104TH GENERAL ASSEMBLY
State of Illinois
2025 and 2026
SB3467

 

Introduced 2/5/2026, by Sen. Graciela Guzmán

 

SYNOPSIS AS INTRODUCED:
 
110 ILCS 155/5
110 ILCS 155/10
110 ILCS 155/15
110 ILCS 155/20
110 ILCS 155/25
110 ILCS 155/30
110 ILCS 155/50 new
110 ILCS 155/55 new
735 ILCS 5/8-804

    Amends the Preventing Sexual Violence in Higher Education Act. Makes changes concerning definitions. Requires a higher education institution's comprehensive policy to include sexual harassment. Provides that a confidential advisor is separate from a complaint advisor, unless a complainant chooses to have the confidential advisor also serve as the complaint advisor. Makes changes to the complaint resolution procedure, including the timeline of the complaint resolution procedure, protective measures and accommodations, the distribution of evidence that includes a private or intentionally digitally altered sexual image, the direct questioning of either party, support persons for survivors and respondents, and the notice of appeal. Provides that violations of the Act are actionable in civil court. Sets forth the relief a prevailing survivor is entitled to. Amends the Code of Civil Procedure to make changes concerning confidential advisors. Makes other changes. Effective July 1, 2027.


LRB104 18841 LNS 32286 b

STATE MANDATES ACT MAY REQUIRE REIMBURSEMENT
MAY APPLY

 

 

A BILL FOR

 

SB3467LRB104 18841 LNS 32286 b

1    AN ACT concerning education.
 
2    Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
3represented in the General Assembly:
 
4    Section 5. The Preventing Sexual Violence in Higher
5Education Act is amended by changing Sections 5, 10, 15, 20,
625, and 30 and by adding Sections 50 and 55 as follows:
 
7    (110 ILCS 155/5)
8    Sec. 5. Definitions. In this Act:
9    "Awareness programming" means institutional action
10designed to communicate the prevalence of sexual violence,
11including without limitation training, poster and flyer
12campaigns, electronic communications, films, guest speakers,
13symposia, conferences, seminars, or panel discussions.
14    "Bystander intervention" includes without limitation the
15act of challenging the social norms that support, condone, or
16permit sexual violence.
17    "Complainant" means a student who files a complaint
18alleging violation of the comprehensive policy through the
19higher education institution's complaint resolution procedure.
20    "Comprehensive policy" means a policy created and
21implemented by a higher education institution to address
22student allegations of sexual violence, domestic violence,
23dating violence, and stalking, and sexual harassment.

 

 

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1    "Complaint advisor" means a person chosen by a complainant
2or respondent or appointed by a higher education institution
3at the request of the complainant or respondent to advise the
4complainant or respondent regarding the complaint resolution
5procedure and accompany the complainant or respondent to any
6meeting or proceeding related to an alleged violation of the
7comprehensive policy. "Complaint advisor" includes an
8attorney. "Complaint advisor" does not include a complainant's
9confidential advisor, unless the complainant requests that the
10confidential advisor also serve as the complainant's complaint
11advisor.
12    "Confidential advisor" means a person who is employed or
13contracted by a higher education institution to provide
14emergency and ongoing support to student survivors of sexual
15violence, domestic violence, dating violence, stalking, and
16sexual harassment, with the training, duties, and
17responsibilities described in Section 20 of this Act.
18"Confidential advisor" does not include a complainant's
19complaint advisor, unless the complainant requests that the
20confidential advisor also serve as the complainant's complaint
21advisor.
22    "Dating violence" means any act of abuse committed by a
23person who is or has been in a romantic or intimate
24relationship with a survivor.
25    "Digital sexual harassment" means technology-facilitated
26abusive acts or unwelcome communication based on sex,

 

 

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1including the actual or threatened dissemination of a private
2or intentionally digitally altered sexual image without the
3depicted individual's consent, as defined in the Civil
4Remedies for Nonconsensual Dissemination of Private Sexual
5Images Act.
6    "Domestic violence" means any act of abuse as defined in
7the Illinois Domestic Violence Act of 1986.
8    "Higher education institution" means a public university,
9a public community college, or an independent, not-for-profit
10or for-profit higher education institution located in this
11State.
12    "Interferes with or limits" includes, but is not limited
13to, mental or physical health impacts, new or increased
14challenges with focusing on academics or activities, fear or
15anxiety about attending class or activities, or needing to
16alter routines or class or activity schedules to avoid another
17student.
18    "Lack of capacity" means an inability to give knowing and
19affirming consent.
20    "Primary prevention programming" means institutional
21action and strategies intended to prevent sexual violence
22before it occurs by means of changing social norms and other
23approaches, including without limitation training, poster and
24flyer campaigns, electronic communications, films, guest
25speakers, symposia, conferences, seminars, or panel
26discussions.

