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Public Act 096-0031 |
SB1905 Re-Enrolled |
LRB096 11268 RLJ 21693 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, |
represented in the General Assembly:
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Section 5. The Open Meetings Act is amended by changing |
Section 1.02 as follows: |
(5 ILCS 120/1.02) (from Ch. 102, par. 41.02) |
Sec. 1.02. For the purposes of this Act:
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"Meeting" means any gathering, whether in person or by |
video or audio conference, telephone call, electronic means |
(such as, without limitation, electronic mail, electronic |
chat, and instant messaging), or other means of contemporaneous |
interactive communication, of a majority of a quorum of the |
members of a
public body held for the purpose of discussing |
public
business or, for a 5-member public body, a quorum of the |
members of a public body held for the purpose of discussing |
public business. |
Accordingly, for a 5-member public body, 3 members of the |
body constitute a quorum and the affirmative vote of 3 members |
is necessary to adopt any motion, resolution, or ordinance, |
unless a greater number is otherwise required.
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"Public body" includes all legislative, executive, |
administrative or advisory
bodies of the State, counties, |
townships, cities, villages, incorporated
towns, school |
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districts and all other municipal corporations, boards, |
bureaus,
committees or commissions of this State, and any |
subsidiary bodies of any
of the foregoing including but not |
limited to committees and subcommittees
which are supported in |
whole or in part by tax revenue, or which expend tax
revenue, |
except the General Assembly and committees or commissions |
thereof.
"Public body" includes tourism boards and convention |
or civic center
boards located in counties that are contiguous |
to the Mississippi River with
populations of more than 250,000 |
but less than 300,000. "Public body"
includes the Health |
Facilities and Services Review Board Health Facilities |
Planning Board . "Public body" does not
include a child death |
review team or the Illinois Child Death Review Teams
Executive |
Council established under
the Child Death Review Team Act or an |
ethics commission acting under the State Officials and
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Employees Ethics Act.
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(Source: P.A. 94-1058, eff. 1-1-07; 95-245, eff. 8-17-07.)
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Section 10. The State Officials and Employees Ethics Act is |
amended by changing Section 5-50 as follows: |
(5 ILCS 430/5-50)
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Sec. 5-50. Ex parte communications; special government |
agents.
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(a) This Section applies to ex
parte communications made to |
any agency listed in subsection (e).
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(b) "Ex parte communication" means any written or oral |
communication by any
person
that imparts or requests material
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information
or makes a material argument regarding
potential |
action concerning regulatory, quasi-adjudicatory, investment, |
or
licensing
matters pending before or under consideration by |
the agency.
"Ex parte
communication" does not include the |
following: (i) statements by
a person publicly made in a public |
forum; (ii) statements regarding
matters of procedure and |
practice, such as format, the
number of copies required, the |
manner of filing, and the status
of a matter; and (iii) |
statements made by a
State employee of the agency to the agency |
head or other employees of that
agency.
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(b-5) An ex parte communication received by an agency,
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agency head, or other agency employee from an interested party |
or
his or her official representative or attorney shall |
promptly be
memorialized and made a part of the record.
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(c) An ex parte communication received by any agency, |
agency head, or
other agency
employee, other than an ex parte |
communication described in subsection (b-5),
shall immediately |
be reported to that agency's ethics officer by the recipient
of |
the communication and by any other employee of that agency who |
responds to
the communication. The ethics officer shall require |
that the ex parte
communication
be promptly made a part of the |
record. The ethics officer shall promptly
file the ex parte |
communication with the
Executive Ethics Commission, including |
all written
communications, all written responses to the |
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communications, and a memorandum
prepared by the ethics officer |
stating the nature and substance of all oral
communications, |
the identity and job title of the person to whom each
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communication was made,
all responses made, the identity and |
job title of the person making each
response,
the identity of |
each person from whom the written or oral ex parte
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communication was received, the individual or entity |
represented by that
person, any action the person requested or |
recommended, and any other pertinent
information.
The |
disclosure shall also contain the date of any
ex parte |
communication.
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(d) "Interested party" means a person or entity whose |
rights,
privileges, or interests are the subject of or are |
directly affected by
a regulatory, quasi-adjudicatory, |
investment, or licensing matter.
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(e) This Section applies to the following agencies:
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Executive Ethics Commission
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Illinois Commerce Commission
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Educational Labor Relations Board
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State Board of Elections
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Illinois Gaming Board
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Health Facilities and Services Review Board |
Health Facilities Planning Board
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Illinois Workers' Compensation Commission
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Illinois Labor Relations Board
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Illinois Liquor Control Commission
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Pollution Control Board
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Property Tax Appeal Board
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Illinois Racing Board
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Illinois Purchased Care Review Board
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Department of State Police Merit Board
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Motor Vehicle Review Board
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Prisoner Review Board
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Civil Service Commission
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Personnel Review Board for the Treasurer
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Merit Commission for the Secretary of State
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Merit Commission for the Office of the Comptroller
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Court of Claims
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Board of Review of the Department of Employment Security
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Department of Insurance
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Department of Professional Regulation and licensing boards
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under the Department
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Department of Public Health and licensing boards under the
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Department
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Office of Banks and Real Estate and licensing boards under
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the Office
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State Employees Retirement System Board of Trustees
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Judges Retirement System Board of Trustees
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General Assembly Retirement System Board of Trustees
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Illinois Board of Investment
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State Universities Retirement System Board of Trustees
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Teachers Retirement System Officers Board of Trustees
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(f) Any person who fails to (i) report an ex parte |
communication to an
ethics officer, (ii) make information part |
of the record, or (iii) make a
filing
with the Executive Ethics |
Commission as required by this Section or as required
by
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Section 5-165 of the Illinois Administrative Procedure Act |
violates this Act.
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(Source: P.A. 95-331, eff. 8-21-07.)
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Section 12. The Civil Administrative Code of Illinois is |
amended by changing Section 5-565 as follows:
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(20 ILCS 5/5-565) (was 20 ILCS 5/6.06)
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Sec. 5-565. In the Department of Public Health.
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(a) The General Assembly declares it to be the public |
policy of this
State that all citizens of Illinois are entitled |
to lead healthy lives.
Governmental public health has a |
specific responsibility to ensure that a
system is in place to |
allow the public health mission to be achieved. To
develop a |
system requires certain core functions to be performed by
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government. The State Board of Health is to assume the |
leadership role in
advising the Director in meeting the |
following functions:
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(1) Needs assessment.
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(2) Statewide health objectives.
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(3) Policy development.
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(4) Assurance of access to necessary services.
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There shall be a State Board of Health composed of 17 |
persons,
all of
whom shall be appointed by the Governor, with |
the advice and consent of the
Senate for those appointed by the |
Governor on and after June 30, 1998,
and one of whom shall be a
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senior citizen age 60 or over. Five members shall be physicians |
licensed
to practice medicine in all its branches, one |
representing a medical school
faculty, one who is board |
certified in preventive medicine, and one who is
engaged in |
private practice. One member shall be a dentist; one an
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environmental health practitioner; one a local public health |
administrator;
one a local board of health member; one a |
registered nurse; one a
veterinarian; one a public health |
academician; one a health care industry
representative; one a |
representative of the business community; one a representative |
of the non-profit public interest community; and 2 shall be |
citizens at large.
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The terms of Board of Health members shall be 3 years, |
except that members shall continue to serve on the Board of |
Health until a replacement is appointed. Upon the effective |
date of this amendatory Act of the 93rd General Assembly, in |
the appointment of the Board of Health members appointed to |
vacancies or positions with terms expiring on or before |
December 31, 2004, the Governor shall appoint up to 6 members |
to serve for terms of 3 years; up to 6 members to serve for |
terms of 2 years; and up to 5 members to serve for a term of one |
year, so that the term of no more than 6 members expire in the |
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same year.
All members shall
be legal residents of the State of |
Illinois. The duties of the Board shall
include, but not be |
limited to, the following:
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(1) To advise the Department of ways to encourage |
public understanding
and support of the Department's |
programs.
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(2) To evaluate all boards, councils, committees, |
authorities, and
bodies
advisory to, or an adjunct of, the |
Department of Public Health or its
Director for the purpose |
of recommending to the Director one or
more of the |
following:
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(i) The elimination of bodies whose activities
are |
not consistent with goals and objectives of the |
Department.
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(ii) The consolidation of bodies whose activities |
encompass
compatible programmatic subjects.
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(iii) The restructuring of the relationship |
between the various
bodies and their integration |
within the organizational structure of the
Department.
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(iv) The establishment of new bodies deemed |
essential to the
functioning of the Department.
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(3) To serve as an advisory group to the Director for
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public health emergencies and
control of health hazards.
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(4) To advise the Director regarding public health |
policy,
and to make health policy recommendations |
regarding priorities to the
Governor through the Director.
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(5) To present public health issues to the Director and |
to make
recommendations for the resolution of those issues.
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(6) To recommend studies to delineate public health |
problems.
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(7) To make recommendations to the Governor through the |
Director
regarding the coordination of State public health |
activities with other
State and local public health |
agencies and organizations.
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(8) To report on or before February 1 of each year on |
the health of the
residents of Illinois to the Governor, |
the General Assembly, and the
public.
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(9) To review the final draft of all proposed |
administrative rules,
other than emergency or preemptory |
rules and those rules that another
advisory body must |
approve or review within a statutorily defined time
period, |
of the Department after September 19, 1991 (the effective |
date of
Public Act
87-633). The Board shall review the |
proposed rules within 90
days of
submission by the |
Department. The Department shall take into consideration
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any comments and recommendations of the Board regarding the |
proposed rules
prior to submission to the Secretary of |
State for initial publication. If
the Department disagrees |
with the recommendations of the Board, it shall
submit a |
written response outlining the reasons for not accepting |
the
recommendations.
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In the case of proposed administrative rules or |
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amendments to
administrative
rules regarding immunization |
of children against preventable communicable
diseases |
designated by the Director under the Communicable Disease |
Prevention
Act, after the Immunization Advisory Committee |
has made its
recommendations, the Board shall conduct 3 |
public hearings, geographically
distributed
throughout the |
State. At the conclusion of the hearings, the State Board |
of
Health shall issue a report, including its |
recommendations, to the Director.
The Director shall take |
into consideration any comments or recommendations made
by |
the Board based on these hearings.
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(10) To deliver to the Governor for presentation to the |
General Assembly a State Health Improvement Plan. The first |
and second such plans shall be delivered to the Governor on |
January 1, 2006 and on January 1, 2009 respectively, and |
then every 4 years thereafter. |
The Plan shall recommend priorities and strategies to |
improve the public health system and the health status of |
Illinois residents, taking into consideration national |
health objectives and system standards as frameworks for |
assessment. |
The Plan shall also take into consideration priorities |
and strategies developed at the community level through the |
Illinois Project for Local Assessment of Needs (IPLAN) and |
any regional health improvement plans that may be |
developed.
The Plan shall focus on prevention as a key |
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strategy for long-term health improvement in Illinois. |
The Plan shall examine and make recommendations on the |
contributions and strategies of the public and private |
sectors for improving health status and the public health |
system in the State. In addition to recommendations on |
health status improvement priorities and strategies for |
the population of the State as a whole, the Plan shall make |
recommendations regarding priorities and strategies for |
reducing and eliminating health disparities in Illinois; |
including racial, ethnic, gender, age, socio-economic and |
geographic disparities. |
The Director of the Illinois Department of Public |
Health shall appoint a Planning Team that includes a range |
of public, private, and voluntary sector stakeholders and |
participants in the public health system. This Team shall |
include: the directors of State agencies with public health |
responsibilities (or their designees), including but not |
limited to the Illinois Departments of Public Health and |
Department of Human Services, representatives of local |
health departments, representatives of local community |
health partnerships, and individuals with expertise who |
represent an array of organizations and constituencies |
engaged in public health improvement and prevention. |
The State Board of Health shall hold at least 3 public |
hearings addressing drafts of the Plan in representative |
geographic areas of the State.
Members of the Planning Team |
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shall receive no compensation for their services, but may |
be reimbursed for their necessary expenses.
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(11) Upon the request of the Governor, to recommend to |
the Governor
candidates for Director of Public Health when |
vacancies occur in the position.
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(12) To adopt bylaws for the conduct of its own |
business, including the
authority to establish ad hoc |
committees to address specific public health
programs |
requiring resolution.
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(13) To review and comment upon the Comprehensive |
Health Plan submitted by the Center for Comprehensive |
Health Planning as provided under Section 2310-217 of the |
Department of Public Health Powers and Duties Law of the |
Civil Administrative Code of Illinois. |
Upon appointment, the Board shall elect a chairperson from |
among its
members.
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Members of the Board shall receive compensation for their |
services at the
rate of $150 per day, not to exceed $10,000 per |
year, as designated by the
Director for each day required for |
transacting the business of the Board
and shall be reimbursed |
for necessary expenses incurred in the performance
of their |
duties. The Board shall meet from time to time at the call of |
the
Department, at the call of the chairperson, or upon the |
request of 3 of its
members, but shall not meet less than 4 |
times per year.
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(b) (Blank).
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(c) An Advisory Board on Necropsy Service to Coroners, |
which shall
counsel and advise with the Director on the |
administration of the Autopsy
Act. The Advisory Board shall |
consist of 11 members, including
a senior citizen age 60 or |
over, appointed by the Governor, one of
whom shall be |
designated as chairman by a majority of the members of the
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Board. In the appointment of the first Board the Governor shall |
appoint 3
members to serve for terms of 1 year, 3 for terms of 2 |
years, and 3 for
terms of 3 years. The members first appointed |
under Public Act 83-1538 shall serve for a term of 3 years. All |
members appointed thereafter
shall be appointed for terms of 3 |
years, except that when an
appointment is made
to fill a |
vacancy, the appointment shall be for the remaining
term of the |
position vacant. The members of the Board shall be citizens of
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the State of Illinois. In the appointment of members of the |
Advisory Board
the Governor shall appoint 3 members who shall |
be persons licensed to
practice medicine and surgery in the |
State of Illinois, at least 2 of whom
shall have received |
post-graduate training in the field of pathology; 3
members who |
are duly elected coroners in this State; and 5 members who
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shall have interest and abilities in the field of forensic |
medicine but who
shall be neither persons licensed to practice |
any branch of medicine in
this State nor coroners. In the |
appointment of medical and coroner members
of the Board, the |
Governor shall invite nominations from recognized medical
and |
coroners organizations in this State respectively. Board |
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members, while
serving on business of the Board, shall receive |
actual necessary travel and
subsistence expenses while so |
serving away from their places of residence.
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(Source: P.A. 93-975, eff. 1-1-05.)
