State of Illinois
90th General Assembly
Legislation

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90_SB0240

      20 ILCS 505/35.5
      20 ILCS 505/35.6
      20 ILCS 515/20
      20 ILCS 520/1-15
      210 ILCS 30/6             from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 4166
      210 ILCS 30/6.2           from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 4166.2
      210 ILCS 30/6.3 rep.
      210 ILCS 30/6.4 rep.
      305 ILCS 5/8A-12
      305 ILCS 5/12-13.1
      405 ILCS 5/5-100A         from Ch. 91 1/2, par. 5-100A
      405 ILCS 5/5-100A         from Ch. 91 1/2, par. 5-100A
          Creates the Inspector General Act.  Creates the Office of
      the Inspector General to replace the inspectors  general  who
      currently  function  in the Department of Children and Family
      Services, the Department of Mental Health  and  Developmental
      Disabilities  or  its  successor,  the  Department  of  Human
      Services,  and  the Department of Public Aid. Provides for an
      Inspector General and  up  to  3  Deputy  Inspectors  General
      appointed  by  the  Governor  and confirmed by the Senate for
      2-year terms who may  be  removed  by  the  Governor  without
      cause.   Provides  for  transfer  of  powers,  property,  and
      personnel to the new Office of the Inspector General.  Amends
      the Children and Family Services Act, the Child Death  Review
      Team  Act,  the  Foster  Parent Law, the Abused and Neglected
      Long Term Care Facility Residents Reporting Act,  the  Public
      Aid   Code,   and   the   Mental   Health  and  Developmental
      Disabilities Code to make conforming changes. Effective  July
      1, 1997.
                                                    LRB9001118LDdvA
                                              LRB9001118LDdvA
 1        AN ACT to create the Office of the Inspector General.
 2        Be  it  enacted  by  the People of the State of Illinois,
 3    represented in the General Assembly:
 4        Section 1. Short title.  This Act may  be  cited  as  the
 5    Inspector General Act.
 6        Section  5.  Purpose.   It  is the purpose of this Act to
 7    provide for the creation  of  the  Office  of  the  Inspector
 8    General and to transfer to it certain rights, powers, duties,
 9    and  functions  currently  exercised by inspectors general in
10    the  Department  of  Children  and   Family   Services,   the
11    Department  of  Human Services as successor to the Department
12    of Mental Health  and  Developmental  Disabilities,  and  the
13    Department of Public Aid.
14        Section 10. Inspector General; organization.
15        (a)  There   is  created  the  Office  of  the  Inspector
16    General.   The  Office  shall  be  headed  by  the  Inspector
17    General, who shall be appointed by the Governor and confirmed
18    by the Senate in the same manner as directors of  departments
19    under   the  Civil  Administrative  Code  of  Illinois.   The
20    Inspector General shall be appointed for a term of  2  years.
21    The  Inspector  General shall report directly to the Governor
22    and shall not be subject to direction  by  the  head  of  any
23    department  of  State  government  and  may be removed by the
24    Governor without cause.
25        (b)  The Governor may appoint up to 3  Deputy  Inspectors
26    General.  The Deputy Inspectors General shall be appointed by
27    the  Governor  and confirmed by the Senate in the same manner
28    as  assistant  directors  of  departments  under  the   Civil
29    Administrative  Code  of  Illinois  and may be removed by the
30    Governor without cause.  The Deputy Inspectors General  shall
                            -2-               LRB9001118LDdvA
 1    each be appointed for terms of 2 years.
 2        (c)  The  Inspector  General's  compensation  shall be an
 3    amount equal  to  that  provided  by  law  for  an  Assistant
 4    Director  of  Public  Aid  or  such  other  amount  as may be
 5    specified by the Compensation Review Board.  The compensation
 6    of the Deputy Inspectors General shall be determined  by  the
 7    Inspector General.
 8        (d)  The  Inspector  General  may  create  divisions  and
 9    administrative   units  and  may  assign  functions,  powers,
10    duties, and personnel as may be  necessary  or  desirable  to
11    carry out the functions and responsibilities vested by law in
12    the Office of the Inspector General.
13        (e)  The  Office  of  the  Inspector  General shall begin
14    operation on July 1, 1997.
15        Section 15. General powers and duties.
16        (a)  The Inspector General  shall  exercise  the  rights,
17    powers, duties, and functions provided by law, including (but
18    not  limited  to)  the  rights, powers, duties, and functions
19    transferred to the Inspector General under this Act.
20        (b)  The  Inspector  General  may  employ  personnel  (in
21    accordance with  the  Personnel  Code),  provide  facilities,
22    contract for goods and services, and adopt rules as necessary
23    to  carry out the functions and purposes of the Office of the
24    Inspector General, all in accordance with applicable law.
25        Section 20. Discontinued offices  of  inspector  general;
26    successor agency.
27        (a)  The  offices  of inspector general in the Department
28    of Children and Family  Services,  the  Department  of  Human
29    Services  as successor to the Department of Mental Health and
30    Developmental Disabilities, and the Department of Public  Aid
31    are abolished on July 1, 1997.
32        (b)  The  terms  of  the  persons  then  serving  as  the
                            -3-               LRB9001118LDdvA
 1    inspectors  general  of the Department of Children and Family
 2    Services, the Department of Human Services  as  successor  to
 3    the   Department   of   Mental   Health   and   Developmental
 4    Disabilities,  and  the Department of Public Aid shall end on
 5    July 1, 1997, and those offices are abolished on that date.
 6        (c)  For the purposes of the Successor  Agency  Act,  the
 7    Office  of  the  Inspector  General created under this Act is
 8    declared to  be  the  successor  agency  of  the  offices  of
 9    inspector  general  in  the Department of Children and Family
10    Services, the Department of Human Services  as  successor  to
11    the   Department   of   Mental   Health   and   Developmental
12    Disabilities, and the Department of Public Aid.
13        Section  25.  Transfer  of  powers.   Except as otherwise
14    provided in this Act, all of the rights, powers, duties,  and
15    functions  vested  by law in the offices of inspector general
16    in the  Department  of  Children  and  Family  Services,  the
17    Department  of  Human Services as successor to the Department
18    of Mental Health  and  Developmental  Disabilities,  and  the
19    Department  of  Public Aid are transferred on July 1, 1997 to
20    the Office of the Inspector General created under  this  Act.
21    The  Office  of the Inspector General may exercise all of the
22    rights, powers, duties, and functions vested by  law  in  the
23    predecessor  agencies,  and  the  Office may not exercise any
24    greater  rights,  powers,  duties,  or  functions  than  were
25    exercised   by   those   predecessor   agencies   except   as
26    specifically authorized by law.
27        Section 30. Transfer of personnel.
28        (a)  Personnel  employed  by  the  offices  of  inspector
29    general in the Department of Children  and  Family  Services,
30    the   Department  of  Human  Services  as  successor  to  the
31    Department of Mental Health and  Developmental  Disabilities,
32    or  the  Department  of  Public  Aid  on  June  30,  1997 are
                            -4-               LRB9001118LDdvA
 1    transferred on July 1, 1997 to the Office  of  the  Inspector
 2    General created under this Act.
 3        (b)  The  rights  of  State employees, the State, and its
 4    agencies under the Personnel Code and  applicable  collective
 5    bargaining  agreements  and retirement plans are not affected
 6    by this Act.
 7        Section 35. Transfer of  property.  All  books,  records,
 8    documents,   property   (real   and   personal),   unexpended
 9    appropriations,   and  pending  business  pertaining  to  the
10    rights, powers, duties,  and  functions  transferred  to  the
11    Office  of  the  Inspector  General  under  this Act shall be
12    transferred and delivered to  the  Office  of  the  Inspector
13    General effective July 1, 1997.
14        Section 40. Rules and standards.
15        (a)  The  rules  and  standards  of  the  Office  of  the
16    Inspector  General's  predecessor agencies that are in effect
17    on June 30, 1997 and pertain to the rights,  powers,  duties,
18    and  functions transferred to the Office under this Act shall
19    become the rules and standards of the Office of the Inspector
20    General on July 1, 1997 and shall continue  in  effect  until
21    amended or repealed by the Office.
22        (b)  Any  rules pertaining to the rights, powers, duties,
23    and functions transferred to  the  Office  of  the  Inspector
24    General   under  this  Act  that  have  been  proposed  by  a
25    predecessor agency but have not taken effect or been  finally
26    adopted  by  June 30, 1997 shall become proposed rules of the
27    Office of the Inspector General on  July  1,  1997,  and  any
28    rulemaking procedures that have already been completed by the
29    predecessor  agency  for  those  proposed  rules  need not be
30    repeated.
31        (c)  As soon as practical after July 1, 1997, the  Office
32    of  the  Inspector General shall revise and clarify the rules
                            -5-               LRB9001118LDdvA
 1    transferred  to  it   under   this   Act   to   reflect   the
 2    reorganization  of  rights,  powers,  duties,  and  functions
 3    effected  by this Act using the procedures for recodification
 4    of  rules  available  under   the   Illinois   Administrative
 5    Procedure  Act, except that existing title, part, and section
 6    numbering for the affected rules may be retained.  The Office
 7    of the Inspector General may  propose  and  adopt  under  the
 8    Illinois Administrative Procedure Act such other rules as may
 9    be  necessary  to  consolidate  and  clarify the rules of the
10    agencies reorganized by this Act.
11        Section 45. Savings provisions.
12        (a)  The   rights,   powers,   duties,   and    functions
13    transferred  to  the  Office of the Inspector General by this
14    Act shall be vested in and exercised by the Office subject to
15    the provisions of this Act.  An act done by the Office of the
16    Inspector General or an officer, employee, or  agent  of  the
17    Office  in  the  exercise  of the transferred rights, powers,
18    duties, or functions shall have the same legal effect  as  if
19    done  by  the  predecessor agency or an officer, employee, or
20    agent of the predecessor agency.
21        (b)  The  transfer  of  rights,   powers,   duties,   and
22    functions  to  the Office of the Inspector General under this
23    Act does not invalidate any previous action taken  by  or  in
24    respect to any of its predecessor agencies or their officers,
25    employees,   or  agents.   References  to  those  predecessor
26    agencies or  their  officers,  employees  or  agents  in  any
27    document,  contract,  agreement, or law shall, in appropriate
28    contexts, be deemed to refer to the Office of  the  Inspector
29    General created under this Act or its officers, employees, or
30    agents.
