104TH GENERAL ASSEMBLY
State of Illinois
2025 and 2026
SB2654

 

Introduced 4/29/2025, by Sen. Kimberly A. Lightford

 

SYNOPSIS AS INTRODUCED:
 
See Index

    Amends the Department of Professional Regulation Law of the Civil Administrative Code of Illinois. Makes changes to provisions regarding disclosures. Amends the Use Tax Act, the Service Use Tax Act, the Service Occupation Tax Act, and the Retailers' Occupation Tax Act. Changes the definition of "prescription and nonprescription medicines and drugs" and "adult use cannabis", beginning on January 1, 2026. Amends the Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis Program Act. Adds provisional patients and Opioid Alternative Patient Program participants to certain provisions that include qualified patients. Adds and changes definitions. Adds references to the Cannabis Regulation and Tax Act. Provides that, beginning January 1, 2026, designated caregivers, qualifying patients, Opioid Alternative Patient Program participants, or provisional patients may purchase an adequate medical supply at any dispensing organization licensed by the Department of Financial and Professional Regulation under the Cannabis Regulation and Tax Act. Provides that, beginning January 1, 2026, the issuance or renewal of any medical cannabis cultivation permits will cease at the next renewal period. Makes conforming changes for transitions from the Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis Program Act to the Cannabis Regulation and Tax Act. Sunsets or repeals certain provisions on certain dates. Makes other changes. Amends the Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis Program Act. Adds and changes definitions. Makes changes to provisions concerning the Department of Agriculture and the Department of Financial and Professional Regulation. In provisions regarding the Cannabis Business Development Fund, adds references to Social Equity Criteria Lottery Licensees. Makes changes to provisions concerning loans and grants to Social Equity Applicants. Provides for certain license mergers. Makes other changes. Amends the Illinois Vehicle Code to make conforming changes. Amends the Tobacco Accessories and Smoking Herbs Control Act to repeal certain references to marijuana and hashish. Effective immediately.


LRB104 13084 BDA 25085 b

 

 

A BILL FOR

 

SB2654LRB104 13084 BDA 25085 b

1    AN ACT concerning health.
 
2    Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
3represented in the General Assembly:
 
4    Section 5. The Department of Professional Regulation Law
5of the Civil Administrative Code of Illinois is amended by
6changing Section 2105-117 as follows:
 
7    (20 ILCS 2105/2105-117)
8    Sec. 2105-117. Confidentiality. All information collected
9by the Department in the course of an examination or
10investigation of a licensee, registrant, or applicant,
11including, but not limited to, any complaint against a
12licensee or registrant filed with the Department and
13information collected to investigate any such complaint, shall
14be maintained for the confidential use of the Department and
15shall not be disclosed. The Department may not disclose the
16information to anyone other than law enforcement officials,
17other regulatory agencies that have an appropriate regulatory
18interest as determined by the Director, the Office of
19Executive Inspector General, or a party presenting a lawful
20subpoena to the Department. Information and documents
21disclosed to a federal, State, county, or local law
22enforcement agency, including the Executive Inspector General,
23shall not be disclosed by the agency for any purpose to any

 

 

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1other agency or person, except as necessary to those involved
2in enforcing the State Officials and Employees Ethics Act. A
3formal complaint filed against a licensee or registrant by the
4Department or any order issued by the Department against a
5licensee, registrant, or applicant shall be a public record,
6except as otherwise prohibited by law.
7(Source: P.A. 99-227, eff. 8-3-15.)
 
8    Section 10. The Use Tax Act is amended by changing Section
93-10 as follows:
 
10    (35 ILCS 105/3-10)  from Ch. 120, par. 439.33-10
11    Sec. 3-10. Rate of tax. Unless otherwise provided in this
12Section, the tax imposed by this Act is at the rate of 6.25% of
13either the selling price or the fair market value, if any, of
14the tangible personal property, which, on and after January 1,
152025, includes leases of tangible personal property. In all
16cases where property functionally used or consumed is the same
17as the property that was purchased at retail, then the tax is
18imposed on the selling price of the property. In all cases
19where property functionally used or consumed is a by-product
20or waste product that has been refined, manufactured, or
21produced from property purchased at retail, then the tax is
22imposed on the lower of the fair market value, if any, of the
23specific property so used in this State or on the selling price
24of the property purchased at retail. For purposes of this

 

 

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1Section "fair market value" means the price at which property
2would change hands between a willing buyer and a willing
3seller, neither being under any compulsion to buy or sell and
4both having reasonable knowledge of the relevant facts. The
5fair market value shall be established by Illinois sales by
6the taxpayer of the same property as that functionally used or
7consumed, or if there are no such sales by the taxpayer, then
8comparable sales or purchases of property of like kind and
9character in Illinois.
10    Beginning on July 1, 2000 and through December 31, 2000,
11with respect to motor fuel, as defined in Section 1.1 of the
12Motor Fuel Tax Law, and gasohol, as defined in Section 3-40 of
13the Use Tax Act, the tax is imposed at the rate of 1.25%.
14    Beginning on August 6, 2010 through August 15, 2010, and
15beginning again on August 5, 2022 through August 14, 2022,
16with respect to sales tax holiday items as defined in Section
173-6 of this Act, the tax is imposed at the rate of 1.25%.
18    With respect to gasohol, the tax imposed by this Act
19applies to (i) 70% of the proceeds of sales made on or after
20January 1, 1990, and before July 1, 2003, (ii) 80% of the
21proceeds of sales made on or after July 1, 2003 and on or
22before July 1, 2017, (iii) 100% of the proceeds of sales made
23after July 1, 2017 and prior to January 1, 2024, (iv) 90% of
24the proceeds of sales made on or after January 1, 2024 and on
25or before December 31, 2028, and (v) 100% of the proceeds of
26sales made after December 31, 2028. If, at any time, however,

 

 

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1the tax under this Act on sales of gasohol is imposed at the
2rate of 1.25%, then the tax imposed by this Act applies to 100%
3of the proceeds of sales of gasohol made during that time.
4    With respect to mid-range ethanol blends, the tax imposed
5by this Act applies to (i) 80% of the proceeds of sales made on
6or after January 1, 2024 and on or before December 31, 2028 and
7(ii) 100% of the proceeds of sales made thereafter. If, at any
8time, however, the tax under this Act on sales of mid-range
9ethanol blends is imposed at the rate of 1.25%, then the tax
10imposed by this Act applies to 100% of the proceeds of sales of
11mid-range ethanol blends made during that time.
12    With respect to majority blended ethanol fuel, the tax
13imposed by this Act does not apply to the proceeds of sales
14made on or after July 1, 2003 and on or before December 31,
152028 but applies to 100% of the proceeds of sales made
16thereafter.
17    With respect to biodiesel blends with no less than 1% and
18no more than 10% biodiesel, the tax imposed by this Act applies
19to (i) 80% of the proceeds of sales made on or after July 1,
202003 and on or before December 31, 2018 and (ii) 100% of the
21proceeds of sales made after December 31, 2018 and before
22January 1, 2024. On and after January 1, 2024 and on or before
23December 31, 2030, the taxation of biodiesel, renewable
24diesel, and biodiesel blends shall be as provided in Section
253-5.1. If, at any time, however, the tax under this Act on
26sales of biodiesel blends with no less than 1% and no more than

 

 

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110% biodiesel is imposed at the rate of 1.25%, then the tax
2imposed by this Act applies to 100% of the proceeds of sales of
3biodiesel blends with no less than 1% and no more than 10%
4biodiesel made during that time.
5    With respect to biodiesel and biodiesel blends with more
6than 10% but no more than 99% biodiesel, the tax imposed by
7this Act does not apply to the proceeds of sales made on or
8after July 1, 2003 and on or before December 31, 2023. On and
9after January 1, 2024 and on or before December 31, 2030, the
10taxation of biodiesel, renewable diesel, and biodiesel blends
11shall be as provided in Section 3-5.1.
12    Until July 1, 2022 and from July 1, 2023 through December
1331, 2025, with respect to food for human consumption that is to
14be consumed off the premises where it is sold (other than
15alcoholic beverages, food consisting of or infused with adult
16use cannabis, soft drinks, and food that has been prepared for
17immediate consumption), the tax is imposed at the rate of 1%.
18Beginning on July 1, 2022 and until July 1, 2023, with respect
19to food for human consumption that is to be consumed off the
20premises where it is sold (other than alcoholic beverages,
21food consisting of or infused with adult use cannabis, soft
22drinks, and food that has been prepared for immediate
23consumption), the tax is imposed at the rate of 0%. On and
24after January 1, 2026, food for human consumption that is to be
25consumed off the premises where it is sold (other than
26alcoholic beverages, food consisting of or infused with adult

 

 

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1use cannabis, soft drinks, candy, and food that has been
2prepared for immediate consumption) is exempt from the tax
3imposed by this Act.
4    With respect to prescription and nonprescription
5medicines, drugs, medical appliances, products classified as
6Class III medical devices by the United States Food and Drug
7Administration that are used for cancer treatment pursuant to
8a prescription, as well as any accessories and components
9related to those devices, modifications to a motor vehicle for
10the purpose of rendering it usable by a person with a
11disability, and insulin, blood sugar testing materials,
12syringes, and needles used by human diabetics, the tax is
13imposed at the rate of 1%. For the purposes of this Section,
14until September 1, 2009: the term "soft drinks" means any
15complete, finished, ready-to-use, non-alcoholic drink, whether
16carbonated or not, including, but not limited to, soda water,
17cola, fruit juice, vegetable juice, carbonated water, and all
18other preparations commonly known as soft drinks of whatever
19kind or description that are contained in any closed or sealed
20bottle, can, carton, or container, regardless of size; but
21"soft drinks" does not include coffee, tea, non-carbonated
22water, infant formula, milk or milk products as defined in the
23Grade A Pasteurized Milk and Milk Products Act, or drinks
24containing 50% or more natural fruit or vegetable juice.
25    Notwithstanding any other provisions of this Act,
26beginning September 1, 2009, "soft drinks" means non-alcoholic

 

 

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1beverages that contain natural or artificial sweeteners. "Soft
2drinks" does not include beverages that contain milk or milk
3products, soy, rice or similar milk substitutes, or greater
4than 50% of vegetable or fruit juice by volume.
5    Until August 1, 2009, and notwithstanding any other
6provisions of this Act, "food for human consumption that is to
7be consumed off the premises where it is sold" includes all
8food sold through a vending machine, except soft drinks and
9food products that are dispensed hot from a vending machine,
10regardless of the location of the vending machine. Beginning
11August 1, 2009, and notwithstanding any other provisions of
12this Act, "food for human consumption that is to be consumed
13off the premises where it is sold" includes all food sold
14through a vending machine, except soft drinks, candy, and food
15products that are dispensed hot from a vending machine,
16regardless of the location of the vending machine.
17    Notwithstanding any other provisions of this Act,
18beginning September 1, 2009, "food for human consumption that
19is to be consumed off the premises where it is sold" does not
20include candy. For purposes of this Section, "candy" means a
21preparation of sugar, honey, or other natural or artificial
22sweeteners in combination with chocolate, fruits, nuts or
23other ingredients or flavorings in the form of bars, drops, or
24pieces. "Candy" does not include any preparation that contains
25flour or requires refrigeration.
26    Notwithstanding any other provisions of this Act,

 

 

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1beginning September 1, 2009, "nonprescription medicines and
2drugs" does not include grooming and hygiene products. For
3purposes of this Section, "grooming and hygiene products"
4includes, but is not limited to, soaps and cleaning solutions,
5shampoo, toothpaste, mouthwash, antiperspirants, and sun tan
6lotions and screens, unless those products are available by
7prescription only, regardless of whether the products meet the
8definition of "over-the-counter-drugs". For the purposes of
9this paragraph, "over-the-counter-drug" means a drug for human
10use that contains a label that identifies the product as a drug
11as required by 21 CFR 201.66. The "over-the-counter-drug"
12label includes:
13        (A) a "Drug Facts" panel; or
14        (B) a statement of the "active ingredient(s)" with a
15    list of those ingredients contained in the compound,
16    substance or preparation.
17    Beginning on January 1, 2014 (the effective date of Public
18Act 98-122), and through December 31, 2025, "prescription and
19nonprescription medicines and drugs" includes medical cannabis
20purchased from a registered dispensing organization under the
21Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis Program Act.
22    Beginning on January 1, 2026, "prescription and
23nonprescription medicines and drugs" includes cannabis
24purchased by a qualified registered patient, provisional
25patient, designated caregiver, or Opioid Alternative Patient
26Program participant as part of their adequate medical supply,

 

 

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1as these terms are defined under the Cannabis Regulation and
2Tax Act, from a dispensing organization registered under the
3Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis Program Act or the
4Cannabis Regulation and Tax Act.
5    As used in this Section through December 31, 2025, "adult
6use cannabis" means cannabis subject to tax under the Cannabis
7Cultivation Privilege Tax Law and the Cannabis Purchaser
8Excise Tax Law and does not include cannabis subject to tax
9under the Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis Program Act.
10    Beginning January 1, 2026, as used in this Section, "adult
11use cannabis" means cannabis subject to tax under the Cannabis
12Cultivation Privilege Tax Law and the Cannabis Purchaser
13Excise Tax Law and does not include cannabis purchased by a
14qualified registered patient, provisional patient, designated
15caregiver, or Opioid Alternative Patient Program participant
16as part of their adequate medical supply.
17    If the property that is purchased at retail from a
18retailer is acquired outside Illinois and used outside
19Illinois before being brought to Illinois for use here and is
20taxable under this Act, the "selling price" on which the tax is
21computed shall be reduced by an amount that represents a
22reasonable allowance for depreciation for the period of prior
23out-of-state use. No depreciation is allowed in cases where
24the tax under this Act is imposed on lease receipts.
25(Source: P.A. 102-4, eff. 4-27-21; 102-700, Article 20,
26Section 20-5, eff. 4-19-22; 102-700, Article 60, Section

 

 

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160-15, eff. 4-19-22; 102-700, Article 65, Section 65-5, eff.
24-19-22; 103-9, eff. 6-7-23; 103-154, eff. 6-30-23; 103-592,
3eff. 1-1-25; 103-781, eff. 8-5-24; revised 11-26-24.)
 
4    Section 15. The Service Use Tax Act is amended by changing
5Section 3-10 as follows:
 
6    (35 ILCS 110/3-10)  (from Ch. 120, par. 439.33-10)
7    Sec. 3-10. Rate of tax. Unless otherwise provided in this
8Section, the tax imposed by this Act is at the rate of 6.25% of
9the selling price of tangible personal property transferred,
10including, on and after January 1, 2025, transferred by lease,
11as an incident to the sale of service, but, for the purpose of
12computing this tax, in no event shall the selling price be less
13than the cost price of the property to the serviceman.
14    Beginning on July 1, 2000 and through December 31, 2000,
15with respect to motor fuel, as defined in Section 1.1 of the
16Motor Fuel Tax Law, and gasohol, as defined in Section 3-40 of
17the Use Tax Act, the tax is imposed at the rate of 1.25%.
18    With respect to gasohol, as defined in the Use Tax Act, the
19tax imposed by this Act applies to (i) 70% of the selling price
20of property transferred as an incident to the sale of service
21on or after January 1, 1990, and before July 1, 2003, (ii) 80%
22of the selling price of property transferred as an incident to
23the sale of service on or after July 1, 2003 and on or before
24July 1, 2017, (iii) 100% of the selling price of property

 

 

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1transferred as an incident to the sale of service after July 1,
22017 and before January 1, 2024, (iv) 90% of the selling price
3of property transferred as an incident to the sale of service
4on or after January 1, 2024 and on or before December 31, 2028,
5and (v) 100% of the selling price of property transferred as an
6incident to the sale of service after December 31, 2028. If, at
7any time, however, the tax under this Act on sales of gasohol,
8as defined in the Use Tax Act, is imposed at the rate of 1.25%,
9then the tax imposed by this Act applies to 100% of the
10proceeds of sales of gasohol made during that time.
11    With respect to mid-range ethanol blends, as defined in
12Section 3-44.3 of the Use Tax Act, the tax imposed by this Act
13applies to (i) 80% of the selling price of property
14transferred as an incident to the sale of service on or after
15January 1, 2024 and on or before December 31, 2028 and (ii)
16100% of the selling price of property transferred as an
17incident to the sale of service after December 31, 2028. If, at
18any time, however, the tax under this Act on sales of mid-range
19ethanol blends is imposed at the rate of 1.25%, then the tax
20imposed by this Act applies to 100% of the selling price of
21mid-range ethanol blends transferred as an incident to the
22sale of service during that time.
23    With respect to majority blended ethanol fuel, as defined
24in the Use Tax Act, the tax imposed by this Act does not apply
25to the selling price of property transferred as an incident to
26the sale of service on or after July 1, 2003 and on or before

 

 

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1December 31, 2028 but applies to 100% of the selling price
2thereafter.
3    With respect to biodiesel blends, as defined in the Use
4Tax Act, with no less than 1% and no more than 10% biodiesel,
5the tax imposed by this Act applies to (i) 80% of the selling
6price of property transferred as an incident to the sale of
7service on or after July 1, 2003 and on or before December 31,
82018 and (ii) 100% of the proceeds of the selling price after
9December 31, 2018 and before January 1, 2024. On and after
10January 1, 2024 and on or before December 31, 2030, the
11taxation of biodiesel, renewable diesel, and biodiesel blends
12shall be as provided in Section 3-5.1 of the Use Tax Act. If,
13at any time, however, the tax under this Act on sales of
14biodiesel blends, as defined in the Use Tax Act, with no less
15than 1% and no more than 10% biodiesel is imposed at the rate
16of 1.25%, then the tax imposed by this Act applies to 100% of
17the proceeds of sales of biodiesel blends with no less than 1%
18and no more than 10% biodiesel made during that time.
19    With respect to biodiesel, as defined in the Use Tax Act,
20and biodiesel blends, as defined in the Use Tax Act, with more
21than 10% but no more than 99% biodiesel, the tax imposed by
22this Act does not apply to the proceeds of the selling price of
23property transferred as an incident to the sale of service on
24or after July 1, 2003 and on or before December 31, 2023. On
25and after January 1, 2024 and on or before December 31, 2030,
26the taxation of biodiesel, renewable diesel, and biodiesel

 

 

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1blends shall be as provided in Section 3-5.1 of the Use Tax
2Act.
3    At the election of any registered serviceman made for each
4fiscal year, sales of service in which the aggregate annual
5cost price of tangible personal property transferred as an
6incident to the sales of service is less than 35%, or 75% in
7the case of servicemen transferring prescription drugs or
8servicemen engaged in graphic arts production, of the
9aggregate annual total gross receipts from all sales of
10service, the tax imposed by this Act shall be based on the
11serviceman's cost price of the tangible personal property
12transferred as an incident to the sale of those services.
13    Until July 1, 2022 and from July 1, 2023 through December
1431, 2025, the tax shall be imposed at the rate of 1% on food
15prepared for immediate consumption and transferred incident to
16a sale of service subject to this Act or the Service Occupation
17Tax Act by an entity licensed under the Hospital Licensing
18Act, the Nursing Home Care Act, the Assisted Living and Shared
19Housing Act, the ID/DD Community Care Act, the MC/DD Act, the
20Specialized Mental Health Rehabilitation Act of 2013, or the
21Child Care Act of 1969, or an entity that holds a permit issued
22pursuant to the Life Care Facilities Act. Until July 1, 2022
23and from July 1, 2023 through December 31, 2025, the tax shall
24also be imposed at the rate of 1% on food for human consumption
25that is to be consumed off the premises where it is sold (other
26than alcoholic beverages, food consisting of or infused with

 

 

SB2654- 14 -LRB104 13084 BDA 25085 b

1adult use cannabis, soft drinks, and food that has been
2prepared for immediate consumption and is not otherwise
3included in this paragraph).
4    Beginning on July 1, 2022 and until July 1, 2023, the tax
5shall be imposed at the rate of 0% on food prepared for
6immediate consumption and transferred incident to a sale of
7service subject to this Act or the Service Occupation Tax Act
8by an entity licensed under the Hospital Licensing Act, the
9Nursing Home Care Act, the Assisted Living and Shared Housing
10Act, the ID/DD Community Care Act, the MC/DD Act, the
11Specialized Mental Health Rehabilitation Act of 2013, or the
12Child Care Act of 1969, or an entity that holds a permit issued
13pursuant to the Life Care Facilities Act. Beginning on July 1,
142022 and until July 1, 2023, the tax shall also be imposed at
15the rate of 0% on food for human consumption that is to be
16consumed off the premises where it is sold (other than
17alcoholic beverages, food consisting of or infused with adult
18use cannabis, soft drinks, and food that has been prepared for
19immediate consumption and is not otherwise included in this
20paragraph).
21    On and an after January 1, 2026, food prepared for
22immediate consumption and transferred incident to a sale of
23service subject to this Act or the Service Occupation Tax Act
24by an entity licensed under the Hospital Licensing Act, the
25Nursing Home Care Act, the Assisted Living and Shared Housing
26Act, the ID/DD Community Care Act, the MC/DD Act, the

 

 

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1Specialized Mental Health Rehabilitation Act of 2013, or the
2Child Care Act of 1969, or by an entity that holds a permit
3issued pursuant to the Life Care Facilities Act is exempt from
4the tax under this Act. On and after January 1, 2026, food for
5human consumption that is to be consumed off the premises
6where it is sold (other than alcoholic beverages, food
7consisting of or infused with adult use cannabis, soft drinks,
8candy, and food that has been prepared for immediate
9consumption and is not otherwise included in this paragraph)
10is exempt from the tax under this Act.
11    The tax shall be imposed at the rate of 1% on prescription
12and nonprescription medicines, drugs, medical appliances,
13products classified as Class III medical devices by the United
14States Food and Drug Administration that are used for cancer
15treatment pursuant to a prescription, as well as any
16accessories and components related to those devices,
17modifications to a motor vehicle for the purpose of rendering
18it usable by a person with a disability, and insulin, blood
19sugar testing materials, syringes, and needles used by human
20diabetics. For the purposes of this Section, until September
211, 2009: the term "soft drinks" means any complete, finished,
22ready-to-use, non-alcoholic drink, whether carbonated or not,
23including, but not limited to, soda water, cola, fruit juice,
24vegetable juice, carbonated water, and all other preparations
25commonly known as soft drinks of whatever kind or description
26that are contained in any closed or sealed bottle, can,

 

 

SB2654- 16 -LRB104 13084 BDA 25085 b

1carton, or container, regardless of size; but "soft drinks"
2does not include coffee, tea, non-carbonated water, infant
3formula, milk or milk products as defined in the Grade A
4Pasteurized Milk and Milk Products Act, or drinks containing
550% or more natural fruit or vegetable juice.
6    Notwithstanding any other provisions of this Act,
7beginning September 1, 2009, "soft drinks" means non-alcoholic
8beverages that contain natural or artificial sweeteners. "Soft
9drinks" does not include beverages that contain milk or milk
10products, soy, rice or similar milk substitutes, or greater
11than 50% of vegetable or fruit juice by volume.
12    Until August 1, 2009, and notwithstanding any other
13provisions of this Act, "food for human consumption that is to
14be consumed off the premises where it is sold" includes all
15food sold through a vending machine, except soft drinks and
16food products that are dispensed hot from a vending machine,
17regardless of the location of the vending machine. Beginning
18August 1, 2009, and notwithstanding any other provisions of
19this Act, "food for human consumption that is to be consumed
20off the premises where it is sold" includes all food sold
21through a vending machine, except soft drinks, candy, and food
22products that are dispensed hot from a vending machine,
23regardless of the location of the vending machine.
24    Notwithstanding any other provisions of this Act,
25beginning September 1, 2009, "food for human consumption that
26is to be consumed off the premises where it is sold" does not

 

 

SB2654- 17 -LRB104 13084 BDA 25085 b

1include candy. For purposes of this Section, "candy" means a
2preparation of sugar, honey, or other natural or artificial
3sweeteners in combination with chocolate, fruits, nuts or
4other ingredients or flavorings in the form of bars, drops, or
5pieces. "Candy" does not include any preparation that contains
6flour or requires refrigeration.
7    Notwithstanding any other provisions of this Act,
8beginning September 1, 2009, "nonprescription medicines and
9drugs" does not include grooming and hygiene products. For
10purposes of this Section, "grooming and hygiene products"
11includes, but is not limited to, soaps and cleaning solutions,
12shampoo, toothpaste, mouthwash, antiperspirants, and sun tan
13lotions and screens, unless those products are available by
14prescription only, regardless of whether the products meet the
15definition of "over-the-counter-drugs". For the purposes of
16this paragraph, "over-the-counter-drug" means a drug for human
17use that contains a label that identifies the product as a drug
18as required by 21 CFR 201.66. The "over-the-counter-drug"
19label includes:
20        (A) a "Drug Facts" panel; or
21        (B) a statement of the "active ingredient(s)" with a
22    list of those ingredients contained in the compound,
23    substance or preparation.
24    Beginning on January 1, 2014 (the effective date of Public
25Act 98-122), and through December 31, 2025, "prescription and
26nonprescription medicines and drugs" includes medical cannabis

 

 

SB2654- 18 -LRB104 13084 BDA 25085 b

1purchased from a registered dispensing organization under the
2Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis Program Act.
3    Beginning on January 1, 2026, "prescription and
4nonprescription medicines and drugs" includes cannabis
5purchased by a qualified registered patient, provisional
6patient, designated caregiver, or Opioid Alternative Patient
7Program participant as part of their adequate medical supply,
8as these terms are defined under the Cannabis Regulation and
9Tax Act, from a dispensing organization registered under the
10Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis Program Act or the
11Cannabis Regulation and Tax Act.
12    As used in this Section, through December 31,2025, "adult
13use cannabis" means cannabis subject to tax under the Cannabis
14Cultivation Privilege Tax Law and the Cannabis Purchaser
15Excise Tax Law and does not include cannabis subject to tax
16under the Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis Program Act.
17    Beginning January 1, 2026, as used in this Section, "adult
18use cannabis" means cannabis subject to tax under the Cannabis
19Cultivation Privilege Tax Law and the Cannabis Purchaser
20Excise Tax Law and does not include cannabis purchased by a
21qualified registered patient, provisional patient, or Opioid
22Alternative Patient Program participant as part of their
23adequate medical supply.
24    If the property that is acquired from a serviceman is
25acquired outside Illinois and used outside Illinois before
26being brought to Illinois for use here and is taxable under

 

 

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1this Act, the "selling price" on which the tax is computed
2shall be reduced by an amount that represents a reasonable
3allowance for depreciation for the period of prior
4out-of-state use. No depreciation is allowed in cases where
5the tax under this Act is imposed on lease receipts.
6(Source: P.A. 102-4, eff. 4-27-21; 102-16, eff. 6-17-21;
7102-700, Article 20, Section 20-10, eff. 4-19-22; 102-700,
8Article 60, Section 60-20, eff. 4-19-22; 103-9, eff. 6-7-23;
9103-154, eff. 6-30-23; 103-592, eff. 1-1-25; 103-781, eff.
108-5-24; revised 11-26-24.)
 
11    Section 20. The Service Occupation Tax Act is amended by
12changing Section 3-10 as follows:
 
13    (35 ILCS 115/3-10)  (from Ch. 120, par. 439.103-10)
14    Sec. 3-10. Rate of tax. Unless otherwise provided in this
15Section, the tax imposed by this Act is at the rate of 6.25% of
16the "selling price", as defined in Section 2 of the Service Use
17Tax Act, of the tangible personal property, including, on and
18after January 1, 2025, tangible personal property transferred
19by lease. For the purpose of computing this tax, in no event
20shall the "selling price" be less than the cost price to the
21serviceman of the tangible personal property transferred. The
22selling price of each item of tangible personal property
23transferred as an incident of a sale of service may be shown as
24a distinct and separate item on the serviceman's billing to

 

 

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1the service customer. If the selling price is not so shown, the
2selling price of the tangible personal property is deemed to
3be 50% of the serviceman's entire billing to the service
4customer. When, however, a serviceman contracts to design,
5develop, and produce special order machinery or equipment, the
6tax imposed by this Act shall be based on the serviceman's cost
7price of the tangible personal property transferred incident
8to the completion of the contract.
9    Beginning on July 1, 2000 and through December 31, 2000,
10with respect to motor fuel, as defined in Section 1.1 of the
11Motor Fuel Tax Law, and gasohol, as defined in Section 3-40 of
12the Use Tax Act, the tax is imposed at the rate of 1.25%.
13    With respect to gasohol, as defined in the Use Tax Act, the
14tax imposed by this Act shall apply to (i) 70% of the cost
15price of property transferred as an incident to the sale of
16service on or after January 1, 1990, and before July 1, 2003,
17(ii) 80% of the selling price of property transferred as an
18incident to the sale of service on or after July 1, 2003 and on
19or before July 1, 2017, (iii) 100% of the selling price of
20property transferred as an incident to the sale of service
21after July 1, 2017 and prior to January 1, 2024, (iv) 90% of
22the selling price of property transferred as an incident to
23the sale of service on or after January 1, 2024 and on or
24before December 31, 2028, and (v) 100% of the selling price of
25property transferred as an incident to the sale of service
26after December 31, 2028. If, at any time, however, the tax

 

 

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1under this Act on sales of gasohol, as defined in the Use Tax
2Act, is imposed at the rate of 1.25%, then the tax imposed by
3this Act applies to 100% of the proceeds of sales of gasohol
4made during that time.
5    With respect to mid-range ethanol blends, as defined in
6Section 3-44.3 of the Use Tax Act, the tax imposed by this Act
7applies to (i) 80% of the selling price of property
8transferred as an incident to the sale of service on or after
9January 1, 2024 and on or before December 31, 2028 and (ii)
10100% of the selling price of property transferred as an
11incident to the sale of service after December 31, 2028. If, at
12any time, however, the tax under this Act on sales of mid-range
13ethanol blends is imposed at the rate of 1.25%, then the tax
14imposed by this Act applies to 100% of the selling price of
15mid-range ethanol blends transferred as an incident to the
16sale of service during that time.
17    With respect to majority blended ethanol fuel, as defined
18in the Use Tax Act, the tax imposed by this Act does not apply
19to the selling price of property transferred as an incident to
20the sale of service on or after July 1, 2003 and on or before
21December 31, 2028 but applies to 100% of the selling price
22thereafter.
23    With respect to biodiesel blends, as defined in the Use
24Tax Act, with no less than 1% and no more than 10% biodiesel,
25the tax imposed by this Act applies to (i) 80% of the selling
26price of property transferred as an incident to the sale of

 

 

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1service on or after July 1, 2003 and on or before December 31,
22018 and (ii) 100% of the proceeds of the selling price after
3December 31, 2018 and before January 1, 2024. On and after
4January 1, 2024 and on or before December 31, 2030, the
5taxation of biodiesel, renewable diesel, and biodiesel blends
6shall be as provided in Section 3-5.1 of the Use Tax Act. If,
7at any time, however, the tax under this Act on sales of
8biodiesel blends, as defined in the Use Tax Act, with no less
9than 1% and no more than 10% biodiesel is imposed at the rate
10of 1.25%, then the tax imposed by this Act applies to 100% of
11the proceeds of sales of biodiesel blends with no less than 1%
12and no more than 10% biodiesel made during that time.
13    With respect to biodiesel, as defined in the Use Tax Act,
14and biodiesel blends, as defined in the Use Tax Act, with more
15than 10% but no more than 99% biodiesel material, the tax
16imposed by this Act does not apply to the proceeds of the
17selling price of property transferred as an incident to the
18sale of service on or after July 1, 2003 and on or before
19December 31, 2023. On and after January 1, 2024 and on or
20before December 31, 2030, the taxation of biodiesel, renewable
21diesel, and biodiesel blends shall be as provided in Section
223-5.1 of the Use Tax Act.
23    At the election of any registered serviceman made for each
24fiscal year, sales of service in which the aggregate annual
25cost price of tangible personal property transferred as an
26incident to the sales of service is less than 35%, or 75% in

 

 

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1the case of servicemen transferring prescription drugs or
2servicemen engaged in graphic arts production, of the
3aggregate annual total gross receipts from all sales of
4service, the tax imposed by this Act shall be based on the
5serviceman's cost price of the tangible personal property
6transferred incident to the sale of those services.
7    Until July 1, 2022 and from July 1, 2023 through December
831, 2025, the tax shall be imposed at the rate of 1% on food
9prepared for immediate consumption and transferred incident to
10a sale of service subject to this Act or the Service Use Tax
11Act by an entity licensed under the Hospital Licensing Act,
12the Nursing Home Care Act, the Assisted Living and Shared
13Housing Act, the ID/DD Community Care Act, the MC/DD Act, the
14Specialized Mental Health Rehabilitation Act of 2013, or the
15Child Care Act of 1969, or an entity that holds a permit issued
16pursuant to the Life Care Facilities Act. Until July 1, 2022
17and from July 1, 2023 through December 31, 2025, the tax shall
18also be imposed at the rate of 1% on food for human consumption
19that is to be consumed off the premises where it is sold (other
20than alcoholic beverages, food consisting of or infused with
21adult use cannabis, soft drinks, and food that has been
22prepared for immediate consumption and is not otherwise
23included in this paragraph).
24    Beginning on July 1, 2022 and until July 1, 2023, the tax
25shall be imposed at the rate of 0% on food prepared for
26immediate consumption and transferred incident to a sale of

 

 

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1service subject to this Act or the Service Use Tax Act by an
2entity licensed under the Hospital Licensing Act, the Nursing
3Home Care Act, the Assisted Living and Shared Housing Act, the
4ID/DD Community Care Act, the MC/DD Act, the Specialized
5Mental Health Rehabilitation Act of 2013, or the Child Care
6Act of 1969, or an entity that holds a permit issued pursuant
7to the Life Care Facilities Act. Beginning July 1, 2022 and
8until July 1, 2023, the tax shall also be imposed at the rate
9of 0% on food for human consumption that is to be consumed off
10the premises where it is sold (other than alcoholic beverages,
11food consisting of or infused with adult use cannabis, soft
12drinks, and food that has been prepared for immediate
13consumption and is not otherwise included in this paragraph).
14    On and after January 1, 2026, food prepared for immediate
15consumption and transferred incident to a sale of service
16subject to this Act or the Service Use Tax Act by an entity
17licensed under the Hospital Licensing Act, the Nursing Home
18Care Act, the Assisted Living and Shared Housing Act, the
19ID/DD Community Care Act, the MC/DD Act, the Specialized
20Mental Health Rehabilitation Act of 2013, or the Child Care
21Act of 1969, or an entity that holds a permit issued pursuant
22to the Life Care Facilities Act is exempt from the tax imposed
23by this Act. On and after January 1, 2026, food for human
24consumption that is to be consumed off the premises where it is
25sold (other than alcoholic beverages, food consisting of or
26infused with adult use cannabis, soft drinks, candy, and food

 

 

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1that has been prepared for immediate consumption and is not
2otherwise included in this paragraph) is exempt from the tax
3imposed by this Act.
4    The tax shall be imposed at the rate of 1% on prescription
5and nonprescription medicines, drugs, medical appliances,
6products classified as Class III medical devices by the United
7States Food and Drug Administration that are used for cancer
8treatment pursuant to a prescription, as well as any
9accessories and components related to those devices,
10modifications to a motor vehicle for the purpose of rendering
11it usable by a person with a disability, and insulin, blood
12sugar testing materials, syringes, and needles used by human
13diabetics. For the purposes of this Section, until September
141, 2009: the term "soft drinks" means any complete, finished,
15ready-to-use, non-alcoholic drink, whether carbonated or not,
16including, but not limited to, soda water, cola, fruit juice,
17vegetable juice, carbonated water, and all other preparations
18commonly known as soft drinks of whatever kind or description
19that are contained in any closed or sealed can, carton, or
20container, regardless of size; but "soft drinks" does not
21include coffee, tea, non-carbonated water, infant formula,
22milk or milk products as defined in the Grade A Pasteurized
23Milk and Milk Products Act, or drinks containing 50% or more
24natural fruit or vegetable juice.
25    Notwithstanding any other provisions of this Act,
26beginning September 1, 2009, "soft drinks" means non-alcoholic

 

 

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1beverages that contain natural or artificial sweeteners. "Soft
2drinks" does not include beverages that contain milk or milk
3products, soy, rice or similar milk substitutes, or greater
4than 50% of vegetable or fruit juice by volume.
5    Until August 1, 2009, and notwithstanding any other
6provisions of this Act, "food for human consumption that is to
7be consumed off the premises where it is sold" includes all
8food sold through a vending machine, except soft drinks and
9food products that are dispensed hot from a vending machine,
10regardless of the location of the vending machine. Beginning
11August 1, 2009, and notwithstanding any other provisions of
12this Act, "food for human consumption that is to be consumed
13off the premises where it is sold" includes all food sold
14through a vending machine, except soft drinks, candy, and food
15products that are dispensed hot from a vending machine,
16regardless of the location of the vending machine.
17    Notwithstanding any other provisions of this Act,
18beginning September 1, 2009, "food for human consumption that
19is to be consumed off the premises where it is sold" does not
20include candy. For purposes of this Section, "candy" means a
21preparation of sugar, honey, or other natural or artificial
22sweeteners in combination with chocolate, fruits, nuts or
23other ingredients or flavorings in the form of bars, drops, or
24pieces. "Candy" does not include any preparation that contains
25flour or requires refrigeration.
26    Notwithstanding any other provisions of this Act,

 

 

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1beginning September 1, 2009, "nonprescription medicines and
2drugs" does not include grooming and hygiene products. For
3purposes of this Section, "grooming and hygiene products"
4includes, but is not limited to, soaps and cleaning solutions,
5shampoo, toothpaste, mouthwash, antiperspirants, and sun tan
6lotions and screens, unless those products are available by
7prescription only, regardless of whether the products meet the
8definition of "over-the-counter-drugs". For the purposes of
9this paragraph, "over-the-counter-drug" means a drug for human
10use that contains a label that identifies the product as a drug
11as required by 21 CFR 201.66. The "over-the-counter-drug"
12label includes:
13        (A) a "Drug Facts" panel; or
14        (B) a statement of the "active ingredient(s)" with a
15    list of those ingredients contained in the compound,
16    substance or preparation.
17    Beginning on January 1, 2014 and through December 31,
182025, (the effective date of Public Act 98-122), "prescription
19and nonprescription medicines and drugs" includes medical
20cannabis purchased from a registered dispensing organization
21under the Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis Program Act.
22    Beginning on January 1, 2026, "prescription and
23nonprescription medicines and drugs" includes cannabis
24purchased by a qualified registered patient, provisional
25patient, designated caregiver, or Opioid Alternative Patient
26Program participant as part of their adequate medical supply,

 

 

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1as these terms are defined under the Cannabis Regulation and
2Tax Act, from a dispensing organization registered under the
3Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis Program Act or the
4Cannabis Regulation and Tax Act.
5    As used in this Section, and through December 31, 2025,
6"adult use cannabis" means cannabis subject to tax under the
7Cannabis Cultivation Privilege Tax Law and the Cannabis
8Purchaser Excise Tax Law and does not include cannabis subject
9to tax under the Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis Program
10Act.
11    Beginning January 1, 2026, as used in this Section, "adult
12use cannabis" means cannabis subject to tax under the Cannabis
13Cultivation Privilege Tax Law and the Cannabis Purchaser
14Excise Tax Law and does not include cannabis purchased by a
15qualified registered patient, provisional patient, designated
16caregiver, or Opioid Alternative Patient Program participant
17as part of their adequate medical supply.
18(Source: P.A. 102-4, eff. 4-27-21; 102-16, eff. 6-17-21;
19102-700, Article 20, Section 20-15, eff. 4-19-22; 102-700,
20Article 60, Section 60-25, eff. 4-19-22; 103-9, eff. 6-7-23;
21103-154, eff. 6-30-23; 103-592, eff. 1-1-25; 103-781, eff.
228-5-24; revised 11-26-24.)
 
23    Section 25. The Retailers' Occupation Tax Act is amended
24by changing Section 2-10 and 11 as follows:
 

 

 

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1    (35 ILCS 120/2-10)  from Ch. 120, par. 441-10
2    Sec. 2-10. Rate of tax. Unless otherwise provided in this
3Section, the tax imposed by this Act is at the rate of 6.25% of
4gross receipts from sales, which, on and after January 1,
52025, includes leases, of tangible personal property made in
6the course of business.
7    Beginning on July 1, 2000 and through December 31, 2000,
8with respect to motor fuel, as defined in Section 1.1 of the
9Motor Fuel Tax Law, and gasohol, as defined in Section 3-40 of
10the Use Tax Act, the tax is imposed at the rate of 1.25%.
11    Beginning on August 6, 2010 through August 15, 2010, and
12beginning again on August 5, 2022 through August 14, 2022,
13with respect to sales tax holiday items as defined in Section
142-8 of this Act, the tax is imposed at the rate of 1.25%.
15    Within 14 days after July 1, 2000 (the effective date of
16Public Act 91-872), each retailer of motor fuel and gasohol
17shall cause the following notice to be posted in a prominently
18visible place on each retail dispensing device that is used to
19dispense motor fuel or gasohol in the State of Illinois: "As of
20July 1, 2000, the State of Illinois has eliminated the State's
21share of sales tax on motor fuel and gasohol through December
2231, 2000. The price on this pump should reflect the
23elimination of the tax." The notice shall be printed in bold
24print on a sign that is no smaller than 4 inches by 8 inches.
25The sign shall be clearly visible to customers. Any retailer
26who fails to post or maintain a required sign through December

 

 

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131, 2000 is guilty of a petty offense for which the fine shall
2be $500 per day per each retail premises where a violation
3occurs.
4    With respect to gasohol, as defined in the Use Tax Act, the
5tax imposed by this Act applies to (i) 70% of the proceeds of
6sales made on or after January 1, 1990, and before July 1,
72003, (ii) 80% of the proceeds of sales made on or after July
81, 2003 and on or before July 1, 2017, (iii) 100% of the
9proceeds of sales made after July 1, 2017 and prior to January
101, 2024, (iv) 90% of the proceeds of sales made on or after
11January 1, 2024 and on or before December 31, 2028, and (v)
12100% of the proceeds of sales made after December 31, 2028. If,
13at any time, however, the tax under this Act on sales of
14gasohol, as defined in the Use Tax Act, is imposed at the rate
15of 1.25%, then the tax imposed by this Act applies to 100% of
16the proceeds of sales of gasohol made during that time.
17    With respect to mid-range ethanol blends, as defined in
18Section 3-44.3 of the Use Tax Act, the tax imposed by this Act
19applies to (i) 80% of the proceeds of sales made on or after
20January 1, 2024 and on or before December 31, 2028 and (ii)
21100% of the proceeds of sales made after December 31, 2028. If,
22at any time, however, the tax under this Act on sales of
23mid-range ethanol blends is imposed at the rate of 1.25%, then
24the tax imposed by this Act applies to 100% of the proceeds of
25sales of mid-range ethanol blends made during that time.
26    With respect to majority blended ethanol fuel, as defined

 

 

SB2654- 31 -LRB104 13084 BDA 25085 b

1in the Use Tax Act, the tax imposed by this Act does not apply
2to the proceeds of sales made on or after July 1, 2003 and on
3or before December 31, 2028 but applies to 100% of the proceeds
4of sales made thereafter.
5    With respect to biodiesel blends, as defined in the Use
6Tax Act, with no less than 1% and no more than 10% biodiesel,
7the tax imposed by this Act applies to (i) 80% of the proceeds
8of sales made on or after July 1, 2003 and on or before
9December 31, 2018 and (ii) 100% of the proceeds of sales made
10after December 31, 2018 and before January 1, 2024. On and
11after January 1, 2024 and on or before December 31, 2030, the
12taxation of biodiesel, renewable diesel, and biodiesel blends
13shall be as provided in Section 3-5.1 of the Use Tax Act. If,
14at any time, however, the tax under this Act on sales of
15biodiesel blends, as defined in the Use Tax Act, with no less
16than 1% and no more than 10% biodiesel is imposed at the rate
17of 1.25%, then the tax imposed by this Act applies to 100% of
18the proceeds of sales of biodiesel blends with no less than 1%
19and no more than 10% biodiesel made during that time.
20    With respect to biodiesel, as defined in the Use Tax Act,
21and biodiesel blends, as defined in the Use Tax Act, with more
22than 10% but no more than 99% biodiesel, the tax imposed by
23this Act does not apply to the proceeds of sales made on or
24after July 1, 2003 and on or before December 31, 2023. On and
25after January 1, 2024 and on or before December 31, 2030, the
26taxation of biodiesel, renewable diesel, and biodiesel blends

 

 

SB2654- 32 -LRB104 13084 BDA 25085 b

1shall be as provided in Section 3-5.1 of the Use Tax Act.
2    Until July 1, 2022 and from July 1, 2023 through December
331, 2025, with respect to food for human consumption that is to
4be consumed off the premises where it is sold (other than
5alcoholic beverages, food consisting of or infused with adult
6use cannabis, soft drinks, and food that has been prepared for
7immediate consumption), the tax is imposed at the rate of 1%.
8Beginning July 1, 2022 and until July 1, 2023, with respect to
9food for human consumption that is to be consumed off the
10premises where it is sold (other than alcoholic beverages,
11food consisting of or infused with adult use cannabis, soft
12drinks, and food that has been prepared for immediate
13consumption), the tax is imposed at the rate of 0%. On and
14after January 1, 2026, food for human consumption that is to be
15consumed off the premises where it is sold (other than
16alcoholic beverages, food consisting of or infused with adult
17use cannabis, soft drinks, candy, and food that has been
18prepared for immediate consumption) is exempt from the tax
19imposed by this Act.
20    With respect to prescription and nonprescription
21medicines, drugs, medical appliances, products classified as
22Class III medical devices by the United States Food and Drug
23Administration that are used for cancer treatment pursuant to
24a prescription, as well as any accessories and components
25related to those devices, modifications to a motor vehicle for
26the purpose of rendering it usable by a person with a

 

 

SB2654- 33 -LRB104 13084 BDA 25085 b

1disability, and insulin, blood sugar testing materials,
2syringes, and needles used by human diabetics, the tax is
3imposed at the rate of 1%. For the purposes of this Section,
4until September 1, 2009: the term "soft drinks" means any
5complete, finished, ready-to-use, non-alcoholic drink, whether
6carbonated or not, including, but not limited to, soda water,
7cola, fruit juice, vegetable juice, carbonated water, and all
8other preparations commonly known as soft drinks of whatever
9kind or description that are contained in any closed or sealed
10bottle, can, carton, or container, regardless of size; but
11"soft drinks" does not include coffee, tea, non-carbonated
12water, infant formula, milk or milk products as defined in the
13Grade A Pasteurized Milk and Milk Products Act, or drinks
14containing 50% or more natural fruit or vegetable juice.
15    Notwithstanding any other provisions of this Act,
16beginning September 1, 2009, "soft drinks" means non-alcoholic
17beverages that contain natural or artificial sweeteners. "Soft
18drinks" does not include beverages that contain milk or milk
19products, soy, rice or similar milk substitutes, or greater
20than 50% of vegetable or fruit juice by volume.
21    Until August 1, 2009, and notwithstanding any other
22provisions of this Act, "food for human consumption that is to
23be consumed off the premises where it is sold" includes all
24food sold through a vending machine, except soft drinks and
25food products that are dispensed hot from a vending machine,
26regardless of the location of the vending machine. Beginning

 

 

SB2654- 34 -LRB104 13084 BDA 25085 b

1August 1, 2009, and notwithstanding any other provisions of
2this Act, "food for human consumption that is to be consumed
3off the premises where it is sold" includes all food sold
4through a vending machine, except soft drinks, candy, and food
5products that are dispensed hot from a vending machine,
6regardless of the location of the vending machine.
7    Notwithstanding any other provisions of this Act,
8beginning September 1, 2009, "food for human consumption that
9is to be consumed off the premises where it is sold" does not
10include candy. For purposes of this Section, "candy" means a
11preparation of sugar, honey, or other natural or artificial
12sweeteners in combination with chocolate, fruits, nuts or
13other ingredients or flavorings in the form of bars, drops, or
14pieces. "Candy" does not include any preparation that contains
15flour or requires refrigeration.
16    Notwithstanding any other provisions of this Act,
17beginning September 1, 2009, "nonprescription medicines and
18drugs" does not include grooming and hygiene products. For
19purposes of this Section, "grooming and hygiene products"
20includes, but is not limited to, soaps and cleaning solutions,
21shampoo, toothpaste, mouthwash, antiperspirants, and sun tan
22lotions and screens, unless those products are available by
23prescription only, regardless of whether the products meet the
24definition of "over-the-counter-drugs". For the purposes of
25this paragraph, "over-the-counter-drug" means a drug for human
26use that contains a label that identifies the product as a drug

 

 

SB2654- 35 -LRB104 13084 BDA 25085 b

1as required by 21 CFR 201.66. The "over-the-counter-drug"
2label includes:
3        (A) a "Drug Facts" panel; or
4        (B) a statement of the "active ingredient(s)" with a
5    list of those ingredients contained in the compound,
6    substance or preparation.
7    Beginning on January 1, 2014 (the effective date of Public
8Act 98-122), and through December 31, 2025, "prescription and
9nonprescription medicines and drugs" includes medical cannabis
10purchased from a registered dispensing organization under the
11Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis Program Act.
12    Beginning on January 1, 2026, "prescription and
13nonprescription medicines and drugs" includes cannabis
14purchased by a qualified registered patient, provisional
15patient, designated caregiver, or Opioid Alternative Patient
16Program participant as part of their adequate medical supply,
17as these terms are defined under the Cannabis Regulation and
18Tax Act, from a dispensing organization registered under the
19Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis Program Act or the
20Cannabis Regulation and Tax Act.
21    As used in this Section, and through December 31, 2025,
22"adult use cannabis" means cannabis subject to tax under the
23Cannabis Cultivation Privilege Tax Law and the Cannabis
24Purchaser Excise Tax Law and does not include cannabis subject
25to tax under the Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis Program
26Act.

 

 

SB2654- 36 -LRB104 13084 BDA 25085 b

1    Beginning January 1, 2026, as used in this Section, "adult
2use cannabis" means cannabis subject to tax under the Cannabis
3Cultivation Privilege Tax Law and the Cannabis Purchaser
4Excise Tax Law and does not include cannabis purchased by a
5qualified registered patient, provisional patient, designated
6caregiver, or Opioid Alternative Patient Program participant
7as part of their adequate medical supply.
8(Source: P.A. 102-4, eff. 4-27-21; 102-700, Article 20,
9Section 20-20, eff. 4-19-22; 102-700, Article 60, Section
1060-30, eff. 4-19-22; 102-700, Article 65, Section 65-10, eff.
114-19-22; 103-9, eff. 6-7-23; 103-154, eff. 6-30-23; 103-592,
12eff. 1-1-25; 103-781, eff. 8-5-24; revised 11-26-24.)
 
13    (35 ILCS 120/11)  (from Ch. 120, par. 450)
14    Sec. 11. All information received by the Department from
15returns filed under this Act, or from any investigation
16conducted under this Act, shall be confidential, except for
17official purposes, and any person, including a third party as
18defined in the Local Government Revenue Recapture Act, who
19divulges any such information in any manner, except in
20accordance with a proper judicial order or as otherwise
21provided by law, including the Local Government Revenue
22Recapture Act, shall be guilty of a Class B misdemeanor with a
23fine not to exceed $7,500.
24    Nothing in this Act prevents the Director of Revenue from
25publishing or making available to the public the names and

 

 

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1addresses of persons filing returns under this Act, or
2reasonable statistics concerning the operation of the tax by
3grouping the contents of returns so the information in any
4individual return is not disclosed.
5    Nothing in this Act prevents the Director of Revenue from
6divulging to the United States Government or the government of
7any other state, or any officer or agency thereof, for
8exclusively official purposes, information received by the
9Department in administering this Act, provided that such other
10governmental agency agrees to divulge requested tax
11information to the Department.
12    The Department's furnishing of information derived from a
13taxpayer's return or from an investigation conducted under
14this Act to the surety on a taxpayer's bond that has been
15furnished to the Department under this Act, either to provide
16notice to such surety of its potential liability under the
17bond or, in order to support the Department's demand for
18payment from such surety under the bond, is an official
19purpose within the meaning of this Section.
20    The furnishing upon request of information obtained by the
21Department from returns filed under this Act or investigations
22conducted under this Act to the Illinois Liquor Control
23Commission for official use is deemed to be an official
24purpose within the meaning of this Section.
25    Notice to a surety of potential liability shall not be
26given unless the taxpayer has first been notified, not less

 

 

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1than 10 days prior thereto, of the Department's intent to so
2notify the surety.
3    The furnishing upon request of the Auditor General, or his
4authorized agents, for official use, of returns filed and
5information related thereto under this Act is deemed to be an
6official purpose within the meaning of this Section.
7    Where an appeal or a protest has been filed on behalf of a
8taxpayer, the furnishing upon request of the attorney for the
9taxpayer of returns filed by the taxpayer and information
10related thereto under this Act is deemed to be an official
11purpose within the meaning of this Section.
12    The furnishing of financial information to a municipality
13or county, upon request of the chief executive officer
14thereof, is an official purpose within the meaning of this
15Section, provided the municipality or county agrees in writing
16to the requirements of this Section. Information provided to
17municipalities and counties under this paragraph shall be
18limited to: (1) the business name; (2) the business address;
19(3) the standard classification number assigned to the
20business; (4) net revenue distributed to the requesting
21municipality or county that is directly related to the
22requesting municipality's or county's local share of the
23proceeds under the Use Tax Act, the Service Use Tax Act, the
24Service Occupation Tax Act, and the Retailers' Occupation Tax
25Act distributed from the Local Government Tax Fund, and, if
26applicable, any locally imposed retailers' occupation tax or

 

 

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1service occupation tax; and (5) a listing of all businesses
2within the requesting municipality or county by account
3identification number and address. On and after July 1, 2015,
4the furnishing of financial information to municipalities and
5counties under this paragraph may be by electronic means. If
6the Department may furnish financial information to a
7municipality or county under this paragraph, then the chief
8executive officer of the municipality or county may, in turn,
9provide that financial information to a third party pursuant
10to the Local Government Revenue Recapture Act. However, the
11third party shall agree in writing to the requirements of this
12Section and meet the requirements of the Local Government
13Revenue Recapture Act.
14    Information so provided shall be subject to all
15confidentiality provisions of this Section. The written
16agreement shall provide for reciprocity, limitations on
17access, disclosure, and procedures for requesting information.
18For the purposes of furnishing financial information to a
19municipality or county under this Section, "chief executive
20officer" means the mayor of a city, the village board
21president of a village, the mayor or president of an
22incorporated town, the county executive of a county that has
23adopted the county executive form of government, the president
24of the board of commissioners of Cook County, or the
25chairperson of the county board or board of county
26commissioners of any other county.

