Public Act 101-0452
 
HB0465 EnrolledLRB101 03398 JRG 48406 b

    AN ACT concerning regulation.
 
    Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
represented in the General Assembly:
 
    Section 1. The Freedom of Information Act is amended by
changing Sections 7 and 7.5 as follows:
 
    (5 ILCS 140/7)  (from Ch. 116, par. 207)
    Sec. 7. Exemptions.
    (1) When a request is made to inspect or copy a public
record that contains information that is exempt from disclosure
under this Section, but also contains information that is not
exempt from disclosure, the public body may elect to redact the
information that is exempt. The public body shall make the
remaining information available for inspection and copying.
Subject to this requirement, the following shall be exempt from
inspection and copying:
        (a) Information specifically prohibited from
    disclosure by federal or State law or rules and regulations
    implementing federal or State law.
        (b) Private information, unless disclosure is required
    by another provision of this Act, a State or federal law or
    a court order.
        (b-5) Files, documents, and other data or databases
    maintained by one or more law enforcement agencies and
    specifically designed to provide information to one or more
    law enforcement agencies regarding the physical or mental
    status of one or more individual subjects.
        (c) Personal information contained within public
    records, the disclosure of which would constitute a clearly
    unwarranted invasion of personal privacy, unless the
    disclosure is consented to in writing by the individual
    subjects of the information. "Unwarranted invasion of
    personal privacy" means the disclosure of information that
    is highly personal or objectionable to a reasonable person
    and in which the subject's right to privacy outweighs any
    legitimate public interest in obtaining the information.
    The disclosure of information that bears on the public
    duties of public employees and officials shall not be
    considered an invasion of personal privacy.
        (d) Records in the possession of any public body
    created in the course of administrative enforcement
    proceedings, and any law enforcement or correctional
    agency for law enforcement purposes, but only to the extent
    that disclosure would:
            (i) interfere with pending or actually and
        reasonably contemplated law enforcement proceedings
        conducted by any law enforcement or correctional
        agency that is the recipient of the request;
            (ii) interfere with active administrative
        enforcement proceedings conducted by the public body
        that is the recipient of the request;
            (iii) create a substantial likelihood that a
        person will be deprived of a fair trial or an impartial
        hearing;
            (iv) unavoidably disclose the identity of a
        confidential source, confidential information
        furnished only by the confidential source, or persons
        who file complaints with or provide information to
        administrative, investigative, law enforcement, or
        penal agencies; except that the identities of
        witnesses to traffic accidents, traffic accident
        reports, and rescue reports shall be provided by
        agencies of local government, except when disclosure
        would interfere with an active criminal investigation
        conducted by the agency that is the recipient of the
        request;
            (v) disclose unique or specialized investigative
        techniques other than those generally used and known or
        disclose internal documents of correctional agencies
        related to detection, observation or investigation of
        incidents of crime or misconduct, and disclosure would
        result in demonstrable harm to the agency or public
        body that is the recipient of the request;
            (vi) endanger the life or physical safety of law
        enforcement personnel or any other person; or
            (vii) obstruct an ongoing criminal investigation
        by the agency that is the recipient of the request.
        (d-5) A law enforcement record created for law
    enforcement purposes and contained in a shared electronic
    record management system if the law enforcement agency that
    is the recipient of the request did not create the record,
    did not participate in or have a role in any of the events
    which are the subject of the record, and only has access to
    the record through the shared electronic record management
    system.
        (e) Records that relate to or affect the security of
    correctional institutions and detention facilities.
        (e-5) Records requested by persons committed to the
    Department of Corrections, Department of Human Services
    Division of Mental Health, or a county jail if those
    materials are available in the library of the correctional
    institution or facility or jail where the inmate is
    confined.
        (e-6) Records requested by persons committed to the
    Department of Corrections, Department of Human Services
    Division of Mental Health, or a county jail if those
    materials include records from staff members' personnel
    files, staff rosters, or other staffing assignment
    information.
        (e-7) Records requested by persons committed to the
    Department of Corrections or Department of Human Services
    Division of Mental Health if those materials are available
    through an administrative request to the Department of
    Corrections or Department of Human Services Division of
    Mental Health.
        (e-8) Records requested by a person committed to the
    Department of Corrections, Department of Human Services
    Division of Mental Health, or a county jail, the disclosure
    of which would result in the risk of harm to any person or
    the risk of an escape from a jail or correctional
    institution or facility.
        (e-9) Records requested by a person in a county jail or
    committed to the Department of Corrections or Department of
    Human Services Division of Mental Health, containing
    personal information pertaining to the person's victim or
    the victim's family, including, but not limited to, a
    victim's home address, home telephone number, work or
    school address, work telephone number, social security
    number, or any other identifying information, except as may
    be relevant to a requester's current or potential case or
    claim.
        (e-10) Law enforcement records of other persons
    requested by a person committed to the Department of
    Corrections, Department of Human Services Division of
    Mental Health, or a county jail, including, but not limited
    to, arrest and booking records, mug shots, and crime scene
    photographs, except as these records may be relevant to the
    requester's current or potential case or claim.
        (f) Preliminary drafts, notes, recommendations,
    memoranda and other records in which opinions are
    expressed, or policies or actions are formulated, except
    that a specific record or relevant portion of a record
    shall not be exempt when the record is publicly cited and
    identified by the head of the public body. The exemption
    provided in this paragraph (f) extends to all those records
    of officers and agencies of the General Assembly that
    pertain to the preparation of legislative documents.
        (g) Trade secrets and commercial or financial
    information obtained from a person or business where the
    trade secrets or commercial or financial information are
    furnished under a claim that they are proprietary,
    privileged or confidential, and that disclosure of the
    trade secrets or commercial or financial information would
    cause competitive harm to the person or business, and only
    insofar as the claim directly applies to the records
    requested.
        The information included under this exemption includes
    all trade secrets and commercial or financial information
    obtained by a public body, including a public pension fund,
    from a private equity fund or a privately held company
    within the investment portfolio of a private equity fund as
    a result of either investing or evaluating a potential
    investment of public funds in a private equity fund. The
    exemption contained in this item does not apply to the
    aggregate financial performance information of a private
    equity fund, nor to the identity of the fund's managers or
    general partners. The exemption contained in this item does
    not apply to the identity of a privately held company
    within the investment portfolio of a private equity fund,
    unless the disclosure of the identity of a privately held
    company may cause competitive harm.
        Nothing contained in this paragraph (g) shall be
    construed to prevent a person or business from consenting
    to disclosure.
        (h) Proposals and bids for any contract, grant, or
    agreement, including information which if it were
    disclosed would frustrate procurement or give an advantage
    to any person proposing to enter into a contractor
    agreement with the body, until an award or final selection
    is made. Information prepared by or for the body in
    preparation of a bid solicitation shall be exempt until an
    award or final selection is made.
        (i) Valuable formulae, computer geographic systems,
    designs, drawings and research data obtained or produced by
    any public body when disclosure could reasonably be
    expected to produce private gain or public loss. The
    exemption for "computer geographic systems" provided in
    this paragraph (i) does not extend to requests made by news
    media as defined in Section 2 of this Act when the
    requested information is not otherwise exempt and the only
    purpose of the request is to access and disseminate
    information regarding the health, safety, welfare, or
