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Public Act 093-1067 |
SB3195 Enrolled |
LRB093 21118 RCE 47172 b |
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AN ACT in relation to budget implementation.
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Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois, |
represented in the General Assembly:
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Section 5. The State Employees Group Insurance Act of 1971 |
is amended by changing Section 3 as follows:
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(5 ILCS 375/3) (from Ch. 127, par. 523)
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Sec. 3. Definitions. Unless the context otherwise |
requires, the
following words and phrases as used in this Act |
shall have the following
meanings. The Department may define |
these and other words and phrases
separately for the purpose of |
implementing specific programs providing benefits
under this |
Act.
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(a) "Administrative service organization" means any |
person, firm or
corporation experienced in the handling of |
claims which is
fully qualified, financially sound and capable |
of meeting the service
requirements of a contract of |
administration executed with the Department.
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(b) "Annuitant" means (1) an employee who retires, or has |
retired,
on or after January 1, 1966 on an immediate annuity |
under the provisions
of Articles 2, 14 (including an employee |
who has elected to receive an alternative retirement |
cancellation payment under Section 14-108.5 of the Illinois |
Pension Code in lieu of an annuity), 15 (including an employee |
who has retired under the optional
retirement program |
established under Section 15-158.2),
paragraphs (2), (3), or |
(5) of Section 16-106, or
Article 18 of the Illinois Pension |
Code; (2) any person who was receiving
group insurance coverage |
under this Act as of March 31, 1978 by
reason of his status as |
an annuitant, even though the annuity in relation
to which such |
coverage was provided is a proportional annuity based on less
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than the minimum period of service required for a retirement |
annuity in
the system involved; (3) any person not otherwise |
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covered by this Act
who has retired as a participating member |
under Article 2 of the Illinois
Pension Code but is ineligible |
for the retirement annuity under Section
2-119 of the Illinois |
Pension Code; (4) the spouse of any person who
is receiving a |
retirement annuity under Article 18 of the Illinois Pension
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Code and who is covered under a group health insurance program |
sponsored
by a governmental employer other than the State of |
Illinois and who has
irrevocably elected to waive his or her |
coverage under this Act and to have
his or her spouse |
considered as the "annuitant" under this Act and not as
a |
"dependent"; or (5) an employee who retires, or has retired, |
from a
qualified position, as determined according to rules |
promulgated by the
Director, under a qualified local government |
or a qualified rehabilitation
facility or a qualified domestic |
violence shelter or service. (For definition
of "retired |
employee", see (p) post).
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(b-5) "New SERS annuitant" means a person who, on or after |
January 1,
1998, becomes an annuitant, as defined in subsection |
(b), by virtue of
beginning to receive a retirement annuity |
under Article 14 of the Illinois
Pension Code (including an |
employee who has elected to receive an alternative retirement |
cancellation payment under Section 14-108.5 of that Code in |
lieu of an annuity), and is eligible to participate in the |
basic program of group
health benefits provided for annuitants |
under this Act.
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(b-6) "New SURS annuitant" means a person who (1) on or |
after January 1,
1998, becomes an annuitant, as defined in |
subsection (b), by virtue of
beginning to receive a retirement |
annuity under Article 15 of the Illinois
Pension Code, (2) has |
not made the election authorized under Section 15-135.1
of the |
Illinois Pension Code, and (3) is eligible to participate in |
the basic
program of group
health benefits provided for |
annuitants under this Act.
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(b-7) "New TRS State annuitant" means a person who, on or |
after July
1, 1998, becomes an annuitant, as defined in |
subsection (b), by virtue of
beginning to receive a retirement |
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annuity under Article 16 of the Illinois
Pension Code based on |
service as a teacher as defined in
paragraph (2), (3), or (5) |
of Section 16-106 of that Code, and is eligible
to participate |
in the basic program of group health benefits provided for
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annuitants under this Act.
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(c) "Carrier" means (1) an insurance company, a corporation |
organized
under the Limited Health Service Organization Act or |
the Voluntary Health
Services Plan Act, a partnership, or other |
nongovernmental organization,
which is authorized to do group |
life or group health insurance business in
Illinois, or (2) the |
State of Illinois as a self-insurer.
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(d) "Compensation" means salary or wages payable on a |
regular
payroll by the State Treasurer on a warrant of the |
State Comptroller out
of any State, trust or federal fund, or |
by the Governor of the State
through a disbursing officer of |
the State out of a trust or out of
federal funds, or by any |
Department out of State, trust, federal or
other funds held by |
the State Treasurer or the Department, to any person
for |
personal services currently performed, and ordinary or |
accidental
disability benefits under Articles 2, 14, 15 |
(including ordinary or accidental
disability benefits under |
the optional retirement program established under
Section |
15-158.2), paragraphs (2), (3), or (5) of
Section 16-106, or |
Article 18 of the Illinois Pension Code, for disability
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incurred after January 1, 1966, or benefits payable under the |
Workers'
Compensation or Occupational Diseases Act or benefits |
payable under a sick
pay plan established in accordance with |
Section 36 of the State Finance Act.
"Compensation" also means |
salary or wages paid to an employee of any
qualified local |
government or qualified rehabilitation facility or a
qualified |
domestic violence shelter or service.
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(e) "Commission" means the State Employees Group Insurance |
Advisory
Commission authorized by this Act. Commencing July 1, |
1984, "Commission"
as used in this Act means the Illinois |
Economic and Fiscal Commission on Government Forecasting and |
Accountability as
established by the Legislative Commission |
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Reorganization Act of 1984.
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(f) "Contributory", when referred to as contributory |
coverage, shall
mean optional coverages or benefits elected by |
the member toward the cost of
which such member makes |
contribution, or which are funded in whole or in part
through |
the acceptance of a reduction in earnings or the foregoing of |
an
increase in earnings by an employee, as distinguished from |
noncontributory
coverage or benefits which are paid entirely by |
the State of Illinois
without reduction of the member's salary.
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(g) "Department" means any department, institution, board,
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commission, officer, court or any agency of the State |
government
receiving appropriations and having power to |
certify payrolls to the
Comptroller authorizing payments of |
salary and wages against such
appropriations as are made by the |
General Assembly from any State fund, or
against trust funds |
held by the State Treasurer and includes boards of
trustees of |
the retirement systems created by Articles 2, 14, 15, 16 and
18 |
of the Illinois Pension Code. "Department" also includes the |
Illinois
Comprehensive Health Insurance Board, the Board of |
Examiners established under
the Illinois Public Accounting |
Act, and the Illinois Finance Authority.
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(h) "Dependent", when the term is used in the context of |
the health
and life plan, means a member's spouse and any |
unmarried child (1) from
birth to age 19 including an adopted |
child, a child who lives with the
member from the time of the |
filing of a petition for adoption until entry
of an order of |
adoption, a stepchild or recognized child who lives with the
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member in a parent-child relationship, or a child who lives |
with the member
if such member is a court appointed guardian of |
the child, or (2)
age 19 to 23 enrolled as a full-time student |
in any accredited school,
financially dependent upon the |
member, and eligible to be claimed as a
dependent for income |
tax purposes, or (3) age 19 or over who is mentally
or |
physically handicapped. For
the health plan only, the term |
"dependent" also includes any person
enrolled prior to the |
effective date of this Section who is dependent upon
the member |
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to the extent that the member may claim such person as a
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dependent for income tax deduction purposes; no other such
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person may be enrolled.
For the health plan only, the term |
"dependent" also includes any person who
has received after |
June 30, 2000 an organ transplant and who is financially
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dependent upon the member and eligible to be claimed as a |
dependent for income
tax purposes.
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(i) "Director" means the Director of the Illinois |
Department of Central
Management Services.
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(j) "Eligibility period" means the period of time a member |
has to
elect enrollment in programs or to select benefits |
without regard to
age, sex or health.
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(k) "Employee" means and includes each officer or employee |
in the
service of a department who (1) receives his |
compensation for
service rendered to the department on a |
warrant issued pursuant to a payroll
certified by a department |
or on a warrant or check issued and drawn by a
department upon |
a trust, federal or other fund or on a warrant issued
pursuant |
to a payroll certified by an elected or duly appointed officer
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of the State or who receives payment of the performance of |
personal
services on a warrant issued pursuant to a payroll |
certified by a
Department and drawn by the Comptroller upon the |
State Treasurer against
appropriations made by the General |
Assembly from any fund or against
trust funds held by the State |
Treasurer, and (2) is employed full-time or
part-time in a |
position normally requiring actual performance of duty
during |
not less than 1/2 of a normal work period, as established by |
the
Director in cooperation with each department, except that |
persons elected
by popular vote will be considered employees |
during the entire
term for which they are elected regardless of |
hours devoted to the
service of the State, and (3) except that |
"employee" does not include any
person who is not eligible by |
reason of such person's employment to
participate in one of the |
State retirement systems under Articles 2, 14, 15
(either the |
regular Article 15 system or the optional retirement program
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established under Section 15-158.2) or 18, or under paragraph |
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(2), (3), or
(5) of Section 16-106, of the Illinois
Pension |
Code, but such term does include persons who are employed |
during
the 6 month qualifying period under Article 14 of the |
Illinois Pension
Code. Such term also includes any person who |
(1) after January 1, 1966,
is receiving ordinary or accidental |
disability benefits under Articles
2, 14, 15 (including |
ordinary or accidental disability benefits under the
optional |
retirement program established under Section 15-158.2), |
paragraphs
(2), (3), or (5) of Section 16-106, or Article 18 of |
the
Illinois Pension Code, for disability incurred after |
January 1, 1966, (2)
receives total permanent or total |
temporary disability under the Workers'
Compensation Act or |
Occupational Disease Act as a result of injuries
sustained or |
illness contracted in the course of employment with the
State |
of Illinois, or (3) is not otherwise covered under this Act and |
has
retired as a participating member under Article 2 of the |
Illinois Pension
Code but is ineligible for the retirement |
annuity under Section 2-119 of
the Illinois Pension Code. |
However, a person who satisfies the criteria
of the foregoing |
definition of "employee" except that such person is made
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ineligible to participate in the State Universities Retirement |
System by
clause (4) of subsection (a) of Section 15-107 of the |
Illinois Pension
Code is also an "employee" for the purposes of |
this Act. "Employee" also
includes any person receiving or |
eligible for benefits under a sick pay
plan established in |
accordance with Section 36 of the State Finance Act.
"Employee" |
also includes each officer or employee in the service of a
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qualified local government, including persons appointed as |
trustees of
sanitary districts regardless of hours devoted to |
the service of the
sanitary district, and each employee in the |
service of a qualified
rehabilitation facility and each |
full-time employee in the service of a
qualified domestic |
violence shelter or service, as determined according to
rules |
promulgated by the Director.
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(l) "Member" means an employee, annuitant, retired |
employee or survivor.
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(m) "Optional coverages or benefits" means those coverages |
or
benefits available to the member on his or her voluntary |
election, and at
his or her own expense.
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(n) "Program" means the group life insurance, health |
benefits and other
employee benefits designed and contracted |
for by the Director under this Act.
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(o) "Health plan" means a health benefits
program offered
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by the State of Illinois for persons eligible for the plan.
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(p) "Retired employee" means any person who would be an |
annuitant as
that term is defined herein but for the fact that |
such person retired prior to
January 1, 1966. Such term also |
includes any person formerly employed by
the University of |
Illinois in the Cooperative Extension Service who would
be an |
annuitant but for the fact that such person was made ineligible |
to
participate in the State Universities Retirement System by |
clause (4) of
subsection (a) of Section 15-107 of the Illinois
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Pension Code.
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(q) "Survivor" means a person receiving an annuity as a |
survivor of an
employee or of an annuitant. "Survivor" also |
includes: (1) the surviving
dependent of a person who satisfies |
the definition of "employee" except that
such person is made |
ineligible to participate in the State Universities
Retirement |
System by clause (4) of subsection (a)
of Section 15-107 of the |
Illinois Pension Code; (2) the surviving
dependent of any |
person formerly employed by the University of Illinois in
the |
Cooperative Extension Service who would be an annuitant except |
for the
fact that such person was made ineligible to |
participate in the State
Universities Retirement System by |
clause (4) of subsection (a) of Section
15-107 of the Illinois |
Pension Code; and (3) the surviving dependent of a person who |
was an annuitant under this Act by virtue of receiving an |
alternative retirement cancellation payment under Section |
14-108.5 of the Illinois Pension Code.
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(q-2) "SERS" means the State Employees' Retirement System |
of Illinois, created under Article 14 of the Illinois Pension |
Code.
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(q-3) "SURS" means the State Universities Retirement |
System, created under Article 15 of the Illinois Pension Code.
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(q-4) "TRS" means the Teachers' Retirement System of the |
State of Illinois, created under Article 16 of the Illinois |
Pension Code.
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(q-5) "New SERS survivor" means a survivor, as defined in |
subsection (q),
whose annuity is paid under Article 14 of the |
Illinois Pension Code and is
based on the death of (i) an |
employee whose death occurs on or after January 1,
1998, or |
(ii) a new SERS annuitant as defined in subsection (b-5). "New |
SERS survivor" includes the surviving dependent of a person who |
was an annuitant under this Act by virtue of receiving an |
alternative retirement cancellation payment under Section |
14-108.5 of the Illinois Pension Code.
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(q-6) "New SURS survivor" means a survivor, as defined in |
subsection (q),
whose annuity is paid under Article 15 of the |
Illinois Pension Code and is
based on the death of (i) an |
employee whose death occurs on or after January 1,
1998, or |
(ii) a new SURS annuitant as defined in subsection (b-6).
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(q-7) "New TRS State survivor" means a survivor, as defined |
in subsection
(q), whose annuity is paid under Article 16 of |
the Illinois Pension Code and is
based on the death of (i) an |
employee who is a teacher as defined in paragraph
(2), (3), or |
(5) of Section 16-106 of that Code and whose death occurs on or
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after July 1, 1998, or (ii) a new TRS State annuitant as |
defined in subsection
(b-7).
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(r) "Medical services" means the services provided within |
the scope
of their licenses by practitioners in all categories |
licensed under the
Medical Practice Act of 1987.
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(s) "Unit of local government" means any county, |
municipality,
township, school district (including a |
combination of school districts under
the Intergovernmental |
Cooperation Act), special district or other unit,
designated as |
a
unit of local government by law, which exercises limited |
governmental
powers or powers in respect to limited |
governmental subjects, any
not-for-profit association with a |
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membership that primarily includes
townships and township |
officials, that has duties that include provision of
research |
service, dissemination of information, and other acts for the
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purpose of improving township government, and that is funded |
wholly or
partly in accordance with Section 85-15 of the |
Township Code; any
not-for-profit corporation or association, |
with a membership consisting
primarily of municipalities, that |
operates its own utility system, and
provides research, |
training, dissemination of information, or other acts to
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promote cooperation between and among municipalities that |
provide utility
services and for the advancement of the goals |
and purposes of its
membership;
the Southern Illinois |
Collegiate Common Market, which is a consortium of higher
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education institutions in Southern Illinois; and the Illinois |
Association of
Park Districts. "Qualified
local government" |
means a unit of local government approved by the Director and
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participating in a program created under subsection (i) of |
Section 10 of this
Act.
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(t) "Qualified rehabilitation facility" means any |
not-for-profit
organization that is accredited by the |
Commission on Accreditation of
Rehabilitation Facilities or |
certified by the Department
of Human Services (as successor to |
the Department of Mental Health
and Developmental |
Disabilities) to provide services to persons with
disabilities
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and which receives funds from the State of Illinois for |
providing those
services, approved by the Director and |
participating in a program created
under subsection (j) of |
Section 10 of this Act.
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(u) "Qualified domestic violence shelter or service" means |
any Illinois
domestic violence shelter or service and its |
administrative offices funded
by the Department of Human |
Services (as successor to the Illinois Department of
Public |
Aid),
approved by the Director and
participating in a program |
created under subsection (k) of Section 10.
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(v) "TRS benefit recipient" means a person who:
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(1) is not a "member" as defined in this Section; and
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(2) is receiving a monthly benefit or retirement |
annuity
under Article 16 of the Illinois Pension Code; and
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(3) either (i) has at least 8 years of creditable |
service under Article
16 of the Illinois Pension Code, or |
(ii) was enrolled in the health insurance
program offered |
under that Article on January 1, 1996, or (iii) is the |
survivor
of a benefit recipient who had at least 8
years of |
creditable service under Article 16 of the Illinois Pension |
Code or
was enrolled in the health insurance program |
offered under that Article on
the effective date of this |
amendatory Act of 1995, or (iv) is a recipient or
survivor |
of a recipient of a disability benefit under Article 16 of |
the
Illinois Pension Code.
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(w) "TRS dependent beneficiary" means a person who:
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(1) is not a "member" or "dependent" as defined in this |
Section; and
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(2) is a TRS benefit recipient's: (A) spouse, (B) |
dependent parent who
is receiving at least half of his or |
her support from the TRS benefit
recipient, or (C) |
unmarried natural or adopted child who is (i) under age
19, |
or (ii) enrolled as a full-time student in
an accredited |
school, financially dependent upon the TRS benefit |
recipient,
eligible to be claimed as a dependent for income |
tax
purposes, and
either is under age 24 or was, on January |
1, 1996, participating as a dependent
beneficiary in the |
health insurance program offered under Article 16 of the
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Illinois Pension Code, or (iii) age 19 or over who is |
mentally or physically
handicapped.
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(x) "Military leave with pay and benefits" refers to |
individuals in basic
training for reserves, special/advanced |
training, annual training, emergency
call up, or activation by |
the President of the United States with approved pay
and |
benefits.
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(y) "Military leave without pay and benefits" refers to
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individuals who enlist for active duty in a regular component |
of the U.S. Armed
Forces or other duty not specified or |
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authorized under military leave with pay
and benefits.
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(z) "Community college benefit recipient" means a person |
who:
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(1) is not a "member" as defined in this Section; and
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(2) is receiving a monthly survivor's annuity or |
retirement annuity
under Article 15 of the Illinois Pension |
Code; and
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(3) either (i) was a full-time employee of a community |
college district or
an association of community college |
boards created under the Public Community
College Act |
(other than an employee whose last employer under Article |
15 of the
Illinois Pension Code was a community college |
district subject to Article VII
of the Public Community |
College Act) and was eligible to participate in a group
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health benefit plan as an employee during the time of |
employment with a
community college district (other than a |
community college district subject to
Article VII of the |
Public Community College Act) or an association of |
community
college boards, or (ii) is the survivor of a |
person described in item (i).
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(aa) "Community college dependent beneficiary" means a |
person who:
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(1) is not a "member" or "dependent" as defined in this |
Section; and
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(2) is a community college benefit recipient's: (A) |
spouse, (B) dependent
parent who is receiving at least half |
of his or her support from the community
college benefit |
recipient, or (C) unmarried natural or adopted child who is |
(i)
under age 19, or (ii) enrolled as a full-time student |
in an accredited school,
financially dependent upon the |
community college benefit recipient, eligible
to be |
claimed as a dependent for income tax purposes and under |
age 23, or (iii)
age 19 or over and mentally or physically |
handicapped.
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(Source: P.A. 92-16, eff. 6-28-01; 92-186, eff. 1-1-02; 92-204, |
eff. 8-1-01; 92-651, eff. 7-11-02; 93-205, eff. 1-1-04; 93-839, |
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eff. 7-30-04.)
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Section 10. The State Budget Law of the Civil |
Administrative Code of Illinois is amended by changing Section |
50-5 as follows:
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(15 ILCS 20/50-5) (was 15 ILCS 20/38)
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Sec. 50-5. Governor to submit State budget. The Governor |
shall, as soon as
possible and not later than the second |
Wednesday in April in 2003 and the third
Wednesday in February |
of each year beginning in 2004, except as otherwise provided in |
this Section, submit a
State budget, embracing therein the |
amounts recommended by the Governor to be
appropriated to the |
respective departments, offices, and institutions, and
for all |
other public purposes, the estimated revenues from taxation, |
the
estimated revenues from sources other than taxation, and an |
estimate of the
amount required to be raised by taxation. In |
2004 only, the Governor shall submit the capital development |
section of the State budget not later than the fourth Tuesday |
of March (March 23, 2004). The amounts recommended by the
|
Governor for appropriation to the respective departments, |
offices and
institutions shall be formulated according to the |
various functions and
activities for which the respective |
department, office or institution of
the State government |
(including the elective officers in the executive
department |
and including the University of Illinois and the judicial
|
department) is responsible. The amounts relating to particular |
functions
and activities shall be further formulated in |
accordance with the object
classification specified in Section |
13 of the State Finance Act.
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The Governor shall not propose expenditures and the General |
Assembly shall
not enact appropriations that exceed the |
resources estimated to be available,
as provided in this |
Section.
