911" for the purpose of making an a
false |
alarm or complaint and reporting false information when, at |
the time the call or transmission is made, the person knows |
there is no reasonable ground for making the call or |
transmission and further knows that the call or transmission |
could result in the emergency response of any public safety |
agency, is subject to the
provisions of Section 26-1 of the |
Criminal Code of 2012.
|
(Source: P.A. 100-20, eff. 7-1-17 .)
|
(50 ILCS 750/15.2a) (from Ch. 134, par. 45.2a)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2021)
|
Sec. 15.2a. The installation of or connection to a |
|
telephone
company's network of any automatic alarm, automatic |
alerting
device, or mechanical dialer that causes the number |
9-1-1 to
be dialed in order to directly access emergency |
services and does not provide for 2-way communication is
|
prohibited in a 9-1-1 system. |
This Section does not apply to a person who connects to a |
9-1-1 network using automatic crash notification technology |
subject to an established protocol. |
This Section does not apply to devices used to enable |
access to the 9-1-1 system for cognitively-impaired or special |
needs persons or for persons with disabilities in an emergency |
situation reported by a caregiver after initiating a missing |
person's report. The device must have the capability to be |
activated and controlled remotely by trained personnel at a |
service center to prevent falsely activated or repeated calls |
to the 9-1-1 system in a single incident. The device must have |
the technical capability to generate location information to |
the 9-1-1 system. Under no circumstances shall a device be |
sold for use in a geographical jurisdiction where the 9-1-1 |
system has not deployed wireless phase II location technology. |
The alerting device shall also provide for either 2-way |
communication or send a pre-recorded message to a 9-1-1 |
provider explaining the nature of the emergency so that the |
9-1-1 provider will be able to dispatch the appropriate |
emergency responder. |
Violation of this Section is
a Class A misdemeanor. A |
|
second or subsequent violation of this
Section is a Class 4 |
felony.
|
(Source: P.A. 99-143, eff. 7-27-15; 100-20, eff. 7-1-17 .)
|
(50 ILCS 750/15.3) (from Ch. 134, par. 45.3)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2021)
|
Sec. 15.3. Local non-wireless surcharge. |
(a) Except as provided in subsection (l) of this Section, |
the corporate authorities of any municipality or any
county |
may, subject to the limitations of subsections (c), (d), and |
(h),
and in addition to any tax levied pursuant to the |
Simplified Municipal
Telecommunications Tax Act, impose a |
monthly surcharge on billed subscribers
of network connection |
provided by telecommunication carriers engaged in the
business |
of transmitting messages by means of electricity originating |
within
the corporate limits of the municipality or county |
imposing the surcharge at
a rate per network connection |
determined in accordance with subsection (c), however the |
monthly surcharge shall not apply to a network connection |
provided for use with pay telephone services.
Provided, |
however, that where multiple voice grade communications |
channels
are connected between the subscriber's premises and a |
public switched network
through private branch exchange (PBX) |
or centrex type service, a municipality
imposing a surcharge |
at a rate per network connection, as determined in
accordance |
with this Act, shall impose: |
|
(i) in a municipality with a population of 500,000 or |
less or in any county, 5 such surcharges per network
|
connection, as defined under Section 2 of this Act, for |
both regular service and advanced service provisioned |
trunk lines; |
(ii) in a municipality with a population, prior to |
March 1, 2010, of 500,000 or more, 5 surcharges per |
network connection, as defined under Section 2 of this |
Act, for both regular service and advanced
service |
provisioned trunk lines; |
(iii) in a municipality with a population, as of March |
1, 2010, of 500,000 or more, 5 surcharges per network |
connection, as defined under Section 2 of this Act, for |
regular service
provisioned trunk lines, and 12 surcharges |
per network connection, as defined under Section 2 of this |
Act, for advanced service provisioned trunk
lines, except |
where an advanced service provisioned trunk line supports |
at least 2 but fewer
than 23 simultaneous voice grade |
calls ("VGC's"), a telecommunication carrier may
elect to |
impose fewer than 12 surcharges per trunk line as provided |
in subsection (iv)
of this Section; or |
(iv) for an advanced service provisioned trunk line |
connected between the
subscriber's premises and the public |
switched network through a P.B.X., where the advanced
|
service provisioned trunk line is capable of transporting |
at least 2 but fewer than 23
simultaneous VGC's per trunk |
|
line, the telecommunications carrier collecting the |
surcharge
may elect to impose surcharges in accordance |
with the table provided in this Section, without limiting
|
any telecommunications carrier's obligations to otherwise |
keep and maintain records. Any
telecommunications carrier |
electing to impose fewer than 12 surcharges per an |
advanced
service provisioned trunk line shall keep and |
maintain records adequately to demonstrate the
VGC |
capability of each advanced service provisioned trunk line |
with fewer than 12
surcharges imposed, provided that 12 |
surcharges shall be imposed on an advanced service
|
provisioned trunk line regardless of the VGC capability |
where a telecommunications carrier
cannot demonstrate the |
VGC capability of the advanced service provisioned trunk |
line.
|
|
Facility | VGC's | 911 Surcharges | |
Advanced service provisioned trunk line | 18-23 | 12 | |
Advanced service provisioned trunk line | 12-17 | 10 | |
Advanced service provisioned trunk line | 2-11 | 8 |
|
Subsections (i), (ii), (iii), and (iv) are not intended to |
make any change in the meaning of this Section, but are |
intended to remove possible ambiguity, thereby confirming the |
intent of paragraph (a) as it existed prior to and following |
the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 97th General |
|
Assembly. |
For mobile telecommunications services, if a surcharge is |
imposed it shall be
imposed based upon the municipality or |
county that encompasses the customer's
place of primary use as |
defined in the Mobile Telecommunications Sourcing
Conformity |
Act. A municipality may enter into an intergovernmental
|
agreement with any county in which it is partially located, |
when the county
has adopted an ordinance to impose a surcharge |
as provided in subsection
(c), to include that portion of the |
municipality lying outside the county
in that county's |
surcharge referendum. If the county's surcharge
referendum is |
approved, the portion of the municipality identified in the
|
intergovernmental agreement shall automatically be |
disconnected from the
county in which it lies and connected to |
the county which approved the
referendum for purposes of a |
surcharge on telecommunications carriers.
|
(b) For purposes of computing the surcharge imposed by |
subsection (a),
the network connections to which the surcharge |
shall apply shall be those
in-service network connections, |
other than those network connections
assigned to the |
municipality or county, where the service address for each
|
such network connection or connections is located within the |
corporate
limits of the municipality or county levying the |
surcharge. Except for mobile
telecommunication services, the |
"service address" shall mean the location of
the primary use |
of the network connection or connections. For mobile
|
|
telecommunication services, "service address" means the |
customer's place of
primary use as defined in the Mobile |
Telecommunications Sourcing Conformity
Act.
|
(c) Upon the passage of an ordinance to impose a surcharge |
under this
Section the clerk of the municipality or county |
shall certify the question
of whether the surcharge may be |
imposed to the proper election authority
who shall submit the |
public question to the electors of the municipality or
county |
in accordance with the general election law; provided that |
such
question shall not be submitted at a consolidated primary |
election. The
public question shall be in substantially the |
following form:
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
Shall the county (or city, village
|
or incorporated town) of ..... impose YES
|
a surcharge of up to ...¢ per month per
|
network connection, which surcharge will
|
be added to the monthly bill you receive ------------------
|
for telephone or telecommunications
|
charges, for the purpose of installing
|
(or improving) a 9-1-1 Emergency NO
|
Telephone System?
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
If a majority of the votes cast upon the public question |
are in favor
thereof, the surcharge shall be imposed.
|
However, if a Joint Emergency Telephone System Board is to |
|
be created
pursuant to an intergovernmental agreement under |
Section 15.4, the
ordinance to impose the surcharge shall be |
subject to the approval of a
majority of the total number of |
votes cast upon the public question by the
electors of all of |
the municipalities or counties, or combination thereof,
that |
are parties to the intergovernmental agreement.
|
The referendum requirement of this subsection (c) shall |
not apply
to any municipality with a population over 500,000 |
or to any
county in which a proposition as to whether a |
sophisticated 9-1-1 Emergency
Telephone System should be |
installed in the county, at a cost not to
exceed a specified |
monthly amount per network connection, has previously
been |
approved by a majority of the electors of the county voting on |
the
proposition at an election conducted before the effective |
date of this
amendatory Act of 1987.
|
(d) A county may not impose a surcharge, unless requested |
by a
municipality, in any incorporated area which has |
previously approved a
surcharge as provided in subsection (c) |
or in any incorporated area where
the corporate authorities of |
the municipality have previously entered into
a binding |
contract or letter of intent with a telecommunications carrier |
to
provide sophisticated 9-1-1 service through municipal |
funds.
|
(e) A municipality or county may at any time by ordinance |
change the
rate of the surcharge imposed under this Section if |
the new rate does not
exceed the rate specified in the |
|
referendum held pursuant to subsection (c).
|
(f) The surcharge authorized by this Section shall be |
collected from
the subscriber by the telecommunications |
carrier providing the subscriber
the network connection as a |
separately stated item on the subscriber's bill.
|
(g) The amount of surcharge collected by the |
telecommunications carrier
shall be paid to the particular |
municipality or county or Joint Emergency
Telephone System |
Board not later than 30 days after the surcharge is
collected, |
net of any network or other 9-1-1 or sophisticated 9-1-1 |
system
charges then due the particular telecommunications |
carrier, as shown on an
itemized bill. The telecommunications |
carrier collecting the surcharge
shall also be entitled to |
deduct 3% of the gross amount of surcharge
collected to |
reimburse the telecommunications carrier for the expense of
|
accounting and collecting the surcharge.
|
(h) Except as expressly provided in subsection (a) of this |
Section, on or after the effective date of this amendatory Act |
of the 98th General Assembly and until December 31, 2017, a |
municipality with a population of 500,000 or more shall not |
impose a monthly surcharge per network connection in excess of |
the highest monthly surcharge imposed as of January 1, 2014 by |
any county or municipality under subsection (c) of this |
Section. Beginning January 1, 2018 and until December 31, 2023 |
2021 , a municipality with a population over 500,000 may not |
impose a monthly surcharge in excess of $5.00 per network |
|
connection. On or after January 1, 2024 2022 , a
municipality |
with a population over 500,000 may not impose a
monthly |
surcharge in excess of $2.50
per network connection.
|
(i) Any municipality or county or joint emergency |
telephone system
board that has imposed a surcharge pursuant |
to this Section prior to the
effective date of this amendatory |
Act of 1990 shall hereafter impose the
surcharge in accordance |
with subsection (b) of this Section.
|
(j) The corporate authorities of any municipality or |
county may issue,
in accordance with Illinois law, bonds, |
notes or other obligations secured
in whole or in part by the |
proceeds of the surcharge described in this
Section.
The State |
of Illinois pledges and agrees that it will not limit or alter
|
the rights and powers vested in municipalities and counties by |
this Section
to impose the surcharge so as to impair the terms |
of or affect the
security for bonds, notes or other |
obligations secured in whole or in part
with the proceeds of |
the surcharge described in this Section. The pledge and |
agreement set forth in this Section survive the termination of |
the surcharge under subsection (l) by virtue of the |
replacement of the surcharge monies guaranteed under Section |
20; the State of Illinois pledges and agrees that it will not |
limit or alter the rights vested in municipalities and |
counties to the surcharge replacement funds guaranteed under |
Section 20 so as to impair the terms of or affect the security |
for bonds, notes or other obligations secured in whole or in |
|
part with the proceeds of the surcharge described in this |
Section.
|
(k) Any surcharge collected by or imposed on a |
telecommunications
carrier pursuant to this Section shall be |
held to be a special fund in
trust for the municipality, county |
or Joint Emergency Telephone Board
imposing the surcharge. |
Except for the 3% deduction provided in subsection
(g) above, |
the special fund shall not be subject to the claims of
|
creditors of the telecommunication carrier.
|
(l) Any surcharge imposed pursuant to this Section by a |
county or municipality, other than a municipality with a |
population in excess of 500,000, shall cease to be imposed on |
January 1, 2016. |
(Source: P.A. 100-20, eff. 7-1-17; 101-639, eff. 6-12-20.)
|
(50 ILCS 750/15.3a) |
(Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2021) |
Sec. 15.3a. Local wireless surcharge. |
(a) Notwithstanding any other provision of this Act, a |
unit of local government or emergency telephone system board |
providing wireless 9-1-1 service and imposing and collecting a |
wireless carrier surcharge prior to July 1, 1998 may continue |
its practices of imposing and collecting its wireless carrier |
surcharge, but, except as provided in subsection (b) of this |
Section, in no event shall that monthly surcharge exceed $2.50 |
per commercial mobile radio service (CMRS) connection or |
|
in-service telephone number billed on a monthly basis. For |
mobile telecommunications services provided on and after |
August 1, 2002, any surcharge imposed shall be imposed based |
upon the municipality or county that encompasses the |
customer's place of primary use as defined in the Mobile |
Telecommunications Sourcing Conformity Act. |
(b) Until December 31, 2017, the corporate authorities of |
a municipality with a population in excess of 500,000 on the |
effective date of this amendatory Act of the 99th General |
Assembly may by ordinance continue to impose and collect a |
monthly surcharge per commercial mobile radio service (CMRS) |
connection or in-service telephone number billed on a monthly |
basis that does not exceed the highest monthly surcharge |
imposed as of January 1, 2014 by any county or municipality |
under subsection (c) of Section 15.3 of this Act. Beginning |
January 1, 2018, and until December 31, 2023 2021 , a |
municipality with a population in excess of 500,000 may by |
ordinance continue to impose and collect a monthly surcharge |
per commercial mobile radio service (CMRS) connection or |
in-service telephone number billed on a monthly basis that |
does not exceed $5.00. On or after January 1, 2024 2022 , the |
municipality may continue imposing and collecting its wireless |
carrier surcharge as provided in and subject to the |
limitations of subsection (a) of this Section. |
(c) In addition to any other lawful purpose, a |
municipality with a population over 500,000 may use the moneys |
|
collected under this Section for any anti-terrorism or |
emergency preparedness measures, including, but not limited |
to, preparedness planning, providing local matching funds for |
federal or State grants, personnel training, and specialized |
equipment, including surveillance cameras, as needed to deal |
with natural and terrorist-inspired emergency situations or |
events.
