|
||||
Public Act 096-0037 |
||||
| ||||
| ||||
AN ACT concerning government.
| ||||
Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
| ||||
represented in the General Assembly:
| ||||
Article 1. | ||||
Section 1-1. Short Title. This Act may be cited as the | ||||
FY2010 Budget Implementation (Capital) Act. | ||||
Section 1-3. Purpose. It is the purpose of this Act to make | ||||
changes in state programs that are necessary to implement the | ||||
Governor's Fiscal Year 2010 budget recommendations concerning | ||||
capital. | ||||
Article 5. | ||||
Section 5-5. The Department of Public Health Powers and | ||||
Duties Law of the
Civil Administrative Code of Illinois is | ||||
amended by adding Section 2310-640 as follows: | ||||
(20 ILCS 2310/2310-640 new) | ||||
Sec. 2310-640. Hospital Capital Investment Program. | ||||
(a) Subject to appropriation, the Department shall | ||||
establish and administer a program to award capital grants to | ||||
Illinois hospitals licensed under the Hospital Licensing Act. |
Grants awarded under this program shall only be used to fund | ||
capital projects to improve or renovate the hospital's facility | ||
or to improve, replace or acquire the hospital's equipment or | ||
technology. Such projects may include, but are not limited to, | ||
projects to satisfy any building code, safety standard or life | ||
safety code; projects to maintain, improve, renovate, expand or | ||
construct buildings or structures; projects to maintain, | ||
establish or improve health information technology; or | ||
projects to maintain or improve patient safety, quality of care | ||
or access to care. | ||
The Department shall establish rules necessary to | ||
implement the Hospital Capital Investment Program, including | ||
application standards, requirements for the distribution and | ||
obligation of grant funds, accounting for the use of the funds, | ||
reporting the status of funded projects, and standards for | ||
monitoring compliance with standards. In awarding grants under | ||
this Section, the Department shall consider criteria that | ||
include but are not limited to: the financial requirements of | ||
the project and the extent to which the grant makes it possible | ||
to implement the project; the proposed project's likely benefit | ||
in terms of patient safety or quality of care; and the proposed | ||
project's likely benefit in terms of maintaining or improving | ||
access to care. | ||
The Department shall approve a hospital's eligibility for a | ||
hospital capital investment grant pursuant to the standards | ||
established by this Section. The Department shall determine |
eligible project costs, including but not limited to the use of | ||
funds for the acquisition, development, construction, | ||
reconstruction, rehabilitation, improvement, architectural | ||
planning, engineering, and installation of capital facilities | ||
consisting of buildings, structures, technology and durable | ||
equipment for hospital purposes. No portion of a hospital | ||
capital investment grant awarded by the Department may be used | ||
by a hospital to pay for any on-going operational costs, pay | ||
outstanding debt, or be allocated to an endowment or other | ||
invested fund. | ||
Nothing in this Section shall exempt nor relieve any | ||
hospital receiving a grant under this Section from any | ||
requirement of the Illinois Health Facilities Planning Act. | ||
(b) Safety Net Hospital Grants. The Department shall make | ||
capital grants to hospitals eligible for safety net hospital | ||
grants under this subsection. The total amount of grants to any | ||
individual hospital shall be no less than $2,500,000 and no | ||
more than $7,000,000. The total amount of grants to hospitals | ||
under this subsection shall not exceed $100,000,000. Hospitals | ||
that satisfy one of the following criteria shall be eligible to | ||
apply for safety net hospital grants: | ||
(1) Any general acute care hospital located in a county | ||
of over 3,000,000 inhabitants that has a Medicaid inpatient | ||
utilization rate for the rate year beginning on October 1, | ||
2008 greater than 43%, that is not affiliated with a | ||
hospital system that owns or operates more than 3 |
hospitals, and that has more than 13,500 Medicaid inpatient | ||
days. | ||
(2) Any general acute care hospital that is located in | ||
a county of more than 3,000,000 inhabitants and has a | ||
Medicaid inpatient utilization rate for the rate year | ||
beginning on October 1, 2008 greater than 55% and has | ||
authorized beds for the obstetric-gynecology category of | ||
service as reported in the 2008 Annual Hospital Bed Report, | ||
issued by the Illinois Department of Public Health. | ||
(3) Any hospital that is defined in 89 Illinois | ||
Administrative Code Section 149.50(c)(3)(A) and that has | ||
less than 20,000 Medicaid inpatient days. | ||
(4) Any general acute care hospital that is located in | ||
a county of less than 3,000,000 inhabitants and has a | ||
Medicaid inpatient utilization rate for the rate year | ||
beginning on October 1, 2008 greater than 64%. | ||
(5) Any general acute care hospital that is located in | ||
a county of over 3,000,000 inhabitants and a city of less | ||
than 1,000,000 inhabitants, that has a Medicaid inpatient | ||
utilization rate for the rate year beginning on October 1, | ||
2008 greater than 22%, that has more than 12,000 Medicaid | ||
inpatient days, and that has a case mix index greater than | ||
0.71. | ||
(c) Community Hospital Grants. The Department shall make a | ||
one-time capital grant to any public or not-for-profit | ||
hospitals located in counties of less than 3,000,000 |
inhabitants that are not otherwise eligible for a grant under | ||
subsection (b) of this Section and that have a Medicaid | ||
inpatient utilization rate for the rate year beginning on | ||
October 1, 2008 of at least 10%. The total amount of grants | ||
under this subsection shall not exceed $50,000,000. This grant | ||
shall be the sum of the following payments: | ||
(1) For each acute care hospital, a base payment of: | ||
(i) $170,000 if it is located in an urban area; or | ||
(ii) $340,000 if it is located in a rural area. | ||
(2) A payment equal to the product of $45 multiplied by | ||
total Medicaid inpatient days for each hospital. | ||
(d) Annual report. The Department of Public Health shall | ||
prepare and submit to the Governor and the General Assembly an | ||
annual report by January 1 of each year regarding its | ||
administration of the Hospital Capital Investment Program, | ||
including an overview of the program and information about the | ||
specific purpose and amount of each grant and the status of | ||
funded projects. The report shall include information as to | ||
whether each project is subject to and authorized under the | ||
Illinois Health Facilities Planning Act, if applicable. | ||
(e) Definitions. As used in this Section, the following | ||
terms shall be defined as follows: | ||
"General acute care hospital" shall have the same meaning | ||
as general acute care hospital in Section 5A-12.2 of the | ||
Illinois Public Aid Code. | ||
"Hospital" shall have the same meaning as defined in |
Section 3 of the Hospital Licensing Act, but in no event shall | ||
it include a hospital owned or operated by a State agency, a | ||
State university, or a county with a population of 3,000,000 or | ||
more. | ||
"Medicaid inpatient day" shall have the same meaning as | ||
defined in Section 5A-12.2(n) of the Illinois Public Aid Code. | ||
"Medicaid inpatient utilization rate" shall have the same | ||
meaning as provided in Title 89, Chapter I, subchapter d, Part | ||
148, Section 148.120 of the Illinois Administrative Code. | ||
"Rural" shall have the same meaning as provided in Title | ||
89, Chapter I, subchapter d, Part 148, Section 148.25(g)(3) of | ||
the Illinois Administrative Code. | ||
"Urban" shall have the same meaning as provided in Title | ||
89, Chapter I, subchapter d, Part 148, Section 148.25(g)(4) of | ||
the Illinois Administrative Code. | ||
Article 10. | ||
Section 10-1. Short title. This Article may be cited as the | ||
Community Health Center Construction Act , and references in | ||
this Article to "this Act" mean this Article. | ||
Section 10-5. Definitions. In this Act:
| ||
"Board" means the Illinois Capital Development Board. | ||
"Community health center site" means a new physical site | ||
where a community
health center will provide primary health |
care services either to a medically
underserved population or | ||
area or to the uninsured population of this State.
| ||
"Community provider" means a Federally Qualified Health | ||
Center (FQHC) or
FQHC Look-Alike (Community Health Center or | ||
health center), designated as such
by the Secretary of the | ||
United States Department of Health and Human Services,
that | ||
operates at least one federally designated primary health care | ||
delivery
site in the State of Illinois.
| ||
"Department" means the Illinois Department of Public | ||
Health.
| ||
"Medically underserved area" means an urban or rural area | ||
designated by the
Secretary of the United States Department of | ||
Health and Human Services as an
area with a shortage of | ||
personal health services.
| ||
"Medically underserved population" means (i) the | ||
population of an urban or
rural area designated by the | ||
Secretary of the United States Department of
Health and Human | ||
Services as
an area with a shortage of personal health services | ||
or (ii) a population group
designated by the Secretary as | ||
having a shortage of those services.
| ||
"Primary health care services" means the following:
| ||
(1) Basic health services consisting of the following:
| ||
(A) Health services related to family medicine, | ||
internal medicine,
pediatrics, obstetrics, or | ||
gynecology that are furnished by physicians and,
if | ||
appropriate, physician assistants, nurse |
practitioners, and nurse
midwives.
| ||
(B) Diagnostic laboratory and radiologic services.
| ||
(C) Preventive health services, including the | ||
following:
| ||
(i) Prenatal and perinatal services.
| ||
(ii) Screenings for breast, ovarian, and | ||
cervical cancer.
| ||
(iii) Well-child services.
| ||
(iv) Immunizations against vaccine-preventable | ||
diseases.
| ||
(v) Screenings for elevated blood lead levels,
| ||
communicable diseases, and cholesterol.
| ||
(vi) Pediatric eye, ear, and dental screenings | ||
to determine
the need for vision and hearing | ||
correction and dental care.
| ||
(vii) Voluntary family planning services.
| ||
(viii) Preventive dental services.
| ||
(D) Emergency medical services.
| ||
(E) Pharmaceutical services as appropriate for | ||
particular health
centers.
| ||
(2) Referrals to providers of medical services and | ||
other health-related
services (including substance abuse | ||
and mental health services).
| ||
(3) Patient case management services (including | ||
counseling, referral, and
follow-up services) and other | ||
services designed to assist health center
patients in |
establishing eligibility for and gaining access to | ||
federal, State,
and local programs that provide or | ||
financially support the provision of
medical, social, | ||
educational, or other related services.
| ||
(4) Services that enable individuals to use the | ||
services of the health
center (including outreach and | ||
transportation services and, if a substantial
number of the | ||
individuals in the population are of limited | ||
English-speaking
ability, the services
of appropriate | ||
personnel fluent in the language spoken by a predominant | ||
number
of those individuals).
| ||
(5) Education of patients and the general population | ||
served by the health
center regarding the availability and | ||
proper use of health services.
| ||
(6) Additional health services consisting of services | ||
that are appropriate
to meet the health needs of the | ||
population served by the health center involved
and that | ||
may include the following:
| ||
(A) Environmental health services, including the | ||
following:
| ||
(i) Detection and alleviation of unhealthful | ||
conditions
associated with water supply.
| ||
(ii) Sewage treatment.
| ||
(iii) Solid waste disposal.
| ||
(iv) Detection and alleviation of rodent and | ||
parasite
infestation.
|
(v) Field sanitation.
| ||
(vi) Housing.
| ||
(vii) Other environmental factors related to | ||
health.
| ||
(B) Special occupation-related health services for | ||
migratory and
seasonal agricultural workers, including | ||
the following:
| ||
(i) Screening for and control of infectious | ||
diseases,
including parasitic diseases.
| ||
(ii) Injury prevention programs, which may | ||
include
prevention of exposure to unsafe levels of | ||
agricultural chemicals,
including pesticides.
| ||
"Uninsured population" means persons who do not own private | ||
health care
insurance, are not part of a group insurance plan, | ||
and are not eligible for any
State or federal | ||
government-sponsored health care program.
| ||
Section 10-10. Operation of the grant program.
| ||
(a) The Board, in consultation with the Department, shall | ||
establish the Community Health Center Construction Grant | ||
Program and may make grants to eligible community providers | ||
subject to appropriations out of funds reserved for capital | ||
improvements or expenditures as provided for in this Act. The | ||
Program shall operate in a manner so that the estimated cost of | ||
the Program during the fiscal year will not exceed the total | ||
appropriation for the Program. The grants shall be for the |
purpose of constructing or renovating new community health | ||
center sites, renovating existing community health center | ||
sites, and purchasing equipment to provide primary health care | ||
services to medically underserved populations or areas as | ||
defined in Section 10-5 of this Act or providing primary health | ||
care services to the uninsured population of Illinois.
| ||
(b) A recipient of a grant to establish a new community | ||
health center site must add each such site to the recipient's | ||
established service area for the purpose of extending federal | ||
FQHC or FQHC Look-Alike status to the new site in accordance | ||
with federal regulations.
| ||
Section 10-15. Eligibility for grant. To be eligible for a | ||
grant under this Act,
a recipient must be a community provider | ||
as defined in Section 10-5 of this Act.
| ||
Section 10-20. Use of grant moneys. A recipient of a grant | ||
under this Act may
use the grant moneys to do any one or more of | ||
the following:
| ||
(1) Purchase equipment.
| ||
(2) Acquire a new physical location for the purpose of | ||
delivering primary
health care services.
| ||
(3) Construct or renovate new or existing community | ||
health center sites.
| ||
Section 10-25. Reporting. Within 60 days after the first |
year of a grant under this Act, the grant recipient must submit | ||
a progress report to the Department. The Department may assist | ||
each grant recipient in meeting the goals and objectives stated | ||
in the original grant proposal submitted by the recipient, that | ||
grant moneys are being used for appropriate purposes, and that | ||
residents of the community are being served by the new | ||
community health center sites established with grant moneys.
| ||
Article 15. | ||
Section 15-1. Short title. This Article may be cited as the | ||
Public Library Construction Act , and references in this Article | ||
to "this Act" mean this Article. | ||
Section 15-5. Definitions. As used in this Act: | ||
"Grant index" means a figure for each public library equal | ||
to one minus the
ratio of the public library's equalized | ||
assessed valuation per capita to the equalized assessed | ||
valuation per capita of the public library located at the 90th | ||
percentile for all public libraries in the State. The grant | ||
index shall be no less than 0.35 and no greater than
0.75 for | ||
each public library; provided that the grant index for public | ||
libraries whose
equalized assessed valuation per capita is at | ||
the
99th percentile and above for all public libraries in the | ||
State shall be 0.00. | ||
"Public library" means the governmental unit of any free |
and public library (i) established under the Illinois Local | ||
Library Act, the Public Library District Act of 1991, the | ||
Illinois Library System Act, or the Village Library Act or (ii) | ||
maintained and operated by a unit of local government. "Public | ||
library" does not include any private library. | ||
"Public library construction project" means the | ||
acquisition, development,
construction, reconstruction, | ||
rehabilitation, improvement, architectural
planning, | ||
installation, maintenance, and upkeep of capital facilities | ||
consisting of buildings,
structures, durable equipment, and | ||
land for public library purposes.
| ||
Section 15-10. Grant awards. The Secretary of State is | ||
authorized to
make grants to public libraries for public | ||
library construction projects with funds
appropriated for that | ||
purpose from the Build Illinois Bond Fund. | ||
Section 15-15. Grants. The Secretary of State is authorized
| ||
to determine grant eligibility for public library construction | ||
projects and shall determine the priority order for public | ||
library construction project grants
to be made by the Secretary | ||
of State.