    legal rights of the general public.
        (j) The following information pertaining to
    educational matters:
            (i) test questions, scoring keys and other
        examination data used to administer an academic
        examination;
            (ii) information received by a primary or
        secondary school, college, or university under its
        procedures for the evaluation of faculty members by
        their academic peers;
            (iii) information concerning a school or
        university's adjudication of student disciplinary
        cases, but only to the extent that disclosure would
        unavoidably reveal the identity of the student; and
            (iv) course materials or research materials used
        by faculty members.
        (k) Architects' plans, engineers' technical
    submissions, and other construction related technical
    documents for projects not constructed or developed in
    whole or in part with public funds and the same for
    projects constructed or developed with public funds,
    including but not limited to power generating and
    distribution stations and other transmission and
    distribution facilities, water treatment facilities,
    airport facilities, sport stadiums, convention centers,
    and all government owned, operated, or occupied buildings,
    but only to the extent that disclosure would compromise
    security.
        (l) Minutes of meetings of public bodies closed to the
    public as provided in the Open Meetings Act until the
    public body makes the minutes available to the public under
    Section 2.06 of the Open Meetings Act.
        (m) Communications between a public body and an
    attorney or auditor representing the public body that would
    not be subject to discovery in litigation, and materials
    prepared or compiled by or for a public body in
    anticipation of a criminal, civil or administrative
    proceeding upon the request of an attorney advising the
    public body, and materials prepared or compiled with
    respect to internal audits of public bodies.
        (n) Records relating to a public body's adjudication of
    employee grievances or disciplinary cases; however, this
    exemption shall not extend to the final outcome of cases in
    which discipline is imposed.
        (o) Administrative or technical information associated
    with automated data processing operations, including but
    not limited to software, operating protocols, computer
    program abstracts, file layouts, source listings, object
    modules, load modules, user guides, documentation
    pertaining to all logical and physical design of
    computerized systems, employee manuals, and any other
    information that, if disclosed, would jeopardize the
    security of the system or its data or the security of
    materials exempt under this Section.
        (p) Records relating to collective negotiating matters
    between public bodies and their employees or
    representatives, except that any final contract or
    agreement shall be subject to inspection and copying.
        (q) Test questions, scoring keys, and other
    examination data used to determine the qualifications of an
    applicant for a license or employment.
        (r) The records, documents, and information relating
    to real estate purchase negotiations until those
    negotiations have been completed or otherwise terminated.
    With regard to a parcel involved in a pending or actually
    and reasonably contemplated eminent domain proceeding
    under the Eminent Domain Act, records, documents and
    information relating to that parcel shall be exempt except
    as may be allowed under discovery rules adopted by the
    Illinois Supreme Court. The records, documents and
    information relating to a real estate sale shall be exempt
    until a sale is consummated.
        (s) Any and all proprietary information and records
    related to the operation of an intergovernmental risk
    management association or self-insurance pool or jointly
    self-administered health and accident cooperative or pool.
    Insurance or self insurance (including any
    intergovernmental risk management association or self
    insurance pool) claims, loss or risk management
    information, records, data, advice or communications.
        (t) Information contained in or related to
    examination, operating, or condition reports prepared by,
    on behalf of, or for the use of a public body responsible
    for the regulation or supervision of financial
    institutions, or insurance companies, or pharmacy benefit
    managers, unless disclosure is otherwise required by State
    law.
        (u) Information that would disclose or might lead to
    the disclosure of secret or confidential information,
    codes, algorithms, programs, or private keys intended to be
    used to create electronic or digital signatures under the
    Electronic Commerce Security Act.
        (v) Vulnerability assessments, security measures, and
    response policies or plans that are designed to identify,
    prevent, or respond to potential attacks upon a community's
    population or systems, facilities, or installations, the
    destruction or contamination of which would constitute a
    clear and present danger to the health or safety of the
    community, but only to the extent that disclosure could
    reasonably be expected to jeopardize the effectiveness of
    the measures or the safety of the personnel who implement
    them or the public. Information exempt under this item may
    include such things as details pertaining to the
    mobilization or deployment of personnel or equipment, to
    the operation of communication systems or protocols, or to
    tactical operations.
        (w) (Blank).
        (x) Maps and other records regarding the location or
    security of generation, transmission, distribution,
    storage, gathering, treatment, or switching facilities
    owned by a utility, by a power generator, or by the
    Illinois Power Agency.
        (y) Information contained in or related to proposals,
    bids, or negotiations related to electric power
    procurement under Section 1-75 of the Illinois Power Agency
    Act and Section 16-111.5 of the Public Utilities Act that
    is determined to be confidential and proprietary by the
    Illinois Power Agency or by the Illinois Commerce
    Commission.
        (z) Information about students exempted from
    disclosure under Sections 10-20.38 or 34-18.29 of the
    School Code, and information about undergraduate students
    enrolled at an institution of higher education exempted
    from disclosure under Section 25 of the Illinois Credit
    Card Marketing Act of 2009.
        (aa) Information the disclosure of which is exempted
    under the Viatical Settlements Act of 2009.
        (bb) Records and information provided to a mortality
    review team and records maintained by a mortality review
    team appointed under the Department of Juvenile Justice
    Mortality Review Team Act.
        (cc) Information regarding interments, entombments, or
    inurnments of human remains that are submitted to the
    Cemetery Oversight Database under the Cemetery Care Act or
    the Cemetery Oversight Act, whichever is applicable.
        (dd) Correspondence and records (i) that may not be
    disclosed under Section 11-9 of the Illinois Public Aid
    Code or (ii) that pertain to appeals under Section 11-8 of
    the Illinois Public Aid Code.
        (ee) The names, addresses, or other personal
    information of persons who are minors and are also
    participants and registrants in programs of park
    districts, forest preserve districts, conservation
    districts, recreation agencies, and special recreation
    associations.
        (ff) The names, addresses, or other personal
    information of participants and registrants in programs of
    park districts, forest preserve districts, conservation
    districts, recreation agencies, and special recreation
    associations where such programs are targeted primarily to
    minors.
        (gg) Confidential information described in Section
    1-100 of the Illinois Independent Tax Tribunal Act of 2012.
        (hh) The report submitted to the State Board of
    Education by the School Security and Standards Task Force
    under item (8) of subsection (d) of Section 2-3.160 of the
    School Code and any information contained in that report.
        (ii) Records requested by persons committed to or
    detained by the Department of Human Services under the
    Sexually Violent Persons Commitment Act or committed to the
    Department of Corrections under the Sexually Dangerous
    Persons Act if those materials: (i) are available in the
    library of the facility where the individual is confined;
    (ii) include records from staff members' personnel files,
    staff rosters, or other staffing assignment information;
    or (iii) are available through an administrative request to
    the Department of Human Services or the Department of
    Corrections.
        (jj) Confidential information described in Section
    5-535 of the Civil Administrative Code of Illinois.
    (1.5) Any information exempt from disclosure under the
Judicial Privacy Act shall be redacted from public records
prior to disclosure under this Act.
    (2) A public record that is not in the possession of a
public body but is in the possession of a party with whom the
agency has contracted to perform a governmental function on
behalf of the public body, and that directly relates to the
governmental function and is not otherwise exempt under this
Act, shall be considered a public record of the public body,
for purposes of this Act.
    (3) This Section does not authorize withholding of
information or limit the availability of records to the public,
except as stated in this Section or otherwise provided in this
Act.
(Source: P.A. 99-298, eff. 8-6-15; 99-346, eff. 1-1-16; 99-642,
eff. 7-28-16; 100-26, eff. 8-4-17; 100-201, eff. 8-18-17;
100-732, eff. 8-3-18.)
 
