Public Act 094-1010
 
HB4186 Enrolled LRB094 14135 DRJ 49309 b

    AN ACT concerning children.
 
    Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
represented in the General Assembly:
 
    Section 5. The Children and Family Services Act is amended
by changing Sections 5, 25, and 35.1 and by adding Sections
5.30 and 7.5 as follows:
 
    (20 ILCS 505/5)  (from Ch. 23, par. 5005)
    Sec. 5. Direct child welfare services; Department of
Children and Family Services. To provide direct child welfare
services when not available through other public or private
child care or program facilities.
    (a) For purposes of this Section:
        (1) "Children" means persons found within the State who
    are under the age of 18 years. The term also includes
    persons under age 19 who:
            (A) were committed to the Department pursuant to
        the Juvenile Court Act or the Juvenile Court Act of
        1987, as amended, prior to the age of 18 and who
        continue under the jurisdiction of the court; or
            (B) were accepted for care, service and training by
        the Department prior to the age of 18 and whose best
        interest in the discretion of the Department would be
        served by continuing that care, service and training
        because of severe emotional disturbances, physical
        disability, social adjustment or any combination
        thereof, or because of the need to complete an
        educational or vocational training program.
        (2) "Homeless youth" means persons found within the
    State who are under the age of 19, are not in a safe and
    stable living situation and cannot be reunited with their
    families.
        (3) "Child welfare services" means public social
    services which are directed toward the accomplishment of
    the following purposes:
            (A) protecting and promoting the health, safety
        and welfare of children, including homeless, dependent
        or neglected children;
            (B) remedying, or assisting in the solution of
        problems which may result in, the neglect, abuse,
        exploitation or delinquency of children;
            (C) preventing the unnecessary separation of
        children from their families by identifying family
        problems, assisting families in resolving their
        problems, and preventing the breakup of the family
        where the prevention of child removal is desirable and
        possible when the child can be cared for at home
        without endangering the child's health and safety;
            (D) restoring to their families children who have
        been removed, by the provision of services to the child
        and the families when the child can be cared for at
        home without endangering the child's health and
        safety;
            (E) placing children in suitable adoptive homes,
        in cases where restoration to the biological family is
        not safe, possible or appropriate;
            (F) assuring safe and adequate care of children
        away from their homes, in cases where the child cannot
        be returned home or cannot be placed for adoption. At
        the time of placement, the Department shall consider
        concurrent planning, as described in subsection (l-1)
        of this Section so that permanency may occur at the
        earliest opportunity. Consideration should be given so
        that if reunification fails or is delayed, the
        placement made is the best available placement to
        provide permanency for the child;
            (G) (blank);
            (H) (blank); and
            (I) placing and maintaining children in facilities
        that provide separate living quarters for children
        under the age of 18 and for children 18 years of age
        and older, unless a child 18 years of age is in the
        last year of high school education or vocational
        training, in an approved individual or group treatment
        program, in a licensed shelter facility, or secure
        child care facility. The Department is not required to
        place or maintain children:
                (i) who are in a foster home, or
                (ii) who are persons with a developmental
            disability, as defined in the Mental Health and
            Developmental Disabilities Code, or
                (iii) who are female children who are
            pregnant, pregnant and parenting or parenting, or
                (iv) who are siblings, in facilities that
            provide separate living quarters for children 18
            years of age and older and for children under 18
            years of age.
    (b) Nothing in this Section shall be construed to authorize
the expenditure of public funds for the purpose of performing
abortions.
    (c) The Department shall establish and maintain
tax-supported child welfare services and extend and seek to
improve voluntary services throughout the State, to the end
that services and care shall be available on an equal basis
throughout the State to children requiring such services.
    (d) The Director may authorize advance disbursements for
any new program initiative to any agency contracting with the
Department. As a prerequisite for an advance disbursement, the
contractor must post a surety bond in the amount of the advance
disbursement and have a purchase of service contract approved
by the Department. The Department may pay up to 2 months
operational expenses in advance. The amount of the advance
disbursement shall be prorated over the life of the contract or
the remaining months of the fiscal year, whichever is less, and
the installment amount shall then be deducted from future
bills. Advance disbursement authorizations for new initiatives
shall not be made to any agency after that agency has operated
during 2 consecutive fiscal years. The requirements of this
Section concerning advance disbursements shall not apply with
respect to the following: payments to local public agencies for
child day care services as authorized by Section 5a of this
Act; and youth service programs receiving grant funds under
Section 17a-4.
    (e) (Blank).
    (f) (Blank).
    (g) The Department shall establish rules and regulations
concerning its operation of programs designed to meet the goals
of child safety and protection, family preservation, family
reunification, and adoption, including but not limited to:
        (1) adoption;
        (2) foster care;
        (3) family counseling;
        (4) protective services;
        (5) (blank);
        (6) homemaker service;
        (7) return of runaway children;
        (8) (blank);
        (9) placement under Section 5-7 of the Juvenile Court
    Act or Section 2-27, 3-28, 4-25 or 5-740 of the Juvenile
    Court Act of 1987 in accordance with the federal Adoption
    Assistance and Child Welfare Act of 1980; and
        (10) interstate services.
    Rules and regulations established by the Department shall
include provisions for training Department staff and the staff
of Department grantees, through contracts with other agencies
or resources, in alcohol and drug abuse screening techniques
approved by the Department of Human Services, as a successor to
the Department of Alcoholism and Substance Abuse, for the
purpose of identifying children and adults who should be
referred to an alcohol and drug abuse treatment program for
professional evaluation.
    (h) If the Department finds that there is no appropriate
program or facility within or available to the Department for a
ward and that no licensed private facility has an adequate and
appropriate program or none agrees to accept the ward, the
Department shall create an appropriate individualized,
program-oriented plan for such ward. The plan may be developed
within the Department or through purchase of services by the
Department to the extent that it is within its statutory
authority to do.
    (i) Service programs shall be available throughout the
State and shall include but not be limited to the following
services:
        (1) case management;
        (2) homemakers;
        (3) counseling;
        (4) parent education;
        (5) day care; and
        (6) emergency assistance and advocacy.
    In addition, the following services may be made available
to assess and meet the needs of children and families:
        (1) comprehensive family-based services;
        (2) assessments;
        (3) respite care; and
        (4) in-home health services.
    The Department shall provide transportation for any of the
services it makes available to children or families or for
which it refers children or families.
    (j) The Department may provide categories of financial
assistance and education assistance grants, and shall
establish rules and regulations concerning the assistance and
grants, to persons who adopt physically or mentally
handicapped, older and other hard-to-place children who (i)
immediately prior to their adoption were legal wards of the
Department or (ii) were determined eligible for financial
assistance with respect to a prior adoption and who become
available for adoption because the prior adoption has been
dissolved and the parental rights of the adoptive parents have
been terminated or because the child's adoptive parents have
died. The Department may, subject to federal financial
participation in the cost, continue to provide financial
assistance and education assistance grants for a child who was
determined eligible for financial assistance under this
subsection (j) in the interim period beginning when the child's
adoptive parents died and ending with the finalization of the
new adoption of the child by another adoptive parent or
parents. The Department may also provide categories of
financial assistance and education assistance grants, and
shall establish rules and regulations for the assistance and
grants, to persons appointed guardian of the person under
Section 5-7 of the Juvenile Court Act or Section 2-27, 3-28,
4-25 or 5-740 of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987 for children
who were wards of the Department for 12 months immediately
prior to the appointment of the guardian.
    The amount of assistance may vary, depending upon the needs
of the child and the adoptive parents, as set forth in the
annual assistance agreement. Special purpose grants are
allowed where the child requires special service but such costs
may not exceed the amounts which similar services would cost
the Department if it were to provide or secure them as guardian
of the child.
    Any financial assistance provided under this subsection is
inalienable by assignment, sale, execution, attachment,
garnishment, or any other remedy for recovery or collection of
a judgment or debt.
    (j-5) The Department shall not deny or delay the placement
of a child for adoption if an approved family is available
either outside of the Department region handling the case, or
outside of the State of Illinois.
    (k) The Department shall accept for care and training any
child who has been adjudicated neglected or abused, or
dependent committed to it pursuant to the Juvenile Court Act or
the Juvenile Court Act of 1987.
    (l) Before July 1, 2000, the Department may provide, and
beginning July 1, 2000, the Department shall offer family
preservation services, as defined in Section 8.2 of the Abused
and Neglected Child Reporting Act, to help families, including
adoptive and extended families. Family preservation services
shall be offered (i) to prevent the placement of children in
substitute care when the children can be cared for at home or
in the custody of the person responsible for the children's
welfare, (ii) to reunite children with their families, or (iii)
to maintain an adoptive placement. Family preservation
services shall only be offered when doing so will not endanger
the children's health or safety. With respect to children who
are in substitute care pursuant to the Juvenile Court Act of
1987, family preservation services shall not be offered if a
goal other than those of subdivisions (A), (B), or (B-1) of
subsection (2) of Section 2-28 of that Act has been set.
Nothing in this paragraph shall be construed to create a
private right of action or claim on the part of any individual
or child welfare agency.
    The Department shall notify the child and his family of the
Department's responsibility to offer and provide family
preservation services as identified in the service plan. The
child and his family shall be eligible for services as soon as
the report is determined to be "indicated". The Department may
offer services to any child or family with respect to whom a
report of suspected child abuse or neglect has been filed,
prior to concluding its investigation under Section 7.12 of the
Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act. However, the child's
or family's willingness to accept services shall not be
considered in the investigation. The Department may also
provide services to any child or family who is the subject of
any report of suspected child abuse or neglect or may refer
such child or family to services available from other agencies
in the community, even if the report is determined to be
unfounded, if the conditions in the child's or family's home
are reasonably likely to subject the child or family to future
reports of suspected child abuse or neglect. Acceptance of such
services shall be voluntary.
    The Department may, at its discretion except for those
children also adjudicated neglected or dependent, accept for
care and training any child who has been adjudicated addicted,
as a truant minor in need of supervision or as a minor
requiring authoritative intervention, under the Juvenile Court
Act or the Juvenile Court Act of 1987, but no such child shall
be committed to the Department by any court without the
approval of the Department. A minor charged with a criminal
offense under the Criminal Code of 1961 or adjudicated
delinquent shall not be placed in the custody of or committed
to the Department by any court, except a minor less than 13
years of age committed to the Department under Section 5-710 of
the Juvenile Court Act of 1987.
    (l-1) The legislature recognizes that the best interests of
the child require that the child be placed in the most
permanent living arrangement as soon as is practically
possible. To achieve this goal, the legislature directs the
Department of Children and Family Services to conduct
concurrent planning so that permanency may occur at the
earliest opportunity. Permanent living arrangements may
include prevention of placement of a child outside the home of
the family when the child can be cared for at home without
endangering the child's health or safety; reunification with
the family, when safe and appropriate, if temporary placement
is necessary; or movement of the child toward the most
permanent living arrangement and permanent legal status.
    When determining reasonable efforts to be made with respect
to a child, as described in this subsection, and in making such
reasonable efforts, the child's health and safety shall be the
paramount concern.
    When a child is placed in foster care, the Department shall
ensure and document that reasonable efforts were made to
prevent or eliminate the need to remove the child from the
child's home. The Department must make reasonable efforts to
reunify the family when temporary placement of the child occurs
unless otherwise required, pursuant to the Juvenile Court Act
of 1987. At any time after the dispositional hearing where the
Department believes that further reunification services would
be ineffective, it may request a finding from the court that
reasonable efforts are no longer appropriate. The Department is
not required to provide further reunification services after
such a finding.
    A decision to place a child in substitute care shall be
made with considerations of the child's health, safety, and
best interests. At the time of placement, consideration should
also be given so that if reunification fails or is delayed, the
placement made is the best available placement to provide
permanency for the child.
    The Department shall adopt rules addressing concurrent
planning for reunification and permanency. The Department
shall consider the following factors when determining
appropriateness of concurrent planning:
        (1) the likelihood of prompt reunification;
        (2) the past history of the family;
        (3) the barriers to reunification being addressed by
    the family;
        (4) the level of cooperation of the family;
        (5) the foster parents' willingness to work with the
    family to reunite;
        (6) the willingness and ability of the foster family to
    provide an adoptive home or long-term placement;
        (7) the age of the child;
        (8) placement of siblings.
    (m) The Department may assume temporary custody of any
child if:
        (1) it has received a written consent to such temporary
    custody signed by the parents of the child or by the parent
    having custody of the child if the parents are not living
    together or by the guardian or custodian of the child if
    the child is not in the custody of either parent, or
        (2) the child is found in the State and neither a
    parent, guardian nor custodian of the child can be located.
If the child is found in his or her residence without a parent,
guardian, custodian or responsible caretaker, the Department
may, instead of removing the child and assuming temporary
custody, place an authorized representative of the Department
in that residence until such time as a parent, guardian or
custodian enters the home and expresses a willingness and
