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Public Act 103-0331 |
HB3055 Enrolled | LRB103 29934 RLC 56349 b |
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AN ACT concerning criminal law.
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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 1. Short title. This Act may be cited as the Faith |
Behind Bars Act. |
Section 5. Findings and declaration of policy. |
(a) The General Assembly hereby finds, determines, and |
declares the following that: |
(1) Chaplains play a key role in helping persons |
committed to correctional institutions and facilities |
transform their understanding of responsibility, choices, |
and possibilities and that behavior only changes when |
hearts change. |
(2) Without a spiritual-based transformation there is |
little hope for sincere, lasting change in any of us. |
Without a faith-based after-care living situation an |
ex-offender has little chance of succeeding on the street.
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(3) That the chaplain's personal contact is crucial. A |
chaplain ministers through relationship. Being accepting, |
nonjudgmental, and working toward self-esteem issues is |
important. |
(4) According to a Pew Research Center 2012 Study,
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Religion in Prisons, 50 state survey of Prison Chaplains, |
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about 71% of chaplains identify as Protestants, 13% as |
Catholics, 7% as Muslims, and the remainder identify with |
other religions, including Judaism and Native American |
spirituality. A plurality of the chaplains 44% consider |
their faith to be part of the evangelical Protestant |
tradition while 15% come from a mainline Protestant |
tradition and 7% are from a historically black Protestant |
tradition.
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(5) A Pew Forum survey ranked the top 3 activities of |
chaplains that are most important, personally leading |
worship services, religious instruction sessions, or |
spiritual counseling sessions. About 75% of the chaplains |
surveyed consider this to be among their most important |
functions, including 57% who ranked it as their number one |
priority. |
(6) The Pew Forum survey found that most prison |
chaplains say there are too few religious volunteers to |
meet the needs of all inmates. About 69% of prison |
chaplains surveyed say there are some religious groups for |
which there are too few volunteers in the prisons where |
they work. |
(7) A 2020 Audit of federal prisons found that the |
Federal Bureau of Prisons chaplaincy services departments |
are not staffed according to the Federal Bureau of Prisons |
guidelines at many institutions. The Federal Bureau of |
Prisons current policy states that, at a minimum, each |
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chaplaincy services department should be staffed with at |
least one chaplain and one religious services assistant. |
This standard translates to a minimum need for 122 |
chaplains and 122 religious services assistants throughout |
the Federal Bureau of Prisons. However, as of March 2020, |
nearly half of the Federal Bureau of Prisons institutions |
had no religious services assistant, 3 institutions had no |
chaplain at all, 21 institutions employed a single |
chaplain, and 2 institutions had only recently filled |
their only chaplain position after long vacancies. In |
addition to the minimum staffing level, Federal Bureau of |
Prisons guidelines also suggest that institutions |
supplement the minimum requirement with additional |
chaplains based on inmate population (one chaplain per 500 |
inmates) and specific characteristics of the institution, |
such as being a major medical center, having 2 or more |
satellite facilities, or the inclusion of a special unit, |
each of which should have one additional chaplain. |
Therefore, the Federal Bureau of Prisons' chaplaincy |
services staffing and supplemental guidelines suggest that |
a fully staffed chaplaincy would include 357 chaplains and |
122 religious services assistants. As of March 2020, the |
Federal Bureau of Prisons' chaplaincy staff included only |
236 chaplains and 64 religious services assistants, which |
is approximately 30% below what the Federal Bureau of |
Prisons' guidelines consider to be a fully staffed |
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chaplaincy for the inmate population. The 2020 audit of |
federal prisons reports that some Federal Bureau of |
Prisons institutions were without any chaplaincy staff. |
During the audit, there was a peak of at least 3 |
institutions that were without a chaplain. The audit found |
that critical tasks may not be accomplished, including |
purchasing and reviewing library materials and conducting |
certain faith-based programming. |
(b) It is the intent of the General Assembly to rectify in |
this State the deficiencies that occur in prison ministries of |
other states and the federal prison system by enacting the |
Faith Behind Bars Act.
