|
of, interest on, and premium, if any, on such bonds during the |
then current and each succeeding fiscal year. With respect to |
the interest payable on variable rate bonds, such |
certifications shall be calculated at the maximum rate of |
interest that may be payable during the fiscal year, after |
taking into account any credits permitted in the related |
indenture or other instrument against the amount of such |
interest required to be appropriated for the period. |
(a) Except as provided for in subsection (b), on or before |
the last day of each month, the State Treasurer and State |
Comptroller shall transfer from the Capital Projects Fund to |
the General Obligation Bond Retirement and Interest Fund an |
amount sufficient to pay the aggregate of the principal of, |
interest on, and premium, if any, on the bonds payable on their |
next payment date, divided by the number of monthly transfers |
occurring between the last previous payment date (or the |
delivery date if no payment date has yet occurred) and the next |
succeeding payment date. Interest payable on variable rate |
bonds shall be calculated at the maximum rate of interest that |
may be payable for the relevant period, after taking into |
account any credits permitted in the related indenture or other |
instrument against the amount of such interest required to be |
appropriated for that period. Interest for which moneys have |
already been deposited into the capitalized interest account |
within the General Obligation Bond Retirement and Interest Fund |
shall not be included in the calculation of the amounts to be |
|
transferred under this subsection.
|
(b) On or before the last day of each month, the State |
Treasurer and State Comptroller shall transfer from the Capital |
Projects Fund to the General Obligation Bond Retirement and |
Interest Fund an amount sufficient to pay the aggregate of the |
principal of, interest on, and premium, if any, on the bonds |
issued prior to January 1, 2012 pursuant to Section 4(d) of the |
General Obligation Bond Act payable on their next payment date, |
divided by the number of monthly transfers occurring between |
the last previous payment date (or the delivery date if no |
payment date has yet occurred) and the next succeeding payment |
date. If the available balance in the Capital Projects Fund is |
not sufficient for the transfer required in this subsection, |
the State Treasurer and State Comptroller shall transfer the |
difference from the Road Fund to the General Obligation Bond |
Retirement and Interest Fund; except that such Road Fund |
transfers shall constitute a debt of the Capital Projects Fund |
which shall be repaid according to subsection (c). Interest |
payable on variable rate bonds shall be calculated at the |
maximum rate of interest that may be payable for the relevant |
period, after taking into account any credits permitted in the |
related indenture or other instrument against the amount of |
such interest required to be appropriated for that period. |
Interest for which moneys have already been deposited into the |
capitalized interest account within the General Obligation |
Bond Retirement and Interest Fund shall not be included in the |
|
calculation of the amounts to be transferred under this |
subsection. |
(c) On the first day of any month when the Capital Projects |
Fund is carrying a debt to the Road Fund due to the provisions |
of subsection (b), the State Treasurer and State Comptroller |
shall transfer from the Capital Projects Fund to the Road Fund |
an amount sufficient to discharge that debt. These transfers to |
the Road Fund shall continue until the Capital Projects Fund |
has repaid to the Road Fund all transfers made from the Road |
Fund pursuant to subsection (b). Notwithstanding any other law |
to the contrary, transfers to the Road Fund from the Capital |
Projects Fund shall be made prior to any other expenditures or |
transfers out of the Capital Projects Fund. |
(Source: P.A. 96-36, eff. 7-13-09; 96-820, eff. 11-18-09.) |
Section 5. The General Obligation Bond Act is amended by |
changing Sections 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, and 9 as follows: |
(30 ILCS 330/2) (from Ch. 127, par. 652) |
Sec. 2. Authorization for Bonds. The State of Illinois is |
authorized to
issue, sell and provide for the retirement of |
General Obligation Bonds of
the State of Illinois for the |
categories and specific purposes expressed in
Sections 2 |
through 8 of this Act, in the total amount of $41,379,777,443 |
$37,217,777,443 $36,967,777,443 . |
The bonds authorized in this Section 2 and in Section 16 of |
|
this Act are
herein called "Bonds". |
Of the total amount of Bonds authorized in this Act, up to |
$2,200,000,000
in aggregate original principal amount may be |
issued and sold in accordance
with the Baccalaureate Savings |
Act in the form of General Obligation
College Savings Bonds. |
Of the total amount of Bonds authorized in this Act, up to |
$300,000,000 in
aggregate original principal amount may be |
issued and sold in accordance
with the Retirement Savings Act |
in the form of General Obligation
Retirement Savings Bonds. |
Of the total amount of Bonds authorized in this Act, the |
additional
$10,000,000,000 authorized by Public Act 93-2 and |
the $3,466,000,000 authorized by Public Act 96-43 shall be used |
solely as provided in Section 7.2. |
The issuance and sale of Bonds pursuant to the General |
Obligation Bond
Act is an economical and efficient method of |
financing the long-term capital needs of
the State. This Act |
will permit the issuance of a multi-purpose General
Obligation |
Bond with uniform terms and features. This will not only lower
|
the cost of registration but also reduce the overall cost of |
issuing debt
by improving the marketability of Illinois General |
Obligation Bonds. |
(Source: P.A. 95-1026, eff. 1-12-09; 96-5, eff. 4-3-09; 96-36, |
eff. 7-13-09; 96-43, eff. 7-15-09; 96-885, eff. 3-11-10; |
96-1000, eff. 7-2-10; revised 9-3-10.)
|
(30 ILCS 330/3) (from Ch. 127, par. 653)
|
|
Sec. 3. Capital Facilities. The amount of $8,900,463,443 |
$7,968,463,443 is authorized
to be used for the acquisition, |
development, construction, reconstruction,
improvement, |
financing, architectural planning and installation of capital
|
facilities within the State, consisting of buildings, |
structures, durable
equipment, land, interests in land, and the |
costs associated with the purchase and implementation of |
information technology, including but not limited to the |
purchase of hardware and software, for the following specific |
purposes:
|
(a) $3,007,228,000 $2,511,228,000 for educational |
purposes by
State universities and
colleges, the Illinois |
Community College Board created by the Public
Community |
College Act and for grants to public community colleges as
|
authorized by Sections 5-11 and 5-12 of the Public |
Community College Act;
|
(b) $1,648,420,000 $1,617,420,000 for correctional |
purposes at
State
prison and correctional centers;
|
(c) $599,183,000 $575,183,000 for open spaces, |
recreational and
conservation purposes and the protection |
of land;
|
(d) $691,917,000 $664,917,000 for child care |
facilities, mental
and public health facilities, and |
facilities for the care of disabled
veterans and their |
spouses;
|
(e) $1,777,990,000 $1,630,990,000 for use by the |
|
State, its
departments, authorities, public corporations, |
commissions and agencies;
|
(f) $818,100 for cargo handling facilities at port |
districts and for
breakwaters, including harbor entrances, |
at port districts in conjunction
with facilities for small |
boats and pleasure crafts;
|
(g) $274,877,074 $248,877,074 for water resource |
management
projects;
|
(h) $16,940,269 for the provision of facilities for |
food production
research and related instructional and |
public service activities at the
State universities and |
public community colleges;
|
(i) $36,000,000 for grants by the Secretary of State, |
as
State
Librarian, for central library facilities |
authorized by Section 8
of the Illinois Library System Act |
and for grants by the Capital
Development Board to units of |
local government for public library
facilities;
|
(j) $25,000,000 for the acquisition, development, |
construction,
reconstruction, improvement, financing, |
architectural planning and
installation of capital |
facilities consisting of buildings, structures,
durable |
equipment and land for grants to counties, municipalities |
or public
building commissions with correctional |
facilities that do not comply with
the minimum standards of |
the Department of Corrections under Section 3-15-2
of the |
Unified Code of Corrections;
|
|
(k) $5,000,000 for grants in fiscal year 1988 by the |
Department of
Conservation for improvement or expansion of |
aquarium facilities located on
property owned by a park |
district;
|
(l) $588,590,000 $432,590,000 to State agencies for |
grants to
local governments for
the acquisition, |
financing, architectural planning, development, |
alteration,
installation, and construction of capital |
facilities consisting of buildings,
structures, durable |
equipment, and land; and
|
(m) $228,500,000 $203,500,000 for the Illinois Open |
Land Trust
Program
as defined by the
Illinois Open Land |
Trust Act.
|
The amounts authorized above for capital facilities may be |
used
for the acquisition, installation, alteration, |
construction, or
reconstruction of capital facilities and for |
the purchase of equipment
for the purpose of major capital |
improvements which will reduce energy
consumption in State |
buildings or facilities.
|
(Source: P.A. 96-36, eff. 7-13-09; 96-37, eff. 7-13-09; |
96-1000, eff. 7-2-10.)
|
(30 ILCS 330/4) (from Ch. 127, par. 654)
|
Sec. 4. Transportation. The amount of $12,443,799,000 |
$9,948,799,000
is authorized for use by the Department of |
Transportation for the specific
purpose of promoting and |
|
assuring rapid, efficient, and safe highway, air and
mass |
transportation for the inhabitants of the State by providing |
monies,
including the making of grants and loans, for the |
acquisition, construction,
reconstruction, extension and |
improvement of the following transportation
facilities and |
equipment, and for the acquisition of real property and
|
interests in real property required or expected to be required |
in connection
therewith as follows:
|
(a) $5,432,129,000 for State highways, arterial
highways, |
freeways,
roads, bridges, structures separating highways and |
railroads and roads, and
bridges on roads maintained by |
counties, municipalities, townships or road
districts for the |
following specific purposes:
|
(1) $3,330,000,000 for use statewide,
|
(2) $3,677,000 for use outside the Chicago urbanized
|
area,
|
(3) $7,543,000 for use within the Chicago urbanized |
area,
|
(4) $13,060,600 for use within the City of Chicago,
|
(5) $58,987,500 for use within the counties of Cook,
|
DuPage, Kane, Lake, McHenry and Will,
|
(6) $18,860,900 for use outside the counties of Cook, |
DuPage, Kane,
Lake, McHenry and Will, and
|
(7) $2,000,000,000 for use on projects included in |
either (i) the FY09-14 Proposed Highway Improvement |
Program as published by the Illinois Department of |
|
Transportation in May 2008 or (ii) the FY10-15 Proposed |
Highway Improvement Program to be published by the Illinois |
Department of Transportation in the spring of 2009; except |
that all projects must be maintenance projects for the |
existing State system with the goal of reaching 90% |
acceptable condition in the system statewide and further |
except that all projects must reflect the generally |
accepted historical distribution of projects throughout |
the State. |
(b) $4,280,070,000 $3,130,070,000 for rail facilities and |
for
mass transit facilities, as defined in Section 2705-305 of |
the Department of
Transportation Law (20 ILCS 2705/2705-305), |
including rapid transit, rail, bus
and other equipment used in |
connection therewith by the State or any unit of
local |
government, special transportation district, municipal |
corporation or
other corporation or public authority |
authorized to provide and promote public
transportation within |
the State or two or more of the foregoing jointly, for
the |
following specific purposes:
|
(1) $3,184,270,000 $2,034,270,000 statewide,
|
(2) $83,350,000 for use within the counties of Cook,
|
DuPage, Kane, Lake, McHenry and Will,
|
(3) $12,450,000 for use outside the counties of Cook,
|
DuPage, Kane, Lake, McHenry and Will, and
|
(4) $1,000,000,000 for use on projects that shall |
reflect the generally accepted historical distribution of |
|
projects throughout the State. |
(c) $482,600,000 $371,600,000 for airport or aviation |
facilities and any equipment used
in connection therewith, |
including engineering and land acquisition costs,
by the State |
or any unit of local government, special transportation |
district,
municipal corporation or other corporation or public |
authority authorized
to provide public transportation within |
the State, or two or more of the
foregoing acting jointly, and |
for the making of deposits into the Airport
Land Loan Revolving |
Fund for loans to public airport owners pursuant to the
|
Illinois Aeronautics Act.
|
(d) $2,249,000,000 $1,015,000,000 for use statewide for |
State or local highways, arterial highways, freeways, roads, |
bridges, and structures separating highways and railroads and |
roads, and for grants to counties, municipalities, townships, |
or road districts for planning, engineering, acquisition, |
construction, reconstruction, development, improvement, |
extension, and all construction-related expenses of the public |
infrastructure and other transportation improvement projects |
which are related to economic development in the State of |
Illinois. |
(Source: P.A. 96-5, eff. 4-3-09; 96-36, eff. 7-13-09; 96-37, |
eff. 7-13-09.)
|
(30 ILCS 330/5) (from Ch. 127, par. 655)
|
Sec. 5. School Construction.
|
|
(a) The amount of $58,450,000 is authorized to
make grants |
to local school
districts for the acquisition, development, |
construction, reconstruction,
rehabilitation, improvement, |
financing, architectural planning and
installation of capital |
facilities, including but not limited to those
required for |
special
education building projects provided for in Article 14 |
of The School Code,
consisting of buildings, structures, and |
durable equipment, and for the
acquisition and improvement of |
real property and interests in real property
required, or |
expected to be required, in connection therewith.