 

 

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1    "Respondent" means a student involved in the complaint
2resolution procedure who has been accused of violating a
3higher education institution's comprehensive policy.
4    "Retaliation" means any action or inaction taken against a
5person, including, but not limited to, intimidation, threats,
6coercion, or discrimination, to purposefully or knowingly
7interfere with any right or privilege secured by this Act or
8Title IX of the federal Education Amendments of 1972 because
9that person reported information, made a complaint, testified,
10assisted, or participated or refused to participate in any
11manner in an investigation, proceeding, or hearing, including
12in an informal resolution process. "Retaliation" includes
13actions by a student, a higher education institution, an
14employee or other individual authorized by a higher education
15institution to provide aid, a benefit, or a service under an
16education program or activity of the higher education
17institution, or a third party acting on behalf of a higher
18education institution or a student or employee or another
19individual.
20    "Sexual harassment" means unwelcome sex-based conduct by
21one student toward another student that is sufficiently
22serious that it interferes with or limits the other student's
23ability to participate in or benefit from a program of a higher
24education institution. "Sexual harassment" includes digital
25sexual harassment.
26    "Sexual violence" means physical sexual acts attempted or

 

 

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1perpetrated against a person's will or when a person is
2incapable of giving consent, including without limitation
3rape, sexual assault, sexual battery, sexual abuse, and sexual
4coercion.
5    "Stalking" means when an individual engages in a course of
6conduct directed at a specific person and when that individual
7knows or should know that this course of conduct would cause a
8reasonable person, as defined in the Stalking No Contact Order
9Act, to fear for that person's safety. "Stalking" includes,
10but is not limited to, following a person, conducting
11surveillance of the person, appearing at the person's home,
12work, or school when not necessary to accomplish a purpose
13that is reasonable under the circumstances, making unwanted
14phone calls, sending unwanted emails, sending unwanted
15messages via social media, sending unwanted text messages,
16leaving objects for the person, vandalizing the person's
17property, injuring a pet, or using any electronic tracking
18system or acquiring tracking information to determine the
19person's location, movement, or travel patterns.
20    "Survivor" means a student who has self-identified as
21having experienced sexual violence, domestic violence, dating
22violence, or stalking, or sexual harassment while enrolled at
23a higher education institution.
24    "Survivor-centered" means a systematic focus on the needs
25and concerns of a survivor of sexual violence, domestic
26violence, dating violence, or stalking, or sexual harassment

 

 

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1that (i) ensures the compassionate and sensitive delivery of
2services in a nonjudgmental manner; (ii) ensures an
3understanding of how trauma affects survivor behavior; (iii)
4maintains survivor safety, privacy, and, if possible,
5confidentiality; and (iv) recognizes that a survivor is not
6responsible for the sexual violence, domestic violence, dating
7violence, or stalking, or sexual harassment.
8    "Trauma-informed response" means a response involving an
9understanding of the complexities of sexual violence, domestic
10violence, dating violence, or stalking, or sexual harassment
11through training centered on the neurobiological impact of
12trauma, the influence of societal myths and stereotypes
13surrounding sexual violence, domestic violence, dating
14violence, or stalking, or sexual harassment, and understanding
15the behavior of perpetrators. "Trauma-informed response"
16includes empowering survivors to make their own decisions
17regarding care, healing, supportive measures, and whether to
18report or engage with systems and then supporting those
19decisions.
20    "Unwelcome sex-based conduct" includes, but is not limited
21to, unwanted sexual advances, unwanted requests for sexual
22favors, and other unwanted verbal, nonverbal, or physical
23conduct of a sexual nature or related to a person's sex or
24sexual orientation.
25(Source: P.A. 99-426, eff. 8-21-15.)
 

 

 

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1    (110 ILCS 155/10)
2    Sec. 10. Comprehensive policy. All On or before August 1,
32016, all higher education institutions shall adopt a
4comprehensive policy concerning sexual violence, domestic
5violence, dating violence, and stalking, and sexual harassment
6consistent with governing federal and State law. The higher
7education institution's comprehensive policy shall include, at
8a minimum, all of the following components:
9        (1) A definition of consent that, at a minimum,
10    recognizes that (i) consent is a freely given agreement to
11    sexual activity, (ii) a person's lack of verbal or
12    physical resistance or submission resulting from the use
13    or threat of force does not constitute consent, (iii) a
14    person's manner of dress does not constitute consent, (iv)
15    a person's consent to past sexual activity does not
16    constitute consent to future sexual activity, (v) a
17    person's consent to engage in sexual activity with one
18    person does not constitute consent to engage in sexual
19    activity with another, (vi) a person can withdraw consent
20    at any time, and (vii) a person cannot consent to sexual
21    activity if that person is unable to understand the nature
22    of the activity or give knowing consent due to
23    circumstances, including without limitation the following:
24            (A) the person exhibits a lack of capacity is
25        incapacitated due to the use or influence of alcohol
26        or drugs;

 

 

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1            (B) the person is asleep or unconscious;
2            (C) the person is under age; or
3            (D) the person exhibits a lack of capacity is
4        incapacitated due to a mental disability.
5        Nothing in this Section prevents a higher education
6    institution from defining consent in a more demanding
7    manner.
8        (2) Procedures that students of the higher education
9    institution may follow if they choose to report an alleged
10    violation of the comprehensive policy, regardless of where
11    the incident of sexual violence, domestic violence, dating
12    violence, or stalking, or sexual harassment occurred,
13    including all of the following:
14            (A) Name and contact information for the Title IX
15        coordinator, campus law enforcement or security, local
16        law enforcement, and the community-based sexual
17        assault crisis center.
18            (B) The name, title, and contact information for
19        confidential advisors and other confidential resources
20        and a description of what confidential reporting
21        means.
22            (C) Information regarding the various individuals,
23        departments, or organizations to whom a student may
24        report a violation of the comprehensive policy,
25        specifying for each individual and entity (i) the
26        extent of the individual's or entity's reporting