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Section 15. The Department of Public Health Powers and |
Duties Law of the
Civil Administrative Code of Illinois is |
amended by adding Section 2310-217 as follows: |
(20 ILCS 2310/2310-217 new)
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Sec. 2310-217. Center for Comprehensive Health Planning. |
(a) The Center for Comprehensive Health Planning |
("Center") is hereby created to promote the distribution of |
health care services and improve the healthcare delivery system |
in Illinois by establishing a statewide Comprehensive Health |
Plan and ensuring a predictable, transparent, and efficient |
Certificate of Need process under the Illinois Health |
Facilities Planning Act. The objectives of the Comprehensive |
Health Plan include: to assess existing community resources and |
determine health care needs; to support safety net services for |
uninsured and underinsured residents; to promote adequate |
financing for health care services; and to recognize and |
respond to changes in community health care needs, including |
public health emergencies and natural disasters. The Center |
shall comprehensively assess health and mental health |
services; assess health needs with a special focus on the |
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identification of health disparities; identify State-level and |
regional needs; and make findings that identify the impact of |
market forces on the access to high quality services for |
uninsured and underinsured residents. The Center shall conduct |
a biennial comprehensive assessment of health resources and |
service needs, including, but not limited to, facilities, |
clinical services, and workforce; conduct needs assessments |
using key indicators of population health status and |
determinations of potential benefits that could occur with |
certain changes in the health care delivery system; collect and |
analyze relevant, objective, and accurate data, including |
health care utilization data; identify issues related to health |
care financing such as revenue streams, federal opportunities, |
better utilization of existing resources, development of |
resources, and incentives for new resource development; |
evaluate findings by the needs assessments; and annually report |
to the General Assembly and the public. |
The Illinois Department of Public Health shall establish a |
Center for Comprehensive Health Planning to develop a |
long-range Comprehensive Health Plan, which Plan shall guide |
the development of clinical services, facilities, and |
workforce that meet the health and mental health care needs of |
this State. |
(b) Center for Comprehensive Health Planning. |
(1) Responsibilities and duties of the Center include: |
(A) providing technical assistance to the Health |
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Facilities and Services Review Board to permit that |
Board to apply relevant components of the |
Comprehensive Health Plan in its deliberations; |
(B) attempting to identify unmet health needs and |
assist in any inter-agency State planning for health |
resource development; |
(C) considering health plans and other related |
publications that have been developed in Illinois and |
nationally; |
(D) establishing priorities and recommend methods |
for meeting identified health service, facilities, and |
workforce needs. Plan recommendations shall be |
short-term, mid-term, and long-range; |
(E) conducting an analysis regarding the |
availability of long-term care resources throughout |
the State, using data and plans developed under the |
Illinois Older Adult Services Act, to adjust existing |
bed need criteria and standards under the Health |
Facilities Planning Act for changes in utilization of |
institutional and non-institutional care options, with |
special consideration of the availability of the |
least-restrictive options in accordance with the needs |
and preferences of persons requiring long-term care; |
and |
(F) considering and recognizing health resource |
development projects or information on methods by |
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which a community may receive benefit, that are |
consistent with health resource needs identified |
through the comprehensive health planning process. |
(2) A Comprehensive Health Planner shall be appointed |
by the Governor, with the advice and consent of the Senate, |
to supervise the Center and its staff for a paid 3-year |
term, subject to review and re-approval every 3 years. The |
Planner shall receive an annual salary of $120,000, or an |
amount set by the Compensation Review Board, whichever is |
greater. The Planner shall prepare a budget for review and |
approval by the Illinois General Assembly, which shall |
become part of the annual report available on the |
Department website. |
(c) Comprehensive Health Plan. |
(1) The Plan shall be developed with a 5 to 10 year |
range, and updated every 2 years, or annually, if needed. |
(2) Components of the Plan shall include: |
(A) an inventory to map the State for growth, |
population shifts, and utilization of available |
healthcare resources, using both State-level and |
regionally defined areas; |
(B) an evaluation of health service needs, |
addressing gaps in service, over-supply, and |
continuity of care, including an assessment of |
existing safety net services; |
(C) an inventory of health care facility |
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infrastructure, including regulated facilities and |
services, and unregulated facilities and services, as |
determined by the Center; |
(D) recommendations on ensuring access to care, |
especially for safety net services, including rural |
and medically underserved communities; and |
(E) an integration between health planning for |
clinical services, facilities and workforce under the |
Illinois Health Facilities Planning Act and other |
health planning laws and activities of the State. |
(3) Components of the Plan may include recommendations |
that will be integrated into any relevant certificate of |
need review criteria, standards, and procedures. |
(d) Within 60 days of receiving the Comprehensive Health |
Plan, the State Board of Health shall review and comment upon |
the Plan and any policy change recommendations. The first Plan |
shall be submitted to the State Board of Health within one year |
after hiring the Comprehensive Health Planner. The Plan shall |
be submitted to the General Assembly by the following March 1. |
The Center and State Board shall hold public hearings on the |
Plan and its updates. The Center shall permit the public to |
request the Plan to be updated more frequently to address |
emerging population and demographic trends. |
(e) Current comprehensive health planning data and |
information about Center funding shall be available to the |
public on the Department website. |
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(f) The Department shall submit to a performance audit of |
the Center by the Auditor General in order to assess whether |
progress is being made to develop a Comprehensive Health Plan |
and whether resources are sufficient to meet the goals of the |
Center for Comprehensive Health Planning. |
Section 20. The Illinois Health Facilities Planning Act is |
amended by changing Sections 2, 3, 4, 4.2, 5, 6, 8.5, 12, 12.2, |
12.3, 15.1, 19.5, and 19.6 and by adding Section 5.4 as |
follows:
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(20 ILCS 3960/2) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1152)
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(Section scheduled to be repealed on July 1, 2009)
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Sec. 2. Purpose of the Act. The purpose of this Act is to |
establish a procedure designed to
reverse the trends of |
increasing costs of health care resulting from
unnecessary |
construction or modification of health care facilities. Such
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procedure shall represent an attempt by the State of Illinois |
to improve
the financial ability of the public to obtain |
necessary health services,
and to establish an orderly and |
comprehensive health care delivery
system which will guarantee |
the availability of quality health care to
the general public. |
This Act shall establish a procedure (1) which requires a |
person
establishing, constructing or modifying a health care |
facility, as
herein defined, to have the qualifications, |
background, character and
financial resources to adequately |
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provide a proper service for the
community; (2) that promotes , |
through the process of comprehensive health planning |
recognized local and
areawide health facilities planning , the |
orderly and
economic development of health care facilities in |
the State of Illinois
that avoids unnecessary duplication of |
such facilities; (3) that
promotes planning for and development |
of health care facilities needed
for comprehensive health care |
especially in areas where the health
planning process has |
identified unmet needs; and (4) that carries out
these purposes |
in coordination with the Center for Comprehensive Health |
Planning Agency and the Comprehensive Health Plan |
comprehensive State
health plan developed by that Center |
Agency .
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The changes made to this Act by this amendatory Act of the |
96th General Assembly are intended to accomplish the following |
objectives: to improve the financial ability of the public to |
obtain necessary health services; to establish an orderly and |
comprehensive health care delivery system that will guarantee |
the availability of quality health care to the general public; |
to maintain and improve the provision of essential health care |
services and increase the accessibility of those services to |
the medically underserved and indigent; to assure that the |
reduction and closure of health care services or facilities is |
performed in an orderly and timely manner, and that these |
actions are deemed to be in the best interests of the public; |
and to assess the financial burden to patients caused by |
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unnecessary health care construction and modification. The |
Health Facilities and Services Review Board must apply the |
findings from the Comprehensive Health Plan to update review |
standards and criteria, as well as better identify needs and |
evaluate applications, and establish mechanisms to support |
adequate financing of the health care delivery system in |
Illinois, for the development and preservation of safety net |
services. The Board must provide written and consistent |
decisions that are based on the findings from the Comprehensive |
Health Plan, as well as other issue or subject specific plans, |
recommended by the Center for Comprehensive Health Planning. |
Policies and procedures must include criteria and standards for |
plan variations and deviations that must be updated. |
Evidence-based assessments, projections and decisions will be |
applied regarding capacity, quality, value and equity in the |
delivery of health care services in Illinois. The integrity of |
the Certificate of Need process is ensured through revised |
ethics and communications procedures. Cost containment and |
support for safety net services must continue to be central |
tenets of the Certificate of Need process. |
(Source: P.A. 80-941 .)
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(20 ILCS 3960/3) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1153)
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(Section scheduled to be repealed on July 1, 2009)
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Sec. 3. Definitions. As used in this Act:
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"Health care facilities" means and includes
the following |
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facilities and organizations:
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1. An ambulatory surgical treatment center required to |
be licensed
pursuant to the Ambulatory Surgical Treatment |
Center Act;
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2. An institution, place, building, or agency required |
to be licensed
pursuant to the Hospital Licensing Act;
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3. Skilled and intermediate long term care facilities |
licensed under the
Nursing
Home Care Act;
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4. Hospitals, nursing homes, ambulatory surgical |
treatment centers, or
kidney disease treatment centers
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maintained by the State or any department or agency |
thereof;
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5. Kidney disease treatment centers, including a |
free-standing
hemodialysis unit required to be licensed |
under the End Stage Renal Disease Facility Act; and
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6. An institution, place, building, or room used for |
the performance of
outpatient surgical procedures that is |
leased, owned, or operated by or on
behalf of an |
out-of-state facility ; .
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7. An institution, place, building, or room used for |
provision of a health care category of service as defined |
by the Board, including, but not limited to, cardiac |
catheterization and open heart surgery; and |
8. An institution, place, building, or room used for |
provision of major medical equipment used in the direct |
clinical diagnosis or treatment of patients, and whose |
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project cost is in excess of the capital expenditure |
minimum. |
This Act shall not apply to the construction of any new |
facility or the renovation of any existing facility located on |
any campus facility as defined in Section 5-5.8b of the |
Illinois Public Aid Code, provided that the campus facility |
encompasses 30 or more contiguous acres and that the new or |
renovated facility is intended for use by a licensed |
residential facility. |
No federally owned facility shall be subject to the |
provisions of this
Act, nor facilities used solely for healing |
by prayer or spiritual means.
|
No facility licensed under the Supportive Residences |
Licensing Act or the
Assisted Living and Shared Housing Act
|
shall be subject to the provisions of this Act.
|
No facility established and operating under the |
Alternative Health Care Delivery Act as a children's respite |
care center alternative health care model demonstration |
program or as an Alzheimer's Disease Management Center |
alternative health care model demonstration program shall be |
subject to the provisions of this Act. |
A facility designated as a supportive living facility that |
is in good
standing with the program
established under Section |
5-5.01a of
the Illinois Public Aid Code shall not be subject to |
the provisions of this
Act.
|
This Act does not apply to facilities granted waivers under |
|
Section 3-102.2
of the Nursing Home Care Act. However, if a |
demonstration project under that
Act applies for a certificate
|
of need to convert to a nursing facility, it shall meet the |
licensure and
certificate of need requirements in effect as of |
the date of application. |
This Act does not apply to a dialysis facility that |
provides only dialysis training, support, and related services |
to individuals with end stage renal disease who have elected to |
receive home dialysis. This Act does not apply to a dialysis |
unit located in a licensed nursing home that offers or provides |
dialysis-related services to residents with end stage renal |
disease who have elected to receive home dialysis within the |
nursing home. The Board, however, may require these dialysis |
facilities and licensed nursing homes to report statistical |
information on a quarterly basis to the Board to be used by the |
Board to conduct analyses on the need for proposed kidney |
disease treatment centers.
|
This Act shall not apply to the closure of an entity or a |
portion of an
entity licensed under the Nursing Home Care Act, |
with the exceptions of facilities operated by a county or |
Illinois Veterans Homes, that elects to convert, in
whole or in |
part, to an assisted living or shared housing establishment
|
licensed under the Assisted Living and Shared Housing Act.
|
This Act does not apply to any change of ownership of a |
healthcare facility that is licensed under the Nursing Home |
Care Act, with the exceptions of facilities operated by a |
|
county or Illinois Veterans Homes. Changes of ownership of |
facilities licensed under the Nursing Home Care Act must meet |
the requirements set forth in Sections 3-101 through 3-119 of |
the Nursing Home Care Act.
|
With the exception of those health care facilities |
specifically
included in this Section, nothing in this Act |
shall be intended to
include facilities operated as a part of |
the practice of a physician or
other licensed health care |
professional, whether practicing in his
individual capacity or |
within the legal structure of any partnership,
medical or |
professional corporation, or unincorporated medical or
|
professional group. Further, this Act shall not apply to |
physicians or
other licensed health care professional's |
practices where such practices
are carried out in a portion of |
a health care facility under contract
with such health care |
facility by a physician or by other licensed
health care |
professionals, whether practicing in his individual capacity
|
or within the legal structure of any partnership, medical or
|
professional corporation, or unincorporated medical or |
professional
groups. This Act shall apply to construction or
|
modification and to establishment by such health care facility |
of such
contracted portion which is subject to facility |
licensing requirements,
irrespective of the party responsible |
for such action or attendant
financial obligation.
|
"Person" means any one or more natural persons, legal |
entities,
governmental bodies other than federal, or any |
|
combination thereof.
|
"Consumer" means any person other than a person (a) whose |
major
occupation currently involves or whose official capacity |
within the last
12 months has involved the providing, |
administering or financing of any
type of health care facility, |
(b) who is engaged in health research or
the teaching of |
health, (c) who has a material financial interest in any
|
activity which involves the providing, administering or |
financing of any
type of health care facility, or (d) who is or |
ever has been a member of
the immediate family of the person |
defined by (a), (b), or (c).
|
"State Board" or "Board" means the Health Facilities and |
Services Review Planning Board.
|
"Construction or modification" means the establishment, |
erection,
building, alteration, reconstruction, modernization, |
improvement,
extension, discontinuation, change of ownership, |
of or by a health care
facility, or the purchase or acquisition |
by or through a health care facility
of
equipment or service |
for diagnostic or therapeutic purposes or for
facility |
administration or operation, or any capital expenditure made by
|
or on behalf of a health care facility which
exceeds the |
capital expenditure minimum; however, any capital expenditure
|
made by or on behalf of a health care facility for (i) the |
construction or
modification of a facility licensed under the |
Assisted Living and Shared
Housing Act or (ii) a conversion |
project undertaken in accordance with Section 30 of the Older |
|
Adult Services Act shall be excluded from any obligations under |
this Act.
|
"Establish" means the construction of a health care |
facility or the
replacement of an existing facility on another |
site or the initiation of a category of service as defined by |
the Board .
|
"Major medical equipment" means medical equipment which is |
used for the
provision of medical and other health services and |
which costs in excess
of the capital expenditure minimum, |
except that such term does not include
medical equipment |
acquired
by or on behalf of a clinical laboratory to provide |
clinical laboratory
services if the clinical laboratory is |
independent of a physician's office
and a hospital and it has |
been determined under Title XVIII of the Social
Security Act to |
meet the requirements of paragraphs (10) and (11) of Section
|
1861(s) of such Act. In determining whether medical equipment |
has a value
in excess of the capital expenditure minimum, the |
value of studies, surveys,
designs, plans, working drawings, |
specifications, and other activities
essential to the |
acquisition of such equipment shall be included.
|
"Capital Expenditure" means an expenditure: (A) made by or |
on behalf of
a health care facility (as such a facility is |
defined in this Act); and
(B) which under generally accepted |
accounting principles is not properly
chargeable as an expense |
of operation and maintenance, or is made to obtain
by lease or |
comparable arrangement any facility or part thereof or any
|
|
equipment for a facility or part; and which exceeds the capital |
expenditure
minimum.
|
For the purpose of this paragraph, the cost of any studies, |
surveys, designs,
plans, working drawings, specifications, and |
other activities essential
to the acquisition, improvement, |
expansion, or replacement of any plant
or equipment with |
respect to which an expenditure is made shall be included
in |
determining if such expenditure exceeds the capital |
expenditures minimum.
Unless otherwise interdependent, or |
submitted as one project by the applicant, components of |
construction or modification undertaken by means of a single |
construction contract or financed through the issuance of a |
single debt instrument shall not be grouped together as one |
project. Donations of equipment
or facilities to a health care |
facility which if acquired directly by such
facility would be |
subject to review under this Act shall be considered capital
|
expenditures, and a transfer of equipment or facilities for |
less than fair
market value shall be considered a capital |
expenditure for purposes of this
Act if a transfer of the |
equipment or facilities at fair market value would
be subject |
to review.
|
"Capital expenditure minimum" means $11,500,000 for |
projects by hospital applicants, $6,500,000 for applicants for |
projects related to skilled and intermediate care long-term |
care facilities licensed under the Nursing Home Care Act, and |
$3,000,000 for projects by all other applicants $6,000,000 , |
|
which shall be annually
adjusted to reflect the increase in |
construction costs due to inflation, for major medical |
equipment and for all other
capital expenditures ; provided, |
however, that when a capital expenditure is
for the |
construction or modification of a health and fitness center, |
"capital
expenditure minimum" means the capital expenditure |
minimum for all other
capital expenditures in effect on March |
1, 2000, which shall be annually
adjusted to reflect the |
increase in construction costs due to inflation .
|
"Non-clinical service area" means an area (i) for the |
benefit of the
patients, visitors, staff, or employees of a |
health care facility and (ii) not
directly related to the |
diagnosis, treatment, or rehabilitation of persons
receiving |
services from the health care facility. "Non-clinical service |
areas"
include, but are not limited to, chapels; gift shops; |
news stands; computer
systems; tunnels, walkways, and |
elevators; telephone systems; projects to
comply with life |
safety codes; educational facilities; student housing;
|
patient, employee, staff, and visitor dining areas; |
administration and
volunteer offices; modernization of |
structural components (such as roof
replacement and masonry |
work); boiler repair or replacement; vehicle
maintenance and |
storage facilities; parking facilities; mechanical systems for
|
heating, ventilation, and air conditioning; loading docks; and |
repair or
replacement of carpeting, tile, wall coverings, |
window coverings or treatments,
or furniture. Solely for the |
|
purpose of this definition, "non-clinical service
area" does |
not include health and fitness centers.
|
"Areawide" means a major area of the State delineated on a
|
geographic, demographic, and functional basis for health |
planning and
for health service and having within it one or |
more local areas for
health planning and health service. The |
term "region", as contrasted
with the term "subregion", and the |
word "area" may be used synonymously
with the term "areawide".