|
(b) $22,550,000, or so much thereof as may be necessary, |
for grants to
school districts for the making of principal and |
interest payments, required
to be made, on bonds issued by such |
school districts after January 1, 1969,
pursuant to any |
indenture, ordinance, resolution, agreement or contract
to |
provide funds for the acquisition, development, construction,
|
reconstruction, rehabilitation, improvement, architectural |
planning and installation of
capital facilities consisting of |
buildings, structures, durable equipment
and land for |
educational purposes or for lease payments required to be made
|
by a school district for principal and interest payments on |
bonds issued
by a Public Building Commission after January 1, |
1969.
|
(c) $10,000,000 for grants to school districts for the |
acquisition,
development, construction, reconstruction, |
rehabilitation, improvement,
architectural
planning and |
|
installation of capital facilities consisting of buildings
|
structures, durable equipment and land for special education |
building projects.
|
(d) $9,000,000 for grants to school districts for the |
reconstruction,
rehabilitation, improvement, financing and |
architectural planning of capital
facilities, including |
construction at another location to replace such capital
|
facilities, consisting of those public school buildings and |
temporary school
facilities which, prior to January 1, 1984, |
were condemned by the regional
superintendent under Section |
3-14.22 of The School Code or by any State
official having |
jurisdiction over building safety.
|
(e) $3,050,000,000 for grants to school districts for
|
school improvement
projects authorized by the School |
Construction Law. The bonds shall be sold in
amounts not to |
exceed the following schedule, except any bonds not sold during
|
one year shall be added to the bonds to be sold during the |
remainder of the
schedule:
|
First year ...................................$200,000,000
|
Second year ..................................$450,000,000
|
Third year ...................................$500,000,000
|
Fourth year ..................................$500,000,000
|
Fifth year ...................................$800,000,000
|
Sixth year and thereafter ....................$600,000,000
|
(f) $1,066,000,000 $420,000,000 grants to school districts |
for school implemented projects authorized by the School |
|
Construction Law. |
(Source: P.A. 96-36, eff. 7-13-09.)
|
(30 ILCS 330/6) (from Ch. 127, par. 656)
|
Sec. 6. Anti-Pollution.
|
(a) The amount of $422,815,000 $369,815,000 is authorized |
for
allocation by the
Environmental Protection Agency for |
grants or loans to units of local
government in such amounts, |
at such times and for such purpose as the Agency
deems |
necessary or desirable for the planning, financing, and |
construction of
municipal sewage treatment works and solid |
waste disposal facilities and for
making of deposits into the |
Water Revolving Fund and
the U.S. Environmental Protection Fund |
to provide assistance in accordance
with the provisions of |
Title IV-A of the Environmental Protection Act.
|
(b) The amount of $236,500,000 $215,500,000 is authorized |
for allocation by the
Environmental Protection Agency for |
payment of claims submitted to the State
and approved for |
payment under the Leaking Underground Storage Tank Program
|
established in Title XVI of the Environmental Protection Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 96-36, eff. 7-13-09.)
|
(30 ILCS 330/7) (from Ch. 127, par. 657) |
Sec. 7. Coal and Energy Development. The amount of |
$698,200,000 is
authorized to be used by the Department of |
Commerce and Economic Opportunity (formerly Department of |
|
Commerce and Community Affairs) for
coal and energy development |
purposes, pursuant to Sections 2, 3 and 3.1 of the
Illinois |
Coal and Energy Development Bond Act, for the purposes
|
specified
in Section 8.1 of the Energy Conservation and Coal |
Development Act, for
the purposes specified in Section 605-332 |
of the Department of Commerce and
Economic Opportunity Law of |
the Civil Administrative Code of Illinois, and for the purpose |
of facility cost reports prepared pursuant to Sections 1-58 or |
1-75(d)(4) of the Illinois Power Agency Act and for the purpose |
of development costs pursuant to Section 8.1 of the Energy |
Conservation and Coal Development Act. Of this
amount: |
(a) $115,000,000 is
for the specific purposes of |
acquisition,
development, construction, reconstruction, |
improvement, financing,
architectural and technical planning |
and installation of capital facilities
consisting of |
buildings, structures, durable equipment, and land for the
|
purpose of capital development of coal resources within the |
State and for the
purposes specified in Section 8.1 of the |
Energy Conservation and Coal
Development Act; |
(b) $35,000,000 is for the purposes specified in Section |
8.1 of the
Energy
Conservation and Coal Development Act and |
making grants to generating stations and coal gasification |
facilities within the State of Illinois and to the owner of a
|
generating station
located in Illinois and having at least |
three coal-fired generating units
with accredited summer |
capability greater than 500 megawatts each at such
generating |
|
station as provided in Section 6 of that Bond Act; |
(c) $13,200,000 is for research, development and |
demonstration
of forms of energy
other than that derived from |
coal, either on or off State property; |
(d) $500,000,000 is for the purpose of providing financial |
assistance to
new
electric generating facilities as provided in |
Section 605-332 of the Department
of Commerce and Economic |
Opportunity Law of the Civil Administrative Code of
Illinois; |
and |
(e) $50,000,000 $35,000,000 is for the purpose of facility |
cost reports prepared for not more than one facility pursuant |
to Section 1-75(d)(4) of the Illinois Power Agency Act and not |
more than one facility pursuant to Section 1-58 of the Illinois |
Power Agency Act and for the purpose of up to $6,000,000 of |
development costs pursuant to Section 8.1 of the Energy |
Conservation and Coal Development Act. |
(Source: P.A. 95-1026, eff. 1-12-09; 96-781, eff. 8-28-09; |
96-1000, eff. 7-2-10; 96-1465, eff. 8-20-10.)
|
(30 ILCS 330/9) (from Ch. 127, par. 659)
|
Sec. 9. Conditions for Issuance and Sale of Bonds - |
Requirements for
Bonds. |
(a) Except as otherwise provided in this subsection, Bonds |
shall be issued and sold from time to time, in one or
more |
series, in such amounts and at such prices as may be directed |
by the
Governor, upon recommendation by the Director of the
|
|
Governor's Office of Management and Budget.
Bonds shall be in |
such form (either coupon, registered or book entry), in
such |
denominations, payable within 25 years from their date, subject |
to such
terms of redemption with or without premium, bear |
interest payable at
such times and at such fixed or variable |
rate or rates, and be dated
as shall be fixed and determined by |
the Director of
the
Governor's Office of Management and Budget
|
in the order authorizing the issuance and sale
of any series of |
Bonds, which order shall be approved by the Governor
and is |
herein called a "Bond Sale Order"; provided however, that |
interest
payable at fixed or variable rates shall not exceed |
that permitted in the
Bond Authorization Act, as now or |
hereafter amended. Bonds shall be
payable at such place or |
places, within or without the State of Illinois, and
may be |
made registrable as to either principal or as to both principal |
and
interest, as shall be specified in the Bond Sale Order. |
Bonds may be callable
or subject to purchase and retirement or |
tender and remarketing as fixed
and determined in the Bond Sale |
Order. Bonds, other than Bonds issued under Section 3 of this |
Act for the costs associated with the purchase and |
implementation of information technology, (i) except for |
refunding Bonds satisfying the requirements of Section 16 of |
this Act and sold during fiscal year 2009, 2010, or 2011, must |
be issued with principal or mandatory redemption amounts in |
equal amounts, with the first maturity issued occurring within |
the fiscal year in which the Bonds are issued or within the |
|
next succeeding fiscal year and (ii) must mature or be subject |
to mandatory redemption each fiscal year thereafter up to 25 |
years, except for refunding Bonds satisfying the requirements |
of Section 16 of this Act and sold during fiscal year 2009, |
2010, or 2011 which must mature or be subject to mandatory |
redemption each fiscal year thereafter up to 16 years. Bonds |
issued under Section 3 of this Act for the costs associated |
with the purchase and implementation of information technology |
must be issued with principal or mandatory redemption amounts |
in equal amounts, with the first maturity issued occurring with |
the fiscal year in which the respective bonds are issued or |
with the next succeeding fiscal year, with the respective bonds |
issued maturing or subject to mandatory redemption each fiscal |
year thereafter up to 10 years. Notwithstanding any provision |
of this Act to the contrary, the Bonds authorized by Public Act |
96-43 shall be payable within 5 years from their date and must |
be issued with principal or mandatory redemption amounts in |
equal amounts, with payment of principal or mandatory |
redemption beginning in the first fiscal year following the |
fiscal year in which the Bonds are issued.
|
In the case of any series of Bonds bearing interest at a |
variable interest
rate ("Variable Rate Bonds"), in lieu of |
determining the rate or rates at which
such series of Variable |
Rate Bonds shall bear interest and the price or prices
at which |
such Variable Rate Bonds shall be initially sold or remarketed |
(in the
event of purchase and subsequent resale), the Bond Sale |
|
Order may provide that
such interest rates and prices may vary |
from time to time depending on criteria
established in such |
Bond Sale Order, which criteria may include, without
|
limitation, references to indices or variations in interest |
rates as may, in
the judgment of a remarketing agent, be |
necessary to cause Variable Rate Bonds
of such series to be |
remarketable from time to time at a price equal to their
|
principal amount, and may provide for appointment of a bank, |
trust company,
investment bank, or other financial institution |
to serve as remarketing agent
in that connection.
The Bond Sale |
Order may provide that alternative interest rates or provisions
|
for establishing alternative interest rates, different |
security or claim
priorities, or different call or amortization |
provisions will apply during
such times as Variable Rate Bonds |
of any series are held by a person providing
credit or |
liquidity enhancement arrangements for such Bonds as |
authorized in
subsection (b) of this Section.
The Bond Sale |
Order may also provide for such variable interest rates to be
|
established pursuant to a process generally known as an auction |
rate process
and may provide for appointment of one or more |
financial institutions to serve
as auction agents and |
broker-dealers in connection with the establishment of
such |
interest rates and the sale and remarketing of such Bonds.
|
(b) In connection with the issuance of any series of Bonds, |
the State may
enter into arrangements to provide additional |
security and liquidity for such
Bonds, including, without |
|
limitation, bond or interest rate insurance or
letters of |
credit, lines of credit, bond purchase contracts, or other
|
arrangements whereby funds are made available to retire or |
purchase Bonds,
thereby assuring the ability of owners of the |
Bonds to sell or redeem their
Bonds. The State may enter into |
contracts and may agree to pay fees to persons
providing such |
arrangements, but only under circumstances where the Director |
of
the
Governor's Office of Management and Budget certifies |
that he or she reasonably expects the total
interest paid or to |
be paid on the Bonds, together with the fees for the
|
arrangements (being treated as if interest), would not, taken |
together, cause
the Bonds to bear interest, calculated to their |
stated maturity, at a rate in
excess of the rate that the Bonds |
would bear in the absence of such
arrangements.
|
The State may, with respect to Bonds issued or anticipated |
to be issued,
participate in and enter into arrangements with |
respect to interest rate
protection or exchange agreements, |
guarantees, or financial futures contracts
for the purpose of |
limiting, reducing, or managing interest rate exposure.