|
(Source: P.A. 100-20, eff. 7-1-17; 101-639, eff. 6-12-20.) |
(50 ILCS 750/15.4) (from Ch. 134, par. 45.4) |
(Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2021) |
Sec. 15.4. Emergency Telephone System Board; powers. |
(a) Except as provided in subsection (e) of this Section, |
the corporate authorities of any county or municipality
may |
establish an Emergency
Telephone System Board. |
The corporate authorities shall provide for the
manner of |
appointment and the number of members of the Board, provided |
that
the board shall consist of not fewer than 5 members, one |
of whom
must be a
public member who is a resident of the local |
exchange service territory
included in the 9-1-1 coverage |
area, one of whom (in counties with a
population less than |
100,000) may be a member of the county
board, and
at least 3 of |
whom shall be representative of the 9-1-1 public safety |
agencies,
including but not limited to police departments, |
fire departments, emergency
medical services providers, and |
emergency services and disaster agencies, and
appointed on the |
|
basis of their ability or experience. In counties with a |
population of more than 100,000 but less than 2,000,000, a |
member of the county board may serve on the Emergency |
Telephone System Board. Elected officials, including members |
of a county board, are
also eligible to serve on the board. |
Members of the board shall serve without
compensation but |
shall be reimbursed for their actual and necessary
expenses. |
Any 2 or more municipalities, counties, or combination |
thereof,
may, instead of establishing
individual boards, |
establish by intergovernmental agreement a Joint
Emergency |
Telephone System Board pursuant to this Section. The manner of
|
appointment of such a joint board shall be prescribed in the |
agreement. On or after the effective date of this amendatory |
Act of the 100th General Assembly, any new intergovernmental |
agreement entered into to establish or join a Joint Emergency |
Telephone System Board shall provide for the appointment of a |
PSAP representative to the board. |
Upon the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 98th |
General Assembly, appointed members of the Emergency Telephone |
System Board shall serve staggered 3-year terms if: (1) the |
Board serves a county with a population of 100,000 or less; and |
(2) appointments, on the effective date of this amendatory Act |
of the 98th General Assembly, are not for a stated term. The |
corporate authorities of the county or municipality shall |
assign terms to the board members serving on the effective |
date of this amendatory Act of the 98th General Assembly in the |
|
following manner: (1) one-third of board members' terms shall |
expire on January 1, 2015; (2) one-third of board members' |
terms shall expire on January 1, 2016; and (3) remaining board |
members' terms shall expire on January 1, 2017. Board members |
may be re-appointed upon the expiration of their terms by the |
corporate authorities of the county or municipality. |
The corporate authorities of a county or municipality may, |
by a vote of the majority of the members elected, remove an |
Emergency Telephone System Board member for misconduct, |
official misconduct, or neglect of office. |
(b) The powers and duties of the board shall be defined by |
ordinance
of the municipality or county, or by |
intergovernmental agreement in the
case of a joint board. The |
powers and duties shall include, but need not
be limited to the |
following: |
(1) Planning a 9-1-1 system. |
(2) Coordinating and supervising the implementation, |
upgrading, or
maintenance of the system, including the |
establishment of equipment
specifications and coding |
systems. |
(3) Receiving moneys
from the surcharge imposed under |
Section 15.3, or disbursed to it under Section 30, and
|
from any other source, for deposit into the Emergency |
Telephone System Fund. |
(4) Authorizing all disbursements from the fund. |
(5) Hiring any staff necessary for the implementation |
|
or upgrade of the
system. |
(6) (Blank). |
(7) Designating a 9-1-1 System Manager, whose duties |
and responsibilities shall be set forth by the Emergency |
Telephone System Board in writing. |
(c) All moneys
received by a board pursuant to a surcharge |
imposed under
Section 15.3, or disbursed to it under Section |
30, shall be deposited into a separate interest-bearing
|
Emergency Telephone System Fund account. The treasurer of the |
municipality or
county that has established the board or, in |
the case of a joint board, any
municipal or county treasurer |
designated in the intergovernmental agreement,
shall be |
custodian of the fund. All interest accruing on the fund shall |
remain
in the fund. No expenditures may be made from such fund |
except upon the
direction of the board by resolution passed by |
a majority of all members of the
board. |
(d) The board shall complete a Master Street Address Guide |
database before implementation of the
9-1-1 system. The error |
ratio of the database shall not at any time
exceed 1% of the |
total database. |
(e) On and after January 1, 2016, no municipality or |
county may create an Emergency Telephone System Board unless |
the board is a Joint Emergency Telephone System Board. The |
corporate authorities of any county or municipality entering |
into an intergovernmental agreement to create or join a Joint |
Emergency Telephone System Board shall rescind an ordinance or |
|
ordinances creating a single Emergency Telephone System Board |
and shall eliminate the single Emergency Telephone System |
Board, effective upon the creation of the Joint Emergency |
Telephone System Board, with regulatory approval by the |
Administrator, or joining of the Joint Emergency Telephone |
System Board. Nothing in this Section shall be construed to |
require the dissolution of an Emergency Telephone System Board |
that is not succeeded by a Joint Emergency Telephone System |
Board or is not required to consolidate under Section 15.4a of |
this Act. |
(f) Within one year after the effective date of this |
amendatory Act of the 100th General Assembly, any corporate |
authorities of a county or municipality, other than a |
municipality with a population of more than 500,000, operating |
a 9-1-1 system without an Emergency Telephone System Board or |
Joint Emergency Telephone System Board shall create or join a |
Joint Emergency Telephone System Board. |
(Source: P.A. 99-6, eff. 1-1-16; 100-20, eff. 7-1-17 .) |
(50 ILCS 750/15.4a) |
(Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2021) |
Sec. 15.4a. Consolidation. |
(a) By July 1, 2017, and except as otherwise provided in |
this Section, Emergency Telephone System Boards, Joint |
Emergency Telephone System Boards, qualified governmental |
entities, and PSAPs shall be consolidated as follows, subject |
|
to subsections (b) and (c) of this Section: |
(1) In any county with a population of at least |
250,000 that has a single Emergency Telephone System |
Board , or qualified governmental entity and more than 2 |
PSAPs, shall reduce the number of PSAPs by at least 50% or |
to 2 PSAPs, whichever is greater. Nothing in this |
paragraph shall preclude consolidation resulting in one |
PSAP in the county. |
(2) In any county with a population of at least |
250,000 that has more than one Emergency Telephone System |
Board, Joint Emergency Telephone System Board, or |
qualified governmental entity, any 9-1-1 Authority serving |
a population of less than 25,000 shall be consolidated |
such that no 9-1-1 Authority in the county serves a |
population of less than 25,000. |
(3) In any county with a population of at least |
250,000 but less than 1,000,000 that has more than one |
Emergency Telephone System Board, Joint Emergency |
Telephone System Board, or qualified governmental entity, |
each 9-1-1 Authority shall reduce the number of PSAPs by |
at least 50% or to 2 PSAPs, whichever is greater. Nothing |
in this paragraph shall preclude consolidation of a 9-1-1 |
Authority into a Joint Emergency Telephone System Board, |
and nothing in this paragraph shall preclude consolidation |
resulting in one PSAP in the county. |
(4) In any county with a population of less than |
|
250,000 that has a single Emergency Telephone System Board |
or qualified governmental entity and more than 2 PSAPs, |
the 9-1-1 Authority shall reduce the number of PSAPs by at |
least 50% or to 2 PSAPs, whichever is greater. Nothing in |
this paragraph shall preclude consolidation resulting in |
one PSAP in the county. |
(5) In any county with a population of less than |
250,000 that has more than one Emergency Telephone System |
Board or , Joint Emergency Telephone System Board , or |
qualified governmental entity and more than 2 PSAPS, the |
9-1-1 Authorities shall be consolidated into a single |
joint board, and the number of PSAPs shall be reduced by at |
least 50% or to 2 PSAPs, whichever is greater. Nothing in |
this paragraph shall preclude consolidation resulting in |
one PSAP in the county. |
(6) Any 9-1-1 Authority that does not have a PSAP |
within its jurisdiction shall be consolidated through an |
intergovernmental agreement with an existing 9-1-1 |
Authority that has a PSAP to create a Joint Emergency |
Telephone Board. |
(7) The corporate authorities of each county that has |
no 9-1-1 service as of January 1, 2016 shall provide |
enhanced 9-1-1 wireline and wireless enhanced 9-1-1 |
service for that county by either (i) entering into an |
intergovernmental agreement with an existing Emergency |
Telephone System Board to create a new Joint Emergency |
|
Telephone System Board, or (ii) entering into an |
intergovernmental agreement with the corporate authorities |
that have created an existing Joint Emergency Telephone |
System Board. |
(b) By July 1, 2016, each county required to consolidate |
pursuant to paragraph (7) of subsection (a) of this Section |
and each 9-1-1 Authority required to consolidate pursuant to |
paragraphs (1) through (6) of subsection (a) of this Section |
shall file a plan for consolidation or a request for a waiver |
pursuant to subsection (c) of this Section with the Office of |
the Statewide 9-1-1 Administrator. |
(1) No county or 9-1-1 Authority may avoid the |
requirements of this Section by converting primary PSAPs |
to secondary or virtual answering points ; however a PSAP |
may be decommissioned. Staff from decommissioned PSAPs may |
remain to perform nonemergency police, fire, or EMS |
responsibilities . Any county or 9-1-1 Authority not in |
compliance with this Section shall be ineligible to |
receive consolidation grant funds issued under Section |
15.4b of this Act or monthly disbursements otherwise due |
under Section 30 of this Act, until the county or 9-1-1 |
Authority is in compliance. |
(2) Within 60 calendar days of receiving a |
consolidation plan or waiver , the Statewide 9-1-1 Advisory |
Board shall hold at least one public hearing on the plan |
and provide a recommendation to the Administrator. Notice |
|
of the hearing shall be provided to the respective entity |
to which the plan applies. |
(3) Within 90 calendar days of receiving a |
consolidation plan, the Administrator shall approve the |
plan or waiver , approve the plan as modified, or grant a |
waiver pursuant to subsection (c) of this Section. In |
making his or her decision, the Administrator shall |
consider any recommendation from the Statewide 9-1-1 |
Advisory Board regarding the plan. If the Administrator |
does not follow the recommendation of the Board, the |
Administrator shall provide a written explanation for the |
deviation in his or her decision. |
(4) The deadlines provided in this subsection may be |
extended upon agreement between the Administrator and |
entity which submitted the plan. |
(c) A waiver from a consolidation required under |
subsection (a) of this Section may be granted if the |
Administrator finds that the consolidation will result in a |
substantial threat to public safety, is economically |
unreasonable, or is technically infeasible. |
(d) Any decision of the Administrator under this Section |
shall be deemed a final administrative decision and shall be |
subject to judicial review under the Administrative Review |
Law.
|
(Source: P.A. 99-6, eff. 1-1-16; 100-20, eff. 7-1-17 .)
|
|
(50 ILCS 750/15.6)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2021)
|
Sec. 15.6. Enhanced 9-1-1 service; business service.
|
(a) After June 30, 2000, or within 18 months after |
enhanced 9-1-1 service
becomes available, any entity that |
installs or operates a private business
switch service and |
provides telecommunications facilities or services to
|
businesses shall assure that the system is connected to the |
public switched
network in a manner that calls to 9-1-1 result |
in automatic number and location
identification. For buildings |
having their own street address and containing
workspace of |
40,000 square feet or less, location identification shall |
include
the building's street address. For buildings having |
their own street
address and containing workspace of more than |
40,000 square feet, location
identification shall include the |
building's street address and one distinct
location |
identification per 40,000 square feet of workspace. Separate
|
buildings containing workspace of 40,000 square feet or less |
having a common
public street address shall have a distinct |
location identification for each
building in addition to the |
street address.
|
(b) Exemptions. Buildings containing workspace of more |
than 40,000 square
feet are exempt from the multiple location |
identification requirements of
subsection (a) if the building |
maintains, at all times, alternative and
adequate means of |
signaling and responding to emergencies. Those means shall
|
|
include, but not be limited to, a telephone system that |
provides the physical
location of 9-1-1 calls coming from |
within the building. Health care
facilities are presumed to |
meet the requirements of this paragraph if the
facilities are |
staffed with medical or nursing personnel 24 hours per day and
|
if an alternative means of providing information about the |
source of an
emergency call exists. Buildings under this |
exemption must provide 9-1-1
service that provides the |
building's street address.
|
Buildings containing workspace of more than 40,000 square |
feet are exempt
from subsection (a) if the building maintains, |
at all times, alternative and
adequate means of signaling and |
responding to emergencies, including a
telephone system that |
provides the location of a 9-1-1 call coming from within
the |
building, and the building is serviced by its own medical, |
fire and
security personnel. Buildings under this exemption |
are subject to emergency
phone system certification by the |
Administrator.
|
Buildings in communities not serviced by enhanced 9-1-1 |
service are exempt
from subsection (a).
|
Correctional institutions and facilities, as defined in |
subsection (d) of
Section 3-1-2 of the Unified Code of |
Corrections, are exempt from subsection
(a).
|
(c) This Act does not apply to any PBX telephone extension |
that uses radio
transmissions to convey electrical signals |
directly between the telephone
extension and the serving PBX.
|
|
(d) An entity that violates this Section is guilty of a |
business
offense and shall be fined not less than $1,000 and |
not more than $5,000.
|
(e) Nothing in this Section shall be
construed to preclude |
the Attorney General on behalf of the Department or on
his or |
her own initiative, or any other interested person, from |
seeking
judicial relief, by mandamus, injunction, or |
otherwise, to compel compliance
with this Section.
|
(f) The Department may promulgate rules for the |
administration of this
Section.
|
(Source: P.A. 99-6, eff. 1-1-16; 100-20, eff. 7-1-17 .)