apparent ability to ensure the child's health and safety and
resume permanent charge of the child, or until a relative
enters the home and is willing and able to ensure the child's
health and safety and assume charge of the child until a
parent, guardian or custodian enters the home and expresses
such willingness and ability to ensure the child's safety and
resume permanent charge. After a caretaker has remained in the
home for a period not to exceed 12 hours, the Department must
follow those procedures outlined in Section 2-9, 3-11, 4-8, or
5-415 of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987.
    The Department shall have the authority, responsibilities
and duties that a legal custodian of the child would have
pursuant to subsection (9) of Section 1-3 of the Juvenile Court
Act of 1987. Whenever a child is taken into temporary custody
pursuant to an investigation under the Abused and Neglected
Child Reporting Act, or pursuant to a referral and acceptance
under the Juvenile Court Act of 1987 of a minor in limited
custody, the Department, during the period of temporary custody
and before the child is brought before a judicial officer as
required by Section 2-9, 3-11, 4-8, or 5-415 of the Juvenile
Court Act of 1987, shall have the authority, responsibilities
and duties that a legal custodian of the child would have under
subsection (9) of Section 1-3 of the Juvenile Court Act of
1987.
    The Department shall ensure that any child taken into
custody is scheduled for an appointment for a medical
examination.
    A parent, guardian or custodian of a child in the temporary
custody of the Department who would have custody of the child
if he were not in the temporary custody of the Department may
deliver to the Department a signed request that the Department
surrender the temporary custody of the child. The Department
may retain temporary custody of the child for 10 days after the
receipt of the request, during which period the Department may
cause to be filed a petition pursuant to the Juvenile Court Act
of 1987. If a petition is so filed, the Department shall retain
temporary custody of the child until the court orders
otherwise. If a petition is not filed within the 10 day period,
the child shall be surrendered to the custody of the requesting
parent, guardian or custodian not later than the expiration of
the 10 day period, at which time the authority and duties of
the Department with respect to the temporary custody of the
child shall terminate.
    (m-1) The Department may place children under 18 years of
age in a secure child care facility licensed by the Department
that cares for children who are in need of secure living
arrangements for their health, safety, and well-being after a
determination is made by the facility director and the Director
or the Director's designate prior to admission to the facility
subject to Section 2-27.1 of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987.
This subsection (m-1) does not apply to a child who is subject
to placement in a correctional facility operated pursuant to
Section 3-15-2 of the Unified Code of Corrections, unless the
child is a ward who was placed under the care of the Department
before being subject to placement in a correctional facility
and a court of competent jurisdiction has ordered placement of
the child in a secure care facility.
    (n) The Department may place children under 18 years of age
in licensed child care facilities when in the opinion of the
Department, appropriate services aimed at family preservation
have been unsuccessful and cannot ensure the child's health and
safety or are unavailable and such placement would be for their
best interest. Payment for board, clothing, care, training and
supervision of any child placed in a licensed child care
facility may be made by the Department, by the parents or
guardians of the estates of those children, or by both the
Department and the parents or guardians, except that no
payments shall be made by the Department for any child placed
in a licensed child care facility for board, clothing, care,
training and supervision of such a child that exceed the
average per capita cost of maintaining and of caring for a
child in institutions for dependent or neglected children
operated by the Department. However, such restriction on
payments does not apply in cases where children require
specialized care and treatment for problems of severe emotional
disturbance, physical disability, social adjustment, or any
combination thereof and suitable facilities for the placement
of such children are not available at payment rates within the
limitations set forth in this Section. All reimbursements for
services delivered shall be absolutely inalienable by
assignment, sale, attachment, garnishment or otherwise.
    (o) The Department shall establish an administrative
review and appeal process for children and families who request
or receive child welfare services from the Department. Children
who are wards of the Department and are placed by private child
welfare agencies, and foster families with whom those children
are placed, shall be afforded the same procedural and appeal
rights as children and families in the case of placement by the
Department, including the right to an initial review of a
private agency decision by that agency. The Department shall
insure that any private child welfare agency, which accepts
wards of the Department for placement, affords those rights to
children and foster families. The Department shall accept for
administrative review and an appeal hearing a complaint made by
(i) a child or foster family concerning a decision following an
initial review by a private child welfare agency or (ii) a
prospective adoptive parent who alleges a violation of
subsection (j-5) of this Section. An appeal of a decision
concerning a change in the placement of a child shall be
conducted in an expedited manner.
    (p) There is hereby created the Department of Children and
Family Services Emergency Assistance Fund from which the
Department may provide special financial assistance to
families which are in economic crisis when such assistance is
not available through other public or private sources and the
assistance is deemed necessary to prevent dissolution of the
family unit or to reunite families which have been separated
due to child abuse and neglect. The Department shall establish
administrative rules specifying the criteria for determining
eligibility for and the amount and nature of assistance to be
provided. The Department may also enter into written agreements
with private and public social service agencies to provide
emergency financial services to families referred by the
Department. Special financial assistance payments shall be
available to a family no more than once during each fiscal year
and the total payments to a family may not exceed $500 during a
fiscal year.
    (q) The Department may receive and use, in their entirety,
for the benefit of children any gift, donation or bequest of
money or other property which is received on behalf of such
children, or any financial benefits to which such children are
or may become entitled while under the jurisdiction or care of
the Department.
    The Department shall set up and administer no-cost,
interest-bearing accounts in appropriate financial
institutions for children for whom the Department is legally
responsible and who have been determined eligible for Veterans'
Benefits, Social Security benefits, assistance allotments from
the armed forces, court ordered payments, parental voluntary
payments, Supplemental Security Income, Railroad Retirement
payments, Black Lung benefits, or other miscellaneous
payments. Interest earned by each account shall be credited to
the account, unless disbursed in accordance with this
subsection.
    In disbursing funds from children's accounts, the
Department shall:
        (1) Establish standards in accordance with State and
    federal laws for disbursing money from children's
    accounts. In all circumstances, the Department's
    "Guardianship Administrator" or his or her designee must
    approve disbursements from children's accounts. The
    Department shall be responsible for keeping complete
    records of all disbursements for each account for any
    purpose.
        (2) Calculate on a monthly basis the amounts paid from
    State funds for the child's board and care, medical care
    not covered under Medicaid, and social services; and
    utilize funds from the child's account, as covered by
    regulation, to reimburse those costs. Monthly,
    disbursements from all children's accounts, up to 1/12 of
    $13,000,000, shall be deposited by the Department into the
    General Revenue Fund and the balance over 1/12 of
    $13,000,000 into the DCFS Children's Services Fund.
        (3) Maintain any balance remaining after reimbursing
    for the child's costs of care, as specified in item (2).
    The balance shall accumulate in accordance with relevant
    State and federal laws and shall be disbursed to the child
    or his or her guardian, or to the issuing agency.
    (r) The Department shall promulgate regulations
encouraging all adoption agencies to voluntarily forward to the
Department or its agent names and addresses of all persons who
have applied for and have been approved for adoption of a
hard-to-place or handicapped child and the names of such
children who have not been placed for adoption. A list of such
names and addresses shall be maintained by the Department or
its agent, and coded lists which maintain the confidentiality
of the person seeking to adopt the child and of the child shall
be made available, without charge, to every adoption agency in
the State to assist the agencies in placing such children for
adoption. The Department may delegate to an agent its duty to
maintain and make available such lists. The Department shall
ensure that such agent maintains the confidentiality of the
person seeking to adopt the child and of the child.
    (s) The Department of Children and Family Services may
establish and implement a program to reimburse Department and
private child welfare agency foster parents licensed by the
Department of Children and Family Services for damages
sustained by the foster parents as a result of the malicious or
negligent acts of foster children, as well as providing third
party coverage for such foster parents with regard to actions
of foster children to other individuals. Such coverage will be
secondary to the foster parent liability insurance policy, if
applicable. The program shall be funded through appropriations
from the General Revenue Fund, specifically designated for such
purposes.
    (t) The Department shall perform home studies and
investigations and shall exercise supervision over visitation
as ordered by a court pursuant to the Illinois Marriage and
Dissolution of Marriage Act or the Adoption Act only if:
        (1) an order entered by an Illinois court specifically
    directs the Department to perform such services; and
        (2) the court has ordered one or both of the parties to
    the proceeding to reimburse the Department for its
    reasonable costs for providing such services in accordance
    with Department rules, or has determined that neither party
    is financially able to pay.
    The Department shall provide written notification to the
court of the specific arrangements for supervised visitation
and projected monthly costs within 60 days of the court order.
The Department shall send to the court information related to
the costs incurred except in cases where the court has
determined the parties are financially unable to pay. The court
may order additional periodic reports as appropriate.
    (u) In addition to other information that must be provided,
whenever Whenever the Department places a child with a
prospective adoptive parent or parents or in a licensed foster
home, group home, child care institution, or in a relative
home, the Department shall provide to the prospective adoptive
parent or parents or other caretaker:
        (1) available detailed information concerning the
    child's educational and health history, copies of
    immunization records (including insurance and medical card
    information), a history of the child's previous
    placements, if any, and reasons for placement changes
    excluding any information that identifies or reveals the
    location of any previous caretaker;
        (2) a copy of the child's portion of the client service
    plan, including any visitation arrangement, and all
    amendments or revisions to it as related to the child; and
        (3) information containing details of the child's
    individualized educational plan when the child is
    receiving special education services.
    The caretaker shall be informed of any known social or
behavioral information (including, but not limited to,
criminal background, fire setting, perpetuation of sexual
abuse, destructive behavior, and substance abuse) necessary to
care for and safeguard the children to be placed or currently
in the home child. The Department may prepare a written summary
of the information required by this paragraph, which may be
provided to the foster or prospective adoptive parent in
advance of a placement. The foster or prospective adoptive
parent may review the supporting documents in the child's file
in the presence of casework staff. In the case of an emergency
placement, casework staff shall at least provide known
information verbally, if necessary, and must subsequently
provide the information in writing as required by this
subsection.
    The information described in this subsection shall be
provided in writing. In the case of emergency placements when
time does not allow prior review, preparation, and collection
of written information, the Department shall provide such
information as it becomes available. Within 10 business days
after placement, the Department shall obtain from the
prospective adoptive parent or parents or other caretaker a
signed verification of receipt of the information provided.
Within 10 business days after placement, the Department shall
provide to the child's guardian ad litem a copy of the
information provided to the prospective adoptive parent or
parents or other caretaker. The information provided to the
prospective adoptive parent or parents or other caretaker shall
be reviewed and approved regarding accuracy at the supervisory
level.
    (u-5) Effective July 1, 1995, only foster care placements
licensed as foster family homes pursuant to the Child Care Act
of 1969 shall be eligible to receive foster care payments from
the Department. Relative caregivers who, as of July 1, 1995,
were approved pursuant to approved relative placement rules
previously promulgated by the Department at 89 Ill. Adm. Code
335 and had submitted an application for licensure as a foster
family home may continue to receive foster care payments only
until the Department determines that they may be licensed as a
foster family home or that their application for licensure is
denied or until September 30, 1995, whichever occurs first.
    (v) The Department shall access criminal history record
information as defined in the Illinois Uniform Conviction
Information Act and information maintained in the adjudicatory
and dispositional record system as defined in Section 2605-355
of the Department of State Police Law (20 ILCS 2605/2605-355)
if the Department determines the information is necessary to
perform its duties under the Abused and Neglected Child
Reporting Act, the Child Care Act of 1969, and the Children and
Family Services Act. The Department shall provide for
interactive computerized communication and processing
equipment that permits direct on-line communication with the
Department of State Police's central criminal history data
repository. The Department shall comply with all certification
requirements and provide certified operators who have been
trained by personnel from the Department of State Police. In
addition, one Office of the Inspector General investigator
shall have training in the use of the criminal history
information access system and have access to the terminal. The
Department of Children and Family Services and its employees
shall abide by rules and regulations established by the
Department of State Police relating to the access and
dissemination of this information.
    (w) Within 120 days of August 20, 1995 (the effective date
of Public Act 89-392), the Department shall prepare and submit
to the Governor and the General Assembly, a written plan for
the development of in-state licensed secure child care
facilities that care for children who are in need of secure
living arrangements for their health, safety, and well-being.
For purposes of this subsection, secure care facility shall
mean a facility that is designed and operated to ensure that
all entrances and exits from the facility, a building or a
distinct part of the building, are under the exclusive control
of the staff of the facility, whether or not the child has the
freedom of movement within the perimeter of the facility,
building, or distinct part of the building. The plan shall
include descriptions of the types of facilities that are needed
in Illinois; the cost of developing these secure care
facilities; the estimated number of placements; the potential
cost savings resulting from the movement of children currently
out-of-state who are projected to be returned to Illinois; the
necessary geographic distribution of these facilities in
Illinois; and a proposed timetable for development of such
facilities.
(Source: P.A. 94-215, eff. 1-1-06.)
 