The |
authority granted under this paragraph, however, shall not |
increase the principal amount of Bonds authorized to be issued |
by law. The arrangements may be executed and delivered by the |
Director
of the
Governor's Office of Management and Budget on |
behalf of the State. Net payments for such
arrangements shall |
constitute interest on the Bonds and shall be paid from the
|
General Obligation Bond Retirement and Interest Fund. The |
|
Director of the
Governor's Office of Management and Budget |
shall at least annually certify to the Governor and
the
State |
Comptroller his or her estimate of the amounts of such net |
payments to
be included in the calculation of interest required |
to be paid by the State.
|
(c) Prior to the issuance of any Variable Rate Bonds |
pursuant to
subsection (a), the Director of the
Governor's |
Office of Management and Budget shall adopt an
interest rate |
risk management policy providing that the amount of the State's
|
variable rate exposure with respect to Bonds shall not exceed |
20%. This policy
shall remain in effect while any Bonds are |
outstanding and the issuance of
Bonds
shall be subject to the |
terms of such policy. The terms of this policy may be
amended |
from time to time by the Director of the
Governor's Office of |
Management and Budget but in no
event shall any amendment cause |
the permitted level of the State's variable
rate exposure with |
respect to Bonds to exceed 20%.
|
(d) "Build America Bonds" in this Section means Bonds |
authorized by Section 54AA of the Internal Revenue Code of |
1986, as amended ("Internal Revenue Code"), and bonds issued |
from time to time to refund or continue to refund "Build |
America Bonds". |
(e) Notwithstanding any other provision of this Section, |
Qualified School Construction Bonds shall be issued and sold |
from time to time, in one or more series, in such amounts and |
at such prices as may be directed by the Governor, upon |
|
recommendation by the Director of the Governor's Office of |
Management and Budget. Qualified School Construction Bonds |
shall be in such form (either coupon, registered or book |
entry), in such denominations, payable within 25 years from |
their date, subject to such terms of redemption with or without |
premium, and if the Qualified School Construction Bonds are |
issued with a supplemental coupon, bear interest payable at |
such times and at such fixed or variable rate or rates, and be |
dated as shall be fixed and determined by the Director of the |
Governor's Office of Management and Budget in the order |
authorizing the issuance and sale of any series of Qualified |
School Construction Bonds, which order shall be approved by the |
Governor and is herein called a "Bond Sale Order"; except that |
interest payable at fixed or variable rates, if any, shall not |
exceed that permitted in the Bond Authorization Act, as now or |
hereafter amended. Qualified School Construction Bonds shall |
be payable at such place or places, within or without the State |
of Illinois, and may be made registrable as to either principal |
or as to both principal and interest, as shall be specified in |
the Bond Sale Order. Qualified School Construction Bonds may be |
callable or subject to purchase and retirement or tender and |
remarketing as fixed and determined in the Bond Sale Order. |
Qualified School Construction Bonds must be issued with |
principal or mandatory redemption amounts or sinking fund |
payments into the General Obligation Bond Retirement and |
Interest Fund (or subaccount therefor) in equal amounts, with |
|
the first maturity issued, mandatory redemption payment or |
sinking fund payment occurring within the fiscal year in which |
the Qualified School Construction Bonds are issued or within |
the next succeeding fiscal year, with Qualified School |
Construction Bonds issued maturing or subject to mandatory |
redemption or with sinking fund payments thereof deposited each |
fiscal year thereafter up to 25 years. Sinking fund payments |
set forth in this subsection shall be permitted only to the |
extent authorized in Section 54F of the Internal Revenue Code |
or as otherwise determined by the Director of the Governor's |
Office of Management and Budget. "Qualified School |
Construction Bonds" in this subsection means Bonds authorized |
by Section 54F of the Internal Revenue Code and for bonds |
issued from time to time to refund or continue to refund such |
"Qualified School Construction Bonds". |
(f) Beginning with the next issuance by the Governor's |
Office of Management and Budget to the Procurement Policy Board |
of a request for quotation for the purpose of formulating a new |
pool of qualified underwriting banks list, all entities |
responding to such a request for quotation for inclusion on |
that list shall provide a written report to the Governor's |
Office of Management and Budget and the Illinois Comptroller. |
The written report submitted to the Comptroller shall (i) be |
published on the Comptroller's Internet website and (ii) be |
used by the Governor's Office of Management and Budget for the |
purposes of scoring such a request for quotation. The written |
|
report, at a minimum, shall: |
(1) disclose whether, within the past 3 months, |
pursuant to its credit default swap market-making |
activities, the firm has entered into any State of Illinois |
credit default swaps ("CDS"); |
(2) include, in the event of State of Illinois CDS |
activity, disclosure of the firm's cumulative notional |
volume of State of Illinois CDS trades and the firm's |
outstanding gross and net notional amount of State of |
Illinois CDS, as of the end of the current 3-month period; |
(3) indicate, pursuant to the firm's proprietary |
trading activities, disclosure of whether the firm, within |
the past 3 months, has entered into any proprietary trades |
for its own account in State of Illinois CDS; |
(4) include, in the event of State of Illinois |
proprietary trades, disclosure of the firm's outstanding |
gross and net notional amount of proprietary State of |
Illinois CDS and whether the net position is short or long |
credit protection, as of the end of the current 3-month |
period; |
(5) list all time periods during the past 3 months |
during which the firm held net long or net short State of |
Illinois CDS proprietary credit protection positions, the |
amount of such positions, and whether those positions were |
net long or net short credit protection positions; and |
(6) indicate whether, within the previous 3 months, the |
|
firm released any publicly available research or marketing |
reports that reference State of Illinois CDS and include |
those research or marketing reports as attachments. |
(g) All entities included on a Governor's Office of |
Management and Budget's pool of qualified underwriting banks |
list shall, as soon as possible after the effective date of |
this amendatory Act of the 96th General Assembly, but not later |
than January 21, 2011, and on a quarterly fiscal basis |
thereafter, provide a written report to the Governor's Office |
of Management and Budget and the Illinois Comptroller. The |
written reports submitted to the Comptroller shall be published |
on the Comptroller's Internet website. The written reports, at |
a minimum, shall: |
(1) disclose whether, within the past 3 months, |
pursuant to its credit default swap market-making |
activities, the firm has entered into any State of Illinois |
credit default swaps ("CDS"); |
(2) include, in the event of State of Illinois CDS |
activity, disclosure of the firm's cumulative notional |
volume of State of Illinois CDS trades and the firm's |
outstanding gross and net notional amount of State of |
Illinois CDS, as of the end of the current 3-month period; |
(3) indicate, pursuant to the firm's proprietary |
trading activities, disclosure of whether the firm, within |
the past 3 months, has entered into any proprietary trades |
for its own account in State of Illinois CDS; |
|
(4) include, in the event of State of Illinois |
proprietary trades, disclosure of the firm's outstanding |
gross and net notional amount of proprietary State of |
Illinois CDS and whether the net position is short or long |
credit protection, as of the end of the current 3-month |
period; |
(5) list all time periods during the past 3 months |
during which the firm held net long or net short State of |
Illinois CDS proprietary credit protection positions, the |
amount of such positions, and whether those positions were |
net long or net short credit protection positions; and |
(6) indicate whether, within the previous 3 months, the |
firm released any publicly available research or marketing |
reports that reference State of Illinois CDS and include |
those research or marketing reports as attachments. |
(Source: P.A. 96-18, eff. 6-26-09; 96-37, eff. 7-13-09; 96-43, |
eff. 7-15-09; 96-828, eff. 12-2-09.)
|
Section 10. The Build Illinois Bond Act is amended by |
changing Sections 2 and 4 as follows:
|
(30 ILCS 425/2) (from Ch. 127, par. 2802)
|
Sec. 2. Authorization for Bonds. The State of Illinois is
|
authorized to issue, sell and provide for the retirement of |
limited
obligation bonds, notes and other evidences of |
indebtedness of the State of
Illinois in the total principal |
|
amount of $5,703,509,000 $4,615,509,000
herein called "Bonds". |
Such authorized amount of Bonds shall
be reduced from time to |
time by amounts, if any, which are equal to the
moneys received |
by the Department of Revenue in any fiscal year pursuant to
|
Section 3-1001 of the "Illinois Vehicle Code", as amended, in |
excess of the
Annual Specified Amount (as defined in Section 3 |
of the "Retailers'
Occupation Tax Act", as amended) and |
transferred at the end of such fiscal
year from the General |
Revenue Fund to the Build Illinois Purposes Fund (now |
abolished) as
provided in Section 3-1001 of said Code; |
provided, however, that no such
reduction shall affect the |
validity or enforceability of any Bonds issued
prior to such |
reduction. Such amount of authorized Bonds
shall be exclusive |
of any refunding Bonds issued pursuant to Section 15 of
this |
Act and exclusive of any Bonds issued pursuant to this Section |
which
are redeemed, purchased, advance refunded, or defeased in |
accordance with
paragraph (f) of Section 4 of this Act. Bonds |
shall be issued for the
categories and specific purposes |
expressed in Section 4 of this Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 96-36, eff. 7-13-09.)
|
(30 ILCS 425/4) (from Ch. 127, par. 2804)
|
Sec. 4. Purposes of Bonds. Bonds shall be issued for the |
following
purposes and in the approximate amounts as set forth |
below:
|
(a) $3,213,000,000 $2,917,000,000 for the expenses of |
|
issuance and
sale of Bonds, including bond discounts, and for |
planning, engineering,
acquisition, construction, |
reconstruction, development, improvement and
extension of the |
public infrastructure in the State of Illinois, including: the
|
making of loans or grants to local governments for waste |
disposal systems,
water and sewer line extensions and water |
distribution and purification
facilities, rail or air or water |
port improvements, gas and electric utility
extensions, |
publicly owned industrial and commercial sites, buildings
used |
for public administration purposes and other public |
infrastructure capital
improvements; the making of loans or |
grants to units of local government
for financing and |
construction of wastewater facilities, including grants to |
serve unincorporated areas; refinancing or
retiring bonds |
issued between January 1, 1987 and January 1,
1990 by home rule |
municipalities, debt service on which is provided from a
tax |
imposed by home rule municipalities prior to January 1, 1990 on |
the
sale of food and drugs pursuant to Section 8-11-1 of the |
Home Rule
Municipal Retailers' Occupation Tax Act or Section |
8-11-5 of the Home
Rule Municipal Service Occupation Tax Act; |
the making of deposits not
to exceed $70,000,000 in the |
aggregate into
the Water Pollution Control Revolving Fund to |
provide assistance in
accordance with the provisions of Title |
IV-A of the Environmental
Protection Act; the planning, |
engineering, acquisition,
construction, reconstruction, |
alteration, expansion, extension and
improvement of highways, |
|
bridges, structures separating highways and
railroads, rest |
areas, interchanges, access
roads to and from any State or |
local highway and other transportation
improvement projects |
which are related to
economic development activities; the |
making of loans or grants for
planning, engineering, |
rehabilitation, improvement or construction of rail
and |
transit facilities; the planning, engineering, acquisition,
|
construction, reconstruction and improvement of watershed, |
drainage, flood
control, recreation and related improvements |
and facilities, including
expenses related to land and easement |
acquisition, relocation, control
structures, channel work and |
clearing and appurtenant work; the making of
grants for |
improvement and development of zoos and park district field
|
houses and related structures; and the making of grants for |
improvement and
development of Navy Pier and related |
structures.
|
(b) $541,000,000 $196,000,000 for fostering economic |
development and
increased employment and the well being of the |
citizens of Illinois, including:
the making of grants for |
improvement and development of McCormick Place and
related |
structures; the
planning and construction of a |
microelectronics research center, including
the planning, |
engineering, construction, improvement, renovation and
|
acquisition of buildings, equipment and related utility |
support systems;
the making of loans to businesses and |
investments in small businesses;
acquiring real properties for |
|
industrial or commercial site development;
acquiring, |
rehabilitating and reconveying industrial and commercial
|
properties for the purpose of expanding employment and |
encouraging private
and other public sector investment in the |
economy of Illinois; the payment
of expenses associated with |
siting the Superconducting Super Collider Particle
Accelerator |
in Illinois and with its acquisition, construction,
|
maintenance, operation, promotion and support; the making of |
loans for the
planning, engineering, acquisition, |
construction, improvement and
conversion of facilities and |
equipment which will foster the use of
Illinois coal; the |
payment of expenses associated with the
promotion, |
establishment, acquisition and operation of small business
|
incubator facilities and agribusiness research facilities, |
including the lease,
purchase, renovation, planning, |
engineering, construction and maintenance of
buildings, |
utility support systems and equipment designated for such
|
purposes and the establishment and maintenance of centralized |
support
services within such facilities; and the making of |
grants or loans to
units of local government for Urban |
Development Action Grant and Housing
Partnership programs.
|
(c) $1,741,358,100 $1,352,358,100 for the development and
|
improvement of educational,
scientific, technical and |
vocational programs and facilities and the
expansion of health |
and human services for all citizens of Illinois,
including: the |
making of construction and improvement grants and loans
to |
|
public libraries
and library systems; the making of grants and |
loans for planning,
engineering, acquisition and construction
|
of a new State central library in Springfield; the planning, |
engineering,
acquisition and construction of an animal and |
dairy sciences facility; the
planning, engineering, |
acquisition and construction of a campus and all
related |
buildings, facilities, equipment and materials for Richland
|
Community College; the acquisition, rehabilitation and |
installation of
equipment and materials for scientific and |
historical surveys; the making of
grants or loans for |
distribution to eligible vocational education instructional
|
programs for the upgrading of vocational education programs, |
school shops
and laboratories, including the acquisition, |
rehabilitation and
installation of technical equipment and |
materials; the making of grants or
loans for distribution to |
eligible local educational agencies for the
upgrading of math |
and science instructional programs, including the
acquisition |
of instructional equipment and materials; miscellaneous |
capital
improvements for universities and community colleges |
including the
planning, engineering,
construction, |
reconstruction, remodeling, improvement, repair and
|
installation of capital facilities and costs of planning, |
supplies,
equipment, materials, services, and all other |
required expenses; the
making of grants or loans for repair, |
renovation and miscellaneous capital
improvements for |
privately operated colleges and universities and community
|
|
colleges, including the planning, engineering, acquisition, |
construction,
reconstruction, remodeling,
improvement, repair |
and installation of capital facilities and costs of
planning, |
supplies, equipment, materials, services, and all other |
required
expenses; and the making of grants or loans for |
distribution to local
governments for hospital and other health |
care facilities including the
planning, engineering, |
acquisition, construction, reconstruction,
remodeling, |
improvement, repair and installation of capital facilities and
|
costs of planning, supplies, equipment, materials, services |
and all other
required expenses.
