Sen. Willie Preston

Filed: 3/14/2025

 

 


 

 


 
10400SB2187sam001LRB104 09079 HLH 22811 a

1
AMENDMENT TO SENATE BILL 2187

2    AMENDMENT NO. ______. Amend Senate Bill 2187 by replacing
3everything after the enacting clause with the following:
 
4    "Section 5. The Illinois Procurement Code is amended by
5changing Sections 1-13 and 20-5 and by adding Section 45-115
6and Article 60 as follows:
 
7    (30 ILCS 500/1-13)
8    Sec. 1-13. Applicability to public institutions of higher
9education.
10    (a) This Code shall apply to public institutions of higher
11education, regardless of the source of the funds with which
12contracts are paid, except as provided in this Section.
13    (b) Except as provided in this Section, this Code shall
14not apply to procurements made by or on behalf of public
15institutions of higher education for any of the following:
16        (1) Memberships in professional, academic, research,

 

 

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1    or athletic organizations on behalf of a public
2    institution of higher education, an employee of a public
3    institution of higher education, or a student at a public
4    institution of higher education.
5        (2) Procurement expenditures for events or activities
6    paid for exclusively by revenues generated by the event or
7    activity, gifts or donations for the event or activity,
8    private grants, or any combination thereof.
9        (3) Procurement expenditures for events or activities
10    for which the use of specific potential contractors is
11    mandated or identified by the sponsor of the event or
12    activity, provided that the sponsor is providing a
13    majority of the funding for the event or activity.
14        (4) Procurement expenditures necessary to provide
15    athletic, artistic or musical services, performances,
16    events, or productions by or for a public institution of
17    higher education.
18        (5) Procurement expenditures for periodicals, books,
19    subscriptions, database licenses, and other publications
20    procured for use by a university library or academic
21    department, except for expenditures related to procuring
22    textbooks for student use or materials for resale or
23    rental.
24        (6) Procurement expenditures for placement of students
25    in externships, practicums, field experiences, and for
26    medical residencies and rotations.

 

 

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1        (7) Contracts for programming and broadcast license
2    rights for university-operated radio and television
3    stations.
4        (8) Procurement expenditures necessary to perform
5    sponsored research and other sponsored activities under
6    grants and contracts funded by the sponsor or by sources
7    other than State appropriations.
8        (9) Contracts with a foreign entity for research or
9    educational activities, provided that the foreign entity
10    either does not maintain an office in the United States or
11    is the sole source of the service or product.
12        (10) Procurement expenditures for any ongoing software
13    license or maintenance agreement or competitively
14    solicited software purchase, when the software, license,
15    or maintenance agreement is available through only the
16    software creator or its manufacturer and not a reseller.
17        (11) Procurement expenditures incurred outside of the
18    United States for the recruitment of international
19    students.
20        (12) Procurement expenditures for contracts entered
21    into under the Public University Energy Conservation Act.
22        (13) Procurement expenditures for advertising
23    purchased directly from a media station or the owner of
24    the station for distribution of advertising.
25Notice of each contract with an annual value of more than
26$100,000 entered into by a public institution of higher

 

 

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1education that is related to the procurement of goods and
2services identified in items (1) through (13) of this
3subsection shall be published in the Procurement Bulletin
4within 14 calendar days after contract execution. The Chief
5Procurement Officer shall prescribe the form and content of
6the notice. Each public institution of higher education shall
7provide the Chief Procurement Officer, on a monthly basis, in
8the form and content prescribed by the Chief Procurement
9Officer, a report of contracts that are related to the
10procurement of goods and services identified in this
11subsection. At a minimum, this report shall include the name
12of the contractor, a description of the supply or service
13provided, the total amount of the contract, the term of the
14contract, and the exception to the Code utilized. A copy of any
15or all of these contracts shall be made available to the Chief
16Procurement Officer immediately upon request. The Chief
17Procurement Officer shall submit a report to the Governor and
18General Assembly no later than November 1 of each year that
19shall include, at a minimum, an annual summary of the monthly
20information reported to the Chief Procurement Officer.
21    (b-5) Except as provided in this subsection, the
22provisions of this Code shall not apply to contracts for
23medical supplies or to contracts for medical services
24necessary for the delivery of care and treatment at medical,
25dental, pharmaceutical, or veterinary teaching facilities used
26by Southern Illinois University or the University of Illinois

 

 

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1or at any university-operated health care center or dispensary
2that provides care, treatment, and medications for students,
3faculty, and staff. Furthermore, the provisions of this Code
4do not apply to the procurement by such a facility of any
5additional supplies or services that the operator of the
6facility deems necessary for the effective use and functioning
7of the medical supplies or services that are otherwise exempt
8from this Code under this subsection (b-5), including, but not
9limited to, procurements necessary for compliance and
10management of federal programs. However, other supplies and
11services needed for these teaching facilities shall be subject
12to the jurisdiction of the Chief Procurement Officer for
13Public Institutions of Higher Education who may establish
14expedited procurement procedures and may waive or modify
15certification, contract, hearing, process and registration
16requirements required by this Code. All procurements made
17under this subsection shall be documented and may require
18publication in the Illinois Procurement Bulletin.
19    (b-10) Procurements made by or on behalf of the University
20of Illinois for investment services may be entered into or
21renewed without being subject to the requirements of this
22Code. Notice of intent to renew a contract shall be published
23in the Illinois Public Higher Education Procurement Bulletin
24at least 14 days prior to the execution of a renewal, and the
25University of Illinois shall hold a public hearing for
26interested parties to provide public comment. Any contract