31        (c)  The   transfer   of   rights,  powers,  duties,  and
32    functions to the Office of the Inspector General  under  this
33    Act  does  not  affect  any  person's rights, obligations, or
                            -6-               LRB9001118LDdvA
 1    duties, including any civil or criminal penalties  applicable
 2    thereto,  arising  out  of  those transferred rights, powers,
 3    duties, and functions.
 4        (d)  With respect to matters that  pertain  to  a  right,
 5    power,  duty,  or  function  transferred to the Office of the
 6    Inspector General under this Act:
 7             (1)  Beginning July 1, 1997, a report or notice that
 8        was previously required to be made or given by any person
 9        to  a  predecessor  agency  or  any  of   its   officers,
10        employees,  or  agents shall be made or given in the same
11        manner  to  the  Office  or  its   appropriate   officer,
12        employee, or agent.
13             (2)  Beginning  July  1,  1997,  a document that was
14        previously required to be  furnished  or  served  by  any
15        person  to  or  upon  a  predecessor agency or any of its
16        officers, employees, or  agents  shall  be  furnished  or
17        served  in  the  same manner to or upon the Office or its
18        appropriate officer, employee, or agent.
19        (e)  This Act does not affect any act done, ratified,  or
20    cancelled,  any right occurring or established, or any action
21    or proceeding had or commenced in an  administrative,  civil,
22    or  criminal  cause  before July 1, 1997.  Any such action or
23    proceeding that pertains to a right, power, duty, or function
24    transferred to the Office of the Inspector General under this
25    Act and that is pending  on  that  date  may  be  prosecuted,
26    defended,  or  continued  by  the  Office  of  the  Inspector
27    General.
28        Section  50.  Reports.   The Inspector General shall make
29    reports to the Governor and the General Assembly as  required
30    by law. To the extent practicable, the reports concerning the
31    Inspector  General's  functions  exercised  with  respect  to
32    various  departments  of State government during a particular
33    reporting period may be combined in a single document.
                            -7-               LRB9001118LDdvA
 1        Section 55.  Audit.  The Auditor General shall conduct  a
 2    management  or  program  audit of the Office of the Inspector
 3    General at least every 5 years, except that a  more  frequent
 4    audit  of particular functions of the Inspector General shall
 5    be conducted if otherwise required  by  law.  To  the  extent
 6    practicable,  an  audit required under any other provision of
 7    law may be  combined  with  the  audit  required  under  this
 8    Section.
 9        Section  900.  The  Children  and  Family Services Act is
10    amended by changing Sections 35.5 and 35.6 as follows:
11        (20 ILCS 505/35.5)
12        Sec. 35.5.  Inspector General.
13        (a)  In this Act, "Inspector General" means the Inspector
14    General  appointed  under  the  Inspector  General  Act.  The
15    Governor shall appoint, and  the  Senate  shall  confirm,  an
16    Inspector  General  who  shall  have the authority to conduct
17    investigations into allegations of or incidents  of  possible
18    misconduct, misfeasance, malfeasance, or violations of rules,
19    procedures,  or  laws by any employee, foster parent, service
20    provider, or contractor of the  Department  of  Children  and
21    Family   Services.   The   Inspector   General   shall   make
22    recommendations  to the Governor and the Director of Children
23    and Family  Services  concerning  sanctions  or  disciplinary
24    actions  against Department employees or providers of service
25    under  contract  to  the   Department.    Any   investigation
26    conducted  by  the Inspector General shall be independent and
27    separate from the investigation mandated by  the  Abused  and
28    Neglected Child Reporting Act. The Inspector General shall be
29    appointed for a term of 4 years.  The Inspector General shall
30    be  independent of the operations of the Department and shall
31    report to the Director of Children and  Family  Services  and
32    perform other duties the Director may designate.
                            -8-               LRB9001118LDdvA
 1        (b)  The  Inspector  General  shall  have  access  to all
 2    information and personnel necessary to perform the duties  of
 3    the  office.   To  minimize  duplication  of  efforts, and to
 4    assure consistency and conformance with the requirements  and
 5    procedures  established  in  the B.H. v. Suter consent decree
 6    and  to  share  resources  when  appropriate,  the  Inspector
 7    General shall coordinate  his  or  her  activities  with  the
 8    Bureau of Quality Assurance within the Department.
 9        (c)  The  Inspector  General shall be the primary liaison
10    between the Department and the  Department  of  State  Police
11    with  regard  to investigations conducted under the Inspector
12    General's auspices.  If the Inspector General determines that
13    a possible criminal act has been committed, or  that  special
14    expertise  is  required in the investigation, he or she shall
15    immediately  notify  the  Department  of  State  Police.  All
16    investigations conducted by the Inspector  General  shall  be
17    conducted  in a manner designed to ensure the preservation of
18    evidence for possible use in a criminal prosecution.
19        (d)  The Inspector General may recommend to the  Governor
20    and  to  the  Department of Children and Family Services, the
21    Department of Public Health, or any other appropriate agency,
22    sanctions to be imposed against service providers  under  the
23    jurisdiction of or under contract with the Department for the
24    protection   of   children   in  the  custody  or  under  the
25    guardianship of the Department  who  received  services  from
26    those   providers.   The   Inspector  General  may  seek  the
27    assistance of the Attorney General  or  any  of  the  several
28    State's Attorneys in imposing sanctions.
29        (e)  The  Inspector General shall at all times be granted
30    access to any foster home, facility, or program operated  for
31    or licensed or funded by the Department.
32        (f)  Nothing  in  this Section shall limit investigations
33    by the Department of Children and Family  Services  that  may
34    otherwise be required by law or that may be necessary in that
                            -9-               LRB9001118LDdvA
 1    Department's capacity as the central administrative authority
 2    for child welfare.
 3        (g)  The  Inspector  General  shall  have  the  power  to
 4    subpoena  witnesses  and  compel  the production of books and
 5    papers pertinent to an investigation authorized by this  Act.
 6    The  power  to  subpoena or to compel the production of books
 7    and papers, however,  shall  not  extend  to  the  person  or
 8    documents  of  a  labor  organization  or its representatives
 9    insofar as the person or documents of  a  labor  organization
10    relate to the function of representing an employee subject to
11    investigation under this Act.  Any person who fails to appear
12    in  response  to  a  subpoena  or  to  answer any question or
13    produce any books or papers  pertinent  to  an  investigation
14    under this Act, except as otherwise provided in this Section,
15    or  who  knowingly  gives  false  testimony in relation to an
16    investigation  under  this  Act  is  guilty  of  a  Class   A
17    misdemeanor.
18        (h)  The  Inspector  General shall provide to the General
19    Assembly and the Governor, no later than January  1  of  each
20    year, a summary of reports and investigations made under this
21    Section for the prior fiscal year. The summaries shall detail
22    the  imposition  of  sanctions  and  the final disposition of
23    those recommendations.  The summaries shall not  contain  any
24    confidential   or   identifying  information  concerning  the
25    subjects of the reports  and  investigations.  The  summaries
26    also   shall   include  detailed  recommended  administrative
27    actions  and  matters  for  consideration  by   the   General
28    Assembly.
29    (Source: P.A. 88-7.)
30        (20 ILCS 505/35.6)
31        Sec. 35.6.  Foster parent state-wide, toll-free telephone
32    number.
33        (a)  There  shall  be  a  State-wide, toll-free telephone
                            -10-              LRB9001118LDdvA
 1    number for foster parents, whether or not mandated by law, to
 2    report to the Inspector General of the Department,  suspected
 3    misconduct, malfeasance, misfeasance, or violations of rules,
 4    procedures,   or   laws   by  Department  employees,  service
 5    providers, or contractors that is  detrimental  to  the  best
 6    interest  of  children  receiving care, services, or training
 7    from or who were committed to the Department as allowed under
 8    Section 5  of  this  Act.   Immediately  upon  receipt  of  a
 9    telephone  call  regarding  suspected  abuse  or  neglect  of
10    children,  the  Inspector General shall refer the call to the
11    Child Abuse and Neglect Hotline or to  the  State  Police  as
12    mandated  by the Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act and
13    Section 35.5 of this Act.  A mandated reporter shall  not  be
14    relieved  of his or her duty to report incidents to the Child
15    Abuse and Neglect Hotline referred  to  in  this  subsection.
16    The   Inspector   General  shall  also  establish  rules  and
17    procedures for evaluating reports of suspected misconduct and
18    violation of rules and for  conducting  an  investigation  of
19    such reports.
20        (b)  The  Inspector  General  shall  prepare and maintain
21    written records from the reporting source that shall  contain
22    the following information to the extent known at the time the
23    report  is made: (1) the names and addresses of the child and
24    the person responsible  for  the  child's  welfare;  (2)  the
25    nature  of  the  misconduct  and  the  detriment cause to the
26    child's best interest;  (3)  the  names  of  the  persons  or
27    agencies   responsible   for  the  alleged  misconduct.   Any
28    investigation conducted by the Inspector General pursuant  to
29    such  information  shall  not duplicate and shall be separate
30    from the investigation mandated by the Abused  and  Neglected
31    Child  Reporting  Act.   However,  the  Inspector General may
32    include the results of such investigation in reports compiled
33    under this Section.  At the request of the  reporting  agent,
34    the   Inspector  General  shall  keep  the  identity  of  the
                            -11-              LRB9001118LDdvA
 1    reporting agent strictly confidential from the  operation  of
 2    the  Department,  until the Inspector General shall determine
 3    what recommendations shall be made with regard to  discipline
 4    or  sanction of the Department employee, service provider, or
 5    contractor, with the exception of suspected  child  abuse  or
 6    neglect which shall be handled consistent with the Abused and
 7    Neglected  Child  Reporting Act and Section 35.5 of this Act.
 8    The Department shall take whatever  steps  are  necessary  to
 9    assure that a person making a report in good faith under this
10    Section  is  not  adversely  affected  solely on the basis of
11    having made such report.
12    (Source: P.A. 88-7; 88-491.)