|
(d) $208,150,900 $150,150,900 for protection, |
preservation,
restoration and conservation of environmental |
and natural resources,
including: the making of grants to soil |
and water conservation districts
for the planning and |
implementation of conservation practices and for
funding |
contracts with the Soil Conservation Service for watershed
|
planning; the making of grants to units of local government for |
the
capital development and improvement of recreation areas, |
including
planning and engineering costs, sewer projects, |
including planning and
engineering costs and water projects, |
including planning
and engineering costs, and for the |
acquisition of open space lands,
including the acquisition of |
easements and other property interests of less
than fee simple |
ownership; the acquisition and related costs and development
|
and management of natural heritage lands, including natural |
|
areas and areas
providing habitat for
endangered species and |
nongame wildlife, and buffer area lands; the
acquisition and |
related costs and development and management of
habitat lands, |
including forest, wildlife habitat and wetlands;
and the |
removal and disposition of hazardous substances, including the |
cost of
project management, equipment, laboratory analysis, |
and contractual services
necessary for preventative and |
corrective actions related to the preservation,
restoration |
and conservation of the environment, including deposits not to
|
exceed $60,000,000 in the aggregate into the Hazardous Waste |
Fund and the
Brownfields Redevelopment Fund for improvements in |
accordance with the
provisions of Titles V and XVII of the |
Environmental Protection Act.
|
(e) The amount specified in paragraph (a) above
shall |
include an amount necessary to pay reasonable expenses of each
|
issuance and sale of the Bonds, as specified in the related |
Bond Sale Order
(hereinafter defined).
|
(f) Any unexpended proceeds from any sale of
Bonds which |
are held in the Build Illinois Bond Fund may be used to redeem,
|
purchase, advance refund, or defease any Bonds outstanding.
|
(Source: P.A. 96-36, eff. 7-13-09; 96-503, eff. 8-14-09; |
96-1000, eff. 7-2-10.)
|
Section 15. The Illinois Pension Code is amended by |
changing Sections 1-113.14, 2-124, 14-131, 15-155, 16-158, |
18-131, and 22A-111 and by adding Section 1-113.15 as follows: |
|
(40 ILCS 5/1-113.14)
|
Sec. 1-113.14. Investment services for retirement systems, |
pension funds, and investment boards, except those funds |
established under Articles 3 and 4. |
(a) For the purposes of this Section, "investment services" |
means services provided by an investment adviser or a |
consultant other than qualified fund-of-fund management |
services as defined in Section 1-113.15 . |
(b) The selection and appointment of an investment adviser |
or consultant for investment services by the board of a |
retirement system, pension fund, or investment board subject to |
this Code, except those whose investments are restricted by |
Section 1-113.2, shall be made and awarded in accordance with |
this Section. All contracts for investment services shall be |
awarded by the board using a competitive process that is |
substantially similar to the process required for the |
procurement of professional and artistic services under |
Article 35 of the Illinois Procurement Code. Each board of |
trustees shall adopt a policy in accordance with this |
subsection (b) within 60 days after the effective date of this |
amendatory Act of the 96th General Assembly. The policy shall |
be posted on its web site and filed with the Illinois |
Procurement Policy Board. Exceptions to this Section are |
allowed for (i) sole source procurements, (ii) emergency |
procurements, and (iii) at the discretion of the pension fund, |
|
retirement system, or board of investment, contracts that are |
nonrenewable and one year or less in duration, so long as the |
contract has a value of less than $20,000.
All exceptions |
granted under this Section must be published on the system's, |
fund's, or board's web site, shall name the person authorizing |
the procurement, and shall include a brief explanation of the |
reason for the exception. |
A person, other than a trustee or an employee of a |
retirement system, pension fund, or investment board, may not |
act as a consultant or investment adviser under this Section |
unless that person is registered as an investment adviser under |
the federal Investment Advisers Act of 1940 (15 U.S.C. 80b-1, |
et seq.) or a bank, as defined in the federal Investment |
Advisers Act of 1940 (15 U.S.C. 80b-1, et seq.). |
(c) Investment services provided by an investment adviser |
or a consultant appointed under this Section shall be rendered |
pursuant to a written contract between the investment adviser |
or consultant and the board. |
The contract shall include all of the following: |
(1) Acknowledgement in writing by the investment |
adviser or consultant that he or she is a fiduciary with |
respect to the pension fund or retirement system. |
(2) The description of the board's investment policy |
and notice that the policy is subject to change. |
(3) (i) Full disclosure of direct and indirect fees, |
commissions, penalties, and other compensation, including |
|
reimbursement for expenses, that may be paid by or on |
behalf of the consultant in connection with the provision |
of services to the pension fund or retirement system and |
(ii) a requirement that the consultant update the |
disclosure promptly after a modification of those payments |
or an additional payment. |
(4) A requirement that the investment adviser or |
consultant, in conjunction with the board's staff, submit |
periodic written reports, on at least a quarterly basis, |
for the board's review at its regularly scheduled meetings. |
All returns on investment shall be reported as net returns |
after payment of all fees, commissions, and any other |
compensation. |
(5) Disclosure of the names and addresses of (i) the |
consultant or investment adviser; (ii) any entity that is a |
parent of, or owns a controlling interest in, the |
consultant or investment adviser; (iii) any entity that is |
a subsidiary of, or in which a controlling interest is |
owned by, the consultant or investment adviser; (iv) any |
persons who have an ownership or distributive income share |
in the consultant or investment adviser that is in excess |
of 7.5%; or (v) serves as an executive officer of the |
consultant or investment adviser. |
(6) A disclosure of the names and addresses of all |
subcontractors, if applicable, and the expected amount of |
money each will receive under the contract, including an |
|
acknowledgment that the contractor must promptly make |
notification, in writing, if at any time during the term of |
the contract a contractor adds or changes any |
subcontractors. For purposes of this subparagraph (6), |
"subcontractor" does not include non-investment related |
professionals or professionals offering services that are |
not directly related to the investment of assets, such as |
legal counsel, actuary, proxy-voting services, services |
used to track compliance with legal standards, and |
investment fund of funds where the board has no direct |
contractual relationship with the investment advisers or |
partnerships. |
(7) A description of service to be performed. |
(8) A description of the need for the service. |
(9) A description of the plan for post-performance |
review. |
(10) A description of the qualifications necessary. |
(11) The duration of the contract. |
(12) The method for charging and measuring cost. |
(d) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, a |
retirement system, pension fund, or investment board subject to |
this Code, except those whose investments are restricted by |
Section 1-113.2 of this Code, shall not enter into a contract |
with a consultant that exceeds 5 years in duration. No contract |
to provide consulting services may be renewed or extended. At |
the end of the term of a contract, however, the consultant is |
|
eligible to compete for a new contract as provided in this |
Section. No retirement system, pension fund, or investment |
board shall attempt to avoid or contravene the restrictions of |
this subsection (d) by any means. |
(e) Within 60 days after the effective date of this |
amendatory Act of the 96th General Assembly, each investment |
adviser or consultant currently providing services or subject |
to an existing contract for the provision of services must |
disclose to the board of trustees all direct and indirect fees, |
commissions, penalties, and other compensation paid by or on |
behalf of the investment adviser or consultant in connection |
with the provision of those services and shall update that |
disclosure promptly after a modification of those payments or |
an additional payment. The person shall update the disclosure |
promptly after a modification of those payments or an |
additional payment. The disclosures required by this |
subsection (e) shall be in writing and shall include the date |
and amount of each payment and the name and address of each |
recipient of a payment. |
(f) The retirement system, pension fund, or board of |
investment shall develop uniform documents that shall be used |
for the solicitation, review, and acceptance of all investment |
services. The form shall include the terms contained in |
subsection (c) of this Section. All such uniform documents |
shall be posted on the retirement system's, pension fund's, or |
investment board's web site. |
|
(g) A description of every contract for investment services |
shall be posted in a conspicuous manner on the web site of the |
retirement system, pension fund, or investment board. The |
description must include the name of the person or entity |
awarded a contract, the total amount applicable to the |
contract, the total fees paid or to be paid, and a disclosure |
approved by the board describing the factors that contributed |
to the selection of an investment adviser or consultant.
|
(Source: P.A. 96-6, eff. 4-3-09.) |
(40 ILCS 5/1-113.15 new) |
Sec. 1-113.15. Qualified fund-of-fund management services. |
(a) As used in this Section: |
"Qualified fund-of-fund management services" means either |
(i) the services of an investment adviser acting in its |
capacity as an investment manager of a fund-of-funds or (ii) an |
investment adviser acting in its capacity as an investment |
manager of a separate account that is invested on a |
side-by-side basis in a substantially identical manner to a |
fund-of-funds, in each case pursuant to qualified written |
agreements. |
"Qualified written agreements" means one or more written |
contracts to which the investment adviser and the board are |
parties and includes all of the following: (i) the matters |
described in items (1), (4), (5), (7), (11), and (12) of |
subsection (c) of Section 1-113.14; (ii) a description of any |
|
fees, commissions, penalties, and other compensation payable, |
if any, directly by the retirement system, pension fund, or |
investment board (which shall not include any fees, |
commissions, penalties, and other compensation payable from |
the assets of the fund-of-funds or separate account); (iii) a |
description (or method of calculation) of the fees and expenses |
payable by the Fund to the investment adviser and the timing of |
the payment of the fees or expenses; and (iv) a description (or |
method of calculation) of any carried interest or other |
performance based interests, fees, or payments allocable by the |
Fund to the investment adviser or an affiliate of the |
investment adviser and the priority of distributions with |
respect to such interest. |
(b) A description of every contract for qualified |
fund-of-fund management services must be posted in a |
conspicuous manner on the web site of the retirement system, |
pension fund, or investment board. The description must include |
the name of the fund-of-funds, the name of its investment |
adviser, the total investment commitment of the retirement |
system, pension fund, or investment board to invest in such |
fund-of-funds, and a disclosure approved by the board |
describing the factors that contributed to the investment in |
such fund-of-funds. No information that is exempt from |
inspection pursuant to Section 7 of the Freedom of Information |
Act shall be disclosed under this Section.
|
|
(40 ILCS 5/2-124) (from Ch. 108 1/2, par. 2-124)
|
Sec. 2-124. Contributions by State.
|
(a) The State shall make contributions to the System by
|
appropriations of amounts which, together with the |
contributions of
participants, interest earned on investments, |
and other income
will meet the cost of maintaining and |
administering the System on a 90%
funded basis in accordance |
with actuarial recommendations.
|
(b) The Board shall determine the amount of State
|
contributions required for each fiscal year on the basis of the
|
actuarial tables and other assumptions adopted by the Board and |
the
prescribed rate of interest, using the formula in |
subsection (c).
|
(c) For State fiscal years 2011 through 2045, the minimum |
contribution
to the System to be made by the State for each |
fiscal year shall be an amount
determined by the System to be |
sufficient to bring the total assets of the
System up to 90% of |
the total actuarial liabilities of the System by the end of
|
State fiscal year 2045. In making these determinations, the |
required State
contribution shall be calculated each year as a |
level percentage of payroll
over the years remaining to and |
including fiscal year 2045 and shall be
determined under the |
projected unit credit actuarial cost method.
|
For State fiscal years 1996 through 2005, the State |
contribution to
the System, as a percentage of the applicable |
employee payroll, shall be
increased in equal annual increments |
|
so that by State fiscal year 2011, the
State is contributing at |
the rate required under this Section.
|
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Article, the |
total required State
contribution for State fiscal year 2006 is |
$4,157,000.
|
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Article, the |
total required State
contribution for State fiscal year 2007 is |
$5,220,300.
|
For each of State fiscal years 2008 through 2009, the State |
contribution to
the System, as a percentage of the applicable |
employee payroll, shall be
increased in equal annual increments |
from the required State contribution for State fiscal year |
2007, so that by State fiscal year 2011, the
State is |
contributing at the rate otherwise required under this Section.
|
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Article, the |
total required State contribution for State fiscal year 2010 is |
$10,454,000 and shall be made from the proceeds of bonds sold |
in fiscal year 2010 pursuant to Section 7.2 of the General |
Obligation Bond Act, less (i) the pro rata share of bond sale |
expenses determined by the System's share of total bond |
proceeds, (ii) any amounts received from the General Revenue |
Fund in fiscal year 2010, and (iii) any reduction in bond |
proceeds due to the issuance of discounted bonds, if |
applicable. |
Beginning in State fiscal year 2046, the minimum State |
contribution for
each fiscal year shall be the amount needed to |
|
maintain the total assets of
the System at 90% of the total |
actuarial liabilities of the System.
