Public Act 097-0315
 
HB0159 EnrolledLRB097 05583 CEL 45645 b

    AN ACT concerning regulation.
 
    Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
represented in the General Assembly:
 
    Section 5. The Currency Exchange Act is amended by changing
Sections 1, 2, 3, 3.1, 3.2, 3.3, 4, 4.1, 4.2, 4.3, 5, 6, 7, 10,
11, 12, 13, 13.1, 14, 14.1, 15, 15.1, 15.1a, 15.1b, 15.1d,
15.2, 16, 17, 18, 19, 19.3, 19.4, 20, 21, and 22.01 and by
adding Section 29.5 as follows:
 
    (205 ILCS 405/1)  (from Ch. 17, par. 4802)
    Sec. 1. Definitions; application of Act.
    (a) For the purposes of this Act:
    "Community currency exchange" means any person, firm,
association, partnership, limited liability company, or
corporation, except an ambulatory currency exchange as
hereinafter defined, banks incorporated under the laws of this
State and National Banks organized pursuant to the laws of the
United States, engaged in the business or service of, and
providing facilities for, cashing checks, drafts, money orders
or any other evidences of money acceptable to such community
currency exchange, for a fee or service charge or other
consideration, or engaged in the business of selling or issuing
money orders under his or their or its name, or any other money
orders (other than United States Post Office money orders,
Postal Telegraph Company money orders, or Western Union
Telegraph Company money orders), or engaged in both such
businesses, or engaged in performing any one or more of the
foregoing services.
    "Department" means the Department of Financial and
Professional Regulation.
    "Director" means the Director of the Division of Financial
Institutions of the Department of Financial and Professional
Regulation.
    "Division of Financial Institutions" means the Division of
Financial Institutions of the Department of Financial and
Professional Regulation.
    "Ambulatory Currency Exchange" means any person, firm,
association, partnership, limited liability company, or
corporation, except banks organized under the laws of this
State and National Banks organized pursuant to the laws of the
United States, engaged in one or both of the foregoing
businesses, or engaged in performing any one or more of the
foregoing services, solely on the premises of the employer
whose employees are being served.
    "Location" when used with reference to an ambulatory
currency exchange means the premises of the employer whose
employees are or are to be served by an ambulatory currency
exchange.
    "Secretary Director" means the Secretary Director of
Financial and Professional Regulation or a person authorized by
the Secretary or this Act to act in the Secretary's stead
Financial Institutions. All references in this Act to the
Secretary shall be deemed to include the Director, as a person
authorized by the Secretary or this Act to assume
responsibility for the oversight of the functions of the
Department relative to the regulatory supervision of community
currency exchanges and ambulatory currency exchanges under
this Act.
    (b) Nothing in this Act shall be held to apply to any
person, firm, association, partnership, limited liability
company, or corporation who is engaged primarily in the
business of transporting for hire, bullion, currency,
securities, negotiable or non-negotiable documents, jewels or
other property of great monetary value and who in the course of
such business and only as an incident thereto, cashes checks,
drafts, money orders or other evidences of money directly for,
or for the employees of and with the funds of and at a cost only
to, the person, firm, association, partnership, limited
liability company, or corporation for whom he or it is then
actually transporting such bullion, currency, securities,
negotiable or non-negotiable documents, jewels, or other
property of great monetary value, pursuant to a written
contract for such transportation and all incidents thereof, nor
shall it apply to any person, firm, association, partnership,
limited liability company, or corporation engaged in the
business of selling tangible personal property at retail who,
in the course of such business and only as an incident thereto,
cashes checks, drafts, money orders or other evidences of
money.
(Source: P.A. 90-545, eff. 1-1-98.)
 
    (205 ILCS 405/2)  (from Ch. 17, par. 4803)
    Sec. 2. License required; violation; injunction. No
person, firm, association, partnership, limited liability
company, or corporation shall engage in the business of a
community currency exchange or in the business of an ambulatory
currency exchange without first securing a license to do so
from the Secretary Director.
    Any person, firm, association, partnership, limited
liability company, or corporation issued a license to do so by
the Secretary Director shall have authority to operate a
community currency exchange or an ambulatory currency
exchange, as defined in Section 1 hereof.
    Any person, firm, association, partnership, limited
liability company, or corporation licensed as and engaged in
the business of a community currency exchange shall at a
minimum offer the service of cashing checks, or drafts, or
money orders, or any other evidences of money acceptable to
such currency exchange.
    No ambulatory currency exchange and no community currency
exchange shall be conducted on any street, sidewalk or highway
used by the public, and no license shall be issued therefor. An
ambulatory currency exchange shall be required to and shall
secure a license or licenses for the conduct of its business at
each and every location served by it, as provided in Section 4
hereof, whether the services at any such location are rendered
for or without a fee, service charge or other consideration.
Each plant or establishment is deemed a separate location. No
license issued for the conduct of its business at one location
shall authorize the conduct of its business at any other
location, nor shall any license authorize the rendering of
services by an ambulatory currency exchange to persons other
than the employees of the employer named therein. If the
employer named in such license shall move his business from the
address therein set forth, such license shall thereupon expire,
unless the Secretary Director has approved a change of address
for such location, as provided in Section 13.
    Any person, firm, association, partnership, limited
liability company, or corporation that violates this Section
shall be guilty of a Class A misdemeanor, and the Attorney
General or the State's Attorney of the county in which the
violation occurs shall file a complaint in the Circuit Court of
the county to restrain the violation.
(Source: P.A. 90-545, eff. 1-1-98.)
 
    (205 ILCS 405/3)  (from Ch. 17, par. 4804)
    Sec. 3. Powers of community currency exchanges. No
community or ambulatory currency exchange shall be permitted to
accept money or evidences of money as a deposit to be returned
to the depositor or upon the depositor's order. ; and no No
community or ambulatory currency exchange shall be permitted to
act as bailee or agent for persons, firms, partnerships,
limited liability companies, associations or corporations to
hold money or evidences thereof or the proceeds therefrom for
the use and benefit of the owners thereof, and deliver such
money or proceeds of evidence of money upon request and
direction of such owner or owners. A community or ambulatory
currency exchange is permitted to engage in, and charge a fee
for, the following activities, either directly or as a
third-party agent: (i) cashing of checks, drafts, money orders,
or any other evidences of money acceptable to the currency
exchange, (ii) selling or issuing money orders, (iii) obtaining
reports, certificates, governmental permits, licenses, and
vital statistics and the preparation of necessary applications
to obtain the same, (iv) the sale and distribution of bond
cards, (v) obtaining, distributing, providing, or selling:
State vehicle registration renewals, title transfers and tax
remittance forms, city vehicle licenses, and other
governmental services, (vi) photocopying and sending and
receiving facsimile transmissions, (vii) notary service either
by the proprietor of the currency exchange or any currency
exchange employee, authorized by the State to act as a notary
public, (viii) issuance of travelers checks obtained by the
currency exchange from a banking institution under a trust
receipt, (ix) accepting for payment utility and other
companies' bills, (x) issuance and acceptance of any
third-party debit, credit, or stored value card and loading or
unloading, (xi) on-premises automated cash dispensing
machines, (xii) sale of rolled coin and paper money, (xiii)
exchange of foreign currency through a third-party, (xiv) sale
of cards, passes, or tokens for public transit, (xv) providing
mail box service, (xvi) sale of phone cards and other pre-paid
telecommunication services, (xvii) on-premises public
telephone, (xviii) sale of U.S. postage, (xix) money
transmission through a licensed third-party money transmitter,
(xx) sale of candy, gum, other packaged foods, soft drinks, and
other products and services by means of on-premises vending
machines, and (xxi) other products and services as may be
approved by the Secretary. ; provided, that nothing contained
herein shall prevent a community or an ambulatory currency
exchange from obtaining state automobile and city vehicle
licenses for a fee or service charge, or from rendering a
photostat service, or from rendering a notary service either by
the proprietor of the currency exchange or any one of its
employees, authorized by the State of Illinois to act as a
notary public, or from selling travelers cheques obtained by
the currency exchange from a banking institution under a trust
receipt, or from issuing money orders or from accepting for
payment utility bills. Any community or ambulatory currency
exchange may enter into an agreements with any utility and
other companies to act as its the companies' agent for the
acceptance of payment of utility and other companies' bills
without charge to the utility customer and, acting under such
agreement, may receipt for payments in the names of the utility
and other companies. Any community or ambulatory currency
exchange may also receive payment of utility and other
companies' bills for remittance to companies with which it has
no such agency agreement and may charge a fee for such service
but may not, in such cases, issue a receipt for such payment in
the names of the utility and other companies. However, funds
received by currency exchanges for remittance to utility and
other companies with which the currency exchange has no agency
agreement shall be forwarded to the appropriate utility and
other companies by the currency exchange before the end of the
next business day.
    For the purpose of this Section, "utility and other
companies" means any utility company and other company with
which the currency exchange may or may not have a contractual
agreement and for which the currency exchange accepts payments
from consumers for remittance to the utility or other company
for the payment of bills.
(Source: P.A. 90-545, eff. 1-1-98.)
 