When a grant eligibility has been determined for a | ||
public library construction project, the
Secretary of State | ||
shall notify the
public library of the dollar amount of the | ||
public library construction
project's cost that the public | ||
library will be required to finance with non-grant
funds in |
order to qualify to receive a public library construction | ||
project grant under
this Act from the Secretary of State. The | ||
Secretary of State shall thereafter determine whether a grant | ||
shall be made. | ||
Section 15-20. Grant application; public library | ||
facilities plan. Public libraries
shall apply to the Secretary | ||
of State for public library construction project
grants. Public | ||
libraries filing grant applications shall
submit to the | ||
Secretary of State a public library facilities plan that shall | ||
include,
but not be limited to, an assessment of present and | ||
future public library facility
needs as required by present and | ||
anticipated public library programming, the
availability of | ||
local financial resources
including current revenues, fund | ||
balances, and unused bonding capacity, a
fiscal plan for | ||
meeting present and anticipated debt service obligations, and a
| ||
maintenance plan and schedule that contain necessary | ||
assurances that new,
renovated, and existing facilities are | ||
being or will be properly maintained.
The Secretary of State | ||
shall review and approve public library facilities plans
prior | ||
to determining eligibility and authorizing grants. Each public | ||
library that is determined to be eligible shall annually update | ||
its public library facilities plan and submit the
revised plan | ||
to the
Secretary of State for approval. | ||
Section 15-25. Eligibility and project standards. |
(a) The Secretary of State shall establish eligibility | ||
standards for
public library construction project grants and | ||
approve a public library's eligibility for a public library
| ||
construction project grant pursuant to the established
| ||
standards. These standards shall include minimum service | ||
population requirements for construction project grants. | ||
(b) The Secretary of State shall establish
project | ||
standards for all public library construction project grants | ||
provided pursuant
to this Act. These standards shall include | ||
the determination of recognized project costs that shall be | ||
eligible
for State financial assistance and enrichment costs | ||
that shall not be eligible
for State financial assistance. | ||
Section 15-30. Priority of public library construction | ||
projects. The Secretary of State shall develop standards for | ||
the determination of priority needs
concerning public library | ||
construction projects based upon approved public library | ||
facilities
plans. These standards shall call for | ||
prioritization based on
the degree of need and project type in | ||
the following order: | ||
(1) Replacement or reconstruction of public library | ||
facilities destroyed or damaged
by flood, tornado, fire, | ||
earthquake, or other disasters, either man-made or
| ||
produced by nature;
| ||
(2) Projects designed to address
population growth or | ||
to replace aging public library facilities; |
(3) Replacement or reconstruction of public library
| ||
facilities determined to be severe and continuing health or | ||
life safety
hazards;
| ||
(4) Alterations necessary to provide accessibility for | ||
qualified individuals
with disabilities; and
| ||
(5) Other unique solutions to facility needs.
| ||
Section 15-35. Public library construction project grant | ||
amounts; permitted
use; prohibited use. | ||
(a) The product of the public library's grant index and the
| ||
recognized project cost, as determined by the Secretary of | ||
State, for an
approved public library construction project | ||
shall equal the amount of the grant the
Secretary of State | ||
shall provide to the eligible public library. The grant
index | ||
shall not be used in cases where the General Assembly and the | ||
Governor
approve appropriations designated for specifically | ||
identified public library
construction projects.
| ||
(b) In each fiscal year in which public library | ||
construction project grants are
awarded, of the total amount | ||
awarded statewide, 20% shall be awarded to the Chicago Public | ||
Library System, provided that the Chicago Public Library System | ||
complies
with the provisions of this Act, and 80% shall be | ||
awarded to public libraries outside of the City of Chicago.
| ||
(c) No portion of a public library construction project | ||
grant awarded by the
Secretary of State shall be used by a | ||
public library for any
on-going operational costs.
|
Section 15-37. Carry over projects. If a public library has | ||
been determined eligible for a public library construction | ||
project, has arranged and approved
all local financing, and is | ||
eligible to receive a public library construction project
grant | ||
award in any fiscal year, but does not receive such award in | ||
that year
due to lack of adequate appropriations, those public | ||
library construction projects shall
continue to be considered | ||
for grant awards
for the following fiscal year. | ||
Section 15-40. Supervision of public library construction | ||
projects. The Secretary of State shall exercise general | ||
supervision over public library construction
projects financed | ||
pursuant to this Act. Public libraries, however, must be | ||
allowed to choose the architect and engineer for their public | ||
library construction projects, and no project may be | ||
disapproved by the Secretary of State solely due to a public | ||
library's selection of an architect or engineer. | ||
Section 15-50. Referendum requirements. After the | ||
Secretary of State
has approved all or part of a public | ||
library's application and made a determination of eligibility | ||
for a public library construction project grant, the governing | ||
body of the public library shall submit
the project or the | ||
financing of the project to a referendum when the
referendum is | ||
required by law. |
Section 15-55. Rules. The Secretary of State shall | ||
promulgate such rules as it deems
necessary for carrying out | ||
its responsibilities under the provisions of this
Act.
| ||
Section 15-60. Public library capital needs assessment. | ||
The Secretary of State shall file with the General
Assembly a | ||
comprehensive assessment report of the capital needs of all
| ||
public libraries in this State before January 1, 2010
and every | ||
2 years thereafter. This assessment shall include, without
| ||
limitation, an analysis of the 5 categories of capital needs | ||
prioritized in
Section 15-30 of this Act. | ||
Article 20. | ||
Section 20-1. Short title. This Article may be cited as the | ||
Park and Recreational Facility Construction Act , and | ||
references in this Article to "this Act" mean this Article. | ||
Section 20-5. Definitions. As used in this Act: | ||
"Department" means the Department of Natural Resources. | ||
"Grant index" means a figure for each park or recreation | ||
unit equal to one minus the
ratio of the park or recreation | ||
unit's equalized assessed valuation per capita to the equalized | ||
assessed valuation per capita of the park or recreation unit | ||
located at the 90th percentile for all park or recreation units |
in the State. The grant index shall be no less than 0.35 and no | ||
greater than
0.75 for each park or recreation unit; provided | ||
that the grant index for park or recreation units whose
| ||
equalized assessed valuation per capita is at the
99th | ||
percentile and above for all park or recreation units in the | ||
State shall be 0.00. | ||
"Park or recreation unit" means the governmental unit of | ||
any public park, park district, park and recreation district, | ||
recreational facility, or recreation system established under | ||
the Park District Code, the Chicago Park District Act, the | ||
Metro-East Park and Recreation District Act, or the Illinois | ||
Municipal Code.
| ||
"Park or recreation unit construction project" means the | ||
acquisition, development,
construction, reconstruction, | ||
rehabilitation, improvement, architectural
planning, | ||
installation, maintenance, and upkeep of (i) capital | ||
facilities consisting of buildings,
structures, durable | ||
equipment, and land for park or recreation purposes and (ii) | ||
open spaces and natural areas, as those terms are defined in | ||
Section 10 of the Illinois Open Land Trust Act.
| ||
Section 20-10. Grant awards. The Department is authorized | ||
to
make grants to park or recreation units for park or | ||
recreation unit construction projects with funds
appropriated | ||
for that purpose from the Build Illinois Bond Fund. |
Section 20-15. Grants. The Department is authorized
to | ||
determine grant eligibility for park or recreation unit | ||
construction projects and shall determine the priority order | ||
for park or recreation unit construction project grants
to be | ||
made by the Department.
When grant eligibility has been | ||
determined for a park or recreation unit construction project, | ||
the
Department shall notify the
park or recreation unit of the | ||
dollar amount of the park or recreation unit construction
| ||
project's cost that the park or recreation unit will be | ||
required to finance with non-grant
funds in order to qualify to | ||
receive a park or recreation unit construction project grant | ||
under
this Act from the Department. The Department shall | ||
thereafter determine whether a grant shall be made. | ||
Section 20-20. Grant application; facilities plan. Park or | ||
recreation units
shall apply to the Department for park or | ||
recreation unit construction project
grants. Park or | ||
recreation units filing grant applications shall
submit to the | ||
Department a facilities plan that shall include,
but not be | ||
limited to, an assessment of present and future park or | ||
recreation facility
needs as required by present and | ||
anticipated park or recreational programming, the
availability | ||
of local financial resources
including current revenues, fund | ||
balances, and unused bonding capacity, a
fiscal plan for | ||
meeting present and anticipated debt service obligations, and a
| ||
maintenance plan and schedule that contain necessary |
assurances that new,
renovated, and existing facilities are | ||
being or will be properly maintained.
The Department shall | ||
review and approve park or recreation unit facilities plans
| ||
prior to determining eligibility and authorizing grants. Each | ||
park or recreation unit that is determined to be eligible shall | ||
annually update its facilities plan and submit the
revised plan | ||
to the
Department for approval. | ||
Section 20-25. Eligibility and project standards. | ||
(a) The Department shall establish eligibility standards | ||
for
park or recreation unit construction project grants and | ||
approve a park or recreation unit's eligibility for a park or | ||
recreation unit
construction project grant pursuant to the | ||
established
standards. These standards shall include minimum | ||
service population requirements for park or recreation unit | ||
construction project grants. | ||
(b) The Department shall establish
project standards for | ||
all park or recreation unit construction project grants | ||
provided pursuant
to this Act. These standards shall include | ||
the determination of recognized project costs that shall be | ||
eligible
for State financial assistance and enrichment costs | ||
that shall not be eligible
for State financial assistance. | ||
Section 20-30. Priority of construction projects. The | ||
Department shall develop standards for the determination of | ||
priority needs
concerning park or recreation unit construction |
projects based upon approved facilities
plans. These standards | ||
shall call for prioritization based on
the degree of need and | ||
project type in the following order: | ||
(1) Replacement or reconstruction of park or | ||
recreation unit facilities destroyed or damaged
by flood, | ||
tornado, fire, earthquake, or other disasters, either | ||
man-made or
produced by nature;
| ||
(2) Projects designed to address
population growth or | ||
to replace aging park or recreation unit facilities;
| ||
(3) Replacement or reconstruction of park or | ||
recreation unit
facilities determined to be severe and | ||
continuing health or life safety
hazards;
| ||
(4) Alterations necessary to provide accessibility for | ||
qualified individuals
with disabilities; and | ||
(5) Other unique solutions to facility needs.
| ||
Section 20-35. Grant amounts; permitted
use; prohibited | ||
use. | ||
(a) The product of the park or recreation unit's grant | ||
index and the
recognized project cost, as determined by the | ||
Department, for an
approved park or recreation unit | ||
construction project shall equal the amount of the grant the
| ||
Department shall provide to the eligible park or recreation | ||
unit. The grant
index shall not be used in cases where the | ||
General Assembly and the Governor
approve appropriations | ||
designated for specifically identified park or recreation unit
|
construction projects.
| ||
(b) In each fiscal year in which park or recreation unit | ||
construction project grants are
awarded, of the total amount | ||
awarded statewide, 20% shall be awarded to the Chicago Park | ||
District, provided that the Chicago Park District complies
with | ||
the provisions of this Act, and 80% shall be awarded to park or | ||
recreation units outside of the City of Chicago.
| ||
(c) No portion of a park or recreation unit construction | ||
project grant awarded by the
Department shall be used by a park | ||
or recreation unit for any
on-going operational costs.
| ||
Section 20-37. Carry over projects. If a park or recreation | ||
unit has been determined eligible for a park or recreation unit | ||
construction project, has arranged and approved
all local | ||
financing, and is eligible to receive a park or recreation unit | ||
construction project
grant award in any fiscal year, but does | ||
not receive such award in that year
due to lack of adequate | ||
appropriations, those park or recreation unit construction | ||
projects shall
continue to be considered for grant awards
for | ||
the following fiscal year. | ||
Section 20-40. Supervision of park or recreation unit | ||
construction projects. The Department shall exercise general | ||
supervision over park or recreation unit construction
projects | ||
financed pursuant to this Act. Park or recreation units, | ||
however, must be allowed to choose the architect and engineer |
for their park or recreation unit construction projects, and no | ||
project may be disapproved by the Department solely due to a | ||
park or recreation unit's selection of an architect or | ||
engineer. | ||
Section 20-50. Referendum requirements. After the | ||
Department
has approved all or part of a park or recreation | ||
unit's application and made a determination of eligibility for | ||
a park or recreation unit construction project grant, the park | ||
or recreation unit shall submit
the project or the financing of | ||
the project to a referendum when the
referendum is required by | ||
law. | ||
Section 20-55. Rules. The Department shall promulgate such | ||
rules as it deems
necessary for carrying out its | ||
responsibilities under the provisions of this
Act.
