Rep. Michelle Mussman

Filed: 4/14/2026

 

 


 

 


 
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1
AMENDMENT TO HOUSE BILL 1783

2    AMENDMENT NO. ______. Amend House Bill 1783 by replacing
3everything after the enacting clause with the following:
 
4    "Section 1. Short title. This Act may be cited as the
5Language Equality Acquisition for Deaf, Hard of Hearing, or
6DeafBlind Children Act.
 
7    Section 5. Findings and goal.
8    (a) The General Assembly finds that there is an urgent and
9substantial need to do all of the following:
10        (1) Develop a State-recognized language needs and
11    monitoring program for deaf, hard of hearing, or DeafBlind
12    children with language and communication developmental
13    milestones to assist parents, guardians, and educators in
14    determining the language and communication needs and goals
15    of deaf, hard of hearing, or DeafBlind children.
16        (2) End language deprivation in children who are deaf,

 

 

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1    hard of hearing, or DeafBlind through proper assessment,
2    monitoring, and tracking of language and communication
3    developmental milestones.
4        (3) Provide access to primary languages to be used at
5    home, including, but not limited to, American Sign
6    Language, English, or Protactile, all of which are
7    essential in the development of cognition, communication,
8    literacy, and language in deaf, hard of hearing, or
9    DeafBlind children and in enhancing preschool and
10    kindergarten readiness.
11        (4) Maximize resources associated with early
12    intervention services by ensuring deaf, hard of hearing,
13    and DeafBlind children have the necessary language
14    foundation to communicate, learn, and achieve their
15    maximum potential.
16        (5) Enhance deaf, hard of hearing, or DeafBlind,
17    children's independence, linguistic proficiency,
18    productivity, and socialization with peers, family, and
19    the community, as well as maximize the potential for these
20    children to thrive in childhood, adolescence, and
21    adulthood.
22    (b) The General Assembly declares that the goal of this
23State is for deaf, hard of hearing, or DeafBlind children to
24enter public and nonpublic schools in this State prepared for
25learning, able to communicate with peers and staff, and with
26access to resources to help these children succeed.
 

 

 

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1    Section 10. Definitions. As used in this Act:
2    "Advisory committee" means the advisory committee
3established under Section 25.
4    "American Sign Language" means a complete, visual, and
5manual sign language with its own grammar and syntax that is
6used by many deaf or hard of hearing individuals.
7    "Communication" means the process of exchanging
8information between individuals or groups that involves the
9transmission of ideas, feelings, or facts from one person, the
10sender, to another, the receiver, and may be verbal or
11nonverbal and plays a crucial role in human interaction.
12    "DeafBlind" means concomitant hearing and vision
13impairments, the combination of which causes such significant
14communication, developmental, or educational needs that they
15cannot be accommodated solely for children with deafness or
16low-vision blindness.
17    "English" means a method of human communication consisting
18of the use of English words in a structured and conventional
19way, including spoken English, written English, and English
20with or without the use of visual or tactile supplements or
21dual language services.
22    "English literacy" means the ability to read and write in
23English.
24    "Kindergarten readiness" means language, communication,
25early reading and math literacy, and social skills development

 

 

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1for each language of the home that is consistent with
2age-related peers by kindergarten.
3    "Language" means the age-appropriate development of human
4communication, spoken, written, or signed, consisting of the
5use of words and signs in a structured and conventional way.
6    "Language and communication developmental milestones"
7means milestones of development measured by validated
8instruments used to meet the requirements of federal law for
9the assessment of children from birth to 5 years of age.
10    "Protactile" means the value of touch-based interactions
11for the purposes of communication for individuals who are
12DeafBlind that has its own grammar and syntax and that allows
13for individuals to connect with the world around them and
14fosters greater independence for those with multisensory
15impairments.
 
16    Section 15. Applicability.
17    (a) This Act applies to children from birth to 5 years of
18age.
19    (b) This Act is subject to appropriation.
 