    (205 ILCS 405/3.1)  (from Ch. 17, par. 4805)
    Sec. 3.1. Nothing in this Act shall prevent a currency
exchange from rendering State or Federal income tax service;
nor shall the rendering of such service be considered a
violation of this Act if such service be rendered either by the
proprietor, or any of his employees, or a licensed, regulated
tax service approved by the Internal Revenue Service. For the
purpose of this Section, "tax service" does not mean to make or
offer to make a refund anticipation loan as defined by the Tax
Refund Anticipation Loan Disclosure Act.
(Source: Laws 1949, p. 336.)
 
    (205 ILCS 405/3.2)  (from Ch. 17, par. 4806)
    Sec. 3.2. Community currency exchanges and ambulatory
currency exchanges may engage in the distribution of
Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) benefits food
stamps in accordance with such regulations as are made by the
Secretary Director.
(Source: P.A. 80-439.)
 
    (205 ILCS 405/3.3)  (from Ch. 17, par. 4807)
    Sec. 3.3. Additional public services.
    (a) Nothing in this Act shall prevent the Secretary
Director from authorizing a currency exchange, group of
currency exchanges, or association of currency exchanges
currency exchanges to render additional services to the public
if the services are consistent with the provisions of this Act,
are within its meaning, are in the best interest of the public,
and benefit the general welfare. A currency exchange, group of
currency exchanges, or association of currency exchanges must
request, in writing, the Secretary's approval of the additional
service prior to rendering such additional service to the
public. Any approval under this Section shall be deemed an
approval for all currency exchanges. Any currency exchange
wishing to provide an additional service as approved by the
Secretary must provide notice to the Secretary 30 days prior to
offering the approved additional service to the public. The
Secretary may charge an additional service investigation fee of
$500 per application. The Secretary may, at his or her
discretion, revoke any authorization under this Section on 60
days written notice to the currency exchange.
    (b) (Blank). Nothing in this Act shall prevent a community
currency exchange from selling candy, gum, other packaged
foods, and soft drinks by means of vending machines on its
premises.
(Source: P.A. 87-258; 88-583, eff. 8-12-94.)
 
    (205 ILCS 405/4)  (from Ch. 17, par. 4808)
    Sec. 4. License application; contents; fees. Application
for such license shall be in writing under oath and in the form
prescribed and furnished by the Secretary Director. Each
application shall contain the following:
    (a) The full name and address (both of residence and place
of business) of the applicant, and if the applicant is a
partnership, limited liability company, or association, of
every member thereof, and the name and business address if the
applicant is a corporation;
    (b) The county and municipality, with street and number, if
any, where the community currency exchange is to be conducted,
if the application is for a community currency exchange
license;
    (c) If the application is for an ambulatory currency
exchange license, the name and address of the employer at each
location to be served by it; and
    (d) The applicant's occupation or profession; a detailed
statement of his business experience for the 10 years
immediately preceding his application; a detailed statement of
his finances; his present or previous connection with any other
currency exchange; whether he has ever been involved in any
civil or criminal litigation, and the material facts pertaining
thereto; whether he has ever been committed to any penal
institution or admitted to an institution for the care and
treatment of mentally ill persons; and the nature of
applicant's occupancy of the premises to be licensed where the
application is for a community currency exchange license. If
the applicant is a partnership, the information specified
herein shall be required of each partner. If the applicant is a
corporation, the said information shall be required of each
officer, director and stockholder thereof along with
disclosure of their ownership interests. If the applicant is a
limited liability company, the information required by this
Section shall be provided with respect to each member and
manager along with disclosure of their ownership interests.
    A community currency exchange license application shall be
accompanied by a fee of $500, prior to January 1, 2012. After
January 1, 2012 the fee shall be $750. After January 1, 2014
the fee shall be $1,000. for the cost of investigating the
applicant. If the ownership of a licensee changes, in whole or
in part, a new application must be filed pursuant to this
Section along with a $500 fee if the licensee's ownership
interests have been transferred or sold to a new person or
entity or a fee of $300 if the licensee's ownership interests
have been transferred or sold to a current holder or holders of
the licensee's ownership interests. When the application for a
community currency exchange license has been approved by the
Secretary Director and the applicant so advised, an additional
sum of $400 $200 as an annual license fee for a period
terminating on the last day of the current calendar year shall
be paid to the Secretary Director by the applicant; provided,
that the license fee for an applicant applying for such a
license after July 1st of any year shall be $200 $100 for the
balance of such year.
    An application for an ambulatory currency exchange license
shall be accompanied by a fee of $100, which fee shall be for
the cost of investigating the applicant. An approved applicant
shall not be required to pay the initial investigation fee of
$100 more than once. When the application for an ambulatory
currency exchange license has been approved by the Secretary
Director, and such applicant so advised, such applicant shall
pay an annual license fee of $25 for each and every location to
be served by such applicant; provided that such license fee for
an approved applicant applying for such a license after July
1st of any year shall be $12 for the balance of such year for
each and every location to be served by such applicant. Such an
approved applicant for an ambulatory currency exchange
license, when applying for a license with respect to a
particular location, shall file with the Secretary Director, at
the time of filing an application, a letter of memorandum,
which shall be in writing and under oath, signed by the owner
or authorized representative of the business whose employees
are to be served; such letter or memorandum shall contain a
statement that such service is desired, and that the person
signing the same is authorized so to do. The Secretary Director
shall thereupon verify the authenticity of the letter or
memorandum and the authority of the person who executed it, to
do so.
(Source: P.A. 92-398, eff. 1-1-02.)
 