| ||
Section 20-60. Capital needs assessment. The Department | ||
shall file with the General
Assembly a comprehensive assessment | ||
report of the capital needs of all
park or recreation units in | ||
this State before January 1, 2010
and every 2 years thereafter. | ||
This assessment shall include, without
limitation, an analysis | ||
of the 5 categories of capital needs prioritized in
Section | ||
20-30 of this Act.
| ||
Article 25. |
Section 25-1. Short title. This Article may be cited as the | ||
Private Colleges and Universities Capital Distribution Formula | ||
Act , and references in this Article to "this Act" mean this | ||
Article. | ||
Section 25-5. Definitions. In this Act: | ||
"Independent colleges" means non-public, non-profit | ||
colleges and universities based in Illinois. The term does not | ||
include any institution that primarily or exclusively provided | ||
online education services as of the fall 2008 term. | ||
"FTE" means full-time equivalent enrollment based on Fall | ||
2008 Final full-time equivalent enrollment according to the | ||
Illinois Board of Higher Education. | ||
Section 25-10. Distribution. This Act creates a | ||
distribution formula for funds appropriated from the Build | ||
Illinois Bond Fund to the Capital Development Board for the | ||
Illinois Board of Higher Education for grants to various | ||
private colleges and universities. | ||
Funds appropriated for this purpose shall be distributed by | ||
the Illinois Board of Higher Education through a formula to | ||
independent colleges that have been given operational approval | ||
by the Illinois Board of Higher Education as of the Fall 2008 | ||
term. The distribution formula shall have 2 components: a base | ||
grant portion of the appropriation and an FTE grant portion of |
the appropriation. Each independent college shall be awarded | ||
both a base grant portion of the appropriation and an FTE grant | ||
portion of the appropriation. | ||
The Illinois Board of Higher Education shall distribute | ||
moneys appropriated for this purpose to independent colleges | ||
based on the following base grant criteria: for each | ||
independent college reporting between 1 and 200 FTE a base | ||
grant of $200,000 shall be awarded; for each independent | ||
college reporting between 201 and 500 FTE a base grant of | ||
$1,000,000 shall be awarded; for each independent college | ||
reporting between 501 and 4,000 FTE a base grant of $2,000,000 | ||
shall be awarded; and for each independent college reporting | ||
4,001 or more FTE a base grant of $5,000,000 shall be awarded. | ||
The remainder of the moneys appropriated for this purpose | ||
shall be distributed by the Illinois Board of Higher Education | ||
to each independent college on a per capita basis as determined | ||
by the independent college's FTE as reported by the Illinois | ||
Board of Higher Education's most recent fall FTE report. | ||
Each independent college shall have up to 5 years from the | ||
date of appropriation to access and utilize its awarded | ||
amounts. If any independent college does not utilize its full | ||
award or a portion thereof after 5 years, the remaining funds | ||
shall be re-distributed to other independent colleges on an FTE | ||
basis. | ||
Article 30. |
Section 30-5. The Department of Commerce and Economic | ||
Opportunity Law of the
Civil Administrative Code of Illinois is | ||
amended by changing Section 605-400 as follows:
| ||
(20 ILCS 605/605-400) (was 20 ILCS 605/46.19c)
| ||
Sec. 605-400. Office of Urban Assistance. The Department
| ||
shall
provide for, staff, and administer an
Office of Urban | ||
Assistance, which
shall plan and coordinate existing
State | ||
programs designed to aid and stimulate the economic growth of | ||
depressed
urban areas. Among other duties assigned by the | ||
Department, the Office
shall have the following duties:
| ||
(1) To coordinate the activities of the following units | ||
and
programs of
the Department and all other present and
| ||
future units and programs of the Department that impact | ||
depressed
urban
areas to the extent that they
impact upon | ||
or concern urban economics:
| ||
(A) Enterprise Zone Program.
| ||
(B) Small Business Development Center Program.
| ||
(C) Programs that assist in the development of
| ||
community
infrastructure.
| ||
(D) Illinois House Energy Assistance Program.
| ||
(E) Illinois Home Weatherization Assistance Program.
| ||
(F) Programs financed with Community Services Block | ||
Grant
funds.
| ||
(G) Industrial Training Program.
|
(H) Technology Transfer and Innovation Program.
| ||
(I) Rental Rehabilitation Program.
| ||
(J) Displaced Homemaker Program.
| ||
(K) Programs under the federal Job Training | ||
Partnership Act.
| ||
The Office shall convene quarterly meetings of | ||
representatives who are
designated by the Department to | ||
represent the units and programs listed in
items (A) through | ||
(K).
| ||
(2) To gather information concerning any State or federal
| ||
program that
is designed to revitalize or assist depressed | ||
urban areas in the State and
to provide this information to | ||
public and private entities upon request.
| ||
(3) To promote and assist in developing urban inner city
| ||
industrial parks.
| ||
(4) To promote economic parity and the autonomy of citizens | ||
of
this State
through promoting and assisting the development | ||
of urban inner city
small business development centers, urban | ||
youth unemployment projects, small
business
incubators, family | ||
resource centers, urban developments banks, self
managed
urban | ||
businesses, and plans for urban infrastructure projects over | ||
the next
25 years.
| ||
(5) To recommend to the General Assembly and the Governor
| ||
economic policies for urban areas and planning models
that will | ||
result in the reconstruction of the economy of urban areas,
| ||
especially those urban areas where economically and socially |
disadvantaged
people live.
| ||
(6) To make recommendations to the General Assembly and the
| ||
Governor on
the establishment of urban economic
policy in the | ||
areas of (i) housing, (ii) scientific
research, (iii) urban
| ||
youth unemployment, (iv) business incubators and family | ||
resource
centers in
urban inner cities, and (v) alternative | ||
energy resource
development, and the
need
thereof, in urban | ||
areas as part of the department's 5-year
plan for
economic | ||
development.
| ||
(7) To make any rules and regulations necessary to carry | ||
out its
responsibilities under the Civil Administrative Code of | ||
Illinois.
| ||
(8) To encourage new industrial enterprises to locate in | ||
urban
areas (i) through
educational promotions that point out | ||
the opportunities of any
such area as a
commercial and | ||
industrial field of opportunity and (ii) by the
solicitation of
| ||
industrial enterprises; and to do other acts that, in
the | ||
judgment
of the Office, are necessary and proper in fostering | ||
and promoting
the
industrial development and economic welfare | ||
of any urban area.
The
Office, however, shall have no power to | ||
require reports from or to regulate
any business.
| ||
(9) To accept grants, loans, or appropriations from the
| ||
federal
government or the State, or any agency or | ||
instrumentality thereof, to be
used for the operating expenses | ||
of the Office or for any purposes of the
Office, including the | ||
making of direct loans or grants of those
funds for
public, |
private, experimental, or cooperative housing, scientific | ||
research,
urban inner city industrial parks, urban youth | ||
employment projects,
business incubators, urban infrastructure | ||
development, alternative energy
resource development, food | ||
deserts and community food plots, community facilities needed | ||
in urban areas, and
any other purpose related to the | ||
revitalization of urban areas.
| ||
(Source: P.A. 91-239, eff. 1-1-00.)
| ||
Section 30-10. The General Obligation Bond Act is amended | ||
by changing Sections 3 and 9 as follows:
| ||
(30 ILCS 330/3) (from Ch. 127, par. 653)
| ||
Sec. 3. Capital Facilities. The amount of $7,320,235,369 is | ||
authorized
to be used for the acquisition, development, | ||
construction, reconstruction,
improvement, financing, | ||
architectural planning and installation of capital
facilities | ||
within the State, consisting of buildings, structures, durable
| ||
equipment, land, and interests in land , and the costs | ||
associated with the purchase and implementation of information | ||
technology, including but not limited to the purchase of | ||
hardware and software, for the following specific purposes:
| ||
(a) $2,211,228,000 for educational purposes by
State | ||
universities and
colleges, the Illinois Community College | ||
Board created by the Public
Community College Act and for | ||
grants to public community colleges as
authorized by |
Sections 5-11 and 5-12 of the Public Community College Act;
| ||
(b) $1,607,420,000 for correctional purposes at
State
| ||
prison and correctional centers;
| ||
(c) $531,175,000 for open spaces, recreational and
| ||
conservation purposes and the protection of land;
| ||
(d) $589,917,000 for child care facilities, mental
and | ||
public health facilities, and facilities for the care of | ||
disabled
veterans and their spouses;
| ||
(e) $1,455,990,000 for use by the State, its
| ||
departments, authorities, public corporations, commissions | ||
and agencies;
| ||
(f) $818,100 for cargo handling facilities at port | ||
districts and for
breakwaters, including harbor entrances, | ||
at port districts in conjunction
with facilities for small | ||
boats and pleasure crafts;
| ||
(g) $204,657,000 for water resource management
| ||
projects;
| ||
(h) $16,940,269 for the provision of facilities for | ||
food production
research and related instructional and | ||
public service activities at the
State universities and | ||
public community colleges;
| ||
(i) $36,000,000 for grants by the Secretary of State, | ||
as
State
Librarian, for central library facilities | ||
authorized by Section 8
of the Illinois Library System Act | ||
and for grants by the Capital
Development Board to units of | ||
local government for public library
facilities;
|
(j) $25,000,000 for the acquisition, development, | ||
construction,
reconstruction, improvement, financing, | ||
architectural planning and
installation of capital | ||
facilities consisting of buildings, structures,
durable | ||
equipment and land for grants to counties, municipalities | ||
or public
building commissions with correctional | ||
facilities that do not comply with
the minimum standards of | ||
the Department of Corrections under Section 3-15-2
of the | ||
Unified Code of Corrections;
| ||
(k) $5,000,000 for grants in fiscal year 1988 by the | ||
Department of
Conservation for improvement or expansion of | ||
aquarium facilities located on
property owned by a park | ||
district;
| ||
(l) $432,590,000 to State agencies for grants to
local | ||
governments for
the acquisition, financing, architectural | ||
planning, development, alteration,
installation, and | ||
construction of capital facilities consisting of | ||
buildings,
structures, durable equipment, and land; and
| ||
(m) $203,500,000 for the Illinois Open Land Trust
| ||
Program
as defined by the
Illinois Open Land Trust Act.
| ||
The amounts authorized above for capital facilities may be | ||
used
for the acquisition, installation, alteration, | ||
construction, or
reconstruction of capital facilities and for | ||
the purchase of equipment
for the purpose of major capital | ||
improvements which will reduce energy
consumption in State | ||
buildings or facilities.
|
(Source: P.A. 91-39, 6-15-99; 91-53, eff. 6-30-99; 91-710, eff. | ||
5-17-00;
92-13, eff. 6-22-01; 92-598, eff. 6-28-02.)
| ||
(30 ILCS 330/9) (from Ch. 127, par. 659)
| ||
Sec. 9. Conditions for Issuance and Sale of Bonds - | ||
Requirements for
Bonds. | ||
(a) Except as otherwise provided in this subsection, Bonds | ||
shall be issued and sold from time to time, in one or
more | ||
series, in such amounts and at such prices as may be directed | ||
by the
Governor, upon recommendation by the Director of the
| ||
Governor's Office of Management and Budget.
Bonds shall be in | ||
such form (either coupon, registered or book entry), in
such | ||
denominations, payable within 25 years from their date, subject | ||
to such
terms of redemption with or without premium, bear | ||
interest payable at
such times and at such fixed or variable | ||
rate or rates, and be dated
as shall be fixed and determined by | ||
the Director of
the
Governor's Office of Management and Budget
| ||
in the order authorizing the issuance and sale
of any series of | ||
Bonds, which order shall be approved by the Governor
and is | ||
herein called a "Bond Sale Order"; provided however, that | ||
interest
payable at fixed or variable rates shall not exceed | ||
that permitted in the
Bond Authorization Act, as now or | ||
hereafter amended. Bonds shall be
payable at such place or | ||
places, within or without the State of Illinois, and
may be | ||
made registrable as to either principal or as to both principal | ||
and
interest, as shall be specified in the Bond Sale Order. |
Bonds may be callable
or subject to purchase and retirement or | ||
tender and remarketing as fixed
and determined in the Bond Sale | ||
Order. Bonds , other than Bonds issued under Section 3 of this | ||
Act for the costs associated with the purchase and | ||
implementation of information technology, must be issued with | ||
principal or mandatory redemption amounts in equal amounts, | ||
with the first maturity issued occurring within the fiscal year | ||
in which the Bonds are issued or within the next succeeding | ||
fiscal year, with Bonds issued maturing or subject to mandatory | ||
redemption each fiscal year thereafter up to 25 years. Bonds | ||
issued under Section 3 of this Act for the costs associated | ||
with the purchase and implementation of information technology | ||
must be issued with principal or mandatory redemption amounts | ||
in equal amounts, with the first maturity issued occurring with | ||
the fiscal year in which the respective bonds are issued or | ||
with the next succeeding fiscal year, with the respective bonds | ||
issued maturing or subject to mandatory redemption each fiscal | ||
year thereafter up to 10 years.
| ||
In the case of any series of Bonds bearing interest at a | ||
variable interest
rate ("Variable Rate Bonds"), in lieu of | ||
determining the rate or rates at which
such series of Variable | ||
Rate Bonds shall bear interest and the price or prices
at which | ||
such Variable Rate Bonds shall be initially sold or remarketed | ||
(in the
event of purchase and subsequent resale), the Bond Sale | ||
Order may provide that
such interest rates and prices may vary | ||
from time to time depending on criteria
established in such |
Bond Sale Order, which criteria may include, without
| ||
limitation, references to indices or variations in interest | ||
rates as may, in
the judgment of a remarketing agent, be | ||
necessary to cause Variable Rate Bonds
of such series to be | ||
remarketable from time to time at a price equal to their
| ||
principal amount, and may provide for appointment of a bank, | ||
trust company,
investment bank, or other financial institution | ||
to serve as remarketing agent
in that connection.
