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Public Act 102-0972 |
HB5196 Enrolled | LRB102 24844 RJT 34091 b |
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AN ACT concerning health.
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Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
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represented in the General Assembly:
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Section 5. The Illinois Identification Card Act is amended |
by changing Section 4A as follows:
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(15 ILCS 335/4A) (from Ch. 124, par. 24A)
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Sec. 4A.
(a) "Person with a disability" as used in this Act |
means any person who
is, and who is expected to indefinitely |
continue to be, subject to any of
the following five types of |
disabilities:
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Type One: Physical disability. A physical disability is a |
physical
impairment, disease, or loss, which is of a permanent |
nature, and which
substantially limits physical ability or |
motor skills. The
Secretary of State shall establish standards |
not inconsistent with this
provision necessary to determine |
the presence of a physical disability.
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Type Two: Developmental disability. Developmental |
disability means "developmental disability" as defined in |
Section 1-106 of the Mental Health and Developmental |
Disabilities Code a disability that is attributable to: (i) an |
intellectual disability, cerebral palsy, epilepsy, or autism |
or (ii) any other condition that results in impairment similar |
to that caused by an intellectual disability and requires |
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services similar to those required by persons with |
intellectual disabilities. Such a disability must originate |
before the age of 18 years, be expected to continue |
indefinitely, and constitute a substantial disability . The |
Secretary
of State shall establish standards not inconsistent |
with this provision
necessary to determine the presence of
a |
developmental disability.
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Type Three: Visual disability. A visual disability is |
blindness, and the term "blindness" means central vision |
acuity of 20/200 or less in the better eye with the use of a |
correcting lens. An eye that is accompanied by a limitation in |
the fields of vision so that the widest diameter of the visual |
field subtends an angle no greater than 20 degrees shall be |
considered as having a central vision acuity of 20/200 or |
less. The Secretary of State shall establish
standards not |
inconsistent with this Section necessary to determine the
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presence of a visual disability.
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Type Four: Hearing disability. A hearing disability is a |
disability
resulting in complete absence of hearing, or |
hearing that with sound
enhancing or magnifying equipment is
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so impaired as to require the use of sensory input other than |
hearing
as the principal means of receiving spoken language. |
The Secretary of State
shall
establish standards not |
inconsistent with this Section
necessary to determine the |
presence of a hearing disability.
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Type Five: Mental Disability. A mental disability is a |
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significant impairment of an individual's cognitive, |
affective, or relational abilities that may require |
intervention and may be a recognized, medically diagnosable |
illness or disorder. The Secretary of State shall establish
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standards not inconsistent with this provision necessary to |
determine the
presence of a mental disability.
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(b) For purposes of this Act, a disability shall be |
classified as
follows: Class 1 disability: A Class 1 |
disability is any type disability
which does not render a |
person unable to engage in any substantial gainful
activity or |
which does not impair his ability to live independently or to
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perform labor or services for which he is qualified. The |
Secretary of State
shall establish standards not inconsistent |
with this Section
necessary to determine the presence of a |
Class 1 disability.
Class 1A disability: A Class 1A disability |
is a Class 1 disability which
renders a person unable to walk |
200 feet or more unassisted by another person
or without the |
aid of a walker, crutches, braces, prosthetic device or a
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wheelchair or without great difficulty or discomfort due to |
the following
impairments: neurologic, orthopedic, |
oncological, respiratory, cardiac, arthritic disorder, |
blindness,
or the loss of function or absence of a limb or |
limbs. The Secretary of
State shall establish standards not |
inconsistent with this Section necessary
to determine the |
presence of a Class 1A disability. Class 2
disability: A Class |
2 disability is any type disability which renders a
person |
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unable to engage in any substantial gainful activity, which
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substantially impairs his ability to live independently |
without
supervision or in-home support services, or which |
substantially impairs
his ability to perform labor
or services |
for which he is qualified or significantly restricts the
labor |
or services which he is able to perform.
The Secretary of State |
shall
establish standards not inconsistent with this Section |
necessary to
determine the presence of a Class 2 disability.
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Class 2A disability: A Class 2A disability is a Class 2 |
disability which
renders a person unable to walk 200 feet or |
more unassisted by another
person or without the aid of a |
walker, crutches, braces, prosthetic device
or a wheelchair or |
without great difficulty or discomfort due to the
following |
impairments: neurologic, orthopedic, oncological, |
respiratory, cardiac,
arthritic disorder, blindness, or the |
loss of function or absence of a limb
or limbs. The Secretary |
of State shall establish standards not inconsistent
with this |
Section necessary to determine the presence of a Class 2A
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disability.
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(Source: P.A. 98-726, eff. 1-1-15; 99-143, eff. 7-27-15.)
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Section 10. The Mental Health and Developmental |
Disabilities Administrative Act is amended by changing Section |
2 as follows:
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(20 ILCS 1705/2) (from Ch. 91 1/2, par. 100-2)
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Sec. 2. Definitions; administrative subdivisions.
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(a) For the purposes of this Act, unless the context |
otherwise requires:
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"Department" means the Department of Human Services, |
successor to the former
Department of Mental Health and |
Developmental Disabilities.
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"Developmental disability" means "developmental |
disability" as defined in Section 1-106 of the Mental Health |
and Developmental Disabilities Code. |
"Intellectual disability" means the "intellectual |
disability" as defined in Section 1-116 of the Mental Health |
and Developmental Disabilities Code. |
"Secretary" means the Secretary of Human Services.
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(b) Unless the context otherwise requires:
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(1) References in this Act to the programs or |
facilities of the
Department
shall be construed to refer |
only to those programs or facilities of the
Department |
that pertain to mental health or developmental |
disabilities.
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(2) References in this Act to the Department's service |
providers or
service recipients shall be construed to |
refer only to providers or recipients
of services that |
pertain to the Department's mental health and |
developmental
disabilities functions.
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(3) References in this Act to employees of the |
Department shall be
construed to refer only to employees |
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whose duties pertain to the Department's
mental health and |
developmental disabilities functions.
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(c) The Secretary shall establish such subdivisions
of the |
Department as shall
be desirable and shall assign to the |
various subdivisions the responsibilities
and duties placed |
upon the Department by the Laws of the State of Illinois.
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(d) There is established a coordinator of services to
deaf |
and hearing impaired persons with mental disabilities. In |
hiring this
coordinator, every consideration shall be given to |
qualified deaf or hearing
impaired individuals.
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(e) Whenever the administrative director of the |
subdivision for mental
health
services is not a |
board-certified psychiatrist, the
Secretary shall appoint a |
Chief for Clinical Services who shall be a
board-certified |
psychiatrist with both clinical and administrative
experience. |
The Chief for Clinical Services shall be responsible for all
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clinical and medical decisions for mental health services.
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(Source: P.A. 99-143, eff. 7-27-15.)
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Section 15. The Disabilities Services Act of 2003 is |
amended by changing Section 10 as follows: |
(20 ILCS 2407/10)
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Sec. 10. Application of Act; definitions.