|
"Local" means a subarea of a delineated major area that on |
a
geographic, demographic, and functional basis may be |
considered to be
part of such major area. The term "subregion" |
may be used synonymously
with the term "local".
|
"Areawide health planning organization" or "Comprehensive |
health
planning organization" means the health systems agency |
designated by the
Secretary, Department of Health and Human |
Services or any successor agency.
|
"Local health planning organization" means those local |
health
planning organizations that are designated as such by |
the areawide
health planning organization of the appropriate |
area.
|
"Physician" means a person licensed to practice in |
accordance with
the Medical Practice Act of 1987, as amended.
|
"Licensed health care professional" means a person |
licensed to
practice a health profession under pertinent |
licensing statutes of the
State of Illinois.
|
"Director" means the Director of the Illinois Department of |
|
Public Health.
|
"Agency" means the Illinois Department of Public Health.
|
"Comprehensive health planning" means health planning |
concerned with
the total population and all health and |
associated problems that affect
the well-being of people and |
that encompasses health services, health
manpower, and health |
facilities; and the coordination among these and
with those |
social, economic, and environmental factors that affect |
health.
|
"Alternative health care model" means a facility or program |
authorized
under the Alternative Health Care Delivery Act.
|
"Out-of-state facility" means a person that is both (i) |
licensed as a
hospital or as an ambulatory surgery center under |
the laws of another state
or that
qualifies as a hospital or an |
ambulatory surgery center under regulations
adopted pursuant |
to the Social Security Act and (ii) not licensed under the
|
Ambulatory Surgical Treatment Center Act, the Hospital |
Licensing Act, or the
Nursing Home Care Act. Affiliates of |
out-of-state facilities shall be
considered out-of-state |
facilities. Affiliates of Illinois licensed health
care |
facilities 100% owned by an Illinois licensed health care |
facility, its
parent, or Illinois physicians licensed to |
practice medicine in all its
branches shall not be considered |
out-of-state facilities. Nothing in
this definition shall be
|
construed to include an office or any part of an office of a |
physician licensed
to practice medicine in all its branches in |
|
Illinois that is not required to be
licensed under the |
Ambulatory Surgical Treatment Center Act.
|
"Change of ownership of a health care facility" means a |
change in the
person
who has ownership or
control of a health |
care facility's physical plant and capital assets. A change
in |
ownership is indicated by
the following transactions: sale, |
transfer, acquisition, lease, change of
sponsorship, or other |
means of
transferring control.
|
"Related person" means any person that: (i) is at least 50% |
owned, directly
or indirectly, by
either the health care |
facility or a person owning, directly or indirectly, at
least |
50% of the health
care facility; or (ii) owns, directly or |
indirectly, at least 50% of the
health care facility.
|
"Charity care" means care provided by a health care |
facility for which the provider does not expect to receive |
payment from the patient or a third-party payer. |
"Freestanding emergency center" means a facility subject |
to licensure under Section 32.5 of the Emergency Medical |
Services (EMS) Systems Act. |
(Source: P.A. 94-342, eff. 7-26-05; 95-331, eff. 8-21-07; |
95-543, eff. 8-28-07; 95-584, eff. 8-31-07; 95-727, eff. |
6-30-08; 95-876, eff. 8-21-08.)
|
(20 ILCS 3960/4) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1154)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on July 1, 2009)
|
Sec. 4. Health Facilities and Services Review Planning |
|
Board; membership; appointment; term;
compensation; quorum. |
Notwithstanding any other provision in this Section, members of |
the State Board holding office on the day before the effective |
date of this amendatory Act of the 96th General Assembly shall |
retain their authority. |
(a) There is created the Health
Facilities and Services |
Review Planning Board, which
shall perform the functions |
described in this
Act. The Department shall provide operational |
support to the Board, including the provision of office space, |
supplies, and clerical, financial, and accounting services. |
The Board may contract with experts related to specific health |
services or facilities and create technical advisory panels to |
assist in the development of criteria, standards, and |
procedures used in the evaluation of applications for permit |
and exemption.
|
(b) Beginning March 1, 2010, the The State Board shall |
consist of 9 5 voting members. All members shall be residents |
of Illinois and at least 4 shall reside outside the Chicago |
Metropolitan Statistical Area. Consideration shall be given to |
potential appointees who reflect the ethnic and cultural |
diversity of the State. Neither Board members nor Board staff |
shall be convicted felons or have pled guilty to a felony. |
Each member shall have a reasonable knowledge of the |
practice, procedures and principles of the health care delivery |
system in Illinois, including at least 5 members who shall be |
knowledgeable about health care delivery systems, health |
|
systems planning, finance, or the management of health care |
facilities currently regulated under the Act. One member shall |
be a representative of a non-profit health care consumer |
advocacy organization health planning, health finance, or |
health care at the time of his or her appointment . Spouses or |
other members of the immediate family of the Board cannot be an |
employee, agent, or under contract with services or facilities |
subject to the Act. Prior to appointment and in the course of |
service on the Board, members of the Board shall disclose the |
employment or other financial interest of any other relative of |
the member, if known, in service or facilities subject to the |
Act. Members of the Board shall declare any conflict of |
interest that may exist with respect to the status of those |
relatives and recuse themselves from voting on any issue for |
which a conflict of interest is declared. No person shall be |
appointed or continue to serve as a member of the State Board |
who is, or whose spouse, parent, or child is, a member of the |
Board of Directors of, has a financial interest in, or has a |
business relationship with a health care facility. |
Notwithstanding any provision of this Section to the |
contrary, the term of
office of each member of the State Board |
serving on the day before the effective date of this amendatory |
Act of the 96th General Assembly is abolished on the date upon |
which members of the 9-member Board, as established by this |
amendatory Act of the 96th General Assembly, have been |
appointed and can begin to take action as a Board. Members of |
|
the State Board serving on the day before the effective date of |
this amendatory Act of the 96th General Assembly may be |
reappointed to the 9-member Board. Prior to March 1, 2010, the |
Health Facilities Planning Board shall establish a plan to |
transition its powers and duties to the Health Facilities and |
Services Review Board. effective date of
this
amendatory Act of |
the 93rd General Assembly and those members no longer hold |
office.
|
(c) The State Board shall be appointed by the Governor, |
with the advice
and consent of the Senate. Not more than 5 3 of |
the
appointments shall be of the same political party at the |
time of the appointment.
No person shall be appointed as a |
State Board member if that person has
served, after the |
effective date of Public Act 93-41, 2 3-year terms as a State |
Board member, except for
ex officio non-voting members.
|
The Secretary of Human Services, the Director of Healthcare |
and Family Services, and
the Director of Public Health, or |
their designated representatives,
shall serve as ex-officio, |
non-voting members of the State Board.
|
(d) Of those 9 members initially appointed by the Governor |
following the effective date of under this
amendatory Act of |
the 96th 93rd General Assembly, 3 2 shall serve for terms |
expiring
July 1, 2011 2005 , 3 2 shall serve for terms expiring |
July 1, 2012 2006 , and 3 1 shall serve
for terms a term |
expiring July 1, 2013 2007 . Thereafter, each
appointed member |
shall
hold office for a term of 3 years, provided that any |
|
member
appointed to fill a vacancy
occurring prior to the |
expiration of the
term for which his or her predecessor was |
appointed shall be appointed for the
remainder of such term and |
the term of office of each successor shall
commence on July 1 |
of the year in which his predecessor's term expires. Each
|
member appointed after the effective date of this amendatory |
Act of the 96th 93rd General Assembly shall hold office until |
his or her successor is appointed and qualified. The Governor |
may reappoint a member for additional terms, but no member |
shall serve more than 3 terms, subject to review and |
re-approval every 3 years.
|
(e) State Board members, while serving on business of the |
State Board,
shall receive actual and necessary travel and |
subsistence expenses while
so serving away from their places
of |
residence. Until March 1, 2010, a
A member of the State Board |
who experiences a significant financial hardship
due to the |
loss of income on days of attendance at meetings or while |
otherwise
engaged in the business of the State Board may be |
paid a hardship allowance, as
determined by and subject to the |
approval of the Governor's Travel Control
Board.
|
(f) The Governor shall designate one of the members to |
serve as the Chairman of the Board, who shall be a person with |
expertise in health care delivery system planning, finance or |
management of health care facilities that are regulated under |
the Act. The Chairman shall annually review Board member |
performance and shall report the attendance record of each |
|
Board member to the General Assembly. |
(g) The State Board, through the Chairman, shall prepare a |
separate and distinct budget approved by the General Assembly |
and shall hire and supervise its own professional staff |
responsible for carrying out the responsibilities of the Board. |
The Governor shall designate one of the members to serve as |
Chairman
and shall name as full-time
Executive Secretary of the |
State
Board, a person qualified in health care facility |
planning and in
administration. The Agency shall provide |
administrative and staff
support for the State Board. The State |
Board shall advise the Director
of its budgetary and staff |
needs and consult with the Director on annual
budget |
preparation.
|
(h) The State Board shall meet at least every 45 days once |
each quarter , or as often as
the Chairman of the State Board |
deems necessary, or upon the request of
a majority of the |
members.
|
(i)
Five Three members of the State Board shall constitute |
a quorum.
The affirmative vote of 5 3 of the members of the |
State Board shall be
necessary for
any action requiring a vote |
to be taken by the State
Board. A vacancy in the membership of |
the State Board shall not impair the
right of a quorum to |
exercise all the rights and perform all the duties of the
State |
Board as provided by this Act.
|
(j) A State Board member shall disqualify himself or |
herself from the
consideration of any application for a permit |
|
or
exemption in which the State Board member or the State Board |
member's spouse,
parent, or child: (i) has
an economic interest |
in the matter; or (ii) is employed by, serves as a
consultant |
for, or is a member of the
governing board of the applicant or |
a party opposing the application.
|
(k) The Chairman, Board members, and Board staff must |
comply with the Illinois Governmental Ethics Act. |
(Source: P.A. 95-331, eff. 8-21-07 .)
|
(20 ILCS 3960/4.2)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on July 1, 2009)
|
Sec. 4.2. Ex parte communications.
|
(a) Except in the disposition of matters that agencies are |
authorized by law
to entertain or dispose of on an ex parte |
basis including, but not limited to
rule making, the State |
Board, any State Board member, employee, or a hearing
officer |
shall not engage in ex parte communication
in connection with |
the substance of any formally filed pending or impending |
application for
a permit with any person or party or the |
representative of any party. This subsection (a) applies when |
the Board, member, employee, or hearing officer knows, or |
should know upon reasonable inquiry, that the application or |
exemption has been formally filed with the Board. Nothing in |
this Section shall prohibit staff members from providing |
technical assistance to applicants. Nothing in this Section |
shall prohibit staff from verifying or clarifying an |
|
applicant's information as it prepares the Board staff report. |
Once an application or exemption is filed and deemed complete, |
a written record of any communication between staff and an |
applicant shall be prepared by staff and made part of the |
public record, using a prescribed, standardized format, and |
shall be included in the application file is pending or |
impending .
|
(b) A State Board member or employee may communicate with |
other
members or employees and any State Board member or |
hearing
officer may have the aid and advice of one or more |
personal assistants.
|
(c) An ex parte communication received by the State Board, |
any State
Board member, employee, or a hearing officer shall be |
made a part of the record
of the
matter, including all written |
communications, all written
responses to the communications, |
and a memorandum stating the substance of all
oral |
communications and all responses made and the identity of each |
person from
whom the ex parte communication was received.
|
(d) "Ex parte communication" means a communication between |
a person who is
not a State Board member or employee and a
|
State Board member or
employee
that reflects on the substance |
of a pending or impending State Board proceeding and that
takes
|
place outside the record of the proceeding. Communications |
regarding matters
of procedure and practice, such as the format |
of pleading, number of copies
required, manner of service, and |
status of proceedings, are not considered ex
parte |
|
communications. Technical assistance with respect to an |
application, not
intended to influence any decision on the |
application, may be provided by
employees to the applicant. Any |
assistance shall be documented in writing by
the applicant and |
employees within 10 business days after the assistance is
|
provided.
|
(e) For purposes of this Section, "employee" means
a person |
the State Board or the Agency employs on a full-time, |
part-time,
contract, or intern
basis.
|
(f) The State Board, State Board member, or hearing |
examiner presiding
over the proceeding, in the event of a |
violation of this Section, must take
whatever action is |
necessary to ensure that the violation does not prejudice
any |
party or adversely affect the fairness of the proceedings.
|
(g) Nothing in this Section shall be construed to prevent |
the State Board or
any member of the State Board from |
consulting with the attorney for the State
Board.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-889, eff. 8-9-04 .)
|
(20 ILCS 3960/5) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1155)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on July 1, 2009)
|
Sec. 5. Construction, modification, or establishment of |
health care facilities or acquisition of major medical |
equipment; permits or exemptions. No After effective dates set |
by the State Board,
no person shall construct, modify or |
establish a
health care facility or acquire major medical |
|
equipment without first
obtaining a permit or exemption from |
the State
Board. The State Board shall not delegate to the |
staff Executive Secretary of
the State Board or any other |
person or entity the authority to grant
permits or exemptions |
whenever the staff Executive Secretary or other person or
|
entity would be required to exercise any discretion affecting |
the decision
to grant a permit or exemption. The State Board |
may, by rule, delegate authority to the Chairman to grant |
permits or exemptions when applications meet all of the State |
Board's review criteria and are unopposed. The State Board |
shall set effective
dates applicable to all or to
each |
classification or category of health care facilities and |
applicable
to all or each type of transaction for which a |
permit is required.
Varying effective dates may be set, |
providing the date or dates so set
shall apply uniformly |
statewide.
|
Notwithstanding any effective dates established by this |
Act or by the
State Board, no person shall be required to |
obtain a permit for any
purpose under this Act until the State |
health facilities plan referred
to in paragraph (4) of Section |
12 of this Act has been approved and
adopted by the State Board |
subsequent to public hearings having been
held thereon.
|
A permit or exemption shall be obtained prior to the |
acquisition
of major medical equipment or to the construction |
or modification of a
health care facility which:
|
(a) requires a total capital expenditure in excess of |
|
the capital
expenditure
minimum; or
|
(b) substantially changes the scope or changes the |
functional operation
of the facility; or
|
(c) changes the bed capacity of a health care facility |
by increasing the
total number of beds or by distributing |
beds among
various categories of service or by relocating |
beds from one physical facility
or site to another by more |
than 20 10 beds or more than 10% of total bed
capacity as |
defined by the
State Board, whichever is less, over a 2 |
year period.
|
A permit shall be valid only for the defined construction |
or modifications,
site, amount and person named in the |
application for such permit and
shall not be transferable or |
assignable. A permit shall be valid until such
time as the |
project has been completed,
provided that (a) obligation of the |
project occurs within 12 months following
issuance of the |
permit except for major construction projects such obligation
|
must
occur within 18 months following issuance of the permit; |
and (b) the project
commences and proceeds to completion with |
due diligence. To monitor progress toward project commencement |
and completion, routine post-permit reports shall be limited to |
annual progress reports and the final completion and cost |
report. Projects may deviate from the costs, fees, and expenses |
provided in their project cost information for the project's |
cost components, provided that the final total project cost |
does not exceed the approved permit amount. Major construction
|
|
projects, for the purposes of this Act, shall include but are |
not limited
to: projects for the construction of new buildings; |
additions to existing
facilities; modernization projects
whose |
cost is in excess of $1,000,000 or 10% of the facilities' |
operating
revenue, whichever is less; and such other projects |
as the State Board shall
define and prescribe pursuant to this |
Act. The State Board may extend the
obligation period upon a |
showing of good cause by the permit holder. Permits
for |
projects that have not been obligated within the prescribed |
obligation
period shall expire on the last day of that period.
|
Persons who otherwise would be required to obtain a permit |
shall be exempt
from such requirement if the State Board finds |
that with respect to
establishing
a new facility or |
construction of new buildings or additions or modifications
to |
an existing facility, final plans and specifications for such |
work have
prior to October 1, 1974, been submitted to and |
approved by the Department
of Public Health in accordance with |
the requirements of applicable laws.