    (20 ILCS 505/5.30 new)
    Sec. 5.30. Specialized care.
    (a) Not later than July 1, 2007, the Department shall adopt
a rule, or an amendment to a rule then in effect, regarding the
provision of specialized care to a child in the custody or
guardianship of the Department, or to a child being placed in a
subsidized guardianship arrangement or under an adoption
assistance agreement, who requires such services due to
emotional, behavioral, developmental, or medical needs, or any
combination thereof, or any other needs which require special
intervention services, the primary goal being to maintain the
child in foster care or in a permanency setting. The rule or
amendment to a rule shall establish, at a minimum, the
criteria, standards, and procedures for the following:
        (1) The determination that a child requires
    specialization.
        (2) The determination of the level of care required to
    meet the child's special needs.
        (3) The approval of a plan of care that will meet the
    child's special needs.
        (4) The monitoring of the specialized care provided to
    the child and review of the plan to ensure quality of care
    and effectiveness in meeting the child's needs.
        (5) The determination, approval, and implementation of
    amendments to the plan of care.
        (6) The establishment and maintenance of the
    qualifications, including specialized training, of
    caretakers of specialized children.
    The rule or amendment to a rule adopted under this
subsection shall establish the minimum services to be provided
to children eligible for specialized care under this Section.
The Department shall also adopt rules providing for the
training of Department and public or private agency staff
involved in implementing the rule. On or before September 1 of
2007 and each year thereafter, the Department shall submit to
the General Assembly an annual report on the implementation of
this Section.
    (b) No payments to caregivers in effect for the specialized
treatment or care of a child, nor the level of care being
provided to a child prior to the effective date of this
amendatory Act of the 94th General Assembly, shall be reduced
under the criteria, standards, and procedures adopted and
implemented under this Section.
 