|
Amounts received by the System pursuant to Section 25 of |
the Budget Stabilization Act or Section 8.12 of the State |
Finance Act in any fiscal year do not reduce and do not |
constitute payment of any portion of the minimum State |
contribution required under this Article in that fiscal year. |
Such amounts shall not reduce, and shall not be included in the |
calculation of, the required State contributions under this |
Article in any future year until the System has reached a |
funding ratio of at least 90%. A reference in this Article to |
the "required State contribution" or any substantially similar |
term does not include or apply to any amounts payable to the |
System under Section 25 of the Budget Stabilization Act.
|
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Section, the |
required State
contribution for State fiscal year 2005 and for |
fiscal year 2008 and each fiscal year thereafter, as
calculated |
under this Section and
certified under Section 2-134, shall not |
exceed an amount equal to (i) the
amount of the required State |
contribution that would have been calculated under
this Section |
for that fiscal year if the System had not received any |
payments
under subsection (d) of Section 7.2 of the General |
Obligation Bond Act, minus
(ii) the portion of the State's |
total debt service payments for that fiscal
year on the bonds |
issued in fiscal year 2003 for the purposes of that Section |
7.2, as determined
and certified by the Comptroller, that is |
|
the same as the System's portion of
the total moneys |
distributed under subsection (d) of Section 7.2 of the General
|
Obligation Bond Act. In determining this maximum for State |
fiscal years 2008 through 2010, however, the amount referred to |
in item (i) shall be increased, as a percentage of the |
applicable employee payroll, in equal increments calculated |
from the sum of the required State contribution for State |
fiscal year 2007 plus the applicable portion of the State's |
total debt service payments for fiscal year 2007 on the bonds |
issued in fiscal year 2003 for the purposes of Section 7.2 of |
the General
Obligation Bond Act, so that, by State fiscal year |
2011, the
State is contributing at the rate otherwise required |
under this Section.
|
(d) For purposes of determining the required State |
contribution to the System, the value of the System's assets |
shall be equal to the actuarial value of the System's assets, |
which shall be calculated as follows: |
As of June 30, 2008, the actuarial value of the System's |
assets shall be equal to the market value of the assets as of |
that date. In determining the actuarial value of the System's |
assets for fiscal years after June 30, 2008, any actuarial |
gains or losses from investment return incurred in a fiscal |
year shall be recognized in equal annual amounts over the |
5-year period following that fiscal year. |
(e) For purposes of determining the required State |
contribution to the system for a particular year, the actuarial |
|
value of assets shall be assumed to earn a rate of return equal |
to the system's actuarially assumed rate of return. |
(Source: P.A. 95-950, eff. 8-29-08; 96-43, eff. 7-15-09.)
|
(40 ILCS 5/14-131)
|
Sec. 14-131. Contributions by State.
|
(a) The State shall make contributions to the System by |
appropriations of
amounts which, together with other employer |
contributions from trust, federal,
and other funds, employee |
contributions, investment income, and other income,
will be |
sufficient to meet the cost of maintaining and administering |
the System
on a 90% funded basis in accordance with actuarial |
recommendations.
|
For the purposes of this Section and Section 14-135.08, |
references to State
contributions refer only to employer |
contributions and do not include employee
contributions that |
are picked up or otherwise paid by the State or a
department on |
behalf of the employee.
|
(b) The Board shall determine the total amount of State |
contributions
required for each fiscal year on the basis of the |
actuarial tables and other
assumptions adopted by the Board, |
using the formula in subsection (e).
|
The Board shall also determine a State contribution rate |
for each fiscal
year, expressed as a percentage of payroll, |
based on the total required State
contribution for that fiscal |
year (less the amount received by the System from
|
|
appropriations under Section 8.12 of the State Finance Act and |
Section 1 of the
State Pension Funds Continuing Appropriation |
Act, if any, for the fiscal year
ending on the June 30 |
immediately preceding the applicable November 15
certification |
deadline), the estimated payroll (including all forms of
|
compensation) for personal services rendered by eligible |
employees, and the
recommendations of the actuary.
|
For the purposes of this Section and Section 14.1 of the |
State Finance Act,
the term "eligible employees" includes |
employees who participate in the System,
persons who may elect |
to participate in the System but have not so elected,
persons |
who are serving a qualifying period that is required for |
participation,
and annuitants employed by a department as |
described in subdivision (a)(1) or
(a)(2) of Section 14-111.
|
(c) Contributions shall be made by the several departments |
for each pay
period by warrants drawn by the State Comptroller |
against their respective
funds or appropriations based upon |
vouchers stating the amount to be so
contributed. These amounts |
shall be based on the full rate certified by the
Board under |
Section 14-135.08 for that fiscal year.
From the effective date |
of this amendatory Act of the 93rd General
Assembly through the |
payment of the final payroll from fiscal year 2004
|
appropriations, the several departments shall not make |
contributions
for the remainder of fiscal year 2004 but shall |
instead make payments
as required under subsection (a-1) of |
Section 14.1 of the State Finance Act.
The several departments |
|
shall resume those contributions at the commencement of
fiscal |
year 2005.
|
(c-1) Notwithstanding subsection (c) of this Section, for |
fiscal year 2010 only, contributions by the several departments |
are not required to be made for General Revenue Funds payrolls |
processed by the Comptroller. Payrolls paid by the several |
departments from all other State funds must continue to be |
processed pursuant to subsection (c) of this Section. |
(c-2) For State fiscal year 2010 only, on or as soon as |
possible after the 15th day of each month the Board shall |
submit vouchers for payment of State contributions to the |
System, in a total monthly amount of one-twelfth of the fiscal |
year 2010 General Revenue Fund appropriation to the System. |
(d) If an employee is paid from trust funds or federal |
funds, the
department or other employer shall pay employer |
contributions from those funds
to the System at the certified |
rate, unless the terms of the trust or the
federal-State |
agreement preclude the use of the funds for that purpose, in
|
which case the required employer contributions shall be paid by |
the State.
From the effective date of this amendatory
Act of |
the 93rd General Assembly through the payment of the final
|
payroll from fiscal year 2004 appropriations, the department or |
other
employer shall not pay contributions for the remainder of |
fiscal year
2004 but shall instead make payments as required |
under subsection (a-1) of
Section 14.1 of the State Finance |
Act. The department or other employer shall
resume payment of
|
|
contributions at the commencement of fiscal year 2005.
|
(e) For State fiscal years 2011 through 2045, the minimum |
contribution
to the System to be made by the State for each |
fiscal year shall be an amount
determined by the System to be |
sufficient to bring the total assets of the
System up to 90% of |
the total actuarial liabilities of the System by the end
of |
State fiscal year 2045. In making these determinations, the |
required State
contribution shall be calculated each year as a |
level percentage of payroll
over the years remaining to and |
including fiscal year 2045 and shall be
determined under the |
projected unit credit actuarial cost method.
|
For State fiscal years 1996 through 2005, the State |
contribution to
the System, as a percentage of the applicable |
employee payroll, shall be
increased in equal annual increments |
so that by State fiscal year 2011, the
State is contributing at |
the rate required under this Section; except that
(i) for State |
fiscal year 1998, for all purposes of this Code and any other
|
law of this State, the certified percentage of the applicable |
employee payroll
shall be 5.052% for employees earning eligible |
creditable service under Section
14-110 and 6.500% for all |
other employees, notwithstanding any contrary
certification |
made under Section 14-135.08 before the effective date of this
|
amendatory Act of 1997, and (ii)
in the following specified |
State fiscal years, the State contribution to
the System shall |
not be less than the following indicated percentages of the
|
applicable employee payroll, even if the indicated percentage |
|
will produce a
State contribution in excess of the amount |
otherwise required under this
subsection and subsection (a):
|
9.8% in FY 1999;
10.0% in FY 2000;
10.2% in FY 2001;
10.4% in FY |
2002;
10.6% in FY 2003; and
10.8% in FY 2004.
|
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Article, the |
total required State
contribution to the System for State |
fiscal year 2006 is $203,783,900.
|
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Article, the |
total required State
contribution to the System for State |
fiscal year 2007 is $344,164,400.
|
For each of State fiscal years 2008 through 2009, the State |
contribution to
the System, as a percentage of the applicable |
employee payroll, shall be
increased in equal annual increments |
from the required State contribution for State fiscal year |
2007, so that by State fiscal year 2011, the
State is |
contributing at the rate otherwise required under this Section.
|
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Article, the |
total required State General Revenue Fund contribution for |
State fiscal year 2010 is $723,703,100 and shall be made from |
the proceeds of bonds sold in fiscal year 2010 pursuant to |
Section 7.2 of the General Obligation Bond Act, less (i) the |
pro rata share of bond sale expenses determined by the System's |
share of total bond proceeds, (ii) any amounts received from |
the General Revenue Fund in fiscal year 2010, and (iii) any |
reduction in bond proceeds due to the issuance of discounted |
bonds, if applicable. |
|
Beginning in State fiscal year 2046, the minimum State |
contribution for
each fiscal year shall be the amount needed to |
maintain the total assets of
the System at 90% of the total |
actuarial liabilities of the System.
|
Amounts received by the System pursuant to Section 25 of |
the Budget Stabilization Act or Section 8.12 of the State |
Finance Act in any fiscal year do not reduce and do not |
constitute payment of any portion of the minimum State |
contribution required under this Article in that fiscal year. |
Such amounts shall not reduce, and shall not be included in the |
calculation of, the required State contributions under this |
Article in any future year until the System has reached a |
funding ratio of at least 90%. A reference in this Article to |
the "required State contribution" or any substantially similar |
term does not include or apply to any amounts payable to the |
System under Section 25 of the Budget Stabilization Act.
|
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Section, the |
required State
contribution for State fiscal year 2005 and for |
fiscal year 2008 and each fiscal year thereafter, as
calculated |
under this Section and
certified under Section 14-135.08, shall |
not exceed an amount equal to (i) the
amount of the required |
State contribution that would have been calculated under
this |
Section for that fiscal year if the System had not received any |
payments
under subsection (d) of Section 7.2 of the General |
Obligation Bond Act, minus
(ii) the portion of the State's |
total debt service payments for that fiscal
year on the bonds |
|
issued in fiscal year 2003 for the purposes of that Section |
7.2, as determined
and certified by the Comptroller, that is |
the same as the System's portion of
the total moneys |
distributed under subsection (d) of Section 7.2 of the General
|
Obligation Bond Act. In determining this maximum for State |
fiscal years 2008 through 2010, however, the amount referred to |
in item (i) shall be increased, as a percentage of the |
applicable employee payroll, in equal increments calculated |
from the sum of the required State contribution for State |
fiscal year 2007 plus the applicable portion of the State's |
total debt service payments for fiscal year 2007 on the bonds |
issued in fiscal year 2003 for the purposes of Section 7.2 of |
the General
Obligation Bond Act, so that, by State fiscal year |
2011, the
State is contributing at the rate otherwise required |
under this Section.
|
(f) After the submission of all payments for eligible |
employees
from personal services line items in fiscal year 2004 |
have been made,
the Comptroller shall provide to the System a |
certification of the sum
of all fiscal year 2004 expenditures |
for personal services that would
have been covered by payments |
to the System under this Section if the
provisions of this |
amendatory Act of the 93rd General Assembly had not been
|
enacted. Upon
receipt of the certification, the System shall |
determine the amount
due to the System based on the full rate |
certified by the Board under
Section 14-135.08 for fiscal year |
2004 in order to meet the State's
obligation under this |
|
Section. The System shall compare this amount
due to the amount |
received by the System in fiscal year 2004 through
payments |
under this Section and under Section 6z-61 of the State Finance |
Act.