    (205 ILCS 405/4.1)  (from Ch. 17, par. 4809)
    Sec. 4.1. The General Assembly finds and declares that
community currency exchanges provide important and vital
services to Illinois citizens, that the number of community
currency exchanges should be limited in accordance with the
needs of the communities they are to serve, and that it is in
the public interest to promote and foster the community
currency exchange business and to insure the financial
stability thereof. Upon receipt of an application for a license
for a community currency exchange, the Secretary Director shall
cause an investigation of the need of the community for the
establishment of a community currency exchange at the location
specified in the application and the effect that granting the
license will have on the financial stability of other community
currency exchanges that may be serving the community in which
the business of the applicant is proposed to be conducted.
    "Community", as used in this Act, means a locality where
there may or can be available to the people thereof the
services of a community currency exchange reasonably
accessible to them. If the issuance of a license to engage in
the community currency exchange business at the location
specified will not promote the needs and the convenience and
advantage of the community in which the business of the
applicant is proposed to be conducted, then the application
shall be denied.
(Source: P.A. 83-652.)
 
    (205 ILCS 405/4.2)  (from Ch. 17, par. 4810)
    Sec. 4.2. Whensoever the ownership of any Currency
Exchange, theretofore licensed under the provisions of this
Act, shall be held or contained in any estate subject to the
control and supervision of any Administrator, Executor or
Guardian appointed, approved or qualified by any Court of the
State of Illinois, having jurisdiction so to do, such
Administrator, Executor or Guardian may, upon the entry of an
order by such Court granting leave to continue the operation of
such Currency Exchange, apply to the Secretary Director of
Financial Institutions for a license under the provisions of
this Act. When any such Administrator, Executor or Guardian
shall apply for a Currency Exchange License pursuant to the
provisions of this Section, and shall otherwise fully comply
with all of the provisions of this Act relating to the
application for a Currency Exchange license, the Secretary
Director may issue to such applicant a Currency Exchange
license. Any Currency Exchange license theretofore issued to a
Currency Exchange, for which an application for a license shall
be sought under the provisions of this Section, if not
previously surrendered, lapsed, or revoked, shall be
surrendered, revoked or otherwise terminated before a license
shall be issued pursuant to application made therefor under
this Section.
(Source: P.A. 92-16, eff. 6-28-01.)
 
    (205 ILCS 405/4.3)  (from Ch. 17, par. 4811)
    Sec. 4.3. Upon receipt of an application from an ambulatory
currency exchange for the conduct of its business at a location
to be served by it, the Secretary Director of Financial
Institutions shall cause an investigation to be made to
determine whether to issue said license. No fee shall be
charged for the investigation of an application for a location
license. The Secretary Director shall employ the following
criteria in making his determination:
    (1) the economic benefit and convenience to the persons to
be served at the location for which a license has been
requested;
    (2) the effect that granting a license will have on the
financial stability of community currency exchanges;
    (3) safety benefits, if any, which may accrue from the
granting of the location license;
    (4) the effects, if any, which granting of a license will
have on traffic, and traffic congestion in the immediate area
of the location to be served;
    (5) such other factors as the Secretary Director shall deem
proper and relevant.
(Source: P.A. 85-1356.)
 
    (205 ILCS 405/5)  (from Ch. 17, par. 4812)
    Sec. 5. Bond; condition; amount.
    (a) Before any license shall be issued to a community
currency exchange the applicant shall file annually with and
have approved by the Secretary Director a surety bond, issued
by a bonding company authorized to do business in this State in
the principal sum of $25,000 $10,000. Such bond shall run to
the Secretary Director and shall be for the benefit of any
creditors of such currency exchange for any liability incurred
by the currency exchange on any money orders, including any
fees and penalties incurred by the remitter should the money
order be returned unpaid, issued or sold by the currency
exchange and for any liability incurred by the currency
exchange for any sum or sums due to any payee or endorsee of
any check, draft or money order left with the currency exchange
for collection, and for any liability incurred by the currency
exchange in connection with the rendering of any of the
services referred to in Section 3 of this Act.
    From time to time the Secretary Director may determine the
amount of liabilities as described herein and shall require the
licensee to file a bond in an additional sum if the same is
determined to be necessary in accordance with the requirements
of this Section. In no case shall the bond be less than the
initial $25,000 $10,000, nor more than the outstanding
liabilities.
    (b) In lieu of the surety bond requirements of subsection
(a), a community currency exchange licensee may submit evidence
satisfactory to the Secretary Director that the community
currency exchange licensee is covered by a blanket bond that
covers multiple licensees who are members of a statewide
association of community currency exchanges. Such a blanket
bond must be issued by a bonding company authorized to do
business in this State and in a principal aggregate sum of not
less than $3,000,000 as of May 1, 2012, and not less than
$4,000,000 as of May 1, 2014 $2,000,000.
    (c) An ambulatory currency exchange may sell or issue money
orders at any location with regard to which it is issued a
license pursuant to this Act, including existing licensed
locations, without the necessity of a further application or
hearing and without regard to any exceptions contained in
existing licenses, upon the filing with the Secretary Director
of a surety bond approved by the Secretary Director and issued
by a bonding company or insurance company authorized to do
business in Illinois, in the principal sum of $100,000. Such
bond may be a blanket bond covering all locations at which the
ambulatory currency exchange may sell or issue money orders,
and shall run to the Secretary Director for the use and benefit
of any creditors of such ambulatory currency exchange for any
liability incurred by the ambulatory currency exchange on any
money orders issued or sold by it. Such bond shall be renewed
annually. If after the expiration of one year from the date of
approval of such bond by the Secretary Director, it shall
appear that the average amount of such liability during the
year has exceeded $100,000, the Secretary Director shall
require the licensee to furnish a bond for the ensuing year, to
be approved by the Secretary Director, for an additional
principal sum of $1,000 for each $1,000 of such liability or
fraction thereof in excess of the original $100,000, except
that the maximum amount of such bond shall not be required to
exceed $250,000.
(Source: P.A. 93-614, eff. 11-18-03.)
 
    (205 ILCS 405/6)  (from Ch. 17, par. 4813)
    Sec. 6. Insurance against loss.
    (a) Every applicant for a license hereunder shall, after
his application for a license has been approved, file with and
have approved by the Secretary of Financial and Professional
Regulation, a policy or policies of insurance issued by an
insurance company or indemnity company authorized to do
business under the law of this State, which shall insure the
applicant against loss by theft, burglary, robbery or forgery
in a principal sum as hereinafter provided; if the average
amount of cash and liquid funds to be kept on hand in the
office of the community currency exchange during the year will
not be in excess of $10,000 the policy or policies shall be in
the principal sum of $10,000. If such average amount will be in
excess of $10,000, the policy or policies shall be for an
additional principal sum of $500 for each $1,000 or fraction
thereof of such excess over the original $10,000. From time to
time, the Secretary may determine the amount of cash and liquid
funds on hand in the office of any community currency exchange
and shall require the licensee to submit additional policies if
the same are determined to be necessary in accordance with the
requirements of this Section.
    However, any community currency exchange licensed under
this Act may meet the insurance bonding requirements of this
subsection (a) by submitting evidence satisfactory to the
Secretary that the licensee is covered by a blanket insurance
policy bond that covers multiple licensees. The blanket
insurance policy bond: (i) shall insure the licensee against
loss by theft, robbery, or forgery; (ii) shall be issued by an
insurance a bonding company authorized to do business in this
State; and (iii) shall be in the principal sum of an amount
equal to the maximum amount required under this Section for any
one licensee covered by the insurance policy bond.
    Any such policy or policies, with respect to forgery, may
carry a condition that the community currency exchange assumes
the first $1,000 of each claim thereunder.
    (b) Before an ambulatory currency exchange shall sell or
issue money orders, it shall file with and have approved by the
Secretary, a policy or policies of insurance issued by an
insurance company or indemnity company authorized to do
business under the laws of this State, which shall insure such
ambulatory currency exchange against loss by theft, burglary,
robbery, forgery or embezzlement in the principal sum of not
less than $500,000. If the average amount of cash and liquid
funds to be kept on hand during the year will exceed $500,000,
the policy or policies shall be for an additional principal sum
of $500 for each $1,000 or fraction thereof in excess of
$500,000. From time to time the Secretary may determine the
amount of cash and liquid funds kept on hand by an ambulatory
currency exchange and shall require it to submit such
additional policies as are determined to be required within the
limits of this Section. No ambulatory currency exchange subject
to this Section shall be required to furnish more than one
policy of insurance if the policy furnished insures it against
the foregoing losses at all locations served by it.
    Any such policy may contain a condition that the insured
assumes a portion of the loss, provided the insured shall file
with such policy a sworn financial statement indicating its
ability to act as self-insurer in the amount of such deductible
portion of the policy without prejudice to the safety of any
funds belonging to its customers. If the Secretary is not
satisfied as to the financial ability of the ambulatory
currency exchange, he may require it to deposit cash or United
States Government Bonds in the amount of part or all of the
deductible portion of the policy.
(Source: P.A. 94-538, eff. 1-1-06.)
 
