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Public Act 098-1076 |
HB5491 Enrolled | LRB098 18402 JWD 53539 b |
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AN ACT concerning finance.
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Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
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represented in the General Assembly:
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Section 5. The Illinois Procurement Code is amended by |
changing Sections 1-10, 1-11, 1-12, 1-13, 1-15.30, 1-15.50, |
1-15.80, 1-15.107, 1-15.108, 1-15.110, 5-5, 5-25, 5-30, 10-20, |
15-20, 15-25, 15-30, 15-35, 20-5, 20-10, 20-15, 20-25, 20-30, |
20-35, 20-40, 20-43, 20-50, 20-80, 20-95, 20-120, 20-155, |
20-160, 25-60, 25-65, 25-80, 30-22, 30-30, 35-30, 35-40, 40-5, |
40-15, 40-20, 40-25, 40-55, 45-10, 45-20, 45-30, 45-35, 45-45, |
45-57, 45-67, 45-70, 50-5, 50-10, 50-10.5, 50-11, 50-12, 50-13, |
50-14, 50-20, 50-25, 50-35, 50-36, 50-37, 50-38, 50-39, 50-40, |
50-45, 50-70, 55-10 and by adding Sections 1-15.01, 1-15.02, |
1-15.12, 1-15.13, 1-15.17, 1-15.51, 1-15.52, 1-15.86, |
1-15.111, 15-40, and 15-45 as follows:
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(30 ILCS 500/1-10)
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Sec. 1-10. Application.
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(a) This Code applies only to procurements for which |
bidders, offerors, potential contractors, or contractors were |
first
solicited on or after July 1, 1998. This Code shall not |
be construed to affect
or impair any contract, or any provision |
of a contract, entered into based on a
solicitation prior to |
the implementation date of this Code as described in
Article |
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99, including but not limited to any covenant entered into with |
respect
to any revenue bonds or similar instruments.
All |
procurements for which contracts are solicited between the |
effective date
of Articles 50 and 99 and July 1, 1998 shall be |
substantially in accordance
with this Code and its intent.
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(b) This Code shall apply regardless of the source of the |
funds with which
the contracts are paid, including federal |
assistance moneys.
This Code shall
not apply to:
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(1) Contracts between the State and its political |
subdivisions or other
governments, or between State |
governmental bodies except as specifically
provided in |
this Code.
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(2) Grants, except for the filing requirements of |
Section 20-80.
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(3) Purchase of care.
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(4) Hiring of an individual as employee and not as an |
independent
contractor, whether pursuant to an employment |
code or policy or by contract
directly with that |
individual.
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(5) Collective bargaining contracts.
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(6) Purchase of real estate, except that notice of this |
type of contract with a value of more than $25,000 must be |
published in the Procurement Bulletin within 10 calendar 7 |
days after the deed is recorded in the county of |
jurisdiction. The notice shall identify the real estate |
purchased, the names of all parties to the contract, the |
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value of the contract, and the effective date of the |
contract.
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(7) Contracts necessary to prepare for anticipated |
litigation, enforcement
actions, or investigations, |
provided
that the chief legal counsel to the Governor shall |
give his or her prior
approval when the procuring agency is |
one subject to the jurisdiction of the
Governor, and |
provided that the chief legal counsel of any other |
procuring
entity
subject to this Code shall give his or her |
prior approval when the procuring
entity is not one subject |
to the jurisdiction of the Governor.
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(8) Contracts for
services to Northern Illinois |
University by a person, acting as
an independent |
contractor, who is qualified by education, experience, and
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technical ability and is selected by negotiation for the |
purpose of providing
non-credit educational service |
activities or products by means of specialized
programs |
offered by the university.
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(9) Procurement expenditures by the Illinois |
Conservation Foundation
when only private funds are used.
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(10) Procurement expenditures by the Illinois Health |
Information Exchange Authority involving private funds |
from the Health Information Exchange Fund. "Private funds" |
means gifts, donations, and private grants. |
(11) Public-private agreements entered into according |
to the procurement requirements of Section 20 of the |
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Public-Private Partnerships for Transportation Act and |
design-build agreements entered into according to the |
procurement requirements of Section 25 of the |
Public-Private Partnerships for Transportation Act. |
(12) Contracts for legal, financial, and other |
professional and artistic services entered into on or |
before December 31, 2018 by the Illinois Finance Authority |
in which the State of Illinois is not obligated. Such |
contracts shall be awarded through a competitive process |
authorized by the Board of the Illinois Finance Authority |
and are subject to Sections 5-30, 20-160, 50-13, 50-20, |
50-35, and 50-37 of this Code, as well as the final |
approval by the Board of the Illinois Finance Authority of |
the terms of the contract. |
Notwithstanding any other provision of law, contracts |
entered into under item (12) of this subsection (b) shall be |
published in the Procurement Bulletin within 14 calendar days |
after contract execution. The chief procurement officer shall |
prescribe the form and content of the notice. The Illinois |
Finance Authority shall provide the chief procurement officer, |
on a monthly basis, in the form and content prescribed by the |
chief procurement officer, a report of contracts that are |
related to the procurement of goods and services identified in |
item (12) of this subsection (b). At a minimum, this report |
shall include the name of the contractor, a description of the |
supply or service provided, the total amount of the contract, |
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the term of the contract, and the exception to the Code |
utilized. A copy of each of these contracts shall be made |
available to the chief procurement officer immediately upon |
request. The chief procurement officer shall submit a report to |
the Governor and General Assembly no later than November 1 of |
each year that shall include, at a minimum, an annual summary |
of the monthly information reported to the chief procurement |
officer. |
(c) This Code does not apply to the electric power |
procurement process provided for under Section 1-75 of the |
Illinois Power Agency Act and Section 16-111.5 of the Public |
Utilities Act. |
(d) Except for Section 20-160 and Article 50 of this Code, |
and as expressly required by Section 9.1 of the Illinois |
Lottery Law, the provisions of this Code do not apply to the |
procurement process provided for under Section 9.1 of the |
Illinois Lottery Law. |
(e) This Code does not apply to the process used by the |
Capital Development Board to retain a person or entity to |
assist the Capital Development Board with its duties related to |
the determination of costs of a clean coal SNG brownfield |
facility, as defined by Section 1-10 of the Illinois Power |
Agency Act, as required in subsection (h-3) of Section 9-220 of |
the Public Utilities Act, including calculating the range of |
capital costs, the range of operating and maintenance costs, or |
the sequestration costs or monitoring the construction of clean |
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coal SNG brownfield facility for the full duration of |
construction. |
(f) This Code does not apply to the process used by the |
Illinois Power Agency to retain a mediator to mediate sourcing |
agreement disputes between gas utilities and the clean coal SNG |
brownfield facility, as defined in Section 1-10 of the Illinois |
Power Agency Act, as required under subsection (h-1) of Section |
9-220 of the Public Utilities Act. |
(g) This Code does not apply to the processes used by the |
Illinois Power Agency to retain a mediator to mediate contract |
disputes between gas utilities and the clean coal SNG facility |
and to retain an expert to assist in the review of contracts |
under subsection (h) of Section 9-220 of the Public Utilities |
Act. This Code does not apply to the process used by the |
Illinois Commerce Commission to retain an expert to assist in |
determining the actual incurred costs of the clean coal SNG |
facility and the reasonableness of those costs as required |
under subsection (h) of Section 9-220 of the Public Utilities |
Act. |
(h) This Code does not apply to the process to procure or |
contracts entered into in accordance with Sections 11-5.2 and |
11-5.3 of the Illinois Public Aid Code. |
(i) Each chief procurement officer may access records |
necessary to review whether a contract, purchase, or other |
expenditure is or is not subject to the provisions of this |
Code, unless such records would be subject to attorney-client |
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privilege. |
(j) This Code does not apply to the process used by the |
Capital Development Board to retain an artist or work or works |
of art as required in Section 14 of the Capital Development |
Board Act. |
(k) This Code does not apply to the process to procure |
contracts, or contracts entered into, by the State Board of |
Elections or the State Electoral Board for hearing officers |
appointed pursuant to the Election Code. |
(Source: P.A. 97-96, eff. 7-13-11; 97-239, eff. 8-2-11; 97-502, |
eff. 8-23-11; 97-689, eff. 6-14-12; 97-813, eff. 7-13-12; |
97-895, eff. 8-3-12; 98-90, eff. 7-15-13; 98-463, eff. 8-16-13; |
98-572, eff. 1-1-14; revised 9-9-13.)
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(30 ILCS 500/1-11) |
Sec. 1-11. Applicability of certain Public Acts. The |
changes made to this Code by Public Act 96-793, Public Act |
96-795, and this amendatory Act of the 96th General Assembly |
apply to those procurements for which bidders, offerors, |
vendors, potential contractors, or contractors were first |
solicited on or after July 1, 2010.
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(Source: P.A. 96-920, eff. 7-1-10.) |
(30 ILCS 500/1-12) |
(Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2016) |
Sec. 1-12. Applicability to artistic or musical services. |
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(a) This Code shall
not apply to procurement expenditures |
necessary to provide artistic or musical services, |
performances, or theatrical productions held at a venue |
operated or leased by a State agency. |
(b) Notice of each contract entered into by a State agency |
that is related to the procurement of goods and services |
identified in this Section shall be published in the Illinois |
Procurement Bulletin within 14 calendar days after contract |
execution. The chief procurement officer shall prescribe the |
form and content of the notice. Each State agency shall provide |
the chief procurement officer, on a monthly basis, in the form |
and content prescribed by the chief procurement officer, a |
report of contracts that are related to the procurement of |
goods and services identified in this Section. At a minimum, |
this report shall include the name of the contractor, a |
description of the supply or service provided, the total amount |
of the contract, the term of the contract, and the exception to |
the Code utilized. A copy of any or all of these contracts |
shall be made available to the chief procurement officer |
immediately upon request. The chief procurement officer shall |
submit a report to the Governor and General Assembly no later |
than November 1 of each year that shall include, at a minimum, |
an annual summary of the monthly information reported to the |
chief procurement officer. |
(c)
This Section is repealed December 31, 2016.
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(Source: P.A. 97-895, eff. 8-3-12.) |
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(30 ILCS 500/1-13) |
(Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2014) |
Sec. 1-13. Applicability to public institutions of higher |
education. |
(a) This Code shall apply to public institutions of higher |
education, regardless of the source of the funds with which |
contracts are paid, except as provided in this Section. |
(b) Except as provided in this Section, this Code shall not |
apply to procurements made by or on behalf of public |
institutions of higher education for any of the following: |
(1) Memberships in professional, academic, research, |
or athletic organizations on behalf of a public institution |
of higher education, an employee of a public institution of |
higher education, or a student at a public institution of |
higher education. |
(2) Procurement expenditures for events or activities |
paid for exclusively by revenues generated by the event or |
activity, gifts or donations for the event or activity, |
private grants, or any combination thereof. |
(3) Procurement expenditures for events or activities |
for which the use of specific potential contractors vendors |
is mandated or identified by the sponsor of the event or |
activity, provided that the sponsor is providing a majority |
of the funding for the event or activity. |
(4) Procurement expenditures necessary to provide |
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artistic or musical services, performances, or productions |
held at a venue operated by a public institution of higher |
education. |
(5) Procurement expenditures for periodicals and books |
procured for use by a university library or academic |
department, except for expenditures related to procuring |
textbooks for student use or materials for resale or |
rental. |
(6) Procurement expenditures for placement of students |
in externships, practicums, field experiences, and medical |
residencies and rotations. |
(7) Contracts for programming and broadcast license |
rights for university-operated radio and television |
stations. |
Notice of each contract entered into by a public institution of |
higher education that is related to the procurement of goods |
and services identified in items (1) through (7) (5) of this |
subsection shall be published in the Procurement Bulletin |
within 14 calendar days after contract execution. The Chief |
Procurement Officer shall prescribe the form and content of the |
notice. Each public institution of higher education shall |
provide the Chief Procurement Officer, on a monthly basis, in |
the form and content prescribed by the Chief Procurement |
Officer, a report of contracts that are related to the |
procurement of goods and services identified in this |
subsection. At a minimum, this report shall include the name of |
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the contractor, a description of the supply or service |
provided, the total amount of the contract, the term of the |
contract, and the exception to the Code utilized. A copy of any |
or all of these contracts shall be made available to the Chief |
Procurement Officer immediately upon request. The Chief |
Procurement Officer shall submit a report to the Governor and |
General Assembly no later than November 1 of each year that |
shall include, at a minimum, an annual summary of the monthly |
information reported to the Chief Procurement Officer. |
(b-5) Except as provided in this subsection, the provisions |
of this Code shall not apply to contracts for FDA-regulated |
supplies, and to contracts for medical services necessary for |
the delivery of care and treatment at medical, dental, or |
veterinary teaching facilities utilized by Southern Illinois |
University or the University of Illinois. Other supplies and |
services needed for these teaching facilities shall be subject |
to the jurisdiction of the Chief Procurement Officer for Public |
Institutions of Higher Education who may establish expedited |
procurement procedures and may waive or modify certification, |
contract, hearing, process and registration requirements |
required by the Code. All procurements made under this |
subsection shall be documented and may require publication in |
the Illinois Procurement Bulletin. |
(c) Procurements made by or on behalf of public |
institutions of higher education for any of the following shall |
be made in accordance with the requirements of this Code to the |
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extent practical as provided in this subsection: |
(1) Contracts with a foreign entity necessary for |
research or educational activities, provided that the |
foreign entity either does not maintain an office in the |
United States or is the sole source of the service or |
product. |
(2) (Blank). Procurements of FDA-regulated goods, |
products, and services necessary for the delivery of care |
and treatment at medical, dental, or veterinary teaching |
facilities utilized by the University of Illinois or |
Southern Illinois University. |
(3) (Blank). Contracts for programming and broadcast |
license rights for university-operated radio and |
television stations. |
(4) Procurements required for fulfillment of a grant. |
Upon the written request of a public institution of higher |
education, the Chief Procurement Officer may waive |
registration, certification, and hearing requirements of this |
Code if, based on the item to be procured or the terms of a |
grant, compliance is impractical. The public institution of |
higher education shall provide the Chief Procurement Officer |
with specific reasons for the waiver, including the necessity |
of contracting with a particular potential contractor vendor , |
and shall certify that an effort was made in good faith to |
comply with the provisions of this Code. The Chief Procurement |
Officer shall provide written justification for any waivers. By |
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November 1 of each year, the Chief Procurement Officer shall |
file a report with the General Assembly identifying each |
contract approved with waivers and providing the justification |
given for any waivers for each of those contracts. Notice of |
each waiver made under this subsection shall be published in |
the Procurement Bulletin within 14 calendar days after contract |
execution. The Chief Procurement Officer shall prescribe the |
form and content of the notice. |
(d) Notwithstanding this Section, a waiver of the |
registration requirements of Section 20-160 does not permit a |
business entity and any affiliated entities or affiliated |
persons to make campaign contributions if otherwise prohibited |
by Section 50-37. The total amount of contracts awarded in |
accordance with this Section shall be included in determining |
the aggregate amount of contracts or pending bids of a business |
entity and any affiliated entities or affiliated persons. |
(e) Notwithstanding subsection (e) of Section 50-10.5 of |
this Code, the Chief Procurement Officer, with the approval of |
the Executive Ethics Commission, may permit a public |
institution of higher education to accept a bid or enter into a |
contract with a business that assisted the public institution |
of higher education in determining whether there is a need for |
a contract or assisted in reviewing, drafting, or preparing |
documents related to a bid or contract, provided that the bid |
or contract is essential to research administered by the public |
institution of higher education and it is in the best interest |
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of the public institution of higher education to accept the bid |
or contract. For purposes of this subsection, "business" |
includes all individuals with whom a business is affiliated, |
including, but not limited to, any officer, agent, employee, |
consultant, independent contractor, director, partner, |
manager, or shareholder of a business. The Executive Ethics |
Commission may promulgate rules and regulations for the |
implementation and administration of the provisions of this |
subsection (e). |
(f) As used in this Section: |
"Grant" means non-appropriated funding provided by a |
federal or private entity to support a project or program |
administered by a public institution of higher education and |
any non-appropriated funding provided to a sub-recipient of the |
grant. |
"Public institution of higher education" means Chicago |
State University, Eastern Illinois University, Governors State |
University, Illinois State University, Northeastern Illinois |
University, Northern Illinois University, Southern Illinois |
University, University of Illinois, Western Illinois |
University, and, for purposes of this Code only, the Illinois |
Mathematics and Science Academy. |
(g) This Section is repealed on December 31, 2016 2014 .
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(Source: P.A. 97-643, eff. 12-20-11; 97-895, eff. 8-3-12.) |
(30 ILCS 500/1-15.01 new) |
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Sec. 1-15.01. Bid. "Bid" means the response submitted by a |
bidder in a competitive sealed bidding process, to an |
invitation for bid, or to a multi-step sealed bidding process. |
(30 ILCS 500/1-15.02 new) |
Sec. 1-15.02. Bidder. "Bidder" means one who submits a |
response in a competitive sealed bidding process, to an |
invitation for bid, or to a multi-step sealed bidding process. |
(30 ILCS 500/1-15.12 new) |
Sec. 1-15.12. Change order. "Change order" means a change |
in a contract term, other than as specifically provided for in |
the contract, which authorizes or necessitates any increase or |
decrease in the cost of the contract or the time for completion |
for procurements subject to the jurisdiction of the chief |
procurement officers appointed pursuant to Section 10-20. |
(30 ILCS 500/1-15.13 new) |
Sec. 1-15.13. Chief Procurement Office. "Chief Procurement |
Office" means the offices to which the chief procurement |
officers are appointed pursuant to Section 10-20. |
(30 ILCS 500/1-15.17 new) |
Sec. 1-15.17. Contractor. "Contractor" means any person |
having a contract with a State agency as defined in Section |
1-15.30.
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(30 ILCS 500/1-15.30)
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Sec. 1-15.30. Contract. "Contract" means all types of
State |
agreements, including change orders and renewals, regardless
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of what they may be called, for the procurement, use, or |
disposal
of supplies, services,
professional or artistic |
services, or construction or for leases of real
property where |
the State is the , whether the State is lessor or lessee, or
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capital improvements,
and including renewals, master |
contracts, contracts for financing through
use of installment |
or
lease-purchase arrangements, renegotiated contracts, |
amendments to contracts, and change orders.
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(Source: P.A. 96-795, eff. 7-1-10 (see Section 5 of P.A. 96-793 |
for the effective date of changes made by P.A. 96-795) .)
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(30 ILCS 500/1-15.50)
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Sec. 1-15.50. Negotiation. "Negotiation" means the
process |
of selecting a contractor
other than by competitive sealed |
bids, multi-step sealed bidding,
or competitive sealed |
proposals,
whereby a purchasing agency can establish any and |
all terms and
conditions of a procurement
contract by |
discussion with one or more potential prospective contractors.
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(Source: P.A. 90-572, eff. 2-6-98.)
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(30 ILCS 500/1-15.51 new) |
Sec. 1-15.51. Offer. "Offer" means a response submitted by |
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an offeror in a competitive sealed proposal process or to a |
request for proposal. |
(30 ILCS 500/1-15.52 new) |
Sec. 1-15.52. Offeror. "Offeror" means any person who |
submits a proposal in response to a competitive sealed proposal |
process or a request for proposals.
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(30 ILCS 500/1-15.80)
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Sec. 1-15.80. Responsible bidder , potential contractor, or |
offeror.
"Responsible bidder , potential contractor, or |
offeror" means
a person who has the capability in all respects |
to perform fully
the contract requirements and
the integrity |
and reliability that will assure good faith
performance. A |
responsible bidder or offeror shall not include a business or |
other entity that does not exist as a legal entity at the time |
a bid or offer or proposal is submitted for a State contract.
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(Source: P.A. 96-795, eff. 7-1-10 (see Section 5 of P.A. 96-793 |
for the effective date of changes made by P.A. 96-795) .)
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(30 ILCS 500/1-15.86 new) |
Sec. 1-15.86. Responsive offeror. "Responsive offeror" |
means a person who has submitted an offer that conforms in all |
material respects to the request for proposals. |
(30 ILCS 500/1-15.107) |
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Sec. 1-15.107. Subcontract. "Subcontract" means a contract |
between a person and a person who has a contract subject to |
this Code, pursuant to which the subcontractor provides to the |
contractor, or, if the contract price exceeds $50,000, another |
subcontractor, some or all of the goods, services, real |
property, remuneration, or other monetary forms of |
consideration that are the subject of the primary contract and |
includes, among other things, subleases from a lessee of a |
State agency. For purposes of this Code, a "subcontract" does |
not include purchases of goods or supplies that are incidental |
to the performance of a contract by a person who has a contract |
subject to this Code.
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(Source: P.A. 96-795, eff. 7-1-10 (see Section 5 of P.A. 96-793 |
for the effective date of P.A. 96-795); 97-895, eff. 8-3-12.) |
(30 ILCS 500/1-15.108) |
Sec. 1-15.108. Subcontractor. "Subcontractor" means a |
person or entity that enters into a contractual agreement with |
a total value of $50,000 or more with a person or entity who |
has a contract subject to this Code pursuant to which the |
person or entity provides some or all of the goods, services, |
real property, remuneration, or other monetary forms of |
consideration that are the subject of the primary State |
contract, including subleases from a lessee of a State |
contract. For purposes of this Code, a person or entity is not |
a "subcontractor" if that person only provides goods or |
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supplies that are incidental to the performance of a contract |
by a person who has a contract subject to this Code.
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(Source: P.A. 96-920, eff. 7-1-10; 97-895, eff. 8-3-12.)
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(30 ILCS 500/1-15.110)
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Sec. 1-15.110. Supplies. "Supplies" means all personal
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property, including but not
limited to equipment, materials, |
printing, and insurance, and the
financing of those supplies |
that can be procured regularly or are available on the |
commercial market .
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(Source: P.A. 90-572, eff. 2-6-98.)
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(30 ILCS 500/1-15.111 new) |
Sec. 1-15.111. Supplier. "Supplier" means any person or |
entity providing supplies, including, but not limited to, |
equipment, materials, printing, and insurance, and the |
financing of those supplies that can be procured regularly or |
are available on the commercial market.
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(30 ILCS 500/5-5)
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Sec. 5-5. Procurement Policy Board.
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(a) Creation. There is created a Procurement Policy Board, |
an agency of the State of Illinois.
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(b) Authority and duties. The Board shall have the
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authority and responsibility to
review, comment upon, and |
recommend, consistent with this Code, rules and
practices |
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governing the
procurement, management, control,
and disposal |
of supplies, services, professional or artistic
services, |
construction, and real
property and capital improvement leases |
procured by the State.
The Board shall also have the authority |
to recommend a program for professional development and provide |
opportunities for training in procurement practices and |
policies to chief procurement officers and their staffs in |
order to ensure that all procurement is conducted in an |
efficient, professional, and appropriately transparent manner. |
Upon a three-fifths vote of its members, the Board may |
review a
contract.
Upon a three-fifths vote of its members, the |
Board may propose procurement
rules for consideration by chief |
procurement officers. These proposals shall
be published in |
each volume of the Procurement Bulletin.
