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Public Act 095-1040 |
SB0381 Enrolled |
LRB095 06715 HLH 26827 b |
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AN ACT concerning State government.
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Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
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represented in the General Assembly:
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Section 5. The Children and Family Services Act is amended |
by changing Section 34.11 as follows:
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(20 ILCS 505/34.11)
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Sec. 34.11. Lou Jones Grandparent Child Care Program
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Grandparent child care program .
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(a) The General Assembly finds and declares the following:
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(1) An increasing number of children under the age of |
18, including many
children who would otherwise be at risk |
of abuse or neglect, are in the care of
a grandparent or |
other nonparent relative.
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(2) The principal causes of this increase include |
parental substance
abuse, child abuse, mental illness, |
poverty, and death, as well as concerted
efforts by |
families and by the child welfare service system to keep |
children
with relatives whenever possible.
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(3) Grandparents and older relatives providing primary |
care for at-risk
children may experience unique resultant |
problems, such as financial stress due
to limited incomes, |
emotional difficulties dealing with the loss of the child's
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parents or the child's unique behaviors, and decreased |
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physical stamina coupled
with a much higher incidence of |
chronic illness.
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(4) Many children being raised by nonparent relatives |
experience one or a
combination of emotional, behavioral, |
psychological, academic, or medical
problems, especially |
those born to a substance-abusing mother or at risk of
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child abuse, neglect, or abandonment.
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(5) Grandparents and other relatives providing primary |
care for children
lack appropriate information about the |
issues of kinship care, the special
needs (both physical |
and psychological) of children born to a substance-abusing
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mother or at risk of child abuse, neglect, or abandonment, |
and the support
resources currently available to them.
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(6) An increasing number of grandparents and other |
relatives age 60 or older are adopting or becoming the |
subsidized guardians of children placed in their care by |
the Department. Some of these children will experience the |
death of their adoptive parent or guardian before reaching |
the age of 18. For most of these children, no legal plan |
has been made for the child's future care and custody in |
the event of the caregiver's death or incapacity. |
(7) Grandparents and other relatives providing primary |
care for children lack appropriate information about |
future care and custody planning for children in their |
care. They also lack access to resources that may assist |
them in developing future legal care and custody plans for |
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children in their legal custody.
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(b) The Department may establish an informational and |
educational program
for grandparents and other relatives who |
provide primary care for children who
are at risk of child |
abuse, neglect, or abandonment or who were born to
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substance-abusing mothers. As a part of the program, the |
Department may
develop, publish, and distribute an |
informational brochure for grandparents and
other relatives |
who provide primary care for children who are at risk of child
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abuse, neglect, or abandonment or who were born to |
substance-abusing mothers.
The information provided under the |
program authorized by this Section may
include, but is not |
limited to the following:
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(1) The most prevalent causes of kinship care, |
especially the risk of
substance exposure or child abuse, |
neglect, or abandonment.
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(2) The problems experienced by children being raised |
by nonparent
caregivers.
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(3) The problems experienced by grandparents and other |
nonparent relatives
providing primary care for children |
who have special needs.
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(4) The legal system as it relates to children and |
their nonparent primary
caregivers.
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(5) The benefits available to children and their |
nonparent primary
caregivers.
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(6) A list of support groups and resources located |
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throughout the State.
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The brochure may be distributed through hospitals, public |
health nurses,
child protective services, medical professional |
offices, elementary and
secondary schools, senior citizen |
centers, public libraries, community action
agencies selected |
by the Department, and the Department of Human Services.
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(c) In addition to other provisions of this Section, the |
Department shall establish a program of information, social |
work services, and legal services for any person age 60 or over |
and any other person who may be in need of a future legal care |
and custody plan who adopt, have adopted, take guardianship of, |
or have taken guardianship of children previously in the |
Department's custody. This program shall also assist families |
of deceased adoptive parents and guardians. As part of the |
program, the Department shall:
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(1) Develop a protocol for identification of persons |
age 60 or over and others who may be in need of future care |
and custody plans, including ill caregivers, who are |
adoptive parents, prospective adoptive parents, guardians, |
or prospective guardians of children who are or have been |
in Department custody.