    (205 ILCS 405/7)  (from Ch. 17, par. 4814)
    Sec. 7. Available funds; minimum amount. Each community
currency exchange shall have, at all times, a minimum of $5,000
sum of its own cash funds available for the uses and purposes
of its business and said minimum sum shall be exclusive of and
in addition to funds received for exchange or transfer; and in
addition thereto each such licensee shall at all times have on
hand an amount of liquid funds sufficient to pay on demand all
outstanding money orders issued by it. Prior to January 1,
1979, this minimum sum shall be $4,000. After January 1, 1979,
this minimum sum shall be $5,000.
    In the event a receiver is appointed in accordance with
Section 15.1 of this Act, and the Secretary Director determines
that the business of the currency exchange should be
liquidated, and if it shall appear that the said minimum sum
was not on hand or available at the time of the appointment of
the receiver, then the receiver shall have the right to recover
in any court of competent jurisdiction from the owner or owners
of such currency exchange, or from the stockholders and
directors thereof if such currency exchange was operated by a
corporation, or from the members if the currency exchange was
operated as a limited liability company, said sum or that part
thereof which was not on hand or available at the time of the
appointment of such receiver. Nothing contained in this Section
shall limit or impair the liability of any bonding or insurance
company on any bond or insurance policy relating to such
community currency exchange issued pursuant to the
requirements of this Act, nor shall anything contained herein
limit or impair such other rights or remedies as the receiver
may otherwise have.
(Source: P.A. 90-545, eff. 1-1-98.)
 
    (205 ILCS 405/10)  (from Ch. 17, par. 4817)
    Sec. 10. Qualifications of applicant; denial of license;
review. The applicant, and its officers, directors and
stockholders, if a corporation, and its managers and members,
if a liability company, shall be vouched for by 2 reputable
citizens of this State setting forth that the individual
mentioned is (a) personally known to them to be trustworthy and
reputable, (b) that he has business experience qualifying him
to competently conduct, operate, own or become associated with
a currency exchange, (c) that he has a good business reputation
and is worthy of a license. Thereafter, the Secretary Director
shall, upon approval of the application filed with him, issue
to the applicant, qualifying under this Act, a license to
operate a currency exchange. If it is a license for a community
currency exchange, the same shall be valid only at the place of
business specified in the application. If it is a license for
an ambulatory currency exchange, it shall entitle the applicant
to operate only at the location or locations specified in the
application, provided the applicant shall secure separate and
additional licenses for each of such locations. Such licenses
shall remain in full force and effect, until they are
surrendered by the licensee, or revoked, or expire, as herein
provided. If the Secretary Director shall not so approve, he
shall not issue such license or licenses and shall notify the
applicant of such denial, retaining the full investigation fee
to cover the cost of investigating the community currency
exchange applicant. The Secretary Director shall approve or
deny every application hereunder within 90 days from the filing
of a complete application thereof; except that in respect to an
application by an approved ambulatory currency exchange for a
license with regard to a particular location to be served by
it, the same shall be approved or denied within 20 days from
the filing thereof. If the application is denied, the Secretary
Director shall send by United States mail notice of such denial
to the applicant at the address set forth in the application.
    If an application is denied, the applicant may, within 10
days from the date of the notice of denial, make written
request to the Secretary Director for a hearing on the
application, and the Secretary Director shall set a time and
place for the hearing. The hearing shall be set for a date
after the receipt by the Secretary Director of the request for
hearing, and written notice of the time and place of the
hearing shall be mailed to the applicant at least 15 days
before the date of the hearing. The applicant shall pay the
actual cost of making the transcript of the hearing prior to
the Secretary's Director's issuing his decision following the
hearing. If, following the hearing, the application is denied,
the Secretary Director shall, within 20 days thereafter prepare
and keep on file in his office a written order of denial
thereof, which shall contain his findings with respect thereto
and the reasons supporting the denial, and shall send by United
States Mail a copy thereof to the applicant at the address set
forth in the application, within 5 days after the filing of
such order. A review of any such decision may be had as
provided in Section 22.01 of this Act.
(Source: P.A. 90-545, eff. 1-1-98.)
 
    (205 ILCS 405/11)  (from Ch. 17, par. 4819)
    Sec. 11. Such license, if issued for a community currency
exchange, shall state the name of the licensee and the address
at which the business is to be conducted. Such license, and its
annual renewal, shall be kept conspicuously posted in the place
of business of the licensee and shall not be transferable or
assignable. If issued for an ambulatory currency exchange, it
shall so state, and shall state the name and office address of
the licensee, and the name and address of the location or
locations to be served by the licensee, and shall not be
transferable and assignable.
(Source: Laws 1951, p. 562.)
 
    (205 ILCS 405/12)  (from Ch. 17, par. 4820)
    Sec. 12. If the Secretary Director shall find at any time
that the bond required by Section 5 is insecure or exhausted or
otherwise doubtful, an additional bond in like amount to be
approved by the Secretary Director shall be filed by the
licensee within 30 days after written demand therefor upon the
licensee by the Secretary Director.
(Source: Laws 1957, p. 320.)
 
    (205 ILCS 405/13)  (from Ch. 17, par. 4821)
    Sec. 13. No more than one place of business shall be
maintained under the same community currency exchange license,
but the Secretary Director may issue more than one license to
the same licensee upon compliance with the provisions of this
Act governing an original issuance of a license, for each new
license.
    Whenever a community currency exchange or an ambulatory
currency exchange shall wish to change its name in its license,
it shall file an application for approval thereof with the
Secretary Director, and if the change is approved by the
Secretary Director he shall attach to the license, in writing,
a rider stating the licensee's new name.
    If an ambulatory currency exchange has serviced a licensed
location for 2 years or longer and the employer whose employees
are served at that location has moved his place of business,
the currency exchange may continue its service to the employees
of that employer at the new address of that employer's place of
business by filing a notice of the change of address with the
Secretary Director and by relinquishing its license to conduct
its business at the employer's old address upon receipt of a
license to conduct its business at the employer's new address.
Nothing in this Act shall preclude or prevent an ambulatory
currency exchange from filing an application to conduct its
business at the old address of an employer who moved his place
of business after the ambulatory currency exchange receives a
license to conduct its business at the employer's new address
through the filing of a notice of its change of address with
the Secretary Director and the relinquishing of its license to
conduct its business at the employer's old address.
    Whenever a currency exchange wishes to make any other
change in the address set forth in any of its licenses, it
shall apply to the Secretary Director for approval of such
change of address. Every application for approval of a change
of address shall be treated by the Secretary Director in the
same manner as is otherwise provided in this Act for the
treatment of proposed places of business or locations as
contained in new applications for licenses; and if any fact or
condition then exists with respect to the application for
change of address, which fact or condition would otherwise
authorize denial of a new application for a license because of
the address of the proposed location or place of business, then
such application for change of address shall not be approved.
Whenever a community currency exchange wishes to sell its
physical assets, it may do so, however, if the assets are sold
with the intention of continuing the operation of a community
currency exchange, the purchaser or purchasers must first make
application to the Secretary Director for licensure in
accordance with Sections 4 and 10 of this Act. If the Secretary
Director shall not so approve, he shall not issue such license
and shall notify the applicant or applicants of such denial.
The investigation fee for a change of location is $500. shall
be $75 on September 22, 1987 and until July 1, 1988, and $125
on July 1, 1988 and until July 1, 1989, and $150 on and after
July 1, 1989.
    The provisions of Section 10 with reference to notice,
hearing and review apply to applications filed pursuant to this
Section.
(Source: P.A. 85-1209.)
 