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For the purposes of Article VIII, Section 2 of the 1970
|
Illinois Constitution, the State budget for the following funds |
|
shall be
prepared on the basis of revenue and expenditure |
measurement concepts that are
in concert with generally |
accepted accounting principles for governments:
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(1) General Revenue Fund.
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(2) Common School Fund.
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(3) Educational Assistance Fund.
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(4) Road Fund.
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(5) Motor Fuel Tax Fund.
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(6) Agricultural Premium Fund.
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These funds shall be known as the "budgeted funds". The |
revenue
estimates used in the State budget for the budgeted |
funds shall include the
estimated beginning fund balance, plus
|
revenues estimated to be received during the budgeted year, |
plus the estimated
receipts due the State as of June 30 of the |
budgeted year that are expected to
be collected during the |
lapse period following the budgeted year, minus the
receipts |
collected during the first 2 months of the budgeted year that |
became
due to the State in the year before the budgeted year. |
Revenues shall also
include estimated federal reimbursements |
associated with the recognition of
Section 25 of the State |
Finance Act liabilities. For any budgeted fund
for which |
current year revenues are anticipated to exceed expenditures, |
the
surplus shall be considered to be a resource available for |
expenditure in the
budgeted fiscal year.
|
Expenditure estimates for the budgeted funds included in |
the State budget
shall include the costs to be incurred by the |
State for the budgeted year,
to be paid in the next fiscal |
year, excluding costs paid in the budgeted year
which were |
carried over from the prior year, where the payment is |
authorized by
Section
25 of the State Finance Act. For any |
budgeted fund
for which expenditures are expected to exceed |
revenues in the current fiscal
year, the deficit shall be |
considered as a use of funds in the budgeted fiscal
year.
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Revenues and expenditures shall also include transfers |
between funds that are
based on revenues received or costs |
incurred during the budget year.
|
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By
March 15 of each year, the Economic and Fiscal
|
Commission on Government Forecasting and Accountability shall |
prepare
revenue and fund transfer estimates in accordance with |
the requirements of this
Section and report those estimates to |
the General Assembly and the Governor.
|
For all funds other than the budgeted funds, the proposed |
expenditures shall
not exceed funds estimated to be available |
for the fiscal year as shown in the
budget. Appropriation for a |
fiscal year shall not exceed funds estimated by
the General |
Assembly to be available during that year.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-1, eff. 2-6-03; 93-662, eff. 2-11-04.)
|
Section 13. The Department of Central Management Services |
Law of the
Civil Administrative Code of Illinois is amended by |
changing Section 405-410 as follows:
|
(20 ILCS 405/405-410)
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Sec. 405-410. Transfer of Information Technology |
functions.
|
(a) Notwithstanding any other law to the contrary, the |
Director of Central Management Services, working in |
cooperation with
the Director of any other agency, department, |
board, or commission directly
responsible to the Governor, may |
direct the transfer, to the Department of
Central Management |
Services, of those information technology functions at that
|
agency, department, board, or commission that are suitable for |
centralization.
|
Upon receipt of the written direction to transfer |
information technology
functions to the Department of Central |
Management Services, the personnel,
equipment, and property |
(both real and personal) directly relating to the
transferred |
functions shall be transferred to the Department of Central
|
Management Services, and the relevant documents, records, and |
correspondence
shall be transferred or copied, as the Director |
may prescribe.
|
(b) Upon receiving written direction from the Director of |
|
Central
Management Services, the Comptroller and Treasurer are |
authorized
to transfer the unexpended balance of any |
appropriations related to the
information technology functions |
transferred to the Department of Central
Management Services |
and shall make the necessary fund transfers from any
special |
fund in the State Treasury or from any other federal or State |
trust
fund held by the Treasurer to the General Revenue Fund , |
the Statistical Services Revolving Fund, or the Communications |
Revolving Fund, as designated by the Director of Central |
Management Services, for
use by the Department of Central |
Management Services in support of information
technology |
functions or any other related costs or expenses of the |
Department
of Central Management Services.
|
(c) The rights of employees and the State and its agencies |
under the
Personnel Code and applicable collective bargaining |
agreements or under any
pension, retirement, or annuity plan |
shall not be affected by any transfer
under this Section.
|
(d) The functions transferred to the Department of Central |
Management
Services by this Section shall be vested in and |
shall be exercised by the
Department of Central Management |
Services. Each act done in the exercise of
those functions |
shall have the same legal effect as if done by the agencies,
|
offices, divisions, departments, bureaus, boards and |
commissions from which
they were transferred.
|
Every person or other entity shall be subject to the same |
obligations and
duties and any penalties, civil or criminal, |
arising therefrom, and shall have
the same rights arising from |
the exercise of such rights, powers, and duties as
had been |
exercised by the agencies, offices, divisions, departments, |
bureaus,
boards, and commissions from which they were |
transferred.
|
Whenever reports or notices are now required to be made or |
given or papers
or documents furnished or served by any person |
in regards to the functions
transferred to or upon the |
agencies, offices, divisions, departments, bureaus,
boards, |
and commissions from which the functions were transferred, the |
|
same
shall be made, given, furnished or served in the same |
manner to or upon the
Department of Central Management |
Services.
|
This Section does not affect any act done, ratified, or |
cancelled or any
right occurring or established or any action |
or proceeding had or commenced
in an administrative, civil, or |
criminal cause regarding the functions
transferred, but those |
proceedings may be continued by the Department of
Central |
Management Services.
|
This Section does not affect the legality of any rules in |
the Illinois
Administrative Code regarding the functions |
transferred in this Section that
are in force on the effective |
date of this Section. If necessary, however,
the affected |
agencies shall propose, adopt, or repeal rules, rule |
amendments,
and rule recodifications as appropriate to |
effectuate this Section.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-25, eff. 6-20-03; 93-839, eff. 7-30-04.)
|
Section 15. The Department of Commerce and Economic |
Opportunity Law of the
Civil Administrative Code of Illinois is |
amended by changing Section 605-335 as follows:
|
(20 ILCS 605/605-335) (was 20 ILCS 605/46.4a)
|
Sec. 605-335. Incentives to foreign firms.
|
(a) For purposes of this Section:
|
"Foreign firm" means any
industrial or manufacturing |
enterprise that is
domiciled in a nation other than the United
|
States.
|
"Incentives" means a loan or grant or offering,
abatement,
|
reduction, or
deferral of any tax or regulation imposed by the |
State of Illinois or a
unit
of local government when the |
aggregate total of all those
incentives will exceed
$10,000.
|
(b) Whenever the Department offers incentives to a
foreign |
firm designed to result in the location or relocation of a |
facility in
this
State that will result in the creation of more |
than 25 new jobs,
the
Department shall prepare an economic |
|
impact study prior to
the consummation of an agreement with the |
foreign firm. An economic impact
study pursuant to this Section |
shall, if practical, include but not be
limited to the |
following:
|
(1) An analysis of the number of direct jobs to be |
created, the number
of indirect jobs to be created, and the |
net gain in employment in
relation to jobs to be |
potentially lost by other similar and competing
firms |
within the industry located within this State.
|
(2) The effect on local and regional competition within |
the industry
from the industry or
business to be located or |
relocated.
|
(3) The degree of economic benefits of awarding the |
same incentives to
similar and existing industries or |
businesses located within the
State.
|
(4) An examination of how the location or relocation of |
the foreign firm
complements existing industries or |
businesses
located within this State.
|
(5) The relationship of the fiscal costs to the State |
or unit of local
government resulting from the incentives |
relative to the fiscal return to
the State or units of |
local government derived from the location or
relocation of |
the firm.
|
(c) A report of any economic impact studies prepared by the |
Department
in the previous 3 months pursuant to
this Section |
shall be transmitted to the Governor, members of the
General |
Assembly, and the Illinois Economic and Fiscal Commission on |
Government Forecasting and Accountability quarterly.
In |
addition to the report,
the Department shall include a |
statement of
incentives subject to the agreement with the |
foreign firm, the name and
type of foreign firm involved and a |
description of its business or
industrial activity, the |
proposed location of the foreign firm, and a
statement |
describing the rationale for the location relative to other
|
locations within the State. The Illinois Economic and Fiscal
|
Commission on Government Forecasting and Accountability shall |
|
evaluate each report received from the
Department and present |
the evaluation and report to the
Commission members and |
legislative leaders within 30 days upon
receipt
of each report |
from the Department.
|
(Source: P.A. 91-239, eff. 1-1-00.)
|
Section 20. The Illinois Enterprise Zone Act is amended by |
changing Section 5.5 as follows:
|
(20 ILCS 655/5.5) (from Ch. 67 1/2, par. 609.1)
|
Sec. 5.5. High Impact Business.
|
(a) In order to respond to unique opportunities to assist |
in the
encouragement, development, growth and expansion of the |
private sector through
large scale investment and development |
projects, the Department is authorized
to receive and approve |
applications for the designation of "High Impact
Businesses" in |
Illinois subject to the following conditions:
|
(1) such applications may be submitted at any time |
during the year;
|
(2) such business is not located, at the time of |
designation, in
an enterprise zone designated pursuant to |
this Act;
|
(3) (A) the business intends to make a minimum |
investment of
$12,000,000 which will be placed in |
service in qualified property and
intends to create 500 |
full-time equivalent jobs at a designated location
in |
Illinois or intends to make a minimum investment of |
$30,000,000 which
will be placed in service in |
qualified property and intends to retain 1,500
|
full-time jobs at a designated location in Illinois.
|
The business must certify in writing that the |
investments would not be
placed in service in qualified |
property and the job creation or job
retention would |
not occur without the tax credits and exemptions set |
forth
in subsection (b) of this Section. The terms |
"placed in service" and
"qualified property" have the |
|
same meanings as described in subsection (h)
of Section |
201 of the Illinois Income Tax Act; or
|
(B) the business intends to establish a new |
electric generating
facility at a designated location |
in Illinois. "New electric generating
facility" , for |
purposes of this Section , means a newly-constructed
|
electric
generation plant
or a newly-constructed |
generation capacity expansion at an existing electric
|
generation
plant, including the transmission lines and |
associated
equipment that transfers electricity from |
points of supply to points of
delivery, and for which |
such new foundation construction commenced not sooner
|
than July 1,
2001. Such facility shall be designed to |
provide baseload electric
generation and shall operate |
on a continuous basis throughout the year;
and shall |
have an aggregate rated generating capacity of at least |
1,000
megawatts for all new units at one site if it |
uses natural gas as its primary
fuel and foundation |
construction of the facility is commenced on
or before |
December 31, 2004, or shall have an aggregate rated |
generating
capacity of at least 400 megawatts for all |
new units at one site if it uses
coal or gases derived |
from coal
as its primary fuel and
shall support the |
creation of at least 150 new Illinois coal mining jobs. |
The
business must certify in writing that the |
investments necessary to establish
a new electric |
generating facility would not be placed in service and |
the
job creation in the case of a coal-fueled plant
|
would not occur without the tax credits and exemptions |
set forth in
subsection (b-5) of this Section. The term |
"placed in service" has
the same meaning as described |
in subsection
(h) of Section 201 of the Illinois Income |
Tax Act; or
|
(C) the business intends to establish
production |
operations at a new coal mine, re-establish production |
operations at
a closed coal mine, or expand production |
|
at an existing coal mine
at a designated location in |
Illinois not sooner than July 1, 2001;
provided that |
the
production operations result in the creation of 150 |
new Illinois coal mining
jobs as described in |
subdivision (a)(3)(B) of this Section, and further
|
provided that the coal extracted from such mine is |
utilized as the predominant
source for a new electric |
generating facility.
The business must certify in |
writing that the
investments necessary to establish a |
new, expanded, or reopened coal mine would
not
be |
placed in service and the job creation would not
occur |
without the tax credits and exemptions set forth in |
subsection (b-5) of
this Section. The term "placed in |
service" has
the same meaning as described in |
subsection (h) of Section 201 of the
Illinois Income |
Tax Act; or
|
(D) the business intends to construct new |
transmission facilities or
upgrade existing |
transmission facilities at designated locations in |
Illinois,
for which construction commenced not sooner |
than July 1, 2001. For the
purposes of this Section, |
"transmission facilities" means transmission lines
|
with a voltage rating of 115 kilovolts or above, |
including associated
equipment, that transfer |
electricity from points of supply to points of
delivery |
and that transmit a majority of the electricity |
generated by a new
electric generating facility |
designated as a High Impact Business in accordance
with |
this Section. The business must certify in writing that |
the investments
necessary to construct new |
transmission facilities or upgrade existing
|
transmission facilities would not be placed in service
|
without the tax credits and exemptions set forth in |
subsection (b-5) of this
Section. The term "placed in |
service" has the
same meaning as described in |
subsection (h) of Section 201 of the Illinois
Income |
|
Tax Act; and
|
(4) no later than 90 days after an application is |
submitted, the
Department shall notify the applicant of the |
Department's determination of
the qualification of the |
proposed High Impact Business under this Section.
|
(b) Businesses designated as High Impact Businesses |
pursuant to
subdivision (a)(3)(A) of this Section shall qualify |
for the credits and
exemptions described in the
following Acts: |
Section 9-222 and Section 9-222.1A of the Public Utilities
Act,
|
subsection (h)
of Section 201 of the Illinois Income Tax Act , ;
|
and , Section 1d of
the
Retailers' Occupation Tax Act ; , provided |
that these credits and
exemptions
described in these Acts shall |
not be authorized until the minimum
investments set forth in |
subdivision (a)(3)(A) of this
Section have been placed in
|
service in qualified properties and, in the case of the |
exemptions
described in the Public Utilities Act and Section 1d |
of the Retailers'
Occupation Tax Act, the minimum full-time |
equivalent jobs or full-time jobs set
forth in subdivision |
(a)(3)(A) of this Section have been
created or retained.
|
Businesses designated as High Impact Businesses under
this |
Section shall also
qualify for the exemption described in |
Section 5l of the Retailers' Occupation
Tax Act. The credit |
provided in subsection (h) of Section 201 of the Illinois
|
Income Tax Act shall be applicable to investments in qualified |
property as set
forth in subdivision (a)(3)(A) of this Section.
|
(b-5) Businesses designated as High Impact Businesses |
pursuant to
subdivisions (a)(3)(B), (a)(3)(C), and (a)(3)(D) |
of this Section shall qualify
for the credits and exemptions |
described in the following Acts: Section 51 of
the Retailers' |
Occupation Tax Act, Section 9-222 and Section 9-222.1A of the
|
Public Utilities Act, and subsection (h) of Section 201 of the |
Illinois Income
Tax Act; however, the credits and exemptions |
authorized under Section 9-222 and
Section 9-222.1A of the |
Public Utilities Act, and subsection (h) of Section 201
of the |
Illinois Income Tax Act shall not be authorized until the new |
electric
generating facility, the new transmission facility, |
|
or the new, expanded, or
reopened coal mine is operational,
|
except that a new electric generating facility whose primary |
fuel source is
natural gas is eligible only for the exemption |
under Section 5l of the
Retailers' Occupation Tax Act.
|
(c) High Impact Businesses located in federally designated |
foreign trade
zones or sub-zones are also eligible for |
additional credits, exemptions and
deductions as described in |
the following Acts: Section 9-221 and Section
9-222.1 of the |
Public
Utilities Act; and subsection (g) of Section 201, and |
Section 203
of the Illinois Income Tax Act.
|
(d) Existing Illinois businesses which apply for |
designation as a
High Impact Business must provide the |
Department with the prospective plan
for which 1,500 full-time |
jobs would be eliminated in the event that the
business is not |
designated.
|
(e) New proposed facilities which apply for designation as |
High Impact
Business must provide the Department with proof of |
alternative non-Illinois
sites which would receive the |
proposed investment and job creation in the
event that the |
business is not designated as a High Impact Business.
|
(f) In the event that a business is designated a High |
Impact Business
and it is later determined after reasonable |
notice and an opportunity for a
hearing as provided under the |
Illinois Administrative Procedure Act, that
the business would |
have placed in service in qualified property the
investments |
and created or retained the requisite number of jobs without
|
the benefits of the High Impact Business designation, the |
Department shall
be required to immediately revoke the |
designation and notify the Director
of the Department of |
Revenue who shall begin proceedings to recover all
wrongfully |
exempted State taxes with interest. The business shall also be
|
ineligible for all State funded Department programs for a |
period of 10 years.
|
(g) The Department shall revoke a High Impact Business |
designation if
the participating business fails to comply with |
the terms and conditions of
the designation.
|
|
(h) Prior to designating a business, the Department shall |
provide the
members of the General Assembly and Illinois |
Economic and Fiscal Commission on Government Forecasting and |
Accountability
with a report setting forth the terms and |
conditions of the designation and
guarantees that have been |
received by the Department in relation to the
proposed business |
being designated.
|
(Source: P.A. 91-914, eff. 7-7-00; 92-12, eff. 7-1-01; revised |
3-7-02.)
|
Section 25. The State and Regional Development Strategy Act |
is amended by changing Section 20-10 as follows:
|
(20 ILCS 695/20-10)
|
Sec. 20-10. Strategic Planning. The Department of Commerce |
and Economic Opportunity
Community
Affairs may prepare an |
economic development strategy for Illinois.
By
no
later than
|
February 1, 2001 and biennially thereafter, the
Department may |
make
modifications in the
economic development strategy as
the |
modifications are warranted by changes in economic conditions |
or by other
factors,
including changes in policy. In preparing |
the strategy
and in making
modifications to the strategy, the |
Department may take cognizance
of the
special
economic |
attributes of the various component areas of the State.
|
(1) The "component areas" shall be determined by the |
Department and may group
counties that are
close in
|
geographical proximity and share common economic traits |
such as commuting
zones, labor market
areas, or other |
economically integrated regions.
|
(2) The strategy may recommend actions for promoting |
sustained
economic
growth at or above national rates of |
economic growth.
|
(3) The strategy may include an assessment of |
historical
patterns of
economic activity for the State and |
projections of
future
economic trends using national
|
economic
trends and
projections for comparative purposes. |
|
All
assumptions made in the formulation of the economic
|
projections shall be
clearly
and explicitly set forth in |
the strategy.
|
(4) The strategy may identify those
community
economic |
improvement characteristics that will positively
influence |
the rate of overall State economic growth.
|
(5) The strategy may recommend actions to foster
and |
promote economic growth, taking into account
indigenous
|
resources and
prevalent economic factors.
|
(A) The strategy may identify the critical |
business development approaches being considered or to |
be
considered. The approaches may include, but are not |
limited to: investment
recruitment, such as industry |
attraction, expansion and retention; trade
development
|
efforts including international trade, support for |
small businesses' efforts to
export
products and |
services, tourism attraction and development including |
cultural
tourism;
technology development efforts |
including technology commercialization and
|
manufacturing modernization; and business development |
efforts, including
entrepreneurship and |
entrepreneurial education, small business management
|
assistance, and business financing.
|
(B) The strategy may identify for the State and |
each
region the
critical workforce training and |
development approaches being considered or
to be
|
considered.
