Public Act 093-0841
 
SB2208 Enrolled LRB093 15827 RCE 41444 b

    AN ACT in relation to budget implementation.
 
    Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
represented in the General Assembly:
    Section 1. Short title. This Act may be cited as the FY2005
Budget Implementation (Human Services) Act.
    Section 5. Purpose. It is the purpose of this Act to make
changes in State programs that are necessary to implement the
Governor's FY2005 budget recommendations concerning human
services.
    Section 7. The Illinois Administrative Procedure Act is
amended by changing Section 5-45 as follows:
 
    (5 ILCS 100/5-45)  (from Ch. 127, par. 1005-45)
    Sec. 5-45. Emergency rulemaking.
    (a) "Emergency" means the existence of any situation that
any agency finds reasonably constitutes a threat to the public
interest, safety, or welfare.
    (b) If any agency finds that an emergency exists that
requires adoption of a rule upon fewer days than is required by
Section 5-40 and states in writing its reasons for that
finding, the agency may adopt an emergency rule without prior
notice or hearing upon filing a notice of emergency rulemaking
with the Secretary of State under Section 5-70. The notice
shall include the text of the emergency rule and shall be
published in the Illinois Register. Consent orders or other
court orders adopting settlements negotiated by an agency may
be adopted under this Section. Subject to applicable
constitutional or statutory provisions, an emergency rule
becomes effective immediately upon filing under Section 5-65 or
at a stated date less than 10 days thereafter. The agency's
finding and a statement of the specific reasons for the finding
shall be filed with the rule. The agency shall take reasonable
and appropriate measures to make emergency rules known to the
persons who may be affected by them.
    (c) An emergency rule may be effective for a period of not
longer than 150 days, but the agency's authority to adopt an
identical rule under Section 5-40 is not precluded. No
emergency rule may be adopted more than once in any 24 month
period, except that this limitation on the number of emergency
rules that may be adopted in a 24 month period does not apply
to (i) emergency rules that make additions to and deletions
from the Drug Manual under Section 5-5.16 of the Illinois
Public Aid Code or the generic drug formulary under Section
3.14 of the Illinois Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act or (ii)
emergency rules adopted by the Pollution Control Board before
July 1, 1997 to implement portions of the Livestock Management
Facilities Act. Two or more emergency rules having
substantially the same purpose and effect shall be deemed to be
a single rule for purposes of this Section.
    (d) In order to provide for the expeditious and timely
implementation of the State's fiscal year 1999 budget,
emergency rules to implement any provision of Public Act 90-587
or 90-588 or any other budget initiative for fiscal year 1999
may be adopted in accordance with this Section by the agency
charged with administering that provision or initiative,
except that the 24-month limitation on the adoption of
emergency rules and the provisions of Sections 5-115 and 5-125
do not apply to rules adopted under this subsection (d). The
adoption of emergency rules authorized by this subsection (d)
shall be deemed to be necessary for the public interest,
safety, and welfare.
    (e) In order to provide for the expeditious and timely
implementation of the State's fiscal year 2000 budget,
emergency rules to implement any provision of this amendatory
Act of the 91st General Assembly or any other budget initiative
for fiscal year 2000 may be adopted in accordance with this
Section by the agency charged with administering that provision
or initiative, except that the 24-month limitation on the
adoption of emergency rules and the provisions of Sections
5-115 and 5-125 do not apply to rules adopted under this
subsection (e). The adoption of emergency rules authorized by
this subsection (e) shall be deemed to be necessary for the
public interest, safety, and welfare.
    (f) In order to provide for the expeditious and timely
implementation of the State's fiscal year 2001 budget,
emergency rules to implement any provision of this amendatory
Act of the 91st General Assembly or any other budget initiative
for fiscal year 2001 may be adopted in accordance with this
Section by the agency charged with administering that provision
or initiative, except that the 24-month limitation on the
adoption of emergency rules and the provisions of Sections
5-115 and 5-125 do not apply to rules adopted under this
subsection (f). The adoption of emergency rules authorized by
this subsection (f) shall be deemed to be necessary for the
public interest, safety, and welfare.
    (g) In order to provide for the expeditious and timely
implementation of the State's fiscal year 2002 budget,
emergency rules to implement any provision of this amendatory
Act of the 92nd General Assembly or any other budget initiative
for fiscal year 2002 may be adopted in accordance with this
Section by the agency charged with administering that provision
or initiative, except that the 24-month limitation on the
adoption of emergency rules and the provisions of Sections
5-115 and 5-125 do not apply to rules adopted under this
subsection (g). The adoption of emergency rules authorized by
this subsection (g) shall be deemed to be necessary for the
public interest, safety, and welfare.
    (h) In order to provide for the expeditious and timely
implementation of the State's fiscal year 2003 budget,
emergency rules to implement any provision of this amendatory
Act of the 92nd General Assembly or any other budget initiative
for fiscal year 2003 may be adopted in accordance with this
Section by the agency charged with administering that provision
or initiative, except that the 24-month limitation on the
adoption of emergency rules and the provisions of Sections
5-115 and 5-125 do not apply to rules adopted under this
subsection (h). The adoption of emergency rules authorized by
this subsection (h) shall be deemed to be necessary for the
public interest, safety, and welfare.
    (i) In order to provide for the expeditious and timely
implementation of the State's fiscal year 2004 budget,
emergency rules to implement any provision of this amendatory
Act of the 93rd General Assembly or any other budget initiative
for fiscal year 2004 may be adopted in accordance with this
Section by the agency charged with administering that provision
or initiative, except that the 24-month limitation on the
adoption of emergency rules and the provisions of Sections
5-115 and 5-125 do not apply to rules adopted under this
subsection (i). The adoption of emergency rules authorized by
this subsection (i) shall be deemed to be necessary for the
public interest, safety, and welfare.
    (j) In order to provide for the expeditious and timely
implementation of the provisions of the State's fiscal year
2005 budget as provided under the Fiscal Year 2005 Budget
Implementation (Human Services) Act, emergency rules to
implement any provision of the Fiscal Year 2005 Budget
Implementation (Human Services) Act may be adopted in
accordance with this Section by the agency charged with
administering that provision, except that the 24-month
limitation on the adoption of emergency rules and the
provisions of Sections 5-115 and 5-125 do not apply to rules
adopted under this subsection (j). The Department of Public Aid
may also adopt rules under this subsection (j) necessary to
administer the Illinois Public Aid Code and the Children's
Health Insurance Program Act. The adoption of emergency rules
authorized by this subsection (j) shall be deemed to be
necessary for the public interest, safety, and welfare.
(Source: P.A. 92-10, eff. 6-11-01; 92-597, eff. 6-28-02; 93-20,
eff. 6-20-03.)
    Section 10. The Mental Health and Developmental
Disabilities Administrative Act is amended by changing Section
18.4 and adding Section 18.5 as follows:
 
    (20 ILCS 1705/18.4)
    Sec. 18.4. Community Mental Health Medicaid Trust Fund;
reimbursement.
    (a) The Community Mental Health Medicaid Trust Fund is
hereby created in the State Treasury.
    (b) Except as otherwise provided in this Section, any Any
funds paid to the State by the federal government under Title
XIX or Title XXI of the Social Security Act for services
delivered by community mental health services providers, and
any interest earned thereon, shall be deposited directly into
the Community Mental Health Medicaid Trust Fund. Beginning with
State fiscal year 2005, the first $95,000,000 received by the
Department shall be deposited 26.3% into the General Revenue
Fund and 73.7% into the Community Mental Health Medicaid Trust
Fund. Amounts received in excess of $95,000,000 in any State
fiscal year shall be deposited 50% into the General Revenue
Fund and 50% into the Community Mental Health Medicaid Trust
Fund. The Department shall analyze the budgeting and
programmatic impact of this funding allocation and report to
the Governor and the General Assembly the results of this
analysis and any recommendations for change, no later than
December 31, 2005.
    (c) The Department shall reimburse community mental health
services providers for Medicaid-reimbursed mental health
services provided to eligible individuals. Moneys in the
Community Mental Health Medicaid Trust Fund may be used for
that purpose.
    (d) As used in this Section:
    "Medicaid-reimbursed mental health services" means
services provided by a community mental health provider under
an agreement with the Department that is eligible for
reimbursement under the federal Title XIX program or Title XXI
program.
    "Provider" means a community agency that is funded by the
Department to provide a Medicaid-reimbursed service.
    "Services" means mental health services provided under one
of the following programs:
        (1) Medicaid Clinic Option;
        (2) Medicaid Rehabilitation Option;
        (3) Targeted Case Management.
(Source: P.A. 92-597, eff. 6-28-02.)
 
    (20 ILCS 1705/18.5 new)
    Sec. 18.5. Community Developmental Disability Services
Medicaid Trust Fund; reimbursement.
    (a) The Community Developmental Disability Services
Medicaid Trust Fund is hereby created in the State treasury.
    (b) Any funds in excess of $16,700,000 in any fiscal year
paid to the State by the federal government under Title XIX or
Title XXI of the Social Security Act for services delivered by
community developmental disability services providers for
services relating to Developmental Training and Community
Integrated Living Arrangements as a result of the conversion of
such providers from a grant payment methodology to a
fee-for-service payment methodology, or any other funds paid to
the State for any subsequent revenue maximization initiatives
performed by such providers, and any interest earned thereon,
shall be deposited directly into the Community Developmental
Disability Services Medicaid Trust Fund. One-third of this
amount shall be used only to pay for Medicaid-reimbursed
community developmental disability services provided to
eligible individuals, and the remainder shall be transferred to
the General Revenue Fund.
    (c) For purposes of this Section:
    "Medicaid-reimbursed developmental disability services"
means services provided by a community developmental
disability provider under an agreement with the Department that
is eligible for reimbursement under the federal Title XIX
program or Title XXI program.
    "Provider" means a qualified entity as defined in the
State's Home and Community-Based Services Waiver for Persons
with Developmental Disabilities that is funded by the
Department to provide a Medicaid-reimbursed service.
    "Revenue maximization alternatives" do not include
increases in funds paid to the State as a result of growth in
spending through service expansion or rate increases.
    Section 20. The State Finance Act is amended by changing
Sections 6z-58 and 25 and by adding Section 8.55 as follows:
 
    (30 ILCS 105/6z-58)
    Sec. 6z-58. The Family Care Fund.
    (a) There is created in the State treasury the Family Care
Fund. Interest earned by the Fund shall be credited to the
Fund.
    (b) The Fund is created solely for the purposes of
receiving, investing, and distributing moneys in accordance
with (i) an approved waiver under the Social Security Act
resulting from the Family Care waiver request submitted by the
Illinois Department of Public Aid on February 15, 2002 and (ii)
an interagency agreement between the Department of Public Aid
and another agency of State government. The Fund shall consist
of:
        (1) All federal financial participation moneys
    received pursuant to the approved waiver, except for moneys
    received pursuant to expenditures for medical services by
    the Department of Public Aid from any other fund; and
        (2) All other moneys received by the Fund from any
    source, including interest thereon.
    (c) Subject to appropriation, the moneys in the Fund shall
be disbursed for reimbursement of medical services and other
costs associated with persons receiving such services:
        (1) under programs administered by the Department of
    Public Aid; and
        (2) pursuant to an interagency agreement, under
    programs administered by another agency of State
    government. under the waiver due to their relationship with
    children receiving medical services pursuant to Article V
    of the Illinois Public Aid Code or the Children's Health
    Insurance Program Act.
(Source: P.A. 92-600, eff. 6-28-02; 93-20, eff. 6-20-03.)
 