 

 

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1extended, renewed, or entered pursuant to this exception shall
2be published in the Illinois Public Higher Education
3Procurement Bulletin within 5 days of contract execution.
4    (c) Procurements made by or on behalf of public
5institutions of higher education for the fulfillment of a
6grant shall be made in accordance with the requirements of
7this Code to the extent practical.
8    Upon the written request of a public institution of higher
9education, the Chief Procurement Officer may waive contract,
10registration, certification, and hearing requirements of this
11Code if, based on the item to be procured or the terms of a
12grant, compliance is impractical. The public institution of
13higher education shall provide the Chief Procurement Officer
14with specific reasons for the waiver, including the necessity
15of contracting with a particular potential contractor, and
16shall certify that an effort was made in good faith to comply
17with the provisions of this Code. The Chief Procurement
18Officer shall provide written justification for any waivers.
19By November 1 of each year, the Chief Procurement Officer
20shall file a report with the General Assembly identifying each
21contract approved with waivers and providing the justification
22given for any waivers for each of those contracts. Notice of
23each waiver made under this subsection shall be published in
24the Procurement Bulletin within 14 calendar days after
25contract execution. The Chief Procurement Officer shall
26prescribe the form and content of the notice.

 

 

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1    (d) Notwithstanding this Section, a waiver of the
2registration requirements of Section 20-160 does not permit a
3business entity and any affiliated entities or affiliated
4persons to make campaign contributions if otherwise prohibited
5by Section 50-37. The total amount of contracts awarded in
6accordance with this Section shall be included in determining
7the aggregate amount of contracts or pending bids of a
8business entity and any affiliated entities or affiliated
9persons.
10    (e) Notwithstanding subsection (e) of Section 50-10.5 of
11this Code, the Chief Procurement Officer, with the approval of
12the Executive Ethics Commission, may permit a public
13institution of higher education to accept a bid or enter into a
14contract with a business that assisted the public institution
15of higher education in determining whether there is a need for
16a contract or assisted in reviewing, drafting, or preparing
17documents related to a bid or contract, provided that the bid
18or contract is essential to research administered by the
19public institution of higher education and it is in the best
20interest of the public institution of higher education to
21accept the bid or contract. For purposes of this subsection,
22"business" includes all individuals with whom a business is
23affiliated, including, but not limited to, any officer, agent,
24employee, consultant, independent contractor, director,
25partner, manager, or shareholder of a business. The Executive
26Ethics Commission may promulgate rules and regulations for the

 

 

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1implementation and administration of the provisions of this
2subsection (e).
3    (e-5) Procurements made by or on behalf of public
4institutions of higher education for food shall be made in
5accordance with Section 25-15.
6    (f) As used in this Section:
7    "Grant" means non-appropriated funding provided by a
8federal or private entity to support a project or program
9administered by a public institution of higher education and
10any non-appropriated funding provided to a sub-recipient of
11the grant.
12    "Public institution of higher education" means Chicago
13State University, Eastern Illinois University, Governors State
14University, Illinois State University, Northeastern Illinois
15University, Northern Illinois University, Southern Illinois
16University, University of Illinois, Western Illinois
17University, and, for purposes of this Code only, the Illinois
18Mathematics and Science Academy.
19    (g) (Blank).
20    (h) The General Assembly finds and declares that:
21        (1) Public Act 98-1076, which took effect on January
22    1, 2015, changed the repeal date set for this Section from
23    December 31, 2014 to December 31, 2016.
24        (2) The Statute on Statutes sets forth general rules
25    on the repeal of statutes and the construction of multiple
26    amendments, but Section 1 of that Act also states that

 

 

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1    these rules will not be observed when the result would be
2    "inconsistent with the manifest intent of the General
3    Assembly or repugnant to the context of the statute".
4        (3) This amendatory Act of the 100th General Assembly
5    manifests the intention of the General Assembly to remove
6    the repeal of this Section.
7        (4) This Section was originally enacted to protect,
8    promote, and preserve the general welfare. Any
9    construction of this Section that results in the repeal of
10    this Section on December 31, 2014 would be inconsistent
11    with the manifest intent of the General Assembly and
12    repugnant to the context of this Code.
13    It is hereby declared to have been the intent of the
14General Assembly that this Section not be subject to repeal on
15December 31, 2014.
16    This Section shall be deemed to have been in continuous
17effect since December 20, 2011 (the effective date of Public
18Act 97-643), and it shall continue to be in effect
19henceforward until it is otherwise lawfully repealed. All
20previously enacted amendments to this Section taking effect on
21or after December 31, 2014, are hereby validated.
22    All actions taken in reliance on or pursuant to this
23Section by any public institution of higher education, person,
24or entity are hereby validated.
25    In order to ensure the continuing effectiveness of this
26Section, it is set forth in full and re-enacted by this

