Public Act 096-0431
 
SB2071 Enrolled LRB096 03629 NHT 13657 b

    AN ACT concerning education.
 
    Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
represented in the General Assembly:
 
    Section 5. The Counties Code is amended by changing Section
3-9005 as follows:
 
    (55 ILCS 5/3-9005)  (from Ch. 34, par. 3-9005)
    Sec. 3-9005. Powers and duties of State's attorney.
    (a) The duty of each State's attorney shall be:
        (1) To commence and prosecute all actions, suits,
    indictments and prosecutions, civil and criminal, in the
    circuit court for his county, in which the people of the
    State or county may be concerned.
        (2) To prosecute all forfeited bonds and
    recognizances, and all actions and proceedings for the
    recovery of debts, revenues, moneys, fines, penalties and
    forfeitures accruing to the State or his county, or to any
    school district or road district in his county; also, to
    prosecute all suits in his county against railroad or
    transportation companies, which may be prosecuted in the
    name of the People of the State of Illinois.
        (3) To commence and prosecute all actions and
    proceedings brought by any county officer in his official
    capacity.
        (4) To defend all actions and proceedings brought
    against his county, or against any county or State officer,
    in his official capacity, within his county.
        (5) To attend the examination of all persons brought
    before any judge on habeas corpus, when the prosecution is
    in his county.
        (6) To attend before judges and prosecute charges of
    felony or misdemeanor, for which the offender is required
    to be recognized to appear before the circuit court, when
    in his power so to do.
        (7) To give his opinion, without fee or reward, to any
    county officer in his county, upon any question or law
    relating to any criminal or other matter, in which the
    people or the county may be concerned.
        (8) To assist the attorney general whenever it may be
    necessary, and in cases of appeal from his county to the
    Supreme Court, to which it is the duty of the attorney
    general to attend, he shall furnish the attorney general at
    least 10 days before such is due to be filed, a manuscript
    of a proposed statement, brief and argument to be printed
    and filed on behalf of the people, prepared in accordance
    with the rules of the Supreme Court. However, if such
    brief, argument or other document is due to be filed by law
    or order of court within this 10 day period, then the
    State's attorney shall furnish such as soon as may be
    reasonable.
        (9) To pay all moneys received by him in trust, without
    delay, to the officer who by law is entitled to the custody
    thereof.
        (10) To notify, by first class mail, complaining
    witnesses of the ultimate disposition of the cases arising
    from an indictment or an information.
        (11) To perform such other and further duties as may,
    from time to time, be enjoined on him by law.
        (12) To appear in all proceedings by collectors of
    taxes against delinquent taxpayers for judgments to sell
    real estate, and see that all the necessary preliminary
    steps have been legally taken to make the judgment legal
    and binding.
        (13) To notify, by first-class mail, the State
    Superintendent of Education, the applicable regional
    superintendent of schools, and the superintendent of the
    employing school district or the chief school
    administrator of the employing nonpublic school, if any,
    upon the conviction of any individual known to possess a
    certificate issued pursuant to Article 21 of the School
    Code of any offense set forth in Section 21-23a of the
    School Code or any other felony conviction, providing the
    name of the certificate holder, the fact of the conviction,
    and the name and location of the court where the conviction
    occurred. The certificate holder must also be
    contemporaneously sent a copy of the notice.
    (b) The State's Attorney of each county shall have
authority to appoint one or more special investigators to serve
subpoenas, make return of process and conduct investigations
which assist the State's Attorney in the performance of his
duties. A special investigator shall not carry firearms except
with permission of the State's Attorney and only while carrying
appropriate identification indicating his employment and in
the performance of his assigned duties.
    Subject to the qualifications set forth in this subsection,
special investigators shall be peace officers and shall have
all the powers possessed by investigators under the State's
Attorneys Appellate Prosecutor's Act.
    No special investigator employed by the State's Attorney
shall have peace officer status or exercise police powers
unless he or she successfully completes the basic police
training course mandated and approved by the Illinois Law
Enforcement Training Standards Board or such board waives the
training requirement by reason of the special investigator's
prior law enforcement experience or training or both. Any
State's Attorney appointing a special investigator shall
consult with all affected local police agencies, to the extent
consistent with the public interest, if the special
investigator is assigned to areas within that agency's
jurisdiction.
    Before a person is appointed as a special investigator, his
fingerprints shall be taken and transmitted to the Department
of State Police. The Department shall examine its records and
submit to the State's Attorney of the county in which the
investigator seeks appointment any conviction information
concerning the person on file with the Department. No person
shall be appointed as a special investigator if he has been
convicted of a felony or other offense involving moral
turpitude. A special investigator shall be paid a salary and be
reimbursed for actual expenses incurred in performing his
assigned duties. The county board shall approve the salary and
actual expenses and appropriate the salary and expenses in the
manner prescribed by law or ordinance.
    (c) The State's Attorney may request and receive from
employers, labor unions, telephone companies, and utility
companies location information concerning putative fathers and
noncustodial parents for the purpose of establishing a child's
paternity or establishing, enforcing, or modifying a child
support obligation. In this subsection, "location information"
means information about (i) the physical whereabouts of a
putative father or noncustodial parent, (ii) the putative
father or noncustodial parent's employer, or (iii) the salary,
wages, and other compensation paid and the health insurance
coverage provided to the putative father or noncustodial parent
by the employer of the putative father or noncustodial parent
or by a labor union of which the putative father or
noncustodial parent is a member.
    (d) For each State fiscal year, the State's Attorney of
Cook County shall appear before the General Assembly and
request appropriations to be made from the Capital Litigation
Trust Fund to the State Treasurer for the purpose of providing
assistance in the prosecution of capital cases in Cook County
and for the purpose of providing assistance to the State in
post-conviction proceedings in capital cases under Article 122
of the Code of Criminal Procedure of 1963 and in relation to
petitions filed under Section 2-1401 of the Code of Civil
Procedure in relation to capital cases. The State's Attorney
may appear before the General Assembly at other times during
the State's fiscal year to request supplemental appropriations
from the Trust Fund to the State Treasurer.
    (e) The State's Attorney shall have the authority to enter
into a written agreement with the Department of Revenue for
pursuit of civil liability under Section 17-1a of the Criminal
Code of 1961 against persons who have issued to the Department
checks or other orders in violation of the provisions of
paragraph (d) of subsection (B) of Section 17-1 of the Criminal
Code of 1961, with the Department to retain the amount owing
upon the dishonored check or order along with the dishonored
check fee imposed under the Uniform Penalty and Interest Act,
with the balance of damages, fees, and costs collected under
Section 17-1a of the Criminal Code of 1961 to be retained by
the State's Attorney. The agreement shall not affect the
allocation of fines and costs imposed in any criminal
prosecution.
(Source: P.A. 92-492, eff. 1-1-02; 93-972, eff. 8-20-04.)
 