    (205 ILCS 405/13.1)  (from Ch. 17, par. 4822)
    Sec. 13.1. Consolidation of business locations. Whenever 2
or more licensees desire to consolidate their places of
business, they shall make application for such consolidation to
the Secretary Director upon a form provided by him or her. This
application shall state: (a) the name to be adopted and the
location at which the business is to be located, which name and
location shall be the same as one of the consolidating
licensees; (b) that the owners or all partners or all
stockholders or all members, as the case may be, of the
licensees involved in the contemplated consolidation, have
approved the application; (c) a certification by the secretary,
if any of the licensees be corporations, that the contemplated
consolidation has been approved by all of the stockholders at a
properly convened stockholders meeting; (d) other relevant
information the Secretary Director may require. Simultaneously
with the approval of the application by the Secretary Director,
the licensee or licensees who will cease doing business shall:
(a) surrender their license or licenses to the Secretary
Director; (b) transfer all of their assets and liabilities to
the licensee continuing to operate by virtue of the
application; (c) apply to the Secretary of State, if they be
corporations, for surrender of their corporate charter in
accordance with the provisions of the Business Corporation Act
of 1983.
    An application for consolidation shall be approved or
rejected by the Secretary Director within 30 days after receipt
by him of such application and supporting documents required
thereunder. The Secretary shall impose a consolidation fee of
$100 per application.
    Such consolidation shall not affect suits pending in which
the surrendering licensees are parties; nor shall such
consolidation affect causes of action nor the rights of persons
in particular; nor shall suits brought against such licensees
in their former names be abated for that cause.
    Nothing contained herein shall limit or prohibit any action
or remedy available to a licensee or to the Secretary Director
under Sections 15, 15.1 to 15.1e or 15.2 of this Act.
(Source: P.A. 90-545, eff. 1-1-98.)
 
    (205 ILCS 405/14)  (from Ch. 17, par. 4823)
    Sec. 14. Every licensee, shall, on or before November 15,
pay to the Secretary Director the annual license fee or fees
for the next succeeding calendar year and shall at the same
time file with the Secretary Director the annual report
required by Section 16 of this Act, and the annual bond or
bonds, and the insurance policy or policies as and if required
by this Act. The annual license fee for each community currency
exchange is $200, prior to January 1, 2012. After January 1,
2012 the fee shall be $300. After January 1, 2014 the fee shall
be $400. shall be $150 on the effective date of this amendatory
Act of 1987 and until January 1, 1989, and $180 on January 1,
1989 and until January 1, 1990, and $200 on and after January
1, 1990. The annual license fee for each location served by an
ambulatory currency exchange shall be $25.
(Source: P.A. 85-708.)
 
    (205 ILCS 405/14.1)
    Sec. 14.1. All moneys received by the Department of
Financial Institutions under this Act shall be deposited in the
Financial Institutions Fund created under Section 6z-26 of the
State Finance Act.
(Source: P.A. 88-13.)
 
    (205 ILCS 405/15)  (from Ch. 17, par. 4824)
    Sec. 15. The Secretary may, after 15 days notice by
registered or certified mail to the licensee at the address set
forth in the license stating the contemplated action and in
general the grounds therefore, fine the licensee an amount not
exceeding $1,000 per violation or revoke or suspend any license
issued if he or she finds that Director may, upon 10 days
notice to the licensee by United States mail directed to the
licensee at the address set forth in the license, stating the
contemplated action and in general the grounds therefor, and
upon reasonable opportunity to be heard prior to such action,
fine, suspend or revoke any license issued hereunder if he
shall find that:
        (a) the The licensee has failed to pay the annual
    license fee or to maintain in effect the required bond or
    bonds or insurance policy or policies or to comply with any
    order, decision, or finding of the Director made pursuant
    to this Act; or that
        (b) the licensee has failed to comply with any
    provision of this Act or any order, decision, finding,
    rule, regulation, or direction of the Secretary lawfully
    made under the authority of this Act; or
        (c) the The licensee has violated any provision of this
    Act or any regulation or direction made by the Secretary
    Director under this Act; or that
        (d) any (c) Any fact or condition exists which, if it
    had existed at the time of the original application for
    such license, would have warranted the Secretary Director
    in refusing the issuance of the license; or that
        (e) the (d) The licensee has not operated the currency
    exchange or at the location licensed, for a period of 60
    sixty consecutive days, unless the licensee was prevented
    from operating during such period by reason of events or
    acts beyond the licensee's control.
    Prior to suspension or revocation of the licenses issued
hereunder, the Director may but is not required to fine a
licensee up to a maximum of $100 a day.
    The Secretary Director may fine, suspend or revoke only the
particular license or licenses for particular places of
business or locations with respect to which grounds for
revocation may occur or exist; except that if he shall find
that such grounds for revocation are of general application to
all places of business or locations, or that such grounds for
fines, suspension or revocation have occurred or exist with
respect to a substantial number of places of business or
locations, he may fine, suspend or revoke all of the licenses
issued to such licensee.
    An order assessing a fine, an order revoking or suspending
a license, or an order denying renewal of a license shall take
effect on service of the order unless the licensee requests a
hearing, in writing, within 15 days after the date of service.
In the event a hearing is requested, the order shall be stayed
until a final administrative order is entered. If the licensee
requests a hearing, the Secretary shall schedule a hearing
within 30 days after the request for a hearing unless otherwise
agreed to by the parties. The hearing shall be held at the time
and place designated by the Secretary.
    The Secretary and any administrative law judge designated
by him or her shall have the power to administer oaths and
affirmations, subpoena witnesses and compel their attendance,
take evidence, and require the production of books, papers,
correspondence, and other records or information that he or she
considers relevant or material to the inquiry.
    In case of contumacy or refusal of a witness to obey a
subpoena, any circuit court of this State whose jurisdiction
encompasses where the hearing is located may issue an order
requiring such witness to appear before the Secretary or the
hearing officer, to produce documentary evidence, or to give
testimony touching the matter in question; and the court may
punish any failures to obey such orders of the court as
contempt.
    A licensee may surrender any license by delivering to the
Secretary Director written notice that he, they or it thereby
surrenders such license, but such surrender shall not affect
such licensee's civil or criminal liability for acts committed
prior to such surrender, or affect the liability on his, their
or its bond or bonds, or his, their or its policy or policies
of insurance, required by this Act, or entitle such licensee to
a return of any part of the annual license fee or fees.
    Every license issued hereunder shall remain in force until
the same shall expire, or shall have been surrendered,
suspended or revoked in accordance with this Act, but the
Secretary Director may on his own motion, issue new licenses to
a licensee whose license or licenses shall have been revoked if
no fact or condition then exists which clearly would have
warranted the Secretary Director in refusing originally the
issuance of such license under this Act.
    No license shall be revoked until the licensee has had
notice of a hearing thereon and an opportunity to be heard.
When any license is so revoked, the Director shall within
twenty (20) days thereafter, prepare and keep on file in his
office, a written order or decision of revocation which shall
contain his findings with respect thereto and the reasons
supporting the revocation and shall send by United States mail
a copy thereof to the licensee at the address set forth in the
license within five (5) days after the filing in his office of
such order, finding or decision. A review of any such order,
finding or decision may be had as provided in Section 22.01 of
this Act.
(Source: P.A. 80-1101.)
 