    (5 ILCS 140/7.5)
    Sec. 7.5. Statutory exemptions. To the extent provided for
by the statutes referenced below, the following shall be exempt
from inspection and copying:
        (a) All information determined to be confidential
    under Section 4002 of the Technology Advancement and
    Development Act.
        (b) Library circulation and order records identifying
    library users with specific materials under the Library
    Records Confidentiality Act.
        (c) Applications, related documents, and medical
    records received by the Experimental Organ Transplantation
    Procedures Board and any and all documents or other records
    prepared by the Experimental Organ Transplantation
    Procedures Board or its staff relating to applications it
    has received.
        (d) Information and records held by the Department of
    Public Health and its authorized representatives relating
    to known or suspected cases of sexually transmissible
    disease or any information the disclosure of which is
    restricted under the Illinois Sexually Transmissible
    Disease Control Act.
        (e) Information the disclosure of which is exempted
    under Section 30 of the Radon Industry Licensing Act.
        (f) Firm performance evaluations under Section 55 of
    the Architectural, Engineering, and Land Surveying
    Qualifications Based Selection Act.
        (g) Information the disclosure of which is restricted
    and exempted under Section 50 of the Illinois Prepaid
    Tuition Act.
        (h) Information the disclosure of which is exempted
    under the State Officials and Employees Ethics Act, and
    records of any lawfully created State or local inspector
    general's office that would be exempt if created or
    obtained by an Executive Inspector General's office under
    that Act.
        (i) Information contained in a local emergency energy
    plan submitted to a municipality in accordance with a local
    emergency energy plan ordinance that is adopted under
    Section 11-21.5-5 of the Illinois Municipal Code.
        (j) Information and data concerning the distribution
    of surcharge moneys collected and remitted by carriers
    under the Emergency Telephone System Act.
        (k) Law enforcement officer identification information
    or driver identification information compiled by a law
    enforcement agency or the Department of Transportation
    under Section 11-212 of the Illinois Vehicle Code.
        (l) Records and information provided to a residential
    health care facility resident sexual assault and death
    review team or the Executive Council under the Abuse
    Prevention Review Team Act.
        (m) Information provided to the predatory lending
    database created pursuant to Article 3 of the Residential
    Real Property Disclosure Act, except to the extent
    authorized under that Article.
        (n) Defense budgets and petitions for certification of
    compensation and expenses for court appointed trial
    counsel as provided under Sections 10 and 15 of the Capital
    Crimes Litigation Act. This subsection (n) shall apply
    until the conclusion of the trial of the case, even if the
    prosecution chooses not to pursue the death penalty prior
    to trial or sentencing.
        (o) Information that is prohibited from being
    disclosed under Section 4 of the Illinois Health and
    Hazardous Substances Registry Act.
        (p) Security portions of system safety program plans,
    investigation reports, surveys, schedules, lists, data, or
    information compiled, collected, or prepared by or for the
    Regional Transportation Authority under Section 2.11 of
    the Regional Transportation Authority Act or the St. Clair
    County Transit District under the Bi-State Transit Safety
    Act.
        (q) Information prohibited from being disclosed by the
    Personnel Record Records Review Act.
        (r) Information prohibited from being disclosed by the
    Illinois School Student Records Act.
        (s) Information the disclosure of which is restricted
    under Section 5-108 of the Public Utilities Act.
        (t) All identified or deidentified health information
    in the form of health data or medical records contained in,
    stored in, submitted to, transferred by, or released from
    the Illinois Health Information Exchange, and identified
    or deidentified health information in the form of health
    data and medical records of the Illinois Health Information
    Exchange in the possession of the Illinois Health
    Information Exchange Authority due to its administration
    of the Illinois Health Information Exchange. The terms
    "identified" and "deidentified" shall be given the same
    meaning as in the Health Insurance Portability and
    Accountability Act of 1996, Public Law 104-191, or any
    subsequent amendments thereto, and any regulations
    promulgated thereunder.
        (u) Records and information provided to an independent
    team of experts under the Developmental Disability and
    Mental Health Safety Act (also known as Brian's Law).
        (v) Names and information of people who have applied
    for or received Firearm Owner's Identification Cards under
    the Firearm Owners Identification Card Act or applied for
    or received a concealed carry license under the Firearm
    Concealed Carry Act, unless otherwise authorized by the
    Firearm Concealed Carry Act; and databases under the
    Firearm Concealed Carry Act, records of the Concealed Carry
    Licensing Review Board under the Firearm Concealed Carry
    Act, and law enforcement agency objections under the
    Firearm Concealed Carry Act.
        (w) Personally identifiable information which is
    exempted from disclosure under subsection (g) of Section
    19.1 of the Toll Highway Act.
        (x) Information which is exempted from disclosure
    under Section 5-1014.3 of the Counties Code or Section
    8-11-21 of the Illinois Municipal Code.
        (y) Confidential information under the Adult
    Protective Services Act and its predecessor enabling
    statute, the Elder Abuse and Neglect Act, including
    information about the identity and administrative finding
    against any caregiver of a verified and substantiated
    decision of abuse, neglect, or financial exploitation of an
    eligible adult maintained in the Registry established
    under Section 7.5 of the Adult Protective Services Act.
        (z) Records and information provided to a fatality
    review team or the Illinois Fatality Review Team Advisory
    Council under Section 15 of the Adult Protective Services
    Act.
        (aa) Information which is exempted from disclosure
    under Section 2.37 of the Wildlife Code.
        (bb) Information which is or was prohibited from
    disclosure by the Juvenile Court Act of 1987.
        (cc) Recordings made under the Law Enforcement
    Officer-Worn Body Camera Act, except to the extent
    authorized under that Act.
        (dd) Information that is prohibited from being
    disclosed under Section 45 of the Condominium and Common
    Interest Community Ombudsperson Act.
        (ee) Information that is exempted from disclosure
    under Section 30.1 of the Pharmacy Practice Act.
        (ff) Information that is exempted from disclosure
    under the Revised Uniform Unclaimed Property Act.
        (gg) Information that is prohibited from being
    disclosed under Section 7-603.5 of the Illinois Vehicle
    Code.
        (hh) Records that are exempt from disclosure under
    Section 1A-16.7 of the Election Code.
        (ii) Information which is exempted from disclosure
    under Section 2505-800 of the Department of Revenue Law of
    the Civil Administrative Code of Illinois.
        (jj) Information and reports that are required to be
    submitted to the Department of Labor by registering day and
    temporary labor service agencies but are exempt from
    disclosure under subsection (a-1) of Section 45 of the Day
    and Temporary Labor Services Act.
        (kk) Information prohibited from disclosure under the
    Seizure and Forfeiture Reporting Act.
        (ll) Information the disclosure of which is restricted
    and exempted under Section 5-30.8 of the Illinois Public
    Aid Code.
        (mm) (ll) Records that are exempt from disclosure under
    Section 4.2 of the Crime Victims Compensation Act.
        (nn) (ll) Information that is exempt from disclosure
    under Section 70 of the Higher Education Student Assistance
    Act.
        (oo) Information that is exempt from disclosure under
    subsections (f) and (j) of Section 5-36 of the Illinois
    Public Aid Code.
(Source: P.A. 99-78, eff. 7-20-15; 99-298, eff. 8-6-15; 99-352,
eff. 1-1-16; 99-642, eff. 7-28-16; 99-776, eff. 8-12-16;
99-863, eff. 8-19-16; 100-20, eff. 7-1-17; 100-22, eff. 1-1-18;
100-201, eff. 8-18-17; 100-373, eff. 1-1-18; 100-464, eff.
8-28-17; 100-465, eff. 8-31-17; 100-512, eff. 7-1-18; 100-517,
eff. 6-1-18; 100-646, eff. 7-27-18; 100-690, eff. 1-1-19;
100-863, eff. 8-14-18; 100-887, eff. 8-14-18; revised
10-12-18.)
 