    Section 10. The School Code is amended by changing Sections
2-3.25o, 3-11, 10-21.9, 10-22.39, 21-1, 21-23, 21-23a, and
34-18.5 as follows:
 
    (105 ILCS 5/2-3.25o)
    Sec. 2-3.25o. Registration and recognition of non-public
elementary and secondary schools.
    (a) Findings. The General Assembly finds and declares (i)
that the Constitution of the State of Illinois provides that a
"fundamental goal of the People of the State is the educational
development of all persons to the limits of their capacities"
and (ii) that the educational development of every school
student serves the public purposes of the State. In order to
ensure that all Illinois students and teachers have the
opportunity to enroll and work in State-approved educational
institutions and programs, the State Board of Education shall
provide for the voluntary registration and recognition of
non-public elementary and secondary schools.
    (b) Registration. All non-public elementary and secondary
schools in the State of Illinois may voluntarily register with
the State Board of Education on an annual basis. Registration
shall be completed in conformance with procedures prescribed by
the State Board of Education. Information required for
registration shall include assurances of compliance (i) with
federal and State laws regarding health examination and
immunization, attendance, length of term, and
nondiscrimination and (ii) with applicable fire and health
safety requirements.
    (c) Recognition. All non-public elementary and secondary
schools in the State of Illinois may voluntarily seek the
status of "Non-public School Recognition" from the State Board
of Education. This status may be obtained by compliance with
administrative guidelines and review procedures as prescribed
by the State Board of Education. The guidelines and procedures
must recognize that some of the aims and the financial bases of
non-public schools are different from public schools and will
not be identical to those for public schools, nor will they be
more burdensome. The guidelines and procedures must also
recognize the diversity of non-public schools and shall not
impinge upon the noneducational relationships between those
schools and their clientele.
    (c-5) Prohibition against recognition. A non-public
elementary or secondary school may not obtain "Non-public
School Recognition" status unless the school requires all
certified and non-certified applicants for employment with the
school, after July 1, 2007, to authorize a fingerprint-based
criminal history records check as a condition of employment to
determine if such applicants have been convicted of any of the
enumerated criminal or drug offenses set forth in Section
21-23a of this Code this subsection (c-5) or have been
convicted, within 7 years of the application for employment, of
any other felony under the laws of this State or of any offense
committed or attempted in any other state or against the laws
of the United States that, if committed or attempted in this
State, would have been punishable as a felony under the laws of
this State.
    Authorization for the check shall be furnished by the
applicant to the school, except that if the applicant is a
substitute teacher seeking employment in more than one
non-public school, a teacher seeking concurrent part-time
employment positions with more than one non-public school (as a
reading specialist, special education teacher, or otherwise),
or an educational support personnel employee seeking
employment positions with more than one non-public school, then
only one of the non-public schools employing the individual
shall request the authorization. Upon receipt of this
authorization, the non-public school shall submit the
applicant's name, sex, race, date of birth, social security
number, fingerprint images, and other identifiers, as
prescribed by the Department of State Police, to the Department
of State Police.
    The Department of State Police and Federal Bureau of
Investigation shall furnish, pursuant to a fingerprint-based
criminal history records check, records of convictions,
forever and hereafter, until expunged, to the president or
principal of the non-public school that requested the check.
The Department of State Police shall charge that school a fee
for conducting such check, which fee must be deposited into the
State Police Services Fund and must not exceed the cost of the
inquiry. Subject to appropriations for these purposes, the
State Superintendent of Education shall reimburse non-public
schools for fees paid to obtain criminal history records checks
under this Section.
    A non-public school may not obtain recognition status
unless the school also performs a check of the Statewide Sex
Offender Database, as authorized by the Sex Offender Community
Notification Law, for each applicant for employment, after July
1, 2007, to determine whether the applicant has been
adjudicated a sex offender.
    Any information concerning the record of convictions
obtained by a non-public school's president or principal under
this Section is confidential and may be disseminated only to
the governing body of the non-public school or any other person
necessary to the decision of hiring the applicant for
employment. A copy of the record of convictions obtained from
the Department of State Police shall be provided to the
applicant for employment. Upon a check of the Statewide Sex
Offender Database, the non-public school shall notify the
applicant as to whether or not the applicant has been
identified in the Sex Offender Database as a sex offender. Any
information concerning the records of conviction obtained by
the non-public school's president or principal under this
Section for a substitute teacher seeking employment in more
than one non-public school, a teacher seeking concurrent
part-time employment positions with more than one non-public
school (as a reading specialist, special education teacher, or
otherwise), or an educational support personnel employee
seeking employment positions with more than one non-public
school may be shared with another non-public school's principal
or president to which the applicant seeks employment. Any
person who releases any criminal history record information
concerning an applicant for employment is guilty of a Class A
misdemeanor and may be subject to prosecution under federal
law, unless the release of such information is authorized by
this Section.
    No non-public school may obtain recognition status that
knowingly employs a person, hired after July 1, 2007, for whom
a Department of State Police and Federal Bureau of
Investigation fingerprint-based criminal history records check
and a Statewide Sex Offender Database check has not been
initiated or who has been convicted of any offense enumerated
in Section 21-23a of this Code or for committing attempted
first degree murder or for committing or attempting to commit
first degree murder or a Class X felony or any one or more of
the following offenses: (i) those defined in Sections 11-6,
11-9, 11-14, 11-15, 11-15.1, 11-16, 11-17, 11-18, 11-19,
11-19.1, 11-19.2, 11-20, 11-20.1, 11-21, 12-13, 12-14,
12-14.1, 12-15, and 12-16 of the Criminal Code of 1961; (ii)
those defined in the Cannabis Control Act, except those defined
in Sections 4(a), 4(b), and 5(a) of that Act; (iii) those
defined in the Illinois Controlled Substances Act; and (iv) any
offense committed or attempted in any other state or against
the laws of the United States that, if committed or attempted
in this State, would have been punishable as one or more of
those the foregoing offenses. No non-public school may obtain
recognition status under this Section that knowingly employs a
person who has been found to be the perpetrator of sexual or
physical abuse of a minor under 18 years of age pursuant to
proceedings under Article II of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987.
    In order to obtain recognition status under this Section, a
non-public school must require compliance with the provisions
of this subsection (c-5) from all employees of persons or firms
holding contracts with the school, including, but not limited
to, food service workers, school bus drivers, and other
transportation employees, who have direct, daily contact with
pupils. Any information concerning the records of conviction or
identification as a sex offender of any such employee obtained
by the non-public school principal or president must be
promptly reported to the school's governing body.
    (d) Public purposes. The provisions of this Section are in
the public interest, for the public benefit, and serve secular
public purposes.
    (e) Definition. For purposes of this Section, a non-public
school means any non-profit, non-home-based, and non-public
elementary or secondary school that is in compliance with Title
VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and attendance at which
satisfies the requirements of Section 26-1 of this Code.
(Source: P.A. 95-351, eff. 8-23-07.)
 