 

 

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1        obligation, (ii) the extent of the individual's or
2        entity's ability to protect the student's privacy, and
3        (iii) the extent of the individual's or entity's
4        ability to have confidential communications with the
5        student.
6            (D) An option for students to electronically
7        report.
8            (E) An option for students to anonymously report.
9            (F) An option for students to confidentially
10        report.
11            (G) An option for reports by third parties and
12        bystanders. However, while third parties and
13        bystanders may report, no complaint resolution
14        procedure may begin unless the survivor agrees to
15        proceed with a report.
16            (H) Information about how the higher education
17        institution protects individuals who report from
18        retaliation.
19        (3) The higher education institution's procedure for
20    responding to a report of an alleged incident of sexual
21    violence, domestic violence, dating violence, or stalking,
22    or sexual harassment, including without limitation (i)
23    assisting and interviewing the survivor, (ii) identifying
24    and locating witnesses, (iii) contacting and interviewing
25    the respondent, (iv) contacting and cooperating with law
26    enforcement, when applicable, and (v) providing

 

 

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1    information regarding the importance of preserving
2    physical evidence of the sexual violence and the
3    availability of a medical forensic examination at no
4    charge to the survivor, and (vi) protecting the survivor
5    from retaliation.
6        (4) A statement of the higher education institution's
7    obligation to provide survivors with concise information,
8    written in plain language, concerning the survivor's
9    rights and options, upon receiving a report of an alleged
10    violation of the comprehensive policy, as described in
11    Section 15 of this Act.
12        (5) The name, address, and telephone number of the
13    medical facility nearest to each campus of the higher
14    education institution where a survivor may have a medical
15    forensic examination completed at no cost to the survivor,
16    pursuant to the Sexual Assault Survivors Emergency
17    Treatment Act.
18        (6) The name, telephone number, address, and website
19    URL, if available, of community-based, State, and national
20    sexual assault crisis centers.
21        (7) A statement notifying survivors of the interim
22    protective measures and accommodations reasonably
23    available from the higher education institution that a
24    survivor may request in response to an alleged violation
25    of the comprehensive policy, including without limitation
26    changes to academic, living, dining, transportation, and

 

 

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1    working situations, obtaining and enforcing campus no
2    contact orders, and honoring an order of protection or no
3    contact order entered by a State civil or criminal court.
4        (8) The higher education institution's complaint
5    resolution procedures if a student alleges violation of
6    the comprehensive violence policy, including, at a
7    minimum, the guidelines set forth in Section 25 of this
8    Act.
9        (9) A statement of the range of sanctions the higher
10    education institution may impose following the
11    implementation of its complaint resolution procedures in
12    response to an alleged violation of the comprehensive
13    policy. Sanctions may include, but are not limited to,
14    suspension, expulsion, or removal of the student found,
15    after complaint resolution procedures, to be in violation
16    of the comprehensive policy of the higher education
17    institution.
18        (10) A statement of the higher education institution's
19    obligation to include an amnesty provision that provides
20    immunity to any student who reports, in good faith, an
21    alleged violation of the higher education institution's
22    comprehensive policy to a responsible employee, as defined
23    by federal law, so that the reporting student will not
24    receive a disciplinary sanction by the institution for a
25    student conduct violation, such as underage drinking or
26    possession or use of a controlled substance, that is

 

 

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1    revealed in the course of such a report, unless the
2    institution determines that the violation was egregious,
3    including without limitation an action that places the
4    health or safety of any other person at significant or
5    serious risk.
6        (11) A statement of the higher education institution's
7    prohibition on retaliation against those who, in good
8    faith, report or disclose an alleged violation of the
9    comprehensive policy, file a complaint, or otherwise
10    participate in the complaint resolution procedure and
11    available sanctions for individuals who engage in
12    retaliatory conduct.
13(Source: P.A. 99-426, eff. 8-21-15; 99-741, eff. 8-5-16;
14100-1087, eff. 1-1-19.)
 