 

 

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1amendatory Act of the 100th General Assembly. This
2re-enactment is intended as a continuation of this Section. It
3is not intended to supersede any amendment to this Section
4that is enacted by the 100th General Assembly.
5    In this amendatory Act of the 100th General Assembly, the
6base text of the reenacted Section is set forth as amended by
7Public Act 98-1076. Striking and underscoring is used only to
8show changes being made to the base text.
9    This Section applies to all procurements made on or before
10the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 100th General
11Assembly.
12(Source: P.A. 102-16, eff. 6-17-21; 102-721, eff. 5-6-22;
13102-1119, eff. 1-23-23; 103-570, eff. 1-1-24; 103-865, eff.
141-1-25.)
 
15    (30 ILCS 500/20-5)
16    Sec. 20-5. Method of source selection. Unless otherwise
17authorized by law, all State contracts shall be awarded by
18competitive sealed bidding, in accordance with Section 20-10,
19except as provided in Sections 20-15, 20-20, 20-25, 20-30,
2020-35, 30-15, and 40-20, and 60-15. The chief procurement
21officers appointed pursuant to Section 10-20 may determine the
22method of solicitation and contract for all procurements
23pursuant to this Code.
24(Source: P.A. 98-1076, eff. 1-1-15.)
 

 

 

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1    (30 ILCS 500/45-115 new)
2    Sec. 45-115. Alignment with the Good Food Purchasing Law.
3When a State agency or a State-owned facility contract for the
4procurement of food is to be awarded pursuant to Section 20-15
5of this Code, the Chief Procurement Officer must consider the
6following factors and may give preference over other proposers
7to an otherwise qualified proposer who will fulfill the
8contract while also adhering to the following:
9        (1) the good food purchasing core values defined in
10    the Local Food, Farms, and Jobs Act; and
11        (2) good food purchasing equity, accountability, and
12    transparency defined in the Local Food, Farms, and Jobs
13    Act.
 
14    (30 ILCS 500/Art. 60 heading new)
15
ARTICLE 60. FOOD PROCUREMENT

 
16    (30 ILCS 500/60-5 new)
17    Sec. 60-5. Applicability. All State agencies and
18State-owned facility food contracts, including public
19institutions of higher education, shall be procured in
20accordance with the provisions of this Article.
 
21    (30 ILCS 500/60-10 new)
22    Sec. 60-10. Authority. Chief Procurement Officers shall
23have the authority to procure food.
 

 

 

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1    (30 ILCS 500/60-15 new)
2    Sec. 60-15. Method of source selection. Each State agency
3and State-owned facility food contract shall be awarded by
4competitive sealed proposal in accordance with Section 20-15
5of this Code, except as provided in Sections 20-20 and 20-30.
6The Chief Procurement Officers appointed pursuant to Section
710-20 may determine the method of solicitation for all
8procurements pursuant to this Act.
 
9    Section 10. The Local Food, Farms, and Jobs Act is amended
10by changing Sections 1 and 5 and by adding Sections 12, 35, and
1140 as follows:
 
12    (30 ILCS 595/1)
13    Sec. 1. Short title. This Act may be cited as the "Local
14Food, Farms, and Jobs Act". This Act may be referred to as the
15Good Food Purchasing Law.
16(Source: P.A. 96-579, eff. 8-18-09.)
 
17    (30 ILCS 595/5)
18    Sec. 5. Definitions. As used in this Act:
19    "Good food purchasing core values" means procurement
20criteria for the purchase of food that is based on all of the
21following:
22        (1) prioritizing local suppliers, especially small or

 

 

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1    mid-sized farms, food manufacturers, or food businesses
2    that are privately or cooperatively operated or operated
3    as not-for-profit organizations and are located within (i)
4    a 250-mile radius for food other than meat, poultry, or
5    seafood or (ii) a 500-mile radius for meat, poultry, or
6    seafood;
7        (2) prioritizing suppliers that are entrepreneurs of
8    color and community members who are most impacted by
9    current and historic economic marginalization;
10        (3) leveraging institutional buying power,
11    infrastructure, financial resources, staff time, and land
12    in support of community members, food producers, and food
13    workers who have experienced negative systemic social or
14    economic impacts;
15        (4) building partnerships with community members to
16    ensure that food products and menus reflect the interests
17    and cultures of everyone they serve, and identifying
18    pathways for purchasing from small and community-based
19    suppliers for products that cannot be grown or harvested
20    within the mileage limitations, such as seafood, coffee,
21    cocoa, and sugar.
22        (2) Prioritizing suppliers that consider: (i)
23    community health and universal rights to clean air and
24    water; (ii) reduction or elimination of synthetic
25    pesticides and fertilizers; (iii) improved soil health and
26    carbon sequestration; (iv) reduced fossil fuel energy

 

 