|
(50 ILCS 750/15.6a) |
(Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2021) |
Sec. 15.6a. Wireless emergency 9-1-1 service. |
(a) The digits "9-1-1" shall be the designated emergency |
telephone number within the wireless system. |
(b) The Department may set non-discriminatory and uniform |
technical and operational standards consistent with the rules |
of the Federal Communications Commission for directing calls |
to authorized public safety answering points. These standards |
shall not in any way prescribe the technology or manner a |
wireless carrier shall use to deliver wireless 9-1-1 or |
wireless E9-1-1 calls, and these standards shall not exceed |
the requirements set by the Federal Communications Commission; |
however, standards for directing calls to the authorized |
|
public safety answering point shall be included. The authority |
given to the Department in this Section is limited to setting |
standards as set forth herein and does not constitute |
authority to regulate wireless carriers. |
(c) For the purpose of providing wireless 9-1-1 emergency |
services, an emergency telephone system board or, in the |
absence of an emergency telephone system board, a qualified |
governmental entity, may declare its intention for one or more |
of its public safety answering points to serve as a primary |
wireless 9-1-1 public safety answering point for its |
jurisdiction by notifying the Administrator in writing within |
6 months after receiving its authority to operate a 9-1-1 |
system under this Act. In addition, 2 or more emergency |
telephone system boards or qualified governmental entities |
may, by virtue of an intergovernmental agreement, provide |
wireless 9-1-1 service. Until the jurisdiction comes into |
compliance with Section 15.4a of this Act, the Department of |
State Police shall be the primary wireless 9-1-1 public safety |
answering point for any jurisdiction that did not provide |
notice to the Illinois Commerce Commission and the Department |
prior to January 1, 2016. |
(d) The Administrator, upon a request from a qualified |
governmental entity or an emergency telephone system board and |
with the advice and recommendation of the Statewide 9-1-1 |
Advisory Board, may grant authority to the emergency telephone |
system board or a qualified governmental entity to provide |
|
wireless 9-1-1 service in areas for which the Department has |
accepted wireless 9-1-1 responsibility. The Administrator |
shall maintain a current list of all 9-1-1 systems and |
qualified governmental entities providing wireless 9-1-1 |
service under this Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 99-6, eff. 1-1-16; 100-20, eff. 7-1-17 .) |
(50 ILCS 750/15.6b) |
(Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2021) |
Sec. 15.6b. Next Generation 9-1-1 service. |
(a) The Administrator, with the advice and recommendation |
of the Statewide 9-1-1 Advisory Board, shall develop and |
implement a plan for a statewide Next Generation 9-1-1 |
network. The Next Generation 9-1-1 network must be an Internet |
protocol-based platform that at a minimum provides: |
(1) improved 9-1-1 call delivery; |
(2) enhanced interoperability; |
(3) increased ease of communication between 9-1-1 |
service providers, allowing immediate transfer of 9-1-1 |
calls, caller information, photos, and other data |
statewide; |
(4) a hosted solution with redundancy built in; and |
(5) compliance with the most current NENA Standards i3 |
Solution 08-003 . |
(b) By July 1, 2016, the Administrator, with the advice |
and recommendation of the Statewide 9-1-1 Advisory Board, |
|
shall design and issue a competitive request for a proposal to |
secure the services of a consultant to complete a feasibility |
study on the implementation of a statewide Next Generation |
9-1-1 network in Illinois. By July 1, 2017, the consultant |
shall complete the feasibility study and make recommendations |
as to the appropriate procurement approach for developing a |
statewide Next Generation 9-1-1 network. |
(c) Within 12 months of the final report from the |
consultant under subsection (b) of this Section, the |
Department shall procure and finalize a contract with a vendor |
certified under Section 13-900 of the Public Utilities Act to |
establish a statewide Next Generation 9-1-1 network. The |
Illinois State Police, in consultation with and subject to the |
approval of the Chief Procurement Officer, may procure a |
single contract or multiple contracts to implement the |
provisions of this Section. A contract or contracts under this |
subsection are not subject to the provisions of the Illinois |
Procurement Code, except for Sections 20-60, 20-65, 20-70, and |
20-160 and Article 50 of that Code, provided that the Chief |
Procurement Officer may, in writing with justification, waive |
any certification required under Article 50 of the Illinois |
Procurement Code. This exemption is inoperative 2 years from |
the effective date of this Amendatory Act of the 102nd General |
Assembly. Within 18 months of securing the contract By July 1, |
2021 , the vendor shall implement a Next Generation 9-1-1 |
network that allows 9-1-1 systems providing 9-1-1 service to |
|
Illinois residents to access the system utilizing their |
current infrastructure if it meets the standards adopted by |
the Department.
|
(Source: P.A. 100-20, eff. 7-1-17; 101-639, eff. 6-12-20.) |
(50 ILCS 750/17.5) |
(Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2021) |
Sec. 17.5. Statewide 9-1-1 Call Directory call transfer, |
forward, or relay . |
(a) The General Assembly finds the following: |
(1) Some 9-1-1 systems throughout this State do not |
have a procedure in place to manually transfer , forward, |
or relay 9-1-1 calls originating within one 9-1-1 system's |
jurisdiction, but which should properly be answered and |
dispatched by another 9-1-1 system, to the appropriate |
9-1-1 system for answering and dispatch of first |
responders. |
(2) On January 1, 2016, the General Assembly gave |
oversight authority of 9-1-1 systems to the Department of |
State Police. |
(3) Since that date, the Department of State Police |
has authorized individual 9-1-1 systems in counties and |
municipalities to implement and upgrade enhanced 9-1-1 |
systems throughout the State. |
(b) The Department shall prepare a directory of all |
authorized 9-1-1 systems in the State. The directory shall |
|
include an emergency 24/7 10-digit telephone number for all |
primary public safety answering points located in each 9-1-1 |
system to which 9-1-1 calls from another jurisdiction can be |
transferred. This directory shall be made available to each |
9-1-1 authority for its use in establishing standard operating |
procedures regarding calls outside its 9-1-1 jurisdiction. |
(c) Each 9-1-1 system shall provide the Department with |
the following information: |
(1) The name of the PSAP, a list of every |
participating agency, and the county the PSAP is in, |
including college and university public safety entities. |
(2) The 24/7 10-digit emergency telephone number and |
email address for the dispatch agency to which 9-1-1 calls |
originating in another 9-1-1 jurisdiction can be |
transferred or by which the PSAP can be contacted via |
email to exchange information. The emergency telephone |
number must be a direct line that is not answered by an |
automated system but rather is answered by a person. Each |
9-1-1 system shall provide the Department with any changes |
to the participating agencies and this number and email |
address immediately upon the change occurring. Each 9-1-1 |
system shall provide the PSAP information and , the 24/7 |
10-digit emergency telephone number and email address to |
the Manager of the Department's 9-1-1 Program within 30 |
days of the effective date of this amendatory Act of the |
102nd 100th General Assembly. |
|
(3) The standard operating procedure describing the |
manner in which the 9-1-1 system will transfer , forward, |
or relay 9-1-1 calls originating within its jurisdiction, |
but which should properly be answered and dispatched by |
another 9-1-1 system, to the appropriate 9-1-1 system. |
Each 9-1-1 system shall provide the standard operating |
procedures to the Manager of the Department's 9-1-1 |
Program within 180 days after the effective date of this |
amendatory Act of the 100th General Assembly.
|
(d) Unless exigent circumstances dictate otherwise, each |
9-1-1 system's public safety telecommunicators shall be |
responsible for remaining on the line with the caller when a |
9-1-1 call originates within its jurisdiction to ensure the |
9-1-1 call is transferred to the appropriate authorized entity |
for answer and dispatch until a public safety telecommunicator |
is on the line and confirms jurisdiction for the call. |
(Source: P.A. 100-20, eff. 7-1-17 .) |
(50 ILCS 750/19) |
(Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2021) |
Sec. 19. Statewide 9-1-1 Advisory Board. |
(a) Beginning July 1, 2015, there is created the Statewide |
9-1-1 Advisory Board within the Department of State Police. |
The Board shall consist of the following 11 voting members: |
(1) The Director of the State Police, or his or her |
designee, who shall serve as chairman. |
|
(2) The Executive Director of the Commission, or his |
or her designee. |
(3) Nine members appointed by the Governor as follows: |
(A) one member representing the Illinois chapter |
of the National Emergency Number Association, or his |
or her designee; |
(B) one member representing the Illinois chapter |
of the Association of Public-Safety Communications |
Officials, or his or her designee; |
(C) one member representing a county 9-1-1 system |
from a county with a population of less than 37,000 |
50,000 ; |
(C-5) one member representing a county 9-1-1 |
system from a county with a population between 37,000 |
and 100,000; |
(D) one member representing a county 9-1-1 system |
from a county with a population between 100,001 50,000 |
and 250,000; |
(E) one member representing a county 9-1-1 system |
from a county with a population of more than 250,000; |
(F) one member representing a municipal or |
intergovernmental cooperative 9-1-1 system, excluding |
any single municipality over 500,000 municipality with |
a population of less than 500,000 in a county with a |
population in excess of 2,000,000 ; |
(G) one member representing the Illinois |
|
Association of Chiefs of Police; |
(H) one member representing the Illinois Sheriffs' |
Association; and |
(I) one member representing the Illinois Fire |
Chiefs Association. |
The Governor shall appoint the following non-voting |
members: (i) one member representing an incumbent local |
exchange 9-1-1 system provider; (ii) one member representing a |
non-incumbent local exchange 9-1-1 system provider; (iii) one |
member representing a large wireless carrier; (iv) one member |
representing an incumbent local exchange carrier; (v) one |
member representing the Illinois Broadband and |
Telecommunications Association; (vi) one member representing |
the Illinois Broadband and Cable Television and Communication |
Association of Illinois ; and (vii) one member representing the |
Illinois State Ambulance Association. The Speaker of the House |
of Representatives, the Minority Leader of the House of |
Representatives, the President of the Senate, and the Minority |
Leader of the Senate may each appoint a member of the General |
Assembly to temporarily serve as a non-voting member of the |
Board during the 12 months prior to the repeal date of this Act |
to discuss legislative initiatives of the Board. |
(b) The Governor shall make initial appointments to the |
Statewide 9-1-1 Advisory Board by August 31, 2015. Six of the |
voting members appointed by the Governor shall serve an |
initial term of 2 years, and the remaining voting members |
|
appointed by the Governor shall serve an initial term of 3 |
years. Thereafter, each appointment by the Governor shall be |
for a term of 3 years. Non-voting members shall serve for a |
term of 3 years. Vacancies shall be filled in the same manner |
as the original appointment. Persons appointed to fill a |
vacancy shall serve for the balance of the unexpired term. |
Members of the Statewide 9-1-1 Advisory Board shall serve |
without compensation. |
(c) The 9-1-1 Services Advisory Board, as constituted on |
June 1, 2015 without the legislative members, shall serve in |
the role of the Statewide 9-1-1 Advisory Board until all |
appointments of voting members have been made by the Governor |
under subsection (a) of this Section. |
(d) The Statewide 9-1-1 Advisory Board shall: |
(1) advise the Department of State Police and the |
Statewide 9-1-1 Administrator on the oversight of 9-1-1 |
systems and the development and implementation of a |
uniform statewide 9-1-1 system; |
(2) make recommendations to the Governor and the |
General Assembly regarding improvements to 9-1-1 services |
throughout the State; and |
(3) exercise all other powers and duties provided in |
this Act. |
(e) The Statewide 9-1-1 Advisory Board shall submit to the |
General Assembly a report by March 1 of each year providing an |
update on the transition to a statewide 9-1-1 system and |
|
recommending any legislative action. |
(f) The Department of State Police shall provide |
administrative support to the Statewide 9-1-1 Advisory Board.