    (30 ILCS 105/8.55 new)
    Sec. 8.55. Interfund transfers. On or after July 1, 2004
and until June 30, 2006, in addition to any other transfers
that may be provided for by law, at the direction of and upon
notification from the Director of Public Aid, the State
Comptroller shall direct and the State Treasurer shall transfer
amounts into the General Revenue Fund from the designated funds
not exceeding the following totals:
    Hospital Provider Fund............................$36,000,000
    Health and Human Services Medicaid Trust Fund...$124,000,000.
    Transfers of moneys under this Section may not exceed a
total of $80,000,000 in any State fiscal year.
 
    (30 ILCS 105/25)  (from Ch. 127, par. 161)
    Sec. 25. Fiscal year limitations.
    (a) All appropriations shall be available for expenditure
for the fiscal year or for a lesser period if the Act making
that appropriation so specifies. A deficiency or emergency
appropriation shall be available for expenditure only through
June 30 of the year when the Act making that appropriation is
enacted unless that Act otherwise provides.
    (b) Outstanding liabilities as of June 30, payable from
appropriations which have otherwise expired, may be paid out of
the expiring appropriations during the 2-month period ending at
the close of business on August 31. Any service involving
professional or artistic skills or any personal services by an
employee whose compensation is subject to income tax
withholding must be performed as of June 30 of the fiscal year
in order to be considered an "outstanding liability as of June
30" that is thereby eligible for payment out of the expiring
appropriation.
    However, payment of tuition reimbursement claims under
Section 14-7.03 or 18-3 of the School Code may be made by the
State Board of Education from its appropriations for those
respective purposes for any fiscal year, even though the claims
reimbursed by the payment may be claims attributable to a prior
fiscal year, and payments may be made at the direction of the
State Superintendent of Education from the fund from which the
appropriation is made without regard to any fiscal year
limitations.
    Medical payments may be made by the Department of Veterans'
Affairs from its appropriations for those purposes for any
fiscal year, without regard to the fact that the medical
services being compensated for by such payment may have been
rendered in a prior fiscal year.
    Medical payments may be made by the Department of Public
Aid and medical payments and child care payments may be made by
the Department of Human Services (as successor to the
Department of Public Aid) from appropriations for those
purposes for any fiscal year, without regard to the fact that
the medical or child care services being compensated for by
such payment may have been rendered in a prior fiscal year; and
payments may be made at the direction of the Department of
Central Management Services from the Health Insurance Reserve
Fund and the Local Government Health Insurance Reserve Fund
without regard to any fiscal year limitations.
    Medical payments may be made by the Department of Human
Services from its appropriations relating to substance abuse
treatment services for any fiscal year, without regard to the
fact that the medical services being compensated for by such
payment may have been rendered in a prior fiscal year, provided
the payments are made on a fee-for-service basis consistent
with requirements established for Medicaid reimbursement by
the Department of Public Aid.
    Additionally, payments may be made by the Department of
Human Services from its appropriations, or any other State
agency from its appropriations with the approval of the
Department of Human Services, from the Immigration Reform and
Control Fund for purposes authorized pursuant to the
Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986, without regard to
any fiscal year limitations.
    Further, with respect to costs incurred in fiscal years
2002 and 2003 only, payments may be made by the State Treasurer
from its appropriations from the Capital Litigation Trust Fund
without regard to any fiscal year limitations.
    Lease payments may be made by the Department of Central
Management Services under the sale and leaseback provisions of
Section 7.4 of the State Property Control Act with respect to
the James R. Thompson Center and the Elgin Mental Health Center
and surrounding land from appropriations for that purpose
without regard to any fiscal year limitations.
    Lease payments may be made under the sale and leaseback
provisions of Section 7.5 of the State Property Control Act
with respect to the Illinois State Toll Highway Authority
headquarters building and surrounding land without regard to
any fiscal year limitations.
    (c) Further, payments may be made by the Department of
Public Health and the Department of Human Services (acting as
successor to the Department of Public Health under the
Department of Human Services Act) from their respective
appropriations for grants for medical care to or on behalf of
persons suffering from chronic renal disease, persons
suffering from hemophilia, rape victims, and premature and
high-mortality risk infants and their mothers and for grants
for supplemental food supplies provided under the United States
Department of Agriculture Women, Infants and Children
Nutrition Program, for any fiscal year without regard to the
fact that the services being compensated for by such payment
may have been rendered in a prior fiscal year.
    (d) The Department of Public Health and the Department of
Human Services (acting as successor to the Department of Public
Health under the Department of Human Services Act) shall each
annually submit to the State Comptroller, Senate President,
Senate Minority Leader, Speaker of the House, House Minority
Leader, and the respective Chairmen and Minority Spokesmen of
the Appropriations Committees of the Senate and the House, on
or before December 31, a report of fiscal year funds used to
pay for services provided in any prior fiscal year. This report
shall document by program or service category those
expenditures from the most recently completed fiscal year used
to pay for services provided in prior fiscal years.
    (e) The Department of Public Aid, and the Department of
Human Services (acting as successor to the Department of Public
Aid), and the Department of Human Services making
fee-for-service payments relating to substance abuse treatment
services provided during a previous fiscal year shall each
annually submit to the State Comptroller, Senate President,
Senate Minority Leader, Speaker of the House, House Minority
Leader, the respective Chairmen and Minority Spokesmen of the
Appropriations Committees of the Senate and the House, on or
before November 30, a report that shall document by program or
service category those expenditures from the most recently
completed fiscal year used to pay for (i) services provided in
prior fiscal years and (ii) services for which claims were
received in prior fiscal years.
    (f) The Department of Human Services (as successor to the
Department of Public Aid) shall annually submit to the State
Comptroller, Senate President, Senate Minority Leader, Speaker
of the House, House Minority Leader, and the respective
Chairmen and Minority Spokesmen of the Appropriations
Committees of the Senate and the House, on or before December
31, a report of fiscal year funds used to pay for services
(other than medical care) provided in any prior fiscal year.
This report shall document by program or service category those
expenditures from the most recently completed fiscal year used
to pay for services provided in prior fiscal years.
    (g) In addition, each annual report required to be
submitted by the Department of Public Aid under subsection (e)
shall include the following information with respect to the
State's Medicaid program:
        (1) Explanations of the exact causes of the variance
    between the previous year's estimated and actual
    liabilities.
        (2) Factors affecting the Department of Public Aid's
    liabilities, including but not limited to numbers of aid
    recipients, levels of medical service utilization by aid
    recipients, and inflation in the cost of medical services.
        (3) The results of the Department's efforts to combat
    fraud and abuse.
    (h) As provided in Section 4 of the General Assembly
Compensation Act, any utility bill for service provided to a
General Assembly member's district office for a period
including portions of 2 consecutive fiscal years may be paid
from funds appropriated for such expenditure in either fiscal
year.
    (i) An agency which administers a fund classified by the
Comptroller as an internal service fund may issue rules for:
        (1) billing user agencies in advance based on estimated
    charges for goods or services;
        (2) issuing credits during the subsequent fiscal year
    for all user agency payments received during the prior
    fiscal year which were in excess of the final amounts owed
    by the user agency for that period; and
        (3) issuing catch-up billings to user agencies during
    the subsequent fiscal year for amounts remaining due when
    payments received from the user agency during the prior
    fiscal year were less than the total amount owed for that
    period.
User agencies are authorized to reimburse internal service
funds for catch-up billings by vouchers drawn against their
respective appropriations for the fiscal year in which the
catch-up billing was issued.
(Source: P.A. 92-885, eff. 1-13-03; 93-19, eff. 6-20-03.)
    Section 22. The Illinois Income Tax Act is amended by
changing Section 917 as follows:
 