    (205 ILCS 405/15.1)  (from Ch. 17, par. 4825)
    Sec. 15.1. If the Secretary Director determines that any
licensee is insolvent or is violating this Act, or if the
owner, executor, or successor in interest of a currency
exchange abandons the currency exchange, he or she shall
appoint a receiver, who shall, under his or her direction, for
the purpose of receivership, take possession of and title to
the books, records, and assets of every description of the
community currency exchange. The Secretary may Director shall
require of the receiver such security as he or she deems proper
and, upon appointment of the receiver, shall have published,
once each week for 4 consecutive weeks in a newspaper having a
general circulation in the community, a notice calling on all
persons who have claims against the community currency
exchange, to present them to the receiver.
    Within 10 days after the receiver takes possession of the
property, the licensee may apply to the Circuit Court of the
county where the community currency exchange is located
Sangamon County to enjoin further proceedings in the premises.
    The receiver may operate the community currency exchange
until the Secretary Director determines that possession should
be restored to the licensee or that the business should be
liquidated.
(Source: Laws 1961, p. 3522.)
 
    (205 ILCS 405/15.1a)  (from Ch. 17, par. 4826)
    Sec. 15.1a. If the Secretary Director determines that a
business in receivership should be liquidated, he shall direct
the Attorney General to file a complaint in the Circuit Court
of the county in which such community currency exchange is
located, in the name of the People of the State of Illinois,
for the orderly liquidation and dissolution of the community
currency exchange and for an injunction restraining the
licensee or the officers and directors thereof from continuing
the operation of the community currency exchange.
    The receiver shall, 30 days from the day the Secretary
Director determines that the business should be liquidated,
file with the Secretary Director and with the clerk of such
court as has charge of the liquidation, a correct list of all
creditors who have not presented their claims. The list shall
show the amount of the claim after allowing all just credits,
deductions and set-offs as shown by the books of the currency
exchange. These claims shall be deemed proven unless objections
are filed by some interested party within the time fixed by the
Secretary Director or court that has charge of the liquidation.
(Source: P.A. 79-1361.)
 
    (205 ILCS 405/15.1b)  (from Ch. 17, par. 4827)
    Sec. 15.1b. Liquidation; distribution; priority. The
General Assembly finds and declares that community currency
exchanges provide important and vital services to Illinois
citizens. The General Assembly also finds that in providing
such services, community currency exchanges transact extensive
business involving check cashing and the writing of money
orders in communities in which banking services are generally
unavailable. It is therefore declared to be the policy of this
State that customers who receive these services must be
protected from insolvencies of currency exchanges and
interruptions of services. To carry out this policy and to
insure that customers of community currency exchanges are
protected in the event it is determined that a community
currency exchange in receivership should be liquidated in
accordance with Section 15.1a of this Act, the Secretary
Director shall make a distribution of moneys collected by the
receiver in the following order of priority: First, allowed
claims for the actual necessary expenses of the receivership of
the community currency exchange being liquidated, including
(a) reasonable receiver fees and receiver's attorney's fees
approved by the Secretary Director, (b) all expenses of any
preliminary or other examinations into the condition of the
community currency exchange or receivership, (c) all expenses
incurred by the Secretary Director which are incident to
possession and control of any property or records of the
community currency exchange, and (d) reasonable expenses
incurred by the Secretary Director as the result of business
agreements or contractual arrangements necessary to insure
that the services of the community currency exchanges are
delivered to the community without interruption. Said business
agreements or contractual arrangements may include, but are not
limited to, agreements made by the Secretary Director, or by
the Receiver with the approval of the Secretary Director, with
banks, money order companies, bonding companies and other types
of financial institutions; Second, allowed claims by a
purchaser of money orders issued on demand of the community
currency exchange being liquidated; Third, allowed claims
arising by virtue of and to the extent of the amount a utility
customer deposits with the community currency exchange being
liquidated which are not remitted to the utility company;
Fourth, allowed claims arising by virtue of and to the extent
of the amount paid by a purchaser of Illinois license plates,
vehicle stickers sold for State and municipal governments in
Illinois, and temporary Illinois registration permits
purchased at the currency exchange being liquidated; Fifth,
allowed unsecured claims for wages or salaries, excluding
vacation, severance and sick leave pay earned by employee
earned within 90 days prior to the appointment of a Receiver;
Sixth, secured claims; Seventh, allowed unsecured claims of any
tax, and interest and penalty on the tax; Eighth Seventh,
allowed unsecured claims other than a kind specified in
paragraph one, two and three of this Section, filed with the
Secretary Director within the time the Secretary Director fixes
for filing claims; Ninth Eighth, allowed unsecured claims,
other than a kind specified in paragraphs one, two and three of
this Section filed with the Secretary Director after the time
fixed for filing claims by the Secretary Director; Tenth Ninth,
allowed creditor claims asserted by an owner, member, or
stockholder of the community currency exchange in liquidation;
Eleventh Tenth, after one year from the final dissolution of
the currency exchange, all assets not used to satisfy allowed
claims shall be distributed pro rata to the owner, owners,
members, or stockholders of the currency exchange.
    The Secretary Director shall pay all claims of equal
priority according to the schedule set out above, and shall not
pay claims of lower priority until all higher priority claims
are satisfied. If insufficient assets are available to meet all
claims of equal priority, those assets shall be distributed pro
rata among those claims. All unclaimed assets of a currency
exchange shall be deposited with the Secretary Director to be
paid out by him when proper claims therefor are presented to
the Secretary Director. If there are funds remaining after the
conclusion of a receivership of an abandoned currency exchange,
the remaining funds shall be considered unclaimed property and
remitted to the State Treasurer under the Uniform Disposition
of Unclaimed Property Act.
(Source: P.A. 90-545, eff. 1-1-98.)
 
    (205 ILCS 405/15.1d)  (from Ch. 17, par. 4829)
    Sec. 15.1d. At the close of a receivership, the receiver
shall turn over to the Secretary Director all books of account
and ledgers of such currency exchange for preservation. All
records of such receiverships heretofore and hereafter
received by the Secretary Director shall be held by him or her
for a period of 2 years after the close of the receivership and
at the termination of the 2 year period may then be destroyed.
    All expenses of the receivership, including reasonable
receiver's and attorney's fees approved by the Secretary
Director, and all expenses of any preliminary or other
examinations into the condition of the community currency
exchange or receivership, and all expenses incident to the
possession and control of any property or records of the
community currency exchange incurred by the Secretary Director
shall be paid out of the assets of the community currency
exchange. The foregoing expenses shall be paid prior to and
ahead of all claims.
(Source: P.A. 83-345.)
 
