Sen. Laura Ellman

Filed: 5/21/2026

 

 


 

 


 
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1
AMENDMENT TO SENATE BILL 643

2    AMENDMENT NO. ______. Amend Senate Bill 643 by replacing
3everything after the enacting clause with the following:
4    "Section 5. The Counties Code is amended by adding
5Division 48 as follows:
 
6    (55 ILCS 5/Art. 5 Div. 48 heading new)
7
DIVISION 48. BUILDING INSPECTIONS

 
8    (55 ILCS 5/5-48001 new)
9    Sec. 5-48001. Findings and purpose.
10    (a) The General Assembly finds and declares that:
11        (1) Uncertain and lengthy building permit review and
12    inspection timelines add costs, delay community
13    investment, and make it harder to deliver housing across
14    the State.
15        (2) Ensuring predictable, efficient, and transparent
16    review processes is a matter of statewide concern

 

 

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1    affecting housing supply, public safety, and economic
2    competitiveness.
3        (3) Several states, including Florida, Arizona,
4    Tennessee, Texas, and New Hampshire, have adopted
5    third-party plan review and inspection systems that
6    accelerate development timelines while maintaining safety
7    and code compliance.
8        (4) By setting statewide expectations and offering
9    qualified third-party review options when local deadlines
10    are exceeded, Illinois can reduce avoidable delays and
11    help advance needed housing and commercial development in
12    communities large and small.
13    (b) It is the purpose of this Division to create a
14statewide third-party plan review and inspection framework, to
15establish uniform county deadlines, and to ensure that all
16applicants may obtain timely approvals necessary to advance
17construction while maintaining public safety and building-code
18standards.
 
19    (55 ILCS 5/5-48002 new)
20    Sec. 5-48002. Definitions. As used in this Act:
21    "Business day" means any day other than a Saturday,
22Sunday, or State-recognized or county-recognized holiday.
23    "Complete application" means a building permit application
24that includes all forms, fees, documents, site plans, and
25other materials required by local ordinance.

 

 

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1    "Qualified third-party inspector" means a person who:
2        (1) is a licensed architect or engineer; and
3        (2) holds a current and active certification issued by
4    the International Code Council, the National Fire
5    Protection Association, or the International Association
6    of Plumbing and Mechanical Officials, or one of their
7    successor organizations; and
8        (3) demonstrates an understanding of local codes and
9    amendments thereto.
10    "Qualified third-party plan reviewer" means a person who:
11        (1) is a licensed architect or engineer under the laws
12    of this State;
13        (2) holds a current and active certification issued by
14    the International Code Council, the National Fire
15    Protection Association, the Independent Alliance of the
16    Electrical Industry, or the International Association of
17    Plumbing and Mechanical Officials, or one of their
18    successor organizations; and
19        (3) demonstrates an understanding of local codes and
20    amendments of local codes.
21    "Single-trade permit" means any construction project on
22the property of a one-family or 2-family residential building
23that requires a permit or approval pursuant to a building code
24that is limited to a single construction discipline, including
25erecting, installing, enlarging, altering, repairing,
26removing, converting, or replacing:

 

 

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1        (1) a heating, ventilation, and air conditioning
2    system;
3        (2) a heat pump system;
4        (3) a water heater or water-treatment appliance;
5        (4) a solar photovoltaic system, a solar thermal
6    system, an energy storage system, or a combination system;
7        (5) an electric vehicle charging station and related
8    equipment;
9        (6) roofing;
10        (7) exterior openings;
11        (8) stucco, plaster, or siding; or
12        (9) fencing.
 
13    (55 ILCS 5/5-48005 new)
14    Sec. 5-48005. Applicability. This Division applies to all
15counties, including home-rule units.
 
16    (55 ILCS 5/5-48010 new)
17    Sec. 5-48010. County plan review timelines.
18    (a) A county shall complete its initial plan review within
1930 business days after receipt of a complete application for a
20one-family residential project, a 2-family residential
21project, or any multifamily, mixed-use, or commercial project.
22    (b) For single-trade permits, a county shall complete its
23permit review within 3 business days after receipt of a
24complete application for an installation or addition to, or

 

 

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1repair, alteration, or remodeling of a one-family or 2-family
2residential project.
3    (c) A county shall issue written comments or approval
4within the applicable deadline.
5    (d) For any subsequent review cycle after the applicant
6submits revisions responding to comments, the county shall
7complete its review within 10 business days of receipt of
8revisions.
9    (e) Failure to meet any deadline under this Section
10triggers the applicant's right to use a qualified third-party
11plan reviewer under Section 5-48020.
 