    (35 ILCS 5/917)  (from Ch. 120, par. 9-917)
    Sec. 917. Confidentiality and information sharing.
    (a) Confidentiality. Except as provided in this Section,
all information received by the Department from returns filed
under this Act, or from any investigation conducted under the
provisions of this Act, shall be confidential, except for
official purposes within the Department or pursuant to official
procedures for collection of any State tax or pursuant to an
investigation or audit by the Illinois State Scholarship
Commission of a delinquent student loan or monetary award or
enforcement of any civil or criminal penalty or sanction
imposed by this Act or by another statute imposing a State tax,
and any person who divulges any such information in any manner,
except for such purposes and pursuant to order of the Director
or in accordance with a proper judicial order, shall be guilty
of a Class A misdemeanor. However, the provisions of this
paragraph are not applicable to information furnished to a
licensed attorney representing the taxpayer where an appeal or
a protest has been filed on behalf of the taxpayer.
    (b) Public information. Nothing contained in this Act shall
prevent the Director from publishing or making available to the
public the names and addresses of persons filing returns under
this Act, or from publishing or making available reasonable
statistics concerning the operation of the tax wherein the
contents of returns are grouped into aggregates in such a way
that the information contained in any individual return shall
not be disclosed.
    (c) Governmental agencies. The Director may make available
to the Secretary of the Treasury of the United States or his
delegate, or the proper officer or his delegate of any other
state imposing a tax upon or measured by income, for
exclusively official purposes, information received by the
Department in the administration of this Act, but such
permission shall be granted only if the United States or such
other state, as the case may be, grants the Department
substantially similar privileges. The Director may exchange
information with the Illinois Department of Public Aid and the
Department of Human Services (acting as successor to the
Department of Public Aid under the Department of Human Services
Act) for the purpose of verifying sources and amounts of income
and for other purposes directly connected with the
administration of this Act and the Illinois Public Aid Code.
The Director may exchange information with the Director of the
Department of Employment Security for the purpose of verifying
sources and amounts of income and for other purposes directly
connected with the administration of this Act and Acts
administered by the Department of Employment Security. The
Director may make available to the Illinois Industrial
Commission information regarding employers for the purpose of
verifying the insurance coverage required under the Workers'
Compensation Act and Workers' Occupational Diseases Act. The
Director may exchange information with the Illinois Department
on Aging for the purpose of verifying sources and amounts of
income for purposes directly related to confirming eligibility
for participation in the programs of benefits authorized by the
Senior Citizens and Disabled Persons Property Tax Relief and
Pharmaceutical Assistance Act.
    The Director may make available to any State agency,
including the Illinois Supreme Court, which licenses persons to
engage in any occupation, information that a person licensed by
such agency has failed to file returns under this Act or pay
the tax, penalty and interest shown therein, or has failed to
pay any final assessment of tax, penalty or interest due under
this Act. The Director may make available to any State agency,
including the Illinois Supreme Court, information regarding
whether a bidder, contractor, or an affiliate of a bidder or
contractor has failed to file returns under this Act or pay the
tax, penalty, and interest shown therein, or has failed to pay
any final assessment of tax, penalty, or interest due under
this Act, for the limited purpose of enforcing bidder and
contractor certifications. For purposes of this Section, the
term "affiliate" means any entity that (1) directly,
indirectly, or constructively controls another entity, (2) is
directly, indirectly, or constructively controlled by another
entity, or (3) is subject to the control of a common entity.
For purposes of this subsection (a), an entity controls another
entity if it owns, directly or individually, more than 10% of
the voting securities of that entity. As used in this
subsection (a), the term "voting security" means a security
that (1) confers upon the holder the right to vote for the
election of members of the board of directors or similar
governing body of the business or (2) is convertible into, or
entitles the holder to receive upon its exercise, a security
that confers such a right to vote. A general partnership
interest is a voting security.
    The Director may make available to any State agency,
including the Illinois Supreme Court, units of local
government, and school districts, information regarding
whether a bidder or contractor is an affiliate of a person who
is not collecting and remitting Illinois Use taxes, for the
limited purpose of enforcing bidder and contractor
certifications.
    The Director may also make available to the Secretary of
State information that a corporation which has been issued a
certificate of incorporation by the Secretary of State has
failed to file returns under this Act or pay the tax, penalty
and interest shown therein, or has failed to pay any final
assessment of tax, penalty or interest due under this Act. An
assessment is final when all proceedings in court for review of
such assessment have terminated or the time for the taking
thereof has expired without such proceedings being instituted.
For taxable years ending on or after December 31, 1987, the
Director may make available to the Director or principal
officer of any Department of the State of Illinois, information
that a person employed by such Department has failed to file
returns under this Act or pay the tax, penalty and interest
shown therein. For purposes of this paragraph, the word
"Department" shall have the same meaning as provided in Section
3 of the State Employees Group Insurance Act of 1971.
    (d) The Director shall make available for public inspection
in the Department's principal office and for publication, at
cost, administrative decisions issued on or after January 1,
1995. These decisions are to be made available in a manner so
that the following taxpayer information is not disclosed:
        (1) The names, addresses, and identification numbers
    of the taxpayer, related entities, and employees.
        (2) At the sole discretion of the Director, trade
    secrets or other confidential information identified as
    such by the taxpayer, no later than 30 days after receipt
    of an administrative decision, by such means as the
    Department shall provide by rule.
    The Director shall determine the appropriate extent of the
deletions allowed in paragraph (2). In the event the taxpayer
does not submit deletions, the Director shall make only the
deletions specified in paragraph (1).
    The Director shall make available for public inspection and
publication an administrative decision within 180 days after
the issuance of the administrative decision. The term
"administrative decision" has the same meaning as defined in
Section 3-101 of Article III of the Code of Civil Procedure.
Costs collected under this Section shall be paid into the Tax
Compliance and Administration Fund.
    (e) Nothing contained in this Act shall prevent the
Director from divulging information to any person pursuant to a
request or authorization made by the taxpayer, by an authorized
representative of the taxpayer, or, in the case of information
related to a joint return, by the spouse filing the joint
return with the taxpayer.
(Source: P.A. 93-25, eff. 6-20-03.)
    Section 25. The Nursing Home Care Act is amended by
changing Section 3-103 as follows:
 
    (210 ILCS 45/3-103)  (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 4153-103)
    Sec. 3-103. The procedure for obtaining a valid license
shall be as follows:
    (1) Application to operate a facility shall be made to the
Department on forms furnished by the Department.
    (2) All license applications shall be accompanied with an
application fee. The fee for an annual license shall be $995
based on the licensed capacity of the facility and shall be
determined as follows: 0-49 licensed beds, a flat fee of $500;
50-99 licensed beds, a flat fee of $750; and for any facility
with 100 or more licensed beds, a fee of $1,000 plus $10 per
licensed bed. Facilities that pay a fee or assessment pursuant
to Article V-C of the Illinois Public Aid Code shall be exempt
from the license fee imposed under this item (2). The fee for a
2-year license shall be double the fee for the annual license
set forth in the preceding sentence. The first $600,000 of such
fees collected each fiscal year shall be deposited with the
State Treasurer into the Long Term Care Monitor/Receiver Fund,
which has been created as a special fund in the State treasury.
Any such fees in excess of $600,000 collected in a fiscal year
shall be deposited into the General Revenue Fund. This special
fund is to be used by the Department for expenses related to
the appointment of monitors and receivers as contained in
Sections 3-501 through 3-517. At the end of each fiscal year,
any funds in excess of $1,000,000 held in the Long Term Care
Monitor/Receiver Fund shall be deposited in the State's General
Revenue Fund. The application shall be under oath and the
submission of false or misleading information shall be a Class
A misdemeanor. The application shall contain the following
information:
        (a) The name and address of the applicant if an
    individual, and if a firm, partnership, or association, of
    every member thereof, and in the case of a corporation, the
    name and address thereof and of its officers and its
    registered agent, and in the case of a unit of local
    government, the name and address of its chief executive
    officer;
        (b) The name and location of the facility for which a
    license is sought;
        (c) The name of the person or persons under whose
    management or supervision the facility will be conducted;
        (d) The number and type of residents for which
    maintenance, personal care, or nursing is to be provided;
    and
        (e) Such information relating to the number,
    experience, and training of the employees of the facility,
    any management agreements for the operation of the
    facility, and of the moral character of the applicant and
    employees as the Department may deem necessary.
    (3) Each initial application shall be accompanied by a
financial statement setting forth the financial condition of
the applicant and by a statement from the unit of local
government having zoning jurisdiction over the facility's
location stating that the location of the facility is not in
violation of a zoning ordinance. An initial application for a
new facility shall be accompanied by a permit as required by
the "Illinois Health Facilities Planning Act". After the
application is approved, the applicant shall advise the
Department every 6 months of any changes in the information
originally provided in the application.
    (4) Other information necessary to determine the identity
and qualifications of an applicant to operate a facility in
accordance with this Act shall be included in the application
as required by the Department in regulations.
(Source: P.A. 93-32, eff. 7-1-03.)
    Section 27. The Pharmacy Practice Act of 1987 is amended by
changing Section 25 as follows:
 
    (225 ILCS 85/25)  (from Ch. 111, par. 4145)
    (Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2008)
    Sec. 25. No person shall compound, or sell or offer for
sale, or cause to be compounded, sold or offered for sale any
medicine or preparation under or by a name recognized in the
United States Pharmacopoeia National Formulary, for internal
or external use, which differs from the standard of strength,
quality or purity as determined by the test laid down in the
United States Pharmacopoeia National Formulary official at the
time of such compounding, sale or offering for sale. Nor shall
any person compound, sell or offer for sale, or cause to be
compounded, sold, or offered for sale, any drug, medicine,
poison, chemical or pharmaceutical preparation, the strength
or purity of which shall fall below the professed standard of
strength or purity under which it is sold. If the physician or
other authorized prescriber, when transmitting an oral or
written prescription, does not prohibit drug product
selection, a different brand name or nonbrand name drug product
of the same generic name may be dispensed by the pharmacist,
provided that the selected drug has a unit price less than the
drug product specified in the prescription and provided that
the selection is permitted, is not subject to review at a
meeting of the Technical Advisory Council, is not subject to a
hearing in accordance with this Section, or is not specifically
prohibited by the current Drug Product Selection Formulary
issued by the Department of Public Health pursuant to Section
3.14 of the Illinois Food, Drug and Cosmetics Act, as amended.
A generic drug determined to be therapeutically equivalent by
the United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA) shall be
available for substitution in Illinois in accordance with this
Act and the Illinois Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act, provided that
each manufacturer submits to the Director of the Department of
Public Health a notification containing product technical
bioequivalence information as a prerequisite to product
substitution when they have completed all required testing to
support FDA product approval and, in any event, the information
shall be submitted no later than 60 days prior to product
substitution in the State. If the Technical Advisory Council
finds that a generic drug product may have issues related to
the practice of medicine or the practice of pharmacy, the
Technical Advisory Council shall review the generic drug
product at its next regularly scheduled Technical Advisory
Council meeting. Following the Technical Advisory Council's
review and initial recommendation that a generic drug product
not be included in the Illinois Formulary, a hearing shall be
conducted in accordance with the rules of the Department of
Public Health and Article 10 of the Illinois Administrative
Procedure Act if requested by the manufacturer. The Technical
Advisory Council shall make its recommendation to the
Department of Public Health within 20 business days after the
public hearing. If the Department of Public Health, on the
recommendation of the Technical Advisory Council, determines
that, based upon a preponderance of the evidence, the drug is
not bioequivalent, not therapeutically equivalent, or could
cause clinically significant harm to the health or safety of
patients receiving that generic drug, the Department of Public
Health may prohibit the generic drug from substitution in the
State. A decision by the Department of Public Health to
prohibit a drug product from substitution shall constitute a
final administrative decision within the meaning of Section
22.2 of the Illinois Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act and Section
3-101 of the Code of Civil Procedure, and shall be subject to
judicial review pursuant to the provisions of Article III of
the Administrative Review Law. A decision to prohibit a generic
drug from substitution must be accompanied by a written
detailed explanation of the basis for the decision. On the
prescription forms of prescribers, shall be placed a signature
line and the words "may substitute" and "may not substitute".
The prescriber, in his or her own handwriting, shall place a
mark beside either the "may substitute" or "may not substitute"
alternatives to guide the pharmacist in the dispensing of the
prescription. A prescriber placing a mark beside the "may
substitute" alternative or failing in his or her own
handwriting to place a mark beside either alternative
authorizes drug product selection in accordance with this Act.
Preprinted or rubber stamped marks, or other deviations from
the above prescription format shall not be permitted. The
prescriber shall sign the form in his or her own handwriting to
authorize the issuance of the prescription. When a person
presents a prescription to be dispensed, the pharmacist to whom
it is presented may inform the person if the pharmacy has
available a different brand name or nonbrand name of the same
generic drug prescribed and the price of the different brand
name or nonbrand name of the drug product. If the person
presenting the prescription is the one to whom the drug is to
be administered, the pharmacist may dispense the prescription
with the brand prescribed or a different brand name or nonbrand
name product of the same generic name that has been permitted
by the Department of Public Health, if the drug is of lesser
unit cost and the patient is informed and agrees to the
selection and the pharmacist shall enter such information into
the pharmacy record. If the person presenting the prescription
is someone other than the one to whom the drug is to be
administered the pharmacist shall not dispense the
prescription with a brand other than the one specified in the
prescription unless the pharmacist has the written or oral
authorization to select brands from the person to whom the drug
is to be administered or a parent, legal guardian or spouse of
that person.
    In every case in which a selection is made as permitted by
the Illinois Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act, the pharmacist shall
indicate on the pharmacy record of the filled prescription the
name or other identification of the manufacturer of the drug
which has been dispensed.
    The selection of any drug product by a pharmacist shall not
constitute evidence of negligence if the selected nonlegend
drug product was of the same dosage form and each of its active
ingredients did not vary by more than 1 percent from the active
ingredients of the prescribed, brand name, nonlegend drug
product or if the selected legend drug product was included in
the Illinois Drug Product Selection Formulary current at the
time the prescription was dispensed. Failure of a prescribing
physician to specify that drug product selection is prohibited
does not constitute evidence of negligence unless that
practitioner has reasonable cause to believe that the health
condition of the patient for whom the physician is prescribing
warrants the use of the brand name drug product and not
another.
    The Department is authorized to employ an analyst or
chemist of recognized or approved standing whose duty it shall
be to examine into any claimed adulteration, illegal
substitution, improper selection, alteration, or other
violation hereof, and report the result of his investigation,
and if such report justify such action the Department shall
cause the offender to be prosecuted.
(Source: P.A. 91-766, eff. 9-1-00; 92-112, eff. 7-20-01.)
    Section 30. The Illinois Public Aid Code is amended by
changing Sections 5-5, 5-5.4, 5A-2, 5A-4, 5A-5, 5A-7, and 5A-12
and adding Sections 5-5.4c and 12-10.7 as follows:
 
