Rep. Maurice A. West, II

Filed: 4/14/2026

 

 


 

 


 
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1
AMENDMENT TO HOUSE BILL 624

2    AMENDMENT NO. ______. Amend House Bill 624 by replacing
3everything after the enacting clause with the following:
 
4    "Section 1. Short title. This Act may be cited as the Home
5for Good Act.
 
6    Section 5. Findings.
7    (a) The General Assembly recognizes the following:
8        (1) The Illinois prison system releases 15,000 people
9    each year, but without a cogent and unified statewide
10    system to support housing security and reduce the risk of
11    recidivism.
12        (2) A 2025 Loyola University Chicago Study found that
13    between 66% and 80% of individuals incarcerated in the
14    Illinois Department of Corrections experienced housing
15    instability or homelessness within 3 years prior to their
16    incarceration, making them at risk of homelessness after

 

 

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1    prison as well.
2        (3) Returning residents often struggle to access
3    housing and stable jobs because of State laws and policies
4    that permit housing discrimination against people with
5    records. For example, the Illinois Human Rights Act only
6    protects people with arrest records from housing-related
7    discrimination, but offers no such protections to persons
8    with conviction records.
9        (4) The current U.S. Department of Housing and Urban
10    Development policy on homelessness also creates barriers
11    that prevent formerly incarcerated individuals from
12    accessing permanent housing programs through the homeless
13    system.
14        (5) A 2023 study of the Illinois Criminal Justice
15    Information Authority found that formerly incarcerated
16    people have an average unemployment rate of 45% and lower
17    annual wages, with Black individuals who are formerly
18    incarcerated having the highest rates of unemployment.
19        (6) As a result, many people cannot comply with the
20    conditions of release, or they turn to the underground
21    economy to support themselves and their families.
22        (7) Research shows that housing instability,
23    homelessness, unemployment, and low wages are among the
24    factors that contribute to the nearly 40% of previously
25    incarcerated people returning to prison within 3 years.
26        (8) According to a Spring 2025 Illinois Sentencing

 

 

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1    Policy Advisory Council report, Illinois taxpayers already
2    pay $89,408 annually for each person incarcerated in State
3    prisons.
4        (9) When a person returns to prison, the total cost
5    rises to $200,000, including direct and indirect costs,
6    resulting in unnecessary and expensive costs for all
7    Illinoisans.
8        (10) The State government has a responsibility to
9    increase community safety and individual and family
10    well-being by addressing the housing needs of persons
11    leaving incarceration.
12        (11) Affordable, safe, and stable housing is a
13    fundamental necessity for successful reentry and family
14    stability.
15        (12) Affordable, safe, and stable housing for
16    returning residents also improves and promotes public
17    safety.
18        (13) Without a dedicated commitment of affordable,
19    safe, and stable housing providing a mix of transitional
20    and permanent affordable housing that is informed by the
21    housing needs and policy perspectives of returning
22    residents, the State is failing to meet the needs of its
23    residents and communities.
24    (b) The General Assembly also recognizes that there are
25several independent strategies in place now that increase
26access to safe, affordable housing for returning residents and

 

 

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1improve and promote public safety, including:
2        (1) The Illinois Housing Development Authority (IHDA),
3    as administrator of the Rental Housing Support Program,
4    created the Re-Entry Program, providing 81 Reentry Rental
5    Housing Support Program subsidies across the State with
6    the support of housing navigators who build relationships
7    with landlords and connect returning residents to
8    resources to support their success.
9        (2) IHDA's Housing for Justice Involved Individuals
10    Program provides grants to community-based organizations
11    to acquire, build, or rehabilitate housing for the purpose
12    of creating transitional reentry housing beds across the
13    State, resulting in over 500 beds statewide.
14        (3) IHDA's Housing Task Force added "justice-involved
15    individuals" as a priority population for IHDA's 2026
16    Annual Comprehensive Housing Plan.
17        (4) The Cannabis Regulation and Tax Act created the
18    Restore, Reinvest, and Renew (R3) program, which reinvests
19    a portion of cannabis tax revenue into communities in
20    order to reduce gun violence through intervention and
21    prevention, improve reentry and diversion services for
22    people involved with the criminal justice system, provide
23    access to legal representation and advice, encourage
24    investment and economic growth, enhance youth development,
25    and support programs that improve the social determinants
26    of health.