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1    inputs and protection of water resources; (v) biodiversity
2    and ecological resilience; (vi) food waste reduction;
3    (vii) greenhouse gas emission reduction; and (viii)
4    reduction or elimination of single-use plastics and other
5    resource-intensive packaging and reducing carbon and water
6    footprint of food purchases.
7        (3) Sourcing from producers and vendors that (i)
8    comply with labor laws, including minimum wage laws,
9    through contractual requirements and enforcement, (ii)
10    honor the right to freedom of association, (iii) provide
11    workers with the ability to organize a union and to
12    bargain collectively, free from reprisal, for livable
13    wages and safe and healthy working conditions, (iv) uphold
14    and implement workers' rights principles, and (v)
15    implement cooperative ownership, democratic
16    decision-making, and migrant, racial, and gender justice.
17        (4) Sourcing from farms and ranches that provide
18    healthy and humane conditions for farm animals throughout
19    their lives through (i) nutrition, (ii) physical
20    environment, (iii) health, (iv) behavioral interaction;
21    and (v) mental or affective state.
22        (5) Promoting community health, nutrition, equitable
23    access, and food sovereignty by prioritizing high-quality
24    and culturally relevant whole or minimally processed
25    foods, including vegetables, fruit, and whole grains, and
26    plant-forward meals. Preservation methods such as canning

 

 

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1    and bottling using oils, sugar, or salt are not permitted.
2        (6) In general, prioritizing products certified under
3    certifications currently endorsed by a national
4    organization managing the Good Food Purchasing Program.
5    "Good Food Purchasing equity, accountability, and
6transparency" means:
7        (1) Having or developing a supplier or vendor
8    diversification plan with goals that include reporting and
9    accountability measures. Measures should be disaggregated
10    by demographic group, including race and gender.
11        (2) Planning implementation should prioritize
12    purchases and address barriers to entry for suppliers who
13    have experienced negative systemic social or economic
14    impacts, including, but not limited to, women, veterans,
15    persons with disabilities, and especially people of color,
16    across all supply chains and to the greatest extent
17    possible.
18        (3) Sharing purchasing data, assessments, purchasing
19    targets, or implementation plans in a publicly accessible
20    location including online with community members to
21    facilitate engagement and transparency.
22        (4) Engaging with community members, including, but
23    not limited to, people served by meal programs, food
24    service workers, constituents, and local food businesses,
25    in informing values-based purchasing decisions and
26    processes.

 

 

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1        (5) Developing and implementing comprehensive
2    institutional policies that reflect community needs and
3    values and prioritize transparency, racial equity, local
4    economies, environmental sustainability, valued
5    workforce, animal welfare, and community health and
6    nutrition within their operations and food procurement.
7        (6) Ensuring that institutional policies are embedded
8    in agreements for contracted food services and that
9    mechanisms are developed to ensure compliance and
10    accountability through reporting and active contract
11    management.
12    "Minimally processed foods" means foods that are unaltered
13or slightly altered from the food's natural state through such
14processes as removal of inedible or unwanted parts, drying,
15powdering, squeezing, crushing, grinding, fractioning,
16steaming, poaching, boiling, roasting, pasteurization,
17chilling, freezing, placing in containers, vacuum packaging,
18nonalcoholic fermentation, and other methods that do not add
19to the original food, salt, sugar, oils, or fats, or food
20substances, other than additives that prolong product
21duration, protect original properties, or prevent
22proliferation of microorganisms. "Minimally processed foods"
23include, but are not limited to, whole grains or flours; fresh
24or frozen fruits and vegetables; meat, poultry, fish, and
25seafood, whole or in the form of steaks, fillets, and other
26cuts; fresh or pasteurized milk, eggs, fresh or pasteurized

 

 

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1plain yogurt, legumes, and nuts and seeds. "Minimally
2processed foods" also includes foods made of 2 or more items in
3this group, such as dried mixed fruits, and foods with
4vitamins and minerals generally added to replace nutrients
5lost during minimal processing, such as flour fortified with
6iron and folic acid.
7"Local farm or food products" are products: (1) grown in
8Illinois; or (2) processed and packaged in Illinois, using at
9least one ingredient grown in Illinois.
10(Source: P.A. 101-258, eff. 1-1-20.)
 
11    (30 ILCS 595/12 new)
12    Sec. 12. Good Food Purchasing Program.
13    (a) No later than one year after the effective date of this
14amendatory Act of the 104th General Assembly, each State
15agency and State-owned facility that purchases food,
16including, without limitation, facilities for persons with
17mental health and developmental disabilities, correctional
18facilities, and public institutions of higher education,
19including community colleges, shall have a timely plan for
20undergoing a Good Food Purchasing baseline assessment
21conducted by a national organization equipped to conduct such
22assessment, to determine current alignment with Good Food
23Purchasing core values and Good Food Purchasing equity,
24transparency, and accountability and how better to meet the
25Good Food Purchasing core values and Good Food Purchasing

 

 