Except as otherwise |
provided by law, the Board shall act upon the vote of a
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majority of its members who have been appointed and are |
serving.
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(b-5) Reviews, studies, and hearings. The Board may review, |
study, and hold public hearings concerning the implementation |
and administration of this Code. Each chief procurement |
officer, State purchasing officer, procurement compliance |
monitor, and State agency shall cooperate with the Board, |
provide information to the Board, and be responsive to the |
Board in the Board's conduct of its reviews, studies, and |
hearings.
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(c) Members. The Board shall consist of 5 members
appointed |
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one each by the 4 legislative leaders and
the Governor.
Each
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member shall have demonstrated sufficient business or |
professional
experience in the area of
procurement to perform |
the functions of the Board. No member may be a member
of the |
General Assembly.
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(d) Terms. Of the initial appointees, the Governor shall
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designate one member, as Chairman, to serve
a one-year term, |
the President of the Senate and the Speaker of the House shall
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each appoint one member to serve 3-year terms, and the Minority |
Leader of the
House
and the Minority Leader of the Senate shall |
each
appoint one member to serve 2-year terms. Subsequent
terms |
shall be 4 years. Members may be reappointed for
succeeding |
terms.
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(e) Reimbursement. Members shall receive no compensation
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but shall be reimbursed
for any expenses reasonably incurred in |
the performance of their
duties.
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(f) Staff support. Upon a three-fifths vote of its members, |
the Board may
employ an executive director. Subject to |
appropriation, the
Board also may employ a reasonable and |
necessary number of staff persons.
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(g) Meetings. Meetings of the Board may be conducted |
telephonically,
electronically, or through the use of other |
telecommunications.
Written minutes of such meetings shall be
|
created and available for public inspection and copying.
|
(h) Procurement recommendations. Upon a three-fifths vote |
of its members, the Board may review a proposal, bid, or |
|
contract and issue a recommendation to void a contract or |
reject a proposal or bid based on any violation of this Code or |
the existence of a conflict of interest as described in |
subsections (b) and (d) of Section 50-35. A chief procurement |
officer or State purchasing officer shall notify the Board if |
an alleged conflict of interest or violation of the Code is |
identified, discovered, or reasonably suspected to exist. Any |
person or entity may notify the Board of an alleged conflict of |
interest or violation of the Code. A recommendation of the |
Board shall be delivered to the appropriate chief procurement |
officer and Executive Ethics Commission within 7 calendar 5 |
days and must be published in the next volume of the |
Procurement Bulletin. In the event that an alleged conflict of |
interest or violation of the
Code that was not originally |
disclosed with the bid, offer, or proposal is identified and |
filed with the Board, the
Board shall provide written notice of |
the alleged conflict of interest or violation to the bidder, |
offeror, potential contractor, contractor , or subcontractor on |
that contract. If
the alleged conflict of interest or violation |
is by the subcontractor, written notice shall also be provided |
to the bidder, offeror, potential contractor, or contractor. |
The bidder, offeror, potential contractor,
contractor , or |
subcontractor shall have 15 calendar days to provide a written |
response to the notice, and a hearing before
the Board on the |
alleged conflict of interest or violation shall be held upon |
request by the bidder, offeror, potential contractor, |
|
contractor , or subcontractor. The requested hearing date and |
time shall
be determined by the Board, but in no event shall |
the hearing occur later than 15 calendar days after the date of |
the request. |
(i) After providing notice and a hearing as required by |
subsection (h), the Board shall refer any alleged violations of |
this Code to the Executive Inspector General in addition to or |
instead of issuing a recommendation to void a contract. |
(Source: P.A. 96-795, eff. 7-1-10 (see Section 5 of P.A. 96-793 |
for the effective date of changes made by P.A. 96-795); 97-895, |
eff. 8-3-12.)
|
(30 ILCS 500/5-25)
|
Sec. 5-25. Rulemaking authority; agency policy; agency |
response. |
(a) Rulemaking. A chief procurement officer
authorized to |
make
procurements under this Code shall have the authority to
|
promulgate rules to carry out that
authority. The
That |
rulemaking on specific procurement
topics is mentioned in |
specific Sections of this Code shall not be construed as
|
prohibiting or limiting rulemaking on other procurement |
topics.
|
All rules
shall be promulgated in accordance with the |
Illinois Administrative Procedure
Act. Contractual provisions, |
specifications, and procurement descriptions are
not rules and |
are not subject to the Illinois Administrative Procedure Act.
|
|
All rules other than those promulgated by the Board
shall be |
presented in writing to the Board and the Executive Procurement |
Officer for review and
comment. The Board and the Executive |
Procurement Officer shall express their opinions and |
recommendations in writing. The
proposed rules and |
recommendations shall be made available for
public review. The |
rules shall also be approved by the Joint Committee on |
Administrative Rules.
|
(b) Policy. Each chief procurement officer shall promptly |
notify the Procurement Policy Board in writing of any proposed |
new procurement rule or policy or any proposed change in an |
existing procurement rule or policy.
|
(c) Response. Each State agency must respond promptly in |
writing to all inquiries and comments of the Procurement Policy |
Board or Executive Procurement Officer .
|
(Source: P.A. 96-795, eff. 7-1-10 (see Section 5 of P.A. 96-793 |
for the effective date of changes made by P.A. 96-795) .)
|
(30 ILCS 500/5-30)
|
Sec. 5-30. Proposed contracts; Procurement Policy Board. |
(a) Except as provided in subsection (c), within 30 |
calendar days after notice of the awarding or letting of a |
contract has appeared in the Procurement Bulletin in accordance |
with subsection (b) of Section 15-25, the Board may request in |
writing from the contracting agency and the contracting agency |
shall promptly, but in no event later than 7 calendar 5 |
|
business days after receipt of the request, provide to the |
Board, by electronic or other means satisfactory to the Board, |
documentation in the possession of the contracting agency |
concerning the proposed contract. Nothing in this subsection is |
intended to waive or abrogate any privilege or right of |
confidentiality authorized by law. |
(b) No contract subject to this Section may be entered into |
until the 30-day period described in subsection (a) has |
expired, unless the contracting agency requests in writing that |
the Board waive the period and the Board grants the waiver in |
writing.
|
(c) This Section does not apply to (i) contracts entered |
into under this Code for small and emergency procurements as |
those procurements are defined in Article 20 and (ii) contracts |
for professional and artistic services that are nonrenewable, |
one year or less in duration, and have a value of less than |
$20,000. If requested in writing by the Board, however, the |
contracting agency must promptly, but in no event later than 10 |
calendar 8 business days after receipt of the request, transmit |
to the Board a copy of the contract for an emergency |
procurement and documentation in the possession of the |
contracting agency concerning the contract.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-839, eff. 7-30-04.) |
(30 ILCS 500/10-20) |
Sec. 10-20. Independent chief procurement officers. |
|
(a) Appointment. Within 60 calendar days after the |
effective date of this amendatory Act of the 96th General |
Assembly, the Executive Ethics Commission, with the advice and |
consent of the Senate shall appoint or approve 4 chief |
procurement officers, one for each of the following categories: |
(1) for procurements for construction and |
construction-related services committed by law to the |
jurisdiction or responsibility of the Capital Development |
Board; |
(2) for procurements for all construction, |
construction-related services, operation of any facility, |
and the provision of any service or activity committed by |
law to the jurisdiction or responsibility of the Illinois |
Department of Transportation, including the direct or |
reimbursable expenditure of all federal funds for which the |
Department of Transportation is responsible or accountable |
for the use thereof in accordance with federal law, |
regulation, or procedure, the chief procurement officer |
recommended for approval under this item appointed by the |
Secretary of Transportation after consent by the Executive |
Ethics Commission; |
(3) for all procurements made by a public institution |
of higher education; and |
(4) for all other procurement needs of State agencies. |
A chief procurement officer shall be responsible to the |
Executive Ethics Commission but must be located within the |
|
agency that the officer provides with procurement services. The |
chief procurement officer for higher education shall have an |
office located within the Board of Higher Education, unless |
otherwise designated by the Executive Ethics Commission. The |
chief procurement officer for all other procurement needs of |
the State shall have an office located within the Department of |
Central Management Services, unless otherwise designated by |
the Executive Ethics Commission. |
(b) Terms and independence. Each chief procurement officer |
appointed under this Section shall serve for a term of 5 years |
beginning on the date of the officer's appointment. The chief |
procurement officer may be removed for cause after a hearing by |
the Executive Ethics Commission. The Governor or the director |
of a State agency directly responsible to the Governor may |
institute a complaint against the officer by filing such |
complaint with the Commission. The Commission shall have a |
hearing based on the complaint. The officer and the complainant |
shall receive reasonable notice of the hearing and shall be |
permitted to present their respective arguments on the |
complaint. After the hearing, the Commission shall make a |
finding on the complaint and may take disciplinary action, |
including but not limited to removal of the officer. |
The salary of a chief procurement officer shall be |
established by the Executive Ethics Commission and may not be |
diminished during the officer's term. The salary may not exceed |
the salary of the director of a State agency for which the |
|
officer serves as chief procurement officer. |
(c) Qualifications. In addition to any other requirement or |
qualification required by State law, each chief procurement |
officer must within 12 months of employment be a Certified |
Professional Public Buyer or a Certified Public Purchasing |
Officer, pursuant to certification by the Universal Public |
Purchasing Certification Council, and must reside in Illinois. |
(d) Fiduciary duty. Each chief procurement officer owes a |
fiduciary duty to the State. |
(e) Vacancy. In case of a vacancy in one or more of the |
offices of a chief procurement officer under this Section |
during the recess of the Senate, the Executive Ethics |
Commission shall make a temporary appointment until the next |
meeting of the Senate, when the Executive Ethics Commission |
shall nominate some person to fill the office, and any person |
so nominated who is confirmed by the Senate shall hold office |
during the remainder of the term and until his or her successor |
is appointed and qualified. If the Senate is not in session at |
the time this amendatory Act of the 96th General Assembly takes |
effect, the Executive Ethics Commission shall make a temporary |
appointment as in the case of a vacancy. |
(f) (Blank). Acting chief procurement officers. Prior to |
August 31, 2010, the Executive Ethics Commission may, until an |
initial chief procurement officer is appointed and qualified, |
designate some person as an acting chief procurement officer to |
execute the powers and discharge the duties vested by law in |
|
that chief procurement officer. An acting chief procurement |
officer shall serve no later than the appointment of the |
initial chief procurement officer pursuant to subsection (a) of |
this Section. Nothing in this subsection shall prohibit the |
Executive Ethics Commission from appointing an acting chief |
procurement officer as a chief procurement officer. |
(g) (Blank). Transition schedule. Notwithstanding any |
other provision of this Act or this amendatory Act of the 96th |
General Assembly, the chief procurement officers on the |
effective date of Public Act 96-793 shall continue to serve as |
chief procurement officers until August 31, 2010 and shall |
retain their powers and duties pertaining to procurements, |
provided the chief procurement officer appointed or approved by |
the Executive Ethics Commission shall approve any rules |
promulgated to implement this Code or the provisions of this |
amendatory Act of the 96th General Assembly. The chief |
procurement officers appointed or approved by the Executive |
Ethics Commission shall assume the position of chief |
procurement officer upon appointment and work in collaboration |
with the current chief procurement officer and staff. On |
September 1, 2010, the chief procurement officers appointed by |
the Executive Ethics Commission shall assume the powers and |
duties of the chief procurement officers. |
(Source: P.A. 96-795, eff. 7-1-10 (see Section 5 of P.A. 96-793 |
for the effective date of P.A. 96-795); 96-920, eff. 7-1-10.)
|
|
(30 ILCS 500/15-20)
|
Sec. 15-20. Qualified bidders or offerors . Subscription to |
the
Illinois Procurement Bulletin shall
not be required to |
qualify as a bidder or offeror under this Code.
|
(Source: P.A. 90-572, eff. date - See Sec. 99-5.)
|
(30 ILCS 500/15-25) |
Sec. 15-25. Bulletin content. |
(a) Invitations for bids. Notice of each and every contract |
that is
offered, including renegotiated contracts and change |
orders,
shall be published in the Bulletin . All , and all |
businesses listed on the Department of Transportation |
Disadvantaged Business Enterprise Directory, the Department of |
Central Management Services Business Enterprise Program , and |
the Chief Procurement Office's Small Business Vendors |
Directory , and the Capital Development Board's Directory of |
Certified Minority and Female Business Enterprises shall be |
furnished written instructions and information on how to |
register on each Procurement Bulletin maintained by the State. |
Such information shall be provided to each business within 30 |
calendar days after the business' notice of certification. The |
applicable chief procurement officer
may provide by rule an |
organized format for the publication of this
information, but |
in any case it must include at least the date first offered,
|
the date submission of offers is due, the location that offers |
are to be
submitted to, the purchasing State agency, the |
|
responsible State purchasing
officer, a brief purchase |
description, the method of source selection,
information of how |
to obtain a comprehensive purchase description and any
|
disclosure and contract forms, and encouragement to potential |
contractors prospective vendors to hire qualified veterans, as |
defined by Section 45-67 of this Code, and qualified Illinois |
minorities, women, persons with disabilities, and residents |
discharged from any Illinois adult correctional center. |
(b) Contracts let. Notice of each and every contract that |
is let, including renegotiated contracts and change orders, |
shall be issued electronically to those bidders or offerors |
submitting responses to the solicitations, inclusive of the |
unsuccessful bidders, immediately upon contract let. Failure |
of any chief procurement officer to give such notice shall |
result in tolling the time for filing a bid protest up to 7 |
calendar 5 business days. |
For purposes of this subsection (b), "contracts let" means |
a construction agency's act of advertising an invitation for |
bids for one or more construction projects. The apparent low |
bidder's award and all other bids from bidders responding to |
solicitations shall be posted on the agency's website the next |
business day.
|
(b-5) Contracts awarded. Notice of each and every contract |
that is awarded, including renegotiated contracts and change |
orders, shall be issued electronically to the successful |
responsible bidder , or offeror, or contractor posted on the |
|
agency's website the next business day, and published in the |
next available subsequent Bulletin. The applicable chief |
procurement officer may provide by rule an organized format for |
the publication of this information, but in any case it must |
include at least all of the information specified in subsection |
(a) as well as the name of the successful responsible bidder , |
or offeror, the contract price, the number of unsuccessful |
responsive bidders or offerors , and any other disclosure |
specified in any Section of this Code. This notice must be |
posted in the online electronic Bulletin prior to execution of |
the contract. |
For purposes of this subsection (b-5), "contract award" |
means the determination that a particular bidder or offeror has |
been selected from among other bidders or offerors to receive a |
contract, subject to the successful completion of final |
negotiations. "Contract award" is evidenced by the posting of a |
Notice of Award or a Notice of Intent to Award to the |
respective volume of the Illinois Procurement Bulletin. |
(c) Emergency purchase disclosure. Any chief procurement |
officer or State
purchasing officer exercising emergency |
purchase authority under
this Code shall publish a written |
description and reasons and the total cost,
if known, or an |
estimate if unknown and the name of the responsible chief
|
procurement officer and State purchasing officer, and the |
business or person
contracted with for all emergency purchases |
in
the next timely, practicable Bulletin. This notice must be |
|
posted in the online electronic Bulletin no later than 5 |
calendar 3 business days after the contract is awarded.
Notice |
of a hearing to extend an emergency contract must be posted in |
the online electronic Procurement Bulletin no later than 14 |
calendar 5 business days prior to the hearing. |
(c-5) Business Enterprise Program report. Each purchasing |
agency shall, with the assistance of the applicable chief |
procurement officer, post in the online electronic Bulletin a |
copy of its annual report of utilization of businesses owned by |
minorities, females, and persons with disabilities as |
submitted to the Business Enterprise Council for Minorities, |
Females, and Persons with Disabilities pursuant to Section 6(c) |
of the Business Enterprise for Minorities, Females, and Persons |
with Disabilities Act within 10 calendar business days after |
its submission of its report to the Council.
|
(c-10) Renewals. Notice of each contract renewal shall be |
posted in the online electronic Bulletin within 14 calendar 10 |
business days of the determination to renew the contract and |
the next available subsequent Bulletin. The notice shall |
include at least all of the information required in subsection |
(b).
|
(c-15) Sole source procurements. Before entering into a |
sole source contract, a chief procurement officer exercising |
sole source procurement authority under this Code shall publish |
a written description of intent to enter into a sole source |
contract along with a description of the item to be procured |
|
and the intended sole source contractor. This notice must be |
posted in the online electronic Procurement Bulletin before a |
sole source contract is awarded and at least 14 calendar days |
before the hearing required by Section 20-25. |
(d) Other required disclosure. The applicable chief |
procurement officer
shall provide by rule for the organized |
publication of all other disclosure
required in other Sections |
of this Code in a timely manner. |
(e) The changes to subsections (b), (c), (c-5), (c-10), and |
(c-15) of this Section made by this amendatory Act of the 96th |
General Assembly apply to reports submitted, offers made, and |
notices on contracts executed on or after its effective date.
|
(f) Each chief procurement officer shall, in consultation |
with the agencies under his or her jurisdiction, provide the |
Procurement Policy Board with the information and resources |
necessary, and in a manner, to effectuate the purpose of this |
amendatory Act of the 96th General Assembly. |
(Source: P.A. 96-795, eff. 7-1-10 (see Section 5 of P.A. 96-793 |
for the effective date of changes made by P.A. 96-795); |
96-1444, eff. 8-20-10; 97-895, eff. 8-3-12.) |
(30 ILCS 500/15-30) |
Sec. 15-30. Electronic Bulletin clearinghouse. |
(a) The Procurement Policy Board shall maintain on its |
official website a searchable database containing all |
information required to be included in the Illinois Procurement |
|
Bulletin under subsections (b), (c), (c-10), and (c-15) of |
Section 15-25 and all information required to be disclosed |
under Section 50-41. The posting of procurement information on |
the website is subject to the same posting requirements as the |
online electronic Bulletin. |
(b) For the purposes of this Section, searchable means |
searchable and sortable by successful responsible bidder , or |
offeror , potential contractor, or contractor , for emergency |
purchases, business or person contracted with; the contract |
price or total cost; the service or good; the purchasing State |
agency; and the date first offered or announced. |
(c) The applicable chief procurement officer shall provide |
the Procurement Policy Board the information and resources |
necessary, and in a manner, to effectuate the purpose of this |
Section.
|
(Source: P.A. 96-795, eff. 7-1-10 (see Section 5 of P.A. 96-793 |
for the effective date of changes made by P.A. 96-795); 97-895, |
eff. 8-3-12.) |
(30 ILCS 500/15-35) |
Sec. 15-35. Vendor portal. Each chief procurement officer |
may, in consultation with the agencies under his or her |
jurisdiction and the Procurement Policy Board, establish a |
vendor portal. The vendor portal shall allow a potential |
prospective vendor to provide certifications, disclosures, |
registrations, and other documentation needed to do business |
|
with a State agency in advance of any particular procurement. A |
potential prospective vendor who registers with the vendor |
portal and provides this information may submit its |
registration number, with a confirmation that the portal |
information remains current, as part of its response to a |
competitive selection or a contracting process, rather than |
submit the same information in full. One or more chief |
procurement officers may jointly operate a vendor portal if a |
single portal would better serve the needs of the State |
agencies and the vendor community. A chief procurement officer |
may accept, for use on procurements and contracts under his or |
her jurisdiction, the registration from another chief |
procurement officer's vendor portal. This Section applies |
notwithstanding any laws to the contrary except for later |
enacted laws that specifically refer to this Section. |
Nothing in this Section shall preclude a State agency from |
implementing its own pre-qualification, certification, |
disclosure, and registration requirements necessary to conduct |
and manage its program operation. |
This Section does not apply to any contract for any project |
as to which federal funds are available for expenditure when |
its provisions may be in conflict with federal law or federal |
regulation.
|
(Source: P.A. 97-895, eff. 8-3-12.) |
(30 ILCS 500/15-40 new) |
|
Sec. 15-40. Method of notices and reports. Notices and |
reports required by any Section of this Code may be made by |
either paper or electronic means. |
(30 ILCS 500/15-45 new) |
Sec. 15-45. Computation of days. The time within which any |
act provided in this Code is to be done shall be computed by |
excluding the first day and including the last, unless the last |
day is Saturday or Sunday or is a holiday, and then it shall |
also be excluded. If the day succeeding a Saturday, Sunday, or |
holiday is also a holiday, a Saturday, or a Sunday, then that |
succeeding day shall also be excluded. For the purposes of this |
Code, "holiday" means: New Year's Day; Dr. Martin Luther King, |
Jr.'s Birthday; Lincoln's Birthday; President's Day; Memorial |
Day; Independence Day; Labor Day; Columbus Day; Veterans' Day; |
Thanksgiving Day; Christmas Day; and any other day from time to |
time declared by the President of the United States or the |
Governor of Illinois to be a day during which the agencies of |
the State of Illinois that are ordinarily open to do business |
with the public shall be closed for business.
|
(30 ILCS 500/20-5)
|
Sec. 20-5. Method of source selection. Unless otherwise |
authorized by
law, all State contracts shall be awarded
by |
competitive sealed bidding, in accordance with Section 20-10,
|
except as provided in Sections 20-15, 20-20, 20-25, 20-30, |
|
20-35, 30-15, and
40-20. The chief procurement officers |
appointed pursuant to Section 10-20 may determine the method of |
solicitation and contract for all procurements pursuant to this |
Code.
|
(Source: P.A. 90-572, eff. date - See Sec. 99-5.)
|
(30 ILCS 500/20-10)
|
(Text of Section from P.A. 96-159, 96-588, 97-96, and |
97-895) |
Sec. 20-10. Competitive sealed bidding; reverse auction.
|
(a) Conditions for use. All contracts shall be awarded by
|
competitive sealed bidding
except as otherwise provided in |
Section 20-5.
|
(b) Invitation for bids. An invitation for bids shall be
|
issued and shall include a
purchase description and the |
material contractual terms and
conditions applicable to the
|
procurement.
|
(c) Public notice. Public notice of the invitation for bids |
shall be
published in the Illinois Procurement Bulletin at |
least 14 calendar days before the date
set in the invitation |
for the opening of bids.
|
(d) Bid opening. Bids shall be opened publicly in the
|
presence of one or more witnesses
at the time and place |
designated in the invitation for bids. The
name of each bidder, |
the amount
of each bid, and other relevant information as may |
be specified by
rule shall be
recorded. After the award of the |
|
contract, the winning bid and the
record of each unsuccessful |
bid shall be open to
public inspection.
|
(e) Bid acceptance and bid evaluation. Bids shall be
|
unconditionally accepted without
alteration or correction, |
except as authorized in this Code. Bids
shall be evaluated |
based on the
requirements set forth in the invitation for bids, |
which may
include criteria to determine
acceptability such as |
inspection, testing, quality, workmanship,
delivery, and |
suitability for a
particular purpose. Those criteria that will |
affect the bid price
and be considered in evaluation
for award, |
such as discounts, transportation costs, and total or
life |
cycle costs, shall be
objectively measurable. The invitation |
for bids shall set forth
the evaluation criteria to be used.
|
(f) Correction or withdrawal of bids. Correction or
|
withdrawal of inadvertently
erroneous bids before or after |
award, or cancellation of awards of
contracts based on bid
|
mistakes, shall be permitted in accordance with rules.