Such exemptions shall be |
null and void after December 31, 1979 unless binding
|
construction contracts were signed prior to December 1, 1979 |
and unless
construction has commenced prior to December 31, |
1979. Such exemptions
shall be valid until such time as the |
project has been completed
provided that the project proceeds |
to completion with due diligence.
|
The acquisition by any person of major medical equipment |
that will not
be owned by or located in a health care facility |
|
and that will not be used
to provide services to inpatients of |
a health care facility shall be exempt
from review provided |
that a notice is filed in accordance with exemption
|
requirements.
|
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Act, no permit |
or exemption is
required for the construction or modification |
of a non-clinical service area
of a health care facility.
|
(Source: P.A. 91-782, eff. 6-9-00 .)
|
(20 ILCS 3960/5.4 new) |
Sec. 5.4. Safety Net Impact Statement. |
(a) General review criteria shall include a requirement |
that all health care facilities, with the exception of skilled |
and intermediate long-term care facilities licensed under the |
Nursing Home Care Act, provide a Safety Net Impact Statement, |
which shall be filed with an application for a substantive |
project or when the application proposes to discontinue a |
category of service. |
(b) For the purposes of this Section, "safety net services" |
are services provided by health care providers or organizations |
that deliver health care services to persons with barriers to |
mainstream health care due to lack of insurance, inability to |
pay, special needs, ethnic or cultural characteristics, or |
geographic isolation. Safety net service providers include, |
but are not limited to, hospitals and private practice |
physicians that provide charity care, school-based health |
|
centers, migrant health clinics, rural health clinics, |
federally qualified health centers, community health centers, |
public health departments, and community mental health |
centers. |
(c) As developed by the applicant, a Safety Net Impact |
Statement shall describe all of the following: |
(1) The project's material impact, if any, on essential |
safety net services in the community, to the extent that it |
is feasible for an applicant to have such knowledge. |
(2) The project's impact on the ability of another |
provider or health care system to cross-subsidize safety |
net services, if reasonably known to the applicant. |
(3) How the discontinuation of a facility or service |
might impact the remaining safety net providers in a given |
community, if reasonably known by the applicant. |
(d) Safety Net Impact Statements shall also include all of |
the following: |
(1) For the 3 fiscal years prior to the application, a |
certification describing the amount of charity care |
provided by the applicant. The amount calculated by |
hospital applicants shall be in accordance with the |
reporting requirements for charity care reporting in the |
Illinois Community Benefits Act. Non-hospital applicants |
shall report charity care, at cost, in accordance with an |
appropriate methodology specified by the Board. |
(2) For the 3 fiscal years prior to the application, a |
|
certification of the amount of care provided to Medicaid |
patients. Hospital and non-hospital applicants shall |
provide Medicaid information in a manner consistent with |
the information reported each year to the Illinois |
Department of Public Health regarding "Inpatients and |
Outpatients Served by Payor Source" and "Inpatient and |
Outpatient Net Revenue by Payor Source" as required by the |
Board under Section 13 of this Act and published in the |
Annual Hospital Profile. |
(3) Any information the applicant believes is directly |
relevant to safety net services, including information |
regarding teaching, research, and any other service. |
(e) The Board staff shall publish a notice, that an |
application accompanied by a Safety Net Impact Statement has |
been filed, in a newspaper having general circulation within |
the area affected by the application. If no newspaper has a |
general circulation within the county, the Board shall post the |
notice in 5 conspicuous places within the proposed area. |
(f) Any person, community organization, provider, or |
health system or other entity wishing to comment upon or oppose |
the application may file a Safety Net Impact Statement Response |
with the Board, which shall provide additional information |
concerning a project's impact on safety net services in the |
community. |
(g) Applicants shall be provided an opportunity to submit a |
reply to any Safety Net Impact Statement Response. |
|
(h) The Board staff report shall include a statement as to |
whether a Safety Net Impact Statement was filed by the |
applicant and whether it included information on charity care, |
the amount of care provided to Medicaid patients, and |
information on teaching, research, or any other service |
provided by the applicant directly relevant to safety net |
services. The report shall also indicate the names of the |
parties submitting responses and the number of responses and |
replies, if any, that were filed.
|
(20 ILCS 3960/6) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1156)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on July 1, 2009)
|
Sec. 6. Application for permit or exemption; exemption |
regulations.
|
(a) An application for a permit or exemption shall be made |
to
the State Board upon forms provided by the State Board. This |
application
shall contain such information
as the State Board |
deems necessary. The State Board shall not require an applicant |
to file a Letter of Intent before an application is filed. Such
|
application shall include affirmative evidence on which the |
Director may
make the findings required under this Section and |
upon which the State
Board or Chairman may make its decision on |
the approval or denial of the permit or
exemption.
|
(b) The State Board shall establish by regulation the |
procedures and
requirements
regarding issuance of exemptions.
|
An exemption shall be approved when information required by the |
|
Board by rule
is submitted. Projects
eligible for an exemption, |
rather than a permit, include, but are not limited
to,
change |
of ownership of a health care facility. For a change of
|
ownership of a health care
facility between related persons, |
the State Board shall provide by rule for an
expedited
process |
for obtaining an exemption. In connection with a change of |
ownership, the State Board may approve the transfer of an |
existing permit without regard to whether the permit to be |
transferred has yet been obligated, except for permits |
establishing a new facility or a new category of service.
|
(c) All applications shall be signed by the applicant and |
shall be
verified by any 2 officers thereof.
|
(c-5) Any written review or findings of the Board staff |
Agency or any other reviewing organization under Section 8 |
concerning an application for a permit must be made available |
to the public at least 14 calendar days before the meeting of |
the State Board at which the review or findings are considered. |
The applicant and members of the public may submit, to the |
State Board, written responses regarding the facts set forth in |
support of or in opposition to the review or findings of the |
Board staff Agency or reviewing organization. Members of the |
public shall submit any written response at least 10 days |
before the meeting of the State Board. The Board staff may |
revise any findings to address corrections of factual errors |
cited in the public response. A written response must be |
submitted at least 2 business days before the meeting of the |
|
State Board. At the meeting, the State Board may, in its |
discretion, permit the submission of other additional written |
materials.
|
(d) Upon receipt of an application for a permit, the State |
Board shall
approve and authorize the issuance of a permit if |
it finds (1) that the
applicant is fit, willing, and able to |
provide a proper standard of
health care service for the |
community with particular regard to the
qualification, |
background and character of the applicant, (2) that
economic |
feasibility is demonstrated in terms of effect on the existing
|
and projected operating budget of the applicant and of the |
health care
facility; in terms of the applicant's ability to |
establish and operate
such facility in accordance with |
licensure regulations promulgated under
pertinent state laws; |
and in terms of the projected impact on the total
health care |
expenditures in the facility and community, (3) that
safeguards |
are provided which assure that the establishment,
construction |
or modification of the health care facility or acquisition
of |
major medical equipment is consistent
with the public interest, |
and (4) that the proposed project is consistent
with the |
orderly and economic
development of such facilities and |
equipment and is in accord with standards,
criteria, or plans |
of need adopted and approved pursuant to the
provisions of |
Section 12 of this Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 95-237, eff. 1-1-08 .)
|
|
(20 ILCS 3960/8.5) |
(Section scheduled to be repealed on July 1, 2009) |
Sec. 8.5. Certificate of exemption for change of ownership |
of a health care facility; public notice and public hearing. |
(a) Upon a finding by the Department of Public Health that |
an application for a change of ownership is complete, the |
Department of Public Health shall publish a legal notice on 3 |
consecutive days in a newspaper of general circulation in the |
area or community to be affected and afford the public an |
opportunity to request a hearing. If the application is for a |
facility located in a Metropolitan Statistical Area, an |
additional legal notice shall be published in a newspaper of |
limited circulation, if one exists, in the area in which the |
facility is located. If the newspaper of limited circulation is |
published on a daily basis, the additional legal notice shall |
be published on 3 consecutive days. The legal notice shall also |
be posted on the Health Facilities and Services Review Board's |
Illinois Health Facilities Planning Board's web site and sent |
to the State Representative and State Senator of the district |
in which the health care facility is located. The Department of |
Public Health shall not find that an application for change of |
ownership of a hospital is complete without a signed |
certification that for a period of 2 years after the change of |
ownership transaction is effective, the hospital will not adopt |
a charity care policy that is
more restrictive than the policy |
in effect during the year prior to the transaction. |
|
For the purposes of this subsection, "newspaper of limited |
circulation" means a newspaper intended to serve a particular |
or defined population of a specific geographic area within a |
Metropolitan Statistical Area such as a municipality, town, |
village, township, or community area, but does not include |
publications of professional and trade associations.
|
(b) If a public hearing is requested, it shall be held at |
least 15 days but no more than 30 days after the date of |
publication of the legal notice in the community in which the |
facility is located. The hearing shall be held in a place of |
reasonable size and accessibility and a full and complete |
written transcript of the proceedings shall be made. The |
applicant shall provide a summary of the proposed change of |
ownership for distribution at the public hearing.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-935, eff. 1-1-05 .)
|
(20 ILCS 3960/12) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1162)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on July 1, 2009)
|
Sec. 12. Powers and duties of State Board. For purposes of |
this Act,
the State Board
shall
exercise the following powers |
and duties:
|
(1) Prescribe rules,
regulations, standards, criteria, |
procedures or reviews which may vary
according to the purpose |
for which a particular review is being conducted
or the type of |
project reviewed and which are required to carry out the
|
provisions and purposes of this Act. Policies and procedures of |
|
the State Board shall take into consideration the priorities |
and needs of medically underserved areas and other health care |
services identified through the comprehensive health planning |
process, giving special consideration to the impact of projects |
on access to safety net services.
|
(2) Adopt procedures for public
notice and hearing on all |
proposed rules, regulations, standards,
criteria, and plans |
required to carry out the provisions of this Act.
|
(3) (Blank). Prescribe criteria for
recognition for |
areawide health planning organizations, including, but
not |
limited to, standards for evaluating the scientific bases for
|
judgments on need and procedure for making these |
determinations.
|
(4) Develop criteria and standards for health care |
facilities planning,
conduct statewide inventories of health |
care facilities, maintain an updated
inventory on the Board's |
Department's web site reflecting the
most recent bed and |
service
changes and updated need determinations when new census |
data become available
or new need formulae
are adopted,
and
|
develop health care facility plans which shall be utilized in |
the review of
applications for permit under
this Act. Such |
health facility plans shall be coordinated by the Board Agency
|
with the health care facility plans areawide health planning
|
organizations and with other pertinent State Plans. |
Inventories pursuant to this Section of skilled or intermediate |
care facilities licensed under the Nursing Home Care Act or |
|
nursing homes licensed under the Hospital Licensing Act shall |
be conducted on an annual basis no later than July 1 of each |
year and shall include among the information requested a list |
of all services provided by a facility to its residents and to |
the community at large and differentiate between active and |
inactive beds.
|
In developing health care facility plans, the State Board |
shall consider,
but shall not be limited to, the following:
|
(a) The size, composition and growth of the population |
of the area
to be served;
|
(b) The number of existing and planned facilities |
offering similar
programs;
|
(c) The extent of utilization of existing facilities;
|
(d) The availability of facilities which may serve as |
alternatives
or substitutes;
|
(e) The availability of personnel necessary to the |
operation of the
facility;
|
(f) Multi-institutional planning and the establishment |
of
multi-institutional systems where feasible;
|
(g) The financial and economic feasibility of proposed |
construction
or modification; and
|
(h) In the case of health care facilities established |
by a religious
body or denomination, the needs of the |
members of such religious body or
denomination may be |
considered to be public need.
|
The health care facility plans which are developed and |
|
adopted in
accordance with this Section shall form the basis |
for the plan of the State
to deal most effectively with |
statewide health needs in regard to health
care facilities.
|
(5) Coordinate with the Center for Comprehensive Health |
Planning and other state agencies having responsibilities
|
affecting health care facilities, including those of licensure |
and cost
reporting.
|
(6) Solicit, accept, hold and administer on behalf of the |
State
any grants or bequests of money, securities or property |
for
use by the State Board or Center for Comprehensive Health |
Planning or recognized areawide health planning
organizations |
in the administration of this Act; and enter into contracts
|
consistent with the appropriations for purposes enumerated in |
this Act.
|
(7) The State Board shall prescribe , in
consultation with |
the recognized
areawide health planning organizations, |
procedures for review, standards,
and criteria which shall be |
utilized
to make periodic areawide reviews and determinations |
of the appropriateness
of any existing health services being |
rendered by health care facilities
subject to the Act. The |
State Board shall consider recommendations of the
Board |
areawide health planning organization and the Agency in making |
its
determinations.
|
(8) Prescribe, in consultation
with the Center for |
Comprehensive Health Planning recognized areawide health |
planning organizations , rules, regulations,
standards, and |
|
criteria for the conduct of an expeditious review of
|
applications
for permits for projects of construction or |
modification of a health care
facility, which projects are |
classified as emergency, substantive, or non-substantive in |
nature. |
Six months after the effective date of this amendatory Act |
of the 96th General Assembly, substantive projects shall |
include no more than the following: |
(a) Projects to construct (1) a new or replacement |
facility located on a new site or
(2) a replacement |
facility located on the same site as the original facility |
and the cost of the replacement facility exceeds the |
capital expenditure minimum; or |
(b) Projects proposing a
(1) new service or
(2) |
discontinuation of a service, which shall be reviewed by |
the Board within 60 days. |
(c) Projects proposing a change in the bed capacity of |
a health care facility by an increase in the total number |
of beds or by a redistribution of beds among various |
categories of service or by a relocation of beds from one |
physical facility or site to another by more than 20 beds |
or more than 10% of total bed capacity, as defined by the |
State Board, whichever is less, over a 2-year period. |
The Chairman may approve applications for exemption that |
meet the criteria set forth in rules or refer them to the full |
Board. The Chairman may approve any unopposed application that |
|
meets all of the review criteria or refer them to the full |
Board. |
Such rules shall
not abridge the right of the Center for |
Comprehensive Health Planning areawide health planning |
organizations to make
recommendations on the classification |
and approval of projects, nor shall
such rules prevent the |
conduct of a public hearing upon the timely request
of an |
interested party. Such reviews shall not exceed 60 days from |
the
date the application is declared to be complete by the |
Agency .
|
(9) Prescribe rules, regulations,
standards, and criteria |
pertaining to the granting of permits for
construction
and |
modifications which are emergent in nature and must be |
undertaken
immediately to prevent or correct structural |
deficiencies or hazardous
conditions that may harm or injure |
persons using the facility, as defined
in the rules and |
regulations of the State Board. This procedure is exempt
from |
public hearing requirements of this Act.
|
(10) Prescribe rules,
regulations, standards and criteria |
for the conduct of an expeditious
review, not exceeding 60 |
days, of applications for permits for projects to
construct or |
modify health care facilities which are needed for the care
and |
treatment of persons who have acquired immunodeficiency |
syndrome (AIDS)
or related conditions.
|
(11) Issue written decisions upon request of the applicant |
or an adversely affected party to the Board within 30 days of |
|
the meeting in which a final decision has been made. A "final |
decision" for purposes of this Act is the decision to approve |
or deny an application, or take other actions permitted under |
this Act, at the time and date of the meeting that such action |
is scheduled by the Board. The staff of the State Board shall |
prepare a written copy of the final decision and the State |
Board shall approve a final copy for inclusion in the formal |
record. |
(12) Require at least one of its members to participate in |
any public hearing, after the appointment of the 9 members to |
the Board. |
(13) Provide a mechanism for the public to comment on, and |
request changes to, draft rules and standards. |
(14) Implement public information campaigns to regularly |
inform the general public about the opportunity for public |
hearings and public hearing procedures. |
(15) Establish a separate set of rules and guidelines for |
long-term care that recognizes that nursing homes are a |
different business line and service model from other regulated |
facilities. An open and transparent process shall be developed |
that considers the following: how skilled nursing fits in the |
continuum of care with other care providers, modernization of |
nursing homes, establishment of more private rooms, |
development of alternative services, and current trends in |
long-term care services.