    (105 ILCS 5/3-11)  (from Ch. 122, par. 3-11)
    Sec. 3-11. Institutes or inservice training workshops. In
counties of less than 2,000,000 inhabitants, the regional
superintendent may arrange for or conduct district, regional,
or county institutes, or equivalent professional educational
experiences, not more than 4 days annually. Of those 4 days, 2
days may be used as a teacher's workshop, when approved by the
regional superintendent, up to 2 days may be used for
conducting parent-teacher conferences or up to 2 days may be
utilized as parental institute days as provided in Section
10-22.18d. A school district may use one of its 4 institute
days on the last day of the school term. "Institute" or
"Professional educational experiences" means any educational
gathering, demonstration of methods of instruction, visitation
of schools or other institutions or facilities, sexual abuse
and sexual assault awareness seminar, or training in First Aid
(which may include cardiopulmonary resuscitation or
defibrillator training) held or approved by the regional
superintendent and declared by him to be an institute day, or
parent-teacher conferences. With the concurrence of the State
Superintendent of Education, he or she may employ such
assistance as is necessary to conduct the institute. Two or
more adjoining counties may jointly hold an institute.
Institute instruction shall be free to holders of certificates
good in the county or counties holding the institute, and to
those who have paid an examination fee and failed to receive a
certificate.
    In counties of 2,000,000 or more inhabitants, the regional
superintendent may arrange for or conduct district, regional,
or county inservice training workshops, or equivalent
professional educational experiences, not more than 4 days
annually. Of those 4 days, 2 days may be used for conducting
parent-teacher conferences and up to 2 days may be utilized as
parental institute days as provided in Section 10-22.18d. A
school district may use one of those 4 days on the last day of
the school term. "Inservice Training Workshops" or
"Professional educational experiences" means any educational
gathering, demonstration of methods of instruction, visitation
of schools or other institutions or facilities, sexual abuse
and sexual assault awareness seminar, or training in First Aid
(which may include cardiopulmonary resuscitation or
defibrillator training) held or approved by the regional
superintendent and declared by him to be an inservice training
workshop, or parent-teacher conferences. With the concurrence
of the State Superintendent of Education, he may employ such
assistance as is necessary to conduct the inservice training
workshop. With the approval of the regional superintendent, 2
or more adjoining districts may jointly hold an inservice
training workshop. In addition, with the approval of the
regional superintendent, one district may conduct its own
inservice training workshop with subject matter consultants
requested from the county, State or any State institution of
higher learning.
    Such teachers institutes as referred to in this Section may
be held on consecutive or separate days at the option of the
regional superintendent having jurisdiction thereof.
    Whenever reference is made in this Act to "teachers
institute", it shall be construed to include the inservice
training workshops or equivalent professional educational
experiences provided for in this Section.
    Any institute advisory committee existing on April 1, 1995,
is dissolved and the duties and responsibilities of the
institute advisory committee are assumed by the regional office
of education advisory board.
    Districts providing inservice training programs shall
constitute inservice committees, 1/2 of which shall be
teachers, 1/4 school service personnel and 1/4 administrators
to establish program content and schedules.
    The teachers institutes shall include teacher training
committed to (i) peer counseling programs and other
anti-violence and conflict resolution programs, including
without limitation programs for preventing at risk students
from committing violent acts, and (ii) educator ethics and
teacher-student conduct. Beginning with the 2009-2010 school
year, the teachers institutes shall include instruction on
prevalent student chronic health conditions.
(Source: P.A. 94-197, eff. 7-12-05; 95-969, eff. 1-1-09.)
 