 

 

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1    The Department may make available to the Board of Trustees
2of any Metro East Mass Transit District information contained
3on transaction reporting returns required to be filed under
4Section 3 of this Act that report sales made within the
5boundary of the taxing authority of that Metro East Mass
6Transit District, as provided in Section 5.01 of the Local
7Mass Transit District Act. The disclosure shall be made
8pursuant to a written agreement between the Department and the
9Board of Trustees of a Metro East Mass Transit District, which
10is an official purpose within the meaning of this Section. The
11written agreement between the Department and the Board of
12Trustees of a Metro East Mass Transit District shall provide
13for reciprocity, limitations on access, disclosure, and
14procedures for requesting information. Information so provided
15shall be subject to all confidentiality provisions of this
16Section.
17    The Director may make available to any State agency,
18including the Illinois Supreme Court, which licenses persons
19to engage in any occupation, information that a person
20licensed by such agency has failed to file returns under this
21Act or pay the tax, penalty and interest shown therein, or has
22failed to pay any final assessment of tax, penalty or interest
23due under this Act. The Director may make available to any
24State agency, including the Illinois Supreme Court,
25information regarding whether a bidder, contractor, or an
26affiliate of a bidder or contractor has failed to collect and

 

 

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1remit Illinois Use tax on sales into Illinois, or any tax under
2this Act or pay the tax, penalty, and interest shown therein,
3or has failed to pay any final assessment of tax, penalty, or
4interest due under this Act, for the limited purpose of
5enforcing bidder and contractor certifications. The Director
6may make available to units of local government and school
7districts that require bidder and contractor certifications,
8as set forth in Sections 50-11 and 50-12 of the Illinois
9Procurement Code, information regarding whether a bidder,
10contractor, or an affiliate of a bidder or contractor has
11failed to collect and remit Illinois Use tax on sales into
12Illinois, file returns under this Act, or pay the tax,
13penalty, and interest shown therein, or has failed to pay any
14final assessment of tax, penalty, or interest due under this
15Act, for the limited purpose of enforcing bidder and
16contractor certifications. For purposes of this Section, the
17term "affiliate" means any entity that (1) directly,
18indirectly, or constructively controls another entity, (2) is
19directly, indirectly, or constructively controlled by another
20entity, or (3) is subject to the control of a common entity.
21For purposes of this Section, an entity controls another
22entity if it owns, directly or individually, more than 10% of
23the voting securities of that entity. As used in this Section,
24the term "voting security" means a security that (1) confers
25upon the holder the right to vote for the election of members
26of the board of directors or similar governing body of the

 

 

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1business or (2) is convertible into, or entitles the holder to
2receive upon its exercise, a security that confers such a
3right to vote. A general partnership interest is a voting
4security.
5    The Director may make available to any State agency,
6including the Illinois Supreme Court, units of local
7government, and school districts, information regarding
8whether a bidder or contractor is an affiliate of a person who
9is not collecting and remitting Illinois Use taxes for the
10limited purpose of enforcing bidder and contractor
11certifications.
12    The Director may also make available to the Secretary of
13State information that a limited liability company, which has
14filed articles of organization with the Secretary of State, or
15corporation which has been issued a certificate of
16incorporation by the Secretary of State has failed to file
17returns under this Act or pay the tax, penalty and interest
18shown therein, or has failed to pay any final assessment of
19tax, penalty or interest due under this Act. An assessment is
20final when all proceedings in court for review of such
21assessment have terminated or the time for the taking thereof
22has expired without such proceedings being instituted.
23    It is an official purpose within the meaning of this
24Section for the Department to publicly report the aggregate
25amount of tax revenues from a given tax return type that the
26Department allocates from a State fund or State trust fund to

 

 

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1each unit of local government, such as the amount of the
2monthly allocation to each unit of local government of
3Municipal Cannabis Retailers' Occupation Tax, County Cannabis
4Retailers' Occupation Tax, or Business District Retailers'
5Occupation Tax, notwithstanding that some units of local
6government may have as few as one retailer reporting revenues
7for a given tax return type in any given reporting period.
8    The Director shall make available for public inspection in
9the Department's principal office and for publication, at
10cost, administrative decisions issued on or after January 1,
111995. These decisions are to be made available in a manner so
12that the following taxpayer information is not disclosed:
13        (1) The names, addresses, and identification numbers
14    of the taxpayer, related entities, and employees.
15        (2) At the sole discretion of the Director, trade
16    secrets or other confidential information identified as
17    such by the taxpayer, no later than 30 days after receipt
18    of an administrative decision, by such means as the
19    Department shall provide by rule.
20    The Director shall determine the appropriate extent of the
21deletions allowed in paragraph (2). In the event the taxpayer
22does not submit deletions, the Director shall make only the
23deletions specified in paragraph (1).
24    The Director shall make available for public inspection
25and publication an administrative decision within 180 days
26after the issuance of the administrative decision. The term

 

 

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1"administrative decision" has the same meaning as defined in
2Section 3-101 of Article III of the Code of Civil Procedure.
3Costs collected under this Section shall be paid into the Tax
4Compliance and Administration Fund.
5    Nothing contained in this Act shall prevent the Director
6from divulging information to any person pursuant to a request
7or authorization made by the taxpayer or by an authorized
8representative of the taxpayer.
9    The furnishing of information obtained by the Department
10from returns filed under Public Act 101-10 to the Department
11of Transportation for purposes of compliance with Public Act
12101-10 regarding aviation fuel is deemed to be an official
13purpose within the meaning of this Section.
14    The Director may make information available to the
15Secretary of State for the purpose of administering Section
165-901 of the Illinois Vehicle Code.
17(Source: P.A. 101-10, eff. 6-5-19; 101-628, eff. 6-1-20;
18102-558, eff. 8-20-21; 102-941, eff. 7-1-22.)
 
19    Section 30. The Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis
20Program Act is amended by changing Sections 7, 10, 15, 25, 30,
2135, 57, 60, 70, 75, 85, 90, 95, 100, 105, 110, 115, 115.5, 125,
22120, 130, 140, 145, 150, 165, 180, 200, 205, and 210 as
23follows:
 
24    (410 ILCS 130/7)

 

 

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1    Sec. 7. Lawful user and lawful products. For the purposes
2of this Act and to clarify the legislative findings on the
3lawful use of cannabis:
4        (1) A cardholder under this Act shall not be
5    considered an unlawful user or addicted to narcotics
6    solely as a result of his or her qualifying patient,
7    provisional patient, or designated caregiver, or Opioid
8    Alternative Patient Program participant status.
9        (2) All medical cannabis products purchased by a
10    qualifying patient, provisional patient, designated
11    caregiver, or Opioid Alternative Patient Program
12    participant at a licensed dispensing organization shall be
13    lawful products and a distinction shall be made between
14    medical and non-medical uses of cannabis as a result of
15    the qualifying patient's cardholder status, provisional
16    registration for qualifying patient cardholder status, or
17    participation in the Opioid Alternative Pilot Program
18    under the authorized use granted under State law.
19        (3) An individual with a provisional registration for
20    qualifying patient cardholder status, a qualifying patient
21    in the Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis Program, or
22    an Opioid Alternative Patient Pilot Program participant
23    under Section 62 shall not be considered an unlawful user
24    or addicted to narcotics solely as a result of his or her
25    application to or participation in the program.
26(Source: P.A. 100-1114, eff. 8-28-18; 101-363, eff. 8-9-19.)
 

 

 

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1    (410 ILCS 130/10)
2    Sec. 10. Definitions. The following terms, as used in this
3Act, shall have the meanings set forth in this Section:
4    (a) "Adequate medical supply" means:
5        (1) 2.5 ounces of usable cannabis during a period of
6    14 days and that is derived solely from an intrastate
7    source.
8        (2) Subject to the rules of the Department of Public
9    Health, a patient may apply for a waiver where a
10    certifying health care professional provides a substantial
11    medical basis in a signed, written statement asserting
12    that, based on the patient's medical history, in the
13    certifying health care professional's professional
14    judgment, 2.5 ounces is an insufficient adequate medical
15    supply for a 14-day period to properly alleviate the
16    patient's debilitating medical condition or symptoms
17    associated with the debilitating medical condition.
18        (3) This subsection may not be construed to authorize
19    the possession of more than 2.5 ounces at any time without
20    authority from the Department of Public Health.
21        (4) The pre-mixed weight of medical cannabis used in
22    making a cannabis infused product shall apply toward the
23    limit on the total amount of medical cannabis a registered
24    qualifying patient may possess at any one time.
25    (a-5) "Advanced practice registered nurse" means a person

 

 

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1who is licensed under the Nurse Practice Act as an advanced
2practice registered nurse and has a controlled substances
3license under Article III of the Illinois Controlled
4Substances Act.
5    (b) "Cannabis" has the same meaning given to that term in
6Section 1-10 3 of the Cannabis Regulation and Tax Control Act.
7    (b-5) "Cannabis business establishment" has the same
8meaning given to that term in Section 1-10 of the Cannabis
9Regulation and Tax Act.
10    (c) "Cannabis plant monitoring system" means a system that
11includes, but is not limited to, testing and data collection
12established and maintained by the registered cultivation
13center and available to the Department for the purposes of
14documenting each cannabis plant and for monitoring plant
15development throughout the life cycle of a cannabis plant
16cultivated for the intended use by a qualifying patient from
17seed planting to final packaging.
18    (d) "Cardholder" means a qualifying patient, provisional
19patient, or a designated caregiver, or Opioid Alternative
20Patient Program participant who has been issued and possesses
21a valid registry identification card by the Department of
22Public Health.
23    (d-5) "Certifying health care professional" means a
24physician, an advanced practice registered nurse, or a
25physician assistant.
26    (e) "Cultivation center" means a facility operated by an

 

 

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1organization or business that is registered by the Department
2of Agriculture to perform necessary activities to provide only
3registered medical cannabis dispensing organizations with
4usable medical cannabis. Beginning July 1, 2025, cultivation
5centers registered under this Act are subject to regulation
6exclusively as a cultivation center under the Cannabis
7Regulation and Tax Act. Cultivation center registrations under
8this Act shall not be renewed after July 1, 2025.
9    (f) "Cultivation center agent" means a principal officer,
10board member, employee, or agent of a registered cultivation
11center who is 21 years of age. This subsection is inoperative
12on and after January 1, 2026 or older and has not been
13convicted of an excluded offense.
14    (g) "Cultivation center agent identification card" means a
15document issued by the Department of Agriculture that
16identifies a person as a cultivation center agent. This
17subsection is inoperative on and after January 1, 2026.
18    (h) "Debilitating medical condition" means one or more of
19the following:
20        (1) cancer, glaucoma, positive status for human
21    immunodeficiency virus, acquired immune deficiency
22    syndrome, hepatitis C, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis,
23    Crohn's disease (including, but not limited to, ulcerative
24    colitis), agitation of Alzheimer's disease,
25    cachexia/wasting syndrome, muscular dystrophy, severe
26    fibromyalgia, spinal cord disease, including but not

 

 

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1    limited to arachnoiditis, Tarlov cysts, hydromyelia,
2    syringomyelia, Rheumatoid arthritis, fibrous dysplasia,
3    spinal cord injury, traumatic brain injury and
4    post-concussion syndrome, Multiple Sclerosis,
5    Arnold-Chiari malformation and Syringomyelia,
6    Spinocerebellar Ataxia (SCA), Parkinson's, Tourette's,
7    Myoclonus, Dystonia, Reflex Sympathetic Dystrophy, RSD
8    (Complex Regional Pain Syndromes Type I), Causalgia, CRPS
9    (Complex Regional Pain Syndromes Type II),
10    Neurofibromatosis, Chronic Inflammatory Demyelinating
11    Polyneuropathy, Sjogren's syndrome, Lupus, Interstitial
12    Cystitis, Myasthenia Gravis, Hydrocephalus, nail-patella
13    syndrome, residual limb pain, seizures (including those
14    characteristic of epilepsy), post-traumatic stress
15    disorder (PTSD), autism, chronic pain, irritable bowel
16    syndrome, migraines, osteoarthritis, anorexia nervosa,
17    Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome, Neuro-Behcet's Autoimmune
18    Disease, neuropathy, polycystic kidney disease, superior
19    canal dehiscence syndrome, endometriosis, ovarian cysts,
20    uterine fibroids, female orgasmic disorder, or the
21    treatment of these conditions;
22        (1.5) terminal illness with a diagnosis of 6 months or
23    less; if the terminal illness is not one of the qualifying
24    debilitating medical conditions, then the certifying
25    health care professional shall on the certification form
26    identify the cause of the terminal illness; or

 

 

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1        (2) any other debilitating medical condition or its
2    treatment that is added by the Department of Public Health
3    by rule as provided in Section 45.
4    (i) "Designated caregiver" means a person who: (1) is at
5least 21 years of age; (2) has agreed to assist with a
6patient's medical use of cannabis; and (3) has not been
7convicted of an excluded offense; and (4) assists no more than
8one registered qualifying patient with his or her medical use
9of cannabis, except for parents or legal guardians of minor
10patients. Beginning January 1, 2026, a designated caregiver
11registered under this Act may perform the designated
12caregiver's duties at any dispensary licensed by the
13Department of Financial and Professional Regulation under the
14Cannabis Regulation and Tax Act.
15    (j) "Dispensing organization agent identification card"
16means a document issued by the Department of Financial and
17Professional Regulation that identifies a person as a medical
18cannabis dispensing organization agent. This definition is
19inoperative on and after July 1, 2026.
20    (k) "Enclosed, locked facility" means a room, greenhouse,
21building, or other enclosed area equipped with locks or other
22security devices that permit access only by a cultivation
23center's agents or a dispensing organization's agent working
24for the registered cultivation center or the registered
25dispensing organization to cultivate, store, and distribute
26cannabis for registered qualifying patients. This definition

 

 

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1is inoperative on and after July 1, 2026.
2    (l) (Blank). "Excluded offense" for cultivation center
3agents and dispensing organizations means:
4        (1) a violent crime defined in Section 3 of the Rights
5    of Crime Victims and Witnesses Act or a substantially
6    similar offense that was classified as a felony in the
7    jurisdiction where the person was convicted; or
8        (2) a violation of a state or federal controlled
9    substance law, the Cannabis Control Act, or the
10    Methamphetamine Control and Community Protection Act that
11    was classified as a felony in the jurisdiction where the
12    person was convicted, except that the registering
13    Department may waive this restriction if the person
14    demonstrates to the registering Department's satisfaction
15    that his or her conviction was for the possession,
16    cultivation, transfer, or delivery of a reasonable amount
17    of cannabis intended for medical use. This exception does
18    not apply if the conviction was under state law and
19    involved a violation of an existing medical cannabis law.
20    For purposes of this subsection, the Department of Public
21Health shall determine by emergency rule within 30 days after
22the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 99th General
23Assembly what constitutes a "reasonable amount".
24    (l-5) (Blank).
25    (l-10) "Illinois Medical Cannabis Tracking System" means a
26web-based system established and maintained by the Department

 

 

SB2654- 52 -LRB104 13084 BDA 25085 b

1of Public Health that is available to the Department of
2Agriculture, the Department of Financial and Professional
3Regulation, the Illinois State Police, and registered medical
4cannabis dispensing organizations on a 24-hour basis to upload
5written certifications for Medical Cannabis Patient Program
6registered patient and Opioid Alternative Patient Pilot
7Program participants; , to verify Medical Cannabis Patient
8Program registered patient and Opioid Alternative Patient
9Pilot Program participants; and , to verify Medical Cannabis
10Patient Program registered patient and Opioid Alternative
11Patient Pilot Program participants' available cannabis
12allotment and assigned dispensary, and the tracking of the
13date of sale, amount, and price of medical cannabis purchased
14by an Opioid Alternative Pilot Program participant.
15    (m) "Medical cannabis cultivation center registration"
16means a registration issued by the Department of Agriculture.
17This definition is inoperative on and after July 1, 2026.
18    (n) "Medical cannabis container" means a sealed,
19traceable, food compliant, tamper resistant, tamper evident
20container, or package used for the purpose of containment of
21medical cannabis from a cultivation center to a dispensing
22organization.
23    (o) "Medical cannabis dispensing organization", or
24"dispensing organization", or "dispensary organization",
25through December 31, 2025, means a facility operated by an
26organization or business that is registered by the Department

 

 

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1of Financial and Professional Regulation to acquire medical
2cannabis from a registered cultivation center for the purpose
3of dispensing cannabis, paraphernalia, or related supplies and
4educational materials to registered qualifying patients,
5individuals with a provisional registration for qualifying
6patient cardholder status, or an Opioid Alternative Patient
7Pilot Program participant. Beginning July 1, 2026, medical
8cannabis dispensing organizations licensed under this Act are
9subject to regulation as a dispensary under the Cannabis
10Regulation and Tax Act.
11    (p) "Medical cannabis dispensing organization agent" or
12"dispensing organization agent" means a principal officer,
13board member, employee, or agent of a registered medical
14cannabis dispensing organization who is 21 years of age or
15older and has not been convicted of an excluded offense.
16Beginning January 1, 2026, medical cannabis dispensing
17organization agents licensed under this Act are subject to
18regulation as a dispensary organization agent under the
19Cannabis Regulation and Tax Act.
20    (q) "Medical cannabis infused product" means food, oils,
21ointments, or other products containing usable cannabis that
22are not smoked.
23    (r) "Medical use" means the acquisition; administration;
24delivery; possession; transfer; transportation; or use of
25cannabis to treat or alleviate a registered qualifying
26patient's debilitating medical condition or symptoms

 

 

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1associated with the patient's debilitating medical condition.
2    (r-5) "Opioid" means a narcotic drug or substance that is
3a Schedule II controlled substance under paragraph (1), (2),
4(3), or (5) of subsection (b) or under subsection (c) of
5Section 206 of the Illinois Controlled Substances Act.
6    (r-10) "Opioid Alternative Patient Pilot Program
7participant" means an individual who has received a valid
8written certification to participate in the Opioid Alternative
9Patient Pilot Program for a medical condition for which an
10opioid has been or could be prescribed by a certifying health
11care professional based on generally accepted standards of
12care.
13    (s) "Physician" means a doctor of medicine or doctor of
14osteopathy licensed under the Medical Practice Act of 1987 to
15practice medicine and who has a controlled substances license
16under Article III of the Illinois Controlled Substances Act.
17It does not include a licensed practitioner under any other
18Act including but not limited to the Illinois Dental Practice
19Act.
20    (s-1) "Physician assistant" means a physician assistant
21licensed under the Physician Assistant Practice Act of 1987
22and who has a controlled substances license under Article III
23of the Illinois Controlled Substances Act.
24    (s-5) "Provisional registration" means a document issued
25by the Department of Public Health to a qualifying patient who
26has submitted: (1) an online application and paid a fee to

 

 

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1participate in Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis Program
2pending approval or denial of the patient's application; or
3(2) a completed application for terminal illness.
4    (s-10) "Provisional patient" means a qualifying patient
5who has received a provisional registration from the
6Department of Public Health.
7    (t) "Qualifying patient" or "registered qualifying
8patient" means a person who has been diagnosed by a certifying
9health care professional as having a debilitating medical
10condition.
11    (u) "Registered" means licensed, permitted, or otherwise
12certified by the Department of Agriculture, Department of
13Public Health, or Department of Financial and Professional
14Regulation.
15    (v) "Registry identification card" means a document issued
16by the Department of Public Health that identifies a person as
17a registered qualifying patient, provisional patient, or
18registered designated caregiver.
19    (w) "Usable cannabis" means the seeds, leaves, buds, and
20flowers of the cannabis plant and any mixture or preparation
21thereof, but does not include the stalks, and roots of the
22plant. It does not include the weight of any non-cannabis
23ingredients combined with cannabis, such as ingredients added
24to prepare a topical administration, food, or drink.
25    (x) "Verification system" means a Web-based system
26established and maintained by the Department of Public Health

 

 

SB2654- 56 -LRB104 13084 BDA 25085 b

1that is available to the Department of Agriculture, the
2Department of Financial and Professional Regulation, law
3enforcement personnel, and registered medical cannabis
4dispensing organization agents on a 24-hour basis for the
5verification of registry identification cards, the tracking of
6delivery of medical cannabis to medical cannabis dispensing
7organizations, and the tracking of the date of sale, amount,
8and price of medical cannabis purchased by a registered
9qualifying patient.
10    (y) "Written certification" means a document dated and
11signed by a certifying health care professional practicing in
12the State of Illinois, stating (1) that the qualifying patient
13has a debilitating medical condition and specifying the
14debilitating medical condition the qualifying patient has; and
15(2) that (A) the certifying health care professional is
16treating or managing treatment of the patient's debilitating
17medical condition; or (B) an Opioid Alternative Patient Pilot
18Program participant has a medical condition for which opioids
19have been or could be prescribed. A written certification
20shall be made only in the course of a bona fide health care
21professional-patient relationship, after the certifying health
22care professional has completed an assessment of either a
23qualifying patient's medical history or Opioid Alternative
24Patient Pilot Program participant, reviewed relevant records
25related to the patient's debilitating condition, and conducted
26a physical examination.

 

 

SB2654- 57 -LRB104 13084 BDA 25085 b

1    (z) "Bona fide health care professional-patient
2relationship" means a relationship established at a hospital,
3certifying health care professional's office, or other health
4care facility in which the certifying health care professional
5has an ongoing responsibility for the assessment, care, and
6treatment of a patient's debilitating medical condition or a
7symptom of the patient's debilitating medical condition.
8    A veteran who has received treatment at a VA hospital
9shall be deemed to have a bona fide health care
10professional-patient relationship with a VA certifying health
11care professional if the patient has been seen for his or her
12debilitating medical condition at the VA Hospital in
13accordance with VA Hospital protocols.
14    A bona fide health care professional-patient relationship
15under this subsection is a privileged communication within the
16meaning of Section 8-802 of the Code of Civil Procedure.
17(Source: P.A. 100-1114, eff. 8-28-18; 101-363, eff. 8-9-19.)
 
18    (410 ILCS 130/15)
19    Sec. 15. Authority.
20    (a) It is the duty of the Department of Public Health to
21enforce the following provisions of this Act unless otherwise
22provided for by this Act:
23        (1) establish and maintain a confidential registry of
24    qualifying patients authorized to engage in the medical
25    use of cannabis and their caregivers;

 

 

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1        (2) distribute educational materials about the health
2    benefits and risks associated with the use of cannabis and
3    prescription medications;
4        (3) adopt rules to administer the patient and
5    caregiver registration program; and
6        (4) adopt rules establishing food handling
7    requirements for cannabis-infused products that are
8    prepared for human consumption.
9    (b) Through July 1, 2025, it It is the duty of the
10Department of Agriculture to enforce the provisions of this
11Act relating to the registration and oversight of cultivation
12centers unless otherwise provided for in this Act.
13    (c) Through December 31, 2025, it It is the duty of the
14Department of Financial and Professional Regulation to enforce
15the provisions of this Act relating to the registration and
16oversight of dispensing organizations unless otherwise
17provided for in this Act.
18    (d) Through December 31, 2025, the The Department of
19Public Health, the Department of Agriculture, or the
20Department of Financial and Professional Regulation shall
21enter into intergovernmental agreements, as necessary, to
22carry out the provisions of this Act including, but not
23limited to, the provisions relating to the registration and
24oversight of cultivation centers, dispensing organizations,
25and qualifying patients, Opioid Alternative Patient Program
26participants, and caregivers. Beginning January 1, 2026, the

 

 

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1Department of Public Health may enter into intergovernmental
2agreements, as necessary, to carry out the provisions of this
3Act, including, but not limited to, the provisions relating to
4qualifying patients and caregivers.
5    (e) The Department of Public Health, the Department of
6Agriculture through December 31, 2025, or the Department of
7Financial and Professional Regulation through December 31,
82025 may suspend, revoke, or impose other penalties upon a
9registration for violations of this Act and any rules adopted
10in accordance thereto. The suspension or revocation of, or
11imposition of any other penalty upon, a registration is a
12final Agency action, subject to judicial review. Jurisdiction
13and venue for judicial review are vested in the Circuit Court.
14(Source: P.A. 98-122, eff. 1-1-14; 98-1172, eff. 1-12-15;
1599-519, eff. 6-30-16.)
 
16    (410 ILCS 130/25)
17    Sec. 25. Immunities and presumptions related to the
18medical use of cannabis.
19    (a) A registered qualifying patient, provisional patient,
20or Opioid Alternative Patient Program participant is not
21subject to arrest, prosecution, or denial of any right or
22privilege, including, but not limited to, civil penalty or
23disciplinary action by an occupational or professional
24licensing board, for the medical use of cannabis in accordance
25with this Act, if the registered qualifying patient possesses

 

 

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1an amount of cannabis that does not exceed an adequate medical
2supply as defined in subsection (a) of Section 10 of this Act
3of usable cannabis and, where the registered qualifying
4patient is a licensed professional, the use of cannabis does
5not impair that licensed professional when he or she is
6engaged in the practice of the profession for which he or she
7is licensed.
8    (b) A registered designated caregiver is not subject to
9arrest, prosecution, or denial of any right or privilege,
10including, but not limited to, civil penalty or disciplinary
11action by an occupational or professional licensing board, for
12acting in accordance with this Act to assist a registered
13qualifying patient to whom he or she is connected through the
14Department's registration process with the medical use of
15cannabis if the designated caregiver possesses an amount of
16cannabis that does not exceed an adequate medical supply as
17defined in subsection (a) of Section 10 of this Act of usable
18cannabis. A school nurse or school administrator is not
19subject to arrest, prosecution, or denial of any right or
20privilege, including, but not limited to, a civil penalty, for
21acting in accordance with Section 22-33 of the School Code
22relating to administering or assisting a student in
23self-administering a medical cannabis infused product. The
24total amount possessed between the qualifying patient and
25caregiver shall not exceed the patient's adequate medical
26supply as defined in subsection (a) of Section 10 of this Act.

 

 

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1    (c) A registered qualifying patient or registered
2designated caregiver is not subject to arrest, prosecution, or
3denial of any right or privilege, including, but not limited
4to, civil penalty or disciplinary action by an occupational or
5professional licensing board for possession of cannabis that
6is incidental to medical use, but is not usable cannabis as
7defined in this Act.
8    (d)(1) There is a rebuttable presumption that a registered
9qualifying patient or Opioid Alternative Patient Program
10Participant is engaged in, or a designated caregiver is
11assisting with, the medical use of cannabis in accordance with
12this Act if the qualifying patient or designated caregiver:
13        (A) is in possession of a valid registry
14    identification card; and
15        (B) is in possession of an amount of cannabis that
16    does not exceed the amount allowed under subsection (a) of
17    Section 10.
18    (2) The presumption may be rebutted by evidence that
19conduct related to cannabis was not for the purpose of
20treating or alleviating the qualifying patient's debilitating
21medical condition or symptoms associated with the debilitating
22medical condition in compliance with this Act.
23    (e) A certifying health care professional is not subject
24to arrest, prosecution, or penalty in any manner, or denial of
25any right or privilege, including, but not limited to, civil
26penalty or disciplinary action by the Medical Disciplinary

 

 

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1Board or by any other occupational or professional licensing
2board, solely for providing written certifications or for
3otherwise stating that, in the certifying health care
4professional's professional opinion, a patient is likely to
5receive therapeutic or palliative benefit from the medical use
6of cannabis to treat or alleviate the patient's debilitating
7medical condition or symptoms associated with the debilitating
8medical condition, provided that nothing shall prevent a
9professional licensing or disciplinary board from sanctioning
10a certifying health care professional for: (1) issuing a
11written certification to a patient who is not under the
12certifying health care professional's care for a debilitating
13medical condition; or (2) failing to properly evaluate a
14patient's medical condition or otherwise violating the
15standard of care for evaluating medical conditions.
16    (f) No person may be subject to arrest, prosecution, or
17denial of any right or privilege, including, but not limited
18to, civil penalty or disciplinary action by an occupational or
19professional licensing board, solely for: (1) selling cannabis
20paraphernalia to a cardholder upon presentation of an
21unexpired registry identification card in the recipient's
22name, if employed and registered as a dispensing agent by a
23registered dispensing organization; (2) being in the presence
24or vicinity of the medical use of cannabis as allowed under
25this Act; or (3) assisting a registered qualifying patient
26with the act of administering cannabis.

 

 

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1    (g) A registered cultivation center is not subject to
2prosecution; search or inspection, except by the Department of
3Agriculture, Department of Public Health, or State or local
4law enforcement under Section 130; seizure; or penalty in any
5manner, or denial of any right or privilege, including, but
6not limited to, civil penalty or disciplinary action by a
7business licensing board or entity, for acting under this Act
8and Department of Agriculture rules to: acquire, possess,
9cultivate, manufacture, deliver, transfer, transport, supply,
10or sell cannabis to registered dispensing organizations. This
11subsection does not apply to events occurring on and after
12July 1, 2025; however, the authority granted in this
13subsection remains in force and effect for events occurring on
14or before June 30, 2025.
15    (h) A registered cultivation center agent is not subject
16to prosecution, search, or penalty in any manner, or denial of
17any right or privilege, including, but not limited to, civil
18penalty or disciplinary action by a business licensing board
19or entity, for working or volunteering for a registered
20cannabis cultivation center under this Act and Department of
21Agriculture rules, including to perform the actions listed
22under subsection (g). This subsection does not apply to events
23occurring on and after July 1, 2025; however, the authority
24granted in this subsection remains in force and effect for
25events occurring on or before June 30, 2025.
26    (i) A registered dispensing organization is not subject to

 

 

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1prosecution; search or inspection, except by the Department of
2Financial and Professional Regulation or State or local law
3enforcement pursuant to Section 130; seizure; or penalty in
4any manner, or denial of any right or privilege, including,
5but not limited to, civil penalty or disciplinary action by a
6business licensing board or entity, for acting under this Act
7and Department of Financial and Professional Regulation rules
8to: acquire, possess, or dispense cannabis, or related
9supplies, and educational materials to registered qualifying
10patients or registered designated caregivers on behalf of
11registered qualifying patients. This subsection does not apply
12to events occurring on and after January 1, 2026; however, the
13authority granted in this subsection remains in force and
14effect for events occurring on or before December 31, 2025.
15    (j) A registered dispensing organization agent is not
16subject to prosecution, search, or penalty in any manner, or
17denial of any right or privilege, including, but not limited
18to, civil penalty or disciplinary action by a business
19licensing board or entity, for working or volunteering for a
20dispensing organization under this Act and Department of
21Financial and Professional Regulation rules, including to
22perform the actions listed under subsection (i). This
23subsection does not apply to events occurring on and after
24January 1, 2026; however, the authority granted in this
25subsection remains in force and effect for events occurring on
26or before December 31, 2025.

 

 

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1    (k) Any cannabis, cannabis paraphernalia, illegal
2property, or interest in legal property that is possessed,
3owned, or used in connection with the medical use of cannabis
4as allowed under this Act, or acts incidental to that use, may
5not be seized or forfeited. This Act does not prevent the
6seizure or forfeiture of cannabis exceeding the amounts
7allowed under this Act or the Cannabis Regulation and Tax Act,
8nor shall it prevent seizure or forfeiture if the basis for the
9action is unrelated to the cannabis that is possessed,
10manufactured, transferred, or used under this Act or the
11Cannabis Regulation and Tax Act.
12    (l) Mere possession of, or application for, a registry
13identification card or registration certificate does not
14constitute probable cause or reasonable suspicion, nor shall
15it be used as the sole basis to support the search of the
16person, property, or home of the person possessing or applying
17for the registry identification card. The possession of, or
18application for, a registry identification card does not
19preclude the existence of probable cause if probable cause
20exists on other grounds.
21    (m) Nothing in this Act shall preclude local or State law
22enforcement agencies from searching a registered cultivation
23center where there is probable cause to believe that the
24criminal laws of this State have been violated and the search
25is conducted in conformity with the Illinois Constitution, the
26Constitution of the United States, and all State statutes.

 

 

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1    (n) Nothing in this Act shall preclude local or State law
2enforcement agencies from searching a registered dispensing
3organization where there is probable cause to believe that the
4criminal laws of this State have been violated and the search
5is conducted in conformity with the Illinois Constitution, the
6Constitution of the United States, and all State statutes.
7    (o) No individual employed by the State of Illinois shall
8be subject to criminal or civil penalties for taking any
9action in accordance with the provisions of this Act, when the
10actions are within the scope of his or her employment.
11Representation and indemnification of State employees shall be
12provided to State employees as set forth in Section 2 of the
13State Employee Indemnification Act.
14    (p) No law enforcement or correctional agency, nor any
15individual employed by a law enforcement or correctional
16agency, shall be subject to criminal or civil liability,
17except for willful and wanton misconduct, as a result of
18taking any action within the scope of the official duties of
19the agency or individual to prohibit or prevent the possession
20or use of cannabis by a cardholder incarcerated at a
21correctional facility, jail, or municipal lockup facility, on
22parole or mandatory supervised release, or otherwise under the
23lawful jurisdiction of the agency or individual.
24(Source: P.A. 101-363, eff. 8-19-19; 101-370, eff. 1-1-20;
25102-558, eff. 8-20-21.)
 

 

 

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1    (410 ILCS 130/30)
2    Sec. 30. Limitations and penalties.
3    (a) This Act does not permit any person to engage in, and
4does not prevent the imposition of any civil, criminal, or
5other penalties for engaging in, the following conduct:
6        (1) Undertaking any task under the influence of
7    cannabis, when doing so would constitute negligence,
8    professional malpractice, or professional misconduct;
9        (2) Possessing cannabis:
10            (A) except as provided under Section 22-33 of the
11        School Code, in a school bus;
12            (B) except as provided under Section 22-33 of the
13        School Code, on the grounds of any preschool or
14        primary or secondary school;
15            (C) in any correctional facility;
16            (D) in a vehicle under Section 11-502.1 of the
17        Illinois Vehicle Code;
18            (E) in a vehicle not open to the public unless the
19        medical cannabis is in a reasonably secured, sealed
20        container and reasonably inaccessible while the
21        vehicle is moving; or
22            (F) in a private residence that is used at any time
23        to provide licensed child care or other similar social
24        service care on the premises;
25        (3) Using cannabis:
26            (A) except as provided under Section 22-33 of the

 

 

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1        School Code, in a school bus;
2            (B) except as provided under Section 22-33 of the
3        School Code, on the grounds of any preschool or
4        primary or secondary school;
5            (C) in any correctional facility;
6            (D) in any motor vehicle;
7            (E) in a private residence that is used at any time
8        to provide licensed child care or other similar social
9        service care on the premises;
10            (F) except as provided under Section 22-33 of the
11        School Code and Section 31 of this Act, in any public
12        place. "Public place" as used in this subsection means
13        any place where an individual could reasonably be
14        expected to be observed by others. A "public place"
15        includes all parts of buildings owned in whole or in
16        part, or leased, by the State or a local unit of
17        government. A "public place" does not include a
18        private residence unless the private residence is used
19        to provide licensed child care, foster care, or other
20        similar social service care on the premises. For
21        purposes of this subsection, a "public place" does not
22        include a health care facility. For purposes of this
23        Section, a "health care facility" includes, but is not
24        limited to, hospitals, nursing homes, hospice care
25        centers, and long-term care facilities;
26            (G) except as provided under Section 22-33 of the

 

 

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1        School Code and Section 31 of this Act, knowingly in
2        close physical proximity to anyone under the age of 18
3        years of age;
4        (4) Smoking medical cannabis in any public place where
5    an individual could reasonably be expected to be observed
6    by others, in a health care facility, or any other place
7    where smoking is prohibited under the Smoke Free Illinois
8    Act;
9        (5) Operating, navigating, or being in actual physical
10    control of any motor vehicle, aircraft, or motorboat while
11    using or under the influence of cannabis in violation of
12    Sections 11-501 and 11-502.1 of the Illinois Vehicle Code;
13        (6) Using or possessing cannabis if that person does
14    not have a debilitating medical condition and is not a
15    registered qualifying patient or caregiver;
16        (7) Allowing any person who is not allowed to use
17    cannabis under this Act to use cannabis that a cardholder
18    is allowed to possess under this Act;
19        (8) Transferring cannabis to any person contrary to
20    the provisions of this Act;
21        (9) The use of medical cannabis by an active duty law
22    enforcement officer, correctional officer, correctional
23    probation officer, or firefighter; or
24        (10) The use of medical cannabis by a person who has a
25    school bus permit or a Commercial Driver's License.
26    (b) Nothing in this Act shall be construed to prevent the

 

 

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1arrest or prosecution of a registered qualifying patient for
2reckless driving or driving under the influence of cannabis
3where probable cause exists.
4    (c) Notwithstanding any other criminal penalties related
5to the unlawful possession of cannabis, knowingly making a
6misrepresentation to a law enforcement official of any fact or
7circumstance relating to the medical use of cannabis to avoid
8arrest or prosecution is a petty offense punishable by a fine
9of up to $1,000, which shall be in addition to any other
10penalties that may apply for making a false statement or for
11the use of cannabis other than use undertaken under this Act.
12    (d) Notwithstanding any other criminal penalties related
13to the unlawful possession of cannabis, any person who makes a
14misrepresentation of a medical condition to a certifying
15health care professional or fraudulently provides material
16misinformation to a certifying health care professional in
17order to obtain a written certification is guilty of a petty
18offense punishable by a fine of up to $1,000.
19    (e) Any registered qualifying patient, provisional
20patient, Opioid Alternative Patient Program participant,
21cardholder or designated registered caregiver who sells
22cannabis shall have his or her registry identification card
23revoked and is subject to other penalties for the unauthorized
24sale of cannabis.
25    (f) Any registered qualifying patient or provisional
26patient who commits a violation of Section 11-502.1 of the

 

 

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1Illinois Vehicle Code or refuses a properly requested test
2related to operating a motor vehicle while under the influence
3of cannabis shall have his or her registry identification card
4revoked.
5    (g) No registered qualifying patient, provisional patient,
6Opioid Alternative Patient Program participant, or designated
7caregiver shall knowingly obtain, seek to obtain, or possess,
8individually or collectively, an amount of usable cannabis
9from a registered medical cannabis dispensing organization
10that would cause him or her to exceed the authorized adequate
11medical supply under subsection (a) of Section 10.
12    (h) Nothing in this Act shall prevent a private business
13from restricting or prohibiting the medical use of cannabis on
14its property.
15    (i) Nothing in this Act shall prevent a university,
16college, or other institution of post-secondary education from
17restricting or prohibiting the use of medical cannabis on its
18property.
19(Source: P.A. 101-363, eff. 8-9-19; 102-67, eff. 7-9-21.)
 
20    (410 ILCS 130/35)
21    Sec. 35. Certifying health care professional requirements.
22    (a) A certifying health care professional who certifies a
23debilitating medical condition for a qualifying patient shall
24comply with all of the following requirements:
25        (1) The certifying health care professional shall be

 

 

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1    currently licensed under the Medical Practice Act of 1987
2    to practice medicine in all its branches, the Nurse
3    Practice Act, or the Physician Assistant Practice Act of
4    1987, shall be in good standing, and must hold a
5    controlled substances license under Article III of the
6    Illinois Controlled Substances Act.
7        (2) A certifying health care professional certifying a
8    patient's condition shall comply with generally accepted
9    standards of medical practice, the provisions of the Act
10    under which he or she is licensed and all applicable
11    rules.
12        (3) The physical examination required by this Act may
13    not be conducted performed by remote means, including
14    telemedicine, provided that an Illinois-based medical
15    clinic is established and accessible to patients, ensuring
16    the provision of adequate medical care.
17        (4) The certifying health care professional shall
18    maintain a record-keeping system for all patients for whom
19    the certifying health care professional has certified the
20    patient's medical condition. These records shall be
21    accessible to and subject to review by the Department of
22    Public Health and the Department of Financial and
23    Professional Regulation upon request.
24    (b) A certifying health care professional may not:
25        (1) accept, solicit, or offer any form of remuneration
26    from or to a qualifying patient, provisional patient,

 

 

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1    designated primary caregiver, cultivation center, or
2    dispensing organization, including each principal officer,
3    board member, agent, and employee, to certify a patient,
4    other than accepting payment from a patient for the fee
5    associated with the required examination, except for the
6    limited purpose of performing a medical cannabis-related
7    research study;
8        (1.5) accept, solicit, or offer any form of
9    remuneration from or to a medical cannabis cultivation
10    center or dispensary organization for the purposes of
11    referring a patient to a specific dispensary organization;
12        (1.10) engage in any activity that is prohibited under
13    Section 22.2 of the Medical Practice Act of 1987,
14    regardless of whether the certifying health care
15    professional is a physician, advanced practice registered
16    nurse, or physician assistant;
17        (2) offer a discount of any other item of value to a
18    qualifying patient or provisional patient who uses or
19    agrees to use a particular designated primary caregiver or
20    dispensing organization to obtain medical cannabis;
21        (3) conduct a personal certifying physical examination
22    of a patient for purposes of diagnosing a debilitating
23    medical condition at a location where medical cannabis is
24    sold or distributed or at the address of a principal
25    officer, agent, or employee or a medical cannabis
26    organization;

 

 

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1        (4) hold a direct or indirect economic interest in a
2    cultivation center or dispensing organization if he or she
3    recommends the use of medical cannabis to qualified
4    patients or is in a partnership or other fee or
5    profit-sharing relationship with a certifying health care
6    professional who recommends medical cannabis, except for
7    the limited purpose of performing a medical
8    cannabis-related research study;
9        (5) serve on the board of directors or as an employee
10    of a cultivation center or dispensing organization;
11        (6) refer patients to a cultivation center, a
12    dispensing organization, or a registered designated
13    caregiver; or
14        (7) advertise in a cultivation center or a dispensing
15    organization.
16    (c) The Department of Public Health may with reasonable
17cause refer a certifying health care professional, who has
18certified a debilitating medical condition of a patient, to
19the Illinois Department of Financial and Professional
20Regulation for potential violations of this Section.
21    (d) Any violation of this Section or any other provision
22of this Act or rules adopted under this Act is a violation of
23the certifying health care professional's licensure act.
24    (e) A certifying health care professional who certifies a
25debilitating medical condition for a qualifying patient or
26Opioid Alternative Patient Program may notify the Department

 

 

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1of Public Health in writing: (1) if the certifying health care
2professional has reason to believe either that the registered
3qualifying patient has ceased to suffer from a debilitating
4medical condition; (2) that the bona fide health care
5professional-patient relationship has terminated; or (3) that
6continued use of medical cannabis would result in
7contraindication with the patient's other medication. The
8registered qualifying patient's or Opioid Alternative Patient
9Program's registry identification card shall be revoked by the
10Department of Public Health after receiving the certifying
11health care professional's notification.
12    (f) Nothing in this Act shall preclude a certifying health
13care professional from referring a patient for health
14services, except when the referral is limited to certification
15purposes only, under this Act.
16(Source: P.A. 101-363, eff. 8-9-19; 102-558, eff. 8-20-21.)
 
17    (410 ILCS 130/57)
18    Sec. 57. Designated Caregivers and provisional Qualifying
19patients.
20    (a) Qualifying patients or provisional patients that are
21under the age of 18 years shall not be prohibited from
22appointing up to 3 designated caregivers who meet the
23definition of "designated caregiver" under Section 10 so long
24as at least one designated caregiver is a biological parent or
25legal guardian.

 

 

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1    (b) Qualifying patients or provisional patients that are
218 years of age or older shall not be prohibited from
3appointing up to 3 designated caregivers who meet the
4definition of "designated caregiver" under Section 10.
5    (c) Beginning January 1, 2026, designated caregivers,
6qualifying patients, Opioid Alternative Patient Program
7participants, or provisional patients registered under this
8Act may purchase an adequate medical supply at any dispensing
9organization licensed by the Department of Financial and
10Professional Regulation under the Cannabis Regulation and Tax
11Act.
12(Source: P.A. 101-363, eff. 8-9-19.)
 
13    (410 ILCS 130/60)
14    Sec. 60. Issuance of registry identification cards.
15    (a) Except as provided in subsection (b), the Department
16of Public Health shall:
17        (1) verify the information contained in an application
18    or renewal for a registry identification card submitted
19    under this Act, and approve or deny an application or
20    renewal, within 90 days of receiving a completed
21    application or renewal application and all supporting
22    documentation specified in Section 55;
23        (2) issue registry identification cards to a
24    qualifying patient and his or her designated caregiver, if
25    any, within 15 business days of approving the application

 

 

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1    or renewal; and
2        (3) (blank) enter the registry identification number
3    of the registered dispensing organization the patient
4    designates into the verification system; and
5        (4) allow for an electronic application process, and
6    provide a confirmation by electronic or other methods that
7    an application has been submitted.
8    Notwithstanding any other provision of this Act, the
9Department of Public Health shall adopt rules for qualifying
10patients and applicants with life-long debilitating medical
11conditions, who may be charged annual renewal fees. The
12Department of Public Health shall not require patients and
13applicants with life-long debilitating medical conditions to
14apply to renew registry identification cards.
15    (b) The Department of Public Health may not issue a
16registry identification card to a qualifying patient who is
17under 18 years of age, unless that patient suffers from
18seizures, including those characteristic of epilepsy, or as
19provided by administrative rule. The Department of Public
20Health shall adopt rules for the issuance of a registry
21identification card for qualifying patients who are under 18
22years of age and suffering from seizures, including those
23characteristic of epilepsy. The Department of Public Health
24may adopt rules to allow other individuals under 18 years of
25age to become registered qualifying patients under this Act
26with the consent of a parent or legal guardian. Registered

 

 

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1qualifying patients under 18 years of age shall be prohibited
2from consuming forms of cannabis other than medical cannabis
3infused products and purchasing any usable cannabis.
4    (c) A veteran who has received treatment at a VA hospital
5is deemed to have a bona fide health care professional-patient
6relationship with a VA certifying health care professional if
7the patient has been seen for his or her debilitating medical
8condition at the VA hospital in accordance with VA hospital
9protocols. All reasonable inferences regarding the existence
10of a bona fide health care professional-patient relationship
11shall be drawn in favor of an applicant who is a veteran and
12has undergone treatment at a VA hospital.
13    (c-10) An individual who submits an application as someone
14who is terminally ill shall have all fees waived. The
15Department of Public Health shall within 30 days after this
16amendatory Act of the 99th General Assembly adopt emergency
17rules to expedite approval for terminally ill individuals.
18These rules shall include, but not be limited to, rules that
19provide that applications by individuals with terminal
20illnesses shall be approved or denied within 14 days of their
21submission.
22    (d) No later than 6 months after the effective date of this
23amendatory Act of the 101st General Assembly, the Secretary of
24State shall remove all existing notations on driving records
25that the person is a registered qualifying patient or his or
26her caregiver under this Act.

 

 

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1    (e) Upon the approval of the registration and issuance of
2a registry card under this Section, the Department of Public
3Health shall electronically forward the registered qualifying
4patient's identification card information to the Prescription
5Monitoring Program established under the Illinois Controlled
6Substances Act and certify that the individual is permitted to
7engage in the medical use of cannabis. For the purposes of
8patient care, the Prescription Monitoring Program shall make a
9notation on the person's prescription record stating that the
10person is a registered qualifying patient or Opioid
11Alternative Patient Program participant who is entitled to the
12lawful medical use of cannabis. If the person no longer holds a
13valid registry card, the Department of Public Health shall
14notify the Prescription Monitoring Program and Department of
15Human Services to remove the notation from the person's
16record. The Department of Human Services and the Prescription
17Monitoring Program shall establish a system by which the
18information may be shared electronically. This confidential
19list may not be combined or linked in any manner with any other
20list or database except as provided in this Section.
21    (f) (Blank).
22(Source: P.A. 100-1114, eff. 8-28-18; 101-363, eff. 8-9-19;
23101-593, eff. 12-4-19.)
 
24    (410 ILCS 130/70)
25    Sec. 70. Registry identification cards.

 

 

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1    (a) A registered qualifying patient, Opioid Alternative
2Patient Program participant, provisional patient, or
3designated caregiver must keep their registry identification
4card in his or her possession at all times when engaging in the
5medical use of cannabis.
6    (b) Registry identification cards shall contain the
7following:
8        (1) the name of the cardholder;
9        (2) a designation of whether the cardholder is a
10    designated caregiver or qualifying patient;
11        (3) the date of issuance and expiration date of the
12    registry identification card;
13        (4) a random alphanumeric identification number that
14    is unique to the cardholder;
15        (5) if the cardholder is a designated caregiver, the
16    random alphanumeric identification number of the
17    registered qualifying patient the designated caregiver is
18    receiving the registry identification card to assist; and
19        (6) a photograph of the cardholder, if required by
20    Department of Public Health rules.
21    (c) To maintain a valid registration identification card,
22a registered qualifying patient and designated caregiver must
23annually resubmit, at least 45 days prior to the expiration
24date stated on the registry identification card, a completed
25renewal application, renewal fee, and accompanying
26documentation as described in Department of Public Health

 

 

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1rules. The Department of Public Health shall send a
2notification to a registered qualifying patient or registered
3designated caregiver 90 days prior to the expiration of the
4registered qualifying patient's or registered designated
5caregiver's identification card. If the Department of Public
6Health fails to grant or deny a renewal application received
7in accordance with this Section, then the renewal is deemed
8granted and the registered qualifying patient or registered
9designated caregiver may continue to use the expired
10identification card until the Department of Public Health
11denies the renewal or issues a new identification card.
12    (d) Except as otherwise provided in this Section, the
13expiration date is 3 years after the date of issuance.
14    (e) The Department of Public Health may electronically
15store in the card any or all of the information listed in
16subsection (b), along with the address and date of birth of the
17cardholder and the qualifying patient's designated dispensary
18organization, to allow it to be read by law enforcement
19agents.
20(Source: P.A. 98-122, eff. 1-1-14; 99-519, eff. 6-30-16.)
 
21    (410 ILCS 130/75)
22    Sec. 75. Notifications to Department of Public Health and
23responses; civil penalty.
24    (a) The following notifications and Department of Public
25Health responses are required:

 

 

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1        (1) A registered qualifying patient or Opioid
2    Alternative Patient Program shall notify the Department of
3    Public Health of any change in his or her name or address,
4    or if the registered qualifying patient ceases to have his
5    or her debilitating medical condition, within 10 days of
6    the change.
7        (2) A registered designated caregiver shall notify the
8    Department of Public Health of any change in his or her
9    name or address, or if the designated caregiver becomes
10    aware the registered qualifying patient passed away,
11    within 10 days of the change.
12        (3) Before a registered qualifying patient changes his
13    or her designated caregiver, the qualifying patient must
14    notify the Department of Public Health.
15        (4) (Blank). If a cardholder loses his or her registry
16    identification card, he or she shall notify the Department
17    within 10 days of becoming aware the card has been lost.
18    (b) When a cardholder notifies the Department of Public
19Health of items listed in subsection (a), but remains eligible
20under this Act, the Department of Public Health shall issue
21the cardholder a new registry identification card with a new
22random alphanumeric identification number within 15 business
23days of receiving the updated information and a fee as
24specified in Department of Public Health rules. If the person
25notifying the Department of Public Health is a registered
26qualifying patient, the Department shall also issue his or her

 

 

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1registered designated caregiver, if any, a new registry
2identification card within 15 business days of receiving the
3updated information.
4    (c) If a registered qualifying patient ceases to be a
5registered qualifying patient, Opioid Alternative Patient
6Program participant, or changes his or her registered
7designated caregiver, the Department of Public Health shall
8promptly notify the designated caregiver. The registered
9designated caregiver's protections under this Act as to that
10qualifying patient shall expire 15 days after notification by
11the Department.
12    (d) A cardholder who fails to make a notification to the
13Department of Public Health that is required by this Section
14is subject to a civil infraction, punishable by a penalty of no
15more than $150.
16    (e) (Blank). A registered qualifying patient shall notify
17the Department of Public Health of any change to his or her
18designated registered dispensing organization. The Department
19of Public Health shall provide for immediate changes of a
20registered qualifying patient's designated registered
21dispensing organization. Registered dispensing organizations
22must comply with all requirements of this Act.
23    (f) If the registered qualifying patient's certifying
24health care professional notifies the Department in writing
25that either the registered qualifying patient or Opioid
26Alternative Patient Program participant has ceased to suffer

 

 

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1from a debilitating medical condition, that the bona fide
2health care professional-patient relationship has terminated,
3or that continued use of medical cannabis would result in
4contraindication with the patient's other medication, the card
5shall become null and void. However, the registered qualifying
6patient shall have 15 days to destroy his or her remaining
7medical cannabis and related paraphernalia.
8(Source: P.A. 101-363, eff. 8-9-19; 102-558, eff. 8-20-21.)
 