After |
bid opening, no
changes in bid prices or other provisions of |
bids prejudicial to
the interest of the State or fair
|
competition shall be permitted. All decisions to permit the
|
correction or withdrawal of bids
based on bid mistakes shall be |
supported by written determination
made by a State purchasing |
officer.
|
(g) Award. The contract shall be awarded with reasonable
|
promptness by written notice
to the lowest responsible and |
responsive bidder whose bid meets
the requirements and criteria
|
|
set forth in the invitation for bids, except when a State |
purchasing officer
determines it is not in the best interest of |
the State and by written
explanation determines another bidder |
shall receive the award. The explanation
shall appear in the |
appropriate volume of the Illinois Procurement Bulletin. The |
written explanation must include:
|
(1) a description of the agency's needs; |
(2) a determination that the anticipated cost will be |
fair and reasonable; |
(3) a listing of all responsible and responsive |
bidders; and |
(4) the name of the bidder selected, the total contract |
price, and the reasons for selecting that bidder. |
Each chief procurement officer may adopt guidelines to |
implement the requirements of this subsection (g). |
The written explanation shall be filed with the Legislative |
Audit Commission and the Procurement Policy Board, and be made |
available for inspection by the public, within 30 calendar days |
after the agency's decision to award the contract. |
(h) Multi-step sealed bidding. When it is considered
|
impracticable to initially prepare
a purchase description to |
support an award based on price, an
invitation for bids may be |
issued
requesting the submission of unpriced offers to be |
followed by an
invitation for bids limited to
those bidders |
whose offers have been qualified under the criteria
set forth |
in the first solicitation.
|
|
(i) Alternative procedures. Notwithstanding any other |
provision of this Act to the contrary, the Director of the |
Illinois Power Agency may create alternative bidding |
procedures to be used in procuring professional services under |
subsection (a) of Section 1-75 and subsection (d) of Section |
1-78 of the Illinois Power Agency Act and Section 16-111.5(c) |
of the Public Utilities Act and to procure renewable energy |
resources under Section 1-56 of the Illinois Power Agency Act. |
These alternative procedures shall be set forth together with |
the other criteria contained in the invitation for bids, and |
shall appear in the appropriate volume of the Illinois |
Procurement Bulletin.
|
(j) Reverse auction. Notwithstanding any other provision |
of this Section and in accordance with rules adopted by the |
chief procurement officer, that chief procurement officer may |
procure supplies or services through a competitive electronic |
auction bidding process after the chief procurement officer |
determines that the use of such a process will be in the best |
interest of the State. The chief procurement officer shall |
publish that determination in his or her next volume of the |
Illinois Procurement Bulletin. |
An invitation for bids shall be issued and shall include |
(i) a procurement description, (ii) all contractual terms, |
whenever practical, and (iii) conditions applicable to the |
procurement, including a notice that bids will be received in |
an electronic auction manner. |
|
Public notice of the invitation for bids shall be given in |
the same manner as provided in subsection (c). |
Bids shall be accepted electronically at the time and in |
the manner designated in the invitation for bids. During the |
auction, a bidder's price shall be disclosed to other bidders. |
Bidders shall have the opportunity to reduce their bid prices |
during the auction. At the conclusion of the auction, the |
record of the bid prices received and the name of each bidder |
shall be open to public inspection. |
After the auction period has terminated, withdrawal of bids |
shall be permitted as provided in subsection (f). |
The contract shall be awarded within 60 calendar days after |
the auction by written notice to the lowest responsible bidder, |
or all bids shall be rejected except as otherwise provided in |
this Code. Extensions of the date for the award may be made by |
mutual written consent of the State purchasing officer and the |
lowest responsible bidder. |
This subsection does not apply to (i) procurements of |
professional and artistic services, (ii) telecommunications |
services, communication services, and information services, |
and (iii) contracts for construction projects, including |
design professional services. |
(Source: P.A. 96-159, eff. 8-10-09; 96-588, eff. 8-18-09; |
97-96, eff. 7-13-11; 97-895, eff. 8-3-12.)
|
(Text of Section from P.A. 96-159, 96-795, 97-96, and |
|
97-895)
|
Sec. 20-10. Competitive sealed bidding; reverse auction.
|
(a) Conditions for use. All contracts shall be awarded by
|
competitive sealed bidding
except as otherwise provided in |
Section 20-5.
|
(b) Invitation for bids. An invitation for bids shall be
|
issued and shall include a
purchase description and the |
material contractual terms and
conditions applicable to the
|
procurement.
|
(c) Public notice. Public notice of the invitation for bids |
shall be
published in the Illinois Procurement Bulletin at |
least 14 calendar days before the date
set in the invitation |
for the opening of bids.
|
(d) Bid opening. Bids shall be opened publicly in the
|
presence of one or more witnesses
at the time and place |
designated in the invitation for bids. The
name of each bidder, |
the amount
of each bid, and other relevant information as may |
be specified by
rule shall be
recorded. After the award of the |
contract, the winning bid and the
record of each unsuccessful |
bid shall be open to
public inspection.
|
(e) Bid acceptance and bid evaluation. Bids shall be
|
unconditionally accepted without
alteration or correction, |
except as authorized in this Code. Bids
shall be evaluated |
based on the
requirements set forth in the invitation for bids, |
which may
include criteria to determine
acceptability such as |
inspection, testing, quality, workmanship,
delivery, and |
|
suitability for a
particular purpose. Those criteria that will |
affect the bid price
and be considered in evaluation
for award, |
such as discounts, transportation costs, and total or
life |
cycle costs, shall be
objectively measurable. The invitation |
for bids shall set forth
the evaluation criteria to be used.
|
(f) Correction or withdrawal of bids. Correction or
|
withdrawal of inadvertently
erroneous bids before or after |
award, or cancellation of awards of
contracts based on bid
|
mistakes, shall be permitted in accordance with rules.
After |
bid opening, no
changes in bid prices or other provisions of |
bids prejudicial to
the interest of the State or fair
|
competition shall be permitted. All decisions to permit the
|
correction or withdrawal of bids
based on bid mistakes shall be |
supported by written determination
made by a State purchasing |
officer.
|
(g) Award. The contract shall be awarded with reasonable
|
promptness by written notice
to the lowest responsible and |
responsive bidder whose bid meets
the requirements and criteria
|
set forth in the invitation for bids, except when a State |
purchasing officer
determines it is not in the best interest of |
the State and by written
explanation determines another bidder |
shall receive the award. The explanation
shall appear in the |
appropriate volume of the Illinois Procurement Bulletin. The |
written explanation must include:
|
(1) a description of the agency's needs; |
(2) a determination that the anticipated cost will be |
|
fair and reasonable; |
(3) a listing of all responsible and responsive |
bidders; and |
(4) the name of the bidder selected, the total contract |
price, and the reasons for selecting that bidder. |
Each chief procurement officer may adopt guidelines to |
implement the requirements of this subsection (g). |
The written explanation shall be filed with the Legislative |
Audit Commission and the Procurement Policy Board, and be made |
available for inspection by the public, within 30 days after |
the agency's decision to award the contract. |
(h) Multi-step sealed bidding. When it is considered
|
impracticable to initially prepare
a purchase description to |
support an award based on price, an
invitation for bids may be |
issued
requesting the submission of unpriced offers to be |
followed by an
invitation for bids limited to
those bidders |
whose offers have been qualified under the criteria
set forth |
in the first solicitation.
|
(i) Alternative procedures. Notwithstanding any other |
provision of this Act to the contrary, the Director of the |
Illinois Power Agency may create alternative bidding |
procedures to be used in procuring professional services under |
subsection (a) of Section 1-75 and subsection (d) of Section |
1-78 of the Illinois Power Agency Act and Section 16-111.5(c) |
of the Public Utilities Act and to procure renewable energy |
resources under Section 1-56 of the Illinois Power Agency Act. |
|
These alternative procedures shall be set forth together with |
the other criteria contained in the invitation for bids, and |
shall appear in the appropriate volume of the Illinois |
Procurement Bulletin.
|
(j) Reverse auction. Notwithstanding any other provision |
of this Section and in accordance with rules adopted by the |
chief procurement officer, that chief procurement officer may |
procure supplies or services through a competitive electronic |
auction bidding process after the chief procurement officer |
determines that the use of such a process will be in the best |
interest of the State. The chief procurement officer shall |
publish that determination in his or her next volume of the |
Illinois Procurement Bulletin. |
An invitation for bids shall be issued and shall include |
(i) a procurement description, (ii) all contractual terms, |
whenever practical, and (iii) conditions applicable to the |
procurement, including a notice that bids will be received in |
an electronic auction manner. |
Public notice of the invitation for bids shall be given in |
the same manner as provided in subsection (c). |
Bids shall be accepted electronically at the time and in |
the manner designated in the invitation for bids. During the |
auction, a bidder's price shall be disclosed to other bidders. |
Bidders shall have the opportunity to reduce their bid prices |
during the auction. At the conclusion of the auction, the |
record of the bid prices received and the name of each bidder |
|
shall be open to public inspection. |
After the auction period has terminated, withdrawal of bids |
shall be permitted as provided in subsection (f). |
The contract shall be awarded within 60 calendar days after |
the auction by written notice to the lowest responsible bidder, |
or all bids shall be rejected except as otherwise provided in |
this Code. Extensions of the date for the award may be made by |
mutual written consent of the State purchasing officer and the |
lowest responsible bidder. |
This subsection does not apply to (i) procurements of |
professional and artistic services, (ii) telecommunications |
services, communication services, and information services,
|
and (iii) contracts for construction projects, including |
design professional services. |
(Source: P.A. 96-159, eff. 8-10-09; 96-795, eff. 7-1-10 (see |
Section 5 of P.A. 96-793 for the effective date of changes made |
by P.A. 96-795); 97-96, eff. 7-13-11; 97-895, eff. 8-3-12.)
|
(30 ILCS 500/20-15)
|
Sec. 20-15. Competitive sealed proposals.
|
(a) Conditions for use. When provided under this Code or |
under
rules, or when
the purchasing agency determines in |
writing that the use of
competitive sealed bidding
is either |
not practicable or not advantageous to the State, a
contract |
may be entered into by
competitive sealed proposals.
|
(b) Request for proposals. Proposals shall be solicited
|
|
through a request for proposals.
|
(c) Public notice. Public notice of the request for
|
proposals shall be published in the
Illinois Procurement |
Bulletin at least 14 calendar days before the date set
in the |
invitation for the opening
of proposals.
|
(d) Receipt of proposals. Proposals shall be opened
|
publicly in the presence of one or
more witnesses at the time |
and place designated in the request for
proposals, but |
proposals shall
be opened in a manner to avoid disclosure of |
contents to competing
offerors during the process
of |
negotiation. A record of proposals shall be prepared and
shall |
be open for public inspection
after contract award.
|
(e) Evaluation factors. The requests for proposals shall
|
state the relative importance of
price and other evaluation |
factors. Proposals shall be submitted
in 2 parts: the first, |
covering
items except price; and the second, covering price. |
The first
part of all proposals shall be
evaluated and ranked |
independently of the second part of
all proposals.
|
(f) Discussion with responsible offerors and revisions of |
offers or
proposals. As provided in the
request for proposals |
and under rules, discussions
may be conducted with
responsible |
offerors who submit offers or proposals determined to be
|
reasonably susceptible of being
selected for award for the |
purpose of clarifying and assuring full
understanding of and
|
responsiveness to the solicitation requirements. Those |
offerors
shall be accorded fair and equal
treatment with |
|
respect to any opportunity for discussion and
revision of |
proposals. Revisions
may be permitted after submission and |
before award for the
purpose of obtaining best and final
|
offers. In conducting discussions there shall be no disclosure |
of
any information derived from
proposals submitted by |
competing offerors.
If information is disclosed to any offeror, |
it shall be
provided to all competing offerors.
|
(g) Award. Awards shall be made to the responsible offeror
|
whose proposal is
determined in writing to be the most |
advantageous to the State,
taking into consideration price
and |
the evaluation factors set forth in the request for proposals.
|
The contract file shall contain
the basis on which the award is
|
made.
|
(Source: P.A. 90-572, eff. date - See Sec. 99-5.)
|
(30 ILCS 500/20-25)
|
Sec. 20-25. Sole source procurements. |
(a) In accordance with
standards set by rule,
contracts may |
be awarded without use of the specified
method of source |
selection when
there is only one economically feasible source |
for the item. A State contract may be awarded as a sole source |
procurement unless an interested party submits a written |
request for a public hearing at which the chief procurement |
officer and purchasing agency present written justification |
for the procurement method. Any interested party may present |
testimony. A sole source contract where a hearing was requested |
|
by an interested party may be awarded after the hearing is |
conducted with the approval of the chief procurement officer. |
(b) This Section may not be used as a basis for amending a |
contract for professional or artistic services if the amendment |
would result in an increase in the amount paid under the |
contract of more than 5% of the initial award, or would extend |
the contract term beyond the time reasonably needed for a |
competitive procurement, not to exceed 2 months. |
(c) Notice of intent to enter into a sole source contract |
shall be provided to the Procurement Policy Board and published |
in the online electronic Bulletin at least 14 calendar days |
before the public hearing required in subsection (a). The |
notice shall include the sole source procurement justification |
form prescribed by the Board, a description of the item to be |
procured, the intended sole source contractor, and the date, |
time, and location of the public hearing. A copy of the notice |
and all documents provided at the hearing shall be included in |
the subsequent Procurement Bulletin.
|
(d) By August 1 each year, each chief procurement officer |
shall file a report with the General Assembly identifying each |
contract the officer sought under the sole source procurement |
method and providing the justification given for seeking sole |
source as the procurement method for each of those contracts. |
(Source: P.A. 96-795, eff. 7-1-10 (see Section 5 of P.A. 96-793 |
for the effective date of changes made by P.A. 96-795); 96-920, |
eff. 7-1-10; 97-895, eff. 8-3-12.)
|
|
(30 ILCS 500/20-30)
|
Sec. 20-30. Emergency purchases.
|
(a) Conditions for use. In accordance with standards set by
|
rule, a purchasing
agency may make emergency procurements |
without competitive sealed
bidding or prior notice
when there |
exists a threat to public health or public safety, or
when |
immediate expenditure is
necessary for repairs to State |
property in order to protect
against further loss of or damage |
to
State property, to prevent or minimize serious disruption in |
critical State
services that affect health, safety, or |
collection of substantial State revenues, or to ensure the
|
integrity of State records; provided, however, that the term of |
the emergency purchase shall be limited to the time reasonably |
needed for a competitive procurement, not to exceed 90 calendar |
days. A contract may be extended beyond 90 calendar days if the |
chief procurement officer determines additional time is |
necessary and that the contract scope and duration are limited |
to the emergency. Prior to execution of the extension, the |
chief procurement officer must hold a public hearing and |
provide written justification for all emergency contracts. |
Members of the public may present testimony. Emergency |
procurements shall be made
with as much competition
as is |
practicable under the circumstances.
A written
description of |
the basis for the emergency and reasons for the
selection of |
the particular
contractor shall be included in the contract |
|
file.
|
(b) Notice. Notice of all emergency procurements shall be |
provided to the Procurement Policy Board and published in the |
online electronic Bulletin no later than 5 calendar 3 business |
days after the contract is awarded. Notice of intent to extend |
an emergency contract shall be provided to the Procurement |
Policy Board and published in the online electronic Bulletin at |
least 14 calendar days before the public hearing. Notice shall |
include at least a description of the need for the emergency |
purchase, the contractor, and if applicable, the date, time, |
and location of the public hearing. A copy of this notice and |
all documents provided at the hearing shall be included in the |
subsequent Procurement Bulletin. Before the next appropriate |
volume of the Illinois Procurement
Bulletin, the purchasing |
agency shall publish in the
Illinois Procurement Bulletin a |
copy of each written description
and reasons and the total cost
|
of each emergency procurement made during the previous month.
|
When only an estimate of the
total cost is known at the time of |
publication, the estimate shall
be identified as an estimate |
and
published. When the actual total cost is determined, it |
shall
also be published in like manner
before the 10th day of |
the next succeeding month.
|
(c) Affidavits. A chief procurement officer making a |
procurement
under this Section shall file
affidavits with the |
Procurement Policy Board and the Auditor General within
10 |
calendar days
after the procurement setting
forth the amount |
|
expended, the name of the contractor involved,
and the |
conditions and
circumstances requiring the emergency |
procurement. When only an
estimate of the cost is
available |
within 10 calendar days after the procurement, the actual cost
|
shall be reported immediately
after it is determined. At the |
end of each fiscal quarter, the
Auditor General shall file with |
the
Legislative Audit Commission and the Governor a complete |
listing
of all emergency
procurements reported during that |
fiscal quarter. The Legislative
Audit Commission shall
review |
the emergency procurements so reported and, in its annual
|
reports, advise the General
Assembly of procurements that |
appear to constitute an abuse of
this Section.
|
(d) Quick purchases. The chief procurement officer may |
promulgate rules
extending the circumstances by which a |
purchasing agency may make purchases
under this Section, |
including but not limited to the procurement of items
available |
at a discount for a limited period of time.
|
(e) The changes to this Section made by this amendatory Act |
of the 96th General Assembly apply to procurements executed on |
or after its effective date.
|
(Source: P.A. 96-795, eff. 7-1-10 (see Section 5 of P.A. 96-793 |
for the effective date of changes made by P.A. 96-795) .)
|
(30 ILCS 500/20-35)
|
Sec. 20-35. Competitive selection procedures.
|
(a) Conditions for use. The services specified in Article
|
|
35
shall be procured in accordance with this Section,
except as |
authorized under Sections
20-25 and 20-30 of
this Article.
|
(b) Statement of qualifications. Respondents Potential |
contractors shall
submit statements of
qualifications and |
expressions of interest. The chief procurement officer
shall |
specify a uniform format for
statements of qualifications. |
Persons may amend these statements
at any time by filing a new
|
statement.
|
(c) Public announcement and form of request for proposals.
|
Public notice of the need
for the procurement shall be given in |
the form of a request for
proposals and published in the
|
Illinois Procurement Bulletin at least 14 calendar days before |
the date set
in the request for proposals for
the opening of |
proposals. The request for proposals shall
describe the |
services required, list the type of information and data |
required
of each respondent offeror , and state the
relative |
importance of particular qualifications.
|
(d) Discussions. The purchasing agency may conduct
|
discussions with any respondent offeror who
has submitted a |
response proposal to determine the respondent's offeror's |
qualifications
for further consideration.
Discussions shall |
not disclose any information derived from
proposals submitted |
by other respondents
offerors .
|
(e) Award. Award shall be made to the respondent offeror |
determined in
writing by the purchasing
agency to be best |
qualified based on the evaluation factors set
forth in the |
|
request for proposals
and negotiation of compensation |
determined to be fair and
reasonable.
|
(Source: P.A. 90-572, eff. date - See Sec. 99-5.)
|
(30 ILCS 500/20-40)
|
Sec. 20-40.
Cancellation of invitations for bids or
|
requests for proposals. An
invitation for bids, a request for |
proposals, or any other
solicitation may be cancelled without |
penalty, or any
and all bids , offers, or proposals , or any |
other solicitation may be rejected in whole or in part as
may |
be specified in the
solicitation, when it is in the best |
interests of the State in
accordance with rules.
The reasons |
for cancellation or rejection shall be
made part of the |
contract file.
|
(Source: P.A. 90-572, eff. date - See Sec. 99-5.)
|
(30 ILCS 500/20-43)
|
Sec. 20-43. Bidder or offeror authorized to do business in |
Illinois. In addition to meeting any other requirement of law |
or rule, a person (other than an individual acting as a sole |
proprietor) may qualify as a bidder or offeror under this Code |
only if the person is a legal entity authorized to transact do |
business or conduct affairs in Illinois prior to submitting the |
bid, offer, or proposal.
|
(Source: P.A. 96-795, eff. 7-1-10 (see Section 5 of P.A. 96-793 |
for the effective date of P.A. 96-795) .)
|
|
(30 ILCS 500/20-50)
|
Sec. 20-50. Specifications. Specifications shall be
|
prepared in accordance with consistent
standards that are |
promulgated by the chief procurement officer and reviewed by
|
the
Board and the Joint Committee on Administrative Rules. |
Those standards shall
include
a prohibition against the use
of |
brand-name only products, except for products intended for |
retail sale or as
specified by rule. All specifications
shall |
seek to promote overall
economy for the purposes intended and |
encourage competition in
satisfying the State's needs
and shall |
not be unduly restrictive.
|
A solicitation or specification for a contract or a |
contract, including a
contract but not limited to of a college, |
university, or institution under the jurisdiction of a
|
governing board listed in Section 1-15.100, may not require, |
stipulate,
suggest, or encourage a monetary or other financial |
contribution or donation, cash bonus or incentive, or economic |
investment , or other prohibited conduct as
an explicit or |
implied term or condition for awarding or completing the
|
contract. The contract, solicitation, or specification also |
may not include
a requirement that an individual or individuals |
employed by
such
a college,
university, or institution receive |
a consulting
contract for professional services.
|
As used in this Section, "prohibited conduct" includes |
requested payments or other consideration by a third party to |
|
the university or State agency that is not part of the |
solicitation or that is unrelated to the subject matter or |
purpose of the solicitation. "Prohibited conduct" does not |
include a payment from the vendor that is supported by |
additional consideration (such as exclusive rights to sell |
items or rights to advertise), other than the consideration of |
the State's awarding a contract to purchase of goods and |
services. |
(Source: P.A. 96-795, eff. 7-1-10 (see Section 5 of P.A. 96-793 |
for the effective date of changes made by P.A. 96-795) .)
|
(30 ILCS 500/20-80)
|
Sec. 20-80. Contract files.
|
(a) Written determinations. All written determinations
|
required under this Article shall
be placed in the contract |
file maintained by the chief procurement officer.
|
(b) Filing with Comptroller. Whenever a grant, defined |
pursuant to
accounting standards established by the |
Comptroller, or a contract
liability,
except for:
(1) contracts |
paid
from personal services, or
(2) contracts between the State |
and its
employees to defer
compensation in accordance with |
Article 24 of the Illinois Pension Code,
exceeding $20,000 is |
incurred by any
State agency, a copy of the contract, purchase |
order, grant, or
lease shall be filed with the
Comptroller |
within 30 calendar days thereafter. Beginning January 1, 2013, |
the Comptroller may require that contracts and grants required |
|
to be filed with the Comptroller under this Section shall be |
filed electronically, unless the agency is incapable of filing |
the contract or grant electronically because it does not |
possess the necessary technology or equipment. Any agency that |
is incapable of electronically filing its contracts or grants |
shall submit a written statement to the Governor and to the |
Comptroller attesting to the reasons for its inability to |
comply. This statement shall include a discussion of what the |
agency needs in order to effectively comply with this Section. |
Prior to requiring electronic filing, the Comptroller shall |
consult with the Governor as to the feasibility of establishing |
mutually agreeable technical standards for the electronic |
document imaging, storage, and transfer of contracts and |
grants, taking into consideration the technology available to |
that agency, best practices, and the technological |
capabilities of State agencies. Nothing in this amendatory Act |
of the 97th General Assembly shall be construed to impede the |
implementation of an Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) |
system. For each State contract for goods, supplies, or |
services awarded on or after July 1, 2010, the contracting |
agency shall provide the applicable rate and unit of |
measurement of the goods, supplies, or services on the contract |
obligation document as required by the Comptroller. If the |
contract obligation document that is submitted to the |
Comptroller contains the rate and unit of measurement of the |
goods, supplies, or services, the Comptroller shall provide |
|
that information on his or her official website. Any |
cancellation or
modification to any such contract
liability |
shall be filed with the Comptroller within 30 calendar days of
|
its execution.