|
(Source: P.A. 99-6, eff. 6-29-15; 100-20, eff. 7-1-17 .) |
(50 ILCS 750/20) |
(Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2021) |
Sec. 20. Statewide surcharge. |
(a) On and after January 1, 2016, and except with respect |
to those customers who are subject to surcharges as provided |
in Sections 15.3 and 15.3a of this Act, a monthly surcharge |
shall be imposed on all customers of telecommunications |
carriers and wireless carriers as follows: |
(1) Each telecommunications carrier shall impose a |
monthly surcharge per network connection; provided, |
however, the monthly surcharge shall not apply to a |
network connection provided for use with pay telephone |
services. Where multiple voice grade communications |
channels are connected between the subscriber's premises |
and a public switched network through private branch |
exchange (PBX), Centrex centrex type service, or other |
multiple voice grade communication channels facility, |
there shall be imposed 5 such surcharges per network |
connection for both regular service and advanced service |
provisioned trunk lines. Until December 31, 2017, the |
surcharge shall be $0.87 per network connection and on and |
|
after January 1, 2018, the surcharge shall be $1.50 per |
network connection. |
(2) Each wireless carrier shall impose and collect a |
monthly surcharge per CMRS connection that either has a |
telephone number within an area code assigned to Illinois |
by the North American Numbering Plan Administrator or has |
a billing address in this State. Until December 31, 2017, |
the surcharge shall be $0.87 per connection and on and |
after January 1, 2018, the surcharge shall be $1.50 per |
connection. |
(b) State and local taxes shall not apply to the |
surcharges imposed under this Section. |
(c) The surcharges imposed by this Section shall be stated |
as a separately stated item on subscriber bills. |
(d) The telecommunications carrier collecting the |
surcharge may deduct and retain 1.74% an amount not to exceed |
3% of the gross amount of surcharge collected to reimburse the |
telecommunications carrier for the expense of accounting and |
collecting the surcharge. On and after July 1, 2022, the |
wireless carrier collecting a surcharge under this Section may |
deduct and retain 1.74% an amount not to exceed 3% of the gross |
amount of the surcharge collected to reimburse the wireless |
carrier for the expense of accounting and collecting the |
surcharge. |
(d-5) Notwithstanding the provisions of subsection (d) of |
this Section, an amount not greater than 2.5% may be deducted |
|
and retained if the telecommunications or wireless carrier can |
support through documentation, expenses that exceed the 1.74% |
allowed. The documentation shall be submitted to the Illinois |
State Police and input obtained from the Statewide 9-1-1 |
Advisory Board prior to approval of the deduction. |
(e) Surcharges imposed under this Section shall be |
collected by the carriers and shall be remitted to the |
Department, either by check or electronic funds transfer, by |
the end of the next calendar month after the calendar month in |
which it was collected for deposit into the Statewide 9-1-1 |
Fund. Carriers are not required to remit surcharge moneys that |
are billed to subscribers but not yet collected. |
The first remittance by wireless carriers shall include |
the number of subscribers by zip code, and the 9-digit zip code |
if currently being used or later implemented by the carrier, |
that shall be the means by which the Department shall |
determine distributions from the Statewide 9-1-1 Fund. This |
information shall be updated at least once each year. Any |
carrier that fails to provide the zip code information |
required under this subsection (e) shall be subject to the |
penalty set forth in subsection (g) of this Section. |
(f) If, within 8 calendar days after it is due under |
subsection (e) of this Section, a carrier does not remit the |
surcharge or any portion thereof required under this Section, |
then the surcharge or portion thereof shall be deemed |
delinquent until paid in full, and the Department may impose a |
|
penalty against the carrier in an amount equal to the greater |
of: |
(1) $25 for each month or portion of a month from the |
time an amount becomes delinquent until the amount is paid |
in full; or |
(2) an amount equal to the product of 1% and the sum of |
all delinquent amounts for each month or portion of a |
month that the delinquent amounts remain unpaid. |
A penalty imposed in accordance with this subsection (f) |
for a portion of a month during which the carrier pays the |
delinquent amount in full shall be prorated for each day of |
that month that the delinquent amount was paid in full. Any |
penalty imposed under this subsection (f) is in addition to |
the amount of the delinquency and is in addition to any other |
penalty imposed under this Section. |
(g) If, within 8 calendar days after it is due, a wireless |
carrier does not provide the number of subscribers by zip code |
as required under subsection (e) of this Section, then the |
report is deemed delinquent and the Department may impose a |
penalty against the carrier in an amount equal to the greater |
of: |
(1) $25 for each month or portion of a month that the |
report is delinquent; or |
(2) an amount equal to the product of $0.01 and the |
number of subscribers served by the carrier for each month |
or portion of a month that the delinquent report is not |
|
provided. |
A penalty imposed in accordance with this subsection (g) |
for a portion of a month during which the carrier provides the |
number of subscribers by zip code as required under subsection |
(e) of this Section shall be prorated for each day of that |
month during which the carrier had not provided the number of |
subscribers by zip code as required under subsection (e) of |
this Section. Any penalty imposed under this subsection (g) is |
in addition to any other penalty imposed under this Section. |
(h) A penalty imposed and collected in accordance with |
subsection (f) or (g) of this Section shall be deposited into |
the Statewide 9-1-1 Fund for distribution according to Section |
30 of this Act. |
(i) The Department may enforce the collection of any |
delinquent amount and any penalty due and unpaid under this |
Section by legal action or in any other manner by which the |
collection of debts due the State of Illinois may be enforced |
under the laws of this State. The Department may excuse the |
payment of any penalty imposed under this Section if the |
Administrator determines that the enforcement of this penalty |
is unjust. |
(j) Notwithstanding any provision of law to the contrary, |
nothing shall impair the right of wireless carriers to recover |
compliance costs for all emergency communications services |
that are not reimbursed out of the Wireless Carrier |
Reimbursement Fund directly from their wireless subscribers by |
|
line-item charges on the wireless subscriber's bill. Those |
compliance costs include all costs incurred by wireless |
carriers in complying with local, State, and federal |
regulatory or legislative mandates that require the |
transmission and receipt of emergency communications to and |
from the general public, including, but not limited to, |
E9-1-1.
|
(Source: P.A. 99-6, eff. 1-1-16; 100-20, eff. 7-1-17 .) |
(50 ILCS 750/30) |
(Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2021) |
Sec. 30. Statewide 9-1-1 Fund; surcharge disbursement. |
(a) A special fund in the State treasury known as the |
Wireless Service Emergency Fund shall be renamed the Statewide |
9-1-1 Fund. Any appropriations made from the Wireless Service |
Emergency Fund shall be payable from the Statewide 9-1-1 Fund. |
The Fund shall consist of the following: |
(1) 9-1-1 wireless surcharges assessed under the |
Wireless Emergency Telephone Safety Act. |
(2) 9-1-1 surcharges assessed under Section 20 of this |
Act. |
(3) Prepaid wireless 9-1-1 surcharges assessed under |
Section 15 of the Prepaid Wireless 9-1-1 Surcharge Act. |
(4) Any appropriations, grants, or gifts made to the |
Fund. |
(5) Any income from interest, premiums, gains, or |
|
other earnings on moneys in the Fund. |
(6) Money from any other source that is deposited in |
or transferred to the Fund. |
(b) Subject to appropriation and availability of funds, |
the Department shall distribute the 9-1-1 surcharges monthly |
as follows: |
(1) From each surcharge collected and remitted under |
Section 20 of this Act: |
(A) $0.013 shall be distributed monthly in equal |
amounts to each County Emergency Telephone System |
Board or qualified governmental entity in counties |
with a population under 100,000 according to the most |
recent census data which is authorized to serve as a |
primary wireless 9-1-1 public safety answering point |
for the county and to provide wireless 9-1-1 service |
as prescribed by subsection (b) of Section 15.6a of |
this Act, and which does provide such service. |
(B) $0.033 shall be transferred by the Comptroller |
at the direction of the Department to the Wireless |
Carrier Reimbursement Fund until June 30, 2017; from |
July 1, 2017 through June 30, 2018, $0.026 shall be |
transferred; from July 1, 2018 through June 30, 2019, |
$0.020 shall be transferred; from July 1, 2019, |
through June 30, 2020, $0.013 shall be transferred; |
from July 1, 2020 through June 30, 2021, $0.007 will be |
transferred; and after June 30, 2021, no transfer |
|
shall be made to the Wireless Carrier Reimbursement |
Fund. |
(C) Until December 31, 2017, $0.007 and on and |
after January 1, 2018, $0.017 shall be used to cover |
the Department's administrative costs. |
(D) Beginning January 1, 2018, until June 30, |
2020, $0.12, and on and after July 1, 2020, $0.04 shall |
be used to make monthly proportional grants to the |
appropriate 9-1-1 Authority currently taking wireless |
9-1-1 based upon the United States Postal Zip Code of |
the billing addresses of subscribers wireless |
carriers. |
(E) Until June 30, 2023 2021 , $0.05 shall be used |
by the Department for grants for NG9-1-1 expenses, |
with priority given to 9-1-1 Authorities that provide |
9-1-1 service within the territory of a Large Electing |
Provider as defined in Section 13-406.1 of the Public |
Utilities Act. |
(F) On and after July 1, 2020, $0.13 shall be used |
for the implementation of and continuing expenses for |
the Statewide NG9-1-1 system. |
(2) After disbursements under paragraph (1) of this |
subsection (b), all remaining funds in the Statewide 9-1-1 |
Fund shall be disbursed in the following priority order: |
(A) The Fund shall pay monthly to: |
(i) the 9-1-1 Authorities that imposed |
|
surcharges under Section 15.3 of this Act and were |
required to report to the Illinois Commerce |
Commission under Section 27 of the Wireless |
Emergency Telephone Safety Act on October 1, 2014, |
except a 9-1-1 Authority in a municipality with a |
population in excess of 500,000, an amount equal |
to the average monthly wireline and VoIP surcharge |
revenue attributable to the most recent 12-month |
period reported to the Department under that |
Section for the October 1, 2014 filing, subject to |
the power of the Department to investigate the |
amount reported and adjust the number by order |
under Article X of the Public Utilities Act, so |
that the monthly amount paid under this item |
accurately reflects one-twelfth of the aggregate |
wireline and VoIP surcharge revenue properly |
attributable to the most recent 12-month period |
reported to the Commission; or |
(ii) county qualified governmental entities |
that did not impose a surcharge under Section 15.3 |
as of December 31, 2015, and counties that did not |
impose a surcharge as of June 30, 2015, an amount |
equivalent to their population multiplied by .37 |
multiplied by the rate of $0.69; counties that are |
not county qualified governmental entities and |
that did not impose a surcharge as of December 31, |
|
2015, shall not begin to receive the payment |
provided for in this subsection until E9-1-1 and |
wireless E9-1-1 services are provided within their |
counties; or |
(iii) counties without 9-1-1 service that had |
a surcharge in place by December 31, 2015, an |
amount equivalent to their population multiplied |
by .37 multiplied by their surcharge rate as |
established by the referendum. |
(B) All 9-1-1 network costs for systems outside of |
municipalities with a population of at least 500,000 |
shall be paid by the Department directly to the |
vendors. |
(C) All expenses incurred by the Administrator and |
the Statewide 9-1-1 Advisory Board and costs |
associated with procurement under Section 15.6b |
including requests for information and requests for |
proposals. |
(D) Funds may be held in reserve by the Statewide |
9-1-1 Advisory Board and disbursed by the Department |
for grants under Section 15.4b of this Act and for |
NG9-1-1 expenses up to $12.5 million per year in State |
fiscal years 2016 and 2017; up to $20 million in State |
fiscal year 2018; up to $20.9 million in State fiscal |
year 2019; up to $15.3 million in State fiscal year |
2020; up to $16.2 million in State fiscal year 2021; up |
|
to $23.1 million in State fiscal year 2022; and up to |
$17.0 million per year for State fiscal year 2023 and |
each year thereafter. The amount held in reserve in |
State fiscal years 2021, 2022, and 2023 2018 and 2019 |
shall not be less than $6.5 million. Disbursements |
under this subparagraph (D) shall be prioritized as |
follows: (i) consolidation grants prioritized under |
subsection (a) of Section 15.4b of this Act; (ii) |
NG9-1-1 expenses; and (iii) consolidation grants under |
Section 15.4b of this Act for consolidation expenses |
incurred between January 1, 2010, and January 1, 2016. |
(E) All remaining funds per remit month shall be |
used to make monthly proportional grants to the |
appropriate 9-1-1 Authority currently taking wireless |
9-1-1 based upon the United States Postal Zip Code of |
the billing addresses of subscribers of wireless |
carriers. |
(c) The moneys deposited into the Statewide 9-1-1 Fund |
under this Section shall not be subject to administrative |
charges or chargebacks unless otherwise authorized by this |
Act. |
(d) Whenever two or more 9-1-1 Authorities consolidate, |
the resulting Joint Emergency Telephone System Board shall be |
entitled to the monthly payments that had theretofore been |
made to each consolidating 9-1-1 Authority. Any reserves held |
by any consolidating 9-1-1 Authority shall be transferred to |
|
the resulting Joint Emergency Telephone System Board. Whenever |
a county that has no 9-1-1 service as of January 1, 2016 enters |
into an agreement to consolidate to create or join a Joint |
Emergency Telephone System Board, the Joint Emergency |
Telephone System Board shall be entitled to the monthly |
payments that would have otherwise been paid to the county if |
it had provided 9-1-1 service.
|
(Source: P.A. 100-20, eff. 7-1-17; 101-639, eff. 6-12-20.) |
(50 ILCS 750/40) |
(Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2021) |
Sec. 40. Financial reports. |
(a) The Department shall create uniform accounting |
procedures, with such modification as may be required to give |
effect to statutory provisions applicable only to |
municipalities with a population in excess of 500,000, that |
any emergency telephone system board , qualified governmental |
entity, or unit of local government receiving surcharge money |
pursuant to Section 15.3, 15.3a, or 30 of this Act must follow. |
(b) By January 31, 2018, and every January 31 thereafter, |
each emergency telephone system board , qualified governmental |
entity, or unit of local government receiving surcharge money |
pursuant to Section 15.3, 15.3a, or 30 shall report to the |
Department audited financial statements showing total revenue |
and expenditures for the period beginning with the end of the |
period covered by the last submitted report through the end of |
|
the previous calendar year in a form and manner as prescribed |
by the Department. Such financial information shall include: |
(1) a detailed summary of revenue from all sources |
including, but not limited to, local, State, federal, and |
private revenues, and any other funds received; |
(2) all expenditures made during the reporting period |
from distributions under this Act; |
(3) call data and statistics, when available, from the |
reporting period, as specified by the Department and |
collected in accordance with any reporting method |
established or required by the Department; |
(4) all costs associated with dispatching appropriate |
public safety agencies to respond to 9-1-1 calls received |
by the PSAP; and |
(5) all funding sources and amounts of funding used |
for costs described in paragraph (4) of this subsection |
(b). |
The emergency telephone system board , qualified |
governmental entity, or unit of local government is |
responsible for any costs associated with auditing such |
financial statements. The Department shall post the audited |
financial statements on the Department's website. |
(c) Along with its audited financial statement, each |
emergency telephone system board , qualified governmental |
entity, or unit of local government receiving a grant under |
Section 15.4b of this Act shall include a report of the amount |
|
of grant moneys received and how the grant moneys were used. In |
case of a conflict between this requirement and the Grant |
Accountability and Transparency Act, or with the rules of the |
Governor's Office of Management and Budget adopted thereunder, |
that Act and those rules shall control. |
(d) If an emergency telephone system board or qualified |
governmental entity that receives funds from the Statewide |
9-1-1 Fund fails to file the 9-1-1 system financial reports as |
required under this Section, the Department shall suspend and |
withhold monthly disbursements otherwise due to the emergency |
telephone system board or qualified governmental entity under |
Section 30 of this Act until the report is filed. |
Any monthly disbursements that have been withheld for 12 |
months or more shall be forfeited by the emergency telephone |
system board or qualified governmental entity and shall be |
distributed proportionally by the Department to compliant |
emergency telephone system boards and qualified governmental |
entities that receive funds from the Statewide 9-1-1 Fund. |
Any emergency telephone system board or qualified |
governmental entity not in compliance with this Section shall |
be ineligible to receive any consolidation grant or |
infrastructure grant issued under this Act. |
(e) The Department may adopt emergency rules necessary to |
implement the provisions of this Section.
|
(f) Any findings or decisions of the Department under this |
Section shall be deemed a final administrative decision and |
|
shall be subject to judicial review under the Administrative |
Review Law. |
(g) Beginning October 1, 2017, the Department shall |
provide a quarterly report to the Statewide 9-1-1 Advisory |
Board of its expenditures from the Statewide 9-1-1 Fund for |
the prior fiscal quarter. |
(Source: P.A. 99-6, eff. 1-1-16; 100-20, eff. 7-1-17 .) |
(50 ILCS 750/99) |
(Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2021) |
Sec. 99. Repealer. This Act is repealed on December 31, |
2023 2021 .