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(a) This Act
applies to persons with disabilities. The |
disabilities included are
defined for purposes of this Act as |
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follows:
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"Disability" means a disability as defined by the |
Americans
with Disabilities Act of 1990 that is attributable |
to a
developmental disability, a mental illness, or a physical
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disability, or combination of those.
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"Developmental disability" means "developmental |
disability" as defined in Section 1-106 of the Mental Health |
and Developmental Disabilities Code. a disability that is
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attributable to an intellectual disability or a related |
condition. A
related condition must meet all of the following |
conditions:
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(1) It must be attributable to cerebral palsy,
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epilepsy, or any other condition (other than
mental |
illness) found to be closely related to an intellectual |
disability because that condition results in impairment of
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general intellectual functioning or adaptive behavior |
similar
to that of individuals with an intellectual |
disability, and requires
treatment or services similar to |
those required for those
individuals. For purposes of this |
Section, autism is considered a related
condition.
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(2) It must be manifested before the individual |
reaches
age 22.
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(3) It must be likely to continue indefinitely.
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(4) It must result in substantial functional
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limitations in 3 or more of the following areas of major |
life
activity: self-care, language, learning, mobility, |
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self-direction, and capacity
for independent living.
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"Mental Illness" means a mental or emotional disorder
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verified by a diagnosis contained in the
Diagnostic and |
Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders-Fourth Edition, |
published
by the American Psychiatric Association (DSM-IV), or |
its successor, or
International Classification of Diseases, |
9th Revision, Clinical Modification
(ICD-9-CM), or its |
successor, that
substantially impairs a person's cognitive, |
emotional, or
behavioral functioning, or any combination of |
those, excluding
(i) conditions that may be the focus of |
clinical attention but are not of
sufficient duration or |
severity to be categorized as a mental illness, such as
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parent-child relational problems, partner-relational |
problems, sexual abuse of
a child, bereavement, academic |
problems, phase-of-life problems, and
occupational problems |
(collectively, "V codes"), (ii) organic disorders such as
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substance intoxication dementia, substance withdrawal |
dementia, Alzheimer's
disease, vascular dementia, dementia due |
to HIV infection, and dementia due to Creutzfeldt-Jakob
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disease
and disorders associated with
known or unknown |
physical conditions such as hallucinosis, amnestic
disorders |
and delirium, and psychoactive substance-induced organic
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disorders, and (iii) an intellectual disability or |
psychoactive substance use
disorders.
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"Intellectual disability" means "intellectual disability" |
as defined in Section 1-116 of the Mental Health and |
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Developmental Disabilities Code significantly sub-average |
general
intellectual functioning existing concurrently with |
deficits in
adaptive behavior and manifested before the age of |
22 years .
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"Physical disability" means a disability as defined by the
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Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 that meets the |
following
criteria:
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(1) It is attributable to a physical impairment.
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(2) It results in a substantial functional limitation
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in any of the following areas of major life activity:
(i) |
self-care, (ii) receptive and expressive language, (iii)
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learning, (iv) mobility, (v) self-direction, (vi) capacity
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for independent living, and (vii) economic sufficiency.
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(3) It reflects the person's need for a combination |
and
sequence of special, interdisciplinary, or general |
care,
treatment, or other services that are of lifelong or |
of
extended duration and must be individually planned and
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coordinated.
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(b) In this Act:
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"Chronological age-appropriate services" means services, |
activities,
and strategies for persons with disabilities that |
are
representative of the lifestyle activities of nondisabled |
peers of similar
age in the community.
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"Comprehensive evaluation" means procedures used by |
qualified professionals
selectively with an individual to
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determine whether a person has a disability and the nature
and |
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extent of the services that the person with a disability
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needs.
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"Department" means the Department on Aging, the Department |
of Human Services,
the Department of Public Health, the |
Department of
Public Aid (now Department Healthcare and Family |
Services), the University of Illinois Division of Specialized |
Care for
Children, the Department of Children and Family |
Services, and the Illinois
State
Board of Education, where |
appropriate, as designated in the implementation plan
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developed under Section 20.
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"Family" means a natural, adoptive, or foster parent or |
parents or
other person or persons responsible for the care of |
an individual with a
disability in a family setting.
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"Family or individual support" means those resources and |
services
that are necessary to maintain an individual with a
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disability within the family home or his or her own home. These |
services may
include, but are not
limited to, cash subsidy, |
respite care, and counseling services.
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"Independent service coordination" means a social service |
that enables
persons
with developmental disabilities and their |
families to locate, use, and
coordinate resources
and
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opportunities in their communities on the basis of individual |
need. Independent
service
coordination is independent of |
providers of services and funding sources and is
designed
to |
ensure accessibility, continuity of care, and accountability |
and to maximize
the
potential of persons with developmental |
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disabilities for independence,
productivity, and
integration |
into
the community. Independent service coordination includes, |
at a minimum: (i)
outreach to
identify eligible individuals; |
(ii) assessment and periodic reassessment to
determine each
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individual's strengths, functional limitations, and need for |
specific services;
(iii)
participation in the development of a |
comprehensive individual service or
treatment plan;
(iv) |
referral to and linkage with needed services and supports; (v) |
monitoring
to ensure
the delivery of appropriate services and |
to determine individual progress in
meeting goals
and |
objectives; and (vi) advocacy to assist the person in |
obtaining all
services for which
he or she is eligible or |
entitled.
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"Individual service or treatment plan" means a recorded |
assessment of the
needs
of a person with a disability, a |
description of the services
recommended, the goals of each |
type of element of service, an anticipated
timetable for the |
accomplishment of the goals, and a designation of the
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qualified professionals responsible for the implementation of |
the plan.
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"Least restrictive environment" means an environment that
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represents the least departure from the normal patterns of |
living and that
effectively meets the needs of the person |
receiving the service.
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(Source: P.A. 97-227, eff. 1-1-12; 98-756, eff. 7-16-14.) |
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Section 25. The School Code is amended by changing Section |
2-3.83 as follows:
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(105 ILCS 5/2-3.83) (from Ch. 122, par. 2-3.83)
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Sec. 2-3.83. Individual transition plan model pilot |
program.
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(a) The General Assembly finds that transition services |
for special
education students in secondary schools are needed |
for the increasing numbers
of students exiting school |
programs. Therefore, to ensure coordinated and
timely delivery |
of services, the State shall establish a model pilot program |
to
provide such services. Local school districts, using joint |
agreements and
regional service delivery systems for special |
and vocational education
selected by the Governor's Planning |
Council on Developmental Disabilities,
shall have the primary |
responsibility to convene transition planning
meetings for |
these students who will require post-school adult services.
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(b) For purposes of this Section:
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(1) "Post-secondary Service Provider" means a
provider |
of services for adults who have any developmental |
disability as
defined in Section 1-106 of the Mental |
Health and Developmental
Disabilities Code or who are |
persons with one or more disabilities as defined in the |
Rehabilitation of Persons with Disabilities Act.
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(2) "Individual Education Plan" means a written |
statement for an
exceptional child that provides at least |
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a statement of: the child's
present levels of educational |
performance, annual goals and short-term
instructional |
objectives; specific special education and related |
services;
the extent of participation in the regular |
education program; the projected
dates for initiation of |
services; anticipated duration of services;
appropriate |
objective criteria and evaluation procedures; and a |
schedule
for annual determination of short-term |
objectives.