    (305 ILCS 5/5-5)  (from Ch. 23, par. 5-5)
    Sec. 5-5. Medical services. The Illinois Department, by
rule, shall determine the quantity and quality of and the rate
of reimbursement for the medical assistance for which payment
will be authorized, and the medical services to be provided,
which may include all or part of the following: (1) inpatient
hospital services; (2) outpatient hospital services; (3) other
laboratory and X-ray services; (4) skilled nursing home
services; (5) physicians' services whether furnished in the
office, the patient's home, a hospital, a skilled nursing home,
or elsewhere; (6) medical care, or any other type of remedial
care furnished by licensed practitioners; (7) home health care
services; (8) private duty nursing service; (9) clinic
services; (10) dental services; (11) physical therapy and
related services; (12) prescribed drugs, dentures, and
prosthetic devices; and eyeglasses prescribed by a physician
skilled in the diseases of the eye, or by an optometrist,
whichever the person may select; (13) other diagnostic,
screening, preventive, and rehabilitative services; (14)
transportation and such other expenses as may be necessary;
(15) medical treatment of sexual assault survivors, as defined
in Section 1a of the Sexual Assault Survivors Emergency
Treatment Act, for injuries sustained as a result of the sexual
assault, including examinations and laboratory tests to
discover evidence which may be used in criminal proceedings
arising from the sexual assault; (16) the diagnosis and
treatment of sickle cell anemia; and (17) any other medical
care, and any other type of remedial care recognized under the
laws of this State, but not including abortions, or induced
miscarriages or premature births, unless, in the opinion of a
physician, such procedures are necessary for the preservation
of the life of the woman seeking such treatment, or except an
induced premature birth intended to produce a live viable child
and such procedure is necessary for the health of the mother or
her unborn child. The Illinois Department, by rule, shall
prohibit any physician from providing medical assistance to
anyone eligible therefor under this Code where such physician
has been found guilty of performing an abortion procedure in a
wilful and wanton manner upon a woman who was not pregnant at
the time such abortion procedure was performed. The term "any
other type of remedial care" shall include nursing care and
nursing home service for persons who rely on treatment by
spiritual means alone through prayer for healing.
    Notwithstanding any other provision of this Section, a
comprehensive tobacco use cessation program that includes
purchasing prescription drugs or prescription medical devices
approved by the Food and Drug administration shall be covered
under the medical assistance program under this Article for
persons who are otherwise eligible for assistance under this
Article.
    Notwithstanding any other provision of this Code, the
Illinois Department may not require, as a condition of payment
for any laboratory test authorized under this Article, that a
physician's handwritten signature appear on the laboratory
test order form. The Illinois Department may, however, impose
other appropriate requirements regarding laboratory test order
documentation.
    The Illinois Department of Public Aid shall provide the
following services to persons eligible for assistance under
this Article who are participating in education, training or
employment programs operated by the Department of Human
Services as successor to the Department of Public Aid:
        (1) dental services, which shall include but not be
    limited to prosthodontics; and
        (2) eyeglasses prescribed by a physician skilled in the
    diseases of the eye, or by an optometrist, whichever the
    person may select.
    The Illinois Department, by rule, may distinguish and
classify the medical services to be provided only in accordance
with the classes of persons designated in Section 5-2.
    The Illinois Department shall authorize the provision of,
and shall authorize payment for, screening by low-dose
mammography for the presence of occult breast cancer for women
35 years of age or older who are eligible for medical
assistance under this Article, as follows: a baseline mammogram
for women 35 to 39 years of age and an annual mammogram for
women 40 years of age or older. All screenings shall include a
physical breast exam, instruction on self-examination and
information regarding the frequency of self-examination and
its value as a preventative tool. As used in this Section,
"low-dose mammography" means the x-ray examination of the
breast using equipment dedicated specifically for mammography,
including the x-ray tube, filter, compression device, image
receptor, and cassettes, with an average radiation exposure
delivery of less than one rad mid-breast, with 2 views for each
breast.
    Any medical or health care provider shall immediately
recommend, to any pregnant woman who is being provided prenatal
services and is suspected of drug abuse or is addicted as
defined in the Alcoholism and Other Drug Abuse and Dependency
Act, referral to a local substance abuse treatment provider
licensed by the Department of Human Services or to a licensed
hospital which provides substance abuse treatment services.
The Department of Public Aid shall assure coverage for the cost
of treatment of the drug abuse or addiction for pregnant
recipients in accordance with the Illinois Medicaid Program in
conjunction with the Department of Human Services.
    All medical providers providing medical assistance to
pregnant women under this Code shall receive information from
the Department on the availability of services under the Drug
Free Families with a Future or any comparable program providing
case management services for addicted women, including
information on appropriate referrals for other social services
that may be needed by addicted women in addition to treatment
for addiction.
    The Illinois Department, in cooperation with the
Departments of Human Services (as successor to the Department
of Alcoholism and Substance Abuse) and Public Health, through a
public awareness campaign, may provide information concerning
treatment for alcoholism and drug abuse and addiction, prenatal
health care, and other pertinent programs directed at reducing
the number of drug-affected infants born to recipients of
medical assistance.
    Neither the Illinois Department of Public Aid nor the
Department of Human Services shall sanction the recipient
solely on the basis of her substance abuse.
    The Illinois Department shall establish such regulations
governing the dispensing of health services under this Article
as it shall deem appropriate. The Department should seek the
advice of formal professional advisory committees appointed by
the Director of the Illinois Department for the purpose of
providing regular advice on policy and administrative matters,
information dissemination and educational activities for
medical and health care providers, and consistency in
procedures to the Illinois Department.
    The Illinois Department may develop and contract with
Partnerships of medical providers to arrange medical services
for persons eligible under Section 5-2 of this Code.
Implementation of this Section may be by demonstration projects
in certain geographic areas. The Partnership shall be
represented by a sponsor organization. The Department, by rule,
shall develop qualifications for sponsors of Partnerships.
Nothing in this Section shall be construed to require that the
sponsor organization be a medical organization.
    The sponsor must negotiate formal written contracts with
medical providers for physician services, inpatient and
outpatient hospital care, home health services, treatment for
alcoholism and substance abuse, and other services determined
necessary by the Illinois Department by rule for delivery by
Partnerships. Physician services must include prenatal and
obstetrical care. The Illinois Department shall reimburse
medical services delivered by Partnership providers to clients
in target areas according to provisions of this Article and the
Illinois Health Finance Reform Act, except that:
        (1) Physicians participating in a Partnership and
    providing certain services, which shall be determined by
    the Illinois Department, to persons in areas covered by the
    Partnership may receive an additional surcharge for such
    services.
        (2) The Department may elect to consider and negotiate
    financial incentives to encourage the development of
    Partnerships and the efficient delivery of medical care.
        (3) Persons receiving medical services through
    Partnerships may receive medical and case management
    services above the level usually offered through the
    medical assistance program.
    Medical providers shall be required to meet certain
qualifications to participate in Partnerships to ensure the
delivery of high quality medical services. These
qualifications shall be determined by rule of the Illinois
Department and may be higher than qualifications for
participation in the medical assistance program. Partnership
sponsors may prescribe reasonable additional qualifications
for participation by medical providers, only with the prior
written approval of the Illinois Department.
    Nothing in this Section shall limit the free choice of
practitioners, hospitals, and other providers of medical
services by clients. In order to ensure patient freedom of
choice, the Illinois Department shall immediately promulgate
all rules and take all other necessary actions so that provided
services may be accessed from therapeutically certified
optometrists to the full extent of the Illinois Optometric
Practice Act of 1987 without discriminating between service
providers.
    The Department shall apply for a waiver from the United
States Health Care Financing Administration to allow for the
implementation of Partnerships under this Section.
    The Illinois Department shall require health care
providers to maintain records that document the medical care
and services provided to recipients of Medical Assistance under
this Article. The Illinois Department shall require health care
providers to make available, when authorized by the patient, in
writing, the medical records in a timely fashion to other
health care providers who are treating or serving persons
eligible for Medical Assistance under this Article. All
dispensers of medical services shall be required to maintain
and retain business and professional records sufficient to
fully and accurately document the nature, scope, details and
receipt of the health care provided to persons eligible for
medical assistance under this Code, in accordance with
regulations promulgated by the Illinois Department. The rules
and regulations shall require that proof of the receipt of
prescription drugs, dentures, prosthetic devices and
eyeglasses by eligible persons under this Section accompany
each claim for reimbursement submitted by the dispenser of such
medical services. No such claims for reimbursement shall be
approved for payment by the Illinois Department without such
proof of receipt, unless the Illinois Department shall have put
into effect and shall be operating a system of post-payment
audit and review which shall, on a sampling basis, be deemed
adequate by the Illinois Department to assure that such drugs,
dentures, prosthetic devices and eyeglasses for which payment
is being made are actually being received by eligible
recipients. Within 90 days after the effective date of this
amendatory Act of 1984, the Illinois Department shall establish
a current list of acquisition costs for all prosthetic devices
and any other items recognized as medical equipment and
supplies reimbursable under this Article and shall update such
list on a quarterly basis, except that the acquisition costs of
all prescription drugs shall be updated no less frequently than
every 30 days as required by Section 5-5.12.
    The rules and regulations of the Illinois Department shall
require that a written statement including the required opinion
of a physician shall accompany any claim for reimbursement for
abortions, or induced miscarriages or premature births. This
statement shall indicate what procedures were used in providing
such medical services.
    The Illinois Department shall require all dispensers of
medical services, other than an individual practitioner or
group of practitioners, desiring to participate in the Medical
Assistance program established under this Article to disclose
all financial, beneficial, ownership, equity, surety or other
interests in any and all firms, corporations, partnerships,
associations, business enterprises, joint ventures, agencies,
institutions or other legal entities providing any form of
health care services in this State under this Article.
    The Illinois Department may require that all dispensers of
medical services desiring to participate in the medical
assistance program established under this Article disclose,
under such terms and conditions as the Illinois Department may
by rule establish, all inquiries from clients and attorneys
regarding medical bills paid by the Illinois Department, which
inquiries could indicate potential existence of claims or liens
for the Illinois Department.
    Enrollment of a vendor that provides non-emergency medical
transportation, defined by the Department by rule, shall be
conditional for 180 days. During that time, the Department of
Public Aid may terminate the vendor's eligibility to
participate in the medical assistance program without cause.
That termination of eligibility is not subject to the
Department's hearing process.
    The Illinois Department shall establish policies,
procedures, standards and criteria by rule for the acquisition,
repair and replacement of orthotic and prosthetic devices and
durable medical equipment. Such rules shall provide, but not be
limited to, the following services: (1) immediate repair or
replacement of such devices by recipients without medical
authorization; and (2) rental, lease, purchase or
lease-purchase of durable medical equipment in a
cost-effective manner, taking into consideration the
recipient's medical prognosis, the extent of the recipient's
needs, and the requirements and costs for maintaining such
equipment. Such rules shall enable a recipient to temporarily
acquire and use alternative or substitute devices or equipment
pending repairs or replacements of any device or equipment
previously authorized for such recipient by the Department.
Rules under clause (2) above shall not provide for purchase or
lease-purchase of durable medical equipment or supplies used
for the purpose of oxygen delivery and respiratory care.
    The Department shall execute, relative to the nursing home
prescreening project, written inter-agency agreements with the
Department of Human Services and the Department on Aging, to
effect the following: (i) intake procedures and common
eligibility criteria for those persons who are receiving
non-institutional services; and (ii) the establishment and
development of non-institutional services in areas of the State
where they are not currently available or are undeveloped.
    The Illinois Department shall develop and operate, in
cooperation with other State Departments and agencies and in
compliance with applicable federal laws and regulations,
appropriate and effective systems of health care evaluation and
programs for monitoring of utilization of health care services
and facilities, as it affects persons eligible for medical
assistance under this Code.
    The Illinois Department shall report annually to the
General Assembly, no later than the second Friday in April of
1979 and each year thereafter, in regard to:
        (a) actual statistics and trends in utilization of
    medical services by public aid recipients;
        (b) actual statistics and trends in the provision of
    the various medical services by medical vendors;
        (c) current rate structures and proposed changes in
    those rate structures for the various medical vendors; and
        (d) efforts at utilization review and control by the
    Illinois Department.
    The period covered by each report shall be the 3 years
ending on the June 30 prior to the report. The report shall
include suggested legislation for consideration by the General
Assembly. The filing of one copy of the report with the
Speaker, one copy with the Minority Leader and one copy with
the Clerk of the House of Representatives, one copy with the
President, one copy with the Minority Leader and one copy with
the Secretary of the Senate, one copy with the Legislative
Research Unit, and such additional copies with the State
Government Report Distribution Center for the General Assembly
as is required under paragraph (t) of Section 7 of the State
Library Act shall be deemed sufficient to comply with this
Section.
(Source: P.A. 92-16, eff. 6-28-01; 92-651, eff. 7-11-02;
92-789, eff. 8-6-02; 93-632, eff. 2-1-04.)
 