    (105 ILCS 5/10-21.9)  (from Ch. 122, par. 10-21.9)
    Sec. 10-21.9. Criminal history records checks and checks of
the Statewide Sex Offender Database and Statewide Child
Murderer and Violent Offender Against Youth Database.
    (a) Certified and noncertified applicants for employment
with a school district, except school bus driver applicants,
are required as a condition of employment to authorize a
fingerprint-based criminal history records check to determine
if such applicants have been convicted of any of the enumerated
criminal or drug offenses in subsection (c) of this Section or
have been convicted, within 7 years of the application for
employment with the school district, of any other felony under
the laws of this State or of any offense committed or attempted
in any other state or against the laws of the United States
that, if committed or attempted in this State, would have been
punishable as a felony under the laws of this State.
Authorization for the check shall be furnished by the applicant
to the school district, except that if the applicant is a
substitute teacher seeking employment in more than one school
district, a teacher seeking concurrent part-time employment
positions with more than one school district (as a reading
specialist, special education teacher or otherwise), or an
educational support personnel employee seeking employment
positions with more than one district, any such district may
require the applicant to furnish authorization for the check to
the regional superintendent of the educational service region
in which are located the school districts in which the
applicant is seeking employment as a substitute or concurrent
part-time teacher or concurrent educational support personnel
employee. Upon receipt of this authorization, the school
district or the appropriate regional superintendent, as the
case may be, shall submit the applicant's name, sex, race, date
of birth, social security number, fingerprint images, and other
identifiers, as prescribed by the Department of State Police,
to the Department. The regional superintendent submitting the
requisite information to the Department of State Police shall
promptly notify the school districts in which the applicant is
seeking employment as a substitute or concurrent part-time
teacher or concurrent educational support personnel employee
that the check of the applicant has been requested. The
Department of State Police and the Federal Bureau of
Investigation shall furnish, pursuant to a fingerprint-based
criminal history records check, records of convictions, until
expunged, to the president of the school board for the school
district that requested the check, or to the regional
superintendent who requested the check. The Department shall
charge the school district or the appropriate regional
superintendent a fee for conducting such check, which fee shall
be deposited in the State Police Services Fund and shall not
exceed the cost of the inquiry; and the applicant shall not be
charged a fee for such check by the school district or by the
regional superintendent. Subject to appropriations for these
purposes, the State Superintendent of Education shall
reimburse school districts and regional superintendents for
fees paid to obtain criminal history records checks under this
Section.
    (a-5) The school district or regional superintendent shall
further perform a check of the Statewide Sex Offender Database,
as authorized by the Sex Offender Community Notification Law,
for each applicant.
    (a-6) The school district or regional superintendent shall
further perform a check of the Statewide Child Murderer and
Violent Offender Against Youth Database, as authorized by the
Child Murderer and Violent Offender Against Youth Community
Notification Law, for each applicant.
    (b) Any information concerning the record of convictions
obtained by the president of the school board or the regional
superintendent shall be confidential and may only be
transmitted to the superintendent of the school district or his
designee, the appropriate regional superintendent if the check
was requested by the school district, the presidents of the
appropriate school boards if the check was requested from the
Department of State Police by the regional superintendent, the
State Superintendent of Education, the State Teacher
Certification Board or any other person necessary to the
decision of hiring the applicant for employment. A copy of the
record of convictions obtained from the Department of State
Police shall be provided to the applicant for employment. Upon
the check of the Statewide Sex Offender Database, the school
district or regional superintendent shall notify an applicant
as to whether or not the applicant has been identified in the
Database as a sex offender. If a check of an applicant for
employment as a substitute or concurrent part-time teacher or
concurrent educational support personnel employee in more than
one school district was requested by the regional
superintendent, and the Department of State Police upon a check
ascertains that the applicant has not been convicted of any of
the enumerated criminal or drug offenses in subsection (c) or
has not been convicted, within 7 years of the application for
employment with the school district, of any other felony under
the laws of this State or of any offense committed or attempted
in any other state or against the laws of the United States
that, if committed or attempted in this State, would have been
punishable as a felony under the laws of this State and so
notifies the regional superintendent and if the regional
superintendent upon a check ascertains that the applicant has
not been identified in the Sex Offender Database as a sex
offender, then the regional superintendent shall issue to the
applicant a certificate evidencing that as of the date
specified by the Department of State Police the applicant has
not been convicted of any of the enumerated criminal or drug
offenses in subsection (c) or has not been convicted, within 7
years of the application for employment with the school
district, of any other felony under the laws of this State or
of any offense committed or attempted in any other state or
against the laws of the United States that, if committed or
attempted in this State, would have been punishable as a felony
under the laws of this State and evidencing that as of the date
that the regional superintendent conducted a check of the
Statewide Sex Offender Database, the applicant has not been
identified in the Database as a sex offender. The school board
of any school district may rely on the certificate issued by
any regional superintendent to that substitute teacher,
concurrent part-time teacher, or concurrent educational
support personnel employee or may initiate its own criminal
history records check of the applicant through the Department
of State Police and its own check of the Statewide Sex Offender
Database as provided in subsection (a). Any person who releases
any confidential information concerning any criminal
convictions of an applicant for employment shall be guilty of a
Class A misdemeanor, unless the release of such information is
authorized by this Section.
    (c) No school board shall knowingly employ a person who has
been convicted of any offense that would subject him or her to
certification suspension or revocation pursuant to Section
21-23a of this Code. for committing attempted first degree
murder or for committing or attempting to commit first degree
murder or a Class X felony or any one or more of the following
offenses: (i) those defined in Sections 11-6, 11-9, 11-14,
11-15, 11-15.1, 11-16, 11-17, 11-18, 11-19, 11-19.1, 11-19.2,
11-20, 11-20.1, 11-21, 12-13, 12-14, 12-14.1, 12-15 and 12-16
of the Criminal Code of 1961; (ii) those defined in the
Cannabis Control Act except those defined in Sections 4(a),
4(b) and 5(a) of that Act; (iii) those defined in the Illinois
Controlled Substances Act; (iv) those defined in the
Methamphetamine Control and Community Protection Act; and (v)
any offense committed or attempted in any other state or
against the laws of the United States, which if committed or
attempted in this State, would have been punishable as one or
more of the foregoing offenses. Further, no school board shall
knowingly employ a person who has been found to be the
perpetrator of sexual or physical abuse of any minor under 18
years of age pursuant to proceedings under Article II of the
Juvenile Court Act of 1987.
    (d) No school board shall knowingly employ a person for
whom a criminal history records check and a Statewide Sex
Offender Database check has not been initiated.
    (e) Upon receipt of the record of a conviction of or a
finding of child abuse by a holder of any certificate issued
pursuant to Article 21 or Section 34-8.1 or 34-83 of the School
Code, the appropriate regional superintendent of schools or the
State Superintendent of Education may shall initiate the
certificate suspension and revocation proceedings as
authorized by law.
    (e-5) The superintendent of the employing school board
shall, in writing, notify the State Superintendent of Education
and the applicable regional superintendent of schools of any
certificate holder whom he or she has reasonable cause to
believe has committed an intentional act of abuse or neglect
with the result of making a child an abused child or a
neglected child, as defined in Section 3 of the Abused and
Neglected Child Reporting Act, and that act resulted in the
certificate holder's dismissal or resignation from the school
district. This notification must be submitted within 30 days
after the dismissal or resignation. The certificate holder must
also be contemporaneously sent a copy of the notice by the
superintendent. All correspondence, documentation, and other
information so received by the regional superintendent of
schools, the State Superintendent of Education, the State Board
of Education, or the State Teacher Certification Board under
this subsection (e-5) is confidential and must not be disclosed
to third parties, except (i) as necessary for the State
Superintendent of Education or his or her designee to
investigate and prosecute pursuant to Article 21 of this Code,
(ii) pursuant to a court order, (iii) for disclosure to the
certificate holder or his or her representative, or (iv) as
otherwise provided in this Article and provided that any such
information admitted into evidence in a hearing is exempt from
this confidentiality and non-disclosure requirement. Except
for an act of willful or wanton misconduct, any superintendent
who provides notification as required in this subsection (e-5)
shall have immunity from any liability, whether civil or
criminal or that otherwise might result by reason of such
action.
    (f) After January 1, 1990 the provisions of this Section
shall apply to all employees of persons or firms holding
contracts with any school district including, but not limited
to, food service workers, school bus drivers and other
transportation employees, who have direct, daily contact with
the pupils of any school in such district. For purposes of
criminal history records checks and checks of the Statewide Sex
Offender Database on employees of persons or firms holding
contracts with more than one school district and assigned to
more than one school district, the regional superintendent of
the educational service region in which the contracting school
districts are located may, at the request of any such school
district, be responsible for receiving the authorization for a
criminal history records check prepared by each such employee
and submitting the same to the Department of State Police and
for conducting a check of the Statewide Sex Offender Database
for each employee. Any information concerning the record of
conviction and identification as a sex offender of any such
employee obtained by the regional superintendent shall be
promptly reported to the president of the appropriate school
board or school boards.
(Source: P.A. 94-219, eff. 7-14-05; 94-556, eff. 9-11-05;
94-875, eff. 7-1-06; 94-945, eff. 6-27-06; 95-331, eff.
8-21-07.)
 
    (105 ILCS 5/10-22.39)  (from Ch. 122, par. 10-22.39)
    Sec. 10-22.39. In-service training programs.
    (a) To conduct in-service training programs for teachers.
    (b) In addition to other topics at in-service training
programs, school guidance counselors, teachers and other
school personnel who work with pupils in grades 7 through 12
shall be trained to identify the warning signs of suicidal
behavior in adolescents and teens and shall be taught
appropriate intervention and referral techniques.
    (c) School guidance counselors, nurses, teachers and other
school personnel who work with pupils may be trained to have a
basic knowledge of matters relating to acquired
immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS), including the nature of the
disease, its causes and effects, the means of detecting it and
preventing its transmission, and the availability of
appropriate sources of counseling and referral, and any other
information that may be appropriate considering the age and
grade level of such pupils. The School Board shall supervise
such training. The State Board of Education and the Department
of Public Health shall jointly develop standards for such
training.
    (d) In this subsection (d):
    "Domestic violence" means abuse by a family or household
member, as "abuse" and "family or household members" are
defined in Section 103 of the Illinois Domestic Violence Act of
1986.
    "Sexual violence" means sexual assault, abuse, or stalking
of an adult or minor child proscribed in the Criminal Code of
1961 in Sections 12-7.3, 12-7.4, 12-7.5, 12-12, 12-13, 12-14,
12-14.1, 12-15, and 12-16, including sexual violence committed
by perpetrators who are strangers to the victim and sexual
violence committed by perpetrators who are known or related by
blood or marriage to the victim.
    At least once every 2 years, an in-service training program
for school personnel who work with pupils, including, but not
limited to, school and school district administrators,
teachers, school guidance counselors, school social workers,
school counselors, school psychologists, and school nurses,
must be conducted by persons with expertise in domestic and
sexual violence and the needs of expectant and parenting youth
and shall include training concerning (i) communicating with
and listening to youth victims of domestic or sexual violence
and expectant and parenting youth, (ii) connecting youth
victims of domestic or sexual violence and expectant and
parenting youth to appropriate in-school services and other
agencies, programs, and services as needed, and (iii)
implementing the school district's policies, procedures, and
protocols with regard to such youth, including
confidentiality. At a minimum, school personnel must be trained
to understand, provide information and referrals, and address
issues pertaining to youth who are parents, expectant parents,
or victims of domestic or sexual violence.
    (e) At least once every 2 years, a school board shall
conduct in-service training on educator ethics,
teacher-student conduct, and school employee-student conduct
for all personnel.
(Source: P.A. 95-558, eff. 8-30-07.)
 