|
(Source: P.A. 100-20, eff. 7-1-17; 101-639, eff. 6-12-20.)
|
(50 ILCS 750/9 rep.)
|
(50 ILCS 750/13 rep.)
|
(50 ILCS 750/17 rep.) |
Section 15. The Emergency Telephone System Act is amended |
by repealing Sections 9, 13, and 17. |
Section 20. The Prepaid Wireless 9-1-1 Surcharge Act is |
amended by changing Section 15 as follows: |
(50 ILCS 753/15)
|
Sec. 15. Prepaid wireless 9-1-1 surcharge. |
(a) Until September 30, 2015, there is hereby imposed on |
|
consumers a prepaid wireless 9-1-1 surcharge of 1.5% per |
retail transaction. Beginning October 1, 2015, the prepaid |
wireless 9-1-1 surcharge shall be 3% per retail transaction.
|
The surcharge authorized by this subsection (a) does not apply |
in a home rule municipality having a population in excess of |
500,000. |
(a-5) On or after the effective date of this amendatory |
Act of the 98th General Assembly and until December 31, 2023 |
2020 , a home rule municipality having a population in excess |
of 500,000 on the effective date of this amendatory Act may |
impose a prepaid wireless 9-1-1 surcharge not to exceed 9% per |
retail transaction sourced to that jurisdiction and collected |
and remitted in accordance with the provisions of subsection |
(b-5) of this Section. On or after January 1, 2021, a home rule |
municipality having a population in excess of 500,000 on the |
effective date of this Act may only impose a prepaid wireless |
9-1-1 surcharge not to exceed 7% per retail transaction |
sourced to that jurisdiction and collected and remitted in |
accordance with the provisions of subsection (b-5). |
(b) The prepaid wireless 9-1-1 surcharge shall be |
collected by the seller from the consumer with respect to each |
retail transaction occurring in this State and shall be |
remitted to the Department by the seller as provided in this |
Act. The amount of the prepaid wireless 9-1-1 surcharge shall |
be separately stated as a distinct item apart from the charge |
for the prepaid wireless telecommunications service on an |
|
invoice, receipt, or other similar document that is provided |
to the consumer by the seller or shall be otherwise disclosed |
to the consumer.
If the seller does not separately state the |
surcharge as a distinct item to the consumer as provided in |
this Section, then the seller shall maintain books and records |
as required by this Act which clearly identify the amount of |
the 9-1-1 surcharge for retail transactions. |
For purposes of this subsection (b), a retail transaction |
occurs in this State if (i) the retail transaction is made in |
person by a consumer at the seller's business location and the |
business is located within the State; (ii) the seller is a |
provider and sells prepaid wireless telecommunications service |
to a consumer located in Illinois; (iii) the retail |
transaction is treated as occurring in this State for purposes |
of the Retailers' Occupation Tax Act; or (iv) a seller that is |
included within the definition of a "retailer maintaining a |
place of business in this State" under Section 2 of the Use Tax |
Act makes a sale of prepaid wireless telecommunications |
service to a consumer located in Illinois. In the case of a |
retail transaction which does not occur in person at a |
seller's business location, if a consumer uses a credit card |
to purchase prepaid wireless telecommunications service |
on-line or over the telephone, and no product is shipped to the |
consumer, the transaction occurs in this State if the billing |
address for the consumer's credit card is in this State. |
(b-5) The prepaid wireless 9-1-1 surcharge imposed under |
|
subsection (a-5) of this Section shall be collected by the |
seller from the consumer with respect to each retail |
transaction occurring in the municipality imposing the |
surcharge. The amount of the prepaid wireless 9-1-1 surcharge |
shall be separately stated on an invoice, receipt, or other |
similar document that is provided to the consumer by the |
seller or shall be otherwise disclosed to the consumer. If the |
seller does not separately state the surcharge as a distinct |
item to the consumer as provided in this Section, then the |
seller shall maintain books and records as required by this |
Act which clearly identify the amount of the 9-1-1 surcharge |
for retail transactions. |
For purposes of this subsection (b-5), a retail |
transaction occurs in the municipality if (i) the retail |
transaction is made in person by a consumer at the seller's |
business location and the business is located within the |
municipality; (ii) the seller is a provider and sells prepaid |
wireless telecommunications service to a consumer located in |
the municipality; (iii) the retail transaction is treated as |
occurring in the municipality for purposes of the Retailers' |
Occupation Tax Act; or (iv) a seller that is included within |
the definition of a "retailer maintaining a place of business |
in this State" under Section 2 of the Use Tax Act makes a sale |
of prepaid wireless telecommunications service to a consumer |
located in the municipality. In the case of a retail |
transaction which does not occur in person at a seller's |
|
business location, if a consumer uses a credit card to |
purchase prepaid wireless telecommunications service on-line |
or over the telephone, and no product is shipped to the |
consumer, the transaction occurs in the municipality if the |
billing address for the consumer's credit card is in the |
municipality. |
(c) The prepaid wireless 9-1-1 surcharge is imposed on the |
consumer and not on any provider. The seller shall be liable to |
remit all prepaid wireless 9-1-1 surcharges that the seller |
collects from consumers as provided in Section 20, including |
all such surcharges that the seller is deemed to collect where |
the amount of the surcharge has not been separately stated on |
an invoice, receipt, or other similar document provided to the |
consumer by the seller.
The surcharge collected or deemed |
collected by a seller shall constitute a debt owed by the |
seller to this State, and any such surcharge actually |
collected shall be held in trust for the benefit of the |
Department. |
For purposes of this subsection (c), the surcharge shall |
not be imposed or collected from entities that have an active |
tax exemption identification number issued by the Department |
under Section 1g of the Retailers' Occupation Tax Act. |
(d) The amount of the prepaid wireless 9-1-1 surcharge |
that is collected by a seller from a consumer, if such amount |
is separately stated on an invoice, receipt, or other similar |
document provided to the consumer by the seller, shall not be |
|
included in the base for measuring any tax, fee, surcharge, or |
other charge that is imposed by this State, any political |
subdivision of this State, or any intergovernmental agency.
|
(e) (Blank).
|
(e-5) Any changes in the rate of the surcharge imposed by a |
municipality under the authority granted in subsection (a-5) |
of this Section shall be effective on the first day of the |
first calendar month to occur at least 60 days after the |
enactment of the change. The Department shall provide not less |
than 30 days' notice of the increase or reduction in the rate |
of such surcharge on the Department's website. |
(f) When prepaid wireless telecommunications service is |
sold with one or more other products or services for a single, |
non-itemized price, then the percentage specified in |
subsection (a) or (a-5) of this Section 15 shall be applied to |
the entire non-itemized price unless the seller elects to |
apply the percentage to (i) the dollar amount of the prepaid |
wireless telecommunications service if that dollar amount is |
disclosed to the consumer or (ii) the portion of the price that |
is attributable to the prepaid wireless telecommunications |
service if the retailer can identify that portion by |
reasonable and verifiable standards from its books and records |
that are kept in the regular course of business for other |
purposes, including, but not limited to, books and records |
that are kept for non-tax purposes. However, if a minimal |
amount of prepaid wireless telecommunications service is sold |
|
with a prepaid wireless device for a single, non-itemized |
price, then the seller may elect not to apply the percentage |
specified in subsection (a) or (a-5) of this Section 15 to such |
transaction. For purposes of this subsection, an amount of |
service denominated as 10 minutes or less or $5 or less is |
considered minimal.
|
(g) The prepaid wireless 9-1-1 surcharge imposed under |
subsections (a) and (a-5) of this Section is not imposed on the |
provider or the consumer for wireless Lifeline service where |
the consumer does not pay the provider for the service. Where |
the consumer purchases from the provider optional minutes, |
texts, or other services in addition to the federally funded |
Lifeline benefit, a consumer must pay the prepaid wireless |
9-1-1 surcharge, and it must be collected by the seller |
according to subsection (b-5). |
(Source: P.A. 99-6, eff. 6-29-15; 100-20, eff. 7-1-17.) |
Section 25. The Small Wireless Facilities Deployment Act |
is amended by changing Sections 15 and 90 and by adding Section |
45 as follows: |
(50 ILCS 840/15) (was 50 ILCS 835/15)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on June 1, 2021) |
Sec. 15. Regulation of small wireless facilities. |
(a) This Section applies to activities of a wireless |
provider within or outside rights-of-way. |
|
(b) Except as provided in this Section, an authority may |
not prohibit, regulate, or charge for the collocation of small |
wireless facilities. |
(c) Small wireless facilities shall be classified as |
permitted uses and subject to administrative review in |
conformance with this Act, except as provided in paragraph (5) |
of subsection (d) of this Section regarding height exceptions |
or variances, but not subject to zoning review or approval if |
they are collocated (i) in rights-of-way in any zone, or (ii) |
outside rights-of-way in property zoned exclusively for |
commercial or industrial use. |
(d) An authority may require an applicant to obtain one or |
more permits to collocate a small wireless facility. An |
authority shall receive applications for, process, and issue |
permits subject to the following requirements: |
(1) An authority may not directly or indirectly |
require an applicant to perform services unrelated to the |
collocation for which approval is sought, such as in-kind |
contributions to the authority, including reserving fiber, |
conduit, or utility pole space for the authority on the |
wireless provider's utility pole. An authority may reserve |
space on authority utility poles for future public safety |
uses or for the authority's electric utility uses, but a |
reservation of space may not preclude the collocation of a |
small wireless facility unless the authority reasonably |
determines that the authority utility pole cannot |
|
accommodate both uses. |
(2) An applicant shall not be required to provide more |
information to obtain a permit than the authority requires |
of a communications service provider that is not a |
wireless provider that requests to attach facilities to a |
structure; however, a wireless provider may be required to |
provide the following information when seeking a permit to |
collocate small wireless facilities on a utility pole or |
wireless support structure: |
(A) site specific structural integrity and, for an |
authority utility pole, make-ready analysis prepared |
by a structural engineer, as that term is defined in |
Section 4 of the Structural Engineering Practice Act |
of 1989; |
(B) the location where each proposed small |
wireless facility or utility pole would be installed |
and photographs of the location and its immediate |
surroundings depicting the utility poles or structures |
on which each proposed small wireless facility would |
be mounted or location where utility poles or |
structures would be installed; |
(C) specifications and drawings prepared by a |
structural engineer, as that term is defined in |
Section 4 of the Structural Engineering Practice Act |
of 1989, for each proposed small wireless facility |
covered by the application as it is proposed to be |
|
installed; |
(D) the equipment type and model numbers for the |
antennas and all other wireless equipment associated |
with the small wireless facility; |
(E) a proposed schedule for the installation and |
completion of each small wireless facility covered by |
the application, if approved; and |
(F) certification that the collocation complies |
with paragraph (6) to the best of the applicant's |
knowledge ; and . |
(G) the wireless provider's certification from a |
radio engineer that it operates the small wireless |
facility within all applicable FCC standards. |
(3) Subject to paragraph (6), an authority may not |
require the placement of small wireless facilities on any |
specific utility pole, or category of utility poles, or |
require multiple antenna systems on a single utility pole; |
however, with respect to an application for the |
collocation of a small wireless facility associated with a |
new utility pole, an authority may propose that the small |
wireless facility be collocated on an existing utility |
pole or existing wireless support structure within 200 100 |
feet of the proposed collocation, which the applicant |
shall accept if it has the right to use the alternate |
structure on reasonable terms and conditions and the |
alternate location and structure does not impose technical |
|
limits or additional material costs as determined by the |
applicant. The authority may require the applicant to |
provide a written certification describing the property |
rights, technical limits or material cost reasons the |
alternate location does not satisfy the criteria in this |
paragraph (3). |
(4) Subject to paragraph (6), an authority may not |
limit the placement of small wireless facilities mounted |
on a utility pole or a wireless support structure by |
minimum horizontal separation distances. |
(5) An authority may limit the maximum height of a |
small wireless facility to 10 feet above the utility pole |
or wireless support structure on which the small wireless |
facility is collocated. Subject to any applicable waiver, |
zoning, or other process that addresses wireless provider |
requests for an exception or variance and does not |
prohibit granting of such exceptions or variances, the |
authority may limit the height of new or replacement |
utility poles or wireless support structures on which |
small wireless facilities are collocated to the higher of: |
(i) 10 feet in height above the tallest existing utility |
pole, other than a utility pole supporting only wireless |
facilities, that is in place on the date the application |
is submitted to the authority, that is located within 300 |
feet of the new or replacement utility pole or wireless |
support structure and that is in the same right-of-way |
|
within the jurisdictional boundary of the authority, |
provided the authority may designate which intersecting |
right-of-way within 300 feet of the proposed
utility pole |
or wireless support structures shall control the height |
limitation for such facility; or (ii) 45 feet above ground |
level. |
(6) An authority may require that: |
(A) the wireless provider's operation of the small |
wireless facilities does not interfere with the |
frequencies used by a public safety agency for public |
safety communications; a wireless provider shall |
install small wireless facilities of the type and |
frequency that will not cause unacceptable |
interference with a public safety agency's |
communications equipment; unacceptable interference |
will be determined by and measured in accordance with |
industry standards and the FCC's regulations |
addressing unacceptable interference to public safety |
spectrum or any other spectrum licensed by a public |
safety agency; if a small wireless facility causes |
such interference, and the wireless provider has been |
given written notice of the interference by the public |
safety agency, the wireless provider, at its own |
expense, shall take all reasonable steps necessary to |
correct and eliminate the interference, including, but |
not limited to, powering down the small wireless |
|
facility and later powering up the small wireless |
facility for intermittent testing, if necessary; the |
authority may terminate a permit for a small wireless |
facility based on such interference if the wireless |
provider is not making a good faith effort to remedy |
the problem in a manner consistent with the abatement |
and resolution procedures for interference with public |
safety spectrum established by the FCC including 47 |
CFR 22.970 through 47 CFR 22.973 and 47 CFR 90.672 |
through 47 CFR 90.675; |
(B) the wireless provider comply with requirements |
that are imposed by a contract between an authority |
and a private property owner that concern design or |
construction standards applicable to utility poles and |
ground-mounted equipment located in the right-of-way; |
(C) the wireless provider comply with applicable |
spacing requirements in applicable codes and |
ordinances concerning the location of ground-mounted |
equipment located in the right-of-way if the |
requirements include a waiver, zoning, or other |
process that addresses wireless provider requests for |
exception or variance and do not prohibit granting of |
such exceptions or variances; |
(D) the wireless provider comply with local code |
provisions or regulations concerning undergrounding |
requirements that prohibit the installation of new or |
|
the modification of existing utility poles in a |
right-of-way without prior approval if the |
requirements include a waiver, zoning, or other |
process that addresses requests to install such new |
utility poles or modify such existing utility poles |
and do not prohibit the replacement of utility poles; |
(E) the wireless provider comply with generally |
applicable standards that are consistent with this Act |
and adopted by an authority for construction and |
public safety in the rights-of-way, including, but not |
limited to, reasonable and nondiscriminatory wiring |
and cabling requirements, grounding requirements, |
utility pole extension requirements, acoustic |
regulations, and signage limitations; and shall comply |
with reasonable and nondiscriminatory requirements |
that are consistent with this Act and adopted by an |
authority regulating the location, size, surface area |
and height of small wireless facilities, or the |
abandonment and removal of small wireless facilities; |
(F) the wireless provider not collocate small |
wireless facilities on authority utility poles that |
are part of an electric distribution or transmission |
system within the communication worker safety zone of |
the pole or the electric supply zone of the pole; |
however, the antenna and support equipment of the |
small wireless facility may be located in the |
|
communications space on the authority utility pole and |
on the top of the pole, if not otherwise unavailable, |
if the wireless provider complies with applicable |
codes for work involving the top of the pole; for |
purposes of this subparagraph (F), the terms |
"communications space", "communication worker safety |
zone", and "electric supply zone" have the meanings |
given to those terms in the National Electric Safety |
Code as published by the Institute of Electrical and |
Electronics Engineers; |
(G) the wireless provider comply with the |
applicable codes and local code provisions or |
regulations that concern public safety;
|
(H) the wireless provider comply with written |
design standards that are generally applicable for |
decorative utility poles, or reasonable stealth, |
concealment, and aesthetic requirements that are |
identified by the authority in an ordinance, written |
policy adopted by the governing board of the |
authority, a comprehensive plan, or other written |
design plan that applies to other occupiers of the |
rights-of-way, including on a historic landmark or in |
a historic district; and
|
(I) subject to subsection (c) of this Section, and |
except for facilities excluded from evaluation for |
effects on historic properties
under 47 CFR |
|
1.1307(a)(4), reasonable, technically feasible and |
non-discriminatory design or concealment measures in a |
historic district or historic landmark; any such |
design or concealment measures, including restrictions |
on a specific category of poles, may not have the |
effect of prohibiting any provider's technology; such |
design and concealment measures shall not be |
considered a part of the small wireless facility for |
purposes of the size restrictions of a small wireless |
facility; this paragraph may not be construed to limit |
an authority's enforcement of historic preservation in |
conformance with the requirements adopted pursuant to |
the Illinois State Agency Historic Resources |
Preservation Act or the National Historic Preservation |
Act of 1966, 54 U.S.C. Section 300101 et seq., and the |
regulations adopted to implement those laws ; and .