    Section 5. The State Employees Group Insurance Act of 1971
is amended by changing Section 6.11 as follows:
 
    (5 ILCS 375/6.11)
    (Text of Section after amendment by P.A. 100-1170)
    Sec. 6.11. Required health benefits; Illinois Insurance
Code requirements. The program of health benefits shall provide
the post-mastectomy care benefits required to be covered by a
policy of accident and health insurance under Section 356t of
the Illinois Insurance Code. The program of health benefits
shall provide the coverage required under Sections 356g,
356g.5, 356g.5-1, 356m, 356u, 356w, 356x, 356z.2, 356z.4,
356z.6, 356z.8, 356z.9, 356z.10, 356z.11, 356z.12, 356z.13,
356z.14, 356z.15, 356z.17, 356z.22, 356z.25, 356z.26, 356z.29,
and 356z.32 of the Illinois Insurance Code. The program of
health benefits must comply with Sections 155.22a, 155.37,
355b, 356z.19, 370c, and 370c.1, and Article XXXIIB of the
Illinois Insurance Code. The Department of Insurance shall
enforce the requirements of this Section with respect to
Sections 370c and 370c.1 of the Illinois Insurance Code; all
other requirements of this Section shall be enforced by the
Department of Central Management Services.
    Rulemaking authority to implement Public Act 95-1045, if
any, is conditioned on the rules being adopted in accordance
with all provisions of the Illinois Administrative Procedure
Act and all rules and procedures of the Joint Committee on
Administrative Rules; any purported rule not so adopted, for
whatever reason, is unauthorized.
(Source: P.A. 99-480, eff. 9-9-15; 100-24, eff. 7-18-17;
100-138, eff. 8-18-17; 100-863, eff. 8-14-18; 100-1024, eff.
1-1-19; 100-1057, eff. 1-1-19; 100-1102, eff. 1-1-19;
100-1170, eff. 6-1-19.)
 
    Section 10. The Illinois Insurance Code is amended by
adding Article XXXIIB as follows:
 
    (215 ILCS 5/Art. XXXIIB heading new)
ARTICLE XXXIIB. PHARMACY BENEFIT MANAGERS

 
    (215 ILCS 5/513b1 new)
    Sec. 513b1. Pharmacy benefit manager contracts.
    (a) As used in this Section:
    "Biological product" has the meaning ascribed to that term
in Section 19.5 of the Pharmacy Practice Act.
    "Maximum allowable cost" means the maximum amount that a
pharmacy benefit manager will reimburse a pharmacy for the cost
of a drug.
    "Maximum allowable cost list" means a list of drugs for
which a maximum allowable cost has been established by a
pharmacy benefit manager.
    "Pharmacy benefit manager" means a person, business, or
entity, including a wholly or partially owned or controlled
subsidiary of a pharmacy benefit manager, that provides claims
processing services or other prescription drug or device
services, or both, for health benefit plans.
    "Retail price" means the price an individual without
prescription drug coverage would pay at a retail pharmacy, not
including a pharmacist dispensing fee.
    (b) A contract between a health insurer and a pharmacy
benefit manager must require that the pharmacy benefit manager:
        (1) Update maximum allowable cost pricing information
    at least every 7 calendar days.
        (2) Maintain a process that will, in a timely manner,
    eliminate drugs from maximum allowable cost lists or modify
    drug prices to remain consistent with changes in pricing
    data used in formulating maximum allowable cost prices and
    product availability.
        (3) Provide access to its maximum allowable cost list
    to each pharmacy or pharmacy services administrative
    organization subject to the maximum allowable cost list.
    Access may include a real-time pharmacy website portal to
    be able to view the maximum allowable cost list. As used in
    this Section, "pharmacy services administrative
    organization" means an entity operating within the State
    that contracts with independent pharmacies to conduct
    business on their behalf with third-party payers. A
    pharmacy services administrative organization may provide
    administrative services to pharmacies and negotiate and
    enter into contracts with third-party payers or pharmacy
    benefit managers on behalf of pharmacies.
        (4) Provide a process by which a contracted pharmacy
    can appeal the provider's reimbursement for a drug subject
    to maximum allowable cost pricing. The appeals process
    must, at a minimum, include the following:
            (A) A requirement that a contracted pharmacy has 14
        calendar days after the applicable fill date to appeal
        a maximum allowable cost if the reimbursement for the
        drug is less than the net amount that the network
        provider paid to the supplier of the drug.
            (B) A requirement that a pharmacy benefit manager
        must respond to a challenge within 14 calendar days of
        the contracted pharmacy making the claim for which the
        appeal has been submitted.
            (C) A telephone number and e-mail address or
        website to network providers, at which the provider can
        contact the pharmacy benefit manager to process and
        submit an appeal.
            (D) A requirement that, if an appeal is denied, the
        pharmacy benefit manager must provide the reason for
        the denial and the name and the national drug code
        number from national or regional wholesalers.
            (E) A requirement that, if an appeal is sustained,
        the pharmacy benefit manager must make an adjustment in
        the drug price effective the date the challenge is
        resolved and make the adjustment applicable to all
        similarly situated network pharmacy providers, as
        determined by the managed care organization or
        pharmacy benefit manager.
        (5) Allow a plan sponsor contracting with a pharmacy
    benefit manager an annual right to audit compliance with
    the terms of the contract by the pharmacy benefit manager,
    including, but not limited to, full disclosure of any and
    all rebate amounts secured, whether product specific or
    generalized rebates, that were provided to the pharmacy
    benefit manager by a pharmaceutical manufacturer.
        (6) Allow a plan sponsor contracting with a pharmacy
    benefit manager to request that the pharmacy benefit
    manager disclose the actual amounts paid by the pharmacy
    benefit manager to the pharmacy.
        (7) Provide notice to the party contracting with the
    pharmacy benefit manager of any consideration that the
    pharmacy benefit manager receives from the manufacturer
    for dispense as written prescriptions once a generic or
    biologically similar product becomes available.
    (c) In order to place a particular prescription drug on a
maximum allowable cost list, the pharmacy benefit manager must,
at a minimum, ensure that:
        (1) if the drug is a generically equivalent drug, it is
    listed as therapeutically equivalent and pharmaceutically
    equivalent "A" or "B" rated in the United States Food and
    Drug Administration's most recent version of the "Orange
    Book" or have an NR or NA rating by Medi-Span, Gold
    Standard, or a similar rating by a nationally recognized
    reference;
        (2) the drug is available for purchase by each pharmacy
    in the State from national or regional wholesalers
    operating in Illinois; and
        (3) the drug is not obsolete.
    (d) A pharmacy benefit manager is prohibited from limiting
a pharmacist's ability to disclose whether the cost-sharing
obligation exceeds the retail price for a covered prescription
drug, and the availability of a more affordable alternative
drug, if one is available in accordance with Section 42 of the
Pharmacy Practice Act.
    (e) A health insurer or pharmacy benefit manager shall not
require an insured to make a payment for a prescription drug at
the point of sale in an amount that exceeds the lesser of:
        (1) the applicable cost-sharing amount; or
        (2) the retail price of the drug in the absence of
    prescription drug coverage.
    (f) This Section applies to contracts entered into or
renewed on or after July 1, 2020.
    (g) This Section applies to any group or individual policy
of accident and health insurance or managed care plan that
provides coverage for prescription drugs and that is amended,
delivered, issued, or renewed on or after July 1, 2020.
 