The approaches may include, but are not |
limited to: customized job training,
retraining and |
skill upgrading, economic adjustment, job creation and
|
addressing
labor shortages in areas of high demand; the |
market for and quality of the
local labor
force; the |
quality of the education and workforce infrastructure; |
and related
issues.
|
(C) The strategy may identify the critical |
community development approaches being considered or |
to
be
considered. The approaches may include, but are |
|
not limited to: community
growth
management such as |
regional planning and smart growth; area |
revitalization
including
brownfields redevelopment and |
facility reuse; and family self-sufficiency such
as
|
through housing conservation and economic opportunity.
|
(D) The strategy may identify the critical public |
facilities development approaches being considered
or |
to be
considered. The approaches may include, but are |
not limited to: local public
services;
the local, |
regional, and State tax and regulatory climate; the |
physical
infrastructure,
including communications and |
transportation systems; the capacity of area
|
utilities;
and the quality of public institutions such |
as schools.
|
(E) The strategy may identify the other critical |
marketplace systems, including: the financial
|
marketplace;
the competitive advantages of the area in |
terms of natural resources, capital
resources
or |
technology resources; and other factors affecting area |
development.
|
(6) In preparing the strategy or modifications to the |
strategy, the
Department
may
work with State agencies, |
boards, and commissions whose programs and activities
|
significantly affect economic activity in the State as |
appropriate. The Directors of the agencies, boards, and
|
commissions shall
provide the assistance to the Department |
as the Governor deems appropriate.
|
(7) In preparing the strategy or the modifications to |
the strategy, the
Department
may
consult with local and |
regional economic development organizations, local
elected
|
officials, community-based organizations, service delivery |
providers, and other
organizations whose programs and |
activities significantly affect economic
activity.
|
(8) In preparing the strategy or the
modifications to |
the strategy, the Department
may take into consideration |
any decisions or recommendations
related to
programs,
|
|
services, and government regulations that have
been
|
rendered
as a result of a Statewide Performance Review.
|
(9) The strategy shall be presented to the Governor, |
the President and
Minority Leader of the Senate, the |
Speaker and Minority Leader of the House of
|
Representatives, the members of the Illinois Economic |
Development Board,
and
the Chair of the Economic and Fiscal
|
Commission on Government Forecasting and Accountability on |
February 1, 2001 and biennially
thereafter, as warranted by |
changes in economic conditions or by other
factors, |
including changes in policy.
|
(10) The strategy shall be published and made available |
to the public in
both
paper and electronic media.
|
(Source: P.A. 91-476, eff. 8-11-99; 92-490, eff. 8-23-01; |
revised 12-6-03.)
|
Section 30. The Department of Revenue Law of the
Civil |
Administrative Code of Illinois is amended by changing Section |
2505-550 as follows:
|
(20 ILCS 2505/2505-550) (was 20 ILCS 2505/39b51)
|
Sec. 2505-550. Jobs Impact Committee and report. With |
respect
to the credits
provided for by Sections 209 and 210 of |
the Illinois Income Tax Act, Section
3-50 of the Use Tax Act, |
Section 2 of the Service Use Tax Act, Section 2 of the
Service |
Occupation Tax Act, and Section 2-45 of the Retailers' |
Occupation Tax
Act, there is hereby created a Jobs Impact |
Committee, which shall consist
of the
Director or the person or |
persons
the Director may
designate, and the representative or |
representatives that shall be designated
to
serve on the |
Committee by the Department of Commerce and
Economic |
Opportunity
Community Affairs , the
Governor's Office of |
Management and Budget
Bureau of the Budget , and the Economic |
and Fiscal Commission on Government Forecasting and |
Accountability . The
Committee,
so assembled, shall invite and |
appoint 2 members of the businesses that are
eligible for the |
|
credits provided by those Sections. The Committee shall study
|
the use and effectiveness of these credits with regard to job |
creation relative
to the revenue loss to the State from the |
provision of these credits. The
Director shall, on behalf of |
the Committee,
submit
the Committee's report to the General |
Assembly on or before June 30, 1998.
|
(Source: P.A. 90-552, eff. 12-12-97;
91-239, eff. 1-1-00; |
revised 8-23-03.)
|
Section 35. The Governor's Office of Management and Budget |
Act is amended by changing Sections 2.5 and 2.6 as follows:
|
(20 ILCS 3005/2.5) (from Ch. 127, par. 412.5)
|
Sec. 2.5. Effective January 1, 1980, to require the |
preparation and
submission of an annual long-range capital |
expenditure plan for all State
agencies. Such Capital Plan |
shall detail each project for each of the
following 3 fiscal |
years, including the project cost in current dollar
amounts, |
the future maintenance costs for the completed project, the
|
anticipated life expectancy of the project and the impact the |
project will
have on the annual operating budget for the |
agency. Each State agency's
annual capital plan shall include |
energy conservation projects intended to
reduce energy costs to |
the greatest extent possible in those agency's
buildings and |
facilities included in the capital plan. Each State agency's
|
annual capital plan shall be submitted to the Office no later
|
than January
15th of each year. A summary of all capital plans |
and future needs
assessments shall be included in the |
Governor's Budget Request and the
detail of the capital plans |
shall be delivered to the Chairmen and Minority
Spokesmen of |
the House and Senate Appropriations Committees
and the
Illinois |
Economic and Fiscal Commission on Government Forecasting and |
Accountability
on the date of the Governor's
Budget Address to |
the General Assembly; except that, in 2004 only, the summary |
and detail shall be delivered not later than the fourth Tuesday |
in March (March 23, 2004).
|
|
(Source: P.A. 93-25, eff. 6-20-03; 93-662, eff. 2-11-04.)
|
(20 ILCS 3005/2.6) (from Ch. 127, par. 412.6)
|
Sec. 2.6. To provide bond indentures to the Illinois |
Economic and Fiscal Commission on Government Forecasting and |
Accountability no later than 7 calendar days following the
sale |
or issuance of any bonds.
|
(Source: P.A. 81-1094.)
|
Section 40. The Illinois Capital Budget Act is amended by |
changing Sections 3 and 6 as follows:
|
(20 ILCS 3010/3) (from Ch. 127, par. 3103)
|
Sec. 3. Each capital improvement program shall include, but |
not be
limited to, roads, bridges, buildings, including |
schools, prisons,
recreational facilities and conservation |
areas, and other infrastructure
facilities that are owned by |
the State of Illinois.
|
Each capital improvement program shall include a needs |
assessment of
the State's capital facilities. Each needs |
assessment shall include
where possible the inventory, age, |
condition, use, sources of financing,
past investment, |
maintenance history, trends in condition, financing and
|
investment, and projected dollar amount of need in the next 5 |
years, 10 years, and until the year 2000. Needs assessment of |
State facilities
shall use, to the fullest extent possible, |
existing studies and data from
other agencies such as the |
Illinois Department of Transportation, the Illinois
|
Environmental Protection Agency, the Illinois Economic and |
Fiscal Commission on Government Forecasting and |
Accountability ,
the Capital Development Board, the Governor's |
Task Force on the Future of
Illinois, and relevant federal |
agencies, so that studies can be completed as
efficiently as |
possible, and so information on needs can be used to seek
|
federal funds as soon as possible.
|
Each capital improvement program shall include an |
|
identification and
analysis of factors that affect estimated |
capital investment needs,
including but not limited to, |
economic assumptions, engineering standards,
estimates of |
spending for operations and maintenance, federal and State
|
regulations, and estimation of demand for services.
|
Each capital improvement program shall include an |
identification and
analysis of the principal policy issues that |
affect
estimated capital investment needs, including but not |
limited to, economic
development policy, equity |
considerations, policies regarding alternative
technologies, |
political jurisdiction over different infrastructure systems,
|
and the role of the private sector in planning for and |
investing in
infrastructure.
|
(Source: P.A. 92-16, eff. 6-28-01.)
|
(20 ILCS 3010/6) (from Ch. 127, par. 3106)
|
Sec. 6. The
Governor's Office of Management and Budget
|
Bureau of the Budget shall prepare and submit an
assessment of |
the State's capital project needs to the following: the
Speaker |
and Minority Leader of the House of Representatives, the |
President
and Minority Leader of the Senate and the Illinois |
Economic and Fiscal Commission on Government Forecasting and |
Accountability . The assessment shall be included in the |
Governor's annual
State budget and shall discuss the State's |
needs in the next fiscal year
and in the next 5 fiscal years.
|
(Source: P.A. 86-192; revised 8-23-03.)
|
Section 45. The Asbestos Abatement Finance Act is amended |
by changing Section 10 as follows:
|
(20 ILCS 3510/10) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 8110)
|
Sec. 10. Authority records and reports. The accounts and |
books of the
Authority in connection with this Act shall be set |
up on and maintained in
a manner approved by the Auditor |
General, and the Authority shall file with
the Auditor General |
a certified annual report of its acts and doings under
this Act |
|
within 120 days after the close of its fiscal year. The |
Authority
shall also file with the Governor, the Secretary of |
the Senate, the Clerk
of the House of Representatives, and the |
Illinois Economic and Fiscal Commission on Government |
Forecasting and Accountability , by March 1 of each year, |
commencing March 1, 1990, a written
report covering its |
activities under this Act for the previous fiscal year.
After |
such filing, such report shall be a public record and open for
|
inspection at the offices of the Authority during normal |
business hours.
|
(Source: P.A. 86-976.)
|
Section 50. The Illinois Environmental Facilities |
Financing Act is amended by changing Section 7 as follows:
|
(20 ILCS 3515/7) (from Ch. 127, par. 727)
|
Sec. 7. Powers. In addition to the powers otherwise |
authorized by
law, for the purposes of this Act, the State |
authority shall have the
following powers together with all |
powers incidental thereto or necessary
for the performance |
thereof:
|
(1) to have perpetual succession as a body politic and |
corporate;
|
(2) to adopt bylaws for the regulation of its affairs and
|
the conduct of its business;
|
(3) to sue and be sued and to prosecute and
defend actions |
in the courts;
|
(4) to have and to use a corporate seal
and to alter the |
same at pleasure;
|
(5) to maintain an office at such place or places as it may |
designate;
|
(6) to determine the location, pursuant to the |
Environmental Protection
Act, and the manner of construction of |
any environmental or hazardous waste
treatment facility to be |
financed under this Act and to acquire, construct,
reconstruct, |
repair, alter, improve, extend, own, finance, lease, sell and
|
|
otherwise dispose of the facility, to enter into contracts for |
any and all
of such purposes, to designate a person as its |
agent to determine the
location and manner of construction of |
an environmental or hazardous waste
treatment facility |
undertaken by such person under the provisions of this
Act and |
as agent of the authority to acquire, construct, reconstruct,
|
repair, alter, improve, extend, own, lease, sell and otherwise |
dispose of
the facility, and to enter into contracts for any |
and all of such purposes;
|
(7) to finance and to lease or sell to a person any or all |
of the
environmental or hazardous waste treatment facilities |
upon such
terms and conditions as the directing body considers |
proper, and to
charge and collect rent or other payments |
therefor and to terminate any
such lease or sales agreement or |
financing agreement upon the failure of
the lessee, purchaser |
or debtor to comply with any of the obligations
thereof; and to |
include in any such lease or other agreement, if
desired, |
provisions that the lessee, purchaser or debtor thereunder
|
shall have options to renew the term of the lease, sales or |
other
agreement for such period or periods and at such rent or |
other
consideration as shall be determined by the directing |
body or to
purchase any or all of the environmental or |
hazardous waste treatment
facilities for a nominal amount or |
otherwise or that at or prior to the
payment of all of the |
indebtedness incurred by the authority for the
financing of |
such environmental or hazardous waste treatment facilities the
|
authority may convey any or all of the environmental or |
hazardous waste
treatment facilities to the lessee or purchaser |
thereof with or without consideration;
|
(8) to issue bonds for any of its corporate
purposes, |
including a bond issuance for the purpose of financing a group
|
of projects involving environmental facilities, and to refund |
those bonds,
all as provided for in this Act and subject to |
Section 13 of this Act;
|
(9) generally to fix and revise from time to time and |
charge and collect
rates, rents, fees and charges for the use |
|
of and services furnished or to
be furnished by any |
environmental or hazardous waste treatment facility or
any |
portion thereof and to contract with any person, firm or |
corporation or
other body public or private in respect thereof;
|
(10) to employ consulting engineers, architects, |
attorneys,
accountants, construction and financial experts, |
superintendents,
managers and such other employees and agents |
as may be necessary in its
judgment and to fix their |
compensation;
|
(11) to receive and accept from any public agency loans or |
grants for or
in aid of the construction of any environmental |
facility and any portion
thereof, or for equipping the |
facility, and to receive and accept grants,
gifts or other |
contributions from any source;
|
(12) to refund outstanding obligations
incurred by any |
person to finance the cost of an environmental or hazardous
|
waste treatment facility including obligations incurred for |
environmental
or hazardous waste treatment facilities |
undertaken and completed prior to
or after the enactment of |
this Act when the authority finds that such
financing is in the |
public interest;
|
(13) to prohibit the financing of environmental facilities |
for new
coal-fired electric steam generating plants and new |
coal-fired industrial
boilers which do not use Illinois coal as |
the primary source of fuel;
|
(14) to set and impose appropriate financial penalties on |
any person who
receives financing from the State authority |
based on a commitment to use
Illinois coal as the primary |
source of fuel at a new coal-fired electric
utility steam |
generating plant or new coal-fired industrial boiler and
later |
uses non-Illinois coal as the primary source of fuel;
|
(15) to fix, determine, charge and collect any premiums, |
fees, charges,
costs and expenses, including, without |
limitation, any application fees,
program fees, commitment |
fees, financing charges or publication fees in
connection with |
its activities under this Act;
all expenses of the State |
|
authority incurred in carrying out this Act are
payable solely |
from funds provided under the authority of this Act and no
|
liability shall be incurred by any authority beyond the extent |
to which moneys
are provided under this Act. All fees and |
moneys accumulated by the Authority
as provided in this Act or |
the Illinois Finance
Authority Act
shall be held outside of the |
State treasury and in the custody of the Treasurer
of the |
Authority; and
|
(16) to do all things necessary and convenient to carry out |
the purposes of
this Act.
|
The State authority may not operate any environmental or |
hazardous waste
treatment facility as a business except for the |
purpose of protecting or
maintaining such facility as security |
for bonds of the State authority. No
environmental or hazardous |
waste treatment facilities completed prior to
January 1, 1970 |
may be financed by the State authority under this Act, but
|
additions and improvements to such environmental or hazardous |
waste
treatment facilities which are commenced subsequent to |
January 1, 1970 may
be financed by the State authority. Any |
lease, sales agreement or other
financing agreement in |
connection with an environmental
or hazardous waste treatment |
facility entered into pursuant to this Act
must be for a term |
not shorter than the longest maturity of any bonds
issued to |
finance such environmental or hazardous waste treatment |
facility
or a portion thereof and must provide for rentals
or |
other payments adequate to pay the principal of and interest |
and
premiums, if any, on such bonds as the same fall due and to |
create and
maintain such reserves and accounts for |
depreciation, if any, as the
directing body determines to be |
necessary.
|
The Authority shall give priority to providing financing |
for the
establishment of hazardous waste treatment facilities |
necessary to achieve
the goals of Section 22.6 of the |
Environmental Protection Act.
|
The Authority shall give special consideration to small |
businesses in
authorizing the issuance of bonds for the |
|
financing of environmental
facilities pursuant to subsection |
(c) of Section 2.
|
The Authority shall make a financial report on all projects |
financed
under this Section to the General Assembly, to the |
Governor, and to the
Illinois Economic and Fiscal Commission on |
Government Forecasting and Accountability by April 1 of each |
year. Such
report shall be a public record and open for |
inspection at the offices
of the Authority during normal |
business hours. The report shall
include: (a) all applications |
for loans and other financial assistance
presented to the |
members of the Authority during such fiscal year, (b)
all |
projects and owners thereof which have received any form of
|
financial assistance from the Authority during such year, (c) |
the nature
and amount of all such assistance, and (d) projected |
activities of the
Authority for the next fiscal year, including |
projection of the total
amount of loans and other financial |
assistance anticipated and the
amount of revenue bonds or other |
evidences of indebtedness that will be
necessary to provide the |
projected level of assistance during the next
fiscal year.
|
The requirement for reporting to the General Assembly shall |
be satisfied
by filing copies of the report with the Speaker, |
the Minority Leader and
the Clerk of the House of |
Representatives and the President, the Minority
Leader and the |
Secretary of the Senate and the Legislative Research
Unit, as |
required
by Section 3.1 of "An Act to revise the law in |
relation to the General
Assembly", approved February 25, 1874, |
as amended, and filing such
additional copies with the State |
Government Report Distribution Center for
the General Assembly |
as is required under paragraph (t) of Section 7 of the
State |
Library Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-205, eff. 1-1-04.)
|
Section 55. The Illinois Housing Development Act is amended |
by changing Section 5 as follows:
|
(20 ILCS 3805/5) (from Ch. 67 1/2, par. 305)
|
|
Sec. 5. The Governor shall designate the Chairman, from |
time to time,
and the Authority shall annually elect from its |
membership a vice
chairman a treasurer, and a secretary. The |
Chairman shall be the chief
executive officer of the Authority. |
The secretary shall keep a record of
the proceedings of the |
Authority. The treasurer of the Authority shall
be custodian of |
all Authority funds, and shall be bonded in such amount
as the |
other members of the Authority may designate. The accounts and
|
books of the Authority shall be set up and maintained in a |
manner
approved by the Auditor General, and the Authority shall |
file with the
Auditor General a certified annual report within |
120 days after the
close of its fiscal year. The Authority |
shall also file with the
Governor, the Secretary of the Senate, |
the Clerk of the House of Representatives
and the Illinois |
Economic and Fiscal Commission on Government Forecasting and |
Accountability , by March 1 of each year,
a written report |
covering its
activities, and any activities
of any |
instrumentality corporation established pursuant to
this Act, |
for the previous fiscal year and, when so filed, such report
|
shall be a public record and open for inspection at the offices |
of the
Authority during normal business hours. The report shall |
include a
complete list of (a) all applications for mortgage |
loans and other
financial assistance regarding developments of |
more than four living
units presented to the members of the |
Authority during
such fiscal year, (b) all developments and |
housing related commercial
facilities and the owners thereof |
which have
received any form of financial assistance from the |
Authority during such
fiscal year, (c) the nature and amount of |
all such financial assistance,
(d) the dwelling unit |
distribution and estimated rent structure for
each development |
financed by the Authority during such fiscal year,
(e) |
projected activities of the Authority for the next fiscal year, |
including
a projection of the total amount of mortgages and |
other financial assistance
anticipated and the amount of |
revenue bonds or other evidences of indebtedness
that will be |
necessary to provide the projected level of assistance during
|
|
the next fiscal year, and (f) activities related to allocation |
of
low-income housing credits.
|
(Source: P.A. 85-612.)
|
Section 60. The Pension Impact Note Act is amended by |
changing Section 2 as follows: |
(25 ILCS 55/2) (from Ch. 63, par. 42.42)
|
Sec. 2. Pension impact notes. The Illinois Economic and |
Fiscal Commission on Government Forecasting and |
Accountability , hereafter in
this Act referred to as the |
"Commission",
shall prepare a written pension system impact |
note in relation to any bill
introduced in either house of the |
General Assembly which proposes to amend,
revise, or add to any |
provision of the Illinois Pension Code or
the State Pension |
Funds Continuing Appropriation Act. Upon the introduction of
|
any such bill, the Clerk of the House or the
Secretary of the |
Senate shall forward the bill to the Commission, which
shall |
prepare such a note within 7 calendar days after receiving the
|
request. The bill shall be held on second reading until the |
note
has been received.
|
Copies of each pension impact note shall be furnished by |
the Commission to
the presiding officer of each house, the |
minority leader of each house, the
Clerk of the House of |
Representatives, the Secretary of the Senate, the sponsor
of |
the bill which is the subject of the note, the member, if any, |
who initiated
the request for the note, the Chairman of the |
House Committee on Personnel and
Pensions, and the Chairman of |
the Senate Committee on Insurance, Pensions and
Licensed |
Activities.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-632, eff. 2-1-04.)
|
Section 65. The State Debt Impact Note Act is amended by |
changing the title of the Act and Sections 3, 5, and 7 as |
follows:
|
|
(25 ILCS 65/Act title)
|
An Act in relation to the providing of information on the |
State's long-term
debt service requirements and to amend in |
connection therewith Section 3
of "An Act creating the Illinois |
Economic and Fiscal Commission, defining
its powers and duties, |
making an appropriation therefor, repealing an Act
therein |
named, and providing for the transfer of appropriations in |
connection
therewith", approved July 13, 1972, as amended .
|
(25 ILCS 65/3) (from Ch. 63, par. 42.73)
|
Sec. 3. The Illinois Economic and Fiscal Commission on |
Government Forecasting and Accountability shall prepare a
|
written State Debt Impact Note in relation to any bill |
introduced in either
house of the General Assembly which |
proposes to increase or add new long
term debt authorization or |
would require, through appropriation, the use
of bond financed |
funds. Upon the assignment of any such bill to Committee,
the |
chairperson of the Committee on Assignments in the House of |
Representatives
or the chairperson of the Committee on |
Assignment of Bills in the Senate
shall forward the bill to the |
Illinois Economic and Fiscal Commission on Government |
Forecasting and Accountability which
shall prepare such a note |
within 7 calendar days after receiving the request
and the bill |
shall be held on second reading until the note has been |
received,
except that whenever, because of the complexity of |
the measure, additional
time is required for preparation of the |
note, the Commission may so inform
the sponsor of the bill, who |
may approve an extension of the time within
which the note is |
to be furnished for an additional 7 calendar days. Copies of |
each
State Debt Impact Note shall be furnished by the |
Commission to the presiding
officer of each house, the minority |
leader of each house, the Clerk of the
House of |
Representatives, the Secretary of the Senate, the sponsor of |
the
bill which is the subject of the note, the member, if any, |
who initiated
the request for the note, the Chairperson and |
Minority Spokespersons of
the House and Senate Appropriations |
|
and Revenue Committees.
|
(Source: P.A. 81-615.)
|
(25 ILCS 65/5) (from Ch. 63, par. 42.75)
|
Sec. 5. The Illinois Economic and Fiscal Commission on |
Government Forecasting and Accountability may include in
any |
State Debt Impact Note any comment or opinion which it deems |
appropriate
with regard to the fiscal and financial impact of |
the measure for which
the note is prepared.
|
(Source: P.A. 81-615.)
|
(25 ILCS 65/7) (from Ch. 63, par. 42.77)
|
Sec. 7. Whenever any committee of either house reports any |
bill which
is required by this Act to have a long-term debt |
note with an amendment
or whenever any bill is amended on the |
floor of either house in such manner
as to substantially affect |
the impact of the bill on the State's debt service
capacity, |
the Illinois Economic and Fiscal Commission on Government |
Forecasting and Accountability shall upon request
by any member |
of the house by which the bill is being considered prepare
a |
new or revised State Debt Impact Note in relation to the |
amended bill.