9    (410 ILCS 130/85)
10    Sec. 85. Issuance and denial of medical cannabis
11cultivation permit.
12    (a) The Department of Agriculture may register up to 22
13cultivation center registrations for operation. The Department
14of Agriculture may not issue more than one registration per
15each Illinois State Police District boundary as specified on
16the date of January 1, 2013. The Department of Agriculture may
17not issue less than the 22 registrations if there are
18qualified applicants who have applied with the Department.
19    (b) The registrations shall be issued and renewed annually
20as determined by administrative rule.
21    (c) The Department of Agriculture shall determine a
22registration fee by rule.
23    (d) A cultivation center may only operate if it has been
24issued a valid registration from the Department of
25Agriculture. When applying for a cultivation center

 

 

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1registration, the applicant shall submit the following in
2accordance with Department of Agriculture rules:
3        (1) the proposed legal name of the cultivation center;
4        (2) the proposed physical address of the cultivation
5    center and description of the enclosed, locked facility as
6    it applies to cultivation centers where medical cannabis
7    will be grown, harvested, manufactured, packaged, or
8    otherwise prepared for distribution to a dispensing
9    organization;
10        (3) the name, address, and date of birth of each
11    principal officer and board member of the cultivation
12    center, provided that all those individuals shall be at
13    least 21 years of age;
14        (4) any instance in which a business that any of the
15    prospective board members of the cultivation center had
16    managed or served on the board of the business and was
17    convicted, fined, censured, or had a registration or
18    license suspended or revoked in any administrative or
19    judicial proceeding;
20        (5) cultivation, inventory, and packaging plans;
21        (6) proposed operating by-laws that include procedures
22    for the oversight of the cultivation center, development
23    and implementation of a plant monitoring system, medical
24    cannabis container tracking system, accurate record
25    keeping, staffing plan, and security plan reviewed by the
26    Illinois State Police that are in accordance with the

 

 

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1    rules issued by the Department of Agriculture under this
2    Act. A physical inventory shall be performed of all plants
3    and medical cannabis containers on a weekly basis;
4        (7) experience with agricultural cultivation
5    techniques and industry standards;
6        (8) any academic degrees, certifications, or relevant
7    experience with related businesses;
8        (9) the identity of every person, association, trust,
9    or corporation having any direct or indirect pecuniary
10    interest in the cultivation center operation with respect
11    to which the registration is sought. If the disclosed
12    entity is a trust, the application shall disclose the
13    names and addresses of the beneficiaries; if a
14    corporation, the names and addresses of all stockholders
15    and directors; if a partnership, the names and addresses
16    of all partners, both general and limited;
17        (10) verification from the Illinois State Police that
18    all background checks of the principal officer, board
19    members, and registered agents have been conducted and
20    those individuals have not been convicted of an excluded
21    offense;
22        (11) provide a copy of the current local zoning
23    ordinance to the Department of Agriculture and verify that
24    proposed cultivation center is in compliance with the
25    local zoning rules issued in accordance with Section 140;
26        (12) an application fee set by the Department of

 

 

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1    Agriculture by rule; and
2        (13) any other information required by Department of
3    Agriculture rules, including, but not limited to a
4    cultivation center applicant's experience with the
5    cultivation of agricultural or horticultural products,
6    operating an agriculturally related business, or operating
7    a horticultural business.
8    (e) An application for a cultivation center permit must be
9denied if any of the following conditions are met:
10        (1) the applicant failed to submit the materials
11    required by this Section, including if the applicant's
12    plans do not satisfy the security, oversight, inventory,
13    or recordkeeping rules issued by the Department of
14    Agriculture;
15        (2) the applicant would not be in compliance with
16    local zoning rules issued in accordance with Section 140;
17        (3) (blank); one or more of the prospective principal
18    officers or board members has been convicted of an
19    excluded offense;
20        (4) one or more of the prospective principal officers
21    or board members has served as a principal officer or
22    board member for a registered dispensing organization or
23    cultivation center that has had its registration revoked;
24        (5) one or more of the principal officers or board
25    members is under 21 years of age;
26        (6) (blank); a principal officer or board member of

 

 

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1    the cultivation center has been convicted of a felony
2    under the laws of this State, any other state, or the
3    United States;
4        (7) (blank); or a principal officer or board member of
5    the cultivation center has been convicted of any violation
6    of Article 28 of the Criminal Code of 2012, or
7    substantially similar laws of any other jurisdiction; or
8        (8) the person has submitted an application for a
9    certificate under this Act which contains false
10    information.
11    (f) Beginning January 1, 2026, the Department shall cease
12to issue or renew any medical cannabis cultivation permit at
13the next renewal period. Entities that hold dual medical
14cannabis cultivation permits and Adult use cultivation center
15licenses may continue all operations with a valid cultivation
16center license issued under the Cannabis Regulation and Tax
17Act. The Department may set up a process to transition medical
18cannabis cultivation permits into cultivation center licenses
19that includes issuing refunds or proration of renewal fees.
20    (g) This Section is repealed on January 1, 2027.
21(Source: P.A. 102-538, eff. 8-20-21.)
 
22    (410 ILCS 130/90)
23    Sec. 90. Renewal of cultivation center registrations.
24    (a) Registrations shall be renewed annually. The
25registered cultivation center shall receive written notice 90

 

 

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1days prior to the expiration of its current registration that
2the registration will expire. The Department of Agriculture
3shall grant a renewal application within 45 days of its
4submission if the following conditions are satisfied:
5        (1) the registered cultivation center submits a
6    renewal application and the required renewal fee
7    established by the Department of Agriculture by rule; and
8        (2) the Department of Agriculture has not suspended
9    the registration of the cultivation center or suspended or
10    revoked the registration for violation of this Act or
11    rules adopted under this Act.
12    (b) Beginning January 1, 2026, all cultivation center
13permits issued under Section 85 shall be renewed in accordance
14with Section 20-45 of the Cannabis Regulation and Tax Act and
15shall be subject to the requirements and prohibitions of the
16Cannabis Regulation and Tax Act.
17    (c) This Section is repealed on July 1, 2027.
18(Source: P.A. 98-122, eff. 1-1-14.)
 
19    (410 ILCS 130/95)
20    Sec. 95. Background checks.
21    (a) The Department of Agriculture through the Illinois
22State Police shall conduct a background check of the
23prospective cultivation center agents. The Illinois State
24Police shall charge a fee for conducting the criminal history
25record check, which shall be deposited in the State Police

 

 

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1Services Fund and shall not exceed the actual cost of the
2record check. In order to carry out this provision, each
3person applying as a cultivation center agent shall submit a
4full set of fingerprints to the Illinois State Police for the
5purpose of obtaining a State and federal criminal records
6check. These fingerprints shall be checked against the
7fingerprint records now and hereafter, to the extent allowed
8by law, filed in the Illinois State Police and Federal Bureau
9of Investigation criminal history records databases. The
10Illinois State Police shall furnish, following positive
11identification, all Illinois conviction information to the
12Department of Agriculture.
13    (b) When applying for the initial permit, the background
14checks for the principal officer, board members, and
15registered agents shall be completed prior to submitting the
16application to the Department of Agriculture.
17    (c) This Section is repealed on July 1, 2027.
18(Source: P.A. 102-538, eff. 8-20-21.)
 
19    (410 ILCS 130/100)
20    Sec. 100. Cultivation center agent identification card.
21    (a) The Department of Agriculture shall:
22        (1) verify the information contained in an application
23    or renewal for a cultivation center identification card
24    submitted under this Act, and approve or deny an
25    application or renewal, within 30 days of receiving a

 

 

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1    completed application or renewal application and all
2    supporting documentation required by rule;
3        (2) issue a cultivation center agent identification
4    card to a qualifying agent within 15 business days of
5    approving the application or renewal;
6        (3) enter the registry identification number of the
7    cultivation center where the agent works; and
8        (4) allow for an electronic application process, and
9    provide a confirmation by electronic or other methods that
10    an application has been submitted.
11    (b) A cultivation center agent must keep his or her
12identification card visible at all times when on the property
13of a cultivation center and during the transportation of
14medical cannabis to a registered dispensary organization.
15    (c) The cultivation center agent identification cards
16shall contain the following:
17        (1) the name of the cardholder;
18        (2) the date of issuance and expiration date of
19    cultivation center agent identification cards;
20        (3) a random 10-digit alphanumeric identification
21    number containing at least 4 numbers and at least 4
22    letters that is unique to the holder; and
23        (4) a photograph of the cardholder.
24    (d) The cultivation center agent identification cards
25shall be immediately returned to the cultivation center upon
26termination of employment.

 

 

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1    (e) Any card lost by a cultivation center agent shall be
2reported to the Illinois State Police and the Department of
3Agriculture immediately upon discovery of the loss.
4    (f) (Blank). An applicant shall be denied a cultivation
5center agent identification card if he or she has been
6convicted of an excluded offense.
7    (g) An agent applicant may begin employment at a
8cultivation center while the agent applicant's identification
9card application is pending. Upon approval, the Department
10shall issue the agent's identification card to the agent. If
11denied, the cultivation center and the agent applicant shall
12be notified and the agent applicant must cease all activity at
13the cultivation center immediately.
14    (h) Beginning July 1, 2025, all cultivation center
15identification cards and renewals shall be renewed in
16accordance with Section 20-45 of the Cannabis Regulation and
17Tax Act.
18    (i) This Section is repealed on July 1, 2027.
19(Source: P.A. 102-98, eff. 7-15-21; 102-538, eff. 8-20-21;
20102-813, eff. 5-13-22.)
 
21    (410 ILCS 130/105)
22    Sec. 105. Requirements; prohibitions; penalties for
23cultivation centers.
24    (a) The operating documents of a registered cultivation
25center shall include procedures for the oversight of the

 

 

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1cultivation center, a cannabis plant monitoring system
2including a physical inventory recorded weekly, a cannabis
3container system including a physical inventory recorded
4weekly, accurate record keeping, and a staffing plan.
5    (b) A registered cultivation center shall implement a
6security plan reviewed by the Illinois State Police and
7including but not limited to: facility access controls,
8perimeter intrusion detection systems, personnel
9identification systems, 24-hour surveillance system to monitor
10the interior and exterior of the registered cultivation center
11facility and accessible to authorized law enforcement and the
12Department of Agriculture in real-time.
13    (c) A registered cultivation center may not be located
14within 2,500 feet of the property line of a pre-existing
15public or private preschool or elementary or secondary school
16or day care center, day care home, group day care home, part
17day child care facility, or an area zoned for residential use.
18    (d) All cultivation of cannabis for distribution to a
19registered dispensing organization must take place in an
20enclosed, locked facility as it applies to cultivation centers
21at the physical address provided to the Department of
22Agriculture during the registration process. The cultivation
23center location shall only be accessed by the cultivation
24center agents working for the registered cultivation center,
25Department of Agriculture staff performing inspections,
26Department of Public Health staff performing inspections, law

 

 

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1enforcement or other emergency personnel, and contractors
2working on jobs unrelated to medical cannabis, such as
3installing or maintaining security devices or performing
4electrical wiring.
5    (e) A cultivation center may not sell or distribute any
6cannabis to any individual or entity other than another
7cultivation center, a dispensing organization registered under
8this Act, or a laboratory licensed by the Department of
9Agriculture.
10    (f) All harvested cannabis intended for distribution to a
11dispensing organization must be packaged in a labeled medical
12cannabis container and entered into a data collection system.
13    (g) (Blank). No person who has been convicted of an
14excluded offense may be a cultivation center agent.
15    (h) Registered cultivation centers are subject to random
16inspection by the Illinois State Police.
17    (i) Registered cultivation centers are subject to random
18inspections by the Department of Agriculture and the
19Department of Public Health.
20    (j) A cultivation center agent shall notify local law
21enforcement, the Illinois State Police, and the Department of
22Agriculture within 24 hours of the discovery of any loss or
23theft. Notification shall be made by phone or in-person, or by
24written or electronic communication.
25    (k) A cultivation center shall comply with all State and
26federal rules and regulations regarding the use of pesticides.

 

 

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1    (l) This Section is repealed on January 1, 2026.
2(Source: P.A. 101-363, eff. 8-9-19; 102-538, eff. 8-20-21.)
 
3    (410 ILCS 130/110)
4    Sec. 110. Suspension; revocation; other penalties for
5cultivation centers and agents. Notwithstanding any other
6criminal penalties related to the unlawful possession of
7cannabis, the Department of Agriculture may revoke, suspend,
8place on probation, reprimand, issue cease and desist orders,
9refuse to issue or renew a registration, or take any other
10disciplinary or non-disciplinary action as the Department of
11Agriculture may deem proper with regard to a registered
12cultivation center or cultivation center agent, including
13imposing fines not to exceed $50,000 for each violation, for
14any violations of this Act and rules adopted under this Act.
15The procedures for disciplining a registered cultivation
16center or cultivation center agent and for administrative
17hearings shall be determined by rule. All final administrative
18decisions of the Department of Agriculture are subject to
19judicial review under the Administrative Review Law and its
20rules. The term "administrative decision" is defined as in
21Section 3-101 of the Code of Civil Procedure. This Section is
22repealed on January 1, 2026.
23(Source: P.A. 98-122, eff. 1-1-14; 98-1172, eff. 1-12-15.)
 
24    (410 ILCS 130/115)

 

 

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1    Sec. 115. Registration of dispensing organizations.
2    (a) The Department of Financial and Professional
3Regulation may issue up to 60 dispensing organization
4registrations for operation. The Department of Financial and
5Professional Regulation may not issue less than the 60
6registrations if there are qualified applicants who have
7applied with the Department of Financial and Professional
8Regulation. The organizations shall be geographically
9dispersed throughout the State to allow all registered
10qualifying patients reasonable proximity and access to a
11dispensing organization.
12    (a-5) The Department of Financial and Professional
13Regulation may shall adopt rules to create a registration
14process for Social Equity Justice Involved Applicants and
15Qualifying Applicants, a streamlined application, and a Social
16Equity Justice Involved Medical Lottery under Section 115.5 to
17issue the remaining available 5 dispensing organization
18registrations for operation. For purposes of this Section:
19    "Disproportionately Impacted Area" means a census tract or
20comparable geographic area that satisfies the following
21criteria as determined by the Department of Commerce and
22Economic Opportunity, that:
23        (1) meets at least one of the following criteria:
24            (A) the area has a poverty rate of at least 20%
25        according to the latest federal decennial census; or
26            (B) 75% or more of the children in the area

 

 

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1        participate in the federal free lunch program
2        according to reported statistics from the State Board
3        of Education; or
4            (C) at least 20% of the households in the area
5        receive assistance under the Supplemental Nutrition
6        Assistance Program; or
7            (D) the area has an average unemployment rate, as
8        determined by the Illinois Department of Employment
9        Security, that is more than 120% of the national
10        unemployment average, as determined by the United
11        States Department of Labor, for a period of at least 2
12        consecutive calendar years preceding the date of the
13        application; and
14        (2) has high rates of arrest, conviction, and
15    incarceration related to sale, possession, use,
16    cultivation, manufacture, or transport of cannabis.
17    "Qualifying Applicant" means an applicant that: (i)
18submitted an application pursuant to Section 15-30 of the
19Cannabis Regulation and Tax Act that received at least 85% of
20250 application points available under Section 15-30 of the
21Cannabis Regulation and Tax Act as the applicant's final
22score; (ii) received points at the conclusion of the scoring
23process for meeting the definition of a "Social Equity
24Applicant" as set forth under the Cannabis Regulation and Tax
25Act; and (iii) is an applicant that did not receive a
26Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization License through

 

 

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1a Qualifying Applicant Lottery pursuant to Section 15-35 of
2the Cannabis Regulation and Tax Act or any Tied Applicant
3Lottery conducted under the Cannabis Regulation and Tax Act.
4    "Social Equity Justice Involved Applicant" means an
5applicant that is an Illinois resident and one of the
6following:
7        (1) an applicant with at least 51% ownership and
8    control by one or more individuals who have resided for at
9    least 5 of the preceding 10 years in a Disproportionately
10    Impacted Area;
11        (2) an applicant with at least 51% of ownership and
12    control by one or more individuals who have been arrested
13    for, convicted of, or adjudicated delinquent for any
14    offense that is eligible for expungement under subsection
15    (i) of Section 5.2 of the Criminal Identification Act; or
16        (3) an applicant with at least 51% ownership and
17    control by one or more members of an impacted family.
18    (b) A dispensing organization may only operate if it has
19been issued a registration from the Department of Financial
20and Professional Regulation. The Department of Financial and
21Professional Regulation shall adopt rules establishing the
22procedures for applicants for dispensing organizations.
23    (c) When applying for a dispensing organization
24registration, the applicant shall submit, at a minimum, the
25following in accordance with Department of Financial and
26Professional Regulation rules:

 

 

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1        (1) a non-refundable application fee established by
2    rule;
3        (2) the proposed legal name of the dispensing
4    organization;
5        (3) the proposed physical address of the dispensing
6    organization;
7        (4) the name, address, and date of birth of each
8    principal officer and board member of the dispensing
9    organization, provided that all those individuals shall be
10    at least 21 years of age;
11        (5) (blank);
12        (6) (blank); and
13        (7) (blank).
14    (d) The Department of Financial and Professional
15Regulation shall conduct a background check of the prospective
16dispensing organization agents in order to carry out this
17Section. The Department of State Police shall charge a fee for
18conducting the criminal history record check, which shall be
19deposited in the State Police Services Fund and shall not
20exceed the actual cost of the record check. Each person
21applying as a dispensing organization agent shall submit a
22full set of fingerprints to the Department of State Police for
23the purpose of obtaining a State and federal criminal records
24check. These fingerprints shall be checked against the
25fingerprint records now and hereafter, to the extent allowed
26by law, filed in the Department of State Police and Federal

 

 

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1Bureau of Investigation criminal history records databases.
2The Department of State Police shall furnish, following
3positive identification, all Illinois conviction information
4to the Department of Financial and Professional Regulation.
5    (e) A dispensing organization must pay a registration fee
6set by the Department of Financial and Professional
7Regulation.
8    (f) An application for a medical cannabis dispensing
9organization registration must be denied if any of the
10following conditions are met:
11        (1) the applicant failed to submit the materials
12    required by this Section, including if the applicant's
13    plans do not satisfy the security, oversight, or
14    recordkeeping rules issued by the Department of Financial
15    and Professional Regulation;
16        (2) the applicant would not be in compliance with
17    local zoning rules issued in accordance with Section 140;
18        (3) the applicant does not meet the requirements of
19    Section 130;
20        (4) (blank) one or more of the prospective principal
21    officers or board members has been convicted of an
22    excluded offense;
23        (5) one or more of the prospective principal officers
24    or board members has served as a principal officer or
25    board member for a registered medical cannabis dispensing
26    organization that has had its registration revoked; and

 

 

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1        (6) one or more of the principal officers or board
2    members is under 21 years of age.
3    (g) This Section is repealed on July 1, 2026.
4(Source: P.A. 101-363, eff. 8-9-19; 102-98, eff. 7-15-21.)
 
5    (410 ILCS 130/120)
6    Sec. 120. Dispensing organization agent identification
7card.
8    (a) The Department of Financial and Professional
9Regulation shall:
10        (1) verify the information contained in an application
11    or renewal for a dispensing organization agent
12    identification card submitted under this Act, and approve
13    or deny an application or renewal, within 30 days of
14    receiving a completed application or renewal application
15    and all supporting documentation required by rule;
16        (2) issue a dispensing organization agent
17    identification card to a qualifying agent within 15
18    business days of approving the application or renewal;
19        (3) enter the registry identification number of the
20    dispensing organization where the agent works; and
21        (4) allow for an electronic application process, and
22    provide a confirmation by electronic or other methods that
23    an application has been submitted.
24    (b) A dispensing agent must keep his or her identification
25card visible at all times when on the property of a dispensing

 

 

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1organization.
2    (c) The dispensing organization agent identification cards
3shall contain the following:
4        (1) the name of the cardholder;
5        (2) the date of issuance and expiration date of the
6    dispensing organization agent identification cards;
7        (3) a random 10 digit alphanumeric identification
8    number containing at least 4 numbers and at least 4
9    letters; that is unique to the holder; and
10        (4) a photograph of the cardholder.
11    (d) The dispensing organization agent identification cards
12shall be immediately returned to the dispensing organization
13upon termination of employment.
14    (e) Any card lost by a dispensing organization agent shall
15be reported to the Illinois State Police and the Department of
16Financial and Professional Regulation immediately upon
17discovery of the loss.
18    (f) Agent renewal on and after January 1, 2026 shall be in
19accordance with Section 15-40 of the Cannabis Regulation Tax
20Act. An applicant shall be denied a dispensing organization
21agent identification card if he or she has been convicted of an
22excluded offense.
23    (g) This Section is repealed on July 1, 2026.
24(Source: P.A. 98-122, eff. 1-1-14; 98-1172, eff. 1-12-15.)
 
25    (410 ILCS 130/125)

 

 

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1    Sec. 125. Medical cannabis dispensing organization
2certification renewal.
3    (a) The registered dispensing organization shall receive
4written notice 90 days prior to the expiration of its current
5registration that the registration will expire. The Department
6of Financial and Professional Regulation shall grant a renewal
7application within 45 days of its submission if the following
8conditions are satisfied:
9        (1) the registered dispensing organization submits a
10    renewal application and the required renewal fee
11    established by the Department of Financial and
12    Professional Regulation rules; and
13        (2) the Department of Financial and Professional
14    Regulation has not suspended the registered dispensing
15    organization or suspended or revoked the registration for
16    violation of this Act or rules adopted under this Act.
17    (b) If a dispensing organization fails to renew its
18registration prior to expiration, the dispensing organization
19shall cease operations until registration is renewed.
20    (c) If a dispensing organization agent fails to renew his
21or her registration prior to its expiration, he or she shall
22cease to work or volunteer at a dispensing organization until
23his or her registration is renewed.
24    (d) Any dispensing organization that continues to operate
25or dispensing agent that continues to work or volunteer at a
26dispensing organization that fails to renew its registration

 

 

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1shall be subject to penalty as provided in Section 130.
2    (e) A dispensing organization licensed under this Act
3shall renew its license in accordance with Section 15-45 of
4the Cannabis Regulation Tax Act on and after January 1, 2026.
5    (f) This Section is repealed on July 1, 2026.
6(Source: P.A. 98-122, eff. 1-1-14.)
 
7    (410 ILCS 130/130)
8    Sec. 130. Requirements; prohibitions; penalties;
9dispensing organizations.
10    (a) The Department of Financial and Professional
11Regulation shall implement the provisions of this Section by
12rule.
13    (b) A dispensing organization shall maintain operating
14documents which shall include procedures for the oversight of
15the registered dispensing organization and procedures to
16ensure accurate recordkeeping.
17    (c) A dispensing organization shall implement appropriate
18security measures, as provided by rule, to deter and prevent
19the theft of cannabis and unauthorized entrance into areas
20containing cannabis.
21    (d) A dispensing organization may not be located within
221,000 feet of the property line of a pre-existing public or
23private preschool or elementary or secondary school or day
24care center, day care home, group day care home, or part day
25child care facility. A registered dispensing organization may

 

 

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1not be located in a house, apartment, condominium, or an area
2zoned for residential use. This subsection shall not apply to
3any dispensing organizations registered on or after July 1,
42019.
5    (e) A dispensing organization is prohibited from acquiring
6cannabis from anyone other than a cultivation center, craft
7grower, infuser, processing organization, another dispensing
8organization, or transporting organization licensed or
9registered under this Act or the Cannabis Regulation and Tax
10Act. A dispensing organization is prohibited from obtaining
11cannabis from outside the State of Illinois.
12    (f) A registered dispensing organization is prohibited
13from dispensing cannabis for any purpose except to assist
14registered qualifying patients with the medical use of
15cannabis directly or through the qualifying patients'
16designated caregivers.
17    (g) The area in a dispensing organization where medical
18cannabis is stored can only be accessed by dispensing
19organization agents working for the dispensing organization,
20Department of Financial and Professional Regulation staff
21performing inspections, law enforcement or other emergency
22personnel, and contractors working on jobs unrelated to
23medical cannabis, such as installing or maintaining security
24devices or performing electrical wiring.
25    (h) A dispensing organization may not dispense more than
262.5 ounces of cannabis to a registered qualifying patient,

 

 

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1directly or via a designated caregiver, in any 14-day period
2unless the qualifying patient has a Department of Public
3Health-approved quantity waiver. Any Department of Public
4Health-approved quantity waiver process must be made available
5to qualified veterans.
6    (i) Except as provided in subsection (i-5), before medical
7cannabis may be dispensed to a designated caregiver or a
8registered qualifying patient, a dispensing organization agent
9must determine that the individual is a current cardholder in
10the verification system and must verify each of the following:
11        (1) that the registry identification card presented to
12    the registered dispensing organization is valid;
13        (2) that the person presenting the card is the person
14    identified on the registry identification card presented
15    to the dispensing organization agent;
16        (3) (blank); and
17        (4) that the registered qualifying patient has not
18    exceeded his or her adequate supply.
19    (i-5) A dispensing organization may dispense medical
20cannabis to an Opioid Alternative Patient Pilot Program
21participant under Section 62 and to a person presenting proof
22of provisional registration under Section 55. Before
23dispensing medical cannabis, the dispensing organization shall
24comply with the requirements of Section 62 or Section 55,
25whichever is applicable, and verify the following:
26        (1) that the written certification presented to the

 

 

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1    registered dispensing organization is valid and an
2    original document;
3        (2) that the person presenting the written
4    certification is the person identified on the written
5    certification; and
6        (3) that the participant has not exceeded his or her
7    adequate supply.
8    (j) Dispensing organizations shall ensure compliance with
9this limitation by maintaining internal, confidential records
10that include records specifying how much medical cannabis is
11dispensed to the registered qualifying patient and whether it
12was dispensed directly to the registered qualifying patient or
13to the designated caregiver. Each entry must include the date
14and time the cannabis was dispensed. Additional recordkeeping
15requirements may be set by rule.
16    (k) The health care professional-patient privilege as set
17forth by Section 8-802 of the Code of Civil Procedure shall
18apply between a qualifying patient and a registered dispensing
19organization and its agents with respect to communications and
20records concerning qualifying patients' debilitating
21conditions.
22    (l) A dispensing organization may not permit any person to
23consume cannabis on the property of a medical cannabis
24organization.
25    (m) A dispensing organization may not share office space
26with or refer patients to a certifying health care

 

 

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1professional.
2    (n) Notwithstanding any other criminal penalties related
3to the unlawful possession of cannabis, the Department of
4Financial and Professional Regulation may revoke, suspend,
5place on probation, reprimand, refuse to issue or renew, or
6take any other disciplinary or non-disciplinary action as the
7Department of Financial and Professional Regulation may deem
8proper with regard to the registration of any person issued
9under this Act to operate a dispensing organization or act as a
10dispensing organization agent, including imposing fines not to
11exceed $10,000 for each violation, for any violations of this
12Act and rules adopted in accordance with this Act. The
13procedures for disciplining a registered dispensing
14organization shall be determined by rule. All final
15administrative decisions of the Department of Financial and
16Professional Regulation are subject to judicial review under
17the Administrative Review Law and its rules. The term
18"administrative decision" is defined as in Section 3-101 of
19the Code of Civil Procedure.
20    (o) Dispensing organizations are subject to random
21inspection and cannabis testing by the Department of Financial
22and Professional Regulation, the Illinois State Police, the
23Department of Revenue, the Department of Public Health, the
24Department of Agriculture, or as provided by rule.
25    (p) The Department of Financial and Professional
26Regulation shall adopt rules permitting returns, and potential

 

 

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1refunds, for damaged or inadequate products.
2    (q) The Department of Financial and Professional
3Regulation may issue nondisciplinary citations for minor
4violations which may be accompanied by a civil penalty not to
5exceed $10,000 per violation. The penalty shall be a civil
6penalty or other condition as established by rule. The
7citation shall be issued to the licensee and shall contain the
8licensee's name, address, and license number, a brief factual
9statement, the Sections of the law or rule allegedly violated,
10and the civil penalty, if any, imposed. The citation must
11clearly state that the licensee may choose, in lieu of
12accepting the citation, to request a hearing. If the licensee
13does not dispute the matter in the citation with the
14Department of Financial and Professional Regulation within 30
15days after the citation is served, then the citation shall
16become final and shall not be subject to appeal.
17    (r) This Section is repealed on July 1, 2026.
18(Source: P.A. 101-363, eff. 8-9-19; 102-98, eff. 7-15-21.)
 
19    (410 ILCS 130/140)
20    Sec. 140. Local ordinances. A unit of local government may
21enact reasonable zoning ordinances or resolutions, not in
22conflict with this Act or with Department of Agriculture or
23Department of Financial and Professional Regulation rules,
24regulating registered medical cannabis cultivation center or
25medical cannabis dispensing organizations. No unit of local

 

 

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1government, including a home rule unit, or school district may
2regulate registered medical cannabis organizations other than
3as provided in this Act and may not unreasonably prohibit the
4cultivation, dispensing, and use of medical cannabis
5authorized by this Act. This Section is a denial and
6limitation under subsection (i) of Section 6 of Article VII of
7the Illinois Constitution on the concurrent exercise by home
8rule units of powers and functions exercised by the State.
9    This Section is repealed on July 1, 2026.
10(Source: P.A. 98-122, eff. 1-1-14; 98-1172, eff. 1-12-15.)
 
11    (410 ILCS 130/145)
12    Sec. 145. Confidentiality.
13    (a) The following information received and records kept by
14the Department of Public Health, Department of Financial and
15Professional Regulation, Department of Agriculture, Department
16of Commerce and Economic Opportunity, Office of Executive
17Inspector General, or Illinois State Police for purposes of
18administering this Act are subject to all applicable federal
19privacy laws, confidential, and exempt from the Freedom of
20Information Act, and not subject to disclosure to any
21individual or public or private entity, except as necessary
22for authorized employees of those authorized agencies to
23perform official duties under this Act and except as necessary
24to those involved in enforcing the State Officials and
25Employees Ethics Act, and the following information received

 

 

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1and records kept by Department of Public Health, Department of
2Agriculture, Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity,
3Department of Financial and Professional Regulation, Office of
4Executive Inspector General, and Illinois State Police,
5excluding any existing or non-existing Illinois or national
6criminal history record information as defined in subsection
7(d), may be disclosed to each other upon request:
8        (1) Applications and renewals, their contents, and
9    supporting information submitted by qualifying patients,
10    provisional patients, and designated caregivers, including
11    information regarding their designated caregivers and
12    certifying health care professionals.
13        (2) Applications and renewals, their contents, and
14    supporting information submitted by or on behalf of
15    cultivation centers and dispensing organizations in
16    compliance with this Act, including their physical
17    addresses. This does not preclude the release of ownership
18    information of cannabis business establishment licenses.
19        (3) The individual names and other information
20    identifying persons to whom the Department of Public
21    Health has issued registry identification cards.
22        (4) Any dispensing information required to be kept
23    under Section 135, Section 150, or Department of Public
24    Health, Department of Agriculture, or Department of
25    Financial and Professional Regulation rules shall identify
26    cardholders and registered cultivation centers by their

 

 

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1    registry identification numbers and medical cannabis
2    dispensing organizations by their registration number and
3    not contain names or other personally identifying
4    information.
5        (5) All medical records provided to the Department of
6    Public Health in connection with an application for a
7    registry card.
8    (b) Nothing in this Section precludes the following:
9        (1) Department of Agriculture, Department of Financial
10    and Professional Regulation, or Public Health employees
11    may notify law enforcement about falsified or fraudulent
12    information submitted to the Departments if the employee
13    who suspects that falsified or fraudulent information has
14    been submitted conferred with his or her supervisor and
15    both agree that circumstances exist that warrant
16    reporting.
17        (2) If the employee conferred with his or her
18    supervisor and both agree that circumstances exist that
19    warrant reporting, Department of Public Health employees
20    may notify the Department of Financial and Professional
21    Regulation if there is reasonable cause to believe a
22    certifying health care professional:
23            (A) issued a written certification without a bona
24        fide health care professional-patient relationship
25        under this Act;
26            (B) issued a written certification to a person who

 

 

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1        was not under the certifying health care
2        professional's care for the debilitating medical
3        condition; or
4            (C) failed to abide by the acceptable and
5        prevailing standard of care when evaluating a
6        patient's medical condition.
7        (3) The Department of Public Health, Department of
8    Agriculture, and Department of Financial and Professional
9    Regulation may notify State or local law enforcement about
10    apparent criminal violations of this Act if the employee
11    who suspects the offense has conferred with his or her
12    supervisor and both agree that circumstances exist that
13    warrant reporting.
14        (4) Medical cannabis cultivation center agents and
15    medical cannabis dispensing organizations may notify the
16    Department of Public Health, Department of Financial and
17    Professional Regulation, or Department of Agriculture of a
18    suspected violation or attempted violation of this Act or
19    the rules issued under it.
20        (5) Each Department may verify registry identification
21    cards under Section 150.
22        (6) The submission of the report to the General
23    Assembly under Section 160.
24    (b-5) Each Department responsible for licensure under this
25Act shall publish on the Department's website a list of the
26ownership information of cannabis business establishment

 

 

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1licensees under the Department's jurisdiction. The list shall
2include, but shall not be limited to, the name of the person or
3entity holding each cannabis business establishment license
4and the address at which the entity is operating under this
5Act. This list shall be published and updated monthly.
6    (c) Except for any ownership information released pursuant
7to subsection (b-5) or as otherwise authorized or required by
8law, it is a Class B misdemeanor with a $1,000 fine for any
9person, including an employee or official of the Department of
10Public Health, Department of Financial and Professional
11Regulation, or Department of Agriculture or another State
12agency or local government, to breach the confidentiality of
13information obtained under this Act.
14    (d) The Department of Public Health, the Department of
15Agriculture, the Illinois State Police, and the Department of
16Financial and Professional Regulation shall not share or
17disclose any existing or non-existing Illinois or national
18criminal history record information. For the purposes of this
19Section, "any existing or non-existing Illinois or national
20criminal history record information" means any Illinois or
21national criminal history record information, including but
22not limited to the lack of or non-existence of these records.
23(Source: P.A. 101-363, eff. 8-9-19; 102-98, eff. 7-15-21;
24102-538, eff. 8-20-21; 102-813, eff. 5-13-22.)
 
25    (410 ILCS 130/150)

 

 

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1    Sec. 150. Registry identification and registration
2certificate verification.
3    (a) The Department of Public Health shall maintain a
4confidential list of the persons to whom the Department of
5Public Health has issued registry identification cards and
6their addresses, phone numbers, and registry identification
7numbers. This confidential list may not be combined or linked
8in any manner with any other list or database except as
9provided in this Section.
10    (b) Within 180 days of the effective date of this Act, the
11Department of Public Health, Department of Financial and
12Professional Regulation, and Department of Agriculture shall
13together establish a computerized database or verification
14system. The database or verification system must allow law
15enforcement personnel and medical cannabis dispensary
16organization agents to determine whether or not the
17identification number corresponds with a current, valid
18registry identification card. The system shall only disclose
19whether the identification card is valid, whether the
20cardholder is a registered qualifying patient, an Opioid
21Alternative Patient Program participant, provisional patient,
22or a registered designated caregiver, the registry
23identification number of the registered medical cannabis
24dispensing organization designated to serve the registered
25qualifying patient who holds the card, and the registry
26identification number of the patient who is assisted by a

 

 

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1registered designated caregiver who holds the card. The
2Department of Public Health, the Department of Agriculture,
3the Illinois State Police, and the Department of Financial and
4Professional Regulation shall not share or disclose any
5existing or non-existing Illinois or national criminal history
6record information. Notwithstanding any other requirements
7established by this subsection, the Department of Public
8Health shall issue registry cards to qualifying patients and
9Opioid Alternative Patient Program participants, the
10Department of Financial and Professional Regulation may issue
11registration to medical cannabis dispensing organizations for
12the period during which the database is being established, and
13the Department of Agriculture may issue registration cards to
14medical cannabis cultivation organizations for the period
15during which the database is being established.
16    (c) For the purposes of this Section, "any existing or
17non-existing Illinois or national criminal history record
18information" means any Illinois or national criminal history
19record information, including but not limited to the lack of
20or non-existence of these records.
21(Source: P.A. 102-538, eff. 8-20-21.)
 
22    (410 ILCS 130/165)
23    Sec. 165. Administrative rulemaking.
24    (a) Not later than 120 days after the effective date of
25this Act, the Department of Public Health, Department of

 

 

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1Agriculture, and the Department of Financial and Professional
2Regulation shall develop rules in accordance to their
3responsibilities under this Act and file those rules with the
4Joint Committee on Administrative Rules.
5    (b) The Department of Public Health rules shall address,
6but not be limited to, the following:
7        (1) fees for applications for registration as a
8    qualified patient or caregiver;
9        (2) establishing the form and content of registration
10    and renewal applications submitted under this Act,
11    including a standard form for written certifications;
12        (3) governing the manner in which it shall consider
13    applications for and renewals of registry identification
14    cards;
15        (4) the manufacture of medical cannabis-infused
16    products;
17        (5) fees for the application and renewal of registry
18    identification cards. Fee revenue may be offset or
19    supplemented by private donations;
20        (6) any other matters as are necessary for the fair,
21    impartial, stringent, and comprehensive administration of
22    this Act; and
23        (7) reasonable rules concerning the medical use of
24    cannabis at a nursing care institution, hospice, assisted
25    living center, assisted living facility, assisted living
26    home, residential care institution, or adult day health

 

 

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1    care facility.
2    (c) The Department of Agriculture rules shall address, but
3not be limited to the following related to registered
4cultivation centers, with the goal of protecting against
5diversion and theft, without imposing an undue burden on the
6registered cultivation centers:
7        (1) oversight requirements for registered cultivation
8    centers;
9        (2) recordkeeping requirements for registered
10    cultivation centers;
11        (3) security requirements for registered cultivation
12    centers, which shall include that each registered
13    cultivation center location must be protected by a fully
14    operational security alarm system;
15        (4) rules and standards for what constitutes an
16    enclosed, locked facility under this Act;
17        (5) procedures for suspending or revoking the
18    registration certificates or registry identification cards
19    of registered cultivation centers and their agents that
20    commit violations of the provisions of this Act or the
21    rules adopted under this Section;
22        (6) rules concerning the intrastate transportation of
23    medical cannabis from a cultivation center to a dispensing
24    organization;
25        (7) standards concerning the testing, quality, and
26    cultivation of medical cannabis;

 

 

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1        (8) any other matters as are necessary for the fair,
2    impartial, stringent, and comprehensive administration of
3    this Act;
4        (9) application and renewal fees for cultivation
5    center agents; and
6        (10) application, renewal, and registration fees for
7    cultivation centers.
8    (d) The Department of Financial and Professional
9Regulation rules shall address, but not be limited to the
10following matters related to registered dispensing
11organizations, with the goal of protecting against diversion
12and theft, without imposing an undue burden on the registered
13dispensing organizations or compromising the confidentiality
14of cardholders:
15        (1) application and renewal and registration fees for
16    dispensing organizations and dispensing organizations
17    agents;
18        (2) medical cannabis dispensing agent-in-charge
19    oversight requirements for dispensing organizations;
20        (3) recordkeeping requirements for dispensing
21    organizations;
22        (4) security requirements for medical cannabis
23    dispensing organizations, which shall include that each
24    registered dispensing organization location must be
25    protected by a fully operational security alarm system;
26        (5) procedures for suspending or revoking the

 

 

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1    registrations of dispensing organizations and dispensing
2    organization agents that commit violations of the
3    provisions of this Act or the rules adopted under this
4    Act;
5        (6) application and renewal fees for dispensing
6    organizations; and
7        (7) application and renewal fees for dispensing
8    organization agents.
9    (e) The Department of Public Health may establish a
10sliding scale of patient application and renewal fees based
11upon a qualifying patient's household income. The Department
12of Public health may accept donations from private sources to
13reduce application and renewal fees, and registry
14identification card fees shall include an additional fee set
15by rule which shall be used to develop and disseminate
16educational information about the health risks associated with
17the abuse of cannabis and prescription medications.
18    (f) During the rule-making process, each Department shall
19make a good faith effort to consult with stakeholders
20identified in the rule-making analysis as being impacted by
21the rules, including patients or a representative of an
22organization advocating on behalf of patients.
23    (g) The Department of Public Health shall develop and
24disseminate educational information about the health risks
25associated with the abuse of cannabis and prescription
26medications.

 

 

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1(Source: P.A. 98-122, eff. 1-1-14; 98-1172, eff. 1-12-15.)
 
2    (410 ILCS 130/180)
3    Sec. 180. Destruction of medical cannabis.
4    (a) All cannabis byproduct, scrap, and harvested cannabis
5not intended for distribution to a medical cannabis
6organization must be destroyed and disposed of pursuant to
7State law. Documentation of destruction and disposal shall be
8retained at the cultivation center for a period of not less
9than 5 years.
10    (b) A cultivation center shall prior to the destruction,
11notify the Department of Agriculture and the Illinois State
12Police.
13    (c) The cultivation center shall keep record of the date
14of destruction and how much was destroyed.
15    (d) A dispensary organization shall destroy all cannabis,
16including cannabis-infused products, that are not sold to
17registered qualifying patients. Documentation of destruction
18and disposal shall be retained at the dispensary organization
19for a period of not less than 5 years.
20    (e) A dispensary organization shall prior to the
21destruction, notify the Department of Financial and
22Professional Regulation and the Illinois State Police.
23    (f) This Section is repealed on July 1, 2026.
24(Source: P.A. 102-538, eff. 8-20-21.)
 

 

 

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1    (410 ILCS 130/200)
2    Sec. 200. Tax imposed.
3    (a) Beginning on January 1, 2014 and through June 30, 2025
4the effective date of this Act, a tax is imposed upon the
5privilege of cultivating medical cannabis at a rate of 7% of
6the sales price per ounce. Beginning July 1, 2025, a tax is
7imposed on the privilege of cultivating medical cannabis at
8the rate of 7% of the gross receipts from the first sale of
9medical cannabis by a cultivator. The sale of any product that
10contains any amount of medical cannabis or any derivative
11thereof is subject to the tax under this Section on the full
12selling price of the product. The Department may determine the
13selling price of the medical cannabis when the seller and
14purchaser are affiliated persons or when the sale and purchase
15of medical cannabis is not an arm's length transaction, and a
16value is not established for the medical cannabis. The value
17determined by the Department shall be commensurate with the
18actual price received for products of like quality, character,
19and use in the area. If there are no sales of medical cannabis
20of like quality, character, and use in the area, then the
21Department shall establish a reasonable value based on sales
22of products of like quality, character, and use in the other
23areas of the State, taking into consideration any other
24relevant factors. Beginning January 1, 2026, the privilege of
25cultivating cannabis shall be subject to the tax imposed under
26Section 60-10 of the Cannabis Regulation and Tax Act. Through

 

 

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1December 31, 2025, The proceeds from this tax shall be
2deposited into the Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis Fund
3created under the Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis
4Program Act. This tax shall be paid by a cultivation center and
5is not the responsibility of a dispensing organization or a
6qualifying patient.
7    (b) The tax imposed under this Act shall be in addition to
8all other occupation or privilege taxes imposed by the State
9of Illinois or by any municipal corporation or political
10subdivision thereof.
11(Source: P.A. 101-363, eff. 8-9-19.)
 
12    (410 ILCS 130/205)
13    Sec. 205. Department enforcement.
14    (a) Every person subject to the tax under this Law shall
15apply to the Department (upon a form prescribed and furnished
16by the Department) for a certificate of registration under
17this Law. Application for a certificate of registration shall
18be made to the Department upon forms furnished by the
19Department. The certificate of registration which is issued by
20the Department to a retailer under the Retailers' Occupation
21Tax Act shall permit the taxpayer to engage in a business which
22is taxable under this Law without registering separately with
23the Department. Beginning January 1, 2026, a person licensed
24as a cultivation center or dispensing organization under the
25Cannabis Regulation and Tax Act shall be deemed to be

 

 

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1sufficiently licensed under this Law by virtue of his or her
2being properly licensed under the Cannabis Regulation and Tax
3Act.
4    (b) The Department shall have full power to administer and
5enforce this Law, to collect all taxes and penalties due
6hereunder, to dispose of taxes and penalties so collected in
7the manner hereinafter provided, and to determine all rights
8to credit memoranda, arising on account of the erroneous
9payment of tax or penalty hereunder. In the administration of,
10and compliance with, this Law, the Department and persons who
11are subject to this Law shall have the same rights, remedies,
12privileges, immunities, powers and duties, and be subject to
13the same conditions, restrictions, limitations, penalties and
14definitions of terms, and employ the same modes of procedure,
15as are prescribed in Sections 1, 1a, 2 through 2-65 (in respect
16to all provisions therein other than the State rate of tax),
172a, 2b, 2c, 3 (except provisions relating to transaction
18returns and quarter monthly payments, and except for
19provisions that are inconsistent with this Law), 4, 5, 5a, 5b,
205c, 5d, 5e, 5f, 5g, 5i, 5j, 6, 6a, 6b, 6c, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11,
2111a, 12 and 13 of the Retailers' Occupation Tax Act and Section
223-7 of the Uniform Penalty and Interest Act as fully as if
23those provisions were set forth herein.
24(Source: P.A. 98-122, eff. 1-1-14.)
 
25    (410 ILCS 130/210)

 

 

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1    Sec. 210. Returns.
2    (a) This subsection (a) applies to returns due on or
3before June 25, 2019 (the effective date of Public Act 101-27)
4this amendatory Act of the 101st General Assembly. On or
5before the twentieth day of each calendar month, every person
6subject to the tax imposed under this Law during the preceding
7calendar month shall file a return with the Department,
8stating:
9        (1) The name of the taxpayer;
10        (2) The number of ounces of medical cannabis sold to a
11    dispensing organization or a registered qualifying patient
12    during the preceding calendar month;
13        (3) The amount of tax due;
14        (4) The signature of the taxpayer; and
15        (5) Such other reasonable information as the
16    Department may require.
17    If a taxpayer fails to sign a return within 30 days after
18the proper notice and demand for signature by the Department,
19the return shall be considered valid and any amount shown to be
20due on the return shall be deemed assessed.
21    The taxpayer shall remit the amount of the tax due to the
22Department at the time the taxpayer files his or her return.
23    (b) Beginning on June 25, 2019 (the effective date of
24Public Act 101-27) this amendatory Act of the 101st General
25Assembly, Section 60-20 65-20 of the Cannabis Regulation and
26Tax Act shall apply to returns filed and taxes paid under this

 

 

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1Act to the same extent as if those provisions were set forth in
2full in this Section.
3(Source: P.A. 101-27, eff. 6-25-19; 101-593, eff. 12-4-19.)
 
4    (410 ILCS 130/80 rep.)
5    (410 ILCS 130/115.5 rep.)
6    (410 ILCS 130/135 rep.)
7    (410 ILCS 130/162 rep.)
8    Section 35. The Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis
9Program Act is amended by repealing Sections 80, 115.5, 125,
10135, and 162.
 
11    Section 40. The Cannabis Regulation and Tax Act is amended
12by changing Sections 1-10, 5-10, 5-15, 7-10, 7-15, 10-10,
1310-15, 15-10, 15-15, 15-20, 15-25, 15-35, 15-35.10, 15-36,
1415-40, 15-45, 15-50, 15-60, 15-65, 15-70, 15-75, 15-85,
1515-100, 15-135, 15-145, the heading of Article 20, 20-10,
1620-15, 20-20, 20-21, 20-30, 20-35, 20-45, 25-35, 30-10, 30-30,
1730-35, 30-45, 35-25, 35-30, 40-25, 45-5, 50-5, 55-5, 55-10,
1855-30, 55-65, 55-85, 60-5, 60-10, 65-5, 65-10, 65-30, 65-38,
19and 65-42 and adding Sections 15-13, 15-17, 15-23, and 15-24
20as follows:
 
21    (410 ILCS 705/1-10)
22    Sec. 1-10. Definitions. In this Act:
23    "Adequate medical supply" means:

 

 

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1        (1) 2.5 ounces of usable cannabis during a period of
2    14 days and that is derived solely from an intrastate
3    source.
4        (2) Subject to the rules of the Department of Public
5    Health, a patient may apply for a waiver where a
6    certifying health care professional provides a substantial
7    medical basis in a signed, written statement asserting
8    that, based on the patient's medical history, in the
9    certifying health care professional's professional
10    judgment, 2.5 ounces is an insufficient adequate medical
11    supply for a 14-day period to properly alleviate the
12    patient's debilitating medical condition or symptoms
13    associated with the debilitating medical condition.
14        (3) This subsection may not be construed to authorize
15    the possession of more than 2.5 ounces at any time without
16    authority from the Department of Public Health.
17        (4) The premixed weight of medical cannabis used in
18    making a cannabis-infused product shall apply toward the
19    limit on the total amount of medical cannabis a registered
20    qualifying patient may possess at any one time.
21    "Adult Use Cultivation Center License" means a license
22issued by the Department of Agriculture that permits a person
23to act as a cultivation center under this Act and any
24administrative rule made in furtherance of this Act.
25    "Adult Use Dispensing Organization License" means a
26license issued by the Department of Financial and Professional

 

 

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1Regulation that permits a person to act as a dispensing
2organization under this Act and any administrative rule made
3in furtherance of this Act.
4    "Advertise" means to engage in promotional activities
5including, but not limited to: newspaper, radio, Internet and
6electronic media, and television advertising; the distribution
7of fliers and circulars; billboard advertising; and the
8display of window and interior signs. "Advertise" does not
9mean exterior signage displaying only the name of the licensed
10cannabis business establishment.
11    "Application points" means the number of points a
12Dispensary Applicant receives on an application for a
13Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization License.
14    "BLS Region" means a region in Illinois used by the United
15States Bureau of Labor Statistics to gather and categorize
16certain employment and wage data. The 17 such regions in
17Illinois are: Bloomington, Cape Girardeau, Carbondale-Marion,
18Champaign-Urbana, Chicago-Naperville-Elgin, Danville,
19Davenport-Moline-Rock Island, Decatur, Kankakee, Peoria,
20Rockford, St. Louis, Springfield, Northwest Illinois
21nonmetropolitan area, West Central Illinois nonmetropolitan
22area, East Central Illinois nonmetropolitan area, and South
23Illinois nonmetropolitan area.
24        (1) Bloomington (DeWitt County; McLean County);
25        (2) Cape Girardeau (Alexander County);
26        (3) Carbondale-Marion (Jackson County; Williamson

 

 

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1    County);
2        (4) Champaign-Urbana (Champaign County; Ford County;
3    Piatt County);
4        (5) Chicago-Naperville-Elgin (Cook County; DeKalb
5    County; DuPage County; Grundy County; Kane County; Kendall
6    County; Lake County; McHenry County; Will County);
7        (6) Danville (Vermilion County);
8        (7) Davenport-Moline-Rock Island (Henry County; Mercer
9    County; Rock Island County);
10        (8) Decatur (Macon County);
11        (9) Kankakee (Kankakee County);
12        (10) Peoria (Marshall County; Peoria County; Stark
13    County; Tazewell County; Woodford County);
14        (11) Rockford (Boone County; Winnebago County);
15        (12) St. Louis (Bond County; Calhoun County; Clinton
16    County; Jersey County; Madison County; Macoupin County;
17    Monroe County; St. Clair County),
18        (13) Springfield (Menard County; Sangamon County);
19        (14) Northwest Illinois nonmetropolitan area (Bureau
20    County; Carroll County; Jo Daviess County; LaSalle County;
21    Lee County; Ogle County; Putnam County; Stephenson County;
22    Whiteside County);
23        (15) West Central Illinois nonmetropolitan area (Adams
24    County; Brown County; Cass County; Christian County;
25    Fulton County; Greene County; Hancock County; Henderson
26    County; Knox County; Livingston County; Logan County;

 

 

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1    Mason County; McDonough County; Montgomery County; Morgan
2    County; Moultrie County; Pike County; Schuyler County;
3    Scott County; Shelby County; Warren County);
4        (16) East Central Illinois nonmetropolitan area (Clark
5    County; Clay County; Coles County; Crawford County;
6    Cumberland County; Douglas County; Edgar County; Effingham
7    County; Fayette County; Iroquois County; Jasper County;
8    Lawrence County; Marion County; Richland County); and
9        (17) Southern Illinois nonmetropolitan area (Edwards
10    County; Franklin County; Gallatin County; Hamilton County;
11    Hardin County; Jefferson County; Johnson County; Massac
12    County; Perry County; Pope County; Pulaski County;
13    Randolph County; Saline County; Union County; Wabash
14    County; Wayne County; White County).
15    "By lot" means a randomized method of choosing between 2
16or more Eligible Tied Applicants or 2 or more Qualifying
17Applicants.
18    "Cannabis" means marijuana, hashish, and other substances
19that are identified as including any parts of the plant
20Cannabis sativa and including derivatives or subspecies, such
21as indica, of all strains of cannabis, whether growing or not;
22the seeds thereof, the resin extracted from any part of the
23plant; and any compound, manufacture, salt, derivative,
24mixture, or preparation of the plant, its seeds, or resin,
25including tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) and all other naturally
26produced cannabinol derivatives, whether produced directly or

 

 

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1indirectly by extraction; however, "cannabis" does not include
2the mature stalks of the plant, fiber produced from the
3stalks, oil or cake made from the seeds of the plant, any other
4compound, manufacture, salt, derivative, mixture, or
5preparation of the mature stalks (except the resin extracted
6from it), fiber, oil or cake, or the sterilized seed of the
7plant that is incapable of germination. "Cannabis" does not
8include industrial hemp as defined and authorized under the
9Industrial Hemp Act. "Cannabis" also means cannabis flower,
10concentrate, and cannabis-infused products.
11    "Cannabis business establishment" means a cultivation
12center, craft grower, processing organization, infuser
13organization, dispensing organization, or transporting
14organization.
15    "Cannabis concentrate" means a product derived from
16cannabis that is produced by extracting cannabinoids,
17including tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), from the plant through
18the use of propylene glycol, glycerin, butter, olive oil, or
19other typical cooking fats; water, ice, or dry ice; or butane,
20propane, CO2, ethanol, or isopropanol and with the intended
21use of smoking or making a cannabis-infused product. The use
22of any other solvent is expressly prohibited unless and until
23it is approved by the Department of Agriculture.
24    "Cannabis container" means a sealed or resealable,
25traceable, container, or package used for the purpose of
26containment of cannabis or cannabis-infused product during

 

 

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1transportation.
2    "Cannabis flower" means marijuana, hashish, and other
3substances that are identified as including any parts of the
4plant Cannabis sativa and including derivatives or subspecies,
5such as indica, of all strains of cannabis; including raw
6kief, leaves, and buds, but not resin that has been extracted
7from any part of such plant; nor any compound, manufacture,
8salt, derivative, mixture, or preparation of such plant, its
9seeds, or resin.
10    "Cannabis-infused product" means a beverage, food, oil,
11ointment, tincture, topical formulation, or another product
12containing cannabis or cannabis concentrate that is not
13intended to be smoked.
14    "Cannabis paraphernalia" means equipment, products, or
15materials intended to be used for planting, propagating,
16cultivating, growing, harvesting, manufacturing, producing,
17processing, preparing, testing, analyzing, packaging,
18repackaging, storing, containing, concealing, ingesting, or
19otherwise introducing cannabis into the human body.
20    "Cannabis plant monitoring system" or "plant monitoring
21system" means a system that includes, but is not limited to,
22testing and data collection established and maintained by the
23cultivation center, craft grower, or infuser processing
24organization and that is available to the Department of
25Revenue, the Department of Agriculture, the Department of
26Financial and Professional Regulation, and the Illinois State

 

 

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1Police for the purposes of documenting each cannabis plant and
2monitoring plant development throughout the life cycle of a
3cannabis plant cultivated for the intended use by a customer
4from seed planting to final packaging.
5    "Cannabis testing facility" means an entity licensed
6registered by the Department of Agriculture to test cannabis
7for potency and contaminants. Licensed cannabis testing
8facilities are authorized under this Act to transport cannabis
9from licensed cannabis business establishments to the licensed
10cannabis testing facility and are exempt from the transporting
11organization license requirements.
12    "Certifying health care professional" has the meaning
13given to that term under the Compassionate Use of Medical
14Cannabis Program Act.
15    "Clone" means a plant section from a female cannabis plant
16not yet rootbound, growing in a water solution or other
17propagation matrix, that is capable of developing into a new
18plant.
19    "Community College Cannabis Vocational Training Pilot
20Program faculty participant" means a person who is 21 years of
21age or older, licensed by the Department of Agriculture, and
22is employed or contracted by an Illinois community college to
23provide student instruction using cannabis plants at an
24Illinois Community College.
25    "Community College Cannabis Vocational Training Pilot
26Program faculty participant Agent Identification Card" means a

 

 

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1document issued by the Department of Agriculture that
2identifies a person as a Community College Cannabis Vocational
3Training Pilot Program faculty participant.
4    "Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization License"
5means a contingent license awarded to applicants for an Adult
6Use Dispensing Organization License that reserves the right to
7an Adult Use Dispensing Organization License if the applicant
8meets certain conditions described in this Act, but does not
9entitle the recipient to begin purchasing or selling cannabis
10or cannabis-infused products.
11    "Conditional Adult Use Cultivation Center License" means a
12license awarded to top-scoring applicants for a an Adult Use
13Cultivation Center License that reserves the right to a an
14Adult Use Cultivation Center License if the applicant meets
15certain conditions as determined by the Department of
16Agriculture by rule, but does not entitle the recipient to
17begin growing, processing, or selling cannabis or
18cannabis-infused products.
19    "Craft grower" means a facility operated by an
20organization or business that is licensed by the Department of
21Agriculture to cultivate, dry, cure, and package cannabis and
22perform other necessary activities to make cannabis available
23for sale at a dispensing organization or use at an infuser a
24processing organization. A craft grower may contain up to
2514,000 5,000 square feet of canopy space on its premises for
26plants in the flowering state. The Department of Agriculture

 

 

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1may authorize an increase or decrease of flowering stage
2cultivation space in increments of 3,000 square feet by rule
3based on market need, craft grower capacity, and the
4licensee's history of compliance or noncompliance, with a
5maximum space of 14,000 square feet for cultivating plants in
6the flowering stage, which must be cultivated in all stages of
7growth in an enclosed and secure area. A craft grower may share
8premises with an infuser a processing organization or a
9dispensing organization, or both, provided each licensee
10stores currency and cannabis or cannabis-infused products in a
11separate secured vault to which the other licensee does not
12have access or all licensees sharing a vault share more than
1350% of the same ownership.
14    "Craft grower agent" means a principal officer, board
15member, employee, or other agent of a craft grower who is 21
16years of age or older.
17    "Craft Grower Agent Identification Card" means a document
18issued by the Department of Agriculture that identifies a
19person as a craft grower agent.
20    "Cultivation center" means a facility operated by an
21organization or business that is licensed by the Department of
22Agriculture to cultivate, process, transport (unless otherwise
23limited by this Act), and perform other necessary activities
24to provide cannabis and cannabis-infused products to cannabis
25business establishments. As used in this Act, "cultivation
26center" includes any cultivation center which prior to January

 

 

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11, 2026, was a cultivation center as defined in the
2Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis Program Act.
3    "Cultivation center agent" means a principal officer,
4board member, employee, or other agent of a cultivation center
5who is 21 years of age or older.
6    "Cultivation Center Agent Identification Card" means a
7document issued by the Department of Agriculture that
8identifies a person as a cultivation center agent.
9    "Currency" means currency and coins coin of the United
10States.
11    "Designated caregiver" means a person who:
12        (1) is at least 21 years of age;
13        (2) has agreed to assist with a patient's medical use
14    of cannabis; and
15        (3) assists no more than one registered qualifying
16    patient with the patient's medical use of cannabis, except
17    the parent of a registered qualifying patient may assist
18    any children of that parent who are registered qualifying
19    patients.
20    "Dispensary" means a facility operated by a dispensing
21organization at which activities licensed by this Act may
22occur.
23    "Dispensary Applicant" means the Proposed Dispensing
24Organization Name as stated on an application for a
25Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization License.
26    "Dispensing organization" or "dispensary" means a facility

 

 

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1operated by an organization or business that is licensed by
2the Department of Financial and Professional Regulation to
3acquire cannabis from a cultivation center, craft grower,
4infuser processing organization licensed by the Department of
5Agriculture, or another dispensary licensed by the Department
6of Financial and Professional Regulation, for the purpose of
7selling or dispensing cannabis, cannabis-infused products,
8cannabis seeds, paraphernalia, or related supplies under this
9Act to purchasers or to qualified registered medical cannabis
10patients, and designated caregivers, Opioid Alternative
11Patient Program participants, and provisional patients to
12purchase an adequate medical supply. As used in this Act,
13"dispensing organization" includes any dispensary which, prior
14to January 1, 2026, was a registered medical cannabis
15organization as defined in the Compassionate Use of Medical
16Cannabis Program Act or its successor Act or that has obtained
17an Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing Organization License or
18Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing Organization License at a
19Secondary Site under this Act.
20    "Dispensing organization agent" means a principal officer,
21employee, or agent of a dispensing organization who is 21
22years of age or older.
23    "Dispensing organization agent identification card" means
24a document issued by the Department of Financial and
25Professional Regulation that identifies a person as a
26dispensing organization agent.