The Chairman of the Board shall |
appoint a permanent Health Services Review Board Long-term Care |
|
Facility Advisory Subcommittee that shall develop and |
recommend to the Board the rules to be established by the Board |
under this paragraph (15). The Subcommittee shall also provide |
continuous review and commentary on policies and procedures |
relative to long-term care and the review of related projects. |
In consultation with other experts from the health field of |
long-term care, the Board and the Subcommittee shall study new |
approaches to the current bed need formula and Health Service |
Area boundaries to encourage flexibility and innovation in |
design models reflective of the changing long-term care |
marketplace and consumer preferences. The Board shall file the |
proposed related administrative rules for the separate rules |
and guidelines for long-term care required by this paragraph |
(15) by September 1, 2010. The Subcommittee shall be provided a |
reasonable and timely opportunity to review and comment on any |
review, revision, or updating of the criteria, standards, |
procedures, and rules used to evaluate project applications as |
provided under Section 12.3 of this Act prior to approval by |
the Board and promulgation of related rules. |
(Source: P.A. 93-41, eff. 6-27-03; 94-983, eff. 6-30-06 .)
|
(20 ILCS 3960/12.2)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on July 1, 2009)
|
Sec. 12.2. Powers of the State Board staff Agency . For |
purposes of this Act,
the staff Agency shall exercise the |
following powers and duties:
|
|
(1) Review applications for permits and exemptions in |
accordance with the
standards, criteria, and plans of need |
established by the State Board under
this Act and certify its |
finding to the State Board.
|
(1.5) Post the following on the Board's Department's web |
site: relevant (i)
rules,
(ii)
standards, (iii)
criteria, (iv) |
State norms, (v) references used by Agency staff in making
|
determinations about whether application criteria are met, and |
(vi) notices of
project-related filings, including notice of |
public comments related to the
application.
|
(2) Charge and collect an amount determined by the State |
Board and the staff to be
reasonable fees for the processing of |
applications by the State Board , the
Agency, and the |
appropriate recognized areawide health planning organization .
|
The State Board shall set the amounts by rule. Application fees |
for continuing care retirement communities, and other health |
care models that include regulated and unregulated components, |
shall apply only to those components subject to regulation |
under this Act. All fees and fines
collected under the |
provisions of this Act shall be deposited
into the Illinois |
Health Facilities Planning Fund to be used for the
expenses of |
administering this Act.
|
(2.1) Publish the following reports on the State Board |
website: |
(A) An annual accounting, aggregated by category and |
with names of parties redacted, of fees, fines, and other |
|
revenue collected as well as expenses incurred, in the |
administration of this Act. |
(B) An annual report, with names of the parties |
redacted, that summarizes all settlement agreements |
entered into with the State Board that resolve an alleged |
instance of noncompliance with State Board requirements |
under this Act. |
(C) A monthly report that includes the status of |
applications and recommendations regarding updates to the |
standard, criteria, or the health plan as appropriate. |
(D) Board reports showing the degree to which an |
application conforms to the review standards, a summation |
of relevant public testimony, and any additional |
information that staff wants to communicate. |
(3) Coordinate with other State agencies having |
responsibilities
affecting
health care facilities, including |
the Center for Comprehensive Health Planning and those of |
licensure and cost reporting.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-41, eff. 6-27-03 .)
|
(20 ILCS 3960/12.3)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on July 1, 2009)
|
Sec. 12.3. Revision of criteria, standards, and rules. At |
least every 2 years Before December 31, 2004 , the State Board |
shall review, revise, and
update promulgate the
criteria, |
standards, and rules used to evaluate applications for permit. |
|
To the
extent practicable,
the criteria, standards, and rules |
shall be based on objective criteria using the inventory and |
recommendations of the Comprehensive Health Plan for guidance. |
The Board may appoint temporary advisory committees made up of |
experts with professional competence in the subject matter of |
the proposed standards or criteria to assist in the development |
of revisions to standards and criteria . In
particular, the |
review of
the criteria, standards, and rules shall consider:
|
(1) Whether the criteria and standards reflect current |
industry standards
and
anticipated trends.
|
(2) Whether the criteria and standards can be reduced |
or eliminated.
|
(3) Whether criteria and standards can be developed to |
authorize the
construction
of unfinished space for future |
use when the ultimate need for such space can be
reasonably
|
projected.
|
(4) Whether the criteria and standards take into |
account issues related to
population growth and changing |
demographics in a community.
|
(5) Whether facility-defined service and planning |
areas should be
recognized.
|
(6) Whether categories of service that are subject to |
review should be re-evaluated, including provisions |
related to structural, functional, and operational |
differences between long-term care facilities and acute |
care facilities and that allow routine changes of |
|
ownership, facility sales, and closure requests to be |
processed on a more timely basis. |
(Source: P.A. 93-41, eff. 6-27-03 .)
|
(20 ILCS 3960/15.1) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1165.1)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on July 1, 2009)
|
Sec. 15.1.
No individual who, as a member of the State |
Board or of an
areawide health planning organization board , or |
as an employee of the State
or of an areawide health planning |
organization , shall, by reason of his
performance of any duty, |
function, or activity required of, or authorized
to be |
undertaken by this Act, be liable for the payment of damages |
under
any law of the State, if he has acted within the scope of |
such duty, function,
or activity, has exercised due care, and |
has acted, with respect to that
performance, without malice |
toward any person affected by it.
|
(Source: P.A. 80-941 .)
|
(20 ILCS 3960/19.5)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on July 1, 2009 and as |
provided internally)
|
Sec. 19.5. Audit. Twenty-four months after the last member |
of the 9-member Board is appointed, as required under this |
amendatory Act of the 96th General Assembly, and 36 months |
thereafter Upon the effective date of this amendatory Act of |
the
91st General Assembly , the Auditor General shall commence a |
|
performance audit of the Center for Comprehensive Health |
Planning, State Board, and the Certificate of Need processes |
must commence an audit of the State
Board to determine:
|
(1) whether progress is being made to develop a |
Comprehensive Health Plan and whether resources are |
sufficient to meet the goals of the Center for |
Comprehensive Health Planning; whether the State Board can |
demonstrate that the certificate of need
process is |
successful in controlling health care costs, allowing |
public access
to necessary health services, and |
guaranteeing the availability of quality
health care to the |
general public;
|
(2) whether changes to the Certificate of Need |
processes are being implemented effectively, as well as |
their impact, if any, on access to safety net services; and |
whether the State Board is following its adopted rules and |
procedures;
|
(3) whether fines and settlements are fair, |
consistent, and in proportion to the degree of violations. |
whether the State Board is consistent in awarding and |
denying
certificates of need; and
|
(4) whether the State Board's annual reports reflect a |
cost savings to the
State.
|
The Auditor General must report on the results of the audit |
to the General
Assembly.
|
This Section is repealed when the Auditor General files his |
|
or her report
with the General Assembly.
|
(Source: P.A. 91-782, eff. 6-9-00 .)
|
(20 ILCS 3960/19.6)
|
(Section scheduled to be repealed on July 1, 2009)
|
Sec. 19.6. Repeal. This Act is repealed on December 31, |
2019 July 1, 2009 .
|
(Source: P.A. 94-983, eff. 6-30-06; 95-1, eff. 3-30-07; 95-5, |
eff. 5-31-07; 95-771, eff. 7-31-08.)
|
(20 ILCS 3960/8 rep.)
|
(20 ILCS 3960/9 rep.)
|
(20 ILCS 3960/15.5 rep.) |
Section 25. The Illinois Health Facilities Planning Act is |
amended by repealing Sections 8, 9, and 15.5. |
Section 30. The Hospital Basic Services Preservation Act is |
amended by changing Section 15 as follows: |
(20 ILCS 4050/15)
|
Sec. 15. Basic services loans. |
(a) Essential community hospitals seeking |
collateralization of loans under this Act must apply to the |
Health Facilities and Services Review Board Illinois Health |
Facilities Planning Board on a form prescribed by the Health |
Facilities and Services Review Board Illinois Health |
|
Facilities Planning Board by rule. The Health Facilities and |
Services Review Board Illinois Health Facilities Planning |
Board shall review the application and, if it approves the |
applicant's plan, shall forward the application and its |
approval to the Hospital Basic Services Review Board. |
(b) Upon receipt of the applicant's application and |
approval from the Health Facilities and Services Review Board |
Illinois Health Facilities Planning Board , the Hospital Basic |
Services Review Board shall request from the applicant and the |
applicant shall submit to the Hospital Basic Services Review |
Board all of the following information: |
(1) A copy of the hospital's last audited financial |
statement. |
(2) The percentage of the hospital's patients each year |
who are Medicaid patients. |
(3) The percentage of the hospital's patients each year |
who are Medicare patients. |
(4) The percentage of the hospital's patients each year |
who are uninsured. |
(5) The percentage of services provided by the hospital |
each year for which the hospital expected payment but for |
which no payment was received. |
(6) Any other information required by the Hospital |
Basic Services Review Board by rule. |
The Hospital Basic Services Review Board shall review the |
applicant's original application, the approval of the Health |
|
Facilities and Services Review Board Illinois Health |
Facilities Planning Board , and the information provided by the |
applicant to the Hospital Basic Services Review Board under |
this Section and make a recommendation to the State Treasurer |
to accept or deny the application. |
(c) If the Hospital Basic Services Review Board recommends |
that the application be accepted, the State Treasurer may |
collateralize the applicant's basic service loan for eligible |
expenses related to completing, attaining, or upgrading basic |
services, including, but not limited to, delivery, |
installation, staff training, and other eligible expenses as |
defined by the State Treasurer by rule. The total cost for any |
one project to be undertaken by the applicants shall not exceed |
$10,000,000 and the amount of each basic services loan |
collateralized under this Act shall not exceed $5,000,000. |
Expenditures related to basic service loans shall not exceed |
the amount available in the Fund necessary to collateralize the |
loans. The terms of any basic services loan collateralized |
under this Act must be approved by the State Treasurer in |
accordance with standards established by the State Treasurer by |
rule.
|
(Source: P.A. 94-648, eff. 1-1-06.)
|
Section 35. The Illinois State Auditing Act is amended by |
changing Section 3-1 as follows:
|
|
(30 ILCS 5/3-1) (from Ch. 15, par. 303-1)
|
Sec. 3-1. Jurisdiction of Auditor General. The Auditor |
General has
jurisdiction over all State agencies to make post |
audits and investigations
authorized by or under this Act or |
the Constitution.
|
The Auditor General has jurisdiction over local government |
agencies
and private agencies only:
|
(a) to make such post audits authorized by or under |
this Act as are
necessary and incidental to a post audit of |
a State agency or of a
program administered by a State |
agency involving public funds of the
State, but this |
jurisdiction does not include any authority to review
local |
governmental agencies in the obligation, receipt, |
expenditure or
use of public funds of the State that are |
granted without limitation or
condition imposed by law, |
other than the general limitation that such
funds be used |
for public purposes;
|
(b) to make investigations authorized by or under this |
Act or the
Constitution; and
|
(c) to make audits of the records of local government |
agencies to verify
actual costs of state-mandated programs |
when directed to do so by the
Legislative Audit Commission |
at the request of the State Board of Appeals
under the |
State Mandates Act.
|
In addition to the foregoing, the Auditor General may |
conduct an
audit of the Metropolitan Pier and Exposition |
|
Authority, the
Regional Transportation Authority, the Suburban |
Bus Division, the Commuter
Rail Division and the Chicago |
Transit Authority and any other subsidized
carrier when |
authorized by the Legislative Audit Commission. Such audit
may |
be a financial, management or program audit, or any combination |
thereof.
|
The audit shall determine whether they are operating in |
accordance with
all applicable laws and regulations. Subject to |
the limitations of this
Act, the Legislative Audit Commission |
may by resolution specify additional
determinations to be |
included in the scope of the audit.
|
In addition to the foregoing, the Auditor General must also |
conduct a
financial audit of
the Illinois Sports Facilities |
Authority's expenditures of public funds in
connection with the |
reconstruction, renovation, remodeling, extension, or
|
improvement of all or substantially all of any existing |
"facility", as that
term is defined in the Illinois Sports |
Facilities Authority Act.
|
The Auditor General may also conduct an audit, when |
authorized by
the Legislative Audit Commission, of any hospital |
which receives 10% or
more of its gross revenues from payments |
from the State of Illinois,
Department of Healthcare and Family |
Services (formerly Department of Public Aid), Medical |
Assistance Program.
|
The Auditor General is authorized to conduct financial and |
compliance
audits of the Illinois Distance Learning Foundation |
|
and the Illinois
Conservation Foundation.
|
As soon as practical after the effective date of this |
amendatory Act of
1995, the Auditor General shall conduct a |
compliance and management audit of
the City of
Chicago and any |
other entity with regard to the operation of Chicago O'Hare
|
International Airport, Chicago Midway Airport and Merrill C. |
Meigs Field. The
audit shall include, but not be limited to, an |
examination of revenues,
expenses, and transfers of funds; |
purchasing and contracting policies and
practices; staffing |
levels; and hiring practices and procedures. When
completed, |
the audit required by this paragraph shall be distributed in
|
accordance with Section 3-14.
|
The Auditor General shall conduct a financial and |
compliance and program
audit of distributions from the |
Municipal Economic Development Fund
during the immediately |
preceding calendar year pursuant to Section 8-403.1 of
the |
Public Utilities Act at no cost to the city, village, or |
incorporated town
that received the distributions.
|
The Auditor General must conduct an audit of the Health |
Facilities and Services Review Board Health Facilities |
Planning
Board pursuant to Section 19.5 of the Illinois Health |
Facilities Planning
Act.
|
The Auditor General of the State of Illinois shall annually |
conduct or
cause to be conducted a financial and compliance |
audit of the books and records
of any county water commission |
organized pursuant to the Water Commission Act
of 1985 and |
|
shall file a copy of the report of that audit with the Governor |
and
the Legislative Audit Commission. The filed audit shall be |
open to the public
for inspection. The cost of the audit shall |
be charged to the county water
commission in accordance with |
Section 6z-27 of the State Finance Act. The
county water |
commission shall make available to the Auditor General its |
books
and records and any other documentation, whether in the |
possession of its
trustees or other parties, necessary to |
conduct the audit required. These
audit requirements apply only |
through July 1, 2007.
|
The Auditor General must conduct audits of the Rend Lake |
Conservancy
District as provided in Section 25.5 of the River |
Conservancy Districts Act.
|
The Auditor General must conduct financial audits of the |
Southeastern Illinois Economic Development Authority as |
provided in Section 70 of the Southeastern Illinois Economic |
Development Authority Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 95-331, eff. 8-21-07.)
|
Section 40. The Alternative Health Care Delivery Act is |
amended by changing Sections 20, 30, and 36.5 as follows:
|
(210 ILCS 3/20)
|
Sec. 20. Board responsibilities. The State Board of Health |
shall have the
responsibilities set forth in this Section.
|
(a) The Board shall investigate new health care delivery |
|
models and
recommend to the Governor and the General Assembly, |
through the Department,
those models that should be authorized |
as alternative health care models for
which demonstration |
programs should be initiated. In its deliberations, the
Board |
shall use the following criteria:
|
(1) The feasibility of operating the model in Illinois, |
based on a
review of the experience in other states |
including the impact on health
professionals of other |
health care programs or facilities.
|
(2) The potential of the model to meet an unmet need.
|
(3) The potential of the model to reduce health care |
costs to
consumers, costs to third party payors, and |
aggregate costs to the public.
|
(4) The potential of the model to maintain or improve |
the standards of
health care delivery in some measurable |
fashion.
|
(5) The potential of the model to provide increased |
choices or access for
patients.
|
(b) The Board shall evaluate and make recommendations to |
the Governor and
the General Assembly, through the Department, |
regarding alternative health care
model demonstration programs |
established under this Act, at the midpoint and
end of the |
period of operation of the demonstration programs. The report |
shall
include, at a minimum, the following:
|
(1) Whether the alternative health care models |
improved
access to health care for their service |
|
populations in the State.
|
(2) The quality of care provided by the alternative |
health care models as
may be evidenced by health outcomes, |
surveillance reports, and administrative
actions taken by |
the Department.
|
(3) The cost and cost effectiveness to the public, |
third-party payors, and
government of the alternative |
health care models, including the impact of pilot
programs |
on aggregate health care costs in the area. In addition to |
any other
information collected by the Board under this |
Section, the Board shall collect
from postsurgical |
recovery care centers uniform billing data substantially |
the
same as specified in Section 4-2(e) of the Illinois |
Health Finance Reform Act.