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(3) "Individual Transition Plan" (ITP) means a |
multi-agency informal
assessment of a student's needs for |
post-secondary adult services including
but not limited to |
employment, post-secondary education or training and
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residential independent living.
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(4) "Developmental Disability" means "developmental |
disability" as defined in Section 1-106 of the Mental |
Health and Developmental Disabilities Code a disability |
which is
attributable to: (a) an intellectual disability, |
cerebral palsy, epilepsy or autism;
or to (b) any other |
condition which results in impairment similar to that
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caused by an intellectual disability and which requires |
services similar to those
required by persons with an |
intellectual disability. Such disability must originate |
before
the age of 18 years, be expected to continue |
indefinitely, and constitute a
substantial disability .
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(5) "Exceptional Characteristic" means any disabling
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or exceptional
characteristic which interferes with a |
student's education including, but
not limited to, a |
determination that the student has a severe or profound |
mental disability, has mental disability but is trainable, |
is deaf-blind, or has
some other health impairment.
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(c) The model pilot program required by this Section shall |
be established
and administered by the Governor's Planning |
Council on Developmental
Disabilities in conjunction with the |
case coordination pilot projects
established by the Department |
of Human Services pursuant to Section 4.1 of the Community |
Services
Act, as amended.
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(d) The model pilot program shall include the following |
features:
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(1) Written notice shall be sent to the student and, |
when appropriate, his
or her parent or guardian giving the |
opportunity to consent to having the
student's name and |
relevant information shared with the local case |
coordination
unit and other appropriate State or local |
agencies for purposes of inviting
participants to the |
individual transition plan meeting.
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(2) Meetings to develop and modify, as needed, an |
Individual Transition
Plan
shall be conducted annually for |
all students with a developmental disability in
the pilot |
program area who are age 16 or older and who are receiving |
special
education services for 50% or more of their public |
school program. These
meetings shall be convened by the |
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local school district and conducted in
conjunction with |
any other regularly scheduled meetings such as the |
student's
annual individual educational plan meeting. The |
Governor's Planning Council on
Developmental Disabilities |
shall cooperate with and may enter into any
necessary |
written agreements with the Department of Human Services |
and the State Board of Education to
identify the target |
group of students for transition planning and the
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appropriate case
coordination unit to serve these |
individuals.
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(3) The ITP meetings shall be co-chaired by the |
individual education plan
coordinator and the case |
coordinator. The ITP meeting shall include but
not be |
limited to discussion of the following: the student's |
projected
date of exit from the public schools; his |
projected post-school goals
in the areas of employment, |
residential living arrangement and
post-secondary |
education or training; specific school or post-school
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services needed during the following year to achieve the |
student's goals,
including but not limited to vocational |
evaluation, vocational education,
work experience or |
vocational training, placement assistance, independent
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living skills training, recreational or leisure training, |
income support,
medical needs and transportation; and |
referrals and linkage to needed services,
including a |
proposed time frame for services and the responsible |
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agency or
provider. The individual transition plan shall |
be signed by participants in
the ITP discussion, including |
but not limited to the student's parents or
guardian, the |
student (where appropriate), multi-disciplinary team
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representatives from the public schools, the case |
coordinator and any other
individuals who have |
participated in the ITP meeting at the discretion of the
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individual education plan coordinator, the developmental |
disability case
coordinator or the parents or guardian.
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(4) At least 10 days prior to the ITP meeting, the |
parents or guardian of
the student shall be notified in |
writing of the time and place of the meeting
by the local |
school district. The ITP discussion shall be documented by |
the
assigned case coordinator, and an individual student |
file shall be
maintained by each case coordination unit. |
One year following a student's
exit from public school the |
case coordinator shall conduct a follow up
interview with |
the student.
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(5) Determinations with respect to individual |
transition plans made under
this Section shall not be |
subject to any due process requirements prescribed in
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Section 14-8.02 of this Code.
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(e) (Blank).
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(Source: P.A. 99-143, eff. 7-27-15.)
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Section 30. The MC/DD Act is amended by changing Section |
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3-801.1 as follows: |
(210 ILCS 46/3-801.1)
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Sec. 3-801.1. Access to records of resident with |
developmental disabilities. Notwithstanding the other |
provisions of this Act to the contrary, the agency designated |
by the Governor under Section 1 of "An Act in relation to the |
protection and advocacy of the rights of persons with |
developmental disabilities, and amending Acts therein named", |
enacted by the 84th General Assembly, shall have access to the |
records of a person with developmental disabilities who |
resides in a facility, subject to the limitations of this Act. |
The agency shall also have access for the purpose of |
inspection and copying, to the records of a person with |
developmental disabilities who resides in any such facility if |
(1) a complaint is received by such agency from or on behalf of |
the person with a developmental disability, and (2) such |
person does not have a guardian or the State or the designee of |
the State is the guardian of such person. The designated |
agency shall provide written notice to the person with |
developmental disabilities and the State guardian of the |
nature of the complaint based upon which the designated agency |
has gained access to the records. No record or the contents of |
any record shall be redisclosed by the designated agency |
unless the person with developmental disabilities and the |
State guardian are provided 7 days' advance written notice, |
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except in emergency situations, of the designated agency's |
intent to redisclose such record, during which time the person |
with developmental disabilities or the State guardian may seek |
to judicially enjoin the designated agency's redisclosure of |
such record on the grounds that such redisclosure is contrary |
to the interests of the person with developmental |
disabilities. If a person with developmental disabilities |
resides in such a facility and has a guardian other than the |
State or the designee of the State, the facility director |
shall disclose the guardian's name, address, and telephone |
number to the designated agency at the agency's request. |
Upon request, the designated agency shall be entitled to |
inspect and copy any records or other materials which may |
further the agency's investigation of problems affecting |
numbers of persons with developmental disabilities. When |
required by law any personally identifiable information of |
persons with a developmental disability shall be removed from |
the records. However, the designated agency may not inspect or |
copy any records or other materials when the removal of |
personally identifiable information imposes an unreasonable |
burden on the facility.
For the purposes of this Section, |
"developmental disability" means "developmental disability" as |
defined in Section 1-106 of the Mental Health and |
Developmental Disabilities Code. a severe, chronic disability |
of a person which: |
(A) is attributable to a mental or physical impairment |
|
or combination of mental and physical impairments; |
(B) is manifested before the person attains age 22; |
(C) is likely to continue indefinitely; |
(D) results in substantial functional limitations in 3 |
or more of the following areas of major life activity: (i) |
self care, (ii) receptive and expressive language, (iii) |
learning, (iv) mobility, (v) self direction, (vi) capacity |
for independent living, and (vii) economic self |
sufficiency; and |
(E) reflects the person's need for combination and |
sequence of special, interdisciplinary or generic care, |
treatment or other services which are of lifelong or |
extended duration and are individually planned and |
coordinated.