Copies of each new or revised State Debt Impact |
Note shall be furnished
to the persons named in Section 2.
|
Whenever any member of either House is of the opinion that |
a State Debt
Impact Note should be prepared on any bill and |
such note has not been requested,
the member may at any time |
before the bill is moved to third reading request
that such a |
note be obtained, in which case the bill shall be submitted
to |
the Economic and Fiscal Commission on Government Forecasting |
and Accountability for preparation of the note. If the
sponsor |
is of the opinion that a long-term debt note is not required, |
the
matter shall be decided by majority vote of those present |
and voting in
the House of which he is a member.
|
(Source: P.A. 81-615.)
|
Section 70. The Legislative Commission Reorganization Act |
|
of 1984 is amended by changing Sections 1-3, 3-1, and 3A-1 as |
follows: |
(25 ILCS 130/1-3) (from Ch. 63, par. 1001-3)
|
Sec. 1-3. Legislative support services agencies. The Joint |
Committee on
Legislative Support Services is responsible for |
establishing general policy and
coordinating activities among |
the legislative support services agencies. The
legislative |
support services agencies include the following:
|
(1) Joint Committee on Administrative Rules;
|
(2) Illinois Economic and Fiscal Commission on Government |
Forecasting and Accountability ;
|
(3) Legislative Information System;
|
(4) Legislative Reference Bureau;
|
(5) Legislative Audit Commission;
|
(6) Legislative Printing Unit;
|
(7) Legislative Research Unit; and
|
(8) Office of the Architect of the Capitol.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-632, eff. 2-1-04.)
|
(25 ILCS 130/3-1) (from Ch. 63, par. 1003-1)
|
Sec. 3-1. The Illinois Economic and Fiscal Commission on |
Government Forecasting and Accountability is hereby
|
established as a legislative support services agency. The |
Commission is
subject to the provisions of this Act and shall |
perform the powers and
duties delegated to it under
"An Act |
creating the Illinois Economic and Fiscal Commission on |
Government Forecasting and Accountability , defining its
powers |
and duties, making an appropriation therefor, repealing an Act
|
therein named, and providing for the transfer of appropriations |
in
connection therewith ", approved July 13, 1972, as amended, |
and such other
functions as may be provided by law.
|
(Source: P.A. 83-1257.)
|
(25 ILCS 130/3A-1)
|
Sec. 3A-1. Economic and Fiscal Commission on Government |
|
Forecasting and Accountability ; pension
laws.
|
(a) The Economic and Fiscal Commission on Government |
Forecasting and Accountability shall have the powers, duties, |
and functions that may be
provided by law.
|
(b) The Commission shall make a continuing study of the
|
laws
and practices pertaining to pensions and related |
retirement and disability
benefits for persons in State or |
local government service and their survivors
and dependents, |
shall evaluate existing laws and practices, and shall review
|
and make recommendations on proposed changes to those laws and |
practices.
|
(c) The Commission shall be responsible for the preparation |
of Pension
Impact Notes as provided in the Pension Impact Note |
Act.
|
(d) The Commission shall report to the General Assembly |
annually or as it
deems necessary or useful on the results of |
its studies and the performance of
its duties.
|
(e) The Commission may request assistance from any other |
entity as necessary
or useful for the performance of its |
duties.
|
(f) For purposes of the Successor Agency Act and Section 9b |
of the State
Finance
Act, the Economic and Fiscal Commission on |
Government Forecasting and Accountability is the successor to |
the
Pension Laws Commission.
The Economic and Fiscal Commission |
on Government Forecasting and Accountability succeeds to and |
assumes all powers, duties,
rights, responsibilities, |
personnel, assets, liabilities, and indebtedness of
the |
Pension Laws Commission.
Any reference in any law, rule, form, |
or other
document to the Pension Laws
Commission is
deemed to |
be a reference to the Economic and Fiscal Commission on |
Government Forecasting and Accountability .
|
(Source: P.A. 93-632, eff. 2-1-04.)
|
Section 75. The Illinois Economic and Fiscal Commission Act |
is amended by changing the title of the Act and Sections 2 and |
6.2 as follows:
|
|
(25 ILCS 155/Act title)
|
An Act creating the Illinois Economic and Fiscal Commission |
on Government Forecasting and Accountability , defining its |
powers and duties, making an
appropriation therefor, repealing |
an Act therein named, and providing for
the transfer of |
appropriations in connection therewith .
|
(25 ILCS 155/2) (from Ch. 63, par. 342)
|
Sec. 2. The Illinois Economic and Fiscal Commission on |
Government Forecasting and Accountability , hereafter in this
|
Act referred to as the Commission, is created and is |
established as a
legislative support services agency subject to |
the Legislative Commission
Reorganization Act of 1984.
|
On the effective date of this amendatory Act of
the 93th |
General Assembly, the name of the Illinois Economic and Fiscal |
Commission is changed to
the Commission on Government |
Forecasting and Accountability. References in any law,
|
appropriation, rule, form, or other document to the Illinois |
Economic and Fiscal Commission are deemed, in appropriate |
contexts, to be references to the Commission on Government |
Forecasting and Accountability for all purposes. References in |
any law,
appropriation, rule, form, or other document to the |
Executive Director of
the Illinois Economic and Fiscal |
Commission are deemed, in appropriate contexts, to be |
references
to the Executive Director of the Commission on |
Government Forecasting and Accountability for all
purposes. |
For purposes of Section 9b of the State Finance Act, the |
Commission on Government Forecasting and Accountability is the |
successor to the Illinois Economic and Fiscal Commission. |
(Source: P.A. 83-1257.)
|
(25 ILCS 155/6.2) (from Ch. 63, par. 346.2)
|
Sec. 6.2. Short title. This Act may be cited as
the |
Illinois Economic and Fiscal Commission on Government |
Forecasting and Accountability Act.
|
|
(Source: P.A. 93-632, eff. 2-1-04.)
|
Section 80. The Fiscal Control and Internal Auditing Act is |
amended by changing Section 2004 as follows:
|
(30 ILCS 10/2004) (from Ch. 15, par. 2004)
|
Sec. 2004. Consultations by internal auditor. Each
chief |
internal auditor may consult with the Auditor General,
the |
Department of Central Management Services, the Economic and |
Fiscal Commission on Government Forecasting and |
Accountability , the appropriations
committees of the General |
Assembly, the
Governor's Office of Management and Budget
Bureau |
of the Budget ,
or the Internal Audit Advisory Board on matters |
affecting the
duties or responsibilities of the chief internal |
auditor under this Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 86-936; revised 8-23-03.)
|
Section 83. The State Finance Act is amended by changing |
Sections 8g, 8h, and 14.1 as follows:
|
(30 ILCS 105/8g)
|
Sec. 8g. Fund transfers.
|
(a) In addition to any other transfers that may be provided |
for by law, as
soon as may be practical after the effective |
date of this amendatory Act of
the 91st General Assembly, the |
State Comptroller shall direct and the State
Treasurer shall |
transfer the sum of $10,000,000 from the General Revenue Fund
|
to the Motor Vehicle License Plate Fund created by Senate Bill |
1028 of the 91st
General Assembly.
|
(b) In addition to any other transfers that may be provided |
for by law, as
soon as may be practical after the effective |
date of this amendatory Act of
the 91st General Assembly, the |
State Comptroller shall direct and the State
Treasurer shall |
transfer the sum of $25,000,000 from the General Revenue Fund
|
to the Fund for Illinois' Future created by Senate Bill 1066 of |
the 91st
General Assembly.
|
|
(c) In addition to any other transfers that may be provided |
for by law,
on August 30 of each fiscal year's license period, |
the Illinois Liquor Control
Commission shall direct and the |
State Comptroller and State Treasurer shall
transfer from the |
General Revenue Fund to the Youth Alcoholism and Substance
|
Abuse Prevention Fund an amount equal to the number of retail |
liquor licenses
issued for that fiscal year multiplied by $50.
|
(d) The payments to programs required under subsection (d) |
of Section 28.1
of the Horse Racing Act of 1975 shall be made, |
pursuant to appropriation, from
the special funds referred to |
in the statutes cited in that subsection, rather
than directly |
from the General Revenue Fund.
|
Beginning January 1, 2000, on the first day of each month, |
or as soon
as may be practical thereafter, the State |
Comptroller shall direct and the
State Treasurer shall transfer |
from the General Revenue Fund to each of the
special funds from |
which payments are to be made under Section 28.1(d) of the
|
Horse Racing Act of 1975 an amount equal to 1/12 of the annual |
amount required
for those payments from that special fund, |
which annual amount shall not exceed
the annual amount for |
those payments from that special fund for the calendar
year |
1998. The special funds to which transfers shall be made under |
this
subsection (d) include, but are not necessarily limited |
to, the Agricultural
Premium Fund; the Metropolitan Exposition |
Auditorium and Office Building Fund;
the Fair and Exposition |
Fund; the Standardbred Breeders Fund; the Thoroughbred
|
Breeders Fund; and the Illinois Veterans' Rehabilitation Fund.
|
(e) In addition to any other transfers that may be provided |
for by law,
as soon as may be practical after the effective |
date of this amendatory Act of
the 91st General Assembly, but |
in no event later than June 30, 2000, the State
Comptroller |
shall direct and the State Treasurer shall transfer the sum of
|
$15,000,000 from the General Revenue Fund to the Fund for |
Illinois' Future.
|
(f) In addition to any other transfers that may be provided |
for by law,
as soon as may be practical after the effective |
|
date of this amendatory Act of
the 91st General Assembly, but |
in no event later than June 30, 2000, the State
Comptroller |
shall direct and the State Treasurer shall transfer the sum of
|
$70,000,000 from the General Revenue Fund to the Long-Term Care |
Provider
Fund.
|
(f-1) In fiscal year 2002, in addition to any other |
transfers that may
be provided for by law, at the direction of |
and upon notification from the
Governor, the State Comptroller |
shall direct and the State Treasurer shall
transfer amounts not |
exceeding a total of $160,000,000 from the General
Revenue Fund |
to the Long-Term Care Provider Fund.
|
(g) In addition to any other transfers that may be provided |
for by law,
on July 1, 2001, or as soon thereafter as may be |
practical, the State
Comptroller shall direct and the State |
Treasurer shall transfer the sum of
$1,200,000 from the General |
Revenue Fund to the Violence Prevention Fund.
|
(h) In each of fiscal years 2002 through 2004, but not
|
thereafter, in
addition to any other transfers that may be |
provided for by law, the State
Comptroller shall direct and the |
State Treasurer shall transfer $5,000,000
from the General |
Revenue Fund to the Tourism Promotion Fund.
|
(i) On or after July 1, 2001 and until May 1, 2002, in |
addition to any
other transfers that may be provided for by |
law, at the direction of and upon
notification from the |
Governor, the State Comptroller shall direct and the
State |
Treasurer shall transfer amounts not exceeding a total of |
$80,000,000
from the General Revenue Fund to the Tobacco |
Settlement Recovery Fund.
Any amounts so transferred shall be |
re-transferred by the State Comptroller
and the State Treasurer |
from the Tobacco Settlement Recovery Fund to the
General |
Revenue Fund at the direction of and upon notification from the
|
Governor, but in any event on or before June 30, 2002.
|
(i-1) On or after July 1, 2002 and until May 1, 2003, in |
addition to any
other transfers that may be provided for by |
law, at the direction of and upon
notification from the |
Governor, the State Comptroller shall direct and the
State |
|
Treasurer shall transfer amounts not exceeding a total of |
$80,000,000
from the General Revenue Fund to the Tobacco |
Settlement Recovery Fund.
Any amounts so transferred shall be |
re-transferred by the State Comptroller
and the State Treasurer |
from the Tobacco Settlement Recovery Fund to the
General |
Revenue Fund at the direction of and upon notification from the
|
Governor, but in any event on or before June 30, 2003.
|
(j) On or after July 1, 2001 and no later than June 30, |
2002, in addition to
any other transfers that may be provided |
for by law, at the direction of and
upon notification from the |
Governor, the State Comptroller shall direct and the
State |
Treasurer shall transfer amounts not to exceed the following |
sums into
the Statistical Services Revolving Fund:
|
|
From the General Revenue Fund ................. |
$8,450,000 |
|
From the Public Utility Fund .................. |
1,700,000 |
|
From the Transportation Regulatory Fund ....... |
2,650,000 |
|
From the Title III Social Security and |
|
|
Employment Fund .............................. |
3,700,000 |
|
From the Professions Indirect Cost Fund ....... |
4,050,000 |
|
From the Underground Storage Tank Fund ........ |
550,000 |
|
From the Agricultural Premium Fund ............ |
750,000 |
|
From the State Pensions Fund .................. |
200,000 |
|
From the Road Fund ............................ |
2,000,000 |
|
From the Health Facilities |
|
|
Planning Fund ................................ |
1,000,000 |
|
From the Savings and Residential Finance |
|
|
Regulatory Fund .............................. |
130,800 |
|
From the Appraisal Administration Fund ........ |
28,600 |
|
From the Pawnbroker Regulation Fund ........... |
3,600 |
|
From the Auction Regulation |
|
|
Administration Fund .......................... |
35,800 |
|
From the Bank and Trust Company Fund .......... |
634,800 |
|
From the Real Estate License |
|
|
Administration Fund .......................... |
313,600 |
|
(k) In addition to any other transfers that may be provided |
for by law,
as soon as may be practical after the effective |
|
date of this amendatory Act of
the 92nd General Assembly, the |
State Comptroller shall direct and the State
Treasurer shall |
transfer the sum of $2,000,000 from the General Revenue Fund
to |
the Teachers Health Insurance Security Fund.
|
(k-1) In addition to any other transfers that may be |
provided for by
law, on July 1, 2002, or as soon as may be |
practical thereafter, the State
Comptroller shall direct and |
the State Treasurer shall transfer the sum of
$2,000,000 from |
the General Revenue Fund to the Teachers Health Insurance
|
Security Fund.
|
(k-2) In addition to any other transfers that may be |
provided for by
law, on July 1, 2003, or as soon as may be |
practical thereafter, the State
Comptroller shall direct and |
the State Treasurer shall transfer the sum of
$2,000,000 from |
the General Revenue Fund to the Teachers Health Insurance
|
Security Fund.
|
(k-3) On or after July 1, 2002 and no later than June 30, |
2003, in
addition to any other transfers that may be provided |
for by law, at the
direction of and upon notification from the |
Governor, the State Comptroller
shall direct and the State |
Treasurer shall transfer amounts not to exceed the
following |
sums into the Statistical Services Revolving Fund:
|
|
Appraisal Administration Fund ................. |
$150,000 |
|
General Revenue Fund .......................... |
10,440,000 |
|
Savings and Residential Finance |
|
|
Regulatory Fund ........................... |
200,000 |
|
State Pensions Fund ........................... |
100,000 |
|
Bank and Trust Company Fund ................... |
100,000 |
|
Professions Indirect Cost Fund ................ |
3,400,000 |
|
Public Utility Fund ........................... |
2,081,200 |
|
Real Estate License Administration Fund ....... |
150,000 |
|
Title III Social Security and |
|
|
Employment Fund ........................... |
1,000,000 |
|
Transportation Regulatory Fund ................ |
3,052,100 |
|
Underground Storage Tank Fund ................. |
50,000 |
|
(l) In addition to any other transfers that may be provided |
|
for by law, on
July 1, 2002, or as soon as may be practical |
thereafter, the State Comptroller
shall direct and the State |
Treasurer shall transfer the sum of $3,000,000 from
the General |
Revenue Fund to the Presidential Library and Museum Operating
|
Fund.
|
(m) In addition to any other transfers that may be provided |
for by law, on
July 1, 2002 and on the effective date of this |
amendatory Act of the 93rd
General Assembly, or as soon |
thereafter as may be practical, the State Comptroller
shall |
direct and the State Treasurer shall transfer the sum of |
$1,200,000 from
the General Revenue Fund to the Violence |
Prevention Fund.
|
(n) In addition to any other transfers that may be provided |
for by law,
on July 1,
2003, or as soon thereafter as may be |
practical, the State Comptroller shall
direct and the
State |
Treasurer shall transfer the sum of $6,800,000 from the General |
Revenue
Fund to
the DHS Recoveries Trust Fund.
|
(o) On or after July 1, 2003, and no later than June 30, |
2004, in
addition to any
other transfers that may be provided |
for by law, at the direction of and upon
notification
from the |
Governor, the State Comptroller shall direct and the State |
Treasurer
shall
transfer amounts not to exceed the following |
sums into the Vehicle Inspection
Fund:
|
|
From the Underground Storage Tank Fund ....... |
$35,000,000. |
|
(p) On or after July 1, 2003 and until May 1, 2004, in |
addition to any
other
transfers that may be provided for by |
law, at the direction of and upon
notification from
the |
Governor, the State Comptroller shall direct and the State |
Treasurer shall
transfer
amounts not exceeding a total of |
$80,000,000 from the General Revenue Fund to
the
Tobacco |
Settlement Recovery Fund. Any amounts so transferred shall be
|
re-transferred
from the Tobacco Settlement Recovery Fund to the |
General Revenue Fund at the
direction of and upon notification |
from the Governor, but in any event on or
before June
30, 2004.
|
(q) In addition to any other transfers that may be provided |
for by law, on
July 1,
2003, or as soon as may be practical |
|
thereafter, the State Comptroller shall
direct and the
State |
Treasurer shall transfer the sum of $5,000,000 from the General |
Revenue
Fund to
the Illinois Military Family Relief Fund.
|
(r) In addition to any other transfers that may be provided |
for by law, on
July 1,
2003, or as soon as may be practical |
thereafter, the State Comptroller shall
direct and the
State |
Treasurer shall transfer the sum of $1,922,000 from the General |
Revenue
Fund to
the Presidential Library and Museum Operating |
Fund.
|
(s) In addition to any other transfers that may be provided |
for by law, on
or after
July 1, 2003, the State Comptroller |
shall direct and the State Treasurer shall
transfer the
sum of |
$4,800,000 from the Statewide Economic Development Fund to the |
General
Revenue Fund.
|
(t) In addition to any other transfers that may be provided |
for by law, on
or after
July 1, 2003, the State Comptroller |
shall direct and the State Treasurer shall
transfer the
sum of |
$50,000,000 from the General Revenue Fund to the Budget |
Stabilization
Fund.
|
(u) On or after July 1, 2004 and until May 1, 2005, in |
addition to any other transfers that may be provided for by |
law, at the direction of and upon notification from the |
Governor, the State Comptroller shall direct and the State |
Treasurer shall transfer amounts not exceeding a total of |
$80,000,000 from the General Revenue Fund to the Tobacco |
Settlement Recovery Fund. Any amounts so transferred shall be |
retransferred by the State Comptroller and the State Treasurer |
from the Tobacco Settlement Recovery Fund to the General |
Revenue Fund at the direction of and upon notification from the |
Governor, but in any event on or before June 30, 2005.
|
(v) In addition to any other transfers that may be provided |
for by law, on July 1, 2004, or as soon thereafter as may be |
practical, the State Comptroller shall direct and the State |
Treasurer shall transfer the sum of $1,200,000 from the General |
Revenue Fund to the Violence Prevention Fund. |
(w) In addition to any other transfers that may be provided |
|
for by law, on July 1, 2004, or as soon thereafter as may be |
practical, the State Comptroller shall direct and the State |
Treasurer shall transfer the sum of $6,445,000 from the General |
Revenue Fund to the Presidential Library and Museum Operating |
Fund.
|
(x) In addition to any other transfers that may be provided |
for by law, on January 15, 2005, or as soon thereafter as may |
be practical, the State Comptroller shall direct and the State |
Treasurer shall transfer to the General Revenue Fund the |
following sums: |
From the State Crime Laboratory Fund, $200,000; |
From the State Police Wireless Service Emergency Fund, |
$200,000; |
From the State Offender DNA Identification System |
Fund, $800,000; and |
From the State Police Whistleblower Reward and |
Protection Fund, $500,000.
|
(Source: P.A. 92-11, eff. 6-11-01; 92-505, eff. 12-20-01; |
92-600, eff. 6-28-02; 93-32, eff. 6-20-03; 93-648, eff. 1-8-04; |
93-839, eff. 7-30-04.)
|
(30 ILCS 105/8h)
|
Sec. 8h. Transfers to General Revenue Fund. |
(a) Except as provided in subsection (b), notwithstanding |
any other
State law to the contrary, the Governor
may, through |
June 30, 2007, from time to time direct the State Treasurer and |
Comptroller to transfer
a specified sum from any fund held by |
the State Treasurer to the General
Revenue Fund in order to |
help defray the State's operating costs for the
fiscal year. |
The total transfer under this Section from any fund in any
|
fiscal year shall not exceed the lesser of (i) 8% of the |
revenues to be deposited
into the fund during that fiscal year |
or (ii) an amount that leaves a remaining fund balance of 25% |
of the July 1 fund balance of that fiscal year. In fiscal year |
2005 only, prior to calculating the July 1, 2004 final |
balances, the Governor may calculate and direct the State |
|
Treasurer with the Comptroller to transfer additional amounts |
determined by applying the formula authorized in Public Act |
93-839
this amendatory Act of the 93rd General Assembly to the |
funds balances on July 1, 2003.