|
(J) When a wireless provider replaces or adds a |
new radio transceiver or antennas to an existing small |
wireless facility, certification by the wireless |
provider from a radio engineer that the continuing |
operation of the small wireless facility complies with |
all applicable FCC standards. |
(7) Within 30 days after receiving an application, an |
authority must determine whether the application is |
complete and notify the applicant. If an application is |
incomplete, an authority must specifically identify the |
|
missing information. An application shall be deemed |
complete if the authority fails to provide notification to |
the applicant within 30 days after when all documents, |
information, and fees specifically enumerated in the |
authority's permit application form are submitted by the |
applicant to the authority. Processing deadlines are |
tolled from the time the authority sends the notice of |
incompleteness to the time the applicant provides the |
missing information. |
(8) An authority shall process applications as |
follows: |
(A) an application to collocate a small wireless |
facility on an existing utility pole or wireless |
support structure shall be processed on a |
nondiscriminatory basis and deemed approved if the |
authority fails to approve or deny the application |
within 90 days; however, if an applicant intends to |
proceed with the permitted activity on a deemed |
approved basis, the applicant must notify the |
authority in writing of its intention to invoke the |
deemed approved remedy no sooner than 75 days after |
the submission of a completed application; the permit |
shall be deemed approved on the latter of the 90th day |
after submission of the complete application or the |
10th day after the receipt of the deemed approved |
notice by the authority; the receipt of the deemed |
|
approved notice shall not preclude the authority's |
denial of the permit request within the time limits as |
provided under this Act; and |
(B) an application to collocate a small wireless |
facility that includes the installation of a new |
utility pole shall be processed on a nondiscriminatory |
basis and deemed approved if the authority fails to |
approve or deny the application within 120 days; |
however, if an applicant intends to proceed with the |
permitted activity on a deemed approved basis, the |
applicant must notify the authority in writing of its |
intention to invoke the deemed approved remedy no |
sooner than 105 days after the submission of a |
completed application; the permit shall be deemed |
approved on the latter of the 120th day after |
submission of the complete application or the 10th day |
after the receipt of the deemed approved notice by the |
authority; the receipt of the deemed approved notice |
shall not preclude the authority's denial of the |
permit request within the time limits as provided |
under this Act. |
(9) An authority shall approve an application unless |
the application does not meet the requirements of this |
Act. If an authority determines that applicable codes, |
local code provisions or regulations that concern public |
safety, or the requirements of paragraph (6) require that |
|
the utility pole or wireless support structure be replaced |
before the requested collocation, approval may be |
conditioned on the replacement of the utility pole or |
wireless support structure at the cost of the provider. |
The authority must document the basis for a denial, |
including the specific code provisions or application |
conditions on which the denial was based, and send the |
documentation to the applicant on or before the day the |
authority denies an application. The applicant may cure |
the deficiencies identified by the authority and resubmit |
the revised application once within 30 days after notice |
of denial is sent to the applicant without paying an |
additional application fee. The authority shall approve or |
deny the revised application within 30 days after the |
applicant resubmits the application or it is deemed |
approved; however, the applicant must notify the authority |
in writing of its intention to proceed with the permitted |
activity on a deemed approved basis, which may be |
submitted with the resubmitted application. Any subsequent |
review shall be limited to the deficiencies cited in the |
denial. However, this revised application cure does not |
apply if the cure requires the review of a new location, |
new or different structure to be collocated upon, new |
antennas, or other wireless equipment associated with the |
small wireless facility. |
(10) The time period for applications may be further |
|
tolled by: |
(A) the express agreement in writing by both the |
applicant and the authority; or |
(B) a local, State, or federal disaster |
declaration or similar emergency that causes the |
delay. |
(11) An applicant seeking to collocate small wireless |
facilities within the jurisdiction of a single authority |
shall be allowed, at the applicant's discretion, to file a |
consolidated application and receive a single permit for |
the collocation of up to 25 small wireless facilities if |
the collocations each involve substantially the same type |
of small wireless facility and substantially the same type |
of structure. If an application includes multiple small |
wireless facilities, the authority may remove small |
wireless facility collocations from the application and |
treat separately small wireless facility collocations for |
which incomplete information has been provided or that do |
not qualify for consolidated treatment or that are denied. |
The authority may issue separate permits for each |
collocation that is approved in a consolidated |
application. |
(12) Collocation for which a permit is granted shall |
be completed within 180 days after issuance of the permit, |
unless the authority and the wireless provider agree to |
extend this period or a delay is caused by make-ready work |
|
for an authority utility pole or by the lack of commercial |
power or backhaul availability at the site, provided the |
wireless provider has made a timely request within 60 days |
after the issuance of the permit for commercial power or |
backhaul services, and the additional time to complete |
installation does not exceed 360 days after issuance of |
the permit. Otherwise, the permit shall be void unless the |
authority grants an extension in writing to the applicant. |
(13) The duration of a permit shall be for a period of |
not less than 5 years, and the permit shall be renewed for |
equivalent durations unless the authority makes a finding |
that the small wireless facilities or the new or modified |
utility pole do not comply with the applicable codes or |
local code provisions or regulations in paragraphs (6) and |
(9). If this Act is repealed as provided in Section 90, |
renewals of permits shall be subject to the applicable |
authority code provisions or regulations in effect at the |
time of renewal. |
(14) An authority may not prohibit, either expressly |
or de facto, the (i) filing, receiving, or processing |
applications, or (ii) issuing of permits or other |
approvals, if any, for the collocation of small wireless |
facilities unless there has been a local, State, or |
federal disaster declaration or similar emergency that |
causes the delay. |
(15) Applicants shall submit applications, supporting |
|
information, and notices by personal delivery or as |
otherwise required by the authority. An authority may |
require that permits, supporting information, and notices |
be submitted by personal delivery at the authority's |
designated place of business, by regular mail postmarked |
on the date due, or by any other commonly used means, |
including electronic mail, as required by the authority. |
(e) Application fees are subject to the following |
requirements: |
(1) An authority may charge an application fee of up |
to $650 for an application to collocate a single small |
wireless facility on an existing utility pole or wireless |
support structure and up to $350 for each small wireless |
facility addressed in an application to collocate more |
than one small wireless facility on existing utility poles |
or wireless support structures. |
(2) An authority may charge an application fee of |
$1,000 for each small wireless facility addressed in an |
application that includes the installation of a new |
utility for such collocation. |
(3) Notwithstanding any contrary provision of State |
law or local ordinance, applications pursuant to this |
Section must be accompanied by the required application |
fee.
|
(4) Within 2 months after the effective date of this |
Act, an authority shall make available application fees |
|
consistent with this subsection, through ordinance, or in |
a written schedule of permit fees adopted by the |
authority.
|
(f) An authority shall not require an application, |
approval, or permit, or require any fees or other charges, |
from a communications service provider authorized to occupy |
the rights-of-way, for: (i) routine maintenance; (ii) the |
replacement of wireless facilities with wireless facilities |
that are substantially similar, the same size, or smaller if |
the wireless provider notifies the authority at least 10 days |
prior to the planned replacement and includes equipment |
specifications for the replacement of equipment consistent |
with the requirements of subparagraph (D) of paragraph (2) of |
subsection (d) of this Section; or (iii) the installation, |
placement, maintenance, operation, or replacement of micro |
wireless facilities that are suspended on cables that are |
strung between existing utility poles in compliance with |
applicable safety codes. However, an authority may require a |
permit to work within rights-of-way for activities that affect |
traffic patterns or require lane closures. |
(g) Nothing in this Act authorizes a person to collocate |
small wireless facilities on: (1) property owned by a private |
party or property owned or controlled by a unit of local |
government that is not located within rights-of-way, subject |
to subsection (j) of this Section, or a privately owned |
utility pole or wireless support structure without the consent |
|
of the property owner; (2) property owned, leased, or |
controlled by a park district, forest preserve district, or |
conservation district for public park, recreation, or |
conservation purposes without the consent of the affected |
district, excluding the placement of facilities on |
rights-of-way located in an affected district that are under |
the jurisdiction and control of a different unit of local |
government as provided by the Illinois Highway Code; or (3) |
property owned by a rail carrier registered under Section |
18c-7201 of the Illinois Vehicle Code, Metra Commuter Rail or |
any other public commuter rail service, or an electric utility |
as defined in Section 16-102 of the Public Utilities Act, |
without the consent of the rail carrier, public commuter rail |
service, or electric utility. The provisions of this Act do |
not apply to an electric or gas public utility or such |
utility's wireless facilities if the facilities are being |
used, developed, and maintained consistent with the provisions |
of subsection (i) of Section 16-108.5 of the Public Utilities |
Act. |
For the purposes of this subsection, "public utility" has |
the meaning given to that term in Section 3-105 of the Public |
Utilities Act. Nothing in this Act shall be construed to |
relieve any person from any requirement (1) to obtain a |
franchise or a State-issued authorization to offer cable |
service or video service or (2) to obtain any required |
permission to install, place, maintain, or operate |
|
communications facilities, other than small wireless |
facilities subject to this Act. |
(h) Agreements between authorities and wireless providers |
that relate to the collocation of small wireless facilities in |
the right-of-way, including the collocation of small wireless |
facilities on authority utility poles, that are in effect on |
the effective date of this Act remain in effect for all small |
wireless facilities collocated on the authority's utility |
poles pursuant to applications submitted to the authority |
before the effective date of this Act, subject to applicable |
termination provisions. Such agreements entered into after the |
effective date of the Act shall comply with the Act. |
(i) An authority shall allow the collocation of small |
wireless facilities on authority utility poles subject to the |
following: |
(1) An authority may not enter into an exclusive |
arrangement with any person for the right to attach small |
wireless facilities to authority utility poles. |
(2) The rates and fees for collocations on authority |
utility poles shall be nondiscriminatory regardless of the |
services provided by the collocating person. |
(3) An authority may charge an annual recurring rate |
to collocate a small wireless facility on an authority |
utility pole located in a right-of-way that equals (i) |
$200 per year or (ii) the actual, direct, and reasonable |
costs related to the wireless provider's use of space on |
|
the authority utility pole. Rates for collocation on |
authority utility poles located outside of a right-of-way |
are not subject to these limitations. In any controversy |
concerning the appropriateness of a cost-based rate for an |