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(Source: P.A. 99-180, eff. 7-29-15.) |
Section 35. The ID/DD Community Care Act is amended by |
changing Section 3-801.1 as follows: |
(210 ILCS 47/3-801.1)
|
Sec. 3-801.1. Access to records of resident with |
developmental disabilities. Notwithstanding the other |
provisions of this Act to the contrary, the agency designated |
by the Governor under Section 1 of "An Act in relation to the |
protection and advocacy of the rights of persons with |
developmental disabilities, and amending Acts therein named", |
|
enacted by the 84th General Assembly, shall have access to the |
records of a person with developmental disabilities who |
resides in a facility, subject to the limitations of this Act. |
The agency shall also have access for the purpose of |
inspection and copying, to the records of a person with |
developmental disabilities who resides in any such facility if |
(1) a complaint is received by such agency from or on behalf of |
the person with a developmental disability, and (2) such |
person does not have a guardian or the State or the designee of |
the State is the guardian of such person. The designated |
agency shall provide written notice to the person with |
developmental disabilities and the State guardian of the |
nature of the complaint based upon which the designated agency |
has gained access to the records. No record or the contents of |
any record shall be redisclosed by the designated agency |
unless the person with developmental disabilities and the |
State guardian are provided 7 days' advance written notice, |
except in emergency situations, of the designated agency's |
intent to redisclose such record, during which time the person |
with developmental disabilities or the State guardian may seek |
to judicially enjoin the designated agency's redisclosure of |
such record on the grounds that such redisclosure is contrary |
to the interests of the person with developmental |
disabilities. If a person with developmental disabilities |
resides in such a facility and has a guardian other than the |
State or the designee of the State, the facility director |
|
shall disclose the guardian's name, address, and telephone |
number to the designated agency at the agency's request. |
Upon request, the designated agency shall be entitled to |
inspect and copy any records or other materials which may |
further the agency's investigation of problems affecting |
numbers of persons with developmental disabilities. When |
required by law any personally identifiable information of |
persons with a developmental disability shall be removed from |
the records. However, the designated agency may not inspect or |
copy any records or other materials when the removal of |
personally identifiable information imposes an unreasonable |
burden on the facility.
For the purposes of this Section, |
"developmental disability" means "developmental disability" as |
defined in Section 1-106 of the Mental Health and |
Developmental Disabilities Code. a severe, chronic disability |
of a person which: |
(A) is attributable to a mental or physical impairment |
or combination of mental and physical impairments; |
(B) is manifested before the person attains age 22; |
(C) is likely to continue indefinitely; |
(D) results in substantial functional limitations in 3 |
or more of the following areas of major life activity: (i) |
self care, (ii) receptive and expressive language, (iii) |
learning, (iv) mobility, (v) self direction, (vi) capacity |
for independent living, and (vii) economic self |
sufficiency; and |
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(E) reflects the person's need for combination and |
sequence of special, interdisciplinary or generic care, |
treatment or other services which are of lifelong or |
extended duration and are individually planned and |
coordinated.
|
(Source: P.A. 96-339, eff. 7-1-10 .) |
Section 40. The Illinois Insurance Code is amended by |
changing Section 356z.2 as follows:
|
(215 ILCS 5/356z.2)
|
Sec. 356z.2. Coverage for adjunctive services in dental |
care.
|
(a) An individual or group policy of accident and health |
insurance
amended, delivered, issued, or renewed after January |
1, 2003 (the effective date of Public Act 92-764) shall cover
|
charges incurred, and anesthetics provided, in
conjunction |
with dental care that is provided to a covered individual in a
|
hospital or
an ambulatory surgical treatment center
if any of |
the
following
applies:
|
(1) the individual is a child age 6 or under;
|
(2) the individual has a medical condition that |
requires
hospitalization or general anesthesia for dental |
care; or
|
(3) the individual is a person with a disability.
|
(a-5) An individual or group policy of accident and health |
|
insurance amended, delivered, issued, or renewed after January |
1, 2016 (the effective date of Public Act 99-141) shall cover |
charges incurred, and anesthetics provided by a dentist with a |
permit provided under Section 8.1 of the Illinois Dental |
Practice Act, in conjunction with dental care that is provided |
to a covered individual in a dental office, oral surgeon's |
office, hospital, or ambulatory surgical treatment center if |
the individual is under age 26 and has been diagnosed with an |
autism spectrum disorder as defined in Section 10 of the |
Autism Spectrum Disorders Reporting Act or a developmental |
disability. A covered individual shall be required to make 2 |
visits to the dental care provider prior to accessing other |
coverage under this subsection. |
For purposes of this subsection, "developmental |
disability" means "developmental disability" as defined in |
Section 1-106 of the Mental Health and Developmental |
Disabilities Code a disability that is attributable to an |
intellectual disability or a related condition, if the related |
condition meets all of the following conditions: |
(1) it is attributable to cerebral palsy, epilepsy, or |
any other condition, other than mental illness, found to |
be closely related to an intellectual disability because |
that condition results in impairment of general |
intellectual functioning or adaptive behavior similar to |
that of individuals with an intellectual disability and |
requires treatment or services similar to those required |
|
for those individuals; for purposes of this definition, |
autism is considered a related condition; |
(2) it is manifested before the individual reaches age |
22; |
(3) it is likely to continue indefinitely; and |
(4) it results in substantial functional limitations |
in 3 or more of the following areas of major life activity: |
self-care, language, learning, mobility, self-direction, |
and capacity for independent living . |
(b) For purposes of this Section, "ambulatory surgical |
treatment center"
has the meaning given to that term in |
Section 3 of the Ambulatory
Surgical Treatment Center Act.
|
For purposes of this Section, "person with a disability" |
means a person, regardless of age,
with a chronic
disability |
if the chronic disability meets all of the following |
conditions:
|
(1) It is attributable to a mental or physical |
impairment or
combination of mental and physical |
impairments.
|
(2) It is likely to continue.
|
(3) It results in substantial functional limitations |
in one or more of
the following areas of major life |
activity:
|
(A) self-care;
|
(B) receptive and expressive language;
|
(C) learning;
|
|
(D) mobility;
|
(E) capacity for independent living; or
|
(F) economic self-sufficiency.
|
(c) The coverage required under this Section may be |
subject to any
limitations, exclusions, or cost-sharing |
provisions that apply generally under
the insurance policy.
|
(d) This Section does not apply to a policy that covers |
only dental care.
|
(e) Nothing in this Section requires that the dental |
services be
covered.
|
(f) The provisions of this Section do not apply to |
short-term travel,
accident-only, limited, or specified |
disease policies, nor to policies or
contracts designed for |
issuance to persons eligible for coverage under Title
XVIII of |
the Social Security Act, known as Medicare, or any other |
similar
coverage under State or federal governmental plans.
|
(Source: P.A. 101-525, eff. 1-1-20 .)
|
Section 45. The Mental Health and Developmental |
Disabilities Code is amended by changing Sections 1-106 and |
1-116 as follows:
|
(405 ILCS 5/1-106) (from Ch. 91 1/2, par. 1-106)
|
Sec. 1-106.