 

 

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1    "Disproportionately Impacted Area" means a census tract or
2comparable geographic area that satisfies the following
3criteria as determined by the Department of Commerce and
4Economic Opportunity, that:
5        (1) meets at least one of the following criteria:
6            (A) the area has a poverty rate of at least 20%
7        according to the latest federal decennial census; or
8            (B) 75% or more of the children in the area
9        participate in the federal free lunch program
10        according to reported statistics from the State Board
11        of Education; or
12            (C) at least 20% of the households in the area
13        receive assistance under the Supplemental Nutrition
14        Assistance Program; or
15            (D) the area has an average unemployment rate, as
16        determined by the Illinois Department of Employment
17        Security, that is more than 120% of the national
18        unemployment average, as determined by the United
19        States Department of Labor, for a period of at least 2
20        consecutive calendar years preceding the date of the
21        application; and
22        (2) has high rates of arrest, conviction, and
23    incarceration related to the sale, possession, use,
24    cultivation, manufacture, or transport of cannabis.
25    "Early Approval Adult Use Cultivation Center License"
26means a license that permits a medical cannabis cultivation

 

 

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1center licensed under the Compassionate Use of Medical
2Cannabis Program Act as of the effective date of this Act to
3begin cultivating, infusing, packaging, transporting (unless
4otherwise provided in this Act), processing, and selling
5cannabis or cannabis-infused product to cannabis business
6establishments for resale to purchasers as permitted by this
7Act as of January 1, 2020.
8    "Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing Organization License"
9means a license that permits a medical cannabis dispensing
10organization licensed under the Compassionate Use of Medical
11Cannabis Program Act as of the effective date of this Act to
12begin selling cannabis or cannabis-infused product to
13purchasers as permitted by this Act as of January 1, 2020.
14    "Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing Organization at a
15secondary site" means a license that permits a medical
16cannabis dispensing organization licensed under the
17Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis Program Act as of the
18effective date of this Act to begin selling cannabis or
19cannabis-infused product to purchasers as permitted by this
20Act on January 1, 2020 at a different dispensary location from
21its existing registered medical dispensary location.
22    "Eligible Tied Applicant" means a Tied Applicant that is
23eligible to participate in the process by which a remaining
24available license is distributed by lot pursuant to a Tied
25Applicant Lottery.
26    "Enclosed, locked facility" means a room, greenhouse,

 

 

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1building, or other enclosed area equipped with locks or other
2security devices that permit access only by cannabis business
3establishment agents working for the licensed cannabis
4business establishment or acting pursuant to this Act to
5cultivate, process, store, or distribute cannabis.
6    "Enclosed, locked space" means a closet, room, greenhouse,
7building, or other enclosed area equipped with locks or other
8security devices that permit access only by authorized
9individuals under this Act. "Enclosed, locked space" may
10include:
11        (1) a space within a residential building that (i) is
12    the primary residence of the individual cultivating 5 or
13    fewer cannabis plants that are more than 5 inches tall and
14    (ii) includes sleeping quarters and indoor plumbing. The
15    space must only be accessible by a key or code that is
16    different from any key or code that can be used to access
17    the residential building from the exterior; or
18        (2) a structure, such as a shed or greenhouse, that
19    lies on the same plot of land as a residential building
20    that (i) includes sleeping quarters and indoor plumbing
21    and (ii) is used as a primary residence by the person
22    cultivating 5 or fewer cannabis plants that are more than
23    5 inches tall, such as a shed or greenhouse. The structure
24    must remain locked when it is unoccupied by people.
25    "Financial institution" has the same meaning as "financial
26organization" as defined in Section 1501 of the Illinois

 

 

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1Income Tax Act, and also includes the holding companies,
2subsidiaries, and affiliates of such financial organizations.
3    "Flowering stage" means the stage of cultivation where and
4when a cannabis plant is cultivated to produce plant material
5for cannabis products. This includes mature plants as follows:
6        (1) if greater than 2 stigmas are visible at each
7    internode of the plant; or
8        (2) if the cannabis plant is in an area that has been
9    intentionally deprived of light for a period of time
10    intended to produce flower buds and induce maturation,
11    from the moment the light deprivation began through the
12    remainder of the marijuana plant growth cycle.
13    "Individual" means a natural person.
14    "Infuser organization" or "infuser" means a facility
15operated by an organization or business that is licensed by
16the Department of Agriculture to directly incorporate cannabis
17or cannabis concentrate into a product formulation to produce
18a cannabis-infused product.
19    "Infuser organization agent" means a principal officer,
20board member, employee, or other agent of an infuser
21organization.
22    "Infuser organization agent identification card" means a
23document issued by the Department of Agriculture that
24identifies a person as an infuser organization agent.
25    "Kief" means the resinous crystal-like trichomes that are
26found on cannabis and that are accumulated, resulting in a

 

 

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1higher concentration of cannabinoids, untreated by heat or
2pressure, or extracted using a solvent.
3    "Labor peace agreement" means an agreement between a
4cannabis business establishment and any labor organization
5recognized under the National Labor Relations Act, referred to
6in this Act as a bona fide labor organization, that prohibits
7labor organizations and members from engaging in picketing,
8work stoppages, boycotts, and any other economic interference
9with the cannabis business establishment. This agreement means
10that the cannabis business establishment has agreed not to
11disrupt efforts by the bona fide labor organization to
12communicate with, and attempt to organize and represent, the
13cannabis business establishment's employees. The agreement
14shall provide a bona fide labor organization access at
15reasonable times to areas in which the cannabis business
16establishment's employees work, for the purpose of meeting
17with employees to discuss their right to representation,
18employment rights under State law, and terms and conditions of
19employment. This type of agreement shall not mandate a
20particular method of election or certification of the bona
21fide labor organization.
22    "Limited access area" means a room or other area under the
23control of a cannabis dispensing organization licensed under
24this Act and upon the licensed premises where cannabis sales
25occur with access limited to purchasers, dispensing
26organization owners and other dispensing organization agents,

 

 

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1or service professionals conducting business with the
2dispensing organization, or, if sales to registered qualifying
3patients, caregivers, provisional patients, and Opioid
4Alternative Patient Pilot Program participants licensed
5pursuant to the Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis Program
6Act are also permitted at the dispensary, registered
7qualifying patients, caregivers, provisional patients, and
8Opioid Alternative Patient Pilot Program participants.
9    "Member of an impacted family" means an individual who has
10a parent, legal guardian, child, spouse, or dependent, or was
11a dependent of an individual who, prior to the effective date
12of this Act, was arrested for, convicted of, or adjudicated
13delinquent for any offense that is eligible for expungement
14under this Act.
15    "Mother plant" means a cannabis plant that is cultivated
16or maintained for the purpose of generating clones, and that
17will not be used to produce plant material for sale to an
18infuser or dispensing organization.
19    "Ordinary public view" means within the sight line with
20normal visual range of a person, unassisted by visual aids,
21from a public street or sidewalk adjacent to real property, or
22from within an adjacent property.
23    "Ownership and control" means ownership of at least 51% of
24the business, including corporate stock if a corporation, and
25control over the management and day-to-day operations of the
26business and an interest in the capital, assets, and profits

 

 

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1and losses of the business proportionate to percentage of
2ownership.
3    "Person" means a natural individual, firm, partnership,
4association, joint-stock joint stock company, joint venture,
5public or private corporation, limited liability company, or a
6receiver, executor, trustee, guardian, or other representative
7appointed by order of any court.
8    "Possession limit" means the amount of cannabis under
9Section 10-10 that may be possessed at any one time by a person
1021 years of age or older or who is a registered qualifying
11medical cannabis patient or caregiver under the Compassionate
12Use of Medical Cannabis Program Act.
13    "Principal officer" includes a cannabis business
14establishment applicant or licensed cannabis business
15establishment's board member, owner with more than 1% interest
16of the total cannabis business establishment or more than 5%
17interest of the total cannabis business establishment of a
18publicly traded company, president, vice president, secretary,
19treasurer, partner, officer, member, manager member, or person
20with a profit sharing, financial interest, or revenue sharing
21arrangement. The definition includes a person with authority
22to control the cannabis business establishment, a person who
23assumes responsibility for the debts of the cannabis business
24establishment and who is further defined in this Act.
25    "Primary residence" means a dwelling where a person
26usually stays or stays more often than other locations. It may

 

 

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1be determined by, without limitation, presence, tax filings;
2address on an Illinois driver's license, an Illinois
3Identification Card, or an Illinois Person with a Disability
4Identification Card; or voter registration. No person may have
5more than one primary residence.
6    "Processor license" means a license issued to an infuser
7organization that is licensed by the Department of Agriculture
8under subsection (f) of Section 35-31 to extract raw materials
9from cannabis flower.
10    "Provisional registration" means a document issued by the
11Department of Public Health to a qualifying patient who has
12submitted (i) an online application and paid a fee to
13participate in Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis Program
14pending approval or denial of the patient's application or
15(ii) a completed application for terminal illness.
16    "Provisional patient" means a qualifying patient who has
17received a provisional registration from the Department of
18Public Health.
19    "Processing organization" or "processor" means a facility
20operated by an organization or business that is licensed by
21the Department of Agriculture to either extract constituent
22chemicals or compounds to produce cannabis concentrate or
23incorporate cannabis or cannabis concentrate into a product
24formulation to produce a cannabis product.
25    "Processing organization agent" means a principal officer,
26board member, employee, or agent of a processing organization.

 

 

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1    "Processing organization agent identification card" means
2a document issued by the Department of Agriculture that
3identifies a person as a processing organization agent.
4    "Purchaser" means a person 21 years of age or older who
5acquires cannabis for a valuable consideration. "Purchaser"
6does not include a cardholder under the Compassionate Use of
7Medical Cannabis Program Act.
8    "Qualifying Applicant" means an applicant that submitted
9an application pursuant to Section 15-30 that received at
10least 85% of 250 application points available under Section
1115-30 as the applicant's final score and meets the definition
12of "Social Equity Applicant" as set forth under this Section.
13    "Qualifying patient" or "qualified patient" means a person
14who has been diagnosed by a certifying health care
15professional as having a debilitating medical condition as
16defined under the Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis
17Program Act.
18    "Qualifying Social Equity Justice Involved Applicant"
19means an applicant that submitted an application pursuant to
20Section 15-30 that received at least 85% of 250 application
21points available under Section 15-30 as the applicant's final
22score and meets the criteria of either paragraph (1) or (2) of
23the definition of "Social Equity Applicant" as set forth under
24this Section.
25    "Qualified Social Equity Applicant" means a Social Equity
26Applicant who has been awarded a license or conditional

 

 

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1license under this Act to operate a cannabis business
2establishment.
3    "Qualifying patient" or "qualified patient" means a person
4who has been diagnosed by a certifying health care
5professional as having a debilitating medical condition.
6    "Resided" means an individual's primary residence was
7located within the relevant geographic area as established by
82 of the following:
9        (1) a signed lease agreement that includes the
10    applicant's name;
11        (2) a property deed that includes the applicant's
12    name;
13        (3) school records;
14        (4) a voter registration card;
15        (5) an Illinois driver's license, an Illinois
16    Identification Card, or an Illinois Person with a
17    Disability Identification Card;
18        (6) a paycheck stub;
19        (7) a utility bill;
20        (8) tax records; or
21        (9) any other proof of residency or other information
22    necessary to establish residence as provided by rule.
23    "Smoking" means the inhalation of smoke caused by the
24combustion of cannabis.
25    "Social Equity Applicant" means an applicant that is an
26Illinois resident that meets one of the following criteria:

 

 

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1        (1) an applicant with at least 51% ownership and
2    control by one or more individuals who have resided for at
3    least 5 of the preceding 10 years in a Disproportionately
4    Impacted Area;
5        (2) an applicant with at least 51% ownership and
6    control by one or more individuals who:
7            (i) have been arrested for, convicted of, or
8        adjudicated delinquent for any offense that is
9        eligible for expungement under this Act; or
10            (ii) is a member of an impacted family;
11        (3) for applicants with a minimum of 10 full-time
12    employees, an applicant with at least 51% of current
13    employees who:
14            (i) currently reside in a Disproportionately
15        Impacted Area; or
16            (ii) have been arrested for, convicted of, or
17        adjudicated delinquent for any offense that is
18        eligible for expungement under this Act or member of
19        an impacted family.
20    Nothing in this Act shall be construed to preempt or limit
21the duties of any employer under the Job Opportunities for
22Qualified Applicants Act. Nothing in this Act shall permit an
23employer to require an employee to disclose sealed or expunged
24offenses, unless otherwise required by law.
25    "Social Equity Criteria Lottery Licensee" means a holder
26of an adult use cannabis dispensary license awarded through a

 

 

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1lottery held under subsection (c) of Section 15-35.20.
2    "Tied Applicant" means an application submitted by a
3Dispensary Applicant pursuant to Section 15-30 that received
4the same number of application points under Section 15-30 as
5the Dispensary Applicant's final score as one or more
6top-scoring applications in the same BLS Region and would have
7been awarded a license but for the one or more other
8top-scoring applications that received the same number of
9application points. Each application for which a Dispensary
10Applicant was required to pay a required application fee for
11the application period ending January 2, 2020 shall be
12considered an application of a separate Tied Applicant.
13    "Tied Applicant Lottery" means the process established
14under 68 Ill. Adm. Code 1291.50 for awarding Conditional Adult
15Use Dispensing Organization Licenses pursuant to Sections
1615-25 and 15-30 among Eligible Tied Applicants.
17    "Tincture" means a cannabis-infused solution, typically
18composed comprised of alcohol, glycerin, or vegetable oils,
19derived either directly from the cannabis plant or from a
20processed cannabis extract. A tincture is not an alcoholic
21liquor as defined in the Liquor Control Act of 1934. A tincture
22shall include a calibrated dropper or other similar device
23capable of accurately measuring servings.
24    "Transporting organization" or "transporter" means an
25organization or business that is licensed by the Department of
26Agriculture to transport cannabis or cannabis-infused product

 

 

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1on behalf of a cannabis business establishment or a community
2college licensed under the Community College Cannabis
3Vocational Training Pilot Program.
4    "Transporting organization agent" means a principal
5officer, board member, employee, or agent of a transporting
6organization.
7    "Transporting organization agent identification card"
8means a document issued by the Department of Agriculture that
9identifies a person as a transporting organization agent.
10    "Unit of local government" means any county, city,
11village, or incorporated town.
12    "Vegetative stage" means the stage of cultivation in which
13a cannabis plant is propagated to produce additional cannabis
14plants or reach a sufficient size for production. This
15includes seedlings, clones, mothers, and other immature
16cannabis plants as follows:
17        (1) if the cannabis plant is in an area that has not
18    been intentionally deprived of light for a period of time
19    intended to produce flower buds and induce maturation, it
20    has no more than 2 stigmas visible at each internode of the
21    cannabis plant; or
22        (2) any cannabis plant that is cultivated solely for
23    the purpose of propagating clones and is never used to
24    produce cannabis.
25(Source: P.A. 101-27, eff. 6-25-19; 101-593, eff. 12-4-19;
26102-98, eff. 7-15-21; 102-538, eff. 8-20-21; 102-813, eff.

 

 

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15-13-22.)
 
2    (410 ILCS 705/5-10)
3    Sec. 5-10. Department of Agriculture.
4    (a) The Department of Agriculture shall administer and
5enforce provisions of this Act relating to the oversight and
6registration of cultivation centers, craft growers, infuser
7organizations, and transporting organizations and agents,
8including the issuance of identification cards and
9establishing limits on potency or serving size for cannabis or
10cannabis products. The Department of Agriculture may suspend
11or revoke the license of, or impose other penalties upon
12cannabis testing facilities, cultivation centers, craft
13growers, infuser organizations, transporting organizations,
14and their principal officers, Agents-in-Charge, and agents for
15violations of this Act and any rules adopted under this Act.
16    (b) The Department of Agriculture may establish, by rule,
17market protections that protect against unfair business
18practices, including, but not limited to, price-fixing, bid
19rigging, boycotts, agreements to not compete, exclusive
20wholesale arrangements for cannabis concentrate, cannabis
21flower, cannabis-infused products, and any product that is
22licensed under this Act to ensure all license types have equal
23access to the market without unfair competition.
24(Source: P.A. 101-27, eff. 6-25-19.)
 

 

 

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1    (410 ILCS 705/5-15)
2    Sec. 5-15. Department of Financial and Professional
3Regulation.
4    (a) The Department of Financial and Professional
5Regulation shall enforce the provisions of this Act relating
6to the oversight and registration of dispensing organizations
7and agents, including the issuance of identification cards for
8dispensing organization agents. The Department of Financial
9and Professional Regulation may suspend or revoke the license
10of, or otherwise discipline dispensing organizations,
11principal officers, agents-in-charge, and agents for
12violations of this Act and any rules adopted under this Act.
13    (b) The Department of Financial and Professional
14Regulation may establish, by rule, market protections that
15protect against unfair business practices, including, but not
16limited to, price-fixing, bid rigging, boycotts, agreements to
17not compete, exclusive wholesale arrangements for cannabis
18concentrate, cannabis flower, cannabis-infused products, and
19any product that is licensed under this Act to ensure all
20license types have equal access to the market without unfair
21competition.
22(Source: P.A. 101-27, eff. 6-25-19; 101-593, eff. 12-4-19.)
 
23    (410 ILCS 705/7-10)
24    Sec. 7-10. Cannabis Business Development Fund.
25    (a) There is created in the State treasury a special fund,

 

 

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1which shall be held separate and apart from all other State
2moneys, to be known as the Cannabis Business Development Fund.
3The Cannabis Business Development Fund shall be exclusively
4used for the following purposes:
5        (1) to provide low-interest rate loans to Qualified
6    Social Equity Applicants and Social Equity Criteria
7    Lottery Licensees to pay for ordinary and necessary
8    expenses to start and operate a cannabis business
9    establishment permitted by this Act;
10        (2) to provide grants to Qualified Social Equity
11    Applicants to pay for ordinary and necessary expenses to
12    start and operate a cannabis business establishment
13    permitted by this Act;
14        (3) to compensate the Department of Commerce and
15    Economic Opportunity for any costs related to the
16    provision of low-interest loans and grants to Qualified
17    Social Equity Applicants and Social Equity Criteria
18    Lottery Licensees;
19        (4) to pay for outreach that may be provided or
20    targeted to attract and support Social Equity Applicants,
21    and Qualified Social Equity Applicants, and Social Equity
22    Criteria Lottery Licensees;
23        (5) (blank);
24        (5.5) to provide financial assistance that supports
25    lending to or private investment in Qualified Social
26    Equity Applicants and Social Equity Criteria Lottery

 

 

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1    Licensees or that facilitates access to the facilities
2    needed to commence operations as a cannabis business
3    establishment;
4        (6) to conduct any study or research concerning the
5    participation of minorities, women, veterans, or people
6    with disabilities in the cannabis industry, including,
7    without limitation, barriers to such individuals entering
8    the industry as equity owners of cannabis business
9    establishments;
10        (7) (blank); and
11        (8) to assist with job training and technical
12    assistance for residents in Disproportionately Impacted
13    Areas.
14    (b) All moneys collected under Sections 15-15 and 15-20
15for Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing Organization Licenses
16issued before January 1, 2021 and remunerations made as a
17result of transfers of permits awarded to Qualified Social
18Equity Applicants shall be deposited into the Cannabis
19Business Development Fund.
20    (c) (Blank).
21    (c-5) In addition to any other transfers that may be
22provided for by law, on July 1, 2023, or as soon thereafter as
23practical, the State Comptroller shall direct and the State
24Treasurer shall transfer the sum of $40,000,000 from the
25Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis Fund to the Cannabis
26Business Development Fund.

 

 

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1    (d) Notwithstanding any other law to the contrary, the
2Cannabis Business Development Fund is not subject to sweeps,
3administrative charge-backs, or any other fiscal or budgetary
4maneuver that would in any way transfer any amounts from the
5Cannabis Business Development Fund into any other fund of the
6State.
7(Source: P.A. 103-8, eff. 6-7-23.)
 
8    (410 ILCS 705/7-15)
9    Sec. 7-15. Loans, financial assistance, and grants to
10Qualified Social Equity Applicants and Social Equity Criteria
11Lottery Licensees.
12    (a) The Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity
13shall establish grant, and loan, and financial assistance
14programs, subject to appropriations from the Cannabis Business
15Development Fund, for the purposes of providing financial
16assistance, loans, grants, and technical assistance to
17Qualified Social Equity Applicants and Social Equity Criteria
18Lottery Licensees.
19    (b) The Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity
20has the power to:
21        (1) provide Cannabis Social Equity loans, financial
22    assistance, and grants from appropriations from the
23    Cannabis Business Development Fund to assist Qualified
24    Social Equity Applicants and Social Equity Criteria
25    Lottery Licensees in gaining entry to, and successfully

 

 

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1    operating in, the State's regulated cannabis marketplace;
2        (2) enter into agreements that set forth terms and
3    conditions of the financial assistance, accept funds or
4    grants, and engage in cooperation with private entities
5    and agencies of State or local government to carry out the
6    purposes of this Section;
7        (3) fix, determine, charge, and collect any premiums,
8    fees, charges, costs and expenses, including application
9    fees, commitment fees, program fees, financing charges, or
10    publication fees in connection with its activities under
11    this Section;
12        (4) coordinate assistance under these financial
13    assistance loan programs with activities of the Illinois
14    Department of Financial and Professional Regulation, the
15    Illinois Department of Agriculture, and other agencies as
16    needed to maximize the effectiveness and efficiency of
17    this Act;
18        (5) provide staff, administration, and related support
19    required to administer this Section;
20        (6) take whatever actions are necessary or appropriate
21    to protect the State's interest in the event of
22    bankruptcy, default, foreclosure, or noncompliance with
23    the terms and conditions of financial assistance provided
24    under this Section, including the ability to recapture
25    funds if the recipient is found to be noncompliant with
26    the terms and conditions of the financial assistance

 

 

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1    agreement;
2        (6.5) enter into financial intermediary agreements to
3    facilitate lending to or investment in Qualified Social
4    Equity Applicants, Social Equity Criteria Lottery
5    Licensees, or their subsidiaries or affiliates to ensure
6    the availability of facilities necessary to operate a
7    cannabis business establishment;
8        (7) establish application, notification, contract, and
9    other forms, procedures, or rules deemed necessary and
10    appropriate; and
11        (8) utilize vendors or contract work to carry out the
12    purposes of this Act.
13    (c) Loans made under this Section:
14        (1) shall only be made if, in the Department's
15    judgment, the project furthers the goals set forth in this
16    Act; and
17        (2) shall be in such principal amount and form and
18    contain such terms and provisions with respect to
19    security, insurance, reporting, delinquency charges,
20    default remedies, forgiveness, and other matters as the
21    Department shall determine appropriate to protect the
22    public interest and to be consistent with the purposes of
23    this Section. The terms and provisions may be less than
24    required for similar loans not covered by this Section;
25    and .
26        (3) may be distributed by a lottery if the Department

 

 

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1    determines that the amount of funding available is
2    insufficient to provide an adequate amount of funding for
3    all of the applicants eligible to receive a loan.
4    The Department may determine the number of loans available
5based on the amount of funding available and communicate the
6number of loans available on the loan application. The
7Department may use competitive criteria to establish which
8applicants are eligible to receive a grant, loan, or financial
9assistance.
10    (d) Grants made under this Section shall be awarded on a
11competitive and annual basis under the Grant Accountability
12and Transparency Act. Grants made under this Section shall
13further and promote the goals of this Act, including promotion
14of Social Equity Applicants, Qualified Social Equity
15Applicants, or Social Equity Criteria Lottery Licensees, job
16training and workforce development, and technical assistance
17to Social Equity Applicants. To the extent registration with
18the federal System for Award Management requires a grant
19applicant to certify compliance with all federal laws, the
20grant applicants under this Section shall not be required to
21register for a unique entity identifier through the federal
22System for Award Management to be qualified to receive a grant
23so long as federal law prohibits the cultivation and sale of
24cannabis.
25    (d-5) Financial intermediary agreements to provide
26financial assistance must further the goals set forth in this

 

 

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1Act and result in financing or lease costs that are affordable
2or below market rate.
3    (e) Beginning January 1, 2021 and each year thereafter,
4the Department shall annually report to the Governor and the
5General Assembly on the outcomes and effectiveness of this
6Section that shall include the following:
7        (1) the number of persons or businesses receiving
8    financial assistance under this Section;
9        (2) the amount in financial assistance awarded in the
10    aggregate, in addition to the amount of loans made that
11    are outstanding and the amount of grants awarded;
12        (3) the location of the project engaged in by the
13    person or business; and
14        (4) if applicable, the number of new jobs and other
15    forms of economic output created as a result of the
16    financial assistance.
17    (f) The Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity
18shall include engagement with individuals with limited English
19proficiency as part of its outreach provided or targeted to
20attract and support Social Equity Applicants.
21(Source: P.A. 101-27, eff. 6-25-19; 101-593, eff. 12-4-19.)
 
22    (410 ILCS 705/10-10)
23    Sec. 10-10. Possession limit.
24    (a) Except if otherwise authorized by this Act, for a
25person who is 21 years of age or older and a resident of this

 

 

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1State, the possession limit is as follows:
2        (1) 30 grams of cannabis flower;
3        (2) no more than 500 milligrams of THC contained in
4    cannabis-infused product;
5        (3) 5 grams of cannabis concentrate; and
6        (4) for registered qualifying patients, any cannabis
7    produced by cannabis plants grown under subsection (b) of
8    Section 10-5, provided any amount of cannabis produced in
9    excess of 30 grams of raw cannabis or its equivalent must
10    remain secured within the residence or residential
11    property in which it was grown.
12    (b) For a person who is 21 years of age or older and who is
13not a resident of this State, the possession limit is:
14        (1) 15 grams of cannabis flower;
15        (2) 2.5 grams of cannabis concentrate; and
16        (3) 250 milligrams of THC contained in a
17    cannabis-infused product.
18    (c) The possession limits found in subsections (a) and (b)
19of this Section are to be considered cumulative.
20    (d) No person shall knowingly obtain, seek to obtain, or
21possess an amount of cannabis from a dispensing organization
22or craft grower that would cause him or her to exceed the
23possession limit under this Section, including cannabis that
24is cultivated by a person under this Act or obtained as a
25qualified registered medical patient, Opioid Alternative
26Patient Program participant, provisional patient, or

 

 

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1designated caregiver.
2    (d-1) No qualified registered patient, provisional
3patient, Opioid Alternative Patient Program participant, or
4designated caregiver shall knowingly obtain, seek to obtain,
5or possess, individually or collectively, an amount that would
6cause the individual to exceed their adequate medical supply
7under the Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis Program Act.
8    (e) Cannabis and cannabis-derived substances regulated
9under the Industrial Hemp Act are not covered by this Act.
10(Source: P.A. 101-27, eff. 6-25-19; 101-593, eff. 12-4-19.)
 
11    (410 ILCS 705/10-15)
12    Sec. 10-15. Persons under 21 years of age.
13    (a) Nothing in this Act is intended to permit the transfer
14of cannabis, with or without remuneration, to a person under
1521 years of age, or to allow a person under 21 years of age to
16purchase, possess, use, process, transport, grow, or consume
17cannabis except where authorized by this Act, the
18Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis Program Act, or by the
19Community College Cannabis Vocational Pilot Program.
20    (b) Notwithstanding any other provisions of law
21authorizing the possession of medical cannabis or
22cannabis-infused products by a qualified registered medical
23patient, provisional patient, or designated caregiver, nothing
24in this Act authorizes a person who is under 21 years of age to
25possess cannabis. A person under 21 years of age with cannabis

 

 

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1in his or her possession is guilty of a civil law violation as
2outlined in paragraph (a) of Section 4 of the Cannabis Control
3Act.
4    (c) If the person under the age of 21 was in a motor
5vehicle at the time of the offense, the Secretary of State may
6suspend or revoke the driving privileges of any person for a
7violation of this Section under Section 6-206 of the Illinois
8Vehicle Code and the rules adopted under it.
9    (d) It is unlawful for any parent or guardian to knowingly
10permit his or her residence, any other private property under
11his or her control, or any vehicle, conveyance, or watercraft
12under his or her control to be used by an invitee of the
13parent's child or the guardian's ward, if the invitee is under
14the age of 21, in a manner that constitutes a violation of this
15Section. A parent or guardian is deemed to have knowingly
16permitted his or her residence, any other private property
17under his or her control, or any vehicle, conveyance, or
18watercraft under his or her control to be used in violation of
19this Section if he or she knowingly authorizes or permits
20consumption of cannabis by underage invitees. Any person who
21violates this subsection (d) is guilty of a Class A
22misdemeanor and the person's sentence shall include, but shall
23not be limited to, a fine of not less than $500. If a violation
24of this subsection (d) directly or indirectly results in great
25bodily harm or death to any person, the person violating this
26subsection is guilty of a Class 4 felony. In this subsection

 

 

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1(d), where the residence or other property has an owner and a
2tenant or lessee, the trier of fact may infer that the
3residence or other property is occupied only by the tenant or
4lessee.
5(Source: P.A. 101-27, eff. 6-25-19; 101-593, eff. 12-4-19.)
 
6    (410 ILCS 705/15-10)
7    Sec. 15-10. Medical cannabis dispensing organization
8exemption. This Article does not apply to medical cannabis
9dispensing organizations registered under the Compassionate
10Use of Medical Cannabis Pilot Program Act, except where
11otherwise specified. This Section is repealed on July 1, 2026.
12(Source: P.A. 101-27, eff. 6-25-19.)
 
13    (410 ILCS 705/15-13 new)
14    Sec. 15-13. Adult Use and medical cannabis dispensing
15organization license merger; medical patient prioritization.
16    (a) Beginning January 1, 2026, all medical cannabis
17dispensing organizations registered under the Compassionate
18Use of Medical Cannabis Program Act and that have received an
19Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing Organization License shall
20be deemed to be an adult use dispensing organization licensed
21pursuant to Section 15-36 of this Act. In addition to selling
22cannabis and cannabis-infused products to persons 21 years of
23age or older, beginning January 1, 2026, but no later than
24April 1, 2026, all dispensing organizations licensed pursuant

 

 

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1to Section 15-36 of this Act shall also offer services to
2registered qualifying patients, provisional patients, Opioid
3Alternative Patient Program participants, and designated
4caregivers.
5    (b) Beginning January 1, 2026, all dispensing organization
6agents registered under the Compassionate Use of Medical
7Cannabis Program Act shall be deemed to be a dispensing
8organization agent as that term is defined in this Act. All
9dispensing organization agents registered under the
10Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis Program Act shall have
11the same rights, privileges, duties, and responsibilities of
12dispensing organization agents licensed under this Act. All
13dispensing organization agents shall be subject to this Act
14and any administrative rules adopted under this Act.
15    (c) On and after January 1, 2026, any dispensing
16organization previously registered as an Early Approval Adult
17Use Dispensing Organization License or an Early Approval Adult
18Use Dispensing Organization at a secondary site shall renew
19pursuant to Section 15-45 of this Act. The Department shall
20prorate any dispensing organization previously registered as
21an Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing Organization License or
22an Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing Organization at a
23secondary site's first renewal fee due under Section 15-45.
24    (d) By April 1, 2026, all dispensing organizations shall
25pay a one-time fee of $10,000 to be deposited into the
26Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis Fund. After this

 

 

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1one-time fee, all dispensing organizations shall renew
2pursuant to the provisions of Section 15-45. The Department
3may approve payment plans that extend beyond April 1, 2026 for
4the fee paid under this subsection if the first payment under
5the payment plan is remitted by April 1, 2026.
6    (e) All dispensing organizations must maintain an adequate
7supply of cannabis and cannabis-infused products for purchase
8by qualifying patients, designated caregivers, and provisional
9patients. For the purposes of this subsection, the Department
10may promulgate administrative rules establishing what
11constitutes an adequate supply.
12    (f) If there is a shortage of cannabis or cannabis-infused
13products, a dispensing organization shall prioritize serving
14qualifying patients, designated caregivers, and provisional
15patients before serving purchasers.
16    (g) Beginning January 1, 2026, cannabis and
17cannabis-infused products purchased from a dispensing
18organization by a qualified patient, Opioid Alternative
19Patient Program participant, provisional patient, or
20designated caregiver are not subject to tax under Section
2165-10 of this Act.
 
22    (410 ILCS 705/15-15)
23    Sec. 15-15. Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing
24Organization License.
25    (a) Any medical cannabis dispensing organization holding a

 

 

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1valid registration under the Compassionate Use of Medical
2Cannabis Program Act as of the effective date of this Act may,
3within 60 days of the effective date of this Act, apply to the
4Department for an Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing
5Organization License to serve purchasers at any medical
6cannabis dispensing location in operation on the effective
7date of this Act, pursuant to this Section.
8    (b) A medical cannabis dispensing organization seeking
9issuance of an Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing
10Organization License to serve purchasers at any medical
11cannabis dispensing location in operation as of the effective
12date of this Act shall submit an application on forms provided
13by the Department. The application must be submitted by the
14same person or entity that holds the medical cannabis
15dispensing organization registration and include the
16following:
17        (1) Payment of a nonrefundable fee of $30,000 to be
18    deposited into the Cannabis Regulation Fund;
19        (2) Proof of registration as a medical cannabis
20    dispensing organization that is in good standing;
21        (3) Certification that the applicant will comply with
22    the requirements contained in the Compassionate Use of
23    Medical Cannabis Program Act except as provided in this
24    Act;
25        (4) The legal name of the dispensing organization;
26        (5) The physical address of the dispensing

 

 

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1    organization;
2        (6) The name, address, social security number, and
3    date of birth of each principal officer and board member
4    of the dispensing organization, each of whom must be at
5    least 21 years of age;
6        (7) A nonrefundable Cannabis Business Development Fee
7    equal to 3% of the dispensing organization's total sales
8    between June 1, 2018 to June 1, 2019, or $100,000,
9    whichever is less, to be deposited into the Cannabis
10    Business Development Fund; and
11        (8) Identification of one of the following Social
12    Equity Inclusion Plans to be completed by March 31, 2021:
13            (A) Make a contribution of 3% of total sales from
14        June 1, 2018 to June 1, 2019, or $100,000, whichever is
15        less, to the Cannabis Business Development Fund. This
16        is in addition to the fee required by item (7) of this
17        subsection (b);
18            (B) Make a grant of 3% of total sales from June 1,
19        2018 to June 1, 2019, or $100,000, whichever is less,
20        to a cannabis industry training or education program
21        at an Illinois community college as defined in the
22        Public Community College Act;
23            (C) Make a donation of $100,000 or more to a
24        program that provides job training services to persons
25        recently incarcerated or that operates in a
26        Disproportionately Impacted Area;

 

 

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1            (D) Participate as a host in a cannabis business
2        establishment incubator program approved by the
3        Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity, and
4        in which an Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing
5        Organization License holder agrees to provide a loan
6        of at least $100,000 and mentorship to incubate, for
7        at least a year, a Social Equity Applicant intending
8        to seek a license or a licensee that qualifies as a
9        Social Equity Applicant. As used in this Section,
10        "incubate" means providing direct financial assistance
11        and training necessary to engage in licensed cannabis
12        industry activity similar to that of the host
13        licensee. The Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing
14        Organization License holder or the same entity holding
15        any other licenses issued pursuant to this Act shall
16        not take an ownership stake of greater than 10% in any
17        business receiving incubation services to comply with
18        this subsection. If an Early Approval Adult Use
19        Dispensing Organization License holder fails to find a
20        business to incubate to comply with this subsection
21        before its Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing
22        Organization License expires, it may opt to meet the
23        requirement of this subsection by completing another
24        item from this subsection; or
25            (E) Participate in a sponsorship program for at
26        least 2 years approved by the Department of Commerce

 

 

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1        and Economic Opportunity in which an Early Approval
2        Adult Use Dispensing Organization License holder
3        agrees to provide an interest-free loan of at least
4        $200,000 to a Social Equity Applicant. The sponsor
5        shall not take an ownership stake in any cannabis
6        business establishment receiving sponsorship services
7        to comply with this subsection.
8    (b-5) Beginning 90 days after the effective date of this
9amendatory Act of the 102nd General Assembly, an Early
10Approval Adult Use Dispensing Organization licensee whose
11license was issued pursuant to this Section may apply to
12relocate within the same geographic district where its
13existing associated medical cannabis dispensing organization
14dispensary licensed under the Compassionate Use of Medical
15Cannabis Program Act is authorized to operate. A request to
16relocate under this subsection is subject to approval by the
17Department. An Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing
18Organization's application to relocate its license under this
19subsection shall be deemed approved 30 days following the
20submission of a complete application to relocate, unless
21sooner approved or denied in writing by the Department. If an
22application to relocate is denied, the Department shall
23provide, in writing, the specific reason for denial.
24    An Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing Organization may
25request to relocate under this subsection if:
26        (1) its existing location is within the boundaries of

 

 

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1    a unit of local government that prohibits the sale of
2    adult use cannabis; or
3        (2) the Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing
4    Organization has obtained the approval of the municipality
5    or, if outside the boundaries of a municipality in an
6    unincorporated area of the county, the approval of the
7    county where the existing license is located to move to
8    another location within that unit of local government.
9    At no time may an Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing
10Organization dispensary licensed under this Section operate in
11a separate facility from its associated medical cannabis
12dispensing organization dispensary licensed under the
13Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis Program Act. The
14relocation of an Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing
15Organization License under this subsection shall be subject to
16Sections 55-25 and 55-28 of this Act.
17    (c) The license fee required by paragraph (1) of
18subsection (b) of this Section shall be in addition to any
19license fee required for the renewal of a registered medical
20cannabis dispensing organization license.
21    (d) Applicants must submit all required information,
22including the requirements in subsection (b) of this Section,
23to the Department. Failure by an applicant to submit all
24required information may result in the application being
25disqualified.
26    (e) If the Department receives an application that fails

 

 

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1to provide the required elements contained in subsection (b),
2the Department shall issue a deficiency notice to the
3applicant. The applicant shall have 10 calendar days from the
4date of the deficiency notice to submit complete information.
5Applications that are still incomplete after this opportunity
6to cure may be disqualified.
7    (f) If an applicant meets all the requirements of
8subsection (b) of this Section, the Department shall issue the
9Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing Organization License
10within 14 days of receiving a completed application unless:
11        (1) The licensee or a principal officer is delinquent
12    in filing any required tax returns or paying any amounts
13    owed to the State of Illinois;
14        (2) The Secretary of Financial and Professional
15    Regulation determines there is reason, based on documented
16    compliance violations, the licensee is not entitled to an
17    Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing Organization License;
18    or
19        (3) Any principal officer fails to register and remain
20    in compliance with this Act or the Compassionate Use of
21    Medical Cannabis Program Act.
22    (g) A registered medical cannabis dispensing organization
23that obtains an Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing
24Organization License may begin selling cannabis,
25cannabis-infused products, paraphernalia, and related items to
26purchasers under the rules of this Act no sooner than January

 

 

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11, 2020.
2    (h) A dispensing organization holding a medical cannabis
3dispensing organization license issued under the Compassionate
4Use of Medical Cannabis Program Act must maintain an adequate
5supply of cannabis and cannabis-infused products for purchase
6by qualifying patients, designated caregivers, provisional
7patients, and Opioid Alternative Patient Pilot Program
8participants. For the purposes of this subsection, "adequate
9supply" means a monthly inventory level that is comparable in
10type and quantity to those medical cannabis products provided
11to qualified patients, Opioid Alternative Patient Program
12participants ,provisional patients, and designated caregivers
13on an average monthly basis for the 6 months before the
14effective date of this Act.
15    (i) If there is a shortage of cannabis or cannabis-infused
16products, a dispensing organization holding both a dispensing
17organization license under the Compassionate Use of Medical
18Cannabis Program Act and this Act shall prioritize serving
19qualifying patients, designated caregivers, provisional
20patients, and Opioid Alternative Patient Pilot Program
21participants before serving purchasers.
22    (j) Notwithstanding any law or rule to the contrary, a
23person that holds a medical cannabis dispensing organization
24license issued under the Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis
25Program Act and an Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing
26Organization License may permit purchasers into a limited

 

 

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1access area as that term is defined in administrative rules
2made under the authority in the Compassionate Use of Medical
3Cannabis Program Act.
4    (k) An Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing Organization
5License is valid until March 31, 2021. A dispensing
6organization that obtains an Early Approval Adult Use
7Dispensing Organization License shall receive written or
8electronic notice 90 days before the expiration of the license
9that the license will expire, and that informs the license
10holder that it may apply to renew its Early Approval Adult Use
11Dispensing Organization License on forms provided by the
12Department. The Department shall renew the Early Approval
13Adult Use Dispensing Organization License within 60 days of
14the renewal application being deemed complete if:
15        (1) the dispensing organization submits an application
16    and the required nonrefundable renewal fee of $30,000, to
17    be deposited into the Cannabis Regulation Fund;
18        (2) the Department has not suspended or permanently
19    revoked the Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing
20    Organization License or a medical cannabis dispensing
21    organization license on the same premises for violations
22    of this Act, the Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis
23    Program Act, or rules adopted pursuant to those Acts;
24        (3) the dispensing organization has completed a Social
25    Equity Inclusion Plan as provided by parts (A), (B), and
26    (C) of paragraph (8) of subsection (b) of this Section or

 

 

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1    has made substantial progress toward completing a Social
2    Equity Inclusion Plan as provided by parts (D) and (E) of
3    paragraph (8) of subsection (b) of this Section; and
4        (4) the dispensing organization is in compliance with
5    this Act and rules.
6    (l) The Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing Organization
7License renewed pursuant to subsection (k) of this Section
8shall expire March 31, 2022. The Early Approval Adult Use
9Dispensing Organization Licensee shall receive written or
10electronic notice 90 days before the expiration of the license
11that the license will expire, and that informs the license
12holder that it may apply for an Adult Use Dispensing
13Organization License on forms provided by the Department. The
14Department shall grant an Adult Use Dispensing Organization
15License within 60 days of an application being deemed complete
16if the applicant has met all of the criteria in Section 15-36.
17    (m) If a dispensing organization fails to submit an
18application for renewal of an Early Approval Adult Use
19Dispensing Organization License or for an Adult Use Dispensing
20Organization License before the expiration dates provided in
21subsections (k) and (l) of this Section, the dispensing
22organization shall cease serving purchasers and cease all
23operations until it receives a renewal or an Adult Use
24Dispensing Organization License, as the case may be.
25    (n) A dispensing organization agent who holds a valid
26dispensing organization agent identification card issued under

 

 

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1the Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis Program Act and is
2an officer, director, manager, or employee of the dispensing
3organization licensed under this Section may engage in all
4activities authorized by this Article to be performed by a
5dispensing organization agent.
6    (o) If the Department suspends, permanently revokes, or
7otherwise disciplines the Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing
8Organization License of a dispensing organization that also
9holds a medical cannabis dispensing organization license
10issued under the Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis Program
11Act, the Department may consider the suspension, permanent
12revocation, or other discipline of the medical cannabis
13dispensing organization license.
14    (p) All fees collected pursuant to this Section shall be
15deposited into the Cannabis Regulation Fund, unless otherwise
16specified.
17    (q) On and after January 1, 2026, all dispensaries which
18were previously issued an Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing
19Organization License pursuant to this Section shall be deemed
20to be a dispensary pursuant to Section 15-36 of this Act.
21    (r) This Section is repealed on July 1, 2026.
22(Source: P.A. 101-27, eff. 6-25-19; 101-593, eff. 12-4-19;
23102-98, eff. 7-15-21.)
 
24    (410 ILCS 705/15-17 new)
25    Sec. 15-17. Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing

 

 

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1Organization License merger with Adult Use Dispensing
2Organization License.
3    (a) On and after January 1, 2026, all dispensing
4organizations previously registered as an Early Approval Adult
5Use Dispensing Organization License shall be a dispensing
6organization or a dispensary under this Act and shall be an
7Adult Use Dispensing Organization License holder under Section
815-36 of this Act.
9    (b) The BLS Region in which the dispensing organization
10licensee's Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing Organization
11License was originally issued shall be considered the
12licensee's BLS Region. The dispensing organization shall
13remain in that BLS Region even if the license or licensee
14changes its ownership, is sold, is relocated under Section
1515-24 of this Act, or receives authorization under subsection
167 (e-5) of Section 15-25.
 