    (20 ILCS 505/7.5 new)
    Sec. 7.5. Notice of post-adoption reunion services.
    (a) For purposes of this Section, "post-adoption reunion
services" means services provided by the Department to
facilitate contact between adoptees and their siblings when one
or more is still in the Department's care or adopted elsewhere,
with the notarized consent of the adoptive parents of a minor
child, when such contact has been established to be necessary
to the adoptee's best interests and when all involved parties,
including the adoptive parent of a child under 21 years of age,
have provided written consent for such contact.
    (b) The Department shall provide to all adoptive parents of
children receiving monthly adoption assistance under
subsection (j) of Section 5 of this Act a notice that includes
a description of the Department's post-adoption reunion
services and an explanation of how to access those services.
The notice to adoptive parents shall be provided at least once
per year until such time as the adoption assistance payments
cease.
    The Department shall also provide to all wards of the
Department, within 30 days after their 18th birthday, the
notice described in this Section.
    (c) The Department shall adopt a rule regarding the
provision of search and reunion services to wards and former
wards.
 
    (20 ILCS 505/25)  (from Ch. 23, par. 5025)
    Sec. 25. Grants, gifts, or legacies; Putative Father
Registry fees.
    (a) To accept and hold in behalf of the State, if for the
public interest, a grant, gift or legacy of money or property
to the State of Illinois, to the Department, or to any
institution or program of the Department made in trust for the
maintenance or support of a resident of an institution of the
Department, or for any other legitimate purpose connected with
such institution or program. The Department shall cause each
gift, grant or legacy to be kept as a distinct fund, and shall
invest the same in the manner provided by the laws of this
State as the same now exist, or shall hereafter be enacted,
relating to securities in which the deposit in savings banks
may be invested. But the Department may, in its discretion,
deposit in a proper trust company or savings bank, during the
continuance of the trust, any fund so left in trust for the
life of a person, and shall adopt rules and regulations
governing the deposit, transfer, or withdrawal of such fund.
The Department shall on the expiration of any trust as provided
in any instrument creating the same, dispose of the fund
thereby created in the manner provided in such instrument. The
Department shall include in its required reports a statement
showing what funds are so held by it and the condition thereof.
Monies found on residents at the time of their admission, or
accruing to them during their period of institutional care, and
monies deposited with the superintendents by relatives,
guardians or friends of residents for the special comfort and
pleasure of such resident, shall remain in the custody of such
superintendents who shall act as trustees for disbursement to,
in behalf of, or for the benefit of such resident. All types of
retirement and pension benefits from private and public sources
may be paid directly to the superintendent of the institution
where the person is a resident, for deposit to the resident's
trust fund account.
    (b) The Department shall hold all Putative Father Registry
fees collected under Section 12.1 of the Adoption Act in a
distinct fund for the Department's use in maintaining the
Putative Father Registry. The Department shall invest the
moneys in the fund in the same manner as moneys in the funds
described in subsection (a) and shall include in its required
reports a statement showing the condition of the fund.
(Source: P.A. 83-1362.)
 
    (20 ILCS 505/35.1)  (from Ch. 23, par. 5035.1)
    Sec. 35.1. The case and clinical records of patients in
Department supervised facilities, wards of the Department,
children receiving or applying for child welfare services,
persons receiving or applying for other services of the
Department, and Department reports of injury or abuse to
children shall not be open to the general public. Such case and
clinical records and reports or the information contained
therein shall be disclosed by the Director of the Department to
juvenile authorities when necessary for the discharge of their
official duties who request information concerning the minor
and who certify in writing that the information will not be
disclosed to any other party except as provided under law or
order of court. For purposes of this Section, "juvenile
authorities" means: (i) a judge of the circuit court and
members of the staff of the court designated by the judge; (ii)
parties to the proceedings under the Juvenile Court Act of 1987
and their attorneys; (iii) probation officers and court
appointed advocates for the juvenile authorized by the judge
hearing the case; (iv) any individual, public or private agency
having custody of the child pursuant to court order or pursuant
to placement of the child by the Department; (v) any
individual, public or private agency providing education,
medical or mental health service to the child when the
requested information is needed to determine the appropriate
service or treatment for the minor; (vi) any potential
placement provider when such release is authorized by the court
for the limited purpose of determining the appropriateness of
the potential placement; (vii) law enforcement officers and
prosecutors; (viii) adult and juvenile prisoner review boards;
(ix) authorized military personnel; (x) individuals authorized
by court; (xi) the Illinois General Assembly or any committee
or commission thereof. This Section does not apply to the
Department's fiscal records, other records of a purely
administrative nature, or any forms, documents or other records
required of facilities subject to licensure by the Department
except as may otherwise be provided under the Child Care Act of
1969.
    Nothing contained in this Act prevents the sharing or
disclosure of information or records relating or pertaining to
juveniles subject to the provisions of the Serious Habitual
Offender Comprehensive Action Program when that information is
used to assist in the early identification and treatment of
habitual juvenile offenders.
    Nothing contained in this Act prevents the sharing or
disclosure of information or records relating or pertaining to
the death of a minor under the care of or receiving services
from the Department and under the jurisdiction of the juvenile
court with the juvenile court, the State's Attorney, and the
minor's attorney.
    Nothing contained in this Section prohibits or prevents any
individual dealing with or providing services to a minor from
sharing information with another individual dealing with or
providing services to a minor for the purpose of coordinating
efforts on behalf of the minor. The sharing of such information
is only for the purpose stated herein and is to be consistent
with the intent and purpose of the confidentiality provisions
of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987. This provision does not
abrogate any recognized privilege. Sharing information does
not include copying of records, reports or case files unless
authorized herein.
    Nothing in this Section prohibits or prevents the
re-disclosure of records, reports, or other information that
reveals malfeasance or nonfeasance on the part of the
Department, its employees, or its agents. Nothing in this
Section prohibits or prevents the Department or a party in a
proceeding under the Juvenile Court Act of 1987 from copying
records, reports, or case files for the purpose of sharing
those documents with other parties to the litigation.
(Source: P.A. 90-15, eff. 6-13-97; 90-590, eff. 1-1-00; 91-812,
eff. 6-13-00.)
 
    Section 10. The Foster Parent Law is amended by changing
Section 1-15 as follows:
 