13        Section 905. The Child Death Review Team Act  is  amended
14    by changing Section 20 as follows:
15        (20 ILCS 515/20)
16        Sec. 20.  Reviews of child deaths.
17        (a)  A  child  death review team shall review every death
18    of a child that occurs in the subregion served by  that  team
19    in which the deceased child was any of the following:
20             (1)  A ward of the Department.
21             (2)  The  subject of an open service case maintained
22        by the Department.
23             (3)  The subject of a pending child abuse or neglect
24        investigation.
25             (4)  A child who was the  subject  of  an  abuse  or
26        neglect  investigation  at  any time during the 12 months
27        preceding the child's death.
28        A child death review team may, at its discretion,  review
29    other sudden, unexpected, or unexplained child deaths.
30        (b)  A  child  death  review team's purpose in conducting
31    reviews of child deaths is to do the following:
32             (1)  Assist in determining the cause and  manner  of
                            -12-              LRB9001118LDdvA
 1        the child's death, when requested.
 2             (2)  Evaluate  means  by  which the death might have
 3        been prevented.
 4             (3)  Report its findings to appropriate agencies and
 5        make recommendations that may help to reduce  the  number
 6        of child deaths caused by abuse or neglect.
 7             (4)  Promote  continuing education for professionals
 8        involved in investigating, treating, and preventing child
 9        abuse and neglect as a means of preventing  child  deaths
10        due to abuse or neglect.
11             (5)  Make  specific  recommendations to the Director
12        and the Inspector General appointed under  the  Inspector
13        General  Act  of the Department concerning the prevention
14        of  child  deaths  due  to  abuse  or  neglect  and   the
15        establishment   of   protocols  for  investigating  child
16        deaths.
17        (c)  A child death review team shall review a child death
18    as soon as practical and not later than 90 days following the
19    child's death.  A child death review team shall meet at least
20    once in each calendar quarter.
21        (d)  The Director shall, within 90 days, review and reply
22    to  recommendations  made  by  a  team  under  item  (5)   of
23    subsection (b).  The Director shall implement recommendations
24    as  feasible  and appropriate and shall respond in writing to
25    explain  the  implementation  or  nonimplementation  of   the
26    recommendations.
27    (Source: P.A. 88-614, eff. 9-7-94.)
28        Section 910. The Foster Parent Law is amended by changing
29    Section 1-15 as follows:
30        (20 ILCS 520/1-15)
31        Sec.  1-15.  Foster  parent  rights.   A  foster parent's
32    rights include, but are not limited to, the following:
                            -13-              LRB9001118LDdvA
 1             (1)  The right to be treated with dignity,  respect,
 2        and  consideration  as a professional member of the child
 3        welfare team.
 4             (2)  The right to be given standardized  pre-service
 5        training   and   appropriate  ongoing  training  to  meet
 6        mutually assessed needs and improve the  foster  parent's
 7        skills.
 8             (3)  The  right  to be informed as to how to contact
 9        the  appropriate  child  placement  agency  in  order  to
10        receive information and assistance to  access  supportive
11        services for children in the foster parent's care.
12             (4)  The   right   to   receive   timely   financial
13        reimbursement  commensurate  with  the  care needs of the
14        child as specified in the service plan.
15             (5)  The right  to  be  provided  a  clear,  written
16        understanding of a placement agency's plan concerning the
17        placement  of  a  child  in  the  foster  parent's  home.
18        Inherent   in   this   right   is   the  foster  parent's
19        responsibility to support activities  that  will  promote
20        the  child's  right  to relationships with his or her own
21        family and cultural heritage.
22             (6)  The right to be provided a  fair,  timely,  and
23        impartial  investigation  of  complaints  concerning  the
24        foster parent's licensure, to be provided the opportunity
25        to  have a person of the foster parent's choosing present
26        during the investigation, and to be provided due  process
27        during  the  investigation;  the right to be provided the
28        opportunity  to  request  and  receive  mediation  or  an
29        administrative review of decisions that affect  licensing
30        parameters,  or  both  mediation  and  an  administrative
31        review;  and  the  right  to  have decisions concerning a
32        licensing corrective action plan  specifically  explained
33        and tied to the licensing standards violated.
34             (7)  The  right, at any time during which a child is
                            -14-              LRB9001118LDdvA
 1        placed with the foster parent, to receive  additional  or
 2        necessary information that is relevant to the care of the
 3        child.
 4             (8)  The  right to be notified of scheduled meetings
 5        and staffings concerning the foster  child  in  order  to
 6        actively   participate   in   the   case   planning   and
 7        decision-making  process  regarding  the child, including
 8        individual service planning meetings, administrative case
 9        reviews,  interdisciplinary  staffings,  and   individual
10        educational  planning  meetings; the right to be informed
11        of decisions made by the  courts  or  the  child  welfare
12        agency  concerning  the child; the right to provide input
13        concerning the plan of services for the child and to have
14        that input given full consideration in the same manner as
15        information presented by any other  professional  on  the
16        team;   and   the   right   to   communicate  with  other
17        professionals who work with the foster child  within  the
18        context  of  the  team, including therapists, physicians,
19        and teachers.
20             (9)  The  right  to  be  given,  in  a  timely   and
21        consistent  manner,  any  information  a  case worker has
22        regarding the child  and  the  child's  family  which  is
23        pertinent  to  the care and needs of the child and to the
24        making of a permanency plan for the child.  Disclosure of
25        information  concerning  the  child's  family  shall   be
26        limited   to  that  information  that  is  essential  for
27        understanding the needs of  and  providing  care  to  the
28        child  in  order  to  protect  the  rights of the child's
29        family.  When a positive relationship exists between  the
30        foster  parent and the child's family, the child's family
31        may consent to disclosure of additional information.
32             (10)  The  right  to  be  given  reasonable  written
33        notice of (i) any change in a  child's  case  plan,  (ii)
34        plans  to  terminate  the placement of the child with the
                            -15-              LRB9001118LDdvA
 1        foster parent, and (iii) the reasons for  the  change  or
 2        termination  in  placement.   The  notice shall be waived
 3        only in cases of a court  order  or  when  the  child  is
 4        determined to be at imminent risk of harm.
 5             (11)  The  right  to  be  notified  in  a timely and
 6        complete manner of all court hearings,  including  notice
 7        of  the  date  and time of the court hearing, the name of
 8        the judge  or  hearing  officer  hearing  the  case,  the
 9        location  of  the hearing, and the court docket number of
10        the case; and the right to intervene in court proceedings
11        or to seek mandamus under the Juvenile Court Act of 1987.
12             (12)  The right to  be  considered  as  a  placement
13        option  when  a foster child who was formerly placed with
14        the foster parent is to be re-entered into  foster  care,
15        if that placement is consistent with the best interest of
16        the child and other children in the foster parent's home.
17             (13)  The  right  to have timely access to the child
18        placement agency's existing appeals process and the right
19        to be free from acts of harassment and retaliation by any
20        other party when exercising the right to appeal.
21             (14)  The right to be informed of the Foster  Parent
22        Hotline  established  under  Section 35.6 of the Children
23        and Family Services Act and all of the rights accorded to
24        foster  parents  concerning  reports  of  misconduct   by
25        Department  employees, service providers, or contractors,
26        confidential handling of those reports, and investigation
27        by the Inspector General appointed  under  the  Inspector
28        General  Act  Section  35.5  of  the  Children and Family
29        Services Act.
30    (Source: P.A. 89-19, eff. 6-3-95.)
31        Section 915. The Abused  and  Neglected  Long  Term  Care
32    Facility  Residents  Reporting  Act  is  amended  by changing
33    Sections 6 and 6.2 as follows:
                            -16-              LRB9001118LDdvA
 1        (210 ILCS 30/6) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 4166)
 2        (Text of Section before amendment by P.A. 89-507)
 3        Sec. 6.  All reports of suspected abuse or  neglect  made
 4    under  this Act shall be made immediately by telephone to the
 5    Department's central register established under Section 14 on
 6    the   single,   State-wide,   toll-free   telephone    number
 7    established  under  Section  13, or in person or by telephone
 8    through the nearest Department office.   No  long  term  care
 9    facility  administrator,  agent  or  employee,  or  any other
10    person,  shall  screen  reports  or  otherwise  withhold  any
11    reports from the Department, and no long term care  facility,
12    department   of  State  government,  or  other  agency  shall
13    establish any rules, criteria, standards or guidelines to the
14    contrary.  Every long term care facility, department of State
15    government and other agency whose employees are  required  to
16    make or cause to be made reports under Section 4 shall notify
17    its  employees  of the provisions of that Section and of this
18    Section, and provide to  the  Department  documentation  that
19    such  notification  has  been given. The Department of Mental
20    Health and Developmental Disabilities shall train all of  its
21    employees  in  the detection and reporting of suspected abuse
22    and neglect  of  residents.   Reports  made  to  the  central
23    register  through  the State-wide, toll-free telephone number
24    shall be transmitted to appropriate  Department  offices  and
25    municipal  health  departments  that  have responsibility for
26    licensing long term care facilities under  the  Nursing  Home
27    Care  Act.   All  reports  received  through  offices  of the
28    Department shall be forwarded to the central register,  in  a
29    manner  and  form described by the Department. The Department
30    shall be capable of receiving reports of suspected abuse  and
31    neglect 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.  Reports shall also be
32    made  in writing deposited in the U.S. mail, postage prepaid,
33    within 24 hours after having reasonable cause to believe that
34    the condition of the resident resulted from abuse or neglect.
                            -17-              LRB9001118LDdvA
 1    Such reports may  in  addition  be  made  to  the  local  law
 2    enforcement  agency in the same manner. However, in the event
 3    a report is made to the local  law  enforcement  agency,  the
 4    reporter  also  shall  immediately  so inform the Department.
 5    The Department shall initiate an investigation of each report
 6    of resident abuse and neglect under this Act, whether oral or
 7    written, as provided for in Section 3-702 of the Nursing Home
 8    Care Act, except that reports of abuse which indicate that  a
 9    resident's  life  or  safety  is  in imminent danger shall be
10    investigated within 24 hours of such report.  The  Department
11    may  delegate  to  law  enforcement officials or other public
12    agencies the duty to perform such investigation.