|
(c) Late filing affidavit. When a contract, purchase order, |
grant,
or lease required to be
filed by this Section has not |
been filed within 30 calendar days of
execution, the |
Comptroller shall refuse
to issue a warrant for payment |
thereunder until the agency files
with the Comptroller the
|
contract, purchase order, grant, or lease and an affidavit, |
signed by the
chief executive officer of the
agency or his or |
her designee, setting forth an explanation of why
the contract |
liability was not
filed within 30 calendar days of execution. A |
copy of this affidavit shall
be filed with the Auditor
General.
|
(d) Timely execution of contracts. No
voucher shall be |
submitted to the
Comptroller for a warrant to be drawn for the |
payment of money
from the State treasury or from
other funds |
held by the State Treasurer on account of any contract unless |
the
contract is reduced to writing
before the services are |
performed and filed with the Comptroller. Vendors shall not be |
paid for any goods that were received or services that were |
rendered before the contract was reduced to writing and signed |
by all necessary parties. A chief procurement officer may |
request an exception to this subsection by submitting a written |
statement to the Comptroller and Treasurer setting forth the |
circumstances and reasons why the contract could not be reduced |
|
to writing before the supplies were received or services were |
performed. A waiver of this subsection must be approved by the |
Comptroller and Treasurer. This Section shall not apply to |
emergency purchases if notice of the emergency purchase is |
filed with the Procurement Policy Board and published in the |
Bulletin as required by this Code.
|
(e) Method of source selection. When a contract is filed
|
with the Comptroller under this
Section, the Comptroller's file |
shall identify the method of
source selection used in obtaining |
the
contract.
|
(Source: P.A. 96-794, eff. 1-1-10; 96-795, eff. 7-1-10 (see |
Section 5 of P.A. 96-793 for the effective date of changes made |
by P.A. 96-795); 96-1000, eff. 7-2-10; 97-932, eff. 8-10-12.)
|
(30 ILCS 500/20-95)
|
Sec. 20-95. Donations. Nothing in this Code or in the rules |
promulgated
under this Code shall prevent any State agency from |
complying with the terms
and conditions of any grant, gift, or |
bequest that calls for the procurement of
a particular good or |
service or the use of a particular vendor contractor , provided
|
that the grant, gift, or bequest provides majority funding for |
the contract.
|
(Source: P.A. 90-572, eff. date - See Sec. 99-5.)
|
(30 ILCS 500/20-120) |
Sec. 20-120. Subcontractors. |
|
(a) Any contract granted under this Code shall state |
whether the services of a subcontractor will be used. The |
contract shall include the names and addresses of all known |
subcontractors with subcontracts with an annual value of more |
than $50,000, the general type of work to be performed by these |
subcontractors, and the expected amount of money each will |
receive under the contract. Upon the request of the chief |
procurement officer appointed pursuant to paragraph (2) of |
subsection (a) of Section 10-20, the contractor shall provide |
the chief procurement officer a copy of a subcontract so |
identified within 15 calendar days after the request is made. A |
subcontractor, or contractor on behalf of a subcontractor, may |
identify information that is deemed proprietary or |
confidential. If the chief procurement officer determines the |
information is not relevant to the primary contract, the chief |
procurement officer may excuse the inclusion of the |
information. If the chief procurement officer determines the |
information is proprietary or could harm the business interest |
of the subcontractor, the chief procurement officer may, in his |
or her discretion, redact the information. Redacted |
information shall not become part of the public record. |
(b) If at any time during the term of a contract, a |
contractor adds or changes any subcontractors, he or she shall |
promptly notify, in writing, the chief procurement officer, |
State purchasing officer, or their designee of the names and |
addresses of each new or replaced subcontractor and the general |
|
type of work to be performed. Upon the request of the chief |
procurement officer appointed pursuant to paragraph (2) of |
subsection (a) of Section 10-20, the contractor shall provide |
the chief procurement officer a copy of any new or amended |
subcontract so identified within 15 calendar days after the |
request is made. |
(c) In addition to any other requirements of this Code, a |
subcontract subject to this Section must include all of the |
subcontractor's certifications required by Article 50 of the |
Code. |
(d) This Section applies to procurements solicited on or |
after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 96th |
General Assembly.
The changes made to this Section by this |
amendatory Act of the 97th General Assembly apply to |
procurements solicited on or after the effective date of this |
amendatory Act of the 97th General Assembly. |
(Source: P.A. 96-795, eff. 7-1-10 (see Section 5 of P.A. 96-793 |
for the effective date of P.A. 96-795); 96-920, eff. 7-1-10; |
97-895, eff. 8-3-12.) |
(30 ILCS 500/20-155) |
Sec. 20-155. Solicitation and contract documents. |
(a) Each chief procurement officer appointed pursuant to |
Section 10-20 shall have the sole authority in their respective |
jurisdiction to develop and distribute uniform documents for |
the solicitation, review, and acceptance of all bids, offers, |
|
and responses and the award of contracts pursuant to this Code. |
If a chief procurement officer appointed pursuant to Section |
10-20 exercises the authority to develop and distribute uniform |
documents for the solicitation, review and acceptance of all |
bids, offers and responses and the award of contracts, then the |
State agency shall use the uniform documents. |
(b) (a) After award of a contract and subject to provisions |
of the Freedom of Information Act, the procuring agency shall |
make available for public inspection and copying all pre-award, |
post-award, administration, and close-out documents relating |
to that particular contract.
|
(c) (b) A procurement file shall be maintained for all |
contracts, regardless of the method of procurement. The |
procurement file shall contain the basis on which the award is |
made, all submitted bids and proposals, all evaluation |
materials, score sheets and all other documentation related to |
or prepared in conjunction with evaluation, negotiation, and |
the award process. The procurement file shall contain a written |
determination, signed by the chief procurement officer or State |
purchasing officer, setting forth the reasoning for the |
contract award decision. The procurement file shall not include |
trade secrets or other competitively sensitive, confidential, |
or proprietary information. The procurement file shall be open |
to public inspection within 7 calendar 7 business days |
following award of the contract. |
(Source: P.A. 96-795, eff. 7-1-10 (see Section 5 of P.A. 96-793 |
|
for the effective date of changes made by P.A. 96-795); 97-895, |
eff. 8-3-12.)
|
(30 ILCS 500/20-160)
|
Sec. 20-160. Business entities; certification; |
registration with the State Board of Elections. |
(a) For purposes of this Section, the terms "business |
entity", "contract", "State contract", "contract with a State |
agency", "State agency", "affiliated entity", and "affiliated |
person" have the meanings ascribed to those terms in Section |
50-37. |
(b) Every bid and offer submitted to and every contract |
executed by the State on or after January 1, 2009 (the |
effective date of Public Act 95-971) and every submission to a |
vendor portal shall contain (1) a certification by the bidder , |
offeror, vendor, or contractor that either (i) the bidder , |
offeror, vendor, or contractor is not required to register as a |
business entity with the State Board of Elections pursuant to |
this Section or (ii) the bidder , offeror, vendor, or contractor |
has registered as a business entity with the State Board of |
Elections and acknowledges a continuing duty to update the |
registration and (2) a statement that the contract is voidable |
under Section 50-60 for the bidder's , offeror's, vendor's, or |
contractor's failure to comply with this Section. |
(c) Within 30 days after the effective date of this |
amendatory Act of the 95th General Assembly, each Each business |
|
entity (i) whose aggregate bids and proposals on State |
contracts annually total more than $50,000, (ii) whose |
aggregate bids and proposals on State contracts combined with |
the business entity's aggregate annual total value of State |
contracts exceed $50,000, or (iii) whose contracts with State |
agencies, in the aggregate, annually total more than $50,000 |
shall register with the State Board of Elections in accordance |
with Section 9-35 of the Election Code. A business entity |
required to register under this subsection shall submit a copy |
of the certificate of registration to the applicable chief |
procurement officer within 90 days after the effective date of |
this amendatory Act of the 95th General Assembly. A business |
entity required to register under this subsection due to item |
(i) or (ii) has a continuing duty to ensure that the |
registration is accurate during the period beginning on the |
date of registration and ending on the day after the date the |
contract is awarded; any change in information must be reported |
to the State Board of Elections 5 business days following such |
change or no later than a day before the contract is awarded, |
whichever date is earlier. A business entity required to |
register under this subsection due to item (iii) has a |
continuing duty to ensure that the registration is accurate in |
accordance with subsection (e). |
(d) Any business entity, not required under subsection (c) |
to register within 30 days after the effective date of this |
amendatory Act of the 95th General Assembly , whose aggregate |
|
bids and proposals on State contracts annually total more than |
$50,000, or whose aggregate bids and proposals on State |
contracts combined with the business entity's aggregate annual |
total value of State contracts exceed $50,000, shall register |
with the State Board of Elections in accordance with Section |
9-35 of the Election Code prior to submitting to a State agency |
the bid or proposal whose value causes the business entity to |
fall within the monetary description of this subsection. A |
business entity required to register under this subsection has |
a continuing duty to ensure that the registration is accurate |
during the period beginning on the date of registration and |
ending on the day after the date the contract is awarded. Any |
change in information must be reported to the State Board of |
Elections within 5 business days following such change or no |
later than a day before the contract is awarded, whichever date |
is earlier. |
(e) A business entity whose contracts with State agencies, |
in the aggregate, annually total more than $50,000 must |
maintain its registration under this Section and has a |
continuing duty to ensure that the registration is accurate for |
the duration of the term of office of the incumbent |
officeholder awarding the contracts or for a period of 2 years |
following the expiration or termination of the contracts, |
whichever is longer. A business entity, required to register |
under this subsection, has a continuing duty to report any |
changes on a quarterly basis to the State Board of Elections |
|
within 14 calendar 10 business days following the last day of |
January, April, July, and October of each year. Any update |
pursuant to this paragraph that is received beyond that date is |
presumed late and the civil penalty authorized by subsection |
(e) of Section 9-35 of the Election Code (10 ILCS 5/9-35) may |
be assessed. |
Also, if a business entity required to register under this |
subsection has a pending bid or offer proposal , any change in |
information shall be reported to the State Board of Elections |
within 7 calendar 5 business days following such change or no |
later than a day before the contract is awarded, whichever date |
is earlier. |
(f) A business entity's continuing duty under this Section |
to ensure the accuracy of its registration includes the |
requirement that the business entity notify the State Board of |
Elections of any change in information, including but not |
limited to changes of affiliated entities or affiliated |
persons. |
(g) For any bid or offer proposal for a contract with a |
State agency by a business entity required to register under |
this Section, the chief procurement officer shall verify that |
the business entity is required to register under this Section |
and is in compliance with the registration requirements on the |
date the bid or offer proposal is due. A chief procurement |
officer shall not accept a bid or offer proposal if the |
business entity is not in compliance with the registration |
|
requirements as of the date bids or offers proposals are due. |
(h) A registration, and any changes to a registration, must |
include the business entity's verification of accuracy and |
subjects the business entity to the penalties of the laws of |
this State for perjury. |
In addition to any penalty under Section 9-35 of the |
Election Code, intentional, willful, or material failure to |
disclose information required for registration shall render |
the contract, bid, offer proposal , or other procurement |
relationship voidable by the chief procurement officer if he or |
she deems it to be in the best interest of the State of |
Illinois. |
(i) This Section applies regardless of the method of source |
selection used in awarding the contract.
|
(Source: P.A. 96-795, eff. 7-1-10 (see Section 5 of P.A. 96-793 |
for the effective date of changes made by P.A. 96-795); 96-848, |
eff. 1-1-10; 97-333, eff. 8-12-11; 97-895, eff. 8-3-12.)
|
(30 ILCS 500/25-60)
|
Sec. 25-60. Prevailing wage requirements.
|
(a) All services furnished
under service contracts of |
$2,000 or more or $200 or more per month and under
printing |
contracts shall be
subject to the following prevailing wage |
requirements:
|
(1) Not less than the general prevailing wage rate of |
hourly wages for
work of a similar character in the |
|
locality in which the work is produced shall
be paid by the |
successful bidder, offeror, or potential contractor vendor |
to its employees who perform the work on the
State |
contracts. The bidder , or offeror, potential contractor, |
or contractor in order to be considered to be a
responsible |
bidder , or offeror , potential contractor, or contractor |
for the purposes of this Code, shall certify to
the |
purchasing agency that wages to be paid to its employees |
are no less, and
fringe benefits and working conditions of |
employees are not less favorable,
than those prevailing in |
the locality where the contract is to be performed.
|
Prevailing wages and working conditions shall be |
determined by the Director of
the Illinois Department of |
Labor.
|
(2) Whenever a collective bargaining agreement is in |
effect between an
employer, other than a governmental body, |
and service or printing employees as
defined in this |
Section who are represented by a responsible organization |
that
is in no way influenced or controlled by the |
management, that agreement and its
provisions shall be |
considered as conditions prevalent in that locality and
|
shall be the minimum requirements taken into consideration |
by the Director of
Labor.
|
(b) As used in this Section, "services" means janitorial |
cleaning services,
window cleaning services, building and |
grounds services, site technician
services, natural resources |
|
services, food services, and security services.
"Printing"
|
means and includes all processes and operations involved in |
printing, including
but not limited to letterpress, offset, and |
gravure processes, the multilith
method, photographic or other |
duplicating process, the operations of
composition, |
platemaking, presswork, and binding, and the end products of |
those
processes, methods, and operations. As used in this Code |
"printing" does not
include photocopiers used in the course of |
normal business activities,
photographic equipment used for |
geographic mapping, or printed matter that is
commonly |
available to the general public from contractor inventory.
|
(c) The terms "general prevailing rate of hourly wages", |
"general prevailing
rate of wages", or "prevailing rate of |
wages" when used in this Section mean
the hourly cash wages |
plus fringe benefits for health and welfare, insurance,
|
vacations, and pensions paid generally, in the locality in |
which the work is
being performed, to employees engaged in work |
of a similar character.
|
(d) "Locality" shall have the meaning established by rule.
|
(e) This Section does not apply to services furnished under |
contracts for
professional or artistic services.
|
(f) This Section does not apply to vocational programs of |
training for
physically or mentally handicapped persons or to |
sheltered workshops for the
severely disabled.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-370, eff. 1-1-04.)
|
|
(30 ILCS 500/25-65) |
Sec. 25-65. Contracts performed outside the United States.
|
Prior to contracting or as a requirement of solicitation of any |
State contracts for services as defined in Section 1-15.90, |
whichever is appropriate, potential contractors prospective |
vendors shall disclose in a statement of work where services |
will be performed under that contract, including any |
subcontracts, and whether any services under that contract, |
including any subcontracts, are anticipated to be performed |
outside the United States. |
In awarding the contract or evaluating the bid or offer, |
the chief procurement officer may consider such disclosure and |
the economic impact to the State of Illinois and its residents.
|
If the chief procurement officer awards a contract to a |
vendor based upon disclosure that work will be performed in the |
United States and during the term of the contract the |
contractor or a subcontractor proceeds to shift work outside of |
the United States, the contractor shall be deemed in breach of |
contract, unless the chief procurement officer shall have first |
determined in writing that circumstances require the shift of |
work or that termination of the contract would not be in the |
State's best interest.
|
Nothing in this Section is intended to contravene any |
existing treaty, law, agreement, or regulation of the United |
States.
|
The chief procurement officer appointed pursuant to |
|
paragraph (4) of subsection (a) of Section 10-20 shall prepare |
and deliver to the General Assembly, no later than September 1, |
2015, a report on the impact of outsourcing services for State |
agencies subject to the jurisdiction of the chief procurement |
officer. The report shall include the State's cost of |
procurement and shall identify those contracts where it was |
disclosed that services were provided outside of the United |
States, including a description and value of those services. |
Each State agency subject to the jurisdiction of the chief |
procurement officer appointed pursuant to paragraph (4) of |
subsection (a) of Section 10-20 must provide the chief |
procurement officer the information necessary to comply with |
this Section on or before June 1, 2015. The requirement for |
reporting to the General Assembly shall be satisfied by filing |
copies of the report in the manner provided by Section 3.1 of |
the General Assembly Organization Act. |
The Department of Central Management Services shall |
prepare and deliver to the General Assembly, no later than |
September 1, 2007, a report on the impact of outsourcing |
services on the State's cost of procurement that identifies |
those contracts where it was disclosed that services were |
provided outside of the United States and a description and |
value of those services.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-1081, eff. 6-1-05 .) |
(30 ILCS 500/25-80) |
|
Sec. 25-80. Successor contractor vendor . All service |
contracts shall include a clause requiring the bidder or |
offeror, in order to be considered a responsible bidder or |
offeror for the purposes of this Code, to certify to the |
purchasing agency (i) that it shall offer to assume the |
collective bargaining obligations of the prior employer, |
including any existing collective bargaining agreement with |
the bargaining representative of any existing collective |
bargaining unit or units performing substantially similar work |
to the services covered by the contract subject to its bid or |
offer, and (ii) that it shall offer employment to all employees |
currently employed in any existing bargaining unit performing |
substantially similar work that will be performed by the |
successor vendor.
|
This Section does not apply to heating and air conditioning |
service contracts, plumbing service contracts, and electrical |
service contracts. |
(Source: P.A. 95-314, eff. 1-1-08.) |
(30 ILCS 500/30-22)
|
Sec. 30-22. Construction contracts; responsible bidder |
requirements. To
be
considered a responsible bidder on a |
construction contract for purposes of this
Code, a
bidder must |
comply with all of the following requirements and must present
|
satisfactory
evidence of that compliance to the appropriate |
construction agency:
|
|
(1) The bidder must comply with all applicable laws |
concerning the
bidder's entitlement to conduct business in |
Illinois.
|
(2) The bidder must comply with all applicable |
provisions of the
Prevailing Wage Act.
|
(3) The bidder must comply with Subchapter VI ("Equal |
Employment
Opportunities") of Chapter 21 of Title 42 of the |
United States Code (42 U.S.C.
2000e and following) and with |
Federal Executive Order No. 11246 as amended
by Executive |
Order No. 11375.
|
(4) The bidder must have a valid Federal Employer |
Identification Number
or, if an individual, a valid Social |
Security Number.
|
(5) The bidder must have a valid certificate of |
insurance showing the
following coverages: general |
liability, professional liability, product
liability,
|
workers' compensation, completed operations, hazardous |
occupation, and
automobile.
|
(6) The bidder and all bidder's subcontractors must |
participate
in applicable apprenticeship and training |
programs
approved by and registered with the United States |
Department of Labor's Bureau
of Apprenticeship and |
Training.
|
(7) For contracts with the Illinois Power Agency, the |
Director of the Illinois Power Agency may establish |
additional requirements for responsible bidders. These |
|
additional requirements, if established, shall be set |
forth together with the other criteria contained in the |
invitation for bids, and shall appear in the appropriate |
volume of the Illinois Procurement Bulletin. |
(8) The bidder must certify submit a signed affidavit |
stating that the bidder will maintain an Illinois office as |
the primary place of employment for persons employed in the |
construction authorized by the contract.
|
The provisions of this Section shall not apply to federally |
funded
construction projects if such application would |
jeopardize the receipt or use
of federal funds in support of |
such a project.
|
(Source: P.A. 97-369, eff. 8-15-11.)
|
(30 ILCS 500/30-30)
|
Sec. 30-30. Contracts in excess of $250,000. For
building |
construction contracts in excess of
$250,000, separate |
specifications shall be prepared for all
equipment, labor, and |
materials in
connection with the following 5 subdivisions of |
the work to be
performed:
|
(1) plumbing;
|
(2) heating, piping, refrigeration, and automatic
|
temperature control systems,
including the testing and |
balancing of those systems;
|
(3) ventilating and distribution systems for
|
conditioned air, including the testing
and balancing of |
|
those systems;
|
(4) electric wiring; and
|
(5) general contract work.
|
The specifications must be so drawn as to permit separate |
and
independent bidding upon
each of the 5 subdivisions of |
work. All contracts awarded
for any part thereof shall
award |
the 5 subdivisions of work separately to responsible and
|
reliable persons, firms, or
corporations engaged in these |
classes of work. The contracts, at
the discretion of the
|
construction agency, may be assigned to the successful bidder |
on
the general contract work or
to the successful bidder on the |
subdivision of work designated by
the construction agency |
before
the bidding as the prime subdivision of work, provided |
that all
payments will be made directly
to the contractors for |
the 5 subdivisions of work upon compliance
with the conditions |
of the
contract.
|
Until a date 4 years after July 1, 2011, the requirements |
of this Section do not apply to a construction project for |
which the Capital Development Board is the construction agency |
if: (i) the project budget is at least $15,000,000; (ii) the |
Capital Development Board has submitted to the Procurement |
Policy Board a written request for a public hearing on waiver |
of the application of the requirements of this Section to that |
project, including its reasons for seeking the waiver and why |
the waiver is in the best interest of the State; (iii) the |
Capital Development Board has posted notice of the waiver |
|
hearing on its procurement web page and on the online |
Procurement Bulletin at least 15 calendar working days before |
the hearing;
(iv) the Procurement Policy Board, after |
conducting the public hearing on the waiver request, reviews |
and approves the request in writing before the award of the |
contract; (v) the successful low bidder has prequalified with |
the Capital Development Board; (vi) the bid of the successful |
low bidder identifies the name of the subcontractor, if any, |
and the bid proposal costs for each of the 5 subdivisions of |
work set forth in this Section; and (vii) the contract entered |
into with the successful bidder provides that no identified |
subcontractor may be terminated without the written consent of |
the Capital Development Board.