No transfer may be made from a |
fund under this Section that would have the
effect of reducing |
the available balance in the fund to an amount less than
the |
amount remaining unexpended and unreserved from the total |
appropriation
from that fund estimated to be expended for that |
fiscal year. This Section does not apply to any
funds that are |
restricted by federal law to a specific use, to any funds in
|
the Motor Fuel Tax Fund, the Hospital Provider Fund, or the |
Medicaid Provider Relief Fund, or the Reviewing Court |
Alternative Dispute Resolution Fund, or to any
funds to which |
subsection (f) of Section 20-40 of the Nursing and Advanced |
Practice Nursing Act applies. Notwithstanding any
other |
provision of this Section, for fiscal year 2004,
the total |
transfer under this Section from the Road Fund or the State
|
Construction Account Fund shall not exceed the lesser of (i) 5% |
of the revenues to be deposited
into the fund during that |
fiscal year or (ii) 25% of the beginning balance in the fund.
|
For fiscal year 2005 through fiscal year 2007, no amounts may |
be transferred under this Section from the Road Fund, the State |
Construction Account Fund, the Criminal Justice Information |
Systems Trust Fund, the Wireless Service Emergency Fund
the |
Wireless Carrier Reimbursement Fund , or the Mandatory |
Arbitration Fund.
|
In determining the available balance in a fund, the |
Governor
may include receipts, transfers into the fund, and |
other
resources anticipated to be available in the fund in that |
fiscal year.
|
The State Treasurer and Comptroller shall transfer the |
amounts designated
under this Section as soon as may be |
practicable after receiving the direction
to transfer from the |
Governor.
|
(b) This Section does not apply to any fund established |
under the Community Senior Services and Resources Act.
|
|
(Source: P.A. 93-32, eff. 6-20-03; 93-659, eff. 2-3-04; 93-674, |
eff. 6-10-04; 93-714, eff. 7-12-04; 93-801, eff. 7-22-04; |
93-839, eff. 7-30-04; 93-1054, eff. 11-18-04; revised |
12-1-04.)
|
(30 ILCS 105/14.1)
(from Ch. 127, par. 150.1)
|
Sec. 14.1. Appropriations for State contributions to the |
State
Employees' Retirement System; payroll requirements.
|
(a) Appropriations for State contributions to the State
|
Employees' Retirement System of Illinois shall be expended in |
the manner
provided in this Section.
Except as otherwise |
provided in subsection (a-1),
at the time of each payment of |
salary to an
employee under the personal services line item, |
payment shall be made to
the State Employees' Retirement |
System, from the amount appropriated for
State contributions to |
the State Employees' Retirement System, of an amount
calculated |
at the rate certified for the applicable fiscal year by the
|
Board of Trustees of the State Employees' Retirement System |
under Section
14-135.08 of the Illinois Pension Code. If a line |
item appropriation to an
employer for this purpose is |
unavailable or exhausted or is unavailable due to any |
limitation on appropriations that may apply, (including, but |
not limited to, limitations on appropriations from the Road |
Fund under Section 8.3 of the State Finance Act) , the amounts |
shall be
paid under the continuing appropriation for this |
purpose contained in the State
Pension Funds Continuing |
Appropriation Act.
|
(a-1) Beginning on the effective date of this amendatory |
Act of the 93rd
General Assembly through the payment of the |
final payroll from fiscal
year 2004 appropriations, |
appropriations for State contributions to the
State Employees' |
Retirement System of Illinois shall be expended in the
manner |
provided in this subsection (a-1). At the time of each payment |
of
salary to an employee under the personal services line item |
from a fund
other than the General Revenue Fund, payment shall |
be made for deposit
into the General Revenue Fund from the |
|
amount appropriated for State
contributions to the State |
Employees' Retirement System of an amount
calculated at the |
rate certified for fiscal year 2004 by the Board of
Trustees of |
the State Employees' Retirement System under Section
14-135.08 |
of the Illinois Pension Code. This payment shall be made to
the |
extent that a line item appropriation to an employer for this |
purpose is
available or unexhausted. No payment from |
appropriations for State
contributions shall be made in |
conjunction with payment of salary to an
employee under the |
personal services line item from the General Revenue
Fund.
|
(b) Except during the period beginning on the effective |
date of this
amendatory
Act of the 93rd General Assembly and |
ending at the time of the payment of the
final payroll from |
fiscal year 2004 appropriations, the State Comptroller
shall |
not approve for payment any payroll
voucher that (1) includes |
payments of salary to eligible employees in the
State |
Employees' Retirement System of Illinois and (2) does not |
include the
corresponding payment of State contributions to |
that retirement system at the
full rate certified under Section |
14-135.08 for that fiscal year for eligible
employees, unless |
the balance in the fund on which the payroll voucher is drawn
|
is insufficient to pay the total payroll voucher , or |
unavailable due to any limitation on appropriations that may |
apply, including, but not limited to, limitations on |
appropriations from the Road Fund under Section 8.3 of the |
State Finance Act . If the State Comptroller
approves a payroll |
voucher under this Section for which the fund balance is
|
insufficient to pay the full amount of the required State |
contribution to the
State Employees' Retirement System, the |
Comptroller shall promptly so notify
the Retirement System.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-665, eff. 3-5-04.)
|
Section 85. The General Obligation Bond Act is amended by |
changing Sections 8 and 21 as follows:
|
(30 ILCS 330/8) (from Ch. 127, par. 658)
|
|
Sec. 8. Bond sale expenses. |
(a)
An amount not to exceed
0.5 percent of the
principal |
amount of the proceeds of sale of each bond sale is authorized
|
to be used to pay the reasonable costs of issuance and sale, |
including, without limitation, underwriter's discounts and |
fees, but excluding bond insurance,
of State of
Illinois |
general obligation bonds authorized and sold pursuant to this |
Act, provided that no salaries of State employees or other |
State office operating expenses shall be paid out of |
non-appropriated proceeds. The Governor's Office of Management |
and Budget shall compile a summary of all costs of issuance on |
each sale (including both costs paid out of proceeds and those |
paid out of appropriated funds) and post that summary on its |
web site within 20 business days after the issuance of
the |
Bonds. The summary shall include, as applicable, the respective |
percentages of participation and compensation of each |
underwriter that is a member of the underwriting syndicate, |
legal counsel, financial advisors, and other professionals for |
the bond issue and an identification of all costs of issuance |
paid to minority owned businesses, female owned businesses, and |
businesses owned by persons with disabilities. The terms |
"minority owned businesses", "female owned businesses", and |
"business owned by a person with a disability" have the |
meanings given to those terms in the Business Enterprise for |
Minorities, Females, and Persons with Disabilities Act. That |
posting shall be maintained on the web site for a period of at |
least 30 days. In addition, the Governor's Office of Management |
and Budget shall provide a written copy of each summary of |
costs to the Speaker and Minority Leader of the House of |
Representatives, the President and Minority Leader of the |
Senate, and the Illinois Economic and Fiscal Commission on |
Government Forecasting and Accountability within 20 business |
days after each issuance of the Bonds. In addition, the |
Governor's Office of Management and Budget shall provide copies |
of all contracts under which any costs of issuance are paid or |
to be paid to the Illinois Economic and Fiscal Commission on |
|
Government Forecasting and Accountability within 20 business |
days after the issuance of Bonds for which those costs are paid |
or to be paid. Instead of filing a second or subsequent copy of |
the same contract, the Governor's Office of Management and |
Budget may file a statement that specified costs are paid under |
specified contracts filed earlier with the Commission. |
(b) The Director of the Governor's Office of Management and |
Budget shall not, in connection with the issuance of Bonds, |
contract with any underwriter, financial advisor, or attorney |
unless that underwriter, financial advisor, or attorney |
certifies that the underwriter, financial advisor, or attorney |
has not and will not pay a contingent fee, whether directly or |
indirectly, to a third party for having promoted the selection |
of the underwriter, financial advisor, or attorney for that |
contract. In the event that the Governor's Office of Management |
and Budget determines that an underwriter, financial advisor, |
or attorney has filed a false certification with respect to the |
payment of contingent fees, the Governor's Office of Management |
and Budget shall not contract with that underwriter, financial |
advisor, or attorney, or with any firm employing any person who |
signed false certifications, for a period of 2 calendar years, |
beginning with the date the determination is made. The validity |
of Bonds issued under such circumstances of violation pursuant |
to this Section shall not be affected.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-2, eff. 4-7-03; 93-839, eff. 7-30-04.)
|
(30 ILCS 330/21) |
Sec. 21. Truth in borrowing disclosures. |
(a) Within 20 business days after the issuance of any Bonds |
under this Act, the Director of the Governor's Office of |
Management and Budget shall publish a truth in borrowing |
disclosure that discloses the total principal and interest |
payments to be paid on the Bonds over the full stated term of |
the Bonds. The disclosure also shall include principal and |
interest payments to be made by each fiscal year over the full |
stated term of the Bonds and total principal and interest |
|
payments to be made by each fiscal year on all other |
outstanding Bonds issued under this Act over the full stated |
terms of those Bonds. |
(b) Within 20 business days after the issuance of any |
refunding bonds under Section 16 of this Act, the Director of |
the Governor's Office of Management and Budget shall publish a |
truth in borrowing disclosure that discloses the estimated |
present-valued savings to be obtained through the refunding, in |
total and by each fiscal year that the refunding Bonds may be |
outstanding.
|
(c) The disclosures required in subsections (a) and (b) |
shall be published by posting the disclosures for no less than |
30 days on the web site of the Governor's Office of Management |
and Budget and by providing the disclosures in written form to |
the Illinois Economic and Fiscal Commission on Government |
Forecasting and Accountability . These disclosures shall be |
calculated assuming Bonds are not redeemed or refunded prior to |
their stated maturities. Amounts included in these disclosures |
as payment of interest on variable rate Bonds shall be computed |
at an interest rate equal to the rate at which the variable |
rate Bonds are first set upon issuance, plus 2.5%, after taking |
into account any credits permitted in the related indenture or |
other instrument against the amount of such interest for each |
fiscal year. Amounts included in these disclosures as payment |
of interest on variable rate Bonds shall include the amounts |
certified by the Director of the Governor's Office of |
Management and Budget under subsection (b) of Section 9 of this |
Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-839, eff. 7-30-04.) |
Section 90. The Metropolitan Civic Center Support Act is |
amended by changing Section 6 as follows:
|
(30 ILCS 355/6) (from Ch. 85, par. 1396)
|
Sec. 6. Annual statements of assets and expenses and annual |
audit
reports shall be submitted to the Department and to the |
|
Legislative Audit
Commission by each
Authority receiving or |
having received State financial support.
Each Authority |
receiving or having received State financial support
shall |
prepare an annual operating plan which details
income and |
expenditures for the proposed budget
year of the Authority.
|
This plan shall contain the appropriate detail for the proposed |
budget
year and a 3 year plan which will justify the project's |
ability to
meet financial obligations by
producing sufficient |
revenue and detailing depreciation and maintenance
|
requirements. Such annual operating
plan
shall be submitted to |
the Department and to the Illinois Economic and Fiscal
|
Commission on Government Forecasting and Accountability no
|
later than January 15th of each year.
|
(Source: P.A. 84-245.)
|
Section 95. The Build Illinois Bond Act is amended by |
changing Sections 5 and 8.5 as follows:
|
(30 ILCS 425/5) (from Ch. 127, par. 2805)
|
Sec. 5. Bond Sale Expenses. |
(a) An amount not to exceed 0.5% of the principal amount of |
the proceeds of the sale of each bond sale is authorized to be |
used to pay
reasonable costs of each issuance and sale of Bonds |
authorized and sold
pursuant to this Act, including, without |
limitation, underwriter's discounts and fees, but excluding |
bond insurance, advertising, printing, bond rating, travel of |
outside vendors,
security, delivery, legal and financial |
advisory services, initial fees
of trustees, registrars, |
paying agents and other fiduciaries, initial costs
of credit or |
liquidity enhancement arrangements, initial fees of indexing
|
and remarketing agents, and initial costs of interest rate |
swaps,
guarantees or arrangements to limit interest rate risk, |
as determined in
the related Bond Sale Order,
from
the proceeds |
of each Bond sale, provided that no salaries of State employees |
or other State office operating expenses shall be paid out of |
non-appropriated proceeds. The Governor's Office of Management |
|
and Budget shall compile a summary of all costs of issuance on |
each sale (including both costs paid out of proceeds and those |
paid out of appropriated funds) and post that summary on its |
web site within 20 business days after the issuance of the |
bonds. That posting shall be maintained on the web site for a |
period of at least 30 days. In addition, the Governor's Office |
of Management and Budget shall provide a written copy of each |
summary of costs to the Speaker and Minority Leader of the |
House of Representatives, the President and Minority Leader of |
the Senate, and the Illinois Economic and Fiscal Commission on |
Government Forecasting and Accountability within 20 business |
days after each issuance of the bonds. This summary shall |
include, as applicable, the respective percentage of |
participation and compensation of each underwriter that is a |
member of the underwriting syndicate, legal counsel, financial |
advisors, and other professionals for the Bond issue, and an |
identification of all costs of issuance paid to minority owned |
businesses, female owned businesses, and businesses owned by |
persons with disabilities. The terms "minority owned |
businesses", "female owned businesses", and "business owned by |
a person with a disability" have the meanings given to those |
terms in the Business Enterprise for Minorities, Females, and |
Persons with Disabilities Act. In addition, the Governor's |
Office of Management and Budget shall provide copies of all |
contracts under which any costs of issuance are paid or to be |
paid to the Illinois Economic and Fiscal Commission on |
Government Forecasting and Accountability within 20 business |
days after the issuance of Bonds for which those costs are paid |
or to be paid. Instead of filing a second or subsequent copy of |
the same contract, the Governor's Office of Management and |
Budget may file a statement that specified costs are paid under |
specified contracts filed earlier with the Commission.
|
(b) The Director of the Governor's Office of Management and |
Budget shall not, in connection with the issuance of Bonds, |
contract with any underwriter, financial advisor, or attorney |
unless that underwriter, financial advisor, or attorney |
|
certifies that the underwriter, financial advisor, or attorney |
has not and will not pay a contingent fee, whether directly or |
indirectly, to any third party for having promoted the |
selection of the underwriter, financial advisor, or attorney |
for that contract. In the event that the Governor's Office of |
Management and Budget determines that an underwriter, |
financial advisor, or attorney has filed a false certification |
with respect to the payment of contingent fees, the Governor's |
Office of Management and Budget shall not contract with that |
underwriter, financial advisor, or attorney, or with any firm |
employing any person who signed false certifications, for a |
period of 2 calendar years, beginning with the date the |
determination is made. The validity of Bonds issued under such |
circumstances of violation pursuant to this Section shall not |
be affected. |
(Source: P.A. 93-839, eff. 7-30-04.)
|
(30 ILCS 425/8.5) |
Sec. 8.5. Truth in borrowing disclosures. |
(a) Within 20 business days after the issuance of any Bonds |
under this Act, the Director of the Governor's Office of |
Management and Budget shall publish a truth in borrowing |
disclosure that discloses the total principal and interest |
payments to be paid on the Bonds over the full stated term of |
the Bonds. The disclosure also shall include principal and |
interest payments to be made by each fiscal year over the full |
stated term of the Bonds and total principal and interest |
payments to be made by each fiscal year on all other |
outstanding Bonds issued under this Act over the full stated |
terms of those Bonds. |
(b) Within 20 business days after the issuance of any |
refunding bonds under Section 15 of this Act, the Director of |
the Governor's Office of Management and Budget shall publish a |
truth in borrowing disclosure that discloses the estimated |
present-valued savings to be obtained through the refunding, in |
total and by each fiscal year that the refunding Bonds may be |
|
outstanding.
|
(c) The disclosures required in subsections (a) and (b) |
shall be published by posting the disclosures for no less than |
30 days on the web site of the Governor's Office of Management |
and Budget and by providing the disclosures in written form to |
the Illinois Economic and Fiscal Commission on Government |
Forecasting and Accountability . These disclosures shall be |
calculated assuming Bonds are not redeemed or refunded prior to |
their stated maturities. Amounts included in these disclosures |
as payment of interest on variable rate Bonds shall be computed |
at an interest rate equal to the rate at which the variable |
rate Bonds are first set upon issuance, plus 2.5%, after taking |
into account any credits permitted in the related indenture or |
other instrument against the amount of such interest for each |
fiscal year. Amounts included in these disclosures as payments |
of interest shall include those amounts paid pursuant to |
arrangements authorized pursuant to subsection (b) of Section 6 |
of this Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-839, eff. 7-30-04.) |
Section 100. The State Facilities Closure Act is amended by |
changing Sections 5-5 and 99-995 as follows: |
(30 ILCS 608/5-5)
|
Sec. 5-5. Definitions. In this Act: |
"Commission" means the Illinois Economic and Fiscal
|
Commission on Government Forecasting and Accountability . |
"State facility" means any facility (i) that is owned and |
operated by the State or leased and operated by the State and |
(ii) that is the primary stationary work location for 25 or |
more State employees. "State facility" does not include any |
facility under the jurisdiction of the legislative branch, |
including the Auditor General, or the judicial branch.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-839, eff. 7-30-04.) |
(30 ILCS 608/99-995)
|
|
Sec. 99-995. Closed meetings; vote requirement. This Act |
authorizes the Illinois Economic and Fiscal Commission on |
Government Forecasting and Accountability to hold closed |
meetings in certain circumstances. In order to meet the |
requirements of subsection (c) of Section 5 of Article IV of |
the Illinois Constitution, the General Assembly determines |
that closed meetings of the Illinois Economic and Fiscal
|
Commission on Government Forecasting and Accountability are |
required by the public interest. Thus, this Act is enacted by |
the affirmative vote of two-thirds of the members elected to |
each house of the General Assembly. |
(Source: P.A. 93-839, eff. 7-30-04 .) |
Section 105. The Illinois Pension Code is amended by |
changing Sections 1-103.3, 3-109.3, 14-108.3, 14-108.5, |
15-158.3, 16-133.3, 22-803, 22-1001, 22-1002, and 22-1003 as |
follows:
|
(40 ILCS 5/1-103.3)
|
Sec. 1-103.3. Application of 1994 amendment; funding |
standard.
|
(a) The provisions of this amendatory Act of 1994 that |
change the method of
calculating, certifying, and paying the |
required State contributions to the
retirement systems |
established under Articles 2, 14, 15, 16, and 18 shall
first |
apply to the State contributions required for State fiscal year |
1996.
|
(b) The General Assembly declares that a funding ratio (the |
ratio of a
retirement system's total assets to its total |
actuarial liabilities) of 90% is
an appropriate goal for |
State-funded retirement systems in Illinois, and it
finds that |
a funding ratio of 90% is now the generally-recognized norm
|
throughout the nation for public employee retirement systems |
that are
considered to be financially secure and funded in an |
appropriate and
responsible manner.
|
(c) Every 5 years, beginning in 1999, the Illinois Economic |
|
and Fiscal Commission on Government Forecasting and |
Accountability , in consultation with the affected retirement |
systems and the
Governor's Office of Management and Budget |
(formerly
Bureau
of the Budget ) , shall consider and determine |
whether the 90% funding ratio
adopted in subsection (b) |
continues to represent an appropriate goal for
State-funded |
retirement systems in Illinois, and it shall report its |
findings
and recommendations on this subject to the Governor |
and the General Assembly.
|
(Source: P.A. 88-593, eff. 8-22-94; revised 8-23-03.)
|
(40 ILCS 5/3-109.3)
|
Sec. 3-109.3. Self-managed plan.
|
(a) Purpose. The General Assembly finds that it is
|
important for municipalities to be able to attract and retain |
the most
qualified police officers and that in order to attract |
and retain these police
officers, municipalities should have |
the flexibility to provide a defined
contribution plan as an |
alternative for eligible employees who elect not
to participate |
in a defined benefit retirement program provided under this
|
Article. Accordingly, a self-managed plan shall be provided, |
which shall offer
participating employees the opportunity to |
accumulate assets for retirement
through a combination of |
employee and employer contributions that may be
invested in |
mutual funds, collective investment funds, or other investment
|
products and used to purchase annuity contracts, either fixed |
or variable,
or a combination thereof. The plan must be |
qualified under the Internal
Revenue Code of 1986.
|
(b) Study by Commission; Adoption of plan.