20    Section 20. Language needs and monitoring program for
21deaf, hard of hearing, or DeafBlind children.
22    (a) The Department of Human Services, in consultation with
23the Illinois School for the Deaf, the Deaf and Hard of Hearing
24Commission, the Department of Early Childhood, the State Board

 

 

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1of Education, and the Department of Public Health, shall
2establish a language needs and monitoring program for deaf,
3hard of hearing, or DeafBlind children. The scope of the
4program shall include language and communication developmental
5milestones in American Sign Language, English, Protactile, or
6the primary language used in the home. The purpose of the
7program is to assess, monitor, and track the language and
8communication developmental milestones of children who are
9deaf, hard of hearing, or DeafBlind and develop a resource for
10use by parents and guardians to monitor and support deaf, hard
11of hearing, or DeafBlind children's expressive and receptive
12language acquisition and developmental stages toward English
13literacy and kindergarten readiness.
14    (b) The resource developed under subsection (a) shall:
15        (1) consider the language and communication
16    developmental milestones recommended by the advisory
17    committee;
18        (2) be appropriate for use, in both content and
19    administration, with deaf, hard of hearing, or DeafBlind
20    children who use American Sign Language, English,
21    Protactile, or the primary language used in the home;
22        (3) include and present evidence-based language and
23    communication developmental milestones for typically
24    developing children, by age range; language and
25    communication development milestones shall be aligned with
26    this State's infant, toddler, preschool-age, and

 

 

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1    school-age guidelines, as well as federal laws and State
2    standards in English language arts and related programs;
3        (4) be provided in English, American Sign Language,
4    Protactile, and the primary language used in the home for
5    clarity and ease of use by parents, guardians, health care
6    professionals, interventionists, and educators;
7        (5) be consistent with State and federal guidelines on
8    early intervention, identification, diagnosis, and early
9    childhood education;
10        (6) inform parents and guardians of their right to
11    choose their preferred language that will be used to
12    communicate and provide a language-rich learning
13    environment for their child, including English, American
14    Sign Language, Protactile, or the primary language used in
15    the home;
16        (7) inform parents and guardians that they may bring
17    the resource to an individualized family service plan,
18    individualized education program, or federal Section 504
19    plan meeting for purposes of supporting their choices and
20    observations regarding their child's language and
21    communication development; the resource shall include
22    evidence-based and comprehensive information about
23    American Sign Language, English, Protactile, or the
24    primary language used in the home, as well as available
25    services and programs; and
26        (8) make clear that the resource is a checklist of

 

 

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1    language and communication developmental milestones that
2    has been created from evidence-based resources and
3    completed by a parent or guardian and professionals
4    together and may have similarities and differences from
5    standardized testing presented at an individualized family
6    service plan, individualized education program, or federal
7    Section 504 plan meeting; the parent or guardian shall be
8    made aware that the school district is not required to use
9    the resources, language and communication developmental
10    milestones, or specific assessments in this subsection and
11    subsection (a) that are recommended by the advisory
12    committee for the purpose of developing the individualized
13    family service plan, individualized education program, or
14    federal Section 504 plan.
15    (c) The Department of Human Services, in consultation with
16the Illinois School for the Deaf, the Deaf and Hard of Hearing
17Commission, the Department of Early Childhood, the State Board
18of Education, and the Department of Public Health, shall
19consult with subject matter experts on the advisory committee
20in selecting from lists of validated tools or assessments for
21interventionists and educators to be used in the assessment of
22language, communication, and preliteracy development for deaf,
23hard of hearing, or DeafBlind children, in accordance with
24assessment requirements under the federal Individuals with
25Disabilities Education Act and Section 10-65 of the Department
26of Early Childhood Act. The selection of the tools or

 

 

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1assessments shall:
2        (1) be in a format that shows language and
3    communication developmental milestones;
4        (2) take into consideration the recommendations of the
5    advisory committee to measure the development of deaf,
6    hard of hearing, or DeafBlind children's expressive and
7    receptive language acquisition and language and
8    communication developmental milestones toward literacy;
9        (3) be selected from a list of tools or assessments
10    used to assess the development of all children; and
11        (4) be appropriate, in both content and
12    administration, for use with deaf, hard of hearing, or
13    DeafBlind children.
14    The tools or assessments may be used, in addition to the
15assessments required by federal law, by a child's
16individualized family service plan or individualized education
17program, as applicable, to track a deaf, hard of hearing, or
18DeafBlind child's progress and to establish or modify an
19individualized family service plan or individualized education
20program. Children with federal Section 504 plans shall be
21assessed to ensure appropriate services are provided. The
22tools or assessments may reflect the recommendations of the
23advisory committee.
24    (d) The Department of Human Services, in consultation with
25the Illinois School for the Deaf, the Deaf and Hard of Hearing
26Commission, the Department of Early Childhood, the State Board