17    (410 ILCS 705/15-20)
18    Sec. 15-20. Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing
19Organization License; secondary site.
20    (a) Any medical cannabis dispensing organization holding a
21valid registration under the Compassionate Use of Medical
22Cannabis Program Act as of the effective date of this Act may,
23within 60 days of the effective date of this Act, apply to the
24Department for an Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing
25Organization License to operate a dispensing organization to

 

 

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1serve purchasers at a secondary site not within 1,500 feet of
2another medical cannabis dispensing organization or adult use
3dispensing organization. The Early Approval Adult Use
4Dispensing Organization secondary site shall be within any BLS
5Region that shares territory with the dispensing organization
6district to which the medical cannabis dispensing organization
7is assigned under the administrative rules for dispensing
8organizations under the Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis
9Program Act.
10    (a-5) If, within 360 days of the effective date of this
11Act, a dispensing organization is unable to find a location
12within the BLS Regions prescribed in subsection (a) of this
13Section in which to operate an Early Approval Adult Use
14Dispensing Organization at a secondary site because no
15jurisdiction within the prescribed area allows the operation
16of an Adult Use Cannabis Dispensing Organization, the
17Department of Financial and Professional Regulation may waive
18the geographic restrictions of subsection (a) of this Section
19and specify another BLS Region into which the dispensary may
20be placed.
21    (b) (Blank).
22    (c) A medical cannabis dispensing organization seeking
23issuance of an Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing
24Organization License at a secondary site to serve purchasers
25at a secondary site as prescribed in subsection (a) of this
26Section shall submit an application on forms provided by the

 

 

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1Department. The application must meet or include the following
2qualifications:
3        (1) a payment of a nonrefundable application fee of
4    $30,000;
5        (2) proof of registration as a medical cannabis
6    dispensing organization that is in good standing;
7        (3) submission of the application by the same person
8    or entity that holds the medical cannabis dispensing
9    organization registration;
10        (4) the legal name of the medical cannabis dispensing
11    organization;
12        (5) the physical address of the medical cannabis
13    dispensing organization and the proposed physical address
14    of the secondary site;
15        (6) a copy of the current local zoning ordinance
16    Sections relevant to dispensary operations and
17    documentation of the approval, the conditional approval or
18    the status of a request for zoning approval from the local
19    zoning office that the proposed dispensary location is in
20    compliance with the local zoning rules;
21        (7) a plot plan of the dispensary drawn to scale. The
22    applicant shall submit general specifications of the
23    building exterior and interior layout;
24        (8) a statement that the dispensing organization
25    agrees to respond to the Department's supplemental
26    requests for information;

 

 

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1        (9) for the building or land to be used as the proposed
2    dispensary:
3            (A) if the property is not owned by the applicant,
4        a written statement from the property owner and
5        landlord, if any, certifying consent that the
6        applicant may operate a dispensary on the premises; or
7            (B) if the property is owned by the applicant,
8        confirmation of ownership;
9        (10) a copy of the proposed operating bylaws;
10        (11) a copy of the proposed business plan that
11    complies with the requirements in this Act, including, at
12    a minimum, the following:
13            (A) a description of services to be offered; and
14            (B) a description of the process of dispensing
15        cannabis;
16        (12) a copy of the proposed security plan that
17    complies with the requirements in this Article, including:
18            (A) a description of the delivery process by which
19        cannabis will be received from a transporting
20        organization, including receipt of manifests and
21        protocols that will be used to avoid diversion, theft,
22        or loss at the dispensary acceptance point; and
23            (B) the process or controls that will be
24        implemented to monitor the dispensary, secure the
25        premises, agents, patients, and currency, and prevent
26        the diversion, theft, or loss of cannabis; and

 

 

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1            (C) the process to ensure that access to the
2        restricted access areas is restricted to, registered
3        agents, service professionals, transporting
4        organization agents, Department inspectors, and
5        security personnel;
6        (13) a proposed inventory control plan that complies
7    with this Section;
8        (14) the name, address, social security number, and
9    date of birth of each principal officer and board member
10    of the dispensing organization; each of those individuals
11    shall be at least 21 years of age;
12        (15) a nonrefundable Cannabis Business Development Fee
13    equal to $200,000, to be deposited into the Cannabis
14    Business Development Fund; and
15        (16) a commitment to completing one of the following
16    Social Equity Inclusion Plans in subsection (d).
17    (d) Before receiving an Early Approval Adult Use
18Dispensing Organization License at a secondary site, a
19dispensing organization shall indicate the Social Equity
20Inclusion Plan that the applicant plans to achieve before the
21expiration of the Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing
22Organization License from the list below:
23        (1) make a contribution of 3% of total sales from June
24    1, 2018 to June 1, 2019, or $100,000, whichever is less, to
25    the Cannabis Business Development Fund. This is in
26    addition to the fee required by paragraph (16) of

 

 

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1    subsection (c) of this Section;
2        (2) make a grant of 3% of total sales from June 1, 2018
3    to June 1, 2019, or $100,000, whichever is less, to a
4    cannabis industry training or education program at an
5    Illinois community college as defined in the Public
6    Community College Act;
7        (3) make a donation of $100,000 or more to a program
8    that provides job training services to persons recently
9    incarcerated or that operates in a Disproportionately
10    Impacted Area;
11        (4) participate as a host in a cannabis business
12    establishment incubator program approved by the Department
13    of Commerce and Economic Opportunity, and in which an
14    Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing Organization License
15    at a secondary site holder agrees to provide a loan of at
16    least $100,000 and mentorship to incubate, for at least a
17    year, a Social Equity Applicant intending to seek a
18    license or a licensee that qualifies as a Social Equity
19    Applicant. In this paragraph (4), "incubate" means
20    providing direct financial assistance and training
21    necessary to engage in licensed cannabis industry activity
22    similar to that of the host licensee. The Early Approval
23    Adult Use Dispensing Organization License holder or the
24    same entity holding any other licenses issued under this
25    Act shall not take an ownership stake of greater than 10%
26    in any business receiving incubation services to comply

 

 

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1    with this subsection. If an Early Approval Adult Use
2    Dispensing Organization License at a secondary site holder
3    fails to find a business to incubate in order to comply
4    with this subsection before its Early Approval Adult Use
5    Dispensing Organization License at a secondary site
6    expires, it may opt to meet the requirement of this
7    subsection by completing another item from this subsection
8    before the expiration of its Early Approval Adult Use
9    Dispensing Organization License at a secondary site to
10    avoid a penalty; or
11        (5) participate in a sponsorship program for at least
12    2 years approved by the Department of Commerce and
13    Economic Opportunity in which an Early Approval Adult Use
14    Dispensing Organization License at a secondary site holder
15    agrees to provide an interest-free loan of at least
16    $200,000 to a Social Equity Applicant. The sponsor shall
17    not take an ownership stake of greater than 10% in any
18    business receiving sponsorship services to comply with
19    this subsection.
20    (e) The license fee required by paragraph (1) of
21subsection (c) of this Section is in addition to any license
22fee required for the renewal of a registered medical cannabis
23dispensing organization license.
24    (f) Applicants must submit all required information,
25including the requirements in subsection (c) of this Section,
26to the Department. Failure by an applicant to submit all

 

 

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1required information may result in the application being
2disqualified. Principal officers shall not be required to
3submit to the fingerprint and background check requirements of
4Section 5-20.
5    (g) If the Department receives an application that fails
6to provide the required elements contained in subsection (c),
7the Department shall issue a deficiency notice to the
8applicant. The applicant shall have 10 calendar days from the
9date of the deficiency notice to submit complete information.
10Applications that are still incomplete after this opportunity
11to cure may be disqualified.
12    (h) Once all required information and documents have been
13submitted, the Department will review the application. The
14Department may request revisions and retains final approval
15over dispensary features. Once the application is complete and
16meets the Department's approval, the Department shall
17conditionally approve the license. Final approval is
18contingent on the build-out and Department inspection.
19    (i) Upon submission of the Early Approval Adult Use
20Dispensing Organization at a secondary site application, the
21applicant shall request an inspection and the Department may
22inspect the Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing Organization's
23secondary site to confirm compliance with the application and
24this Act.
25    (j) The Department shall only issue an Early Approval
26Adult Use Dispensing Organization License at a secondary site

 

 

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1after the completion of a successful inspection.
2    (k) If an applicant passes the inspection under this
3Section, the Department shall issue the Early Approval Adult
4Use Dispensing Organization License at a secondary site within
510 business days unless:
6        (1) the The licensee, any principal officer or board
7    member of the licensee, or any person having a financial
8    or voting interest of 5% or greater in the licensee is
9    delinquent in filing any required tax returns or paying
10    any amounts owed to the State of Illinois; or
11        (2) the The Secretary of Financial and Professional
12    Regulation determines there is reason, based on documented
13    compliance violations, the licensee is not entitled to an
14    Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing Organization License
15    at its secondary site.
16    (l) Once the Department has issued a license, the
17dispensing organization shall notify the Department of the
18proposed opening date.
19    (m) A registered medical cannabis dispensing organization
20that obtains an Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing
21Organization License at a secondary site may begin selling
22cannabis, cannabis-infused products, paraphernalia, and
23related items to purchasers under the rules of this Act no
24sooner than January 1, 2020.
25    (n) If there is a shortage of cannabis or cannabis-infused
26products, a dispensing organization holding both a dispensing

 

 

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1organization license under the Compassionate Use of Medical
2Cannabis Program Act and this Article shall prioritize serving
3qualifying patients, Opioid Alternative Patient Program
4participants, provisional patients, and designated caregivers
5before serving purchasers.
6    (o) An Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing Organization
7License at a secondary site is valid until March 31, 2021. A
8dispensing organization that obtains an Early Approval Adult
9Use Dispensing Organization License at a secondary site shall
10receive written or electronic notice 90 days before the
11expiration of the license that the license will expire, and
12inform the license holder that it may renew its Early Approval
13Adult Use Dispensing Organization License at a secondary site.
14The Department shall renew an Early Approval Adult Use
15Dispensing Organization License at a secondary site within 60
16days of submission of the renewal application being deemed
17complete if:
18        (1) the dispensing organization submits an application
19    and the required nonrefundable renewal fee of $30,000, to
20    be deposited into the Cannabis Regulation Fund;
21        (2) the Department has not suspended or permanently
22    revoked the Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing
23    Organization License or a medical cannabis dispensing
24    organization license held by the same person or entity for
25    violating this Act or rules adopted under this Act or the
26    Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis Program Act or rules

 

 

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1    adopted under that Act; and
2        (3) the dispensing organization has completed a Social
3    Equity Inclusion Plan provided by paragraph (1), (2), or
4    (3) of subsection (d) of this Section or has made
5    substantial progress toward completing a Social Equity
6    Inclusion Plan provided by paragraph (4) or (5) of
7    subsection (d) of this Section.
8    (p) The Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing Organization
9Licensee at a secondary site renewed pursuant to subsection
10(o) shall receive written or electronic notice 90 days before
11the expiration of the license that the license will expire,
12and that informs the license holder that it may apply for an
13Adult Use Dispensing Organization License on forms provided by
14the Department. The Department shall grant an Adult Use
15Dispensing Organization License within 60 days of an
16application being deemed complete if the applicant has meet
17all of the criteria in Section 15-36.
18    (q) If a dispensing organization fails to submit an
19application for renewal of an Early Approval Adult Use
20Dispensing Organization License or for an Adult Use Dispensing
21Organization License before the expiration dates provided in
22subsections (o) and (p) of this Section, the dispensing
23organization shall cease serving purchasers until it receives
24a renewal or an Adult Use Dispensing Organization License.
25    (r) A dispensing organization agent who holds a valid
26dispensing organization agent identification card issued under

 

 

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1the Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis Program Act and is
2an officer, director, manager, or employee of the dispensing
3organization licensed under this Section may engage in all
4activities authorized by this Article to be performed by a
5dispensing organization agent.
6    (s) If the Department suspends, permanently revokes, or
7otherwise disciplines the Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing
8Organization License of a dispensing organization that also
9holds a medical cannabis dispensing organization license
10issued under the Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis Program
11Act, the Department may consider the suspension, permanent
12revocation, or other discipline as grounds to take
13disciplinary action against the medical cannabis dispensing
14organization.
15    (t) All fees collected pursuant to this Section shall be
16deposited into the Cannabis Regulation Fund, unless otherwise
17specified.
18    (u) On and after January 1, 2026, all dispensaries that
19were previously issued an Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing
20Organization at a secondary site license pursuant to this
21Section shall be deemed to be a dispensary pursuant to Section
2215-36 of this Act.
23    (v) This Section is repealed on July 1, 2026.
24(Source: P.A. 101-27, eff. 6-25-19; 101-593, eff. 12-4-19;
25revised 7-19-24.)
 

 

 

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1    (410 ILCS 705/15-23 new)
2    Sec. 15-23. Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing
3Organization at a secondary site license merger with Adult Use
4Dispensing Organization license.
5    (a) On and after January 1, 2026, all dispensing
6organizations previously registered as an Early Approval Adult
7Use Dispensing Organization at a secondary site license shall
8be a dispensing organization or a dispensary under this Act
9and shall be an Adult Use Dispensing Organization License
10holder under Section 15-36 of this Act.
11    (b) The BLS Region in which the dispensing organization
12licensee's Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing Organization at
13a secondary site license was originally issued shall be
14considered the licensee's BLS Region. The dispensing
15organization shall remain in that BLS Region even if the
16license or licensee changes its ownership, is sold, is
17relocated under Section 15-24 of this Act, or receives
18authorization under subsection (e-5) of Section 15-25.
 
19    (410 ILCS 705/15-24 new)
20    Sec. 15-24. Adult Use Dispensing Organization Licensee
21relocation.
22    (a) An Adult Use Dispensing Organization licensee may
23apply to relocate within the Licensee's specific BLS Region
24consistent with this Section. A request to relocate under this
25Section is subject to approval by the Department. An Adult Use

 

 

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1Dispensing Organization's application to relocate its license
2under this Section shall be considered to be approved 30 days
3following the submission of a complete application to
4relocate, unless the request is sooner approved or denied in
5writing by the Department. If an application to relocate is
6denied, the Department shall provide, in writing, the specific
7reason for denial. An Adult Use Dispensing Organization may
8request to relocate under this Section only if:
9        (1) the Adult Use Dispensing Organization's existing
10    location is within the boundaries of a unit of local
11    government that prohibits the sale of adult use cannabis;
12        (2) the Adult Use Dispensing Organization has obtained
13    the zoning approval of a new location by the municipality
14    it currently operates in if the new location is within
15    that same municipality, or if outside the boundaries of a
16    municipality in an unincorporated area of the county, the
17    zoning approval of a new location by the county where it
18    currently operates in if the new location is within the
19    same county, to move to a different location within that
20    unit of local government; or
21        (3) the Adult Use Dispensing Organization has obtained
22    the approval, as evidenced by a letter of intent or full
23    zoning approval, to operate within the boundaries of a new
24    unit of local government, so long as the new unit of local
25    government is within the dispensing organization's
26    specific BLS Region.

 

 

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1    (b) The relocation of an Adult Use Dispensing Organization
2Licensee under this Section shall be subject to Sections 55-25
3and 55-28.
 
4    (410 ILCS 705/15-25)
5    Sec. 15-25. Awarding of Conditional Adult Use Dispensing
6Organization Licenses prior to January 1, 2021.
7    (a) The Department shall issue up to 75 Conditional Adult
8Use Dispensing Organization Licenses before May 1, 2020.
9    (b) The Department shall make the application for a
10Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization License
11available no later than October 1, 2019 and shall accept
12applications no later than January 1, 2020.
13    (c) To ensure the geographic dispersion of Conditional
14Adult Use Dispensing Organization License holders, the
15following number of licenses shall be awarded in each BLS
16Region as determined by each region's percentage of the
17State's population:
18        (1) Bloomington: 1
19        (2) Cape Girardeau: 1
20        (3) Carbondale-Marion: 1
21        (4) Champaign-Urbana: 1
22        (5) Chicago-Naperville-Elgin: 47
23        (6) Danville: 1
24        (7) Davenport-Moline-Rock Island: 1
25        (8) Decatur: 1

 

 

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1        (9) Kankakee: 1
2        (10) Peoria: 3
3        (11) Rockford: 2
4        (12) St. Louis: 4
5        (13) Springfield: 1
6        (14) Northwest Illinois nonmetropolitan: 3
7        (15) West Central Illinois nonmetropolitan: 3
8        (16) East Central Illinois nonmetropolitan: 2
9        (17) South Illinois nonmetropolitan: 2
10    (d) An applicant seeking issuance of a Conditional Adult
11Use Dispensing Organization License shall submit an
12application on forms provided by the Department. An applicant
13must meet the following requirements:
14        (1) Payment of a nonrefundable application fee of
15    $5,000 for each license for which the applicant is
16    applying, which shall be deposited into the Cannabis
17    Regulation Fund;
18        (2) Certification that the applicant will comply with
19    the requirements contained in this Act;
20        (3) The legal name of the proposed dispensing
21    organization;
22        (4) A statement that the dispensing organization
23    agrees to respond to the Department's supplemental
24    requests for information;
25        (5) From each principal officer, a statement
26    indicating whether that person:

 

 

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1            (A) has previously held or currently holds an
2        ownership interest in a cannabis business
3        establishment in Illinois; or
4            (B) has held an ownership interest in a dispensing
5        organization or its equivalent in another state or
6        territory of the United States that had the dispensing
7        organization registration or license suspended,
8        revoked, placed on probationary status, or subjected
9        to other disciplinary action;
10        (6) Disclosure of whether any principal officer has
11    ever filed for bankruptcy or defaulted on spousal support
12    or child support obligation;
13        (7) A resume for each principal officer, including
14    whether that person has an academic degree, certification,
15    or relevant experience with a cannabis business
16    establishment or in a related industry;
17        (8) A description of the training and education that
18    will be provided to dispensing organization agents;
19        (9) A copy of the proposed operating bylaws;
20        (10) A copy of the proposed business plan that
21    complies with the requirements in this Act, including, at
22    a minimum, the following:
23            (A) A description of services to be offered; and
24            (B) A description of the process of dispensing
25        cannabis;
26        (11) A copy of the proposed security plan that

 

 

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1    complies with the requirements in this Article, including:
2            (A) The process or controls that will be
3        implemented to monitor the dispensary, secure the
4        premises, agents, and currency, and prevent the
5        diversion, theft, or loss of cannabis; and
6            (B) The process to ensure that access to the
7        restricted access areas is restricted to, registered
8        agents, service professionals, transporting
9        organization agents, Department inspectors, and
10        security personnel;
11        (12) A proposed inventory control plan that complies
12    with this Section;
13        (13) A proposed floor plan, a square footage estimate,
14    and a description of proposed security devices, including,
15    without limitation, cameras, motion detectors, servers,
16    video storage capabilities, and alarm service providers;
17        (14) The name, address, social security number, and
18    date of birth of each principal officer and board member
19    of the dispensing organization; each of those individuals
20    shall be at least 21 years of age;
21        (15) Evidence of the applicant's status as a Social
22    Equity Applicant, if applicable, and whether a Social
23    Equity Applicant plans to apply for a loan or grant issued
24    by the Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity;
25        (16) The address, telephone number, and email address
26    of the applicant's principal place of business, if

 

 

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1    applicable. A post office box is not permitted;
2        (17) Written summaries of any information regarding
3    instances in which a business or not-for-profit that a
4    prospective board member previously managed or served on
5    were fined or censured, or any instances in which a
6    business or not-for-profit that a prospective board member
7    previously managed or served on had its registration
8    suspended or revoked in any administrative or judicial
9    proceeding;
10        (18) A plan for community engagement;
11        (19) Procedures to ensure accurate recordkeeping and
12    security measures that are in accordance with this Article
13    and Department rules;
14        (20) The estimated volume of cannabis it plans to
15    store at the dispensary;
16        (21) A description of the features that will provide
17    accessibility to purchasers as required by the Americans
18    with Disabilities Act;
19        (22) A detailed description of air treatment systems
20    that will be installed to reduce odors;
21        (23) A reasonable assurance that the issuance of a
22    license will not have a detrimental impact on the
23    community in which the applicant wishes to locate;
24        (24) The dated signature of each principal officer;
25        (25) A description of the enclosed, locked facility
26    where cannabis will be stored by the dispensing

 

 

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1    organization;
2        (26) Signed statements from each dispensing
3    organization agent stating that he or she will not divert
4    cannabis;
5        (27) The number of licenses it is applying for in each
6    BLS Region;
7        (28) A diversity plan that includes a narrative of at
8    least 2,500 words that establishes a goal of diversity in
9    ownership, management, employment, and contracting to
10    ensure that diverse participants and groups are afforded
11    equality of opportunity;
12        (29) A contract with a private security contractor
13    agency that is licensed under Section 10-5 of the Private
14    Detective, Private Alarm, Private Security, Fingerprint
15    Vendor, and Locksmith Act of 2004 in order for the
16    dispensary to have adequate security at its facility; and
17        (30) Other information deemed necessary by the
18    Illinois Cannabis Regulation Oversight Officer to conduct
19    the disparity and availability study referenced in
20    subsection (e) of Section 5-45.
21    (e) An applicant who receives a Conditional Adult Use
22Dispensing Organization License under this Section has 180
23days from the date of award to identify a physical location for
24the dispensing organization retail storefront. The applicant
25shall provide evidence that the location is not within 1,500
26feet of an existing dispensing organization, unless the

 

 

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1applicant is a Social Equity Applicant or Social Equity
2Justice Involved Applicant located or seeking to locate within
31,500 feet of a dispensing organization licensed under Section
415-15 or Section 15-20. However, the Department may approve
5locations to be within 1,500 feet of each other if both have
6received local government zoning approval for sites within
71,500 feet of each other and the conditional licenses were
8issued pursuant to a lottery conducted under 68 Ill. Adm. Code
91291.50, subsection (c) of Section 15-35.20, Section 15-35, or
10Section 15-35.10. If an applicant is unable to find a suitable
11physical address in the opinion of the Department within 180
12days of the issuance of the Conditional Adult Use Dispensing
13Organization License, the Department may extend the period for
14finding a physical address an additional 540 days if the
15Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization License holder
16demonstrates concrete attempts to secure a location and a
17hardship. If the Department denies the extension or the
18Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization License holder
19is unable to either find a location within 720 days of being
20awarded a conditional license and become operational within
21180 days thereafter, or become operational within 720 days of
22being awarded a conditional license, the Department may,
23considering the totality of the circumstances, rescind the
24conditional license. If the conditional license holder does
25not become operational within 365 days after having found a
26location, the Department may mandate a date by which the

 

 

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1conditional license holder shall become operational prior to
2the Department rescinding the conditional license. If the
3Department rescinds shall rescind the conditional license and
4award it to the next highest scoring applicant in the BLS
5Region for which the license was assigned, provided the
6applicant receiving the license: (i) confirms a continued
7interest in operating a dispensing organization; (ii) can
8provide evidence that the applicant continues to meet all
9requirements for holding a Conditional Adult Use Dispensing
10Organization License set forth in this Act; and (iii) has not
11otherwise become ineligible to be awarded a dispensing
12organization license. If the new awardee is unable to accept
13the Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization License, the
14Department may issue shall award the Conditional Adult Use
15Dispensing Organization License to the next highest scoring
16applicant in the same manner. The new awardee shall be subject
17to the same required deadlines as provided in this subsection.
18    (e-5) If, within 720 days of being awarded a Conditional
19Adult Use Dispensing Organization License, a dispensing
20organization is unable to find a location within the BLS
21Region in which it was awarded a Conditional Adult Use
22Dispensing Organization License because no jurisdiction within
23the BLS Region allows for the operation of an Adult Use
24Dispensing Organization, the Department of Financial and
25Professional Regulation may authorize the Conditional Adult
26Use Dispensing Organization License holder to transfer its

 

 

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1license to a BLS Region specified by the Department.
2    (f) A dispensing organization that is awarded a
3Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization License pursuant
4to the criteria in Section 15-30 shall not purchase, possess,
5sell, or dispense cannabis or cannabis-infused products until
6the person has received an Adult Use Dispensing Organization
7License issued by the Department pursuant to Section 15-36 of
8this Act.
9    (g) The Department shall conduct a background check of the
10prospective organization agents in order to carry out this
11Article. The Illinois State Police shall charge the applicant
12a fee for conducting the criminal history record check, which
13shall be deposited into the State Police Services Fund and
14shall not exceed the actual cost of the record check. Each
15person applying as a dispensing organization agent shall
16submit a full set of fingerprints to the Illinois State Police
17for the purpose of obtaining a State and federal criminal
18records check. These fingerprints shall be checked against the
19fingerprint records now and hereafter, to the extent allowed
20by law, filed in the Illinois State Police and Federal Bureau
21of Identification criminal history records databases. The
22Illinois State Police shall furnish, following positive
23identification, all Illinois conviction information to the
24Department.
25(Source: P.A. 102-98, eff. 7-15-21; 102-538, eff. 8-20-21;
26102-813, eff. 5-13-22; 103-8, eff. 6-7-23.)
 

 

 

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1    (410 ILCS 705/15-35)
2    Sec. 15-35. Qualifying Applicant Lottery for Conditional
3Adult Use Dispensing Organization Licenses.
4    (a) In addition to any of the licenses issued under
5Section 15-15, Section 15-20, Section 15-25, Section 15-30.20,
6or Section 15-35.10 of this Act, within 10 business days after
7the resulting final scores for all scored applications
8pursuant to Sections 15-25 and 15-30 are released, the
9Department shall issue up to 55 Conditional Adult Use
10Dispensing Organization Licenses by lot, pursuant to the
11application process adopted under this Section. In order to be
12eligible to be awarded a Conditional Adult Use Dispensing
13Organization License by lot under this Section, a Dispensary
14Applicant must be a Qualifying Applicant.
15    The licenses issued under this Section shall be awarded in
16each BLS Region in the following amounts:
17        (1) Bloomington: 1.
18        (2) Cape Girardeau: 1.
19        (3) Carbondale-Marion: 1.
20        (4) Champaign-Urbana: 1.
21        (5) Chicago-Naperville-Elgin: 36.
22        (6) Danville: 1.
23        (7) Davenport-Moline-Rock Island: 1.
24        (8) Decatur: 1.
25        (9) Kankakee: 1.

 

 

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1        (10) Peoria: 2.
2        (11) Rockford: 1.
3        (12) St. Louis: 3.
4        (13) Springfield: 1.
5        (14) Northwest Illinois nonmetropolitan: 1.
6        (15) West Central Illinois nonmetropolitan: 1.
7        (16) East Central Illinois nonmetropolitan: 1.
8        (17) South Illinois nonmetropolitan: 1.
9    (a-5) Prior to issuing licenses under subsection (a), the
10Department may adopt rules through emergency rulemaking in
11accordance with subsection (kk) of Section 5-45 of the
12Illinois Administrative Procedure Act. The General Assembly
13finds that the adoption of rules to regulate cannabis use is
14deemed an emergency and necessary for the public interest,
15safety, and welfare.
16    (b) The Department shall distribute the available licenses
17established under this Section subject to the following:
18        (1) The drawing by lot for all available licenses
19    issued under this Section shall occur on the same day when
20    practicable.
21        (2) Within each BLS Region, the first Qualifying
22    Applicant drawn will have the first right to an available
23    license. The second Qualifying Applicant drawn will have
24    the second right to an available license. The same pattern
25    will continue for each subsequent Qualifying Applicant
26    drawn.

 

 

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1        (3) The process for distributing available licenses
2    under this Section shall be recorded by the Department in
3    a format selected by the Department.
4        (4) A Dispensary Applicant is prohibited from becoming
5    a Qualifying Applicant if a principal officer resigns
6    after the resulting final scores for all scored
7    applications pursuant to Sections 15-25 and 15-30 are
8    released.
9        (5) No Qualifying Applicant may be awarded more than 2
10    Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization Licenses at
11    the conclusion of a lottery conducted under this Section.
12        (6) No individual may be listed as a principal officer
13    of more than 2 Conditional Adult Use Dispensing
14    Organization Licenses awarded under this Section.
15        (7) If, upon being selected for an available license
16    established under this Section, a Qualifying Applicant
17    exceeds the limits under paragraph (5) or (6), the
18    Qualifying Applicant must choose which license to abandon
19    and notify the Department in writing within 5 business
20    days. If the Qualifying Applicant does not notify the
21    Department as required, the Department shall refuse to
22    issue the Qualifying Applicant all available licenses
23    established under this Section obtained by lot in all BLS
24    Regions.
25        (8) If, upon being selected for an available license
26    established under this Section, a Qualifying Applicant has

 

 

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1    a principal officer who is a principal officer in more
2    than 10 Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing Organization
3    Licenses, Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization
4    Licenses, Adult Use Dispensing Organization Licenses, or
5    any combination thereof, the licensees and the Qualifying
6    Applicant listing that principal officer must choose which
7    license to abandon pursuant to subsection (d) of Section
8    15-36 and notify the Department in writing within 5
9    business days. If the Qualifying Applicant or licensees do
10    not notify the Department as required, the Department
11    shall refuse to issue the Qualifying Applicant all
12    available licenses established under this Section obtained
13    by lot in all BLS Regions.
14        (9) All available licenses that have been abandoned
15    under paragraph (7) or (8) shall be distributed to the
16    next Qualifying Applicant drawn by lot.
17    Any and all rights conferred or obtained under this
18Section shall be limited to the provisions of this Section.
19    (c) An applicant who receives a Conditional Adult Use
20Dispensing Organization License under this Section has 180
21days from the date it is awarded to identify a physical
22location for the dispensing organization's retail storefront.
23The applicant shall provide evidence that the location is not
24within 1,500 feet of an existing dispensing organization,
25unless the applicant is a Social Equity Applicant or Social
26Equity Justice Involved Applicant located or seeking to locate

 

 

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1within 1,500 feet of a dispensing organization licensed under
2Section 15-15 or Section 15-20. If an applicant is unable to
3find a suitable physical address in the opinion of the
4Department within 180 days from the issuance of the
5Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization License, the
6Department may extend the period for finding a physical
7address an additional 540 days if the Conditional Adult Use
8Dispensing Organization License holder demonstrates a concrete
9attempt to secure a location and a hardship. If the Department
10denies the extension or the Conditional Adult Use Dispensing
11Organization License holder is unable to either find a
12location within 720 days of being awarded a conditional
13license and become operational within 180 days thereafter, or
14become operational within 720 days of being awarded a
15Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization License under
16this Section, the Department may, considering the totality of
17the circumstances, rescind the conditional license. If the
18conditional license holder does not become operational within
19365 days after having found a location, the Department may
20mandate a date by which the conditional license holder shall
21become operational prior to the Department rescinding the
22conditional license. If the Department rescinds shall rescind
23the Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization License, it
24may issue and award it pursuant to subsection (b), provided
25the applicant receiving the Conditional Adult Use Dispensing
26Organization License: (i) confirms a continued interest in

 

 

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1operating a dispensing organization; (ii) can provide evidence
2that the applicant continues to meet all requirements for
3holding a Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization
4License set forth in this Act; and (iii) has not otherwise
5become ineligible to be awarded a Conditional Adult Use
6Dispensing Organization License. If the new awardee is unable
7to accept the Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization
8License, the Department may issue shall award the Conditional
9Adult Use Dispensing Organization License pursuant to
10subsection (b). The new conditional license holder awardee
11shall be subject to the same required deadlines as provided in
12this subsection. However, the Department may approve locations
13to be within 1,500 feet of each other if both have received
14local government zoning approval for sites within 1,500 feet
15of each other and the conditional licenses were issued
16pursuant to a lottery conducted under 68 Ill. Adm. Code
171291.50, subsection (c) of Section 15-35.20, Section 15-35, or
18Section 15-35.10.
19    (d) If, within 720 days of being awarded a Conditional
20Adult Use Dispensing Organization License, a dispensing
21organization is unable to find a location within the BLS
22Region in which it was awarded a Conditional Adult Use
23Dispensing Organization License because no jurisdiction within
24the BLS Region allows for the operation of an Adult Use
25Dispensing Organization, the Department may authorize the
26Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization License holder

 

 

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1to transfer its Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization
2License to a BLS Region specified by the Department.
3    (e) A dispensing organization that is awarded a
4Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization License under
5this Section shall not purchase, possess, sell, or dispense
6cannabis or cannabis-infused products until the dispensing
7organization has received an Adult Use Dispensing Organization
8License issued by the Department pursuant to Section 15-36.
9    (f) The Department shall conduct a background check of the
10prospective dispensing organization agents in order to carry
11out this Article. The Illinois State Police shall charge the
12applicant a fee for conducting the criminal history record
13check, which shall be deposited into the State Police Services
14Fund and shall not exceed the actual cost of the record check.
15Each person applying as a dispensing organization agent shall
16submit a full set of fingerprints to the Illinois State Police
17for the purpose of obtaining a State and federal criminal
18records check. These fingerprints shall be checked against the
19fingerprint records now and hereafter, to the extent allowed
20by law, filed with the Illinois State Police and the Federal
21Bureau of Investigation criminal history records databases.
22The Illinois State Police shall furnish, following positive
23identification, all Illinois conviction information to the
24Department.
25    (g) The Department may verify information contained in
26each application and accompanying documentation to assess the

 

 

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1applicant's veracity and fitness to operate a dispensing
2organization.
3    (h) The Department may, in its discretion, refuse to issue
4authorization to an applicant who meets any of the following
5criteria:
6        (1) An applicant who is unqualified to perform the
7    duties required of the applicant.
8        (2) An applicant who fails to disclose or states
9    falsely any information called for in the application.
10        (3) An applicant who has been found guilty of a
11    violation of this Act, who has had any disciplinary order
12    entered against the applicant by the Department, who has
13    entered into a disciplinary or nondisciplinary agreement
14    with the Department, whose medical cannabis dispensing
15    organization, medical cannabis cultivation organization,
16    Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing Organization License,
17    Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing Organization License
18    at a secondary site, Early Approval Cultivation Center
19    License, Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization
20    License, or Adult Use Dispensing Organization License was
21    suspended, restricted, revoked, or denied for just cause,
22    or whose cannabis business establishment license was
23    suspended, restricted, revoked, or denied in any other
24    state.
25        (4) An applicant who has engaged in a pattern or
26    practice of unfair or illegal practices, methods, or

 

 

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1    activities in the conduct of owning a cannabis business
2    establishment or other business.
3    (i) The Department shall deny issuance of a license under
4this Section if any principal officer, board member, or person
5having a financial or voting interest of 5% or greater in the
6licensee is delinquent in filing any required tax return or
7paying any amount owed to the State of Illinois.
8    (j) The Department shall verify an applicant's compliance
9with the requirements of this Article and rules adopted under
10this Article before issuing a Conditional Adult Use Dispensing
11Organization License under this Section.
12    (k) If an applicant is awarded a Conditional Adult Use
13Dispensing Organization License under this Section, the
14information and plans provided in the application, including
15any plans submitted for bonus points, shall become a condition
16of the Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization License
17and any Adult Use Dispensing Organization License issued to
18the holder of the Conditional Adult Use Dispensing
19Organization License, except as otherwise provided by this Act
20or by rule. A dispensing organization has a duty to disclose
21any material changes to the application. The Department shall
22review all material changes disclosed by the dispensing
23organization and may reevaluate its prior decision regarding
24the awarding of a Conditional Adult Use Dispensing
25Organization License, including, but not limited to,
26suspending or permanently revoking a Conditional Adult Use

 

 

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1Dispensing Organization License. Failure to comply with the
2conditions or requirements in the application may subject the
3dispensing organization to discipline up to and including
4suspension or permanent revocation of its authorization or
5Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization License by the
6Department.
7    (l) If an applicant has not begun operating as a
8dispensing organization within one year after the issuance of
9the Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization License
10under this Section, the Department may permanently revoke the
11Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization License and
12award it to the next highest scoring applicant in the BLS
13Region if a suitable applicant indicates a continued interest
14in the Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization License
15or may begin a new selection process to award a Conditional
16Adult Use Dispensing Organization License.
17(Source: P.A. 102-98, eff. 7-15-21; 103-8, eff. 6-7-23.)
 
18    (410 ILCS 705/15-35.10)
19    Sec. 15-35.10. Social Equity Justice Involved Lottery for
20Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization Licenses.
21    (a) In addition to any of the licenses issued under
22Section 15-15, Section 15-20, Section 15-25, Section 15-30.20,
23or Section 15-35, within 10 business days after the resulting
24final scores for all scored applications pursuant to Sections
2515-25 and 15-30 are released, the Department shall issue up to

 

 

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155 Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization Licenses by
2lot, pursuant to the application process adopted under this
3Section. In order to be eligible to be awarded a Conditional
4Adult Use Dispensing Organization License by lot, a Dispensary
5Applicant must be a Qualifying Social Equity Justice Involved
6Applicant.
7    The licenses issued under this Section shall be awarded in
8each BLS Region in the following amounts:
9        (1) Bloomington: 1.
10        (2) Cape Girardeau: 1.
11        (3) Carbondale-Marion: 1.
12        (4) Champaign-Urbana: 1.
13        (5) Chicago-Naperville-Elgin: 36.
14        (6) Danville: 1.
15        (7) Davenport-Moline-Rock Island: 1.
16        (8) Decatur: 1.
17        (9) Kankakee: 1.
18        (10) Peoria: 2.
19        (11) Rockford: 1.
20        (12) St. Louis: 3.
21        (13) Springfield: 1.
22        (14) Northwest Illinois nonmetropolitan: 1.
23        (15) West Central Illinois nonmetropolitan: 1.
24        (16) East Central Illinois nonmetropolitan: 1.
25        (17) South Illinois nonmetropolitan: 1.
26    (a-5) Prior to issuing licenses under subsection (a), the

 

 

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1Department may adopt rules through emergency rulemaking in
2accordance with subsection (kk) of Section 5-45 of the
3Illinois Administrative Procedure Act. The General Assembly
4finds that the adoption of rules to regulate cannabis use is
5deemed an emergency and necessary for the public interest,
6safety, and welfare.
7    (b) The Department shall distribute the available licenses
8established under this Section subject to the following:
9        (1) The drawing by lot for all available licenses
10    established under this Section shall occur on the same day
11    when practicable.
12        (2) Within each BLS Region, the first Qualifying
13    Social Equity Justice Involved Applicant drawn will have
14    the first right to an available license. The second
15    Qualifying Social Equity Justice Involved Applicant drawn
16    will have the second right to an available license. The
17    same pattern will continue for each subsequent applicant
18    drawn.
19        (3) The process for distributing available licenses
20    under this Section shall be recorded by the Department in
21    a format selected by the Department.
22        (4) A Dispensary Applicant is prohibited from becoming
23    a Qualifying Social Equity Justice Involved Applicant if a
24    principal officer resigns after the resulting final scores
25    for all scored applications pursuant to Sections 15-25 and
26    15-30 are released.

 

 

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1        (5) No Qualifying Social Equity Justice Involved
2    Applicant may be awarded more than 2 Conditional Adult Use
3    Dispensing Organization Licenses at the conclusion of a
4    lottery conducted under this Section.
5        (6) No individual may be listed as a principal officer
6    of more than 2 Conditional Adult Use Dispensing
7    Organization Licenses awarded under this Section.
8        (7) If, upon being selected for an available license
9    established under this Section, a Qualifying Social Equity
10    Justice Involved Applicant exceeds the limits under
11    paragraph (5) or (6), the Qualifying Social Equity Justice
12    Involved Applicant must choose which license to abandon
13    and notify the Department in writing within 5 business
14    days on forms prescribed by the Department. If the
15    Qualifying Social Equity Justice Involved Applicant does
16    not notify the Department as required, the Department
17    shall refuse to issue the Qualifying Social Equity Justice
18    Involved Applicant all available licenses established
19    under this Section obtained by lot in all BLS Regions.
20        (8) If, upon being selected for an available license
21    established under this Section, a Qualifying Social Equity
22    Justice Involved Applicant has a principal officer who is
23    a principal officer in more than 10 Early Approval Adult
24    Use Dispensing Organization Licenses, Conditional Adult
25    Use Dispensing Organization Licenses, Adult Use Dispensing
26    Organization Licenses, or any combination thereof, the

 

 

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1    licensees and the Qualifying Social Equity Justice
2    Involved Applicant listing that principal officer must
3    choose which license to abandon pursuant to subsection (d)
4    of Section 15-36 and notify the Department in writing
5    within 5 business days on forms prescribed by the
6    Department. If the Dispensary Applicant or licensees do
7    not notify the Department as required, the Department
8    shall refuse to issue the Qualifying Social Equity Justice
9    Involved Applicant all available licenses established
10    under this Section obtained by lot in all BLS Regions.
11        (9) All available licenses that have been abandoned
12    under paragraph (7) or (8) shall be distributed to the
13    next Qualifying Social Equity Justice Involved Applicant
14    drawn by lot.
15    Any and all rights conferred or obtained under this
16subsection shall be limited to the provisions of this
17subsection.
18    (c) An applicant who receives a Conditional Adult Use
19Dispensing Organization License under this Section has 180
20days from the date of the award to identify a physical location
21for the dispensing organization's retail storefront. The
22applicant shall provide evidence that the location is not
23within 1,500 feet of an existing dispensing organization,
24unless the applicant is a Social Equity Applicant or Social
25Equity Justice Involved Applicant located or seeking to locate
26within 1,500 feet of a dispensing organization licensed under

 

 

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1Section 15-15 or Section 15-20. If an applicant is unable to
2find a suitable physical address in the opinion of the
3Department within 180 days from the issuance of the
4Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization License, the
5Department may extend the period for finding a physical
6address an additional 540 days if the Conditional Adult Use
7Dispensing Organization License holder demonstrates a concrete
8attempt to secure a location and a hardship. If the Department
9denies the extension or the Conditional Adult Use Dispensing
10Organization License holder is unable to either find a
11location within 720 days of being awarded a conditional
12license and become operational within 180 days thereafter, or
13become operational within 720 days of being awarded a
14Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization License under
15this Section, the Department may, considering the totality of
16the circumstances, rescind the conditional license. If the
17conditional license holder does not become operational within
18365 days after having found a location, the Department may
19mandate a date by which the conditional license holder shall
20become operational prior to the Department rescinding the
21conditional license. If the Department rescinds shall rescind
22the Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization License, it
23may issue and award it pursuant to subsection (b) and notify
24the new awardee at the email address provided in the awardee's
25application, provided the applicant receiving the Conditional
26Adult Use Dispensing Organization License: (i) confirms a

 

 

SB2654- 214 -LRB104 13084 BDA 25085 b

1continued interest in operating a dispensing organization;
2(ii) can provide evidence that the applicant continues to meet
3all requirements for holding a Conditional Adult Use
4Dispensing Organization License set forth in this Act; and
5(iii) has not otherwise become ineligible to be awarded a
6Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization License. If the
7new awardee is unable to accept the Conditional Adult Use
8Dispensing Organization License, the Department may issue
9shall award the Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization
10License pursuant to subsection (b). The new conditional
11license holder awardee shall be subject to the same required
12deadlines as provided in this subsection. However, the
13Department may approve locations to be within 1,500 feet of
14each other if both have received local government zoning
15approval for sites within 1,500 feet of each other and the
16conditional licenses were issued pursuant to a lottery
17conducted under 68 Ill. Adm. Code 1291.50, subsection (c) of
18Section 15-35.20, Section 15-35, or Section 15-35.10.
19    (d) If, within 720 180 days of being awarded a Conditional
20Adult Use Dispensing Organization License, a dispensing
21organization is unable to find a location within the BLS
22Region in which it was awarded a Conditional Adult Use
23Dispensing Organization License under this Section because no
24jurisdiction within the BLS Region allows for the operation of
25an Adult Use Dispensing Organization, the Department may
26authorize the Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization

 

 

SB2654- 215 -LRB104 13084 BDA 25085 b

1License holder to transfer its Conditional Adult Use
2Dispensing Organization License to a BLS Region specified by
3the Department.
4    (e) A dispensing organization that is awarded a
5Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization License under
6this Section shall not purchase, possess, sell, or dispense
7cannabis or cannabis-infused products until the dispensing
8organization has received an Adult Use Dispensing Organization
9License issued by the Department pursuant to Section 15-36.
10    (f) The Department shall conduct a background check of the
11prospective dispensing organization agents in order to carry
12out this Article. The Illinois State Police shall charge the
13applicant a fee for conducting the criminal history record
14check, which shall be deposited into the State Police Services
15Fund and shall not exceed the actual cost of the record check.
16Each person applying as a dispensing organization agent shall
17submit a full set of fingerprints to the Illinois State Police
18for the purpose of obtaining a State and federal criminal
19records check. These fingerprints shall be checked against the
20fingerprint records now and hereafter, to the extent allowed
21by law, filed with the Illinois State Police and the Federal
22Bureau of Investigation criminal history records databases.
23The Illinois State Police shall furnish, following positive
24identification, all Illinois conviction information to the
25Department.
26    (g) The Department may verify information contained in

 

 

SB2654- 216 -LRB104 13084 BDA 25085 b

1each application and accompanying documentation to assess the
2applicant's veracity and fitness to operate a dispensing
3organization.
4    (h) The Department may, in its discretion, refuse to issue
5an authorization to an applicant who meets any of the
6following criteria:
7        (1) An applicant who is unqualified to perform the
8    duties required of the applicant.
9        (2) An applicant who fails to disclose or states
10    falsely any information called for in the application.
11        (3) An applicant who has been found guilty of a
12    violation of this Act, who has had any disciplinary order
13    entered against the applicant by the Department, who has
14    entered into a disciplinary or nondisciplinary agreement
15    with the Department, whose medical cannabis dispensing
16    organization, medical cannabis cultivation organization,
17    Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing Organization License,
18    Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing Organization License
19    at a secondary site, Early Approval Cultivation Center
20    License, Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization
21    License, or Adult Use Dispensing Organization License was
22    suspended, restricted, revoked, or denied for just cause,
23    or whose cannabis business establishment license was
24    suspended, restricted, revoked, or denied in any other
25    state.
26        (4) An applicant who has engaged in a pattern or

 

 

SB2654- 217 -LRB104 13084 BDA 25085 b

1    practice of unfair or illegal practices, methods, or
2    activities in the conduct of owning a cannabis business
3    establishment or other business.
4    (i) The Department shall deny the license if any principal
5officer, board member, or person having a financial or voting
6interest of 5% or greater in the licensee is delinquent in
7filing any required tax return or paying any amount owed to the
8State of Illinois.
9    (j) The Department shall verify an applicant's compliance
10with the requirements of this Article and rules adopted under
11this Article before issuing a Conditional Adult Use Dispensing
12Organization License.
13    (k) If an applicant is awarded a Conditional Adult Use
14Dispensing Organization License under this Section, the
15information and plans provided in the application, including
16any plans submitted for bonus points, shall become a condition
17of the Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization License
18and any Adult Use Dispensing Organization License issued to
19the holder of the Conditional Adult Use Dispensing
20Organization License, except as otherwise provided by this Act
21or by rule. Dispensing organizations have a duty to disclose
22any material changes to the application. The Department shall
23review all material changes disclosed by the dispensing
24organization and may reevaluate its prior decision regarding
25the awarding of a Conditional Adult Use Dispensing
26Organization License, including, but not limited to,

 

 

SB2654- 218 -LRB104 13084 BDA 25085 b

1suspending or permanently revoking a Conditional Adult Use
2Dispensing Organization License. Failure to comply with the
3conditions or requirements in the application may subject the
4dispensing organization to discipline up to and including
5suspension or permanent revocation of its authorization or
6Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization License by the
7Department.
8    (l) If an applicant has not begun operating as a
9dispensing organization within one year after the issuance of
10the Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization License
11under this Section, the Department may permanently revoke the
12Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization License and
13award it to the next highest scoring applicant in the BLS
14Region if a suitable applicant indicates a continued interest
15in the Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization License
16or may begin a new selection process to award a Conditional
17Adult Use Dispensing Organization License.
18(Source: P.A. 102-98, eff. 7-15-21; 103-8, eff. 6-7-23.)
 
19    (410 ILCS 705/15-36)
20    Sec. 15-36. Adult Use Dispensing Organization License.
21    (a) A person is only eligible to receive or hold an Adult
22Use Dispensing Organization License if the person has been
23issued awarded a Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization
24License pursuant to this Act or its administrative rules, was
25issued an Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing Organization

 

 

SB2654- 219 -LRB104 13084 BDA 25085 b

1License, an Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing Organization
2License at a Secondary Site, or was a registered medical
3dispensing organization as defined under the Compassionate Use
4of Medical Cannabis Act or has renewed its license pursuant to
5subsection (k) of Section 15-15 or subsection (p) of Section
615-20.
7    (a-5) Beginning January 1, 2026, all dispensing
8organizations registered under the Compassionate Use of
9Medical Cannabis Program Act and Sections 15-15 and 15-20 of
10this Act shall be a dispensing organization or a dispensary as
11those terms are defined in this Act and shall be an Adult Use
12Dispensing Organization License holder under this Section.
13Beginning January 1, 2026, all dispensing organizations
14registered under the Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis
15Program Act and Sections 15-15 and 15-20 of this Act shall have
16the same rights, privileges, duties, and responsibilities of
17dispensing organizations licensed pursuant to this Section and
18shall be subject to any administrative rules adopted under
19this Act.
20    (a-10) In addition to selling cannabis and
21cannabis-infused products to persons 21 years of age or older,
22beginning January 1, 2026, but no later than April 1, 2026, all
23dispensing organizations licensed pursuant to this Act shall
24also offer cannabis and cannabis-infused products for sale to
25registered qualifying patients, Opioid Alternative Patient
26Program participants, provisional patients, and designated

 

 

SB2654- 220 -LRB104 13084 BDA 25085 b

1caregivers.
2    (a-15) By April 1, 2026, all dispensing organizations
3licensed under Section 15-36 shall pay the fee under
4subsection (d) of Section 15-13 of this Act or shall have
5entered into an approved payment plan with the Department to
6pay the fee.
7    (b) The Department shall not issue an Adult Use Dispensing
8Organization License until:
9        (1) the Department has inspected the dispensary site
10    and proposed operations and verified that they are in
11    compliance with this Act and local zoning laws;
12        (2) the Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization
13    License holder has paid a license fee of $70,000 $60,000
14    or a prorated amount accounting for the difference of time
15    between when the Adult Use Dispensing Organization License
16    is issued and March 31 of the next even-numbered year;
17    $60,000 (or the proportional prorated amount paid) of the
18    fee shall be remitted into the Cannabis Regulation Fund,
19    and $10,000 (or the proportional prorated amount paid) of
20    the fee shall be remitted into the Compassionate Use of
21    Medical Cannabis Fund; and
22        (3) the Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization
23    License holder has met all the requirements in this Act
24    and rules.
25    (c) No person or entity shall hold any legal, equitable,
26ownership, or beneficial interest, directly or indirectly, of

 

 

SB2654- 221 -LRB104 13084 BDA 25085 b

1more than 10 dispensing organizations licensed under this
2Article. Further, no person or entity that is:
3        (1) employed by, is an agent of, or participates in
4    the management of a dispensing organization or registered
5    medical cannabis dispensing organization;
6        (2) a principal officer of a dispensing organization
7    or registered medical cannabis dispensing organization; or
8        (3) an entity controlled by or affiliated with a
9    principal officer of a dispensing organization or
10    registered medical cannabis dispensing organization;
11shall hold any legal, equitable, ownership, or beneficial
12interest, directly or indirectly, in a dispensing organization
13that would result in such person or entity owning or
14participating in the management of more than 10 Early Approval
15Adult Use Dispensing Organization Licenses, Early Approval
16Adult Use Dispensing Organization Licenses at a secondary
17site, Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization Licenses,
18or Adult Use Dispensing Organization Licenses. For the purpose
19of this subsection, participating in management may include,
20without limitation, controlling decisions regarding staffing,
21pricing, purchasing, marketing, store design, hiring, and
22website design.
23    (d) The Department shall deny an application if granting
24that application would result in a person or entity obtaining
25direct or indirect financial interest in more than 10 Early
26Approval Adult Use Dispensing Organization Licenses,

 

 

SB2654- 222 -LRB104 13084 BDA 25085 b

1Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization Licenses, Adult
2Use Dispensing Organization Licenses, or any combination
3thereof. If a person or entity is awarded a Conditional Adult
4Use Dispensing Organization License that would cause the
5person or entity to be in violation of this subsection, he,
6she, or it shall choose which license application it wants to
7abandon and such licenses shall become available to the next
8qualified applicant in the region in which the abandoned
9license was awarded.
10(Source: P.A. 101-27, eff. 6-25-19; 101-593, eff. 12-4-19;
11revised 7-19-24.)
 
12    (410 ILCS 705/15-40)
13    Sec. 15-40. Dispensing organization agent identification
14card; agent training.
15    (a) The Department shall:
16        (1) verify the information contained in an application
17    or renewal for a dispensing organization agent
18    identification card submitted under this Article, and
19    approve or deny an application or renewal, within 30 days
20    of receiving a completed application or renewal
21    application and all supporting documentation required by
22    rule;
23        (2) issue a dispensing organization agent
24    identification card to a qualifying agent within 15
25    business days of approving the application or renewal;

 

 

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1        (3) enter the registry identification number of the
2    dispensing organization where the agent works;
3        (4) within one year from the effective date of this
4    Act, allow for an electronic application process and
5    provide a confirmation by electronic or other methods that
6    an application has been submitted; and
7        (5) collect a $100 nonrefundable fee from the
8    applicant to be deposited into the Cannabis Regulation
9    Fund.
10    (b) A dispensing organization agent must keep his or her
11identification card visible at all times when in the
12dispensary.
13    (c) The dispensing organization agent identification cards
14shall contain the following:
15        (1) the name of the cardholder;
16        (2) the date of issuance and expiration date of the
17    dispensing organization agent identification cards;
18        (3) a random 10-digit alphanumeric identification
19    number containing at least 4 numbers and at least 4
20    letters that is unique to the cardholder; and
21        (4) a photograph of the cardholder.
22    (d) The dispensing organization agent identification cards
23shall be immediately returned to the dispensing organization
24upon termination of employment.
25    (e) The Department shall not issue an agent identification
26card if the applicant is delinquent in filing any required tax

 

 

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1returns or paying any amounts owed to the State of Illinois.
2    (f) Any card lost by a dispensing organization agent shall
3be reported to the Illinois State Police and the Department
4immediately upon discovery of the loss.
5    (g) An applicant shall be denied a dispensing organization
6agent identification card renewal if he or she fails to
7complete the training provided for in this Section.
8    (h) A dispensing organization agent shall only be required
9to hold one card for the same employer regardless of what type
10of dispensing organization license the employer holds.
11    (i) Cannabis retail sales training requirements.
12        (1) Within 90 days of September 1, 2019, or 90 days of
13    employment, whichever is later, all owners, managers,
14    employees, and agents involved in the handling or sale of
15    cannabis or cannabis-infused product employed by an adult
16    use dispensing organization or medical cannabis dispensing
17    organization as defined in Section 10 of the Compassionate
18    Use of Medical Cannabis Program Act shall attend and
19    successfully complete a Responsible Vendor Program.
20        (2) Each owner, manager, employee, and agent of an
21    adult use dispensing organization or medical cannabis
22    dispensing organization shall successfully complete the
23    program annually.
24        (3) Responsible Vendor Program Training modules shall
25    include at least 2 hours of instruction time approved by
26    the Department including:

 

 

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1            (i) Health and safety concerns of cannabis use,
2        including the responsible use of cannabis, its
3        physical effects, onset of physiological effects,
4        recognizing signs of impairment, and appropriate
5        responses in the event of overconsumption.
6            (ii) Training on laws and regulations on driving
7        while under the influence and operating a watercraft
8        or snowmobile while under the influence.
9            (iii) Sales to minors prohibition. Training shall
10        cover all relevant Illinois laws and rules.
11            (iv) Quantity limitations on sales to purchasers.
12        Training shall cover all relevant Illinois laws and
13        rules.
14            (v) Acceptable forms of identification. Training
15        shall include:
16                (I) How to check identification; and
17                (II) Common mistakes made in verification;
18            (vi) Safe storage of cannabis;
19            (vii) Compliance with all inventory tracking
20        system regulations;
21            (viii) Waste handling, management, and disposal;
22            (ix) Health and safety standards;
23            (x) Maintenance of records;
24            (xi) Security and surveillance requirements;
25            (xii) Permitting inspections by State and local
26        licensing and enforcement authorities;

 

 

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1            (xiii) Privacy issues, including, but not limited
2        to, the safe storage and handling of confidential
3        information such as qualifying patient information;
4            (xiv) Packaging and labeling requirement for sales
5        to purchasers; and
6             (xv) Prioritizing the needs of a qualifying
7        patient, provisional patient, Opioid Alternative
8        Patient Program participant, or designated caregiver;
9        and
10            (xvi) Other areas as determined by rule.
11    (j) Blank.
12    (k) Upon the successful completion of the Responsible
13Vendor Program, the provider shall deliver proof of completion
14either through mail or electronic communication to the
15dispensing organization, which shall retain a copy of the
16certificate.
17    (l) The license of a dispensing organization or medical
18cannabis dispensing organization whose owners, managers,
19employees, or agents fail to comply with this Section may be
20suspended or permanently revoked under Section 15-145 or may
21face other disciplinary action.
22    (m) The regulation of dispensing organization and medical
23cannabis dispensing employer and employee training is an
24exclusive function of the State, and regulation by a unit of
25local government, including a home rule unit, is prohibited.
26This subsection (m) is a denial and limitation of home rule

 

 

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1powers and functions under subsection (h) of Section 6 of
2Article VII of the Illinois Constitution.
3    (n) Persons seeking Department approval to offer the
4training required by paragraph (3) of subsection (i) may apply
5for such approval between August 1 and August 15 of each
6odd-numbered year in a manner prescribed by the Department.
7    (o) Persons seeking Department approval to offer the
8training required by paragraph (3) of subsection (i) shall
9submit a nonrefundable application fee of $2,000 to be
10deposited into the Cannabis Regulation Fund or a fee as may be
11set by rule. Any changes made to the training module shall be
12approved by the Department.
13    (p) The Department shall not unreasonably deny approval of
14a training module that meets all the requirements of paragraph
15(3) of subsection (i). A denial of approval shall include a
16detailed description of the reasons for the denial.
17    (q) Any person approved to provide the training required
18by paragraph (3) of subsection (i) shall submit an application
19for re-approval between August 1 and August 15 of each
20odd-numbered year and include a nonrefundable application fee
21of $2,000 to be deposited into the Cannabis Regulation Fund or
22a fee as may be set by rule.
23    (r) All persons applying to become or renewing their
24registrations to be agents, including agents-in-charge and
25principal officers, shall disclose any disciplinary action
26taken against them that may have occurred in Illinois, another

 

 

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1state, or another country in relation to their employment at a
2cannabis business establishment or at any cannabis cultivation
3center, processor, infuser, dispensary, or other cannabis
4business establishment.
5    (s) An agent applicant may begin employment at a
6dispensing organization while the agent applicant's
7identification card application is pending. Upon approval, the
8Department shall issue the agent's identification card to the
9agent. If denied, the dispensing organization and the agent
10applicant shall be notified and the agent applicant must cease
11all activity at the dispensing organization immediately.
12    (t) The Department and the Department of Agriculture may
13develop and implement an integrated system to issue an agent
14identification card which identifies a dispensary agent
15licensed by the Department as well as any cultivator, craft
16grower, transporter, community college program or infuser
17license or registration the agent may simultaneously hold.
18    (u) Beginning January 1, 2026, all dispensing organization
19agents registered under the Compassionate Use of Medical
20Cannabis Program Act shall, subject to the agent being in good
21standing with all licensing requirements, be deemed to be an
22agent under this Act. The Department shall issue all agents
23previously registered as an agent under the Compassionate Use
24of Medical Cannabis Program Act a new license number at the
25time of their first renewal on or after January 1, 2026.
26(Source: P.A. 101-27, eff. 6-25-19; 101-593, eff. 12-4-19;

 

 

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1102-98, eff. 7-15-21; 102-538, eff. 8-20-21; 102-813, eff.
25-13-22.)
 