    (215 ILCS 5/513b2 new)
    Sec. 513b2. Licensure requirements.
    (a) Beginning on July 1, 2020, to conduct business in this
State, a pharmacy benefit manager must register with the
Director. To initially register or renew a registration, a
pharmacy benefit manager shall submit:
        (1) A nonrefundable fee not to exceed $500.
        (2) A copy of the registrant's corporate charter,
    articles of incorporation, or other charter document.
        (3) A completed registration form adopted by the
    Director containing:
            (A) The name and address of the registrant.
            (B) The name, address, and official position of
        each officer and director of the registrant.
    (b) The registrant shall report any change in information
required under this Section to the Director in writing within
60 days after the change occurs.
    (c) Upon receipt of a completed registration form, the
required documents, and the registration fee, the Director
shall issue a registration certificate. The certificate may be
in paper or electronic form, and shall clearly indicate the
expiration date of the registration. Registration certificates
are nontransferable.
    (d) A registration certificate is valid for 2 years after
its date of issue. The Director shall adopt by rule an initial
registration fee not to exceed $500 and a registration renewal
fee not to exceed $500, both of which shall be nonrefundable.
Total fees may not exceed the cost of administering this
Section.
    (e) The Department shall adopt any rules necessary to
implement this Section.
 
    (215 ILCS 5/513b3 new)
    Sec. 513b3. Examination.
    (a) The Director, or his or her designee, may examine a
registered pharmacy benefit manager.
    (b) Any pharmacy benefit manager being examined shall
provide to the Director, or his or her designee, convenient and
free access to all books, records, documents, and other papers
relating to such pharmacy benefit manager's business affairs at
all reasonable hours at its offices.
    (c) The Director, or his or her designee, may administer
oaths and thereafter examine the pharmacy benefit manager's
designee, representative, or any officer or senior manager as
listed on the license or registration certificate about the
business of the pharmacy benefit manager.
    (d) The examiners designated by the Director under this
Section may make reports to the Director. Any report alleging
substantive violations of this Article, any applicable
provisions of this Code, or any applicable Part of Title 50 of
the Illinois Administrative Code shall be in writing and be
based upon facts obtained by the examiners. The report shall be
verified by the examiners.
    (e) If a report is made, the Director shall either deliver
a duplicate report to the pharmacy benefit manager being
examined or send such duplicate by certified or registered mail
to the pharmacy benefit manager's address specified in the
records of the Department. The Director shall afford the
pharmacy benefit manager an opportunity to request a hearing to
object to the report. The pharmacy benefit manager may request
a hearing within 30 days after receipt of the duplicate report
by giving the Director written notice of such request together
with written objections to the report. Any hearing shall be
conducted in accordance with Sections 402 and 403 of this Code.
The right to a hearing is waived if the delivery of the report
is refused or the report is otherwise undeliverable or the
pharmacy benefit manager does not timely request a hearing.
After the hearing or upon expiration of the time period during
which a pharmacy benefit manager may request a hearing, if the
examination reveals that the pharmacy benefit manager is
operating in violation of any applicable provision of this
Code, any applicable Part of Title 50 of the Illinois
Administrative Code, a provision of this Article, or prior
order, the Director, in the written order, may require the
pharmacy benefit manager to take any action the Director
considers necessary or appropriate in accordance with the
report or examination hearing. If the Director issues an order,
it shall be issued within 90 days after the report is filed, or
if there is a hearing, within 90 days after the conclusion of
the hearing. The order is subject to review under the
Administrative Review Law.
 
    (215 ILCS 5/513b4 new)
    Sec. 513b4. Denial, revocation, or suspension of
registration; administrative fines.
    (a) Denial of an application or suspension or revocation of
a registration in accordance with this Section shall be by
written order sent to the applicant or registrant by certified
or registered mail at the address specified in the records of
the Department. The written order shall state the grounds,
charges, or conduct on which denial, suspension, or revocation
is based. The applicant or registrant may in writing request a
hearing within 30 days from the date of mailing. Upon receipt
of a written request, the Director shall issue an order
setting: (i) a specific time for the hearing, which may not be
less than 20 nor more than 30 days after receipt of the
request; and (ii) a specific place for the hearing, which may
be in either the city of Springfield or in the county in
Illinois where the applicant's or registrant's principal place
of business is located. If no written request is received by
the Director, such order shall be final upon the expiration of
said 30 days.
    (b) If the Director finds that one or more grounds exist
for the revocation or suspension of a registration issued under
this Article, the Director may, in lieu of or in addition to
such suspension or revocation, impose a fine upon the pharmacy
benefit manager as provided under subsection (c).
    (c) With respect to any knowing and willful violation of a
lawful order of the Director, any applicable portion of this
Code, Part of Title 50 of the Illinois Administrative Code, or
provision of this Article, the Director may impose a fine upon
the pharmacy benefit manager in an amount not to exceed $50,000
for each violation.
 
    (215 ILCS 5/513b5 new)
    Sec. 513b5. Failure to register. Any pharmacy benefit
manager that operates without a registration or fails to
register with the Director and pay the fee prescribed by this
Article is an unauthorized insurer as defined in Article VII of
this Code and shall be subject to all penalties provided for
therein.
 