12    (55 ILCS 5/5-48015 new)
13    Sec. 5-48015. Inspection timelines.
14    (a) A county shall conduct any required inspection within
155 business days after receipt of a request.
16    (b) Failure to conduct the inspection within the required
17period triggers the applicant's right to use a qualified
18third-party inspector under Section 5-48025.
 
19    (55 ILCS 5/5-48020 new)
20    Sec. 5-48020. Use of qualified third-party plan reviewers
21upon missed deadline.
22    (a) If a county fails to complete its plan review within
23the deadlines established under Section 5-48010, then the
24applicant may retain a qualified third-party plan reviewer.

 

 

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1    (b) A county shall accept any plan review submitted by a
2qualified third-party plan reviewer as meeting the county's
3requirements if the review demonstrates compliance with the
4applicable building codes. However, if the county completes
5its plan review before receiving a compliant plan review from
6a qualified third-party reviewer, the county may rely on its
7own plan review.
8    (c) A county shall issue the permit within 2 business days
9after receiving a compliant third-party plan review.
10    (d) A county may not require a second review, impose
11additional comments, or delay issuance once a qualified review
12has been submitted. This includes requiring changes to
13approved permit drawings during construction. Once a permit
14has been approved, inspectors shall not request design changes
15or additional requirements beyond what is reflected in the
16approved plan, except as permitted under Section 5-48030.
 
17    (55 ILCS 5/5-48025 new)
18    Sec. 5-48025. Use of qualified third-party inspectors upon
19missed deadline.
20    (a) If a county fails to conduct a required inspection
21within 5 business days, then the applicant may retain a
22qualified third-party inspector.
23    (b) A county shall accept inspection reports submitted
24under this Section as satisfying local inspection requirements
25if the report demonstrates compliance with the building code.

 

 

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1    (c) A county shall issue any required approval,
2certificate, or authorization within one business day after
3receiving a compliant inspection report.
 
4    (55 ILCS 5/5-48030 new)
5    Sec. 5-48030. County audit authority.
6    (a) A county retains full authority to audit any qualified
7third-party plan review or inspection for compliance with
8applicable codes. Nothing in this Division limits a county's
9authority to issue stop-work orders, withhold certificates of
10occupancy, or pursue enforcement actions if the county audit
11authority makes a written finding of material noncompliance
12with the Division, detailing each case of material
13noncompliance.
14    (b) An audit may not delay issuance of a permit or
15authorization submitted under Section 5-48020 or 5-48025.
16    (c) If a county identifies material noncompliance, then it
17may pursue enforcement actions available under its code
18authority and report the findings to the Department of
19Financial and Professional Regulation or the applicable
20credentialing organization.
21    (d) A county may require reasonable documentation
22demonstrating that a qualified third-party plan reviewer or
23qualified third-party inspector meets the qualification
24requirements of this Division, including proof that the
25qualified third-party plan reviewer's or qualified third-party

 

 

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1inspector's licensure or certification is current and active.
2    (e) Nothing in this Division shall be construed to
3transfer liability for code compliance or construction defects
4from the owner, design professional, or contractor.
 
5    (55 ILCS 5/5-48035 new)
6    Sec. 5-48035. Fees; fee parity.
7    (a) In the absence of a county plan review or county
8inspection, a county may not charge plan review or inspection
9fees for any portion of the review process or inspection
10process performed by a qualified third-party plan reviewer or
11qualified third-party inspector.
12    (b) Fees charged by a qualified third-party plan reviewer
13may not exceed the county's standard fees for the same
14service.
15    (c) A county shall reduce its fees proportionally when an
16applicant uses a qualified third-party plan reviewer or
17qualified third-party inspector for only one portion of the
18process.
19    (d) An applicant who retains a qualified third-party plan
20reviewer or a qualified third-party inspector is solely liable
21for costs incurred for the indicated services. A county is not
22liable for fees of a qualified third-party plan reviewer or
23qualified third-party inspector.
 