3    (410 ILCS 705/15-45)
4    Sec. 15-45. Renewal.
5    (a) Adult Use Dispensing Organization Licenses shall
6expire on March 31 of even-numbered years.
7    (b) Agent identification cards shall expire one year from
8the date they are issued.
9    (c) Licensees and dispensing agents shall submit a renewal
10application as provided by the Department and pay the required
11renewal fee. The Department shall require an agent, employee,
12contracting, and subcontracting diversity report and an
13environmental impact report with its renewal application. No
14license or agent identification card shall be renewed if it is
15currently under revocation or suspension for violation of this
16Article or any rules that may be adopted under this Article or
17the licensee, principal officer, board member, person having a
18financial or voting interest of 5% or greater in the licensee,
19or agent is delinquent in filing any required tax returns or
20paying any amounts owed to the State of Illinois.
21    (d) Renewal fees are:
22        (1) For a dispensing organization, $60,000, to be
23    deposited into the Cannabis Regulation Fund; and $10,000
24    to be deposited into Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis
25    Fund.

 

 

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1        (2) For an agent identification card, $100, to be
2    deposited into the Cannabis Regulation Fund.
3    (e) If a dispensing organization fails to renew its
4license before expiration, the dispensing organization shall
5cease operations until the license is renewed.
6    (f) If a dispensing organization agent fails to renew his
7or her registration before its expiration, he or she shall
8cease to perform duties authorized by this Article at a
9dispensing organization until his or her registration is
10renewed.
11    (g) Any dispensing organization that continues to operate
12or dispensing agent that continues to perform duties
13authorized by this Article at a dispensing organization that
14fails to renew its license is subject to penalty as provided in
15this Article, or any rules that may be adopted pursuant to this
16Article.
17    (h) The Department shall not renew a license if the
18applicant is delinquent in filing any required tax returns or
19paying any amounts owed to the State of Illinois. The
20Department shall not renew a dispensing agent identification
21card if the applicant is delinquent in filing any required tax
22returns or paying any amounts owed to the State of Illinois.
23(Source: P.A. 101-27, eff. 6-25-19.)
 
24    (410 ILCS 705/15-50)
25    Sec. 15-50. Disclosure of ownership and control.

 

 

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1    (a) Each dispensing organization applicant and licensee
2shall file and maintain a Table of Organization, Ownership,
3and Control with the Department. The Table of Organization,
4Ownership, and Control shall contain the information required
5by this Section in sufficient detail to identify all owners,
6directors, and principal officers, and the title of each
7principal officer or business entity that, through direct or
8indirect means, manages, owns, or controls the applicant or
9licensee.
10    (b) The Table of Organization, Ownership, and Control
11shall identify the following information:
12        (1) The management structure, ownership, and control
13    of the applicant or license holder including the name of
14    each principal officer or business entity, the office or
15    position held, and the percentage ownership interest, if
16    any. If the business entity has a parent company, the name
17    of each owner, board member, and officer of the parent
18    company and his or her percentage ownership interest in
19    the parent company and the dispensing organization.
20        (2) If the applicant or licensee is a business entity
21    with publicly traded stock, the identification of
22    ownership shall be provided as required in subsection (c).
23    (c) If a business entity identified in subsection (b) is a
24publicly traded company, the following information shall be
25provided in the Table of Organization, Ownership, and Control:
26        (1) The name and percentage of ownership interest of

 

 

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1    each individual or business entity with ownership of more
2    than 5% of the voting shares of the entity, to the extent
3    such information is known or contained in 13D or 13G
4    Securities and Exchange Commission filings.
5        (2) To the extent known, the names and percentage of
6    interest of ownership of persons who are relatives of one
7    another and who together exercise control over or own more
8    than 10% of the voting shares of the entity.
9    (d) A dispensing organization with a parent company or
10companies, or partially owned or controlled by another entity
11must disclose to the Department the relationship and all
12owners, board members, officers, or individuals with control
13or management of those entities. A dispensing organization
14shall not shield its ownership or control from the Department.
15    (e) All principal officers must submit a complete online
16application with the Department within 14 days of the
17dispensing organization being licensed by the Department or
18within 14 days of Department notice of approval as a new
19principal officer.
20    (f) A principal officer may not allow his or her
21registration to expire.
22    (g) A dispensing organization separating with a principal
23officer must do so under this Act. The principal officer must
24communicate the separation to the Department within 5 business
25days.
26    (h) A principal officer not in compliance with the

 

 

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1requirements of this Act shall be removed from his or her
2position with the dispensing organization or shall otherwise
3terminate his or her affiliation. Failure to do so may subject
4the dispensing organization to discipline, suspension, or
5revocation of its license by the Department.
6    (i) It is the responsibility of the dispensing
7organization and its principal officers to promptly notify the
8Department of any change of the principal place of business
9address, hours of operation, change in ownership or control,
10or a change of the dispensing organization's primary or
11secondary contact information. Any changes must be made to the
12Department in writing.
13(Source: P.A. 101-27, eff. 6-25-19.)
 
14    (410 ILCS 705/15-60)
15    Sec. 15-60. Changes to a dispensing organization.
16    (a) A license shall be issued to the specific dispensing
17organization identified on the application and for the
18specific location proposed. The license is valid only as
19designated on the license and for the location for which it is
20issued.
21    (b) A dispensing organization may only add principal
22officers after being approved by the Department.
23    (c) A dispensing organization shall provide written notice
24of the removal of a principal officer within 5 business days
25after removal. The notice shall include the written agreement

 

 

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1of the principal officer being removed, unless otherwise
2approved by the Department, and allocation of ownership shares
3after removal in an updated ownership chart.
4    (d) A dispensing organization shall provide a written
5request to the Department for the addition of principal
6officers. A dispensing organization shall submit proposed
7principal officer applications on forms approved by the
8Department.
9    (e) All proposed new principal officers shall be subject
10to the requirements of this Act, this Article, and any rules
11that may be adopted pursuant to this Act.
12    (f) The Department may prohibit the addition of a
13principal officer to a dispensing organization for failure to
14comply with this Act, this Article, and any rules that may be
15adopted pursuant to this Act.
16    (g) A dispensing organization may not assign a license.
17    (h) A dispensing organization may not transfer a license
18without prior Department approval. Such approval may be
19withheld if the person to whom the license is being
20transferred does not commit to the same or a similar community
21engagement plan provided as part of the dispensing
22organization's application under paragraph (18) of subsection
23(d) of Section 15-25, and such transferee's license shall be
24conditional upon that commitment.
25    (i) With the addition or removal of principal officers,
26the Department will review the ownership structure to

 

 

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1determine whether the change in ownership has had the effect
2of a transfer of the license. The dispensing organization
3shall supply all ownership documents requested by the
4Department.
5    (j) A dispensing organization may apply to the Department
6to approve a sale of the dispensing organization. A request to
7sell the dispensing organization must be on application forms
8provided by the Department. A request for an approval to sell a
9dispensing organization must comply with the following:
10        (1) New application materials shall comply with this
11    Act and any rules that may be adopted pursuant to this Act;
12        (2) Application materials shall include a change of
13    ownership fee of $5,000 to be deposited into the Cannabis
14    Regulation Fund;
15        (3) The application materials shall provide proof that
16    the transfer of ownership will not have the effect of
17    granting any of the owners or principal officers direct or
18    indirect ownership or control of more than 10 adult use
19    dispensing organization licenses;
20        (4) New principal officers shall each complete the
21    proposed new principal officer application;
22        (5) If the Department approves the application
23    materials and proposed new principal officer applications,
24    it will perform an inspection before approving the sale
25    and issuing the dispensing organization license;
26        (6) If a new license is approved, the Department will

 

 

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1    issue a new license number and certificate to the new
2    dispensing organization.
3    (k) The dispensing organization shall provide the
4Department with the personal information for all new
5dispensing organizations agents as required in this Article
6and all new dispensing organization agents shall be subject to
7the requirements of this Article. A dispensing organization
8agent must obtain an agent identification card from the
9Department before beginning work at a dispensary.
10    (l) Before remodeling, expansion, reduction, or other
11physical, noncosmetic alteration of a dispensary, the
12dispensing organization must notify the Department and confirm
13the alterations are in compliance with this Act and any rules
14that may be adopted pursuant to this Act.
15(Source: P.A. 101-27, eff. 6-25-19.)
 
16    (410 ILCS 705/15-65)
17    Sec. 15-65. Administration.
18    (a) A dispensing organization shall establish, maintain,
19and comply with written policies and procedures as submitted
20in the Business, Financial and Operating plan as required in
21this Article or by rules established by the Department, and
22approved by the Department, for the security, storage,
23inventory, and distribution of cannabis. These policies and
24procedures shall include methods for identifying, recording,
25and reporting diversion, theft, or loss, and for correcting

 

 

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1errors and inaccuracies in inventories. At a minimum,
2dispensing organizations shall ensure the written policies and
3procedures provide for the following:
4        (1) Mandatory and voluntary recalls of cannabis
5    products. The policies shall be adequate to deal with
6    recalls due to any action initiated at the request of the
7    Department and any voluntary action by the dispensing
8    organization to remove defective or potentially defective
9    cannabis from the market or any action undertaken to
10    promote public health and safety, including:
11            (i) A mechanism reasonably calculated to contact
12        purchasers who have, or likely have, obtained the
13        product from the dispensary, including information on
14        the policy for return of the recalled product;
15            (ii) A mechanism to identify and contact the adult
16        use cultivation center, craft grower, or infuser that
17        manufactured the cannabis;
18            (iii) Policies for communicating with the
19        Department, the Department of Agriculture, and the
20        Department of Public Health within 24 hours of
21        discovering defective or potentially defective
22        cannabis; and
23            (iv) Policies for destruction of any recalled
24        cannabis product;
25        (2) Responses to local, State, or national
26    emergencies, including natural disasters, that affect the

 

 

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1    security or operation of a dispensary;
2        (3) Segregation and destruction of outdated, damaged,
3    deteriorated, misbranded, or adulterated cannabis. This
4    procedure shall provide for written documentation of the
5    cannabis disposition;
6        (4) Ensure the oldest stock of a cannabis product is
7    distributed first. The procedure may permit deviation from
8    this requirement, if such deviation is temporary and
9    appropriate;
10        (5) Training of dispensing organization agents in the
11    provisions of this Act and rules, to effectively operate
12    the point-of-sale system and the State's verification
13    system, proper inventory handling and tracking, specific
14    uses of cannabis or cannabis-infused products, instruction
15    regarding regulatory inspection preparedness and law
16    enforcement interaction, awareness of the legal
17    requirements for maintaining status as an agent, and other
18    topics as specified by the dispensing organization or the
19    Department. The dispensing organization shall maintain
20    evidence of all training provided to each agent in its
21    files that is subject to inspection and audit by the
22    Department. The dispensing organization shall ensure
23    agents receive a minimum of 8 hours of training subject to
24    the requirements in subsection (i) of Section 15-40
25    annually, unless otherwise approved by the Department;
26        (6) Maintenance of business records consistent with

 

 

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1    industry standards, including bylaws, consents, manual or
2    computerized records of assets and liabilities, audits,
3    monetary transactions, journals, ledgers, and supporting
4    documents, including agreements, checks, invoices,
5    receipts, and vouchers. Records shall be maintained in a
6    manner consistent with this Act and shall be retained for
7    5 years;
8        (7) Inventory control, including:
9            (i) Tracking purchases and denials of sale;
10            (ii) Disposal of unusable or damaged cannabis as
11        required by this Act and rules; and
12        (8) Purchaser education and support, including:
13            (i) Whether possession of cannabis is illegal
14        under federal law;
15            (ii) Current educational information issued by the
16        Department of Public Health about the health risks
17        associated with the use or abuse of cannabis;
18            (iii) Information about possible side effects;
19            (iv) Prohibition on smoking cannabis in public
20        places; and
21            (v) Offering any other appropriate purchaser
22        education or support materials.
23    (b) Blank.
24    (c) A dispensing organization shall maintain copies of the
25policies and procedures on the dispensary premises and provide
26copies to the Department upon request. The dispensing

 

 

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1organization shall review the dispensing organization policies
2and procedures at least once every 12 months from the issue
3date of the license and update as needed due to changes in
4industry standards or as requested by the Department.
5    (d) A dispensing organization shall ensure that each
6principal officer and each dispensing organization agent has a
7current agent identification card in the agent's immediate
8possession when the agent is at the dispensary.
9    (e) A dispensing organization shall provide prompt written
10notice to the Department, including the date of the event,
11when a dispensing organization agent no longer is employed by
12the dispensing organization.
13    (f) A dispensing organization shall promptly document and
14report any loss or theft of cannabis from the dispensary to the
15Illinois State Police and the Department. It is the duty of any
16dispensing organization agent who becomes aware of the loss or
17theft to report it as provided in this Article.
18    (g) A dispensing organization shall post the following
19information in a conspicuous location in an area of the
20dispensary accessible to consumers:
21        (1) The dispensing organization's license;
22        (2) The hours of operation.
23    (h) Signage that shall be posted inside the premises.
24        (1) All dispensing organizations must display a
25    placard that states the following: "Cannabis consumption
26    can impair cognition and driving, is for adult use only,

 

 

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1    may be habit forming, and should not be used by pregnant or
2    breastfeeding women.".
3        (2) Any dispensing organization that sells edible
4    cannabis-infused products must display a placard that
5    states the following:
6            (A) "Edible cannabis-infused products were
7        produced in a kitchen that may also process common
8        food allergens."; and
9            (B) "The effects of cannabis products can vary
10        from person to person, and it can take as long as two
11        hours to feel the effects of some cannabis-infused
12        products. Carefully review the portion size
13        information and warnings contained on the product
14        packaging before consuming.".
15        (3) All of the required signage in this subsection (h)
16    shall be no smaller than 24 inches tall by 36 inches wide,
17    with typed letters no smaller than 2 inches. The signage
18    shall be clearly visible and readable by customers. The
19    signage shall be placed in the area where cannabis and
20    cannabis-infused products are sold and may be translated
21    into additional languages as needed. The Department may
22    require a dispensary to display the required signage in a
23    different language, other than English, if the Secretary
24    deems it necessary.
25    (i) A dispensing organization shall prominently post
26notices inside the dispensing organization that state

 

 

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1activities that are strictly prohibited and punishable by law,
2including, but not limited to:
3        (1) no minors permitted on the premises unless the
4    minor is a minor qualifying patient under the
5    Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis Program Act;
6        (2) distribution to persons under the age of 21 is
7    prohibited;
8        (3) transportation of cannabis or cannabis products
9    across state lines is prohibited.
10(Source: P.A. 101-27, eff. 6-25-19; 101-593, eff. 12-4-19;
11102-538, eff. 8-20-21.)
 
12    (410 ILCS 705/15-70)
13    Sec. 15-70. Operational requirements; prohibitions.
14    (a) A dispensing organization shall operate in accordance
15with the representations made in its application and license
16materials. It shall be in compliance with this Act and rules.
17    (b) Beginning January 1, 2026, but no later than April 1,
182026, all dispensaries shall have a patient prioritization
19plan demonstrating that the dispensary is prioritizing
20qualifying patients, provisional patients, Opioid Alternative
21Patient Program participants, and designated caregivers.
22Prioritization may include, but is not limited to, the
23following: a dedicated service line for patients or
24caregivers; a dedicated time of the day for patients or
25caregivers, so long as the dispensary remains open at all

 

 

SB2654- 243 -LRB104 13084 BDA 25085 b

1other hours of operation to serve patients and caregivers; and
2a dedicated register for patients or caregivers. A dispensing
3organization must include the legal name of the dispensary on
4the packaging of any cannabis product it sells.
5    (c) All cannabis, cannabis-infused products, and cannabis
6seeds must be obtained from an Illinois registered adult use
7cultivation center, craft grower, infuser, or another
8dispensary.
9    (c-5) A dispensing organization may sell cannabis and
10cannabis-infused products purchased from any cultivation
11center, craft grower, infuser, or other dispensary to persons
12over 21 years of age and to qualifying patients, Opioid
13Alternative Patient Program Participants, designated
14caregivers, and provisional patients.
15    (d) Dispensing organizations are prohibited from selling
16any product containing alcohol except tinctures, which must be
17limited to containers that are no larger than 100 milliliters.
18    (e) A dispensing organization shall inspect and count
19product received from a transporting organization, adult use
20cultivation center, craft grower, infuser organization, or
21other dispensing organization before dispensing it.
22    (f) A dispensing organization may only accept cannabis
23deliveries into a restricted access area. Deliveries may not
24be accepted through the public or limited access areas unless
25otherwise approved by the Department.
26    (g) A dispensing organization shall maintain compliance

 

 

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1with State and local building, fire, and zoning requirements
2or regulations.
3    (h) A dispensing organization shall submit a list to the
4Department of the names of all service professionals that will
5work at the dispensary. The list shall include a description
6of the type of business or service provided. Changes to the
7service professional list shall be promptly provided. No
8service professional shall work in the dispensary until the
9name is provided to the Department on the service professional
10list.
11    (i) A dispensing organization's license allows for a
12dispensary to be operated only at a single location.
13    (j) All dispensaries' hours of operation may be A
14dispensary may operate between 6 a.m. and 10 p.m. local time.
15    (k) A dispensing organization must keep all lighting
16outside and inside the dispensary in good working order and
17wattage sufficient for security cameras.
18    (l) A dispensing organization must keep all air treatment
19systems that will be installed to reduce odors in good working
20order.
21    (m) A dispensing organization must contract with a private
22security contractor that is licensed under Section 10-5 of the
23Private Detective, Private Alarm, Private Security,
24Fingerprint Vendor, and Locksmith Act of 2004 to provide
25on-site security at all hours of the dispensary's operation.
26    (n) A dispensing organization shall ensure that any

 

 

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1building or equipment used by a dispensing organization for
2the storage or sale of cannabis is maintained in a clean and
3sanitary condition.
4    (o) The dispensary shall be free from infestation by
5insects, rodents, or pests.
6    (p) A dispensing organization shall not:
7        (1) Produce or manufacture cannabis;
8        (2) Accept a cannabis product from a an adult use
9    cultivation center, craft grower, infuser, dispensing
10    organization, or transporting organization unless it is
11    pre-packaged and labeled in accordance with this Act and
12    any rules that may be adopted pursuant to this Act;
13        (3) Obtain cannabis or cannabis-infused products from
14    outside the State of Illinois;
15        (4) Sell cannabis or cannabis-infused products to a
16    purchaser unless the purchaser has been verified to be 21
17    years of age or older, or beginning January 1, 2026, the
18    person is verified to be a qualifying patient, Opioid
19    Alternative Patient Program participant, provisional
20    patient, or designated caregiver the dispensing
21    organization is licensed under the Compassionate Use of
22    Medical Cannabis Program Act, and the individual is
23    registered under the Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis
24    Program or the purchaser has been verified to be 21 years
25    of age or older;
26        (5) Enter into an exclusive agreement with any adult

 

 

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1    use cultivation center, craft grower, or infuser.
2    Dispensaries shall provide consumers an assortment of
3    products from various cannabis business establishment
4    licensees such that the inventory available for sale at
5    any dispensary from any single cultivation center, craft
6    grower, processor, transporter, or infuser entity shall
7    not be more than 40% of the total inventory available for
8    sale. For the purpose of this subsection, a cultivation
9    center, craft grower, processor, or infuser shall be
10    considered part of the same entity if the licensees share
11    at least one principal officer. The Department may request
12    that a dispensary diversify its products as needed or
13    otherwise discipline a dispensing organization for
14    violating this requirement;
15        (6) Refuse to conduct business with an adult use
16    cultivation center, craft grower, transporting
17    organization, or infuser that has the ability to properly
18    deliver the product and is permitted by the Department of
19    Agriculture, on the same terms as other adult use
20    cultivation centers, craft growers, infusers, or
21    transporters with whom it is dealing;
22        (7) (Blank); Operate drive-through windows;
23        (8) Allow for the dispensing of cannabis or
24    cannabis-infused products in vending machines;
25        (9) Transport cannabis to residences or transport
26    cannabis to other locations where purchasers may be for

 

 

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1    delivery, except for the limited circumstances provided in
2    paragraph (5.5) of subsection (c) of Section 15-100;
3        (10) Enter into agreements to allow persons who are
4    not dispensing organization agents to deliver cannabis or
5    to transport cannabis to purchasers;
6        (11) Operate a dispensary if its video surveillance
7    equipment is inoperative;
8        (12) Operate a dispensary if the point-of-sale
9    equipment is inoperative;
10        (13) Operate a dispensary if the State's cannabis
11    electronic verification system is inoperative;
12        (14) Have fewer than 2 people working at the
13    dispensary at any time while the dispensary is open;
14        (15) Be located within 1,500 feet of the property line
15    of a pre-existing dispensing organization, unless the
16    applicant is a Social Equity Applicant or Social Equity
17    Justice Involved Applicant located or seeking to locate
18    within 1,500 feet of a dispensing organization licensed
19    under Section 15-15 or Section 15-20; however, the
20    Department may approve locations to be within 1,500 feet
21    of each other if both have received local government
22    zoning approval for sites within 1,500 feet of each other
23    and the conditional licenses were issued pursuant to a
24    lottery conducted under 68 Ill. Adm. Code 1291.50,
25    subsection (c) of Section 15-35.20, Section 15-35, or
26    Section 15-35.10;

 

 

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1        (16) Sell clones or any other live plant material;
2        (17) Sell cannabis, cannabis concentrate, or
3    cannabis-infused products in combination or bundled with
4    each other or any other items for one price, and each item
5    of cannabis, concentrate, or cannabis-infused product must
6    be separately identified by quantity and price on the
7    receipt;
8        (18) Have a certifying health care professional
9    on-site at the dispensary, make referrals to a certifying
10    health care professional, include links to a certifying
11    health care professional on the dispensary's website, or
12    otherwise direct patients to a certifying health care
13    professional;
14        (19) Beginning January 1, 2026, fail to prioritize
15    qualifying patients, provisional patients, Opioid
16    Alternative Patient Program participants, and designated
17    caregivers; or
18        (20) Violate any other requirements or prohibitions
19    set by Department rules.
20    (q) It is unlawful for any person having an Early Approval
21Adult Use Cannabis Dispensing Organization License, a
22Conditional Adult Use Cannabis Dispensing Organization
23License, an Adult Use Dispensing Organization License, or a
24medical cannabis dispensing organization license issued under
25the Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis Program Act or any
26officer, associate, member, representative, or agent of such

 

 

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1licensee to accept, receive, or borrow money or anything else
2of value or accept or receive credit (other than merchandising
3credit in the ordinary course of business for a period not to
4exceed 30 days) directly or indirectly from any adult use
5cultivation center, craft grower, infuser, or transporting
6organization in exchange for preferential placement on the
7dispensing organization's shelves, display cases, or website.
8This includes anything received or borrowed or from any
9stockholders, officers, agents, or persons connected with a an
10adult use cultivation center, craft grower, infuser, or
11transporting organization.
12    (r) It is unlawful for any person having an Early Approval
13Adult Use Cannabis Dispensing Organization License, a
14Conditional Adult Use Cannabis Dispensing Organization
15License, an Adult Use Dispensing Organization License, or a
16medical cannabis dispensing organization license issued under
17the Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis Program to enter
18into any contract with any person licensed to cultivate,
19process, or transport cannabis whereby such dispensing
20organization agrees not to sell any cannabis cultivated,
21processed, transported, manufactured, or distributed by any
22other cultivator, transporter, or infuser, and any provision
23in any contract violative of this Section shall render the
24whole of such contract void and no action shall be brought
25thereon in any court.
26(Source: P.A. 101-27, eff. 6-25-19; 101-593, eff. 12-4-19;

 

 

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1102-98, eff. 7-15-21; revised 7-23-24.)
 
2    (410 ILCS 705/15-75)
3    Sec. 15-75. Inventory control system.
4    (a) A dispensing organization agent-in-charge shall have
5primary oversight of the dispensing organization's cannabis
6inventory verification system, and its point-of-sale system.
7The inventory point-of-sale system shall be real-time,
8web-based, and accessible by the Department at any time. The
9point-of-sale system shall track, at a minimum the date of
10sale, amount, price, and currency.
11    (b) A dispensing organization shall establish an account
12with the State's verification system that documents:
13        (1) Each sales transaction at the time of sale and
14    each day's beginning inventory, acquisitions, sales,
15    disposal, and ending inventory.
16        (2) Acquisition of cannabis and cannabis-infused
17    products from a licensed adult use cultivation center,
18    craft grower, infuser, or transporter, including:
19            (i) A description of the products, including the
20        quantity, strain, variety, and batch number of each
21        product received;
22            (ii) The name and registry identification number
23        of the licensed adult use cultivation center, craft
24        grower, or infuser providing the cannabis and
25        cannabis-infused products;

 

 

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1            (iii) The name and registry identification number
2        of the licensed adult use cultivation center, craft
3        grower, infuser, or transporting agent delivering the
4        cannabis;
5            (iv) The name and registry identification number
6        of the dispensing organization agent receiving the
7        cannabis; and
8            (v) The date of acquisition.
9        (3) The disposal of cannabis, including:
10            (i) A description of the products, including the
11        quantity, strain, variety, batch number, and reason
12        for the cannabis being disposed;
13            (ii) The method of disposal; and
14            (iii) The date and time of disposal.
15    (c) Upon cannabis delivery, a dispensing organization
16shall confirm the product's name, strain name, weight, and
17identification number on the manifest matches the information
18on the cannabis product label and package. The product name
19listed and the weight listed in the State's verification
20system shall match the product packaging.
21    (d) The agent-in-charge shall conduct daily inventory
22reconciliation documenting and balancing cannabis inventory by
23confirming the State's verification system matches the
24dispensing organization's point-of-sale system and the amount
25of physical product at the dispensary.
26        (1) A dispensing organization must receive Department

 

 

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1    approval before completing an inventory adjustment. It
2    shall provide a detailed reason for the adjustment.
3    Inventory adjustment documentation shall be kept at the
4    dispensary for 2 years from the date performed.
5        (2) If the dispensing organization identifies an
6    imbalance in the amount of cannabis after the daily
7    inventory reconciliation due to mistake, the dispensing
8    organization shall determine how the imbalance occurred
9    and immediately upon discovery take and document
10    corrective action. If the dispensing organization cannot
11    identify the reason for the mistake within 2 calendar days
12    after first discovery, it shall inform the Department
13    immediately in writing of the imbalance and the corrective
14    action taken to date. The dispensing organization shall
15    work diligently to determine the reason for the mistake.
16        (3) If the dispensing organization identifies an
17    imbalance in the amount of cannabis after the daily
18    inventory reconciliation or through other means due to
19    theft, criminal activity, or suspected criminal activity,
20    the dispensing organization shall immediately determine
21    how the reduction occurred and take and document
22    corrective action. Within 24 hours after the first
23    discovery of the reduction due to theft, criminal
24    activity, or suspected criminal activity, the dispensing
25    organization shall inform the Department and the Illinois
26    State Police in writing.

 

 

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1        (4) The dispensing organization shall file an annual
2    compilation report with the Department, including a
3    financial statement that shall include, but not be limited
4    to, an income statement, balance sheet, profit and loss
5    statement, statement of cash flow, wholesale cost and
6    sales, and any other documentation requested by the
7    Department in writing. The financial statement shall
8    include any other information the Department deems
9    necessary in order to effectively administer this Act and
10    all rules, orders, and final decisions promulgated under
11    this Act. Statements required by this Section shall be
12    filed with the Department within 60 days after the end of
13    the calendar year. The compilation report shall include a
14    letter authored by a licensed certified public accountant
15    that it has been reviewed and is accurate based on the
16    information provided. The dispensing organization,
17    financial statement, and accompanying documents are not
18    required to be audited unless specifically requested by
19    the Department.
20    (e) A dispensing organization shall:
21        (1) Maintain the documentation required in this
22    Section in a secure locked location at the dispensing
23    organization for 5 years from the date on the document;
24        (2) Provide any documentation required to be
25    maintained in this Section to the Department for review
26    upon request; and

 

 

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1        (3) If maintaining a bank account, retain for a period
2    of 5 years a record of each deposit or withdrawal from the
3    account.
4    (f) If a dispensing organization chooses to have a return
5policy for cannabis and cannabis products, the dispensing
6organization shall seek prior approval from the Department.
7    (g) Beginning January 1, 2026, all dispensing
8organizations shall maintain internal, confidential records
9that record a registered qualifying patient, provisional
10patient, or designated caregiver's transactions for the
11patient's adequate medical supply and whether it was dispensed
12directly to the patient, the Opioid Alternative Patient
13Program participant, or to the designated caregiver. Each
14entry must include the amount and the date and time the
15cannabis was dispensed. Additional recordkeeping requirements
16may be set by rule.
17(Source: P.A. 101-27, eff. 6-25-19; 101-593, eff. 12-4-19;
18102-538, eff. 8-20-21.)
 
19    (410 ILCS 705/15-85)
20    Sec. 15-85. Dispensing cannabis.
21    (a) Before a dispensing organization agent dispenses
22cannabis to a purchaser, the agent shall:
23        (1) Verify the age of the purchaser by checking a
24    government-issued identification card by use of an
25    electronic reader or electronic scanning device to scan a

 

 

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1    purchaser's government-issued identification, if
2    applicable, to determine the purchaser's age and the
3    validity of the identification;
4        (2) Verify the validity of the government-issued
5    identification card by use of an electronic reader or
6    electronic scanning device to scan a purchaser's
7    government-issued identification, if applicable, to
8    determine the purchaser's age and the validity of the
9    identification;
10        (3) Offer any appropriate purchaser education or
11    support materials;
12        (3-5) Verify the qualifying patient, Opioid
13    Alternative Patient Program participant, provisional
14    patient, or designated caregiver's registration card, if
15    purchasing as a patient or caregiver;
16        (4) Enter the following information into the State's
17    cannabis electronic verification system:
18            (i) The dispensing organization agent's
19        identification number, or if the agent's card
20        application is pending the Department's approval, a
21        temporary and unique identifier until the agent's card
22        application is approved or denied by the Department;
23            (ii) The dispensing organization's identification
24        number;
25            (iii) The amount, type (including strain, if
26        applicable) of cannabis or cannabis-infused product

 

 

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1        dispensed;
2            (iv) The date and time the cannabis was dispensed.
3    (b) A dispensing organization shall refuse to sell
4cannabis or cannabis-infused products to any person unless the
5person produces a valid identification showing that the person
6is 21 years of age or older or a qualifying patient,
7provisional patient, Opioid Alternative Patient Program
8participant, or designated caregivers registered under the
9Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis Program Act. A medical
10cannabis dispensing organization may sell cannabis or
11cannabis-infused products to a person who is under 21 years of
12age if the sale complies with the provisions of the
13Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis Program Act and rules.
14    (c) For the purposes of this Section, valid identification
15must:
16        (1) Be valid and unexpired;
17        (2) Contain a photograph and the date of birth of the
18    person.
19    (d) A dispensing organization shall not dispense to a
20registered qualifying patient, Opioid Alternative Patient
21Program participant, provisional patient, or a designated
22caregiver, an amount exceeding the patient's adequate medical
23supply unless the qualifying patient has a Department of
24Public Health-approved quantity waiver.
25    (e) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, a
26dispensing organization may offer pickup or drive-through

 

 

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1locations for cannabis or cannabis-infused products to
2purchasers over 21 years of age, qualifying patients,
3provisional patients, and designated caregivers in accordance
4with Section 15-100 of this Act.
5(Source: P.A. 101-27, eff. 6-25-19; 101-593, eff. 12-4-19;
6102-98, eff. 7-15-21.)
 
7    (410 ILCS 705/15-100)
8    Sec. 15-100. Security.
9    (a) A dispensing organization shall implement security
10measures to deter and prevent entry into and theft of cannabis
11or currency.
12    (b) A dispensing organization shall submit any changes to
13the floor plan or security plan to the Department for
14pre-approval. All cannabis shall be maintained and stored in a
15restricted access area during construction.
16    (c) The dispensing organization shall implement security
17measures to protect the premises, purchasers, and dispensing
18organization agents including, but not limited to the
19following:
20        (1) Establish a locked door or barrier between the
21    facility's entrance and the limited access area;
22        (2) Prevent individuals from remaining on the premises
23    if they are not engaging in activity permitted by this Act
24    or rules;
25        (3) Develop a policy that addresses the maximum

 

 

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1    capacity and purchaser flow in the waiting rooms and
2    limited access areas;
3        (4) Dispose of cannabis in accordance with this Act
4    and rules;
5        (5) During hours of operation, store and dispense all
6    cannabis in from the restricted access area. During
7    operational hours, cannabis shall be stored in an enclosed
8    locked room or cabinet and accessible only to specifically
9    authorized dispensing organization agents;
10        (5.5) During hours of operation, dispense all cannabis
11    from the restricted access area, including a drive-through
12    window, or from a pickup location in close proximity to
13    the restricted access area. Orders in the pickup or
14    drive-through location may only be placed by the purchaser
15    or patient in advance, and the dispensing organization
16    shall, prior to dispensing the cannabis, confirm that the
17    purchaser, registered qualifying patient, Opioid
18    Alternative Patient Program participant, provisional
19    patient, or designated caregiver is in compliance with
20    Section 15-85 of this Act. As used in this paragraph,
21    "pickup location in close proximity" means an area
22    contiguous to the real property of the dispensary, such as
23    a sidewalk or parking lot;
24        (6) When the dispensary is closed, store all cannabis
25    and currency in a reinforced vault room in the restricted
26    access area and in a manner as to prevent diversion,

 

 

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1    theft, or loss;
2        (7) Keep the reinforced vault room and any other
3    equipment or cannabis storage areas securely locked and
4    protected from unauthorized entry;
5        (8) Keep an electronic daily log of dispensing
6    organization agents with access to the reinforced vault
7    room and knowledge of the access code or combination;
8        (9) Keep all locks and security equipment in good
9    working order;
10        (10) Maintain an operational security and alarm system
11    at all times;
12        (11) Prohibit keys, if applicable, from being left in
13    the locks, or stored or placed in a location accessible to
14    persons other than specifically authorized personnel;
15        (12) Prohibit accessibility of security measures,
16    including combination numbers, passwords, or electronic or
17    biometric security systems to persons other than
18    specifically authorized dispensing organization agents;
19        (13) Ensure that the dispensary interior and exterior
20    premises are sufficiently lit to facilitate surveillance;
21        (14) Ensure that trees, bushes, and other foliage
22    outside of the dispensary premises do not allow for a
23    person or persons to conceal themselves from sight;
24        (15) Develop emergency policies and procedures for
25    securing all product and currency following any instance
26    of diversion, theft, or loss of cannabis, and conduct an

 

 

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1    assessment to determine whether additional safeguards are
2    necessary; and
3        (16) Develop sufficient additional safeguards in
4    response to any special security concerns, or as required
5    by the Department; and .
6        (17) Maintain a security and safe storage plan for
7    qualifying patient information. The health care
8    professional-patient privilege as set forth by Section
9    8-802 of the Code of Civil Procedure shall apply between a
10    qualifying patient, provisional patient, and a dispensing
11    organization and its agents with respect to communications
12    and records concerning patients' debilitating conditions.
13    (d) The Department may request or approve alternative
14security provisions that it determines are an adequate
15substitute for a security requirement specified in this
16Article. Any additional protections may be considered by the
17Department in evaluating overall security measures.
18    (e) A dispensing organization may share premises with a
19craft grower or an infuser organization, or both, provided
20each licensee stores currency and cannabis or cannabis-infused
21products in a separate secured vault to which the other
22licensee does not have access or all licensees sharing a vault
23share more than 50% of the same ownership.
24    (f) A dispensing organization shall provide additional
25security as needed and in a manner appropriate for the
26community where it operates.

 

 

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1    (g) Restricted access areas.
2        (1) All restricted access areas must be identified by
3    the posting of a sign that is a minimum of 12 inches by 12
4    inches and that states "Do Not Enter - Restricted Access
5    Area - Authorized Personnel Only" in lettering no smaller
6    than one inch in height.
7        (2) All restricted access areas shall be clearly
8    described in the floor plan of the premises, in the form
9    and manner determined by the Department, reflecting walls,
10    partitions, counters, and all areas of entry and exit. The
11    floor plan shall show all storage, disposal, and retail
12    sales areas.
13        (3) All restricted access areas must be secure, with
14    locking devices that prevent access from the limited
15    access areas.
16    (h) Security and alarm.
17        (1) A dispensing organization shall have an adequate
18    security plan and security system to prevent and detect
19    diversion, theft, or loss of cannabis, currency, or
20    unauthorized intrusion using commercial grade equipment
21    installed by an Illinois licensed private alarm contractor
22    or private alarm contractor agency that shall, at a
23    minimum, include:
24            (i) A perimeter alarm on all entry points and
25        glass break protection on perimeter windows;
26            (ii) Security shatterproof tinted film on exterior

 

 

SB2654- 262 -LRB104 13084 BDA 25085 b

1        windows;
2            (iii) A failure notification system that provides
3        an audible, text, or visual notification of any
4        failure in the surveillance system, including, but not
5        limited to, panic buttons, alarms, and video
6        monitoring system. The failure notification system
7        shall provide an alert to designated dispensing
8        organization agents within 5 minutes after the
9        failure, either by telephone or text message;
10            (iv) A duress alarm, panic button, and alarm, or
11        holdup alarm and after-hours intrusion detection alarm
12        that by design and purpose will directly or indirectly
13        notify, by the most efficient means, the Public Safety
14        Answering Point for the law enforcement agency having
15        primary jurisdiction;
16            (v) Security equipment to deter and prevent
17        unauthorized entrance into the dispensary, including
18        electronic door locks on the limited and restricted
19        access areas that include devices or a series of
20        devices to detect unauthorized intrusion that may
21        include a signal system interconnected with a radio
22        frequency method, cellular, private radio signals or
23        other mechanical or electronic device.
24        (2) All security system equipment and recordings shall
25    be maintained in good working order, in a secure location
26    so as to prevent theft, loss, destruction, or alterations.

 

 

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1        (3) Access to surveillance monitoring recording
2    equipment shall be limited to persons who are essential to
3    surveillance operations, law enforcement authorities
4    acting within their jurisdiction, security system service
5    personnel, and the Department. A current list of
6    authorized dispensing organization agents and service
7    personnel that have access to the surveillance equipment
8    must be available to the Department upon request.
9        (4) All security equipment shall be inspected and
10    tested at regular intervals, not to exceed one month from
11    the previous inspection, and tested to ensure the systems
12    remain functional.
13        (5) The security system shall provide protection
14    against theft and diversion that is facilitated or hidden
15    by tampering with computers or electronic records.
16        (6) The dispensary shall ensure all access doors are
17    not solely controlled by an electronic access panel to
18    ensure that locks are not released during a power outage.
19    (i) To monitor the dispensary, the dispensing organization
20shall incorporate continuous electronic video monitoring
21including the following:
22        (1) All monitors must be 19 inches or greater;
23        (2) Unobstructed video surveillance of all enclosed
24    dispensary areas, unless prohibited by law, including all
25    points of entry and exit that shall be appropriate for the
26    normal lighting conditions of the area under surveillance.

 

 

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1    The cameras shall be directed so all areas are captured,
2    including, but not limited to, safes, vaults, sales areas,
3    and areas where cannabis is stored, handled, dispensed, or
4    destroyed. Cameras shall be angled to allow for facial
5    recognition, the capture of clear and certain
6    identification of any person entering or exiting the
7    dispensary area and in lighting sufficient during all
8    times of night or day;
9        (3) Unobstructed video surveillance of outside areas,
10    the storefront, and the parking lot, that shall be
11    appropriate for the normal lighting conditions of the area
12    under surveillance. Cameras shall be angled so as to allow
13    for the capture of facial recognition, clear and certain
14    identification of any person entering or exiting the
15    dispensary and the immediate surrounding area, and license
16    plates of vehicles in the parking lot;
17        (4) 24-hour recordings from all video cameras
18    available for immediate viewing by the Department upon
19    request. Recordings shall not be destroyed or altered and
20    shall be retained for at least 90 days. Recordings shall
21    be retained as long as necessary if the dispensing
22    organization is aware of the loss or theft of cannabis or a
23    pending criminal, civil, or administrative investigation
24    or legal proceeding for which the recording may contain
25    relevant information;
26        (5) The ability to immediately produce a clear, color

 

 

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1    still photo from the surveillance video, either live or
2    recorded;
3        (6) A date and time stamp embedded on all video
4    surveillance recordings. The date and time shall be
5    synchronized and set correctly and shall not significantly
6    obscure the picture;
7        (7) The ability to remain operational during a power
8    outage and ensure all access doors are not solely
9    controlled by an electronic access panel to ensure that
10    locks are not released during a power outage;
11        (8) All video surveillance equipment shall allow for
12    the exporting of still images in an industry standard
13    image format, including .jpg, .bmp, and .gif. Exported
14    video shall have the ability to be archived in a
15    proprietary format that ensures authentication of the
16    video and guarantees that no alteration of the recorded
17    image has taken place. Exported video shall also have the
18    ability to be saved in an industry standard file format
19    that can be played on a standard computer operating
20    system. All recordings shall be erased or destroyed before
21    disposal;
22        (9) The video surveillance system shall be operational
23    during a power outage with a 4-hour minimum battery
24    backup;
25        (10) A video camera or cameras recording at each
26    point-of-sale location allowing for the identification of

 

 

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1    the dispensing organization agent distributing the
2    cannabis and any purchaser. The camera or cameras shall
3    capture the sale, the individuals and the computer
4    monitors used for the sale;
5        (11) A failure notification system that provides an
6    audible and visual notification of any failure in the
7    electronic video monitoring system; and
8        (12) All electronic video surveillance monitoring must
9    record at least the equivalent of 8 frames per second and
10    be available as recordings to the Department and the
11    Illinois State Police 24 hours a day via a secure
12    web-based portal with reverse functionality.
13    (j) The requirements contained in this Act are minimum
14requirements for operating a dispensing organization. The
15Department may establish additional requirements by rule.
16(Source: P.A. 101-27, eff. 6-25-19; 101-593, eff. 12-4-19;
17102-538, eff. 8-20-21.)
 
18    (410 ILCS 705/15-135)
19    Sec. 15-135. Investigations.
20    (a) Dispensing organizations are subject to random and
21unannounced dispensary inspections and cannabis testing by the
22Department, the Department of Agriculture, the Department of
23Revenue, the Department of Public Health, the Illinois State
24Police, local law enforcement, local health officials, or as
25provided by rule.

 

 

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1    (b) The Department and its authorized representatives may
2enter any place, including a vehicle, in which cannabis is
3held, stored, dispensed, sold, produced, delivered,
4transported, manufactured, or disposed of and inspect, in a
5reasonable manner, the place and all pertinent equipment,
6containers and labeling, and all things including records,
7files, financial data, sales data, shipping data, pricing
8data, personnel data, research, papers, processes, controls,
9and facility, and inventory any stock of cannabis and obtain
10samples of any cannabis or cannabis-infused product, any
11labels or containers for cannabis, or paraphernalia.
12    (c) The Department may conduct an investigation of an
13applicant, application, dispensing organization, principal
14officer, dispensary agent, third party vendor, or any other
15party associated with a dispensing organization for an alleged
16violation of this Act or rules or to determine qualifications
17to be granted a registration by the Department.
18    (d) The Department may require an applicant or holder of
19any license issued pursuant to this Article to produce
20documents, records, or any other material pertinent to the
21investigation of an application or alleged violations of this
22Act or rules. Failure to provide the required material may be
23grounds for denial or discipline.
24    (e) Every person charged with preparation, obtaining, or
25keeping records, logs, reports, or other documents in
26connection with this Act and rules and every person in charge,

 

 

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1or having custody, of those documents shall, upon request by
2the Department, make the documents immediately available for
3inspection and copying by the Department, the Department's
4authorized representative, or others authorized by law to
5review the documents.
6(Source: P.A. 101-27, eff. 6-25-19; 102-98, eff. 7-15-21;
7102-538, eff. 8-20-21; 102-813, eff. 5-13-22.)
 
8    (410 ILCS 705/15-145)
9    Sec. 15-145. Grounds for discipline.
10    (a) The Department may deny issuance, refuse to renew or
11restore, or may reprimand, place on probation, suspend,
12revoke, or take other disciplinary or nondisciplinary action
13against any license or agent identification card or may impose
14a fine for any of the following:
15        (1) Material misstatement in furnishing information to
16    the Department;
17        (2) Violations of this Act or rules;
18        (3) Obtaining an authorization or license by fraud or
19    misrepresentation;
20        (4) A pattern of conduct that demonstrates
21    incompetence or that the applicant has engaged in conduct
22    or actions that would constitute grounds for discipline
23    under this Act;
24        (5) Aiding or assisting another person in violating
25    any provision of this Act or rules;

 

 

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1        (6) Failing to respond to a written request for
2    information by the Department within 30 days;
3        (7) Engaging in unprofessional, dishonorable, or
4    unethical conduct of a character likely to deceive,
5    defraud, or harm the public;
6        (8) Adverse action by another United States
7    jurisdiction or foreign nation;
8        (9) A finding by the Department that the licensee,
9    after having his or her license placed on suspended or
10    probationary status, has violated the terms of the
11    suspension or probation;
12        (10) Conviction, entry of a plea of guilty, nolo
13    contendere, or the equivalent in a State or federal court
14    of a principal officer or agent-in-charge of a felony
15    offense in accordance with Sections 2105-131, 2105-135,
16    and 2105-205 of the Department of Professional Regulation
17    Law of the Civil Administrative Code of Illinois;
18        (11) Excessive use of or addiction to alcohol,
19    narcotics, stimulants, or any other chemical agent or
20    drug;
21        (12) A finding by the Department of a discrepancy in a
22    Department audit of cannabis;
23        (13) A finding by the Department of a discrepancy in a
24    Department audit of capital or funds;
25        (14) A finding by the Department of acceptance of
26    cannabis from a source other than a cultivation center an

 

 

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1    Adult Use Cultivation Center, craft grower, infuser, or
2    transporting organization licensed by the Department of
3    Agriculture, or a dispensing organization licensed by the
4    Department;
5        (15) An inability to operate using reasonable
6    judgment, skill, or safety due to physical or mental
7    illness or other impairment or disability, including,
8    without limitation, deterioration through the aging
9    process or loss of motor skills or mental incompetence;
10        (16) Failing to report to the Department within the
11    time frames established, or if not identified, 14 days, of
12    any adverse action taken against the dispensing
13    organization or an agent by a licensing jurisdiction in
14    any state or any territory of the United States or any
15    foreign jurisdiction, any governmental agency, any law
16    enforcement agency or any court defined in this Section;
17        (17) Any violation of the dispensing organization's
18    policies and procedures submitted to the Department
19    annually as a condition for licensure;
20        (18) Failure to inform the Department of any change of
21    address within 10 business days;
22        (19) Disclosing customer names, personal information,
23    or protected health information in violation of any State
24    or federal law;
25        (20) Operating a dispensary before obtaining a license
26    from the Department;

 

 

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1        (21) Performing duties authorized by this Act prior to
2    receiving a license to perform such duties;
3        (22) Dispensing cannabis when prohibited by this Act
4    or rules;
5        (23) Any fact or condition that, if it had existed at
6    the time of the original application for the license,
7    would have warranted the denial of the license;
8        (24) Permitting a person without a valid agent
9    identification card to perform licensed activities under
10    this Act;
11        (25) Failure to assign an agent-in-charge as required
12    by this Article;
13        (26) Failure to provide the training required by
14    paragraph (3) of subsection (i) of Section 15-40 within
15    the provided timeframe;
16        (27) Personnel insufficient in number or unqualified
17    in training or experience to properly operate the
18    dispensary business;
19        (28) Any pattern of activity that causes a harmful
20    impact on the community; and
21        (29) Failing to prevent diversion, theft, or loss of
22    cannabis; and .
23        (30) Engaging in a pattern of nonpayment or late
24    payment for goods or services to a cannabis business
25    establishment.
26    (b) All fines and fees imposed under this Section shall be

 

 

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1paid within 60 days after the effective date of the order
2imposing the fine or as otherwise specified in the order.
3    (c) A circuit court order establishing that an
4agent-in-charge or principal officer holding an agent
5identification card is subject to involuntary admission as
6that term is defined in Section 1-119 or 1-119.1 of the Mental
7Health and Developmental Disabilities Code shall operate as a
8suspension of that card.
9(Source: P.A. 101-27, eff. 6-25-19; 101-593, eff. 12-4-19.)
 
10    (410 ILCS 705/Art. 20 heading)
11
Article 20.
12
Adult Use Cultivation Centers
13(Source: P.A. 101-27, eff. 6-25-19.)
 
14    (410 ILCS 705/20-10)
15    Sec. 20-10. Early Approval of Adult Use Cultivation Center
16License.
17    (a) Any medical cannabis cultivation center registered and
18in good standing under the Compassionate Use of Medical
19Cannabis Program Act as of the effective date of this Act may,
20within 60 days of the effective date of this Act but no later
21than 180 days from the effective date of this Act, apply to the
22Department of Agriculture for an Early Approval Adult Use
23Cultivation Center License to produce cannabis and
24cannabis-infused products at its existing facilities as of the

 

 

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1effective date of this Act.
2    (b) A medical cannabis cultivation center seeking issuance
3of an Early Approval Adult Use Cultivation Center License
4shall submit an application on forms provided by the
5Department of Agriculture. The application must meet or
6include the following qualifications:
7        (1) Payment of a nonrefundable application fee of
8    $100,000 to be deposited into the Cannabis Regulation
9    Fund;
10        (2) Proof of registration as a medical cannabis
11    cultivation center that is in good standing;
12        (3) Submission of the application by the same person
13    or entity that holds the medical cannabis cultivation
14    center registration;
15        (4) Certification that the applicant will comply with
16    the requirements of Section 20-30;
17        (5) The legal name of the cultivation center;
18        (6) The physical address of the cultivation center;
19        (7) The name, address, social security number, and
20    date of birth of each principal officer and board member
21    of the cultivation center; each of those individuals shall
22    be at least 21 years of age;
23        (8) A nonrefundable Cannabis Business Development Fee
24    equal to 5% of the cultivation center's total sales
25    between June 1, 2018 to June 1, 2019 or $750,000,
26    whichever is less, but at not less than $250,000, to be

 

 

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1    deposited into the Cannabis Business Development Fund; and
2        (9) A commitment to completing one of the following
3    Social Equity Inclusion Plans provided for in this
4    subsection (b) before the expiration of the Early Approval
5    Adult Use Cultivation Center License:
6            (A) A contribution of 5% of the cultivation
7        center's total sales from June 1, 2018 to June 1, 2019,
8        or $100,000, whichever is less, to one of the
9        following:
10                (i) the Cannabis Business Development Fund.
11            This is in addition to the fee required by item (8)
12            of this subsection (b);
13                (ii) a cannabis industry training or education
14            program at an Illinois community college as
15            defined in the Public Community College Act;
16                (iii) a program that provides job training
17            services to persons recently incarcerated or that
18            operates in a Disproportionately Impacted Area.
19            (B) Participate as a host in a cannabis business
20        incubator program for at least one year approved by
21        the Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity,
22        and in which an Early Approval Adult Use Cultivation
23        Center License holder agrees to provide a loan of at
24        least $100,000 and mentorship to incubate, for at
25        least a year, a Social Equity Applicant intending to
26        seek a license or a licensee that qualifies as a Social

 

 

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1        Equity Applicant. As used in this Section, "incubate"
2        means providing direct financial assistance and
3        training necessary to engage in licensed cannabis
4        industry activity similar to that of the host
5        licensee. The Early Approval Adult Use Cultivation
6        Center License holder or the same entity holding any
7        other licenses issued pursuant to this Act shall not
8        take an ownership stake of greater than 10% in any
9        business receiving incubation services to comply with
10        this subsection. If an Early Approval Adult Use
11        Cultivation Center License holder fails to find a
12        business to incubate to comply with this subsection
13        before its Early Approval Adult Use Cultivation Center
14        License expires, it may opt to meet the requirement of
15        this subsection by completing another item from this
16        subsection prior to the expiration of its Early
17        Approval Adult Use Cultivation Center License to avoid
18        a penalty.
19    (c) An Early Approval Adult Use Cultivation Center License
20is valid until March 31, 2021. A cultivation center that
21obtains an Early Approval Adult Use Cultivation Center License
22shall receive written or electronic notice 90 days before the
23expiration of the license that the license will expire, and
24inform the license holder that it may renew its Early Approval
25Adult Use Cultivation Center License. The Department of
26Agriculture shall grant a renewal of an Early Approval Adult

 

 

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1Use Cultivation Center License within 60 days of submission of
2an application if:
3        (1) the cultivation center submits an application and
4    the required renewal fee of $100,000 for an Early Approval
5    Adult Use Cultivation Center License;
6        (2) the Department of Agriculture has not suspended
7    the license of the cultivation center or suspended or
8    revoked the license for violating this Act or rules
9    adopted under this Act; and
10        (3) the cultivation center has completed a Social
11    Equity Inclusion Plan as required by item (9) of
12    subsection (b) of this Section.
13    (c-5) The Early Approval Adult Use Cultivation Center
14License renewed pursuant to subsection (c) of this Section
15shall expire March 31, 2022. The Early Approval Adult Use
16Cultivation Center Licensee shall receive written or
17electronic notice 90 days before the expiration of the license
18that the license will expire, and inform the license holder
19that it may apply for a an Adult Use Cultivation Center
20License. The Department of Agriculture shall grant a
21Cultivation Center an Adult Use Dispensing Organization
22License within 60 days of an application being deemed complete
23if the applicant meets all of the criteria in Section 20-21.
24    (d) The license fee required by paragraph (1) of
25subsection (c) of this Section shall be in addition to any
26license fee required for the renewal of a registered medical

 

 

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1cannabis cultivation center license that expires during the
2effective period of the Early Approval Adult Use Cultivation
3Center License.
4    (e) Applicants must submit all required information,
5including the requirements in subsection (b) of this Section,
6to the Department of Agriculture. Failure by an applicant to
7submit all required information may result in the application
8being disqualified.
9    (f) If the Department of Agriculture receives an
10application with missing information, the Department may issue
11a deficiency notice to the applicant. The applicant shall have
1210 calendar days from the date of the deficiency notice to
13submit complete information. Applications that are still
14incomplete after this opportunity to cure may be disqualified.
15    (g) If an applicant meets all the requirements of
16subsection (b) of this Section, the Department of Agriculture
17shall issue the Early Approval Adult Use Cultivation Center
18License within 14 days of receiving the application unless:
19        (1) The licensee; principal officer, board member, or
20    person having a financial or voting interest of 5% or
21    greater in the licensee; or agent is delinquent in filing
22    any required tax returns or paying any amounts owed to the
23    State of Illinois;
24        (2) The Director of Agriculture determines there is
25    reason, based on an inordinate number of documented
26    compliance violations, the licensee is not entitled to an

 

 

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1    Early Approval Adult Use Cultivation Center License; or
2        (3) The licensee fails to commit to the Social Equity
3    Inclusion Plan.
4    (h) A cultivation center may begin producing cannabis and
5cannabis-infused products once the Early Approval Adult Use
6Cultivation Center License is approved. A cultivation center
7that obtains an Early Approval Adult Use Cultivation Center
8License may begin selling cannabis and cannabis-infused
9products on December 1, 2019.
10    (i) An Early Approval Adult Use Cultivation Center License
11holder must continue to produce and provide an adequate supply
12of cannabis and cannabis-infused products for purchase by
13qualifying patients and caregivers. For the purposes of this
14subsection, "adequate supply" means a monthly production level
15that is comparable in type and quantity to those medical
16cannabis products produced for patients and caregivers on an
17average monthly basis for the 6 months before the effective
18date of this Act.
19    (j) If there is a shortage of cannabis or cannabis-infused
20products, a license holder shall prioritize patients
21registered under the Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis
22Program Act over adult use purchasers.
23    (k) If an Early Approval Adult Use Cultivation Center
24licensee fails to submit an application for a an Adult Use
25Cultivation Center License before the expiration of the Early
26Approval Adult Use Cultivation Center License pursuant to

 

 

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1subsection (c-5) of this Section, the cultivation center shall
2cease all adult use cultivation until it receives a an Adult
3Use Cultivation Center License.
4    (l) A cultivation center agent who holds a valid
5cultivation center agent identification card issued under the
6Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis Program Act and is an
7officer, director, manager, or employee of the cultivation
8center licensed under this Section may engage in all
9activities authorized by this Article to be performed by a
10cultivation center agent.
11    (m) If the Department of Agriculture suspends or revokes
12the Early Approval Adult Use Cultivation Center License of a
13cultivation center that also holds a medical cannabis
14cultivation center license issued under the Compassionate Use
15of Medical Cannabis Program Act, the Department of Agriculture
16may suspend or revoke the medical cannabis cultivation center
17license concurrently with the Early Approval Adult Use
18Cultivation Center License.
19    (n) All fees or fines collected from an Early Approval
20Adult Use Cultivation Center License holder as a result of a
21disciplinary action in the enforcement of this Act shall be
22deposited into the Cannabis Regulation Fund.
23(Source: P.A. 101-27, eff. 6-25-19; 101-593, eff. 12-4-19.)
 