15    (110 ILCS 155/15)
16    Sec. 15. Student notification of rights and options.
17    (a) Upon On or before August 1, 2016, upon being notified
18of an alleged violation of the comprehensive policy by or on
19behalf of a student, each higher education institution shall,
20at a minimum, provide the survivor, when identified, with a
21concise notification, written in plain language, of the
22survivor's rights and options, including without limitation:
23        (1) the survivor's right to report or not report the
24    alleged incident to the higher education institution, law
25    enforcement, or both, including information about the

 

 

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1    survivor's right to privacy and which reporting methods
2    are confidential, as well as the survivor's right to
3    participate or not participate in any investigation into
4    the alleged incident;
5        (2) the contact information for the higher education
6    institution's Title IX coordinator or coordinators,
7    confidential advisors, a community-based sexual assault
8    crisis center, campus law enforcement, and local law
9    enforcement;
10        (3) the survivor's right to request and receive
11    assistance from campus authorities in notifying law
12    enforcement;
13        (4) the survivor's ability to request interim
14    protective measures and accommodations for survivors,
15    including without limitation changes to academic, living,
16    dining, working, and transportation situations, obtaining
17    and enforcing a campus-issued order of protection or no
18    contact order, if such protective measures and
19    accommodations are reasonably available, and an order of
20    protection or no contact order in State court;
21        (5) the higher education institution's ability to
22    provide assistance, upon the survivor's request, in
23    accessing and navigating campus and local health and
24    mental health services, counseling, and advocacy services;
25    and
26        (6) a summary of the higher education institution's

 

 

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1    complaint resolution procedures, under Section 25 of this
2    Act, if the survivor reports a violation of the
3    comprehensive policy; and .
4        (7) a summary of the higher education institution's
5    process for protecting survivors from retaliation.
6    (b) Within 12 hours after receiving an electronic report
7or by the next business day for other reports, the higher
8education institution shall respond to the electronic
9reporter. If the reporter is not the survivor, the higher
10education institution shall also contact the survivor, if
11known, by the next business day following receipt of the
12report. The separate responses to the reporter and the
13survivor must and, at a minimum, provide the information
14described in subdivisions (1) through (7) (6) of subsection
15(a) of this Section and a list of available resources. The
16higher education institution may choose the manner in which it
17responds including, but not limited to, through verbal or
18electronic communication. Nothing in this subsection (b)
19limits a higher education institution's obligations under
20subsection (a) of this Section.
21(Source: P.A. 99-426, eff. 8-21-15.)
 
22    (110 ILCS 155/20)
23    Sec. 20. Confidential advisor.
24    (a) Each higher education institution shall provide
25students with access to confidential advisors to provide

 

 

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1emergency and ongoing support to survivors of sexual violence.
2    (b) The confidential advisors may not be individuals on
3campus who are designated as responsible employees under Title
4IX of the federal Education Amendments of 1972. Nothing in
5this Section precludes a higher education institution from
6partnering with a community-based sexual assault crisis center
7to provide confidential advisors.
8    (b-5) A confidential advisor is separate from a complaint
9advisor, unless a complainant chooses to have the confidential
10advisor also serve as the complaint advisor. Unless prohibited
11by Title IX of the federal Education Amendments of 1972 or
12other federal law, a complainant has a right to have both a
13support person, which may be the confidential advisor if the
14person so chooses, and a complaint advisor at any meeting or
15proceeding related to an alleged violation of the
16comprehensive policy or under Title IX of the federal
17Education Amendments of 1972. The higher education institution
18must not require or appoint a confidential advisor to serve as
19the complainant's complaint advisor.
20    (c) All confidential advisors shall receive 40 hours of
21training on sexual violence, if they have not already
22completed this 40-hour training, before being designated a
23confidential advisor and shall attend a minimum of 6 hours of
24ongoing education training annually on issues related to
25sexual violence to remain a confidential advisor. Confidential
26advisors shall also receive periodic training on the campus

 

 

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1administrative processes, interim protective measures and
2accommodations, and complaint resolution procedures.
3    (d) In the course of working with a survivor, each
4confidential advisor shall, at a minimum, do all of the
5following:
6        (1) Inform the survivor of the survivor's choice of
7    possible next steps regarding the survivor's reporting
8    options and possible outcomes, including without
9    limitation reporting pursuant to the higher education
10    institution's comprehensive policy and notifying local law
11    enforcement.
12        (2) Notify the survivor of resources and services for
13    survivors of sexual violence, including, but not limited
14    to, student services available on campus and through
15    community-based resources, including without limitation
16    sexual assault crisis centers, medical treatment
17    facilities, counseling services, legal resources, medical
18    forensic services, and mental health services. A
19    confidential advisor must inform the survivor if
20    requesting or receiving certain resources or services that
21    may affect confidentiality.
22        (3) Inform the survivor of the survivor's rights and
23    the higher education institution's responsibilities
24    regarding orders of protection, no contact orders, or
25    similar lawful orders issued by the higher education
26    institution or a criminal or civil court.

 

 

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1        (4) Provide confidential services to and have
2    privileged, confidential communications with survivors of
3    sexual violence in accordance with Section 8-804 of the
4    Code of Civil Procedure.
5        (5) Upon the survivor's request and as appropriate,
6    liaise with campus officials, community-based sexual
7    assault crisis centers, or local law enforcement and, if
8    requested, assist the survivor with contacting and
9    reporting to campus officials, campus law enforcement, or
10    local law enforcement. A confidential advisor must inform
11    the survivor if requesting or receiving certain resources
12    or services that may affect confidentiality.
13        (6) Upon the survivor's request, liaise with the
14    necessary campus authorities to secure interim protective
15    measures and accommodations for the survivor.
16        (7) Upon the survivor's request, liaise with the
17    necessary campus authorities to assist the survivor in
18    responding to and advocating against any retaliation by
19    the respondent or any other individual, including agents
20    of the higher education institution.
21(Source: P.A. 99-426, eff. 8-21-15.)
 