    (215 ILCS 5/513b6 new)
    Sec. 513b6. Insurance Producer Administration Fund. All
fees and fines paid to and collected by the Director under this
Article shall be paid promptly after receipt thereof, together
with a detailed statement of such fees, into the Insurance
Producer Administration Fund. The moneys deposited into the
Insurance Producer Administration Fund may be transferred to
the Professions Indirect Cost Fund, as authorized under Section
2105-300 of the Department of Professional Regulation Law of
the Civil Administrative Code of Illinois.
 
    Section 15. The Health Maintenance Organization Act is
amended by changing Section 5-3 as follows:
 
    (215 ILCS 125/5-3)  (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1411.2)
    Sec. 5-3. Insurance Code provisions.
    (a) Health Maintenance Organizations shall be subject to
the provisions of Sections 133, 134, 136, 137, 139, 140, 141.1,
141.2, 141.3, 143, 143c, 147, 148, 149, 151, 152, 153, 154,
154.5, 154.6, 154.7, 154.8, 155.04, 155.22a, 355.2, 355.3,
355b, 356g.5-1, 356m, 356v, 356w, 356x, 356y, 356z.2, 356z.4,
356z.5, 356z.6, 356z.8, 356z.9, 356z.10, 356z.11, 356z.12,
356z.13, 356z.14, 356z.15, 356z.17, 356z.18, 356z.19, 356z.21,
356z.22, 356z.25, 356z.26, 356z.29, 356z.30, 356z.32, 364,
364.01, 367.2, 367.2-5, 367i, 368a, 368b, 368c, 368d, 368e,
370c, 370c.1, 401, 401.1, 402, 403, 403A, 408, 408.2, 409, 412,
444, and 444.1, paragraph (c) of subsection (2) of Section 367,
and Articles IIA, VIII 1/2, XII, XII 1/2, XIII, XIII 1/2, XXV,
and XXVI, and XXXIIB of the Illinois Insurance Code.
    (b) For purposes of the Illinois Insurance Code, except for
Sections 444 and 444.1 and Articles XIII and XIII 1/2, Health
Maintenance Organizations in the following categories are
deemed to be "domestic companies":
        (1) a corporation authorized under the Dental Service
    Plan Act or the Voluntary Health Services Plans Act;
        (2) a corporation organized under the laws of this
    State; or
        (3) a corporation organized under the laws of another
    state, 30% or more of the enrollees of which are residents
    of this State, except a corporation subject to
    substantially the same requirements in its state of
    organization as is a "domestic company" under Article VIII
    1/2 of the Illinois Insurance Code.
    (c) In considering the merger, consolidation, or other
acquisition of control of a Health Maintenance Organization
pursuant to Article VIII 1/2 of the Illinois Insurance Code,
        (1) the Director shall give primary consideration to
    the continuation of benefits to enrollees and the financial
    conditions of the acquired Health Maintenance Organization
    after the merger, consolidation, or other acquisition of
    control takes effect;
        (2)(i) the criteria specified in subsection (1)(b) of
    Section 131.8 of the Illinois Insurance Code shall not
    apply and (ii) the Director, in making his determination
    with respect to the merger, consolidation, or other
    acquisition of control, need not take into account the
    effect on competition of the merger, consolidation, or
    other acquisition of control;
        (3) the Director shall have the power to require the
    following information:
            (A) certification by an independent actuary of the
        adequacy of the reserves of the Health Maintenance
        Organization sought to be acquired;
            (B) pro forma financial statements reflecting the
        combined balance sheets of the acquiring company and
        the Health Maintenance Organization sought to be
        acquired as of the end of the preceding year and as of
        a date 90 days prior to the acquisition, as well as pro
        forma financial statements reflecting projected
        combined operation for a period of 2 years;
            (C) a pro forma business plan detailing an
        acquiring party's plans with respect to the operation
        of the Health Maintenance Organization sought to be
        acquired for a period of not less than 3 years; and
            (D) such other information as the Director shall
        require.
    (d) The provisions of Article VIII 1/2 of the Illinois
Insurance Code and this Section 5-3 shall apply to the sale by
any health maintenance organization of greater than 10% of its
enrollee population (including without limitation the health
maintenance organization's right, title, and interest in and to
its health care certificates).
    (e) In considering any management contract or service
agreement subject to Section 141.1 of the Illinois Insurance
Code, the Director (i) shall, in addition to the criteria
specified in Section 141.2 of the Illinois Insurance Code, take
into account the effect of the management contract or service
agreement on the continuation of benefits to enrollees and the
financial condition of the health maintenance organization to
be managed or serviced, and (ii) need not take into account the
effect of the management contract or service agreement on
competition.
    (f) Except for small employer groups as defined in the
Small Employer Rating, Renewability and Portability Health
Insurance Act and except for medicare supplement policies as
defined in Section 363 of the Illinois Insurance Code, a Health
Maintenance Organization may by contract agree with a group or
other enrollment unit to effect refunds or charge additional
premiums under the following terms and conditions:
        (i) the amount of, and other terms and conditions with
    respect to, the refund or additional premium are set forth
    in the group or enrollment unit contract agreed in advance
    of the period for which a refund is to be paid or
    additional premium is to be charged (which period shall not
    be less than one year); and
        (ii) the amount of the refund or additional premium
    shall not exceed 20% of the Health Maintenance
    Organization's profitable or unprofitable experience with
    respect to the group or other enrollment unit for the
    period (and, for purposes of a refund or additional
    premium, the profitable or unprofitable experience shall
    be calculated taking into account a pro rata share of the
    Health Maintenance Organization's administrative and
    marketing expenses, but shall not include any refund to be
    made or additional premium to be paid pursuant to this
    subsection (f)). The Health Maintenance Organization and
    the group or enrollment unit may agree that the profitable
    or unprofitable experience may be calculated taking into
    account the refund period and the immediately preceding 2
    plan years.
    The Health Maintenance Organization shall include a
statement in the evidence of coverage issued to each enrollee
describing the possibility of a refund or additional premium,
and upon request of any group or enrollment unit, provide to
the group or enrollment unit a description of the method used
to calculate (1) the Health Maintenance Organization's
profitable experience with respect to the group or enrollment
unit and the resulting refund to the group or enrollment unit
or (2) the Health Maintenance Organization's unprofitable
experience with respect to the group or enrollment unit and the
resulting additional premium to be paid by the group or
enrollment unit.
    In no event shall the Illinois Health Maintenance
Organization Guaranty Association be liable to pay any
contractual obligation of an insolvent organization to pay any
refund authorized under this Section.
    (g) Rulemaking authority to implement Public Act 95-1045,
if any, is conditioned on the rules being adopted in accordance
with all provisions of the Illinois Administrative Procedure
Act and all rules and procedures of the Joint Committee on
Administrative Rules; any purported rule not so adopted, for
whatever reason, is unauthorized.
(Source: P.A. 99-761, eff. 1-1-18; 100-24, eff. 7-18-17;
100-138, eff. 8-18-17; 100-863, eff. 8-14-18; 100-1026, eff.
8-22-18; 100-1057, eff. 1-1-19; 100-1102, eff. 1-1-19; revised
10-4-18.)
 