authority utility pole located within a right-of-way, the |
authority shall have the burden of proving that the rate |
does not exceed the actual, direct, and reasonable costs |
for the applicant's proposed use of the authority utility |
pole. Nothing in this paragraph (3) prohibits a wireless |
provider and an authority from mutually agreeing to an |
annual recurring rate of less than $200 to collocate a |
small wireless facility on an authority utility pole. |
(4) Authorities or other persons owning or controlling |
authority utility poles within the right-of-way shall |
offer rates, fees, and other terms that comply with |
subparagraphs (A) through (E) of this paragraph (4). |
Within 2 months after the effective date of this Act, an |
authority or a person owning or controlling authority |
utility poles shall make available, through ordinance or |
an authority utility pole attachment agreement, license or |
other agreement that makes available to wireless |
providers, the rates, fees, and terms for the collocation |
of small wireless facilities on authority utility poles |
that comply with this Act and with subparagraphs (A) |
through (E) of this paragraph (4). In the absence of such |
an ordinance or agreement that complies with this Act, and |
|
until such a compliant ordinance or agreement is adopted, |
wireless providers may collocate small wireless facilities |
and install utility poles under the requirements of this |
Act. |
(A) The rates, fees, and terms must be |
nondiscriminatory, competitively neutral, and |
commercially reasonable, and may address, among other |
requirements, the requirements in subparagraphs (A) |
through (I) of paragraph (6) of subsection (d) of this |
Section; subsections (e), (i), and (k) of this |
Section; Section 30; and Section 35, and must comply |
with this Act. |
(B) For authority utility poles that support |
aerial facilities used to provide communications |
services or electric service, wireless providers shall |
comply with the process for make-ready work under 47 |
U.S.C. 224 and its implementing regulations, and the |
authority shall follow a substantially similar process |
for make-ready work except to the extent that the |
timing requirements are otherwise addressed in this |
Act. The good-faith estimate of the person owning or |
controlling the authority utility pole for any |
make-ready work necessary to enable the pole to |
support the requested collocation shall include |
authority utility pole replacement, if necessary. |
(C) For authority utility poles that do not |
|
support aerial facilities used to provide |
communications services or electric service, the |
authority shall provide a good-faith estimate for any |
make-ready work necessary to enable the authority |
utility pole to support the requested collocation, |
including pole replacement, if necessary, within 90 |
days after receipt of a complete application. |
Make-ready work, including any authority utility pole |
replacement, shall be completed within 60 days of |
written acceptance of the good-faith estimate by the |
applicant at the wireless provider's sole cost and |
expense. Alternatively, if the authority determines |
that applicable codes or public safety regulations |
require the authority utility pole to be replaced to |
support the requested collocation, the authority may |
require the wireless provider to replace the authority |
utility pole at the wireless provider's sole cost and |
expense. |
(D) The authority shall not require more |
make-ready work than required to meet applicable codes |
or industry standards. Make-ready work may include |
work needed to accommodate additional public safety |
communications needs that are identified in a |
documented and approved plan for the deployment of |
public safety equipment as specified in paragraph (1) |
of subsection (d) of this Section and included in an |
|
existing or preliminary authority or public service |
agency budget for attachment within one year of the |
application. Fees for make-ready work, including any |
authority utility pole replacement, shall not exceed |
actual costs or the amount charged to communications |
service providers for similar work and shall not |
include any consultants' fees or expenses for |
authority utility poles that do not support aerial |
facilities used to provide communications services or |
electric service. Make-ready work, including any pole |
replacement, shall be completed within 60 days of |
written acceptance of the good-faith estimate by the |
wireless provider, at its sole cost and expense. |
(E) A wireless provider that has an existing |
agreement with the authority on the effective date of |
the Act may accept the rates, fees, and terms that an |
authority makes available under this Act for the |
collocation of small wireless facilities or the |
installation of new utility poles for the collocation |
of small wireless facilities that are the subject of |
an application submitted 2 or more years after the |
effective date of the Act as provided in this |
paragraph (4) by notifying the authority that it opts |
to accept such rates, fees, and terms. The existing |
agreement remains in effect, subject to applicable |
termination provisions, for the small wireless |
|
facilities the wireless provider has collocated on the |
authority's utility poles pursuant to applications |
submitted to the authority before the wireless |
provider provides such notice and exercises its option |
under this subparagraph. |
(j) An authority shall authorize the collocation of small |
wireless facilities on utility poles owned or controlled by |
the authority that are not located within rights-of-way to the |
same extent the authority currently permits access to utility |
poles for other commercial projects or uses. The collocations |
shall be subject to reasonable and nondiscriminatory rates, |
fees, and terms as provided in an agreement between the |
authority and the wireless provider. |
(k) Nothing in this Section precludes an authority from |
adopting reasonable rules with respect to the removal of |
abandoned small wireless facilities. A small wireless facility |
that is not operated for a continuous period of 12 months shall |
be considered abandoned and the owner of the facility must |
remove the small wireless facility within 90 days after |
receipt of written notice from the authority notifying the |
owner of the abandonment. The notice shall be sent by |
certified or registered mail, return receipt requested, by the |
authority to the owner at the last known address of the owner. |
If the small wireless facility is not removed within 90 days of |
such notice, the authority may remove or cause the removal of |
the such facility pursuant to the terms of its pole attachment |
|
agreement for authority utility poles or through whatever |
actions are provided for abatement of nuisances or by other |
law for removal and cost recovery. An authority may require a |
wireless provider to provide written notice to the authority |
if it sells or transfers small wireless facilities subject to |
this Act within the jurisdictional boundary of the authority. |
Such notice shall include the name and contact information of |
the new wireless provider. |
(l) Nothing in this Section requires an authority to |
install or maintain any specific utility pole or to continue |
to install or maintain utility poles in any location if the |
authority makes a non-discriminatory decision to eliminate |
above-ground utility poles of a particular type generally, |
such as electric utility poles, in all or a significant |
portion of its geographic jurisdiction. For authority utility |
poles with collocated small wireless facilities in place when |
an authority makes a decision to eliminate above-ground |
utility poles of a particular type generally, the authority |
shall either (i) continue to maintain the authority utility |
pole or install and maintain a reasonable alternative utility |
pole or wireless support structure for the collocation of the |
small wireless facility, or (ii) offer to sell the utility |
pole to the wireless provider at a reasonable cost or allow the |
wireless provider to install its own utility pole so it can |
maintain service from that location.
|
(Source: P.A. 100-585, eff. 6-1-18 .) |
|
(50 ILCS 840/45 new) |
Sec. 45. Continuation of Act; validation. |
(a) The General Assembly finds and declares that this
|
amendatory Act of the 102nd General Assembly manifests the
|
intention of the General Assembly to extend the repeal of this
|
Act and have this Act continue in effect until December 31, |
2024. |
(b) This Section shall be deemed to have been in |
continuous
effect since June 1, 2021 and it shall continue to |
be in effect
henceforward until it is otherwise lawfully |
repealed. All
previously enacted amendments to this Act taking |
effect on or
after June 1, 2021, are hereby validated. All |
actions taken in reliance on or under this Act by any person or |
entity are hereby validated. |
(c) In order to ensure the continuing effectiveness of |
this
Act, it is set forth in full and reenacted by this |
amendatory
Act of the 102nd General Assembly. Striking and |
underscoring
are used only to show changes being made to the |
base text. This
reenactment is intended as a continuation of |
this Act. It is
not intended to supersede any amendment to this |
Act that is
enacted by the 102nd General Assembly. |
(50 ILCS 840/90) (was 50 ILCS 835/90)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on June 1, 2021) |
Sec. 90. Repeal. This Act is repealed on December 31, 2024 |
|
June 1, 2021 .
|
(Source: P.A. 100-585, eff. 6-1-18 .) |
Section 30. The Illinois Municipal Code is amended by |
adding Section 11-80-24 as follows: |
(65 ILCS 5/11-80-24 new) |
Sec. 11-80-24. Collocation of small wireless facilities. |
(a) A municipality may propose that a small wireless |
facility be collocated on an existing utility pole within 200 |
feet of the wireless providers proposed location within its |
public rights-of-way under paragraph (3) of subsection (d) of |
Section 15 of the Small Wireless Facilities Deployment Act and |
the entity owning the utility pole shall provide access for |
that purpose. |
(b) Any fee charged for the use of a utility pole under |
this Section shall be at the lowest rate charged by the entity |
owning the utility pole for other wireless providers and shall |
not exceed the entity's actual costs. |
(c) Nothing in this Section alters anything in Section 15 |
of the Small Wireless Facilities Deployment Act. |
Section 35. The Public Utilities Act is amended by |
changing Sections 13-406, 13-1200, 21-401, and 21-1601 as |
follows:
|
|
(220 ILCS 5/13-406) (from Ch. 111 2/3, par. 13-406)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2021)
|
Sec. 13-406. Abandonment of service. |
(a) No telecommunications carrier offering or providing
|
noncompetitive telecommunications service pursuant to a valid
|
Certificate of Service Authority or certificate of public |
convenience and
necessity shall discontinue or abandon such |
service once initiated until
and unless it shall demonstrate, |
and the Commission finds, after notice and
hearing, that such |
discontinuance or abandonment will not deprive customers
of |
any necessary or essential telecommunications service or |
access thereto
and is not otherwise contrary to the public |
interest. No
telecommunications carrier offering or providing |
competitive
telecommunications service shall completely |
discontinue or abandon such service to an identifiable class |
or group of customers once
initiated except upon 60 days' days |
notice to the Commission and affected
customers. The |
Commission may, upon its own motion or upon complaint,
|
investigate the proposed discontinuance or abandonment of a |
competitive
telecommunications service and may, after notice |
and hearing, prohibit such
proposed discontinuance or |
abandonment if the Commission finds that it
would be contrary |
to the public interest. If the Commission does not provide |
notice of a hearing within 60 calendar days after the |
notification or holds a hearing and fails to find that the |
proposed discontinuation or abandonment would be contrary to |
|
the public interest, the provider may discontinue or abandon |
such service after providing at least 30 days' days notice to |
affected customers. This Section does not apply to a Large |
Electing Provider proceeding under Section 13-406.1.
|
(b) A Small Electing Provider may choose to cease offering |
or providing a telecommunications service pursuant to either |
this Section or Section 13-406.1 of this Act in the same manner |
as a Large Electing Provider. A Small Electing Provider that |
elects to cease offering or providing a telecommunications |
service pursuant to Section 13-406.1 shall be subject to all |
of the provisions that apply to a Large Electing Provider |
under Section 13-406.1. In this subsection (b), "Small |
Electing Provider" means an incumbent local exchange carrier, |
as defined in Section 13-202.5 of this Act, that is an Electing |
Provider, as defined in Section 13-506.2 of this Act, and |
that, together with all of its incumbent local exchange |
carrier affiliates offering telecommunications services within |
the State of Illinois, has fewer than 40,000 subscriber access |
lines as of January 1, 2020. |
(Source: P.A. 100-20, eff. 7-1-17 .)