    (105 ILCS 5/21-1)  (from Ch. 122, par. 21-1)
    Sec. 21-1. Qualification of teachers. No one may be
certified to teach or supervise in the public schools of this
State who is not of good character, of good health, a citizen
of the United States or legally present and authorized for
employment, and at least 19 years of age. No one may be
certified to teach or supervise in the public schools of this
State who has been convicted of an offense set forth in Section
21-23a of this Code. An applicant for a certificate who is not
a citizen of the United States must sign and file with the
State Board of Education a letter of intent indicating that
either (i) within 10 years after the date that the letter is
filed or (ii) at the earliest opportunity after the person
becomes eligible to apply for U.S. citizenship, the person will
apply for U.S. citizenship.
    Citizenship is not required for the issuance of a temporary
part-time certificate to participants in approved training
programs for exchange students as described in Section 21-10.2.
A certificate issued under this plan shall expire on June 30
following the date of issue. One renewal for one year is
authorized if the holder remains as an official participant in
an approved exchange program.
    In determining good character under this Section, any
felony conviction of the applicant may be taken into
consideration, but, unless the conviction is an offense set
forth in Section 21-23a of this Code, an applicant must be
permitted to submit character references or other written
material before such a conviction or other information
regarding the applicant's character may be used by the State
Superintendent of Education as a basis for denying the
application shall not operate as a bar to registration.
    No person otherwise qualified shall be denied the right to
be certified, to receive training for the purpose of becoming a
teacher or to engage in practice teaching in any school because
of a physical disability including but not limited to visual
and hearing disabilities; nor shall any school district refuse
to employ a teacher on such grounds, provided that the person
is able to carry out the duties of the position for which he
applies.
    No person may be granted or continue to hold a teaching
certificate who has knowingly altered or misrepresented his or
her teaching qualifications in order to acquire the
certificate. Any other certificate held by such person may be
suspended or revoked by the State Teacher Certification Board,
depending upon the severity of the alteration or
misrepresentation.
    No one may teach or supervise in the public schools nor
receive for teaching or supervising any part of any public
school fund, who does not hold a certificate of qualification
granted by the State Board of Education or by the State Teacher
Certification Board and a regional superintendent of schools as
hereinafter provided, or by the board of education of a city
having a population exceeding 500,000 inhabitants except as
provided in Section 34-6 and in Section 10-22.34 or Section
10-22.34b. However, the provisions of this Article do not apply
to a member of the armed forces who is employed as a teacher of
subjects in the Reserve Officer's Training Corps of any school.
Sections 21-2 through 21-24 do not apply to cities having a
population exceeding 500,000 inhabitants, until July 1, 1988.
    Notwithstanding any other provision of this Act, the board
of education of any school district may grant to a teacher of
the district a leave of absence with full pay for a period of
not more than one year to permit such teacher to teach in a
foreign state under the provisions of the Exchange Teacher
Program established under Public Law 584, 79th Congress, and
Public Law 402, 80th Congress, as amended. The school board
granting such leave of absence may employ with or without pay a
national of the foreign state wherein the teacher on leave of
absence will teach, if the national is qualified to teach in
that foreign state, and if that national will teach in a grade
level similar to the one which was taught in such foreign
state. The State Board of Education shall promulgate and
enforce such reasonable rules as may be necessary to effectuate
this paragraph.
(Source: P.A. 93-572, eff. 1-1-04.)
 