 

 

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1of Education, and the Department of Public Health, shall
2disseminate the resource developed under subsection (a) to the
3parents or guardians of deaf, hard of hearing, or DeafBlind
4children and, pursuant to federal law, the Department of Human
5Services shall disseminate the tools and assessments selected
6under subsection (c) to early intervention entities and school
7districts for consideration in the development and
8modification of individualized family service plans,
9individualized education programs, and federal Section 504
10plans.
11    (e) The Department of Human Services shall make available
12to parents and guardians materials and training on the tools,
13assessments, and resources for deaf, hard of hearing, or
14DeafBlind children.
15    (f) Beginning on July 1, 2028, an annual language
16assessment shall be offered to the parent or guardian of each
17child who is deaf, hard of hearing, or DeafBlind, in
18accordance with the federal Individuals with Disabilities
19Education Act and Section 10-65 of the Department of Early
20Childhood Act. The language assessment shall be administered
21by a credentialed or licensed professional who meets the
22qualifications established by the test developer and
23demonstrates proficiency in the language being assessed.
24    A deaf, hard of hearing, or DeafBlind newborn child shall
25be screened by the time the child turns one month old,
26diagnosed no later than 3 months of age, and referred to an

 

 

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1early intervention program by the time the child turns 6
2months old. Following the referral to an early intervention
3program, the initial evaluation, assessment, and
4individualized family service plan meeting shall occur within
545 days. Services shall begin no later than 30 days after the
6consent of the parent or guardian is obtained as required by
7the federal Individuals with Disabilities Education Act and
8Section 10-65 of the Department of Early Childhood Act.
9    A deaf, hard of hearing, or DeafBlind child with late
10onset hearing loss shall be diagnosed no later than 3 months
11after a suspected hearing loss and immediately referred to
12services after diagnosis.
13    If a deaf, hard of hearing, or DeafBlind child is referred
14to an early intervention program, a formal assessment shall be
15offered, in person or virtually, by a developmental
16therapist-hearing or discipline-specific credentialed
17provider upon program entry and at yearly intervals, in
18accordance with the federal Individuals with Disabilities
19Education Act and Section 10-65 of the Department of Early
20Childhood Act. Developmental therapists-hearing and
21discipline-specific credentialed providers shall be expected
22to refer out as appropriate for children whose primary
23language is American Sign Language or Protactile to ensure
24assessments of children are completed by individuals with the
25ability to accurately conduct such assessments.
26    A deaf, hard of hearing, or DeafBlind child entering

 

 

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1school with an individualized education program or federal
2Section 504 plan shall receive a formal assessment implemented
3by a licensed teacher of the deaf or discipline-specific
4licensed teacher. Licensed teachers of the deaf or
5discipline-specific licensed teachers shall be expected to
6refer out as appropriate for children whose primary language
7is American Sign Language or Protactile to ensure assessments
8of children are completed by those individuals with the
9ability to accurately conduct such assessments.
10    The advisory committee shall recommend the criteria that
11may be used to identify those individuals who are qualified to
12conduct accurate American Sign Language or Protactile
13assessments.
14    In accordance with the federal Individuals with
15Disabilities Education Act and Section 10-65 of the Department
16of Early Childhood Act, if a deaf, hard of hearing, or
17DeafBlind child does not demonstrate progress in expressive
18and receptive language skills, the child's individualized
19family service plan, individualized education program, or
20federal Section 504 plan team shall be responsible for
21identifying areas not meeting or progressing toward the
22language and communication developmental milestones. Data
23collected on children with disabilities in addition to hearing
24loss, nonnative English speakers, and children with unilateral
25or bilateral hearing loss shall be extrapolated and analyzed
26independently to ensure data efficacy is not compromised. The

 

 

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1individualized family service plan, individualized education
2program, or federal Section 504 plan team, including the
3parents or guardians, shall consider specific strategies,
4services, and programs to assist the child's success toward
5learning the child's parent's or guardian's preferred
6language. A follow-up meeting shall be scheduled within 30 to
760 days or as deemed appropriate by the individualized family
8service plan, individualized education program, or federal
9Section 504 plan team to determine the effects of the
10recommendations.
11    (g) All activities in implementing this Section shall be
12consistent with federal and State law regarding the education
13of children with disabilities and the privacy of pupil
14information.
 