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Section 10. Definitions. |
(a) In this Act: |
"Chaplain" means a cleric, such as a minister, priest, |
pastor, rabbi, or imam, or a lay representative of a religious |
tradition, attached to a correctional institution or facility.
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"Chaplaincy" means the general activity performed by a |
chaplain, which may include crisis ministry, counseling, |
sacraments, worship, education, help in ethical |
decision-making, staff support, clergy contact, and community |
or church coordination.
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"Chaplaincy services" means services offered by a chaplain |
or lay person. |
"Committed person" has the meaning ascribed to it in |
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Section 1-2 of the Unified Code of Corrections. |
"Correctional institution or facility" has the meaning |
ascribed to it in Section 1-2 of the Unified Code of |
Corrections. |
"Undue burden" means significant difficulty, expense, or |
detriment to the safety and security of the facility. |
Section 15. Right to practice faith in a correctional |
institution or facility. |
(a) A committed person has a right to practice his or her |
faith in a correctional institution or facility absent harm or |
without undue burden to the State's correctional system. |
(b) A committed person belonging to a faith group in a |
correctional institution or facility shall have access to |
pastoral and spiritual care absent harm or without undue |
burden to the State's correctional system. |
(c) Absent harm or undue burden, a correctional |
institution or facility shall provide reading materials for |
diverse faith groups, including, but not limited to, |
spiritual, religious texts, prayer manuals, prayer mats, and |
other requested material from committed persons.
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(d) All correctional institutions and facilities in this |
State shall provide committed persons the ability to pray by |
facilitating time and clean location, fast by allowing a |
committed person to abstain from food when appropriate, and |
respect for dietary restrictions absent harm or without undue |
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burden to the State's correctional system. |
(e) All correctional institutions and facilities in this |
State shall hold a training seminar administered by chaplains |
of the leading faith groups representing the State's |
correctional institutions and facilities population every 5 |
years for wardens and chief administrative officers of |
correctional institutions and facilities to familiarize |
themselves with the foundations of each faith group.
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(f) All correctional institutions and facilities in this |
State shall maintain a chaplain database of chaplains |
representing the percentage of the correctional institutions |
and facilities populations' various faith groups. |
(g) All correctional institutions and facilities in this |
State shall provide access to chaplains in the State's |
correctional system as requested by a committed person |
belonging to a specific faith group cross-referenced by the |
correctional institutions and facilities chaplain database. |
(h) All correctional institutions and facilities in this |
State shall not bar chaplains from access to committed persons |
absent evidence of potential harm or threat to the security of |
the State's correctional system. |
(i) All correctional institutions and facilities in this |
State shall grant requests of religious observance gatherings, |
including, but not limited to, mass, weekly congregations, |
sermons, and pastoral meetings absent harm or undue burden to |
the State's correctional system.
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(j) In determining whether an action would result in an |
undue burden under this Section, factors to be considered by |
the warden or chief administrative officer of the correctional |
institution or facility include: |
(1) the nature and cost of the action needed under |
this Section; |
(2) the overall financial resources of the |
correctional institution or facility involved in the |
action; |
(3) the number of persons employed at the correctional |
institution or facility; |
(4) the effect on expenses and resources of the |
correctional institution or facility; and |
(5) legitimate safety and security requirements that |
are necessary for safe operation of the correctional |
institution or facility, including crime prevention |
measures.