The Illinois |
Pension Laws Commission (or its successor, the Economic and |
Fiscal Commission on Government Forecasting and |
Accountability ) shall study
and evaluate the creation
of a |
statewide self-managed plan for eligible employees under this |
Article.
The Commission shall report its findings and |
recommendations to the General
Assembly no later than January |
1, 2002.
|
|
In accordance with the recommendations of the Commission |
and any action
taken by the General Assembly in response to |
those recommendations, a statewide
self-managed plan shall be |
adopted for eligible employees under this Article.
The |
self-managed plan shall take effect as specified in the plan, |
but in no
event earlier than July 1, 2002 or the date of its |
approval by the U.S.
Internal Revenue Service, whichever occurs |
later.
|
The self-managed plan shall include a plan document and |
shall provide for the
adoption of such rules and procedures as |
are necessary or desirable for the
administration of the |
self-managed plan. Consistent with fiduciary duty to the
|
participants and beneficiaries of the self-managed plan, it may |
provide for
delegation of suitable aspects of plan |
administration to companies authorized
to do business in this |
State.
|
(c) Selection of service providers and funding vehicles. |
The principal
administrator of the self-managed plan shall |
solicit proposals to provide
administrative services and |
funding vehicles for the self-managed plan from
insurance and |
annuity companies and mutual fund companies, banks, trust
|
companies, or other financial institutions authorized to do |
business in this
State. In reviewing the proposals received and |
approving and contracting with
no fewer than 2 and no more than |
7 companies, the principal administrator shall
consider, among |
other things, the following criteria:
|
(1) the nature and extent of the
benefits that would be |
provided to the participants;
|
(2) the reasonableness of the benefits in relation to |
the premium
charged;
|
(3) the suitability of the benefits to the needs and |
interests of the
participating employees and the employer;
|
(4) the ability of the company to provide benefits |
under the contract
and the financial stability of the |
company; and
|
(5) the efficacy of the contract in the recruitment and |
|
retention of
employees.
|
The principal administrator shall periodically review each |
approved company.
A company may continue to provide |
administrative services and funding vehicles
for the |
self-managed plan only so long as it continues to be an |
approved
company under contract with the principal |
administrator.
|
(d) Employee Direction. Employees who are participating in |
the
program must be allowed to direct the transfer of their |
account balances among
the various investment options offered, |
subject to applicable contractual
provisions. The participant |
shall not be deemed a fiduciary by reason of
providing such |
investment direction. A person who is a fiduciary shall not be
|
liable for any loss resulting from such investment direction |
and shall not be
deemed to have breached any fiduciary duty by |
acting in accordance with that
direction. The self-managed plan |
does not guarantee any of the investments in
the employee's |
account balances.
|
(e) Participation. An eligible employee must make a written |
election in
accordance with the provisions of Section 3-109.2 |
and the procedures
established under the self-managed plan. |
Participation in the self-managed
plan by an eligible employee |
who elects to participate in the self-managed plan
shall begin |
on the first day of the first pay period following the later of |
the
date the employee's election is filed with the fund or the |
employer, but in no
event sooner than the effective date of the |
self-managed plan.
|
A police officer who has elected to participate in the |
self-managed plan
under this Section must continue |
participation while employed in an eligible
position, and may |
not participate in any other retirement program administered
by |
the municipality while employed as a police officer by that |
municipality.
Participation in the self-managed plan under |
this Section shall constitute
membership in an Article 3 |
pension fund.
|
(f) No Duplication of Service Credit. Notwithstanding any |
|
other provision
of this Article, a police officer may not |
purchase or receive service or
service credit applicable to any |
other retirement program administered by a
fund under this |
Article for any period during which the police officer was a
|
participant in the self-managed plan established under this |
Section.
|
(g) Contributions. The self-managed plan shall be funded by |
contributions
from participants in the self-managed plan and |
employer contributions as
provided in this Section.
|
The contribution rate for a participant in the self-managed |
plan under
this Section shall be a minimum of 10% of his or her |
salary. This required
contribution shall be made as an |
"employer pick-up" under Section 414(h) of
the Internal Revenue |
Code of 1986 or any successor Section thereof. An
employee may |
make additional contributions to the self-managed plan in
|
accordance with the terms of the plan.
|
The self-managed plan shall provide for employer |
contributions to be credited
to each self-managed plan |
participant at a rate of 10% of the participating
employee's |
salary, less the amount of the employer contribution used to |
provide
disability benefits for the employee. The amounts so |
credited shall be paid
into the participant's self-managed plan |
accounts in the manner prescribed by
the plan.
|
An amount of employer contribution, not exceeding 1.5% of |
the participating
employee's salary, shall be used for the |
purpose of providing disability
benefits to the participating |
employee. Prior to the beginning of each plan
year under the |
self-managed plan, the principal administrator shall |
determine,
as a percentage of salary, the amount of employer |
contributions to be allocated
during that plan year for |
providing disability benefits for employees in the
|
self-managed plan.
|
(h) Vesting; Withdrawal; Return to Service. A participant |
in the
self-managed plan becomes fully vested in the employer |
contributions credited
to his or her account in the |
self-managed plan on the earliest to occur of the
following:
|
|
(1) completion of 6 years of service with the |
municipality; or
|
(2) the death of the participating employee while
|
employed by the municipality, if the participant
has |
completed at least 1.5 years of service.
|
A participant in the self-managed plan who receives a |
distribution of his or
her vested amounts from the self-managed |
plan upon or after termination of
employment shall forfeit all |
service credit and accrued rights in the fund of
his or her |
employer; if subsequently re-employed, the participant shall |
be
considered a new employee. If a former participant again |
becomes a
participating employee and continues as such for at |
least 2 years, all such
rights, service credit, and previous |
status as a participant shall be restored
upon repayment of the |
amount of the distribution without interest.
|
(i) Benefit amounts. If a participating employee who is |
fully vested in
employer contributions terminates employment, |
the participating employee shall
be entitled to a benefit which |
is based on the account values attributable to
both employer |
and employee contributions and any investment return thereon.
|
If a participating employee who is not fully vested in |
employer contributions
terminates employment, the employee |
shall be entitled to a benefit based on the
account values |
attributable to the employee's contributions and any |
investment
return thereon, plus the following percentage of |
employer contributions and any
investment return thereon: 20% |
after the second year; 40% after the third year;
60% after the |
fourth year; 80% after the fifth year; and 100% after the sixth
|
year. The remainder of employer contributions and investment |
return thereon
shall be forfeited. Any employer contributions
|
that are forfeited shall be held in escrow by the company |
investing those
contributions and shall be used as directed by |
the municipality for future
allocations of employer |
contributions or for the restoration of amounts
previously |
forfeited by former participants who again become |
participating
employees.
|
|
(Source: P.A. 93-632, eff. 2-1-04.)
|
(40 ILCS 5/14-108.3)
|
Sec. 14-108.3. Early retirement incentives.
|
(a) To be eligible for the benefits provided in this |
Section, a person
must:
|
(1) be a member of this System who, on any day during |
June, 2002, is
(i) in active payroll status in a position |
of employment with a department
and an active contributor |
to this System with respect to that employment,
and |
terminates that employment before the retirement annuity |
under this
Article begins, or (ii) on layoff status from |
such a position with a right of
re-employment or recall to |
service, or (iii) receiving benefits under Section
14-123, |
14-123.1 or 14-124, but only if the member has not been |
receiving
those benefits for a continuous period of more |
than 2 years as of the date
of application;
|
(2) not have received any retirement annuity under this |
Article
beginning earlier than August 1, 2002;
|
(3) file with the Board on or before December 31, 2002 |
a written
application requesting the benefits provided in |
this Section;
|
(4) terminate employment under this Article no later |
than December 31,
2002 (or the date established under |
subsection (d), if applicable);
|
(5) by the date of termination of service, have at |
least 8 years of
creditable service under this Article, |
without the use of any creditable
service established under |
this Section;
|
(6) by the date of termination of service, have at |
least 5 years
of membership service earned while an |
employee under this Article, which may
include military |
service for which credit is established under Section
|
14-105(b), service during the qualifying period for which |
credit is
established under Section 14-104(a), and service |
for which credit has been
established by repaying a refund |
|
under Section 14-130, but shall not include
service for |
which any other optional service credit has been |
established; and
|
(7) not receive any early retirement benefit under |
Section 16-133.3 of
this Code.
|
(b)
An eligible person may establish up to 5 years of |
creditable service
under this Article, in increments of one |
month, by making the contributions
specified in subsection (c). |
In addition, for each month of creditable
service established |
under this Section, a person's age at retirement shall
be |
deemed to be one month older than it actually is.
|
The creditable service established under this Section may |
be used for
all purposes under this Article and the Retirement |
Systems Reciprocal Act,
except for the computation of final |
average compensation under Section
14-103.12 or the |
determination of compensation under this or any other
Article |
of this Code.
|
The age enhancement established under this Section may not |
be used to
enable any person to begin receiving a retirement |
annuity calculated under
Section 14-110 before actually |
attaining age 50 (without any age enhancement
under this |
Section). The age enhancement established under this Section |
may
be used for all other purposes under this Article |
(including calculation of
a proportionate annuity payable by |
this System under the Retirement Systems
Reciprocal Act), |
except for purposes of the level income option in Section
|
14-112, the reversionary annuity under Section 14-113, and the |
required
distributions under Section 14-121.1.
|
The age enhancement established under this Section may be |
used in
determining benefits payable under Article 16 of this |
Code under the
Retirement Systems Reciprocal Act, if the person |
has at least 5 years of
service credit in the Article 16 system |
that was earned while participating
in that system as a teacher |
(as defined in Section 16-106) employed by a
department (as |
defined in Section 14-103.04).
Age enhancement established |
under this Section shall not otherwise be used
in determining |
|
benefits payable under other Articles of this Code under the
|
Retirement Systems Reciprocal Act.
|
(c) For all creditable service established under this |
Section, a person
must pay to the System an employee |
contribution to be determined by the
System, based on the |
member's rate of compensation on June 1, 2002 (or
the last date |
before June 1, 2002 for which a rate can be determined) and
the |
retirement contribution rate in effect on June 1, 2002 for the |
member
(or for members with the same social security and |
alternative formula status
as the member).
|
If the member receives a lump sum payment for accumulated |
vacation, sick
leave and personal leave upon withdrawal from |
service, and the net amount of
that lump sum payment is at |
least as great as the amount of the contribution
required under |
this Section, the entire contribution must be paid by the
|
employee by payroll deduction. If there is no such lump sum |
payment, or if
it is less than the contribution required under |
this Section, the member shall
make an initial payment by |
payroll deduction, equal to the net amount of the
lump sum |
payment for accumulated vacation, sick leave, and personal |
leave,
and have the remaining amount due treated as a reduction |
from the retirement
annuity in 24 equal monthly installments |
beginning in the month in which the
retirement annuity takes |
effect. The required contribution may be paid as a
pre-tax |
deduction from earnings. For federal and Illinois tax purposes, |
the
monthly amount by which the annuitant's benefit is reduced |
shall not be
treated as a contribution by the annuitant, but |
rather as a reduction of the
annuitant's monthly benefit.
|
(c-5) The reduction in retirement annuity provided in |
subsection (c) of
Section 14-108 does not apply to the annuity |
of a person who retires under this
Section. A person who has |
received any age enhancement or creditable service
under this |
Section may begin to receive an unreduced retirement annuity |
upon
attainment of age 55 with at least 25 years of creditable |
service (including
any age enhancement and creditable service |
established under this Section).
|
|
(d) In order to ensure that the efficient operation of |
State government
is not jeopardized by the simultaneous |
retirement of large numbers of key
personnel, the director or |
other head of a department may, for key employees
of that |
department, extend the December 31, 2002 deadline for |
terminating
employment under this Article established in |
subdivision (a)(4) of this
Section to a date not later than |
April 30, 2003 by so notifying the System
in writing by |
December 31, 2002.
|
(e) Notwithstanding Section 14-111, a person who has |
received any
age enhancement or creditable service under this |
Section and who reenters
service under this Article (or as an |
employee of a department under Article
16) other than as a |
temporary employee thereby forfeits that age enhancement
and |
creditable service and is entitled to a refund of the |
contributions
made pursuant to this Section.
|
(f) The System shall determine the amount of the increase |
in the present value of future benefits resulting from the |
granting of early retirement incentives
under this Section and |
shall report that amount to the Governor and the
Economic and |
Fiscal Commission on Government Forecasting and Accountability
|
on or after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the |
93rd General Assembly and on or before November 15,
2004. The |
increase
reported under this subsection (f) shall not be |
included in the
calculation of the required State contribution |
under Section 14-131.
|
(g) In addition to the contributions otherwise required |
under this Article,
the State shall appropriate and pay to the |
System (1) an amount equal to
$70,000,000 in State fiscal years |
2004 and 2005 and (2) in each of State fiscal years 2006 |
through 2015, a level dollar-payment based upon the increase in |
the present value of future benefits provided by the early |
retirement incentives provided under this Section amortized at |
8.5% interest.
|
(h) The Economic and Fiscal Commission on Government |
Forecasting and Accountability (i) shall hold one or more |
|
hearings on or before the last session day during the fall veto |
session of 2004 to review recommendations relating to funding |
of early retirement incentives under this Section and (ii) |
shall file its report with the General Assembly on or before |
December 31, 2004 making its recommendations relating to |
funding of early retirement incentives under this Section; the |
Commission's report may contain both majority recommendations |
and minority recommendations. The System shall recalculate and |
recertify to the Governor by January 31, 2005 the amount of the |
required State contribution to the System for State fiscal year |
2005 with respect to those incentives. The Pension Laws |
Commission (or its successor, the Economic and Fiscal
|
Commission on Government Forecasting and Accountability ) shall |
determine
and report to the General
Assembly, on or before |
January 1, 2004 and annually thereafter through the year
2013, |
its estimate of (1) the annual amount of payroll savings likely |
to be
realized by the State as a result of the early retirement |
of persons receiving
early retirement incentives under this |
Section and (2) the net annual savings
or cost to the State |
from the program of early retirement incentives created
under |
this Section.
|
The System, the Department of Central Management Services, |
the
Governor's Office of Management and Budget (formerly
Bureau |
of
the Budget), and all other departments shall provide to the |
Commission any
assistance that the Commission may request with |
respect to its reports under
this Section. The Commission may |
require departments to provide it with any
information that it |
deems necessary or useful with respect to its reports under
|
this Section, including without limitation information about |
(1) the final
earnings of former department employees who |
elected to receive benefits under
this Section, (2) the |
earnings of current department employees holding the
positions |
vacated by persons who elected to receive benefits under this
|
Section, and (3) positions vacated by persons who elected to |
receive benefits
under this Section that have not yet been |
refilled.
|
|
(i) The changes made to this Section by this amendatory Act |
of the 92nd
General Assembly do not apply to persons who |
retired under this Section on or
before May 1, 1992.
|
(Source: P.A. 92-566, eff. 6-25-02; 93-632, eff. 2-1-04; |
93-839, eff. 7-30-04.)
|
(40 ILCS 5/14-108.5) |
Sec. 14-108.5. Alternative retirement cancellation |
payment. |
(a) To be eligible for the alternative retirement |
cancellation payment provided in this Section, a person
must:
|
(1) be a member of this System who, on any day during |
June 2004, was
(i) in active payroll status as an employee |
in a position listed in subsection (b) of this Section
and |
continuously employed in a position listed in subsection |
(b) on and after January 1, 2004 and (ii) an active |
contributor to this System with respect to that employment;
|
(2) have not previously received any retirement |
annuity under this Article;
|
(3) not accept an incentive payment under Section 14a.5 |
of the State Finance Act;
|
(4) in the case of persons employed in a position title |
listed under paragraph (1) of subsection (b), be among the |
first 3,000 persons to file with the Board on or before |
September 30, 2004 a written
application requesting the |
alternative retirement cancellation payment provided in |
this Section;
|
(5) in the case of persons employed in a position title |
listed under paragraph (2) of subsection (b), have received |
written authorization from the director or other head of |
his or her department and filed that authorization with the |
system on or before September 1, 2004;
|
(6) if there is a QILDRO in effect against the person, |
file with the Board the written consent of all alternate |
payees under the QILDRO to the election of an alternative |
retirement cancellation payment under this Section;
and |
|
(7) terminate employment under this Article within 2 |
weeks after approval of the person's application |
requesting the alternative retirement cancellation |
payment, but in no event later than October 31,
2004.
