Illinois General Assembly - Full Text of HB1428
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Full Text of HB1428  97th General Assembly

HB1428 97TH GENERAL ASSEMBLY


 


 
97TH GENERAL ASSEMBLY
State of Illinois
2011 and 2012
HB1428

 

Introduced , by Rep. Elaine Nekritz

 

SYNOPSIS AS INTRODUCED:
 
New Act
30 ILCS 105/5.786 new

    Creates the Condominium Ombudsperson Act and amends the State Finance Act. Creates the Office of the Condominium Ombudsperson in the Department of Financial and Professional Regulation under the supervision and control of the Secretary of the Department of Financial and Professional Regulation. Provides that the Ombudsperson shall offer training and educational materials and courses to condominium unit owners, condominium associations, and boards of managers in subjects relevant to the operation and management of condominium property and the rights and duties of a unit owner or unit owners' association. Requires the Ombudsperson to maintain a statewide toll-free telephone number, and a website with certain specified information, to provide information or assistance on matters relating to condominium property. Requires the Ombudsperson to report annually to the General Assembly. Provides that every condominium unit owners' association shall pay an annual fee to the Ombudsperson to cover the administration of the Act. Creates the Condominium Ombudsperson Fund as a special fund in the State treasury, to consist of fees received by the Ombudsperson, to be used exclusively for expenditures necessary for the proper administration of the Act. Repeals the Act on July 1, 2014. Effective July 1, 2011.


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FISCAL NOTE ACT MAY APPLY

 

 

A BILL FOR

 

HB1428LRB097 06602 AJO 46687 b

1    AN ACT concerning condominium property.
 
2    Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
3represented in the General Assembly:
 
4    Section 1. Short title. This Act may be cited as the
5Condominium Ombudsperson Act.
 
6    Section 5. Definitions. As used in this Act:
7    "Board of managers", "condominium instruments", "master
8association", "unit", "unit owner", and "unit owners'
9association" have the meanings ascribed to those terms in the
10Condominium Property Act.
11    "Condominium association" means a unit owners' association
12or master association.
13    "Department" means the Department of Financial and
14Professional Regulation.
15    "Office" means the Office of the Condominium Ombudsperson
16established under Section 15.
17    "Ombudsperson" means the Condominium Ombudsperson employed
18under Section 15.
19    "Person" includes a natural person, firm, association,
20organization, partnership, business trust, corporation,
21limited liability company, or public entity.
 
22    Section 10. Findings. The General Assembly finds as

 

 

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1follows:
2        (1) Managing condominium property is a complex
3    responsibility. Unit owners and persons charged with
4    managing condominium property may have little or no prior
5    experience in managing real property, operating a
6    not-for-profit association or corporation, complying with
7    the law governing condominium property, and interpreting
8    and enforcing restrictions and rules imposed by the
9    condominium instruments or other applicable covenants.
10    Unit owners may not fully understand their rights and
11    obligations under the law and the condominium instruments
12    or other applicable covenants. Mistakes and
13    misunderstandings are inevitable and may lead to serious,
14    costly, and divisive problems. A Condominium Ombudsperson
15    will seek to educate unit owners, condominium
16    associations, and boards of managers as to their legal
17    rights and obligations. Effective education can prevent or
18    reduce the severity of problems within a condominium
19    community.
20        (2) The principal remedy for a violation of condominium
21    property law is private litigation. Litigation is not an
22    ideal remedy for many condominium property disputes,
23    because the disputants are neighbors who must maintain
24    ongoing relationships. The adversarial nature of
25    litigation can disrupt these relationships, creating
26    animosity that degrades the quality of life within the

 

 