|
(220 ILCS 5/13-1200) |
(Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2021) |
Sec. 13-1200. Repealer. This Article is repealed December |
31, 2026 2021 . |
(Source: P.A. 100-20, eff. 7-1-17; 101-639, eff. 6-12-20.) |
|
(220 ILCS 5/21-401) |
(Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2021) |
Sec. 21-401. Applications. |
(a)(1) A person or entity seeking to provide cable service |
or video service pursuant to this Article shall not use the |
public rights-of-way for the installation or construction of |
facilities for the provision of cable service or video service |
or offer cable service or video service until it has obtained a |
State-issued authorization to offer or provide cable or video |
service under this Section, except as provided for in item (2) |
of this subsection (a). All cable or video providers offering |
or providing service in this State shall have authorization |
pursuant to either (i) the Cable and Video Competition Law of |
2007 (220 ILCS 5/21-100 et seq.); (ii) Section 11-42-11 of the |
Illinois Municipal Code (65 ILCS 5/11-42-11); or (iii) Section |
5-1095 of the Counties Code (55 ILCS 5/5-1095). |
(2) Nothing in this Section shall prohibit a local unit of |
government from granting a permit to a person or entity for the |
use of the public rights-of-way to install or construct |
facilities to provide cable service or video service, at its |
sole discretion. No unit of local government shall be liable |
for denial or delay of a permit prior to the issuance of a |
State-issued authorization. |
(b) The application to the Commission for State-issued |
authorization shall contain a completed affidavit submitted by |
|
the applicant and signed by an officer or general partner of |
the applicant affirming all of the following: |
(1) That the applicant has filed or will timely file |
with the Federal Communications Commission all forms |
required by that agency in advance of offering cable |
service or video service in this State. |
(2) That the applicant agrees to comply with all |
applicable federal and State statutes and regulations. |
(3) That the applicant agrees to comply with all |
applicable local unit of government regulations. |
(4) An exact description of the cable service or video |
service area where the cable service or video service will |
be offered during the term of the State-issued |
authorization. The service area shall be identified in |
terms of either (i) exchanges, as that term is defined in |
Section 13-206 of this Act; (ii) a collection of United |
States Census Bureau Block numbers (13 digit); (iii) if |
the area is smaller than the areas identified in either |
(i) or (ii), by geographic information system digital |
boundaries meeting or exceeding national map accuracy |
standards; or (iv) local unit of government. The |
description shall include the number of low-income |
households within the service area or footprint. If an |
applicant is an incumbent cable operator, the incumbent |
cable operator and any successor-in-interest shall be |
obligated to provide access to cable services or video |
|
services within any local units of government at the same |
levels required by the local franchising authorities for |
the local unit of government on June 30, 2007
(the |
effective date of Public Act 95-9),
and its application |
shall provide a description of an area no smaller than the |
service areas contained in its franchise or franchises
|
within the jurisdiction of the local unit of government in |
which it seeks to offer cable or video service. |
(5) The location and telephone number of the |
applicant's principal place of business within this State |
and the names of the applicant's principal executive |
officers who are responsible for communications concerning |
the application and the services to be offered pursuant to |
the application, the applicant's legal name, and any name |
or names under which the applicant does or will provide |
cable services or video services in this State. |
(6) A certification that the applicant has |
concurrently delivered a copy of the application to all |
local units of government that include all or any part of |
the service area identified in item (4) of this subsection |
(b)
within such local unit of government's jurisdictional |
boundaries. |
(7) The expected date that cable service or video |
service will be initially offered in the area identified |
in item (4) of this subsection (b). In the event that a |
holder does not offer cable services or video services |
|
within 3
months after the expected date, it shall amend |
its application and update the expected date service will |
be offered and explain the delay in offering cable |
services or video services. |
(8) For any entity that received State-issued |
authorization prior to this amendatory Act of the 98th |
General Assembly as a cable operator and that intends to |
proceed as a cable operator under this Article, the entity |
shall file a written affidavit with the Commission and |
shall serve a copy of the affidavit with any local units of |
government affected by the authorization within 30 days |
after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the |
98th General Assembly stating that the holder will be |
providing cable service under the State-issued |
authorization. |
The application shall include adequate assurance that the |
applicant possesses the financial, managerial, legal, and |
technical qualifications necessary to construct and operate |
the proposed system, to promptly repair any damage to the |
public right-of-way caused by the applicant, and to pay the |
cost of removal of its facilities. To accomplish these |
requirements, the applicant may, at the time the applicant |
seeks to use the public rights-of-way in that jurisdiction, be |
required by the State of Illinois or
later be required by the |
local unit of government, or both, to post a bond, produce a |
certificate of insurance, or otherwise demonstrate its |
|
financial responsibility. |
The application shall include the applicant's general |
standards related to customer service required by Section |
22-501 of this Act, which shall include, but not be limited to, |
installation, disconnection, service and repair obligations; |
appointment hours; employee ID requirements; customer service |
telephone numbers and hours; procedures for billing, charges, |
deposits, refunds, and credits; procedures for termination of |
service; notice of deletion of programming service and changes |
related to transmission of programming or changes or increases |
in rates; use and availability of parental control or lock-out |
devices; complaint procedures and procedures for bill dispute |
resolution and a description of the rights and remedies |
available to consumers if the holder does not materially meet |
their customer service standards; and special services for |
customers with visual, hearing, or mobility disabilities. |
(c)(1) The applicant may designate information that it |
submits in its application or subsequent reports as |
confidential or proprietary, provided that the applicant |
states the reasons the confidential designation is necessary. |
The Commission shall provide adequate protection for such |
information pursuant to Section 4-404 of this Act. If the |
Commission, a local unit of government, or any other party |
seeks public disclosure of information designated as |
confidential, the Commission shall consider the confidential |
designation in a proceeding under the Illinois Administrative |
|
Procedure
Act, and the burden of proof to demonstrate that the |
designated information is confidential shall be upon the |
applicant. Designated information shall remain confidential |
pending the Commission's determination of whether the |
information is entitled to confidential treatment. Information |
designated as confidential shall be provided to local units of |
government for purposes of assessing compliance with this |
Article as permitted under a Protective Order issued by the |
Commission pursuant to the Commission's rules and to the |
Attorney General pursuant to Section 6.5 of the Attorney |
General Act
(15 ILCS 205/6.5). Information designated as |
confidential under this Section or determined to be |
confidential upon Commission review shall only be disclosed |
pursuant to a valid and enforceable subpoena or court order or |
as required by the Freedom of Information Act. Nothing herein |
shall delay the application approval timeframes set forth in |
this Article. |
(2) Information regarding the location of video services |
that have been or are being offered to the public and aggregate |
information included in the reports required by this Article |
shall not be designated or treated as confidential. |
(d)(1) The Commission shall post all applications it |
receives under this Article on its web site within 5
business |
days. |
(2) The Commission shall notify an applicant for a cable |
service or video service authorization whether the applicant's |
|
application and affidavit are complete on or before the 15th |
business day after the applicant submits the application. If |
the application and affidavit are not complete, the Commission |
shall state in its notice all of the reasons the application or |
affidavit are incomplete, and the applicant shall resubmit a |
complete application. The Commission shall have 30 days after |
submission by the applicant of a complete application and |
affidavit to issue the service authorization. If the |
Commission does not notify the applicant regarding the |
completeness of the application and affidavit or issue the |
service authorization within the time periods required under |
this subsection, the application and affidavit shall be |
considered complete and the service authorization issued upon |
the expiration of the 30th day. |
(e) Any authorization issued by the Commission will expire |
on December 31, 2029 2024 and shall contain or include all of |
the following: |
(1) A grant of authority, including an authorization |
issued prior to this amendatory Act of the 98th General |
Assembly, to provide cable service or video service in the |
service area footprint as requested in the application, |
subject to the provisions of this Article in existence on |
the date the grant of authority was issued, and any |
modifications to this Article enacted at any time prior to |
the date in Section 21-1601 of this Act, and to the laws of |
the State and the ordinances, rules, and regulations of |
|
the local units of government. |
(2) A grant of authority to use, occupy, and construct |
facilities in the public rights-of-way for the delivery of |
cable service or video service in the service area |
footprint, subject to the laws, ordinances, rules, or |
regulations of this State and local units of governments. |
(3) A statement that the grant of authority is subject |
to lawful operation of the cable service or video service |
by the applicant, its affiliated entities, or its |
successors-in-interest. |
(e-5) The Commission shall notify a local unit of |
government within 3
business days of the grant of any |
authorization within a service area footprint if that |
authorization includes any part of the local unit of |
government's jurisdictional boundaries and state whether the |
holder will be providing video service or cable service under |
the authorization. |
(f) The authorization issued pursuant to this Section
by |
the Commission may be transferred to any successor-in-interest |
to the applicant to which it is initially granted without |
further Commission action if the successor-in-interest (i) |
submits an application and the information required by |
subsection (b) of this Section
for the successor-in-interest |
and (ii) is not in violation of this Article or of any federal, |
State, or local law, ordinance, rule, or regulation. A |
successor-in-interest shall file its application and notice of |
|
transfer with the Commission and the relevant local units of |
government no less than 15
business days prior to the |
completion of the transfer. The Commission is not required or |
authorized to act upon the notice of transfer; however, the |
transfer is not effective until the Commission approves the |
successor-in-interest's application. A local unit of |
government or the Attorney General may seek to bar a transfer |
of ownership by filing suit in a court of competent |
jurisdiction predicated on the existence of a material and |
continuing breach of this Article by the holder, a pattern of |
noncompliance with customer service standards by the potential |
successor-in-interest, or the insolvency of the potential |
successor-in-interest. If a transfer is made when there are |
violations of this Article or of any federal, State, or local |
law, ordinance, rule, or regulation, the successor-in-interest |
shall be subject to 3
times the penalties provided for in this |
Article. |
(g) The authorization issued pursuant to this Section by |
the Commission may be terminated, or its cable service or |
video service area footprint may be modified, by the cable |
service provider or video service provider by submitting |
notice to the Commission and to the relevant local unit of |
government containing a description of the change on the same |
terms as the initial description pursuant to item (4) of |
subsection (b) of this Section. The Commission is not required |
or authorized to act upon that notice. It shall be a violation |
|
of this Article for a holder to discriminate against potential |
residential subscribers because of the race or income of the |
residents in the local area in which the group resides by |
terminating or modifying its cable service or video service |
area footprint. It shall be a violation of this Article for a |
holder to terminate or modify its cable service or video |
service area footprint if it leaves an area with no cable |
service or video service from any provider. |
(h) The Commission's authority to administer this Article |
is limited to the powers and duties explicitly provided under |
this Article. Its authority under this Article does not |
include or limit the powers and duties that the Commission has |
under the other Articles of this Act, the Illinois |
Administrative Procedure Act,
or any other law or regulation |
to conduct proceedings, other than as provided in subsection |
(c), or has to promulgate rules or regulations. The Commission |
shall not have the authority to limit or expand the |
obligations and requirements provided in this Section or to |
regulate or control a person or entity to the extent that |
person or entity is providing cable service or video service, |
except as provided in this Article.
|
(Source: P.A. 100-20, eff. 7-1-17; 101-639, eff. 6-12-20.) |
(220 ILCS 5/21-1601)
|
Sec. 21-1601. Repealer. Sections 21-101 through 21-1501 of |
this Article are repealed December 31, 2026 2021 .
|
|
(Source: P.A. 100-20, eff. 7-1-17; 101-639, eff. 6-12-20.) |
Section 40. The Prevailing Wage Act is amended by changing |
Section 2 and by adding Section 2.1 as follows:
|
(820 ILCS 130/2) (from Ch. 48, par. 39s-2)
|
Sec. 2. This Act applies to the wages of laborers, |
mechanics and
other workers employed in any public works, as |
hereinafter defined, by
any public body and to anyone under |
contracts for public works. This includes any maintenance, |
repair, assembly, or disassembly work performed on equipment |
whether owned, leased, or rented.
|
As used in this Act, unless the context indicates |
otherwise:
|
"Public works" means all fixed works constructed or |
demolished by
any public body,
or paid for wholly or in part |
out of public funds. "Public works" as
defined herein includes |
all projects financed in whole
or in part with bonds, grants, |
loans, or other funds made available by or through the State or |
any of its political subdivisions, including but not limited |
to: bonds issued under the Industrial Project Revenue Bond
Act |
(Article 11, Division 74 of the Illinois Municipal Code), the |
Industrial
Building Revenue Bond Act, the Illinois Finance |
Authority Act,
the Illinois Sports Facilities Authority Act, |
or the Build Illinois Bond Act; loans or other funds made
|
available pursuant to the Build Illinois Act; loans or other |
|
funds made available pursuant to the Riverfront Development |
Fund under Section 10-15 of the River Edge Redevelopment Zone |
Act; or funds from the Fund for
Illinois' Future under Section |
6z-47 of the State Finance Act, funds for school
construction |
under Section 5 of the General Obligation Bond Act, funds
|
authorized under Section 3 of the School Construction Bond |
Act, funds for
school infrastructure under Section 6z-45 of |
the State Finance Act, and funds
for transportation purposes |
under Section 4 of the General Obligation Bond
Act. "Public |
works" also includes (i) all projects financed in whole or in |
part
with funds from the Department of Commerce and Economic |
Opportunity under the Illinois Renewable Fuels Development |
Program
Act for which there is no project labor agreement; |
(ii) all work performed pursuant to a public private agreement |
under the Public Private Agreements for the Illiana Expressway |
Act or the Public-Private Agreements for the South Suburban |
Airport Act; and (iii) all projects undertaken under a |
public-private agreement under the Public-Private Partnerships |
for Transportation Act. "Public works" also includes all |
projects at leased facility property used for airport purposes |
under Section 35 of the Local Government Facility Lease Act. |
"Public works" also includes the construction of a new wind |
power facility by a business designated as a High Impact |
Business under Section 5.5(a)(3)(E) of the Illinois Enterprise |
Zone Act.
"Public works" does not include work done directly |
by any public utility company, whether or not done under |
|
public supervision or direction, or paid for wholly or in part |
out of public funds. "Public works" also includes construction |
projects performed by a third party contracted by any public |
utility, as described in subsection (a) of Section 2.1, in |
public rights-of-way, as defined in Section 21-201 of the |
Public Utilities Act, whether or not done under public |
supervision or direction, or paid for wholly or in part out of |
public funds. "Public works" also includes construction |
projects that exceed 15 aggregate miles of new fiber optic |
cable, performed by a third party contracted by any public |
utility, as described in subsection (b) of Section 2.1, in |
public rights-of-way, as defined in Section 21-201 of the |
Public Utilities Act, whether or not done under public |
supervision or direction, or paid for wholly or in part out of |
public funds. "Public works" also includes any corrective |
action performed pursuant to Title XVI of the Environmental |
Protection Act for which payment from the Underground Storage |
Tank Fund is requested. "Public works" does not include |
projects undertaken by the owner at an owner-occupied |
single-family residence or at an owner-occupied unit of a |
multi-family residence. "Public works" does not include work |
performed for soil and water conservation purposes on |
agricultural lands, whether or not done under public |
supervision or paid for wholly or in part out of public funds, |
done directly by an owner or person who has legal control of |
those lands.
|
|
"Construction" means all work on public works involving |
laborers,
workers or mechanics. This includes any maintenance, |
repair, assembly, or disassembly work performed on equipment |
whether owned, leased, or rented.
|
"Locality" means the county where the physical work upon |
public works
is performed, except (1) that if there is not |
available in the county a
sufficient number of competent |
skilled laborers, workers and mechanics
to construct the |
public works efficiently and properly, "locality"
includes any |
other county nearest the one in which the work or
construction |
is to be performed and from which such persons may be
obtained |
in sufficient numbers to perform the work and (2) that, with
|
respect to contracts for highway work with the Department of
|
Transportation of this State, "locality" may at the discretion |
of the
Secretary of the Department of Transportation be |
construed to include
two or more adjacent counties from which |
workers may be accessible for
work on such construction.
|
"Public body" means the State or any officer, board or |
commission of
the State or any political subdivision or |
department thereof, or any
institution supported in whole or |
in part by public funds,
and includes every county, city, |
town,
village, township, school district, irrigation, utility, |
reclamation
improvement or other district and every other |
political subdivision,
district or municipality of the state |
whether such political
subdivision, municipality or district |
operates under a special charter
or not.
|
|
"Labor organization" means an organization that is the |
exclusive representative of an
employer's employees recognized |
or certified pursuant to the National Labor Relations Act. |
The terms "general prevailing rate of hourly wages", |
"general
prevailing rate of wages" or "prevailing rate of |
wages" when used in
this Act mean the hourly cash wages plus |
annualized fringe benefits for training and
apprenticeship |
programs approved by the U.S. Department of Labor, Bureau of
|
Apprenticeship and Training, health and welfare, insurance, |
vacations and
pensions paid generally, in the
locality in |
which the work is being performed, to employees engaged in
|
work of a similar character on public works.
|
(Source: P.A. 100-1177, eff. 6-1-19 .)
|
(820 ILCS 130/2.1 new) |
Sec. 2.1. Public utilities. |
(a) For purposes of this Act, to the extent permitted by |
and consistent with federal law, "public utility" has the |
meaning given that term in Section 3-105 of the Public |
Utilities Act. |
(b) For purposes of this Act, "public utility" also |
includes: |
(1) telecommunications carriers, as defined in Section |
13-202 of the Public Utilities Act, but not including |
incumbent local exchange carriers that serve fewer than |
20,000 access lines; |
|
(2) providers of cable service or video service, as |
defined in Section 21-201 of the Public Utilities Act; |
(3) providers of wireless services, including, but not |
limited to, private radio service, public mobile service, |
or commercial mobile service within the meaning of Section |
332 of the federal Communications Act of 1934 (47 U.S.C. |
332); |
(4) interconnected voice over Internet protocol |
providers as defined in Section 13-235 of the Public |
Utilities Act; |
(5) providers of broadband service, as defined in |
Section 21-201 of the Public Utilities Act; and |
(6) persons or entities engaged in the installation, |
repair, or maintenance of fiber optic cable that is or |
will be used by persons described in paragraphs (1) |
through (5) of this subsection. |
Section 97. Severability. The provisions of this Act are |
severable under Section 1.31 of the Statute on Statutes.
|
Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon |
becoming law, except that Section 40 takes effect on January |
1, 2022.
|