    (105 ILCS 5/21-23)  (from Ch. 122, par. 21-23)
    Sec. 21-23. Suspension or revocation of certificate.
    (a) The State Superintendent of Education has the exclusive
authority, in accordance with this Section and any rules
adopted by the State Board of Education, to initiate the
suspension of up to 5 calendar years or revocation of any Any
certificate issued pursuant to this Article, including but not
limited to any administrative certificate or endorsement, for
abuse or neglect of a child, may be suspended for a period not
to exceed one calendar year by the regional superintendent or
for a period not to exceed 5 calendar years by the State
Superintendent of Education upon evidence of immorality, a
condition of health detrimental to the welfare of pupils,
incompetency, unprofessional conduct (which includes the
failure to disclose on an employment application any previous
conviction for a sex offense, as defined in Section 21-23a of
this Code, or any other offense committed in any other state or
against the laws of the United States that, if committed in
this State, would be punishable as a sex offense, as defined in
Section 21-23a of this Code), the neglect of any professional
duty, willful failure to report an instance of suspected child
abuse or neglect as required by the Abused and Neglected Child
Reporting Act, failure to establish satisfactory repayment on
an educational loan guaranteed by the Illinois Student
Assistance Commission, or other just cause. Unprofessional
conduct shall include refusal to attend or participate in,
institutes, teachers' meetings, professional readings, or to
meet other reasonable requirements of the regional
superintendent or State Superintendent of Education.
Unprofessional conduct also includes conduct that violates the
standards, ethics, or rules applicable to the security,
administration, monitoring, or scoring of, or the reporting of
scores from, any assessment test or the Prairie State
Achievement Examination administered under Section 2-3.64 or
that is known or intended to produce or report manipulated or
artificial, rather than actual, assessment or achievement
results or gains from the administration of those tests or
examinations. It shall also include neglect or unnecessary
delay in making of statistical and other reports required by
school officers.
    (a-5) The regional superintendent or State Superintendent
of Education shall, upon receipt of evidence of abuse or
neglect of a child, immorality, a condition of health
detrimental to the welfare of pupils, incompetency,
unprofessional conduct, the neglect of any professional duty or
other just cause, further investigate and, if and as
appropriate, serve written notice to the individual and afford
the individual opportunity for a hearing prior to suspension or
revocation; provided that the State Superintendent is under no
obligation to initiate such an investigation if the Department
of Children and Family Services is investigating the same or
substantially similar allegations and its child protective
service unit has not made its determination as required under
Section 7.12 of the Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act.
If the State Superintendent of Education does not receive from
an individual a request for a hearing within 10 days after the
individual receives notice, the suspension or revocation shall
immediately take effect in accordance with the notice. If a
hearing is requested within 10 days of notice of opportunity
for hearing, it shall act as a stay of proceedings until the
State Teacher Certification Board issues a decision. Any
hearing shall take place in the educational service region
wherein the educator is or was last employed and in accordance
with rules adopted by the State Board of Education, in
consultation with the State Teacher Certification Board, which
rules shall include without limitation provisions for
discovery and the sharing of information between parties prior
to the hearing. The standard of proof for any administrative
hearing held pursuant to this Section shall be by the
preponderance of the evidence. The decision of the State
Teacher Certification Board is a final administrative decision
and is subject to judicial review by appeal of either party.
not to exceed 30 days, unless the individual requests a delay.
In such an instance, the stay of proceedings must be continued
for another 30 days. No certificate shall be suspended until
the teacher has an opportunity for a hearing at the educational
service region. When a certificate is suspended, the right of
appeal shall lie to the State Teacher Certification Board. When
an appeal is taken within 10 days after notice of suspension it
shall act as a stay of proceedings not to exceed 120 days. If a
certificate is suspended for a period greater than one year,
the State Superintendent of Education shall review the
suspension prior to the expiration of that period to determine
whether the cause for the suspension has been remedied or
continues to exist. Upon determining that the cause for
suspension has not abated, the State Superintendent of
Education may order that the suspension be continued for an
appropriate period. Nothing in this Section prohibits the
continuance of such a suspension for an indefinite period if
the State Superintendent determines that the cause for the
suspension remains unabated. Any certificate may be revoked for
the same reasons as for suspension by the State Superintendent
of Education. No certificate shall be revoked until the teacher
has an opportunity for a hearing before the State Teacher
Certification Board, which hearing must be held within 120 days
from the date the appeal is taken, unless the State Teacher
Certification Board requests a delay. In such an instance, the
stay of the revocation proceedings must be continued until the
completion of the proceedings.
    The State Board may refuse to issue or may suspend the
certificate of any person who fails to file a return, or to pay
the tax, penalty or interest shown in a filed return, or to pay
any final assessment of tax, penalty or interest, as required
by any tax Act administered by the Illinois Department of
Revenue, until such time as the requirements of any such tax
Act are satisfied.
    The exclusive authority of the State Superintendent of
Education to initiate suspension or revocation of a certificate
pursuant to this Section does not preclude a regional
superintendent of schools from cooperating with the State
Superintendent or a State's Attorney with respect to an
investigation of alleged misconduct.
    (b) (Blank). Any certificate issued pursuant to this
Article may be suspended for an appropriate length of time as
determined by either the regional superintendent or State
Superintendent of Education upon evidence that the holder of
the certificate has been named as a perpetrator in an indicated
report filed pursuant to the Abused and Neglected Child
Reporting Act, approved June 26, 1975, as amended, and upon
proof by clear and convincing evidence that the licensee has
caused a child to be an abused child or neglected child as
defined in the Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act.
    The regional superintendent or State Superintendent of
Education shall, upon receipt of evidence that the certificate
holder has been named a perpetrator in any indicated report,
serve written notice to the individual and afford the
individual opportunity for a hearing prior to suspension. If a
hearing is requested within 10 days of notice of opportunity
for hearing, it shall act as a stay of proceedings not to
exceed 30 days, unless the individual requests a delay. In such
an instance, the stay of proceedings must be continued for
another 30 days. No certificate shall be suspended until the
teacher has an opportunity for a hearing at the educational
service region. When a certificate is suspended, the right of
appeal shall lie to the State Teacher Certification Board. When
an appeal is taken within 10 days after notice of suspension it
shall act as a stay of proceedings not to exceed 120 days. The
State Superintendent may revoke any certificate upon proof at
hearing by clear and convincing evidence that the certificate
holder has caused a child to be an abused child or neglected
child as defined in the Abused and Neglected Child Reporting
Act. No certificate shall be revoked until the teacher has an
opportunity for a hearing before the State Teacher
Certification Board, which hearing must be held within 120 days
from the date the appeal is taken, unless the teacher or the
hearing officer appointed by the State Teacher Certification
Board requests a delay. In such an instance, the stay of the
revocation proceedings must be continued until the completion
of the proceedings.
    (b-5) The State Superintendent of Education or his or her
designee may initiate and conduct such investigations as may be
reasonably necessary to establish the existence of any alleged
misconduct. At any stage of the investigation, the State
Superintendent may issue a subpoena requiring the attendance
and testimony of a witness, including the certificate holder,
and the production of any evidence, including files, records,
correspondence, or documents, relating to any matter in
question in the investigation. The subpoena shall require a
witness to appear at the State Board of Education at a
specified date and time and shall specify any evidence to be
produced. The certificate holder is not entitled to be present,
but the State Superintendent shall provide the certificate
holder with a copy of any recorded testimony prior to a hearing
under this Section. Such recorded testimony must not be used as
evidence at a hearing, unless the certificate holder has
adequate notice of the testimony and the opportunity to
cross-examine the witness. Failure of a certificate holder to
comply with a duly-issued, investigatory subpoena may be
grounds for revocation, suspension, or denial of a certificate.
    (b-10) All correspondence, documentation, and other
information so received by the regional superintendent of
schools, the State Superintendent of Education, the State Board
of Education, or the State Teacher Certification Board under
this Section is confidential and must not be disclosed to third
parties, except (i) as necessary for the State Superintendent
of Education or his or her designee to investigate and
prosecute pursuant to this Article, (ii) pursuant to a court
order, (iii) for disclosure to the certificate holder or his or
her representative, or (iv) as otherwise required in this
Article and provided that any such information admitted into
evidence in a hearing shall be exempt from this confidentiality
and non-disclosure requirement.
    (c) The State Superintendent of Education or a person
designated by him shall have the power to administer oaths to
witnesses at any hearing conducted before the State Teacher
Certification Board pursuant to this Section. The State
Superintendent of Education or a person designated by him is
authorized to subpoena and bring before the State Teacher
Certification Board any person in this State and to take
testimony either orally or by deposition or by exhibit, with
the same fees and mileage and in the same manner as prescribed
by law in judicial proceedings in the civil cases in circuit
courts of this State.
    (c-5) Any circuit court, upon the application of the State
Superintendent of Education or the certificate holder, may, by
order duly entered, require the attendance of witnesses and the
production of relevant books and papers as part of any
investigation or at any hearing the State Teacher Certification
Board State Superintendent of Education is authorized to
conduct pursuant to this Section, and the court may compel
obedience to its orders by proceedings for contempt.
    (c-10) The State Board of Education shall receive an annual
line item appropriation to cover fees associated with the
investigation and prosecution of alleged educator misconduct
and hearings related thereto.
    (d) As used in this Section, "teacher" means any school
district employee regularly required to be certified, as
provided in this Article, in order to teach or supervise in the
public schools.
(Source: P.A. 93-679, eff. 6-30-04; 94-991, eff. 1-1-07.)
 