13        With respect to investigations of  reports  of  suspected
14    abuse  or  neglect  of  residents  of  institutions under the
15    jurisdiction  of  the  Department  of   Mental   Health   and
16    Developmental  Disabilities,  the  Department  shall transmit
17    copies of such reports to the Department of State Police, the
18    Department of Mental Health and  Developmental  Disabilities,
19    and  the  Inspector  General  appointed  under  the Inspector
20    General Act Section 6.2. If the Department receives a  report
21    of  suspected  abuse or neglect of a recipient of services as
22    defined  in  Section  1-123  of   the   Mental   Health   and
23    Developmental   Disabilities   Code,   the  Department  shall
24    transmit copies of such report to the Inspector  General  and
25    the Directors of the Guardianship and Advocacy Commission and
26    the  agency  designated  by  the  Governor  pursuant  to  the
27    Protection  and Advocacy for Developmentally Disabled Persons
28    Act. When requested by the Director of the  Guardianship  and
29    Advocacy  Commission or the agency designated by the Governor
30    pursuant to the Protection and Advocacy  for  Developmentally
31    Disabled  Persons  Act,  the  Department,  the  Department of
32    Mental  Health  and  Developmental   Disabilities   and   the
33    Department of State Police shall make available a copy of the
34    final investigative report regarding investigations conducted
                            -18-              LRB9001118LDdvA
 1    by  their respective agencies on incidents of suspected abuse
 2    or  neglect  of   residents   of   institutions   under   the
 3    jurisdiction   of   the   Department  of  Mental  Health  and
 4    Developmental Disabilities.  Such final investigative  report
 5    shall  not  contain  witness statements, investigation notes,
 6    draft summaries, results of lie detector tests, investigative
 7    files or other raw data which was used to compile  the  final
 8    investigative  report.  Specifically, the final investigative
 9    report of the Department  of  State  Police  shall  mean  the
10    Director's  final  transmittal  letter.   The  Department  of
11    Mental  Health and Developmental Disabilities shall also make
12    available a copy of the results of  disciplinary  proceedings
13    of employees involved in incidents of abuse or neglect to the
14    Directors.   All identifiable information in reports provided
15    shall not be further disclosed  except  as  provided  by  the
16    Mental  Health and Developmental Disabilities Confidentiality
17    Act.  Nothing  in  this  Section  is  intended  to  limit  or
18    construe  the  power  or  authority  granted  to  the  agency
19    designated  by  the  Governor  pursuant to the Protection and
20    Advocacy for Developmentally Disabled Persons  Act,  pursuant
21    to any other State or federal statute.
22        With respect to investigations of reported resident abuse
23    or  neglect, the Department shall effect with appropriate law
24    enforcement agencies formal agreements concerning methods and
25    procedures  for  the  conduct  of  investigations  into   the
26    criminal  histories  of any administrator, staff assistant or
27    employee of the nursing home or other person responsible  for
28    the  residents  care,  as  well as for other residents in the
29    nursing home who may be in a position to  abuse,  neglect  or
30    exploit  the  patient.   Pursuant  to  the  formal agreements
31    entered into with appropriate law enforcement  agencies,  the
32    Department  may  request  information with respect to whether
33    the person or persons set forth in this paragraph  have  ever
34    been charged with a crime and if so, the disposition of those
                            -19-              LRB9001118LDdvA
 1    charges.   Unless  the  criminal  histories  of  the subjects
 2    involved crimes of violence or resident abuse or neglect, the
 3    Department shall be entitled only to information  limited  in
 4    scope  to  charges  and  their  dispositions.  In cases where
 5    prior crimes of violence or resident  abuse  or  neglect  are
 6    involved,  a  more  detailed  report can be made available to
 7    authorized representatives of the Department, pursuant to the
 8    agreements entered  into  with  appropriate  law  enforcement
 9    agencies.    Any   criminal  charges  and  their  disposition
10    information obtained by the Department shall be  confidential
11    and  may not be transmitted outside the Department, except as
12    required herein, to authorized representatives  or  delegates
13    of  the  Department,  and  may  not  be transmitted to anyone
14    within the Department who is not duly  authorized  to  handle
15    resident abuse or neglect investigations.
16        The   Department  shall  effect  formal  agreements  with
17    appropriate law enforcement agencies in the various  counties
18    and  communities to encourage cooperation and coordination in
19    the handling of resident abuse or neglect cases  pursuant  to
20    this  Act.   The Department shall adopt and implement methods
21    and  procedures  to  promote  statewide  uniformity  in   the
22    handling  of reports of abuse and neglect under this Act, and
23    those methods and procedures shall be adhered to by personnel
24    of  the  Department  involved  in  such  investigations   and
25    reporting.    The  Department  shall  also  make  information
26    required by this Act available to authorized personnel within
27    the Department, as well as its authorized representatives.
28        The Department shall keep  a  continuing  record  of  all
29    reports  made  pursuant to this Act, including indications of
30    the final determination of any investigation  and  the  final
31    disposition of all reports.
32        The  Department  shall  report  annually  to  the General
33    Assembly on the incidence of abuse and neglect of  long  term
34    care  facility residents, with special attention to residents
                            -20-              LRB9001118LDdvA
 1    who are mentally disabled. The report shall include  but  not
 2    be  limited  to  data  on the number and source of reports of
 3    suspected abuse or neglect filed under this Act,  the  nature
 4    of  any  injuries  to  residents,  the final determination of
 5    investigations, the type and number of cases where  abuse  or
 6    neglect  is determined to exist, and the final disposition of
 7    cases.
 8    (Source: P.A. 86-820; 86-1013; 86-1416; 87-828.)
 9        (Text of Section after amendment by P.A. 89-507)
10        Sec. 6.  All reports of suspected abuse or  neglect  made
11    under  this Act shall be made immediately by telephone to the
12    Department's central register established under Section 14 on
13    the   single,   State-wide,   toll-free   telephone    number
14    established  under  Section  13, or in person or by telephone
15    through the nearest Department office.   No  long  term  care
16    facility  administrator,  agent  or  employee,  or  any other
17    person,  shall  screen  reports  or  otherwise  withhold  any
18    reports from the Department, and no long term care  facility,
19    department   of  State  government,  or  other  agency  shall
20    establish any rules, criteria, standards or guidelines to the
21    contrary.  Every long term care facility, department of State
22    government and other agency whose employees are  required  to
23    make or cause to be made reports under Section 4 shall notify
24    its  employees  of the provisions of that Section and of this
25    Section, and provide to  the  Department  documentation  that
26    such  notification  has  been given.  The Department of Human
27    Services  shall  train  all  of   its   mental   health   and
28    developmental  disabilities  employees  in  the detection and
29    reporting  of  suspected  abuse  and  neglect  of  residents.
30    Reports made to the central register through the  State-wide,
31    toll-free   telephone   number   shall   be   transmitted  to
32    appropriate   Department   offices   and   municipal   health
33    departments that have responsibility for licensing long  term
34    care facilities under the Nursing Home Care Act.  All reports
                            -21-              LRB9001118LDdvA
 1    received through offices of the Department shall be forwarded
 2    to  the  central  register, in a manner and form described by
 3    the Department.  The Department shall be capable of receiving
 4    reports of suspected abuse and neglect 24 hours a day, 7 days
 5    a week.  Reports shall also be made in writing  deposited  in
 6    the  U.S. mail, postage prepaid, within 24 hours after having
 7    reasonable  cause  to  believe  that  the  condition  of  the
 8    resident resulted from abuse or neglect.  Such reports may in
 9    addition be made to the local law enforcement agency  in  the
10    same  manner.  However,  in the event a report is made to the
11    local  law  enforcement  agency,  the  reporter  also   shall
12    immediately  so  inform the Department.  The Department shall
13    initiate an investigation of each report  of  resident  abuse
14    and  neglect  under  this  Act,  whether  oral or written, as
15    provided for in Section 3-702 of the Nursing Home  Care  Act,
16    except that reports of abuse which indicate that a resident's
17    life  or  safety  is in imminent danger shall be investigated
18    within 24 hours of such report. The Department  may  delegate
19    to  law  enforcement  officials  or other public agencies the
20    duty to perform such investigation.
21        With respect to investigations of  reports  of  suspected
22    abuse   or   neglect   of  residents  of  mental  health  and
23    developmental    disabilities    institutions    under    the
24    jurisdiction  of  the  Department  of  Human  Services,   the
25    Department  shall  transmit  copies  of  such  reports to the
26    Department of State Police, the Department of Human Services,
27    and the  Inspector  General  appointed  under  the  Inspector
28    General Act Section 6.2.  If the Department receives a report
29    of  suspected  abuse or neglect of a recipient of services as
30    defined  in  Section  1-123  of   the   Mental   Health   and
31    Developmental   Disabilities   Code,   the  Department  shall
32    transmit copies of such report to the Inspector  General  and
33    the Directors of the Guardianship and Advocacy Commission and
34    the  agency  designated  by  the  Governor  pursuant  to  the
                            -22-              LRB9001118LDdvA
 1    Protection  and Advocacy for Developmentally Disabled Persons
 2    Act.  When requested by the Director of the Guardianship  and
 3    Advocacy  Commission or the agency designated by the Governor
 4    pursuant to the Protection and Advocacy  for  Developmentally
 5    Disabled Persons Act, the Department, the Department of Human
 6    Services  and  the  Department  of  State  Police  shall make
 7    available a copy of the final investigative report  regarding
 8    investigations  conducted  by  their  respective  agencies on
 9    incidents of suspected  abuse  or  neglect  of  residents  of
10    mental  health  and  developmental  disabilities institutions
11    under the jurisdiction of the Department of  Human  Services.
12    Such  final  investigative  report  shall not contain witness
13    statements, investigation notes, draft summaries, results  of
14    lie  detector  tests,  investigative  files or other raw data
15    which was used to compile  the  final  investigative  report.
16    Specifically,   the   final   investigative   report  of  the
17    Department of State Police shall mean  the  Director's  final
18    transmittal  letter.   The Department of Human Services shall
19    also make available a copy of  the  results  of  disciplinary
20    proceedings  of  employees  involved in incidents of abuse or
21    neglect to the Directors.  All  identifiable  information  in
22    reports  provided  shall  not  be further disclosed except as
23    provided by the Mental Health and Developmental  Disabilities
24    Confidentiality  Act.  Nothing in this Section is intended to
25    limit or construe the  power  or  authority  granted  to  the
26    agency  designated by the Governor pursuant to the Protection
27    and  Advocacy  for  Developmentally  Disabled  Persons   Act,
28    pursuant to any other State or federal statute.