24    (410 ILCS 705/20-15)
25    Sec. 20-15. Conditional Adult Use Cultivation Center

 

 

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1application.
2    (a) If the Department of Agriculture makes available
3additional cultivation center licenses pursuant to Section
420-5, applicants for a Conditional Adult Use Cultivation
5Center License shall electronically submit the following in
6such form as the Department of Agriculture may direct:
7        (1) the nonrefundable application fee set by rule by
8    the Department of Agriculture, to be deposited into the
9    Cannabis Regulation Fund;
10        (2) the legal name of the cultivation center;
11        (3) the proposed physical address of the cultivation
12    center;
13        (4) the name, address, social security number, and
14    date of birth of each principal officer and board member
15    of the cultivation center; each principal officer and
16    board member shall be at least 21 years of age;
17        (5) the details of any administrative or judicial
18    proceeding in which any of the principal officers or board
19    members of the cultivation center (i) pled guilty, were
20    convicted, were fined, or had a registration or license
21    suspended or revoked, or (ii) managed or served on the
22    board of a business or non-profit organization that pled
23    guilty, was convicted, was fined, or had a registration or
24    license suspended or revoked;
25        (6) proposed operating bylaws that include procedures
26    for the oversight of the cultivation center, including the

 

 

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1    development and implementation of a plant monitoring
2    system, accurate recordkeeping, staffing plan, and
3    security plan approved by the Illinois State Police that
4    are in accordance with the rules issued by the Department
5    of Agriculture under this Act. A physical inventory shall
6    be performed of all plants and cannabis on a weekly basis
7    by the cultivation center;
8        (7) verification from the Illinois State Police that
9    all background checks of the prospective principal
10    officers, board members, and agents of the cannabis
11    business establishment have been conducted;
12        (8) a copy of the current local zoning ordinance or
13    permit and verification that the proposed cultivation
14    center is in compliance with the local zoning rules and
15    distance limitations established by the local
16    jurisdiction;
17        (9) proposed employment practices, in which the
18    applicant must demonstrate a plan of action to inform,
19    hire, and educate minorities, women, veterans, and persons
20    with disabilities, engage in fair labor practices, and
21    provide worker protections;
22        (10) whether an applicant can demonstrate experience
23    in or business practices that promote economic empowerment
24    in Disproportionately Impacted Areas;
25        (11) experience with the cultivation of agricultural
26    or horticultural products, operating an agriculturally

 

 

SB2654- 282 -LRB104 13084 BDA 25085 b

1    related business, or operating a horticultural business;
2        (12) a description of the enclosed, locked facility
3    where cannabis will be grown, harvested, manufactured,
4    processed, packaged, or otherwise prepared for
5    distribution to a dispensing organization;
6        (13) a survey of the enclosed, locked facility,
7    including the space used for cultivation;
8        (14) cultivation, processing, inventory, and packaging
9    plans;
10        (15) a description of the applicant's experience with
11    agricultural cultivation techniques and industry
12    standards;
13        (16) a list of any academic degrees, certifications,
14    or relevant experience of all prospective principal
15    officers, board members, and agents of the related
16    business;
17        (17) the identity of every person having a financial
18    or voting interest of 5% or greater in the cultivation
19    center operation with respect to which the license is
20    sought, whether a trust, corporation, partnership, limited
21    liability company, or sole proprietorship, including the
22    name and address of each person;
23        (18) a plan describing how the cultivation center will
24    address each of the following:
25            (i) energy needs, including estimates of monthly
26        electricity and gas usage, to what extent it will

 

 

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1        procure energy from a local utility or from on-site
2        generation, and if it has or will adopt a sustainable
3        energy use and energy conservation policy;
4            (ii) water needs, including estimated water draw
5        and if it has or will adopt a sustainable water use and
6        water conservation policy; and
7            (iii) waste management, including if it has or
8        will adopt a waste reduction policy;
9        (19) a diversity plan that includes a narrative of not
10    more than 2,500 words that establishes a goal of diversity
11    in ownership, management, employment, and contracting to
12    ensure that diverse participants and groups are afforded
13    equality of opportunity;
14        (20) any other information required by rule;
15        (21) a recycling plan:
16            (A) Purchaser packaging, including cartridges,
17        shall be accepted by the applicant and recycled.
18            (B) Any recyclable waste generated by the cannabis
19        cultivation facility shall be recycled per applicable
20        State and local laws, ordinances, and rules.
21            (C) Any cannabis waste, liquid waste, or hazardous
22        waste shall be disposed of in accordance with 8 Ill.
23        Adm. Code 1000.460, except, to the greatest extent
24        feasible, all cannabis plant waste will be rendered
25        unusable by grinding and incorporating the cannabis
26        plant waste with compostable mixed waste to be

 

 

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1        disposed of in accordance with 8 Ill. Adm. Code
2        1000.460(g)(1);
3        (22) commitment to comply with local waste provisions:
4    a cultivation facility must remain in compliance with
5    applicable State and federal environmental requirements,
6    including, but not limited to:
7            (A) storing, securing, and managing all
8        recyclables and waste, including organic waste
9        composed of or containing finished cannabis and
10        cannabis products, in accordance with applicable State
11        and local laws, ordinances, and rules; and
12            (B) disposing liquid waste containing cannabis or
13        byproducts of cannabis processing in compliance with
14        all applicable State and federal requirements,
15        including, but not limited to, the cannabis
16        cultivation facility's permits under Title X of the
17        Environmental Protection Act; and
18        (23) a commitment to a technology standard for
19    resource efficiency of the cultivation center facility.
20            (A) A cannabis cultivation facility commits to use
21        resources efficiently, including energy and water. For
22        the following, a cannabis cultivation facility commits
23        to meet or exceed the technology standard identified
24        in items (i), (ii), (iii), and (iv), which may be
25        modified by rule:
26                (i) lighting systems, including light bulbs;

 

 

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1                (ii) HVAC system;
2                (iii) water application system to the crop;
3            and
4                (iv) filtration system for removing
5            contaminants from wastewater.
6            (B) Lighting. The Lighting Power Densities (LPD)
7        for cultivation space commits to not exceed an average
8        of 36 watts per gross square foot of active and growing
9        space canopy, or all installed lighting technology
10        shall meet a photosynthetic photon efficacy (PPE) of
11        no less than 2.2 micromoles per joule fixture and
12        shall be featured on the DesignLights Consortium (DLC)
13        Horticultural Specification Qualified Products List
14        (QPL). In the event that DLC requirement for minimum
15        efficacy exceeds 2.2 micromoles per joule fixture,
16        that PPE shall become the new standard.
17            (C) HVAC. The (i) For cannabis grow operations
18        with less than 6,000 square feet of canopy, the
19        licensee commits that all HVAC units will be
20        high-efficiency ductless split HVAC units, or other
21        more energy efficient equipment.
22                (ii) For cannabis grow operations with 6,000
23            square feet of canopy or more, the licensee
24            commits that all HVAC units will be variable
25            refrigerant flow HVAC units, or other more energy
26            efficient equipment.

 

 

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1            (D) Water application.
2                (i) The cannabis cultivation facility commits
3            to use automated watering systems, including, but
4            not limited to, drip irrigation and flood tables,
5            to irrigate cannabis crops crop.
6                (ii) The cannabis cultivation facility commits
7            to measure runoff from watering events and report
8            this volume in its water usage plan, and that on
9            average, watering events shall have no more than
10            20% of runoff of water.
11            (E) Filtration. The cultivator commits that HVAC
12        condensate, dehumidification water, excess runoff, and
13        other wastewater produced by the cannabis cultivation
14        facility shall be captured and filtered to the best of
15        the facility's ability to achieve the quality needed
16        to be reused in subsequent watering rounds.
17            (F) Reporting energy use and efficiency as
18        required by rule.
19    (b) Applicants must submit all required information,
20including the information required in Section 20-10, to the
21Department of Agriculture. Failure by an applicant to submit
22all required information may result in the application being
23disqualified.
24    (c) If the Department of Agriculture receives an
25application with missing information, the Department of
26Agriculture may issue a deficiency notice to the applicant.

 

 

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1The applicant shall have 10 calendar days from the date of the
2deficiency notice to resubmit the incomplete information.
3Applications that are still incomplete after this opportunity
4to cure will not be scored and will be disqualified.
5    (d) (Blank).
6    (e) A cultivation center that is awarded a Conditional
7Adult Use Cultivation Center License pursuant to the criteria
8in Section 20-20 shall not grow, purchase, possess, or sell
9cannabis or cannabis-infused products until the person has
10received an Adult Use Cultivation Center License issued by the
11Department of Agriculture pursuant to Section 20-21 of this
12Act.
13(Source: P.A. 101-27, eff. 6-25-19; 101-593, eff. 12-4-19;
14102-538, eff. 8-20-21; revised 7-23-24.)
 
15    (410 ILCS 705/20-20)
16    Sec. 20-20. Conditional Cultivation Center Adult Use
17License scoring applications.
18    (a) The Department of Agriculture shall by rule develop a
19system to score cultivation center applications to
20administratively rank applications based on the clarity,
21organization, and quality of the applicant's responses to
22required information. Applicants shall be awarded points based
23on the following categories:
24        (1) Suitability of the proposed facility;
25        (2) Suitability of employee training plan;

 

 

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1        (3) Security and recordkeeping;
2        (4) Cultivation plan;
3        (5) Product safety and labeling plan;
4        (6) Business plan;
5        (7) The applicant's status as a Social Equity
6    Applicant, which shall constitute no less than 20% of
7    total available points;
8        (8) Labor and employment practices, which shall
9    constitute no less than 2% of total available points;
10        (9) Environmental plan as described in paragraphs
11    (18), (21), (22), and (23) of subsection (a) of Section
12    20-15;
13        (10) The applicant is 51% or more owned and controlled
14    by an individual or individuals who have been an Illinois
15    resident for the past 5 years as proved by tax records or 2
16    of the following:
17            (A) a signed lease agreement that includes the
18        applicant's name;
19            (B) a property deed that includes the applicant's
20        name;
21            (C) school records;
22            (D) a voter registration card;
23            (E) an Illinois driver's license, an Illinois
24        Identification Card, or an Illinois Person with a
25        Disability Identification Card;
26            (F) a paycheck stub;

 

 

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1            (G) a utility bill; or
2            (H) any other proof of residency or other
3        information necessary to establish residence as
4        provided by rule;
5        (11) The applicant is 51% or more controlled and owned
6    by an individual or individuals who meet the
7    qualifications of a veteran as defined by Section 45-57 of
8    the Illinois Procurement Code;
9        (12) a diversity plan that includes a narrative of not
10    more than 2,500 words that establishes a goal of diversity
11    in ownership, management, employment, and contracting to
12    ensure that diverse participants and groups are afforded
13    equality of opportunity; and
14        (13) Any other criteria the Department of Agriculture
15    may set by rule for points.
16    (b) The Department may also award bonus points for the
17applicant's plan to engage with the community. Bonus points
18will only be awarded if the Department receives applications
19that receive an equal score for a particular region.
20    (c) Should the applicant be awarded a cultivation center
21license, the information and plans that an applicant provided
22in its application, including any plans submitted for the
23acquiring of bonus points, becomes a mandatory condition of
24the permit. Any variation from or failure to perform such
25plans may result in discipline, including the revocation or
26nonrenewal of a license.

 

 

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1    (d) Should the applicant be awarded a cultivation center
2license, it shall pay a fee of $100,000 prior to receiving the
3license, to be deposited into the Cannabis Regulation Fund.
4The Department of Agriculture may by rule adjust the fee in
5this Section after January 1, 2021.
6(Source: P.A. 101-27, eff. 6-25-19; 101-593, eff. 12-4-19.)
 
7    (410 ILCS 705/20-21)
8    Sec. 20-21. Adult Use Cultivation Center License.
9    (a) A person or entity is only eligible to receive a an
10Adult Use Cultivation Center License if the person or entity
11has first been awarded a Conditional Adult Use Cultivation
12Center License pursuant to this Act or the person or entity has
13renewed its Early Approval Cultivation Center License pursuant
14to subsection (c) of Section 20-10.
15    (b) The Department of Agriculture shall not issue a an
16Adult Use Cultivation Center License until:
17        (1) the Department of Agriculture has inspected the
18    cultivation center site and proposed operations and
19    verified that they are in compliance with this Act and
20    local zoning laws;
21        (2) the Conditional Adult Use Cultivation Center
22    License holder has paid a registration fee of $100,000 or
23    a prorated amount accounting for the difference of time
24    between when the Adult Use Cultivation Center License is
25    issued and March 31 of the next even-numbered year; and

 

 

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1        (3) The Conditional Adult Use Cultivation Center
2    License holder has met all the requirements in the Act and
3    rules.
4    (c) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, on and
5after January 1, 2026, the Department shall cease to issue or
6renew any medical cannabis cultivation permit issued under the
7Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis Act. Licensees that hold
8dual Medical Cannabis Cultivation Permits and Adult Use
9Cultivation Center Licenses may continue all operations with a
10valid Cultivation Center License issued under this Act that is
11in good standing.
12        (1) The Department shall create a process for licenses
13    to transition to sole operation as Cultivation Centers;
14    including refund or proration of medical cultivation
15    center permit fees.
16        (2) Any statements or plans submitted as part of an
17    initial application for a medical cannabis cultivation
18    permit as well as all subsequent modifications and
19    alterations shall remain a mandatory condition of the
20    cultivation center license.
21        (3) Cultivation Centers shall not relocate except
22    within the same Illinois State Police District boundary as
23    specified on the date of January 1, 2013 in which the
24    initial Medical Cannabis Cultivation Permit was initially
25    issued.
26(Source: P.A. 101-27, eff. 6-25-19.)
 

 

 

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1    (410 ILCS 705/20-30)
2    Sec. 20-30. Cultivation center requirements; prohibitions.
3    (a) The operating documents of a cultivation center shall
4include procedures for the oversight of the cultivation
5center, a cannabis plant monitoring system including a
6physical inventory recorded weekly, accurate recordkeeping,
7and a staffing plan.
8    (b) A cultivation center shall implement a security plan
9reviewed by the Illinois State Police that includes, but is
10not limited to: facility access controls, perimeter intrusion
11detection systems, personnel identification systems, 24-hour
12surveillance system to monitor the interior and exterior of
13the cultivation center facility and accessibility to
14authorized law enforcement, the Department of Public Health
15where processing takes place, and the Department of
16Agriculture in real time.
17    (c) All cultivation of cannabis by a cultivation center
18must take place in an enclosed, locked facility at the
19physical address provided to the Department of Agriculture
20during the licensing process. The cultivation center location
21shall only be accessed by the agents working for the
22cultivation center, the Department of Agriculture staff
23performing inspections, the Department of Public Health staff
24performing inspections, local and State law enforcement or
25other emergency personnel, contractors working on jobs

 

 

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1unrelated to cannabis, such as installing or maintaining
2security devices or performing electrical wiring, transporting
3organization agents as provided in this Act, individuals in a
4mentoring or educational program approved by the State, or
5other individuals as provided by rule.
6    (d) A cultivation center may not sell or distribute any
7cannabis or cannabis-infused products to any person other than
8a dispensing organization, craft grower, infuser organization,
9transporter, or as otherwise authorized by rule.
10    (e) A cultivation center may not either directly or
11indirectly discriminate in price between different dispensing
12organizations, craft growers, or infuser organizations that
13are purchasing a like grade, strain, brand, and quality of
14cannabis or cannabis-infused product. Nothing in this
15subsection (e) prevents a cultivation center from pricing
16cannabis differently based on differences in the cost of
17manufacturing or processing, the quantities sold, such as
18volume discounts, or the way the products are delivered.
19    (f) All cannabis harvested by a cultivation center and
20intended for distribution to a dispensing organization must be
21entered into a data collection system, packaged and labeled
22under Section 55-21, and placed into a cannabis container for
23transport. All cannabis harvested by a cultivation center and
24intended for distribution to a craft grower or infuser
25organization must be packaged in a labeled cannabis container
26and entered into a data collection system before transport.

 

 

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1    (g) Cultivation centers are subject to random inspections
2by the Department of Agriculture, the Department of Public
3Health, local safety or health inspectors, the Illinois State
4Police, or as provided by rule.
5    (h) A cultivation center agent shall notify local law
6enforcement, the Illinois State Police, and the Department of
7Agriculture within 24 hours of the discovery of any loss or
8theft. Notification shall be made by phone or in person, or by
9written or electronic communication.
10    (i) A cultivation center shall comply with all State and
11any applicable federal rules and regulations regarding the use
12of pesticides on cannabis plants.
13    (j) No person or entity shall hold any legal, equitable,
14ownership, or beneficial interest, directly or indirectly, of
15more than 3 cultivation centers licensed under this Article.
16Further, no person or entity that is employed by, an agent of,
17has a contract to receive payment in any form from a
18cultivation center, is a principal officer of a cultivation
19center, or entity controlled by or affiliated with a principal
20officer of a cultivation shall hold any legal, equitable,
21ownership, or beneficial interest, directly or indirectly, in
22a cultivation that would result in the person or entity owning
23or controlling in combination with any cultivation center,
24principal officer of a cultivation center, or entity
25controlled or affiliated with a principal officer of a
26cultivation center by which he, she, or it is employed, is an

 

 

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1agent of, or participates in the management of, more than 3
2cultivation center licenses.
3    (k) A cultivation center may not contain more than 210,000
4square feet of canopy space for plants in the flowering stage
5for cultivation of adult use cannabis as provided in this Act.
6    (l) A cultivation center may process cannabis, cannabis
7concentrates, and cannabis-infused products.
8    (m) Beginning July 1, 2020, a cultivation center shall not
9transport cannabis or cannabis-infused products to a craft
10grower, dispensing organization, infuser organization, or
11laboratory licensed under this Act, unless it has obtained a
12transporting organization license.
13    (n) It is unlawful for any person having a cultivation
14center license or any officer, associate, member,
15representative, or agent of such licensee to offer or deliver
16money, or anything else of value, directly or indirectly to
17any person having an Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing
18Organization License, a Conditional Adult Use Dispensing
19Organization License, an Adult Use Dispensing Organization
20License, or a medical cannabis dispensing organization license
21issued under the Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis Program
22Act, or to any person connected with or in any way
23representing, or to any member of the family of, such person
24holding an Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing Organization
25License, a Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization
26License, an Adult Use Dispensing Organization License, or a

 

 

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1medical cannabis dispensing organization license issued under
2the Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis Program Act, or to
3any stockholders in any corporation engaged in the retail sale
4of cannabis, or to any officer, manager, agent, or
5representative of the Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing
6Organization License, a Conditional Adult Use Dispensing
7Organization License, an Adult Use Dispensing Organization
8License, or a medical cannabis dispensing organization license
9issued under the Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis Program
10Act to obtain preferential placement within the dispensing
11organization, including, without limitation, on shelves and in
12display cases where purchasers can view products, or on the
13dispensing organization's website.
14    (o) A cultivation center must comply with any other
15requirements or prohibitions set by administrative rule of the
16Department of Agriculture.
17    (p) A cultivation center may not be located within 2,500
18feet of the property line of a pre-existing public or private
19preschool or elementary or secondary school or day care
20center, day care home, group day care home, part day child care
21facility, or an area zoned for residential use.
22(Source: P.A. 101-27, eff. 6-25-19; 101-593, eff. 12-4-19;
23102-98, eff. 7-15-21; 102-538, eff. 8-20-21; 102-813, eff.
245-13-22.)
 
25    (410 ILCS 705/20-35)

 

 

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1    Sec. 20-35. Cultivation center agent identification card.
2    (a) The Department of Agriculture shall:
3        (1) establish by rule the information required in an
4    initial application or renewal application for an agent
5    identification card submitted under this Act and the
6    nonrefundable fee to accompany the initial application or
7    renewal application;
8        (2) verify the information contained in an initial
9    application or renewal application for an agent
10    identification card submitted under this Act, and approve
11    or deny an application within 30 days of receiving a
12    completed initial application or renewal application and
13    all supporting documentation required by rule;
14        (3) issue an agent identification card to a qualifying
15    agent within 15 business days of approving the initial
16    application or renewal application;
17        (4) enter the license number of the cultivation center
18    where the agent works; and
19        (5) allow for an electronic initial application and
20    renewal application process, and provide a confirmation by
21    electronic or other methods that an application has been
22    submitted. The Department of Agriculture may by rule
23    require prospective agents to file their applications by
24    electronic means and provide notices to the agents by
25    electronic means.
26    (b) An agent must keep his or her identification card

 

 

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1visible at all times when on the property of the cultivation
2center at which the agent is employed.
3    (c) The agent identification cards shall contain the
4following:
5        (1) the name of the cardholder;
6        (2) the date of issuance and expiration date of the
7    identification card;
8        (3) a random 10-digit alphanumeric identification
9    number containing at least 4 numbers and at least 4
10    letters that is unique to the holder;
11        (4) a photograph of the cardholder; and
12        (5) the legal name of the cultivation center employing
13    the agent.
14    (d) An agent identification card shall be immediately
15returned to the cultivation center of the agent upon
16termination of his or her employment.
17    (e) Any agent identification card lost by a cultivation
18center agent shall be reported to the Illinois State Police
19and the Department of Agriculture immediately upon discovery
20of the loss.
21    (f) The Department of Agriculture shall not issue an agent
22identification card if the applicant is delinquent in filing
23any required tax returns or paying any amounts owed to the
24State of Illinois.
25    (g) The Department and the Department of Financial and
26Professional Regulation may develop and implement an

 

 

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1integrated system to issue an agent identification card which
2identifies a cultivation center agent licensed by the
3Department as well as any craft grower, transporter,
4dispensing organization, community college program, or infuser
5license or registration the agent may simultaneously hold.
6(Source: P.A. 101-27, eff. 6-25-19; 102-538, eff. 8-20-21.)
 
7    (410 ILCS 705/20-45)
8    Sec. 20-45. Renewal of cultivation center licenses and
9agent identification cards.
10    (a) Licenses and identification cards issued under this
11Act shall be renewed annually. A cultivation center shall
12receive written or electronic notice 90 days before the
13expiration of its current license that the license will
14expire. The Department of Agriculture shall grant a renewal
15within 45 days of submission of a renewal application if:
16        (1) the cultivation center submits a renewal
17    application and the required nonrefundable renewal fee of
18    $100,000, or another amount as the Department of
19    Agriculture may set by rule after January 1, 2021, to be
20    deposited into the Cannabis Regulation Fund. On or after
21    January 1, 2026, the Cultivation Center License renewal
22    fee shall be $200,000 to be deposited into the Cannabis
23    Regulation Fund. For the 2026 renewal cycle the Department
24    may set up a process to refund or prorate renewal fees.
25        (2) the Department of Agriculture has not suspended

 

 

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1    the license of the cultivation center or suspended or
2    revoked the license for violating this Act or rules
3    adopted under this Act;
4        (3) the cultivation center has continued to operate in
5    accordance with all plans submitted as part of its
6    application and approved by the Department of Agriculture
7    or any amendments thereto that have been approved by the
8    Department of Agriculture;
9        (4) the cultivation center has submitted an agent,
10    employee, contracting, and subcontracting diversity report
11    as required by the Department; and
12        (5) the cultivation center has submitted an
13    environmental impact report.
14    (b) If a cultivation center fails to renew its license
15before expiration, it shall cease operations until its license
16is renewed.
17    (c) If a cultivation center agent fails to renew his or her
18identification card before its expiration, he or she shall
19cease to work as an agent of the cultivation center until his
20or her identification card is renewed.
21    (d) Any cultivation center that continues to operate, or
22any cultivation center agent who continues to work as an
23agent, after the applicable license or identification card has
24expired without renewal is subject to the penalties provided
25under Section 45-5.
26    (e) The Department of Agriculture shall not renew a

 

 

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1license or an agent identification card if the applicant is
2delinquent in filing any required tax returns or paying any
3amounts owed to the State.
4(Source: P.A. 101-27, eff. 6-25-19.)
 
5    (410 ILCS 705/25-35)
6    (Section scheduled to be repealed on July 1, 2026)
7    Sec. 25-35. Community College Cannabis Vocational Training
8Pilot Program faculty participant agent identification card.
9    (a) The Department shall:
10        (1) establish by rule the information required in an
11    initial application or renewal application for an agent
12    identification card submitted under this Article and the
13    nonrefundable fee to accompany the initial application or
14    renewal application;
15        (2) verify the information contained in an initial
16    application or renewal application for an agent
17    identification card submitted under this Article, and
18    approve or deny an application within 30 days of receiving
19    a completed initial application or renewal application and
20    all supporting documentation required by rule;
21        (3) issue an agent identification card to a qualifying
22    agent within 15 business days of approving the initial
23    application or renewal application;
24        (4) enter the license number of the community college
25    where the agent works; and

 

 

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1        (5) allow for an electronic initial application and
2    renewal application process, and provide a confirmation by
3    electronic or other methods that an application has been
4    submitted. Each Department may by rule require prospective
5    agents to file their applications by electronic means and
6    to provide notices to the agents by electronic means.
7    (b) An agent must keep his or her identification card
8visible at all times when in the enclosed, locked facility, or
9facilities for which he or she is an agent.
10    (c) The agent identification cards shall contain the
11following:
12        (1) the name of the cardholder;
13        (2) the date of issuance and expiration date of the
14    identification card;
15        (3) a random 10-digit alphanumeric identification
16    number containing at least 4 numbers and at least 4
17    letters that is unique to the holder;
18        (4) a photograph of the cardholder; and
19        (5) the legal name of the community college employing
20    the agent.
21    (d) An agent identification card shall be immediately
22returned to the community college of the agent upon
23termination of his or her employment.
24    (e) Any agent identification card lost shall be reported
25to the Illinois State Police and the Department of Agriculture
26immediately upon discovery of the loss.

 

 

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1    (f) An agent applicant may begin employment at a Community
2College Cannabis Vocational Training Pilot Program while the
3agent applicant's identification card application is pending.
4Upon approval, the Department shall issue the agent's
5identification card to the agent. If denied, the Community
6College Cannabis Vocational Training Pilot Program and the
7agent applicant shall be notified and the agent applicant must
8cease all activity at the Community College Cannabis
9Vocational Training Pilot Program immediately.
10    (g) The Department of Agriculture shall not issue an agent
11identification card if the applicant is delinquent in filing
12any required tax returns or paying any amounts owed to the
13State.
14    (h) The Department of Agriculture and the Department of
15Financial and Professional Regulation may develop and
16implement an integrated system to issue an agent
17identification card which identifies a community college
18program agent licensed by the Department as well as any
19cultivation center, craft grower, transporter, dispensing
20organization, or infuser license or registration the agent may
21simultaneously hold.
22(Source: P.A. 101-27, eff. 6-25-19; 102-98, eff. 7-15-21;
23102-538, eff. 8-20-21; 102-813, eff. 5-13-22.)
 
24    (410 ILCS 705/30-10)
25    Sec. 30-10. Application.

 

 

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1    (a) When applying for a license, the applicant shall
2electronically submit the following in such form as the
3Department of Agriculture may direct:
4        (1) the nonrefundable application fee of $5,000 to be
5    deposited into the Cannabis Regulation Fund, or another
6    amount as the Department of Agriculture may set by rule
7    after January 1, 2021;
8        (2) the legal name of the craft grower;
9        (3) the proposed physical address of the craft grower;
10        (4) the name, address, social security number, and
11    date of birth of each principal officer and board member
12    of the craft grower; each principal officer and board
13    member shall be at least 21 years of age;
14        (5) the details of any administrative or judicial
15    proceeding in which any of the principal officers or board
16    members of the craft grower (i) pled guilty, were
17    convicted, were fined, or had a registration or license
18    suspended or revoked or (ii) managed or served on the
19    board of a business or non-profit organization that pled
20    guilty, was convicted, was fined, or had a registration or
21    license suspended or revoked;
22        (6) proposed operating bylaws that include procedures
23    for the oversight of the craft grower, including the
24    development and implementation of a plant monitoring
25    system, accurate recordkeeping, staffing plan, and
26    security plan approved by the Illinois State Police that

 

 

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1    are in accordance with the rules issued by the Department
2    of Agriculture under this Act; a physical inventory shall
3    be performed of all plants and on a weekly basis by the
4    craft grower;
5        (7) verification from the Illinois State Police that
6    all background checks of the prospective principal
7    officers, board members, and agents of the cannabis
8    business establishment have been conducted;
9        (8) a copy of the current local zoning ordinance or
10    permit and verification that the proposed craft grower is
11    in compliance with the local zoning rules and distance
12    limitations established by the local jurisdiction;
13        (9) proposed employment practices, in which the
14    applicant must demonstrate a plan of action to inform,
15    hire, and educate minorities, women, veterans, and persons
16    with disabilities, engage in fair labor practices, and
17    provide worker protections;
18        (10) whether an applicant can demonstrate experience
19    in or business practices that promote economic empowerment
20    in Disproportionately Impacted Areas;
21        (11) experience with the cultivation of agricultural
22    or horticultural products, operating an agriculturally
23    related business, or operating a horticultural business;
24        (12) a description of the enclosed, locked facility
25    where cannabis will be grown, harvested, manufactured,
26    packaged, or otherwise prepared for distribution to a

 

 

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1    dispensing organization or other cannabis business
2    establishment;
3        (13) a survey of the enclosed, locked facility,
4    including the space used for cultivation;
5        (14) cultivation, processing, inventory, and packaging
6    plans;
7        (15) a description of the applicant's experience with
8    agricultural cultivation techniques and industry
9    standards;
10        (16) a list of any academic degrees, certifications,
11    or relevant experience of all prospective principal
12    officers, board members, and agents of the related
13    business;
14        (17) the identity of every person having a financial
15    or voting interest of 5% or greater in the craft grower
16    operation, whether a trust, corporation, partnership,
17    limited liability company, or sole proprietorship,
18    including the name and address of each person;
19        (18) a plan describing how the craft grower will
20    address each of the following:
21            (i) energy needs, including estimates of monthly
22        electricity and gas usage, to what extent it will
23        procure energy from a local utility or from on-site
24        generation, and if it has or will adopt a sustainable
25        energy use and energy conservation policy;
26            (ii) water needs, including estimated water draw

 

 

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1        and if it has or will adopt a sustainable water use and
2        water conservation policy; and
3            (iii) waste management, including if it has or
4        will adopt a waste reduction policy;
5        (19) a recycling plan:
6            (A) Purchaser packaging, including cartridges,
7        shall be accepted by the applicant and recycled.
8            (B) Any recyclable waste generated by the craft
9        grower facility shall be recycled per applicable State
10        and local laws, ordinances, and rules.
11            (C) Any cannabis waste, liquid waste, or hazardous
12        waste shall be disposed of in accordance with 8 Ill.
13        Adm. Code 1000.460, except, to the greatest extent
14        feasible, all cannabis plant waste will be rendered
15        unusable by grinding and incorporating the cannabis
16        plant waste with compostable mixed waste to be
17        disposed of in accordance with 8 Ill. Adm. Code
18        1000.460(g)(1);
19        (20) a commitment to comply with local waste
20    provisions: a craft grower facility must remain in
21    compliance with applicable State and federal environmental
22    requirements, including, but not limited to:
23            (A) storing, securing, and managing all
24        recyclables and waste, including organic waste
25        composed of or containing finished cannabis and
26        cannabis products, in accordance with applicable State

 

 

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1        and local laws, ordinances, and rules; and
2            (B) disposing liquid waste containing cannabis or
3        byproducts of cannabis processing in compliance with
4        all applicable State and federal requirements,
5        including, but not limited to, the cannabis
6        cultivation facility's permits under Title X of the
7        Environmental Protection Act;
8        (21) a commitment to a technology standard for
9    resource efficiency of the craft grower facility.
10            (A) A craft grower facility commits to use
11        resources efficiently, including energy and water. For
12        the following, a cannabis cultivation facility commits
13        to meet or exceed the technology standard identified
14        in paragraphs (i), (ii), (iii), and (iv), which may be
15        modified by rule:
16                (i) lighting systems, including light bulbs;
17                (ii) HVAC system;
18                (iii) water application system to the crop;
19            and
20                (iv) filtration system for removing
21            contaminants from wastewater.
22            (B) Lighting. The Lighting Power Densities (LPD)
23        for cultivation space commits to not exceed an average
24        of 36 watts per gross square foot of active and growing
25        space canopy, or all installed lighting technology
26        shall meet a photosynthetic photon efficacy (PPE) of

 

 

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1        no less than 2.2 micromoles per joule fixture and
2        shall be featured on the DesignLights Consortium (DLC)
3        Horticultural Specification Qualified Products List
4        (QPL). In the event that DLC requirement for minimum
5        efficacy exceeds 2.2 micromoles per joule fixture,
6        that PPE shall become the new standard.
7            (C) HVAC.
8                (i) The For cannabis grow operations with less
9            than 6,000 square feet of canopy, the licensee
10            commits that all HVAC units will be
11            high-efficiency ductless split HVAC units, or
12            other more energy efficient equipment.
13                (ii) (Blank). For cannabis grow operations
14            with 6,000 square feet of canopy or more, the
15            licensee commits that all HVAC units will be
16            variable refrigerant flow HVAC units, or other
17            more energy efficient equipment.
18            (D) Water application.
19                (i) The craft grower facility commits to use
20            automated watering systems, including, but not
21            limited to, drip irrigation and flood tables, to
22            irrigate cannabis crop.
23                (ii) The craft grower facility commits to
24            measure runoff from watering events and report
25            this volume in its water usage plan, and that on
26            average, watering events shall have no more than

 

 

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1            20% of runoff of water.
2            (E) Filtration. The craft grower commits that HVAC
3        condensate, dehumidification water, excess runoff, and
4        other wastewater produced by the craft grower facility
5        shall be captured and filtered to the best of the
6        facility's ability to achieve the quality needed to be
7        reused in subsequent watering rounds.
8            (F) Reporting energy use and efficiency as
9        required by rule; and
10        (22) any other information required by rule.
11    (b) Applicants must submit all required information,
12including the information required in Section 30-15, to the
13Department of Agriculture. Failure by an applicant to submit
14all required information may result in the application being
15disqualified.
16    (c) If the Department of Agriculture receives an
17application with missing information, the Department of
18Agriculture may issue a deficiency notice to the applicant.
19The applicant shall have 10 calendar days from the date of the
20deficiency notice to resubmit the incomplete information.
21Applications that are still incomplete after this opportunity
22to cure will not be scored and will be disqualified.
23(Source: P.A. 101-27, eff. 6-25-19; 101-593, eff. 12-4-19;
24102-538, eff. 8-20-21.)
 
25    (410 ILCS 705/30-30)

 

 

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1    Sec. 30-30. Craft grower requirements; prohibitions.
2    (a) The operating documents of a craft grower shall
3include procedures for the oversight of the craft grower, a
4cannabis plant monitoring system including a physical
5inventory recorded weekly, accurate recordkeeping, and a
6staffing plan.
7    (b) A craft grower shall implement a security plan
8reviewed by the Illinois State Police that includes, but is
9not limited to: facility access controls, perimeter intrusion
10detection systems, personnel identification systems, and a
1124-hour surveillance system to monitor the interior and
12exterior of the craft grower facility and that is accessible
13to authorized law enforcement and the Department of
14Agriculture in real time.
15    (c) All cultivation of cannabis by a craft grower must
16take place in an enclosed, locked facility at the physical
17address provided to the Department of Agriculture during the
18licensing process. The craft grower location shall only be
19accessed by the agents working for the craft grower, the
20Department of Agriculture staff performing inspections, the
21Department of Public Health staff performing inspections,
22State and local law enforcement or other emergency personnel,
23contractors working on jobs unrelated to cannabis, such as
24installing or maintaining security devices or performing
25electrical wiring, transporting organization agents as
26provided in this Act, or participants in the incubator

 

 

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1program, individuals in a mentoring or educational program
2approved by the State, or other individuals as provided by
3rule. However, if a craft grower shares a premises with an
4infuser or dispensing organization, agents from those other
5licensees may access the craft grower portion of the premises
6if that is the location of common bathrooms, lunchrooms,
7locker rooms, or other areas of the building where work or
8cultivation of cannabis is not performed. At no time may an
9infuser or dispensing organization agent perform work at a
10craft grower without being a registered agent of the craft
11grower.
12    (d) A craft grower may not sell or distribute any cannabis
13to any person other than a cultivation center, a craft grower,
14an infuser organization, a dispensing organization, or as
15otherwise authorized by rule.
16    (e) A craft grower may not be located in an area zoned for
17residential use.
18    (f) A craft grower may not either directly or indirectly
19discriminate in price between different cannabis business
20establishments that are purchasing a like grade, strain,
21brand, and quality of cannabis or cannabis-infused product.
22Nothing in this subsection (f) prevents a craft grower from
23pricing cannabis differently based on differences in the cost
24of manufacturing or processing, the quantities sold, such as
25volume discounts, or the way the products are delivered.
26    (g) All cannabis harvested by a craft grower and intended

 

 

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1for distribution to a dispensing organization must be entered
2into a data collection system, packaged and labeled under
3Section 55-21, and, if distribution is to a dispensing
4organization that does not share a premises with the
5dispensing organization receiving the cannabis, placed into a
6cannabis container for transport. All cannabis harvested by a
7craft grower and intended for distribution to a cultivation
8center, to an infuser organization, or to a craft grower with
9which it does not share a premises, must be packaged in a
10labeled cannabis container and entered into a data collection
11system before transport.
12    (h) Craft growers are subject to random inspections by the
13Department of Agriculture, local safety or health inspectors,
14the Illinois State Police, or as provided by rule.
15    (i) A craft grower agent shall notify local law
16enforcement, the Illinois State Police, and the Department of
17Agriculture within 24 hours of the discovery of any loss or
18theft. Notification shall be made by phone, in person, or
19written or electronic communication.
20    (j) A craft grower shall comply with all State and any
21applicable federal rules and regulations regarding the use of
22pesticides.
23    (k) A craft grower or craft grower agent shall not
24transport cannabis or cannabis-infused products to any other
25cannabis business establishment without a transport
26organization license unless:

 

 

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1        (i) If the craft grower is located in a county with a
2    population of 3,000,000 or more, the cannabis business
3    establishment receiving the cannabis is within 2,000 feet
4    of the property line of the craft grower;
5        (ii) If the craft grower is located in a county with a
6    population of more than 700,000 but fewer than 3,000,000,
7    the cannabis business establishment receiving the cannabis
8    is within 2 miles of the craft grower; or
9        (iii) If the craft grower is located in a county with a
10    population of fewer than 700,000, the cannabis business
11    establishment receiving the cannabis is within 15 miles of
12    the craft grower.
13    (l) A craft grower may enter into a contract with a
14transporting organization to transport cannabis to a
15cultivation center, a craft grower, an infuser organization, a
16dispensing organization, or a laboratory.
17    (m) No person or entity shall hold any legal, equitable,
18ownership, or beneficial interest, directly or indirectly, of
19more than 3 craft grower licenses. Further, no person or
20entity that is employed by, an agent of, or has a contract to
21receive payment from or participate in the management of a
22craft grower, is a principal officer of a craft grower, or
23entity controlled by or affiliated with a principal officer of
24a craft grower shall hold any legal, equitable, ownership, or
25beneficial interest, directly or indirectly, in a craft grower
26license that would result in the person or entity owning or

 

 

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1controlling in combination with any craft grower, principal
2officer of a craft grower, or entity controlled or affiliated
3with a principal officer of a craft grower by which he, she, or
4it is employed, is an agent of, or participates in the
5management of more than 3 craft grower licenses.
6    (n) It is unlawful for any person having a craft grower
7license or any officer, associate, member, representative, or
8agent of the licensee to offer or deliver money, or anything
9else of value, directly or indirectly, to any person having an
10Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing Organization License, a
11Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization License, an
12Adult Use Dispensing Organization License, or a medical
13cannabis dispensing organization license issued under the
14Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis Program Act, or to any
15person connected with or in any way representing, or to any
16member of the family of, the person holding an Early Approval
17Adult Use Dispensing Organization License, a Conditional Adult
18Use Dispensing Organization License, an Adult Use Dispensing
19Organization License, or a medical cannabis dispensing
20organization license issued under the Compassionate Use of
21Medical Cannabis Program Act, or to any stockholders in any
22corporation engaged in the retail sale of cannabis, or to any
23officer, manager, agent, or representative of the Early
24Approval Adult Use Dispensing Organization License, a
25Conditional Adult Use Dispensing Organization License, an
26Adult Use Dispensing Organization License, or a medical

 

 

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1cannabis dispensing organization license issued under the
2Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis Program Act to obtain
3preferential placement within the dispensing organization,
4including, without limitation, on shelves and in display cases
5where purchasers can view products, or on the dispensing
6organization's website.
7    (o) A craft grower shall not be located within 1,500 feet
8of another craft grower or a cultivation center.
9    (p) A craft grower may process cannabis, cannabis
10concentrates, and cannabis-infused products.
11    (q) A craft grower must comply with any other requirements
12or prohibitions set by administrative rule of the Department
13of Agriculture.
14(Source: P.A. 101-27, eff. 6-25-19; 101-593, eff. 12-4-19;
15102-98, eff. 7-15-21; 102-538, eff. 8-20-21; 102-813, eff.
165-13-22.)
 
17    (410 ILCS 705/30-35)
18    Sec. 30-35. Craft grower agent identification card.
19    (a) The Department of Agriculture shall:
20        (1) establish by rule the information required in an
21    initial application or renewal application for an agent
22    identification card submitted under this Act and the
23    nonrefundable fee to accompany the initial application or
24    renewal application;
25        (2) verify the information contained in an initial

 

 

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1    application or renewal application for an agent
2    identification card submitted under this Act and approve
3    or deny an application within 30 days of receiving a
4    completed initial application or renewal application and
5    all supporting documentation required by rule;
6        (3) issue an agent identification card to a qualifying
7    agent within 15 business days of approving the initial
8    application or renewal application;
9        (4) enter the license number of the craft grower where
10    the agent works; and
11        (5) allow for an electronic initial application and
12    renewal application process, and provide a confirmation by
13    electronic or other methods that an application has been
14    submitted. The Department of Agriculture may by rule
15    require prospective agents to file their applications by
16    electronic means and provide notices to the agents by
17    electronic means.
18    (b) An agent must keep his or her identification card
19visible at all times when on the property of a cannabis
20business establishment, including the craft grower
21organization for which he or she is an agent.
22    (c) The agent identification cards shall contain the
23following:
24        (1) the name of the cardholder;
25        (2) the date of issuance and expiration date of the
26    identification card;

 

 

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1        (3) a random 10-digit alphanumeric identification
2    number containing at least 4 numbers and at least 4
3    letters that is unique to the holder;
4        (4) a photograph of the cardholder; and
5        (5) the legal name of the craft grower organization
6    employing the agent.
7    (d) An agent identification card shall be immediately
8returned to the cannabis business establishment of the agent
9upon termination of his or her employment.
10    (e) Any agent identification card lost by a craft grower
11agent shall be reported to the Illinois State Police and the
12Department of Agriculture immediately upon discovery of the
13loss.
14    (f) The Department of Agriculture shall not issue an agent
15identification card to an applicant if the applicant is
16delinquent in filing any required tax returns or paying any
17amounts owed to the State.
18(Source: P.A. 101-27, eff. 6-25-19; 102-538, eff. 8-20-21.)
 
19    (410 ILCS 705/30-45)
20    Sec. 30-45. Renewal of craft grower licenses and agent
21identification cards.
22    (a) Licenses and identification cards issued under this
23Act shall be renewed annually. A craft grower shall receive
24written or electronic notice 90 days before the expiration of
25its current license that the license will expire. The

 

 

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1Department of Agriculture shall grant a renewal within 45 days
2of submission of a renewal application if:
3        (1) the craft grower submits a renewal application and
4    the required nonrefundable renewal fee of $40,000, or
5    another amount as the Department of Agriculture may set by
6    rule after January 1, 2021;
7        (2) the Department of Agriculture has not suspended
8    the license of the craft grower or suspended or revoked
9    the license for violating this Act or rules adopted under
10    this Act;
11        (3) the craft grower has continued to operate in
12    accordance with all plans submitted as part of its
13    application and approved by the Department of Agriculture
14    or any amendments thereto that have been approved by the
15    Department of Agriculture;
16        (4) the craft grower has submitted an agent, employee,
17    contracting, and subcontracting diversity report as
18    required by the Department; and
19        (5) the craft grower has submitted an environmental
20    impact report.
21    (b) If a craft grower fails to renew its license before
22expiration, it shall cease operations until its license is
23renewed.
24    (c) If a craft grower agent fails to renew his or her
25identification card before its expiration, he or she shall
26cease to work as an agent of the craft grower organization

 

 

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1until his or her identification card is renewed.
2    (d) Any craft grower that continues to operate, or any
3craft grower agent who continues to work as an agent, after the
4applicable license or identification card has expired without
5renewal is subject to the penalties provided under Section
645-5.
7    (e) All fees or fines collected from the renewal of a craft
8grower license shall be deposited into the Cannabis Regulation
9Fund.
10    (f) The Department of Agriculture shall not renew an
11applicant's license or agent identification card if the
12applicant is delinquent in filing any required tax returns or
13paying any amounts owed to the State.
14    (g) The Department and the Department of Financial and
15Professional Regulation may develop and implement an
16integrated system to issue an agent identification card which
17identifies a craft grower agent licensed by the Department as
18well as any cultivator, dispensary, transporter, community
19college program, or infuser license or registration the agent
20may simultaneously hold.
21(Source: P.A. 101-27, eff. 6-25-19.)
 
22    (410 ILCS 705/35-25)
23    Sec. 35-25. Infuser organization requirements;
24prohibitions.
25    (a) The operating documents of an infuser shall include

 

 

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1procedures for the oversight of the infuser, an inventory
2monitoring system including a physical inventory recorded
3weekly, accurate recordkeeping, and a staffing plan.
4    (b) An infuser shall implement a security plan reviewed by
5the Illinois State Police that includes, but is not limited
6to: facility access controls, perimeter intrusion detection
7systems, personnel identification systems, and a 24-hour
8surveillance system to monitor the interior and exterior of
9the infuser facility and that is accessible to authorized law
10enforcement, the Department of Public Health, and the
11Department of Agriculture in real time.
12    (c) All processing of cannabis by an infuser must take
13place in an enclosed, locked facility at the physical address
14provided to the Department of Agriculture during the licensing
15process. The infuser location shall only be accessed by the
16agents working for the infuser, the Department of Agriculture
17staff performing inspections, the Department of Public Health
18staff performing inspections, State and local law enforcement
19or other emergency personnel, contractors working on jobs
20unrelated to cannabis, such as installing or maintaining
21security devices or performing electrical wiring, transporting
22organization agents as provided in this Act, participants in
23the incubator program, individuals in a mentoring or
24educational program approved by the State, local safety or
25health inspectors, or other individuals as provided by rule.
26However, if an infuser shares a premises with a craft grower or

 

 

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1dispensing organization, agents from these other licensees may
2access the infuser portion of the premises if that is the
3location of common bathrooms, lunchrooms, locker rooms, or
4other areas of the building where processing of cannabis is
5not performed. At no time may a craft grower or dispensing
6organization agent perform work at an infuser without being a
7registered agent of the infuser.
8    (d) An infuser may not sell or distribute any cannabis to
9any person other than a dispensing organization, or as
10otherwise authorized by rule.
11    (e) An infuser may not either directly or indirectly
12discriminate in price between different cannabis business
13establishments that are purchasing a like grade, strain,
14brand, and quality of cannabis or cannabis-infused product.
15Nothing in this subsection (e) prevents an infuser from
16pricing cannabis differently based on differences in the cost
17of manufacturing or processing, the quantities sold, such
18volume discounts, or the way the products are delivered.
19    (f) All cannabis infused by an infuser and intended for
20distribution to a dispensing organization must be entered into
21a data collection system, packaged and labeled under Section
2255-21, and, if distribution is to a dispensing organization
23that does not share a premises with the infuser, placed into a
24cannabis container for transport. All cannabis produced by an
25infuser and intended for distribution to a cultivation center,
26infuser organization, or craft grower with which it does not

 

 

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1share a premises, must be packaged in a labeled cannabis
2container and entered into a data collection system before
3transport.
4    (g) Infusers are subject to random inspections by the
5Department of Agriculture, the Department of Public Health,
6the Illinois State Police, local law enforcement, or as
7provided by rule.
8    (h) An infuser agent shall notify local law enforcement,
9the Illinois State Police, and the Department of Agriculture
10within 24 hours of the discovery of any loss or theft.
11Notification shall be made by phone, in person, or by written
12or electronic communication.
13    (i) An infuser organization may not be located in an area
14zoned for residential use.
15    (j) An infuser or infuser agent shall not transport
16cannabis or cannabis-infused products to any other cannabis
17business establishment without a transport organization
18license unless:
19        (i) If the infuser is located in a county with a
20    population of 3,000,000 or more, the cannabis business
21    establishment receiving the cannabis or cannabis-infused
22    product is within 2,000 feet of the property line of the
23    infuser;
24        (ii) If the infuser is located in a county with a
25    population of more than 700,000 but fewer than 3,000,000,
26    the cannabis business establishment receiving the cannabis

 

 

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1    or cannabis-infused product is within 2 miles of the
2    infuser; or
3        (iii) If the infuser is located in a county with a
4    population of fewer than 700,000, the cannabis business
5    establishment receiving the cannabis or cannabis-infused
6    product is within 15 miles of the infuser.
7    (k) An infuser may enter into a contract with a
8transporting organization to transport cannabis to a
9dispensing organization or a laboratory.
10    (l) An infuser organization may share premises with a
11craft grower or a dispensing organization, or both, provided
12each licensee stores currency and cannabis or cannabis-infused
13products in a separate secured vault to which the other
14licensee does not have access or all licensees sharing a vault
15share more than 50% of the same ownership.
16    (m) It is unlawful for any person or entity having an
17infuser organization license or any officer, associate,
18member, representative or agent of such licensee to offer or
19deliver money, or anything else of value, directly or
20indirectly to any person having an Early Approval Adult Use
21Dispensing Organization License, a Conditional Adult Use
22Dispensing Organization License, an Adult Use Dispensing
23Organization License, or a medical cannabis dispensing
24organization license issued under the Compassionate Use of
25Medical Cannabis Program Act, or to any person connected with
26or in any way representing, or to any member of the family of,

 

 

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1such person holding an Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing
2Organization License, a Conditional Adult Use Dispensing
3Organization License, an Adult Use Dispensing Organization
4License, or a medical cannabis dispensing organization license
5issued under the Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis Program
6Act, or to any stockholders in any corporation engaged the
7retail sales of cannabis, or to any officer, manager, agent,
8or representative of the Early Approval Adult Use Dispensing
9Organization License, a Conditional Adult Use Dispensing
10Organization License, an Adult Use Dispensing Organization
11License, or a medical cannabis dispensing organization license
12issued under the Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis Program
13Act to obtain preferential placement within the dispensing
14organization, including, without limitation, on shelves and in
15display cases where purchasers can view products, or on the
16dispensing organization's website.
17    (n) At no time shall an infuser organization or an infuser
18agent perform the extraction of cannabis concentrate from
19cannabis flower except if the infuser organization has also
20been issued a processor license under subsection (f) of
21Section 35-31.
22(Source: P.A. 101-27, eff. 6-25-19; 101-593, eff. 12-4-19;
23102-98, eff. 7-15-21; 102-538, eff. 8-20-21; 102-813, eff.
245-13-22.)
 