    (105 ILCS 5/21-23a)  (from Ch. 122, par. 21-23a)
    Sec. 21-23a. Conviction of certain offenses sex or
narcotics offense, first degree murder, attempted first degree
murder, or Class X felony as grounds for revocation of
certificate.
    (a) Whenever the holder of any certificate issued pursuant
to this Article has been convicted of any sex offense or
narcotics offense as defined in this Section, the regional
superintendent or the State Superintendent of Education shall
forthwith suspend the certificate. If the conviction is
reversed and the holder is acquitted of the offense in a new
trial or the charges against him are dismissed, the suspending
authority shall forthwith terminate the suspension of the
certificate. When the conviction becomes final, the State
Superintendent of Education shall forthwith revoke the
certificate. "Sex offense" as used in this Section means any
one or more of the following offenses: (1) any offense defined
in Sections 11-6 and 11-9 through 11-9.5, inclusive, and
Sections 11-14 through 11-21, inclusive, Sections 11-23 (if
punished as a Class 3 felony), 11-24, 11-25, and 11-26, and
Sections 12-4.9, 12-13, 12-14, 12-14.1, 12-15, and 12-16,
12-32, and 12-33 of the Criminal Code of 1961; (2) any attempt
to commit any of the foregoing offenses, and (3) any offense
committed or attempted in any other state which, if committed
or attempted in this State, would have been punishable as one
or more of the foregoing offenses. "Narcotics offense" as used
in this Section means any one or more of the following
offenses: (1) any offense defined in the Cannabis Control Act,
except those defined in Sections 4(a), 4(b) and 5(a) of that
Act and any offense for which the holder of any certificate is
placed on probation under the provisions of Section 10 of that
Act, provided that if the terms and conditions of probation
required by the court are not fulfilled, the offense is not
eligible for this exception and fulfills the terms and
conditions of probation as may be required by the court; (2)
any offense defined in the Illinois Controlled Substances Act,
except any offense for which the holder of any certificate is
placed on probation under the provisions of Section 410 of that
Act, provided that if the terms and conditions of probation
required by the court are not fulfilled, the offense is not
eligible for this exception and fulfills the terms and
conditions of probation as may be required by the court; (3)
any offense defined in the Methamphetamine Control and
Community Protection Act, except any offense for which the
holder of any certificate is placed on probation under the
provision of Section 70 of that Act, provided that if the terms
and conditions of probation required by the court are not
fulfilled, the offense is not eligible for this exception and
fulfills the terms and conditions of probation as may be
required by the court; (4) any attempt to commit any of the
foregoing offenses; and (5) any offense committed or attempted
in any other state or against the laws of the United States
which, if committed or attempted in this State, would have been
punishable as one or more of the foregoing offenses. The
changes made by this amendatory Act of the 96th General
Assembly to the definition of "narcotics offense" in this
subsection (a) are declaratory of existing law.
    (b) Whenever the holder of a certificate issued pursuant to
this Article has been convicted of first degree murder,
attempted first degree murder, conspiracy to commit first
degree murder, attempted conspiracy to commit first degree
murder, or a Class X felony or any offense committed or
attempted in any other state or against the laws of the United
States that, if committed or attempted in this State, would
have been punishable as one or more of the foregoing offenses,
the regional superintendent or the State Superintendent of
Education shall forthwith suspend the certificate. If the
conviction is reversed and the holder is acquitted of that
offense in a new trial or the charges that he or she committed
that offense are dismissed, the State Superintendent of
Education suspending authority shall forthwith terminate the
suspension of the certificate. When the conviction becomes
final, the State Superintendent of Education shall forthwith
revoke the certificate. The stated offenses of "first degree
murder", "attempted first degree murder", and "Class X felony"
referred to in this Section include any offense committed in
another state that, if committed in this State, would have been
punishable as any one of the stated offenses.
(Source: P.A. 94-556, eff. 9-11-05.)
 