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Section 90. The Unified Code of Corrections is amended by |
changing Section 3-7-2 as follows: |
(730 ILCS 5/3-7-2) (from Ch. 38, par. 1003-7-2) |
(Text of Section before amendment by P.A. 102-1111 ) |
Sec. 3-7-2. Facilities. |
(a) All institutions and facilities of the Department |
shall provide
every committed person with access to toilet |
|
facilities, barber
facilities, bathing facilities at least |
once each week, a library of
legal materials and published |
materials including newspapers and magazines
approved by the |
Director. A committed person may not receive any materials
|
that the Director deems pornographic. |
(b) (Blank). |
(c) All institutions and facilities of the Department |
shall provide
facilities for every committed person to leave |
his cell for at least one
hour each day unless the chief |
administrative officer determines that it
would be harmful or |
dangerous to the security or safety of the
institution or |
facility. |
(d) All institutions and facilities of the Department |
shall provide
every committed person with a wholesome and |
nutritional diet at
regularly scheduled hours, drinking water, |
clothing adequate for the
season, bedding, soap and towels and |
medical and dental care. |
(e) All institutions and facilities of the Department |
shall permit
every committed person to send and receive an |
unlimited number of
uncensored letters, provided, however, |
that the Director may order that
mail be inspected and read for |
reasons of the security, safety or morale
of the institution |
or facility. |
(f) All of the institutions and facilities of the |
Department shall
permit every committed person to receive |
in-person visitors and video contact, if available, except in |
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case of
abuse of the visiting privilege or when the chief |
administrative officer
determines that such visiting would be |
harmful or dangerous to the
security, safety or morale of the |
institution or facility.
Each committed person is entitled to |
7 visits per month. Every committed person may submit a list of |
at least 30 persons to the Department that are authorized to |
visit the committed person. The list shall be kept in an |
electronic format by the Department beginning on August 1, |
2019, as well as available in paper form for Department |
employees. The chief administrative officer shall have the |
right to restrict visitation
to non-contact visits, video, or |
other forms of non-contact visits for reasons of safety, |
security, and order, including,
but not limited to, |
restricting contact visits for committed persons engaged in
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gang activity.
No committed person in a super maximum security |
facility or on disciplinary
segregation is allowed contact |
visits. Any committed person found in
possession of illegal |
drugs or who fails a drug test shall not be permitted
contact |
visits for a period of at least 6 months. Any committed person
|
involved in gang activities or found guilty of assault |
committed against a
Department employee shall not be permitted |
contact visits for a period of at
least 6 months. The |
Department shall offer every visitor appropriate written |
information concerning HIV and AIDS, including information |
concerning how to contact the Illinois Department of Public |
Health for counseling information. The Department shall |
|
develop the written materials in consultation with the |
Department of Public Health. The Department shall ensure that |
all such information and materials are culturally sensitive |
and reflect cultural diversity as appropriate. Implementation |
of the changes made to this Section by Public Act 94-629 is |
subject to appropriation.
The Department shall seek the lowest |
possible cost to provide video calling and shall charge to the |
extent of recovering any demonstrated costs of providing video |
calling. The Department shall not make a commission or profit |
from video calling services. Nothing in this Section shall be |
construed to permit video calling instead of in-person |
visitation. |
(f-5) (Blank). |
(f-10) The Department may not restrict or limit in-person |
visits to committed persons due to the availability of |
interactive video conferences. |
(f-15)(1) The Department shall issue a standard written |
policy for each institution and facility of the Department |
that provides for: |
(A) the number of in-person visits each committed
|
person is entitled to per week and per month including the |
requirements of subsection (f) of this Section; |
(B) the hours of in-person visits; |
(C) the type of identification required for visitors |
at least 18 years of age; and |
(D) the type of identification, if any, required for |
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visitors under 18 years of age. |
(2) This policy shall be posted on the Department website
|
and at each facility. |
(3) The Department shall post on its website daily any
|
restrictions or denials of visitation for that day and the
|
succeeding 5 calendar days, including those based on a |
lockdown
of the facility, to inform family members and other |
visitors. |
(g) All institutions and facilities of the Department |
shall permit
religious ministrations and sacraments to be |
available to every
committed person, but attendance at |
religious services shall not be
required. |
(h) Within 90 days after December 31, 1996, the Department |
shall prohibit
the use of curtains, cell-coverings, or any |
other matter or object that
obstructs or otherwise impairs the |
line of vision into a committed person's
cell. |
(i) A point of contact person appointed under subsection |
(u-6) of Section 3-2-2 of this Code shall promptly and |
efficiently review suggestions, complaints, and other requests |
made by visitors to institutions and facilities of the |
Department and by other members of the public. Based on the |
nature of the submission, the point of contact person shall |
communicate with the appropriate division of the Department, |
disseminate the concern or complaint, and act as liaison |