    (20 ILCS 520/1-15)
    Sec. 1-15. Foster parent rights. A foster parent's rights
include, but are not limited to, the following:
        (1) The right to be treated with dignity, respect, and
    consideration as a professional member of the child welfare
    team.
        (2) The right to be given standardized pre-service
    training and appropriate ongoing training to meet mutually
    assessed needs and improve the foster parent's skills.
        (3) The right to be informed as to how to contact the
    appropriate child placement agency in order to receive
    information and assistance to access supportive services
    for children in the foster parent's care.
        (4) The right to receive timely financial
    reimbursement commensurate with the care needs of the child
    as specified in the service plan.
        (5) The right to be provided a clear, written
    understanding of a placement agency's plan concerning the
    placement of a child in the foster parent's home. Inherent
    in this right is the foster parent's responsibility to
    support activities that will promote the child's right to
    relationships with his or her own family and cultural
    heritage.
        (6) The right to be provided a fair, timely, and
    impartial investigation of complaints concerning the
    foster parent's licensure, to be provided the opportunity
    to have a person of the foster parent's choosing present
    during the investigation, and to be provided due process
    during the investigation; the right to be provided the
    opportunity to request and receive mediation or an
    administrative review of decisions that affect licensing
    parameters, or both mediation and an administrative
    review; and the right to have decisions concerning a
    licensing corrective action plan specifically explained
    and tied to the licensing standards violated.
        (7) The right, at any time during which a child is
    placed with the foster parent, to receive additional or
    necessary information that is relevant to the care of the
    child.
        (7.5) The right to be given information concerning a
    child (i) from the Department as required under subsection
    (u) of Section 5 of the Children and Family Services Act
    and (ii) from a child welfare agency as required under
    subsection (c-5) of Section 7.4 of the Child Care Act of
    1969.
        (8) The right to be notified of scheduled meetings and
    staffings concerning the foster child in order to actively
    participate in the case planning and decision-making
    process regarding the child, including individual service
    planning meetings, administrative case reviews,
    interdisciplinary staffings, and individual educational
    planning meetings; the right to be informed of decisions
    made by the courts or the child welfare agency concerning
    the child; the right to provide input concerning the plan
    of services for the child and to have that input given full
    consideration in the same manner as information presented
    by any other professional on the team; and the right to
    communicate with other professionals who work with the
    foster child within the context of the team, including
    therapists, physicians, and teachers.
        (9) The right to be given, in a timely and consistent
    manner, any information a case worker has regarding the
    child and the child's family which is pertinent to the care
    and needs of the child and to the making of a permanency
    plan for the child. Disclosure of information concerning
    the child's family shall be limited to that information
    that is essential for understanding the needs of and
    providing care to the child in order to protect the rights
    of the child's family. When a positive relationship exists
    between the foster parent and the child's family, the
    child's family may consent to disclosure of additional
    information.
        (10) The right to be given reasonable written notice of
    (i) any change in a child's case plan, (ii) plans to
    terminate the placement of the child with the foster
    parent, and (iii) the reasons for the change or termination
    in placement. The notice shall be waived only in cases of a
    court order or when the child is determined to be at
    imminent risk of harm.
        (11) The right to be notified in a timely and complete
    manner of all court hearings, including notice of the date
    and time of the court hearing, the name of the judge or
    hearing officer hearing the case, the location of the
    hearing, and the court docket number of the case; and the
    right to intervene in court proceedings or to seek mandamus
    under the Juvenile Court Act of 1987.
        (12) The right to be considered as a placement option
    when a foster child who was formerly placed with the foster
    parent is to be re-entered into foster care, if that
    placement is consistent with the best interest of the child
    and other children in the foster parent's home.
        (13) The right to have timely access to the child
    placement agency's existing appeals process and the right
    to be free from acts of harassment and retaliation by any
    other party when exercising the right to appeal.
        (14) The right to be informed of the Foster Parent
    Hotline established under Section 35.6 of the Children and
    Family Services Act and all of the rights accorded to
    foster parents concerning reports of misconduct by
    Department employees, service providers, or contractors,
    confidential handling of those reports, and investigation
    by the Inspector General appointed under Section 35.5 of
    the Children and Family Services Act.
(Source: P.A. 89-19, eff. 6-3-95.)
 
    Section 15. The Child Care Act of 1969 is amended by
changing Sections 7.4, 8, and 15 as follows:
 
    (225 ILCS 10/7.4)
    Sec. 7.4. Disclosures.
    (a) Every child welfare agency providing adoption services
and licensed by the Department shall provide to all prospective
clients and to the public written disclosures with respect to
its adoption services, policies, and practices, including
general eligibility criteria, fees, and the mutual rights and
responsibilities of clients, including biological parents and
adoptive parents. The written disclosure shall be posted on any
website maintained by the child welfare agency that relates to
adoption services. The Department shall adopt rules relating to
the contents of the written disclosures. Eligible agencies may
be deemed compliant with this subsection (a).
    (b) Every licensed child welfare agency providing adoption
services shall provide to all applicants, prior to application,
a written schedule of estimated fees, expenses, and refund
policies. Every child welfare agency providing adoption
services shall have a written policy that shall be part of its
standard adoption contract and state that it will not charge
additional fees and expenses beyond those disclosed in the
adoption contract unless additional fees are reasonably
required by the circumstances and are disclosed to the adoptive
parents or parent before they are incurred. The Department
shall adopt rules relating to the contents of the written
schedule and policy. Eligible agencies may be deemed compliant
with this subsection (b).
    (c) Every licensed child welfare agency providing adoption
services must make full and fair disclosure to its clients,
including biological parents and adoptive parents, of all
circumstances material to the placement of a child for
adoption. The Department shall adopt rules necessary for the
implementation and regulation of the requirements of this
subsection (c).
    (c-5) Whenever a licensed child welfare agency places a
child in a licensed foster family home, the agency shall
provide the following to the caretaker:
        (1) Available detailed information concerning the
    child's educational and health history, copies of
    immunization records (including insurance and medical card
    information), a history of the child's previous
    placements, if any, and reasons for placement changes,
    excluding any information that identifies or reveals the
    location of any previous caretaker.
        (2) A copy of the child's portion of the client service
    plan, including any visitation arrangement, and all
    amendments or revisions to it as related to the child.
        (3) Information containing details of the child's
    individualized educational plan when the child is
    receiving special education services.
        (4) Any known social or behavioral information
    (including, but not limited to, criminal background, fire
    setting, perpetration of sexual abuse, destructive
    behavior, and substance abuse) necessary to care for and
    safeguard the child.
    The agency may prepare a written summary of the information
required by this subsection, which may be provided to the
foster or prospective adoptive parent in advance of a
placement. The foster or prospective adoptive parent may review
the supporting documents in the child's file in the presence of
casework staff. In the case of an emergency placement, casework
staff shall at least provide information verbally, if
necessary, and must subsequently provide the information in
writing as required by this subsection. In the case of
emergency placements when time does not allow prior review,
preparation, and collection of written information, the agency
shall provide such information as it becomes available.
    The Department shall adopt rules necessary for the
implementation and regulation of the requirements of this
subsection (c-5).
    (d) Every licensed child welfare agency providing adoption
services shall meet minimum standards set forth by the
Department concerning the taking or acknowledging of a consent
prior to taking or acknowledging a consent from a prospective
biological parent. The Department shall adopt rules concerning
the minimum standards required by agencies under this Section.
(Source: P.A. 94-586, eff. 8-15-05.)
 
    (225 ILCS 10/8)  (from Ch. 23, par. 2218)
    Sec. 8. The Department may revoke or refuse to renew the
license of any child care facility or child welfare agency or
refuse to issue full license to the holder of a permit should
the licensee or holder of a permit:
        (1) fail to maintain standards prescribed and
    published by the Department;
        (2) violate any of the provisions of the license
    issued;
        (3) furnish or make any misleading or any false
    statement or report to the Department;
        (4) refuse to submit to the Department any reports or
    refuse to make available to the Department any records
    required by the Department in making investigation of the
    facility for licensing purposes;
        (5) fail or refuse to submit to an investigation by the
    Department;
        (6) fail or refuse to admit authorized representatives
    of the Department at any reasonable time for the purpose of
    investigation;
        (7) fail to provide, maintain, equip and keep in safe
    and sanitary condition premises established or used for
    child care as required under standards prescribed by the
    Department, or as otherwise required by any law, regulation
    or ordinance applicable to the location of such facility;
        (8) refuse to display its license or permit;
        (9) be the subject of an indicated report under Section
    3 of the Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act or fail
    to discharge or sever affiliation with the child care
    facility of an employee or volunteer at the facility with
    direct contact with children who is the subject of an
    indicated report under Section 3 of that Act;
        (10) fail to comply with the provisions of Section 7.1;
        (11) fail to exercise reasonable care in the hiring,
    training and supervision of facility personnel;
        (12) fail to report suspected abuse or neglect of
    children within the facility, as required by the Abused and
    Neglected Child Reporting Act;
        (12.5) fail to comply with subsection (c-5) of Section
    7.4;
        (13) fail to comply with Section 5.1 or 5.2 of this
    Act; or
        (14) be identified in an investigation by the
    Department as an addict or alcoholic, as defined in the
    Alcoholism and Other Drug Abuse and Dependency Act, or be a
    person whom the Department knows has abused alcohol or
    drugs, and has not successfully participated in treatment,
    self-help groups or other suitable activities, and the
    Department determines that because of such abuse the
    licensee, holder of the permit, or any other person
    directly responsible for the care and welfare of the
    children served, does not comply with standards relating to
    character, suitability or other qualifications established
    under Section 7 of this Act.
(Source: P.A. 94-586, eff. 8-15-05.)
 
    (225 ILCS 10/15)  (from Ch. 23, par. 2225)
    Sec. 15. Every child care facility must keep and maintain
such records as the Department may prescribe pertaining to the
admission, progress, health and discharge of children under the
care of the facility and shall report relative thereto to the
Department whenever called for, upon forms prescribed by the
Department. All records regarding children and all facts
learned about children and their relatives must be kept
confidential both by the child care facility and by the
Department.
    Nothing contained in this Act prevents the sharing or
disclosure of information or records relating or pertaining to
juveniles subject to the provisions of the Serious Habitual
Offender Comprehensive Action Program when that information is
used to assist in the early identification and treatment of
habitual juvenile offenders.
    Nothing contained in this Act prevents the disclosure of
information or records by a licensed child welfare agency as
required under subsection (c-5) of Section 7.4.
(Source: P.A. 87-928.)
 