    (305 ILCS 5/5-5.4)  (from Ch. 23, par. 5-5.4)
    Sec. 5-5.4. Standards of Payment - Department of Public
Aid. The Department of Public Aid shall develop standards of
payment of skilled nursing and intermediate care services in
facilities providing such services under this Article which:
    (1) Provide for the determination of a facility's payment
for skilled nursing and intermediate care services on a
prospective basis. The amount of the payment rate for all
nursing facilities certified by the Department of Public Health
under the Nursing Home Care Act as Intermediate Care for the
Developmentally Disabled facilities, Long Term Care for Under
Age 22 facilities, Skilled Nursing facilities, or Intermediate
Care facilities under the medical assistance program shall be
prospectively established annually on the basis of historical,
financial, and statistical data reflecting actual costs from
prior years, which shall be applied to the current rate year
and updated for inflation, except that the capital cost element
for newly constructed facilities shall be based upon projected
budgets. The annually established payment rate shall take
effect on July 1 in 1984 and subsequent years. No rate increase
and no update for inflation shall be provided on or after July
1, 1994 and before July 1, 2005 2004, unless specifically
provided for in this Section. The changes made by this
amendatory Act of the 93rd General Assembly extending the
duration of the prohibition against a rate increase or update
for inflation are effective retroactive to July 1, 2004.
    For facilities licensed by the Department of Public Health
under the Nursing Home Care Act as Intermediate Care for the
Developmentally Disabled facilities or Long Term Care for Under
Age 22 facilities, the rates taking effect on July 1, 1998
shall include an increase of 3%. For facilities licensed by the
Department of Public Health under the Nursing Home Care Act as
Skilled Nursing facilities or Intermediate Care facilities,
the rates taking effect on July 1, 1998 shall include an
increase of 3% plus $1.10 per resident-day, as defined by the
Department.
    For facilities licensed by the Department of Public Health
under the Nursing Home Care Act as Intermediate Care for the
Developmentally Disabled facilities or Long Term Care for Under
Age 22 facilities, the rates taking effect on July 1, 1999
shall include an increase of 1.6% plus $3.00 per resident-day,
as defined by the Department. For facilities licensed by the
Department of Public Health under the Nursing Home Care Act as
Skilled Nursing facilities or Intermediate Care facilities,
the rates taking effect on July 1, 1999 shall include an
increase of 1.6% and, for services provided on or after October
1, 1999, shall be increased by $4.00 per resident-day, as
defined by the Department.
    For facilities licensed by the Department of Public Health
under the Nursing Home Care Act as Intermediate Care for the
Developmentally Disabled facilities or Long Term Care for Under
Age 22 facilities, the rates taking effect on July 1, 2000
shall include an increase of 2.5% per resident-day, as defined
by the Department. For facilities licensed by the Department of
Public Health under the Nursing Home Care Act as Skilled
Nursing facilities or Intermediate Care facilities, the rates
taking effect on July 1, 2000 shall include an increase of 2.5%
per resident-day, as defined by the Department.
    For facilities licensed by the Department of Public Health
under the Nursing Home Care Act as skilled nursing facilities
or intermediate care facilities, a new payment methodology must
be implemented for the nursing component of the rate effective
July 1, 2003. The Department of Public Aid shall develop the
new payment methodology using the Minimum Data Set (MDS) as the
instrument to collect information concerning nursing home
resident condition necessary to compute the rate. The
Department of Public Aid shall develop the new payment
methodology to meet the unique needs of Illinois nursing home
residents while remaining subject to the appropriations
provided by the General Assembly. A transition period from the
payment methodology in effect on June 30, 2003 to the payment
methodology in effect on July 1, 2003 shall be provided for a
period not exceeding 2 years after implementation of the new
payment methodology as follows:
        (A) For a facility that would receive a lower nursing
    component rate per patient day under the new system than
    the facility received effective on the date immediately
    preceding the date that the Department implements the new
    payment methodology, the nursing component rate per
    patient day for the facility shall be held at the level in
    effect on the date immediately preceding the date that the
    Department implements the new payment methodology until a
    higher nursing component rate of reimbursement is achieved
    by that facility.
        (B) For a facility that would receive a higher nursing
    component rate per patient day under the payment
    methodology in effect on July 1, 2003 than the facility
    received effective on the date immediately preceding the
    date that the Department implements the new payment
    methodology, the nursing component rate per patient day for
    the facility shall be adjusted.
        (C) Notwithstanding paragraphs (A) and (B), the
    nursing component rate per patient day for the facility
    shall be adjusted subject to appropriations provided by the
    General Assembly.
    For facilities licensed by the Department of Public Health
under the Nursing Home Care Act as Intermediate Care for the
Developmentally Disabled facilities or Long Term Care for Under
Age 22 facilities, the rates taking effect on March 1, 2001
shall include a statewide increase of 7.85%, as defined by the
Department.
    For facilities licensed by the Department of Public Health
under the Nursing Home Care Act as Intermediate Care for the
Developmentally Disabled facilities or Long Term Care for Under
Age 22 facilities, the rates taking effect on April 1, 2002
shall include a statewide increase of 2.0%, as defined by the
Department. This increase terminates on July 1, 2002; beginning
July 1, 2002 these rates are reduced to the level of the rates
in effect on March 31, 2002, as defined by the Department.
    For facilities licensed by the Department of Public Health
under the Nursing Home Care Act as skilled nursing facilities
or intermediate care facilities, the rates taking effect on
July 1, 2001 shall be computed using the most recent cost
reports on file with the Department of Public Aid no later than
April 1, 2000, updated for inflation to January 1, 2001. For
rates effective July 1, 2001 only, rates shall be the greater
of the rate computed for July 1, 2001 or the rate effective on
June 30, 2001.
    Notwithstanding any other provision of this Section, for
facilities licensed by the Department of Public Health under
the Nursing Home Care Act as skilled nursing facilities or
intermediate care facilities, the Illinois Department shall
determine by rule the rates taking effect on July 1, 2002,
which shall be 5.9% less than the rates in effect on June 30,
2002.
    Notwithstanding any other provision of this Section, for
facilities licensed by the Department of Public Health under
the Nursing Home Care Act as skilled nursing facilities or
intermediate care facilities, if the payment methodologies
required under Section 5A-12 and the waiver granted under 42
CFR 433.68 are approved by the United States Centers for
Medicare and Medicaid Services, the Illinois Department shall
determine by rule the rates taking effect on July 1, 2004 2003,
which shall be 3.0% greater less than the rates in effect on
June 30, 2004 2002. These rates This rate shall take effect
only upon approval and implementation of the payment
methodologies required under Section 5A-12.
    Notwithstanding any other provisions of this Section, for
facilities licensed by the Department of Public Health under
the Nursing Home Care Act as skilled nursing facilities or
intermediate care facilities, the rates taking effect on
January 1, 2005 shall be 3% more than the rates in effect on
December 31, 2004.
    For facilities licensed by the Department of Public Health
under the Nursing Home Care Act as Intermediate Care for the
Developmentally Disabled facilities or as long-term care
facilities for residents under 22 years of age, the rates
taking effect on July 1, 2003 shall include a statewide
increase of 4%, as defined by the Department.
    Rates established effective each July 1 shall govern
payment for services rendered throughout that fiscal year,
except that rates established on July 1, 1996 shall be
increased by 6.8% for services provided on or after January 1,
1997. Such rates will be based upon the rates calculated for
the year beginning July 1, 1990, and for subsequent years
thereafter until June 30, 2001 shall be based on the facility
cost reports for the facility fiscal year ending at any point
in time during the previous calendar year, updated to the
midpoint of the rate year. The cost report shall be on file
with the Department no later than April 1 of the current rate
year. Should the cost report not be on file by April 1, the
Department shall base the rate on the latest cost report filed
by each skilled care facility and intermediate care facility,
updated to the midpoint of the current rate year. In
determining rates for services rendered on and after July 1,
1985, fixed time shall not be computed at less than zero. The
Department shall not make any alterations of regulations which
would reduce any component of the Medicaid rate to a level
below what that component would have been utilizing in the rate
effective on July 1, 1984.
    (2) Shall take into account the actual costs incurred by
facilities in providing services for recipients of skilled
nursing and intermediate care services under the medical
assistance program.
    (3) Shall take into account the medical and psycho-social
characteristics and needs of the patients.
    (4) Shall take into account the actual costs incurred by
facilities in meeting licensing and certification standards
imposed and prescribed by the State of Illinois, any of its
political subdivisions or municipalities and by the U.S.
Department of Health and Human Services pursuant to Title XIX
of the Social Security Act.
    The Department of Public Aid shall develop precise
standards for payments to reimburse nursing facilities for any
utilization of appropriate rehabilitative personnel for the
provision of rehabilitative services which is authorized by
federal regulations, including reimbursement for services
provided by qualified therapists or qualified assistants, and
which is in accordance with accepted professional practices.
Reimbursement also may be made for utilization of other
supportive personnel under appropriate supervision.
(Source: P.A. 92-10, eff. 6-11-01; 92-31, eff. 6-28-01; 92-597,
eff. 6-28-02; 92-651, eff. 7-11-02; 92-848, eff. 1-1-03; 93-20,
eff. 6-20-03; 93-649, eff. 1-8-04; 93-659, eff. 2-3-04; revised
2-3-04.)
 