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(2) Provide outreach to caregivers before and after |
adoption and guardianship, and to the families of deceased |
caregivers, regarding Illinois legal options for future |
care and custody of children.
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(3) Provide training for Department and private agency |
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staff on methods of assisting caregivers before and after |
adoption and guardianship, and the families of older and |
ill caregivers, who wish to make future care and custody |
plans for children who have been wards of the Department |
and who are or will be adopted by or are or will become |
wards of those caregivers.
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(4) Ensure that all caregivers age 60 or over who will |
adopt or will become guardians of children previously in |
Department custody have specifically designated future |
caregivers for children in their care. The Department shall |
document this designation, and the Department shall also |
document acceptance of this responsibility by any future |
caregiver. Documentation of future care designation shall |
be included in each child's case file and adoption or |
guardianship subsidy files as applicable to the child.
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(5) Ensure that any designated future caregiver and the |
family of a deceased caregiver have information on the |
financial needs of the child and future resources that may |
be available to support the child, including any adoption |
assistance and subsidized guardianship for which the child |
is or may be eligible.
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(6) With respect to programs of social work and legal |
services:
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(i) Provide contracted social work services to |
older and ill caregivers, and the families of deceased |
caregivers, including those who will or have adopted or |
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will take or have taken guardianship of children |
previously in Department custody. Social work services |
to caregivers will have the goal of securing a future |
care and custody plan for children in their care. Such |
services will include providing information to the |
caregivers and families on standby guardianship, |
guardianship, standby adoption, and adoption. The |
Department will assist the caregiver in developing a |
plan for the child if the caregiver becomes |
incapacitated or terminally ill, or dies while the |
child is a minor. The Department shall develop a form |
to document the information given to caregivers and to |
document plans for future custody, in addition to the |
documentation described in subsection (b) (4). This |
form shall be included in each child's case file and |
adoption or guardianship subsidy files as applicable |
to the child.
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(ii) Through a program of contracted legal |
services, assist older and ill caregivers, and the |
families of deceased caregivers, with the goal of |
securing court-ordered future care and custody plans |
for children in their care. Court-ordered future care |
and custody plans may include: standby guardianship, |
successor guardianship, standby adoption, and |
successor adoption. The program will also study ways in |
which to provide timely and cost-effective legal |
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services to older and ill caregivers, and to families |
of deceased caregivers in order to ensure permanency |
for children in their care.
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(7) Ensure that future caregivers designated by |
adoptive parents or guardians, and the families of deceased |
caregivers, understand their rights and potential |
responsibilities and shall be able to provide adequate |
support and education for children who may become their |
legal responsibility.
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(8) Ensure that future caregivers designated by |
adoptive parents and guardians, and the families of |
deceased caregivers, understand the problems of children |
who have experienced multiple caregivers and who may have |
experienced abuse, neglect, or abandonment or may have been |
born to substance-abusing mothers.
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(9) Ensure that future caregivers designated by |
adoptive parents and guardians, and the families of |
deceased caregivers, understand the problems experienced |
by older and ill caregivers of children, including children |
with special needs, such as financial stress due to limited |
income and increased financial responsibility, emotional |
difficulties associated with the loss of a child's parent |
or the child's unique behaviors, the special needs of a |
child who may come into their custody or whose parent or |
guardian is already deceased, and decreased physical |
stamina and a higher rate of chronic illness and other |
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health concerns.
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(10) Provide additional services as needed to families |
in which a designated caregiver appointed by the court or a |
caregiver designated in a will or other legal document |
cannot or will not fulfill the responsibilities as adoptive |
parent, guardian, or legal custodian of the child.
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(d) The Department shall consult with the Department on |
Aging and any other agency it deems appropriate as the |
Department develops the program required by subsection (c).
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(e) Rulemaking authority to implement this amendatory Act |
of the 95th General Assembly, if any, is conditioned on the |
rules being adopted in accordance with all provisions of the |
Illinois Administrative Procedure Act and all rules and |
procedures of the Joint Committee on Administrative Rules; any |
purported rule not so adopted, for whatever reason, is |
unauthorized.
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(Source: P.A. 88-229; 88-670, eff. 12-2-94; 89-507, eff. |
7-1-97.)
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Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon |
becoming law.
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