If the amount
due is more than the amount received, the |
difference shall be termed the
"Fiscal Year 2004 Shortfall" for |
purposes of this Section, and the
Fiscal Year 2004 Shortfall |
shall be satisfied under Section 1.2 of the State
Pension Funds |
Continuing Appropriation Act. If the amount due is less than |
the
amount received, the
difference shall be termed the "Fiscal |
Year 2004 Overpayment" for purposes of
this Section, and the |
Fiscal Year 2004 Overpayment shall be repaid by
the System to |
the Pension Contribution Fund as soon as practicable
after the |
certification.
|
(g) For purposes of determining the required State |
contribution to the System, the value of the System's assets |
shall be equal to the actuarial value of the System's assets, |
which shall be calculated as follows: |
As of June 30, 2008, the actuarial value of the System's |
assets shall be equal to the market value of the assets as of |
that date. In determining the actuarial value of the System's |
assets for fiscal years after June 30, 2008, any actuarial |
gains or losses from investment return incurred in a fiscal |
year shall be recognized in equal annual amounts over the |
5-year period following that fiscal year. |
(h) For purposes of determining the required State |
contribution to the System for a particular year, the actuarial |
|
value of assets shall be assumed to earn a rate of return equal |
to the System's actuarially assumed rate of return. |
(i) After the submission of all payments for eligible |
employees from personal services line items paid from the |
General Revenue Fund in fiscal year 2010 have been made, the |
Comptroller shall provide to the System a certification of the |
sum of all fiscal year 2010 expenditures for personal services |
that would have been covered by payments to the System under |
this Section if the provisions of this amendatory Act of the |
96th General Assembly had not been enacted. Upon receipt of the |
certification, the System shall determine the amount due to the |
System based on the full rate certified by the Board under |
Section 14-135.08 for fiscal year 2010 in order to meet the |
State's obligation under this Section. The System shall compare |
this amount due to the amount received by the System in fiscal |
year 2010 through payments under this Section. If the amount |
due is more than the amount received, the difference shall be |
termed the "Fiscal Year 2010 Shortfall" for purposes of this |
Section, and the Fiscal Year 2010 Shortfall shall be satisfied |
under Section 1.2 of the State Pension Funds Continuing |
Appropriation Act. If the amount due is less than the amount |
received, the difference shall be termed the "Fiscal Year 2010 |
Overpayment" for purposes of this Section, and the Fiscal Year |
2010 Overpayment shall be repaid by the System to the General |
Revenue Fund as soon as practicable after the certification. |
(Source: P.A. 95-950, eff. 8-29-08; 96-43, eff. 7-15-09; 96-45, |
|
eff. 7-15-09; 96-1000, eff. 7-2-10.)
|
(40 ILCS 5/15-155) (from Ch. 108 1/2, par. 15-155)
|
Sec. 15-155. Employer contributions.
|
(a) The State of Illinois shall make contributions by |
appropriations of
amounts which, together with the other |
employer contributions from trust,
federal, and other funds, |
employee contributions, income from investments,
and other |
income of this System, will be sufficient to meet the cost of
|
maintaining and administering the System on a 90% funded basis |
in accordance
with actuarial recommendations.
|
The Board shall determine the amount of State contributions |
required for
each fiscal year on the basis of the actuarial |
tables and other assumptions
adopted by the Board and the |
recommendations of the actuary, using the formula
in subsection |
(a-1).
|
(a-1) For State fiscal years 2011 through 2045, the minimum |
contribution
to the System to be made by the State for each |
fiscal year shall be an amount
determined by the System to be |
sufficient to bring the total assets of the
System up to 90% of |
the total actuarial liabilities of the System by the end of
|
State fiscal year 2045. In making these determinations, the |
required State
contribution shall be calculated each year as a |
level percentage of payroll
over the years remaining to and |
including fiscal year 2045 and shall be
determined under the |
projected unit credit actuarial cost method.
|
|
For State fiscal years 1996 through 2005, the State |
contribution to
the System, as a percentage of the applicable |
employee payroll, shall be
increased in equal annual increments |
so that by State fiscal year 2011, the
State is contributing at |
the rate required under this Section.
|
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Article, the |
total required State
contribution for State fiscal year 2006 is |
$166,641,900.
|
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Article, the |
total required State
contribution for State fiscal year 2007 is |
$252,064,100.
|
For each of State fiscal years 2008 through 2009, the State |
contribution to
the System, as a percentage of the applicable |
employee payroll, shall be
increased in equal annual increments |
from the required State contribution for State fiscal year |
2007, so that by State fiscal year 2011, the
State is |
contributing at the rate otherwise required under this Section.
|
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Article, the |
total required State contribution for State fiscal year 2010 is |
$702,514,000 and shall be made from the State Pensions Fund and |
proceeds of bonds sold in fiscal year 2010 pursuant to Section |
7.2 of the General Obligation Bond Act, less (i) the pro rata |
share of bond sale expenses determined by the System's share of |
total bond proceeds, (ii) any amounts received from the General |
Revenue Fund in fiscal year 2010, (iii) any reduction in bond |
proceeds due to the issuance of discounted bonds, if |
|
applicable. |
Beginning in State fiscal year 2046, the minimum State |
contribution for
each fiscal year shall be the amount needed to |
maintain the total assets of
the System at 90% of the total |
actuarial liabilities of the System.
|
Amounts received by the System pursuant to Section 25 of |
the Budget Stabilization Act or Section 8.12 of the State |
Finance Act in any fiscal year do not reduce and do not |
constitute payment of any portion of the minimum State |
contribution required under this Article in that fiscal year. |
Such amounts shall not reduce, and shall not be included in the |
calculation of, the required State contributions under this |
Article in any future year until the System has reached a |
funding ratio of at least 90%. A reference in this Article to |
the "required State contribution" or any substantially similar |
term does not include or apply to any amounts payable to the |
System under Section 25 of the Budget Stabilization Act. |
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Section, the |
required State
contribution for State fiscal year 2005 and for |
fiscal year 2008 and each fiscal year thereafter, as
calculated |
under this Section and
certified under Section 15-165, shall |
not exceed an amount equal to (i) the
amount of the required |
State contribution that would have been calculated under
this |
Section for that fiscal year if the System had not received any |
payments
under subsection (d) of Section 7.2 of the General |
Obligation Bond Act, minus
(ii) the portion of the State's |
|
total debt service payments for that fiscal
year on the bonds |
issued in fiscal year 2003 for the purposes of that Section |
7.2, as determined
and certified by the Comptroller, that is |
the same as the System's portion of
the total moneys |
distributed under subsection (d) of Section 7.2 of the General
|
Obligation Bond Act. In determining this maximum for State |
fiscal years 2008 through 2010, however, the amount referred to |
in item (i) shall be increased, as a percentage of the |
applicable employee payroll, in equal increments calculated |
from the sum of the required State contribution for State |
fiscal year 2007 plus the applicable portion of the State's |
total debt service payments for fiscal year 2007 on the bonds |
issued in fiscal year 2003 for the purposes of Section 7.2 of |
the General
Obligation Bond Act, so that, by State fiscal year |
2011, the
State is contributing at the rate otherwise required |
under this Section.
|
(b) If an employee is paid from trust or federal funds, the |
employer
shall pay to the Board contributions from those funds |
which are
sufficient to cover the accruing normal costs on |
behalf of the employee.
However, universities having employees |
who are compensated out of local
auxiliary funds, income funds, |
or service enterprise funds are not required
to pay such |
contributions on behalf of those employees. The local auxiliary
|
funds, income funds, and service enterprise funds of |
universities shall not be
considered trust funds for the |
purpose of this Article, but funds of alumni
associations, |
|
foundations, and athletic associations which are affiliated |
with
the universities included as employers under this Article |
and other employers
which do not receive State appropriations |
are considered to be trust funds for
the purpose of this |
Article.
|
(b-1) The City of Urbana and the City of Champaign shall |
each make
employer contributions to this System for their |
respective firefighter
employees who participate in this |
System pursuant to subsection (h) of Section
15-107. The rate |
of contributions to be made by those municipalities shall
be |
determined annually by the Board on the basis of the actuarial |
assumptions
adopted by the Board and the recommendations of the |
actuary, and shall be
expressed as a percentage of salary for |
each such employee. The Board shall
certify the rate to the |
affected municipalities as soon as may be practical.
The |
employer contributions required under this subsection shall be |
remitted by
the municipality to the System at the same time and |
in the same manner as
employee contributions.
|
(c) Through State fiscal year 1995: The total employer |
contribution shall
be apportioned among the various funds of |
the State and other employers,
whether trust, federal, or other |
funds, in accordance with actuarial procedures
approved by the |
Board. State of Illinois contributions for employers receiving
|
State appropriations for personal services shall be payable |
from appropriations
made to the employers or to the System. The |
contributions for Class I
community colleges covering earnings |
|
other than those paid from trust and
federal funds, shall be |
payable solely from appropriations to the Illinois
Community |
College Board or the System for employer contributions.
|
(d) Beginning in State fiscal year 1996, the required State |
contributions
to the System shall be appropriated directly to |
the System and shall be payable
through vouchers issued in |
accordance with subsection (c) of Section 15-165, except as |
provided in subsection (g).
|
(e) The State Comptroller shall draw warrants payable to |
the System upon
proper certification by the System or by the |
employer in accordance with the
appropriation laws and this |
Code.
|
(f) Normal costs under this Section means liability for
|
pensions and other benefits which accrues to the System because |
of the
credits earned for service rendered by the participants |
during the
fiscal year and expenses of administering the |
System, but shall not
include the principal of or any |
redemption premium or interest on any bonds
issued by the Board |
or any expenses incurred or deposits required in
connection |
therewith.
|
(g) If the amount of a participant's earnings for any |
academic year used to determine the final rate of earnings, |
determined on a full-time equivalent basis, exceeds the amount |
of his or her earnings with the same employer for the previous |
academic year, determined on a full-time equivalent basis, by |
more than 6%, the participant's employer shall pay to the |
|
System, in addition to all other payments required under this |
Section and in accordance with guidelines established by the |
System, the present value of the increase in benefits resulting |
from the portion of the increase in earnings that is in excess |
of 6%. This present value shall be computed by the System on |
the basis of the actuarial assumptions and tables used in the |
most recent actuarial valuation of the System that is available |
at the time of the computation. The System may require the |
employer to provide any pertinent information or |
documentation. |
Whenever it determines that a payment is or may be required |
under this subsection (g), the System shall calculate the |
amount of the payment and bill the employer for that amount. |
The bill shall specify the calculations used to determine the |
amount due. If the employer disputes the amount of the bill, it |
may, within 30 days after receipt of the bill, apply to the |
System in writing for a recalculation. The application must |
specify in detail the grounds of the dispute and, if the |
employer asserts that the calculation is subject to subsection |
(h) or (i) of this Section, must include an affidavit setting |
forth and attesting to all facts within the employer's |
knowledge that are pertinent to the applicability of subsection |
(h) or (i). Upon receiving a timely application for |
recalculation, the System shall review the application and, if |
appropriate, recalculate the amount due.
|
The employer contributions required under this subsection |
|
(f) may be paid in the form of a lump sum within 90 days after |
receipt of the bill. If the employer contributions are not paid |
within 90 days after receipt of the bill, then interest will be |
charged at a rate equal to the System's annual actuarially |
assumed rate of return on investment compounded annually from |
the 91st day after receipt of the bill. Payments must be |
concluded within 3 years after the employer's receipt of the |
bill. |
(h) This subsection (h) applies only to payments made or |
salary increases given on or after June 1, 2005 but before July |
1, 2011. The changes made by Public Act 94-1057 shall not |
require the System to refund any payments received before July |
31, 2006 (the effective date of Public Act 94-1057). |
When assessing payment for any amount due under subsection |
(g), the System shall exclude earnings increases paid to |
participants under contracts or collective bargaining |
agreements entered into, amended, or renewed before June 1, |
2005.
|
When assessing payment for any amount due under subsection |
(g), the System shall exclude earnings increases paid to a |
participant at a time when the participant is 10 or more years |
from retirement eligibility under Section 15-135.
|
When assessing payment for any amount due under subsection |
(g), the System shall exclude earnings increases resulting from |
overload work, including a contract for summer teaching, or |
overtime when the employer has certified to the System, and the |
|
System has approved the certification, that: (i) in the case of |
overloads (A) the overload work is for the sole purpose of |
academic instruction in excess of the standard number of |
instruction hours for a full-time employee occurring during the |
academic year that the overload is paid and (B) the earnings |
increases are equal to or less than the rate of pay for |
academic instruction computed using the participant's current |
salary rate and work schedule; and (ii) in the case of |
overtime, the overtime was necessary for the educational |
mission. |
When assessing payment for any amount due under subsection |
(g), the System shall exclude any earnings increase resulting |
from (i) a promotion for which the employee moves from one |
classification to a higher classification under the State |
Universities Civil Service System, (ii) a promotion in academic |
rank for a tenured or tenure-track faculty position, or (iii) a |
promotion that the Illinois Community College Board has |
recommended in accordance with subsection (k) of this Section. |
These earnings increases shall be excluded only if the |
promotion is to a position that has existed and been filled by |
a member for no less than one complete academic year and the |
earnings increase as a result of the promotion is an increase |
that results in an amount no greater than the average salary |
paid for other similar positions. |
(i) When assessing payment for any amount due under |
subsection (g), the System shall exclude any salary increase |
|
described in subsection (h) of this Section given on or after |
July 1, 2011 but before July 1, 2014 under a contract or |
collective bargaining agreement entered into, amended, or |
renewed on or after June 1, 2005 but before July 1, 2011. |
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Section, any |
payments made or salary increases given after June 30, 2014 |
shall be used in assessing payment for any amount due under |
subsection (g) of this Section.