    (305 ILCS 5/5-5.4c new)
    Sec. 5-5.4c. Bed reserves; approval. The Department of
Public Aid shall approve bed reserves at a daily rate of 75% of
an individual's current Medicaid per diem, for nursing
facilities 90% or more of whose residents are Medicaid
recipients and that have occupancy levels of at least 93% for
resident bed reserves not exceeding 10 days.
 
    (305 ILCS 5/5A-2)  (from Ch. 23, par. 5A-2)
    (Section scheduled to be repealed on July 1, 2005)
    Sec. 5A-2. Assessment; no local authorization to tax.
    (a) Subject to Sections 5A-3 and 5A-10, an annual
assessment on inpatient services is imposed on each hospital
provider in an amount equal to the hospital's occupied bed days
multiplied by $84.19 for State fiscal years 2004 and 2005, if
the payment methodologies required under 5A-12 and the waiver
granted under 42 CFR 433.68 are approved with an effective date
prior to July 1, 2004; or the assessment will be imposed for
fiscal year 2005 only, if the payment methodologies required
under Section 5A-12 and the waiver granted under 42 CFR 433.68
are approved with an effective date on or after July 1, 2004 in
an amount equal to the hospital's occupied bed days multiplied
by $84.19.
    The Department of Public Aid shall use the number of
occupied bed days as reported by each hospital on the Annual
Survey of Hospitals conducted by the Department of Public
Health to calculate the hospital's annual assessment. If the
sum of a hospital's occupied bed days is not reported on the
Annual Survey of Hospitals or if there are data errors in the
reported sum of a hospital's occupied bed days as determined by
the Department of Public Aid, then the Department of Public Aid
may obtain the sum of occupied bed days from any source
available, including, but not limited to, records maintained by
the hospital provider, which may be inspected at all times
during business hours of the day by the Department of Public
Aid or its duly authorized agents and employees.
    (b) Nothing in this amendatory Act of the 93rd General
Assembly shall be construed to authorize any home rule unit or
other unit of local government to license for revenue or to
impose a tax or assessment upon hospital providers or the
occupation of hospital provider, or a tax or assessment
measured by the income or earnings of a hospital provider.
    (c) As provided in Section 5A-14, this Section is repealed
on July 1, 2005.
(Source: P.A. 93-659, eff. 2-3-04.)
 
    (305 ILCS 5/5A-4)  (from Ch. 23, par. 5A-4)
    Sec. 5A-4. Payment of assessment; penalty.
    (a) The annual assessment imposed by Section 5A-2 for State
fiscal year 2004 shall be due and payable on June 18 of the
year. The assessment imposed by Section 5A-2 for State fiscal
year 2005 shall be due and payable in quarterly installments,
each equalling one-fourth of the assessment for the year, on
July 19, October 19, January 18, and April 19 of the year. No
installment payment of an assessment imposed by Section 5A-2
shall be due and payable, however, until after: (i) the
hospital provider receives written notice from the Department
of Public Aid that the payment methodologies to hospitals
required under Section 5A-12 have been approved by the Centers
for Medicare and Medicaid Services of the U.S. Department of
Health and Human Services and the waiver under 42 CFR 433.68
for the assessment imposed by Section 5A-2 has been granted by
the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services of the U.S.
Department of Health and Human Services; and (ii) the hospital
has received the payments required under Section 5A-12. Upon
notification to the Department of approval of the payment
methodologies required under Section 5A-12 and the waiver
granted under 42 CFR 433.68, all quarterly installments
otherwise due under Section 5A-2 prior to the date of
notification shall be due and payable to the Department within
30 days of the date of notification.
    (b) The Illinois Department is authorized to establish
delayed payment schedules for hospital providers that are
unable to make installment payments when due under this Section
due to financial difficulties, as determined by the Illinois
Department.
    (c) If a hospital provider fails to pay the full amount of
an installment when due (including any extensions granted under
subsection (b)), there shall, unless waived by the Illinois
Department for reasonable cause, be added to the assessment
imposed by Section 5A-2 a penalty assessment equal to the
lesser of (i) 5% of the amount of the installment not paid on
or before the due date plus 5% of the portion thereof remaining
unpaid on the last day of each 30-day period thereafter or (ii)
100% of the installment amount not paid on or before the due
date. For purposes of this subsection, payments will be
credited first to unpaid installment amounts (rather than to
penalty or interest), beginning with the most delinquent
installments.
(Source: P.A. 93-659, eff. 2-3-04.)
 
    (305 ILCS 5/5A-5)  (from Ch. 23, par. 5A-5)
    Sec. 5A-5. Notice; penalty; maintenance of records.
    (a) After December 31 of each year (except as otherwise
provided in this subsection), and on or before March 31 of the
succeeding year, the The Department of Public Aid shall send a
notice of assessment to every hospital provider subject to
assessment under this Article. The notice of assessment shall
notify the hospital of its assessment and for the State fiscal
year commencing on the next July 1, except that the notice for
the State fiscal year commencing July 1, 2003 shall be sent
within 14 days of receipt by the Department of notification
from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services of the U.S.
Department of Health and Human Services that the payment
methodologies required under Section 5A-12 and the waiver
granted under 42 CFR 433.68 have been approved on or before
June 1, 2004. The notice shall be on a form prepared by the
Illinois Department and shall state the following:
        (1) The name of the hospital provider.
        (2) The address of the hospital provider's principal
    place of business from which the provider engages in the
    occupation of hospital provider in this State, and the name
    and address of each hospital operated, conducted, or
    maintained by the provider in this State.
        (3) The occupied bed days of the hospital provider, the
    amount of assessment imposed under Section 5A-2 for the
    State fiscal year for which the notice is sent, and the
    amount of each quarterly installment to be paid during the
    State fiscal year.
        (4) (Blank).
        (5) Other reasonable information as determined by the
    Illinois Department.
    (b) If a hospital provider conducts, operates, or maintains
more than one hospital licensed by the Illinois Department of
Public Health, the provider shall pay the assessment for each
hospital separately.
    (c) Notwithstanding any other provision in this Article, in
the case of a person who ceases to conduct, operate, or
maintain a hospital in respect of which the person is subject
to assessment under this Article as a hospital provider, the
assessment for the State fiscal year in which the cessation
occurs shall be adjusted by multiplying the assessment computed
under Section 5A-2 by a fraction, the numerator of which is the
number of days in the year during which the provider conducts,
operates, or maintains the hospital and the denominator of
which is 365. Immediately upon ceasing to conduct, operate, or
maintain a hospital, the person shall pay the assessment for
the year as so adjusted (to the extent not previously paid).
    (d) Notwithstanding any other provision in this Article, a
provider who commences conducting, operating, or maintaining a
hospital, upon notice by the Illinois Department, shall pay the
assessment computed under Section 5A-2 and subsection (e) in
installments on the due dates stated in the notice and on the
regular installment due dates for the State fiscal year
occurring after the due dates of the initial notice.
    (e) Notwithstanding any other provision in this Article, in
the case of a hospital provider that did not conduct, operate,
or maintain a hospital throughout calendar year 2001, the
assessment for that State fiscal year shall be computed on the
basis of hypothetical occupied bed days for the full calendar
year as determined by the Illinois Department.
    (f) (Blank).
    (g) (Blank).
    (h) (Blank).
(Source: P.A. 93-659, eff. 2-3-04.)
 