The Bond Sale | ||
Order may provide that alternative interest rates or provisions
| ||
for establishing alternative interest rates, different | ||
security or claim
priorities, or different call or amortization | ||
provisions will apply during
such times as Variable Rate Bonds | ||
of any series are held by a person providing
credit or | ||
liquidity enhancement arrangements for such Bonds as | ||
authorized in
subsection (b) of this Section.
The Bond Sale | ||
Order may also provide for such variable interest rates to be
| ||
established pursuant to a process generally known as an auction | ||
rate process
and may provide for appointment of one or more | ||
financial institutions to serve
as auction agents and | ||
broker-dealers in connection with the establishment of
such | ||
interest rates and the sale and remarketing of such Bonds.
| ||
(b) In connection with the issuance of any series of Bonds, | ||
the State may
enter into arrangements to provide additional | ||
security and liquidity for such
Bonds, including, without | ||
limitation, bond or interest rate insurance or
letters of | ||
credit, lines of credit, bond purchase contracts, or other
|
arrangements whereby funds are made available to retire or | ||
purchase Bonds,
thereby assuring the ability of owners of the | ||
Bonds to sell or redeem their
Bonds. The State may enter into | ||
contracts and may agree to pay fees to persons
providing such | ||
arrangements, but only under circumstances where the Director | ||
of
the
Governor's Office of Management and Budget certifies | ||
that he or she reasonably expects the total
interest paid or to | ||
be paid on the Bonds, together with the fees for the
| ||
arrangements (being treated as if interest), would not, taken | ||
together, cause
the Bonds to bear interest, calculated to their | ||
stated maturity, at a rate in
excess of the rate that the Bonds | ||
would bear in the absence of such
arrangements.
| ||
The State may, with respect to Bonds issued or anticipated | ||
to be issued,
participate in and enter into arrangements with | ||
respect to interest rate
protection or exchange agreements, | ||
guarantees, or financial futures contracts
for the purpose of | ||
limiting, reducing, or managing interest rate exposure.
The | ||
authority granted under this paragraph, however, shall not | ||
increase the principal amount of Bonds authorized to be issued | ||
by law. The arrangements may be executed and delivered by the | ||
Director
of the
Governor's Office of Management and Budget on | ||
behalf of the State. Net payments for such
arrangements shall | ||
constitute interest on the Bonds and shall be paid from the
| ||
General Obligation Bond Retirement and Interest Fund. The | ||
Director of the
Governor's Office of Management and Budget | ||
shall at least annually certify to the Governor and
the
State |
Comptroller his or her estimate of the amounts of such net | ||
payments to
be included in the calculation of interest required | ||
to be paid by the State.
| ||
(c) Prior to the issuance of any Variable Rate Bonds | ||
pursuant to
subsection (a), the Director of the
Governor's | ||
Office of Management and Budget shall adopt an
interest rate | ||
risk management policy providing that the amount of the State's
| ||
variable rate exposure with respect to Bonds shall not exceed | ||
20%. This policy
shall remain in effect while any Bonds are | ||
outstanding and the issuance of
Bonds
shall be subject to the | ||
terms of such policy. The terms of this policy may be
amended | ||
from time to time by the Director of the
Governor's Office of | ||
Management and Budget but in no
event shall any amendment cause | ||
the permitted level of the State's variable
rate exposure with | ||
respect to Bonds to exceed 20%.
| ||
(Source: P.A. 92-16, eff. 6-28-01; 93-9, eff. 6-3-03; 93-666, | ||
eff. 3-5-04; 93-839, eff. 7-30-04.)
| ||
Section 30-11. If and only if the provisions of House Bill | ||
2400 of the 96th General Assembly that are changed by this | ||
amendatory Act of the 96th General Assembly become law, then | ||
the General Obligation Bond Act is amended by changing Section | ||
4 as follows:
| ||
(30 ILCS 330/4) (from Ch. 127, par. 654)
| ||
Sec. 4. Transportation. The amount of $9,948,799,000
is |
authorized for use by the Department of Transportation for the | ||
specific
purpose of promoting and assuring rapid, efficient, | ||
and safe highway, air and
mass transportation for the | ||
inhabitants of the State by providing monies,
including the | ||
making of grants and loans, for the acquisition, construction,
| ||
reconstruction, extension and improvement of the following | ||
transportation
facilities and equipment, and for the | ||
acquisition of real property and
interests in real property | ||
required or expected to be required in connection
therewith as | ||
follows:
| ||
(a) $5,432,129,000 for State highways, arterial
highways, | ||
freeways,
roads, bridges, structures separating highways and | ||
railroads and roads, and
bridges on roads maintained by | ||
counties, municipalities, townships or road
districts for the | ||
following specific purposes:
| ||
(1) $3,330,000,000 for use statewide,
| ||
(2) $3,677,000 for use outside the Chicago urbanized
| ||
area,
| ||
(3) $7,543,000 for use within the Chicago urbanized | ||
area,
| ||
(4) $13,060,600 for use within the City of Chicago,
| ||
(5) $58,987,500 for use within the counties of Cook,
| ||
DuPage, Kane, Lake, McHenry and Will,
| ||
(6) $18,860,900 for use outside the counties of Cook, | ||
DuPage, Kane,
Lake, McHenry and Will, and
| ||
(7) $2,000,000,000 for use on projects included in |
either (i) the FY09-14 Proposed Highway Improvement | ||
Program as published by the Illinois Department of | ||
Transportation in May 2008 or (ii) the FY10-15 Proposed | ||
Highway Improvement Program to be published by the Illinois | ||
Department of Transportation in the spring of 2009; except | ||
that all projects must be maintenance projects for the | ||
existing State system with the goal of reaching 90% | ||
acceptable condition in the system statewide and further | ||
except that all projects must reflect the generally | ||
accepted historical distribution of projects throughout | ||
the State. | ||
(b) $3,130,070,000 for rail facilities and for
mass transit | ||
facilities, as defined in Section 2705-305 of the Department of
| ||
Transportation Law (20 ILCS 2705/2705-305), including rapid | ||
transit, rail, bus
and other equipment used in connection | ||
therewith by the State or any unit of
local government, special | ||
transportation district, municipal corporation or
other | ||
corporation or public authority authorized to provide and | ||
promote public
transportation within the State or two or more | ||
of the foregoing jointly, for
the following specific purposes:
| ||
(1) $2,034,270,000 statewide,
| ||
(2) $83,350,000 for use within the counties of Cook,
| ||
DuPage, Kane, Lake, McHenry and Will,
| ||
(3) $12,450,000 for use outside the counties of Cook,
| ||
DuPage, Kane, Lake, McHenry and Will, and
| ||
(4) $1,000,000,000 for use on projects that shall |
reflect the generally accepted historical distribution of | ||
projects throughout the State. | ||
(c) $371,600,000 for airport or aviation facilities and any | ||
equipment used
in connection therewith, including engineering | ||
and land acquisition costs,
by the State or any unit of local | ||
government, special transportation district,
municipal | ||
corporation or other corporation or public authority | ||
authorized
to provide public transportation within the State, | ||
or two or more of the
foregoing acting jointly, and for the | ||
making of deposits into the Airport
Land Loan Revolving Fund | ||
for loans to public airport owners pursuant to the
Illinois | ||
Aeronautics Act.
| ||
(d) $1,015,000,000 for use statewide for State or local | ||
highways, arterial highways, freeways, roads, bridges, and | ||
structures separating highways and railroads and roads, and for | ||
grants to bridges on roads maintained by counties, | ||
municipalities, townships, or road districts for planning, | ||
engineering, acquisition, construction, reconstruction, | ||
development, improvement, extension, and all | ||
construction-related expenses of the public infrastructure and | ||
other transportation improvement projects which are related to | ||
economic development in the State of Illinois . | ||
(Source: 96HB2400 enrolled.)
| ||
Section 30-20. The School Construction Law is amended by | ||
changing Section 5-40 and by adding Sections 5-200, 5-300, and |
5-400 as follows:
| ||
(105 ILCS 230/5-40)
| ||
Sec. 5-40. Supervision of school construction projects; | ||
green projects. The Capital
Development Board shall exercise | ||
general supervision over school construction
projects financed | ||
pursuant to this Article. School districts, however, must be | ||
allowed to choose the architect and engineer for their school | ||
construction projects, and no project may be disapproved by the | ||
State Board of Education or the Capital Development Board | ||
solely due to a school district's selection of an architect or | ||
engineer.
| ||
With respect to those school construction projects for | ||
which a school district first applies for a grant on or after | ||
July 1, 2007, the school construction project must receive | ||
certification from the United States Green Building Council's | ||
Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design Green Building | ||
Rating System or the Green Building Initiative's Green Globes | ||
Green Building Rating System or must meet green building | ||
standards of the Capital Development Board and its Green | ||
Building Advisory Committee. With respect to those school | ||
construction projects for which a school district applies for a | ||
grant on or after July 1, 2009, the school construction project | ||
must receive silver certification from the United States Green | ||
Building Council's Leadership in Energy and Environmental | ||
Design Green Building Rating System.
|
(Source: P.A. 95-416, eff. 8-24-07.)
| ||
(105 ILCS 230/5-200 new) | ||
Sec. 5-200. School energy efficiency grants. | ||
(a) The State Board of Education is authorized to make | ||
grants to school districts, without regard to enrollment, for | ||
school energy efficiency projects. These grants shall be paid | ||
out of moneys appropriated for that purpose from the School | ||
Infrastructure Fund. No grant under this Section for one fiscal | ||
year shall exceed $250,000, but a school district may receive | ||
grants for more than one project during one fiscal year. A | ||
school district must provide local matching funds in an amount | ||
equal to the amount of the grant under this Section. A school | ||
district has no entitlement to a grant under this Section. | ||
(b) The State Board of Education shall adopt rules to | ||
implement this Section. These rules need not be the same as the | ||
rules for school construction project grants or school | ||
maintenance project grants.
The rules may specify: | ||
(1) the manner of applying for grants; | ||
(2) project eligibility requirements; | ||
(3) restrictions on the use of grant moneys; | ||
(4) the manner in which school districts must account | ||
for the use of grant moneys; and | ||
(5) any other provision that the State Board determines | ||
to be necessary or useful for the administration of this | ||
Section. |
(c) In each school year in which school energy efficiency | ||
project grants are awarded, 20% of the total amount awarded | ||
shall be awarded to a school district with a population of more | ||
than 500,000, provided that the school district complies with | ||
the requirements of this Section and the rules adopted under | ||
this Section. | ||
(105 ILCS 230/5-300 new) | ||
Sec. 5-300. Early childhood construction grants. | ||
(a) The Capital Development Board is authorized to make | ||
grants to public school districts and not-for-profit entities | ||
for early childhood construction projects. These grants shall | ||
be paid out of moneys appropriated for that purpose from the | ||
School Construction Fund. No grants may be awarded to entities | ||
providing services within private residences. A public school | ||
district or other eligible entity must provide local matching | ||
funds in an amount equal to the amount of the grant under this | ||
Section. A public school district or other eligible entity has | ||
no entitlement to a grant under this Section. | ||
(b) The Capital Development Board shall adopt rules to | ||
implement this Section. These rules need not be the same as the | ||
rules for school construction project grants or school | ||
maintenance project grants.
The rules may specify: | ||
(1) the manner of applying for grants; | ||
(2) project eligibility requirements; | ||
(3) restrictions on the use of grant moneys; |
(4) the manner in which school districts and other | ||
eligible entities must account for the use of grant moneys; | ||
and | ||
(5) any other provision that the Capital Development | ||
Board determines to be necessary or useful for the | ||
administration of this Section. | ||
(c) The Capital Development Board, in consultation with the | ||
State Board of Education, shall establish standards for the | ||
determination of priority needs concerning early childhood | ||
projects based on projects located in communities in the State | ||
with the greatest underserved population of young children, | ||
utilizing Census data and other reliable local early childhood | ||
service data. | ||
(d) In each school year in which early childhood | ||
construction project grants are awarded, 20% of the total | ||
amount awarded shall be awarded to a school district with a | ||
population of more than 500,000, provided that the school | ||
district complies with the requirements of this Section and the | ||
rules adopted under this Section. | ||
(105 ILCS 230/5-400 new) | ||
Sec. 5-400. Charter school construction grants. | ||
(a) The Capital Development Board is authorized to make | ||
grants to charter schools, as authorized by Article 27A of the | ||
School Code, 105 ILCS 5/Art. 27A, for construction projects. | ||
The grants shall be paid out of moneys appropriated for that |
purpose from the Build Illinois Bond Fund. A charter school and | ||
other eligible entities have no entitlement to a grant under | ||
this Section. | ||
(b) The Capital Development Board shall adopt rules to | ||
implement this Section. These rules need not be the same as the | ||
rules for school construction project grants or school | ||
maintenance project grants.
