Sen. Graciela Guzmán

Filed: 4/15/2026

 

 


 

 


 
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1
AMENDMENT TO SENATE BILL 2202

2    AMENDMENT NO. ______. Amend Senate Bill 2202, AS AMENDED,
3by replacing everything after the enacting clause with the
4following:
 
5    "Section 1. Short title. This Act may be cited as the
6Academic Freedom of Expression Act.
 
7    Section 3. Findings and legislative intent.
8    (a) The General Assembly finds that:
9        (1) Institutions of higher education are essential
10    forums for the open exchange of ideas that foster the free
11    search for truth, robust debate, and innovation, which
12    benefits this State. Academic freedom is indispensable to
13    this mission and therefore warrants statutory protection.
14        (2) Academic freedom serves not only individual
15    interests but also the broader public interest by
16    safeguarding the independence and integrity of teaching,

 

 

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1    learning, and scholarship, which are vital to the economic
2    and cultural well-being of the State.
3        (3) The exercise of academic freedom may be threatened
4    by external pressures, including actions by public
5    officials or governmental bodies that seek to influence or
6    restrict teaching, research, or expression. Such actions
7    undermine the mission of higher education and are contrary
8    to the public interest.
9    (b) The General Assembly encourages the governing board of
10each post-secondary educational institution, as defined in the
11Private College Act, to adopt or amend institutional policies
12that incorporate, at a minimum, the academic freedoms, rights,
13and obligations for public institutions of higher education
14set forth in Section 8 of the Public Higher Education Act. The
15General Assembly further encourages each private
16post-secondary educational institution to make the
17institution's policies on academic freedom, if applicable,
18publicly available on the institution's website.
 
19    Section 5. The Public Higher Education Act is amended by
20adding Section 8 as follows:
 
21    (110 ILCS 167/8 new)
22    Sec. 8. Academic freedom.
23    (a) As used in this Section:
24    "Harassment" means conduct directed at a particular

 

 

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1individual or group that is so severe, pervasive, and
2objectively offensive that it effectively denies a person
3equal access to a public institution of higher education's
4educational programs or activities, consistent with applicable
5federal and State law.
6    "Hate crime" has the meaning given to that term in Section
712-7.1 of the Criminal Code of 2012.
8    "Intimidation" means a course of conduct directed at a
9particular individual or group that would cause a reasonable
10person to fear for their physical safety or the physical
11safety of others and that is not protected by the First
12Amendment to the Constitution of the United States, consistent
13with applicable federal and State law.
14    "Threat" means a statement or course of conduct made with
15knowledge or reckless disregard that a reasonable person would
16interpret as a serious expression of intent to commit an act of
17unlawful violence against a particular individual or group,
18consistent with applicable federal and State law.
19    (b) Every faculty member of a public institution of higher
20education has the right to all of the following, without fear
21of direct or indirect retaliation by the institution or
22discipline up to and including termination:
23        (1) Freedom in teaching, including the right to select
24    pedagogical methods, course materials, and forms of
25    assessment and to present and freely discuss the subject
26    matter of course material, as long as such methods,

 

 

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1    materials, forms of assessment, and discussions are
2    relevant to the course content and conducted consistent
3    with lawful institutional policies and standards of the
4    discipline.
5        (2) Freedom in research, including the right to
6    pursue, produce, publish, and disseminate
7    scholarship-related research, subject only to professional
8    ethics standards, lawful institutional policies and
9    responsibilities, contractual obligations, and applicable
10    laws and regulatory requirements governing research
11    activities.
12        (3) Freedom of expression, where the faculty member is
13    acting in an individual capacity and does not purport to
14    represent the views of the institution unless the faculty
15    member is authorized to do so, on matters of public
16    concern, including the right to comment on institutional,
17    local, State, or federal policies, practices, governance,
18    or administration. This freedom shall be exercised in a
19    manner consistent with applicable laws.
20        (4) Freedom to attend a political rally or public
21    demonstration, as long as the faculty member is not absent
22    from class or other official responsibilities, and to
23    write or publicly comment on political issues or related
24    topics, as long as the faculty member is acting in an
25    individual capacity outside the scope of their assigned
26    institutional duties and without the use of institutional