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1equity, transparency, and accountability.
2    (b) No later than one year after completion of the
3baseline assessment under subsection (a), each State agency
4and State-owned facility shall develop and adopt a multi-year
5action plan with benchmarks to align food purchasing processes
6with Good Food Purchasing equity, transparency, and
7accountability and food purchases with Good Food Purchasing
8core values.
9    (c) Upon adoption of the multi-year action plan required
10under subsection (b) of this Section, each State agency and
11State-owned facility shall procure food pursuant to Section
1220-15 of the Illinois Procurement Code.
13    (d) The year after completing the multi-year action plan
14and each year thereafter, each State agency and State-owned
15facility shall undergo a Good Food Purchasing assessment and
16update its multi-year action plan to annually increase the
17procurement of food that meets the Good Food Purchasing core
18values and Good Food Purchasing equity, transparency, and
19accountability.
20    (e) (Blank).
21    (f) To facilitate reporting required under this Section,
22all State agencies and State-owned facilities that purchase
23food shall include in all requests for proposals, and
24contracts a requirement for vendor data-sharing, including,
25but not limited to, product types, quantities, sizes, prices,
26origin, processors, and distributors.

 

 

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1    (g) On each January 1 following adoption of a multi-year
2action plan, each State agency and State-owned facility that
3purchases food shall publish in its procurement bulletin and
4on its website, in the form and format prescribed by the Chief
5Procurement Officer, notice of its purchases of food in the
6immediately preceding fiscal year, its Good Food Purchasing
7baseline and annual assessments, in the immediately preceding
8fiscal year and its multi-year action plan.
9    (h) Under the procedures laid out in subsection (h) of
10Section 5-5 of the Illinois Procurement Code, the Procurement
11Policy Board may review a proposal or contract and issue a
12recommendation to void a contract or reject a proposal based
13on a vendor's or proposer's current violation or history of
14violation of federal, State, or local law, including, but not
15limited to, federal labor laws under Title 29 of the United
16States Code and the Minimum Wage Law.
 
17    (30 ILCS 595/35 new)
18    Sec. 35. Good Food Purchasing Task Force.
19    (a) The Good Food Purchasing Task Force created by House
20Joint Resolution 33 adopted in the 102nd General Assembly is
21reestablished and shall continue with its study of current
22procurement of food within the State and to explore how good
23food purchasing can be implemented to maximize the procurement
24of healthy foods that are sustainably, locally, and equitably
25sourced.

 

 

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1    (b) Any action taken in reliance on House Joint Resolution
233 of the 102nd General Assembly after January 1, 2023 by any
3person or entity is hereby validated.
4    (c) The Task Force shall consist of the following members,
5who shall serve without compensation:
6        (1) the Lieutenant Governor or his or her designee;
7        (2) the Speaker of the House of Representatives or his
8    or her designee;
9        (3) the Minority Leader of the House of
10    Representatives or his or her designee;
11        (4) the Senate President or his or her designee;
12        (5) the Senate Minority Leader or his or her designee;
13        (6) one member nominated by a statewide local food
14    advocacy organization and appointed by the Lieutenant
15    Governor;
16        (7) one member nominated by a national multi-sector
17    food advocacy organization and appointed by the Lieutenant
18    Governor;
19        (8) one member nominated by a Chicago-based food
20    advocacy organization and appointed by the Lieutenant
21    Governor;
22        (9) one member nominated by a statewide environmental
23    advocacy organization and appointed by the Lieutenant
24    Governor;
25        (10) one member nominated by a statewide labor
26    organization that represents food workers and appointed by

 

 

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1    the Lieutenant Governor;
2        (11) one member nominated by a national farm-animal
3    welfare organization and appointed by the Lieutenant
4    Governor;
5        (12) the Director of the Department of Commerce and
6    Economic Opportunity or his or her designee;
7        (13) the Director of the Environmental Protection
8    Agency or his or her designee;
9        (14) the Director of the Department of Public Health
10    or his or her designee;
11        (15) the Director of the Department of Natural
12    Resources or his or her designee;
13        (16) the Chief Procurement Officer for General
14    Services or his or her designee;
15        (17) the Chief Procurement Officer for Higher
16    Education or his or her designee;
17        (18) the Chief Procurement Officer for the Secretary
18    of State's Office or his or her designee;
19        (19) the Director of Corrections or his or her
20    designee;
21        (20) the Secretary of Human Services or his or her
22    designee;
23        (21) the Director of Central Management Services or
24    his or her designee;
25        (22) the Director of the Department of Agriculture or
26    his or her designee; and

 

 

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1        (23) one member nominated by a statewide organization
2    that advocates for healthy nutrition and appointed by
3    Lieutenant Governor.
4    Members of the Task Force shall serve without
5compensation. The Task Force members shall select a
6chairperson at the first meeting of the Task Force. Any member
7appointed under House Joint Resolution 33 of the 102nd General
8Assembly who was a member of the Task Force at the end of the
9102nd General Assembly shall continue to serve on the Task
10Force until the appointed member resigns or is otherwise
11removed from the Task Force.
12    (d) The Department of Agriculture shall provide
13administrative support for the Task Force.
14    (e) The Task Force shall submit its interim report to the
15Governor and General Assembly no later than one year after the
16effective date of this amendatory Act of the 104th General
17Assembly and its final report 2 years after the effective date
18of this amendatory Act of the 104th General Assembly.
19Following submission of the final report, the Task Force shall
20continue to meet to monitor and support implementation of this
21Act.
 
