Rep. Maurice A. West, II

Filed: 4/15/2026

 

 


 

 


 
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1
AMENDMENT TO HOUSE BILL 4949

2    AMENDMENT NO. ______. Amend House Bill 4949 by replacing
3everything after the enacting clause with the following:
 
4    "Section 1. Short title. This Act may be cited as the
5Family Justice Centers Act.
 
6    Section 5. Findings. The General Assembly finds and
7declares that:
8        (1) Underreporting of domestic violence, sexual
9    violence, stalking, and human trafficking to service
10    providers, law enforcement, and protective agencies is
11    detrimental to the health, safety, and welfare of the
12    State of Illinois. Survivors have stressed the need for
13    collaborative implementation of resources and interagency
14    communication and assessment of policies and procedures to
15    allow for intentional process improvement in the delivery
16    of and response to survivors.

 

 

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1        (2) To support survivors and their children and
2    encourage the development of partnerships to close gaps
3    and implement best practices, entities must work
4    collaboratively and actively to build a trauma-informed,
5    survivor-centered community response to prevent domestic
6    violence, child abuse, sexual violence, stalking, and
7    human trafficking.
8        (3) The enactment of the Family Justice Centers Act
9    promotes the health and safety of survivors of domestic
10    violence, sexual violence, stalking, and human trafficking
11    and provides alternative ways for survivors to seek
12    services in a trauma-informed, survivor-centered,
13    coordinated manner.
14        (4) In recent years, Illinois has experienced an
15    upward trend in domestic violence incidents, including
16    increased contacts to the Illinois Domestic Violence
17    Hotline and higher rates of domestic-related homicides.
18    Contacts to the Illinois Domestic Violence Hotline rose
19    26% from 2023 to 2024 to a total of 59,704 contacts, which
20    is 140% higher than in 2019, according to Measuring
21    Safety: Gender Based Violence in Illinois 2024, Illinois
22    Domestic Violence Hotline Report, published in June 2025
23    by The Network: Advocating Against Domestic Violence. This
24    rising rate of reports, coupled with the reality that many
25    incidents go unreported, demonstrates the need for a State
26    response.

 

 

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1        (5) Given the intimate and personal nature of sexual
2    violence, advocacy services are necessary to support
3    survivors of sexual assault by providing comprehensive
4    assistance that addresses immediate and long-term needs.
5    The State of Illinois should continue to support these
6    programs, which have faced declining funds in recent
7    years.
8        (6) In 2025, the Illinois General Assembly passed the
9    Illinois Statewide Trauma-Informed Response to Human
10    Trafficking Act, recognizing the need for a comprehensive
11    response to human trafficking in the State. This Act
12    requires agencies to investigate and respond in a
13    survivor-centered, trauma-informed manner to increase the
14    detection of survivors and provide a survivor-centered,
15    trauma-informed response when survivors present for
16    services.
17        (7) The Family Justice Center framework offers a
18    comprehensive and collaborative approach to addressing
19    domestic violence, sexual violence, stalking, and human
20    trafficking. Family Justice Centers bring together
21    professionals and services under one roof, providing a
22    safe and supportive environment for survivors and ensuring
23    a coordinated and effective response.
24        (8) Children's Advocacy Centers were established in
25    Illinois by Public Act 86-276 and are governed by the
26    Children's Advocacy Center Act. In response to the need

 

 

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1    for a formal, comprehensive, integrated, and
2    multidisciplinary approach to child maltreatment,
3    Children's Advocacy Centers provide subject-matter
4    expertise that complements Family Justice Centers. This
5    Act is intended to enhance collaboration and sharing of
6    expertise and is not meant to supersede the expertise of
7    Children's Advocacy Centers. Domestic violence, sexual
8    violence, and child abuse are forms of community violence
9    that require coordinated responses. Family Justice Centers
10    and Children's Advocacy Centers should work
11    collaboratively.
12        (9) Family Justice Centers minimize the need for
13    survivors to navigate multiple agencies, to travel to
14    multiple locations, and to repeat their stories. They
15    offer services shown to improve access to services,
16    increase hope and well-being, reduce recantation, reduce
17    homicides, and increase successful prosecution of
18    offenders.
19        (10) Creating Family Justice Centers is essential to
20    provide multiagency, multidisciplinary support and
21    services to survivors of domestic violence, sexual
22    violence, stalking, and human trafficking; to ensure
23    survivors can access all needed services; to enhance
24    survivor safety; to increase offender accountability; and
25    to reduce the number of times survivors are questioned and
26    examined and the number of places survivors must go to

 

 

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1    receive assistance.
 