|
(j) The System shall prepare a report and file copies of |
the report with the Governor and the General Assembly by |
January 1, 2007 that contains all of the following information: |
(1) The number of recalculations required by the |
changes made to this Section by Public Act 94-1057 for each |
employer. |
(2) The dollar amount by which each employer's |
contribution to the System was changed due to |
recalculations required by Public Act 94-1057. |
(3) The total amount the System received from each |
employer as a result of the changes made to this Section by |
Public Act 94-4. |
(4) The increase in the required State contribution |
resulting from the changes made to this Section by Public |
Act 94-1057. |
(k) The Illinois Community College Board shall adopt rules |
for recommending lists of promotional positions submitted to |
the Board by community colleges and for reviewing the |
|
promotional lists on an annual basis. When recommending |
promotional lists, the Board shall consider the similarity of |
the positions submitted to those positions recognized for State |
universities by the State Universities Civil Service System. |
The Illinois Community College Board shall file a copy of its |
findings with the System. The System shall consider the |
findings of the Illinois Community College Board when making |
determinations under this Section. The System shall not exclude |
any earnings increases resulting from a promotion when the |
promotion was not submitted by a community college. Nothing in |
this subsection (k) shall require any community college to |
submit any information to the Community College Board.
|
(l) For purposes of determining the required State |
contribution to the System, the value of the System's assets |
shall be equal to the actuarial value of the System's assets, |
which shall be calculated as follows: |
As of June 30, 2008, the actuarial value of the System's |
assets shall be equal to the market value of the assets as of |
that date. In determining the actuarial value of the System's |
assets for fiscal years after June 30, 2008, any actuarial |
gains or losses from investment return incurred in a fiscal |
year shall be recognized in equal annual amounts over the |
5-year period following that fiscal year. |
(m) For purposes of determining the required State |
contribution to the system for a particular year, the actuarial |
value of assets shall be assumed to earn a rate of return equal |
|
to the system's actuarially assumed rate of return. |
(Source: P.A. 95-331, eff. 8-21-07; 95-950, eff. 8-29-08; |
96-43, eff. 7-15-09.)
|
(40 ILCS 5/16-158)
(from Ch. 108 1/2, par. 16-158)
|
Sec. 16-158. Contributions by State and other employing |
units.
|
(a) The State shall make contributions to the System by |
means of
appropriations from the Common School Fund and other |
State funds of amounts
which, together with other employer |
contributions, employee contributions,
investment income, and |
other income, will be sufficient to meet the cost of
|
maintaining and administering the System on a 90% funded basis |
in accordance
with actuarial recommendations.
|
The Board shall determine the amount of State contributions |
required for
each fiscal year on the basis of the actuarial |
tables and other assumptions
adopted by the Board and the |
recommendations of the actuary, using the formula
in subsection |
(b-3).
|
(a-1) Annually, on or before November 15, the Board shall |
certify to the
Governor the amount of the required State |
contribution for the coming fiscal
year. The certification |
shall include a copy of the actuarial recommendations
upon |
which it is based.
|
On or before May 1, 2004, the Board shall recalculate and |
recertify to
the Governor the amount of the required State |
|
contribution to the System for
State fiscal year 2005, taking |
into account the amounts appropriated to and
received by the |
System under subsection (d) of Section 7.2 of the General
|
Obligation Bond Act.
|
On or before July 1, 2005, the Board shall recalculate and |
recertify
to the Governor the amount of the required State
|
contribution to the System for State fiscal year 2006, taking |
into account the changes in required State contributions made |
by this amendatory Act of the 94th General Assembly.
|
(b) Through State fiscal year 1995, the State contributions |
shall be
paid to the System in accordance with Section 18-7 of |
the School Code.
|
(b-1) Beginning in State fiscal year 1996, on the 15th day |
of each month,
or as soon thereafter as may be practicable, the |
Board shall submit vouchers
for payment of State contributions |
to the System, in a total monthly amount of
one-twelfth of the |
required annual State contribution certified under
subsection |
(a-1).
From the
effective date of this amendatory Act of the |
93rd General Assembly
through June 30, 2004, the Board shall |
not submit vouchers for the
remainder of fiscal year 2004 in |
excess of the fiscal year 2004
certified contribution amount |
determined under this Section
after taking into consideration |
the transfer to the System
under subsection (a) of Section |
6z-61 of the State Finance Act.
These vouchers shall be paid by |
the State Comptroller and
Treasurer by warrants drawn on the |
funds appropriated to the System for that
fiscal year.
|
|
If in any month the amount remaining unexpended from all |
other appropriations
to the System for the applicable fiscal |
year (including the appropriations to
the System under Section |
8.12 of the State Finance Act and Section 1 of the
State |
Pension Funds Continuing Appropriation Act) is less than the |
amount
lawfully vouchered under this subsection, the |
difference shall be paid from the
Common School Fund under the |
continuing appropriation authority provided in
Section 1.1 of |
the State Pension Funds Continuing Appropriation Act.
|
(b-2) Allocations from the Common School Fund apportioned |
to school
districts not coming under this System shall not be |
diminished or affected by
the provisions of this Article.
|
(b-3) For State fiscal years 2011 through 2045, the minimum |
contribution
to the System to be made by the State for each |
fiscal year shall be an amount
determined by the System to be |
sufficient to bring the total assets of the
System up to 90% of |
the total actuarial liabilities of the System by the end of
|
State fiscal year 2045. In making these determinations, the |
required State
contribution shall be calculated each year as a |
level percentage of payroll
over the years remaining to and |
including fiscal year 2045 and shall be
determined under the |
projected unit credit actuarial cost method.
|
For State fiscal years 1996 through 2005, the State |
contribution to the
System, as a percentage of the applicable |
employee payroll, shall be increased
in equal annual increments |
so that by State fiscal year 2011, the State is
contributing at |
|
the rate required under this Section; except that in the
|
following specified State fiscal years, the State contribution |
to the System
shall not be less than the following indicated |
percentages of the applicable
employee payroll, even if the |
indicated percentage will produce a State
contribution in |
excess of the amount otherwise required under this subsection
|
and subsection (a), and notwithstanding any contrary |
certification made under
subsection (a-1) before the effective |
date of this amendatory Act of 1998:
10.02% in FY 1999;
10.77% |
in FY 2000;
11.47% in FY 2001;
12.16% in FY 2002;
12.86% in FY |
2003; and
13.56% in FY 2004.
|
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Article, the |
total required State
contribution for State fiscal year 2006 is |
$534,627,700.
|
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Article, the |
total required State
contribution for State fiscal year 2007 is |
$738,014,500.
|
For each of State fiscal years 2008 through 2009, the State |
contribution to
the System, as a percentage of the applicable |
employee payroll, shall be
increased in equal annual increments |
from the required State contribution for State fiscal year |
2007, so that by State fiscal year 2011, the
State is |
contributing at the rate otherwise required under this Section.
|
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Article, the |
total required State contribution for State fiscal year 2010 is |
$2,089,268,000 and shall be made from the proceeds of bonds |
|
sold in fiscal year 2010 pursuant to Section 7.2 of the General |
Obligation Bond Act, less (i) the pro rata share of bond sale |
expenses determined by the System's share of total bond |
proceeds, (ii) any amounts received from the Common School Fund |
in fiscal year 2010, and (iii) any reduction in bond proceeds |
due to the issuance of discounted bonds, if applicable. |
Beginning in State fiscal year 2046, the minimum State |
contribution for
each fiscal year shall be the amount needed to |
maintain the total assets of
the System at 90% of the total |
actuarial liabilities of the System.
|
Amounts received by the System pursuant to Section 25 of |
the Budget Stabilization Act or Section 8.12 of the State |
Finance Act in any fiscal year do not reduce and do not |
constitute payment of any portion of the minimum State |
contribution required under this Article in that fiscal year. |
Such amounts shall not reduce, and shall not be included in the |
calculation of, the required State contributions under this |
Article in any future year until the System has reached a |
funding ratio of at least 90%. A reference in this Article to |
the "required State contribution" or any substantially similar |
term does not include or apply to any amounts payable to the |
System under Section 25 of the Budget Stabilization Act. |
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Section, the |
required State
contribution for State fiscal year 2005 and for |
fiscal year 2008 and each fiscal year thereafter, as
calculated |
under this Section and
certified under subsection (a-1), shall |
|
not exceed an amount equal to (i) the
amount of the required |
State contribution that would have been calculated under
this |
Section for that fiscal year if the System had not received any |
payments
under subsection (d) of Section 7.2 of the General |
Obligation Bond Act, minus
(ii) the portion of the State's |
total debt service payments for that fiscal
year on the bonds |
issued in fiscal year 2003 for the purposes of that Section |
7.2, as determined
and certified by the Comptroller, that is |
the same as the System's portion of
the total moneys |
distributed under subsection (d) of Section 7.2 of the General
|
Obligation Bond Act. In determining this maximum for State |
fiscal years 2008 through 2010, however, the amount referred to |
in item (i) shall be increased, as a percentage of the |
applicable employee payroll, in equal increments calculated |
from the sum of the required State contribution for State |
fiscal year 2007 plus the applicable portion of the State's |
total debt service payments for fiscal year 2007 on the bonds |
issued in fiscal year 2003 for the purposes of Section 7.2 of |
the General
Obligation Bond Act, so that, by State fiscal year |
2011, the
State is contributing at the rate otherwise required |
under this Section.
|
(c) Payment of the required State contributions and of all |
pensions,
retirement annuities, death benefits, refunds, and |
other benefits granted
under or assumed by this System, and all |
expenses in connection with the
administration and operation |
thereof, are obligations of the State.
|
|
If members are paid from special trust or federal funds |
which are
administered by the employing unit, whether school |
district or other
unit, the employing unit shall pay to the |
System from such
funds the full accruing retirement costs based |
upon that
service, as determined by the System. Employer |
contributions, based on
salary paid to members from federal |
funds, may be forwarded by the distributing
agency of the State |
of Illinois to the System prior to allocation, in an
amount |
determined in accordance with guidelines established by such
|
agency and the System.
|
(d) Effective July 1, 1986, any employer of a teacher as |
defined in
paragraph (8) of Section 16-106 shall pay the |
employer's normal cost
of benefits based upon the teacher's |
service, in addition to
employee contributions, as determined |
by the System. Such employer
contributions shall be forwarded |
monthly in accordance with guidelines
established by the |
System.
|
However, with respect to benefits granted under Section |
16-133.4 or
16-133.5 to a teacher as defined in paragraph (8) |
of Section 16-106, the
employer's contribution shall be 12% |
(rather than 20%) of the member's
highest annual salary rate |
for each year of creditable service granted, and
the employer |
shall also pay the required employee contribution on behalf of
|
the teacher. For the purposes of Sections 16-133.4 and |
16-133.5, a teacher
as defined in paragraph (8) of Section |
16-106 who is serving in that capacity
while on leave of |
|
absence from another employer under this Article shall not
be |
considered an employee of the employer from which the teacher |
is on leave.
|
(e) Beginning July 1, 1998, every employer of a teacher
|
shall pay to the System an employer contribution computed as |
follows:
|
(1) Beginning July 1, 1998 through June 30, 1999, the |
employer
contribution shall be equal to 0.3% of each |
teacher's salary.
|
(2) Beginning July 1, 1999 and thereafter, the employer
|
contribution shall be equal to 0.58% of each teacher's |
salary.
|
The school district or other employing unit may pay these |
employer
contributions out of any source of funding available |
for that purpose and
shall forward the contributions to the |
System on the schedule established
for the payment of member |
contributions.
|
These employer contributions are intended to offset a |
portion of the cost
to the System of the increases in |
retirement benefits resulting from this
amendatory Act of 1998.
|
Each employer of teachers is entitled to a credit against |
the contributions
required under this subsection (e) with |
respect to salaries paid to teachers
for the period January 1, |
2002 through June 30, 2003, equal to the amount paid
by that |
employer under subsection (a-5) of Section 6.6 of the State |
Employees
Group Insurance Act of 1971 with respect to salaries |
|
paid to teachers for that
period.
|
The additional 1% employee contribution required under |
Section 16-152 by
this amendatory Act of 1998 is the |
responsibility of the teacher and not the
teacher's employer, |
unless the employer agrees, through collective bargaining
or |
otherwise, to make the contribution on behalf of the teacher.
|
If an employer is required by a contract in effect on May |
1, 1998 between the
employer and an employee organization to |
pay, on behalf of all its full-time
employees
covered by this |
Article, all mandatory employee contributions required under
|
this Article, then the employer shall be excused from paying |
the employer
contribution required under this subsection (e) |
for the balance of the term
of that contract. The employer and |
the employee organization shall jointly
certify to the System |
the existence of the contractual requirement, in such
form as |
the System may prescribe. This exclusion shall cease upon the
|
termination, extension, or renewal of the contract at any time |
after May 1,
1998.
|
(f) If the amount of a teacher's salary for any school year |
used to determine final average salary exceeds the member's |
annual full-time salary rate with the same employer for the |
previous school year by more than 6%, the teacher's employer |
shall pay to the System, in addition to all other payments |
required under this Section and in accordance with guidelines |
established by the System, the present value of the increase in |
benefits resulting from the portion of the increase in salary |
|
that is in excess of 6%. This present value shall be computed |
by the System on the basis of the actuarial assumptions and |
tables used in the most recent actuarial valuation of the |
System that is available at the time of the computation. If a |
teacher's salary for the 2005-2006 school year is used to |
determine final average salary under this subsection (f), then |
the changes made to this subsection (f) by Public Act 94-1057 |
shall apply in calculating whether the increase in his or her |
salary is in excess of 6%. For the purposes of this Section, |
change in employment under Section 10-21.12 of the School Code |
on or after June 1, 2005 shall constitute a change in employer. |
The System may require the employer to provide any pertinent |
information or documentation.
