(65 ILCS 5/11-22-2) (from Ch. 24, par. 11-22-2)
Sec. 11-22-2.
In the event any municipality has established a public
hospital in accordance with the provisions of this Division 22 and in the
further event the corporate authorities shall determine that the hospital
is no longer needed for the purposes for which it was established, or that
those purposes would be better served through the operation of the hospital by
a corporation, hospital, health care facility, unit of local government or
institution of higher education, the corporate authorities may by ordinance
authorize
the transfer, sale or lease of the hospital to such corporation, hospital,
health care facility, unit of local government or institution of higher
education within or without the corporate limits of the municipality, or
may authorize the sale or lease of the hospital to any mental health clinic
which obtains any portion of its funds from the Department of Human
Services (as successor to the Department of Mental Health and Developmental
Disabilities). Such transfer, sale or lease may be on such
terms and under such conditions as the corporate authorities may deem
proper without regard to any provisions of Division 9 or 10 of Article 8 or
Divisions 75, 76, 77 and 78 of this Article 11. At least 10 days prior to
the adoption of an ordinance under this Section, the corporate authorities
shall make the proposed ordinance conveniently available for public
inspection and shall hold at least one public hearing thereon. Notice of
this hearing shall be published in one or more newspapers published
in the municipality, or if there is none published in the municipality, in
a newspaper having general circulation in the municipality, at least 10
days prior to the time of the public hearing. Such notice shall state the
time and place of the hearing and the place where copies of the proposed
ordinance will be accessible for examination.
In the event that prior to the sale or lease of the hospital pursuant
to this Section, a labor organization has been recognized by the hospital
as the exclusive representative of the majority of employees in a
bargaining unit for purposes of collective bargaining, and in the further
event that a purchaser or lessor subject to the National Labor Relations
Act retains or hires a majority of the employees in such a bargaining unit,
such purchaser or lessor shall recognize the labor organization as the
exclusive representative of the majority of employees in that bargaining
unit for purposes of collective bargaining, provided that the labor
organization makes a timely written assertion of its representational
capacity to the purchaser or lessor.
(Source: P.A. 89-507, eff. 7-1-97.)
|