between the parties to reach a resolution. |
(1) The point of contact person shall maintain |
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information about the subject matter of each |
correspondence, including, but not limited to, information |
about the following subjects: |
(A) the parties making the submission; |
(B) any commissary-related concerns; |
(C) any concerns about the institution or |
facility's COVID protocols and mitigations; |
(D) any concerns about mail, video, or electronic |
messages or other communications with incarcerated |
persons; |
(E) any concerns about the institution or |
facility; |
(F) any discipline-related concerns; |
(G) any concerns about earned sentencing credits; |
(H) any concerns about educational opportunities |
for incarcerated persons; |
(I) any concerns about health-related matters; |
(J) any mental health concerns; |
(K) any concerns about personal property; |
(L) any concerns about the records of the |
incarcerated person; |
(M) any concerns about recreational opportunities |
for incarcerated persons; |
(N) any staffing-related concerns; |
(O) any concerns about the transfer of individuals |
in custody; |
|
(P) any concerns about visitation; and |
(Q) any concerns about work opportunities for |
incarcerated persons. |
The information shall be maintained in accordance with |
standards set by the Department of Corrections, and shall |
be made available to the Department's Planning and |
Research Division. The point of contact person shall |
provide a summary of the results of the review, including |
any resolution or recommendations made as a result of |
correspondence with the Planning and Research Division of |
the Department. |
(2) The Department shall provide an annual written |
report to the General Assembly and the Governor, with the |
first report due no later than January 1, 2023, and |
publish the report on its website within 48 hours after |
the report is transmitted to the Governor and the General |
Assembly. The report shall include a summary of activities |
undertaken and completed as a result of submissions to the |
point of contact person. The Department of Corrections |
shall collect and report the following aggregated and |
disaggregated data for each institution and facility and |
describe: |
(A) the work of the point of contact person; |
(B) the general nature of suggestions, complaints, |
and other requests submitted to the point of contact |
person; |
|
(C) the volume of emails, calls, letters, and |
other correspondence received by the point of contact |
person; |
(D) the resolutions reached or recommendations |
made as a result of the point of contact person's |
review; |
(E) whether, if an investigation is recommended, a |
report of the complaint was forwarded to the Chief |
Inspector of the Department or other Department |
employee, and the resolution of the complaint, and if |
the investigation has not concluded, a detailed status |
report on the complaint; and |
(F) any recommendations that the point of contact |
person has relating to systemic issues in the |
Department of Corrections, and any other matters for |
consideration by the General Assembly and the |
Governor. |
The name, address, or other personally identifiable |
information of a person who files a complaint, suggestion, |
or other request with the point of contact person, and |
confidential records shall be redacted from the annual |
report and are not subject to disclosure under the Freedom |
of Information Act. The Department shall disclose the |
records only if required by a court order on a showing of |
good cause. |
(3) The Department must post in a conspicuous place in |
|
the waiting area of every facility or institution a sign |
that contains in bold, black type the following: |
(A) a short statement notifying visitors of the |
point of contact person and that person's duty to |
receive suggestions, complaints, or other requests; |
and |
(B) information on how to submit suggestions, |
complaints, or other requests to the point of contact |
person. |
(Source: P.A. 102-1082, eff. 6-10-22.) |
(Text of Section after amendment by P.A. 102-1111 ) |
Sec. 3-7-2. Facilities. |
(a) All institutions and facilities of the Department |
shall provide
every committed person with access to toilet |
facilities, barber
facilities, bathing facilities at least |
once each week, a library of
legal materials and published |
materials including newspapers and magazines
approved by the |
Director. A committed person may not receive any materials
|
that the Director deems pornographic. |
(b) (Blank). |
(c) All institutions and facilities of the Department |
shall provide
facilities for every committed person to leave |
his cell for at least one
hour each day unless the chief |
administrative officer determines that it
would be harmful or |
dangerous to the security or safety of the
institution or |
|
facility. |
(d) All institutions and facilities of the Department |
shall provide
every committed person with a wholesome and |
nutritional diet at
regularly scheduled hours, drinking water, |
clothing adequate for the
season, including underwear, |
bedding, soap and towels and medical and dental care. |
Underwear provided to each committed person in all |
institutions and facilities of the Department shall be free of |
charge and shall be provided at any time upon request, |
including multiple requests, of the committed person or as |
needed by the committed person. |
(e) All institutions and facilities of the Department |
shall permit
every committed person to send and receive an |
unlimited number of
uncensored letters, provided, however, |
that the Director may order that
mail be inspected and read for |
reasons of the security, safety or morale
of the institution |
or facility. |
(f) All of the institutions and facilities of the |
Department shall
permit every committed person to receive |
in-person visitors and video contact, if available, except in |
case of
abuse of the visiting privilege or when the chief |
administrative officer
determines that such visiting would be |
harmful or dangerous to the
security, safety or morale of the |
institution or facility.