15    Section 25. Advisory committee.
16    (a) An advisory committee on language needs and monitoring
17shall be established. The advisory committee shall be composed
18of subject matter experts, consumers, and parents or guardians
19supporting deaf, hard of hearing, or DeafBlind children.
20    (b) The advisory committee shall consist of all of the
21following voting members, each appointed by the Secretary of
22Human Services, in consultation with the Illinois School for
23the Deaf and the Deaf and Hard of Hearing Commission:
24        (1) One parent or guardian of a child who (i) is 18
25    years of age or younger at the time of the appointment,

 

 

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1    (ii) is deaf, hard of hearing, or DeafBlind, and (iii)
2    uses the dual languages of American Sign Language and
3    English.
4        (2) One parent or guardian of a child who (i) is 18
5    years of age or younger at the time of the appointment,
6    (ii) is deaf, hard of hearing, or DeafBlind, and (iii)
7    uses primarily spoken English, without sign support.
8        (3) One expert on language outcomes for deaf and hard
9    of hearing children who use American Sign Language and the
10    English language.
11        (4) One licensed teacher of deaf and hard of hearing
12    children from a spoken English-only school or one expert
13    on language outcomes for deaf and hard of hearing children
14    using spoken English, with or without visual supplements.
15        (5) One licensed teacher of deaf and hard of hearing
16    children whose expertise is in curriculum and instruction
17    in American Sign Language and English, with or without
18    visual supplements, or one licensed teacher of deaf and
19    hard of hearing children whose expertise is in American
20    Sign Language and English language assessments, with or
21    without visual supplements.
22        (6) A psychologist with expertise in assessing deaf
23    and hard of hearing children who use or are fluent in
24    American Sign Language and English.
25        (7) One developmental therapist-hearing who works with
26    deaf and hard of hearing infants and toddlers who use the

 

 

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1    dual languages of American Sign Language and the English
2    language.
3        (8) One licensed speech-language pathologist who has
4    expertise in working with children and who uses listening
5    and spoken language methodologies.
6        (9) One licensed speech-language pathologist who has
7    expertise in working with children who use American Sign
8    Language.
9        (10) One deaf person who represents the deaf
10    community.
11        (11) One DeafBlind individual, specialist, or educator
12    whose expertise is in DeafBlind advocacy or education.
13        (12) One licensed teacher of deaf and hard of hearing
14    children who also has significant experience in working
15    with deaf, hard of hearing, or DeafBlind children with
16    other educational disabilities.
17        (13) One licensed pediatric audiologist with working
18    knowledge of American Sign Language and English.
19    (c) The advisory committee shall consist of all of the
20following ex officio, nonvoting members:
21        (1) The State Superintendent of Education or the State
22    Superintendent's designee.
23        (2) The Director of the Deaf and Hard of Hearing
24    Commission or the Director's designee.
25        (3) The Secretary of Early Childhood or the
26    Secretary's designee.

 

 

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1        (4) The Director of Public Health or the Director's
2    designee.
3        (5) The Superintendent of the Illinois School for the
4    Deaf or the Superintendent's designee.
5        (6) The Secretary of Human Services or the Secretary's
6    designee.
7    The ex officio, nonvoting members shall provide support to
8the advisory committee.
9    (d) The Secretary of Human Services, in consultation with
10the Illinois School for the Deaf and the Deaf and Hard of
11Hearing Commission, shall select a chairperson from among the
12voting appointed members. The Department of Human Services
13shall call an inaugural meeting of the advisory committee
14within 120 days of the effective date of this Act. The advisory
15committee may meet at any time in person or virtually at the
16call of the chairperson.
17    (e) Members of the advisory committee shall serve without
18compensation or travel reimbursement. Communication access
19accommodations, such as interpreters and captioning, must be
20provided at all meetings to ensure full participation.
21    (f) A quorum of the advisory committee shall consist of a
22simple majority of the members of the advisory committee,
23voting and nonvoting. All actions and recommendations of the
24advisory committee must be approved by an advisory committee
25vote of the members appointed.
26    (g) Any vacancy in the advisory committee shall be filled