To facilitate its evaluation of |
that data, the Board shall forward a copy of
the data to |
the Illinois Health Care Cost Containment Council. All |
patient
identifiers shall be removed from the data before |
it is submitted to the Board
or Council.
|
(4) The impact of the alternative health care models on |
the health
care system in that area, including changing |
patterns of patient demand and
utilization, financial |
viability, and feasibility of operation of service in
|
inpatient and alternative models in the area.
|
(5) The implementation by alternative health care |
models of any special
commitments made during application |
review to the Health Facilities and Services Review Board |
|
Illinois Health Facilities
Planning Board .
|
(6) The continuation, expansion, or modification of |
the alternative health
care models.
|
(c) The Board shall advise the Department on the definition |
and scope of
alternative health care models demonstration |
programs.
|
(d) In carrying out its responsibilities under this |
Section, the
Board shall seek the advice of other Department |
advisory boards or committees
that may be impacted by the |
alternative health care model or the proposed
model of health |
care delivery. The Board shall also seek input from other
|
interested parties, which may include holding public hearings.
|
(e) The Board shall otherwise advise the Department on the |
administration of
the Act as the Board deems appropriate.
|
(Source: P.A. 87-1188; 88-441.)
|
(210 ILCS 3/30)
|
Sec. 30. Demonstration program requirements. The |
requirements set forth in
this Section shall apply to |
demonstration programs.
|
(a) There shall be no more than:
|
(i) 3 subacute care hospital alternative health care |
models in the City of
Chicago (one of which shall be |
located on a designated site and shall have been
licensed |
as a hospital under the Illinois Hospital Licensing Act |
within the 10
years immediately before the application for |
|
a license);
|
(ii) 2 subacute care hospital alternative health care |
models in the
demonstration program for each of the |
following areas:
|
(1) Cook County outside the City of Chicago.
|
(2) DuPage, Kane, Lake, McHenry, and Will |
Counties.
|
(3) Municipalities with a population greater than |
50,000 not
located in the areas described in item (i) |
of subsection (a) and paragraphs
(1) and (2) of item |
(ii) of subsection (a); and
|
(iii) 4 subacute care hospital alternative health care
|
models in the demonstration program for rural areas.
|
In selecting among applicants for these
licenses in rural |
areas, the Health Facilities and Services Review Board Health |
Facilities Planning Board and the
Department shall give |
preference to hospitals that may be unable for economic
reasons |
to provide continued service to the community in which they are |
located
unless the hospital were to receive an alternative |
health care model license.
|
(a-5) There shall be no more than a total of 12 |
postsurgical
recovery care
center alternative health care |
models in the demonstration program, located as
follows:
|
(1) Two in the City of Chicago.
|
(2) Two in Cook County outside the City of Chicago. At |
least
one of these shall be owned or operated by a hospital |
|
devoted exclusively to
caring for children.
|
(3) Two in Kane, Lake, and McHenry Counties.
|
(4) Four in municipalities with a population of 50,000 |
or more
not located
in the areas described in paragraphs |
(1), (2), and (3), 3 of which
shall be
owned or operated by |
hospitals, at least 2 of which shall be located in
counties |
with a population of less than 175,000, according to the |
most recent
decennial census for which data are available, |
and one of
which shall be owned or operated by
an |
ambulatory surgical treatment center.
|
(5) Two in rural areas,
both of which shall be owned or |
operated by
hospitals.
|
There shall be no postsurgical recovery care center |
alternative health care
models located in counties with |
populations greater than 600,000 but less
than 1,000,000. A |
proposed postsurgical recovery care center must be owned or
|
operated by a hospital if it is to be located within, or will |
primarily serve
the residents of, a health service area in |
which more than 60% of the gross
patient revenue of the |
hospitals within that health service area are derived
from |
Medicaid and Medicare, according to the most recently available |
calendar
year data from the Illinois Health Care Cost |
Containment Council. Nothing in
this paragraph shall preclude a |
hospital and an ambulatory surgical treatment
center from |
forming a joint venture or developing a collaborative agreement |
to
own or operate a postsurgical recovery care center.
|
|
(a-10) There shall be no more than a total of 8 children's |
respite care
center alternative health care models in the |
demonstration program, which shall
be located as follows:
|
(1) One in the City of Chicago.
|
(2) One in Cook County outside the City of Chicago.
|
(3) A total of 2 in the area comprised of DuPage, Kane, |
Lake, McHenry, and
Will counties.
|
(4) A total of 2 in municipalities with a population of |
50,000 or more and
not
located in the areas described in |
paragraphs (1), (2), or (3).
|
(5) A total of 2 in rural areas, as defined by the |
Health Facilities and Services Review Board Health |
Facilities
Planning Board .
|
No more than one children's respite care model owned and |
operated by a
licensed skilled pediatric facility shall be |
located in each of the areas
designated in this subsection |
(a-10).
|
(a-15) There shall be an authorized community-based |
residential
rehabilitation center alternative health care |
model in the demonstration
program. The community-based |
residential rehabilitation center shall be
located in the area |
of Illinois south of Interstate Highway 70.
|
(a-20) There shall be an authorized
Alzheimer's disease |
management center alternative health care model in the
|
demonstration program. The Alzheimer's disease management |
center shall be
located in Will
County, owned by a
|
|
not-for-profit entity, and endorsed by a resolution approved by |
the county
board before the effective date of this amendatory |
Act of the 91st General
Assembly.
|
(a-25) There shall be no more than 10 birth center |
alternative health care
models in the demonstration program, |
located as follows:
|
(1) Four in the area comprising Cook, DuPage, Kane, |
Lake, McHenry, and
Will counties, one of
which shall be |
owned or operated by a hospital and one of which shall be |
owned
or operated by a federally qualified health center.
|
(2) Three in municipalities with a population of 50,000 |
or more not
located in the area described in paragraph (1) |
of this subsection, one of
which shall be owned or operated |
by a hospital and one of which shall be owned
or operated |
by a federally qualified health center.
|
(3) Three in rural areas, one of which shall be owned |
or operated by a
hospital and one of which shall be owned |
or operated by a federally qualified
health center.
|
The first 3 birth centers authorized to operate by the |
Department shall be
located in or predominantly serve the |
residents of a health professional
shortage area as determined |
by the United States Department of Health and Human
Services. |
There shall be no more than 2 birth centers authorized to |
operate in
any single health planning area for obstetric |
services as determined under the
Illinois Health Facilities |
Planning Act. If a birth center is located outside
of a
health |
|
professional shortage area, (i) the birth center shall be |
located in a
health planning
area with a demonstrated need for |
obstetrical service beds, as determined by
the Health |
Facilities and Services Review Board Illinois Health |
Facilities Planning Board or (ii) there must be a
reduction in
|
the existing number of obstetrical service beds in the planning |
area so that
the establishment of the birth center does not |
result in an increase in the
total number of obstetrical |
service beds in the health planning area.
|
(b) Alternative health care models, other than a model |
authorized under subsections (a-10) and
subsection (a-20), |
shall obtain a certificate of
need from the Health Facilities |
and Services Review Board Illinois Health Facilities Planning |
Board under the Illinois
Health Facilities Planning Act before |
receiving a license by the
Department.
If, after obtaining its |
initial certificate of need, an alternative health
care |
delivery model that is a community based residential |
rehabilitation center
seeks to
increase the bed capacity of |
that center, it must obtain a certificate of need
from the |
Health Facilities and Services Review Board Illinois Health |
Facilities Planning Board before increasing the bed
capacity. |
Alternative
health care models in medically underserved areas
|
shall receive priority in obtaining a certificate of need.
|
(c) An alternative health care model license shall be |
issued for a
period of one year and shall be annually renewed |
if the facility or
program is in substantial compliance with |
|
the Department's rules
adopted under this Act. A licensed |
alternative health care model that continues
to be in |
substantial compliance after the conclusion of the |
demonstration
program shall be eligible for annual renewals |
unless and until a different
licensure program for that type of |
health care model is established by
legislation. The Department |
may issue a provisional license to any
alternative health care |
model that does not substantially comply with the
provisions of |
this Act and the rules adopted under this Act if (i)
the |
Department finds that the alternative health care model has |
undertaken
changes and corrections which upon completion will |
render the alternative
health care model in substantial |
compliance with this Act and rules and
(ii) the health and |
safety of the patients of the alternative
health care model |
will be protected during the period for which the provisional
|
license is issued. The Department shall advise the licensee of
|
the conditions under which the provisional license is issued, |
including
the manner in which the alternative health care model |
fails to comply with
the provisions of this Act and rules, and |
the time within which the changes
and corrections necessary for |
the alternative health care model to
substantially comply with |
this Act and rules shall be completed.
|
(d) Alternative health care models shall seek |
certification under Titles
XVIII and XIX of the federal Social |
Security Act. In addition, alternative
health care models shall |
provide charitable care consistent with that provided
by |
|
comparable health care providers in the geographic area.
|
(d-5) The Department of Healthcare and Family Services |
(formerly Illinois Department of Public Aid), in cooperation |
with the
Illinois Department of
Public Health, shall develop |
and implement a reimbursement methodology for all
facilities |
participating in the demonstration program. The Department of |
Healthcare and Family Services shall keep a record of services |
provided under the demonstration
program to recipients of |
medical assistance under the Illinois Public Aid Code
and shall |
submit an annual report of that information to the Illinois
|
Department of Public Health.
|
(e) Alternative health care models shall, to the extent |
possible,
link and integrate their services with nearby health |
care facilities.
|
(f) Each alternative health care model shall implement a |
quality
assurance program with measurable benefits and at |
reasonable cost.
|
(Source: P.A. 95-331, eff. 8-21-07; 95-445, eff. 1-1-08.)
|
(210 ILCS 3/36.5)
|
Sec. 36.5. Alternative health care models authorized. |
Notwithstanding
any other law to the contrary, alternative |
health care models described in
part 1 of Section 35 shall be |
licensed without additional consideration by the Health |
Facilities and Services Review Board
Illinois Health |
Facilities Planning Board if:
|
|
(1) an application for such a model was filed with the |
Health Facilities and Services Review Board Illinois |
Health
Facilities Planning Board prior to September 1, |
1994;
|
(2) the application was received by the Health |
Facilities and Services Review Board Illinois Health |
Facilities
Planning
Board and was awarded at least the |
minimum number of points required for
approval by the
Board |
or, if the application was withdrawn prior to Board
action, |
the
staff
report recommended at least the minimum number of |
points required for approval
by the Board; and
|
(3) the applicant complies with all regulations of the |
Illinois Department
of Public Health to receive a license |
pursuant to part 1 of Section 35.
|
(Source: P.A. 89-393, eff. 8-20-95.)
|
Section 45. The Assisted Living and Shared Housing Act is |
amended by changing Section 145 as follows:
|
(210 ILCS 9/145)
|
Sec. 145. Conversion of facilities. Entities licensed as
|
facilities
under the Nursing Home Care Act may elect to convert
|
to a license under this Act. Any facility that
chooses to |
convert, in whole or in part, shall follow the requirements in |
the
Nursing Home Care Act and rules promulgated under that Act |
regarding voluntary
closure and notice to residents. Any |
|
conversion of existing beds licensed
under the Nursing Home |
Care Act to licensure under this Act is exempt from
review by |
the Health Facilities and Services Review Board Health |
Facilities Planning Board .
|
(Source: P.A. 91-656, eff. 1-1-01.)
|
Section 50. The Emergency Medical Services (EMS) Systems |
Act is amended by changing Section 32.5 as follows:
|
(210 ILCS 50/32.5)
|
Sec. 32.5. Freestanding Emergency Center.
|
(a) Until June 30, 2009, the Department shall issue an |
annual Freestanding Emergency Center (FEC)
license to any |
facility that:
|
(1) is located: (A) in a municipality with
a population
|
of 75,000 or fewer inhabitants; (B) within 20 miles of the
|
hospital that owns or controls the FEC; and (C) within 20 |
miles of the Resource
Hospital affiliated with the FEC as |
part of the EMS System;
|
(2) is wholly owned or controlled by an Associate or |
Resource Hospital,
but is not a part of the hospital's |
physical plant;
|
(3) meets the standards for licensed FECs, adopted by |
rule of the
Department, including, but not limited to:
|
(A) facility design, specification, operation, and |
maintenance
standards;
|
|
(B) equipment standards; and
|
(C) the number and qualifications of emergency |
medical personnel and
other staff, which must include |
at least one board certified emergency
physician |
present at the FEC 24 hours per day.
|
(4) limits its participation in the EMS System strictly |
to receiving a
limited number of BLS runs by emergency |
medical vehicles according to protocols
developed by the |
Resource Hospital within the FEC's
designated EMS System |
and approved by the Project Medical Director and the
|
Department;
|
(5) provides comprehensive emergency treatment |
services, as defined in the
rules adopted by the Department |
pursuant to the Hospital Licensing Act, 24
hours per day, |
on an outpatient basis;
|
(6) provides an ambulance and
maintains on site |
ambulance services staffed with paramedics 24 hours per |
day;
|
(7) maintains helicopter landing capabilities approved |
by appropriate
State and federal authorities;
|
(8) complies with all State and federal patient rights |
provisions,
including, but not limited to, the Emergency |
Medical Treatment Act and the
federal Emergency
Medical |
Treatment and Active Labor Act;
|
(9) maintains a communications system that is fully |
integrated with
its Resource Hospital within the FEC's |
|
designated EMS System;
|
(10) reports to the Department any patient transfers |
from the FEC to a
hospital within 48 hours of the transfer |
plus any other
data
determined to be relevant by the |
Department;
|
(11) submits to the Department, on a quarterly basis, |
the FEC's morbidity
and mortality rates for patients |
treated at the FEC and other data determined
to be relevant |
by the Department;
|
(12) does not describe itself or hold itself out to the |
general public as
a full service hospital or hospital |
emergency department in its advertising or
marketing
|
activities;
|
(13) complies with any other rules adopted by the
|
Department
under this Act that relate to FECs;
|
(14) passes the Department's site inspection for |
compliance with the FEC
requirements of this Act;
|
(15) submits a copy of the permit issued by
the Health |
Facilities and Services Review Board Illinois Health |
Facilities Planning Board indicating that the facility has |
complied with the Illinois Health Facilities Planning Act |
with respect to the health services to be provided at the |
facility;
|
(16) submits an application for designation as an FEC |
in a manner and form
prescribed by the Department by rule; |
and
|
|
(17) pays the annual license fee as determined by the |
Department by
rule.
|
(b) The Department shall:
|
(1) annually inspect facilities of initial FEC |
applicants and licensed
FECs, and issue
annual licenses to |
or annually relicense FECs that
satisfy the Department's |
licensure requirements as set forth in subsection (a);
|
(2) suspend, revoke, refuse to issue, or refuse to |
renew the license of
any
FEC, after notice and an |
opportunity for a hearing, when the Department finds
that |
the FEC has failed to comply with the standards and |
requirements of the
Act or rules adopted by the Department |
under the
Act;
|
(3) issue an Emergency Suspension Order for any FEC |
when the
Director or his or her designee has determined |
that the continued operation of
the FEC poses an immediate |
and serious danger to
the public health, safety, and |
welfare.
An opportunity for a
hearing shall be promptly |
initiated after an Emergency Suspension Order has
been |
issued; and
|
(4) adopt rules as needed to implement this Section.
|
(Source: P.A. 95-584, eff. 8-31-07.)
|
Section 55. The Health Care Worker Self-Referral Act is |
amended by changing Sections 5, 15, and 30 as follows:
|
|
(225 ILCS 47/5)
|
Sec. 5. Legislative intent. The General Assembly |
recognizes that
patient referrals by health care workers for |
health services
to an entity in which the referring health care |
worker has an investment
interest may present
a potential |
conflict of interest. The General Assembly finds that these |
referral
practices may limit or completely eliminate |
competitive alternatives in the health care
market. In some |
instances, these referral practices may expand and improve care
|
or may make services available which were previously |
unavailable. They
may also provide
lower cost options to |
patients or increase competition. Generally,
referral |
practices are positive occurrences. However, self-referrals |
may
result in over utilization of health services, increased |
overall costs
of the health care systems, and may affect the |
quality of health care.
|
It is the intent of the General Assembly to provide |
guidance to health
care workers regarding acceptable patient |
referrals, to prohibit patient
referrals to entities providing |
health services in which the referring
health care worker has |
an investment interest, and to protect the
citizens of Illinois |
from unnecessary and costly health care expenditures.
|
Recognizing the need for flexibility to quickly respond to |
changes in
the delivery of health services, to avoid results |
beyond the
limitations on self referral provided under this Act |
and to provide minimal
disruption to the appropriate delivery |
|
of health care, the Health Facilities and Services Review Board |
Health
Facilities Planning Board shall be exclusively and |
solely authorized to
implement and interpret this Act through |
adopted rules.
|
The General Assembly recognizes that changes in delivery of |
health care has
resulted in various methods by which health |
care workers practice their
professions. It is not the intent |
of the General Assembly to limit
appropriate delivery of care, |
nor force unnecessary changes in the
structures created by |
workers for the health and convenience of their
patients.
|
(Source: P.A. 87-1207.)
|
(225 ILCS 47/15)
|
Sec. 15. Definitions. In this Act:
|
(a) "Board" means the Health Facilities and Services Review |
Board Health Facilities Planning Board .
|
(b) "Entity" means any individual, partnership, firm, |
corporation, or
other business that provides health services |
but does not include an
individual who is a health care worker |
who provides professional services
to an individual.