22    (30 ILCS 595/40 new)
23    Sec. 40. Good Food Purchasing Fund. The Good Food
24Purchasing Fund is established as a special fund in the State
25treasury. Interest earned by the Good Food Purchasing Fund

 

 

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1shall be credited to the fund. Moneys in the Good Food
2Purchasing Fund shall be used by the Department of Agriculture
3to administer this Act, including by creating a Good Food
4Purchasing Office within the Department, hiring staff, and
5providing training and technical assistance to State agencies
6and State-owned facilities that purchase food. The fund shall
7be subject to appropriations; however, the Department shall be
8permitted to accept federal government, local government, and
9private resources at any time to implement this Act.
 
10    (30 ILCS 595/10 rep.)
11    Section 15. The Local Food, Farms, and Jobs Act is amended
12by repealing Section 10.
 
13    Section 20. The Food Handling Regulation Enforcement Act
14is amended by changing Section 4 as follows:
 
15    (410 ILCS 625/4)
16    Sec. 4. Cottage food operation.
17    (a) For the purpose of this Section:
18    A food is "acidified" if: (i) acid or acid ingredients are
19added to it to produce a final equilibrium pH of 4.6 or below
20and a water activity greater than 0.85; or (ii) it is fermented
21to produce a final equilibrium pH of 4.6 or below.
22    "Canned food" means food that has been heat processed
23sufficiently under United States Department of Agriculture

 

 

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1guidelines to enable storing the food at normal home
2temperatures.
3    "Cottage food operation" means an operation conducted by a
4person who produces or packages food or drink, other than
5foods and drinks listed as prohibited in paragraph (1.5) of
6subsection (b) of this Section, in a kitchen located in that
7person's primary domestic residence or another appropriately
8designed and equipped kitchen on a farm for direct sale by the
9owner, a family member, or an employee.
10    "Cut leafy greens" means fresh leafy greens whose leaves
11have been cut, shredded, sliced, chopped, or torn. "Cut leafy
12greens" does not mean cut-to-harvest leafy greens.
13    "Department" means the Department of Public Health.
14    "Employee" means a person who is employed by and receives
15monetary compensation from a cottage food operator.
16    "Equilibrium pH" means the final potential of hydrogen
17measured in an acidified food after all the components of the
18food have achieved the same acidity.
19    "Farmers' market" means a common facility or area where
20farmers gather to sell a variety of fresh fruits and
21vegetables and other locally produced farm and food products
22directly to consumers.
23    "Leafy greens" includes iceberg lettuce; romaine lettuce;
24leaf lettuce; butter lettuce; baby leaf lettuce, such as
25immature lettuce or leafy greens; escarole; endive; spring
26mix; spinach; cabbage; kale; arugula; and chard. "Leafy

 

 

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1greens" does not include microgreens or herbs such as cilantro
2or parsley.
3    "Local health department" means a State-certified health
4department of a unit of local government in which a cottage
5food operation is located or, if the cottage food operation is
6located in a county that does not have a local health
7department, is registered.
8    "Local public health department association" means an
9association solely representing 2 or more State-certified
10local health departments.
11    "Low-acid canned food" means any canned food with a
12finished equilibrium pH greater than 4.6 and a water activity
13greater than 0.85.
14    "Microgreen" means an edible plant seedling grown in soil
15or substrate and harvested above the soil or substrate line.
16    "Mobile farmers markets" means a farmers market that is
17operated from a movable motor drive or propelled vehicle or
18trailer that can change location, including a farmers market
19that is owned and operated by a farmer or a third party selling
20products on behalf of farmers or cottage food operations with
21the intent of a direct sale to an end consumer.
22    "Sprout" means any seedling intended for human consumption
23that was produced in a manner that does not meet the definition
24of microgreen.
25    "Time/temperature control for safety food" means a food
26that is stored under time or temperature control for food

 

 

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1safety according to the Department's administrative rules.
2    (b) A cottage food operation may produce homemade food and
3drink provided that all of the following conditions are met:
4        (1) (Blank).
5        (1.3) A cottage food operation must register with the
6    local health department for the unit of local government
7    in which it is located, but may sell products outside of
8    the unit of local government where the cottage food
9    operation is located. If a county does not have a local
10    health department, the county shall enter into an
11    agreement or contract with a local health department in an
12    adjacent county to register cottage food operations in the
13    jurisdiction of the county that does not have a health
14    department. The adjacent local health department where the
15    cottage food operation registers has the powers described
16    in subsection (d). A copy of the certificate of
17    registration must be available upon request by any local
18    health department.
19        (1.5) A cottage food operation shall not sell or offer
20    to sell the following food items or processed foods
21    containing the following food items, except as indicated:
22            (A) meat, poultry, fish, seafood, or shellfish;
23            (B) dairy, except as an ingredient in a baked good
24        or candy that is not a time/temperature control for
25        safety food, such as caramel, subject to paragraph
26        (4), or as an ingredient in a baked good frosting, such