 

 

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1        (5) Through the 2026 R3 Notice of Funding Opportunity
2    (CSFA Number 546-00-2378), the Illinois Criminal Justice
3    Information Authority and the R3 Board have committed up
4    to $35,000,000 as a set aside for reentry services, civil
5    legal aid services, and economic development in order to
6    provide returning residents with support and economic
7    opportunities.
8    (c) It is the intent of the General Assembly to codify into
9law a comprehensive and unified statewide reentry program
10incorporating the existing reentry programs of the Illinois
11Housing Development Authority and the Illinois Criminal
12Justice Information Authority that:
13        (1) will meet a returning resident's housing needs and
14    is community-based;
15        (2) includes ongoing active involvement by formerly
16    incarcerated persons;
17        (3) provides a mix of transitional and permanent
18    affordable housing units, rental subsidies, and reentry
19    services supported by sustained and adequate funding; and
20        (4) will have a positive long-term return on
21    investment for this State.
 
22    Section 10. Definitions. In this Act:
23    "Advisory Committee" means the Home for Good Advisory
24Committee.
25    "Community-based organizations" means non-profit

 

 

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1organizations delivering housing and other services to those
2reentering from incarceration and who are eligible to receive
3grants from Illinois state agencies.
4    "ICJIA" means the Illinois Criminal Justice Information
5Authority.
6    "IDOC" means the Illinois Department of Corrections.
7    "IHDA" means the Illinois Housing Development Authority.
8    "Institute" means the Home for Good Institute.
9    "Program" means the Home for Good Program.
10    "Targeted population" means persons released from an IDOC
11facility on or after January 1, 2027 who shall be eligible to
12enroll in the Program for up to 5 years from their release
13date.
 
14    Section 15. Home for Good Program. The Home for Good
15Program is created as a statewide coordinated program designed
16to provide housing and services to the targeted population.
17The Program shall contain the following elements:
18        (1) Beginning January 1, 2027, IHDA shall be
19    responsible for providing appropriate resources to
20    potential applicants to acquire, develop, and rehabilitate
21    permanent affordable housing units and transitional
22    housing units that are designated exclusively for the
23    targeted population. The granting and application process
24    shall follow the existing program model of the Housing for
25    Justice Involved Individuals Program. IHDA shall also be

 

 

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1    responsible for providing site-based rental housing
2    subsidies to community-based organizations that work with
3    the targeted population which may be used to enter into
4    lease agreements and master lease agreements for the
5    purpose of providing housing for program participants and
6    tenant-based rental subsidies.
7        (2) Beginning January 1, 2027, ICJIA shall provide
8    appropriate resources to community-based organizations who
9    work with the targeted population. These resources shall
10    be used to provide case management and reentry navigation
11    services to Program participants. In addition, these
12    resources shall be used to make supportive services
13    available to Program participants. Services may include
14    housing and related services, physical and behavioral
15    health, education, family reunification and relationship
16    building, transportation, job training, acquiring vital
17    documents, and meeting basic needs.
18        (3) Beginning January 1, 2027, the Executive Director
19    of ICJIA shall ensure that regional networks of
20    participating community-based organizations and housing
21    providers are established for the Program to collaborate
22    and provide services and housing to the targeted
23    population.
24        (4) Beginning January 1, 2027, the Program shall
25    require that a housing needs assessment tool designed to
26    determine housing and support services needs is

 

 

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1    administered to all individuals who are exiting IDOC
2    custody within the next 12 to 18 months. At least 18 months
3    prior to their release date, individuals must be informed
4    of the housing needs assessment tool and their right to
5    opt out of participation. IDOC shall make all reasonable
6    efforts to ensure that all individuals who do not opt out
7    of participation are able to complete the housing needs
8    assessment. The assessment shall be administered by a
9    community-based organization with demonstrable expertise
10    in reentry services, behavioral health, and permanent and
11    transitional affordable housing which shall be given no
12    less than monthly access to IDOC facilities for the
13    purposes of administering the housing needs assessment
14    tool and conducting prerelease reentry planning and
15    service delivery. For individuals exiting IDOC prior to
16    the completion of the housing needs assessment tool, IDOC
17    shall provide the contact information for the
18    community-based organizations administering the housing
19    needs assessment tool. Community-based organizations
20    administering the housing needs assessment tool shall make
21    all reasonable efforts to complete the tool for
22    individuals who have already exited IDOC. The housing
23    needs assessment shall determine an individual's
24    vulnerability to housing instability or homelessness, and
25    the assessment shall identify the individual's behavioral
26    health needs. The purpose of the behavioral health element

 

 