29        With respect to investigations of reported resident abuse
30    or  neglect, the Department shall effect with appropriate law
31    enforcement agencies formal agreements concerning methods and
32    procedures  for  the  conduct  of  investigations  into   the
33    criminal  histories  of any administrator, staff assistant or
34    employee of the nursing home or other person responsible  for
                            -23-              LRB9001118LDdvA
 1    the  residents  care,  as  well as for other residents in the
 2    nursing home who may be in a position to  abuse,  neglect  or
 3    exploit  the  patient.   Pursuant  to  the  formal agreements
 4    entered into with appropriate law enforcement  agencies,  the
 5    Department  may  request  information with respect to whether
 6    the person or persons set forth in this paragraph  have  ever
 7    been charged with a crime and if so, the disposition of those
 8    charges.   Unless  the  criminal  histories  of  the subjects
 9    involved crimes of violence or resident abuse or neglect, the
10    Department shall be entitled only to information  limited  in
11    scope  to  charges  and  their  dispositions.  In cases where
12    prior crimes of violence or resident  abuse  or  neglect  are
13    involved,  a  more  detailed  report can be made available to
14    authorized representatives of the Department, pursuant to the
15    agreements entered  into  with  appropriate  law  enforcement
16    agencies.    Any   criminal  charges  and  their  disposition
17    information obtained by the Department shall be  confidential
18    and  may not be transmitted outside the Department, except as
19    required herein, to authorized representatives  or  delegates
20    of  the  Department,  and  may  not  be transmitted to anyone
21    within the Department who is not duly  authorized  to  handle
22    resident abuse or neglect investigations.
23        The   Department  shall  effect  formal  agreements  with
24    appropriate law enforcement agencies in the various  counties
25    and  communities to encourage cooperation and coordination in
26    the handling of resident abuse or neglect cases  pursuant  to
27    this  Act.   The Department shall adopt and implement methods
28    and  procedures  to  promote  statewide  uniformity  in   the
29    handling  of reports of abuse and neglect under this Act, and
30    those methods and procedures shall be adhered to by personnel
31    of  the  Department  involved  in  such  investigations   and
32    reporting.    The  Department  shall  also  make  information
33    required by this Act available to authorized personnel within
34    the Department, as well as its authorized representatives.
                            -24-              LRB9001118LDdvA
 1        The Department shall keep  a  continuing  record  of  all
 2    reports  made  pursuant to this Act, including indications of
 3    the final determination of any investigation  and  the  final
 4    disposition of all reports.
 5        The  Department  shall  report  annually  to  the General
 6    Assembly on the incidence of abuse and neglect of  long  term
 7    care  facility residents, with special attention to residents
 8    who are mentally disabled. The report shall include  but  not
 9    be  limited  to  data  on the number and source of reports of
10    suspected abuse or neglect filed under this Act,  the  nature
11    of  any  injuries  to  residents,  the final determination of
12    investigations, the type and number of cases where  abuse  or
13    neglect  is determined to exist, and the final disposition of
14    cases.
15    (Source: P.A. 89-507, eff. 7-1-97.)
16        (210 ILCS 30/6.2) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 4166.2)
17        (Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2000)
18        (Text of Section before amendment by P.A. 89-507)
19        Sec. 6.2.  Inspector General.
20        (a)  In this Act, "Inspector General" means the Inspector
21    General appointed  under  the  Inspector  General  Act.   The
22    Governor  shall  appoint,  and  the  Senate shall confirm, an
23    Inspector General who shall function within the Department of
24    Mental Health and Developmental Disabilities  and  report  to
25    the   Director.   The  Inspector  General  shall  investigate
26    reports of suspected abuse or neglect  (as  those  terms  are
27    defined in Section 3 of this Act) of patients or residents in
28    any  facility operated by the Department of Mental Health and
29    Developmental  Disabilities  and  shall  have  authority   to
30    investigate  and take immediate action on reports of abuse or
31    neglect of recipients, whether patients or residents, in  any
32    facility  or  program  that  is  licensed or certified by the
33    Department of Mental Health and Developmental Disabilities or
                            -25-              LRB9001118LDdvA
 1    that is  funded  by  the  Department  of  Mental  Health  and
 2    Developmental  Disabilities  and is not licensed or certified
 3    by any agency of the State.  At the specific, written request
 4    of an agency of the State other than the Department of Mental
 5    Health and Developmental Disabilities, the Inspector  General
 6    may  cooperate  in investigating reports of abuse and neglect
 7    of persons with mental illness or persons with  developmental
 8    disabilities.    The   Inspector   General   shall   have  no
 9    supervision over or  involvement  in  routine,  programmatic,
10    licensure,  or  certification operations of the Department of
11    Mental Health and Developmental Disabilities or  any  of  its
12    funded agencies.
13        The Inspector General shall promulgate rules establishing
14    minimum   requirements   for   initiating,   conducting,  and
15    completing  investigations.   The  promulgated  rules   shall
16    clearly  set  forth  that  in instances where 2 or more State
17    agencies could investigate an allegation of abuse or neglect,
18    the Inspector General shall not conduct an investigation that
19    is redundant to an investigation conducted by  another  State
20    agency.   The rules shall establish criteria for determining,
21    based upon the nature  of  the  allegation,  the  appropriate
22    method  of  investigation, which may include, but need not be
23    limited to, site visits, telephone contacts, or requests  for
24    written  responses  from  agencies.    The  rules  shall also
25    clarify  how  the  Office  of  the  Inspector  General  shall
26    interact with the licensing unit of the Department of  Mental
27    Health  and  Developmental  Disabilities in investigations of
28    allegations  of  abuse  or  neglect.    Any  allegations   or
29    investigations  of  reports  made  pursuant to this Act shall
30    remain confidential until a final report is completed.  Final
31    reports regarding unsubstantiated  or  unfounded  allegations
32    shall  remain  confidential, except that final reports may be
33    disclosed pursuant to Section 6 of this Act.
34        The Inspector General shall be appointed for a term of  4
                            -26-              LRB9001118LDdvA
 1    years.
 2        (b)  The  Inspector  General  shall within 24 hours after
 3    receiving a report of suspected abuse  or  neglect  determine
 4    whether the evidence indicates that any possible criminal act
 5    has been committed. If he determines that a possible criminal
 6    act has been committed, or that special expertise is required
 7    in   the  investigation,  he  shall  immediately  notify  the
 8    Department of State Police. The Department  of  State  Police
 9    shall  investigate  any  report indicating a possible murder,
10    rape, or other felony. All investigations  conducted  by  the
11    Inspector  General shall be conducted in a manner designed to
12    ensure the preservation of evidence for  possible  use  in  a
13    criminal prosecution.
14        (c)  The Inspector General shall, within 10 calendar days
15    after the transmittal date of a completed investigation where
16    abuse or neglect is substantiated or administrative action is
17    recommended,  provide  a  complete  report on the case to the
18    Governor and the Director of Mental Health and  Developmental
19    Disabilities  and to the agency in which the abuse or neglect
20    is alleged to have  happened.   There  shall  be  an  appeals
21    process  for  any  person  or  agency  that is subject to any
22    action based on a recommendation or recommendations.
23        (d)  The Inspector General may recommend to the  Governor
24    and  the  Departments  of Public Health and Mental Health and
25    Developmental Disabilities sanctions to  be  imposed  against
26    facilities under the jurisdiction of the Department of Mental
27    Health  and  Developmental Disabilities for the protection of
28    residents,  including  appointment  of  on-site  monitors  or
29    receivers, transfer or relocation of residents,  and  closure
30    of  units.  The  Inspector General may seek the assistance of
31    the Attorney General or any of the several State's  attorneys
32    in imposing such sanctions.
33        (e)  The  Inspector  General  shall establish and conduct
34    periodic   training   programs   for   Department   employees
                            -27-              LRB9001118LDdvA
 1    concerning the prevention and reporting of neglect and abuse.
 2        (f)  The Inspector General shall at all times be  granted
 3    access  to  any  facility  operated  by the Department, shall
 4    establish  and  conduct  unannounced  site  visits  to  those
 5    facilities at least  once  annually,  and  shall  be  granted
 6    access, for the purpose of investigating a report of abuse or
 7    neglect,  to any facility or program funded by the Department
 8    that is subject under  the  provisions  of  this  Section  to
 9    investigation  by the Inspector General for a report of abuse
10    or neglect.
11        (g)  Nothing in this Section shall  limit  investigations
12    by   the   Department  of  Mental  Health  and  Developmental
13    Disabilities that may otherwise be required by  law  or  that
14    may be necessary in that Department's capacity as the central
15    administrative  authority  responsible  for  the operation of
16    State mental health and developmental disability facilities.
17        (h)  This Section is repealed on January 1, 2000.
18    (Source: P.A. 89-427, eff. 12-7-95.)
19        (Text of Section after amendment by P.A. 89-507)
20        Sec. 6.2.  Inspector General.
21        (a)  In this Act, "Inspector General" means the Inspector
22    General appointed  under  the  Inspector  General  Act.   The
23    Governor  shall  appoint,  and  the  Senate shall confirm, an
24    Inspector General who shall function within the Department of
25    Human Services and report to the Secretary of Human Services.
26    The Inspector General shall investigate reports of  suspected
27    abuse  or neglect (as those terms are defined in Section 3 of
28    this Act) of patients or residents in any  mental  health  or
29    developmental   disabilities   facility   operated   by   the
30    Department  of  Human  Services  and  shall have authority to
31    investigate and take immediate action on reports of abuse  or
32    neglect  of recipients, whether patients or residents, in any
33    mental  health  or  developmental  disabilities  facility  or
34    program that is licensed or certified by  the  Department  of
                            -28-              LRB9001118LDdvA
 1    Human  Services  (as  successor  to  the Department of Mental
 2    Health and Developmental Disabilities) or that is  funded  by
 3    the  Department  of  Human  Services  (as  successor  to  the
 4    Department  of  Mental Health and Developmental Disabilities)
 5    and is not licensed or certified by any agency of the  State.