    Section 20. The Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act is
amended by changing Section 11.1 as follows:
 
    (325 ILCS 5/11.1)  (from Ch. 23, par. 2061.1)
    Sec. 11.1. Access to records.
    (a) A person shall have access to the records described in
Section 11 only in furtherance of purposes directly connected
with the administration of this Act or the Intergovernmental
Missing Child Recovery Act of 1984. Those persons and purposes
for access include:
        (1) Department staff in the furtherance of their
    responsibilities under this Act, or for the purpose of
    completing background investigations on persons or
    agencies licensed by the Department or with whom the
    Department contracts for the provision of child welfare
    services.
        (2) A law enforcement agency investigating known or
    suspected child abuse or neglect, known or suspected
    involvement with child pornography, known or suspected
    criminal sexual assault, known or suspected criminal
    sexual abuse, or any other sexual offense when a child is
    alleged to be involved.
        (3) The Department of State Police when administering
    the provisions of the Intergovernmental Missing Child
    Recovery Act of 1984.
        (4) A physician who has before him a child whom he
    reasonably suspects may be abused or neglected.
        (5) A person authorized under Section 5 of this Act to
    place a child in temporary protective custody when such
    person requires the information in the report or record to
    determine whether to place the child in temporary
    protective custody.
        (6) A person having the legal responsibility or
    authorization to care for, treat, or supervise a child, or
    a parent, prospective adoptive parent, foster parent,
    guardian, or other person responsible for the child's
    welfare, who is the subject of a report.
        (7) Except in regard to harmful or detrimental
    information as provided in Section 7.19, any subject of the
    report, and if the subject of the report is a minor, his
    guardian or guardian ad litem.
        (8) A court, upon its finding that access to such
    records may be necessary for the determination of an issue
    before such court; however, such access shall be limited to
    in camera inspection, unless the court determines that
    public disclosure of the information contained therein is
    necessary for the resolution of an issue then pending
    before it.
        (8.1) A probation officer or other authorized
    representative of a probation or court services department
    conducting an investigation ordered by a court under the
    Juvenile Court Act of l987.
        (9) A grand jury, upon its determination that access to
    such records is necessary in the conduct of its official
    business.
        (10) Any person authorized by the Director, in writing,
    for audit or bona fide research purposes.
        (11) Law enforcement agencies, coroners or medical
    examiners, physicians, courts, school superintendents and
    child welfare agencies in other states who are responsible
    for child abuse or neglect investigations or background
    investigations.
        (12) The Department of Professional Regulation, the
    State Board of Education and school superintendents in
    Illinois, who may use or disclose information from the
    records as they deem necessary to conduct investigations or
    take disciplinary action, as provided by law.
        (13) A coroner or medical examiner who has reason to
    believe that a child has died as the result of abuse or
    neglect.
        (14) The Director of a State-operated facility when an
    employee of that facility is the perpetrator in an
    indicated report.
        (15) The operator of a licensed child care facility or
    a facility licensed by the Department of Human Services (as
    successor to the Department of Alcoholism and Substance
    Abuse) in which children reside when a current or
    prospective employee of that facility is the perpetrator in
    an indicated child abuse or neglect report, pursuant to
    Section 4.3 of the Child Care Act of 1969.
        (16) Members of a multidisciplinary team in the
    furtherance of its responsibilities under subsection (b)
    of Section 7.1. All reports concerning child abuse and
    neglect made available to members of such
    multidisciplinary teams and all records generated as a
    result of such reports shall be confidential and shall not
    be disclosed, except as specifically authorized by this Act
    or other applicable law. It is a Class A misdemeanor to
    permit, assist or encourage the unauthorized release of any
    information contained in such reports or records. Nothing
    contained in this Section prevents the sharing of reports
    or records relating or pertaining to the death of a minor
    under the care of or receiving services from the Department
    of Children and Family Services and under the jurisdiction
    of the juvenile court with the juvenile court, the State's
    Attorney, and the minor's attorney.
        (17) The Department of Human Services, as provided in
    Section 17 of the Disabled Persons Rehabilitation Act.
        (18) Any other agency or investigative body, including
    the Department of Public Health and a local board of
    health, authorized by State law to conduct an investigation
    into the quality of care provided to children in hospitals
    and other State regulated care facilities. The access to
    and release of information from such records shall be
    subject to the approval of the Director of the Department
    or his designee.
        (19) The person appointed, under Section 2-17 of the
    Juvenile Court Act of 1987, as the guardian ad litem of a
    minor who is the subject of a report or records under this
    Act.
        (20) The Department of Human Services, as provided in
    Section 10 of the Early Intervention Services System Act,
    and the operator of a facility providing early intervention
    services pursuant to that Act, for the purpose of
    determining whether a current or prospective employee who
    provides or may provide direct services under that Act is
    the perpetrator in an indicated report of child abuse or
    neglect filed under this Act.
    (b) Nothing contained in this Act prevents the sharing or
disclosure of information or records relating or pertaining to
juveniles subject to the provisions of the Serious Habitual
Offender Comprehensive Action Program when that information is
used to assist in the early identification and treatment of
habitual juvenile offenders.
    (c) To the extent that persons or agencies are given access
to information pursuant to this Section, those persons or
agencies may give this information to and receive this
information from each other in order to facilitate an
investigation conducted by those persons or agencies.
(Source: P.A. 93-147, eff. 1-1-04.)
 
    Section 25. The Mental Health and Developmental
Disabilities Confidentiality Act is amended by changing
Section 11 as follows:
 
    (740 ILCS 110/11)  (from Ch. 91 1/2, par. 811)
    Sec. 11. Disclosure of records and communications. Records
and communications may be disclosed:
        (i) in accordance with the provisions of the Abused and
    Neglected Child Reporting Act, subsection (u) of Section 5
    of the Children and Family Services Act, or Section 7.4 of
    the Child Care Act of 1969;
        (ii) when, and to the extent, a therapist, in his or
    her sole discretion, determines that disclosure is
    necessary to initiate or continue civil commitment
    proceedings under the laws of this State or to otherwise
    protect the recipient or other person against a clear,
    imminent risk of serious physical or mental injury or
    disease or death being inflicted upon the recipient or by
    the recipient on himself or another;
        (iii) when, and to the extent disclosure is, in the
    sole discretion of the therapist, necessary to the
    provision of emergency medical care to a recipient who is
    unable to assert or waive his or her rights hereunder;
        (iv) when disclosure is necessary to collect sums or
    receive third party payment representing charges for
    mental health or developmental disabilities services
    provided by a therapist or agency to a recipient under
    Chapter V of the Mental Health and Developmental
    Disabilities Code or to transfer debts under the
    Uncollected State Claims Act; however, disclosure shall be
    limited to information needed to pursue collection, and the
    information so disclosed shall not be used for any other
    purposes nor shall it be redisclosed except in connection
    with collection activities;
        (v) when requested by a family member, the Department
    of Human Services may assist in the location of the
    interment site of a deceased recipient who is interred in a
    cemetery established under Section 100-26 of the Mental
    Health and Developmental Disabilities Administrative Act;
        (vi) in judicial proceedings under Article VIII of
    Chapter III and Article V of Chapter IV of the Mental
    Health and Developmental Disabilities Code and proceedings
    and investigations preliminary thereto, to the State's
    Attorney for the county or residence of a person who is the
    subject of such proceedings, or in which the person is
    found, or in which the facility is located, to the attorney
    representing the recipient in the judicial proceedings, to
    any person or agency providing mental health services that
    are the subject of the proceedings and to that person's or
    agency's attorney, to any court personnel, including but
    not limited to judges and circuit court clerks, and to a
    guardian ad litem if one has been appointed by the court,
    provided that the information so disclosed shall not be
    utilized for any other purpose nor be redisclosed except in
    connection with the proceedings or investigations;
        (vii) when, and to the extent disclosure is necessary
    to comply with the requirements of the Census Bureau in
    taking the federal Decennial Census;
        (viii) when, and to the extent, in the therapist's sole
    discretion, disclosure is necessary to warn or protect a
    specific individual against whom a recipient has made a
    specific threat of violence where there exists a
    therapist-recipient relationship or a special
    recipient-individual relationship;
        (ix) in accordance with the Sex Offender Registration
    Act; and
        (x) in accordance with the Rights of Crime Victims and
    Witnesses Act.
    Any person, institution, or agency, under this Act,
participating in good faith in the making of a report under the
Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act or in the disclosure
of records and communications under this Section, shall have
immunity from any liability, civil, criminal or otherwise, that
might result by reason of such action. For the purpose of any
proceeding, civil or criminal, arising out of a report or
disclosure under this Section, the good faith of any person,
institution, or agency so reporting or disclosing shall be
presumed.
(Source: P.A. 90-423, eff. 8-15-97; 90-538, eff. 12-1-97;
90-655, eff. 7-30-98; 91-357, eff. 7-29-99.)
 