Each committed person is entitled to |
7 visits per month. Every committed person may submit a list of |
at least 30 persons to the Department that are authorized to |
|
visit the committed person. The list shall be kept in an |
electronic format by the Department beginning on August 1, |
2019, as well as available in paper form for Department |
employees. The chief administrative officer shall have the |
right to restrict visitation
to non-contact visits, video, or |
other forms of non-contact visits for reasons of safety, |
security, and order, including,
but not limited to, |
restricting contact visits for committed persons engaged in
|
gang activity.
No committed person in a super maximum security |
facility or on disciplinary
segregation is allowed contact |
visits. Any committed person found in
possession of illegal |
drugs or who fails a drug test shall not be permitted
contact |
visits for a period of at least 6 months. Any committed person
|
involved in gang activities or found guilty of assault |
committed against a
Department employee shall not be permitted |
contact visits for a period of at
least 6 months. The |
Department shall offer every visitor appropriate written |
information concerning HIV and AIDS, including information |
concerning how to contact the Illinois Department of Public |
Health for counseling information. The Department shall |
develop the written materials in consultation with the |
Department of Public Health. The Department shall ensure that |
all such information and materials are culturally sensitive |
and reflect cultural diversity as appropriate. Implementation |
of the changes made to this Section by Public Act 94-629 is |
subject to appropriation.
The Department shall seek the lowest |
|
possible cost to provide video calling and shall charge to the |
extent of recovering any demonstrated costs of providing video |
calling. The Department shall not make a commission or profit |
from video calling services. Nothing in this Section shall be |
construed to permit video calling instead of in-person |
visitation. |
(f-5) (Blank). |
(f-10) The Department may not restrict or limit in-person |
visits to committed persons due to the availability of |
interactive video conferences. |
(f-15)(1) The Department shall issue a standard written |
policy for each institution and facility of the Department |
that provides for: |
(A) the number of in-person visits each committed
|
person is entitled to per week and per month including the |
requirements of subsection (f) of this Section; |
(B) the hours of in-person visits; |
(C) the type of identification required for visitors |
at least 18 years of age; and |
(D) the type of identification, if any, required for |
visitors under 18 years of age. |
(2) This policy shall be posted on the Department website
|
and at each facility. |
(3) The Department shall post on its website daily any
|
restrictions or denials of visitation for that day and the
|
succeeding 5 calendar days, including those based on a |
|
lockdown
of the facility, to inform family members and other |
visitors. |
(g) All institutions and facilities of the Department |
shall permit
religious ministrations and sacraments to be |
available to every
committed person, but attendance at |
religious services shall not be
required. This subsection (g)
|
is subject to the provisions of the Faith Behind Bars Act. |
(h) Within 90 days after December 31, 1996, the Department |
shall prohibit
the use of curtains, cell-coverings, or any |
other matter or object that
obstructs or otherwise impairs the |
line of vision into a committed person's
cell. |
(i) A point of contact person appointed under subsection |
(u-6) of Section 3-2-2 of this Code shall promptly and |
efficiently review suggestions, complaints, and other requests |
made by visitors to institutions and facilities of the |
Department and by other members of the public. Based on the |
nature of the submission, the point of contact person shall |
communicate with the appropriate division of the Department, |
disseminate the concern or complaint, and act as liaison |
between the parties to reach a resolution. |
(1) The point of contact person shall maintain |
information about the subject matter of each |
correspondence, including, but not limited to, information |
about the following subjects: |
(A) the parties making the submission; |
(B) any commissary-related concerns; |
|
(C) any concerns about the institution or |