24    (55 ILCS 5/5-48040 new)

 

 

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1    Sec. 5-48040. Conflicts of interest.
2    (a) A qualified third-party plan reviewer may not review
3plans if:
4        (1) the qualified third-party plan reviewer, an
5    employee of the qualified third-party plan reviewer, or
6    qualified third-party plan reviewer's employer was
7    involved in making the plans; or
8        (2) the plans are for work to be performed on property
9    owned by the qualified third-party plan reviewer, an
10    employee of the qualified third-party plan reviewer, or
11    qualified third-party plan reviewer's employer.
12    (b) A qualified third-party inspector may not inspect work
13if the qualified third-party inspector, an employee of the
14qualified third-party inspector, or qualified third-party
15inspector's employer:
16        (1) performed any of the work;
17        (2) planned any of the work; or
18        (3) is the owner of the property on which the work was
19    performed.
20    (c) A qualified third-party plan reviewer or qualified
21third-party inspector shall disclose any potential conflict of
22interest to the applicant and the county before accepting an
23engagement.
 
24    (55 ILCS 5/5-48045 new)
25    Sec. 5-48045. County immunity. Nothing in this Division

 

 

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1shall be construed to:
2        (1) find a county liable for contracts or agreements
3    between an applicant and a third-party plan review or
4    third-party inspector for unfulfilled or delayed
5    third-party plan reviews or inspections.
6        (2) grant an applicant the right to obtain relief
7    against a local public entity or public employee if a
8    third-party plan reviewer or inspector fails to conduct a
9    required plan review or inspection.
 
10    (55 ILCS 5/5-48050 new)
11    Sec. 5-48050. Home rule preemption. A home rule unit may
12not regulate plan reviews or building inspections in a manner
13inconsistent with this Division. This Division is a limitation
14under subsection (i) of Section 6 of Article VII of the
15Illinois Constitution on the concurrent exercise by home rule
16units of powers and functions exercised by the State.
 
17    (55 ILCS 5/5-48097 new)
18    Sec. 5-48097. Severability. The provisions of this
19Division are severable under Section 1.31 of the Statute on
20Statutes.
 
21    Section 10. The Illinois Municipal Code is amended by
22adding Division 31.2 as follows:
 

 

 

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1    (65 ILCS 5/Art. 11 Div. 31.2 heading new)
2
DIVISION 31.2. BUILDING INSPECTIONS

 
3    (65 ILCS 5/11-31.2-1 new)
4    Sec. 11-31.2-1. Findings and purpose.
5    (a) The General Assembly finds and declares that:
6        (1) Uncertain and lengthy building permit review and
7    inspection timelines add costs, delay community
8    investment, and make it harder to deliver housing across
9    the State.
10        (2) Ensuring predictable, efficient, and transparent
11    review processes is a matter of statewide concern
12    affecting housing supply, public safety, and economic
13    competitiveness.
14        (3) Several states, including Florida, Arizona,
15    Tennessee, Texas, and New Hampshire, have adopted
16    third-party plan review and inspection systems that
17    accelerate development timelines while maintaining safety
18    and code compliance.
19        (4) By setting statewide expectations and offering
20    qualified third-party review options when local deadlines
21    are exceeded, Illinois can reduce avoidable delays and
22    help advance needed housing and commercial development in
23    communities large and small.
24    (b) It is the purpose of this Division to create a
25statewide third-party plan review and inspection framework, to

 

 

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1establish uniform municipal deadlines, and to ensure that all
2applicants may obtain timely approvals necessary to advance
3construction while maintaining public safety and building-code
4standards.
 
5    (65 ILCS 5/11-31.2-2 new)
6    Sec. 11-31.2-2. Definitions. As used in this Act:
7    "Business day" means any day other than a Saturday,
8Sunday, or State-recognized or municipally-recognized holiday.
9    "Complete application" means a building permit application
10that includes all forms, fees, documents, site plans, and
11other materials required by local ordinance.
12    "Qualified third-party inspector" means a person who:
13        (1) is a licensed architect or engineer; and
14        (2) holds a current and active certification issued by
15    the International Code Council, the National Fire
16    Protection Association, or the International Association
17    of Plumbing and Mechanical Officials, or one of their
18    successor organizations; and
19        (3) demonstrates an understanding of local codes and
20    the local codes amendments.
21    "Qualified third-party plan reviewer" means a person who:
22        (1) is a licensed architect or engineer under the laws
23    of this State;
24        (2) holds a current and active certification issued by
25    the International Code Council, the National Fire