    (105 ILCS 5/34-18.5)  (from Ch. 122, par. 34-18.5)
    Sec. 34-18.5. Criminal history records checks and checks of
the Statewide Sex Offender Database and Statewide Child
Murderer and Violent Offender Against Youth Database.
    (a) Certified and noncertified applicants for employment
with the school district are required as a condition of
employment to authorize a fingerprint-based criminal history
records check to determine if such applicants have been
convicted of any of the enumerated criminal or drug offenses in
subsection (c) of this Section or have been convicted, within 7
years of the application for employment with the school
district, of any other felony under the laws of this State or
of any offense committed or attempted in any other state or
against the laws of the United States that, if committed or
attempted in this State, would have been punishable as a felony
under the laws of this State. Authorization for the check shall
be furnished by the applicant to the school district, except
that if the applicant is a substitute teacher seeking
employment in more than one school district, or a teacher
seeking concurrent part-time employment positions with more
than one school district (as a reading specialist, special
education teacher or otherwise), or an educational support
personnel employee seeking employment positions with more than
one district, any such district may require the applicant to
furnish authorization for the check to the regional
superintendent of the educational service region in which are
located the school districts in which the applicant is seeking
employment as a substitute or concurrent part-time teacher or
concurrent educational support personnel employee. Upon
receipt of this authorization, the school district or the
appropriate regional superintendent, as the case may be, shall
submit the applicant's name, sex, race, date of birth, social
security number, fingerprint images, and other identifiers, as
prescribed by the Department of State Police, to the
Department. The regional superintendent submitting the
requisite information to the Department of State Police shall
promptly notify the school districts in which the applicant is
seeking employment as a substitute or concurrent part-time
teacher or concurrent educational support personnel employee
that the check of the applicant has been requested. The
Department of State Police and the Federal Bureau of
Investigation shall furnish, pursuant to a fingerprint-based
criminal history records check, records of convictions, until
expunged, to the president of the school board for the school
district that requested the check, or to the regional
superintendent who requested the check. The Department shall
charge the school district or the appropriate regional
superintendent a fee for conducting such check, which fee shall
be deposited in the State Police Services Fund and shall not
exceed the cost of the inquiry; and the applicant shall not be
charged a fee for such check by the school district or by the
regional superintendent. Subject to appropriations for these
purposes, the State Superintendent of Education shall
reimburse the school district and regional superintendent for
fees paid to obtain criminal history records checks under this
Section.
    (a-5) The school district or regional superintendent shall
further perform a check of the Statewide Sex Offender Database,
as authorized by the Sex Offender Community Notification Law,
for each applicant.
    (a-6) The school district or regional superintendent shall
further perform a check of the Statewide Child Murderer and
Violent Offender Against Youth Database, as authorized by the
Child Murderer and Violent Offender Against Youth Community
Notification Law, for each applicant.
    (b) Any information concerning the record of convictions
obtained by the president of the board of education or the
regional superintendent shall be confidential and may only be
transmitted to the general superintendent of the school
district or his designee, the appropriate regional
superintendent if the check was requested by the board of
education for the school district, the presidents of the
appropriate board of education or school boards if the check
was requested from the Department of State Police by the
regional superintendent, the State Superintendent of
Education, the State Teacher Certification Board or any other
person necessary to the decision of hiring the applicant for
employment. A copy of the record of convictions obtained from
the Department of State Police shall be provided to the
applicant for employment. Upon the check of the Statewide Sex
Offender Database, the school district or regional
superintendent shall notify an applicant as to whether or not
the applicant has been identified in the Database as a sex
offender. If a check of an applicant for employment as a
substitute or concurrent part-time teacher or concurrent
educational support personnel employee in more than one school
district was requested by the regional superintendent, and the
Department of State Police upon a check ascertains that the
applicant has not been convicted of any of the enumerated
criminal or drug offenses in subsection (c) or has not been
convicted, within 7 years of the application for employment
with the school district, of any other felony under the laws of
this State or of any offense committed or attempted in any
other state or against the laws of the United States that, if
committed or attempted in this State, would have been
punishable as a felony under the laws of this State and so
notifies the regional superintendent and if the regional
superintendent upon a check ascertains that the applicant has
not been identified in the Sex Offender Database as a sex
offender, then the regional superintendent shall issue to the
applicant a certificate evidencing that as of the date
specified by the Department of State Police the applicant has
not been convicted of any of the enumerated criminal or drug
offenses in subsection (c) or has not been convicted, within 7
years of the application for employment with the school
district, of any other felony under the laws of this State or
of any offense committed or attempted in any other state or
against the laws of the United States that, if committed or
attempted in this State, would have been punishable as a felony
under the laws of this State and evidencing that as of the date
that the regional superintendent conducted a check of the
Statewide Sex Offender Database, the applicant has not been
identified in the Database as a sex offender. The school board
of any school district may rely on the certificate issued by
any regional superintendent to that substitute teacher,
concurrent part-time teacher, or concurrent educational
support personnel employee or may initiate its own criminal
history records check of the applicant through the Department
of State Police and its own check of the Statewide Sex Offender
Database as provided in subsection (a). Any person who releases
any confidential information concerning any criminal
convictions of an applicant for employment shall be guilty of a
Class A misdemeanor, unless the release of such information is
authorized by this Section.
    (c) The board of education shall not knowingly employ a
person who has been convicted of any offense that would subject
him or her to certification suspension or revocation pursuant
to Section 21-23a of this Code. for committing attempted first
degree murder or for committing or attempting to commit first
degree murder or a Class X felony or any one or more of the
following offenses: (i) those defined in Sections 11-6, 11-9,
11-14, 11-15, 11-15.1, 11-16, 11-17, 11-18, 11-19, 11-19.1,
11-19.2, 11-20, 11-20.1, 11-21, 12-13, 12-14, 12-14.1, 12-15
and 12-16 of the Criminal Code of 1961; (ii) those defined in
the Cannabis Control Act, except those defined in Sections
4(a), 4(b) and 5(a) of that Act; (iii) those defined in the
Illinois Controlled Substances Act; (iv) those defined in the
Methamphetamine Control and Community Protection Act; and (v)
any offense committed or attempted in any other state or
against the laws of the United States, which if committed or
attempted in this State, would have been punishable as one or
more of the foregoing offenses. Further, the board of education
shall not knowingly employ a person who has been found to be
the perpetrator of sexual or physical abuse of any minor under
18 years of age pursuant to proceedings under Article II of the
Juvenile Court Act of 1987.
    (d) The board of education shall not knowingly employ a
person for whom a criminal history records check and a
Statewide Sex Offender Database check has not been initiated.
    (e) Upon receipt of the record of a conviction of or a
finding of child abuse by a holder of any certificate issued
pursuant to Article 21 or Section 34-8.1 or 34-83 of the School
Code, the board of education or the State Superintendent of
Education may shall initiate the certificate suspension and
revocation proceedings as authorized by law.
    (e-5) The general superintendent of schools shall, in
writing, notify the State Superintendent of Education of any
certificate holder whom he or she has reasonable cause to
believe has committed an intentional act of abuse or neglect
with the result of making a child an abused child or a
neglected child, as defined in Section 3 of the Abused and
Neglected Child Reporting Act, and that act resulted in the
certificate holder's dismissal or resignation from the school
district. This notification must be submitted within 30 days
after the dismissal or resignation. The certificate holder must
also be contemporaneously sent a copy of the notice by the
superintendent. All correspondence, documentation, and other
information so received by the State Superintendent of
Education, the State Board of Education, or the State Teacher
Certification Board under this subsection (e-5) is
confidential and must not be disclosed to third parties, except
(i) as necessary for the State Superintendent of Education or
his or her designee to investigate and prosecute pursuant to
Article 21 of this Code, (ii) pursuant to a court order, (iii)
for disclosure to the certificate holder or his or her
representative, or (iv) as otherwise provided in this Article
and provided that any such information admitted into evidence
in a hearing is exempt from this confidentiality and
non-disclosure requirement. Except for an act of willful or
wanton misconduct, any superintendent who provides
notification as required in this subsection (e-5) shall have
immunity from any liability, whether civil or criminal or that
otherwise might result by reason of such action.
    (f) After March 19, 1990, the provisions of this Section
shall apply to all employees of persons or firms holding
contracts with any school district including, but not limited
to, food service workers, school bus drivers and other
transportation employees, who have direct, daily contact with
the pupils of any school in such district. For purposes of
criminal history records checks and checks of the Statewide Sex
Offender Database on employees of persons or firms holding
contracts with more than one school district and assigned to
more than one school district, the regional superintendent of
the educational service region in which the contracting school
districts are located may, at the request of any such school
district, be responsible for receiving the authorization for a
criminal history records check prepared by each such employee
and submitting the same to the Department of State Police and
for conducting a check of the Statewide Sex Offender Database
for each employee. Any information concerning the record of
conviction and identification as a sex offender of any such
employee obtained by the regional superintendent shall be
promptly reported to the president of the appropriate school
board or school boards.
(Source: P.A. 94-219, eff. 7-14-05; 94-556, eff. 9-11-05;
94-875, eff. 7-1-06; 94-945, eff. 6-27-06; 95-331, eff.
8-21-07.)
 
    Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect July 1,
2009.
INDEX
Statutes amended in order of appearance
    55 ILCS 5/3-9005 from Ch. 34, par. 3-9005
    105 ILCS 5/3-11 from Ch. 122, par. 3-11
    105 ILCS 5/10-21.9 from Ch. 122, par. 10-21.9
    105 ILCS 5/10-22.39 from Ch. 122, par. 10-22.39
    105 ILCS 5/21-1 from Ch. 122, par. 21-1
    105 ILCS 5/21-23 from Ch. 122, par. 21-23
    105 ILCS 5/21-23a from Ch. 122, par. 21-23a
    105 ILCS 5/34-18.5 from Ch. 122, par. 34-18.5