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1    condominium community and makes future disputes more
2    likely to arise. Litigation imposes costs on a condominium
3    community as a whole, costs that must be paid by all unit
4    owners through increased assessments. Many unit owners
5    cannot afford to bring a lawsuit and are effectively denied
6    the benefit of laws designed for their protection. A
7    Condominium Ombudsperson will provide a neutral,
8    nonjudicial forum for resolution of condominium property
9    disputes.
10        (3) Anecdotal accounts of abuses within condominium
11    communities create continuing public demand for reform of
12    condominium property law. This results in frequent changes
13    to the law, making it more difficult to understand and
14    apply and imposing significant transitional costs on
15    condominium communities statewide. By collecting empirical
16    data on the nature and incidence of problems within
17    condominium communities, a Condominium Ombudsperson will
18    provide a sound basis for prioritizing reform efforts,
19    thereby increasing the stability of condominium property
20    law.
21        (4) The costs of the Office of the Condominium
22    Ombudsperson should be borne entirely by condominium unit
23    owners through the imposition of an annual fee.
 
24    Section 15. Office of the Condominium Ombudsperson.
25    (a) The Office of the Condominium Ombudsperson is created

 

 

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1in the Department of Financial and Professional Regulation
2under the supervision and control of the Secretary of the
3Department of Financial and Professional Regulation.
4    (b) Commencing July 1, 2011, the Secretary of the
5Department of Financial and Professional Regulation shall
6employ a Condominium Ombudsperson and other persons as
7necessary to discharge the requirements of this Act. The
8Ombudsperson shall have the powers delegated to him or her by
9the Secretary, in addition to the powers set forth in this Act.
10    (c) The Ombudsperson may adopt rules governing practices
11and procedures under this Act. Any rule adopted under this Act
12is subject to the rulemaking provisions of the Illinois
13Administrative Procedure Act.
14    (d) Information and advice provided by the Ombudsperson has
15no binding legal effect and is not subject to the rulemaking
16provisions of the Illinois Administrative Procedure Act.
17    (e) The Ombudsperson may convene an advisory committee to
18make recommendations on matters within the Ombudsperson's
19jurisdiction. The members of any such advisory committee shall
20receive a per diem and expenses as determined by the
21Department. In selecting the members of an advisory committee,
22the Ombudsperson shall ensure a fair representation of the
23interests involved.
 
24    Section 20. Training and education.
25    (a) The Ombudsperson shall offer training and other

 

 

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1educational materials and courses to condominium unit owners,
2condominium associations, and boards of managers, in subjects
3relevant to the operation and management of condominium
4property and the rights and duties of unit owners, condominium
5associations, and boards of managers.
6    (b) The Ombudsperson may charge a fee for training and
7other educational materials and courses provided under this
8Section, not to exceed the actual cost of the training or other
9materials and courses.
 
10    Section 25. Toll-free number; Internet website.
11     (a) The Office shall maintain a statewide toll-free
12telephone number to provide information or assistance on
13matters relating to condominium property.
14    (b) The Office shall maintain an Internet website, which
15shall provide all of the following information:
16        (1) The text of this Act, the Condominium Property Act,
17    and any other statute or regulation that the Ombudsperson
18    determines would be relevant to the operation and
19    management of condominium property or the rights and duties
20    of unit owners, condominium associations, and boards of
21    managers.
22        (2) Information concerning nonjudicial resolution of
23    disputes that may arise within a condominium community,
24    including contacts for locally available dispute
25    resolution programs.

 

 

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1        (3) A description of the services provided by the
2    Ombudsperson and information on how to contact the
3    Ombudsperson for assistance.
4        (4) An analysis, prepared each year, of changes in the
5    law affecting condominium property.
6        (5) Any other information that the Ombudsperson
7    determines would be useful to unit owners, condominium
8    associations, and boards of managers.
9    (c) Information provided on the Office's Internet website
10shall also be made available in printed form. The Office may
11charge a fee for the purchase of such printed materials, not to
12exceed the actual cost of printing and delivery.
 