    Section 30. The Adoption Act is amended by changing
Sections 12.1 and 18.3a as follows:
 
    (750 ILCS 50/12.1)
    Sec. 12.1. Putative Father Registry. The Department of
Children and Family Services shall establish a Putative Father
Registry for the purpose of determining the identity and
location of a putative father of a minor child who is, or is
expected to be, the subject of an adoption proceeding, in order
to provide notice of such proceeding to the putative father.
The Department of Children and Family Services shall establish
rules and informational material necessary to implement the
provisions of this Section. The Department shall have the
authority to set reasonable fees for the use of the Registry.
All such fees for the use of the Registry that are received by
the Department or its agent shall be deposited into the fund
authorized under subsection (b) of Section 25 of the Children
and Family Services Act. The Department shall use the moneys in
that fund for the purpose of maintaining the Registry.
    (a) The Department shall maintain the following
information in the Registry:
        (1) With respect to the putative father:
            (i) Name, including any other names by which the
        putative father may be known and that he may provide to
        the Registry;
            (ii) Address at which he may be served with notice
        of a petition under this Act, including any change of
        address;
            (iii) Social Security Number;
            (iv) Date of birth; and
            (v) If applicable, a certified copy of an order by
        a court of this State or of another state or territory
        of the United States adjudicating the putative father
        to be the father of the child.
        (2) With respect to the mother of the child:
            (i) Name, including all other names known to the
        putative father by which the mother may be known;
            (ii) If known to the putative father, her last
        address;
            (iii) Social Security Number; and
            (iv) Date of birth.
        (3) If known to the putative father, the name, gender,
    place of birth, and date of birth or anticipated date of
    birth of the child.
        (4) The date that the Department received the putative
    father's registration.
        (5) Other information as the Department may by rule
    determine necessary for the orderly administration of the
    Registry.
    (b) A putative father may register with the Department
before the birth of the child but shall register no later than
30 days after the birth of the child. All registrations shall
be in writing and signed by the putative father. No fee shall
be charged for the initial registration. The Department shall
have no independent obligation to gather the information to be
maintained.
    (c) An interested party, including persons intending to
adopt a child, a child welfare agency with whom the mother has
placed or has given written notice of her intention to place a
child for adoption, the mother of the child, or an attorney
representing an interested party may request that the
Department search the Registry to determine whether a putative
father is registered in relation to a child who is or may be
the subject to an adoption petition.
    (d) A search of the Registry may be proven by the
production of a certified copy of the registration form, or by
the certified statement of the administrator of the Registry
that after a search, no registration of a putative father in
relation to a child who is or may be the subject of an adoption
petition could be located.
    (e) Except as otherwise provided, information contained
within the Registry is confidential and shall not be published
or open to public inspection.
    (f) A person who knowingly or intentionally registers false
information under this Section commits a Class B misdemeanor. A
person who knowingly or intentionally releases confidential
information in violation of this Section commits a Class B
misdemeanor.
    (g) Except as provided in subsections (b) or (c) of Section
8 of this Act, a putative father who fails to register with the
Putative Father Registry as provided in this Section is barred
from thereafter bringing or maintaining any action to assert
any interest in the child, unless he proves by clear and
convincing evidence that:
        (1) it was not possible for him to register within the
    period of time specified in subsection (b) of this Section;
    and
        (2) his failure to register was through no fault of his
    own; and
        (3) he registered within 10 days after it became
    possible for him to file.
    A lack of knowledge of the pregnancy or birth is not an
acceptable reason for failure to register.
    (h) Except as provided in subsection (b) or (c) of Section
8 of this Act, failure to timely register with the Putative
Father Registry (i) shall be deemed to be a waiver and
surrender of any right to notice of any hearing in any judicial
proceeding for the adoption of the child, and the consent or
surrender of that person to the adoption of the child is not
required, and (ii) shall constitute an abandonment of the child
and shall be prima facie evidence of sufficient grounds to
support termination of such father's parental rights under this
Act.
    (i) In any adoption proceeding pertaining to a child born
out of wedlock, if there is no showing that a putative father
has executed a consent or surrender or waived his rights
regarding the proposed adoption, certification as specified in
subsection (d) shall be filed with the court prior to entry of
a final judgment order of adoption.
    (j) The Registry shall not be used to notify a putative
father who is the father of a child as a result of criminal
sexual abuse or assault as defined under Article 12 of the
Criminal Code of 1961.
(Source: P.A. 89-315, eff. 1-1-96; 90-15, eff. 6-13-97.)
 