    Section 20. The Managed Care Reform and Patient Rights Act
is amended by changing Sections 10 and 30 as follows:
 
    (215 ILCS 134/10)
    Sec. 10. Definitions.
    "Adverse determination" means a determination by a health
care plan under Section 45 or by a utilization review program
under Section 85 that a health care service is not medically
necessary.
    "Clinical peer" means a health care professional who is in
the same profession and the same or similar specialty as the
health care provider who typically manages the medical
condition, procedures, or treatment under review.
    "Department" means the Department of Insurance.
    "Emergency medical condition" means a medical condition
manifesting itself by acute symptoms of sufficient severity,
regardless of the final diagnosis given, (including, but not
limited to, severe pain) such that a prudent layperson, who
possesses an average knowledge of health and medicine, could
reasonably expect the absence of immediate medical attention to
result in:
        (1) placing the health of the individual (or, with
    respect to a pregnant woman, the health of the woman or her
    unborn child) in serious jeopardy;
        (2) serious impairment to bodily functions; or
        (3) serious dysfunction of any bodily organ or part; .
        (4) inadequately controlled pain; or
        (5) with respect to a pregnant woman who is having
    contractions:
            (A) inadequate time to complete a safe transfer to
        another hospital before delivery; or
            (B) a transfer to another hospital may pose a
        threat to the health or safety of the woman or unborn
        child.
    "Emergency medical screening examination" means a medical
screening examination and evaluation by a physician licensed to
practice medicine in all its branches, or to the extent
permitted by applicable laws, by other appropriately licensed
personnel under the supervision of or in collaboration with a
physician licensed to practice medicine in all its branches to
determine whether the need for emergency services exists.
    "Emergency services" means, with respect to an enrollee of
a health care plan, transportation services, including but not
limited to ambulance services, and covered inpatient and
outpatient hospital services furnished by a provider qualified
to furnish those services that are needed to evaluate or
stabilize an emergency medical condition. "Emergency services"
does not refer to post-stabilization medical services.
    "Enrollee" means any person and his or her dependents
enrolled in or covered by a health care plan.
    "Health care plan" means a plan, including, but not limited
to, a health maintenance organization, a managed care community
network as defined in the Illinois Public Aid Code, or an
accountable care entity as defined in the Illinois Public Aid
Code that receives capitated payments to cover medical services
from the Department of Healthcare and Family Services, that
establishes, operates, or maintains a network of health care
providers that has entered into an agreement with the plan to
provide health care services to enrollees to whom the plan has
the ultimate obligation to arrange for the provision of or
payment for services through organizational arrangements for
ongoing quality assurance, utilization review programs, or
dispute resolution. Nothing in this definition shall be
construed to mean that an independent practice association or a
physician hospital organization that subcontracts with a
health care plan is, for purposes of that subcontract, a health
care plan.
    For purposes of this definition, "health care plan" shall
not include the following:
        (1) indemnity health insurance policies including
    those using a contracted provider network;
        (2) health care plans that offer only dental or only
    vision coverage;
        (3) preferred provider administrators, as defined in
    Section 370g(g) of the Illinois Insurance Code;
        (4) employee or employer self-insured health benefit
    plans under the federal Employee Retirement Income
    Security Act of 1974;
        (5) health care provided pursuant to the Workers'
    Compensation Act or the Workers' Occupational Diseases
    Act; and
        (6) not-for-profit voluntary health services plans
    with health maintenance organization authority in
    existence as of January 1, 1999 that are affiliated with a
    union and that only extend coverage to union members and
    their dependents.
    "Health care professional" means a physician, a registered
professional nurse, or other individual appropriately licensed
or registered to provide health care services.
    "Health care provider" means any physician, hospital
facility, facility licensed under the Nursing Home Care Act,
long-term care facility as defined in Section 1-113 of the
Nursing Home Care Act, or other person that is licensed or
otherwise authorized to deliver health care services. Nothing
in this Act shall be construed to define Independent Practice
Associations or Physician-Hospital Organizations as health
care providers.
    "Health care services" means any services included in the
furnishing to any individual of medical care, or the
hospitalization incident to the furnishing of such care, as
well as the furnishing to any person of any and all other
services for the purpose of preventing, alleviating, curing, or
healing human illness or injury including home health and
pharmaceutical services and products.
    "Medical director" means a physician licensed in any state
to practice medicine in all its branches appointed by a health
care plan.
    "Person" means a corporation, association, partnership,
limited liability company, sole proprietorship, or any other
legal entity.
    "Physician" means a person licensed under the Medical
Practice Act of 1987.
    "Post-stabilization medical services" means health care
services provided to an enrollee that are furnished in a
licensed hospital by a provider that is qualified to furnish
such services, and determined to be medically necessary and
directly related to the emergency medical condition following
stabilization.
    "Stabilization" means, with respect to an emergency
medical condition, to provide such medical treatment of the
condition as may be necessary to assure, within reasonable
medical probability, that no material deterioration of the
condition is likely to result.
    "Utilization review" means the evaluation of the medical
necessity, appropriateness, and efficiency of the use of health
care services, procedures, and facilities.
    "Utilization review program" means a program established
by a person to perform utilization review.
(Source: P.A. 98-651, eff. 6-16-14; 98-841, eff. 8-1-14; 99-78,
eff. 7-20-15.)
 
    (215 ILCS 134/30)
    Sec. 30. Prohibitions.
    (a) No health care plan or its subcontractors may prohibit
or discourage health care providers by contract or policy from
discussing any health care services and health care providers,
utilization review and quality assurance policies, terms and
conditions of plans and plan policy with enrollees, prospective
enrollees, providers, or the public.
    (b) No health care plan by contract, written policy, or
procedure may permit or allow an individual or entity to
dispense a different drug in place of the drug or brand of drug
ordered or prescribed without the express permission of the
person ordering or prescribing the drug, except as provided
under Section 3.14 of the Illinois Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act.
    (c) No health care plan or its subcontractors may by
contract, written policy, procedure, or otherwise mandate or
require an enrollee to substitute his or her participating
primary care physician under the plan during inpatient
hospitalization, such as with a hospitalist physician licensed
to practice medicine in all its branches, without the agreement
of that enrollee's participating primary care physician.
"Participating primary care physician" for health care plans
and subcontractors that do not require coordination of care by
a primary care physician means the participating physician
treating the patient. All health care plans shall inform
enrollees of any policies, recommendations, or guidelines
concerning the substitution of the enrollee's primary care
physician when hospitalization is necessary in the manner set
forth in subsections (d) and (e) of Section 15.
    (d) A health care plan shall apply any third-party
payments, financial assistance, discount, product vouchers, or
any other reduction in out-of-pocket expenses made by or on
behalf of such insured for prescription drugs toward a covered
individual's deductible, copay, or cost-sharing
responsibility, or out-of-pocket maximum associated with the
individual's health insurance.
    (e) (d) Any violation of this Section shall be subject to
the penalties under this Act.
(Source: P.A. 94-866, eff. 6-16-06.)
 
    Section 25. The Pharmacy Practice Act is amended by adding
Section 42 as follows:
 
    (225 ILCS 85/42 new)
    Sec. 42. Information disclosure. A pharmacist or her or his
authorized employee must inform customers of a less expensive,
generically equivalent drug product for her or his prescription
and whether the cost-sharing obligation to the customer exceeds
the retail price of the prescription in the absence of
prescription drug coverage.
 