    (305 ILCS 5/5A-7)  (from Ch. 23, par. 5A-7)
    Sec. 5A-7. Administration; enforcement provisions.
    (a) The Illinois Department shall establish and maintain a
listing of all hospital providers appearing in the licensing
records of the Illinois Department of Public Health, which
shall show each provider's name and principal place of business
and the name and address of each hospital operated, conducted,
or maintained by the provider in this State. The Illinois
Department shall administer and enforce this Article and
collect the assessments and penalty assessments imposed under
this Article using procedures employed in its administration of
this Code generally. The Illinois Department, its Director, and
every hospital provider subject to assessment measured by
occupied bed days shall have the following powers, duties, and
rights:
        (1) The Illinois Department may initiate either
    administrative or judicial proceedings, or both, to
    enforce provisions of this Article. Administrative
    enforcement proceedings initiated hereunder shall be
    governed by the Illinois Department's administrative
    rules. Judicial enforcement proceedings initiated
    hereunder shall be governed by the rules of procedure
    applicable in the courts of this State.
        (2) No proceedings for collection, refund, credit, or
    other adjustment of an assessment amount shall be issued
    more than 3 years after the due date of the assessment,
    except in the case of an extended period agreed to in
    writing by the Illinois Department and the hospital
    provider before the expiration of this limitation period.
        (3) Any unpaid assessment under this Article shall
    become a lien upon the assets of the hospital upon which it
    was assessed. If any hospital provider, outside the usual
    course of its business, sells or transfers the major part
    of any one or more of (A) the real property and
    improvements, (B) the machinery and equipment, or (C) the
    furniture or fixtures, of any hospital that is subject to
    the provisions of this Article, the seller or transferor
    shall pay the Illinois Department the amount of any
    assessment, assessment penalty, and interest (if any) due
    from it under this Article up to the date of the sale or
    transfer. If the seller or transferor fails to pay any
    assessment, assessment penalty, and interest (if any) due,
    the purchaser or transferee of such asset shall be liable
    for the amount of the assessment, penalties, and interest
    (if any) up to the amount of the reasonable value of the
    property acquired by the purchaser or transferee. The
    purchaser or transferee shall continue to be liable until
    the purchaser or transferee pays the full amount of the
    assessment, penalties, and interest (if any) up to the
    amount of the reasonable value of the property acquired by
    the purchaser or transferee or until the purchaser or
    transferee receives from the Illinois Department a
    certificate showing that such assessment, penalty, and
    interest have been paid or a certificate from the Illinois
    Department showing that no assessment, penalty, or
    interest is due from the seller or transferor under this
    Article.
        (4) Payments under this Article are not subject to the
    Illinois Prompt Payment Act. Credits or refunds shall not
    bear interest.
    (b) In addition to any other remedy provided for and
without sending a notice of assessment liability, the Illinois
Department may collect an unpaid assessment by withholding, as
payment of the assessment, reimbursements or other amounts
otherwise payable by the Illinois Department to the hospital
provider.
    (a) To the extent practicable, the Illinois Department
shall administer and enforce this Article and collect the
assessments, interest, and penalty assessments imposed under
this Article using procedures employed in its administration of
this Code generally and, as it deems appropriate, in a manner
similar to that in which the Department of Revenue administers
and collects the retailers' occupation tax under the Retailers'
Occupation Tax Act ("ROTA"). Instead of certificates of
registration, the Illinois Department shall establish and
maintain a listing of all hospital providers appearing in the
licensing records of the Department of Public Health, which
shall show each provider's name, principal place of business,
and the name and address of each hospital operated, conducted,
or maintained by the provider in this State. In addition, the
following specified provisions of the Retailers' Occupation
Tax Act are incorporated by reference into this Section except
that the Illinois Department and its Director (rather than the
Department of Revenue and its Director) and every hospital
provider subject to assessment measured by occupied bed days
(rather than persons subject to retailers' occupation tax
measured by gross receipts from the sale of tangible personal
property at retail) shall have the powers, duties, and rights
specified in these ROTA provisions, as modified in this Section
or by the Illinois Department in a manner consistent with this
Article and except as manifestly inconsistent with the other
provisions of this Article:
        (1) ROTA, Section 4 (examination of return; notice of
    correction; evidence; limitations; protest and hearing),
    except that (i) the Illinois Department shall issue notices
    of assessment liability (rather than notices of tax
    liability as provided in ROTA, Section 4); (ii) in the case
    of a fraudulent return or in the case of an extended period
    agreed to by the Illinois Department and the hospital
    provider before the expiration of the limitation period, no
    notice of assessment liability shall be issued more than 3
    years after the later of the due date of the return
    required by Section 5A-5 or the date the return (or an
    amended return) was filed (rather within the period stated
    in ROTA, Section 4); and (iii) the penalty provisions of
    ROTA, Section 4 shall not apply.
        (2) ROTA, Sec. 5 (failure to make return; failure to
    pay assessment), except that the penalty and interest
    provisions of ROTA, Section 5 shall not apply.
        (3) ROTA, Section 5a (lien; attachment; termination;
    notice; protest; review; release of lien; status of lien).
        (4) ROTA, Section 5b (State lien notices; State lien
    index; duties of recorder and registrar of titles).
        (5) ROTA, Section 5c (liens; certificate of release).
        (6) ROTA, Section 5d (Department not required to
    furnish bond; claim to property attached or levied upon).
        (7) ROTA, Section 5e (foreclosure on liens;
    enforcement).
        (8) ROTA, Section 5f (demand for payment; levy and sale
    of property; limitation).
        (9) ROTA, Section 5g (sale of property; redemption).
        (10) ROTA, Section 5j (sales on transfers outside usual
    course of business; report; payment of assessment; rights
    and duties of purchaser; penalty), except that notice shall
    be provided to the Illinois Department as specified by
    rule.
        (11) ROTA, Section 6 (erroneous payments; credit or
    refund), provided that (i) the Illinois Department may only
    apply an amount otherwise subject to credit or refund to a
    liability arising under this Article; (ii) except in the
    case of an extended period agreed to by the Illinois
    Department and the hospital provider before the expiration
    of this limitation period, a claim for credit or refund
    must be filed no more than 3 years after the due date of
    the return required by Section 5A-5 (rather than the time
    limitation stated in ROTA, Section 6); and (iii) credits or
    refunds shall not bear interest.
        (12) ROTA, Section 6a (claims for credit or refund).
        (13) ROTA, Section 6b (tentative determination of
    claim; notice; hearing; review), provided that a hospital
    provider or its representative shall have 60 days (rather
    than 20 days) within which to file a protest and request
    for hearing in response to a tentative determination of
    claim.
        (14) ROTA, Section 6c (finality of tentative
    determinations).
        (15) ROTA, Section 8 (investigations and hearings).
        (16) ROTA, Section 9 (witness; immunity).
        (17) ROTA, Section 10 (issuance of subpoenas;
    attendance of witnesses; production of books and records).
        (18) ROTA, Section 11 (information confidential;
    exceptions).
        (19) ROTA, Section 12 (rules and regulations; hearing;
    appeals), except that a hospital provider shall not be
    required to file a bond or be subject to a lien in lieu
    thereof in order to seek court review under the
    Administrative Review Law of a final assessment or revised
    final assessment or the equivalent thereof issued by the
    Illinois Department under this Article.
    (b) In addition to any other remedy provided for and
without sending a notice of assessment liability, the Illinois
Department may collect an unpaid assessment by withholding, as
payment of the assessment, reimbursements or other amounts
otherwise payable by the Illinois Department to the provider.
(Source: P.A. 93-659, eff. 2-3-04.)
 
    (305 ILCS 5/5A-12)
    (Section scheduled to be repealed on July 1, 2005)
    Sec. 5A-12. Hospital access improvement payments.
    (a) To improve access to hospital services, for hospital
services rendered on or after June 1, 2004, the Department of
Public Aid shall make payments to hospitals as set forth in
this Section, except for hospitals described in subsection (b)
of Section 5A-3. These payments shall be paid on a quarterly
basis. For State fiscal year 2004, if the effective date of the
approval of the payment methodology required under this Section
and the waiver granted under 42 CFR 433.68 by the Centers for
Medicare and Medicaid Services of the U.S. Department of Health
and Human Services is prior to July 1, 2004, the Department
shall pay the total amounts required for fiscal year 2004 under
this Section within 25 days of the latest notification ; these
amounts shall be paid on or before June 15 of the year. No
payment shall be made for State fiscal year 2004 if the
effective date of the approval is on or after July 1, 2004. In
State fiscal year 2005 subsequent State fiscal years, the total
amounts required under this Section shall be paid in 4 equal
installments on or before July 15, October 15, January 14, and
April 15 of the year, except that if the date of notification
of the approval of the payment methodologies required under
this Section and the waiver granted under 42 CFR 433.68 is on
or after July 1, 2004, the sum of amounts required under this
Section prior to the date of notification shall be paid within
25 days of the date of the last notification. Payments under
this Section are not due and payable, however, until (i) the
methodologies described in this Section are approved by the
federal government in an appropriate State Plan amendment, (ii)
the assessment imposed under this Article is determined to be a
permissible tax under Title XIX of the Social Security Act, and
(iii) the assessment is in effect.
    (b) High volume payment. In addition to rates paid for
inpatient hospital services, the Department of Public Aid shall
pay, to each Illinois hospital that provided more than 20,000
Medicaid inpatient days of care during State fiscal year 2001
(except for hospitals that qualify for adjustment payments
under Section 5-5.02 for the 12-month period beginning on
October 1, 2002), $190 for each Medicaid inpatient day of care
provided during that fiscal year. A hospital that provided less
than 30,000 Medicaid inpatient days of care during that period,
however, is not entitled to receive more than $3,500,000 per
year in such payments.
    (c) Medicaid inpatient utilization rate adjustment. In
addition to rates paid for inpatient hospital services, the
Department of Public Aid shall pay each Illinois hospital
(except for hospitals described in Section 5A-3), for each
Medicaid inpatient day of care provided during State fiscal
year 2001, an amount equal to the product of $57.25 multiplied
by the quotient of 1 divided by the greater of 1.6% or the
hospital's Medicaid inpatient utilization rate (as used to
determine eligibility for adjustment payments under Section
5-5.02 for the 12-month period beginning on October 1, 2002).
The total payments under this subsection to a hospital may not
exceed $10,500,000 annually.
    (d) Psychiatric base rate adjustment.
        (1) In addition to rates paid for inpatient psychiatric
    services, the Department of Public Aid shall pay each
    Illinois general acute care hospital with a distinct
    part-psychiatric unit, for each Medicaid inpatient
    psychiatric day of care provided in State fiscal year 2001,
    an amount equal to $400 less the hospital's per-diem rate
    for Medicaid inpatient psychiatric services as in effect on
    October 1, 2003. In no event, however, shall that amount be
    less than zero.
        (2) For distinct part-psychiatric units of Illinois
    general acute care hospitals, except for all hospitals
    excluded in Section 5A-3, whose inpatient per-diem rate as
    in effect on October 1, 2003 is greater than $400, the
    Department shall pay, in addition to any other amounts
    authorized under this Code, $25 for each Medicaid inpatient
    psychiatric day of care provided in State fiscal year 2001.
    (e) Supplemental tertiary care adjustment. In addition to
rates paid for inpatient services, the Department of Public Aid
shall pay to each Illinois hospital eligible for tertiary care
adjustment payments under 89 Ill. Adm. Code 148.296, as in
effect for State fiscal year 2003, a supplemental tertiary care
adjustment payment equal to the tertiary care adjustment
payment required under 89 Ill. Adm. Code 148.296, as in effect
for State fiscal year 2003.
    (f) Medicaid outpatient utilization rate adjustment. In
addition to rates paid for outpatient hospital services, the
Department of Public Aid shall pay each Illinois hospital
(except for hospitals described in Section 5A-3), an amount
equal to the product of 2.45% multiplied by the hospital's
Medicaid outpatient charges multiplied by the quotient of 1
divided by the greater of 1.6% or the hospital's Medicaid
outpatient utilization rate. The total payments under this
subsection to a hospital may not exceed $6,750,000 annually.
    For purposes of this subsection:
    "Medicaid outpatient charges" means the charges for
outpatient services provided to Medicaid patients for State
fiscal year 2001 as submitted by the hospital on the UB-92
billing form or under the ambulatory procedure listing and
adjudicated by the Department of Public Aid on or before
September 12, 2003.
    "Medicaid outpatient utilization rate" means a fraction,
the numerator of which is the hospital's Medicaid outpatient
charges and the denominator of which is the total number of the
hospital's charges for outpatient services for the hospital's
fiscal year ending in 2001.
    (g) State outpatient service adjustment. In addition to
rates paid for outpatient hospital services, the Department of
Public Aid shall pay each Illinois hospital an amount equal to
the product of 75.5% multiplied by the hospital's Medicaid
outpatient services submitted to the Department on the UB-92
billing form for State fiscal year 2001 multiplied by the
hospital's outpatient access fraction.
    For purposes of this subsection, "outpatient access
fraction" means a fraction, the numerator of which is the
hospital's Medicaid payments for outpatient services for
ambulatory procedure listing services submitted to the
Department on the UB-92 billing form for State fiscal year
2001, and the denominator of which is the hospital's Medicaid
outpatient services submitted to the Department on the UB-92
billing form for State fiscal year 2001.
    The total payments under this subsection to a hospital may
not exceed $3,000,000 annually.
    (h) Rural hospital outpatient adjustment. In addition to
rates paid for outpatient hospital services, the Department of
Public Aid shall pay each Illinois rural hospital an amount
equal to the product of $14,500,000 multiplied by the rural
hospital outpatient adjustment fraction.
    For purposes of this subsection, "rural hospital
outpatient adjustment fraction" means a fraction, the
numerator of which is the hospital's Medicaid visits for
outpatient services for ambulatory procedure listing services
submitted to the Department on the UB-92 billing form for State
fiscal year 2001, and the denominator of which is the total
Medicaid visits for outpatient services for ambulatory
procedure listing services for all Illinois rural hospitals
submitted to the Department on the UB-92 billing form for State
fiscal year 2001.
    For purposes of this subsection, "rural hospital" has the
same meaning as in 89 Ill. Adm. Code 148.25, as in effect on
September 30, 2003.
    (i) Merged/closed hospital adjustment. If any hospital
files a combined Medicaid cost report with another hospital
after January 1, 2001, and if that hospital subsequently
closes, then except for the payments described in subsection
(e), all payments described in the various subsections of this
Section shall, before the application of the annual limitation
amount specified in each such subsection, be multiplied by a
fraction, the numerator of which is the number of occupied bed
days attributable to the open hospital and the denominator of
which is the sum of the number of occupied bed days of each
open hospital and each closed hospital. For purposes of this
subsection, "occupied bed days" has the same meaning as the
term is defined in subsection (a) of Section 5A-2.
    (j) For purposes of this Section, the terms "Medicaid
days", "Medicaid charges", and "Medicaid services" do not
include any days, charges, or services for which Medicare was
liable for payment.
    (k) As provided in Section 5A-14, this Section is repealed
on July 1, 2005.
(Source: P.A. 93-659, eff. 2-3-04.)
 