    (205 ILCS 405/15.2)  (from Ch. 17, par. 4831)
    Sec. 15.2. No community currency exchange shall determine
its affairs and close up its business unless it shall first
deposit with the Secretary Director an amount of money equal to
the whole of its debts, liabilities and lawful demands against
it including the costs and expenses of this proceeding, and
shall surrender to the Secretary Director its community
currency exchange license, and shall file with the Secretary
Director a statement of termination signed by the licensee of
such community currency exchange, containing a pronouncement
of intent to close up its business and liquidate its
liabilities, and also containing a sworn list itemizing in full
all such debts, liabilities and lawful demands against it.
Corporate licensees shall attach to, and make a part of such
statement of termination, a copy of a resolution providing for
the determination and closing up of the licensee's affairs,
certified by the secretary of such licensee and duly adopted at
a shareholders' meeting by the holders of at least two-thirds
of the outstanding shares entitled to vote at such meeting.
Upon the filing with the Secretary Director of a statement of
termination the Secretary Director shall cause notice thereof
to be published once each week for three consecutive weeks in a
public newspaper of general circulation published in the city
or village where such community currency exchange is located,
and if no newspaper shall be there published, then in a public
newspaper of general circulation nearest to said city or
village; and such publication shall give notice that the debts,
liabilities and lawful demands against such community currency
exchange will be redeemed by the Secretary Director on demand
in writing made by the owner thereof, at any time within three
years from the date of first publication. After the expiration
of such three year period, the Secretary Director shall return
to the person or persons designated in the statement of
termination to receive such repayment and in the proportion
therein specified, any balance of money then remaining in his
possession, if any there be, after first deducting therefrom
all unpaid costs and expenses incurred in connection with this
proceeding. The Secretary Director shall receive for his
services, exclusive of costs and expenses, two per cent of any
amount up to $5,000.00, and one per cent of any amount in
excess of $5,000.00, deposited with him hereunder by any one
community currency exchange. Nothing contained herein shall
affect or impair the liability of any bonding or insurance
company on any bond or insurance policy issued under this Act
relating to such community currency exchange.
(Source: Laws 1957, p. 320.)
 
    (205 ILCS 405/16)  (from Ch. 17, par. 4832)
    Sec. 16. Annual report; investigation; costs.
    (a) Each licensee shall annually, on or before the 1st day
of March, file a report with the Secretary Director for the
calendar year period from January 1st through December 31st,
except that the report filed on or before March 15, 1990 shall
cover the period from October 1, 1988 through December 31,
1989, (which shall be used only for the official purposes of
the Director) giving such relevant information as the Secretary
Director may reasonably require concerning, and for the purpose
of examining, the business and operations during the preceding
fiscal year period of each licensed currency exchange conducted
by such licensee within the State. Such report shall be made
under oath and shall be in the form prescribed by the
Secretary. The Secretary Director and the Director may at any
time, and shall at least once in each year, investigate the
currency exchange business of any licensee and of every person,
partnership, association, limited liability company, and
corporation who or which shall be engaged in the business of
operating a currency exchange. For that purpose, the Secretary
Director shall have free access to the offices and places of
business and to such records of all such persons, firms,
partnerships, associations, limited liability companies and
members thereof, and corporations and to the officers and
directors thereof that shall relate to such currency exchange
business. The investigation may be conducted in conjunction
with representatives of other State agencies or agencies of
another state or of the United States as determined by the
Secretary Director. The Secretary Director may at any time
inspect the locations served by an ambulatory currency
exchange, for the purpose of determining whether such currency
exchange is complying with the provisions of this Act at each
location served. The Secretary Director may require by subpoena
the attendance of and examine under oath all persons whose
testimony he may require relative to such business, and in such
cases the Secretary Director, or any qualified representative
of the Secretary Director whom the Secretary Director may
designate, may administer oaths to all such persons called as
witnesses, and the Secretary Director, or any such qualified
representative of the Secretary Director, may conduct such
examinations, and there shall be paid to the Secretary Director
for each such examination a fee of $250 $225 for each day or
part thereof for each qualified representative designated and
required to conduct the examination; provided, however, that in
the case of an ambulatory currency exchange, such fee shall be
$150 $75 for each day or part thereof and shall not be
increased by reason of the number of locations served by it.
    (b) Confidentiality. All information collected by the
Department in the course of an examination or investigation of
an ambulatory or community currency exchange or applicant,
including, by not limited to, any complaint against an
ambulatory or community currency exchange filed with the
Department, and information collected to investigate any such
complaint shall be maintained for the confidential use of the
Department and shall not be disclosed. The Department may not
disclose such information to anyone other than law enforcement
officials, other regulatory agencies that have an appropriate
regulatory interest as determined by the Secretary, or to a
party presenting a lawful subpoena to the Department.
Information and documents disclosed to a federal, State,
county, or local law enforcement agency shall not be disclosed
by the agency for any purpose to any other agency or person. A
formal complaint filed against a licensee by the Department or
any order issued by the Department against a licensee shall be
a public record, except as otherwise prohibited by law.
(Source: P.A. 92-398, eff. 1-1-02; 93-32, eff. 7-1-03.)
 
    (205 ILCS 405/17)  (from Ch. 17, par. 4833)
    Sec. 17. A. Every licensee shall keep and use in his
business such books, accounts and records as will enable the
Secretary Director to determine whether such licensee is
complying with the provisions of this Act and with the rules,
regulations and directions made by the Secretary Director
hereunder.
    B. Each licensee shall record or cause to be recorded the
following information with respect to each money order it sells
or issues: (1) The amount; (2) the month and year of sale or
issuance; and (3) the serial number.
    Each licensee shall preserve the record required by this
subsection for at least 7 17 years or until the money order to
which it pertains is returned to the licensee. Each money order
returned to the licensee shall be preserved for not less than 3
years from the month and year of sale or issuance by the
licensee. The licensee shall keep the record, or an authentic
microfilm copy thereof, required to be preserved by this
subsection within this state at a place readily accessible to
the Secretary Director and his representatives. If a licensee
sells or transfers his business at a location or an address,
his obligations under this paragraph devolve upon the successor
licensee and subsequent successor licensees, if any, at such
location or address. If a licensee ceases to do business in
this state, he shall deposit the records and money orders he is
required to preserve, with the Secretary Director.
(Source: Laws 1963, p. 1634.)
 
    (205 ILCS 405/18)  (from Ch. 17, par. 4834)
    Sec. 18. The applicant for a community currency exchange
license shall have a permanent address as evidenced by a lease
of at least six months duration or other suitable evidence of
permanency, and the license issued, pursuant to the application
shall be valid only at that address or any new address approved
by the Secretary Director.
(Source: Laws 1957, p. 320.)
 
    (205 ILCS 405/19)  (from Ch. 17, par. 4835)
    Sec. 19. The Department Director may make and enforce such
reasonable rules , relevant regulations, directions, orders,
decisions and findings as the execution and enforcement of the
provisions of this Act require, and as are not inconsistent
within this Act. may be necessary for the execution and
enforcement of this Act and the purposes sought to be attained
herein. All such rules regulations, directions, orders,
decisions and findings shall be filed and entered by the
Secretary Director in an indexed permanent book or record, or
electronic record, with the effective date thereof suitably
indicated, and such book or record shall be a public document.
All rules regulations and directions, which are of a general
character, shall be made available in electronic form to all
licensees within 10 days after filing and all licensees shall
receive by mail notice of any changes. printed and copies
thereof mailed to all licensees within 10 days after filing as
aforesaid. Copies of all findings, orders and decisions shall
be mailed to the parties affected thereby by United States mail
within 5 days of such filing.
(Source: Laws 1957, p. 320.)
 
