Rep. Esther Golar

Filed: 3/18/2015

 

 


 

 


 
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1
AMENDMENT TO HOUSE BILL 2921

2    AMENDMENT NO. ______. Amend House Bill 2921 by replacing
3everything after the enacting clause with the following:
 
4    "Section 5. The School Code is amended by changing Section
534-4.5 as follows:
 
6    (105 ILCS 5/34-4.5)
7    Sec. 34-4.5. Chronic truants. In accordance with Section
826-13 of this Code, the board shall create a policy to address
9chronic truancy. The chief executive officer shall biennially
10review this policy beginning with the 2016-2017 school year.
11    (a) Office of Chronic Truant Adjudication. The board shall
12establish and implement an Office of Chronic Truant
13Adjudication, which shall be responsible for administratively
14adjudicating cases of chronic truancy and imposing appropriate
15sanctions. The board shall appoint or employ hearing officers
16to perform the adjudicatory functions of that Office.

 

 

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1Principals and other appropriate personnel may refer pupils
2suspected of being chronic truants, as defined in Section 26-2a
3of this Code, to the Office of Chronic Truant Adjudication.
4    (b) Notices. Before any hearing may be held under
5subsection (c), the principal of the school attended by the
6pupil or the principal's designee shall notify the pupil's
7parent or guardian by personal visit, letter, or telephone of
8each unexcused absence of the pupil. After giving the parent or
9guardian notice of the tenth unexcused absence of the pupil,
10the principal or the principal's designee shall send the
11pupil's parent or guardian a letter, by certified mail, return
12receipt requested, notifying the parent or guardian that he or
13she is subjecting himself or herself to a hearing procedure as
14provided under subsection (c) and clearly describing any and
15all possible penalties that may be imposed as provided for in
16subsections (d) and (e) of this Section.
17    (c) Hearing. Once a pupil has been referred to the Office
18of Chronic Truant Adjudication, a hearing shall be scheduled
19before an appointed hearing officer, and the pupil and the
20pupil's parents or guardian shall be notified by certified
21mail, return receipt requested stating the time, place, and
22purpose of the hearing. The hearing officer shall hold a
23hearing and render a written decision within 14 days
24determining whether the pupil is a chronic truant as defined in
25Section 26-2a of this Code and whether the parent or guardian
26took reasonable steps to assure the pupil's attendance at

 

 

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1school. The hearing shall be private unless a public hearing is
2requested by the pupil's parent or guardian, and the pupil may
3be present at the hearing with a representative in addition to
4the pupil's parent or guardian. The board shall present
5evidence of the pupil's truancy, and the pupil and the parent
6or guardian or representative of the pupil may cross examine
7witnesses, present witnesses and evidence, and present
8defenses to the charges. All testimony at the hearing shall be
9taken under oath administered by the hearing officer. The
10decision of the hearing officer shall constitute an
11"administrative decision" for purposes of judicial review
12under the Administrative Review Law.
13    (d) Penalties. The hearing officer may require the pupil or
14the pupil's parent or guardian or both the pupil and the
15pupil's parent or guardian to do any or all of the following:
16perform reasonable school or community services for a period
17not to exceed 30 days; complete a parenting education program;
18obtain counseling or other supportive services; and comply with
19an individualized educational plan or service plan as provided
20by appropriate school officials. If the parent or guardian of
21the chronic truant shows that he or she took reasonable steps
22to insure attendance of the pupil at school, he or she shall
23not be required to perform services.
24    (e) Non-compliance with sanctions. If a pupil determined by
25a hearing officer to be a chronic truant or the parent or
26guardian of the pupil fails to comply with the sanctions

 

 

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1ordered by the hearing officer under subsection (c) of this
2Section, the Office of Chronic Truant Adjudication may refer
3the matter to the State's Attorney for prosecution under
4Section 3-33.5 of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987.
5    (f) Limitation on applicability. Nothing in this Section
6shall be construed to apply to a parent or guardian of a pupil
7not required to attend a public school pursuant to Section
826-1.
9(Source: P.A. 94-1011, eff. 7-7-06.)
 