2    Section 10. Definitions. As used in this Act:
3    "Domestic violence" means any act of abuse as defined in
4the Illinois Domestic Violence Act of 1986.
5    "Human trafficking" means an act as set forth in Section
610-9 of the Criminal Code of 2012, including recruiting,
7harboring, transporting, providing, or obtaining a person for
8labor or services through force, fraud, or coercion.
9    "Sexual violence" means physical sexual acts attempted or
10perpetrated against a person's will or when a person is
11incapable of giving consent, including, without limitation,
12rape, sexual assault, sexual battery, sexual abuse, and sexual
13coercion.
14    "Stalking" has the meaning given to that term in the
15Stalking No Contact Order Act. "Stalking" includes, without
16limitation, the following conduct:
17        (1) following a person;
18        (2) conducting surveillance of the person;
19        (3) appearing at the person's home, work, or school
20    without a reasonable purpose under the circumstances;
21        (4) making unwanted phone calls;
22        (5) sending unwanted mail;
23        (6) sending unwanted messages via social media;
24        (7) sending unwanted text messages;
25        (8) leaving objects for the person;

 

 

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1        (9) vandalizing the person's property;
2        (10) injuring a pet; or
3        (11) using any electronic tracking system or acquiring
4    tracking information to determine the person's location,
5    movements, or travel patterns.
 
6    Section 15. Family Justice Centers.
7    (a) A city, county, State, community-based nonprofit
8organization, or a combination of these entities may establish
9a multiagency, multidisciplinary Family Justice Center to
10assist survivors of domestic violence, sexual violence,
11stalking, and human trafficking, to ensure that survivors are
12able to access needed services in one location, to enhance
13survivor safety, to increase offender accountability, and to
14improve access to services.
15    (b) A Family Justice Center is a multiagency,
16multidisciplinary service center where public and private
17agencies assign staff members on a full-time or part-time
18basis to provide services to survivors of domestic violence,
19sexual violence, stalking, and human trafficking from one
20location, to reduce the number of times survivors must repeat
21their accounts, to reduce the number of places survivors must
22go for help, and to increase access to services and support for
23survivors and their children. A Family Justice Center shall,
24as appropriate, partner with other agencies to provide
25services.

 

 

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1    (c) Staff members at a Family Justice Center may include,
2but are not limited to:
3        (1) domestic violence providers recognized by the
4    Department of Human Services;
5        (2) rape crisis organizations as defined in Section
6    8-802.1 of the Code of Civil Procedure;
7        (3) civil legal service providers, in accordance with
8    memoranda of understanding developed by the Family Justice
9    Center;
10        (4) legal advocacy providers, in accordance with
11    memoranda of understanding developed by the Family Justice
12    Center;
13        (5) mental health care providers, in accordance with
14    memoranda of understanding developed by the Family Justice
15    Center;
16        (6) housing providers, in accordance with memoranda of
17    understanding developed by the Family Justice Center;
18        (7) substance-use counselors, in accordance with
19    memoranda of understanding developed by the Family Justice
20    Center;
21        (8) Family Justice Center administrative personnel;
22        (9) medical personnel;
23        (10) local Children's Advocacy Centers;
24        (11) law enforcement;
25        (12) the State's Attorney's office and victim-witness
26    personnel;

 

 

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1        (13) supervised volunteers of partner agencies; and
2        (14) other professional agencies serving survivors of
3    domestic violence, sexual violence, stalking, or human
4    trafficking, in accordance with memoranda of understanding
5    developed by the Family Justice Center.
6    (d) If Department of Children and Family Services
7personnel are present on site at a Family Justice Center, they
8shall only interact with a survivor receiving services from
9the Family Justice Center upon the survivor's request.
10    (e) This Section does not abrogate existing laws regarding
11privacy or information sharing. Family Justice Center staff
12members shall comply with the laws governing their respective
13professions.
14    (f) Survivors shall not be required to participate with
15law enforcement, the Department of Children and Family
16Services, or the criminal justice system to receive services
17at a Family Justice Center. A Family Justice Center shall
18establish memoranda of understanding with law enforcement, the
19Department of Children and Family Services, and State's
20Attorneys' offices to facilitate collaboration, improved
21processes, and systems change for the benefit of survivors and
22the health, safety, and well-being of the community.
23    (g) Each Family Justice Center shall consult with
24statewide and local community-based domestic violence, sexual
25assault, stalking, and human trafficking agencies, in
26partnership with survivors and their advocates, in the