 

 

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1    resources, consistent with applicable law and lawful
2    institutional policies.
3    Nothing in this Section shall be construed to create an
4inconsistent or unequal application of lawful institutional
5policies governing expressive activity among faculty, staff,
6or other employees of the public institution of higher
7education, except as necessary to account for differences in
8assigned institutional responsibilities.
9    (c) Every student of a public institution of higher
10education has the right to all of the following, without fear
11of direct or indirect retaliation by the institution or
12discipline:
13        (1) Freedom to freely discuss the subject matter of
14    teaching material in the classroom, as long as such
15    discussion is relevant to the course content, conducted
16    consistent with lawful institutional policies, and in
17    conformity with the class management expectations
18    established for the applicable class.
19        (2) Freedom in research, including the right to
20    pursue, produce, publish, and disseminate
21    scholarship-related research, subject only to applicable
22    ethics standards, lawful institutional policies,
23    contractual obligations, and laws and regulatory
24    requirements governing research activities.
25        (3) Freedom of expression on matters of public
26    concern, including the right to comment on institutional,

 

 

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1    local, State, or federal policies, practices, governance,
2    or administration. This freedom shall be exercised in a
3    manner consistent with lawful institutional policies and
4    applicable laws.
5        (4) Freedom to attend a political rally or public
6    demonstration and to write or publicly comment on
7    political issues or related topics.
8    (d) This Section may not be construed to:
9        (1) prevent this State or a public institution of
10    higher education from enacting generally applicable
11    academic standards, degree requirements, or governance
12    structures developed through established
13    shared-governance processes;
14        (2) limit compliance with federal or State civil
15    rights, health and safety, or fiduciary laws;
16        (3) supersede any valid collective bargaining
17    agreement provisions that afford equal or greater
18    protection;
19        (4) limit the authority of an institution of higher
20    education to regulate the speech or expressive conduct of
21    faculty, staff, or students to the extent permitted under
22    federal or State law, including through reasonable
23    content-neutral and viewpoint-neutral time, place, and
24    manner restrictions and the regulation of speech in
25    nonpublic forums;
26        (5) restrict an institution's ability to clarify that

 

 

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1    speech or expression by faculty, staff, or students is
2    undertaken in an individual capacity and does not
3    represent the views of the institution unless the faculty,
4    staff, or students were expressly authorized by the
5    institution; or
6        (6) prohibit an institution from adopting and
7    enforcing policies addressing unlawful harassment,
8    discrimination, threats, intimidation, hate crimes, or
9    conduct that materially and substantially disrupts the
10    functioning of the institution or that interferes with the
11    rights of others to participate in or benefit from
12    institutional programs or activities, consistent with
13    federal and State law.
14    (e) No State officer or employee, member of a State
15governing or coordinating board, or institutional
16administrator may penalize any faculty member of a public
17institution of higher education concerning the specific
18content of, viewpoints presented in, or method of the faculty
19member's teaching or scholarship, except as necessary to
20ensure that a faculty member's teaching or scholarship is
21reasonably germane to the faculty member's field or fields of
22study or assigned instructional responsibilities and that
23non-germane speech does not comprise a substantial portion of
24classroom instruction or to comply with applicable law.
25    (f) The governing board of each public institution of
26higher education shall, by July 1, 2027, adopt or amend

 

 

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1institutional policies to incorporate, at a minimum, the
2rights and obligations set forth in this amendatory Act of the
3104th General Assembly, in consultation with recognized
4faculty governing bodies and, if applicable, collective
5bargaining representatives.
6    Each public institution of higher education shall make the
7institution's policies on academic freedom publicly available
8on the institution's website by July 1, 2027 and within 60 days
9after any subsequent revisions to the policy.
10    Each public institution of higher education shall submit
11the institution's policies on academic freedom to the Illinois
12Community College Board or the Board of Higher Education,
13whichever is applicable, by July 1, 2027 and within 60 days
14after any subsequent revisions to the policy. The Illinois
15Community College Board and the Board of Higher Education
16shall make the policies received from each institution under
17this subsection (f) publicly available on their respective
18websites by January 1, 2028 and within 60 days after any
19subsequent revisions to the policy. The Illinois Community
20College Board and the Board of Higher Education shall each
21submit to the General Assembly a report compiling the policies
22received from each institution under this subsection (f) by
23January 1, 2028.
24    (g) Alleged violations of this Section shall first be
25addressed through an institution's established grievance or
26administrative review procedures or applicable collective