|
(c) "Group practice" means a group of 2 or more health care |
workers
legally organized as a partnership, professional |
corporation,
not-for-profit corporation, faculty
practice plan |
or a similar association in which:
|
(1) each health care worker who is a member or employee |
or an
independent contractor of the group provides
|
|
substantially the full range of services that the health |
care worker
routinely provides, including consultation, |
diagnosis, or treatment,
through the use of office space, |
facilities, equipment, or personnel of the
group;
|
(2) the services of the health care workers
are |
provided through the group, and payments received for |
health
services are treated as receipts of the group; and
|
(3) the overhead expenses and the income from the |
practice are
distributed by methods previously determined |
by the group.
|
(d) "Health care worker" means any individual licensed |
under the laws of
this State to provide health services, |
including but not limited to:
dentists licensed under the |
Illinois Dental Practice Act; dental hygienists
licensed under |
the Illinois Dental Practice Act; nurses and advanced practice
|
nurses licensed under the Nurse Practice Act;
occupational |
therapists licensed under
the
Illinois Occupational Therapy |
Practice Act; optometrists licensed under the
Illinois |
Optometric Practice Act of 1987; pharmacists licensed under the
|
Pharmacy Practice Act; physical therapists licensed under the
|
Illinois Physical Therapy Act; physicians licensed under the |
Medical
Practice Act of 1987; physician assistants licensed |
under the Physician
Assistant Practice Act of 1987; podiatrists |
licensed under the Podiatric
Medical Practice Act of 1987; |
clinical psychologists licensed under the
Clinical |
Psychologist Licensing Act; clinical social workers licensed |
|
under
the Clinical Social Work and Social Work Practice Act; |
speech-language
pathologists and audiologists licensed under |
the Illinois Speech-Language
Pathology and Audiology Practice |
Act; or hearing instrument
dispensers licensed
under the |
Hearing Instrument Consumer Protection Act, or any of
their |
successor Acts.
|
(e) "Health services" means health care procedures and |
services
provided by or through a health care worker.
|
(f) "Immediate family member" means a health care worker's |
spouse,
child, child's spouse, or a parent.
|
(g) "Investment interest" means an equity or debt security |
issued by an
entity, including, without limitation, shares of |
stock in a corporation,
units or other interests in a |
partnership, bonds, debentures, notes, or
other equity |
interests or debt instruments except that investment interest
|
for purposes of Section 20 does not include interest in a |
hospital licensed
under the laws of the State of Illinois.
|
(h) "Investor" means an individual or entity directly or |
indirectly
owning a legal or beneficial ownership or investment |
interest, (such as
through an immediate family member, trust, |
or another entity related to the investor).
|
(i) "Office practice" includes the facility or facilities |
at which a health
care worker, on an ongoing basis, provides or |
supervises the provision of
professional health services to |
individuals.
|
(j) "Referral" means any referral of a patient for health |
|
services,
including, without limitation:
|
(1) The forwarding of a patient by one health care |
worker to another
health care worker or to an entity |
outside the health care worker's office
practice or group |
practice that provides health services.
|
(2) The request or establishment by a health care
|
worker of a plan of care outside the health care worker's |
office practice
or group practice
that includes the |
provision of any health services.
|
(Source: P.A. 95-639, eff. 10-5-07; 95-689, eff. 10-29-07; |
95-876, eff. 8-21-08.)
|
(225 ILCS 47/30)
|
Sec. 30. Rulemaking. The Health Facilities and Services |
Review Board Health Facilities Planning Board
shall |
exclusively and solely implement the provisions of this Act |
pursuant
to rules adopted in accordance with the Illinois |
Administrative Procedure
Act concerning, but not limited to:
|
(a) Standards and procedures for the administration of this |
Act.
|
(b) Procedures and criteria for exceptions from the |
prohibitions set
forth in Section 20.
|
(c) Procedures and criteria for determining practical |
compliance with
the needs and alternative investor criteria in |
Section 20.
|
(d) Procedures and criteria for determining when a written |
|
request for
an opinion set forth in Section 20 is complete.
|
(e) Procedures and criteria for advising health care |
workers of the
applicability of this Act to practices pursuant |
to written requests.
|
(Source: P.A. 87-1207.)
|
Section 60. The Illinois Public Aid Code is amended by |
changing Section 5-5.02 as follows:
|
(305 ILCS 5/5-5.02) (from Ch. 23, par. 5-5.02)
|
Sec. 5-5.02. Hospital reimbursements.
|
(a) Reimbursement to Hospitals; July 1, 1992 through |
September 30, 1992.
Notwithstanding any other provisions of |
this Code or the Illinois
Department's Rules promulgated under |
the Illinois Administrative Procedure
Act, reimbursement to |
hospitals for services provided during the period
July 1, 1992 |
through September 30, 1992, shall be as follows:
|
(1) For inpatient hospital services rendered, or if |
applicable, for
inpatient hospital discharges occurring, |
on or after July 1, 1992 and on
or before September 30, |
1992, the Illinois Department shall reimburse
hospitals |
for inpatient services under the reimbursement |
methodologies in
effect for each hospital, and at the |
inpatient payment rate calculated for
each hospital, as of |
June 30, 1992. For purposes of this paragraph,
|
"reimbursement methodologies" means all reimbursement |
|
methodologies that
pertain to the provision of inpatient |
hospital services, including, but not
limited to, any |
adjustments for disproportionate share, targeted access,
|
critical care access and uncompensated care, as defined by |
the Illinois
Department on June 30, 1992.
|
(2) For the purpose of calculating the inpatient |
payment rate for each
hospital eligible to receive |
quarterly adjustment payments for targeted
access and |
critical care, as defined by the Illinois Department on |
June 30,
1992, the adjustment payment for the period July |
1, 1992 through September
30, 1992, shall be 25% of the |
annual adjustment payments calculated for
each eligible |
hospital, as of June 30, 1992. The Illinois Department |
shall
determine by rule the adjustment payments for |
targeted access and critical
care beginning October 1, |
1992.
|
(3) For the purpose of calculating the inpatient |
payment rate for each
hospital eligible to receive |
quarterly adjustment payments for
uncompensated care, as |
defined by the Illinois Department on June 30, 1992,
the |
adjustment payment for the period August 1, 1992 through |
September 30,
1992, shall be one-sixth of the total |
uncompensated care adjustment payments
calculated for each |
eligible hospital for the uncompensated care rate year,
as |
defined by the Illinois Department, ending on July 31, |
1992. The
Illinois Department shall determine by rule the |
|
adjustment payments for
uncompensated care beginning |
October 1, 1992.
|
(b) Inpatient payments. For inpatient services provided on |
or after October
1, 1993, in addition to rates paid for |
hospital inpatient services pursuant to
the Illinois Health |
Finance Reform Act, as now or hereafter amended, or the
|
Illinois Department's prospective reimbursement methodology, |
or any other
methodology used by the Illinois Department for |
inpatient services, the
Illinois Department shall make |
adjustment payments, in an amount calculated
pursuant to the |
methodology described in paragraph (c) of this Section, to
|
hospitals that the Illinois Department determines satisfy any |
one of the
following requirements:
|
(1) Hospitals that are described in Section 1923 of the |
federal Social
Security Act, as now or hereafter amended; |
or
|
(2) Illinois hospitals that have a Medicaid inpatient |
utilization
rate which is at least one-half a standard |
deviation above the mean Medicaid
inpatient utilization |
rate for all hospitals in Illinois receiving Medicaid
|
payments from the Illinois Department; or
|
(3) Illinois hospitals that on July 1, 1991 had a |
Medicaid inpatient
utilization rate, as defined in |
paragraph (h) of this Section,
that was at least the mean |
Medicaid inpatient utilization rate for all
hospitals in |
Illinois receiving Medicaid payments from the Illinois
|
|
Department and which were located in a planning area with |
one-third or
fewer excess beds as determined by the Health |
Facilities and Services Review Board Illinois Health |
Facilities
Planning Board , and that, as of June 30, 1992, |
were located in a federally
designated Health Manpower |
Shortage Area; or
|
(4) Illinois hospitals that:
|
(A) have a Medicaid inpatient utilization rate |
that is at least
equal to the mean Medicaid inpatient |
utilization rate for all hospitals in
Illinois |
receiving Medicaid payments from the Department; and
|
(B) also have a Medicaid obstetrical inpatient |
utilization
rate that is at least one standard |
deviation above the mean Medicaid
obstetrical |
inpatient utilization rate for all hospitals in |
Illinois
receiving Medicaid payments from the |
Department for obstetrical services; or
|
(5) Any children's hospital, which means a hospital |
devoted exclusively
to caring for children. A hospital |
which includes a facility devoted
exclusively to caring for |
children shall be considered a
children's hospital to the |
degree that the hospital's Medicaid care is
provided to |
children
if either (i) the facility devoted exclusively to |
caring for children is
separately licensed as a hospital by |
a municipality prior to
September
30, 1998 or
(ii) the |
hospital has been
designated
by the State
as a Level III |
|
perinatal care facility, has a Medicaid Inpatient
|
Utilization rate
greater than 55% for the rate year 2003 |
disproportionate share determination,
and has more than |
10,000 qualified children days as defined by
the
Department |
in rulemaking.
|
(c) Inpatient adjustment payments. The adjustment payments |
required by
paragraph (b) shall be calculated based upon the |
hospital's Medicaid
inpatient utilization rate as follows:
|
(1) hospitals with a Medicaid inpatient utilization |
rate below the mean
shall receive a per day adjustment |
payment equal to $25;
|
(2) hospitals with a Medicaid inpatient utilization |
rate
that is equal to or greater than the mean Medicaid |
inpatient utilization rate
but less than one standard |
deviation above the mean Medicaid inpatient
utilization |
rate shall receive a per day adjustment payment
equal to |
the sum of $25 plus $1 for each one percent that the |
hospital's
Medicaid inpatient utilization rate exceeds the |
mean Medicaid inpatient
utilization rate;
|
(3) hospitals with a Medicaid inpatient utilization |
rate that is equal
to or greater than one standard |
deviation above the mean Medicaid inpatient
utilization |
rate but less than 1.5 standard deviations above the mean |
Medicaid
inpatient utilization rate shall receive a per day |
adjustment payment equal to
the sum of $40 plus $7 for each |
one percent that the hospital's Medicaid
inpatient |
|
utilization rate exceeds one standard deviation above the |
mean
Medicaid inpatient utilization rate; and
|
(4) hospitals with a Medicaid inpatient utilization |
rate that is equal
to or greater than 1.5 standard |
deviations above the mean Medicaid inpatient
utilization |
rate shall receive a per day adjustment payment equal to |
the sum of
$90 plus $2 for each one percent that the |
hospital's Medicaid inpatient
utilization rate exceeds 1.5 |
standard deviations above the mean Medicaid
inpatient |
utilization rate.
|
(d) Supplemental adjustment payments. In addition to the |
adjustment
payments described in paragraph (c), hospitals as |
defined in clauses
(1) through (5) of paragraph (b), excluding |
county hospitals (as defined in
subsection (c) of Section 15-1 |
of this Code) and a hospital organized under the
University of |
Illinois Hospital Act, shall be paid supplemental inpatient
|
adjustment payments of $60 per day. For purposes of Title XIX |
of the federal
Social Security Act, these supplemental |
adjustment payments shall not be
classified as adjustment |
payments to disproportionate share hospitals.
|
(e) The inpatient adjustment payments described in |
paragraphs (c) and (d)
shall be increased on October 1, 1993 |
and annually thereafter by a percentage
equal to the lesser of |
(i) the increase in the DRI hospital cost index for the
most |
recent 12 month period for which data are available, or (ii) |
the
percentage increase in the statewide average hospital |
|
payment rate over the
previous year's statewide average |
hospital payment rate. The sum of the
inpatient adjustment |
payments under paragraphs (c) and (d) to a hospital, other
than |
a county hospital (as defined in subsection (c) of Section 15-1 |
of this
Code) or a hospital organized under the University of |
Illinois Hospital Act,
however, shall not exceed $275 per day; |
that limit shall be increased on
October 1, 1993 and annually |
thereafter by a percentage equal to the lesser of
(i) the |
increase in the DRI hospital cost index for the most recent |
12-month
period for which data are available or (ii) the |
percentage increase in the
statewide average hospital payment |
rate over the previous year's statewide
average hospital |
payment rate.
|
(f) Children's hospital inpatient adjustment payments. For |
children's
hospitals, as defined in clause (5) of paragraph |
(b), the adjustment payments
required pursuant to paragraphs |
(c) and (d) shall be multiplied by 2.0.
|
(g) County hospital inpatient adjustment payments. For |
county hospitals,
as defined in subsection (c) of Section 15-1 |
of this Code, there shall be an
adjustment payment as |
determined by rules issued by the Illinois Department.
|
(h) For the purposes of this Section the following terms |
shall be defined
as follows:
|
(1) "Medicaid inpatient utilization rate" means a |
fraction, the numerator
of which is the number of a |
hospital's inpatient days provided in a given
12-month |
|
period to patients who, for such days, were eligible for |
Medicaid
under Title XIX of the federal Social Security |
Act, and the denominator of
which is the total number of |
the hospital's inpatient days in that same period.
|
(2) "Mean Medicaid inpatient utilization rate" means |
the total number
of Medicaid inpatient days provided by all |
Illinois Medicaid-participating
hospitals divided by the |
total number of inpatient days provided by those same
|
hospitals.
|
(3) "Medicaid obstetrical inpatient utilization rate" |
means the
ratio of Medicaid obstetrical inpatient days to |
total Medicaid inpatient
days for all Illinois hospitals |
receiving Medicaid payments from the
Illinois Department.
|
(i) Inpatient adjustment payment limit. In order to meet |
the limits
of Public Law 102-234 and Public Law 103-66, the
|
Illinois Department shall by rule adjust
disproportionate |
share adjustment payments.
|
(j) University of Illinois Hospital inpatient adjustment |
payments. For
hospitals organized under the University of |
Illinois Hospital Act, there shall
be an adjustment payment as |
determined by rules adopted by the Illinois
Department.
|
(k) The Illinois Department may by rule establish criteria |
for and develop
methodologies for adjustment payments to |
hospitals participating under this
Article.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-40, eff. 6-27-03 .)