25    (410 ILCS 705/35-30)

 

 

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1    Sec. 35-30. Infuser agent identification card.
2    (a) The Department of Agriculture shall:
3        (1) establish by rule the information required in an
4    initial application or renewal application for an agent
5    identification card submitted under this Act and the
6    nonrefundable fee to accompany the initial application or
7    renewal application;
8        (2) verify the information contained in an initial
9    application or renewal application for an agent
10    identification card submitted under this Act, and approve
11    or deny an application within 30 days of receiving a
12    completed initial application or renewal application and
13    all supporting documentation required by rule;
14        (3) issue an agent identification card to a qualifying
15    agent within 15 business days of approving the initial
16    application or renewal application;
17        (4) enter the license number of the infuser where the
18    agent works; and
19        (5) allow for an electronic initial application and
20    renewal application process, and provide a confirmation by
21    electronic or other methods that an application has been
22    submitted. The Department of Agriculture may by rule
23    require prospective agents to file their applications by
24    electronic means and provide notices to the agents by
25    electronic means.
26    (b) An agent must keep his or her identification card

 

 

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1visible at all times when on the property of a cannabis
2business establishment including the cannabis business
3establishment for which he or she is an agent.
4    (c) The agent identification cards shall contain the
5following:
6        (1) the name of the cardholder;
7        (2) the date of issuance and expiration date of the
8    identification card;
9        (3) a random 10-digit alphanumeric identification
10    number containing at least 4 numbers and at least 4
11    letters that is unique to the holder;
12        (4) a photograph of the cardholder; and
13        (5) the legal name of the infuser organization
14    employing the agent.
15    (d) An agent identification card shall be immediately
16returned to the infuser organization of the agent upon
17termination of his or her employment.
18    (e) Any agent identification card lost by a transporting
19agent shall be reported to the Illinois State Police and the
20Department of Agriculture immediately upon discovery of the
21loss.
22    (f) An agent applicant may begin employment at an infuser
23organization while the agent applicant's identification card
24application is pending. Upon approval, the Department shall
25issue the agent's identification card to the agent. If denied,
26the infuser organization and the agent applicant shall be

 

 

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1notified and the agent applicant must cease all activity at
2the infuser organization immediately.
3    (g) The Department of Agriculture shall not issue an
4applicant an agent identification card if the applicant is
5delinquent in filing any required tax returns or paying any
6amounts owed to the State.
7    (h) The Department and the Department of Financial and
8Professional Regulation may develop and implement an
9integrated system to issue an agent identification card which
10identifies an infuser agent licensed by the Department as well
11as any cultivation center, craft grower, transporter,
12dispensing organization, or community college program license
13or registration the agent may simultaneously hold.
14(Source: P.A. 101-27, eff. 6-25-19; 102-98, eff. 7-15-21;
15102-538, eff. 8-20-21; 102-813, eff. 5-13-22.)
 
16    (410 ILCS 705/40-25)
17    Sec. 40-25. Transporting organization requirements;
18prohibitions.
19    (a) The operating documents of a transporting organization
20shall include procedures for the oversight of the transporter,
21an inventory monitoring system including a physical inventory
22recorded weekly, accurate recordkeeping, and a staffing plan.
23    (b) A transporting organization may not transport cannabis
24or cannabis-infused products to any person other than a
25cultivation center, a craft grower, an infuser organization, a

 

 

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1dispensing organization, a testing facility, or as otherwise
2authorized by rule.
3    (c) All cannabis transported by a transporting
4organization must be entered into a data collection system and
5placed into a cannabis container for transport.
6    (d) Transporters are subject to random inspections by the
7Department of Agriculture, the Department of Public Health,
8the Illinois State Police, or as provided by rule.
9    (e) A transporting organization agent shall notify local
10law enforcement, the Illinois State Police, and the Department
11of Agriculture within 24 hours of the discovery of any loss or
12theft. Notification shall be made by phone, in person, or by
13written or electronic communication.
14    (f) No person under the age of 21 years shall be in a
15commercial vehicle or trailer transporting cannabis goods.
16    (g) No person or individual who is not a transporting
17organization agent shall be in a vehicle while transporting
18cannabis goods.
19    (h) Transporters may not use commercial motor vehicles
20with a weight rating of over 10,001 pounds.
21    (i) It is unlawful for any person to offer or deliver
22money, or anything else of value, directly or indirectly, to
23any of the following persons to obtain preferential placement
24within the dispensing organization, including, without
25limitation, on shelves and in display cases where purchasers
26can view products, or on the dispensing organization's

 

 

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1website:
2        (1) a person having a transporting organization
3    license, or any officer, associate, member,
4    representative, or agent of the licensee;
5        (2) a person having an Early Applicant Adult Use
6    Dispensing Organization License, an Adult Use Dispensing
7    Organization License, or a medical cannabis dispensing
8    organization license issued under the Compassionate Use of
9    Medical Cannabis Program Act;
10        (3) a person connected with or in any way
11    representing, or a member of the family of, a person
12    holding an Early Applicant Adult Use Dispensing
13    Organization License, an Adult Use Dispensing Organization
14    License, or a medical cannabis dispensing organization
15    license issued under the Compassionate Use of Medical
16    Cannabis Program Act; or
17        (4) a stockholder, officer, manager, agent, or
18    representative of a corporation engaged in the retail sale
19    of cannabis, an Early Applicant Adult Use Dispensing
20    Organization License, an Adult Use Dispensing Organization
21    License, or a medical cannabis dispensing organization
22    license issued under the Compassionate Use of Medical
23    Cannabis Program Act.
24    (j) A transporting organization agent must keep his or her
25identification card visible at all times when on the property
26of a cannabis business establishment and during the

 

 

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1transporting of cannabis when acting under his or her duties
2as a transportation organization agent. During these times,
3the transporting organization agent must also provide the
4identification card upon request of any law enforcement
5officer engaged in his or her official duties.
6    (j-5) A transporting organization agent may not be
7required to remain on the property of a cannabis business
8establishment after transferring cannabis goods into the
9control of the cannabis business establishment. A cannabis
10business establishment may examine the cannabis goods from the
11delivery after the transporting organization has transferred
12control of the cannabis goods to the cannabis business
13establishment.
14    (k) A copy of the transporting organization's registration
15and a manifest for the delivery shall be present in any vehicle
16transporting cannabis.
17    (l) Cannabis shall be transported so it is not visible or
18recognizable from outside the vehicle.
19    (m) A vehicle transporting cannabis must not bear any
20markings to indicate the vehicle contains cannabis or bear the
21name or logo of the cannabis business establishment.
22    (n) Cannabis must be transported in an enclosed, locked
23storage compartment that is secured or affixed to the vehicle.
24    (o) The Department of Agriculture may, by rule, impose any
25other requirements or prohibitions on the transportation of
26cannabis.

 

 

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1    (p) A cannabis business establishment may not schedule any
2delivery from a transporting organization within 1 hour of the
3cannabis business establishment's close of business on any
4business day.
5    (q) A transporting organization may begin a delivery to a
6cannabis business establishment at any time during the day. A
7transporting organization may not be restricted from beginning
8a delivery based on a cannabis business establishment's listed
9business hours.
10(Source: P.A. 101-27, eff. 6-25-19; 101-593, eff. 12-4-19;
11102-98, eff. 7-15-21; 102-538, eff. 8-20-21; 102-813, eff.
125-13-22.)
 
13    (410 ILCS 705/45-5)
14    Sec. 45-5. License suspension; revocation; other
15penalties.
16    (a) Notwithstanding any other criminal penalties related
17to the unlawful possession of cannabis, the Department of
18Financial and Professional Regulation and the Department of
19Agriculture may revoke, suspend, place on probation,
20reprimand, issue cease and desist orders, refuse to issue or
21renew a license, or take any other disciplinary or
22nondisciplinary action as each department may deem proper with
23regard to a cannabis business establishment or cannabis
24business establishment agent, including fines not to exceed:
25        (1) $50,000 for each violation of this Act or rules

 

 

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1    adopted under this Act by a cultivation center or
2    cultivation center agent;
3        (2) $20,000 for each violation of this Act or rules
4    adopted under this Act by a dispensing organization or
5    dispensing organization agent;
6        (3) $15,000 for each violation of this Act or rules
7    adopted under this Act by a craft grower or craft grower
8    agent;
9        (4) $10,000 for each violation of this Act or rules
10    adopted under this Act by an infuser organization or
11    infuser organization agent; and
12        (5) $10,000 for each violation of this Act or rules
13    adopted under this Act by a transporting organization or
14    transporting organization agent.
15        (6) $15,000 for each violation of this Act or rules
16    adopted under this Act by a cannabis testing facility.
17    (b) The Department of Financial and Professional
18Regulation and the Department of Agriculture, as the case may
19be, shall consider licensee cooperation in any agency or other
20investigation in its determination of penalties imposed under
21this Section.
22    (c) The procedures for disciplining a cannabis business
23establishment or cannabis business establishment agent and for
24administrative hearings shall be determined by rule, and shall
25provide for the review of final decisions under the
26Administrative Review Law.

 

 

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1    (d) The Attorney General may also enforce a violation of
2Section 55-20, Section 55-21, and Section 15-155 as an
3unlawful practice under the Consumer Fraud and Deceptive
4Business Practices Act.
5(Source: P.A. 101-27, eff. 6-25-19; 101-593, eff. 12-4-19.)
 
6    (410 ILCS 705/50-5)
7    Sec. 50-5. Laboratory testing.
8    (a) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the
9following acts, when performed by a cannabis testing facility
10with a current, valid license registration, or a person 21
11years of age or older who is acting in his or her capacity as
12an owner, employee, or agent of a cannabis testing facility,
13are not unlawful and shall not be an offense under Illinois law
14or be a basis for seizure or forfeiture of assets under
15Illinois law:
16        (1) possessing, repackaging, transporting, storing, or
17    displaying cannabis or cannabis-infused products;
18        (2) receiving or transporting cannabis or
19    cannabis-infused products from a cannabis business
20    establishment, a community college licensed under the
21    Community College Cannabis Vocational Training Pilot
22    Program, or a person 21 years of age or older; and
23        (3) returning or transporting cannabis or
24    cannabis-infused products to a cannabis business
25    establishment, a community college licensed under the

 

 

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1    Community College Cannabis Vocational Training Pilot
2    Program, or a person 21 years of age or older.
3    (b)(1) No laboratory shall handle, test, or analyze
4cannabis unless approved by the Department of Agriculture in
5accordance with this Section.
6    (2) No laboratory shall be approved to handle, test, or
7analyze cannabis unless the laboratory:
8        (A) is licensed by the Department of Agriculture;
9        (A-5) is accredited by a private laboratory
10    accrediting organization;
11        (B) is independent from all other persons involved in
12    the cannabis industry in Illinois and no person with a
13    direct or indirect interest in the laboratory has a direct
14    or indirect financial, management, or other interest in an
15    Illinois cultivation center, craft grower, dispensary,
16    infuser, transporter, certifying physician, or any other
17    entity in the State that may benefit from the production,
18    manufacture, dispensing, sale, purchase, or use of
19    cannabis; and
20        (C) has employed at least one person to oversee and be
21    responsible for the laboratory testing who has earned,
22    from a college or university accredited by a national or
23    regional certifying authority, at least:
24            (i) a master's level degree in chemical or
25        biological sciences and a minimum of 2 years'
26        post-degree laboratory experience; or

 

 

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1            (ii) a bachelor's degree in chemical or biological
2        sciences and a minimum of 4 years' post-degree
3        laboratory experience.
4    (3) Each independent testing laboratory that claims to be
5accredited must provide the Department of Agriculture with a
6copy of the most recent annual inspection report granting
7accreditation and every annual report thereafter.
8    (c) Immediately before manufacturing or natural processing
9of any cannabis or cannabis-infused product or packaging
10cannabis for sale to a dispensary, each batch shall be made
11available by the cultivation center, craft grower, or infuser
12for an employee of an approved laboratory to select a random
13sample, which shall be tested by the approved laboratory for:
14        (1) microbiological contaminants;
15        (2) mycotoxins;
16        (3) pesticide active ingredients;
17        (4) residual solvent; and
18        (5) an active ingredient analysis.
19    (d) The Department of Agriculture may select a random
20sample that shall, for the purposes of conducting an active
21ingredient analysis, be tested by the Department of
22Agriculture for verification of label information and any
23other testing deemed necessary by the Department.
24    (e) A laboratory shall immediately return or dispose of
25any cannabis upon the completion of any testing, use, or
26research. If cannabis is disposed of, it shall be done in

 

 

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1compliance with Department of Agriculture rule.
2    (f) If a sample of cannabis does not pass the
3microbiological, mycotoxin, pesticide chemical residue, or
4solvent residue test, based on the standards established by
5the Department of Agriculture, the following shall apply:
6        (1) If the sample failed the pesticide chemical
7    residue test, the entire batch from which the sample was
8    taken shall, if applicable, be recalled as provided by
9    rule.
10        (2) If the sample failed any other test, the batch may
11    be used to make a CO2-based or solvent based extract. After
12    processing, the CO2-based or solvent based extract must
13    still pass all required tests.
14    (g) The Department of Agriculture shall establish
15standards for microbial, mycotoxin, pesticide residue, solvent
16residue, or other standards for the presence of possible
17contaminants, in addition to labeling requirements for
18contents and potency.
19    (h) The laboratory shall file with the Department of
20Agriculture an electronic copy of each laboratory test result
21for any batch that does not pass the microbiological,
22mycotoxin, or pesticide chemical residue test, at the same
23time that it transmits those results to the cultivation
24center. In addition, the laboratory shall maintain the
25laboratory test results for at least 5 years and make them
26available at the Department of Agriculture's request.

 

 

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1    (i) A cultivation center, craft grower, and infuser shall
2provide to a dispensing organization the laboratory test
3results for each batch of cannabis product purchased by the
4dispensing organization, if sampled. Each dispensing
5organization must have those laboratory results available upon
6request to purchasers.
7    (j) The Department of Agriculture may adopt rules related
8to testing and licensing of laboratories in furtherance of
9this Act.
10(Source: P.A. 101-27, eff. 6-25-19; 101-593, eff. 12-4-19.)
 
11    (410 ILCS 705/55-5)
12    Sec. 55-5. Preparation of cannabis-infused products.
13    (a) The Department of Agriculture may regulate the
14production of cannabis-infused products by a cultivation
15center, a craft grower, an infuser organization, or a
16dispensing organization and establish rules related to
17refrigeration, hot-holding, and handling of cannabis-infused
18products. All cannabis-infused products shall meet the
19packaging and labeling requirements contained in Section
2055-21.
21    (b) Cannabis-infused products for sale or distribution at
22a dispensing organization must be prepared by an approved
23agent of a cultivation center, craft grower, or infuser
24organization.
25    (c) A cultivation center, craft grower, or infuser

 

 

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1organization that prepares cannabis-infused products for sale
2or distribution by a dispensing organization shall be under
3the operational supervision of a Department of Public Health
4certified food service sanitation manager.
5    (d) Dispensing organizations may not manufacture, process,
6or produce cannabis-infused products.
7    (e) The Department of Public Health shall adopt and
8enforce rules for the manufacture and processing of
9cannabis-infused products, and for that purpose it may at all
10times enter every building, room, basement, enclosure, or
11premises occupied or used, or suspected of being occupied or
12used, for the production, preparation, manufacture for sale,
13storage, sale, processing, distribution, or transportation of
14cannabis-infused products, and to inspect the premises
15together with all utensils, fixtures, furniture, and machinery
16used for the preparation of these products.
17    (f) The Department of Agriculture shall by rule establish
18a maximum level of THC that may be contained in each serving of
19cannabis-infused product, and within the product package.
20    (g) If a local public health agency has a reasonable
21belief that a cannabis-infused product poses a public health
22hazard, it may refer the cultivation center, craft grower, or
23infuser that manufactured or processed the cannabis-infused
24product to the Department of Public Health. If the Department
25of Public Health finds that a cannabis-infused product poses a
26health hazard, it may bring an action for immediate injunctive

 

 

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1relief to require that action be taken as the court may deem
2necessary to meet the hazard of the cultivation facility or
3seek other relief as provided by rule.
4(Source: P.A. 101-27, eff. 6-25-19.)
 
5    (410 ILCS 705/55-10)
6    Sec. 55-10. Maintenance of inventory. Through June 30,
72025, all All dispensing organizations authorized to serve
8both registered qualifying patients, Opioid Alternative
9Patient Program participants, provisional patients, and
10caregivers and purchasers are required to report which
11cannabis and cannabis-infused products are purchased for sale
12under the Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis Program Act,
13and which cannabis and cannabis-infused products are purchased
14under this Act. Nothing in this Section prohibits a registered
15qualifying patient under the Compassionate Use of Medical
16Cannabis Program Act from purchasing cannabis as a purchaser
17under this Act.
18(Source: P.A. 101-27, eff. 6-25-19; 101-593, eff. 12-4-19.)
 
19    (410 ILCS 705/55-30)
20    Sec. 55-30. Confidentiality.
21    (a) Information provided by the cannabis business
22establishment licensees or applicants to the Department of
23Agriculture, the Department of Public Health, the Department
24of Financial and Professional Regulation, the Department of

 

 

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1Commerce and Economic Opportunity, or other agency shall be
2limited to information necessary for the purposes of
3administering this Act. The information is subject to the
4provisions and limitations contained in the Freedom of
5Information Act and may be disclosed in accordance with
6Section 55-65.
7    (b) The following information received and records kept by
8the Department of Agriculture, the Department of Public
9Health, the Illinois State Police, and the Department of
10Financial and Professional Regulation for purposes of
11administering this Article are subject to all applicable
12federal privacy laws, are confidential and exempt from
13disclosure under the Freedom of Information Act, except as
14provided in this Act, and not subject to disclosure to any
15individual or public or private entity, except to the
16Department of Financial and Professional Regulation, the
17Department of Agriculture, the Department of Public Health,
18the Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity, the
19Office of Executive Inspector General, and the Illinois State
20Police as necessary to perform official duties under this
21Article, and to the Attorney General as necessary to enforce
22the provisions of this Act, and except as necessary to those
23involved in enforcing the State Officials and Employees Ethics
24Act. The following information received and kept by the
25Department of Financial and Professional Regulation or the
26Department of Agriculture may be disclosed to the Department

 

 

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1of Public Health, the Department of Agriculture, the
2Department of Revenue, the Department of Commerce and Economic
3Opportunity, the Illinois State Police, the Office of
4Executive Inspector General, or the Attorney General upon
5proper request:
6        (1) Applications and renewals, their contents, and
7    supporting information submitted by or on behalf of
8    dispensing organizations, cannabis business
9    establishments, or Community College Cannabis Vocational
10    Program licensees, in compliance with this Article,
11    including their physical addresses; however, this does not
12    preclude the release of ownership information about
13    cannabis business establishment licenses, or information
14    submitted with an application required to be disclosed
15    pursuant to subsection (f);
16        (2) Any plans, procedures, policies, or other records
17    relating to cannabis business establishment security; and
18        (3) Information otherwise exempt from disclosure by
19    State or federal law.
20    Illinois or national criminal history record information,
21or the nonexistence or lack of such information, may not be
22disclosed by the Department of Financial and Professional
23Regulation or the Department of Agriculture, except as
24necessary to the Attorney General to enforce this Act.
25    (c) The name and address of a dispensing organization
26licensed under this Act shall be subject to disclosure under

 

 

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1the Freedom of Information Act. The name and cannabis business
2establishment address of the person or entity holding each
3cannabis business establishment license shall be subject to
4disclosure.
5    (d) All information collected by the Department of
6Financial and Professional Regulation or the Department of
7Agriculture in the course of an examination, inspection, or
8investigation of a licensee or applicant, including, but not
9limited to, any complaint against a licensee or applicant
10filed with the Department of Financial and Professional
11Regulation or the Department of Agriculture and information
12collected to investigate any such complaint, shall be
13maintained for the confidential use of the Department of
14Financial and Professional Regulation or the Department of
15Agriculture and shall not be disclosed, except to those
16involved in enforcing the State Officials and Employees Ethics
17Act and as otherwise provided in this Act. A formal complaint
18against a licensee by the Department of Financial and
19Professional Regulation or the Department of Agriculture or
20any disciplinary order issued by the Department of Financial
21and Professional Regulation or the Department of Agriculture
22against a licensee or applicant shall be a public record,
23except as otherwise provided by law. Complaints from consumers
24or members of the general public received regarding a
25specific, named licensee or complaints regarding conduct by
26unlicensed entities shall be subject to disclosure under the

 

 

SB2654- 344 -LRB104 13084 BDA 25085 b

1Freedom of Information Act.
2    (e) The Department of Agriculture, the Illinois State
3Police, and the Department of Financial and Professional
4Regulation shall not share or disclose any Illinois or
5national criminal history record information, or the
6nonexistence or lack of such information, to any person or
7entity not expressly authorized by this Act.
8    (f) Each Department responsible for licensure under this
9Act shall publish on the Department's website a list of the
10ownership information of cannabis business establishment
11licensees under the Department's jurisdiction. The list shall
12include, but is not limited to: the name of the person or
13entity holding each cannabis business establishment license;
14and the address at which the entity is operating under this
15Act. This list shall be published and updated monthly.
16(Source: P.A. 101-27, eff. 6-25-19; 101-593, eff. 12-4-19;
17102-98, eff. 7-15-21; 102-538, eff. 8-20-21; 102-813, eff.
185-13-22.)
 
19    (410 ILCS 705/55-65)
20    Sec. 55-65. Financial institutions.
21    (a) A financial institution that provides financial
22services customarily provided by financial institutions to a
23cannabis business establishment authorized under this Act or
24the Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis Program Act, or to a
25person that is affiliated with such cannabis business

 

 

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1establishment, is exempt from any criminal law of this State
2as it relates to cannabis-related conduct authorized under
3State law.
4    (b) Upon request of a financial institution, a cannabis
5business establishment or proposed cannabis business
6establishment may provide to the financial institution the
7following information:
8        (1) Whether a cannabis business establishment with
9    which the financial institution is doing or is considering
10    doing business holds a license under this Act or the
11    Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis Program Act;
12        (2) The name of any other business or individual
13    affiliate with the cannabis business establishment;
14        (3) A copy of the application, and any supporting
15    documentation submitted with the application, for a
16    license or a permit submitted on behalf of the proposed
17    cannabis business establishment;
18        (4) If applicable, data relating to sales and the
19    volume of product sold by the cannabis business
20    establishment;
21        (5) Any past or pending violation by the person of
22    this Act, the Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis
23    Program Act, or the rules adopted under these Acts where
24    applicable; and
25        (6) Any penalty imposed upon the person for violating
26    this Act, the Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis

 

 

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1    Program Act, or the rules adopted under these Acts.
2    (c) (Blank).
3    (d) (Blank).
4    (e) Information received by a financial institution under
5this Section is confidential. Except as otherwise required or
6permitted by this Act, State law or rule, or federal law or
7regulation, a financial institution may not make the
8information available to any person other than:
9        (1) the customer to whom the information applies;
10        (2) a trustee, conservator, guardian, personal
11    representative, or agent of the customer to whom the
12    information applies; a federal or State regulator when
13    requested in connection with an examination of the
14    financial institution or if otherwise necessary for
15    complying with federal or State law;
16        (3) a federal or State regulator when requested in
17    connection with an examination of the financial
18    institution or if otherwise necessary for complying with
19    federal or State law; and
20        (4) a third party performing services for the
21    financial institution, provided the third party is
22    performing such services under a written agreement that
23    expressly or by operation of law prohibits the third
24    party's sharing and use of such confidential information
25    for any purpose other than as provided in its agreement to
26    provide services to the financial institution; and .

 

 

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1        (5) the Office of Executive Inspector General pursuant
2    to an investigation.
3(Source: P.A. 101-27, eff. 6-25-19; 101-593, eff. 12-4-19.)
 
4    (410 ILCS 705/55-85)
5    Sec. 55-85. Medical cannabis.
6    (a) Nothing in this Act shall be construed to limit any
7privileges or rights of an Opioid Alternative Patient Program
8participant, a qualifying medical cannabis patient including
9minor patients, provisional patients, designated caregivers
10primary caregiver, medical cannabis cultivation center, or
11medical cannabis dispensing organization under the
12Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis Program Act, and where
13there is conflict between this Act and the Compassionate Use
14of Medical Cannabis Program Act as they relate to medical
15cannabis patients, the Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis
16Program Act shall prevail.
17    (b) Dispensary locations that obtain an Early Approval
18Adult Use Dispensary Organization License or an Adult Use
19Dispensary Organization License in accordance with this Act at
20the same location as a medical cannabis dispensing
21organization registered under the Compassionate Use of Medical
22Cannabis Program Act shall maintain an inventory of medical
23cannabis and medical cannabis products on a monthly basis that
24is substantially similar in variety and quantity to the
25products offered at the dispensary during the 6-month period

 

 

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1immediately before the effective date of this Act.
2    (c) Beginning June 30, 2020, the Department of Agriculture
3shall make a quarterly determination whether inventory
4requirements established for dispensaries in subsection (b)
5should be adjusted due to changing patient need.
6(Source: P.A. 101-27, eff. 6-25-19; 101-593, eff. 12-4-19.)
 
7    (410 ILCS 705/60-5)
8    Sec. 60-5. Definitions. In this Article:
9    "Cannabis" has the meaning given to that term in Article 1
10of this Act, except that, through December 31, 2025, it does
11not include cannabis that is subject to tax under the
12Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis Program Act.
13    "Craft grower" has the meaning given to that term in
14Article 1 of this Act.
15    "Cultivation center" has the meaning given to that term in
16Article 1 of this Act. On and after January 1, 2026,
17"cultivation center" includes any cultivation center which,
18prior to January 1, 2026, was a cultivation center as defined
19in the Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis Program Act.
20    "Cultivator" or "taxpayer" means a cultivation center or
21craft grower who is subject to tax under this Article. On and
22after January 1, 2026, "cultivator" includes any cultivator
23which, prior to January 1, 2026, was a cultivator as defined
24under the Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis Program Act.
25    "Department" means the Department of Revenue.

 

 

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1    "Director" means the Director of Revenue.
2    "Dispensing organization" or "dispensary" has the meaning
3given to that term in Article 1 of this Act.
4    "Gross receipts" from the sales of cannabis by a
5cultivator means the total selling price or the amount of such
6sales, as defined in this Article. In the case of charges and
7time sales, the amount thereof shall be included only when
8payments are received by the cultivator.
9    "Person" means a natural individual, firm, partnership,
10association, joint stock company, joint adventure, public or
11private corporation, limited liability company, or a receiver,
12executor, trustee, guardian, or other representative appointed
13by order of any court.
14    "Infuser" means "infuser organization" or "infuser" as
15defined in Article 1 of this Act.
16    "Selling price" or "amount of sale" means the
17consideration for a sale valued in money whether received in
18money or otherwise, including cash, credits, property, and
19services, and shall be determined without any deduction on
20account of the cost of the property sold, the cost of materials
21used, labor or service cost, or any other expense whatsoever,
22but does not include separately stated charges identified on
23the invoice by cultivators to reimburse themselves for their
24tax liability under this Article.
25(Source: P.A. 101-27, eff. 6-25-19; 101-593, eff. 12-4-19.)
 

 

 

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1    (410 ILCS 705/60-10)
2    Sec. 60-10. Tax imposed.
3    (a) Beginning September 1, 2019, a tax is imposed upon the
4privilege of cultivating cannabis at the rate of 7% of the
5gross receipts from the first sale of cannabis by a
6cultivator. The sale of any product that contains any amount
7of cannabis or any derivative thereof is subject to the tax
8under this Section on the full selling price of the product.
9The Department may determine the selling price of the cannabis
10when the seller and purchaser are affiliated persons, when the
11sale and purchase of cannabis is not an arm's length
12transaction, or when cannabis is transferred by a craft grower
13to the craft grower's dispensing organization or infuser or
14processing organization and a value is not established for the
15cannabis. The value determined by the Department shall be
16commensurate with the actual price received for products of
17like quality, character, and use in the area. If there are no
18sales of cannabis of like quality, character, and use in the
19same area, then the Department shall establish a reasonable
20value based on sales of products of like quality, character,
21and use in other areas of the State, taking into consideration
22any other relevant factors.
23    (b) The Cannabis Cultivation Privilege Tax imposed under
24this Article is solely the responsibility of the cultivator
25who makes the first sale and is not the responsibility of a
26subsequent purchaser, a dispensing organization, or an

 

 

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1infuser. Persons subject to the tax imposed under this Article
2may, however, reimburse themselves for their tax liability
3hereunder by separately stating reimbursement for their tax
4liability as an additional charge.
5    (c) The tax imposed under this Article shall be in
6addition to all other occupation, privilege, or excise taxes
7imposed by the State of Illinois or by any unit of local
8government.
9(Source: P.A. 101-27, eff. 6-25-19.)
 
10    (410 ILCS 705/65-5)
11    Sec. 65-5. Definitions. In this Article:
12    "Adjusted delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol level" means, for a
13delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol dominant product, the sum of the
14percentage of delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol plus .877
15multiplied by the percentage of tetrahydrocannabinolic acid.
16    "Cannabis" has the meaning given to that term in Article 1
17of this Act, except that through December 31, 2025, it does not
18include cannabis that is subject to tax under the
19Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis Program Act.
20    "Cannabis-infused product" means beverage food, oils,
21ointments, tincture, topical formulation, or another product
22containing cannabis that is not intended to be smoked.
23    "Cannabis retailer" means a dispensing organization that
24sells cannabis for use and not for resale.
25    "Craft grower" has the meaning given to that term in

 

 

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1Article 1 of this Act.
2    "Department" means the Department of Revenue.
3    "Director" means the Director of Revenue.
4    "Dispensing organization" or "dispensary" has the meaning
5given to that term in Article 1 of this Act.
6    "Person" means a natural individual, firm, partnership,
7association, joint stock company, joint adventure, public or
8private corporation, limited liability company, or a receiver,
9executor, trustee, guardian, or other representative appointed
10by order of any court.
11    "Infuser organization" or "infuser" means a facility
12operated by an organization or business that is licensed by
13the Department of Agriculture to directly incorporate cannabis
14or cannabis concentrate into a product formulation to produce
15a cannabis-infused product.
16    "Purchase price" means the consideration paid for a
17purchase of cannabis, valued in money, whether received in
18money or otherwise, including cash, gift cards, credits, and
19property and shall be determined without any deduction on
20account of the cost of materials used, labor or service costs,
21or any other expense whatsoever. However, "purchase price"
22does not include consideration paid for:
23        (1) any charge for a payment that is not honored by a
24    financial institution;
25        (2) any finance or credit charge, penalty or charge
26    for delayed payment, or discount for prompt payment; and

 

 

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1        (3) any amounts added to a purchaser's bill because of
2    charges made under the tax imposed by this Article, the
3    Municipal Cannabis Retailers' Occupation Tax Law, the
4    County Cannabis Retailers' Occupation Tax Law, the
5    Retailers' Occupation Tax Act, the Use Tax Act, the
6    Service Occupation Tax Act, the Service Use Tax Act, or
7    any locally imposed occupation or use tax.
8    "Purchaser" means a person who acquires cannabis for a
9valuable consideration.
10    "Qualifying patient" or "qualified patient" means a person
11who has been diagnosed by a certifying health care
12professional as having a debilitating medical condition as
13defined under the Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis
14Program Act.
15    "Taxpayer" means a cannabis retailer who is required to
16collect the tax imposed under this Article.
17(Source: P.A. 101-27, eff. 6-25-19; 101-593, eff. 12-4-19.)
 
18    (410 ILCS 705/65-10)
19    Sec. 65-10. Tax imposed.
20    (a) Beginning January 1, 2020, a tax is imposed upon
21purchasers for the privilege of using cannabis, and not for
22the purpose of resale, at the following rates:
23        (1) Any cannabis, other than a cannabis-infused
24    product, with an adjusted delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol
25    level at or below 35% shall be taxed at a rate of 10% of

 

 

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1    the purchase price;
2        (2) Any cannabis, other than a cannabis-infused
3    product, with an adjusted delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol
4    level above 35% shall be taxed at a rate of 25% of the
5    purchase price; and
6        (3) A cannabis-infused product shall be taxed at a
7    rate of 20% of the purchase price.
8    (b) The purchase of any product that contains any amount
9of cannabis or any derivative thereof is subject to the tax
10under subsection (a) of this Section on the full purchase
11price of the product.
12    (c) Through December 31, 2025, the The tax imposed under
13this Section is not imposed on cannabis that is subject to tax
14under the Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis Program Act.
15The tax imposed by this Section is not imposed with respect to
16any transaction in interstate commerce, to the extent the
17transaction may not, under the Constitution and statutes of
18the United States, be made the subject of taxation by this
19State. Beginning January 1, 2026, the tax imposed under this
20Article shall not be imposed on cannabis or cannabis-infused
21products purchased by a qualified patient, designated
22caregiver, provisional patient, or Opioid Alternative Patient
23Program participant when purchasing cannabis or
24cannabis-infused products under this Act as part of their
25adequate medical supply as these terms are defined under
26Section 1-10 of this Act.

 

 

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1    (d) The tax imposed under this Article shall be in
2addition to all other occupation, privilege, or excise taxes
3imposed by the State of Illinois or by any municipal
4corporation or political subdivision thereof.
5    (e) The tax imposed under this Article shall not be
6imposed on any purchase by a purchaser if the cannabis
7retailer is prohibited by federal or State Constitution,
8treaty, convention, statute, or court decision from collecting
9the tax from the purchaser.
10(Source: P.A. 101-27, eff. 6-25-19; 101-593, eff. 12-4-19.)
 
11    (410 ILCS 705/65-30)
12    Sec. 65-30. Return and payment of tax by cannabis
13retailer. Each cannabis retailer that is required or
14authorized to collect the tax imposed by this Article shall
15make a return to the Department, by electronic means, on or
16before the 20th day of each month for the preceding calendar
17month stating the following:
18        (1) the cannabis retailer's name;
19        (2) the address of the cannabis retailer's principal
20    place of business and the address of the principal place
21    of business (if that is a different address) from which
22    the cannabis retailer is engaged in the business of
23    selling cannabis subject to tax under this Article;
24        (3) the total purchase price received by the cannabis
25    retailer for cannabis subject to tax under this Article;

 

 

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1        (4) the amount of tax due at each rate;
2        (5) the signature of the cannabis retailer; and
3        (6) any other information as the Department may
4    reasonably require.
5    All returns required to be filed and payments required to
6be made under this Article shall be by electronic means.
7Cannabis retailers who demonstrate hardship in paying
8electronically may petition the Department to waive the
9electronic payment requirement.
10    Any amount that is required to be shown or reported on any
11return or other document under this Article shall, if the
12amount is not a whole-dollar amount, be increased to the
13nearest whole-dollar amount if the fractional part of a dollar
14is $0.50 or more and decreased to the nearest whole-dollar
15amount if the fractional part of a dollar is less than $0.50.
16If a total amount of less than $1 is payable, refundable, or
17creditable, the amount shall be disregarded if it is less than
18$0.50 and shall be increased to $1 if it is $0.50 or more.
19    The cannabis retailer making the return provided for in
20this Section shall also pay to the Department, in accordance
21with this Section, the amount of tax imposed by this Article,
22less a discount of 1.75%, but not to exceed $1,000 per return
23period, which is allowed to reimburse the cannabis retailer
24for the expenses incurred in keeping records, collecting tax,
25preparing and filing returns, remitting the tax, and supplying
26data to the Department upon request. No discount may be

 

 

SB2654- 357 -LRB104 13084 BDA 25085 b

1claimed by a cannabis retailer on returns not timely filed and
2for taxes not timely remitted. No discount may be claimed by a
3taxpayer for any return that is not filed electronically. No
4discount may be claimed by a taxpayer for any payment that is
5not made electronically, unless a waiver has been granted
6under this Section.
7    Notwithstanding any other provision of this Article
8concerning the time within which a cannabis retailer may file
9a return, any such cannabis retailer who ceases to engage in
10the kind of business that makes the person responsible for
11filing returns under this Article shall file a final return
12under this Article with the Department within one month after
13discontinuing the business.
14    Each cannabis retailer shall make estimated payments to
15the Department on or before the 7th, 15th, 22nd, and last day
16of the month during which tax liability to the Department is
17incurred. The payments shall be in an amount not less than the
18lower of either 22.5% of the cannabis retailer's actual tax
19liability for the month or 25% of the cannabis retailer's
20actual tax liability for the same calendar month of the
21preceding year. The amount of the quarter-monthly payments
22shall be credited against the final tax liability of the
23cannabis retailer's return for that month. If any such
24quarter-monthly payment is not paid at the time or in the
25amount required by this Section, then the cannabis retailer
26shall be liable for penalties and interest on the difference

 

 

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1between the minimum amount due as a payment and the amount of
2the quarter-monthly payment actually and timely paid, except
3insofar as the cannabis retailer has previously made payments
4for that month to the Department in excess of the minimum
5payments previously due as provided in this Section.
6    If any payment provided for in this Section exceeds the
7taxpayer's liabilities under this Article, as shown on an
8original monthly return, the Department shall, if requested by
9the taxpayer, issue to the taxpayer a credit memorandum no
10later than 30 days after the date of payment. The credit
11evidenced by the credit memorandum may be assigned by the
12taxpayer to a similar taxpayer under this Article, in
13accordance with reasonable rules to be prescribed by the
14Department. If no such request is made, the taxpayer may
15credit the excess payment against tax liability subsequently
16to be remitted to the Department under this Article, in
17accordance with reasonable rules prescribed by the Department.
18If the Department subsequently determines that all or any part
19of the credit taken was not actually due to the taxpayer, the
20taxpayer's discount shall be reduced, if necessary, to reflect
21the difference between the credit taken and that actually due,
22and that taxpayer shall be liable for penalties and interest
23on the difference. If a cannabis retailer fails to sign a
24return within 30 days after the proper notice and demand for
25signature by the Department is received by the cannabis
26retailer, the return shall be considered valid and any amount

 

 

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1shown to be due on the return shall be deemed assessed.
2(Source: P.A. 101-27, eff. 6-25-19.)
 
3    (410 ILCS 705/65-38)
4    Sec. 65-38. Violations and penalties.
5    (a) When the amount due is under $300, any retailer of
6cannabis who fails to file a return, willfully fails or
7refuses to make any payment to the Department of the tax
8imposed by this Article, or files a fraudulent return, or any
9officer or agent of a corporation engaged in the business of
10selling cannabis to purchasers located in this State who signs
11a fraudulent return filed on behalf of the corporation, or any
12accountant or other agent who knowingly enters false
13information on the return of any taxpayer under this Article
14is guilty of a Class 4 felony.
15    (b) When the amount due is $300 or more, any retailer of
16cannabis who files, or causes to be filed, a fraudulent
17return, or any officer or agent of a corporation engaged in the
18business of selling cannabis to purchasers located in this
19State who files or causes to be filed or signs or causes to be
20signed a fraudulent return filed on behalf of the corporation,
21or any accountant or other agent who knowingly enters false
22information on the return of any taxpayer under this Article
23is guilty of a Class 3 felony.
24    (c) Any person who violates any provision of Section 65-20
25or , fails to keep books and records as required under this

 

 

SB2654- 360 -LRB104 13084 BDA 25085 b

1Article, or willfully violates a rule of the Department for
2the administration and enforcement of this Article is guilty
3of a Class 4 felony. A person commits a separate offense on
4each day that he or she engages in business in violation of
5Section 65-20 or a rule of the Department for the
6administration and enforcement of this Article. If a person
7fails to produce the books and records for inspection by the
8Department upon request, a prima facie presumption shall arise
9that the person has failed to keep books and records as
10required under this Article. A person who is unable to rebut
11this presumption is in violation of this Article and is
12subject to the penalties provided in this Section.
13    (d) Any person who violates any provision of Sections
1465-20, fails to keep books and records as required under this
15Article, or willfully violates a rule of the Department for
16the administration and enforcement of this Article, is guilty
17of a business offense and may be fined up to $5,000. If a
18person fails to produce books and records for inspection by
19the Department upon request, a prima facie presumption shall
20arise that the person has failed to keep books and records as
21required under this Article. A person who is unable to rebut
22this presumption is in violation of this Article and is
23subject to the penalties provided in this Section. A person
24commits a separate offense on each day that he or she engages
25in business in violation of a rule of the Department for the
26administration and enforcement of this Article Section 65-20.

 

 

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1    (e) Any taxpayer or agent of a taxpayer who with the intent
2to defraud purports to make a payment due to the Department by
3issuing or delivering a check or other order upon a real or
4fictitious depository for the payment of money, knowing that
5it will not be paid by the depository, is guilty of a deceptive
6practice in violation of Section 17-1 of the Criminal Code of
72012.
8    (f) Any person who fails to keep books and records or fails
9to produce books and records for inspection, as required by
10Section 65-36, is liable to pay to the Department, for deposit
11in the Tax Compliance and Administration Fund, a penalty of
12$1,000 for the first failure to keep books and records or
13failure to produce books and records for inspection, as
14required by Section 65-36, and $3,000 for each subsequent
15failure to keep books and records or failure to produce books
16and records for inspection, as required by Section 65-36.
17    (g) Any person who knowingly acts as a retailer of
18cannabis in this State without first having obtained a
19certificate of registration to do so in compliance with
20Section 65-20 of this Article shall be guilty of a Class 4
21felony.
22    (h) A person commits the offense of tax evasion under this
23Article when he or she knowingly attempts in any manner to
24evade or defeat the tax imposed on him or her or on any other
25person, or the payment thereof, and he or she commits an
26affirmative act in furtherance of the evasion. As used in this

 

 

SB2654- 362 -LRB104 13084 BDA 25085 b

1Section, "affirmative act in furtherance of the evasion" means
2an act designed in whole or in part to (i) conceal,
3misrepresent, falsify, or manipulate any material fact or (ii)
4tamper with or destroy documents or materials related to a
5person's tax liability under this Article. Two or more acts of
6sales tax evasion may be charged as a single count in any
7indictment, information, or complaint and the amount of tax
8deficiency may be aggregated for purposes of determining the
9amount of tax that is attempted to be or is evaded and the
10period between the first and last acts may be alleged as the
11date of the offense.
12        (1) When the amount of tax, the assessment or payment
13    of which is attempted to be or is evaded is less than $500,
14    a person is guilty of a Class 4 felony.
15        (2) When the amount of tax, the assessment or payment
16    of which is attempted to be or is evaded is $500 or more
17    but less than $10,000, a person is guilty of a Class 3
18    felony.
19        (3) When the amount of tax, the assessment or payment
20    of which is attempted to be or is evaded is $10,000 or more
21    but less than $100,000, a person is guilty of a Class 2
22    felony.
23        (4) When the amount of tax, the assessment or payment
24    of which is attempted to be or is evaded is $100,000 or
25    more, a person is guilty of a Class 1 felony.
26    Any person who knowingly sells, purchases, installs,

 

 

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1transfers, possesses, uses, or accesses any automated sales
2suppression device, zapper, or phantom-ware in this State is
3guilty of a Class 3 felony.
4    As used in this Section:
5    "Automated sales suppression device" or "zapper" means a
6software program that falsifies the electronic records of an
7electronic cash register or other point-of-sale system,
8including, but not limited to, transaction data and
9transaction reports. The term includes the software program,
10any device that carries the software program, or an Internet
11link to the software program.
12    "Phantom-ware" means a hidden programming option embedded
13in the operating system of an electronic cash register or
14hardwired into an electronic cash register that can be used to
15create a second set of records or that can eliminate or
16manipulate transaction records in an electronic cash register.
17    "Electronic cash register" means a device that keeps a
18register or supporting documents through the use of an
19electronic device or computer system designed to record
20transaction data for the purpose of computing, compiling, or
21processing retail sales transaction data in any manner.
22    "Transaction data" includes: items purchased by a
23purchaser; the price of each item; a taxability determination
24for each item; a segregated tax amount for each taxed item; the
25amount of cash or credit tendered; the net amount returned to
26the customer in change; the date and time of the purchase; the

 

 

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1name, address, and identification number of the vendor; and
2the receipt or invoice number of the transaction.
3    "Transaction report" means a report that documents,
4without limitation, the sales, taxes, or fees collected, media
5totals, and discount voids at an electronic cash register and
6that is printed on a cash register tape at the end of a day or
7shift, or a report that documents every action at an
8electronic cash register and is stored electronically.
9    A prosecution for any act in violation of this Section may
10be commenced at any time within 5 years of the commission of
11that act.
12    (i) The Department may adopt rules to administer the
13penalties under this Section.
14    (j) Any person whose principal place of business is in
15this State and who is charged with a violation under this
16Section shall be tried in the county where his or her principal
17place of business is located unless he or she asserts a right
18to be tried in another venue.
19    (k) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (h), a
20prosecution for a violation described in this Section may be
21commenced within 3 years after the commission of the act
22constituting the violation.
23(Source: P.A. 101-27, eff. 6-25-19.)
 
24    (410 ILCS 705/65-42)
25    Sec. 65-42. Seizure and forfeiture. After seizing any

 

 

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1cannabis as provided in Section 65-41, the Department must
2hold a hearing and determine whether (i) the retailer was
3properly registered to sell the cannabis; (ii) the retailer
4possessed the cannabis in violation of this Act; (iii) the
5retailer possessed the cannabis in violation of any reasonable
6rule or regulation adopted by the Department for the
7enforcement of this Act; or (iv) the tax imposed by Article 60
8had been paid on the cannabis at the time of its seizure by the
9Department. The Department is not required to hold such a
10hearing if a waiver and consent to forfeiture has been
11executed by the owner of the cannabis, if the owner is known,
12and by the person in whose possession the cannabis so taken was
13found, if that person is known and if that person is not the
14owner of said cannabis. The Department shall give not less
15than 20 days' notice of the time and place of the hearing to
16the owner of the cannabis, if the owner is known, and also to
17the person in whose possession the cannabis was found, if that
18person is known and if the person in possession is not the
19owner of the cannabis. If neither the owner nor the person in
20possession of the cannabis is known, the Department must cause
21publication of the time and place of the hearing to be made at
22least once in each week for 3 weeks successively in a newspaper
23of general circulation in the county where the hearing is to be
24held.
25    If, as the result of the hearing, the Department makes any
26of the findings listed in items (i) through (iv) determines

 

 

SB2654- 366 -LRB104 13084 BDA 25085 b

1that the retailer was not properly registered at the time the
2cannabis was seized, or upon receipt of a properly executed
3waiver and consent to forfeiture as provided in this Section,
4the Department must enter an order declaring the cannabis
5confiscated and forfeited to the State, to be held by the
6Department for disposal by it as provided in Section 65-43.
7The Department must give notice of the order to the owner of
8the cannabis, if the owner is known, and also to the person in
9whose possession the cannabis was found, if that person is
10known and if the person in possession is not the owner of the
11cannabis. If neither the owner nor the person in possession of
12the cannabis is known, the Department must cause publication
13of the order to be made at least once in each week for 3 weeks
14successively in a newspaper of general circulation in the
15county where the hearing was held.
16(Source: P.A. 103-1001, eff. 8-9-24.)
 
17    (410 ILCS 705/20-50 rep.)
18    (410 ILCS 705/30-50 rep.)
19    Section 45. The Cannabis Regulation and Tax Act is amended
20by repealing Sections 20-50 and 30-50.
 
21    Section 50. The Illinois Vehicle Code is amended by
22changing Sections 11-502.1 and 11-502.15 as follows:
 
23    (625 ILCS 5/11-502.1)

 

 

SB2654- 367 -LRB104 13084 BDA 25085 b

1    Sec. 11-502.1. Possession of medical cannabis in a motor
2vehicle.
3    (a) No driver, who is a medical cannabis cardholder, may
4use medical cannabis within the passenger area of any motor
5vehicle upon a highway in this State.
6    (b) No driver, who is a medical cannabis cardholder,
7medical cannabis provisional patient, an Opioid Alternative
8Patient Program participant, a medical cannabis designated
9caregiver, medical cannabis cultivation center agent, or
10dispensing organization agent may possess medical cannabis
11within any area of any motor vehicle upon a highway in this
12State except in a secured, sealed or resealable, odor-proof,
13and child-resistant medical cannabis container that is
14inaccessible.
15    (c) No passenger, who is a medical cannabis card holder,
16medical cannabis provisional patient, an Opioid Alternative
17Patient Program participant, a medical cannabis designated
18caregiver, or medical cannabis dispensing organization agent
19may possess medical cannabis within any passenger area of any
20motor vehicle upon a highway in this State except in a secured,
21sealed or resealable, odor-proof, and child-resistant medical
22cannabis container that is inaccessible.
23    (d) Any person who violates subsections (a) through (c) of
24this Section:
25        (1) commits a Class A misdemeanor;
26        (2) shall be subject to revocation of his or her

 

 

SB2654- 368 -LRB104 13084 BDA 25085 b

1    medical cannabis card for a period of 2 years from the end
2    of the sentence imposed; and
3        (3) shall be subject to revocation of his or her
4    status as a designated medical cannabis caregiver, medical
5    cannabis cultivation center agent, or medical cannabis
6    dispensing organization agent for a period of 2 years from
7    the end of the sentence imposed.
8(Source: P.A. 101-27, eff. 6-25-19; 102-98, eff. 7-15-21;
9102-558, eff. 8-20-21.)
 
10    (625 ILCS 5/11-502.15)
11    Sec. 11-502.15. Possession of adult use cannabis in a
12motor vehicle.
13    (a) No driver may use cannabis within the passenger area
14of any motor vehicle upon a highway in this State.
15    (b) No driver may possess cannabis within any area of any
16motor vehicle upon a highway in this State except in a secured,
17sealed or resealable, odor-proof, child-resistant cannabis
18container that is inaccessible.
19    (c) No passenger may possess cannabis within any passenger
20area of any motor vehicle upon a highway in this State except
21in a secured, sealed or resealable, odor-proof,
22child-resistant cannabis container that is inaccessible.
23    (d) Any person who knowingly violates subsection (a), (b),
24or (c) of this Section commits a Class A misdemeanor.
25(Source: P.A. 101-27, eff. 6-25-19; 102-98, eff. 7-15-21.)
 

 

 

SB2654- 369 -LRB104 13084 BDA 25085 b

1    Section 55. The Tobacco Accessories and Smoking Herbs
2Control Act is amended by changing Section 2 as follows:
 
3    (720 ILCS 685/2)  (from Ch. 23, par. 2358-2)
4    Sec. 2. Purpose. The sale and possession of marijuana,
5hashish, cocaine, opium, and their derivatives, is not only
6prohibited by Illinois Law, but the use of these substances
7has been deemed injurious to the health of the user.
8    It has further been determined by the Surgeon General of
9the United States that the use of tobacco is hazardous to human
10health.
11    The ready availability of smoking herbs to persons under
1221 years of age could lead to the use of tobacco and illegal
13drugs.
14    It is in the best interests of the citizens of the State of
15Illinois to seek to prohibit the spread of illegal drugs,
16tobacco or smoking materials to persons under 21 years of age.
17The prohibition of the sale of tobacco and snuff accessories
18and smoking herbs to persons under 21 years of age would help
19to curb the usage of illegal drugs and tobacco products, among
20our youth.
21(Source: P.A. 101-2, eff. 7-1-19.)
 
22    Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon
23becoming law.

 

 

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1 INDEX
2 Statutes amended in order of appearance
3    20 ILCS 2105/2105-117
4    35 ILCS 105/3-10from Ch. 120, par. 439.33-10
5    35 ILCS 110/3-10from Ch. 120, par. 439.33-10
6    35 ILCS 115/3-10from Ch. 120, par. 439.103-10
7    35 ILCS 120/2-10from Ch. 120, par. 441-10
8    35 ILCS 120/11from Ch. 120, par. 450
9    410 ILCS 130/7
10    410 ILCS 130/10
11    410 ILCS 130/15
12    410 ILCS 130/25
13    410 ILCS 130/30
14    410 ILCS 130/35
15    410 ILCS 130/57
16    410 ILCS 130/60
17    410 ILCS 130/70
18    410 ILCS 130/75
19    410 ILCS 130/85
20    410 ILCS 130/90
21    410 ILCS 130/95
22    410 ILCS 130/100
23    410 ILCS 130/105
24    410 ILCS 130/110
25    410 ILCS 130/115

 

 

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1    410 ILCS 130/120
2    410 ILCS 130/125
3    410 ILCS 130/130
4    410 ILCS 130/140
5    410 ILCS 130/145
6    410 ILCS 130/150
7    410 ILCS 130/165
8    410 ILCS 130/180
9    410 ILCS 130/200
10    410 ILCS 130/205
11    410 ILCS 130/210
12    410 ILCS 130/80 rep.
13    410 ILCS 130/115.5 rep.
14    410 ILCS 130/135 rep.
15    410 ILCS 130/162 rep.
16    410 ILCS 705/1-10
17    410 ILCS 705/5-10
18    410 ILCS 705/5-15
19    410 ILCS 705/7-10
20    410 ILCS 705/7-15
21    410 ILCS 705/10-10
22    410 ILCS 705/10-15
23    410 ILCS 705/15-10
24    410 ILCS 705/15-13 new
25    410 ILCS 705/15-15
26    410 ILCS 705/15-17 new

 

 

SB2654- 372 -LRB104 13084 BDA 25085 b

1    410 ILCS 705/15-20
2    410 ILCS 705/15-23 new
3    410 ILCS 705/15-24 new
4    410 ILCS 705/15-25
5    410 ILCS 705/15-35
6    410 ILCS 705/15-35.10
7    410 ILCS 705/15-36
8    410 ILCS 705/15-40
9    410 ILCS 705/15-45
10    410 ILCS 705/15-50
11    410 ILCS 705/15-60
12    410 ILCS 705/15-65
13    410 ILCS 705/15-70
14    410 ILCS 705/15-75
15    410 ILCS 705/15-85
16    410 ILCS 705/15-100
17    410 ILCS 705/15-135
18    410 ILCS 705/15-145
19    410 ILCS 705/Art. 20
20    heading
21    410 ILCS 705/20-10
22    410 ILCS 705/20-15
23    410 ILCS 705/20-20
24    410 ILCS 705/20-21
25    410 ILCS 705/20-30
26    410 ILCS 705/20-35

 

 

SB2654- 373 -LRB104 13084 BDA 25085 b

1    410 ILCS 705/20-45
2    410 ILCS 705/25-35
3    410 ILCS 705/30-10
4    410 ILCS 705/30-30
5    410 ILCS 705/30-35
6    410 ILCS 705/30-45
7    410 ILCS 705/35-25
8    410 ILCS 705/35-30
9    410 ILCS 705/40-25
10    410 ILCS 705/45-5
11    410 ILCS 705/50-5
12    410 ILCS 705/55-5
13    410 ILCS 705/55-10
14    410 ILCS 705/55-30
15    410 ILCS 705/55-65
16    410 ILCS 705/55-85
17    410 ILCS 705/60-5
18    410 ILCS 705/60-10
19    410 ILCS 705/65-5
20    410 ILCS 705/65-10
21    410 ILCS 705/65-30
22    410 ILCS 705/65-38
23    410 ILCS 705/65-42
24    410 ILCS 705/20-50 rep.
25    410 ILCS 705/30-50 rep.
26    625 ILCS 5/11-502.1

 

 

SB2654- 374 -LRB104 13084 BDA 25085 b

1    625 ILCS 5/11-502.15
2    720 ILCS 685/2from Ch. 23, par. 2358-2