 

 

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1        as buttercream;
2            (C) eggs, except as an ingredient in a food that is
3        not a time/temperature control for safety food,
4        including dry noodles, or as an ingredient in a baked
5        good frosting, such as buttercream, if the eggs are
6        not raw;
7            (D) pumpkin pies, sweet potato pies, cheesecakes,
8        custard pies, creme pies, and pastries with
9        time/temperature control for safety foods that are
10        fillings or toppings;
11            (E) garlic in oil or oil infused with garlic,
12        except if the garlic oil is acidified;
13            (F) low-acid canned foods;
14            (G) sprouts;
15            (H) cut leafy greens, except for cut leafy greens
16        that are dehydrated, acidified, or blanched and
17        frozen;
18            (I) cut or pureed fresh tomato or melon;
19            (J) dehydrated tomato or melon;
20            (K) frozen cut melon;
21            (L) wild-harvested, non-cultivated mushrooms;
22            (M) alcoholic beverages; or
23            (N) kombucha.
24        (1.6) In order to sell canned tomatoes or a canned
25    product containing tomatoes, a cottage food operator shall
26    either:

 

 

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1            (A) follow exactly a recipe that has been tested
2        by the United States Department of Agriculture or by a
3        state cooperative extension located in this State or
4        any other state in the United States; or
5            (B) submit the recipe, at the cottage food
6        operator's expense, to a commercial laboratory
7        according to the commercial laboratory's directions to
8        test that the product has been adequately acidified;
9        use only the varietal or proportionate varietals of
10        tomato included in the tested recipe for all
11        subsequent batches of such recipe; and provide
12        documentation of the annual test results of the recipe
13        submitted under this subparagraph upon registration
14        and to an inspector upon request during any inspection
15        authorized by subsection (d).
16        (2) In order to sell a fermented or acidified food, a
17    cottage food operation shall either:
18            (A) submit a recipe that has been tested by the
19        United States Department of Agriculture or a
20        cooperative extension system located in this State or
21        any other state in the United States; or
22            (B) submit a written food safety plan for each
23        category of products for which the cottage food
24        operator uses the same procedures, such as pickles,
25        kimchi, or hot sauce, and a pH test for a single
26        product that is representative of that category; the

 

 

10400SB2187sam001- 29 -LRB104 09079 HLH 22811 a

1        written food safety plan shall be submitted annually
2        upon registration and each pH test shall be submitted
3        every 3 years; the food safety plan shall adhere to
4        guidelines developed by the Department.
5        (3) A fermented or acidified food shall be packaged
6    according to one of the following standards:
7            (A) A fermented or acidified food that is canned
8        must be processed in a boiling water bath in a
9        Mason-style jar or glass container with a
10        tight-fitting lid.
11            (B) A fermented or acidified food that is not
12        canned shall be sold in any container that is new,
13        clean, and seals properly and must be stored,
14        transported, and sold at or below 41 degrees.
15        (4) In order to sell a baked good with cheese, a local
16    health department may require a cottage food operation to
17    submit a recipe, at the cottage food operator's expense,
18    to a commercial laboratory to verify that it is not a
19    time/temperature time-or-temperature control for safety
20    food before allowing the cottage food operation to sell
21    the baked good as a cottage food.
22        (5) For a cottage food operation that does not utilize
23    a municipal water supply, such as an operation using a
24    private well, a local health department may require a
25    water sample test to verify that the water source being
26    used meets public safety standards related to E. coli

 

 

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1    coliform. If a test is requested, it must be conducted at
2    the cottage food operator's expense.
3        (6) A person preparing or packaging a product as part
4    of a cottage food operation must be a Department-approved
5    certified food protection manager.
6        (7) Food packaging must conform with the labeling
7    requirements of the Illinois Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act.
8    A cottage food product shall be prepackaged and the food
9    packaging shall be affixed with a prominent label that
10    includes the following:
11            (A) the name of the cottage food operation and
12        unit of local government in which the cottage food
13        operation is located;
14            (B) the identifying registration number provided
15        by the local health department on the certificate of
16        registration and the name of the municipality or
17        county in which the registration was filed;
18            (C) the common or usual name of the food product;
19            (D) all ingredients of the food product, including
20        any color, artificial flavor, and preservative, listed
21        in descending order by predominance of weight shown
22        with the common or usual names;
23            (E) the following phrase in prominent lettering:
24        "This product was produced in a home kitchen not
25        inspected by a health department that may also process
26        common food allergens. If you have safety concerns,

 

 