 

 

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1bargaining agreements. A faculty member or student of an
2institution at the time that the institution has made or
3enforced any rule in violation of this Section may commence a
4civil action to obtain appropriate injunctive and declaratory
5relief as determined by a court if the faculty member or
6student has first exhausted applicable institutional grievance
7or administrative review procedures or remedies available
8under any applicable collective bargaining agreement. Upon
9motion, the court shall award reasonable attorney's fees and
10costs, including expert witness fees and other litigation
11expenses, to a prevailing plaintiff in a civil action brought
12under this Section. Nothing in this Section shall be construed
13to create a private right of action for damages against an
14institution.
 
15    Section 15. The Public Community College Act is amended by
16changing Section 2-15 as follows:
 
17    (110 ILCS 805/2-15)  (from Ch. 122, par. 102-15)
18    Sec. 2-15. Recognition. The State Board shall grant
19recognition to community colleges which maintain equipment,
20courses of study, standards of scholarship and other
21requirements set by the State Board. Application for
22recognition shall be made to the State Board. The State Board
23shall set the criteria by which the community colleges shall
24be judged and through the executive officer of the State Board

 

 

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1shall arrange for an official evaluation of the community
2colleges and shall grant recognition of such community
3colleges as may meet the required standards.
4    Recognition shall include a review of a community
5college's compliance with Section 8 of the Public Higher
6Education Act. Recognition shall also include a review of
7compliance with Section 3-65 of this Act and other applicable
8State and federal laws regarding employment contracts and
9compensation. Annually, the State Board shall convene an
10advisory committee to review the findings and make
11recommendations for changes or additions to the laws or the
12review procedures.
13    If a community college district fails to meet the
14recognition standards set by the State Board, and if the
15district, in accordance with: (a) generally accepted
16Government Auditing Standards issued by the Comptroller
17General of the United States, (b) auditing standards
18established by the American Institute of Certified Public
19Accountants, or (c) other applicable State and federal
20standards, is found by the district's auditor or the State
21Board working in cooperation with the district's auditor to
22have material deficiencies in the design or operation of
23financial control structures that could adversely affect the
24district's financial integrity and stability, or is found to
25have misused State or federal funds and jeopardized its
26participation in State or federal programs, the State Board

 

 

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1may, notwithstanding any laws to the contrary, implement one
2or more of the following emergency powers:
3        (1) To direct the district to develop and implement a
4    plan that addresses the budgetary, programmatic, and other
5    relevant factors contributing to the need to implement
6    emergency measures. The State Board shall assist in the
7    development and shall have final approval of the plan.
8        (2) To direct the district to contract for educational
9    services in accordance with Section 3-40. The State Board
10    shall assist in the development and shall have final
11    approval of any such contractual agreements.
12        (3) To approve and require revisions of the district's
13    budget.
14        (4) To appoint a Financial Administrator to exercise
15    oversight and control over the district's budget. The
16    Financial Administrator shall serve at the pleasure of the
17    State Board and may be an individual, partnership,
18    corporation, including an accounting firm, or other entity
19    determined by the State Board to be qualified to serve,
20    and shall be entitled to compensation. Such compensation
21    shall be provided through specific appropriations made to
22    the State Board for that express purpose.
23        (5) To develop and implement a plan providing for the
24    dissolution or reorganization of the district if in the
25    judgment of the State Board the circumstances so require.
26    All local funds under the control of the State Board as a

 

 

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1    result of the dissolution or reorganization of the
2    district shall be expended by the State Board for purposes
3    of providing educational services in the territory from
4    which those local funds were acquired.
5(Source: P.A. 103-940, eff. 8-9-24.)".