 

 

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1    Protection Association, the Independent Alliance of the
2    Electrical Industry, or the International Association of
3    Plumbing and Mechanical Officials, or one of their
4    successor organizations; and
5        (3) demonstrates an understanding of local codes and
6    the local codes amendments.
7    "Single-trade permit" means any construction project on
8the property of a one-family or 2-family residential building
9that requires a permit or approval pursuant to a building code
10that is limited to a single construction discipline including
11erecting, installing, enlarging, altering, repairing,
12removing, converting, or replacing:
13        (1) a heating, ventilation, and air conditioning
14    system;
15        (2) a heat pump system;
16        (3) a water heater or water-treatment appliance;
17        (4) a solar photovoltaic system, a solar thermal
18    system, an energy storage system, or a combination system;
19        (5) an electric vehicle charging station and related
20    equipment;
21        (6) roofing;
22        (7) exterior openings;
23        (8) stucco, plaster, or siding; or
24        (9) fencing.
 
25    (65 ILCS 5/11-31.2-5 new)

 

 

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1    Sec. 11-31.2-5. Applicability. This Division applies to
2all municipalities, including home-rule units.
 
3    (65 ILCS 5/11-31.2-10 new)
4    Sec. 11-31.2-10. Municipal plan review timelines.
5    (a) A municipality shall complete its initial plan review
6within 30 business days after receipt of a complete
7application for a one-family residential project, a 2-family
8residential project, or any multifamily, mixed-use, or
9commercial project.
10    (b) For single-trade permits, a municipality shall
11complete its permit review within 3 business days after
12receipt of a complete application for an installation or
13addition to, or repair, alteration, or remodeling of a
14one-family or 2-family residential project.
15    (c) A municipality shall issue written comments or
16approval within the applicable deadline.
17    (d) For any subsequent review cycle after the applicant
18submits revisions responding to comments, the municipality
19shall complete review within 10 business days of receipt of
20revisions.
21    (e) Failure to meet any deadline under this Section
22triggers the applicant's right to use a qualified third-party
23plan reviewer under Section 11-31.2-20.
 
24    (65 ILCS 5/11-31.2-15 new)

 

 

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1    Sec. 11-31.2-15. Inspection timelines.
2    (a) A municipality shall conduct any required inspection
3within 5 business days after receipt of a request.
4    (b) Failure to conduct the inspection within the required
5period triggers the applicant's right to use a qualified
6third-party inspector under Section 11-31.2-25.
 
7    (65 ILCS 5/11-31.2-20 new)
8    Sec. 11-31.2-20. Use of qualified third-party plan
9reviewers upon missed deadline.
10    (a) If a municipality fails to complete its plan review
11within the deadlines established under Section 11-31.2-10,
12then the applicant may retain a qualified third-party plan
13reviewer.
14    (b) A municipality shall accept any plan review submitted
15by a qualified third-party plan reviewer as meeting the
16municipality's requirements if the review demonstrates
17compliance with the applicable building codes. However, if the
18municipality completes its plan review before receiving a
19compliant plan review from a qualified third-party reviewer,
20the municipality may rely on its own plan review.
21    (c) A municipality shall issue the permit within 2
22business days after receiving a compliant third-party plan
23review.
24    (d) A municipality may not require a second review, impose
25additional comments, or delay issuance once a compliant review

 

 

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1has been submitted. This includes requiring changes to
2approved permit drawings during construction. Once a permit
3has been approved, inspectors shall not request design changes
4or additional requirements beyond what is reflected in the
5approved plan, except as permitted under Section 11-31.2-30.
 
6    (65 ILCS 5/11-31.2-25 new)
7    Sec. 11-31.2-25. Use of qualified third-party inspectors
8upon missed deadline.
9    (a) If a municipality fails to conduct a required
10inspection within 5 business days, then the applicant may
11retain a qualified third-party inspector.
12    (b) Municipalities shall accept inspection reports
13submitted under this Section as satisfying local inspection
14requirements if the report demonstrates compliance with the
15building code.
16    (c) A municipality shall issue any required approval,
17certificate, or authorization within one business day after
18receiving a compliant inspection report.
 