With respect to any construction |
project described in this paragraph, the Capital Development |
Board shall: (i) provide to the Auditor General an affidavit |
that the waiver of the application of the requirements of this |
Section is in the best interest of the State; (ii) specify in |
writing as a public record that the project shall comply with |
the disadvantaged business practices of the Business |
Enterprise for Minorities, Females, and Persons with |
Disabilities Act and the equal employment practices of Section |
2-105 of the Illinois Human Rights Act; and (iii) report |
annually to the Governor and the General Assembly on the |
bidding, award, and performance. On and after January 1, 2009 |
(the effective date of Public Act 95-758), the Capital |
Development Board may award in each year contracts with an |
|
aggregate total value of no more than $200,000,000 with respect |
to construction projects described in this paragraph. |
Until a date 11 years after November 29, 2005 (the |
effective date of Public Act 94-699), the requirements of this |
Section do not apply to the Capitol Building HVAC upgrade |
project if (i) the bid of the successful bidder identifies the |
name of the subcontractor, if any, and the bid proposal costs |
for each of the 5 subdivisions of work set forth in this |
Section, and (ii) the contract entered into with the successful |
bidder provides that no identified subcontractor may be |
terminated without the written consent of the Capital |
Development Board.
|
(Source: P.A. 97-182, eff. 7-22-11; 98-431, eff. 8-16-13.)
|
(30 ILCS 500/35-30) |
Sec. 35-30. Awards. |
(a) All State contracts for professional and artistic |
services, except as
provided in this Section, shall be awarded |
using the
competitive request for proposal process outlined in |
this Section. |
(b) For each contract offered, the chief procurement |
officer, State
purchasing officer, or his or her designee shall |
use the appropriate standard
solicitation
forms
available from |
the chief procurement officer for matters other than |
construction or the higher
education chief procurement |
officer. |
|
(c) Prepared forms shall be submitted to the chief |
procurement officer for matters other than construction or the |
higher education chief procurement officer,
whichever is |
appropriate, for
publication in its Illinois Procurement |
Bulletin and circulation to the chief procurement officer for |
matters other than construction
or the higher education chief |
procurement officer's list of
prequalified vendors. Notice of |
the offer or request for
proposal shall appear at least 14 |
calendar days before the response to the offer is due. |
(d) All interested respondents shall return their |
responses to the chief procurement officer for matters other |
than construction
or the higher education chief procurement |
officer,
whichever is appropriate, which shall open
and record |
them. The chief procurement officer for matters other than |
construction or higher education chief procurement officer
|
then shall forward the responses, together
with any
information |
it has available about the qualifications and other State work
|
of the respondents. |
(e) After evaluation, ranking, and selection, the |
responsible chief
procurement officer, State purchasing |
officer, or
his or her designee shall notify the chief |
procurement officer for matters other than construction
or the |
higher education chief procurement officer, whichever is |
appropriate,
of the successful respondent and shall forward
a |
copy of the signed contract for the chief procurement officer |
for matters other than construction or higher education chief
|
|
procurement officer's file. The chief procurement officer for |
matters other than construction or higher education chief
|
procurement officer shall
publish the names of the
responsible |
procurement decision-maker,
the agency letting the contract, |
the
successful respondent, a contract reference, and value of |
the let contract
in the next appropriate volume of the Illinois |
Procurement Bulletin. |
(f) For all professional and artistic contracts with |
annualized value
that exceeds $25,000, evaluation and ranking |
by price are required. Any chief
procurement officer or State |
purchasing officer,
but not their designees, may select a |
respondent an offeror other than the lowest respondent bidder |
by
price. In any case, when the contract exceeds the $25,000 |
threshold and
the lowest respondent bidder is not selected, the |
chief procurement officer or the State
purchasing officer shall |
forward together
with the contract notice of who the low |
respondent by price bidder was and a written decision as
to why |
another was selected to the chief procurement officer for |
matters other than construction or
the higher education chief |
procurement officer, whichever is appropriate.
The chief |
procurement officer for matters other than construction or |
higher education chief procurement officer shall publish as
|
provided in subsection (e) of Section 35-30,
but
shall include |
notice of the chief procurement officer's or State purchasing
|
officer's written decision. |
(g) The chief procurement officer for matters other than |
|
construction and higher education chief
procurement officer |
may each refine, but not
contradict, this Section by |
promulgating rules
for submission to the Procurement Policy |
Board and then to the Joint Committee
on Administrative Rules. |
Any
refinement shall be based on the principles and procedures |
of the federal
Architect-Engineer Selection Law, Public Law |
92-582 Brooks Act, and the
Architectural, Engineering, and Land |
Surveying Qualifications Based Selection
Act; except that |
pricing shall be an integral part of the selection process. |
(Source: P.A. 95-331, eff. 8-21-07; 95-481, eff. 8-28-07; |
96-920, eff. 7-1-10.) |
(30 ILCS 500/35-40) |
Sec. 35-40. Subcontractors. |
(a) Any contract granted under this Article shall state |
whether the services
of a subcontractor will be used. The |
contract shall include the names and
addresses of all |
subcontractors with an annual value of more than $50,000, the |
general type of work to be performed by these subcontractors, |
and the expected amount of money each will
receive under the |
contract. Upon the request of the chief procurement officer |
appointed pursuant to paragraph (2) of subsection (a) of |
Section 10-20, the contractor shall provide the chief |
procurement officer a copy of a subcontract so identified |
within 15 calendar days after the request is made. A |
subcontractor, or contractor on behalf of a subcontractor, may |
|
identify information that is deemed proprietary or |
confidential. If the chief procurement officer determines the |
information is not relevant to the primary contract, the chief |
procurement officer may excuse the inclusion of the |
information. If the chief procurement officer determines the |
information is proprietary or could harm the business interest |
of the subcontractor, the chief procurement officer may, in his |
or her discretion, redact the information. Redacted |
information shall not become part of the public record. |
(b) If at any time during the term of a contract, a |
contractor adds or
changes any subcontractors, he or she shall |
promptly notify, in writing, the chief procurement officer for |
matters other than construction
or the higher education chief
|
procurement officer, whichever is appropriate, and the
|
responsible State purchasing officer, or their
designee of the |
names and addresses and the
expected amount of money each new |
or replaced subcontractor will receive. Upon request of the |
chief
procurement officer appointed pursuant to paragraph (2) |
of subsection (a) of Section 10-20, the
contractor shall |
provide the chief procurement officer a copy of any new or |
amended subcontract so
identified within 15 calendar days after |
the request is made. |
(c) In addition to any other requirements of this Code, a |
subcontract subject to this Section must
include all of the |
subcontractor's certifications required by Article 50 of this |
Code. |
|
(d) For purposes of this Section, the changes made by this |
amendatory Act of the 98th General Assembly apply to |
procurements solicited on or after the effective date of this
|
amendatory Act of the 98th General Assembly. |
(Source: P.A. 95-481, eff. 8-28-07; 96-920, eff. 7-1-10.)
|
(30 ILCS 500/40-5)
|
Sec. 40-5. Applicability. All leases for real property
or |
capital improvements,
including office and storage space, |
buildings, and other
facilities for State agencies where the |
State is the lessee , shall be
procured in accordance with the |
provisions of this Article. All State agencies, with the |
exception of public institutions of higher education, shall, in |
consultation with the Department of Central Management |
Services, evaluate the State's existing lease portfolio prior |
to engaging in a procurement for real property or capital |
improvements.
|
(Source: P.A. 90-572, eff. date - See Sec. 99-5.)
|
(30 ILCS 500/40-15)
|
Sec. 40-15. Method of source selection.
|
(a) Request for information. Except as provided in
|
subsections (b) and (c), all State
contracts for leases of real |
property or capital improvements
shall be awarded by a request |
for
information process in accordance with Section 40-20.
|
(b) Other methods. A request for information process need
|
|
not be used in procuring any
of the following leases:
|
(1) Property of less than 10,000 square feet with rent |
of less than $100,000 per year.
|
(2) (Blank).
|
(3) Duration of less than one year that cannot be
|
renewed.
|
(4) Specialized space available at only one location.
|
(5) Renewal or extension of a lease;
provided that: (i) |
the chief procurement officer determines in writing that |
the
renewal or extension is in the best interest of the |
State; (ii) the chief
procurement officer submits his or |
her written determination and the renewal or
extension to |
the Board; (iii) the Board does not object in writing to |
the
renewal or extension within 30 calendar days after its |
submission; and (iv) the chief
procurement officer |
publishes the renewal or extension in the appropriate
|
volume of the Procurement Bulletin.
|
(c) Leases with governmental units. Leases with other
|
governmental units may be
negotiated without using the request |
for information process when
deemed by the chief procurement |
officer to be
in the best interest of the State.
|
(Source: P.A. 95-647, eff. 10-11-07; 96-920, eff. 7-1-10.)
|
(30 ILCS 500/40-20)
|
Sec. 40-20. Request for information.
|
(a) Conditions for use. Leases shall be procured by request
|
|
for information except as
otherwise provided in Section 40-15.
|
(b) Form. A request for information shall be issued and
|
shall include:
|
(1) the type of property to be leased;
|
(2) the proposed uses of the property;
|
(3) the duration of the lease;
|
(4) the preferred location of the property; and
|
(5) a general description of the configuration |
desired.
|
(c) Public notice. Public notice of the request for
|
information for the availability of real
property to lease |
shall be published in the appropriate volume of the Illinois
|
Procurement Bulletin at least 14 calendar days before
the date |
set forth in the request for receipt of responses and
shall |
also be published in similar
manner in a newspaper of general |
circulation in the community or
communities where the using
|
agency is seeking space.
|
(d) Response. The request for information response shall
|
consist of written information
sufficient to show that the |
respondent can meet minimum criteria
set forth in the request. |
State
purchasing officers may enter into discussions with |
respondents
for the purpose of clarifying
State needs and the |
information supplied by the respondents. On
the basis of the |
information
supplied and discussions, if any, a State |
purchasing officer shall
make a written determination
|
identifying the responses that meet the minimum criteria set |
|
forth
in the request for information.
Negotiations shall be |
entered into with all qualified respondents
for the purpose of |
securing a
lease that is in the best interest of the State. A |
written report
of the negotiations shall be
retained in the |
lease files and shall include the reasons for the
final |
selection. All leases shall
be reduced to writing; one copy |
shall be filed with the Comptroller in accordance with the |
provisions
of Section 20-80, and one copy shall be filed with |
the Board.
|
When the lowest response by price is not selected, the |
State purchasing
officer shall forward to the chief procurement |
officer, along with the lease,
notice of the identity of the |
lowest respondent by price and written reasons
for the |
selection of a different response. The chief procurement |
officer shall
publish the written reasons in the next volume of |
the Illinois Procurement
Bulletin. |
(e) Board review. Upon receipt of (1) any proposed lease of |
real property of 10,000 or more square feet or (2) any proposed |
lease of real property with annual rent payments of $100,000 or |
more, the Procurement Policy Board shall have 30 calendar days |
to review the proposed lease. If the Board does not object in |
writing within 30 calendar days, then the proposed lease shall |
become effective according to its terms as submitted. The |
leasing agency shall make any and all materials available to |
the Board to assist in the review process.
|
(Source: P.A. 96-1521, eff. 2-14-11.)
|
|
(30 ILCS 500/40-25)
|
Sec. 40-25. Length of leases.
|
(a) Maximum term. Leases shall be for a term not to exceed
|
10 years inclusive, beginning January, 1, 2010, of proposed |
contract renewals and shall include
a termination option in |
favor of the State after 5 years.
|
(b) Renewal. Leases may include a renewal option. An
option |
to renew may be
exercised only when a State purchasing officer |
determines in
writing that renewal is in the best
interest of |
the State and notice of the exercise of the option is published |
in
the appropriate volume of the Procurement Bulletin at least |
60 calendar days prior to
the exercise of the option.
|
(c) Subject to appropriation. All leases shall recite that
|
they are subject to termination
and cancellation in any year |
for which the General Assembly fails
to make an appropriation |
to
make payments under the terms of the lease.
|
(d) Holdover. Beginning January 1, 2010, no lease may |
continue on a month-to-month or other holdover basis for a |
total of more than 6 months. Beginning July 1, 2010, the |
Comptroller shall withhold payment of leases beyond this |
holdover period. |
(Source: P.A. 96-15, eff. 6-22-09; 96-795, eff. 7-1-10 (see |
Section 5 of P.A. 96-793 for the effective date of changes made |
by P.A. 96-795).)
|
|
(30 ILCS 500/40-55)
|
Sec. 40-55. Lessor's failure to make improvements. Each |
lease must provide for actual or
liquidated damages a penalty |
upon the lessor's failure to make improvements agreed upon in |
the lease. The actual or liquidated damages penalty shall |
consist of a reduction in lease payments equal to the |
corresponding percentage of the improvement value to the lease |
value. The actual or
liquidated damages penalty shall continue |
until the lessor complies with the lease and the improvements |
are certified by the chief procurement officer and the leasing |
State agency.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-839, eff. 7-30-04.)
|
(30 ILCS 500/45-10)
|
Sec. 45-10. Resident bidders and offerors .
|
(a) Amount of preference. When a contract is to be awarded
|
to the lowest responsible
bidder or offeror , a resident bidder |
or offeror shall be allowed a preference as against
a |
non-resident bidder or offeror from any
state that gives or |
requires a preference to bidders or offerors from that
state. |
The preference shall be equal
to the preference given or |
required by the state of the
non-resident bidder or offeror . |
Further, if only non-resident bidders or offerors are
bidding, |
the purchasing agency is within its right to specify that
|
Illinois
labor and manufacturing locations be used as a part of |
the
manufacturing process, if applicable.
This specification |
|
may be negotiated as part of the solicitation
process.
|
(b) Residency. A resident bidder or offeror is a person |
authorized to
transact business in this State
and having a bona |
fide establishment for transacting business
within this State |
where it was
actually transacting business on the date when any |
bid for a
public contract is first advertised
or announced. A |
resident bidder or offeror includes a foreign corporation
duly |
authorized to transact
business in this State that has a bona |
fide establishment for
transacting business within this State
|
where it was actually transacting business on the date when any
|
bid for a public contract is first
advertised or announced.
|
(c) Federal funds. This Section does not apply to any
|
contract for any project as to
which federal funds are |
available for expenditure when its
provisions may be in |
conflict with
federal law or federal regulation.
|
(Source: P.A. 90-572, eff. date - See Sec. 99-5.)
|
(30 ILCS 500/45-20)
|
Sec. 45-20. Recycled supplies. When a public contract
is to |
be awarded to the
lowest responsible bidder or offeror , an |
otherwise qualified bidder or offeror who will
fulfill the |
contract through the
use of products made of recycled supplies |
may
be given preference over other bidders or offerors unable |
to do so, provided
that the cost included in the
bid of |
supplies made of recycled materials does not constitute an |
undue economic or practical hardship.
|
|
(Source: P.A. 96-197, eff. 1-1-10.)
|
(30 ILCS 500/45-30)
|
Sec. 45-30. Illinois Correctional industries. |
Notwithstanding anything to the
contrary in other law, the |
chief procurement officer appointed pursuant to paragraph (4) |
of subsection (a) of Section 10-20 of the Department of Central |
Management Services shall, in consultation
with Illinois |
Correctional Industries, a division of the Illinois Department |
of Corrections (referred to as the "Illinois Correctional |
Industries" or "ICI") determine for all State agencies which |
articles, materials,
industry related services, food stuffs, |
and finished goods that are produced or
manufactured by persons |
confined in institutions and facilities of the Department of |
Corrections who are participating in Illinois Correctional |
Industries programs shall be purchased from Illinois |
Correctional Industries.
The chief procurement officer |
appointed pursuant to paragraph (4) of subsection (a) of |
Section 10-20 of Central Management Services shall develop and |
distribute to the various
purchasing and using agencies a |
listing of all Illinois Correctional Industries products and |
procedures for implementing this Section.
|
(Source: P.A. 96-877, eff. 7-1-10; 96-943, eff. 7-1-10.)
|
(30 ILCS 500/45-35)
|
Sec. 45-35. Facilities for persons with severe |
|
disabilities. |
(a) Qualification. Supplies and services may be procured
|
without advertising or calling
for bids from any qualified |
not-for-profit agency for persons with severe disabilities |
that:
|
(1) complies with Illinois laws governing private
|
not-for-profit organizations;
|
(2) is certified as a sheltered workshop by the Wage
|
and Hour Division of the
United States Department of Labor |
or is an accredited vocational program that provides |
transition services to youth between the ages of 14 1/2 and |
22 in accordance with individualized education plans under |
Section 14-8.03 of the School Code and that provides |
residential services at a child care institution, as |
defined under Section 2.06 of the Child Care Act of 1969, |
or at a group home, as defined under Section 2.16 of the |
Child Care Act of 1969; and
|
(3) meets the applicable Illinois Department of Human
|
Services just standards.
|
(b) Participation. To participate, the not-for-profit
|
agency must have indicated an
interest in providing the |
supplies and services, must meet the
specifications and needs |
of the
using agency, and must set a fair market price.
|
(c) Committee. There is created within the Department of
|
Central Management
Services a committee to facilitate the |
purchase of products and
services of persons so severely
|
|
disabled by a physical, developmental, or mental disability or |
a combination of any of those disabilities that they cannot
|
engage in normal competitive
employment. This committee is |
called the State Use Committee. The committee shall consist of |
the Director of the
Department of Central
Management Services |
or his or her designee, the Director of the Department
of Human |
Services or his or her designee, one public member representing |
private business who is knowledgeable of the employment needs |
and concerns of persons with developmental disabilities, one |
public member representing private business who is |
knowledgeable of the needs and concerns of rehabilitation |
facilities, one public member who is knowledgeable of the |
employment needs and concerns of persons with developmental |
disabilities, one public member who is knowledgeable of the |
needs and concerns of rehabilitation facilities, and 2 public |
members from a statewide association that represents |
community-based rehabilitation facilities, all appointed by |
the
Governor. The public
members shall serve 2 year terms, |
commencing upon appointment and
every 2 years thereafter.
A |
public member may be reappointed, and vacancies shall be filled |
by
appointment for the
completion of the term. In the event |
there is a vacancy on the Committee, the Governor must make an |
appointment to fill that vacancy within 30 calendar days after |
the notice of vacancy. The members shall serve without
|
compensation but shall be reimbursed
for expenses at a rate |
equal to that of State employees on a per
diem basis by the |
|
Department
of Central Management Services. All members shall be |
entitled to
vote on issues before the
committee.
|
The committee shall have the following powers and duties:
|
(1) To request from any State agency information as to
|
product specification
and service requirements in order to |
carry out its purpose.
|
(2) To meet quarterly or more often as necessary to
|
carry out its purposes.
|
(3) To request a quarterly report from each
|
participating qualified not-for-profit agency for persons |
with severe disabilities describing the volume of sales for |
each product or
service sold under this Section.
|
(4) To prepare a report for the Governor and General |
Assembly no later than December 31 of each year annually . |
The requirement for reporting to the General Assembly shall |
be satisfied by following the procedures set forth in |
Section 3.1 of the General Assembly Organization Act.
|
(5) To prepare a publication that lists all supplies
|
and services currently
available from any qualified |
not-for-profit agency for persons with severe |
disabilities. This list and
any revisions shall be |
distributed to all purchasing agencies.
|
(6) To encourage diversity in supplies and services
|
provided by qualified not-for-profit agencies for persons |
with severe disabilities and discourage unnecessary |
duplication or
competition among facilities.
|
|
(7) To develop guidelines to be followed by qualifying
|
agencies for
participation under the provisions of this |
Section. The
guidelines shall be developed within
6 months |
after the effective date of this Code and made available
on |
a nondiscriminatory basis
to all qualifying agencies.
|
(8) To review all bids submitted under the provisions
|
of this Section and reject
any bid for any purchase that is |
determined to be substantially
more than the purchase would
|
have cost had it been competitively bid.
|
(9) To develop a 5-year plan for increasing the number |
of products and services purchased from qualified |
not-for-profit agencies for persons with severe |
disabilities, including the feasibility of developing |
mandatory set-aside contracts. This 5-year plan must be |
developed no later than 180 calendar days after the |
effective date of this amendatory Act of the 96th General |
Assembly. |
(c-5) Conditions for Use. Each chief procurement officer |
shall, in consultation with the State Use Committee, determine |
which articles, materials, services, food stuffs, and supplies |
that are produced, manufactured, or provided by persons with |
severe disabilities in qualified not-for-profit agencies shall |
be given preference by purchasing agencies procuring those |
items. |
(d) Former committee. The committee created under
|
subsection (c) shall replace the
committee created under |
|
Section 7-2 of the Illinois Purchasing Act,
which shall
|
continue to operate until the appointments under subsection (c)
|
are made.
|
(Source: P.A. 96-634, eff. 8-24-09; 97-895, eff. 8-3-12.)
|
(30 ILCS 500/45-45)
|
Sec. 45-45. Small businesses.
|
(a) Set-asides. Each The chief procurement officer has |
authority to designate as
small business set-asides a fair
|
proportion of construction, supply, and service contracts for |
award
to small businesses in Illinois.
Advertisements for bids |
or offers for those contracts shall
specify designation as |
small business
set-asides. In awarding the contracts, only bids |
or offers from
qualified small businesses shall
be considered.
|
(b) Small business. "Small business" means a business that
|
is independently owned and
operated and that is not dominant in |
its field of operation. The
chief procurement officer shall |
establish a detailed
definition by rule, using in addition to |
the foregoing criteria
other criteria, including the number
of |
employees and the dollar volume of business. When computing
the |
size status of a potential contractor bidder ,
annual sales and |
receipts of the potential contractor bidder and all of its |
affiliates
shall be included. The maximum
number of employees |
and the maximum dollar volume that a small
business may have |
under
the rules promulgated by the chief procurement officer |
may vary from industry
to
industry to the extent necessary
to |
|
reflect differing characteristics of those industries, subject
|
to the following limitations:
|
(1) No wholesale business is a small business if its
|
annual sales for its most
recently completed fiscal year |
exceed $13,000,000 $10,000,000 .
|
(2) No retail business or business selling services is
|
a small business if its
annual sales and receipts exceed |
$8,000,000 $6,000,000 .
|
(3) No manufacturing business is a small business if it
|
employs more than 250
persons.
|
(4) No construction business is a small business if its
|
annual sales and receipts
exceed $14,000,000 $10,000,000 .
|
(c) Fair proportion. For the purpose of subsection (a), for |
State agencies
of the executive branch, a
fair proportion of |
construction
contracts shall be no less than 25% nor more than |
40% of the
annual total contracts for
construction.
|
(d) Withdrawal of designation. A small business set-aside
|
designation may be withdrawn
by the purchasing agency when |
deemed in the best interests of the
State. Upon withdrawal, all
|
bids or offers shall be rejected, and the bidders or offerors
|
shall be notified of the reason for
rejection. The contract |
shall then be awarded in accordance with
this Code without the
|
designation of small business set-aside.
|
(e) Small business specialist. The chief procurement |
officer shall
designate a
State purchasing officer
who will be |
responsible for engaging an experienced contract
negotiator to |
|
serve as its small
business specialist, whose duties shall |
include:
|
(1) Compiling and maintaining a comprehensive bidders
|
list of potential small contractors
businesses . In this |
duty, he or she shall cooperate with the
Federal Small |
Business
Administration in locating potential sources for |
various products
and services.
|
(2) Assisting small businesses in complying with the
|
procedures for bidding
on State contracts.
|
(3) Examining requests from State agencies for the
|
purchase of property or
services to help determine which |
invitations to bid are to be
designated small business |
set-asides.
|
(4) Making recommendations to the chief procurement |
officer for the
simplification of
specifications and terms |
in order to increase the opportunities
for small business |
participation.
|
(5) Assisting in investigations by purchasing agencies
|
to determine the
responsibility of bidders or offerors on |
small business set-asides.
|
(f) Small business annual report. The State purchasing
|
officer designated under
subsection (e) shall annually before |
December 1 report in writing
to the General Assembly
concerning |
the awarding of contracts to small businesses. The
report shall |
include the total
value of awards made in the preceding fiscal |
year under the
designation of small business set-aside.