 6    At  the  specific,  written request of an agency of the State
 7    other than the Department of Human Services (as successor  to
 8    the   Department   of   Mental   Health   and   Developmental
 9    Disabilities),   the   Inspector  General  may  cooperate  in
10    investigating reports of abuse and neglect  of  persons  with
11    mental  illness  or  persons with developmental disabilities.
12    The Inspector General  shall  have  no  supervision  over  or
13    involvement   in   routine,   programmatic,   licensure,   or
14    certification  operations of the Department of Human Services
15    or any of its funded agencies.
16        The Inspector General shall promulgate rules establishing
17    minimum  requirements   for   initiating,   conducting,   and
18    completing   investigations.   The  promulgated  rules  shall
19    clearly set forth that in instances where  2  or  more  State
20    agencies could investigate an allegation of abuse or neglect,
21    the Inspector General shall not conduct an investigation that
22    is  redundant  to an investigation conducted by another State
23    agency.  The rules shall establish criteria for  determining,
24    based  upon  the  nature  of  the allegation, the appropriate
25    method of investigation, which may include, but need  not  be
26    limited  to, site visits, telephone contacts, or requests for
27    written responses  from  agencies.    The  rules  shall  also
28    clarify  how  the  Office  of  the  Inspector  General  shall
29    interact  with  the licensing unit of the Department of Human
30    Services  in  investigations  of  allegations  of  abuse   or
31    neglect.   Any  allegations or investigations of reports made
32    pursuant to this Act shall remain confidential until a  final
33    report is completed.  Final reports regarding unsubstantiated
34    or  unfounded  allegations  shall remain confidential, except
                            -29-              LRB9001118LDdvA
 1    that final reports may be disclosed pursuant to Section 6  of
 2    this Act.
 3        The  Inspector General shall be appointed for a term of 4
 4    years.
 5        (b)  The Inspector General shall within  24  hours  after
 6    receiving  a  report  of suspected abuse or neglect determine
 7    whether the evidence indicates that any possible criminal act
 8    has been committed. If he determines that a possible criminal
 9    act has been committed, or that special expertise is required
10    in  the  investigation,  he  shall  immediately  notify   the
11    Department  of  State Police.  The Department of State Police
12    shall investigate any report indicating  a  possible  murder,
13    rape,  or  other  felony. All investigations conducted by the
14    Inspector General shall be conducted in a manner designed  to
15    ensure  the  preservation  of  evidence for possible use in a
16    criminal prosecution.
17        (c)  The Inspector General shall, within 10 calendar days
18    after the transmittal date of a completed investigation where
19    abuse or neglect is substantiated or administrative action is
20    recommended, provide a complete report on  the  case  to  the
21    Governor  and  the  Secretary  of  Human  Services and to the
22    agency in which the abuse  or  neglect  is  alleged  to  have
23    happened.   There  shall be an appeals process for any person
24    or  agency  that  is  subject  to  any  action  based  on   a
25    recommendation or recommendations.
26        (d)  The  Inspector General may recommend to the Governor
27    and the Departments  of  Public  Health  and  Human  Services
28    sanctions   to   be   imposed   against   mental  health  and
29    developmental disabilities facilities under the  jurisdiction
30    of  the  Department  of  Human Services for the protection of
31    residents,  including  appointment  of  on-site  monitors  or
32    receivers, transfer or relocation of residents,  and  closure
33    of  units.   The Inspector General may seek the assistance of
34    the Attorney General or any of the several State's  attorneys
                            -30-              LRB9001118LDdvA
 1    in imposing such sanctions.
 2        (e)  The  Inspector  General  shall establish and conduct
 3    periodic   training   programs   for   Department   employees
 4    concerning the prevention and reporting of neglect and abuse.
 5        (f)  The Inspector General shall at all times be  granted
 6    access  to  any  mental  health or developmental disabilities
 7    facility operated by  the  Department,  shall  establish  and
 8    conduct  unannounced site visits to those facilities at least
 9    once annually, and shall be granted access, for  the  purpose
10    of  investigating  a  report  of  abuse  or  neglect,  to any
11    facility or program funded by the Department that is  subject
12    under  the provisions of this Section to investigation by the
13    Inspector General for a report of abuse or neglect.
14        (g)  Nothing in this Section shall  limit  investigations
15    by  the  Department  of  Human Services that may otherwise be
16    required by law or that may be necessary in that Department's
17    capacity as the central administrative authority  responsible
18    for  the  operation  of State mental health and developmental
19    disability facilities.
20        (h)  This Section is repealed on January 1, 2000.
21    (Source: P.A. 89-427, eff. 12-7-95; 89-507, eff. 7-1-97.)
22        (210 ILCS 30/6.3 rep.)
23        (210 ILCS 30/6.4 rep.)
24        Section 916.  The Abused and  Neglected  Long  Term  Care
25    Facility  Residents  Reporting  Act  is  amended by repealing
26    Sections 6.3 and 6.4.
27        Section 920.  The Illinois Public Aid Code is amended  by
28    changing Sections 8A-12 and 12-13.1 as follows:
29        (305 ILCS 5/8A-12)
30        Sec.   8A-12.  Early   fraud   prevention  and  detection
31    program.  The Illinois Department may conduct an early  fraud
                            -31-              LRB9001118LDdvA
 1    prevention and detection program as provided in this Section.
 2    If  conducted,  the  program shall apply to all categories of
 3    assistance and all applicants for aid.  The  program  may  be
 4    conducted  in  appropriate  counties  as  determined  by  the
 5    Department.  The program shall have the following features:
 6             (1)  No intimidation of applicants or recipients may
 7        occur,  either  by  referral  or threat of referral for a
 8        fraud prevention investigation.
 9             (2)  An applicant may not be referred  for  a  fraud
10        prevention  investigation until an application for aid is
11        completed and signed by the applicant or  any  authorized
12        representative.
13             (3)  An  applicant  may be referred to the Inspector
14        General appointed under the Inspector General Act  for  a
15        fraud  prevention  investigation  if there are reasonable
16        grounds to question  the  accuracy  of  any  information,
17        statements,  documents,  or  other representations by the
18        applicant or any  authorized  representative.   Referrals
19        for  fraud  prevention  investigations  shall  be made in
20        accordance with guidelines to be  jointly  determined  by
21        the Inspector General and the Department.
22    (Source: P.A. 89-118, eff. 7-7-95.)
23        (305 ILCS 5/12-13.1)
24        (Text of Section before amendment by P.A. 89-507)
25        Sec. 12-13.1.  Inspector General.
26        (a)  In  this  Section,  "Inspector  General"  means  the
27    Inspector  General appointed under the Inspector General Act.
28    The Governor shall appoint, and the Senate shall confirm,  an
29    Inspector  General  who  shall  function  within the Illinois
30    Department and report  to  the  Governor.  The  term  of  the
31    Inspector  General  shall  expire  on  the  third  Monday  of
32    January, 1997 and every 4 years thereafter.
33        (b)  In  order  to  prevent, detect, and eliminate fraud,
                            -32-              LRB9001118LDdvA
 1    waste, abuse, mismanagement, and  misconduct,  the  Inspector
 2    General shall oversee the Illinois Department of Public Aid's
 3    Department's  integrity functions, which include, but are not
 4    limited to, the following:
 5             (1)  Investigation  of  misconduct   by   employees,
 6        vendors, contractors and medical providers.
 7             (2)  Audits of medical providers related to ensuring
 8        that  appropriate payments are made for services rendered
 9        and to the recovery of overpayments.
10             (3)  Monitoring  of   quality   assurance   programs
11        generally  related  to the medical assistance program and
12        specifically related to any managed care program.
13             (4)  Quality control measurements  of  the  programs
14        administered by the Illinois Department of Public Aid.
15             (5)  Investigations  of fraud or intentional program
16        violations  committed  by   clients   of   the   Illinois
17        Department of Public Aid.
18             (6)  Actions   initiated   against   contractors  or
19        medical providers for any of the following reasons:
20                  (A)  Violations  of  the   medical   assistance
21             program.
22                  (B)  Sanctions  against  providers  brought  in
23             conjunction  with the Department of Public Health or
24             the Department of Mental  Health  and  Developmental
25             Disabilities.
26                  (C)  Recoveries    of    assessments    against
27             hospitals and long-term care facilities.
28                  (D)  Sanctions  mandated  by  the United States
29             Department of  Health  and  Human  Services  against
30             medical providers.
31                  (E)  Violations  of  contracts  related  to any
32             managed care programs.
33             (7)  Representation of the  Illinois  Department  of
34        Public  Aid  at  hearings with the Illinois Department of
                            -33-              LRB9001118LDdvA
 1        Professional  Regulation   in   actions   taken   against
 2        professional   licenses   held  by  persons  who  are  in
 3        violation of orders for child support payments.
 4        (c)  The Inspector  General  shall  have  access  to  all
 5    information,   personnel   and  facilities  of  the  Illinois
 6    Department of Public Aid, its employees, vendors, contractors
 7    and  medical  providers  and  any  federal,  State  or  local
 8    governmental agency that are necessary to perform the  duties
 9    of  the  Office  as  directly  related  to  public assistance
10    programs administered by the Illinois Department.  No medical
11    provider shall be compelled, however, to  provide  individual
12    medical  records  of  patients  who  are  not  clients of the
13    Medical Assistance Program.   State  and  local  governmental
14    agencies are authorized and directed to provide the requested
15    information, assistance or cooperation.
16        (d)  The  Inspector  General  shall serve as the Illinois
17    Department's   primary   liaison   with   law    enforcement,
18    investigatory  and  prosecutorial agencies, including but not
19    limited to the following:
20             (1)  The Department of State Police.
21             (2)  The Federal Bureau of Investigation  and  other
22        federal law enforcement agencies.
23             (3)  The   various  Inspectors  General  of  federal
24        agencies overseeing  the  programs  administered  by  the
25        Illinois Department.
26             (4)  (Blank).  The various Inspectors General of any
27        other State agencies with responsibilities  for  portions
28        of   programs  primarily  administered  by  the  Illinois
29        Department.
30             (5)  The  Offices  of  the  several  United   States
31        Attorneys in Illinois.
32             (6)  The several State's Attorneys.
33        The  Inspector General shall meet on a regular basis with
34    these  entities  to  share  information  regarding   possible
                            -34-              LRB9001118LDdvA
 1    misconduct  by  any  persons  or  entities  involved with the
 2    public aid programs administered by the Illinois Department.