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1    of the assessment is to help potential participants
2    successfully secure housing and shall not be used as a
3    reason to exclude potential participants from the Program.
4        (5) The Interagency Reentry Workgroup shall be created
5    and designed to serve the housing and support services
6    needs of the targeted population by implementing and
7    coordinating the activities of the Program among the State
8    agencies involved. The Workgroup's activities shall be
9    informed by people who have experienced reentry. The
10    Workgroup shall be chaired by the Executive Director of
11    ICJIA or his or her designee. Members of the Workgroup
12    shall include the Director of IDOC, or his or her
13    designee, and the Executive Director of IHDA, or his or
14    her designee. The chair may add other agency leaders or
15    their designees to the Workgroup as needed.
16        (6) On January 1, 2027, or as soon thereafter as
17    reasonably possible, the Executive Director of IHDA shall
18    create the Home for Good Institute. The Home for Good
19    Institute shall provide training and technical assistance
20    to community-based organizations who intend to acquire,
21    develop, rehabilitate, or operate permanent and
22    transitional housing units for the targeted population.
23    Community-based organizations that successfully complete
24    the training from the Institute shall be awarded
25    additional points on any applications for funding from
26    IHDA, including the Home for Good Program.

 

 

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1        (7) The Home for Good Advisory Committee is created
2    for the purposes of identifying program priorities and
3    making recommendations for approval to ICJIA's and IHDA's
4    governing boards to foster collaboration between ICJIA and
5    IHDA and between these State agencies and community-based
6    organizations, and to ensure the equitable provision of
7    resources for affordable housing and support services
8    throughout the State based upon the geographic
9    distribution of incarcerated people exiting IDOC. The
10    Advisory Committee shall be housed at ICJIA. The Executive
11    Director of ICJIA shall appoint Advisory Committee
12    members, not to exceed 25. Members of the Advisory
13    Committee shall include:
14            (A) the Executive Director of ICJIA or his or her
15        designee;
16            (B) the Executive Director of IHDA or his or her
17        designee;
18            (C) the Director of IDOC or his or her designee;
19            (D) the Reentry Director at the Department of
20        Human Services or his or her designee;
21            (E) the Director of Reentry for the City of
22        Chicago or his or her designee;
23            (F) the Executive Director of the Illinois
24        Sentencing Policy Advisory Council or his or her
25        designee;
26            (G) the Chief Homelessness Officer or his or her

 

 

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1        designee;
2            (H) 5 reentry advocates, at least 3 of whom must be
3        previously incarcerated; however, advocates who are
4        officers, members, or employees of entities that
5        receive money through the Program are not eligible for
6        appointment to the Advisory Committee;
7            (I) one representative of an affordable housing
8        development organization;
9            (J) one representative of an affordable housing
10        advocacy organization;
11            (K) one reentry researcher;
12            (L) 5 community members with proportional
13        representation from urban, suburban, and rural areas
14        throughout the State; and
15            (M) one person each appointed by:
16                (i) the President of the Senate;
17                (ii) the Minority Leader of the Senate;
18                (iii) the Speaker of the House of
19            Representatives; and
20                (iv) the Minority Leader of the House of
21            Representatives.
22        At least 5 of the up to 25 members appointed to the
23    Advisory Committee by the Executive Director of ICJIA
24    shall have personally experienced incarceration and
25    reentry.
26        (8) No later than January 31, 2028, and every January

 

 

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1    31 thereafter, the Home for Good Advisory Committee,
2    subject to approval by ICJIA's and IHDA's governing
3    boards, shall annually submit to the General Assembly and
4    the Governor a public report containing data for the prior
5    State fiscal year on the number of persons served, the
6    effectiveness of the Program as measured by criteria
7    established by the Advisory Committee, the amount and type
8    of housing made available through the Program, metrics on
9    the Program's waitlist such as demographics, size and
10    average waiting time, metrics on the number and percentage
11    of individuals who completed a housing needs assessment
12    compared to the number and percentage of individuals
13    eligible to receive that housing needs assessment, data
14    and information about why individuals chose to opt out of
15    the housing needs assessment, the return on investment
16    generated through savings and economic activity resulting
17    from the implementation of the Program, a forecast of the
18    number of people exiting State prisons who are at risk of
19    experiencing housing instability and homelessness each
20    fiscal year, any recommended improvements to the Program's
21    design, and a forecast of the number of affordable homes
22    needed to meet the needs of Program participants.
 
23    Section 20. Rules. IHDA, ICJIA, and IDOC shall jointly
24adopt rules to implement this Act. The rules must describe how
25a housing needs assessment will be administered by

 

 

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1community-based organizations with expertise in providing
2reentry services and permanent and transitional housing to
3persons incarcerated in IDOC no later than 12 months prior to
4their release date.
5    The rules must describe how a housing needs assessment
6will make the determinations described in paragraph (3) of
7Section 15.
 
8    Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon
9becoming law.".