    (205 ILCS 405/19.3)  (from Ch. 17, par. 4838)
    Sec. 19.3. (A) The General Assembly hereby finds and
declares: community currency exchanges and ambulatory currency
exchanges provide important and vital services to Illinois
citizens. In so doing, they transact extensive business
involving check cashing and the writing of money orders in
communities in which banking services are generally
unavailable. Customers of currency exchanges who receive these
services must be protected from being charged unreasonable and
unconscionable rates for cashing checks and purchasing money
orders. The Illinois Department of Financial and Professional
Regulation Institutions has the responsibility for regulating
the operations of currency exchanges and has the expertise to
determine reasonable maximum rates to be charged for check
cashing and money order purchases. Therefore, it is in the
public interest, convenience, welfare and good to have the
Department establish reasonable maximum rate schedules for
check cashing and the issuance of money orders and to require
community and ambulatory currency exchanges to prominently
display to the public the fees charged for all services. The
Secretary Director shall review, each year, the cost of
operation of the Currency Exchange Section Division and the
revenue generated from currency exchange examinations and
report to the General Assembly if the need exists for an
increase in the fees mandated by this Act to maintain the
Currency Exchange Section Division at a fiscally
self-sufficient level. The Secretary Director shall include in
such report the total amount of funds remitted to the State and
delivered to the State Treasurer by currency exchanges pursuant
to the Uniform Disposition of Unclaimed Property Act.
    (B) The Secretary Director shall, by rules adopted in
accordance with the Illinois Administrative Procedure Act,
expeditiously formulate and issue schedules of reasonable
maximum rates which can be charged for check cashing and
writing of money orders by community currency exchanges and
ambulatory currency exchanges.
        (1) In determining the maximum rate schedules for the
    purposes of this Section the Secretary Director shall take
    into account:
            (a) Rates charged in the past for the cashing of
        checks and the issuance of money orders by community
        and ambulatory currency exchanges.
            (b) Rates charged by banks or other business
        entities for rendering the same or similar services and
        the factors upon which those rates are based.
            (c) The income, cost and expense of the operation
        of currency exchanges.
            (d) Rates charged by currency exchanges or other
        similar entities located in other states for the same
        or similar services and the factors upon which those
        rates are based.
            (e) Rates charged by the United States Postal
        Service for the issuing of money orders and the factors
        upon which those rates are based.
            (f) A reasonable profit for a currency exchange
        operation.
        (2)    (a) The schedule of reasonable maximum rates
    established pursuant to this Section may be modified by the
    Secretary Director from time to time pursuant to rules
    adopted in accordance with the Illinois Administrative
    Procedure Act.
        (b) Upon the filing of a verified petition setting
    forth allegations demonstrating reasonable cause to
    believe that the schedule of maximum rates previously
    issued and promulgated should be adjusted, the Secretary
    Director shall expeditiously:
            (i) reject the petition if it fails to demonstrate
        reasonable cause to believe that an adjustment is
        necessary; or
            (ii) conduct such hearings, in accordance with
        this Section, as may be necessary to determine whether
        the petition should be granted in whole or in part.
        (c) No petition may be filed pursuant to subparagraph
    (a) of paragraph (2) of subsection (B) unless:
            (i) at least nine months have expired since the
        last promulgation of schedules of maximum rates; and
            (ii) at least one-fourth of all community currency
        exchange licensees join in a petition or, in the case
        of ambulatory currency exchanges, a licensee or
        licensees authorized to serve at least 100 locations
        join in a petition.
    (3) Any currency exchange may charge lower fees than those
of the applicable maximum fee schedule after filing with the
Secretary Director a schedule of fees it proposes to use.
(Source: P.A. 91-16, eff. 7-1-99.)
 
    (205 ILCS 405/19.4)  (from Ch. 17, par. 4839)
    Sec. 19.4. The fees charged by community and ambulatory
currency exchanges for rendering any service authorized by this
Act shall be prominently displayed on the premises of the
community currency exchange or at the location served by the
ambulatory currency exchange in such fashion as shall be
required by the Secretary Director.
(Source: P.A. 81-964.)
 
    (205 ILCS 405/20)  (from Ch. 17, par. 4840)
    Sec. 20. Every person having taken an oath in any
proceeding or matter wherein an oath is required by this Act,
who shall swear willfully wilfully, corruptly or falsely in a
matter material to the issue or point in question, or shall
suborn any other person to swear as aforesaid, shall be guilty
of perjury or subornation of perjury, as the case may be.
(Source: Laws 1943, vol. 1, p. 233.)
 
    (205 ILCS 405/21)  (from Ch. 17, par. 4841)
    Sec. 21. Except as otherwise provided for in this Act,
whenever the Secretary Director is required to give notice to
any applicant or licensee, such requirement shall be complied
with if, within the time fixed herein, such notice shall be
enclosed in an envelope plainly addressed to such applicant or
licensee, as the case may be, at the address set forth in the
application or license, as the case may be, United States
postage fully prepaid, and deposited, registered or certified,
in the United States mail.
    Notice may also be provided to an applicant or licensee by
telephone facsimile to the person or electronically via email
to the telephone number or email address designated by an
applicant or licensee in writing.
(Source: Laws 1957, p. 320.)
 
    (205 ILCS 405/22.01)  (from Ch. 17, par. 4843)
    Sec. 22.01. All final administrative decisions of the
Secretary Director hereunder shall be subject to judicial
review pursuant to the provisions of the Administrative Review
Law, and all amendments and modifications thereof, and the
rules adopted pursuant thereto. The term "administrative
decision" is defined as in Section 3-101 of the Code of Civil
Procedure. The person seeking judicial review shall pay to the
Secretary Director the costs of preparing and certifying the
record of proceedings before the Secretary Director.
(Source: P.A. 82-783.)
 
    (205 ILCS 405/29.5 new)
    Sec. 29.5. Cease and desist. The Secretary may issue a
cease and desist order to any currency exchange or other person
doing business without the required license, when in the
opinion of the Secretary, the currency exchange or other person
is violating or is about to violate any provision of this Act
or any rule or requirement imposed in writing by the
Department. The cease and desist order shall specify the
activity or activities that the Department is seeking the
currency exchange or other person doing business without the
required license to cease and desist.
    The cease and desist order permitted by this Section may be
issued prior to a hearing.
    The Secretary shall serve notice of his or her action,
including, but not limited to, a statement of reasons for the
action, either personally or by certified mail, return receipt
requested. Service by certified mail shall be deemed completed
when the notice is deposited in the U.S. mail.
    Within 10 days after service of a cease and desist order,
the licensee or other person may request, in writing, a
hearing. The Secretary shall schedule a hearing within 30 days
after the request for a hearing unless otherwise agreed to by
the parties.
    If it is determined that the Secretary has the authority to
issue the cease and desist order, he or she may issue such
orders as reasonably necessary to correct, eliminate, or remedy
such conduct.
    The powers vested in the Secretary by this Section are
additional to any and all other powers and remedies vested in
the Secretary by law, and nothing in this Section shall be
construed as requiring that the Secretary shall employ the
power conferred in this Section instead of or as a condition
precedent to the exercise of any other power or remedy vested
in the Secretary.
    The currency exchange, or other person doing business
without the required license, shall pay the actual costs of the
hearing.
 
    (205 ILCS 405/10.1 rep.)
    (205 ILCS 405/22.03 rep.)
    (205 ILCS 405/25 rep.)
    Section 10. The Currency Exchange Act is amended by
repealing Sections 10.1, 22.03, and 25.
 
    Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect January
1, 2012.