    Section 30. The Illinois Public Aid Code is amended by
adding Section 5-36 as follows:
 
    (305 ILCS 5/5-36 new)
    Sec. 5-36. Pharmacy benefits.
    (a)(1) The Department may enter into a contract with a
third party on a fee-for-service reimbursement model for the
purpose of administering pharmacy benefits as provided in this
Section for members not enrolled in a Medicaid managed care
organization; however, these services shall be approved by the
Department. The Department shall ensure coordination of care
between the third-party administrator and managed care
organizations as a consideration in any contracts established
in accordance with this Section. Any managed care techniques,
principles, or administration of benefits utilized in
accordance with this subsection shall comply with State law.
    (2) The following shall apply to contracts between entities
contracting relating to the Department's third-party
administrators and pharmacies:
        (A) the Department shall approve any contract between a
    third-party administrator and a pharmacy;
        (B) the Department's third-party administrator shall
    not change the terms of a contract between a third-party
    administrator and a pharmacy without written approval by
    the Department; and
        (C) the Department's third-party administrator shall
    not create, modify, implement, or indirectly establish any
    fee on a pharmacy, pharmacist, or a recipient of medical
    assistance without written approval by the Department.
    (b) The provisions of this Section shall not apply to
outpatient pharmacy services provided by a health care facility
registered as a covered entity pursuant to 42 U.S.C. 256b or
any pharmacy owned by or contracted with the covered entity. A
Medicaid managed care organization shall, either directly or
through a pharmacy benefit manager, administer and reimburse
outpatient pharmacy claims submitted by a health care facility
registered as a covered entity pursuant to 42 U.S.C. 256b, its
owned pharmacies, and contracted pharmacies in accordance with
the contractual agreements the Medicaid managed care
organization or its pharmacy benefit manager has with such
facilities and pharmacies. Any pharmacy benefit manager that
contracts with a Medicaid managed care organization to
administer and reimburse pharmacy claims as provided in this
Section must be registered with the Director of Insurance in
accordance with Section 513b2 of the Illinois Insurance Code.
    (c) On at least an annual basis, the Director of the
Department of Healthcare and Family Services shall submit a
report beginning no later than one year after the effective
date of this amendatory Act of the 101st General Assembly that
provides an update on any contract, contract issues, formulary,
dispensing fees, and maximum allowable cost concerns regarding
a third-party administrator and managed care. The requirement
for reporting to the General Assembly shall be satisfied by
filing copies of the report with the Speaker, the Minority
Leader, and the Clerk of the House of Representatives and with
the President, the Minority leader, and the Secretary of the
Senate. The Department shall take care that no proprietary
information is included in the report required under this
Section.
    (d) A pharmacy benefit manager shall notify the Department
in writing of any activity, policy, or practice of the pharmacy
benefit manager that directly or indirectly presents a conflict
of interest that interferes with the discharge of the pharmacy
benefit manager's duty to a managed care organization to
exercise its contractual duties. "Conflict of interest" shall
be defined by rule by the Department.
    (e) A pharmacy benefit manager shall, upon request,
disclose to the Department the following information:
        (1) whether the pharmacy benefit manager has a
    contract, agreement, or other arrangement with a
    pharmaceutical manufacturer to exclusively dispense or
    provide a drug to a managed care organization's enrollees,
    and the aggregate amounts of consideration of economic
    benefits collected or received pursuant to that
    arrangement;
        (2) the percentage of claims payments made by the
    pharmacy benefit manager to pharmacies owned, managed, or
    controlled by the pharmacy benefit manager or any of the
    pharmacy benefit manager's management companies, parent
    companies, subsidiary companies, or jointly held
    companies;
        (3) the aggregate amount of the fees or assessments
    imposed on, or collected from, pharmacy providers; and
        (4) the average annualized percentage of revenue
    collected by the pharmacy benefit manager as a result of
    each contract it has executed with a managed care
    organization contracted by the Department to provide
    medical assistance benefits which is not paid by the
    pharmacy benefit manager to pharmacy providers and
    pharmaceutical manufacturers or labelers or in order to
    perform administrative functions pursuant to its contracts
    with managed care organizations.
    (f) The information disclosed under subsection (e) shall
include all retail, mail order, specialty, and compounded
prescription products. All information made available to the
Department under subsection (e) is confidential and not subject
to disclosure under the Freedom of Information Act. All
information made available to the Department under subsection
(e) shall not be reported or distributed in any way that
compromises its competitive, proprietary, or financial value.
The information shall only be used by the Department to assess
the contract, agreement, or other arrangements made between a
pharmacy benefit manager and a pharmacy provider,
pharmaceutical manufacturer or labeler, managed care
organization, or other entity, as applicable.
    (g) A pharmacy benefit manager shall disclose directly in
writing to a pharmacy provider or pharmacy services
administrative organization contracting with the pharmacy
benefit manager of any material change to a contract provision
that affects the terms of the reimbursement, the process for
verifying benefits and eligibility, dispute resolution,
procedures for verifying drugs included on the formulary, and
contract termination at least 30 days prior to the date of the
change to the provision. The terms of this subsection shall be
deemed met if the pharmacy benefit manager posts the
information on a website, viewable by the public. A pharmacy
service administration organization shall notify all contract
pharmacies of any material change, as described in this
subsection, within 2 days of notification. As used in this
Section, "pharmacy services administrative organization" means
an entity operating within the State that contracts with
independent pharmacies to conduct business on their behalf with
third-party payers. A pharmacy services administrative
organization may provide administrative services to pharmacies
and negotiate and enter into contracts with third-party payers
or pharmacy benefit managers on behalf of pharmacies.
    (h) A pharmacy benefit manager shall not include the
following in a contract with a pharmacy provider:
        (1) a provision prohibiting the provider from
    informing a patient of a less costly alternative to a
    prescribed medication; or
        (2) a provision that prohibits the provider from
    dispensing a particular amount of a prescribed medication,
    if the pharmacy benefit manager allows that amount to be
    dispensed through a pharmacy owned or controlled by the
    pharmacy benefit manager, unless the prescription drug is
    subject to restricted distribution by the United States
    Food and Drug Administration or requires special handling,
    provider coordination, or patient education that cannot be
    provided by a retail pharmacy.
    (i) Nothing in this Section shall be construed to prohibit
a pharmacy benefit manager from requiring the same
reimbursement and terms and conditions for a pharmacy provider
as for a pharmacy owned, controlled, or otherwise associated
with the pharmacy benefit manager.
    (j) A pharmacy benefit manager shall establish and
implement a process for the resolution of disputes arising out
of this Section, which shall be approved by the Department.
    (k) The Department shall adopt rules establishing
reasonable dispensing fees for fee-for-service payments in
accordance with guidance or guidelines from the federal Centers
for Medicare and Medicaid Services.
 
    Section 97. Severability. If any provision of this Act or
the application of this Act to any person or circumstance is
held invalid, the invalidity shall not affect other provisions
or applications of this Act which can be given effect without
the invalid provision or application, and to this end, the
provisions of this Act are declared severable.