 

 

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1operation of the Family Justice Center. Each Family Justice
2Center shall establish procedures for ongoing input, feedback,
3and evaluation by survivors and community-based survivor
4service providers and advocates.
5    (h) Each Family Justice Center shall develop operating
6agreements, policies, and procedures, in collaboration with
7local community-based survivor service providers and local
8survivors, to ensure coordinated services and to enhance the
9safety of survivors and professionals at the Family Justice
10Center, including participants in affiliated survivor-centered
11support or advocacy groups. Each Family Justice Center shall
12maintain a formal survivor feedback, complaint, and input
13process to address concerns about services or the conduct of
14any Family Justice Center professionals, agency partners, or
15volunteers.
16    (i) Each Family Justice Center shall provide survivors
17with educational materials relating to rights available under
18Illinois law.
19    (j) Each Family Justice Center shall maintain a survivor's
20informed, specific, and time-limited consent. The consent
21policy, and the sharing of any details gathered from the
22survivor, the survivor's family, or other sources shall follow
23all State and federal laws, including, but not limited to, the
24Violence Against Women Act of 1994, so as to protect the
25confidentiality of information gathered and any documents in a
26survivor's file, including, but not limited to, medical

 

 

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1records, legal records, survivor counselor records, and any
2other information gathered during intake or throughout the
3period of engagement with the survivor. Each Family Justice
4Center shall develop privacy policies and procedures
5consistent with State and federal privacy and confidentiality
6laws and the Fair Information Practice Principles adopted by
7the U.S. Department of Homeland Security in Privacy Policy
8Guidance Memorandum 2008-01.
9    (k) A Family Justice Center shall obtain informed,
10written, time-limited consent from a survivor before sharing
11information obtained from the survivor with any staff member
12or agency partner, except that a Family Justice Center shall
13inform the survivor that information shared with staff members
14or partner agencies may be shared with the Department of
15Children and Family Services or a peace officer without the
16survivor's consent if there is a mandatory duty to report or if
17the survivor is a danger to self or others. A Family Justice
18Center shall obtain written acknowledgment that the survivor
19has been informed of this policy.
20    (l) Consent by a survivor to share information within a
21Family Justice Center under this Section shall not be
22construed as a universal waiver of any evidentiary privilege
23that makes confidential communications or documents between
24the survivor and a service provider, including, without
25limitation, any lawyer, advocate, rape crisis counselor, or
26domestic violence counselor, and including protections under

 

 

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1applicable State and federal law, such as the Address
2Confidentiality for Victims of Domestic Violence, Sexual
3Assault, Human Trafficking, or Stalking Act; and Sections
48-802, 8-802.1, and 8-802.2 of the Code of Civil Procedure.
5Any oral or written communication or document authorized by
6the survivor to be shared for the purposes of enhancing safety
7and providing more effective and efficient services shall not
8be disclosed to any third party, unless authorized by the
9survivor or required by State or federal law or court order.
10    (m) An individual staff member, volunteer, or agency that
11has survivor information governed by this Section shall not be
12required to disclose that information unless the survivor has
13consented to the disclosure or the disclosure is consistent
14with applicable State law regarding crime victims' rights.
15    (n) A disclosure of information consented to by the
16survivor in a Family Justice Center, made for the purposes of
17clinical assessment, risk assessment, safety planning, or
18service delivery, shall not be deemed a waiver of any
19privilege or confidentiality provision contained in any other
20law of this State.
21    (o) In addition to any other required training, each
22Family Justice Center shall maintain a training program with
23mandatory training of not less than 16 hours per year for all
24persons providing services at the Family Justice Center,
25including, but not limited to, training on evidentiary
26privileges, confidentiality provisions, information sharing,

 

 

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1risk assessment, safety planning, survivor advocacy, and
2high-risk case response.".