The rules may specify: | ||
(1) the manner of applying for grants; | ||
(2) project eligibility requirements; | ||
(3) restrictions on the use of grant moneys; | ||
(4) the manner in which school districts must account | ||
for the use of grant moneys; and | ||
(5) any other provision that the Capital Development | ||
Board determines to be necessary or useful for the | ||
administration of this Section. | ||
With respect to those school construction projects for | ||
which a charter school applies for a grant on or after July 1, | ||
2009, the school construction project must receive silver | ||
certification from the United States Green Building Council's | ||
Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design Green Building | ||
Rating System. | ||
Article 35. | ||
Section 35-1. Short title. This Article may be cited as the | ||
State Construction Minority and Female Building Trades Act. |
Section 35-5. Definitions. For the purposes of this | ||
Article: | ||
"Under-represented minority" means African-American, | ||
Hispanic, and Asian-American as those terms are defined in the | ||
Business Enterprise for Minorities, Females, and Persons with | ||
Disabilities Act. | ||
"Construction" means any constructing, altering, | ||
reconstructing, repairing, rehabilitating, refinishing, | ||
refurbishing, remodeling, remediating, renovating, custom | ||
fabricating, maintenance, landscaping, improving, wrecking, | ||
painting, decorating, demolishing, and adding to or | ||
subtracting from any building, structure, highway, roadway, | ||
street, bridge, alley, sewer, ditch, sewage disposal plant, | ||
water works, parking facility, railroad, excavation or other | ||
structure, project, development, real property or improvement, | ||
or to do any part thereof, whether or not the performance of | ||
the work herein described involves the addition to, or | ||
fabrication into, any structure, project, development, real | ||
property or improvement herein described of any material or | ||
article of merchandise. Construction shall also include moving | ||
construction related materials on the job site to or from the | ||
job site. | ||
Section 35-10. Apprenticeship reports. Each labor | ||
organization and other entity in Illinois with one or more |
apprenticeship programs for construction trades, whether or | ||
not recognized and certified by the United States Department of | ||
Labor, Bureau of Apprenticeship and Training, must report to | ||
the Illinois Department of Labor the information required to be | ||
reported to the Bureau of Apprenticeship and Training by labor | ||
organizations with recognized and certified apprenticeship | ||
programs that lists the race, gender, ethnicity, and national | ||
origin of apprentices in that labor organization or entity. The | ||
information must be submitted to the Illinois Department of | ||
Labor as provided by rules adopted by the Department. For labor | ||
organizations with recognized and certified apprentice | ||
programs, the reporting requirement of this Section may be met | ||
by providing the Illinois Department of Labor, on a schedule | ||
adopted by the Department by rule, copies of the reports | ||
submitted to the Bureau of Apprenticeship and Training. | ||
Section 35-15. Compilation of building trade data. By March | ||
1 of each year, the Illinois Department of Labor shall publish | ||
and make available on its official website a report compiling | ||
and summarizing demographic trends in the State's building | ||
trades apprenticeship programs, with particular attention to | ||
race, gender, ethnicity, and national origin of apprentices in | ||
labor organizations and other entities in Illinois based on the | ||
information submitted to the Department under Section 35-10. | ||
Section 35-20. Construction employment initiative.
|
(a) Each fiscal year, the Department of Commerce and | ||
Economic Opportunity shall identify construction projects that | ||
are: | ||
(1) funded by the State or the American Recovery and | ||
Reinvestment Act or funded in part by the State and in part | ||
by the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act; | ||
(2) equal to or greater than $5,000,000 in total value; | ||
and | ||
(3) located in or within 5 miles of Cook County, | ||
Aurora, Elgin, Joliet, Kankakee, Peoria, Decatur, | ||
Champaign-Urbana, Springfield, East St. Louis, Rockford, | ||
Waukegan, or Cairo. | ||
In addition, the Director of Commerce and Economic | ||
Opportunity may designate any other construction project as a | ||
construction employment initiative project if the local | ||
available workforce is sufficient to meet the goals of this | ||
Section. | ||
(b) Not less than 20% of the total apprenticeship hours | ||
performed on projects identified pursuant to subsection (a) is | ||
established as a goal of those projects to be completed by | ||
members of minority groups currently under-represented in | ||
skilled building trades. | ||
(c) Not less than 10% of the total apprenticeship hours | ||
performed on projects identified pursuant to subsection (a) is | ||
established as a goal of those projects to be performed by | ||
women. A woman who is also a member of a minority group shall |
be designated to one category or the other by the Department of | ||
Commerce and Economic Opportunity for purposes of this | ||
subsection and subsection (b). | ||
(d) An advisory committee for the purposes of this Section | ||
is established as follows: | ||
(1) Eight members appointed 2 each by the President and | ||
Minority Leader of the Senate and the Speaker and Minority | ||
Leader of the House of Representatives. | ||
(2) The Director of Commerce and Economic Opportunity, | ||
or his or her designee. | ||
(3) The Illinois Secretary of Transportation, or his or | ||
her designee. | ||
(4) The executive director of the Capital Development | ||
Board, or his or her designee. | ||
(5) Three members representing building trades labor | ||
organizations, appointed by the Governor. | ||
(6) One member representing vertical construction, | ||
appointed by the Governor. | ||
(7) One member representing road builders, appointed | ||
by the Governor. | ||
(8) One member representing an association of | ||
African-American owned construction companies, appointed | ||
by the Governor. | ||
(9) One member representing an association of Latino | ||
owned construction companies, appointed by the Governor. | ||
(10) One member representing an association of women in |
the building trades, appointed by the Governor. | ||
(11) One member representing an association of | ||
female-owned construction companies, appointed by the | ||
Governor. | ||
The Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity shall | ||
provide administrative support staff for the advisory | ||
committee. | ||
Article 40. | ||
Section 40-1. Short title. This Article may be cited as the | ||
Urban Weatherization Initiative Act. | ||
Section 40-5. Definitions. As used in this Article: | ||
"Board" means the Weatherization Initiative Board. | ||
"Department" means the Department of Commerce and Economic | ||
Opportunity. | ||
"Initiative" means the Urban Weatherization Initiative. | ||
"Urban metropolitan area" means a municipality with a | ||
population of 5,000 or more or a township with a population of | ||
5,000 or more. | ||
Section 40-10. Urban Weatherization Initiative | ||
established; purpose.
| ||
(a) The Urban Weatherization Initiative is created. The | ||
Initiative shall be administered by the Department of Commerce |
and Economic Opportunity in consultation with other | ||
appropriate State agencies and overseen by the Weatherization | ||
Initiative Board. | ||
(b) The purpose of the Urban Weatherization Initiative is | ||
to promote the State's interest in reducing the impact of high | ||
energy costs on low-income households. The Initiative seeks to | ||
increase employment and entrepreneurship opportunities through | ||
the installation and manufacturing of low-cost weatherization | ||
materials. In particular, the Initiative is intended to | ||
weatherize owner-occupied, single family homes and | ||
multi-family (6 units or fewer) housing in census tracts with | ||
high rates of unemployment, underemployment, and poverty and to | ||
ensure that residents of those communities are able to access | ||
the work as a local employment engine. The Initiative also | ||
seeks to implement outreach strategies to increase awareness of | ||
cost savings and job training services associated with the | ||
program. | ||
Section 40-15. Grants. The Department is authorized to make | ||
payments for grants awarded pursuant to this Article. These | ||
grants shall be paid out of moneys appropriated for that | ||
purpose from the Build Illinois Bond Fund. | ||
Section 40-20. Award of grants.
| ||
(a) The Department shall award grants under this Article | ||
using a competitive request-for-proposal process administered |
by the Department and overseen by the Board. No more than 2% of | ||
funds used for grants may be retained by the Department for | ||
administrative costs, program evaluation, and technical | ||
assistance activities. | ||
(b) The Department must award grants competitively in | ||
accordance with the priorities described in this Article. | ||
Grants must be awarded in support of the implementation, | ||
expansion, or implementation and expansion of weatherization | ||
and job training programs consistent with the priorities | ||
described in this Article. Strategies for grant use include, | ||
but are not limited to, the following: | ||
(1) Repair or replacement of inefficient heating and | ||
cooling units. | ||
(2) Addressing of air infiltration with weather | ||
stripping, caulking, thresholds, minor repairs to walls, | ||
roofs, ceilings, and floors, and window and door | ||
replacement. | ||
(3) Repair or replacement of water heaters. | ||
(4) Pipe, duct, or pipe and duct insulation. | ||
(c) Portions of grant funds may be used for: | ||
(1) Work-aligned training in weatherization skill | ||
sets, including skills necessary for career advancement in | ||
the energy efficiency field. | ||
(2) Basic skills training, including soft-skill | ||
training, and other workforce development services, | ||
including mentoring, job development, support services, |
transportation assistance, and wage subsidies tied to | ||
training and employment in weatherization. | ||
(d) All grant applicants must include a comprehensive plan | ||
for local community engagement. Grant recipients may devote a | ||
portion of awarded funds to conduct outreach activities | ||
designed to assure that eligible households and relevant | ||
workforce populations are made aware of the opportunities | ||
available under this Article. A portion of outreach activities | ||
must occur in convenient, local intake centers, including but | ||
not limited to churches, local schools, and community centers. | ||
(e) Any private, public, and non-profit entities that | ||
provide, or demonstrate desire and ability to provide, | ||
weatherization services that act to decrease the impact of | ||
energy costs on low-income areas and incorporate an effective | ||
local employment strategy are eligible grant applicants. | ||
(f) For grant recipients, maximum per unit expenditure | ||
shall not exceed $6,500. | ||
(g) A grant recipient may not be awarded grants totaling | ||
more than $500,000 per fiscal year. | ||
(h) A grant recipient may not use more than 15% of its | ||
total grant amount for administrative expenses. | ||
Section 40-25. Targets. The Department shall award grants | ||
under this Article using the following target areas and | ||
populations, and the Board shall monitor the application of | ||
these targets to the awarding of grants: |
(1) Census tracts in urban metropolitan areas where 20% | ||
or more of the population is living in poverty and that | ||
suffer from disproportionately high rates of unemployment, | ||
underemployment, and poverty as defined by the 2000 Census. | ||
(2) Areas with high concentrations of families with | ||
income equal to or less than 60% of the Area Median Income. | ||
(3) Areas with the highest energy costs in relation to | ||
income. | ||
Section 40-30. Priority grants. In awarding grants, the | ||
Department must give priority to grant applications that | ||
demonstrate collaboration among local weatherization agencies, | ||
educational institutions, workforce stakeholders, and | ||
community organizations, especially those located in | ||
communities with high rates of unemployment, underemployment, | ||
and poverty. | ||
Section 40-35. Quarterly reports. Grant recipients must | ||
submit quarterly reports of their grant activities to the | ||
Department in accordance with rules adopted under this Article. | ||
Section 40-40. Weatherization Initiative Board.
| ||
(a) The Weatherization Initiative Board is created within | ||
the Department. The Board must approve or deny all grants from | ||
the Fund. | ||
(a-5) Notwithstanding any other provision of this Article, |
the Board has the authority to direct the Department to | ||
authorize the awarding of grants to applicants serving areas or | ||
populations not included in the target areas and populations | ||
set forth in Section 40-25 if the Board determines that there | ||
are special circumstances involving the areas or populations | ||
served by the applicant. | ||
(b) The Board shall consist of 5 voting members appointed | ||
by the Governor with the advice and consent of the Senate. The | ||
initial members shall have terms as follows as designated by | ||
the Governor: one for one year, one for 2 years, one for 3 | ||
years, one for 4 years, and one for 5 years, or until a | ||
successor is appointed and qualified. Thereafter, members | ||
shall serve 5-year terms or until a successor is appointed and | ||
qualified. The voting members shall elect a voting member to | ||
serve as chair for a one-year term. Vacancies shall be filled | ||
in the same manner for the balance of a term.
| ||
(c) The Board shall also have 4 non-voting ex officio | ||
members appointed as follows: one Representative appointed by | ||
the Speaker of the House, one Representative appointed by the | ||
House Minority Leader, one Senator appointed by the President | ||
of the Senate, and one Senator appointed by the Senate Minority | ||
Leader, each to serve at the pleasure of the appointing | ||
authority. | ||
(d) Members shall receive no compensation, but may be | ||
reimbursed for necessary expenses from appropriations to the | ||
Department available for that purpose. |
(e) The Board may adopt rules under the Illinois | ||
Administrative Procedure Act. | ||
(f) A quorum of the Board is at least 3 voting members, and | ||
the affirmative vote of at least 3 voting members is required | ||
for Board decisions and adoption of rules. | ||
(g) The Department shall provide staff and administrative | ||
assistance to the Board.