 3        (e)  All  investigations  conducted  by   the   Inspector
 4    General  shall  be  conducted  in  a  manner that ensures the
 5    preservation of evidence for use  in  criminal  prosecutions.
 6    If  the Inspector General determines that a possible criminal
 7    act relating to fraud in the provision or  administration  of
 8    the  medical  assistance  program  has  been  committed,  the
 9    Inspector General shall immediately notify the Medicaid Fraud
10    Control  Unit.   If  the  Inspector General determines that a
11    possible  criminal  act  has  been   committed   within   the
12    jurisdiction of the Office, the Inspector General may request
13    the special expertise of the Department of State Police.  The
14    Inspector General may present for prosecution the findings of
15    any  criminal  investigation  to  the  Office of the Attorney
16    General, the Offices of the several United State Attorneys in
17    Illinois or the several State's Attorneys.
18        (f)  To carry out his or her duties as described in  this
19    Section, the Inspector General and his or her designees shall
20    have  the  power  to  compel  by  subpoena the attendance and
21    testimony  of  witnesses  and  the   production   of   books,
22    electronic  records  and papers as directly related to public
23    assistance programs administered by the Illinois  Department.
24    No  medical  provider shall be compelled, however, to provide
25    individual medical records of patients who are not clients of
26    the Medical Assistance Program.
27        (g)  The Inspector General shall report all  convictions,
28    terminations,   and   suspensions   taken   against  vendors,
29    contractors and medical providers to  the  Governor  and  the
30    Illinois   Department   of  Public  Aid  and  to  any  agency
31    responsible for licensing  or  regulating  those  persons  or
32    entities.
33        (h)  The  Inspector General shall make quarterly reports,
34    findings,  and   recommendations   regarding   the   Office's
                            -35-              LRB9001118LDdvA
 1    investigations   into   reports   of   fraud,  waste,  abuse,
 2    mismanagement, or  misconduct  relating  to  any  public  aid
 3    programs  administered  by  the  Illinois  Department  to the
 4    General Assembly  and  the  Governor.   These  reports  shall
 5    include, but not be limited to, the following information:
 6             (1)  Aggregate    provider   billing   and   payment
 7        information, including the number of providers at various
 8        Medicaid earning levels.
 9             (2)  The number of audits of the medical  assistance
10        program  and  the  dollar  savings  resulting  from those
11        audits.
12             (3)  The number of prescriptions  rejected  annually
13        under   the   Illinois   Department   of   Public   Aid's
14        Department's  Refill  Too  Soon  program  and  the dollar
15        savings resulting from that program.
16             (4)  Provider sanctions, in the aggregate, including
17        terminations and suspensions.
18             (5)  A  detailed  summary  of   the   investigations
19        undertaken  in the previous fiscal year.  These summaries
20        shall  comply  with  all   laws   and   rules   regarding
21        maintaining confidentiality in the public aid programs.
22        (i)  Nothing  in  this Section shall limit investigations
23    by the Illinois Department that may otherwise be required  by
24    law  or  that  may  be necessary in the Illinois Department's
25    capacity as the central administrative authority  responsible
26    for administration of public aid programs in this State.
27    (Source: P.A. 88-554, eff. 7-26-94.)
28        (Text of Section after amendment by P.A. 89-507)
29        Sec. 12-13.1.  Inspector General.
30        (a)  In  this  Section,  "Inspector  General"  means  the
31    Inspector  General appointed under the Inspector General Act.
32    The Governor shall appoint, and the Senate shall confirm,  an
33    Inspector  General  who  shall  function  within the Illinois
34    Department of Public Aid and report  to  the  Governor.   The
                            -36-              LRB9001118LDdvA
 1    term  of  the  Inspector  General  shall  expire on the third
 2    Monday of January, 1997 and every 4 years thereafter.
 3        (b)  In order to prevent, detect,  and  eliminate  fraud,
 4    waste,  abuse,  mismanagement,  and misconduct, the Inspector
 5    General shall oversee the Illinois Department of Public Aid's
 6    integrity functions, which include, but are not  limited  to,
 7    the following:
 8             (1)  Investigation   of   misconduct  by  employees,
 9        vendors, contractors and medical providers.
10             (2)  Audits of medical providers related to ensuring
11        that appropriate payments are made for services  rendered
12        and to the recovery of overpayments.
13             (3)  Monitoring   of   quality   assurance  programs
14        generally related to the medical assistance  program  and
15        specifically related to any managed care program.
16             (4)  Quality  control  measurements  of the programs
17        administered by the Illinois Department of Public Aid.
18             (5)  Investigations of fraud or intentional  program
19        violations   committed   by   clients   of  the  Illinois
20        Department of Public Aid.
21             (6)  Actions  initiated   against   contractors   or
22        medical providers for any of the following reasons:
23                  (A)  Violations   of   the  medical  assistance
24             program.
25                  (B)  Sanctions  against  providers  brought  in
26             conjunction with the Department of Public Health  or
27             the  Department  of  Human Services (as successor to
28             the Department of Mental  Health  and  Developmental
29             Disabilities).
30                  (C)  Recoveries    of    assessments    against
31             hospitals and long-term care facilities.
32                  (D)  Sanctions  mandated  by  the United States
33             Department of  Health  and  Human  Services  against
34             medical providers.
                            -37-              LRB9001118LDdvA
 1                  (E)  Violations  of  contracts  related  to any
 2             managed care programs.
 3             (7)  Representation of the  Illinois  Department  of
 4        Public  Aid  at  hearings with the Illinois Department of
 5        Professional  Regulation   in   actions   taken   against
 6        professional   licenses   held  by  persons  who  are  in
 7        violation of orders for child support payments.
 8        (b-5)  At the request of the Secretary of Human Services,
 9    the Inspector General shall,  in  relation  to  any  function
10    performed by the Department of Human Services as successor to
11    the  Department  of  Public  Aid, exercise one or more of the
12    powers provided under this Section as if those powers related
13    to the Department of Human Services;  in  such  matters,  the
14    Inspector  General  shall  report  his or her findings to the
15    Governor and the Secretary of Human Services.
16        (c)  The Inspector  General  shall  have  access  to  all
17    information,   personnel   and  facilities  of  the  Illinois
18    Department of Public Aid and the Department of Human Services
19    (as  successor  to  the  Department  of  Public  Aid),  their
20    employees, vendors, contractors and medical providers and any
21    federal,  State  or  local  governmental  agency   that   are
22    necessary  to  perform  the  duties of the Office as directly
23    related to public assistance programs administered  by  those
24    departments.    No   medical  provider  shall  be  compelled,
25    however, to provide individual medical  records  of  patients
26    who are not clients of the Medical Assistance Program.  State
27    and  local  governmental agencies are authorized and directed
28    to  provide  the   requested   information,   assistance   or
29    cooperation.
30        (d)  The  Inspector  General  shall serve as the Illinois
31    Department  of  Public  Aid's  primary   liaison   with   law
32    enforcement,   investigatory   and   prosecutorial  agencies,
33    including but not limited to the following:
34             (1)  The Department of State Police.
                            -38-              LRB9001118LDdvA
 1             (2)  The Federal Bureau of Investigation  and  other
 2        federal law enforcement agencies.
 3             (3)  The   various  Inspectors  General  of  federal
 4        agencies overseeing  the  programs  administered  by  the
 5        Illinois Department of Public Aid.
 6             (4)  (Blank).  The various Inspectors General of any
 7        other State agencies with responsibilities  for  portions
 8        of   programs  primarily  administered  by  the  Illinois
 9        Department of Public Aid.
10             (5)  The  Offices  of  the  several  United   States
11        Attorneys in Illinois.
12             (6)  The several State's Attorneys.
13        The  Inspector General shall meet on a regular basis with
14    these  entities  to  share  information  regarding   possible
15    misconduct  by  any  persons  or  entities  involved with the
16    public aid programs administered by the  Illinois  Department
17    of Public Aid.
18        (e)  All   investigations   conducted  by  the  Inspector
19    General shall be conducted  in  a  manner  that  ensures  the
20    preservation  of  evidence  for use in criminal prosecutions.
21    If the Inspector General determines that a possible  criminal
22    act  relating  to fraud in the provision or administration of
23    the  medical  assistance  program  has  been  committed,  the
24    Inspector General shall immediately notify the Medicaid Fraud
25    Control Unit.  If the Inspector  General  determines  that  a
26    possible   criminal   act   has  been  committed  within  the
27    jurisdiction of the Office, the Inspector General may request
28    the special expertise of the Department of State Police.  The
29    Inspector General may present for prosecution the findings of
30    any criminal investigation to  the  Office  of  the  Attorney
31    General, the Offices of the several United State Attorneys in
32    Illinois or the several State's Attorneys.
33        (f)  To  carry out his or her duties as described in this
34    Section, the Inspector General and his or her designees shall
                            -39-              LRB9001118LDdvA
 1    have the power to  compel  by  subpoena  the  attendance  and
 2    testimony   of   witnesses   and  the  production  of  books,
 3    electronic records and papers as directly related  to  public
 4    assistance  programs  administered by the Illinois Department
 5    of Public  Aid  or  the  Department  of  Human  Services  (as
 6    successor  to  the  Department  of  Public  Aid).  No medical
 7    provider shall be compelled, however, to  provide  individual
 8    medical  records  of  patients  who  are  not  clients of the
 9    Medical Assistance Program.
10        (g)  The Inspector General shall report all  convictions,
11    terminations,   and   suspensions   taken   against  vendors,
12    contractors and medical providers to  the  Governor  and  the
13    Illinois   Department   of  Public  Aid  and  to  any  agency
14    responsible for licensing  or  regulating  those  persons  or
15    entities.
16        (h)  The  Inspector General shall make quarterly reports,
17    findings,  and   recommendations   regarding   the   Office's
18    investigations   into   reports   of   fraud,  waste,  abuse,
19    mismanagement, or  misconduct  relating  to  any  public  aid
20    programs  administered  by  the Illinois Department of Public
21    Aid or the Department of Human Services (as successor to  the
22    Department  of  Public  Aid)  to the General Assembly and the
23    Governor.  These reports shall include, but  not  be  limited
24    to, the following information:
25             (1)  Aggregate    provider   billing   and   payment
26        information, including the number of providers at various
27        Medicaid earning levels.
28             (2)  The number of audits of the medical  assistance
29        program  and  the  dollar  savings  resulting  from those
30        audits.