13    Section 30. Members of condominium board of managers or
14master association.
15    (a) Within 60 days after assuming office as a member of a
16board of managers or a master association, every such member
17shall certify that he or she has read each of the following:
18        (1) The condominium instruments relating to the
19    condominium property administered by the board of managers
20    or master association.
21        (2) This Act or, if the Ombudsperson prepares a
22    detailed summary of the requirements of this Act, that
23    summary.
24    (b) Each member of a board of managers or a master
25association shall file the certification required by this

 

 

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1Section with the Ombudsperson.
 
2    Section 35. Dispute resolution assistance.
3    (a) Any interested person may request that the Ombudsperson
4provide assistance in resolving a dispute between a unit owner
5and a condominium association or board of managers that
6involves the law governing condominium property or the
7condominium instruments relating to a condominium community.
8    (b) On receipt of a request for assistance, the
9Ombudsperson shall, within the limits of the available
10resources, confer with the interested parties and assist in
11efforts to resolve the dispute by mutual agreement of the
12parties.
13    (c) The Ombudsperson shall not charge a fee for services
14provided under this Section.
 
15    Section 40. Reports.
16    (a) The Ombudsperson shall submit an annual written report
17to the General Assembly, no later than October 1 of each year.
18The report shall include all of the following information:
19        (1) Annual workload and performance data, including
20    the number of requests for assistance received, the manner
21    in which a request was or was not resolved, and the staff
22    time required to resolve the inquiry. For each category of
23    data, the Ombudsperson shall provide subtotals based on the
24    type of question or dispute involved in the request.

 

 

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1        (2) Analysis of the most common and serious types of
2    disputes within condominium communities, along with any
3    recommendations for statutory reform to reduce the
4    frequency or severity of those disputes.
5    (b) On or before January 1, 2013, the Ombudsperson shall
6submit recommendations to the General Assembly on the following
7topics:
8        (1) Whether the Ombudsperson should be authorized to
9    enforce condominium property law.
10        (2) Whether the Ombudsperson should be authorized to
11    oversee unit owners' association elections.
12        (3) Whether the scope of application of Section 30
13    should be narrowed or broadened.
14        (4) Whether the Ombudsperson should provide or
15    subsidize mediation of condominium property disputes.
 
16    Section 45. Fees.
17    (a) Every condominium unit owners' association shall pay to
18the Ombudsperson an annual fee as provided in this Section.
19This fee shall be in addition to any other fees authorized to
20be charged by the Ombudsperson under this Act. The total fee
21due from an association under this Section in any year shall be
22the product of (i) the number of units composing the
23condominium property administered by the association
24multiplied by (ii) the annual fee amount for that year
25determined under subsection (b).

 

 

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1    (b) The initial annual fee amount to be used in calculating
2a unit owners' association's fee under this Section shall be
3$3. The Ombudsperson shall increase or decrease the annual fee
4amount every year to provide only the revenue that he or she
5estimates will be necessary for the Office's operation expenses
6during the next year. The annual fee amount shall not exceed
7$10, however.
8    (c) A unit owners' association is excused from paying the
9fee for a unit if another association has paid the fee for that
10unit. An association that is excused from paying the fee for a
11unit shall certify, on a form prescribed by the Ombudsperson
12for that purpose, that another association has paid the fee for
13that unit. The Ombudsperson may adopt a rule governing which
14association is required to pay the fee for a unit that is
15administered by more than one association.
 
16    Section 50. Condominium Ombudsperson Fund. All moneys
17received by the Ombudsperson as fees under this Act shall be
18deposited into the Condominium Ombudsperson Fund, which is
19hereby created as a special fund in the State treasury. All
20moneys in the fund, upon appropriation by the General Assembly,
21shall be used exclusively for expenditures by the Ombudsperson
22that are necessary for the proper administration of this Act.
 
23    Section 85. Repeal. This Act is repealed on July 1, 2014.
 

 

 

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1    Section 90. The State Finance Act is amended by adding
2Section 5.786 as follows:
 
3    (30 ILCS 105/5.786 new)
4    Sec. 5.786. The Condominium Ombudsperson Fund.
 
5    Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect July 1,
62011.