The |
|
report shall also include the total value of awards made to
|
businesses owned by minorities, females, and persons with |
disabilities, as
defined in the Business Enterprise for |
Minorities, Females, and Persons with
Disabilities Act, in the |
preceding fiscal year under the designation of small
business |
set-aside.
|
The requirement for reporting to the General Assembly shall
|
be satisfied by filing copies
of the report as required by |
Section 3.1 of the General Assembly
Organization Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 92-60, eff. 7-12-01; 93-769, eff. 1-1-05.)
|
(30 ILCS 500/45-57) |
Sec. 45-57. Veterans. |
(a) Set-aside goal. It is the goal of the State to promote |
and encourage the continued economic development of small |
businesses owned and controlled by qualified veterans and that |
qualified service-disabled veteran-owned small businesses |
(referred to as SDVOSB) and veteran-owned small businesses |
(referred to as VOSB) participate in the State's procurement |
process as both prime contractors and subcontractors. Not less |
than 3% of the total dollar amount of State contracts, as |
defined by the Director of Central Management Services, shall |
be established as a goal to be awarded to SDVOSB and VOSB. That
|
portion of a contract under which the contractor subcontracts
|
with a SDVOSB or VOSB may be counted toward the
goal of this |
subsection. The Department of Central Management Services |
|
shall adopt rules to implement compliance with this subsection |
by all State agencies. |
(b) Fiscal year reports. By each September 1, each chief |
procurement officer shall report to the Department of Central |
Management Services on all of the following for the immediately |
preceding fiscal year, and by each March 1 the Department of |
Central Management Services shall compile and report that |
information to the General Assembly: |
(1) The total number of VOSB, and the number of SDVOSB, |
who submitted bids for contracts under this Code. |
(2) The total number of VOSB, and the number of SDVOSB, |
who entered into contracts with the State under this Code |
and the total value of those contracts. |
(c) Yearly review and recommendations. Each year, each |
chief procurement officer shall review the progress of all |
State agencies under its jurisdiction in meeting the goal |
described in subsection (a), with input from statewide |
veterans' service organizations and from the business |
community, including businesses owned by qualified veterans, |
and shall make recommendations to be included in the Department |
of Central Management Services' report to the General Assembly |
regarding continuation, increases, or decreases of the |
percentage goal. The recommendations shall be based upon the |
number of businesses that are owned by qualified veterans and |
on the continued need to encourage and promote businesses owned |
by qualified veterans. |
|
(d) Governor's recommendations. To assist the State in |
reaching the goal described in subsection (a), the Governor |
shall recommend to the General Assembly changes in programs to |
assist businesses owned by qualified veterans. |
(e) Definitions. As used in this Section: |
"Armed forces of the United States" means the United States |
Army, Navy, Air Force, Marine Corps, Coast Guard, or service in |
active duty as defined under 38 U.S.C. Section 101. Service in |
the Merchant Marine that constitutes active duty under Section |
401 of federal Public Act 95-202 shall also be considered |
service in the armed forces for purposes of this Section. |
"Certification" means a determination made by the Illinois |
Department of Veterans' Affairs and the Department of Central |
Management Services that a business entity is a qualified |
service-disabled veteran-owned small business or a qualified |
veteran-owned small business for whatever purpose. A SDVOSB or |
VOSB owned and controlled by females, minorities, or persons |
with disabilities, as those terms are defined in Section 2 of |
the Business Enterprise for Minorities, Females, and Persons |
with Disabilities Act, may also select and designate whether |
that business is to be certified as a "female-owned business", |
"minority-owned business", or "business owned by a person with |
a disability", as defined in Section 2 of the Business |
Enterprise for Minorities, Females, and Persons with |
Disabilities Act. |
"Control" means the exclusive, ultimate, majority, or sole |
|
control of the business, including but not limited to capital |
investment and all other financial matters, property, |
acquisitions, contract negotiations, legal matters, |
officer-director-employee selection and comprehensive hiring, |
operation responsibilities, cost-control matters, income and |
dividend matters, financial transactions, and rights of other |
shareholders or joint partners. Control shall be real, |
substantial, and continuing, not pro forma. Control shall |
include the power to direct or cause the direction of the |
management and policies of the business and to make the |
day-to-day as well as major decisions in matters of policy, |
management, and operations. Control shall be exemplified by |
possessing the requisite knowledge and expertise to run the |
particular business, and control shall not include simple |
majority or absentee ownership. |
"Qualified service-disabled veteran" means a
veteran who |
has been found to have 10% or more service-connected disability |
by the United States Department of Veterans Affairs or the |
United States Department of Defense. |
"Qualified service-disabled veteran-owned small business" |
or "SDVOSB" means a small business (i) that is at least 51% |
owned by one or more qualified service-disabled veterans living |
in Illinois or, in the case of a corporation, at least 51% of |
the stock of which is owned by one or more qualified |
service-disabled veterans living in Illinois; (ii) that has its |
home office in Illinois; and (iii) for which items (i) and (ii) |
|
are factually verified annually by the Department of Central |
Management Services. |
"Qualified veteran-owned small business" or "VOSB" means a |
small business (i) that is at least 51% owned by one or more |
qualified veterans living in Illinois or, in the case of a |
corporation, at least 51% of the stock of which is owned by one |
or more qualified veterans living in Illinois; (ii) that has |
its home office in Illinois; and (iii) for which items (i) and |
(ii) are factually verified annually by the Department of |
Central Management Services. |
"Service-connected disability" means a disability incurred |
in the line of duty in the active military, naval, or air |
service as described in 38 U.S.C. 101(16). |
"Small business" means a business that has annual gross |
sales of less than $75,000,000 as evidenced by the federal |
income tax return of the business. A firm with gross sales in |
excess of this cap may apply to the Department of Central |
Management Services for certification for a particular |
contract if the firm can demonstrate that the contract would |
have significant impact on SDVOSB or VOSB as suppliers or |
subcontractors or in employment of veterans or |
service-disabled veterans. |
"State agency" has the same meaning as in Section 2 of the |
Business Enterprise for Minorities, Females, and Persons with |
Disabilities Act. |
"Time of hostilities with a foreign country" means any |
|
period of time in the past, present, or future during which a |
declaration of war by the United States Congress has been or is |
in effect or during which an emergency condition has been or is |
in effect that is recognized by the issuance of a Presidential |
proclamation or a Presidential executive order and in which the |
armed forces expeditionary medal or other campaign service |
medals are awarded according to Presidential executive order. |
"Veteran" means a person who (i) has been a member of the |
armed forces of the United States or, while a citizen of the |
United States, was a member of the armed forces of allies of |
the United States in time of hostilities with a foreign country |
and (ii) has served under one or more of the following |
conditions: (a) the veteran served a total of at least 6 |
months; (b) the veteran served for the duration of hostilities |
regardless of the length of the engagement; (c) the veteran was |
discharged on the basis of hardship; or (d) the veteran was |
released from active duty because of a service connected |
disability and was discharged under honorable conditions. |
(f) Certification program. The Illinois Department of |
Veterans' Affairs and the Department of Central Management |
Services shall work together to devise a certification |
procedure to assure that businesses taking advantage of this |
Section are legitimately classified as qualified |
service-disabled veteran-owned small businesses or qualified |
veteran-owned small businesses.
|
(g) Penalties. |
|
(1) Administrative penalties. The chief procurement |
officers appointed pursuant to Section 10-20 Department of |
Central Management Services shall suspend any person who |
commits a violation of Section 17-10.3 or subsection (d) of |
Section 33E-6 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal |
Code of 2012 relating to this Section from bidding on, or |
participating as a contractor, subcontractor, or supplier |
in, any State contract or project for a period of not less |
than 3 years, and, if the person is certified as a |
service-disabled veteran-owned small business or a |
veteran-owned small business, then the Department shall |
revoke the business's certification for a period of not |
less than 3 years. An additional or subsequent violation |
shall extend the periods of suspension and revocation for a |
period of not less than 5 years. The suspension and |
revocation shall apply to the principals of the business |
and any subsequent business formed or financed by, or |
affiliated with, those principals. |
(2) Reports of violations. Each State agency shall |
report any alleged violation of Section 17-10.3 or |
subsection (d) of Section 33E-6 of the Criminal Code of |
1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012 relating to this Section |
to the chief procurement officers appointed pursuant to |
Section 10-20 Department of Central Management Services . |
The chief procurement officers appointed pursuant to |
Section 10-20 Department of Central Management Services |
|
shall subsequently report all such alleged violations to |
the Attorney General, who shall determine whether to bring |
a civil action against any person for the violation. |
(3) List of suspended persons. The chief procurement |
officers appointed pursuant to Section 10-20 Department of |
Central Management Services shall monitor the status of all |
reported violations of Section 17-10.3 or subsection (d) of |
Section 33E-6 of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal |
Code of 2012 relating to this Section and shall maintain |
and make available to all State agencies a central listing |
of all persons that committed violations resulting in |
suspension. |
(4) Use of suspended persons. During the period of a |
person's suspension under paragraph (1) of this |
subsection, a State agency shall not enter into any |
contract with that person or with any contractor using the |
services of that person as a subcontractor. |
(5) Duty to check list. Each State agency shall check |
the central listing provided by the chief procurement |
officers appointed pursuant to Section 10-20 Department of |
Central Management Services under paragraph (3) of this |
subsection to verify that a person being awarded a contract |
by that State agency, or to be used as a subcontractor or |
supplier on a contract being awarded by that State agency, |
is not under suspension pursuant to paragraph (1) of this |
subsection. |
|
(Source: P.A. 97-260, eff. 8-5-11; 97-1150, eff. 1-25-13; |
98-307, eff. 8-12-13.) |
(30 ILCS 500/45-67)
|
Sec. 45-67. Encouragement to hire qualified veterans. A |
chief procurement officer may, as part of any solicitation, |
encourage potential contractors prospective vendors to |
consider hiring qualified veterans and to notify them of any |
available financial incentives or other advantages associated |
with hiring such persons. In establishing internal guidelines |
in furtherance of this Section, the Department of Central |
Management Services may work with an interagency advisory |
committee consisting of representatives from the Department of |
Veterans Affairs, the Department of Employment Security, the |
Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity, and the |
Department of Revenue and consisting of 8 members of the |
General Assembly, 2 of whom are appointed by the Speaker of the |
House of Representatives, 2 of whom are appointed by the |
President of the Senate, 2 of whom are appointed by the |
Minority Leader of the House of Representatives, and 2 of whom |
are appointed by the Minority Leader of the Senate. |
For the purposes of this Section, "qualified veteran" means |
an Illinois resident who: (i) was a member of the Armed Forces |
of the United States, a member of the Illinois National Guard, |
or a member of any reserve component of the Armed Forces of the |
United States; (ii) served on active duty in connection with |
|
Operation Desert Storm, Operation Enduring Freedom, or |
Operation Iraqi Freedom; and (iii) was honorably discharged.
|
The Department of Central Management Services must report |
to the Governor and to the General Assembly by December 31 of |
each year on the activities undertaken by chief procurement |
officers and the Department of Central Management Services to |
encourage potential contractors prospective vendors to |
consider hiring qualified veterans. The report must include the |
number of vendors who have hired qualified veterans.
|
(Source: P.A. 94-1067, eff. 8-1-06.) |
(30 ILCS 500/45-70) |
Sec. 45-70. Encouragement to hire ex-offenders. A chief |
procurement officer may, as part of any solicitation, encourage |
potential contractors prospective vendors to consider hiring |
Illinois residents discharged from any Illinois adult |
correctional center, in appropriate circumstances, and to |
notify them of any available financial incentives or other |
advantages associated with hiring such persons. In |
establishing internal guidelines in furtherance of this |
Section, the Department of Central Management Services may work |
with an interagency advisory committee consisting of |
representatives from the Department of Corrections, the |
Department of Employment Security, the Department of Juvenile |
Justice, the Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity, |
and the Department of Revenue and consisting of 8 members of |
|
the General Assembly, 2 of whom are appointed by the Speaker of |
the House of Representatives, 2 of whom are appointed by the |
President of the Senate, 2 of whom are appointed by the |
Minority Leader of the House of Representatives, and 2 of whom |
are appointed by the Minority Leader of the Senate. |
The Department of Central Management Services must report |
to the Governor and to the General Assembly by December 31 of |
each year on the activities undertaken by chief procurement |
officers and the Department of Central Management Services to |
encourage potential contractors prospective vendors to |
consider hiring Illinois residents who have been discharged |
from an Illinois adult correctional center. The report must |
include the number of vendors who have hired Illinois residents |
who have been discharged from any Illinois adult correctional |
center.
|
(Source: P.A. 94-1067, eff. 8-1-06.)
|
(30 ILCS 500/50-5)
|
Sec. 50-5. Bribery.
|
(a) Prohibition. No person or business shall be awarded a
|
contract or subcontract under
this Code who:
|
(1) has been convicted under the laws of Illinois or
|
any other state of bribery
or attempting to bribe an |
officer or employee of the State of
Illinois or any other |
state in that
officer's or employee's official capacity; or
|
(2) has made an admission of guilt of that conduct that
|
|
is a matter of record but
has not been prosecuted for that |
conduct.
|
(b) Businesses. No business shall be barred from
|
contracting with any unit of State or
local government, or |
subcontracting under such a contract, as a result of a |
conviction under this Section of
any employee or agent of the
|
business if the employee or agent is no longer employed by the
|
business and:
|
(1) the business has been finally adjudicated not
|
guilty; or
|
(2) the business demonstrates to the governmental
|
entity with which it seeks to
contract or which is a |
signatory to the contract to which the subcontract relates, |
and that entity finds that the commission of the offense
|
was not authorized, requested,
commanded, or performed by a |
director, officer, or high managerial
agent on behalf of |
the
business as provided in paragraph (2) of subsection (a) |
of Section
5-4 of the Criminal Code of
2012.
|
(c) Conduct on behalf of business. For purposes of this
|
Section, when an official, agent,
or employee of a business |
committed the bribery or attempted
bribery on behalf of the |
business
and in accordance with the direction or authorization |
of a responsible
official of the business, the
business shall |
be chargeable with the conduct.
|
(d) Certification. Every bid or offer submitted to every to |
and contract
executed by the State , and every subcontract |
|
subject to Section 20-120 of this Code , and every vendor's |
submission to a vendor portal shall
contain a certification by |
the bidder, offeror, potential contractor, contractor , or the |
subcontractor, respectively, that the bidder, offeror, |
potential contractor, contractor or subcontractor is
not |
barred from being awarded a
contract or subcontract under this |
Section and acknowledges that the chief procurement officer may |
declare the related contract void if any certifications |
required by this Section are false. If the false certification |
is made by a subcontractor, then the contractor's submitted bid |
or offer and the executed contract may not be declared void, |
unless the contractor refuses to terminate the subcontract upon |
the State's request after a finding that the subcontract's |
certification was false. A bidder, offeror, potential |
contractor, contractor , or subcontractor who
makes a false |
statement, material
to the certification, commits a Class 3 |
felony.
|
(Source: P.A. 96-795, eff. 7-1-10 (see Section 5 of P.A. 96-793 |
for the effective date of changes made by P.A. 96-795); 97-895, |
eff. 8-3-12; 97-1150, eff. 1-25-13.)
|
(30 ILCS 500/50-10)
|
Sec. 50-10. Felons. |
(a) Unless otherwise provided, no person
or business |
convicted of
a felony shall do business with the State of |
Illinois or any State
agency, or enter into a subcontract, from |
|
the date of
conviction until 5 years after the date of |
completion of the
sentence for that felony, unless no
person |
held responsible by a prosecutorial office for the facts
upon |
which the conviction was
based continues to have any |
involvement with the business.
|
(b) Every bid or offer submitted to the State, every and |
contract executed by the State , and every subcontract subject |
to Section 20-120 of this Code , and every vendor's submission |
to a vendor portal shall contain a certification by the bidder , |
offeror, potential contractor, or contractor , or |
subcontractor, respectively, that the bidder, offeror, |
potential contractor, contractor, or subcontractor is not |
barred from being awarded a contract or subcontract under this |
Section and acknowledges that the chief procurement officer may |
declare the related contract void if any of the certifications |
required by this Section are false. If the false certification |
is made by a subcontractor, then the contractor's submitted bid |
or offer and the executed contract may not be declared void, |
unless the contractor refuses to terminate the subcontract upon |
the State's request after a finding that the subcontract's |
certification was false. |
(Source: P.A. 96-795, eff. 7-1-10 (see Section 5 of P.A. 96-793 |
for the effective date of changes made by P.A. 96-795); 97-895, |
eff. 8-3-12.)
|
(30 ILCS 500/50-10.5) |
|
Sec. 50-10.5. Prohibited bidders , offerors, potential |
contractors, and contractors. |
(a) Unless otherwise provided, no business shall bid , |
offer, or enter into a
contract or subcontract under this Code , |
or make a submission to a vendor portal if the business or any
|
officer, director, partner, or other managerial agent of the |
business has been
convicted of a felony under the |
Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 or a
Class 3 or Class 2 felony under |
the Illinois Securities Law of 1953 for a
period of 5 years |
from
the date of conviction. |
(b) Every bid and offer submitted to the State, every and |
contract executed by the State , every vendor's submission to a |
vendor portal, and every subcontract subject to Section 20-120 |
of this Code shall contain
a certification by the bidder, |
offeror, potential contractor, contractor, or subcontractor, |
respectively, that the bidder, offeror, potential contractor, |
contractor, or subcontractor is not barred
from being awarded a |
contract or subcontract under this Section and
acknowledges |
that the chief procurement officer shall declare the related |
contract void
if any of
the certifications completed pursuant |
to this subsection (b) are false. If the false certification is |
made by a subcontractor, then the contractor's submitted bid or |
offer and the executed contract may not be declared void, |
unless the contractor refuses to terminate the subcontract upon |
the State's request after a finding that the subcontract's |
certification was false. |
|
(c) If a business is not a natural person, the prohibition |
in subsection (a)
applies only if: |
(1) the business itself is convicted of a felony |
referenced in subsection
(a); or |
(2) the business is ordered to pay punitive damages |
based on the
conduct
of any officer, director, partner, or |
other managerial agent who has been
convicted of a felony |
referenced in subsection (a). |
(d) A natural person who is convicted of a felony |
referenced in subsection
(a) remains subject to Section 50-10. |
(e) No person or business shall bid , offer, make a |
submission to a vendor portal, or enter into a contract under |
this Code if the person or business assisted an employee of the |
State of Illinois, who, by the nature of his or her duties, has |
the authority to participate personally and substantially in |
the decision to award a State contract, by reviewing, drafting, |
directing, or preparing any invitation for bids, a request for |
proposal, or request for information or provided similar |
assistance except as part of a publicly issued opportunity to |
review drafts of all or part of these documents. |
This subsection does not prohibit a person or business from |
submitting a bid or offer or proposal or entering into a |
contract if the person or business: (i) initiates a |
communication with an employee to provide general information |
about products, services, or industry best practices and, if |
applicable, that communication is documented in accordance |
|
with Section 50-39 or (ii) responds to a communication |
initiated by an employee of the State for the purposes of |
providing information to evaluate new products, trends, |
services, or technologies. |
Nothing in this Section prohibits a vendor developing |
technology, goods, or services from bidding or offering to |
supply that technology or those goods or services if the |
subject demonstrated to the State represents industry trends |
and innovation and is not specifically designed to meet the |
State's needs. |
For purposes of this subsection (e), "business" includes |
all individuals with whom a business is affiliated, including, |
but not limited to, any officer, agent, employee, consultant, |
independent contractor, director, partner, or manager , or |
shareholder of a business. |
No person or business shall submit specifications to a |
State agency unless requested to do so by an employee of the |
State. No person or business who contracts with a State agency |
to write specifications for a particular procurement need shall |
submit a bid or proposal or receive a contract for that |
procurement need. |
(Source: P.A. 96-795, eff. 7-1-10 (see Section 5 of P.A. 96-793 |
for the effective date of changes made by P.A. 96-795); 96-920, |
eff. 7-1-10; 97-895, eff. 8-3-12.)
|
(30 ILCS 500/50-11)
|
|
Sec. 50-11. Debt delinquency.
|
(a) No person shall submit a bid or offer for , or enter |
into a contract or subcontract under this Code , or make a |
submission to a vendor portal if that person knows or should |
know that he or she or
any affiliate is
delinquent in the |
payment of any debt to the State, unless the person or
|
affiliate has
entered into a deferred payment plan to pay off |
the debt. For purposes of this
Section, the phrase "delinquent |
in the payment of any debt" shall be determined
by the Debt |
Collection Bureau.
For purposes of this Section, the term |
"affiliate" means any entity that (1)
directly,
indirectly, or |
constructively controls another entity, (2) is directly,
|
indirectly, or
constructively controlled by another entity, or |
(3) is subject to the control
of
a common
entity. For purposes |
of this subsection (a), a person controls an entity if the
|
person owns,
directly or individually, more than 10% of the |
voting securities of that
entity.
As used in
this subsection |
(a), the term "voting security" means a security that (1)
|
confers upon the
holder the right to vote for the election of |
members of the board of directors
or similar
governing body of |
the business or (2) is convertible into, or entitles the
holder |
to receive
upon its exercise, a security that confers such a |
right to vote. A general
partnership
interest is a voting |
security.
|
(b) Every bid and offer submitted to the State, every |
vendor's submission to a vendor portal, every and contract |
|
executed by the State and every subcontract subject to Section |
20-120 of this Code shall contain
a certification by the |
bidder, offeror, potential contractor, contractor, or |
subcontractor, respectively, that the bidder, offeror, |
respondent, potential contractor, contractor or the |
subcontractor and its
affiliate is not barred
from being |
awarded a contract or subcontract under this Section and
|
acknowledges that the chief procurement officer may declare the |
related contract void if
any of the certifications completed |
pursuant to this subsection (b) are false. If the false |
certification is made by a subcontractor, then the contractor's |
submitted bid or offer and the executed contract may not be |
declared void, unless the contractor refuses to terminate the |
subcontract upon the State's request after a finding that the |
subcontract's certification was false.
|
(Source: P.A. 96-493, eff. 1-1-10; 96-795, eff. 7-1-10 (see |
Section 5 of P.A. 96-793 for effective date of changes made by |
P.A. 96-795); 96-1000, eff. 7-2-10; 97-895, eff. 8-3-12.)
|
(30 ILCS 500/50-12)
|
Sec. 50-12. Collection and remittance of Illinois Use Tax.
|
(a) No person shall enter into a contract with a State |
agency or enter into a subcontract under this
Code
unless the |
person and all affiliates of the person collect and remit |
Illinois
Use Tax on all
sales of tangible personal property |
into the State of Illinois in accordance
with the
provisions of |
|
the Illinois Use Tax Act regardless of whether the person or
|
affiliate is a
"retailer maintaining a place of business within |
this State" as defined in
Section 2 of the
Use Tax Act. For |
purposes of this Section, the term "affiliate" means any
entity |
that (1)
directly, indirectly, or constructively controls |
another entity, (2) is
directly, indirectly, or
constructively |
controlled by another entity, or (3) is subject to the control |
of
a common
entity. For purposes of this subsection (a), an |
entity controls another entity
if it owns,
directly or |
individually, more than 10% of the voting securities of that |
entity.