The changes made to this |
subsection (f) by this amendatory Act of the 94th General |
Assembly apply without regard to whether the teacher was in |
service on or after its effective date.
|
Whenever it determines that a payment is or may be required |
under this subsection, the System shall calculate the amount of |
the payment and bill the employer for that amount. The bill |
shall specify the calculations used to determine the amount |
due. If the employer disputes the amount of the bill, it may, |
within 30 days after receipt of the bill, apply to the System |
in writing for a recalculation. The application must specify in |
detail the grounds of the dispute and, if the employer asserts |
that the calculation is subject to subsection (g) or (h) of |
this Section, must include an affidavit setting forth and |
|
attesting to all facts within the employer's knowledge that are |
pertinent to the applicability of that subsection. Upon |
receiving a timely application for recalculation, the System |
shall review the application and, if appropriate, recalculate |
the amount due.
|
The employer contributions required under this subsection |
(f) may be paid in the form of a lump sum within 90 days after |
receipt of the bill. If the employer contributions are not paid |
within 90 days after receipt of the bill, then interest will be |
charged at a rate equal to the System's annual actuarially |
assumed rate of return on investment compounded annually from |
the 91st day after receipt of the bill. Payments must be |
concluded within 3 years after the employer's receipt of the |
bill.
|
(g) This subsection (g) applies only to payments made or |
salary increases given on or after June 1, 2005 but before July |
1, 2011. The changes made by Public Act 94-1057 shall not |
require the System to refund any payments received before
July |
31, 2006 (the effective date of Public Act 94-1057). |
When assessing payment for any amount due under subsection |
(f), the System shall exclude salary increases paid to teachers |
under contracts or collective bargaining agreements entered |
into, amended, or renewed before June 1, 2005.
|
When assessing payment for any amount due under subsection |
(f), the System shall exclude salary increases paid to a |
teacher at a time when the teacher is 10 or more years from |
|
retirement eligibility under Section 16-132 or 16-133.2.
|
When assessing payment for any amount due under subsection |
(f), the System shall exclude salary increases resulting from |
overload work, including summer school, when the school |
district has certified to the System, and the System has |
approved the certification, that (i) the overload work is for |
the sole purpose of classroom instruction in excess of the |
standard number of classes for a full-time teacher in a school |
district during a school year and (ii) the salary increases are |
equal to or less than the rate of pay for classroom instruction |
computed on the teacher's current salary and work schedule.
|
When assessing payment for any amount due under subsection |
(f), the System shall exclude a salary increase resulting from |
a promotion (i) for which the employee is required to hold a |
certificate or supervisory endorsement issued by the State |
Teacher Certification Board that is a different certification |
or supervisory endorsement than is required for the teacher's |
previous position and (ii) to a position that has existed and |
been filled by a member for no less than one complete academic |
year and the salary increase from the promotion is an increase |
that results in an amount no greater than the lesser of the |
average salary paid for other similar positions in the district |
requiring the same certification or the amount stipulated in |
the collective bargaining agreement for a similar position |
requiring the same certification.
|
When assessing payment for any amount due under subsection |
|
(f), the System shall exclude any payment to the teacher from |
the State of Illinois or the State Board of Education over |
which the employer does not have discretion, notwithstanding |
that the payment is included in the computation of final |
average salary.
|
(h) When assessing payment for any amount due under |
subsection (f), the System shall exclude any salary increase |
described in subsection (g) of this Section given on or after |
July 1, 2011 but before July 1, 2014 under a contract or |
collective bargaining agreement entered into, amended, or |
renewed on or after June 1, 2005 but before July 1, 2011. |
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Section, any |
payments made or salary increases given after June 30, 2014 |
shall be used in assessing payment for any amount due under |
subsection (f) of this Section.
|
(i) The System shall prepare a report and file copies of |
the report with the Governor and the General Assembly by |
January 1, 2007 that contains all of the following information: |
(1) The number of recalculations required by the |
changes made to this Section by Public Act 94-1057 for each |
employer. |
(2) The dollar amount by which each employer's |
contribution to the System was changed due to |
recalculations required by Public Act 94-1057. |
(3) The total amount the System received from each |
employer as a result of the changes made to this Section by |
|
Public Act 94-4. |
(4) The increase in the required State contribution |
resulting from the changes made to this Section by Public |
Act 94-1057.
|
(j) For purposes of determining the required State |
contribution to the System, the value of the System's assets |
shall be equal to the actuarial value of the System's assets, |
which shall be calculated as follows: |
As of June 30, 2008, the actuarial value of the System's |
assets shall be equal to the market value of the assets as of |
that date. In determining the actuarial value of the System's |
assets for fiscal years after June 30, 2008, any actuarial |
gains or losses from investment return incurred in a fiscal |
year shall be recognized in equal annual amounts over the |
5-year period following that fiscal year. |
(k) For purposes of determining the required State |
contribution to the system for a particular year, the actuarial |
value of assets shall be assumed to earn a rate of return equal |
to the system's actuarially assumed rate of return. |
(Source: P.A. 95-331, eff. 8-21-07; 95-950, eff. 8-29-08; |
96-43, eff. 7-15-09.)
|
(40 ILCS 5/18-131) (from Ch. 108 1/2, par. 18-131)
|
Sec. 18-131. Financing; employer contributions.
|
(a) The State of Illinois shall make contributions to this |
System by
appropriations of the amounts which, together with |
|
the contributions of
participants, net earnings on |
investments, and other income, will meet the
costs of |
maintaining and administering this System on a 90% funded basis |
in
accordance with actuarial recommendations.
|
(b) The Board shall determine the amount of State |
contributions
required for each fiscal year on the basis of the |
actuarial tables and other
assumptions adopted by the Board and |
the prescribed rate of interest, using
the formula in |
subsection (c).
|
(c) For State fiscal years 2011 through 2045, the minimum |
contribution
to the System to be made by the State for each |
fiscal year shall be an amount
determined by the System to be |
sufficient to bring the total assets of the
System up to 90% of |
the total actuarial liabilities of the System by the end of
|
State fiscal year 2045. In making these determinations, the |
required State
contribution shall be calculated each year as a |
level percentage of payroll
over the years remaining to and |
including fiscal year 2045 and shall be
determined under the |
projected unit credit actuarial cost method.
|
For State fiscal years 1996 through 2005, the State |
contribution to
the System, as a percentage of the applicable |
employee payroll, shall be
increased in equal annual increments |
so that by State fiscal year 2011, the
State is contributing at |
the rate required under this Section.
|
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Article, the |
total required State
contribution for State fiscal year 2006 is |
|
$29,189,400.
|
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Article, the |
total required State
contribution for State fiscal year 2007 is |
$35,236,800.
|
For each of State fiscal years 2008 through 2009, the State |
contribution to
the System, as a percentage of the applicable |
employee payroll, shall be
increased in equal annual increments |
from the required State contribution for State fiscal year |
2007, so that by State fiscal year 2011, the
State is |
contributing at the rate otherwise required under this Section.
|
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Article, the |
total required State contribution for State fiscal year 2010 is |
$78,832,000 and shall be made from the proceeds of bonds sold |
in fiscal year 2010 pursuant to Section 7.2 of the General |
Obligation Bond Act, less (i) the pro rata share of bond sale |
expenses determined by the System's share of total bond |
proceeds, (ii) any amounts received from the General Revenue |
Fund in fiscal year 2010, and (iii) any reduction in bond |
proceeds due to the issuance of discounted bonds, if |
applicable. |
Beginning in State fiscal year 2046, the minimum State |
contribution for
each fiscal year shall be the amount needed to |
maintain the total assets of
the System at 90% of the total |
actuarial liabilities of the System.
|
Amounts received by the System pursuant to Section 25 of |
the Budget Stabilization Act or Section 8.12 of the State |
|
Finance Act in any fiscal year do not reduce and do not |
constitute payment of any portion of the minimum State |
contribution required under this Article in that fiscal year. |
Such amounts shall not reduce, and shall not be included in the |
calculation of, the required State contributions under this |
Article in any future year until the System has reached a |
funding ratio of at least 90%. A reference in this Article to |
the "required State contribution" or any substantially similar |
term does not include or apply to any amounts payable to the |
System under Section 25 of the Budget Stabilization Act.
|
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Section, the |
required State
contribution for State fiscal year 2005 and for |
fiscal year 2008 and each fiscal year thereafter, as
calculated |
under this Section and
certified under Section 18-140, shall |
not exceed an amount equal to (i) the
amount of the required |
State contribution that would have been calculated under
this |
Section for that fiscal year if the System had not received any |
payments
under subsection (d) of Section 7.2 of the General |
Obligation Bond Act, minus
(ii) the portion of the State's |
total debt service payments for that fiscal
year on the bonds |
issued in fiscal year 2003 for the purposes of that Section |
7.2, as determined
and certified by the Comptroller, that is |
the same as the System's portion of
the total moneys |
distributed under subsection (d) of Section 7.2 of the General
|
Obligation Bond Act. In determining this maximum for State |
fiscal years 2008 through 2010, however, the amount referred to |
|
in item (i) shall be increased, as a percentage of the |
applicable employee payroll, in equal increments calculated |
from the sum of the required State contribution for State |
fiscal year 2007 plus the applicable portion of the State's |
total debt service payments for fiscal year 2007 on the bonds |
issued in fiscal year 2003 for the purposes of Section 7.2 of |
the General
Obligation Bond Act, so that, by State fiscal year |
2011, the
State is contributing at the rate otherwise required |
under this Section.
|
(d) For purposes of determining the required State |
contribution to the System, the value of the System's assets |
shall be equal to the actuarial value of the System's assets, |
which shall be calculated as follows: |
As of June 30, 2008, the actuarial value of the System's |
assets shall be equal to the market value of the assets as of |
that date. In determining the actuarial value of the System's |
assets for fiscal years after June 30, 2008, any actuarial |
gains or losses from investment return incurred in a fiscal |
year shall be recognized in equal annual amounts over the |
5-year period following that fiscal year. |
(e) For purposes of determining the required State |
contribution to the system for a particular year, the actuarial |
value of assets shall be assumed to earn a rate of return equal |
to the system's actuarially assumed rate of return. |
(Source: P.A. 95-950, eff. 8-29-08; 96-43, eff. 7-15-09.)
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(40 ILCS 5/22A-111) (from Ch. 108 1/2, par. 22A-111)
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Sec. 22A-111.
The Board shall manage the investments of any |
pension
fund, retirement system , or education fund for the |
purpose
of obtaining a total return on
investments for the long |
term. It also shall perform such other functions as
may be |
assigned or directed by the General Assembly.
|
The authority of the board to manage pension fund |
investments and the
liability shall begin when there has been a |
physical transfer of the pension
fund investments to the board |
and placed in the custody of the State Treasurer.
|
The authority of the board to manage monies from the |
education fund for
investment and the liability of the board |
shall begin when there has been a
physical transfer of |
education fund investments to the board and placed in
the |
custody of the State Treasurer.
|
The board may not delegate its management functions , but it |
may , but is not required to, arrange
to compensate for |
personalized investment advisory service
for any or all |
investments under its control , with any national or state bank
|
or trust company authorized to do a trust business and |
domiciled in Illinois,
or other financial institution |
organized under the laws of Illinois, or an
investment advisor |
who is qualified under Federal Investment Advisors Act of 1940
|
and is registered under the Illinois Securities Law of 1953. |
Nothing contained
herein shall prevent the Board from |
subscribing to general investment research
services available |
|
for purchase or use by others. The Board shall also have
the |
authority to compensate for accounting services.
|
This Section shall not be construed to prohibit the |
Illinois State Board of Investment from directly investing |
pension assets in public market investments, private |
investments, real estate investments, or other investments |
authorized by this Code. |
(Source: P.A. 84-1127.)
|
Section 20. The School Construction Law is amended by |
adding Section 5-38 as follows: |
(105 ILCS 230/5-38 new) |
Sec. 5-38. Fiscal Year 2002 escalation. If a school |
district has been issued a school construction grant in Fiscal |
Year 2010 and the school district was on the FY2002 priority |
ranking, the Capital Development Board shall escalate the state |
share grant amount of the project on a 3% annual escalation |
rate.
|
Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon |
becoming law.
|