"Developmental disability" means a severe, |
chronic disability, other than mental illness, found to be |
closely related to an intellectual disability because this |
|
condition results in impairment of general intellectual |
functioning or adaptive behavior similar to that of persons |
with ID, and requires services similar to those required for a |
person with an intellectual disability. In addition, a |
developmental disability: (1) is manifested before the |
individual reaches 22 years of age; (2) is likely to continue |
indefinitely; (3) results in substantial functional |
limitations in three or more of the following areas of major |
life activity: self-care, receptive and expressive language, |
learning, mobility, self-direction, capacity for independent |
living, or economic self-sufficiency; and (4) reflects the |
individual's need for a combination and sequence of special |
interdisciplinary or generic services, individualized |
supports, or other forms of assistance that are of lifelong or |
extended duration and are individually planned and coordinated |
a disability which is
attributable to: (a) an intellectual |
disability, cerebral palsy, epilepsy or autism;
or (b) any |
other condition which results in impairment similar to that
|
caused by an intellectual disability and which requires |
services similar to those
required by persons with an |
intellectual disability. Such disability must originate before
|
the age of 18 years,
be expected to continue indefinitely, and |
constitute
a substantial disability . This definition does not |
supersede the "developmental disability" definition in Section |
1.1 of the Firearm Owners Identification Card Act which is |
required to be applied under that Act for the purpose of |
|
mandatory reporting.
|
(Source: P.A. 99-143, eff. 7-27-15.)
|
(405 ILCS 5/1-116) (from Ch. 91 1/2, par. 1-116)
|
Sec. 1-116. Intellectual disability. "Intellectual |
disability" means a disorder with onset during the |
developmental period (before the individual reaches age 22), |
that includes both intellectual and adaptive deficits in |
conceptual, social and practical domains. The following 3 |
criteria must be met: (1) deficits in intellectual functions |
such as reasoning, problem solving, planning, abstract |
thinking, judgment, academic learning, and learning from |
experience confirmed by both clinical assessment and |
individualized, standardized intelligence testing (generally |
indicated with an IQ score of about 70 or below), (2) deficits |
in adaptive functioning that result in failure to meet |
developmental and sociocultural standards for personal |
independence and social responsibility. Without ongoing |
support, the adaptive deficits limit functioning in one or |
more activities of daily life, such as communication, social |
participation, and independent living, across multiple |
environments, such as home, school, work, and community, and |
(3) onset of intellectual and adaptive deficits during the |
developmental period significantly subaverage general
|
intellectual functioning which exists concurrently with |
impairment in adaptive
behavior and which originates before |
|
the age of 18 years . This definition does not supersede the |
"intellectual disability" definition in Section 1.1 of the |
Firearm Owners Identification Card Act which is required to be |
applied under that Act for the purpose of mandatory reporting.
|
(Source: P.A. 97-227, eff. 1-1-12.)
|
Section 50. The Specialized Living Centers Act is amended |
by changing Section 2.03 as follows:
|
(405 ILCS 25/2.03) (from Ch. 91 1/2, par. 602.03)
|
Sec. 2.03.
"Person with a developmental disability" means |
a person with a "developmental disability" as defined in |
Section 1-116 of the Mental Health and Developmental |
Disabilities Code individuals whose
disability is attributable |
to an intellectual disability, cerebral palsy, epilepsy or
|
other neurological condition which generally originates before |
such individuals
attain age 18 which had continued or can be |
expected to continue indefinitely
and which constitutes a |
substantial disability to such individuals .
|
(Source: P.A. 99-143, eff. 7-27-15.)
|
Section 55. The Developmental Disability and Mental |
Disability Services Act is amended by changing Section 2-3 as |
follows:
|
(405 ILCS 80/2-3) (from Ch. 91 1/2, par. 1802-3)
|
|
Sec. 2-3. As used in this Article, unless the context |
requires otherwise:
|
(a) "Agency" means an agency or entity licensed by the |
Department
pursuant to this Article or pursuant to the |
Community Residential
Alternatives Licensing Act.
|
(b) "Department" means the Department of Human Services, |
as successor to
the Department of Mental Health and |
Developmental Disabilities.
|
(c) "Home-based services" means services provided to an |
adult with a mental disability who lives in his or her own |
home. These services include but are
not limited to:
|
(1) home health services;
|
(2) case management;
|
(3) crisis management;
|
(4) training and assistance in self-care;
|
(5) personal care services;
|
(6) habilitation and rehabilitation services;
|
(7) employment-related services;
|
(8) respite care; and
|
(9) other skill training that enables a person to |
become self-supporting.
|
(d) "Legal guardian" means a person appointed by a court |
of competent
jurisdiction to exercise certain powers on behalf |
of an adult with a mental disability.
|
(e) "Adult with a mental disability" means a person over |
the age of 18 years
who lives in his or her own home; who needs |
|
home-based services,
but does not require 24-hour-a-day |
supervision; and who has one of the
following conditions: |
severe autism, severe mental illness, a severe or
profound |
intellectual disability, or severe and multiple impairments.
|
(f) In one's "own home" means that an adult with a mental |
disability lives
alone; or that an adult with a mental |
disability is in full-time residence with his
or her parents, |
legal guardian, or other relatives; or that an adult with a |
mental disability is in full-time residence in a setting not |
subject to
licensure under the Nursing Home Care Act, the |
Specialized Mental Health Rehabilitation Act of 2013, the |
ID/DD Community Care Act, the MC/DD Act, or the Child Care Act |
of 1969, as now or hereafter amended, with 3 or fewer other |
adults unrelated to the
adult with a mental disability who do |
not provide home-based services to the
adult with a mental |
disability.
|
(g) "Parent" means the biological or adoptive parent
of an |
adult with a mental disability, or a person licensed as a
|
foster parent under the laws of this State who acts as a foster |
parent to an adult with a mental disability.
|
(h) "Relative" means any of the following relationships
by |
blood, marriage or adoption: parent, son, daughter, brother, |
sister,
grandparent, uncle, aunt, nephew, niece, great |
grandparent, great uncle,
great aunt, stepbrother, stepsister, |
stepson, stepdaughter, stepparent or
first cousin.
|
(i) "Severe autism" means a lifelong developmental |
|
disability which is
typically manifested before 30 months of |
age and is characterized by
severe disturbances in reciprocal |
social interactions; verbal and
nonverbal communication and |
imaginative activity; and repertoire of
activities and |
interests. A person shall be determined severely
autistic, for |
purposes of this Article, if both of the following are |
present:
|
(1) Diagnosis consistent with the criteria for |
autistic disorder in
the current edition of the Diagnostic |
and Statistical Manual of Mental
Disorders.
|
(2) Severe disturbances in reciprocal social |
interactions; verbal and
nonverbal communication and |
imaginative activity; repertoire of activities
and |
interests. A determination of severe autism shall be based |
upon a
comprehensive, documented assessment with an |
evaluation by a licensed
clinical psychologist or |
psychiatrist. A determination of severe autism
shall not |
be based solely on behaviors relating to environmental, |
cultural
or economic differences.