    (750 ILCS 50/18.3a)  (from Ch. 40, par. 1522.3a)
    Sec. 18.3a. Confidential intermediary.
    (a) General purposes. Notwithstanding any other provision
of this Act, any adopted or surrendered person 21 years of age
or over, any adoptive parent or legal guardian of an adopted or
surrendered person under the age of 21, or any birth parent of
an adopted or surrendered person who is 21 years of age or over
may petition the court in any county in the State of Illinois
for appointment of a confidential intermediary as provided in
this Section for the purpose of exchanging medical information
with one or more mutually consenting biological relatives,
obtaining identifying information about one or more mutually
consenting biological relatives, or arranging contact with one
or more mutually consenting biological relatives.
Additionally, in cases where an adopted or surrendered person
is deceased, an adult child of the adopted or surrendered
person or his or her adoptive parents or surviving spouse may
file a petition under this Section and in cases where the birth
parent is deceased, an adult birth sibling of the adopted or
surrendered person or of the deceased birth parent may file a
petition under this Section for the purpose of exchanging
medical information with one or more mutually consenting
biological relatives of the adopted or surrendered person,
obtaining identifying information about one or more mutually
consenting biological relatives of the adopted or surrendered
person, or arranging contact with one or more mutually
consenting biological relatives of the adopted or surrendered
person. Beginning January 1, 2006, any adopted or surrendered
person 21 years of age or over; any adoptive parent or legal
guardian of an adopted or surrendered person under the age of
21; any birth parent, birth sibling, birth aunt, or birth uncle
of an adopted or surrendered person over the age of 21; any
surviving child, adoptive parent, or surviving spouse of a
deceased adopted or surrendered person who wishes to petition
the court for the appointment of a confidential intermediary
shall be required to accompany their petition with proof of
registration with the Illinois Adoption Registry and Medical
Information Exchange.
    (b) Petition. Upon petition by an adopted or surrendered
person 21 years of age or over, an adoptive parent or legal
guardian of an adopted or surrendered person under the age of
21, or a birth parent of an adopted or surrendered person who
is 21 years of age or over, the court shall appoint a
confidential intermediary. Upon petition by an adult child,
adoptive parent or surviving spouse of an adopted or
surrendered person who is deceased, by an adult birth sibling
of an adopted or surrendered person whose common birth parent
is deceased and whose adopted or surrendered birth sibling is
21 years of age or over, or by an adult sibling of a birth
parent who is deceased, and whose surrendered child is 21 years
of age or over, the court may appoint a confidential
intermediary if the court finds that the disclosure is of
greater benefit than nondisclosure. The petition shall state
which biological relative or relatives are being sought and
shall indicate if the petitioner wants to do any one or more of
the following: exchange medical information with the
biological relative or relatives, obtain identifying
information from the biological relative or relatives, or to
arrange contact with the biological relative.
    (c) Order. The order appointing the confidential
intermediary shall allow that intermediary to conduct a search
for the sought-after relative by accessing those records
described in subsection (g) of this Section.
    (d) Fees and expenses. The court shall condition the
appointment of the confidential intermediary on the
petitioner's payment of the intermediary's fees and expenses in
advance of the commencement of the work of the confidential
intermediary.
    (e) Eligibility of intermediary. The court may appoint as
confidential intermediary any person certified by the
Department of Children and Family Services as qualified to
serve as a confidential intermediary. Certification shall be
dependent upon the confidential intermediary completing a
course of training including, but not limited to, applicable
federal and State privacy laws.
    (f) Confidential Intermediary Council. There shall be
established under the Department of Children and Family
Services a Confidential Intermediary Advisory Council. One
member shall be an attorney representing the Attorney General's
Office appointed by the Attorney General. One member shall be a
currently certified confidential intermediary appointed by the
Director of the Department of Children and Family Services. The
Director shall also appoint 5 additional members. When making
those appointments, the Director shall consider advocates for
adopted persons, adoptive parents, birth parents, lawyers who
represent clients in private adoptions, lawyers specializing
in privacy law, and representatives of agencies involved in
adoptions. The Director shall appoint one of the 7 members as
the chairperson. An attorney from the Department of Children
and Family Services and the person directly responsible for
administering the confidential intermediary program shall
serve as ex-officio, non-voting advisors to the Council.
Council members shall serve at the discretion of the Director
and shall receive no compensation other than reasonable
expenses approved by the Director. The Council shall meet no
less than twice yearly, and shall make recommendations to the
Director regarding the development of rules, procedures, and
forms that will ensure efficient and effective operation of the
confidential intermediary process, including:
        (1) Standards for certification for confidential
    intermediaries.
        (2) Oversight of methods used to verify that
    intermediaries are complying with the appropriate laws.
        (3) Training for confidential intermediaries,
    including training with respect to federal and State
    privacy laws.
        (4) The relationship between confidential
    intermediaries and the court system, including the
    development of sample orders defining the scope of the
    intermediaries' access to information.
        (5) Any recent violations of policy or procedures by
    confidential intermediaries and remedial steps, including
    decertification, to prevent future violations.
    (g)  Access. Subject to the limitations of subsection (i)
of this Section, the confidential intermediary shall have
access to vital records maintained by the Department of Public
Health and its local designees for the maintenance of vital
records and all records of the court or any adoption agency,
public or private, as limited in this Section, which relate to
the adoption or the identity and location of an adopted or
surrendered person, of an adult child or surviving spouse of a
deceased adopted or surrendered person, or of a birth parent,
birth sibling, or the sibling of a deceased birth parent. The
confidential intermediary shall not have access to any personal
health information protected by the Standards for Privacy of
Individually Identifiable Health Information adopted by the
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services under the Health
Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 unless the
confidential intermediary has obtained written consent from
the person whose information is being sought or, if that person
is a minor child, that person's parent or guardian.
Confidential intermediaries shall be authorized to inspect
confidential relinquishment and adoption records. The
confidential intermediary shall not be authorized to access
medical records, financial records, credit records, banking
records, home studies, attorney file records, or other personal
records. In cases where a birth parent is being sought, an
adoption agency shall inform the confidential intermediary of
any statement filed pursuant to Section 18.3, hereinafter
referred to as "the 18.3 statement", indicating a desire of the
surrendering birth parent to have identifying information
shared or to not have identifying information shared. If there
was a clear statement of intent by the sought-after birth
parent not to have identifying information shared, the
confidential intermediary shall discontinue the search and
inform the petitioning party of the sought-after relative's
intent. Information provided to the confidential intermediary
by an adoption agency shall be restricted to the full name,
date of birth, place of birth, last known address, last known
telephone number of the sought-after relative or, if
applicable, of the children or siblings of the sought-after
relative, and the 18.3 statement.
    (h) Adoption agency disclosure of medical information. If
the petitioner is an adult adopted or surrendered person or the
adoptive parent of a minor and if the petitioner has signed a
written authorization to disclose personal medical
information, an adoption agency disclosing information to a
confidential intermediary shall disclose available medical
information about the adopted or surrendered person from birth
through adoption.
    (i) Duties of confidential intermediary in conducting a
search. In conducting a search under this Section, the
confidential intermediary shall first confirm that there is no
Denial of Information Exchange on file with the Illinois
Adoption Registry. If the petitioner is an adult child of an
adopted or surrendered person who is deceased, the confidential
intermediary shall additionally confirm that the adopted or
surrendered person did not file a Denial of Information
Exchange with the Illinois Adoption Registry during his or her
life. If the petitioner is an adult birth sibling of an adopted
or surrendered person or an adult sibling of a birth parent who
is deceased, the confidential intermediary shall additionally
confirm that the birth parent did not file a Denial of
Information Exchange with the Registry during his or her life.
If the confidential intermediary learns that a sought-after
birth parent signed a statement indicating his or her intent
not to have identifying information shared, and did not later
file an Information Exchange Authorization with the Adoption
Registry, the confidential intermediary shall discontinue the
search and inform the petitioning party of the birth parent's
intent.
    In conducting a search under this Section, the confidential
intermediary shall attempt to locate the relative or relatives
from whom the petitioner has requested information. If the
sought-after relative is deceased or cannot be located after a
diligent search, the confidential intermediary may contact
other adult relatives of the sought-after relative.
    The confidential intermediary shall contact a sought-after
relative on behalf of the petitioner in a manner that respects
the sought-after relative's privacy and shall inform the
sought-after relative of the petitioner's request for medical
information, identifying information or contact as stated in
the petition. Based upon the terms of the petitioner's request,
the confidential intermediary shall contact a sought-after
relative on behalf of the petitioner and inform the
sought-after relative of the following options:
        (1) The sought-after relative may totally reject one or
    all of the requests for medical information, identifying
    information or contact. The sought-after relative shall be
    informed that they can provide a medical questionnaire to
    be forwarded to the petitioner without releasing any
    identifying information. The confidential intermediary
    shall inform the petitioner of the sought-after relative's
    decision to reject the sharing of information or contact.
        (2) The sought-after relative may consent to
    completing a medical questionnaire only. In this case, the
    confidential intermediary shall provide the questionnaire
    and ask the sought-after relative to complete it. The
    confidential intermediary shall forward the completed
    questionnaire to the petitioner and inform the petitioner
    of the sought-after relative's desire to not provide any
    additional information.
        (3) The sought-after relative may communicate with the
    petitioner without having his or her identity disclosed. In
    this case, the confidential intermediary shall arrange the
    desired communication in a manner that protects the
    identity of the sought-after relative. The confidential
    intermediary shall inform the petitioner of the
    sought-after relative's decision to communicate but not
    disclose his or her identity.
        (4) The sought after relative may consent to initiate
    contact with the petitioner. If both the petitioner and the
    sought-after relative or relatives are eligible to
    register with the Illinois Adoption Registry, the
    confidential intermediary shall provide the necessary
    application forms and request that the sought-after
    relative register with the Illinois Adoption Registry. If
    either the petitioner or the sought-after relative or
    relatives are ineligible to register with the Illinois
    Adoption Registry, the confidential intermediary shall
    obtain written consents from both parties that they wish to
    disclose their identities to each other and to have contact
    with each other.
    (j) Oath. The confidential intermediary shall sign an oath
of confidentiality substantially as follows: "I, ..........,
being duly sworn, on oath depose and say: As a condition of
appointment as a confidential intermediary, I affirm that:
        (1) I will not disclose to the petitioner, directly or
    indirectly, any confidential information except in a
    manner consistent with the law.
        (2) I recognize that violation of this oath subjects me
    to civil liability and to a potential finding of contempt
    of court. ................................
SUBSCRIBED AND SWORN to before me, a Notary Public, on (insert
date)
................................."
    (k) Sanctions.
        (1) Any confidential intermediary who improperly
    discloses confidential information identifying a
    sought-after relative shall be liable to the sought-after
    relative for damages and may also be found in contempt of
    court.
        (2) Any person who learns a sought-after relative's
    identity, directly or indirectly, through the use of
    procedures provided in this Section and who improperly
    discloses information identifying the sought-after
    relative shall be liable to the sought-after relative for
    actual damages plus minimum punitive damages of $10,000.
        (3) The Department shall fine any confidential
    intermediary who improperly discloses confidential
    information in violation of item (1) or (2) of this
    subsection (k) an amount up to $2,000 per improper
    disclosure. This fine does not affect civil liability under
    item (2) of this subsection (k). The Department shall
    deposit all fines and penalties collected under this
    Section into the Illinois Adoption Registry and Medical
    Information Fund.
    (l) Death of person being sought. Notwithstanding any other
provision of this Act, if the confidential intermediary
discovers that the person being sought has died, he or she
shall report this fact to the court, along with a copy of the
death certificate.
    (m) Any confidential information obtained by the
confidential intermediary during the course of his or her
search shall be kept strictly confidential and shall be used
for the purpose of arranging contact between the petitioner and
the sought-after birth relative. At the time the case is
closed, all identifying information shall be returned to the
court for inclusion in the impounded adoption file.
    (n) If the petitioner is an adopted or surrendered person
21 years of age or over or the adoptive parent or legal
guardian of an adopted or surrendered person under the age of
21, any non-identifying information, as defined in Section
18.4, that is ascertained during the course of the search may
be given in writing to the petitioner before the case is
closed.
    (o) Except as provided in subsection (k) of this Section,
no liability shall accrue to the State, any State agency, any
judge, any officer or employee of the court, any certified
confidential intermediary, or any agency designated to oversee
confidential intermediary services for acts, omissions, or
efforts made in good faith within the scope of this Section.
    (p) An adoption agency that has received a request from a
confidential intermediary for the full name, date of birth,
last known address, or last known telephone number of a
sought-after relative pursuant to subsection (g) of Section
18.3, or for medical information regarding a sought-after
relative pursuant to subsection (h) of Section 18.3, must
satisfactorily comply with this court order within a period of
45 days. The court shall order the adoption agency to reimburse
the petitioner in an amount equal to all payments made by the
petitioner to the confidential intermediary, and the adoption
agency shall be subject to a civil monetary penalty of $1,000
to be paid to the Department of Children and Family Services.
Following the issuance of a court order finding that the
adoption agency has not complied with Section 18.3, the
adoption agency shall be subject to a monetary penalty of $500
per day for each subsequent day of non-compliance.
    Any reimbursements and fines, notwithstanding any
reimbursement directly to the petitioner, paid under this
subsection are in addition to other remedies a court may
otherwise impose by law.
    Proceeds from the penalties paid to the Department of
Children and Family Services shall be deposited into the DCFS
Children's Services Fund. The Department of Children and Family
Services shall submit reports to the Confidential Intermediary
Advisory Council by July 1 and January 1 of each year in order
to report the penalties assessed and collected under this
subsection, the amounts of related deposits into the DCFS
Children's Services Fund, and any expenditures from such
deposits.
(Source: P.A. 93-189, eff. 1-1-04; 94-173, eff. 1-1-06.)
 
    Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect October
1, 2006.