| ||
(h) By December 31 of each year, the Board shall file an | ||
annual report with the Governor and the General Assembly | ||
concerning the Initiative, grants awarded, and grantees and | ||
making recommendations for any changes needed to enhance the | ||
effectiveness of the Initiative. | ||
Section 40-45. Emergency rules. The Department and the | ||
Board shall exercise emergency rulemaking authority under the | ||
Illinois Administrative Procedure Act to adopt necessary | ||
emergency rules for the implementation of this Article. | ||
Article 45. | ||
Section 45-5. The Illinois Vehicle Code is amended by | ||
adding Section 6-305.3 as follows: | ||
(625 ILCS 5/6-305.3 new) | ||
Sec. 6-305.3. Vehicle license cost recovery fee. | ||
(a) As used in this Section: |
"Automobile rental company" means a person or entity whose | ||
primary business is renting private passenger vehicles to the | ||
public for 30 days or less. | ||
"Inspect" or "inspection" means a vehicle emissions | ||
inspection under Chapter 13C of this Code. | ||
"Rental agreement" means an agreement for 30 days or less | ||
setting forth the terms and conditions governing the use of a | ||
private passenger vehicle provided by a rental company. | ||
"Motor vehicle" means passenger vehicles of the first | ||
division and motor vehicles of the second division weighing not | ||
more than 8,000 pounds. | ||
"Vehicle license cost recovery fee" or "VLCRF" means a | ||
charge that may be separately stated and charged on a rental | ||
agreement in a vehicle rental transaction originating in | ||
Illinois to recover costs incurred by an automobile rental | ||
company to license, title, register, and inspect motor | ||
vehicles. | ||
(b) Automobile rental companies may include a separately | ||
stated mandatory surcharge or fee in a rental agreement for | ||
vehicle license cost recovery fees (VLCRF) and all applicable | ||
taxes. | ||
(c) If an automobile rental company includes a VLCRF as | ||
separately stated charge in a rental agreement, the amount of | ||
the fee must represent the automobile rental company's | ||
good-faith estimate of the automobile rental company's daily | ||
charge as calculated by the automobile rental company to |
recover its actual total annual motor vehicle titling, | ||
registration, and inspection costs. | ||
(d) If the total amount of the VLCRF collected by a | ||
automobile rental company under this Section in any calendar | ||
year exceeds the automobile rental company's actual costs to | ||
license, title, register, and inspect for that calendar year, | ||
the automobile rental company shall do both of the following: | ||
(1) Retain the excess amount; and | ||
(2) Adjust the estimated average per vehicle titling, | ||
licensing, inspection, and registration charge for the | ||
following calendar year by a corresponding amount. | ||
(e) Nothing in subsection (d) of this Section shall prevent | ||
a automobile rental company from making adjustments to the | ||
VLCRF during the calendar year. | ||
Article 50. | ||
Section 50-5. The State Finance Act is amended by changing | ||
Section 13.2 as follows:
| ||
(30 ILCS 105/13.2) (from Ch. 127, par. 149.2)
| ||
Sec. 13.2. Transfers among line item appropriations.
| ||
(a) Transfers among line item appropriations from the same
| ||
treasury fund for the objects specified in this Section may be | ||
made in
the manner provided in this Section when the balance | ||
remaining in one or
more such line item appropriations is |
insufficient for the purpose for
which the appropriation was | ||
made.
| ||
(a-1) No transfers may be made from one
agency to another | ||
agency, nor may transfers be made from one institution
of | ||
higher education to another institution of higher education.
| ||
(a-2) Except as otherwise provided in this Section, | ||
transfers may be made only among the objects of expenditure | ||
enumerated
in this Section, except that no funds may be | ||
transferred from any
appropriation for personal services, from | ||
any appropriation for State
contributions to the State | ||
Employees' Retirement System, from any
separate appropriation | ||
for employee retirement contributions paid by the
employer, nor | ||
from any appropriation for State contribution for
employee | ||
group insurance. During State fiscal year 2005, an agency may | ||
transfer amounts among its appropriations within the same | ||
treasury fund for personal services, employee retirement | ||
contributions paid by employer, and State Contributions to | ||
retirement systems; notwithstanding and in addition to the | ||
transfers authorized in subsection (c) of this Section, the | ||
fiscal year 2005 transfers authorized in this sentence may be | ||
made in an amount not to exceed 2% of the aggregate amount | ||
appropriated to an agency within the same treasury fund. During | ||
State fiscal year 2007, the Departments of Children and Family | ||
Services, Corrections, Human Services, and Juvenile Justice | ||
may transfer amounts among their respective appropriations | ||
within the same treasury fund for personal services, employee |
retirement contributions paid by employer, and State | ||
contributions to retirement systems. During State fiscal year | ||
2010, the Department of Transportation may transfer amounts | ||
among their respective appropriations within the same treasury | ||
fund for personal services, employee retirement contributions | ||
paid by employer, and State contributions to retirement | ||
systems. Notwithstanding, and in addition to, the transfers | ||
authorized in subsection (c) of this Section, these transfers | ||
may be made in an amount not to exceed 2% of the aggregate | ||
amount appropriated to an agency within the same treasury fund.
| ||
(a-3) Further, if an agency receives a separate
| ||
appropriation for employee retirement contributions paid by | ||
the employer,
any transfer by that agency into an appropriation | ||
for personal services
must be accompanied by a corresponding | ||
transfer into the appropriation for
employee retirement | ||
contributions paid by the employer, in an amount
sufficient to | ||
meet the employer share of the employee contributions
required | ||
to be remitted to the retirement system.
| ||
(b) In addition to the general transfer authority provided | ||
under
subsection (c), the following agencies have the specific | ||
transfer authority
granted in this subsection:
| ||
The Department of Healthcare and Family Services is | ||
authorized to make transfers
representing savings attributable | ||
to not increasing grants due to the
births of additional | ||
children from line items for payments of cash grants to
line | ||
items for payments for employment and social services for the |
purposes
outlined in subsection (f) of Section 4-2 of the | ||
Illinois Public Aid Code.
| ||
The Department of Children and Family Services is | ||
authorized to make
transfers not exceeding 2% of the aggregate | ||
amount appropriated to it within
the same treasury fund for the | ||
following line items among these same line
items: Foster Home | ||
and Specialized Foster Care and Prevention, Institutions
and | ||
Group Homes and Prevention, and Purchase of Adoption and | ||
Guardianship
Services.
| ||
The Department on Aging is authorized to make transfers not
| ||
exceeding 2% of the aggregate amount appropriated to it within | ||
the same
treasury fund for the following Community Care Program | ||
line items among these
same line items: Homemaker and Senior | ||
Companion Services, Alternative Senior Services, Case | ||
Coordination
Units, and Adult Day Care Services.
| ||
The State Treasurer is authorized to make transfers among | ||
line item
appropriations
from the Capital Litigation Trust | ||
Fund, with respect to costs incurred in
fiscal years 2002 and | ||
2003 only, when the balance remaining in one or
more such
line | ||
item appropriations is insufficient for the purpose for which | ||
the
appropriation was
made, provided that no such transfer may | ||
be made unless the amount transferred
is no
longer required for | ||
the purpose for which that appropriation was made.
| ||
The State Board of Education is authorized to make | ||
transfers from line item appropriations within the same | ||
treasury fund for General State Aid and General State Aid - |
Hold Harmless, provided that no such transfer may be made | ||
unless the amount transferred is no longer required for the | ||
purpose for which that appropriation was made, to the line item | ||
appropriation for Transitional Assistance when the balance | ||
remaining in such line item appropriation is insufficient for | ||
the purpose for which the appropriation was made. | ||
The State Board of Education is authorized to make | ||
transfers between the following line item appropriations | ||
within the same treasury fund: Disabled Student | ||
Services/Materials (Section 14-13.01 of the School Code), | ||
Disabled Student Transportation Reimbursement (Section | ||
14-13.01 of the School Code), Disabled Student Tuition - | ||
Private Tuition (Section 14-7.02 of the School Code), | ||
Extraordinary Special Education (Section 14-7.02b of the | ||
School Code), Reimbursement for Free Lunch/Breakfast Program, | ||
Summer School Payments (Section 18-4.3 of the School Code), and | ||
Transportation - Regular/Vocational Reimbursement (Section | ||
29-5 of the School Code). Such transfers shall be made only | ||
when the balance remaining in one or more such line item | ||
appropriations is insufficient for the purpose for which the | ||
appropriation was made and provided that no such transfer may | ||
be made unless the amount transferred is no longer required for | ||
the purpose for which that appropriation was made. | ||
(c) The sum of such transfers for an agency in a fiscal | ||
year shall not
exceed 2% of the aggregate amount appropriated | ||
to it within the same treasury
fund for the following objects: |
Personal Services; Extra Help; Student and
Inmate | ||
Compensation; State Contributions to Retirement Systems; State
| ||
Contributions to Social Security; State Contribution for | ||
Employee Group
Insurance; Contractual Services; Travel; | ||
Commodities; Printing; Equipment;
Electronic Data Processing; | ||
Operation of Automotive Equipment;
Telecommunications | ||
Services; Travel and Allowance for Committed, Paroled
and | ||
Discharged Prisoners; Library Books; Federal Matching Grants | ||
for
Student Loans; Refunds; Workers' Compensation, | ||
Occupational Disease, and
Tort Claims; and, in appropriations | ||
to institutions of higher education,
Awards and Grants. | ||
Notwithstanding the above, any amounts appropriated for
| ||
payment of workers' compensation claims to an agency to which | ||
the authority
to evaluate, administer and pay such claims has | ||
been delegated by the
Department of Central Management Services | ||
may be transferred to any other
expenditure object where such | ||
amounts exceed the amount necessary for the
payment of such | ||
claims.
| ||
(c-1) Special provisions for State fiscal year 2003. | ||
Notwithstanding any
other provision of this Section to the | ||
contrary, for State fiscal year 2003
only, transfers among line | ||
item appropriations to an agency from the same
treasury fund | ||
may be made provided that the sum of such transfers for an | ||
agency
in State fiscal year 2003 shall not exceed 3% of the | ||
aggregate amount
appropriated to that State agency for State | ||
fiscal year 2003 for the following
objects: personal services, |
except that no transfer may be approved which
reduces the | ||
aggregate appropriations for personal services within an | ||
agency;
extra help; student and inmate compensation; State
| ||
contributions to retirement systems; State contributions to | ||
social security;
State contributions for employee group | ||
insurance; contractual services; travel;
commodities; | ||
printing; equipment; electronic data processing; operation of
| ||
automotive equipment; telecommunications services; travel and | ||
allowance for
committed, paroled, and discharged prisoners; | ||
library books; federal matching
grants for student loans; | ||
refunds; workers' compensation, occupational disease,
and tort | ||
claims; and, in appropriations to institutions of higher | ||
education,
awards and grants.
| ||
(c-2) Special provisions for State fiscal year 2005. | ||
Notwithstanding subsections (a), (a-2), and (c), for State | ||
fiscal year 2005 only, transfers may be made among any line | ||
item appropriations from the same or any other treasury fund | ||
for any objects or purposes, without limitation, when the | ||
balance remaining in one or more such line item appropriations | ||
is insufficient for the purpose for which the appropriation was | ||
made, provided that the sum of those transfers by a State | ||
agency shall not exceed 4% of the aggregate amount appropriated | ||
to that State agency for fiscal year 2005.
| ||
(d) Transfers among appropriations made to agencies of the | ||
Legislative
and Judicial departments and to the | ||
constitutionally elected officers in the
Executive branch |
require the approval of the officer authorized in Section 10
of | ||
this Act to approve and certify vouchers. Transfers among | ||
appropriations
made to the University of Illinois, Southern | ||
Illinois University, Chicago State
University, Eastern | ||
Illinois University, Governors State University, Illinois
| ||
State University, Northeastern Illinois University, Northern | ||
Illinois
University, Western Illinois University, the Illinois | ||
Mathematics and Science
Academy and the Board of Higher | ||
Education require the approval of the Board of
Higher Education | ||
and the Governor. Transfers among appropriations to all other
| ||
agencies require the approval of the Governor.
| ||
The officer responsible for approval shall certify that the
| ||
transfer is necessary to carry out the programs and purposes | ||
for which
the appropriations were made by the General Assembly | ||
and shall transmit
to the State Comptroller a certified copy of | ||
the approval which shall
set forth the specific amounts | ||
transferred so that the Comptroller may
change his records | ||
accordingly. The Comptroller shall furnish the
Governor with | ||
information copies of all transfers approved for agencies
of | ||
the Legislative and Judicial departments and transfers | ||
approved by
the constitutionally elected officials of the | ||
Executive branch other
than the Governor, showing the amounts | ||
transferred and indicating the
dates such changes were entered | ||
on the Comptroller's records.
| ||
(e) The State Board of Education, in consultation with the | ||
State Comptroller, may transfer line item appropriations for |
General State Aid from the Common School Fund to the Education | ||
Assistance Fund. | ||
(Source: P.A. 94-839, eff. 6-6-06; 95-707, eff. 1-11-08.)
| ||
Article 55. | ||
Section 55-5. The Department of Transportation Law of the
| ||
Civil Administrative Code of Illinois is amended by changing | ||
Section 2705-245 as follows:
| ||
(20 ILCS 2705/2705-245) (was 20 ILCS 2705/49.20)
| ||
Sec. 2705-245.
Inspection of property and records of | ||
applicants for and
recipients of assistance. The Department at | ||
reasonable
times may inspect the property
and examine the | ||
books, records, and other information relating to the
nature
or | ||
adequacy of services, facilities, or equipment of any | ||
municipality,
district, or carrier that is receiving or has | ||
applied for
assistance under
this Law. It may conduct | ||
investigations and hold hearings within or
without
the State. | ||
This Section shall not affect the regulatory power of any other
| ||
State or local agency with respect to transportation rates and | ||
services.