|
|
Section 65. The Older Adult Services Act is amended by |
changing Sections 20, 25, and 30 as follows: |
(320 ILCS 42/20)
|
Sec. 20. Priority service areas; service expansion. |
(a) The requirements of this Section are subject to the |
availability of funding. |
(b) The Department shall expand older adult services that |
promote independence and permit older adults to remain in their |
own homes and communities. Priority shall be given to both the |
expansion of services and the development of new services in |
priority service areas. |
(c) Inventory of services. The Department shall develop and |
maintain an inventory and assessment of (i) the types and |
quantities of public older adult services and, to the extent |
possible, privately provided older adult services, including |
the unduplicated count, location, and characteristics of |
individuals served by each facility, program, or service and |
(ii) the resources supporting those services. |
(d) Priority service areas. The Departments shall assess |
the current and projected need for older adult services |
throughout the State, analyze the results of the inventory, and |
identify priority service areas, which shall serve as the basis |
for a priority service plan to be filed with the Governor and |
the General Assembly no later than July 1, 2006, and every 5 |
years thereafter. |
|
(e) Moneys appropriated by the General Assembly for the |
purpose of this Section, receipts from donations, grants, fees, |
or taxes that may accrue from any public or private sources to |
the Department for the purpose of this Section, and savings |
attributable to the nursing home conversion program as |
calculated in subsection (h) shall be deposited into the |
Department on Aging State Projects Fund. Interest earned by |
those moneys in the Fund shall be credited to the Fund. |
(f) Moneys described in subsection (e) from the Department |
on Aging State Projects Fund shall be used for older adult |
services, regardless of where the older adult receives the |
service, with priority given to both the expansion of services |
and the development of new services in priority service areas. |
Fundable services shall include: |
(1) Housing, health services, and supportive services: |
(A) adult day care; |
(B) adult day care for persons with Alzheimer's |
disease and related disorders; |
(C) activities of daily living; |
(D) care-related supplies and equipment; |
(E) case management; |
(F) community reintegration; |
(G) companion; |
(H) congregate meals; |
(I) counseling and education; |
(J) elder abuse prevention and intervention; |
|
(K) emergency response and monitoring; |
(L) environmental modifications; |
(M) family caregiver support; |
(N) financial; |
(O) home delivered meals;
|
(P) homemaker; |
(Q) home health; |
(R) hospice; |
(S) laundry; |
(T) long-term care ombudsman; |
(U) medication reminders;
|
(V) money management; |
(W) nutrition services;
|
(X) personal care; |
(Y) respite care; |
(Z) residential care; |
(AA) senior benefits outreach; |
(BB) senior centers; |
(CC) services provided under the Assisted Living |
and Shared Housing Act, or sheltered care services that |
meet the requirements of the Assisted Living and Shared |
Housing Act, or services provided under Section |
5-5.01a of the Illinois Public Aid Code (the Supportive |
Living Facilities Program); |
(DD) telemedicine devices to monitor recipients in |
their own homes as an alternative to hospital care, |
|
nursing home care, or home visits; |
(EE) training for direct family caregivers; |
(FF) transition; |
(GG) transportation; |
(HH) wellness and fitness programs; and |
(II) other programs designed to assist older |
adults in Illinois to remain independent and receive |
services in the most integrated residential setting |
possible for that person. |
(2) Older Adult Services Demonstration Grants, |
pursuant to subsection (g) of this Section. |
(g) Older Adult Services Demonstration Grants. The |
Department shall establish a program of demonstration grants to |
assist in the restructuring of the delivery system for older |
adult services and provide funding for innovative service |
delivery models and system change and integration initiatives. |
The Department shall prescribe, by rule, the grant application |
process. At a minimum, every application must include: |
(1) The type of grant sought; |
(2) A description of the project; |
(3) The objective of the project; |
(4) The likelihood of the project meeting identified |
needs; |
(5) The plan for financing, administration, and |
evaluation of the project; |
(6) The timetable for implementation; |
|
(7) The roles and capabilities of responsible |
individuals and organizations; |
(8) Documentation of collaboration with other service |
providers, local community government leaders, and other |
stakeholders, other providers, and any other stakeholders |
in the community; |
(9) Documentation of community support for the |
project, including support by other service providers, |
local community government leaders, and other |
stakeholders;
|
(10) The total budget for the project; |
(11) The financial condition of the applicant; and |
(12) Any other application requirements that may be |
established by the Department by rule. |
Each project may include provisions for a designated staff |
person who is responsible for the development of the project |
and recruitment of providers. |
Projects may include, but are not limited to: adult family |
foster care; family adult day care; assisted living in a |
supervised apartment; personal services in a subsidized |
housing project; evening and weekend home care coverage; small |
incentive grants to attract new providers; money following the |
person; cash and counseling; managed long-term care; and at |
least one respite care project that establishes a local |
coordinated network of volunteer and paid respite workers, |
coordinates assignment of respite workers to caregivers and |
|
older adults, ensures the health and safety of the older adult, |
provides training for caregivers, and ensures that support |
groups are available in the community. |
A demonstration project funded in whole or in part by an |
Older Adult Services Demonstration Grant is exempt from the |
requirements of the Illinois Health Facilities Planning Act. To |
the extent applicable, however, for the purpose of maintaining |
the statewide inventory authorized by the Illinois Health |
Facilities Planning Act, the Department shall send to the |
Health Facilities and Services Review Board Health Facilities |
Planning Board a copy of each grant award made under this |
subsection (g). |
The Department, in collaboration with the Departments of |
Public Health and Healthcare and Family Services, shall |
evaluate the effectiveness of the projects receiving grants |
under this Section. |
(h) No later than July 1 of each year, the Department of |
Public Health shall provide information to the Department of |
Healthcare and Family Services to enable the Department of |
Healthcare and Family Services to annually document and verify |
the savings attributable to the nursing home conversion program |
for the previous fiscal year to estimate an annual amount of |
such savings that may be appropriated to the Department on |
Aging State Projects Fund and notify the General Assembly, the |
Department on Aging, the Department of Human Services, and the |
Advisory Committee of the savings no later than October 1 of |
|
the same fiscal year.
|
(Source: P.A. 94-342, eff. 7-26-05; 95-331, eff. 8-21-07.) |
(320 ILCS 42/25)
|
Sec. 25. Older adult services restructuring. No later than |
January 1, 2005, the Department shall commence the process of |
restructuring the older adult services delivery system. |
Priority shall be given to both the expansion of services and |
the development of new services in priority service areas. |
Subject to the availability of funding, the restructuring shall |
include, but not be limited to, the following:
|
(1) Planning. The Department shall develop a plan to |
restructure the State's service delivery system for older |
adults. The plan shall include a schedule for the |
implementation of the initiatives outlined in this Act and all |
other initiatives identified by the participating agencies to |
fulfill the purposes of this Act. Financing for older adult |
services shall be based on the principle that "money follows |
the individual". The plan shall also identify potential |
impediments to delivery system restructuring and include any |
known regulatory or statutory barriers. |
(2) Comprehensive case management. The Department shall |
implement a statewide system of holistic comprehensive case |
management. The system shall include the identification and |
implementation of a universal, comprehensive assessment tool |
to be used statewide to determine the level of functional, |
|
cognitive, socialization, and financial needs of older adults. |
This tool shall be supported by an electronic intake, |
assessment, and care planning system linked to a central |
location. "Comprehensive case management" includes services |
and coordination such as (i) comprehensive assessment of the |
older adult (including the physical, functional, cognitive, |
psycho-social, and social needs of the individual); (ii) |
development and implementation of a service plan with the older |
adult to mobilize the formal and family resources and services |
identified in the assessment to meet the needs of the older |
adult, including coordination of the resources and services |
with any other plans that exist for various formal services, |
such as hospital discharge plans, and with the information and |
assistance services; (iii) coordination and monitoring of |
formal and family service delivery, including coordination and |
monitoring to ensure that services specified in the plan are |
being provided; (iv) periodic reassessment and revision of the |
status of the older adult with the older adult or, if |
necessary, the older adult's designated representative; and |
(v) in accordance with the wishes of the older adult, advocacy |
on behalf of the older adult for needed services or resources. |
(3) Coordinated point of entry. The Department shall |
implement and publicize a statewide coordinated point of entry |
using a uniform name, identity, logo, and toll-free number. |
(4) Public web site. The Department shall develop a public |
web site that provides links to available services, resources, |
|
and reference materials concerning caregiving, diseases, and |
best practices for use by professionals, older adults, and |
family caregivers. |
(5) Expansion of older adult services. The Department shall |
expand older adult services that promote independence and |
permit older adults to remain in their own homes and |
communities. |
(6) Consumer-directed home and community-based services. |
The Department shall expand the range of service options |
available to permit older adults to exercise maximum choice and |
control over their care. |
(7) Comprehensive delivery system. The Department shall |
expand opportunities for older adults to receive services in |
systems that integrate acute and chronic care. |
(8) Enhanced transition and follow-up services. The |
Department shall implement a program of transition from one |
residential setting to another and follow-up services, |
regardless of residential setting, pursuant to rules with |
respect to (i) resident eligibility, (ii) assessment of the |
resident's health, cognitive, social, and financial needs, |
(iii) development of transition plans, and (iv) the level of |
services that must be available before transitioning a resident |
from one setting to another. |
(9) Family caregiver support. The Department shall develop |
strategies for public and private financing of services that |
supplement and support family caregivers.
|
|
(10) Quality standards and quality improvement. The |
Department shall establish a core set of uniform quality |
standards for all providers that focus on outcomes and take |
into consideration consumer choice and satisfaction, and the |
Department shall require each provider to implement a |
continuous quality improvement process to address consumer |
issues. The continuous quality improvement process must |
benchmark performance, be person-centered and data-driven, and |
focus on consumer satisfaction.
|
(11) Workforce. The Department shall develop strategies to |
attract and retain a qualified and stable worker pool, provide |
living wages and benefits, and create a work environment that |
is conducive to long-term employment and career development. |
Resources such as grants, education, and promotion of career |
opportunities may be used. |
(12) Coordination of services. The Department shall |
identify methods to better coordinate service networks to |
maximize resources and minimize duplication of services and |
ease of application. |
(13) Barriers to services. The Department shall identify |
barriers to the provision, availability, and accessibility of |
services and shall implement a plan to address those barriers. |
The plan shall: (i) identify barriers, including but not |
limited to, statutory and regulatory complexity, reimbursement |
issues, payment issues, and labor force issues; (ii) recommend |
changes to State or federal laws or administrative rules or |
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regulations; (iii) recommend application for federal waivers |
to improve efficiency and reduce cost and paperwork; (iv) |
develop innovative service delivery models; and (v) recommend |
application for federal or private service grants. |
(14) Reimbursement and funding. The Department shall |
investigate and evaluate costs and payments by defining costs |
to implement a uniform, audited provider cost reporting system |
to be considered by all Departments in establishing payments. |
To the extent possible, multiple cost reporting mandates shall |
not be imposed. |
(15) Medicaid nursing home cost containment and Medicare |
utilization. The Department of Healthcare and Family Services |
(formerly Department of Public Aid), in collaboration with the |
Department on Aging and the Department of Public Health and in |
consultation with the Advisory Committee, shall propose a plan |
to contain Medicaid nursing home costs and maximize Medicare |
utilization. The plan must not impair the ability of an older |
adult to choose among available services. The plan shall |
include, but not be limited to, (i) techniques to maximize the |
use of the most cost-effective services without sacrificing |
quality and (ii) methods to identify and serve older adults in |
need of minimal services to remain independent, but who are |
likely to develop a need for more extensive services in the |
absence of those minimal services. |
(16) Bed reduction. The Department of Public Health shall |
implement a nursing home conversion program to reduce the |
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number of Medicaid-certified nursing home beds in areas with |
excess beds. The Department of Healthcare and Family Services |
shall investigate changes to the Medicaid nursing facility |
reimbursement system in order to reduce beds. Such changes may |
include, but are not limited to, incentive payments that will |
enable facilities to adjust to the restructuring and expansion |
of services required by the Older Adult Services Act, including |
adjustments for the voluntary closure or layaway of nursing |
home beds certified under Title XIX of the federal Social |
Security Act. Any savings shall be reallocated to fund |
home-based or community-based older adult services pursuant to |
Section 20. |
(17) Financing. The Department shall investigate and |
evaluate financing options for older adult services and shall |
make recommendations in the report required by Section 15 |
concerning the feasibility of these financing arrangements. |
These arrangements shall include, but are not limited to: |
(A) private long-term care insurance coverage for |
older adult services; |
(B) enhancement of federal long-term care financing |
initiatives; |
(C) employer benefit programs such as medical savings |
accounts for long-term care; |
(D) individual and family cost-sharing options; |
(E) strategies to reduce reliance on government |
programs; |
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(F) fraudulent asset divestiture and financial |
planning prevention; and |
(G) methods to supplement and support family and |
community caregiving. |
(18) Older Adult Services Demonstration Grants. The |
Department shall implement a program of demonstration grants |
that will assist in the restructuring of the older adult |
services delivery system, and shall provide funding for |
innovative service delivery models and system change and |
integration initiatives pursuant to subsection (g) of Section |
20. |
(19) Bed need methodology update. For the purposes of |
determining areas with excess beds, the Departments shall |
provide information and assistance to the Health Facilities and |
Services Review Board Health Facilities Planning Board to |
update the Bed Need Methodology for Long-Term Care to update |
the assumptions used to establish the methodology to make them |
consistent with modern older adult services.
|
(20) Affordable housing. The Departments shall utilize the |
recommendations of Illinois' Annual Comprehensive Housing |
Plan, as developed by the Affordable Housing Task Force through |
the Governor's Executive Order 2003-18, in their efforts to |
address the affordable housing needs of older adults.
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The Older Adult Services Advisory Committee shall |
investigate innovative and promising practices operating as |
demonstration or pilot projects in Illinois and in other |
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states. The Department on Aging shall provide the Older Adult |
Services Advisory Committee with a list of all demonstration or |
pilot projects funded by the Department on Aging, including |
those specified by rule, law, policy memorandum, or funding |
arrangement. The Committee shall work with the Department on |
Aging to evaluate the viability of expanding these programs |
into other areas of the State.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-1031, eff. 8-27-04; 94-236, eff. 7-14-05; |
94-766, eff. 1-1-07.) |
(320 ILCS 42/30)
|
Sec. 30. Nursing home conversion program. |
(a) The Department of Public Health, in collaboration with |
the Department on Aging and the Department of Healthcare and |
Family Services, shall establish a nursing home conversion |
program. Start-up grants, pursuant to subsections (l) and (m) |
of this Section, shall be made available to nursing homes as |
appropriations permit as an incentive to reduce certified beds, |
retrofit, and retool operations to meet new service delivery |
expectations and demands. |
(b) Grant moneys shall be made available for capital and |
other costs related to: (1) the conversion of all or a part of |
a nursing home to an assisted living establishment or a special |
program or unit for persons with Alzheimer's disease or related |
disorders licensed under the Assisted Living and Shared Housing |
Act or a supportive living facility established under Section |
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5-5.01a of the Illinois Public Aid Code; (2) the conversion of |
multi-resident bedrooms in the facility into single-occupancy |
rooms; and (3) the development of any of the services |
identified in a priority service plan that can be provided by a |
nursing home within the confines of a nursing home or |
transportation services. Grantees shall be required to provide |
a minimum of a 20% match toward the total cost of the project. |
(c) Nothing in this Act shall prohibit the co-location of |
services or the development of multifunctional centers under |
subsection (f) of Section 20, including a nursing home offering |
community-based services or a community provider establishing |
a residential facility. |
(d) A certified nursing home with at least 50% of its |
resident population having their care paid for by the Medicaid |
program is eligible to apply for a grant under this Section. |
(e) Any nursing home receiving a grant under this Section |
shall reduce the number of certified nursing home beds by a |
number equal to or greater than the number of beds being |
converted for one or more of the permitted uses under item (1) |
or (2) of subsection (b). The nursing home shall retain the |
Certificate of Need for its nursing and sheltered care beds |
that were converted for 15 years. If the beds are reinstated by |
the provider or its successor in interest, the provider shall |
pay to the fund from which the grant was awarded, on an |
amortized basis, the amount of the grant. The Department shall |
establish, by rule, the bed reduction methodology for nursing |
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homes that receive a grant pursuant to item (3) of subsection |
(b). |
(f) Any nursing home receiving a grant under this Section |
shall agree that, for a minimum of 10 years after the date that |
the grant is awarded, a minimum of 50% of the nursing home's |
resident population shall have their care paid for by the |
Medicaid program. If the nursing home provider or its successor |
in interest ceases to comply with the requirement set forth in |
this subsection, the provider shall pay to the fund from which |
the grant was awarded, on an amortized basis, the amount of the |
grant. |
(g) Before awarding grants, the Department of Public Health |
shall seek recommendations from the Department on Aging and the |
Department of Healthcare and Family Services. The Department of |
Public Health shall attempt to balance the distribution of |
grants among geographic regions, and among small and large |
nursing homes. The Department of Public Health shall develop, |
by rule, the criteria for the award of grants based upon the |
following factors:
|
(1) the unique needs of older adults (including those |
with moderate and low incomes), caregivers, and providers |
in the geographic area of the State the grantee seeks to |
serve; |
(2) whether the grantee proposes to provide services in |
a priority service area; |
(3) the extent to which the conversion or transition |
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will result in the reduction of certified nursing home beds |
in an area with excess beds; |
(4) the compliance history of the nursing home; and |
(5) any other relevant factors identified by the |
Department, including standards of need. |
(h) A conversion funded in whole or in part by a grant |
under this Section must not: |
(1) diminish or reduce the quality of services |
available to nursing home residents; |
(2) force any nursing home resident to involuntarily |
accept home-based or community-based services instead of |
nursing home services; |
(3) diminish or reduce the supply and distribution of |
nursing home services in any community below the level of |
need, as defined by the Department by rule; or |
(4) cause undue hardship on any person who requires |
nursing home care. |
(i) The Department shall prescribe, by rule, the grant |
application process. At a minimum, every application must |
include: |
(1) the type of grant sought; |
(2) a description of the project; |
(3) the objective of the project; |
(4) the likelihood of the project meeting identified |
needs; |
(5) the plan for financing, administration, and |
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evaluation of the project; |
(6) the timetable for implementation;
|
(7) the roles and capabilities of responsible |
individuals and organizations; |
(8) documentation of collaboration with other service |
providers, local community government leaders, and other |
stakeholders, other providers, and any other stakeholders |
in the community;
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(9) documentation of community support for the |
project, including support by other service providers, |
local community government leaders, and other |
stakeholders; |
(10) the total budget for the project;
|
(11) the financial condition of the applicant; and |
(12) any other application requirements that may be |
established by the Department by rule.
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(j) A conversion project funded in whole or in part by a |
grant under this Section is exempt from the requirements of the |
Illinois Health Facilities Planning Act.
The Department of |
Public Health, however, shall send to the Health Facilities and |
Services Review Board Health Facilities Planning Board a copy |
of each grant award made under this Section. |
(k) Applications for grants are public information, except |
that nursing home financial condition and any proprietary data |
shall be classified as nonpublic data.
|
(l) The Department of Public Health may award grants from |