31             (3)  The number of prescriptions  rejected  annually
32        under  the Illinois Department of Public Aid's Refill Too
33        Soon program and the dollar savings resulting  from  that
34        program.
                            -40-              LRB9001118LDdvA
 1             (4)  Provider sanctions, in the aggregate, including
 2        terminations and suspensions.
 3             (5)  A   detailed   summary  of  the  investigations
 4        undertaken in the previous fiscal year.  These  summaries
 5        shall   comply   with   all   laws  and  rules  regarding
 6        maintaining confidentiality in the public aid programs.
 7        (i)  Nothing in this Section shall  limit  investigations
 8    by the Illinois Department of Public Aid or the Department of
 9    Human  Services that may otherwise be required by law or that
10    may  be  necessary  in  their   capacity   as   the   central
11    administrative  authorities responsible for administration of
12    public aid programs in this State.
13    (Source: P.A. 88-554, eff. 7-26-94; 89-507, eff. 7-1-97.)
14        Section  925.   The  Mental  Health   and   Developmental
15    Disabilities  Code  is  amended by changing Section 5-100A as
16    follows:
17        (405 ILCS 5/5-100A) (from Ch. 91 1/2, par. 5-100A)
18        (Text of Section before amendment by P.A. 89-507)
19        Sec. 5-100A. Review Board.
20        (a)  There is created the Mental Health and Developmental
21    Disabilities Medical Review Board, hereinafter referred to as
22    the Board, consisting of 5 members appointed by the Governor,
23    who shall be physicians licensed to practice medicine in  all
24    its branches, including specialists in psychiatry and primary
25    care.   Members  shall  serve at the pleasure of the Governor
26    and shall receive no compensation but may be  reimbursed  for
27    actual  and necessary expenses incurred in the performance of
28    their duties.  The terms  of  members  appointed  before  the
29    effective date of this amendatory Act of 1995 shall expire on
30    the  effective  date of this amendatory Act of 1995.  As soon
31    as possible after the effective date of this  amendatory  Act
32    of 1995, the Governor shall appoint new Board members.
                            -41-              LRB9001118LDdvA
 1        The Governor shall designate one member as chairman.  The
 2    chairman  shall appoint an executive secretary and such other
 3    officers and employees as may be  necessary  to  perform  the
 4    functions of the Board.  The chairman may appoint one or more
 5    committees  of  Board  members and delegate in writing to any
 6    such committee the authority to perform any  of  the  Board's
 7    functions  and duties and to exercise any of its powers.  Any
 8    reports of such committees shall be forwarded to the chairman
 9    for review and forwarding to the Director.  The chairman  may
10    also  seek  consultation  from consultants, including but not
11    limited to specialists in  forensic  pathology  and  forensic
12    psychiatry.
13        (b)  The director or chief officer of every mental health
14    or  developmental  disabilities facility licensed or operated
15    by the Department shall immediately report the death  of  any
16    recipient  of  services  at  the  facility  to the Board in a
17    manner and form prescribed by the  Board,  but  in  any  case
18    within 3 working days of the death.
19        (c)  The Board's functions shall include the following:
20             (1)  investigation  of  any death that occurs within
21        24 hours after admission;
22             (2)  investigation of the causes  and  circumstances
23        of  unusual  deaths  or  deaths  from  other than natural
24        causes;
25             (3)  expert consultation with the Inspector  General
26        on  suspected  abuse  and neglect investigations that the
27        Inspector General determines require independent  medical
28        review;
29             (4)  investigation of all suspected cases of neglect
30        concerning   delivery   of  medical  services,  including
31        investigations by the Inspector General;
32             (5)  visitation  and  inspection  of  any   facility
33        operated  by  the  Department  in  which such a death has
34        occurred;
                            -42-              LRB9001118LDdvA
 1             (6)  reporting upon its  review  of  the  cause  and
 2        circumstances  of  the  death  of  any  recipient  to the
 3        Director and the Associate Director for Clinical Services
 4        and, when appropriate, making  recommendations  to  those
 5        individuals  and  to  the  facility  director  to prevent
 6        similar deaths; and
 7             (7)  reporting by  April  1  of  each  year  to  the
 8        Governor  and  the Legislature concerning its work during
 9        the preceding year and reporting more frequently  to  the
10        Governor  or  the Legislature as such bodies shall direct
11        or as it shall deem advisable.
12        In this Section, "Inspector General" means the  Inspector
13    General appointed under the Inspector General Act.
14        (d)  All   records   of   the   Board's  proceedings  and
15    deliberations and any testimony given before it are protected
16    from disclosure under Section 8-2101 of  the  Code  of  Civil
17    Procedure   and   are   subject  to  the  Mental  Health  and
18    Developmental Disabilities Confidentiality Act.
19        (e)  Notwithstanding any report by the facility  director
20    or   chief   officer   to   the   Board  and  any  subsequent
21    investigation by the Board, the facility  director  or  chief
22    officer shall also report such incidents to other agencies or
23    entities as may be required by law or policies and procedures
24    of  the Department with respect to deaths.  Investigations by
25    the Board are not to be in lieu of or to replace those lawful
26    duties of other agencies or entities.
27        (f)  If the report by the Board to the Director  contains
28    a conclusion of misconduct or criminal acts, such facts shall
29    be   forwarded   by  the  Director  to  the  appropriate  law
30    enforcement or disciplinary entity.
31    (Source: P.A. 89-427, eff. 12-7-95.)
32        (Text of Section after amendment by P.A. 89-507)
33        Sec. 5-100A. Review Board.
34        (a)  There is created the Mental Health and Developmental
                            -43-              LRB9001118LDdvA
 1    Disabilities Medical Review Board, hereinafter referred to as
 2    the Board, consisting of 5 members appointed by the Governor,
 3    who shall be physicians licensed to practice medicine in  all
 4    its branches, including specialists in psychiatry and primary
 5    care.   Members  shall  serve at the pleasure of the Governor
 6    and shall receive no compensation but may be  reimbursed  for
 7    actual  and necessary expenses incurred in the performance of
 8    their duties.  The terms  of  members  appointed  before  the
 9    effective date of this amendatory Act of 1995 shall expire on
10    the  effective  date of this amendatory Act of 1995.  As soon
11    as possible after the effective date of this  amendatory  Act
12    of 1995, the Governor shall appoint new Board members.
13        The Governor shall designate one member as chairman.  The
14    chairman  shall appoint an executive secretary and such other
15    officers and employees as may be  necessary  to  perform  the
16    functions of the Board.  The chairman may appoint one or more
17    committees  of  Board  members and delegate in writing to any
18    such committee the authority to perform any  of  the  Board's
19    functions  and duties and to exercise any of its powers.  Any
20    reports of such committees shall be forwarded to the chairman
21    for review and forwarding to the Secretary.  The chairman may
22    also seek consultation from consultants,  including  but  not
23    limited  to  specialists  in  forensic pathology and forensic
24    psychiatry.
25        (b)  The director or chief officer of every mental health
26    or developmental disabilities facility licensed  or  operated
27    by  the  Department shall immediately report the death of any
28    recipient of services at the  facility  to  the  Board  in  a
29    manner  and  form  prescribed  by  the Board, but in any case
30    within 3 working days of the death.
31        (c)  The Board's functions shall include the following:
32             (1)  investigation of any death that  occurs  within
33        24 hours after admission;
34             (2)  investigation  of  the causes and circumstances
                            -44-              LRB9001118LDdvA
 1        of unusual deaths  or  deaths  from  other  than  natural
 2        causes;
 3             (3)  expert  consultation with the Inspector General
 4        on suspected abuse and neglect  investigations  that  the
 5        Inspector  General determines require independent medical
 6        review;
 7             (4)  investigation of all suspected cases of neglect
 8        concerning  delivery  of  medical   services,   including
 9        investigations by the Inspector General;
10             (5)  visitation   and  inspection  of  any  facility
11        operated by the Department in  which  such  a  death  has
12        occurred;
13             (6)  reporting  upon  its  review  of  the cause and
14        circumstances of  the  death  of  any  recipient  to  the
15        Secretary  and his or her designee and, when appropriate,
16        making recommendations to those individuals  and  to  the
17        facility director to prevent similar deaths; and
18             (7)  reporting  by  April  1  of  each  year  to the
19        Governor and the Legislature concerning its  work  during
20        the  preceding  year and reporting more frequently to the
21        Governor or the Legislature as such bodies  shall  direct
22        or as it shall deem advisable.
23        In  this Section, "Inspector General" means the Inspector
24    General appointed under the Inspector General Act.
25        (d)  All  records  of   the   Board's   proceedings   and
26    deliberations and any testimony given before it are protected
27    from  disclosure  under  Section  8-2101 of the Code of Civil
28    Procedure  and  are  subject  to  the   Mental   Health   and
29    Developmental Disabilities Confidentiality Act.
30        (e)  Notwithstanding  any report by the facility director
31    or  chief  officer  to   the   Board   and   any   subsequent
32    investigation  by  the  Board, the facility director or chief
33    officer shall also report such incidents to other agencies or
34    entities as may be required by law or policies and procedures
                            -45-              LRB9001118LDdvA
 1    of the Department with respect to deaths.  Investigations  by
 2    the Board are not to be in lieu of or to replace those lawful
 3    duties of other agencies or entities.
 4        (f)  If the report by the Board to the Secretary contains
 5    a conclusion of misconduct or criminal acts, such facts shall
 6    be   forwarded  by  the  Secretary  to  the  appropriate  law
 7    enforcement or disciplinary entity.
 8    (Source: P.A. 89-427, eff. 12-7-95; 89-507, eff. 7-1-97.)
 9        Section 995.  No acceleration or delay.  Where  this  Act
10    makes changes in a statute that is represented in this Act by
11    text  that  is not yet or no longer in effect (for example, a
12    Section represented by multiple versions), the  use  of  that
13    text  does  not  accelerate or delay the taking effect of (i)
14    the changes made by this Act or (ii) provisions derived  from
15    any other Public Act.
16        Section  999.  Effective date. This Act takes effect July
17    1, 1997.

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