As used in
this subsection (a), the term "voting |
security" means a security that (1)
confers upon the
holder the |
right to vote for the election of members of the board of |
directors
or similar
governing body of the business or (2) is |
convertible into, or entitles the
holder to receive
upon its |
exercise, a security that confers such a right to vote. A |
general
partnership
interest is a voting security.
|
(b) Every bid and offer submitted to the State, every |
submission to a vendor portal, every and contract executed by |
the State and every subcontract subject to Section 20-120 of |
this Code shall contain
a
certification by the bidder, offeror, |
potential contractor, contractor, or subcontractor, |
respectively, that the bidder, offeror, respondent, potential |
contractor, contractor, or subcontractor is not
barred from
|
bidding for or entering into a contract under subsection (a) of |
this Section
and
acknowledges that the chief procurement |
|
officer may declare
the
related contract void if any of the |
certifications completed pursuant to this subsection (b) are
|
false. If the false certification is made by a subcontractor, |
then the contractor's submitted bid or offer and the executed |
contract may not be declared void, unless the contractor |
refuses to terminate the subcontract upon the State's request |
after a finding that the subcontract's certification was false.
|
(Source: P.A. 96-795, eff. 7-1-10 (see Section 5 of P.A. 96-793 |
for the effective date of changes made by P.A. 96-795); 97-895, |
eff. 8-3-12.)
|
(30 ILCS 500/50-13)
|
Sec. 50-13. Conflicts of interest.
|
(a) Prohibition. It is unlawful for any person holding an
|
elective office in this State,
holding a seat in the General |
Assembly, or appointed to or
employed in any of the offices or
|
agencies of State government and who receives compensation for |
such employment
in excess of 60% of the salary of the Governor |
of the State of Illinois, or who
is an officer or employee of
|
the Capital Development
Board or the Illinois Toll Highway |
Authority, or who is the spouse
or minor child of any such
|
person to have or acquire any contract, or any direct pecuniary
|
interest in any contract therein,
whether for stationery, |
printing, paper, or any services,
materials, or supplies, that |
will be
wholly or partially satisfied by the payment of funds |
appropriated
by the General Assembly of
the State of Illinois |
|
or in any contract of the Capital
Development Board or the |
Illinois Toll
Highway Authority.
|
(b) Interests. It is unlawful for any firm, partnership,
|
association, or corporation, in
which any person listed in |
subsection (a) is entitled to receive (i) more than
7 1/2% of |
the total
distributable income or (ii) an amount in excess of |
the salary of the Governor,
to have or acquire any
such |
contract or direct pecuniary interest therein.
|
(c) Combined interests. It is unlawful for any firm, |
partnership,
association, or corporation, in which any person |
listed in subsection (a)
together with his or her spouse or |
minor children is entitled to receive (i)
more than 15%, in the |
aggregate, of the total distributable income or (ii) an
amount |
in excess of 2 times the salary of the Governor, to have or |
acquire any
such contract or direct pecuniary interest therein.
|
(c-5) Appointees and firms. In addition to any provisions |
of this Code,
the interests of certain
appointees and their |
firms are subject to Section 3A-35 of the Illinois
Governmental |
Ethics Act.
|
(d) Securities. Nothing in this Section invalidates the
|
provisions of any bond or other
security previously offered or |
to be offered for sale or sold by
or for the State of Illinois.
|
(e) Prior interests. This Section does not affect the
|
validity of any contract made
between the State and an officer |
or employee of the State or
member of the General Assembly,
his |
or her spouse, minor child, or other immediate family member |
|
living in
his or her residence or any
combination of those |
persons
if that contract was in
existence before his or her |
election or employment as an officer,
member, or employee. The
|
contract is voidable, however, if it cannot be completed within |
365 calendar
days after the officer, member,
or employee takes |
office or is employed.
|
(f) Exceptions.
|
(1) Public aid payments. This Section does not apply
to |
payments made for a
public aid recipient.
|
(2) Teaching. This Section does not apply to a
contract |
for personal services as
a teacher or school administrator |
between a member of the General
Assembly or his or her
|
spouse, or a State officer or employee or his or her |
spouse, and
any school district, public community college |
district, the University of
Illinois, Southern Illinois |
University, Illinois State University, Eastern
Illinois |
University, Northern Illinois University, Western Illinois |
University,
Chicago State University, Governor State |
University, or Northeastern Illinois
University.
|
(3) Ministerial duties. This Section does not apply to
|
a contract for personal
services of a wholly ministerial |
character, including but not
limited to services as a |
laborer, clerk,
typist, stenographer, page, bookkeeper, |
receptionist, or telephone
switchboard operator, made
by a |
spouse or minor child of an elective or appointive State
|
officer or employee or of a member
of the General Assembly.
|
|
(4) Child and family services. This Section does not
|
apply to payments made
to a member of the General Assembly, |
a State officer or employee,
his or her spouse or minor
|
child acting as a foster parent, homemaker, advocate, or |
volunteer
for or in behalf of a child or
family served by |
the Department of Children and Family Services.
|
(5) Licensed professionals. Contracts with licensed |
professionals,
provided they are competitively bid or part |
of a reimbursement program for
specific, customary goods |
and services through the Department of Children and
Family |
Services, the Department of Human Services,
the Department |
of Healthcare and Family Services, the Department of Public |
Health, or
the Department on Aging.
|
(g) Penalty. A person convicted of a violation of this |
Section is guilty of
a business offense and shall be fined not |
less than $1,000 nor more than
$5,000.
|
(Source: P.A. 95-331, eff. 8-21-07.)
|
(30 ILCS 500/50-14)
|
Sec. 50-14. Environmental Protection Act violations.
|
(a) Unless otherwise provided, no person or business found |
by a court or
the Pollution Control Board to have committed a |
willful or knowing violation of
the Environmental Protection |
Act shall do business with the State
of Illinois or any State |
agency or enter into a subcontract that is subject to this Code |
from the date of the order containing the
finding of violation |
|
until 5 years after that date, unless the person or
business |
can show that no person involved in the violation continues to |
have
any involvement with the business.
|
(b) A person or business otherwise barred from doing |
business with the
State of Illinois or any State agency or |
subcontracting under this Code by subsection (a) may be allowed |
to do
business with the State of Illinois or any State agency |
if it is shown that
there is no practicable alternative to the |
State to contracting with that
person or business.
|
(c) Every bid or offer submitted to the State, every and |
contract executed by the State , every submission to a vendor |
portal, and every subcontract subject to Section 20-120 of this |
Code shall contain
a certification by the bidder, offeror, |
potential contractor, contractor, or subcontractor, |
respectively, that the bidder, offeror, potential contractor, |
contractor, or subcontractor is
not barred from being awarded a |
contract or subcontract under this Section and acknowledges |
that the contracting State agency may declare the related
|
contract void if any of the certifications completed pursuant |
to this subsection (c) are
false. If the false certification is |
made by a subcontractor, then the contractor's submitted bid or |
offer and the executed contract may not be declared void, |
unless the contractor refuses to terminate the subcontract upon |
the State's request after a finding that the subcontract's |
certification was false.
|
(Source: P.A. 96-795, eff. 7-1-10 (see Section 5 of P.A. 96-793 |
|
for the effective date of changes made by P.A. 96-795); 97-895, |
eff. 8-3-12.)
|
(30 ILCS 500/50-20)
|
Sec. 50-20. Exemptions. The appropriate chief
procurement |
officer may file a request with the Executive Ethics Commission |
to exempt named individuals from the
prohibitions of
Section |
50-13 when, in his or her judgment, the public interest in
|
having
the
individual in the service of the State outweighs the |
public policy evidenced in
that Section. The Executive Ethics |
Commission may grant an exemption after a public hearing at |
which any person may present testimony. The chief procurement |
officer shall publish notice of the date, time, and location of |
the hearing in the online electronic Bulletin at least 14 |
calendar days prior to the hearing and provide notice to the |
individual subject to the waiver and the Procurement Policy |
Board. The Executive Ethics Commission shall also provide |
public notice of the date, time, and location of the hearing on |
its website. If the Commission grants an exemption, the |
exemption is effective only if it is filed with the
Secretary |
of State and the Comptroller prior to the execution of any |
contract and includes a statement setting forth
the name of the |
individual and all the pertinent facts that would make that
|
Section applicable, setting forth the reason for the exemption, |
and declaring
the individual exempted from that Section.
Notice |
of each exemption shall be published in the Illinois |
|
Procurement
Bulletin. A contract for which a waiver has been |
issued but has not been filed in accordance with this Section |
is voidable by the State. The changes to this Section made by |
this amendatory Act of the 96th General Assembly shall apply to |
exemptions granted on or after its effective date.
|
(Source: P.A. 96-795, eff. 7-1-10 (see Section 5 of P.A. 96-793 |
for the effective date of changes made by P.A. 96-795) .)
|
(30 ILCS 500/50-25)
|
Sec. 50-25. Inducement. Any person who offers or pays
any |
money or other valuable
thing to any person to induce him or |
her not to provide a submission to a vendor portal, bid , or |
submit an offer for a State
contract or as recompense for not
|
having bid on or submitted an offer for a State contract or |
provided a submission to a vendor portal is guilty of a Class 4 |
felony. Any
person who accepts any money
or other valuable |
thing for not bidding or submitting an offer for a State |
contract , not making a submission to a vendor portal, or
who |
withholds a bid , offer, or submission to vendor portal in
|
consideration of the promise for the payment of money or other
|
valuable thing is guilty of a
Class 4 felony.
|
(Source: P.A. 90-572, eff. 2-6-98.)
|
(30 ILCS 500/50-35) |
Sec. 50-35. Financial disclosure and potential conflicts |
of interest. |
|
(a) All bids and offers from responsive bidders , or |
offerors , vendors, or contractors with an annual value of
more |
than $50,000, and all submissions to a vendor portal, $25,000 |
shall be accompanied by disclosure of the financial
interests |
of the contractor, bidder, offeror, potential contractor, or |
contractor or proposer and each subcontractor to be used. In |
addition, all subcontracts identified as provided by Section |
20-120 of this Code with an annual value of
more than $50,000 |
shall be accompanied by disclosure of the financial
interests |
of each subcontractor. The financial disclosure of
each |
successful bidder, offeror, potential contractor, or |
contractor bidder or offeror and its subcontractors shall be |
incorporated as a material term of the contract and shall |
become
part of the publicly available contract or procurement |
file
maintained by the appropriate chief procurement officer. |
Each disclosure under this Section shall be signed and made |
under penalty of perjury by an authorized officer or employee |
on behalf of the bidder, offeror, potential contractor, |
contractor, or subcontractor bidder or offeror , and must be |
filed with the Procurement Policy Board. |
(b) Disclosure shall include any
ownership or distributive |
income share that is in excess of 5%, or an amount
greater than |
60% of the annual salary of the Governor, of the disclosing |
entity
or its parent entity, whichever is less, unless the |
contractor, bidder, offeror, potential contractor, contractor, |
or subcontractor
(i) is a
publicly traded entity subject to |
|
Federal 10K reporting, in which case it may
submit its 10K
|
disclosure in place of the prescribed disclosure, or (ii) is a |
privately held
entity that is exempt from Federal 10k reporting |
but has more than 100 200
shareholders, in which case it may |
submit the information that Federal 10k
reporting companies are |
required to report under 17 CFR 229.401 and list the
names of |
any person or entity holding any ownership share that is in |
excess of
5% in place of the prescribed disclosure. The form of |
disclosure shall
be prescribed by the applicable chief |
procurement officer and must include at
least the names,
|
addresses, and dollar or proportionate share of ownership of |
each person
identified in this Section, their instrument of |
ownership or beneficial
relationship, and notice of any |
potential conflict of interest resulting from
the current |
ownership or beneficial relationship of each individual person |
identified in
this Section having in addition any of the |
following relationships: |
(1) State employment, currently or in the previous 3 |
years, including
contractual employment of services. |
(2) State employment of spouse, father, mother, son, or |
daughter,
including
contractual employment for services in |
the previous 2 years. |
(3) Elective status; the holding of elective office of |
the State of
Illinois, the government of the United States, |
any unit of local government
authorized by the Constitution |
of the State of Illinois or the statutes of the
State of |
|
Illinois currently or in the previous 3 years. |
(4) Relationship to anyone holding elective office |
currently or in the
previous 2 years; spouse, father, |
mother, son, or daughter. |
(5) Appointive office; the holding of any appointive |
government office of
the State of Illinois, the United |
States of America, or any unit of local
government |
authorized by the Constitution of the State of Illinois or |
the
statutes of the State of Illinois, which office |
entitles the holder to
compensation in excess of expenses |
incurred in the discharge of that office
currently or in |
the previous 3 years. |
(6) Relationship to anyone holding appointive office |
currently or in the
previous 2 years; spouse, father, |
mother, son, or daughter. |
(7) Employment, currently or in the previous 3 years, |
as or by any
registered lobbyist of the State government. |
(8) Relationship to anyone who is or was a registered |
lobbyist in the
previous 2 years; spouse, father, mother, |
son, or daughter. |
(9) Compensated employment, currently or in the |
previous 3 years, by any
registered election or re-election |
committee registered with the Secretary of
State or any |
county clerk in the State of Illinois, or any political |
action
committee registered with either the Secretary of |
State or the Federal Board of
Elections. |
|
(10) Relationship to anyone; spouse, father, mother, |
son, or daughter; who
is or was a compensated employee in |
the last 2 years of any registered
election or re-election |
committee registered with the Secretary of State or any
|
county clerk in the State of Illinois, or any political |
action committee
registered with either the Secretary of |
State or the Federal Board of
Elections. |
(b-1) The disclosure required under this Section must also |
include the name and address of each lobbyist required to |
register under the Lobbyist Registration Act and other agent of |
the bidder , or offeror , potential contractor, contractor, or |
subcontractor who is not identified under subsections (a) and |
(b) and who has communicated, is communicating, or may |
communicate with any State officer or employee concerning the |
bid or offer. The disclosure under this subsection is a |
continuing obligation and must be promptly supplemented for |
accuracy throughout the process and throughout the term of the |
contract if the bid or offer is successful. |
(b-2) The disclosure required under this Section must also |
include, for each of the persons identified in subsection (b) |
or (b-1), each of the following that occurred within the |
previous 10 years: suspension or debarment from contracting |
with any governmental entity; professional licensure |
discipline; bankruptcies; adverse civil judgments and |
administrative findings; and criminal felony convictions. The |
disclosure under this subsection is a continuing obligation and |
|
must be promptly supplemented for accuracy throughout the |
process and throughout the term of the contract if the bid or |
offer is successful. |
(c) The disclosure in subsection (b) is not intended to |
prohibit or prevent
any
contract. The disclosure is meant to |
fully and publicly disclose any potential
conflict to the chief |
procurement officers, State purchasing officers, their
|
designees, and executive officers so they may adequately |
discharge their duty
to protect the State. |
(d) When a potential for a conflict of interest is |
identified, discovered, or reasonably suspected, the chief |
procurement officer or State procurement officer shall send the |
contract to the Procurement Policy Board. In accordance with |
the objectives of subsection (c), if the Procurement Policy |
Board finds evidence of a potential conflict of interest not |
originally disclosed by the bidder, offeror, potential |
contractor, contractor , or subcontractor, the Board shall |
provide written notice to the bidder, offeror, potential |
contractor, contractor , or subcontractor that is identified, |
discovered, or reasonably suspected of having a potential |
conflict of interest. The bidder, offeror, potential |
contractor, contractor , or subcontractor shall have 15 |
calendar days to respond in writing to the Board, and a hearing |
before the Board will be granted upon request by the bidder, |
offeror, potential contractor, contractor, contractor's or |
subcontractor subcontractor's request , at a date and time to be |
|
determined by the Board, but which in no event shall occur |
later than 15 calendar days after the date of the request. Upon |
consideration, the Board shall recommend, in writing, whether |
to allow or void the contract, bid, offer, or subcontract |
weighing the best interest of the State of Illinois. All |
recommendations shall be submitted to the Executive Ethics |
Commission. The Executive Ethics Commission must hold a public |
hearing within 30 calendar days after receiving the Board's |
recommendation if the Procurement Policy Board makes a |
recommendation to (i) void a contract or (ii) void a bid or |
offer and the chief procurement officer selected or intends to |
award the contract to the bidder , or offeror , or potential |
contractor . A chief procurement officer is prohibited from |
awarding a contract before a hearing if the Board |
recommendation does not support a bid or offer. The |
recommendation and proceedings of any hearing, if applicable, |
shall be available to the public. |
(e) These thresholds and disclosure do not relieve the |
chief procurement
officer, the State purchasing officer, or
|
their designees from reasonable care and diligence for any |
contract, bid,
offer, or submission to a vendor portal
or |
proposal . The chief procurement officer, the State purchasing |
officer, or
their designees shall be
responsible for using any |
reasonably known and publicly available information
to
|
discover any undisclosed potential conflict of interest and act |
to protect the
best interest of the State of Illinois. |
|
(f) Inadvertent or accidental failure to fully disclose |
shall render the
contract, bid, offer, proposal, subcontract, |
or relationship voidable by the chief procurement
officer if he |
or she deems it in
the best interest of the State of Illinois |
and, at his or her discretion, may
be cause for barring from |
future contracts, bids, offers, proposals, subcontracts, or
|
relationships with the State for a period of up to 2 years. |
(g) Intentional, willful, or material failure to disclose |
shall render the
contract, bid, offer, proposal, subcontract, |
or relationship voidable by the chief procurement
officer if he |
or she deems it in
the best interest of the State of Illinois |
and shall result in debarment from
future contracts, bids, |
offers, proposals, subcontracts, or relationships for a period |
of not less
than 2 years and not more than 10 years. |
Reinstatement after 2 years and
before 10 years must be |
reviewed and commented on in writing by the Governor
of the |
State of Illinois, or by an executive ethics board or |
commission he or
she
might designate. The comment shall be |
returned to the responsible chief
procurement officer who must
|
rule in writing whether and when to reinstate. |
(h) In addition, all disclosures shall note any other |
current or pending
contracts, bids, offers, proposals, |
subcontracts, leases, or other ongoing procurement |
relationships the bidder
bidding , offeror, potential |
contractor, contractor proposing, offering , or subcontractor |
subcontracting entity has with any other unit of State
|
|
government and shall clearly identify the unit and the |
contract, offer, proposal,
lease, or other relationship. |
(i) The contractor or bidder , offeror, potential |
contractor, or contractor has a continuing obligation to |
supplement the disclosure required by this Section throughout |
the bidding process or during the term of any contract , and |
during the vendor portal registration process . |
(Source: P.A. 96-795, eff. 7-1-10 (see Section 5 of P.A. 96-793 |
for the effective date of changes made by P.A. 96-795); 96-920, |
eff. 7-1-10; 97-490, eff. 8-22-11; 97-895, eff. 8-3-12.) |
(30 ILCS 500/50-36) |
Sec. 50-36. Disclosure of business in Iran. |
(a) As used in this Section:
|
"Business operations" means engaging in commerce
in any |
form in Iran, including, but not limited to,
acquiring, |
developing, maintaining, owning, selling,
possessing, leasing, |
or operating equipment, facilities,
personnel, products, |
services, personal property, real
property, or any other |
apparatus of business or commerce. |
"Company" means any sole proprietorship,
organization, |
association, corporation, partnership, joint
venture, limited |
partnership, limited liability partnership,
limited liability |
company, or other entity or business
association, including all |
wholly owned subsidiaries,
majority-owned subsidiaries, parent |
companies, or affiliates
of those entities or business |
|
associations, that exists for
the purpose of making profit. |
"Mineral-extraction activities" include exploring,
|
extracting, processing, transporting, or wholesale selling or
|
trading of elemental minerals or associated metal alloys or
|
oxides (ore), including gold, copper, chromium, chromite,
|
diamonds, iron, iron ore, silver, tungsten, uranium, and zinc. |
"Oil-related activities" include, but are not
limited to, |
owning rights to oil blocks; exporting,
extracting, producing, |
refining, processing, exploring for,
transporting, selling, or |
trading of oil; and constructing,
maintaining, or operating a |
pipeline, refinery, or other
oil-field infrastructure. The |
mere retail sale of gasoline and
related consumer products is |
not considered an oil-related
activity. |
"Petroleum resources" means petroleum, petroleum
|
byproducts, or natural gas. |
"Substantial action" means adopting, publicizing,
and |
implementing a formal plan to cease scrutinized business
|
operations within one year and to refrain from any such new
|
business operations. |
(b) Each bid or , offer , or proposal submitted for a State |
contract, other than a small purchase defined in Section 20-20, |
shall include a disclosure of whether or not the bidder, |
offeror, or proposing entity, or any of its corporate parents |
or subsidiaries, within the 24 months before submission of the |
bid or , offer , or proposal had
business operations that |
involved contracts with or provision
of supplies or services to |
|
the Government of Iran, companies
in which the Government of |
Iran has any direct or indirect
equity share, consortiums or |
projects commissioned by the
Government of Iran, or companies |
involved in consortiums or
projects commissioned by the |
Government of Iran and: |
(1) more than 10% of the company's revenues produced in |
or assets located in Iran involve oil-related activities or
|
mineral-extraction activities; less than 75% of the
|
company's revenues produced in or assets located in Iran |
involve contracts
with or provision of oil-related or |
mineral-extraction
products or services to the Government |
of Iran or a project or
consortium created exclusively by |
that government; and the
company has failed to take |
substantial action; or |
(2) the company has, on or after
August 5, 1996, made |
an investment of $20 million or more, or
any combination of |
investments of at least $10 million each
that in the |
aggregate equals or exceeds $20 million in any
12-month |
period, that directly or significantly contributes
to the |
enhancement of Iran's ability to develop petroleum
|
resources of Iran. |
(c) A bid or , offer , or proposal that does not include the |
disclosure required by subsection (b) may be given a period |
after the bid or offer is submitted to cure non-disclosure |
shall not be considered responsive . A chief procurement officer |
may consider the disclosure when evaluating the bid or , offer , |
|
or proposal or awarding the contract. |
(d) Each chief procurement officer shall provide the State |
Comptroller with the name of each entity disclosed under |
subsection (b) as doing business or having done business in |
Iran. The State Comptroller shall post that information on his |
or her official website.