19    (65 ILCS 5/11-31.2-30 new)
20    Sec. 11-31.2-30. Municipal audit authority.
21    (a) A municipality retains full authority to audit any
22third-party plan review or inspection for compliance with
23applicable codes. Nothing in this Division limits a
24municipality's authority to issue stop-work orders, withhold

 

 

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1certificates of occupancy, or pursue enforcement actions if
2the municipal authority makes a written finding of material
3noncompliance with the Division, detailing each case of
4material noncompliance.
5    (b) An audit may not delay issuance of a permit or
6authorization submitted under Section 11-31.2-20 or
711-31.2-25.
8    (c) If a municipality identifies material noncompliance,
9then it may pursue enforcement actions available under its
10code authority and report the findings to the Department of
11Financial and Professional Regulation or applicable
12credentialing organization.
13    (d) A municipality may require reasonable documentation
14demonstrating that a qualified third-party plan reviewer or
15qualified third-party inspector meets the qualification
16requirements of this Division, including proof that the
17qualified third-party plan reviewer's or qualified third-party
18inspector's licensure or certification is current and active.
19    (e) Nothing in this Division shall be construed to
20transfer liability for code compliance or construction defects
21from the owner, design professional, or contractor.
 
22    (65 ILCS 5/11-31.2-35 new)
23    Sec. 11-31.2-35. Fees; fee parity.
24    (a) In the absence of a municipal plan review or municipal
25inspection, a municipality may not charge plan review or

 

 

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1inspection fees for any portion of the review process or
2inspection process performed by a qualified third-party plan
3reviewer or qualified third-party inspector.
4    (b) Fees charged by a qualified third-party plan reviewer
5may not exceed the municipality's standard fees for the same
6service.
7    (c) A municipality shall reduce its fees proportionally
8when an applicant uses a qualified third-party plan reviewer
9or a qualified third-party inspector for only one portion of
10the process.
11    (d) An applicant who retains a qualified third-party plan
12reviewer or a qualified third-party inspector is solely liable
13for costs incurred for the indicated services. A municipality
14is not liable for fees of a qualified third-party plan
15reviewer or qualified third-party inspector.
 
16    (65 ILCS 5/11-31.2-40 new)
17    Sec. 11-31.2-40. Conflicts of interest.
18    (a) A qualified third-party plan reviewer may not review
19plans if:
20        (1) the qualified third-party plan reviewer, an
21    employee of the qualified third-party plan reviewer, or
22    qualified third-party plan reviewer's employer was
23    involved in making the plans; or
24        (2) the plans are for work to be performed on property
25    owned by the qualified third-party plan reviewer, an

 

 

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1    employee of the qualified third-party plan reviewer, or
2    qualified third-party plan reviewer's employer.
3    (b) A qualified third-party inspector may not inspect work
4if the qualified third-party inspector, an employee of the
5qualified third-party inspector, or qualified third-party
6inspector's employer:
7        (1) performed any of the work;
8        (2) planned any of the work; or
9        (3) is the owner of the property on which the work was
10    performed.
11    (c) A qualified third-party plan reviewer or qualified
12third-party inspector shall disclose any potential conflict of
13interest to the applicant and the municipality before
14accepting an engagement.
 
15    (65 ILCS 5/11-31.2-45 new)
16    Sec. 11-31.2-45. Municipal immunity. Nothing in this
17Division shall be construed to:
18        (1) find a municipality liable for contracts or
19    agreements between an applicant and a third-party plan
20    reviewer or third-party inspector for unfulfilled or
21    delayed third-party plan reviews or inspections; or
22        (2) grant an applicant the right to obtain relief
23    against a local public entity or public employee if a
24    third-party plan reviewer or inspector fails to conduct a
25    required plan review or inspection.
 

 

 

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1    (65 ILCS 5/11-31.2-50 new)
2    Sec. 11-31.2-50. Home rule preemption. A home rule unit
3may not regulate plan reviews or building inspections in a
4manner inconsistent with this Division. This Division is a
5limitation under subsection (i) of Section 6 of Article VII of
6the Illinois Constitution on the concurrent exercise by home
7rule units of powers and functions exercised by the State.
 
8    (65 ILCS 5/11-31.2-97 new)
9    Sec. 11-31.2-97. Severability. The provisions of this
10Division are severable under Section 1.31 of the Statute on
11Statutes.".