|
(j) "Severe mental illness" means the manifestation of all |
of the
following characteristics:
|
(1) A primary diagnosis of one of the major mental |
disorders
in the current edition of the Diagnostic and |
Statistical Manual of Mental
Disorders listed below:
|
(A) Schizophrenia disorder.
|
(B) Delusional disorder.
|
|
(C) Schizo-affective disorder.
|
(D) Bipolar affective disorder.
|
(E) Atypical psychosis.
|
(F) Major depression, recurrent.
|
(2) The individual's mental illness must substantially |
impair his
or her functioning in at least 2 of the |
following areas:
|
(A) Self-maintenance.
|
(B) Social functioning.
|
(C) Activities of community living.
|
(D) Work skills.
|
(3) Disability must be present or expected to be |
present for at least
one year.
|
A determination of severe mental illness shall be based |
upon a
comprehensive, documented assessment with an evaluation |
by a licensed
clinical psychologist or psychiatrist, and shall |
not be based solely on
behaviors relating to environmental, |
cultural or economic differences.
|
(k) "Severe or profound intellectual disability" means a |
manifestation of all
of the following characteristics:
|
(1) A diagnosis which meets Classification in Mental |
Retardation or
criteria in the current edition of the |
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of
Mental Disorders for |
severe or profound mental retardation (an IQ of 40 or
|
below). This must be measured by a standardized instrument |
for general
intellectual functioning.
|
|
(2) A severe or profound level of disturbed adaptive |
behavior. This
must be measured by a standardized adaptive |
behavior scale or informal
appraisal by the professional |
in keeping with illustrations in
Classification in Mental |
Retardation, 1983.
|
(3) Disability diagnosed before age of 18.
|
A determination of a severe or profound intellectual |
disability shall be based
upon a comprehensive, documented |
assessment with an evaluation by a
licensed clinical |
psychologist or certified school psychologist or a
|
psychiatrist, and shall not be based solely on behaviors |
relating to
environmental, cultural or economic differences.
|
(l) "Severe and multiple impairments" means the |
manifestation of all of
the following characteristics:
|
(1) The evaluation determines the presence of a |
developmental
disability which is expected to continue |
indefinitely, constitutes a
substantial disability and is |
attributable to any of the following:
|
(A) Intellectual disability as defined in Section |
1-116 of the Mental Health and Developmental |
Disabilities Code , which is defined as general |
intellectual
functioning that is 2 or more standard |
deviations below the mean
concurrent with impairment |
of adaptive behavior which is 2 or more standard
|
deviations below the mean. Assessment of the |
individual's intellectual
functioning must be measured |
|
by a standardized instrument for general
intellectual |
functioning .
|
(B) Cerebral palsy.
|
(C) Epilepsy.
|
(D) Autism.
|
(E) Any other condition which results in |
impairment similar to that
caused by an intellectual |
disability and which requires services similar to |
those
required by persons with intellectual |
disabilities.
|
(2) The evaluation determines multiple disabilities in |
physical, sensory,
behavioral or cognitive functioning |
which constitute a severe or profound
impairment |
attributable to one or more of the following:
|
(A) Physical functioning, which severely impairs |
the individual's motor
performance that may be due to:
|
(i) Neurological, psychological or physical |
involvement resulting in a
variety of disabling |
conditions such as hemiplegia, quadriplegia or |
ataxia,
|
(ii) Severe organ systems involvement such as |
congenital heart defect,
|
(iii) Physical abnormalities resulting in the |
individual being
non-mobile and non-ambulatory or |
confined to bed and receiving assistance
in |
transferring, or
|
|
(iv) The need for regular medical or nursing |
supervision such as
gastrostomy care and feeding.
|
Assessment of physical functioning must be based |
on clinical medical
assessment by a physician licensed |
to practice medicine in all its branches,
using the |
appropriate instruments, techniques and standards of |
measurement
required by the professional.
|
(B) Sensory, which involves severe restriction due |
to hearing or
visual impairment limiting the |
individual's movement and creating
dependence in |
completing most daily activities. Hearing impairment |
is
defined as a loss of 70 decibels aided or speech |
discrimination of less
than 50% aided. Visual |
impairment is defined as 20/200 corrected in the
|
better eye or a visual field of 20 degrees or less.
|
Sensory functioning must be based on clinical medical |
assessment by a
physician licensed to practice |
medicine in all its branches using the
appropriate |
instruments, techniques and standards of measurement |
required
by the professional.
|
(C) Behavioral, which involves behavior that is |
maladaptive and presents
a danger to self or others, |
is destructive to property by deliberately
breaking, |
destroying or defacing objects, is disruptive by |
fighting, or has
other socially offensive behaviors in |
sufficient frequency or severity to
seriously limit |
|
social integration. Assessment of behavioral |
functioning
may be measured by a standardized scale or |
informal appraisal by a clinical
psychologist or |
psychiatrist.
|
(D) Cognitive, which involves intellectual |
functioning at a measured IQ
of 70 or below. |
Assessment of cognitive functioning must be measured |
by a
standardized instrument for general intelligence.
|
(3) The evaluation determines that development is |
substantially less
than expected for the age in cognitive, |
affective or psychomotor behavior
as follows:
|
(A) Cognitive, which involves intellectual |
functioning at a measured IQ
of 70 or below. |
Assessment of cognitive functioning must be measured |
by a
standardized instrument for general intelligence.
|
(B) Affective behavior, which involves over and |
under responding to
stimuli in the environment and may |
be observed in mood, attention to
awareness, or in |
behaviors such as euphoria, anger or sadness that
|
seriously limit integration into society. Affective |
behavior must be based
on clinical assessment using |
the appropriate instruments, techniques and
standards |
of measurement required by the professional.
|
(C) Psychomotor, which includes a severe |
developmental delay in fine or
gross motor skills so |
that development in self-care, social interaction,
|
|
communication or physical activity will be greatly |
delayed or restricted.
|
(4) A determination that the disability originated |
before the age of
18 years.
|
A determination of severe and multiple impairments shall |
be based upon a
comprehensive, documented assessment with an |
evaluation by a licensed
clinical psychologist or |
psychiatrist.
|
If the examiner is a licensed clinical psychologist, |
ancillary evaluation
of physical impairment, cerebral palsy or |
epilepsy must be made by a
physician licensed to practice |
medicine in all its branches.
|
Regardless of the discipline of the examiner, ancillary |
evaluation of
visual impairment must be made by an |
ophthalmologist or a licensed optometrist.
|
Regardless of the discipline of the examiner, ancillary |
evaluation of
hearing impairment must be made by an |
otolaryngologist or an audiologist
with a certificate of |
clinical competency.
|
The only exception to the above is in the case of a person |
with cerebral
palsy or epilepsy who, according to the |
eligibility criteria listed below,
has multiple impairments |
which are only physical and sensory. In such a
case, a |
physician licensed to practice medicine in all its branches |
may
serve as the examiner.
|
(m) "Twenty-four-hour-a-day supervision" means |
|
24-hour-a-day care by a
trained mental health or developmental |
disability professional on an ongoing
basis.
|
(Source: P.A. 98-104, eff. 7-22-13; 99-143, eff. 7-27-15; |
99-180, eff. 7-29-15; 99-642, eff. 7-28-16.)
|
Section 60. The Developmental Disability Prevention Act is |
amended by changing Section 2 as follows:
|
(410 ILCS 250/2) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 2102)
|
Sec. 2.