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1        contact your local health department.";
2            (F) the date the product was processed; and
3            (G) allergen labeling as specified under federal
4        labeling requirements.
5        (8) Food packaging may include the designation
6    "Illinois-grown", "Illinois-sourced", or "Illinois farm
7    product" if the packaged product is (1) grown in Illinois;
8    or (2) processed and packaged in Illinois, using at least
9    one ingredient grown in Illinois a local farm or food
10    product as that term is defined in Section 5 of the Local
11    Food, Farms, and Jobs Act.
12        (9) In the case of a product that is difficult to
13    properly label or package, or for other reasons, the local
14    health department of the location where the product is
15    sold may grant permission to sell products that are not
16    prepackaged, in which case other prominent written notice
17    shall be provided to the purchaser.
18        (10) At the point of sale, notice must be provided in a
19    prominent location that states the following: "This
20    product was produced in a home kitchen not inspected by a
21    health department that may also process common food
22    allergens." At a physical display, notice shall be a
23    placard. Online, notice shall be a message on the cottage
24    food operation's online sales interface at the point of
25    sale.
26        (11) Food and drink produced by a cottage food

 

 

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1    operation shall be sold directly to consumers for their
2    own consumption and not for resale. Sales directly to
3    consumers include, but are not limited to, sales at or
4    through:
5            (A) farmers' markets;
6            (B) fairs, festivals, public events, or online;
7            (C) pickup from the private home or farm of the
8        cottage food operator, if the pickup is not prohibited
9        by any law of the unit of local government that applies
10        equally to all cottage food operations; in a
11        municipality with a population of 1,000,000 or more, a
12        cottage food operator shall comply with any law of the
13        municipality that applies equally to all home-based
14        businesses;
15            (D) delivery to the customer;
16            (E) pickup from a third-party private property
17        with the consent of the third-party property holder;
18        and
19            (F) mobile farmers markets.
20        (12) Only food that is not a time/temperature
21    time-or-temperature control for safety food may be
22    shipped. A cottage food product shall not be shipped out
23    of State. Each cottage food product that is shipped must
24    be sealed in a manner that reveals tampering, including,
25    but not limited to, a sticker or pop top.
26        (13) Alcohol may be used to make extracts, such as

 

 

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1    vanilla extract, or may be used as an ingredient in baked
2    goods as long as the created product is not intended for
3    use as a beverage.
4        (14) Time/temperature control for safety foods shall
5    be maintained and transported at holding temperatures as
6    set in the Department's administrative rules to ensure the
7    food's safety and limit microorganism growth or toxin
8    formation.
9        (15) A product assessment of pH and water activity may
10    be used to show that a product is non-time or temperature
11    controlled for food safety and does not require
12    temperature control.
13    (c) A local health department shall register any eligible
14cottage food operation that meets the requirements of this
15Section and shall issue a certificate of registration with an
16identifying registration number to each registered cottage
17food operation. A local health department may establish a
18self-certification program for cottage food operators to
19affirm compliance with applicable laws, rules, and
20regulations. Registration shall be completed annually and the
21local health department may impose a fee not to exceed $50.
22    (d) In the event of a consumer complaint or foodborne
23illness outbreak, upon notice from a different local health
24department, or if the Department or a local health department
25has reason to believe that an imminent health hazard exists or
26that a cottage food operation's product has been found to be

 

 

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1misbranded, adulterated, or not in compliance with the
2conditions for cottage food operations set forth in this
3Section, the Department or the local health department may:
4        (1) inspect the premises of the cottage food operation
5    in question;
6        (2) set a reasonable fee for the inspection; and
7        (3) invoke penalties and the cessation of the sale of
8    cottage food products until it deems that the situation
9    has been addressed to the satisfaction of the Department
10    or local health department; if the situation is not
11    amenable to being addressed, the local health department
12    may revoke the cottage food operation's registration
13    following a process outlined by the local health
14    department.
15    (e) A local health department that receives a consumer
16complaint or a report of foodborne illness related to a
17cottage food operator in another jurisdiction shall refer the
18complaint or report to the local health department where the
19cottage food operator is registered.
20    (f) By January 1, 2022, the Department, in collaboration
21with local public health department associations and other
22stakeholder groups, shall write and issue administrative
23guidance to local health departments on the following:
24        (1) development of a standard registration form,
25    including, if applicable, a written food safety plan;
26        (2) development of a Home-Certification Self Checklist

 

 

10400SB2187sam001- 35 -LRB104 09079 HLH 22811 a

1    Form;
2        (3) development of a standard inspection form and
3    inspection procedures; and
4        (4) procedures for cottage food operation workspaces
5    that include, but are not limited to, cleaning products,
6    general sanitation, and requirements for functional
7    equipment.
8    (g) A person who produces or packages a baked good that is
9not a time/temperature control for safety food for sale by a
10religious, charitable, or nonprofit organization for
11fundraising purposes is exempt from the requirements of this
12Section.
13    (h) A home rule unit may not regulate cottage food
14operations in a manner inconsistent with the regulation by the
15State of cottage food operations under this Section. This
16Section is a limitation under subsection (i) of Section 6 of
17Article VII of the Illinois Constitution on the concurrent
18exercise by home rule units of powers and functions exercised
19by the State.
20    (i) The Department may adopt rules as may be necessary to
21implement the provisions of this Section.
22(Source: P.A. 102-633, eff. 1-1-22; 103-903, eff. 1-1-25;
23revised 11-25-24.)
 
24    Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon
25becoming law.".