Annual statements of assets, revenues, and expenses | ||
and annual audit
reports
shall be submitted to the Department | ||
by any each municipality, district, or
carrier receiving or | ||
applying for capital assistance from the State when requested | ||
by the Department as part of an inspection under this Section .
|
(Source: P.A. 91-239, eff. 1-1-00.)
| ||
Section 55-10. The Architectural, Engineering, and Land | ||
Surveying
Qualifications Based Selection Act is amended by | ||
changing Section 30 as follows:
| ||
(30 ILCS 535/30) (from Ch. 127, par. 4151-30)
| ||
Sec. 30. Evaluation procedure. A State agency shall | ||
evaluate the
firms submitting letters of interest and other | ||
prequalified firms,
taking into account qualifications; and | ||
the State agency may consider, but
shall not be limited to | ||
considering, ability of professional personnel,
past record | ||
and experience, performance data on file, willingness to meet
| ||
time requirements, location, workload of the firm and any other
| ||
qualifications based factors as the State agency may determine | ||
in writing
are applicable. The State agency may conduct | ||
discussions with and require
public presentations by firms | ||
deemed to be the most qualified regarding
their qualifications, | ||
approach to the project and ability to furnish the
required | ||
services.
| ||
A State agency shall establish a committee to select firms | ||
to provide
architectural, engineering, and land surveying | ||
services. A selection
committee may include at least one public | ||
member nominated by a statewide
association of the profession | ||
affected. The public member may not be
employed or associated | ||
with any firm holding a contract with the State
agency nor may |
the public member's firm be considered for a
contract with
that | ||
State agency while he or she is serving as a public member of | ||
the
committee.
| ||
In addition, the Department of Transportation may appoint | ||
public members to selection committees that represent the | ||
geographic, ethnic, and cultural diversity of the population of | ||
the State, including persons nominated by associations | ||
representing minority and female-owned business associations. | ||
Public members shall be licensed in the profession affected and | ||
shall not be employed by, associated with, or have an ownership | ||
interest in any firm holding or seeking to hold a contract | ||
while serving as a public member of the committee. | ||
In no case shall a State agency, prior to selecting a firm | ||
for
negotiation under Section 40, seek formal or informal | ||
submission of verbal
or written estimates of costs or proposals | ||
in terms of dollars, hours
required, percentage of construction | ||
cost, or any other measure of
compensation.
| ||
(Source: P.A. 91-357, eff. 7-29-99.)
| ||
Section 55-15. The Motor Fuel Tax Law is amended by | ||
changing Section 19 as follows:
| ||
(35 ILCS 505/19) (from Ch. 120, par. 433.2)
| ||
Sec. 19.
A committee is hereby established to advise the | ||
Governor on
the administration of the Department's | ||
Disadvantaged Business Enterprise
Program, and on the |
Department's compliance with workforce equal
opportunity | ||
goals. The committee shall have 8 9 members appointed by the | ||
Governor
with the concurrence of the Senate, as follows: one | ||
member shall be chosen from
a civic organization whose purpose | ||
is to assure equal opportunity in the
workforce; and 7 members | ||
shall be chosen from industry, 5 of whom
shall be owners of | ||
certified disadvantaged business enterprises ; and one
member | ||
shall be an employee of the Illinois Department of | ||
Transportation .
| ||
The committee shall report to the Governor semi-annually, | ||
and shall
advise the General Assembly annually of the status of | ||
the Department's
administration of the Disadvantaged Business | ||
Enterprise Program and on the
Department's compliance with | ||
workforce equal opportunity goals.
| ||
The activities of the committee shall encompass the review | ||
of issues,
concerns, questions, policies and procedures | ||
pertaining to the
administration of the Disadvantaged Business | ||
Enterprise Program and the
Department's compliance with | ||
workforce equal opportunity goals.
| ||
Members' expenses associated with committee activities | ||
shall be
reimbursed at the State rate.
| ||
(Source: P.A. 86-16.)
| ||
Section 55-20. The Permanent Noise Monitoring Act is | ||
amended by changing Sections 5, 10, and 15 as follows:
|
(620 ILCS 35/5) (from Ch. 15 1/2, par. 755)
| ||
Sec. 5. Definitions. As used in this Act:
| ||
(a) "Airport" means an airport, as defined in Section 6 of | ||
the Illinois
Aeronautics Act, that has more than 500,000 | ||
aircraft operations (take-offs
and landings) per year. | ||
(a-1) "Airport sponsor" means any municipality, as defined | ||
in Section 20 of the Illinois
Aeronautics Act, that can own and | ||
operate an airport.
| ||
(b) "Permanent noise monitoring system" or "system" means a | ||
system that
includes at least:
| ||
(1) automated noise monitors capable of recording | ||
noise levels 24
hours per day 365 days per year; and
| ||
(2) computer equipment sufficient to process the data | ||
from each noise
monitor so that permanent noise monitoring | ||
reports in accordance with
Section 15 of this Act can be | ||
generated.
| ||
(c) "Division" means the Division of Aeronautics of the | ||
Illinois
Department of Transportation.
| ||
(d) "Ldn" means day-night average sound level. "Day-night | ||
average sound
level" has the meaning ascribed to it in Section | ||
150.7 of Part 150
of Title 14 of the Code of Federal | ||
Regulations.
| ||
(Source: P.A. 87-808.)
| ||
(620 ILCS 35/10) (from Ch. 15 1/2, par. 760)
| ||
Sec. 10. Establishment of permanent noise monitoring |
systems. No
later than December 31, 2008 1992 , each airport | ||
shall have an operable permanent
noise monitoring system. The | ||
system shall be designed, constructed, and
operated by the | ||
airport sponsor Division . The airport sponsor shall be | ||
responsible for the construction or the design and construction | ||
of any system not constructed or designed and constructed as of | ||
the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 96th General | ||
Assembly. The cost of the systems and of the permanent
noise | ||
monitoring reports under Section 15 of this Act shall be borne
| ||
by the airport sponsor State of Illinois .
| ||
(Source: P.A. 87-808.)
| ||
(620 ILCS 35/15) (from Ch. 15 1/2, par. 765)
| ||
Sec. 15. Permanent noise monitoring reports. Beginning in | ||
1993 and through 2008 , the
Division shall, on June 30th and | ||
December 31st of each
year, prepare a permanent noise | ||
monitoring report and make the
report available to the public. | ||
Beginning in 2009, the
airport sponsor shall, on June 30th and | ||
December 31st of each
year, prepare a permanent noise | ||
monitoring report and make the
report available to the public. | ||
Copies of the report shall be
submitted to: the Office of the | ||
Governor; the Office of the President of
the Senate; the Office | ||
of the Senate Minority Leader; the Office of the
Speaker of the | ||
House; the Office of the House Minority Leader; the United
| ||
States Environmental Protection Agency, Region V; and the | ||
Illinois
Environmental Protection Agency. Beginning in 2009, a |
copy of the report shall also be submitted to the division. The | ||
permanent noise monitoring report
shall contain all of the | ||
following:
| ||
(a) Copies of the actual data collected by each permanent | ||
noise monitor
in the system.
| ||
(b) A summary of the data collected by each permanent noise | ||
monitor in
the system, showing the data organized by:
| ||
(1) day of the week;
| ||
(2) time of day;
| ||
(3) week of the year;
| ||
(4) type of aircraft; and
| ||
(5) the single highest noise event recorded at each | ||
monitor.
| ||
(c) Noise contour maps showing the 65 Ldn, 70 Ldn and 75 | ||
Ldn zones
around the airport.
| ||
(d) Noise contour maps showing the 65 decibel (dBA), 70 | ||
dBA, and 75
dBA zones around the airport for:
| ||
(1) 7:00 a.m. to 10:00 p.m.;
| ||
(2) 10:00 p.m. to 7:00 a.m.; and
| ||
(3) types of aircraft.
| ||
(e) The noise contour maps produced under subsections (c) | ||
and (d)
shall also indicate:
| ||
(1) residential areas (single and multi-family);
| ||
(2) schools;
| ||
(3) hospitals and nursing homes;
| ||
(4) recreational areas, including but not limited to |
parks and
forest preserves;
| ||
(5) commercial areas;
| ||
(6) industrial areas;
| ||
(7) the boundary of the airport;
| ||
(8) the number of residences (single and multi-family) | ||
within each
contour;
| ||
(9) the number of residents within each contour;
| ||
(10) the number of schools within each contour; and
| ||
(11) the number of school students within each contour.
| ||
(f) Through 2008, a A certification by the Division that | ||
the system was in proper
working order during the period or, if | ||
it was not, a specific description
of any and all problems with | ||
the System during the period. | ||
(g) Beginning in 2009, a certification by the airport | ||
sponsor that the system was in proper
working order during the | ||
period or, if it was not, a specific description
of any and all | ||
problems with the system during the period.
| ||
(Source: P.A. 87-808.)
| ||
Article 60. | ||
Section 60-5. If and only if House Bill 255 of the 96th | ||
General Assembly becomes law, the Video Gaming Act is amended | ||
by changing Sections 5, 15, 25, 35, 45, 50, 58, and 60 and by | ||
adding Sections 80 and 85 as follows: |
(09600HB0255enr. Sec. 5)
| ||
Sec. 5. Definitions. As used in this Act:
| ||
"Board" means the Illinois Gaming Board.
| ||
"Credit" means 5, 10, or 25 cents either won or purchased | ||
by a player.
| ||
"Distributor" means an individual, partnership, or | ||
corporation licensed under
this Act to buy, sell, lease, or | ||
distribute video gaming terminals or major
components or parts | ||
of video gaming terminals to or from terminal
operators.
| ||
"Terminal operator" means an individual, partnership or | ||
corporation that is
licensed under this Act and that owns, | ||
services, and maintains video
gaming terminals for placement in | ||
licensed establishments, licensed fraternal
establishments, or | ||
licensed veterans establishments.
| ||
"Licensed technician" means an individual
who
is licensed | ||
under this Act to repair,
service, and maintain
video gaming | ||
terminals.
| ||
"Licensed terminal handler" means a person, including but | ||
not limited to an employee or independent contractor working | ||
for a manufacturer, distributor, supplier, technician, or | ||
terminal operator, who is licensed under this Act to possess or | ||
control a video gaming terminal or to have access to the inner | ||
workings of a video gaming terminal. A licensed terminal | ||
handler does not include an individual, partnership, or | ||
corporation defined as a manufacturer, distributor, supplier, | ||
technician, or terminal operator under this Act. |
"Manufacturer" means an individual, partnership, or | ||
corporation that is
licensed under this Act and that | ||
manufactures or assembles video gaming
terminals.
| ||
"Supplier" means an individual, partnership, or | ||
corporation that is
licensed under this Act to supply major | ||
components or parts to video gaming
terminals to licensed
| ||
terminal operators.
| ||
"Net terminal income" means money put into a video gaming | ||
terminal minus
credits paid out to players.
| ||
"Video gaming terminal" means any electronic video game | ||
machine
that, upon insertion of cash, is available to play or | ||
simulate the play of
a video game, including but not limited to | ||
video poker, line up, and blackjack, as
authorized by the Board | ||
utilizing a video display and microprocessors in
which the | ||
player may receive free games or credits that can be
redeemed | ||
for cash. The term does not include a machine that directly
| ||
dispenses coins, cash, or tokens or is for amusement purposes | ||
only.
| ||
"Licensed establishment" means any licensed retail | ||
establishment where
alcoholic liquor is drawn, poured, mixed, | ||
or otherwise served for consumption
on the premises. "Licensed | ||
establishment" does not include a facility operated by an | ||
organization licensee, an intertrack wagering licensee, or an | ||
intertrack wagering location licensee licensed under the | ||
Illinois Horse Racing Act of 1975 or a riverboat licensed under | ||
the Riverboat Gambling Act.
|
"Licensed fraternal establishment" means the location | ||
where a qualified
fraternal organization that derives its | ||
charter from a national fraternal
organization regularly | ||
meets.
| ||
"Licensed veterans establishment" means the location where | ||
a qualified
veterans organization that derives its charter from | ||
a national veterans
organization regularly meets.
| ||
"Licensed truck stop establishment" means a facility that | ||
is at least a
3-acre facility with a convenience store and with | ||
separate diesel
islands for fueling commercial motor vehicles | ||
and parking spaces for commercial
motor vehicles as defined in | ||
Section 18b-101 of the Illinois Vehicle Code.
| ||
(Source: 09600HB0255enr.) | ||
(09600HB0255enr. Sec. 15)
| ||
Sec. 15. Minimum requirements for
licensing and | ||
registration. Every video gaming terminal offered for
play | ||
shall first be
tested and approved pursuant to the rules of the | ||
Board, and
each video gaming terminal offered in this State for | ||
play shall conform to an
approved
model. The Board may utilize | ||
the services of an independent outside testing laboratory for | ||
the
examination of video gaming machines and associated | ||
equipment as required
by this Section. Every video gaming | ||
terminal offered in this State for play must meet minimum | ||
standards set by an independent outside testing laboratory | ||
approved by the Board. Each approved model shall, at a minimum, |
meet the following
criteria:
| ||
(1) It must conform to all requirements of federal law | ||
and
regulations, including FCC Class A
Emissions | ||
Standards.
| ||
(2) It must theoretically pay out a mathematically | ||
demonstrable percentage
during the expected lifetime of | ||
the machine
of all amounts played, which must not be less | ||
than 80%. Video gaming
terminals that may be affected by | ||
skill must meet this standard when using a
method of play | ||
that will provide the greatest return to the player over a
| ||
period of continuous play.
| ||
(3) It must use a random selection process to determine | ||
the outcome of
each play of a game. The random selection | ||
process must meet 99% confidence
limits using a standard | ||
chi-squared test for (randomness) goodness of fit.
| ||
(4) It must display an accurate representation of the | ||
game outcome.
| ||
(5) It must not automatically alter pay tables or any | ||
function of the
video gaming terminal based on internal | ||
computation of hold percentage or have
any means of | ||
manipulation that affects the random selection process or
| ||
probabilities of winning a game.
| ||
(6) It must not be adversely affected by static | ||
discharge or other
electromagnetic interference.
| ||
(7) It must be capable of detecting and displaying the | ||
following
conditions
during idle states or on demand: power |
reset; door open; and door just closed.