22    (110 ILCS 155/25)
23    Sec. 25. Complaint resolution procedures.
24    (a) On or before August 1, 2016, each campus of a higher
25education institution shall adopt one procedure to resolve

 

 

SB3467- 18 -LRB104 18841 LNS 32286 b

1complaints of alleged student violations of the comprehensive
2policy.
3    (b) For each campus, a higher education institution's
4complaint resolution procedures for allegations of student
5violation of the comprehensive policy shall provide, at a
6minimum, all of the following:
7        (1) Complainants alleging student violation of the
8    comprehensive policy shall have the right to have
9    opportunity to request that the complaint resolution
10    procedure begin promptly and be completed within 120 days
11    after the complaint was received by the higher education
12    institution. A reasonable extension of this timeframe is
13    allowed on a case-by-case basis for good cause, with
14    notice to the parties that includes the reason for the
15    delay. Written notification must be provided to the
16    complainant and the respondent if the complaint resolution
17    procedure extends beyond 120 days. A survivor shall have
18    the right to the consideration of any additional
19    accommodations that may be necessary due to a delay in the
20    complaint resolution procedure proceed in a timely manner.
21        (2) The higher education institution shall determine
22    the individuals who will resolve complaints of alleged
23    student violations of the comprehensive policy.
24        (3) All individuals whose duties include resolution of
25    complaints of student violations of the comprehensive
26    policy shall receive a minimum of 8 to 10 hours of annual

 

 

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1    training on issues related to sexual violence, domestic
2    violence, dating violence, and stalking, and sexual
3    harassment and how to conduct the higher education
4    institution's complaint resolution procedures, in addition
5    to the annual training required for employees as provided
6    in subsection (c) of Section 30 of this Act. The initial
7    training must be completed prior to such individuals
8    participating in the investigation of or resolution of
9    complaints.
10        (4) The higher education institution shall have a
11    sufficient number of individuals trained to resolve
12    complaints so that (i) a substitution can occur in the
13    case of a conflict of interest or recusal and (ii) an
14    individual or individuals with no prior involvement in the
15    initial determination or finding hear any appeal brought
16    by a party.
17        (5) The individual or individuals resolving a
18    complaint shall use a preponderance of the evidence
19    standard to determine whether the alleged violation of the
20    comprehensive policy occurred.
21        (6) The complainant and respondent shall (i) receive
22    notice of the individual or individuals with authority to
23    make a finding or impose a sanction in their proceeding
24    before the individual or individuals initiate contact with
25    either party and (ii) have the opportunity to request a
26    substitution if the participation of an individual with

 

 

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1    authority to make a finding or impose a sanction poses a
2    conflict of interest.
3        (7) The higher education institution shall have a
4    procedure to determine interim protective measures and
5    available accommodations available pending the resolution
6    of the complaint. Such protective measures and
7    accommodations must not be overly burdensome to the
8    survivor or result in excluding the survivor from
9    participation in, denying the survivor the benefits of, or
10    subjecting the survivor to discrimination under any
11    education program or activity or otherwise interfere with
12    any right or privilege secured by this Act or Title IX of
13    the federal Education Amendments of 1972.
14        Protective measures and accommodations may burden the
15    respondent, but must not be overly burdensome in that they
16    deny the respondent access to the respondent's education.
17    Nothing in this Section prohibits a higher education
18    institution from following its emergency or regular
19    removal or expulsion processes.
20        The higher education institution shall bear the cost
21    of reasonable protective measures and accommodations. The
22    higher education institution shall have a procedure for
23    providing reasonable protective measures and
24    accommodations to all students who report sexual violence,
25    domestic violence, dating violence, stalking, and sexual
26    harassment. Such protective measures and accommodations

 

 

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1    shall be available even if a student does not file a formal
2    complaint, the student's complaint is dismissed, or there
3    is no finding of responsibility in the complaint
4    resolution procedure.
5        Protective measures and accommodations may include,
6    but are not limited to, counseling, extensions of
7    deadlines, granting requests to change enrollment options
8    after deadlines and other course-related adjustments,
9    campus escort services, increased security and monitoring
10    of certain areas of the campus, campus no contact orders
11    and honoring protective orders entered by a civil or
12    criminal court, leaves of absence to seek medical care,
13    legal assistance, counseling, safety planning, advocacy,
14    or other assistance without penalty from the higher
15    education institution, excused absences to attend,
16    participate in, or prepare for a court, campus,
17    administrative, or quasi-judicial proceeding, training and
18    education programs related to sexual violence, domestic
19    violence, dating violence, stalking, or sexual harassment,
20    and changes in a class schedule, a campus employment or
21    work schedule, housing, or an extracurricular or other
22    activity.
23        A higher education institution must make a good faith
24    effort to accommodate requests for protective measures and
25    accommodations. The major or course enrolled in by the
26    survivor is not a reason to deny protective measures or

 

 