10    Section 10. The Juvenile Court Act of 1987 is amended by
11changing Section 3-33.5 as follows:
 
12    (705 ILCS 405/3-33.5)
13    Sec. 3-33.5. Truant minors in need of supervision.
14    (a) Definition. A minor who is reported by the office of
15the regional superintendent of schools, or, in cities of over
16500,000 inhabitants, by the school district Office of Chronic
17Truant Adjudication, as a chronic truant may be subject to a
18petition for adjudication and adjudged a truant minor in need
19of supervision, provided that prior to the filing of the
20petition, the office of the regional superintendent of schools,
21the school district Office of Chronic Truant Adjudication, or a
22community truancy review board certifies that the local school
23has provided appropriate truancy intervention services to the
24truant minor and his or her family. For purposes of this

 

 

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1Section, "truancy intervention services" means services
2designed to assist the minor's return to an educational
3program, and includes but is not limited to: assessments,
4counseling, mental health services, shelter, optional and
5alternative education programs, tutoring, and educational
6advocacy. If, after review by the regional office of education,
7the school district Office of Chronic Truant Adjudication, or
8the community truancy review board, it is determined the local
9school did not provide the appropriate interventions, then the
10minor shall be referred to a comprehensive community based
11youth service agency for truancy intervention services. If the
12comprehensive community based youth service agency is
13incapable to provide intervention services, then this
14requirement for services is not applicable. The comprehensive
15community based youth service agency shall submit reports to
16the office of the regional superintendent of schools, the
17school district Office of Chronic Truant Adjudication, or the
18community truancy review board within 20, 40, and 80 school
19days of the initial referral or at any other time requested by
20the office of the regional superintendent of schools, the
21school district Office of Chronic Truant Adjudication, or the
22community truancy review board, which reports each shall
23certify the date of the minor's referral and the extent of the
24minor's progress and participation in truancy intervention
25services provided by the comprehensive community based youth
26service agency. In addition, if, after referral by the office

 

 

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1of the regional superintendent of schools, the school district
2Office of Chronic Truant Adjudication, or the community truancy
3review board, the minor declines or refuses to fully
4participate in truancy intervention services provided by the
5comprehensive community based youth service agency, then the
6agency shall immediately certify such facts to the office of
7the regional superintendent of schools, the school district
8Office of Chronic Truant Adjudication, or the community truancy
9review board.
10    (a-1) There is a rebuttable presumption that a chronic
11truant is a truant minor in need of supervision.
12    (a-2) There is a rebuttable presumption that school records
13of a minor's attendance at school are authentic.
14    (a-3) For purposes of this Section, "chronic truant" has
15the meaning ascribed to it in Section 26-2a of the School Code.
16    (a-4) For purposes of this Section, a "community truancy
17review board" is a local community based board comprised of but
18not limited to: representatives from local comprehensive
19community based youth service agencies, representatives from
20court service agencies, representatives from local schools,
21representatives from health service agencies, and
22representatives from local professional and community
23organizations as deemed appropriate by the office of the
24regional superintendent of schools, or, in cities of over
25500,000 inhabitants, by the school district Office of Chronic
26Truant Adjudication. The regional superintendent of schools,

 

 

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1or, in cities of over 500,000 inhabitants, the school district
2Office of Chronic Truant Adjudication, must approve the
3establishment and organization of a community truancy review
4board and the regional superintendent of schools or his or her
5designee, or, in cities of over 500,000 inhabitants, the
6general superintendent of schools or his or her designee, shall
7chair the board.
8    (a-5) Nothing in this Section shall be construed to create
9a private cause of action or right of recovery against a
10regional office of education or school district the Office of
11Chronic Truant Adjudication, its superintendent, or its staff
12with respect to truancy intervention services where the
13determination to provide the services is made in good faith.
14    (b) Kinds of dispositional orders. A minor found to be a
15truant minor in need of supervision may be:
16        (1) committed to the appropriate regional
17    superintendent of schools for a student assistance team
18    staffing, a service plan, or referral to a comprehensive
19    community based youth service agency;
20        (2) required to comply with a service plan as
21    specifically provided by the appropriate regional
22    superintendent of schools;
23        (3) ordered to obtain counseling or other supportive
24    services;
25        (4) subject to a fine in an amount in excess of $5, but
26    not exceeding $100, and each day of absence without valid

 

 

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1    cause as defined in Section 26-2a of The School Code is a
2    separate offense;
3        (5) required to perform some reasonable public service
4    work such as, but not limited to, the picking up of litter
5    in public parks or along public highways or the maintenance
6    of public facilities; or
7        (6) subject to having his or her driver's license or
8    driving privilege suspended for a period of time as
9    determined by the court but only until he or she attains 18
10    years of age.
11    A dispositional order may include a fine, public service,
12or suspension of a driver's license or privilege only if the
13court has made an express written finding that a truancy
14prevention program has been offered by the school, regional
15superintendent of schools, or a comprehensive community based
16youth service agency to the truant minor in need of
17supervision.
18    (c) Orders entered under this Section may be enforced by
19contempt proceedings.
20(Source: P.A. 97-975, eff. 8-17-12.)".