Public Act 103-0857
 
HB5344 EnrolledLRB103 38353 RTM 68488 b

    AN ACT concerning regulation.
 
    Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
represented in the General Assembly:
 
    Section 5. The Behavior Analyst Licensing Act is amended
by changing Section 20 and 150 as follows:
 
    (225 ILCS 6/20)
    (Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2028)
    Sec. 20. License required; exemptions.
    (a) Beginning 10 months after the adoption of the rules
required under subsection (b) of Section 80 30 months after
the effective date of this Act, an individual shall not engage
in the practice of applied behavior analysis unless licensed
under this Act or covered by an exemption under subsection
(c).
    (a-5) An individual licensed under this Act as an
assistant behavior analyst shall not engage in the practice of
applied behavior analysis unless supervised by a licensed
clinical psychologist or licensed behavior analyst.
    (b) Beginning 10 months after the adoption of the rules
required under subsection (b) of Section 80 30 months after
the effective date of this Act, an individual shall not use the
title "licensed behavior analyst", "L.B.A.", "licensed
assistant behavior analyst", "L.A.B.A.", or similar words or
letters indicating the individual is licensed as a behavior
analyst or assistant behavior analyst unless the individual is
actually licensed under this Act.
    (c) This Act does not prohibit any of the following:
        (1) Self-care by a patient or uncompensated care by a
    friend or family member who does not represent or hold
    oneself out to be a behavior analyst or assistant behavior
    analyst.
        (2) An individual from implementing a behavior
    analytic treatment plan under the extended authority,
    direction, and supervision of a licensed behavior analyst
    or licensed assistant behavior analyst.
        (3) A clinical psychologist, social worker,
    psychiatric nurse, speech-language pathologist,
    audiologist, professional counselor, clinical
    professional counselor, clinical social worker, or
    marriage and family therapist from performing or
    advertising activities that are considered to be the
    practice of applied behavior analysis under this Act if
    the activities are consistent with the laws of this State,
    the individual's training, and any code of ethics of the
    individual's respective professions, so long as the
    individual does not use the titles provided in subsection
    (b).
        (4) An individual from performing activities that are
    considered to be the practice of applied behavior analysis
    under this Act if the activities are with nonhumans,
    including applied animal behaviorists and animal trainers.
    The individual may use the title "behavior analyst" but
    shall not represent oneself as a licensed behavior analyst
    or licensed assistant behavior analyst unless the
    individual holds a license issued by the State.
        (5) An individual who provides general applied
    behavior analysis services to organizations, so long as
    the services are for the benefit of the organizations and
    do not involve direct services to individuals. The
    individual may use the title "behavior analyst" but may
    not represent oneself as a licensed behavior analyst or
    licensed assistant behavior analyst unless the individual
    holds a license issued by the State.
        (6) An individual who is a matriculated student at a
    nationally accredited university approved in rules or a
    postdoctoral fellow from performing activities that are
    considered to be the practice of applied behavior analysis
    under this Act if the activities are part of a defined
    program of study, course, practicum, internship, or
    postdoctoral fellowship, provided that the applied
    behavior analysis activities are directly supervised by a
    licensed behavior analyst under this Act or a licensed
    clinical psychologist.
        (7) An individual who is not licensed under this Act
    from pursuing field experience in the practice of behavior
    analysis if the experience is supervised by a licensed
    behavior analyst or a licensed psychologist.
        (8) An individual with a learning behavior specialist
    or school support personnel endorsement from the State
    Board of Education, the school district in which the
    school is located, or a special education joint agreement
    serving the school district in which the school is located
    from delivering behavior analytic services in a school
    setting when employed by that school as long as those
    services are defined in the scope of practice for that
    endorsement and that person is not in any manner held out
    to the public as a licensed behavior analyst or licensed
    assistant behavior analyst.
        (9) A qualified intellectual disabilities
    professional, meeting the minimum federal education
    requirements outlined in 42 CFR 483.430, who is performing
    the duties required for individuals with intellectual or
    developmental disabilities in programs and facilities
    regulated by the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid
    Services, the Department of Human Services, or the
    Department of Public Health, so long as the individual
    does not use the titles provided in subsection (b).
        (10) A service provider, designated by the Department
    of Human Services, from providing behavior intervention
    and treatment, so long as the individual does not use the
    titles provided in subsection (b).
    (d) This Act does not apply to an individual who, on the
effective date of this Act, is engaging in the practice of
applied behavior analysis under the medical assistance program
under the Illinois Public Aid Code while that individual is
seeking the education, training, and experience necessary to
obtain a license under this Act.
    (e) No licensed behavior analyst or licensed assistant
behavior analyst shall engage in the practice of
speech-language pathology or the practice of audiology, as
defined in the Illinois Speech-Language Pathology and
Audiology Practice Act, unless licensed to do so under that
Act.
(Source: P.A. 102-953, eff. 5-27-22.)
 
    (225 ILCS 6/150)
    (Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2028)
    Sec. 150. License restrictions and limitations.
Notwithstanding the exclusion in paragraph (2) of subsection
(c) of Section 20 that permits an individual to implement a
behavior analytic treatment plan under the extended authority,
direction, and supervision of a licensed behavior analyst or
licensed assistant behavior analyst, beginning 24 months after
the Department has commenced issuance of licenses under this
Act, no business organization shall provide, attempt to
provide, or offer to provide behavior analysis services unless
every member, partner, shareholder, director, officer, holder
of any other ownership interest, agent, and employee who
renders applied behavior analysis services holds a currently
valid license issued under this Act. No business shall be
created that (i) has a stated purpose that includes behavior
analysis, or (ii) practices or holds itself out as available
to practice behavior analysis therapy, unless it is organized
under the Professional Service Corporation Act or Professional
Limited Liability Company Act. Nothing in this Act shall
preclude individuals licensed under this Act from practicing
directly or indirectly for a physician licensed to practice
medicine in all its branches under the Medical Practice Act of
1987 or for any legal entity as provided under subsection (c)
of Section 22.2 of the Medical Practice Act of 1987.
(Source: P.A. 102-953, eff. 5-27-22; 102-1118, eff. 1-18-23.)
 
    Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon
becoming law.