|
(b)(1) Position titles eligible for the alternative |
retirement cancellation payment provided in this Section |
are:
|
911 Analyst III;
Brickmason;
Account Clerk I and II;
Budget |
Analyst I and II;
Account Technician I and II;
Budget |
Operations Director;
Accountant;
Budget Principal;
|
Accountant Advanced;
Building Services Worker;
Accountant |
Supervisor;
Building/Grounds Laborer;
Accounting Fiscal |
Administrative Career Trainee;
Building/Grounds Lead 1 and |
2;
Accounts Payable Processing Analyst;
Building/Grounds |
Maintenance Worker;
Accounts Payable Specialist;
|
Building/Grounds Supervisor;
Accounts Processing Analyst;
|
Bureau Chief;
Actuarial Assistant;
Business Administrative |
Specialist;
Administrative and Technology Director;
|
Business Analyst I through IV;
Administrative Assistant I |
through III;
Business Manager;
Administrative Clerk;
|
Buyer;
Administrative Coordinator;
Buyer Assistant;
|
Administrator;
Capital Budget Analyst I and II;
|
Administrator of Capital Programs;
Capital Budget |
Director;
Administrator of Construction Administration;
|
Capital Programs Analyst I and II;
Administrator of |
Contract Administration;
Capital Programs Technician;
|
Administrator of Fair Employment Practices;
Carpenter;
|
Administrator of Fiscal;
Carpenter Foreman;
Administrator |
of Information Management;
Cartographer I through III;
|
Administrator of Information Systems;
Chief - Police;
|
Administrator of Personnel;
Chief Veterans Technician;
|
Administrator of Professional Services;
Circuit |
Provisioning Specialist;
Administrator of Public Affairs;
|
Civil Engineer I through IX;
Administrator of |
Quality-Based Selection;
Civil Engineer Trainee;
|
|
Administrator of Strategic Planning and Training;
Clerical |
Trainee;
Appeals & Orders Coordinator;
Communications |
Director;
Appraisal Specialist 1 through 3;
Community |
Planner 3;
Assignment Coordinator;
Commander;
Assistant |
Art-in-Architecture Coordinator;
Compliance Specialist;
|
Assistant Chief - Police;
Conservation Education |
Representative;
Assistant Internal Auditor;
Conservation |
Grant Administrator 1 through 3;
Assistant Manager;
|
Construction Supervisor I and II;
Assistant Personnel |
Officer;
Consumer Policy Analyst;
Assistant Professor |
Scientist;
Consumer Program Coordinator;
Assistant |
Reimbursement Officer;
Contract Executive;
Assistant |
Steward;
Coordinator of Administrative Services;
Associate |
Director for Administrative Services;
Coordinator of |
Art-in-Architecture;
Associate Museum Director;
|
Corrections Clerk I through III;
Associate Professor |
Scientist;
Corrections Maintenance Supervisor; Corrections |
Caseworker Supervisor; Corrections Food Service |
Supervisor;
Auto Parts Warehouse Specialist;
Corrections |
Maintenance Worker;
Auto Parts Warehouser;
Curator I |
through III;
Automotive Attendant I and II;
Data Processing |
Administrative Specialist;
Automotive Mechanic;
Data |
Processing Assistant;
Automotive Shop Supervisor;
Data |
Processing Operator;
Baker;
Data Processing Specialist;
|
Barber;
Data Processing Supervisor 1 through 3;
|
Beautician;
Data Processing Technician;
Brickmason;
Deputy |
Chief Counsel;
Director of Licensing;
Desktop Technician;
|
Director of Security;
Human Resources Officer;
Division |
Chief;
Human Resources Representative;
Division Director;
|
Human Resources Specialist;
Economic Analyst I through IV;
|
Human Resources Trainee;
Electrical Engineer;
Human |
Services Casework Manager;
Electrical Engineer I through |
V;
Human Services Grant Coordinator 2 and 3;
Electrical |
Equipment Installer/Repairer;
Iconographer;
Electrical |
Equipment Installer/Repairer Lead Worker;
Industry and |
Commercial Development Representative 1 and 2;
|
|
Electrician;
Industry Services Consultant 1 and 2;
|
Electronics Technician;
Information Services Intern;
|
Elevator Operator;
Information Services Specialist I and |
II;
Endangered Species Secretary;
Information Systems |
Analyst I through III;
Engineering Aide;
Information |
Systems Manager;
Engineering Analyst I through IV;
|
Information Systems Planner;
Engineering Manager I and II;
|
Institutional Maintenance Worker;
Engineering Technician I |
through V;
Instrument Designer;
Environmental Scientist I |
and II;
Insurance Analyst I through IV;
Executive I through |
VI;
Executive Assistant;
Intermittent Clerk;
Executive |
Assistant I through IV;
Intermittent Laborer Maintenance;
|
Executive Secretary 1 through 3;
Intern;
Federal Funding |
and Public Safety Director;
Internal Auditor 1;
Financial & |
Budget Assistant;
Internal Communications Officer;
|
Financial & Budget Supervisor;
International Marketing |
Representative 1;
Financial Management Director;
IT |
Manager;
Fiscal Executive;
Janitor I and II;
Fiscal |
Officer;
Junior State Veterinarian;
Gas Engineer I through |
IV;
Junior Supervisor Scientist;
General Counsel and |
Regulatory Director;
Laboratory Manager II;
General |
Services Administrator I;
Labor Maintenance Lead Worker;
|
General Services Technician;
Laborer;
Geographic |
Information Specialist 1 and 2;
Laborer (Building);
|
Geologist I through IV;
Laborer (Maintenance);
Graphic |
Arts Design Supervisor;
Landscape Architect;
Graphic Arts |
Designer;
Landscape Architect I through IV;
Graphic Arts |
Technician;
Landscape Planner;
Grounds Supervisor;
Laundry |
Manager I;
Highway Construction Supervisor I;
Legislative |
Liaison I and II;
Historical Research Editor 2;
Liability |
Claims Adjuster 1 and 2;
Historical Research Specialist;
|
Librarian 1 and 2;
Horse Custodian;
Library Aide I through |
III;
Horse Identifier;
Library Associate;
Hourly |
Assistant;
Library Technical Assistant;
Human Resource |
Coordinator;
Licensing Assistant;
Human Resources Analyst;
|
Line Technician I through II;
Human Resources Assistant;
|
|
Local History Service Representative;
Human Resources |
Associate;
Local Housing Advisor 2 and 3;
Human Resources |
Manager;
Local Revenue and Fiscal Advisor 3;
Machinist;
|
Locksmith;
Maintenance Equipment Operator;
Operations |
Communications Specialist Trainee;
Maintenance Worker;
|
Operations Technician;
Maintenance Worker Power Plant;
|
Painter;
Management Information Technician;
Paralegal |
Assistant;
Management Operations Analyst 1 and 2;
|
Performance Management Analyst;
Management Secretary I;
|
Personnel Manager;
Management Systems Specialist;
|
Photogrammetrist I through IV;
Management Technician I |
through IV;
Physician;
Manager;
Physician Specialist |
Operations A through D;
Manpower Planner 1 through 3;
|
Planning Director;
Medical Administrator III and V;
Plant |
Maintenance Engineer 1 and 2;
Methods & Processes Advisor |
1, 2 and III;
Plumber;
Methods & Processes Career Associate |
1 and 2;
Policy Advisor;
Microfilm Operator I through III;
|
Policy Analyst I through IV;
Military Administrative |
Assistant I;
Power Shovel Operator (Maintenance);
Military |
Administrative Clerk;
Principal Economist;
Military |
Administrative Officer-Legal;
Principal Scientist;
|
Military Administrative Specialist;
Private Secretary 1 |
and 2;
Military Community Relations Specialist;
Private |
Secretary I and II;
Military Cooperative Agreement |
Specialist;
Procurement Representative;
Military Crash, |
Fire, Rescue I through III;
Professor & Scientist;
Military |
Energy Manager;
Program Manager;
Military Engineer |
Technician;
Program Specialist;
Military Environmental |
Specialist I through III;
Project Coordinator;
Military |
Facilities Engineer;
Project Designer;
Military Facilities |
Officer I;
Project Manager I through III;
Military |
Maintenance Engineer;
Project Manager;
Military Museum |
Director;
Project Manager/Technical Specialist I thru III;
|
Military Program Supervisor;
Project Specialist I through |
IV;
Military Property Custodian II;
Projects Director;
|
Military Real Property Clerk;
Property & Supply Clerk I |
|
through III;
Motorist Assistance Specialist;
Property |
Control Officer;
Museum Director;
Public Administration |
Intern;
Museum Security Head I through III;
Public |
Information Coordinator;
Museum Technician I through III;
|
Public Information Officer;
Network Control Center |
Specialist;
Public Information Officer 2 through 4;
|
Network Control Center Technician 2;
Public Service |
Administrator;
Network Engineer I through IV;
Race Track |
Maintenance 1 and 2;
Office Administration Specialist;
|
Radio Technician Program Coordinator;
Office Administrator |
1 through 5;
Realty Specialist I through V;
Office Aide;
|
Receptionist;
Office Assistant;
Regional Manager;
Office |
Associate;
Regulatory Accountant IV;
Office Clerk;
|
Reimbursement Officer 1 and 2;
Office Coordinator;
|
Representative I and II;
Office Manager;
Representative |
Trainee;
Office Occupations Trainee;
School Construction |
Manager;
Office Specialist;
Secretary I and IV;
Operations |
Communications Specialist I and II;
Security Guard;
Senior |
Economic Analyst;
Security Supervisor; Senior Editor;
|
Systems Developer I through IV;
Senior Electrical |
Engineer;
Systems Developer Trainee;
Senior Financial & |
Budget Assistant;
Systems Engineer I through IV;
Senior Gas |
Engineer;
Systems Engineer Trainee;
Senior Policy Analyst;
|
Tariff & Order Coordinator;
Senior Programs Analyst;
|
Tariff Administrator III;
Senior Project Consultant;
|
Tariff Analyst IV;
Senior Project Manager;
Teacher of |
Barbering;
Senior Public Information Officer;
Teacher of |
Beauty Culture;
Senior Public Service Administrator;
|
Technical Advisor 2 and 3;
Senior Rate Analyst;
Technical |
Advisor I through VII;
Senior Technical Assistant;
|
Technical Analyst; Technical Manager I through IX;
Senior |
Technical Supervisor;
Technical Assistant;
Senior |
Technology Specialist;
Technical Manager 1;
Senior |
Transportation Industry Analyst;
Technical Manager I |
through X;
Sewage Plant Operator;
Technical Specialist;
|
Sign Hanger;
Technical Support Specialist;
Sign Hanger |
|
Foreman;
Technical Specialist I thru III;
Sign Painter;
|
Technician Trainee;
Sign Shop Foreman;
Telecom Systems |
Analyst;
Silk Screen Operator;
Telecom Systems Consultant;
|
Senior Administrative Assistant;
Telecom Systems |
Technician 1 and 2;
Site Superintendent;
Telecommunication |
Supervisor;
Software Architect;
Tinsmith;
Special |
Assistant;
Trades Tender;
Special Assistant to the |
Executive Director;
Training Coordinator;
Staff |
Development Specialist I;
Transportation Counsel;
Staff |
Development Technician II;
Transportation Industry Analyst |
III;
State Police Captain;
Transportation Industry |
Customer Service;
State Police Lieutenant;
Transportation |
Officer;
State Police Major;
Transportation Policy Analyst |
III and IV;
State Police Master Sergeant;
Urban Planner I |
through VI;
Stationary Engineer;
Utility Engineer I and II;
|
Stationary Engineer Assistant Chief;
Veteran Secretary;
|
Stationary Engineer Chief;
Veteran Technician;
Stationary |
Fireman;
Water Engineer I through IV;
Statistical Research |
Specialist 1 through 3;
Water Plant Operator;
Statistical |
Research Supervisor;
Web and Publications Manager;
|
Statistical Research Technician;
Steamfitter;
Steward;
|
Steward Secretary;
Storekeeper I through III;
Stores |
Clerk;
Student Intern;
Student Worker;
Supervisor;
|
Supervisor & Assistant Scientist;
Supervisor & Associate |
Scientist;
Switchboard Operator 1 through 3; |
Administrative Assistant to the Superintendent; Assistant |
Legal Advisor; Legal Assistant; Senior Human Resources |
Specialist; Principal Internal Auditor; Division |
Administrator; Division Supervisor; and Private Secretary |
I through III.
|
(2) In addition, any position titles with the Speaker |
of the House of Representatives, the Minority Leader of the |
House of Representatives, the President of the Senate, the |
Minority Leader of the Senate, the Attorney General, the |
Secretary of State, the Comptroller, the Treasurer, the |
Auditor General, the Supreme Court, the Court of Claims, |
|
and each legislative agency are eligible for the |
alternative retirement cancellation payment provided in |
this Section.
|
(c) In lieu of any retirement annuity or other benefit |
provided under this Article, a person who qualifies for and |
elects to receive the alternative retirement cancellation |
payment under this Section shall be entitled to receive a |
one-time lump sum retirement cancellation payment equal to the |
amount of his or her contributions to the System (including any |
employee contributions for optional service credit and |
including any employee contributions paid by the employer or |
credited to the employee during disability) as of the date of |
termination, with regular interest, multiplied by 2. |
(d) Notwithstanding any other provision of this Article, a |
person who receives an alternative retirement cancellation |
payment under this Section thereby forfeits the right to any |
other retirement or disability benefit or refund under this |
Article, and no widow's, survivor's, or death benefit deriving |
from that person shall be payable under this Article. Upon |
accepting an alternative retirement cancellation payment under |
this Section, the person's creditable service and all other |
rights in the System are terminated for all purposes, except |
for the purpose of determining State group life and health |
benefits for the person and his or her survivors as provided |
under the State Employees Group Insurance Act of 1971.
|
(e) To the extent permitted by federal law, a person who |
receives an alternative retirement cancellation payment under |
this Section may direct the System to pay all or a portion of |
that payment as a rollover into another retirement plan or |
account qualified under the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as |
amended. |
(f) Notwithstanding Section 14-111, a person who has |
received an alternative retirement cancellation payment under |
this Section and who reenters
service under this Article other |
than as a temporary employee must repay to the System the |
amount by which that alternative retirement cancellation |
|
payment exceeded the amount of his or her refundable employee |
contributions within 60 days of resuming employment under this |
System. For the purposes of re-establishing creditable service |
that was terminated upon election of the alternative retirement |
cancellation payment, the portion of the alternative |
retirement cancellation payment representing refundable |
employee contributions shall be deemed a refund repayable in |
accordance with Section 14-130. |
(g) The Economic and Fiscal Commission on Government |
Forecasting and Accountability shall determine
and report to |
the Governor and the General
Assembly, on or before January 1, |
2006, its estimate of (1) the annual amount of payroll savings |
likely to be
realized by the State as a result of the early |
termination of persons receiving
the alternative retirement |
cancellation payment under this Section and (2) the net annual |
savings
or cost to the State from the program of alternative |
retirement cancellation payments under this Section.
|
The System, the Department of Central Management Services, |
the
Governor's Office of Management and Budget, and all other |
departments shall provide to the Commission any
assistance that |
the Commission may request with respect to its report under
|
this Section. The Commission may require departments to provide |
it with any
information that it deems necessary or useful with |
respect to its reports under
this Section, including without |
limitation information about (1) the final
earnings of former |
department employees who elected to receive alternative |
retirement cancellation payments under
this Section, (2) the |
earnings of current department employees holding the
positions |
vacated by persons who elected to receive alternative |
retirement cancellation payments under this
Section, and (3) |
positions vacated by persons who elected to receive alternative |
retirement cancellation payments
under this Section that have |
not yet been refilled.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-839, eff. 7-30-04.) |
(40 ILCS 5/15-158.3)
|
|
Sec. 15-158.3. Reports on cost reduction; effect on |
retirement at any age
with 30 years of service.
|
(a) On or before November 15, 2001 and on or before |
November 15th of each
year thereafter, the Board shall have the |
System's actuary prepare a report
showing, on a fiscal year by |
fiscal year basis, the actual rate of
participation in the |
self-managed plan
authorized by Section
15-158.2, (i) by |
employees of the System's covered higher educational
|
institutions who were hired on or after the implementation date |
of the
self-managed plan and (ii) by other System
participants.
|
The actuary's report must also quantify the extent to which |
employee optional
retirement plan participation has reduced |
the State's required contributions to
the System, expressed |
both in dollars and as a percentage of covered payroll,
in |
relation to what the State's contributions to the System would |
have been
(1) if the self-managed plan had not been
|
implemented, and (2) if
45% of employees of the System's |
covered higher educational institutions who
were hired on or |
after the implementation date of the self-managed plan had
|
elected to participate in the self-managed plan and 10%
of |
other System participants had transferred to the self-managed |
plan
following its implementation.
|
(b) On or before November 15th of 2001 and on or before |
November 15th of
each year thereafter, the Illinois Board of |
Higher Education, in conjunction
with the
Bureau of the
Budget |
(now Governor's Office of Management and Budget) shall prepare |
a
report showing, on a
fiscal year by fiscal year basis, the |
amount by which the costs associated with
compensable sick |
leave have been reduced as a result of the termination of
|
compensable sick leave accrual on and after January 1, 1998 by |
employees of
higher education institutions who are |
participants in the System.
|
(c) On or before November 15 of 2001 and on or before |
November 15th of each
year thereafter, the Department of |
Central Management Services shall prepare a
report showing, on
|
a fiscal year by fiscal year basis, the amount by which the |
|
State's cost for
health insurance coverage under the State |
Employees Group Insurance Act
of 1971 for retirees of the |
State's universities and their survivors has
declined as a |
result of requiring some of those retirees and survivors to
|
contribute to the cost of their basic health insurance. These |
year-by-year
reductions in cost must be quantified both in |
dollars and as a level percentage
of payroll covered by the |
System.
|
(d) The reports required under subsections (a), (b), and |
(c) shall be
disseminated to the Board, the Pension Laws
|
Commission (until it ceases to exist), the Illinois Economic |
and Fiscal Commission on Government Forecasting and |
Accountability , the Illinois Board of Higher Education, and the
|
Governor.
|
(e) The reports required under subsections (a), (b), and |
(c) shall be
taken into account by the Pension
Laws Commission |
(or its successor, the Economic and Fiscal Commission on |
Government Forecasting and Accountability ) in
making any |
recommendation to extend by legislation beyond
December 31, |
2002 the provision that allows a System participant to retire |
at
any age with 30 or more years of service as authorized in |
Section 15-135.
If that provision is extended beyond December |
31, 2002, and if the most recent
report under subsection (a) |
indicates that actual State contributions to the
System for the |
period during which the self-managed plan has been in
operation |
have exceeded the projected State contributions under the |
assumptions
in clause (2) of subsection (a), then any extension |
of the provision beyond
December 31, 2002 must require that the |
System's higher educational
institutions and agencies cover |
any funding deficiency through an annual
payment to the System |
out of appropriate resources of their own.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-632, eff. 2-1-04.)
|
(40 ILCS 5/16-133.3) (from Ch. 108 1/2, par. 16-133.3) |
Sec. 16-133.3. Early retirement incentives for State |
employees.
|
|
(a) To be eligible for the benefits provided in this |
Section, a person
must:
|
(1) be a member of this System who, on any day during |
June, 2002, is
(i) in active payroll status as a full-time |
teacher employed by a department
and an active contributor |
to this System with respect to that employment, or
(ii) on |
layoff status from such a position with a right of |
re-employment or
recall to service, or (iii) receiving a |
disability benefit under Section
16-149 or 16-149.1, but |
only if the member has not been receiving that benefit
for |
a continuous period of more than 2 years as of the date of |
application;
|
(2) not have received any retirement annuity under this |
Article
beginning earlier than August 1, 2002;
|
(3) file with the Board on or before December 31, 2002 |
a written
application requesting the benefits provided in |
this Section;
|
(4) terminate employment under this Article no later |
than December 31,
2002 (or the date established under |
subsection (d), if applicable);
|
(5) by the date of termination of service, have at |
least 8 years of
creditable service under this Article, |
without the use of any creditable
service established under |
this Section;
|
(6) by the date of termination of service, have at |
least 5 years
of service credit earned while participating |
in the System as a teacher
employed by a department; and
|
(7) not receive any early retirement benefit under |
Section 14-108.3 of
this Code.
|
For the purposes of this Section, "department" means a |
department as defined
in Section 14-103.04 that employs a |
teacher as defined in this Article.
|
(b) An eligible person may establish up to 5 years of |
creditable service
under this Article by making the |
contributions
specified in subsection (c). In addition, for |
each period of creditable
service established under this |
|
Section, a person's age at retirement shall
be deemed to be |
enhanced by an equivalent period.
|
The creditable service established under this Section may |
be used for all
purposes under this Article and the Retirement |
Systems Reciprocal Act,
except for the computation of final |
average salary, the determination of salary
or compensation |
under this Article or any other Article of this Code, or the
|
determination of eligibility for or the computation of benefits |
under Section
16-133.2.
|
The age enhancement established under this Section may be |
used for all
purposes under this Article (including calculation |
of a proportionate annuity
payable by this System under the |
Retirement Systems Reciprocal Act), except for
purposes of a |
retirement annuity under Section 16-133(a)(A), a
reversionary |
annuity under Section 16-136, the required distributions under
|
Section 16-142.3, and the determination of eligibility for or |
the computation
of benefits under Section 16-133.2. Age |
enhancement established under this
Section may be used in |
determining benefits payable under Article 14 of this
Code |
under the Retirement Systems Reciprocal Act (subject to the |
limitations
on the use of age enhancement provided in Section |
14-108.3); age enhancement
established under this Section |
shall not be used in determining benefits
payable under other |
Articles of this Code under the Retirement Systems
Reciprocal |
Act.
|
(c) For all creditable service established under this |
Section, a person
must pay to the System an employee |
contribution to be determined by the
System, equal to 9.0% of |
the member's highest annual salary rate that would be
used in |
the determination of the average salary for retirement annuity |
purposes
if the member retired immediately after withdrawal, |
for each year of creditable
service established under this |
Section.
|
If the member receives a lump sum payment for accumulated |
vacation, sick
leave, and personal leave upon withdrawal from |
service, and the net amount of
that lump sum payment is at |
|
least as great as the amount of the contribution
required under |
this Section, the entire contribution must be paid by the
|
employee by payroll deduction. If there is no such lump sum |
payment, or if it
is less than the contribution required under |
this Section, the member shall
make an initial payment by |
payroll deduction, equal to the net amount of the
lump sum |
payment for accumulated vacation, sick leave, and personal |
leave,
and have the remaining amount due treated as a reduction |
from the retirement
annuity in 24 equal monthly installments |
beginning in the month in which the
retirement annuity takes |
effect. The required contribution may be paid as a
pre-tax |
deduction from earnings.
|
(d) In order to ensure that the efficient operation of |
State government
is not jeopardized by the simultaneous |
retirement of large numbers of key
personnel, the director or |
other head of a department may, for key employees
of that |
department, extend the December 31, 2002 deadline for |
terminating
employment under this Article established in |
subdivision (a)(4) of this
Section to a date not later than |
April 30, 2003 by so notifying the
System in writing by |
December 31, 2002.
|
(e) A person who has received any age enhancement or |
creditable service
under this Section and who reenters |
contributing service under this Article or
Article 14 shall |
thereby forfeit that age enhancement and creditable service,
|
and become entitled to a refund of the contributions made |
pursuant to this
Section.
|
(f) The System shall determine the amount of the increase |
in the present value of future benefits resulting from the |
granting of early retirement incentives
under this Section and |
shall report that amount to the Governor and the
Economic and |
Fiscal Commission on Government Forecasting and Accountability
|
on or after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the |
93rd General Assembly and on or before November 15,
2004. The |
increase in
liability reported under this subsection (f) shall |
not be included in the
calculation of the required State |
|
contribution under Section 16-158.
|
(g)
In addition to the contributions otherwise required |
under this Article,
the State shall appropriate and pay to the |
System (1) an amount equal to
$1,000,000 in State fiscal year |
2004 and (2) in each of State fiscal years
2006 through 2015, a |
level dollar-payment based upon the increase in the present |
value of future benefits provided by the early retirement |
incentives provided under this Section amortized at 8.5% |
interest.
|
(h) The Pension Laws Commission (or its successor, the |
Economic and Fiscal Commission on Government Forecasting and |
Accountability ) shall determine
and report to the General
|
Assembly, on or before January 1, 2004 and annually thereafter |
through the year
2013, its estimate of (1) the annual amount of |
payroll savings likely to be
realized by the State as a result |
of the early retirement of persons receiving
early retirement |
incentives under this Section and (2) the net annual savings
or |
cost to the State from the program of early retirement |
incentives created
under this Section.
|
The System, the Department of Central Management Services, |
the
Governor's Office of Management and Budget (formerly
Bureau |
of
the Budget), and all other departments shall provide to the |
Commission any
assistance that the Commission may request with |
respect to its reports under
this Section. The Commission may |
require departments to provide it with any
information that it |
deems necessary or useful with respect to its reports under
|
this Section, including without limitation information about |
(1) the final
earnings of former department employees who |
elected to receive benefits under
this Section, (2) the |
earnings of current department employees holding the
positions |
vacated by persons who elected to receive benefits under this
|
Section, and (3) positions vacated by persons who elected to |
receive benefits
under this Section that have not yet been |
refilled.