As used in this Act:
|
( a ) "perinatal" means the period of time between the |
conception of an
infant and the end of the first month of life;
|
( b ) "congenital" means those intrauterine factors which |
influence the
growth, development and function of the fetus;
|
( c ) "environmental" means those extrauterine factors which |
influence the
adaptation, well being or life of the newborn |
and may lead to disability;
|
( d ) "high risk" means an increased level of risk of harm or |
mortality to
the woman of childbearing age, fetus or newborn |
from congenital and/or
environmental factors;
|
( e ) "perinatal center" means a referral facility intended |
to care for the
high risk patient before, during, or after |
labor and delivery and
characterized by sophistication and |
availability of personnel, equipment,
laboratory, |
transportation techniques, consultation and other support
|
services;
|
|
( f ) "developmental disability" means "developmental |
disability" as defined in Section 1-106 of the Mental Health |
and Developmental Disabilities Code an intellectual |
disability, cerebral palsy,
epilepsy, or other neurological |
disabling conditions of an individual
found to be closely |
related to an intellectual disability or to require treatment
|
similar to that required by individuals with an intellectual |
disability, and the
disability originates before such |
individual attains age 18, and has
continued, or can be |
expected to continue indefinitely, and constitutes a
|
substantial disability of such individuals ;
|
( g ) "disability" means a condition characterized by |
temporary or
permanent, partial or complete impairment of |
physical, mental or
physiological function;
|
( h ) "Department" means the Department of Public Health.
|
(Source: P.A. 99-143, eff. 7-27-15.)
|
Section 65. The Firearm Owners Identification Card Act is |
amended by changing Section 1.1 as follows:
|
(430 ILCS 65/1.1) (from Ch. 38, par. 83-1.1)
|
Sec. 1.1. For purposes of this Act:
|
"Addicted to narcotics" means a person who has been: |
(1) convicted of an offense involving the use or |
possession of cannabis, a controlled substance, or |
methamphetamine within the past year; or |
|
(2) determined by the Illinois State Police to be |
addicted to narcotics based upon federal law or federal |
guidelines. |
"Addicted to narcotics" does not include possession or use |
of a prescribed controlled substance under the direction and |
authority of a physician or other person authorized to |
prescribe the controlled substance when the controlled |
substance is used in the prescribed manner. |
"Adjudicated as a person with a mental disability" means |
the person is the subject of a determination by a court, board, |
commission or other lawful authority that the person, as a |
result of marked subnormal intelligence, or mental illness, |
mental impairment, incompetency, condition, or disease: |
(1) presents a clear and present danger to himself, |
herself, or to others; |
(2) lacks the mental capacity to manage his or her own |
affairs or is adjudicated a person with a disability as |
defined in Section 11a-2 of the Probate Act of 1975; |
(3) is not guilty in a criminal case by reason of |
insanity, mental disease or defect; |
(3.5) is guilty but mentally ill, as provided in |
Section 5-2-6 of the Unified Code of Corrections; |
(4) is incompetent to stand trial in a criminal case; |
(5) is not guilty by reason of lack of mental |
responsibility under Articles 50a and 72b of the Uniform |
Code of Military Justice, 10 U.S.C. 850a, 876b;
|
|
(6) is a sexually violent person under subsection (f) |
of Section 5 of the Sexually Violent Persons Commitment |
Act; |
(7) is a sexually dangerous person under the Sexually |
Dangerous Persons Act; |
(8) is unfit to stand trial under the Juvenile Court |
Act of 1987; |
(9) is not guilty by reason of insanity under the |
Juvenile Court Act of 1987; |
(10) is subject to involuntary admission as an |
inpatient as defined in Section 1-119 of the Mental Health |
and Developmental Disabilities Code; |
(11) is subject to involuntary admission as an |
outpatient as defined in Section 1-119.1 of the Mental |
Health and Developmental Disabilities Code; |
(12) is subject to judicial admission as set forth in |
Section 4-500 of the Mental Health and Developmental |
Disabilities Code; or |
(13) is subject to the provisions of the Interstate |
Agreements on Sexually Dangerous Persons Act. |
"Clear and present danger" means a person who: |
(1) communicates a serious threat of physical violence |
against a reasonably identifiable victim or poses a clear |
and imminent risk of serious physical injury to himself, |
herself, or another person as determined by a physician, |
clinical psychologist, or qualified examiner; or |
|
(2) demonstrates threatening physical or verbal |
behavior, such as violent, suicidal, or assaultive |
threats, actions, or other behavior, as determined by a |
physician, clinical psychologist, qualified examiner, |
school administrator, or law enforcement official. |
"Clinical psychologist" has the meaning provided in |
Section 1-103 of the Mental Health and Developmental |
Disabilities Code. |
"Controlled substance" means a controlled substance or |
controlled substance analog as defined in the Illinois |
Controlled Substances Act. |
"Counterfeit" means to copy or imitate, without legal |
authority, with
intent
to deceive. |
"Developmental disability" means a severe, chronic |
disability of an individual that: |
(1) is attributable to a mental or physical impairment |
or combination of mental and physical impairments; |
(2) is manifested before the individual attains age |
22; |
(3) is likely to continue indefinitely; |
(4) results in substantial functional limitations in 3 |
or more of the following areas of major life activity: |
(A) Self-care. |
(B) Receptive and expressive language. |
(C) Learning. |
(D) Mobility. |
|
(E) Self-direction. |
(F) Capacity for independent living. |
(G) Economic self-sufficiency; and |
(5) reflects the individual's need for a combination |
and sequence of special, interdisciplinary, or generic |
services, individualized supports, or other forms of |
assistance that are of lifelong or extended duration and |
are individually planned and coordinated. |
"Federally licensed firearm dealer" means a person who is |
licensed as a federal firearms dealer under Section 923 of the |
federal Gun Control Act of 1968 (18 U.S.C. 923).
|
"Firearm" means any device, by
whatever name known, which |
is designed to expel a projectile or projectiles
by the action |
of an explosion, expansion of gas or escape of gas; excluding,
|
however:
|
(1) any pneumatic gun, spring gun, paint ball gun, or |
B-B gun which
expels a single globular projectile not |
exceeding .18 inch in
diameter or which has a maximum |
muzzle velocity of less than 700 feet
per second;
|
(1.1) any pneumatic gun, spring gun, paint ball gun, |
or B-B gun which expels breakable paint balls containing |
washable marking colors; |
(2) any device used exclusively for signaling or |
safety and required or
recommended by the United States |
Coast Guard or the Interstate Commerce
Commission;
|
(3) any device used exclusively for the firing of stud |
|
cartridges,
explosive rivets or similar industrial |
ammunition; and
|
(4) an antique firearm (other than a machine-gun) |
which, although
designed as a weapon, the Illinois State |
Police finds by reason of
the date of its manufacture, |
value, design, and other characteristics is
primarily a |
collector's item and is not likely to be used as a weapon.
|
"Firearm ammunition" means any self-contained cartridge or |
shotgun
shell, by whatever name known, which is designed to be |
used or adaptable to
use in a firearm; excluding, however:
|
(1) any ammunition exclusively designed for use with a |
device used
exclusively for signaling signalling or safety |
and required or recommended by the
United States Coast |
Guard or the Interstate Commerce Commission; and
|
(2) any ammunition designed exclusively for use with a |
stud or rivet
driver or other similar industrial |
ammunition. |
"Gun show" means an event or function: |
(1) at which the sale and transfer of firearms is the |
regular and normal course of business and where 50 or more |
firearms are displayed, offered, or exhibited for sale, |
transfer, or exchange; or |
(2) at which not less than 10 gun show vendors |
display, offer, or exhibit for sale, sell, transfer, or |
exchange firearms.