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1    accommodations. If the higher education institution cannot
2    grant a survivor's request and a comparable alternative is
3    not available, the higher education institution must
4    consider whether there are any other reasonably available
5    options that could support the survivor or meet the
6    survivor's needs and offer those options to the survivor.
7        (8) Any proceeding, meeting, or hearing held to
8    resolve complaints of alleged student violations of the
9    comprehensive policy shall protect the privacy of the
10    participating parties and witnesses.
11        (9) The complainant, regardless of this person's level
12    of involvement in the complaint resolution procedure, and
13    the respondent shall have the opportunity to provide or
14    present evidence and witnesses on their behalf during the
15    complaint resolution procedure.
16        (9.5) The higher education institution may not
17    distribute any evidence that includes a private or
18    intentionally digitally altered sexual image by physical
19    or electronic means, except as legally required by a
20    subpoena or court order or as requested by the
21    complainant. The complainant, the respondent, and each
22    party's complaint advisor shall have the opportunity to
23    view physical or electronic copies of any private or
24    intentionally digitally altered sexual image evidence in
25    person in a higher education institution office and only
26    in the presence of an individual resolving the complaint.

 

 

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1    If either party is unable to view this evidence in person,
2    that party and the party's complainant advisor may view it
3    temporarily via an electronic procedure established by the
4    higher education institution that ensures confidentiality.
5    Each party and each party's complaint advisor must not
6    create physical or electronic copies of private or
7    intentionally digitally altered sexual image evidence. All
8    private or intentionally digitally altered sexual image
9    evidence must be kept in the strictest of confidence by
10    the higher education institution and its employees during
11    and after the completion of the complaint resolution
12    procedure, and evidence shall be retained as required
13    under the federal Family Educational Rights and Privacy
14    Act of 1974.
15        (10) The complainant, and the respondent, and each
16    party's complaint advisor may not directly question the
17    other party cross examine one another, but may, at the
18    discretion and direction of the individual or individuals
19    resolving the complaint, suggest questions to be posed to
20    the other party by the individual or individuals resolving
21    the complaint and respond to the other party. This
22    prohibition on direct questioning does not apply to any
23    complaint resolution procedure that involves a complaint
24    that the higher education institution is obligated to
25    address under Title IX of the federal Education Amendments
26    of 1972 if, at the time of the complaint resolution

 

 

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1    procedure, Title IX rules require allowing cross
2    examination by the parties' complaint advisors.
3        (11) Both parties may request and must be allowed to
4    have a complaint an advisor of their choice accompany them
5    to any meeting or proceeding related to an alleged
6    violation of the comprehensive policy, provided that the
7    involvement of the complaint advisor does not result in
8    undue delay of the meeting or proceeding. The complaint
9    advisor must comply with any rules in the higher education
10    institution's complaint resolution procedure regarding the
11    advisor's role. If the complaint advisor violates the
12    rules or engages in behavior or advocacy that harasses,
13    abuses, or intimidates either party, a witness, or an
14    individual resolving the complaint, that advisor may be
15    prohibited from further participation.
16        (12) The complainant and the respondent may not be
17    compelled to testify, if the complaint resolution
18    procedure involves a hearing, in the presence of the other
19    party. If a party invokes this right, the higher education
20    institution shall provide a procedure by which each party
21    can, at a minimum, hear the other party's testimony.
22        (12.5) Survivors of sexual violence, domestic
23    violence, dating violence, stalking, or sexual harassment
24    have a right to have a support person of their choosing,
25    including a confidential advisor, at any meeting or
26    proceeding related to an alleged violation of the

 

 

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1    comprehensive policy or under Title IX of the federal
2    Education Amendments of 1972. If a support person violates
3    the rules or engages in behavior that harasses, abuses, or
4    intimidates either party, a witness, or an individual
5    resolving the complaint, that support person may be
6    prohibited from further participation. Nothing in this
7    paragraph (12.5) prohibits a higher education institution
8    from allowing respondents to have their own support
9    person.
10        (13) The complainant and the respondent are entitled
11    to simultaneous, written notification of the results of
12    the complaint resolution procedure, including information
13    regarding appeal rights, within 7 days of a decision or
14    sooner if required by State or federal law.
15        (14) The complainant and the respondent shall, at a
16    minimum, have the right to timely appeal the complaint
17    resolution procedure's findings or imposed sanctions if
18    the party alleges (i) a procedural error occurred, (ii)
19    new information exists that would substantially change the
20    outcome of the finding, or (iii) the sanction is
21    disproportionate with the violation. The individual or
22    individuals reviewing the findings or imposed sanctions
23    shall not have participated previously in the complaint
24    resolution procedure and shall not have a conflict of
25    interest with either party. The complainant and the
26    respondent shall receive written notice of an appeal and

 

 

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1    the alleged grounds for appeal within 7 days after the
2    appeal was submitted to the higher education institution,
3    and the nonappealing party shall be provided an
4    opportunity to submit a response to the higher education
5    institution. The complainant and the respondent shall
6    receive notice of the appeal decision in writing within 7
7    days after the conclusion of the review of findings or
8    sanctions or sooner if required by federal or State law.
9        (15) The higher education institution shall not
10    disclose the identity of the complainant survivor or the
11    respondent, except as necessary to resolve the complaint
12    or to implement interim protective measures and
13    accommodations or when provided by State or federal law.
14(Source: P.A. 99-426, eff. 8-21-15.)
 