    (305 ILCS 5/12-10.7 new)
    Sec. 12-10.7. The Health and Human Services Medicaid Trust
Fund.
    (a) The Health and Human Services Medicaid Trust Fund shall
consist of (i) moneys appropriated or transferred into the
Fund, pursuant to statute, (ii) federal financial
participation moneys received pursuant to expenditures from
the Fund, and (iii) the interest earned on moneys in the Fund.
    (b) Subject to appropriation, the moneys in the Fund shall
be used by a State agency for such purposes as that agency may,
by the appropriation language, be directed.
    Section 35. The Senior Citizens and Disabled Persons
Property Tax Relief and Pharmaceutical Assistance Act is
amended by changing Section 6 as follows:
 
    (320 ILCS 25/6)  (from Ch. 67 1/2, par. 406)
    Sec. 6. Administration.
    (a) In general. Upon receipt of a timely filed claim, the
Department shall determine whether the claimant is a person
entitled to a grant under this Act and the amount of grant to
which he is entitled under this Act. The Department may require
the claimant to furnish reasonable proof of the statements of
domicile, household income, rent paid, property taxes accrued
and other matters on which entitlement is based, and may
withhold payment of a grant until such additional proof is
furnished.
    (b) Rental determination. If the Department finds that the
gross rent used in the computation by a claimant of rent
constituting property taxes accrued exceeds the fair rental
value for the right to occupy that residence, the Department
may determine the fair rental value for that residence and
recompute rent constituting property taxes accrued
accordingly.
    (c) Fraudulent claims. The Department shall deny claims
which have been fraudulently prepared or when it finds that the
claimant has acquired title to his residence or has paid rent
for his residence primarily for the purpose of receiving a
grant under this Act.
    (d) Pharmaceutical Assistance. The Department shall allow
all pharmacies licensed under the Pharmacy Practice Act of 1987
to participate as authorized pharmacies unless they have been
removed from that status for cause pursuant to the terms of
this Section. The Director of the Department may enter into a
written contract with any State agency, instrumentality or
political subdivision, or a fiscal intermediary for the purpose
of making payments to authorized pharmacies for covered
prescription drugs and coordinating the program of
pharmaceutical assistance established by this Act with other
programs that provide payment for covered prescription drugs.
Such agreement shall establish procedures for properly
contracting for pharmacy services, validating reimbursement
claims, validating compliance of dispensing pharmacists with
the contracts for participation required under this Section,
validating the reasonable costs of covered prescription drugs,
and otherwise providing for the effective administration of
this Act.
    The Department shall promulgate rules and regulations to
implement and administer the program of pharmaceutical
assistance required by this Act, which shall include the
following:
        (1) Execution of contracts with pharmacies to dispense
    covered prescription drugs. Such contracts shall stipulate
    terms and conditions for authorized pharmacies
    participation and the rights of the State to terminate such
    participation for breach of such contract or for violation
    of this Act or related rules and regulations of the
    Department;
        (2) Establishment of maximum limits on the size of
    prescriptions, new or refilled, which shall be in amounts
    sufficient for 34 days, except as otherwise specified by
    rule for medical or utilization control reasons;
        (3) Establishment of liens upon any and all causes of
    action which accrue to a beneficiary as a result of
    injuries for which covered prescription drugs are directly
    or indirectly required and for which the Director made
    payment or became liable for under this Act;
        (4) Charge or collection of payments from third parties
    or private plans of assistance, or from other programs of
    public assistance for any claim that is properly chargeable
    under the assignment of benefits executed by beneficiaries
    as a requirement of eligibility for the pharmaceutical
    assistance identification card under this Act;
        (4.5) Provision for automatic enrollment of
    beneficiaries into a Medicare Discount Card program
    authorized under the federal Medicare Modernization Act of
    2003 (P.L. 108-391) to coordinate coverage including
    Medicare Transitional Assistance;
        (5) Inspection of appropriate records and audit of
    participating authorized pharmacies to ensure contract
    compliance, and to determine any fraudulent transactions
    or practices under this Act;
        (6) Annual determination of the reasonable costs of
    covered prescription drugs for which payments are made
    under this Act, as provided in Section 3.16;
        (7) Payment to pharmacies under this Act in accordance
    with the State Prompt Payment Act.
    The Department shall annually report to the Governor and
the General Assembly by March 1st of each year on the
administration of pharmaceutical assistance under this Act. By
the effective date of this Act the Department shall determine
the reasonable costs of covered prescription drugs in
accordance with Section 3.16 of this Act.
(Source: P.A. 91-357, eff. 7-29-99; 92-651, eff. 7-11-02.)
    Section 40. The Illinois Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act is
amended by changing Section 3.14 as follows:
 
    (410 ILCS 620/3.14)  (from Ch. 56 1/2, par. 503.14)
    Sec. 3.14. Dispensing or causing to be dispensed 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. However, this Section does not
prohibit the interchange of different brands of the same
generically equivalent drug product, when the drug products are
not required to bear the legend "Caution: Federal law prohibits
dispensing without prescription", provided that the same
dosage form is dispensed and there is no greater than 1%
variance in the stated amount of each active ingredient of the
drug products. Nothing in this Section shall prohibit the
selection of different brands of the same generic drug, based
upon a drug formulary listing which is developed, maintained,
and issued by the Department of Public Health under which drug
product selection is permitted, is not subject to review at a
meeting of the Technical Advisory Council, is not subject to a
hearing in accordance with this Section, or is not specifically
prohibited. A generic drug determined to be therapeutically
equivalent by the United States Food and Drug Administration
(FDA) shall be available for substitution in Illinois in
accordance with this Act and the Pharmacy Practice Act of 1987,
provided that each manufacturer submits to the Director of the
Department of Public Health a notification containing product
technical bioequivalence information as a prerequisite to
product substitution when they have completed all required
testing to support FDA product approval and, in any event, the
information shall be submitted no later than 60 days prior to
product substitution in the State. If the Technical Advisory
Council finds that a generic drug product may have issues
related to the practice of medicine or the practice of
pharmacy, the Technical Advisory Council shall review the
generic drug product at its next regularly scheduled Technical
Advisory Council meeting. Following the Technical Advisory
Council's review and initial recommendation that a generic drug
product not be included in the Illinois Formulary, a hearing
shall be conducted in accordance with the Department's Rules of
Practice and Procedure in Administrative Hearings (77 Ill.
Admin. Code 100) and Article 10 of the Illinois Administrative
Procedure Act if requested by the manufacturer. The Technical
Advisory Council shall make its recommendation to the
Department of Public Health within 20 business days after the
public hearing. If the Department of Public Health, on the
recommendation of the Technical Advisory Council, determines
that, based upon a preponderance of the evidence, the drug is
not bioequivalent, not therapeutically equivalent, or could
cause clinically significant harm to the health or safety of
patients receiving that generic drug, the Department of Public
Health may prohibit the generic drug from substitution in the
State. A decision by the Department to prohibit a drug product
from substitution shall constitute a final administrative
decision within the meaning of Section 22.2 of the Illinois
Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act and Section 3-101 of the Code of
Civil Procedure, and shall be subject to judicial review
pursuant to the provisions of Article III of the Administrative
Review Law. A decision to prohibit a generic drug from
substitution must be accompanied by a written detailed
explanation of the basis for the decision. Determination of
products which may be selected shall be recommended by a
Technical Advisory Council of the Department, selected by the
Director of Public Health, which council shall consist of 7
persons including 2 physicians, 2 pharmacists, 2
pharmacologists and one other prescriber who have special
knowledge of generic drugs and formulary. Technical Advisory
Council members shall serve without pay, and shall be appointed
for a 3 year term and until their successors are appointed and
qualified. The procedures for operation of the Drug Product
Selection Program shall be promulgated by the Director, however
the actual list of products prohibited or approved for drug
product selection need not be promulgated. The Technical
Advisory Council shall take cognizance of federal studies, the
U.S. Pharmacopoeia - National Formulary, or other recognized
authoritative sources, and shall advise the Director of any
necessary modifications. Drug products previously approved by
the Technical Advisory Council for generic interchange may be
substituted in the State of Illinois without further review
subject to the conditions of approval in the State of Illinois
prior to the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 91st
General Assembly.
    Timely notice of revisions to the formulary shall be
furnished at no charge to all pharmacies by the Department.
Single copies of the drug formulary shall be made available at
no charge upon request to licensed prescribers, student
pharmacists, and pharmacists practicing pharmacy in this State
under a reciprocal license. The Department shall offer
subscriptions to the drug formulary and its revisions to other
interested parties at a reasonable charge to be established by
rule. Before the Department makes effective any additions to or
deletions from the procedures for operation of the Drug Product
Selection Program under this Section, the Department shall file
proposed rules to amend the procedures for operation of the
program under Section 5-40 of the Illinois Administrative
Procedure Act. The Department shall issue necessary rules and
regulations for the implementation of this Section.
(Source: P.A. 91-766, eff. 9-1-00; 92-112, eff. 7-20-01.)
    Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon
becoming law.