 

 

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1in the same manner as the original appointment.
2    (h) The Department of Human Services shall provide the
3advisory committee with administrative support.
4    (i) On or before December 31, 2027, the advisory committee
5shall submit to the Department of Human Services specific,
6recommended action plans, timelines, anticipated costs, and
7proposed rules necessary to fully implement language and
8communication tools, assessments, and resources. The advisory
9committee may:
10        (1) solicit input from experts on the selection of
11    language and communication developmental milestones
12    related to the resources, tools, and assessments;
13        (2) review and monitor the use of language and
14    communication assessments for children who are deaf, hard
15    of hearing, or DeafBlind;
16        (3) recommend criteria for qualified American Sign
17    Language and English experts who can support the initial
18    and periodic individualized family service plan,
19    individualized education program, or federal Section 504
20    plan team meetings; and
21        (4) recommend methods for documenting, monitoring, and
22    submitting to all State agencies, child-specific
23    information on language and communication assessment
24    results, language and communication developmental
25    milestones, assessment tools, and the progress of a child.
26    The periodic assessment results and longitudinal progress

 

 

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1ultimately implemented by the Department of Human Services,
2considering the recommendations of the advisory committee and
3in consultation with the Deaf and Hard of Hearing Commission,
4the Department of Early Childhood, the State Board of
5Education, and the Department of Public Health, shall be made
6available on the child-specific level to each State agency and
7to the parent or guardian of the child, teachers, and other
8professionals involved in the early intervention and education
9of the child.
10    (j) The specific recommended action plans and proposed
11rules developed by the advisory committee shall include, but
12are not limited to, all of the following:
13        (1) Language and communication assessments that
14    include child-specific data collection and timely tracking
15    in a statewide data system of a child's development to
16    provide information about the child's receptive and
17    expressive language compared to the child's typically
18    developing, age-related peers who are not deaf, hard of
19    hearing, or DeafBlind.
20        (2) Language and communication assessments conducted
21    in accordance with the federal Individuals with
22    Disabilities Education Act and Section 10-65 of the
23    Department of Early Childhood Act, as well as standardized
24    procedures and timelines to monitor and track language and
25    communication developmental milestones in both receptive
26    and expressive language acquisition by language and

 

 

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1    communication developmental milestones toward
2    kindergarten readiness for all children who are deaf, hard
3    of hearing, or DeafBlind.
4        (3) Language and communication assessments delivered
5    in American Sign Language, English, Protactile, or the
6    primary language used in the home that have been validated
7    for the specific purposes for which each assessment is
8    used and appropriately normed.
9    Language and communication assessments shall be
10administered by individuals who are proficient and have
11expertise in the language and communication developmental
12stages of American Sign Language, English, Protactile, or the
13primary language used in the home.
14    Language and communication assessment results may be used
15to guide individualized family service plan, individualized
16education program, or federal Section 504 plan teams for the
17purpose of reviewing a child's progress in language and
18communication development.
19    Language and communication assessment results shall be
20reported to the parent or guardian of a child. Child-specific
21data, in accordance with federal and State laws, shall be
22reported to the Department of Human Services, which shall
23ensure it is available to appropriate staff at the Deaf and
24Hard of Hearing Commission, the Department of Early Childhood,
25the State Board of Education, and the Department of Public
26Health. One designated State agency shall publish annual

 

 

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1reports related to this Act.
2    Language and communication assessment results shall be
3reported annually to the child's individualized family service
4plan, individualized education program, or federal Section 504
5plan team to assist the individualized family service plan,
6individualized education program, or federal Section 504 plan
7team in ensuring that appropriate language and communication
8development remains a priority and continues to be monitored.
9    (k) This Section is repealed on January 1, 2028.
 