15    (110 ILCS 155/30)
16    Sec. 30. Campus training, education, and awareness.
17    (a) On or before August 1, 2016, a higher education
18institution shall prominently publish, timely update, and have
19easily available on its Internet website all of the following
20information:
21        (1) The higher education institution's comprehensive
22    policy, as well as options and resources available to
23    survivors.
24        (2) The higher education institution's student
25    notification of rights and options described in Section 15

 

 

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1    of this Act.
2        (3) The name and contact information for all of the
3    higher education institution's Title IX coordinators.
4        (4) An explanation of the role of (i) Title IX
5    coordinators, including deputy or assistant Title IX
6    coordinators, under Title IX of the federal Education
7    Amendments of 1972, (ii) responsible employees under Title
8    IX of the federal Education Amendments of 1972, (iii)
9    campus security authorities under the federal Jeanne Clery
10    Disclosure of Campus Security Policy and Campus Crime
11    Statistics Act, and (iv) mandated reporters under the
12    Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act and the reporting
13    obligations of each, as well as the level of
14    confidentiality each is allowed to provide to reporting
15    students under relevant federal and State law.
16        (5) The name, title, and contact information for all
17    confidential advisors, counseling services, and
18    confidential resources that can provide a confidential
19    response to a report and a description of what
20    confidential reporting means.
21        (6) The telephone number and website URL for
22    community-based, State, and national hotlines providing
23    information to sexual violence survivors.
24    (b) Beginning with the 2016-2017 academic year, each
25higher education institution shall provide sexual violence
26primary prevention and awareness programming for all students

 

 

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1who attend one or more classes on campus, which shall include,
2at a minimum, annual training as described in this subsection
3(b). Nothing in this Section shall be construed to limit the
4higher education institution's ability to conduct additional
5ongoing sexual violence primary prevention and awareness
6programming.
7    Each higher education institution's annual training shall,
8at a minimum, provide each student who attends one or more
9classes on campus information regarding the higher education
10institution's comprehensive policy, including without
11limitation the following:
12        (1) the institution's definitions of consent,
13    inability to consent, and retaliation as they relate to
14    sexual violence;
15        (2) reporting to the higher education institution,
16    campus law enforcement, and local law enforcement;
17        (3) reporting to the confidential advisor or other
18    confidential resources;
19        (4) available survivor services; and
20        (5) strategies for bystander intervention and risk
21    reduction.
22    At the beginning of each academic year, each higher
23education institution shall provide each student of the higher
24education institution with an electronic copy or hard copy of
25its comprehensive policy, procedures, and related protocols.
26    (c) A Beginning in the 2016-2017 academic year, a higher

 

 

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1education institution shall provide annual survivor-centered
2and trauma-informed response training to any employee of the
3higher education institution who is involved in (i) the
4receipt of a student report of an alleged incident of sexual
5violence, domestic violence, dating violence, or stalking, or
6sexual harassment, (ii) the referral or provision of services
7to a survivor, or (iii) any campus complaint resolution
8procedure that results from an alleged incident of sexual
9violence, domestic violence, dating violence, or stalking, or
10sexual harassment. Employees falling under this description
11include without limitation the Title IX coordinator, members
12of the higher education institution's campus law enforcement,
13and campus security. An enrolled student at or a contracted
14service provider of the higher education institution with the
15employee responsibilities outlined in clauses (i) through
16(iii) of this paragraph shall also receive annual
17survivor-centered and trauma-informed response training.
18    The higher education institution shall design the training
19to improve the trainee's ability to understand (i) the higher
20education institution's comprehensive policy; (ii) the
21relevant federal and State law concerning survivors of sexual
22violence, domestic violence, dating violence, and stalking,
23and sexual harassment at higher education institutions; (iii)
24the roles of the higher education institution, medical
25providers, law enforcement, and community agencies in ensuring
26a coordinated response to a reported incident of sexual

 

 

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1violence; (iv) the effects of trauma on a survivor; (v) the
2types of conduct that constitute sexual violence, domestic
3violence, dating violence, and stalking, and sexual
4harassment, including same-sex violence and digital sexual
5harassment; and (vi) consent and the role drugs and alcohol
6use can have on the ability to consent. The training shall also
7seek to improve the trainee's ability to respond with cultural
8sensitivity; provide services to or assist in locating
9services for a survivor, as appropriate; and communicate
10sensitively and compassionately with a survivor of sexual
11violence, domestic violence, dating violence, or stalking, or
12sexual harassment.
13(Source: P.A. 99-426, eff. 8-21-15.)
 
14    (110 ILCS 155/50 new)
15    Sec. 50. Cause of action. Violations of this Act are
16actionable in civil court as described in this Section. A
17survivor has a cause of action against any higher education
18institution that responds or fails to respond to sexual
19violence, domestic violence, dating violence, stalking, or
20sexual harassment in a way that shows reckless disregard for
21the requirements of this Act or that shows reckless disregard
22for the life or safety of the survivor.
 