|
(i) The changes made to this Section by this amendatory Act |
of the 92nd
General Assembly do not apply to persons who |
|
retired under this Section on or
before May 1, 1992.
|
(Source: P.A. 92-566, eff. 6-25-02; 93-632, eff. 2-1-04; |
93-839, eff. 7-30-04.)
|
(40 ILCS 5/22-803)
|
Sec. 22-803. Economic and Fiscal Commission on Government |
Forecasting and Accountability . The
Illinois State Board of
|
Investment and all pension funds and retirement systems subject |
to this Code
shall cooperate with the Economic and Fiscal
|
Commission on Government Forecasting and Accountability
and |
shall upon request provide
the Commission with such information |
and other assistance as it may find
necessary or useful for the |
performance of its duties.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-632, eff. 2-1-04.)
|
(40 ILCS 5/22-1001) (from Ch. 108 1/2, par. 22-1001)
|
Sec. 22-1001. Submission of information. By March 1 of |
each year, the
retirement systems created under Articles 2, 14, |
15, 16 and 18 of this Code
shall each submit the following |
information to the Economic and Fiscal Commission on Government |
Forecasting and Accountability :
|
(1) the most recent actuarial valuation computed using |
the projected
unit credit actuarial cost method for |
retirement and ancillary benefits.
|
(2) a full disclosure of the provisions of the plan; |
economic,
mortality, termination, and demographic |
assumptions used for the valuation;
methods used to |
determine the actuarial values; the impact of significant
|
changes in the actuarial assumptions and methods; the most |
recent
experience review; and other information affecting |
the plan's actuarial status.
|
(3) the State's share of the amount necessary to fund |
the normal cost
plus interest on the unfunded accrued |
liability for the next fiscal year as
determined by the |
projected unit credit computations.
|
(4) a five-year history of the system's liabilities, |
|
assets (valued at
cost), and unfunded liabilities.
|
(5) the July 1 market value of system assets and a |
five-year history of
annual and annualized investment |
returns of the system's total portfolio
and each segment of |
the portfolio; and
|
(6) measures of financial status, including ten-year |
trends of: unfunded
liabilities, funded ratios, quick |
liability ratios, current reserves, and
other solvency |
tests requested by the Commission.
|
For plan years ending prior to December 31, 1984, the |
historical data
submitted by the retirement systems pursuant to |
items (4) and (6) above may
be based on a cost method other |
than the projected unit credit actuarial
cost method. In |
submitting the data, the retirement systems shall specify
the |
method used.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-632, eff. 2-1-04.)
|
(40 ILCS 5/22-1002) (from Ch. 108 1/2, par. 22-1002)
|
Sec. 22-1002. Within 3 days of the Governor's submission of |
the State
Budget, the Director of the
Governor's Office of |
Management and Budget shall provide the
Illinois Economic and |
Fiscal Commission on Government Forecasting and Accountability
|
with the recommendations for budgeted annual appropriations |
for
each system as specified in the Governor's budget |
recommendations.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-632, eff. 2-1-04.)
|
(40 ILCS 5/22-1003) (from Ch. 108 1/2, par. 22-1003)
|
Sec. 22-1003. The Economic and Fiscal Commission on |
Government Forecasting and Accountability shall receive the |
information specified in Section 22-1001
and Section 22-1002 of |
this Act. Commission staff shall examine the
information and |
submit a report of the analysis thereof to the General
|
Assembly. The report shall also include either an analysis of |
the effect of
the different economic assumptions used by the 5 |
systems, or supplemental
valuations using the same economic |
|
assumptions for all 5 systems. The
Commission shall compare (1) |
each system's required actuarial funding computed
using the |
projected unit credit actuarial cost method, and (2) the
|
required State contribution levels established by Public Act |
88-593. The report shall also identify the amount
of the |
required funding for each system expected to come from (i) |
budgeted
annual appropriations and (ii) continuing |
appropriations under the State
Pension Funds Continuing |
Appropriation Act.
|
The Commission shall also compute multiple year |
projections showing the
effect on system liabilities and the |
State's annual cost (1) if the systems
were to be funded |
according to actuarial recommendations that
the Commission |
deems reasonable, (2) if each system were to be funded
|
according to recommendations made by the system's actuary, and |
(3) if the
systems were to be funded according to the required |
State contribution levels
established by Public Act 88-593;
|
including (i) comparisons of State costs with projected benefit |
payments,
payroll, and the general funds budget, and (ii) |
comparisons of unfunded
liabilities, funded ratios, solvency |
tests, and projected reserves. The
Commission may conduct |
additional analyses and projections as it deems useful.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-632, eff. 2-1-04.)
|
Section 107. The State Pension Funds Continuing |
Appropriation Act is amended by changing Sections 1 and 1.2 as |
follows:
|
(40 ILCS 15/1)
|
Sec. 1. Appropriations from State Pensions Fund. For the |
purpose of making
up any deficiency in the appropriations to |
the designated retirement systems
that are required to be made |
under Section 8.12 of the State Finance Act, there
is hereby |
appropriated, on a continuing annual basis in each fiscal year, |
from
the State Pensions Fund to each designated retirement |
system, the amount, if
any, by which the total appropriation to |
|
that system from the State Pensions
Fund for that fiscal year |
is less than the amount required to be appropriated
to that |
retirement system under Section 8.12 of the State Finance Act.
|
The annual appropriation under this Section to each |
designated retirement
system shall take effect on July 1 for |
the State fiscal year beginning on that
date.
|
The amount of any continuing appropriation used by a |
retirement system
under this Section for a given fiscal year |
shall be charged against the
unexpended amount of any |
appropriation to that retirement system for
that fiscal year |
under Section 8.12 of the State Finance Act that subsequently
|
becomes available , subject to Section 8.3 of the State Finance |
Act .
|
"Designated retirement systems" means the State Employees' |
Retirement
System of Illinois, the Teachers' Retirement System |
of the State of
Illinois, the State Universities Retirement |
System, the Judges Retirement
System of Illinois, and the |
General Assembly Retirement System.
|
The appropriations made in this Section are appropriated to |
the designated
retirement systems as a part of the annual State |
contribution required by the
laws providing for the funding of |
those systems.
|
(Source: P.A. 87-923; 88-593, eff. 8-22-94.)
|
(40 ILCS 15/1.2)
|
Sec. 1.2. Appropriations for the State Employees' |
Retirement System.
|
(a) From each fund from which an amount is appropriated for |
personal
services to a department or other employer under |
Article 14 of the Illinois
Pension Code, there is hereby |
appropriated to that department or other
employer, on a |
continuing annual basis for each State fiscal year, an
|
additional amount equal to the amount, if any, by which (1) an |
amount equal
to the percentage of the personal services line |
item for that department or
employer from that fund for that |
fiscal year that the Board of Trustees of
the State Employees' |
|
Retirement System of Illinois has certified under Section
|
14-135.08 of the Illinois Pension Code to be necessary to meet |
the State's
obligation under Section 14-131 of the Illinois |
Pension Code for that fiscal
year, exceeds (2) the amounts |
otherwise appropriated to that department or
employer from that |
fund for State contributions to the State Employees'
Retirement |
System for that fiscal year.
From the effective
date of this |
amendatory Act of the 93rd General Assembly
through the final |
payment from a department or employer's
personal services line |
item for fiscal year 2004, payments to
the State Employees' |
Retirement System that otherwise would
have been made under |
this subsection (a) shall be governed by
the provisions in |
subsection (a-1).
|
(a-1) If a Fiscal Year 2004 Shortfall is certified under |
subsection (f) of
Section 14-131 of the Illinois Pension Code, |
there is hereby appropriated
to the State Employees' Retirement |
System of Illinois on a
continuing basis from the General |
Revenue Fund an additional
aggregate amount equal to the Fiscal |
Year 2004 Shortfall.
|
(b) The continuing appropriations provided for by this |
Section shall first
be available in State fiscal year 1996.
|
(c) Beginning in Fiscal Year 2005, any continuing |
appropriation under this Section arising out of an |
appropriation for personal services from the Road Fund to the |
Department of State Police or the Secretary of State shall be |
payable from the General Revenue Fund rather than the Road |
Fund.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-665, eff. 3-5-04.)
|
Section 110. The Illinois Sports Facilities Authority Act |
is amended by changing Section 18 as follows:
|
(70 ILCS 3205/18) (from Ch. 85, par. 6018)
|
Sec. 18. Records and Reports of the Authority. The |
secretary shall keep a
record of the proceedings of the |
Authority. The treasurer of the Authority
shall be custodian of |
|
all Authority funds, and shall be bonded in such
amount as the |
other members of the Authority may designate. The accounts
and |
books of the Authority shall be set up and maintained in a |
manner
approved by the Auditor General, and the Authority shall |
file with the
Auditor General a certified annual report within |
120 days after the close
of its fiscal year. The Authority |
shall also file with the Governor, the
Secretary of the Senate, |
the Clerk of the House of Representatives, the
Illinois |
Economic and Fiscal Commission on Government Forecasting and |
Accountability , by March 1 of each year, a written
report |
covering its activities for the previous fiscal year and so |
filed,
such report shall be a public record and open for |
inspection at the offices
of the Authority during normal |
business hours.
|
(Source: P.A. 84-1470.)
|
Section 115. The Downstate Illinois Sports Facilities |
Authority Act is amended by changing Section 75 as follows:
|
(70 ILCS 3210/75)
|
Sec. 75. Records and reports of the Authority. The |
secretary shall
keep a record of the proceedings of the |
Authority. The treasurer of the
Authority shall be custodian of |
all Authority funds and shall be bonded
in the amount the other |
members of the Authority may designate. The
accounts and books |
of the Authority shall be set up and maintained in a
manner |
approved by the Auditor General, and the Authority shall file
|
with the Auditor General a certified annual report within 120 |
days after
the close of its fiscal year. The Authority shall |
also file with the
Governor, the Secretary of the Senate, the |
Clerk of the House of
Representatives, and the Illinois |
Economic and Fiscal Commission on Government Forecasting and |
Accountability , by March 1
of each year, a written report |
covering its activities for the previous
fiscal year. So filed, |
the report shall be a public record and open
for inspection at |
the offices of the Authority during normal
business hours.
|
|
(Source: P.A. 93-227, eff. 1-1-04.)
|
Section 120. The Board of Higher Education Act is amended |
by changing Sections 9.11 and 9.18 as follows:
|
(110 ILCS 205/9.11) (from Ch. 144, par. 189.11)
|
Sec. 9.11. Effective January 1, 1980, to require the |
preparation of an
annual capital plan which details the |
proposed budget year and 3 year capital
needs of the Board of |
Trustees of the University of Illinois, the Board
of Trustees |
of Southern Illinois University,
the Board of Trustees of |
Chicago State University, the Board of Trustees of
Eastern |
Illinois University, the Board of Trustees of Governors State
|
University, the Board of Trustees of Illinois State University, |
the Board of
Trustees of Northeastern Illinois University, the |
Board of Trustees of Northern
Illinois University, and the |
Board of Trustees of Western Illinois University.
Such plan |
shall detail capital expenditures to finance revenue producing
|
facilities through the issuance of revenue bonds. This plan |
shall detail
each project and the project cost in current |
dollar amounts. The plan shall
contain the appropriate detail
|
for the proposed budget year and the 3 year plan which will |
justify the
projects ability to meet: the debt service |
requirements by producing sufficient
revenue, life expectancy |
and maintenance requirements. Such annual capital
plans shall |
be submitted to the Illinois Economic and Fiscal Commission on |
Government Forecasting and Accountability
no later than March |
15th of each year.
|
(Source: P.A. 89-4, eff. 1-1-96.)
|
(110 ILCS 205/9.18) (from Ch. 144, par. 189.18)
|
Sec. 9.18. To review the annual budget proposals of the |
Illinois
Mathematics and Science Academy and to submit to the |
Governor, the
General Assembly, the
Governor's Office of |
Management and Budget
Bureau of the Budget , and the Illinois |
Economic and Fiscal Commission on Government Forecasting and |
|
Accountability its analysis and recommendations on such budget |
proposals.
|
(Source: P.A. 85-1019; revised 8-23-03.)
|
Section 125. The Illinois Horse Racing Act of 1975 is |
amended by changing Section 1.3 as follows:
|
(230 ILCS 5/1.3)
|
Sec. 1.3. Legislative findings.
|
(a) The General Assembly finds that the Illinois gaming |
industry is a single
industry consisting of horse racing and |
riverboat gambling. Reports issued by
the legislative Economic
|
and Fiscal Commission on Government Forecasting and |
Accountability in 1992, 1994, and 1998 have
found that horse |
racing and riverboat gambling:
|
(1) "share many of the same characteristics" and are |
"more alike than
different";
|
(2) are planned events;
|
(3) have similar odds of winning;
|
(4) occur in similar settings; and
|
(5) compete with each other for limited gaming dollars.
|
(b) The General Assembly declares it to be the public |
policy of this State
to ensure the viability of both horse |
racing and riverboat aspects of the
Illinois gaming industry.
|
(Source: P.A. 91-40, eff. 6-25-99.)
|
Section 130. The Toll Highway Act is amended by changing |
Section 23 as follows:
|
(605 ILCS 10/23) (from Ch. 121, par. 100-23)
|
Sec. 23. The Authority shall file with the Governor, the |
Clerk of the House
of Representatives, the Secretary of the |
Senate, and the Illinois Economic and Fiscal Commission on |
Government Forecasting and Accountability , on or prior to March |
15th of each year, a written
statement and report covering its |
activities for the preceding calendar
year. The Authority shall |
|
present, to the committees of the House
of Representatives |
designated by the Speaker of the House and to the committees
of |
the Senate designated by the President of the Senate, an annual |
report
outlining its planned
revenues and expenditures. The |
Authority shall prepare an annual capital
plan which identifies
|
capital projects by location and details the project costs in |
correct
dollar amounts. The Authority shall also prepare and |
file a ten-year
capital plan that includes a listing of all |
capital improvement projects
contemplated during the ensuing |
ten-year period. The first ten-year
capital plan shall be filed |
in 1991 and thereafter on the anniversary of
each ten-year |
period.
|
It shall also be the duty of the Auditor General of the |
State of
Illinois, annually to audit or cause to be audited the |
books and records of
the Authority and to file a certified copy |
of the report of such audit with
the Governor and with the |
Legislative Audit Commission, which audit
reports, when so |
filed, shall be open to the public for inspection.
|
(Source: P.A. 91-256, eff. 1-1-00.)
|
Section 135. The Illinois Vehicle Code is amended by |
changing Sections 3-820 and 3-821 as follows:
|
(625 ILCS 5/3-820) (from Ch. 95 1/2, par. 3-820)
|
Sec. 3-820. Duplicate Number Plates. Upon filing in the |
Office of the
Secretary of State an affidavit to the effect |
that an original number plate
for a vehicle is lost, stolen or |
destroyed, a duplicate number plate shall
be furnished upon |
payment of a fee of $6 for each duplicate plate
and a fee of $9 |
for a pair of duplicate plates.
|
Upon filing in the Office of the Secretary of State an |
affidavit to the
effect that an original registration sticker |
for a vehicle is lost,
stolen or destroyed, a new registration |
sticker shall be
furnished upon payment of a fee of $5 for |
registration stickers issued on or before February 28, 2005 and |
$20 for registration stickers issued on or after March 1, 2005 .
|
|
The Secretary of State may, in his discretion, assign a new |
number plate
or plates in lieu of a duplicate of the plate or |
plates so lost, stolen or
destroyed, but such assignment of a |
new plate or plates shall not affect
the right of the owner to |
secure a reassignment of his original
registration number in |
the manner provided in this Act. The fee for one new
number |
plate shall be $6, and for a pair of new number plates,
$9.
|
For the administration of this Section, the Secretary shall |
consider the
loss of a registration plate or plates with |
properly affixed registration
stickers as requiring the |
payment of: |
(i) $11 for each duplicate issued on or before February |
28, 2005 and $26 for each duplicate issued on or after |
March 1, 2005 ; or
|
(ii)
$14 for a pair of duplicate plates issued on or |
before February 28, 2005 and $29 for a pair of duplicate |
plates issued on or after March 1, 2005. ; or |
(iii) $39 for a pair of duplicate plates on or after |
January 1, 2005, which includes a fee of $20 for the |
replacement sticker.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-840, eff. 7-30-04.)
|
(625 ILCS 5/3-821) (from Ch. 95 1/2, par. 3-821)
|
Sec. 3-821. Miscellaneous Registration and Title Fees.
|
(a) The fee to be paid to the Secretary of State for the |
following
certificates, registrations or evidences of proper |
registration, or for
corrected or duplicate documents shall be |
in accordance with the following
schedule:
|
|
Certificate of Title, except for an all-terrain |
|
|
vehicle or off-highway motorcycle |
$65 |
|
Certificate of Title for an all-terrain vehicle |
|
|
or off-highway motorcycle |
$30 |
|
Certificate of Title for an all-terrain
vehicle |
|
|
or off-highway motorcycle used for production |
|
|
agriculture, or accepted by a dealer in trade | 13 |
|
Transfer of Registration or any evidence of |
|
|
|
|
proper registration
|
15 |
|
Duplicate Registration Card for plates or other |
|
|
evidence of proper registration |
3 |
|
Duplicate Registration Sticker or Stickers issued | on or before February 28, 2005 , each |
5
|
|
Duplicate Registration Sticker or Stickers issued | on or after March 1, 2005, each | 20 |
|
Duplicate Certificate of Title |
65 |
|
Corrected Registration Card or Card for other |
|
|
evidence of proper registration |
3 |
|
Corrected Certificate of Title |
65 |
|
Salvage Certificate |
4 |
|
Fleet Reciprocity Permit |
15 |
|
Prorate Decal |
1 |
|
Prorate Backing Plate |
3 |
|
There shall be no fee paid for a Junking Certificate.
|
(b) The Secretary may prescribe the maximum service charge |
to be
imposed upon an applicant for renewal of a registration |
by any person
authorized by law to receive and remit or |
transmit to the Secretary such
renewal application and fees |
therewith.
|
(c) If a check is delivered to the Office of the Secretary |
of State
as payment of any fee or tax under this Code, and such |
check is not
honored by the bank on which it is drawn for any |
reason, the registrant
or other person tendering the check |
remains liable for the payment of
such fee or tax. The |
Secretary of State may assess a service charge of
$19
in |
addition to the fee or tax due and owing for all dishonored
|
checks.
|
If the total amount then due and owing exceeds the sum of |
$50 and
has not been paid in full within 60 days from the date |
such fee or tax
became due to the Secretary of State, the |
Secretary of State shall
assess a penalty of 25% of such amount |
remaining unpaid.
|
All amounts payable under this Section shall be computed to |
the
nearest dollar.
|
|
(d) The minimum fee and tax to be paid by any applicant for
|
apportionment of a fleet of vehicles under this Code shall be |
$15
if the application was filed on or before the date |
specified by the
Secretary together with fees and taxes due. If |
an application and the
fees or taxes due are filed after the |
date specified by the Secretary,
the Secretary may prescribe |
the payment of interest at the rate of 1/2
of 1% per month or |
fraction thereof after such due date and a minimum of
$8.
|
(e) Trucks, truck tractors, truck tractors with loads, and |
motor buses,
any one of which having a combined total weight in |
excess of 12,000 lbs.
shall file an application for a Fleet |
Reciprocity Permit issued by the
Secretary of State. This |
permit shall be in the possession of any driver
operating a |
vehicle on Illinois highways. Any foreign licensed vehicle of |
the
second division operating at any time in Illinois without a |
Fleet Reciprocity
Permit or other proper Illinois |
registration, shall subject the operator to the
penalties |
provided in Section 3-834 of this Code. For the purposes of |
this
Code, "Fleet Reciprocity Permit" means any second division |
motor vehicle with a
foreign license and used only in |
interstate transportation of goods. The fee
for such permit |
shall be $15 per fleet which shall include all
vehicles of the |
fleet being registered.
|
(f) For purposes of this Section, "all-terrain vehicle or |
off-highway
motorcycle used for production agriculture" means |
any all-terrain vehicle or
off-highway motorcycle used in the |
raising
of or the propagation of livestock, crops for sale for |
human consumption,
crops for livestock consumption, and |
production seed stock grown for the
propagation of feed grains |
and the husbandry of animals or for the purpose
of providing a |
food product, including the husbandry of blood stock as a
main |
source of providing a food product.
"All-terrain vehicle or |
off-highway motorcycle used in production agriculture"
also |
means any all-terrain vehicle or off-highway motorcycle used in |
animal
husbandry, floriculture, aquaculture, horticulture, and |
viticulture.
|