10    Section 30. Joint action plan on deaf, hard of hearing, or
11DeafBlind children. On or before July 1, 2028, the Department
12of Human Services, in consultation with the Illinois School
13for the Deaf, the Deaf and Hard of Hearing Commission, the
14Department of Early Childhood, the State Board of Education,
15and the Department of Public Health, shall publish a joint
16action plan that considers the recommendations of the advisory
17committee and may propose legislation and rules necessary to
18implement this Act. The joint action plan may include
19recommendations on all of the following:
20        (1) Evidence-based and research-supported tools to
21    help identify deaf, hard of hearing, or DeafBlind
22    children.
23        (2) The development of evidence-based resources and
24    training for parents, guardians, health care providers,
25    interventionists, and educators about State resources

 

 

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1    available to deaf, hard of hearing, or DeafBlind children
2    of school age.
3        (3) Ways to connect deaf, hard of hearing, or
4    DeafBlind adults with families supporting children in need
5    of support.
6        (4) Training and resources for physicians and other
7    health care providers on how to connect deaf, hard of
8    hearing, or DeafBlind children and their parents or
9    guardians to resources and support.
 
10    Section 35. Reporting. On or before January 1, 2030 or 2
11years after the tools and assessments under Section 20 are
12implemented, whichever is later, the Department of Human
13Services, in consultation with the Illinois School for the
14Deaf, the Deaf and Hard of Hearing Commission, the Department
15of Early Childhood, the State Board of Education, and the
16Department of Public Health, shall publish aggregate
17deidentified data on (i) the number of children from birth to 3
18years of age who have been diagnosed as deaf, hard of hearing,
19or DeafBlind, (ii) the number and scope of individualized
20education programs written for children aged 3 to 5 years who
21are enrolled in public preschool programs and who are deaf,
22hard of hearing, or DeafBlind, and (iii) the number and scope
23of individualized education programs for children in
24kindergarten and first grade who are deaf, hard of hearing, or
25DeafBlind. The Department of Human Services, in consultation

 

 

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1with the Illinois School for the Deaf, the Deaf and Hard of
2Hearing Commission, the Department of Early Childhood, the
3State Board of Education, and the Department of Public Health,
4may add additional data reporting recommendations. The data
5must be shared within the requirements of the federal Family
6Educational Rights and Privacy Act of 1974, the Illinois
7School Student Records Act, and the Personal Information
8Protection Act.
 
9    Section 40. Information sharing.
10    (a) For the purposes of documentation and the coordination
11of medical care, intervention, or educational services, the
12Department of Human Services, the Illinois School for the
13Deaf, the Deaf and Hard of Hearing Commission, the Department
14of Early Childhood, the State Board of Education, and the
15Department of Public Health may, after obtaining consent,
16share screening, diagnosis, intervention, education,
17assessment, and monitoring information with other State
18agencies or a child's parent or guardian.
19    (b) For the purposes of documentation and the coordination
20of medical care, intervention, or educational services, the
21Department of Human Services, the Illinois School for the
22Deaf, the Deaf and Hard of Hearing Commission, the Department
23of Early Childhood, the State Board of Education, and the
24Department of Public Health may, after obtaining consent,
25share screening, diagnosis, intervention, education,

 

 

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1assessment, and monitoring information in accordance with
2applicable State and federal laws. Medical care facilities,
3health care providers, early interventionists, local health
4departments, and the University of Illinois at Chicago
5Division of Specialized Care for Children may submit relevant
6information or reports about newborn, infant, and child
7screening, diagnosis, intervention, education, assessment, or
8follow-up services for those services provided. To the extent
9practicable, reporting shall be done as soon as possible after
10the date of service or an inquiry from a State agency. Reports
11shall be in a format determined by the reporting State agency.
12    (c) The Department of Human Services, in consultation with
13the Illinois School for the Deaf, the Deaf and Hard of Hearing
14Commission, the Department of Early Childhood, the State Board
15of Education, and the Department of Public Health, may
16exchange, in adherence with confidentiality and nondisclosure
17requirements, child-specific data for children who are deaf,
18hard of hearing, or DeafBlind only in order to support
19children and their families and assist in the transition and
20continuity of care and for the purposes of this Act.
21    (d) Except in cases of willful or wanton misconduct, no
22health care provider, hospital, or medical facility acting in
23compliance with this Section is civilly or criminally liable
24for any act performed in compliance with this Section,
25including furnishing information required under this Section.
 

 

 

10400HB1783ham002- 23 -LRB104 09258 LNS 36630 a

1    Section 90. Rulemaking. The Department of Human Services,
2in consultation with the Illinois School for the Deaf, the
3Deaf and Hard of Hearing Commission, the Department of Early
4Childhood, the State Board of Education, and the Department of
5Public Health, may adopt any rules necessary to implement this
6Act.
 
7    Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon
8becoming law.".