|
(Source: P.A. 95-616, eff. 1-1-08.) |
(30 ILCS 500/50-37) |
Sec. 50-37. Prohibition of political contributions. |
(a) As used in this Section: |
The terms "contract", "State contract", and "contract |
with a State agency" each mean any contract, as defined in |
this Code, between a business entity and a State agency let |
or awarded pursuant to this Code. The terms "contract", |
"State contract", and "contract with a State agency" do not |
include cost reimbursement contracts; purchase of care |
agreements as defined in Section 1-15.68 of this Code; |
contracts for projects eligible for full or partial |
federal-aid funding reimbursements authorized by the |
Federal Highway Administration; grants, including but are |
not limited to grants for job training or transportation; |
and grants, loans, or tax credit agreements for economic |
development purposes. |
"Contribution" means a contribution as defined in |
Section 9-1.4 of the Election Code. |
|
"Declared candidate" means a person who has filed a |
statement of candidacy and petition for nomination or |
election in the principal office of the State Board of |
Elections. |
"State agency" means and includes all boards, |
commissions, agencies, institutions, authorities, and |
bodies politic and corporate of the State, created by or in |
accordance with the Illinois Constitution or State |
statute, of the executive branch of State government and |
does include colleges, universities,
public employee |
retirement systems, and institutions under the |
jurisdiction of the governing boards of the University of |
Illinois, Southern Illinois University, Illinois State |
University, Eastern Illinois University, Northern Illinois |
University, Western Illinois University, Chicago State |
University, Governors State University, Northeastern |
Illinois University, and the Illinois Board of Higher |
Education. |
"Officeholder" means the Governor, Lieutenant |
Governor, Attorney General, Secretary of State, |
Comptroller, or Treasurer. The Governor shall be |
considered the officeholder responsible for awarding all |
contracts by all officers and employees of, and potential |
contractors vendors and others doing business with, |
executive branch State agencies under the jurisdiction of |
the Executive Ethics Commission and not within the |
|
jurisdiction of the Attorney General, the Secretary of |
State, the Comptroller, or the Treasurer. |
"Sponsoring entity" means a sponsoring entity as |
defined in Section 9-3 of the Election Code. |
"Affiliated person" means (i) any person with any |
ownership
interest or distributive share of the bidding or |
contracting business entity in excess of 7.5%, (ii) |
executive employees of the bidding or contracting business |
entity, and (iii) the spouse of any such persons. |
"Affiliated person" does not include a person prohibited by |
federal law from making contributions or expenditures in |
connection with a federal, state, or local election. |
"Affiliated entity" means (i) any corporate parent and |
each operating subsidiary of the bidding or contracting |
business entity, (ii) each operating subsidiary of the |
corporate parent of the bidding or contracting business |
entity, (iii) any organization recognized by the United |
States Internal Revenue Service as a tax-exempt |
organization described in Section 501(c) of the Internal |
Revenue Code of 1986 (or any successor provision of federal |
tax law) established by the bidding or contracting business |
entity, any affiliated entity of that business entity, or |
any affiliated person of that business entity, or (iv) any |
political committee for which the bidding or contracting |
business entity, or any 501(c) organization described in |
item (iii) related to that business entity, is the |
|
sponsoring entity. "Affiliated entity" does not include an |
entity prohibited by federal law from making contributions |
or expenditures in connection with a federal, state, or |
local election. |
"Business entity" means any entity doing business for |
profit, whether organized as a corporation, partnership, |
sole proprietorship, limited liability company or |
partnership, or otherwise. |
"Executive employee" means (i) the President, |
Chairman, or Chief Executive Officer of a business entity |
and any other individual that fulfills equivalent duties as |
the President, Chairman of the Board, or Chief Executive |
Officer of a business entity; and (ii) any employee of a |
business entity whose compensation is determined directly, |
in whole or in part, by the award or payment of contracts |
by a State agency to the entity employing the employee. A |
regular salary that is paid irrespective of the award or |
payment of a contract with a State agency shall not |
constitute "compensation" under item (ii) of this |
definition. "Executive employee" does not include any |
person prohibited by federal law from making contributions |
or expenditures in connection with a federal, state, or |
local election. |
(b) Any business entity whose contracts with State |
agencies, in the aggregate, annually total more than $50,000, |
and any affiliated entities or affiliated persons of such |
|
business entity, are prohibited from making any contributions |
to any political committees established to promote the |
candidacy of (i) the officeholder responsible for awarding the |
contracts or (ii) any other declared candidate for that office. |
This prohibition shall be effective for the duration of the |
term of office of the incumbent officeholder awarding the |
contracts or for a period of 2 years following the expiration |
or termination of the contracts, whichever is longer. |
(c) Any business entity whose aggregate pending bids and |
offers and proposals on State contracts total more than |
$50,000, or whose aggregate pending bids and offers on and |
proposals on State contracts combined with the business |
entity's aggregate annual total value of State contracts exceed |
$50,000, and any affiliated entities or affiliated persons of |
such business entity, are prohibited from making any |
contributions to any political committee
established to |
promote the candidacy of the officeholder responsible for |
awarding the contract on which the business entity has |
submitted a bid or offer or proposal during the period |
beginning on the date the invitation for bids , or request for |
proposals , or any other procurement opportunity is issued and |
ending on the day after the date the contract is awarded. |
(c-5) For the purposes of the prohibitions under |
subsections (b) and (c) of this Section, (i) any contribution |
made to a political committee established to promote the |
candidacy of the Governor or a declared candidate for the |
|
office of Governor shall also be considered as having been made |
to a political committee established to promote the candidacy |
of the Lieutenant Governor, in the case of the Governor, or the |
declared candidate for Lieutenant Governor having filed a joint |
petition, or write-in declaration of intent, with the declared |
candidate for Governor, as applicable, and (ii) any |
contribution made to a political committee established to |
promote the candidacy of the Lieutenant Governor or a declared |
candidate for the office of Lieutenant Governor shall also be |
considered as having been made to a political committee |
established to promote the candidacy of the Governor, in the |
case of the Lieutenant Governor, or the declared candidate for |
Governor having filed a joint petition, or write-in declaration |
of intent, with the declared candidate for Lieutenant Governor, |
as applicable. |
(d) All contracts between State agencies and a business |
entity that violate subsection (b) or (c) shall be voidable |
under Section 50-60. If a business entity violates subsection |
(b) 3 or more times within a 36-month period, then all |
contracts between State agencies and that business entity shall |
be void, and that business entity shall not bid or respond to |
any invitation to bid or request for proposals from any State |
agency or otherwise enter into any contract with any State |
agency for 3 years from the date of the last violation. A |
notice of each violation and the penalty imposed shall be |
published in both the Procurement Bulletin and the Illinois |
|
Register. |
(e) Any political committee that has received a |
contribution in violation of subsection (b) or (c) shall pay an |
amount equal to the value of the contribution to the State no |
more than 30 calendar days after notice of the violation |
concerning the contribution appears in the Illinois Register. |
Payments received by the State
pursuant to this subsection |
shall be deposited into the general revenue
fund.
|
(Source: P.A. 96-795, eff. 7-1-10 (see Section 5 of P.A. 96-793 |
for the effective date of changes made by P.A. 96-795); 96-848, |
eff. 1-1-10; 97-411, eff. 8-16-11.) |
(30 ILCS 500/50-38) |
Sec. 50-38. Lobbying restrictions. |
(a) A person or business that is let or awarded a contract |
is not entitled to receive any payment, compensation, or other |
remuneration from the State to compensate the person or |
business for any expenses related to travel, lodging, or meals |
that are paid by the person or business to any officer, agent, |
employee, consultant, independent contractor, director, |
partner, manager, or shareholder. |
(b) Any bidder , or offeror , potential contractor, or |
contractor on a State contract that hires a person required to |
register under the Lobbyist Registration Act to assist in |
obtaining a contract shall (i) disclose all costs, fees, |
compensation, reimbursements, and other remunerations paid or |
|
to be paid to the lobbyist related to the contract, (ii) not |
bill or otherwise cause the State of Illinois to pay for any of |
the lobbyist's costs, fees, compensation, reimbursements, or |
other remuneration, and (iii) sign a verification certifying |
that none of the lobbyist's costs, fees, compensation, |
reimbursements, or other remuneration were billed to the State. |
This information, along with all supporting documents, shall be |
filed with the agency awarding the contract and with the |
Secretary of State. The chief procurement officer shall post |
this information, together with the contract award notice, in |
the online Procurement Bulletin. |
(c) Ban on contingency fee. No person or entity shall |
retain a person or entity required to register under the |
Lobbyist Registration Act to attempt to influence the outcome |
of a procurement decision made under this Code for compensation |
contingent in whole or in part upon the decision or |
procurement. Any person who violates this subsection is guilty |
of a business offense and shall be fined not more than $10,000. |
(Source: P.A. 96-795, eff. 7-1-10 (see Section 5 of P.A. 96-793 |
for the effective date of P.A. 96-795); 96-920, eff. 7-1-10.) |
(30 ILCS 500/50-39) |
Sec. 50-39. Procurement communications reporting |
requirement. |
(a) Any written or oral communication received by a State |
employee who, by the nature of his or her duties, has the |
|
authority to participate personally and substantially in the |
decision to award a State contract and that imparts or requests |
material information or makes a material argument regarding |
potential action concerning an active procurement matter, |
including, but not limited to, an application, a contract, or a |
project, shall be reported to the Procurement Policy Board, |
and, with respect to the Illinois Power Agency, by the |
initiator of the communication, and may be reported also by the |
recipient. |
Any person communicating orally, in writing, |
electronically, or otherwise with the Director or any person |
employed by, or associated with, the Illinois Power Agency to |
impart, solicit, or transfer any information related to the |
content of any power procurement plan, the manner of conducting |
any power procurement process, the procurement of any power |
supply, or the method or structure of contracting with power |
suppliers must disclose to the Procurement Policy Board the |
full nature, content, and extent of any such communication in |
writing by submitting a report with the following information: |
(1) The names of any party to the communication. |
(2) The date on which the communication occurred. |
(3) The time at which the communication occurred. |
(4) The duration
of the communication. |
(5) The method (written, oral, etc.) of the |
communication. |
(6) A summary of the substantive content
of the |
|
communication. |
These communications do not include the following: (i) |
statements by a person publicly made in a public forum; (ii) |
statements regarding matters of procedure and practice, such as |
format, the number of copies required, the manner of filing, |
and the status of a matter; (iii) statements made by a State |
employee of the agency to the agency head or other employees of |
that agency, to the employees of the Executive Ethics |
Commission, or to an employee of another State agency who, |
through the communication, is either (a) exercising his or her |
experience or expertise in the subject matter of the particular |
procurement in the normal course of business, for official |
purposes, and at the initiation of the purchasing agency or the |
appropriate State purchasing officer, or (b) exercising |
oversight, supervisory, or management authority over the |
procurement in the normal course of business and as part of |
official responsibilities; (iv) unsolicited communications |
providing general information about products, services, or |
industry best practices before those products or services |
become involved in a procurement matter; (v) communications |
received in response to procurement solicitations, including, |
but not limited to, vendor responses to a request for |
information, request for proposal, request for qualifications, |
invitation for bid, or a small purchase, sole source, or |
emergency solicitation, or questions and answers posted to the |
Illinois Procurement Bulletin to supplement the procurement |
|
action, provided that the communications are made in accordance |
with the instructions contained in the procurement |
solicitation, procedures, or guidelines; (vi) communications |
that are privileged, protected, or confidential under law; and |
(vii) communications that are part of a formal procurement |
process as set out by statute, rule, or the solicitation, |
guidelines, or procedures, including, but not limited to, the |
posting of procurement opportunities, the process for |
approving a procurement business case or its equivalent, fiscal |
approval, submission of bids, the finalizing of contract terms |
and conditions with an awardee or apparent awardee, and similar |
formal procurement processes. The provisions of this Section |
shall not apply to communications regarding the administration |
and implementation of an existing contract, except |
communications regarding change orders or the renewal or |
extension of a contract. |
(b) The report required by subsection (a) shall be |
submitted monthly and include at least the following: (i) the |
date and time of each communication; (ii) the identity of each |
person from whom the written or oral communication was |
received, the individual or entity represented by that person, |
and any action the person requested or recommended; (iii) the |
identity and job title of the person to whom each communication |
was made; (iv) if a response is made, the identity and job |
title of the person making each response; (v) a detailed |
summary of the points made by each person involved in the |
|
communication; (vi) the duration of the communication; (vii) |
the location or locations of all persons involved in the |
communication and, if the communication occurred by telephone, |
the telephone numbers for the callers and recipients of the |
communication; and (viii) any other pertinent information. No |
trade secrets or other proprietary or confidential information |
shall be included in any communication reported to the |
Procurement Policy Board. |
(c) Additionally, when an oral communication made by a |
person required to register under the Lobbyist Registration Act |
is received by a State employee that is covered under this |
Section, all individuals who initiate or participate in the |
oral communication shall submit a written report to that State |
employee that memorializes the communication and includes, but |
is not limited to, the items listed in subsection (b). |
(d) The Procurement Policy Board shall make each report |
submitted pursuant to this Section available on its website |
within 7 calendar days after its receipt of the report. The |
Procurement Policy Board may promulgate rules to ensure |
compliance with this Section. |
(e) The reporting requirements shall also be conveyed |
through ethics training under the State Officials and Employees |
Ethics Act. An employee who knowingly and intentionally |
violates this Section shall be subject to suspension or |
discharge. The Executive Ethics Commission shall promulgate |
rules, including emergency rules, to implement this Section. |
|
(f) This Section becomes operative on January 1, 2011. |
(g) For purposes of this Section: |
"Active procurement matter" means a procurement process |
beginning with requisition or determination of need by an |
agency and continuing through the publication of an award |
notice or other completion of a final procurement action, the |
resolution of any protests, and the expiration of any protest |
or Procurement Policy Board review period, if applicable. |
"Active procurement matter" also includes communications |
relating to change orders, renewals, or extensions. |
"Material information" means information that a reasonable |
person would deem important in determining his or her course of |
action and pertains to significant issues, including, but not |
limited to, price, quantity, and terms of payment or |
performance. |
"Material argument" means a communication that a |
reasonable person would believe was made for the purpose of |
influencing a decision relating to a procurement matter. |
"Material argument" does not include general information about |
products, services, or industry best practices or a response to |
a communication initiated by an employee of the State for the |
purposes of providing information to evaluate new products, |
trends, services, or technologies. |
(Source: P.A. 96-795, eff. 7-1-10 (see Section 5 of P.A. 96-793 |
for the effective date of changes made by P.A. 96-795); 96-920, |
eff. 7-1-10; 97-333, eff. 8-12-11; 97-618, eff. 10-26-11; |
|
97-895, eff. 8-3-12.)
|
(30 ILCS 500/50-40)
|
Sec. 50-40. Reporting anticompetitive practices. When, for |
any reason,
any
vendor, bidder, offeror, potential contractor, |
contractor, chief procurement officer, State purchasing
|
officer, designee, elected official, or State
employee |
suspects collusion or other anticompetitive practice among any
|
bidders, offerors, potential contractors, contractors, |
proposers, or employees of the State, a notice
of the relevant |
facts shall be transmitted to the Attorney General and the
|
chief procurement officer.
|
(Source: P.A. 90-572, eff. 2-6-98.)
|
(30 ILCS 500/50-45)
|
Sec. 50-45. Confidentiality. Any chief procurement |
officer, State
purchasing officer, designee, or executive |
officer
who willfully uses or allows the use of specifications,
|
competitive solicitation bid documents, proprietary |
competitive information, proposals,
contracts, or selection |
information to compromise the fairness or integrity of
the |
procurement , bidding, or contract process shall be subject to |
immediate
dismissal, regardless of the Personnel Code, any |
contract, or any
collective bargaining agreement, and may in |
addition be subject to criminal
prosecution.
|
(Source: P.A. 90-572, eff. 2-6-98.)
|
|
(30 ILCS 500/50-70)
|
Sec. 50-70. Additional provisions. This Code is subject
to |
applicable provisions of
the following Acts:
|
(1) Article 33E of the Criminal Code of 2012;
|
(2) the Illinois Human Rights Act;
|
(3) the Discriminatory Club Act;
|
(4) the Illinois Governmental Ethics Act;
|
(5) the State Prompt Payment Act;
|
(6) the Public Officer Prohibited Activities Act;
|
(7) the Drug Free Workplace Act;
|
(8) the Illinois Power Agency Act;
|
(9)
the Employee Classification Act; and
|
(10) the State Officials and Employees Ethics Act ; and |
(11) the Department of Employment Security Law . |
(Source: P.A. 96-795, eff. 7-1-10 (see Section 5 of P.A. 96-793 |
for the effective date of changes made by P.A. 96-795); |
97-1150, eff. 1-25-13.)
|
(30 ILCS 500/55-10)
|
Sec. 55-10. Exclusive exercise of powers. On and after
120 |
calendar days following the effective date of this Act, the
|
powers granted under this Code shall be exercised exclusively |
as
granted under this Code, and
no State agency may |
concurrently exercise any such power, unless
specifically |
authorized
otherwise by a later enacted law. This Code is not |
|
intended to
impair any contract entered into
before the |
effective date of this Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 90-572, eff. date - See Sec. 99-5.)
|
Section 10. The Small Business Contracts Act is amended by |
changing Section 5 and by adding Sections 12 and 25 as follows: |
(30 ILCS 503/5)
|
Sec. 5. Definitions. For the purposes of this Act, the |
following terms shall have the following definitions: |
"Small business" means a small business as defined in the |
Illinois Procurement Code. |
"State contract" means a State contract, as defined in the |
Illinois Procurement Code, funded with State or federal funds, |
whether competitively bid or negotiated. |
"State official or agency" means a department, officer, |
board, commission, institution, or body politic or corporate of |
the State.
|
"Subcontract" means a subcontract, as defined in the |
Illinois Procurement Code, funded with State or federal funds, |
whether competitively bid or negotiated. |
(Source: P.A. 97-307, eff. 8-11-11.) |
(30 ILCS 503/12 new) |
Sec. 12. Chief procurement officers; presentation. During |
each fiscal year, the chief procurement officers appointed |
|
pursuant to Section 10-20 of the Illinois Procurement Code, |
individually or as a group, may provide presentations at which |
small businesses may learn about the contracting process and |
how to apply for contracts. |
(30 ILCS 503/25 new) |
Sec. 25. Rulemaking. Subject to the rule making provision |
of the Illinois Administrative Procedure Act, each chief |
procurement officer may adopt rules to implement and administer |
this Act. |
Section 15. The Governmental Joint Purchasing Act is |
amended by changing Sections 1, 3, and 4 as follows:
|
(30 ILCS 525/1) (from Ch. 85, par. 1601)
|
Sec. 1.
For the purposes of this Act, "governmental unit" |
means State of
Illinois, any State agency as defined in Section |
1-15.100 of the Illinois Procurement Code, officers of the |
State of Illinois, any public authority which has the power to |
tax, or
any other public entity created by statute.
|
(Source: P.A. 86-769.)
|
(30 ILCS 525/3) (from Ch. 85, par. 1603)
|
Sec. 3. Conduct of competitive procurement selection . |
Under any agreement of governmental units that desire to make |
joint
purchases pursuant to subsection (a) of Section 2, one of |
|
the governmental units shall conduct the competitive |
procurement selection process.
Where the State of Illinois is a |
party to the joint purchase agreement, the
appropriate chief |
procurement officer shall conduct or authorize the competitive |
procurement selection process. Expenses of such competitive |
procurement selection process may be shared by the |
participating
governmental units in proportion to the amount of |
personal property,
supplies or services each unit purchases.
|
When the State of Illinois is a party to the joint
purchase |
agreement pursuant to subsection (a) of Section 2, the |
acceptance of responses to the competitive procurement |
selection process shall be in
accordance with the Illinois |
Procurement Code and
rules promulgated under that Code. When |
the State of
Illinois is not a party to the joint purchase |
agreement, the
acceptance of responses to the competitive |
procurement selection process shall be governed by the |
agreement.
|
When the State of Illinois is a party to a joint purchase |
agreement pursuant to subsection (a-5) of Section 2, the State |
may act as the lead state or as a participant state. When the |
State of Illinois is the lead state, all such joint purchases |
shall be conducted in accordance with the Illinois Procurement |
Code. When Illinois is a participant state, all such joint |
purchases shall be conducted in accordance with the procurement |
laws of the lead state; provided that all such joint |
procurements must be by competitive solicitation process. All |
|
resulting awards shall be published in the appropriate volume |
of the Illinois Procurement Bulletin as may be required by |
Illinois law governing publication of the solicitation, |
protest, and award of Illinois State contracts. Contracts |
resulting from a joint purchase shall contain all provisions |
required by Illinois law and rule. |
The personal
property, supplies or services involved shall |
be distributed or rendered
directly to each governmental unit |
taking part in the purchase. The person
selling the personal |
property, supplies or services may bill each
governmental unit |
separately for its proportionate share of the cost of the
|
personal property, supplies or services purchased.
|
The credit or liability of each governmental unit shall |
remain separate
and distinct. Disputes between bidders and |
governmental units shall be resolved
between the immediate |
parties.
|
(Source: P.A. 96-584, eff. 1-1-10; 97-895, eff. 8-3-12.)
|
(30 ILCS 525/4) (from Ch. 85, par. 1604)
|
Sec. 4. Bids , offers, and small purchases and proposals . |
The purchases of all personal property, supplies and services |
under
this Act , except for small purchases, shall be based on |
competitive solicitations and shall follow the same procedures |
used for competitive solicitations made pursuant to the |
Illinois Procurement Code . For purchases pursuant to |
subsection (a) of Section 2, bids and offers and proposals |
|
shall be
solicited by public notice inserted at least once in a |
newspaper of general
circulation in one of the counties where |
the materials are to be used and
at least 5 calendar days |
before the final date of submitting bids or offers or |
proposals . Where
the State of Illinois is a party to the joint |
purchase agreement, public
notice soliciting the bids or offers |
shall be published in the appropriate volume of the Illinois |
Procurement Bulletin. Such notice shall include a general |
description of the personal
property, supplies or services to |
be purchased and shall state where all
blanks and |
specifications may be obtained and the time and place for the
|
opening of bids and offers and proposals . The governmental unit |
conducting the competitive procurement selection process may |
also
solicit sealed bids or offers or proposals by sending |
requests by mail to potential contractors prospective |
suppliers
and by posting notices on a public bulletin board in |
its office. Small purchases pursuant to this Section shall |
follow the same procedure used for small purchases in Section |
20-20 of the Illinois Procurement Code.
|
All purchases, orders or contracts shall be awarded to the |
lowest
responsible bidder or highest-ranked offeror proposer , |
taking into consideration the qualities of the articles
or |
services supplied, their conformity with the specifications, |
their
suitability to the requirements of the participating |
governmental units and
the delivery terms.
|
Where the State of Illinois is not a party, all bids or |
|
offers or proposals may be rejected and
new bids or offers or |
proposals solicited if one or more of the participating |
governmental units
believes the public interest may be served |
thereby. Each bid or offer, or proposal, with the name
of the |
bidder or offeror, or proposer, shall be entered on a record, |
which record with the
successful bid or offer, or proposal |
indicated thereon shall, after the award of the purchase or
|
order or contract, be open to public inspection. A copy of all |
contracts
shall be filed with the purchasing office or clerk or |
secretary of each
participating governmental unit.
|
(Source: P.A. 96-584, eff. 1-1-10; 97-895, eff. 8-3-12.)
|
Section 20. The Discriminatory Club Act is amended by |
changing Section 2 as follows:
|
(775 ILCS 25/2) (from Ch. 68, par. 102)
|
Sec. 2.
No private organization which sells goods or |
services to the
State pursuant to the The Illinois Procurement |
Code Purchasing Act , nor any private organization
which |
receives any award or grant from the State, nor any public body |
may
pay any dues or fees on behalf of its employees or agents |
or may subsidize
or otherwise reimburse them for payments of |
their dues or fees to any
discriminating club. The Illinois |
Department of Human Rights shall
enforce this Section.
|
(Source: P.A. 85-909.)
|