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"Gun show" includes the entire premises provided for an |
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event or function, including parking areas for the event or |
function, that is sponsored to facilitate the purchase, sale, |
transfer, or exchange of firearms as described in this |
Section.
Nothing in this definition shall be construed to |
exclude a gun show held in conjunction with competitive |
shooting events at the World Shooting Complex sanctioned by a |
national governing body in which the sale or transfer of |
firearms is authorized under subparagraph (5) of paragraph (g) |
of subsection (A) of Section 24-3 of the Criminal Code of 2012. |
Unless otherwise expressly stated, "gun show" does not |
include training or safety classes, competitive shooting |
events, such as rifle, shotgun, or handgun matches, trap, |
skeet, or sporting clays shoots, dinners, banquets, raffles, |
or
any other event where the sale or transfer of firearms is |
not the primary course of business. |
"Gun show promoter" means a person who organizes or |
operates a gun show. |
"Gun show vendor" means a person who exhibits, sells, |
offers for sale, transfers, or exchanges any firearms at a gun |
show, regardless of whether the person arranges with a gun |
show promoter for a fixed location from which to exhibit, |
sell, offer for sale, transfer, or exchange any firearm. |
"Intellectual disability" means significantly subaverage |
general intellectual functioning, existing concurrently with |
deficits in adaptive behavior and manifested during the |
developmental period, which is defined as before the age of |
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22, that adversely affects a child's educational performance. |
"Involuntarily admitted" has the meaning as prescribed in |
Sections 1-119 and 1-119.1 of the Mental Health and |
Developmental Disabilities Code. |
"Mental health facility" means any licensed private |
hospital or hospital affiliate, institution, or facility, or |
part thereof, and any facility, or part thereof, operated by |
the State or a political subdivision thereof which provides |
provide treatment of persons with mental illness and includes |
all hospitals, institutions, clinics, evaluation facilities, |
mental health centers, colleges, universities, long-term care |
facilities, and nursing homes, or parts thereof, which provide |
treatment of persons with mental illness whether or not the |
primary purpose is to provide treatment of persons with mental |
illness. |
"National governing body" means a group of persons who |
adopt rules and formulate policy on behalf of a national |
firearm sporting organization. |
"Patient" means: |
(1) a person who is admitted as an inpatient or |
resident of a public or private mental health facility for |
mental health treatment under Chapter III of the Mental |
Health and Developmental Disabilities Code as an informal |
admission, a voluntary admission, a minor admission, an |
emergency admission, or an involuntary admission, unless |
the treatment was solely for an alcohol abuse disorder; or |
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(2) a person who voluntarily or involuntarily receives |
mental health treatment as an out-patient or is otherwise |
provided services by a public or private mental health |
facility , and who poses a clear and present danger to |
himself, herself, or to others. |
" Person with a developmental disability" means a person |
with a disability which is attributable to any other condition |
which results in impairment similar to that caused by an |
intellectual disability and which requires services similar to |
those required by persons with intellectual disabilities. The |
disability must originate before the age of 18
years, be |
expected to continue indefinitely, and constitute a |
substantial disability. This disability results, in the |
professional opinion of a physician, clinical psychologist, or |
qualified examiner, in significant functional limitations in 3 |
or more of the following areas of major life activity: |
(i) self-care; |
(ii) receptive and expressive language; |
(iii) learning; |
(iv) mobility; or |
(v) self-direction. |
"Person with an intellectual disability" means a person |
with a significantly subaverage general intellectual |
functioning which exists concurrently with impairment in |
adaptive behavior and which originates before the age of 18 |
years. |
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"Physician" has the meaning as defined in Section 1-120 of |
the Mental Health and Developmental Disabilities Code. |
"Protective order" means any orders of protection issued |
under the Illinois Domestic Violence Act of 1986, stalking no |
contact orders issued under the Stalking No Contact Order Act, |
civil no contact orders issued under the Civil No Contact |
Order Act, and firearms restraining orders issued under the |
Firearms Restraining Order Act. |
"Qualified examiner" has the meaning provided in Section |
1-122 of the Mental Health and Developmental Disabilities |
Code. |
"Sanctioned competitive shooting event" means a shooting |
contest officially recognized by a national or state shooting |
sport association, and includes any sight-in or practice |
conducted in conjunction with the event.
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"School administrator" means the person required to report |
under the School Administrator Reporting of Mental Health |
Clear and Present Danger Determinations Law. |
"Stun gun or taser" has the meaning ascribed to it in |
Section 24-1 of the Criminal Code of 2012. |
(Source: P.A. 102-237, eff. 1-1-22; 102-538, eff. 8-20-21; |
revised 10-6-21.) |
Section 70. The Probate Act of 1975 is amended by changing |
Section 11a-1 as follows:
|
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(755 ILCS 5/11a-1) (from Ch. 110 1/2, par. 11a-1)
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Sec. 11a-1. "Developmental disability", "intellectual |
disability", and "related condition" defined. |
"Developmental disability" means "developmental |
disability" as defined in Section 1-116 of the Mental Health |
and Developmental Disabilities Code a disability that is |
attributable to an intellectual disability or a related |
condition . |
"Intellectual disability" means "intellectual disability" |
as defined in Section 1-116 of the Mental Health and |
Developmental Disabilities Code significantly subaverage |
general intellectual functioning existing concurrently with |
deficits in adaptive behavior and manifested before the age of |
22 years . |
"Related condition" means a condition that: |
(1) is attributable to cerebral palsy, epilepsy, or |
any other condition, other than mental illness, found to |
be closely related to an intellectual disability because |
that condition results in impairment of general |
intellectual functioning or adaptive behavior similar to |
that of individuals with an intellectual disability, and |
requires treatment or services similar to those required |
for those individuals. For purposes of this Act, autism is |
considered a related condition; |
(2) is manifested before the individual reaches age |
22; |
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(3) is likely to continue indefinitely; and |
(4) results in substantial functional limitation in 3 |
or more of the following areas of major life activity: |
self-care, language, learning, mobility, self-direction, |
and capacity for independent living.
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(Source: P.A. 102-72, eff. 1-1-22; 102-109, eff. 1-1-22 .)
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