facility's COVID protocols and mitigations; |
(D) any concerns about mail, video, or electronic |
messages or other communications with incarcerated |
persons; |
(E) any concerns about the institution or |
facility; |
(F) any discipline-related concerns; |
(G) any concerns about earned sentencing credits; |
(H) any concerns about educational opportunities |
for incarcerated persons; |
(I) any concerns about health-related matters; |
(J) any mental health concerns; |
(K) any concerns about personal property; |
(L) any concerns about the records of the |
incarcerated person; |
(M) any concerns about recreational opportunities |
for incarcerated persons; |
(N) any staffing-related concerns; |
(O) any concerns about the transfer of individuals |
in custody; |
(P) any concerns about visitation; and |
(Q) any concerns about work opportunities for |
incarcerated persons. |
The information shall be maintained in accordance with |
standards set by the Department of Corrections, and shall |
|
be made available to the Department's Planning and |
Research Division. The point of contact person shall |
provide a summary of the results of the review, including |
any resolution or recommendations made as a result of |
correspondence with the Planning and Research Division of |
the Department. |
(2) The Department shall provide an annual written |
report to the General Assembly and the Governor, with the |
first report due no later than January 1, 2023, and |
publish the report on its website within 48 hours after |
the report is transmitted to the Governor and the General |
Assembly. The report shall include a summary of activities |
undertaken and completed as a result of submissions to the |
point of contact person. The Department of Corrections |
shall collect and report the following aggregated and |
disaggregated data for each institution and facility and |
describe: |
(A) the work of the point of contact person; |
(B) the general nature of suggestions, complaints, |
and other requests submitted to the point of contact |
person; |
(C) the volume of emails, calls, letters, and |
other correspondence received by the point of contact |
person; |
(D) the resolutions reached or recommendations |
made as a result of the point of contact person's |
|
review; |
(E) whether, if an investigation is recommended, a |
report of the complaint was forwarded to the Chief |
Inspector of the Department or other Department |
employee, and the resolution of the complaint, and if |
the investigation has not concluded, a detailed status |
report on the complaint; and |
(F) any recommendations that the point of contact |
person has relating to systemic issues in the |
Department of Corrections, and any other matters for |
consideration by the General Assembly and the |
Governor. |
The name, address, or other personally identifiable |
information of a person who files a complaint, suggestion, |
or other request with the point of contact person, and |
confidential records shall be redacted from the annual |
report and are not subject to disclosure under the Freedom |
of Information Act. The Department shall disclose the |
records only if required by a court order on a showing of |
good cause. |
(3) The Department must post in a conspicuous place in |
the waiting area of every facility or institution a sign |
that contains in bold, black type the following: |
(A) a short statement notifying visitors of the |
point of contact person and that person's duty to |
receive suggestions, complaints, or other requests; |
|
and |
(B) information on how to submit suggestions, |
complaints, or other requests to the point of contact |
person. |
(j) (i) Menstrual hygiene products shall be available, as |
needed, free of charge, at all institutions and facilities of |
the Department for all committed persons who menstruate. In |
this subsection (j) (i) , "menstrual hygiene products" means |
tampons and sanitary napkins for use in connection with
the |
menstrual cycle. |
(Source: P.A. 102-1082, eff. 6-10-22; 102-1111, eff. 6-1-23; |
revised 1-8-23.) |
Section 95. No acceleration or delay. Where this Act makes |
changes in a statute that is represented in this Act by text |
that is not yet or no longer in effect (for example, a Section |
represented by multiple versions), the use of that text does |
not accelerate or delay the taking effect of (i) the changes |
made by this Act or (ii) provisions derived from any other |
Public Act.
|