23    (110 ILCS 155/55 new)
24    Sec. 55. Relief. A prevailing survivor is entitled to

 

 

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1relief that includes, but is not limited to:
2        (1) declaratory relief;
3        (2) injunctive relief;
4        (3) the recovery of costs and attorney's fees,
5    including, but not limited to, costs for expert testimony
6    and witness fees;
7        (4) compensatory damages, including, but not limited
8    to, economic loss, including damage to, the destruction
9    of, or the loss of use of personal property, lost wages, or
10    the loss of past or future earnings' capacity;
11        (5) damages for personal injury, disease, or mental or
12    emotional harm, including medical care, rehabilitation,
13    pain and suffering, or physical impairment; and
14        (6) punitive damages.
 
15    Section 10. The Code of Civil Procedure is amended by
16changing Section 8-804 as follows:
 
17    (735 ILCS 5/8-804)
18    Sec. 8-804. Confidential advisor.
19    (a) This Section is intended to protect students at higher
20education institutions in this State who are survivors of
21sexual violence, domestic violence, dating violence, stalking,
22or sexual harassment from public disclosure of communications
23they make in confidence to confidential advisors. Because of
24the fear, stigma, and trauma that often result from incidents

 

 

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1of gender-based sexual violence, many survivors hesitate to
2report or seek help, even when it is available at no cost to
3them. As a result, they not only fail to receive needed medical
4care and emergency counseling, but may lack the psychological
5support necessary to report the incident of sexual violence to
6the higher education institution or law enforcement.
7    (b) In this Section:
8    "Confidential advisor" means a person who is employed or
9contracted by a higher education institution to provide
10emergency and ongoing support to survivors of sexual violence
11with the training, duties, and responsibilities described in
12Section 20 of the Preventing Sexual Violence in Higher
13Education Act.
14    "Dating violence" has the meaning given to that term in
15the Preventing Sexual Violence in Higher Education Act.
16    "Domestic violence" has the meaning given to that term in
17the Preventing Sexual Violence in Higher Education Act.
18    "Gender-based violence" means sexual violence, domestic
19violence, dating violence, stalking, or sexual harassment.
20    "Higher education institution" means a public university,
21a public community college, or an independent, not-for-profit
22or for-profit higher education institution located in this
23State.
24    "Sexual harassment" has the meaning given to that term in
25the Preventing Sexual Violence in Higher Education Act.
26    "Sexual violence" has the meaning given to that term in

 

 

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1the Preventing Sexual Violence in Higher Education Act means
2physical sexual acts attempted or perpetrated against a
3person's will or when a person is incapable of giving consent,
4including without limitation rape, sexual assault, sexual
5battery, sexual abuse, and sexual coercion.
6    "Stalking" has the meaning given to that term in the
7Preventing Sexual Violence in Higher Education Act.
8    "Survivor" has the meaning given to that term in the
9Preventing Sexual Violence in Higher Education Act means a
10student who has experienced sexual violence while enrolled at
11a higher education institution.
12    (c) All communications between a confidential advisor and
13a survivor pertaining to an incident of sexual violence shall
14remain confidential, unless the survivor consents to the
15disclosure of the communication in writing, the disclosure
16falls within one of the exceptions outlined in subsection (d)
17of this Section, or failure to disclose the communication
18would violate State or federal law. Communications include all
19records kept by the confidential advisor in the course of
20providing the survivor with services related to the incident
21of sexual violence.
22    (d) The confidential advisor may disclose confidential
23communications between the confidential advisor and the
24survivor if failure to disclose would result in a clear,
25imminent risk of serious physical injury to or death of the
26survivor or another person.

 

 

SB3467- 34 -LRB104 18841 LNS 32286 b

1    The confidential advisor shall have no obligation to
2report crimes to the higher education institution or law
3enforcement, except to report to the Title IX coordinator, as
4defined by Title IX of the federal Education Amendments of
51972, on a monthly basis the number and type of incidents of
6sexual violence, domestic violence, dating violence, stalking,
7and sexual harassment reported exclusively to the confidential
8advisor in accordance with the higher education institution's
9reporting requirements under subsection (b) of Section 9.21 of
10the Board of Higher Education Act and under federal law.
11    If, in any judicial proceeding, a party alleges that the
12communications are necessary to the determination of any issue
13before the court and written consent to disclosure has not
14been given, the party may ask the court to consider ordering
15the disclosure of the communications. In such a case,
16communications may be disclosed if the court finds, after in
17camera examination of the communication, that the
18communication is relevant, probative, and not unduly
19prejudicial or inflammatory or is otherwise clearly
20admissible; that other evidence is demonstrably unsatisfactory
21as evidence of the facts sought to be established by the
22communication or communications; and that disclosure is more
23important to the interests of substantial justice than
24protection from injury to the confidential advisor-survivor
25relationship, to the survivor, or to any other individual whom
26disclosure is likely to harm.

 

 

SB3467- 35 -LRB104 18841 LNS 32286 b

1    (e) This privilege shall not preclude an individual from
2asserting a greater privilege under federal or State law that
3applies.
4(Source: P.A. 99-426, eff. 8-21-15.)
 
5    Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect July 1,
62027.