| ||
(8) It must have the capacity to display complete play | ||
history
(outcome, intermediate play steps, credits | ||
available, bets placed, credits
paid, and credits cashed | ||
out) for the most recent game played and 10 games
prior
| ||
thereto.
| ||
(9) The theoretical payback percentage of a video | ||
gaming terminal must
not be
capable of being changed | ||
without making a hardware or software change in
the video | ||
gaming terminal.
| ||
(10) Video gaming terminals must be designed so that | ||
replacement of
parts or modules required for normal | ||
maintenance does not necessitate
replacement of the | ||
electromechanical meters.
| ||
(11) It must have nonresettable meters housed in a | ||
locked area of the
terminal that
keep a permanent record of | ||
all cash inserted into the machine, all winnings
made by | ||
the terminal printer, credits played in for video gaming | ||
terminals, and
credits won by video gaming players. The | ||
video gaming terminal must provide
the means for on-demand | ||
display of stored information as determined by the
Board.
| ||
(12) Electronically stored meter information required | ||
by this Section
must be preserved for a minimum of 180 days | ||
after a power loss to the service.
| ||
(13) It must have one or more mechanisms that accept | ||
cash in the
form of
bills. The mechanisms shall be designed |
to prevent obtaining credits without
paying by stringing, | ||
slamming, drilling, or other means. If such attempts at | ||
physical tampering are made, the video gaming terminal | ||
shall suspend itself from operating until reset.
| ||
(14) It shall have accounting software that keeps an | ||
electronic record
which includes, but is not limited to, | ||
the following: total cash inserted
into the video gaming | ||
terminal; the value of winning tickets claimed by
players; | ||
the
total credits played; and the total
credits awarded
by | ||
a video gaming terminal ; and pay back percentage credited | ||
to players of each video game .
| ||
(15) It shall be linked by a central communications | ||
system
to provide
auditing program information as approved | ||
by the Board. The central communications system shall use a | ||
standard industry protocol, as defined by the Gaming | ||
Standards Association, and shall have the functionality to | ||
enable the Board or its designee to activate or deactivate | ||
individual gaming devices from the central communications | ||
system. In no event may the
communications system approved | ||
by the Board limit participation to only one
manufacturer | ||
of video gaming terminals by either the cost in | ||
implementing
the necessary program modifications to | ||
communicate or the inability to
communicate with the | ||
central communications system.
| ||
(16) The Board, in its discretion, may require video | ||
gaming terminals to display Amber Alert messages if the |
Board makes a finding that it would be economically and | ||
technically feasible and pose no risk to the integrity and | ||
security of the central communications system and video | ||
gaming terminals. It shall be able to receive and broadcast | ||
amber alert messages.
| ||
The Board may adopt rules to establish additional criteria | ||
to preserve the integrity and security of video gaming in this | ||
State. | ||
(Source: 09600HB0255enr.) | ||
(09600HB0255enr. Sec. 25)
| ||
Sec. 25. Restriction of licensees.
| ||
(a) Manufacturer. A person may not be licensed as a | ||
manufacturer of a
video gaming terminal in Illinois unless the | ||
person has a valid
manufacturer's license issued
under this | ||
Act. A manufacturer may only sell video gaming terminals for | ||
use
in Illinois to
persons having a valid distributor's | ||
license.
| ||
(b) Distributor. A person may not sell, distribute, or | ||
lease
or market a video gaming terminal in Illinois unless the | ||
person has a valid
distributor's
license issued under this Act. | ||
A distributor may only sell video gaming
terminals for use in
| ||
Illinois to persons having a valid distributor's or terminal | ||
operator's
license.
| ||
(c) Terminal operator. A person may not own, maintain, or | ||
place a video gaming terminal unless he has a valid terminal |
operator's
license issued
under this Act. A terminal operator | ||
may only place video gaming terminals for
use in
Illinois in | ||
licensed establishments, licensed truck stop establishments, | ||
licensed fraternal establishments,
and
licensed veterans | ||
establishments.
No terminal operator may give anything of | ||
value, including but not limited to
a loan or financing | ||
arrangement, to a licensed establishment, licensed truck stop | ||
establishment,
licensed fraternal establishment, or licensed | ||
veterans establishment as
any incentive or inducement to locate | ||
video terminals in that establishment.
Of the after-tax profits
| ||
from a video gaming terminal, 50% shall be paid to the terminal
| ||
operator and 50% shall be paid to the licensed establishment, | ||
licensed truck stop establishment,
licensed fraternal | ||
establishment, or
licensed veterans establishment.
No terminal
| ||
operator may own or have a substantial interest in more than 5% | ||
of the video
gaming terminals licensed in this State. A video | ||
terminal operator that violates one or more requirements of | ||
this subsection is guilty of a Class 4 felony and is subject to | ||
termination of his or her license by the Board.
| ||
(d) Licensed technician. A person may not service, | ||
maintain, or repair a
video gaming terminal
in this State | ||
unless he or she (1) has a valid technician's license issued
| ||
under this Act, (2) is a terminal operator, or (3) is employed | ||
by a terminal
operator, distributor, or manufacturer.
| ||
(d-5) Licensed terminal handler. No person, including but | ||
not limited to an employee or independent contractor working |
for a manufacturer, distributor, supplier, technician, or | ||
terminal operator licensed pursuant to this Act, shall have | ||
possession or control of a video gaming terminal, or access to | ||
the inner workings of a video gaming terminal, unless that | ||
person possesses a valid terminal handler's license issued | ||
under this Act. | ||
(e) Licensed establishment. No video gaming terminal may be | ||
placed in any licensed establishment, licensed veterans | ||
establishment, licensed truck stop establishment,
or licensed | ||
fraternal establishment
unless the owner
or agent of the owner | ||
of the licensed establishment, licensed veterans | ||
establishment, licensed truck stop establishment, or licensed
| ||
fraternal establishment has entered into a
written use | ||
agreement with the terminal operator for placement of the
| ||
terminals. A copy of the use agreement shall be on file in the | ||
terminal
operator's place of business and available for | ||
inspection by individuals
authorized by the Board. A licensed | ||
establishment, licensed truck stop establishment, licensed | ||
veterans establishment,
or
licensed
fraternal
establishment | ||
may operate up to 5 video gaming terminals on its premises at | ||
any
time , unless the Board authorizes a greater number .
| ||
(f) Residency requirement. Each licensed distributor and | ||
terminal
operator
must be an Illinois
resident. However, if an | ||
out of state distributor or terminal operator
has performed its | ||
respective business
within Illinois for at least 48 months | ||
prior to the effective date of this
Act, the out of state |
person may be eligible for
licensing under this Act, upon | ||
application to and approval of the Board.
| ||
(g) Financial interest restrictions.
As used in this Act, | ||
"substantial interest" in a partnership, a corporation, an
| ||
organization, an association, or a business means:
| ||
(A) When, with respect to a sole proprietorship, an | ||
individual or
his or her spouse owns, operates, | ||
manages, or conducts, directly
or indirectly, the | ||
organization, association, or business, or any part | ||
thereof;
or
| ||
(B) When, with respect to a partnership, the | ||
individual or his or
her spouse shares in any of the | ||
profits, or potential profits,
of the partnership | ||
activities; or
| ||
(C) When, with respect to a corporation, an | ||
individual or his or her
spouse is an officer or | ||
director, or the individual or his or her spouse is a | ||
holder, directly or beneficially, of 5% or more of any | ||
class
of stock of the corporation; or
| ||
(D) When, with respect to an organization not | ||
covered in (A), (B) or
(C) above, an individual or his | ||
or her spouse is an officer or manages the
business | ||
affairs, or the individual or his or her spouse is the
| ||
owner of or otherwise controls 10% or more of the | ||
assets of the organization;
or
| ||
(E) When an individual or his or her spouse |
furnishes
5% or more of the capital, whether in cash, | ||
goods, or services, for the
operation of any business, | ||
association, or organization during any calendar
year.
| ||
(h) Location restriction. A licensed establishment, | ||
licensed truck stop establishment, licensed
fraternal
| ||
establishment, or licensed veterans establishment that is (i) | ||
located within 1,000
feet of a facility operated by an | ||
organizational licensee, an intertrack wagering licensee, or | ||
an intertrack wagering location licensee licensed under the | ||
Illinois Horse Racing Act of 1975, or the home dock of a | ||
riverboat licensed under the Riverboat
Gambling Act or (ii) | ||
located within 100 feet of , a school , or a place of worship | ||
under the Religious Corporation Act , is ineligible to operate a | ||
video gaming terminal.
| ||
(i) The provisions of the Illinois Antitrust Act are fully | ||
and equally applicable to the activities of any licensee under | ||
this Act. | ||
(Source: 09600HB0255enr.) | ||
(09600HB0255enr. Sec. 35)
| ||
Sec. 35. Display of license; confiscation; violation as | ||
felony. | ||
(a) Each
video gaming terminal shall be licensed by the | ||
Board before placement
or operation on the premises of a | ||
licensed establishment, licensed truck stop
establishment, | ||
licensed
fraternal establishment, or licensed veterans |
establishment. The license of
each video gaming terminal shall | ||
be maintained
at the location where the video gaming terminal | ||
is operated. Failure to do so
is a petty offense with a fine
| ||
not to exceed $100.
Any licensed establishment, licensed truck | ||
stop establishment, licensed
fraternal establishment, or | ||
licensed
veterans establishment
used for the conduct of | ||
gambling games in violation of this Act shall be
considered a | ||
gambling place in violation of Section 28-3 of the Criminal
| ||
Code of 1961. Every gambling device found in
a licensed | ||
establishment, licensed truck stop establishment, licensed | ||
fraternal
establishment, or licensed
veterans establishment | ||
operating gambling games in violation of this
Act shall be | ||
subject to seizure, confiscation, and destruction as provided
| ||
in Section 28-5 of the Criminal Code of 1961.
Any license | ||
issued under the Liquor Control Act
of 1934 to any owner or | ||
operator of a licensed establishment, licensed truck
stop | ||
establishment, licensed
fraternal establishment, or licensed | ||
veterans establishment that operates or
permits the operation | ||
of a video gaming terminal within its establishment in
| ||
violation of this Act shall be immediately revoked.
No person | ||
may own, operate, have in his or her possession or custody or | ||
under
his or her control, or permit to be kept in any place | ||
under his or her
possession or control, any
device that awards | ||
credits and contains a circuit, meter, or switch capable of
| ||
removing and recording the removal of credits when the award of | ||
credits is
dependent upon chance. A violation of this Section |
is a Class 4 felony. All
devices that are owned, operated, or | ||
possessed in violation of this Section are
hereby declared to | ||
be public nuisances and shall be subject to seizure,
| ||
confiscation, and destruction as provided in Section 28-5 of | ||
the Criminal Code
of 1961.
The provisions of this Section do | ||
not apply to devices or electronic video
game terminals | ||
licensed pursuant to this Act. A video gaming terminal operated | ||
for amusement only and bearing a valid amusement tax sticker | ||
issued prior to the effective date of this amendatory Act of | ||
the 96th General Assembly shall not be subject to this Section | ||
until the sooner of (i) the expiration of the amusement tax | ||
sticker or (ii) 30 days after the Board establishes that the | ||
central communications system is functional.
| ||
(b) (1) The odds of winning each video game shall be posted | ||
on or near each video gaming terminal. The manner in which the | ||
odds are calculated and how they are posted shall be determined | ||
by the Board by rule. | ||
(2) No video gaming terminal licensed under this Act may be | ||
played except during the legal hours of operation allowed for | ||
the consumption of alcoholic beverages at the licensed | ||
establishment, licensed fraternal establishment, or licensed | ||
veterans establishment. A licensed establishment, licensed | ||
fraternal establishment, or licensed veterans establishment | ||
that violates this subsection is subject to termination of its | ||
license by the Board. | ||
(Source: 09600HB0255enr.) |
(09600HB0255enr. Sec. 45)
| ||
Sec. 45. Issuance of license.
| ||
(a) The burden is upon each applicant to
demonstrate his | ||
suitability for licensure. Each video gaming terminal
| ||
manufacturer, distributor, supplier, operator, handler, | ||
licensed establishment, licensed truck stop establishment, | ||
licensed
fraternal
establishment, and licensed veterans | ||
establishment shall be
licensed by the Board.
The Board may | ||
issue or deny a license under this Act to any person pursuant | ||
to the same criteria set forth in Section 9 of the Riverboat | ||
Gambling Act.
| ||
(b) Each person seeking and possessing a license as a video | ||
gaming terminal manufacturer, distributor, supplier, operator, | ||
handler, licensed establishment, licensed truck stop | ||
establishment, licensed fraternal establishment, or licensed | ||
veterans establishment shall submit to a background | ||
investigation conducted by the Board with the assistance of the | ||
State Police or other law enforcement. The background | ||
investigation shall include each beneficiary of a trust, each | ||
partner of a partnership, and each director and officer and all | ||
stockholders of 5% or more in a parent or subsidiary | ||
corporation of a video gaming terminal manufacturer, | ||
distributor, supplier, operator, or licensed establishment, | ||
licensed truck stop establishment, licensed fraternal | ||
establishment, or licensed veterans establishment. |
(c) Each person seeking and possessing a license as a video | ||
gaming terminal manufacturer, distributor, supplier, operator, | ||
handler, licensed establishment, licensed truck stop | ||
establishment, licensed fraternal establishment, or licensed | ||
veterans establishment shall disclose the identity of every | ||
person, association, trust, or corporation having a greater | ||
than 1% direct or indirect pecuniary interest in the video | ||
gaming terminal operation to which the license is sought. If | ||
the disclosed entity is a trust, the application shall disclose | ||
the names and addresses of the beneficiaries; if a corporation, | ||
the names and addresses of all stockholders and directors; if a | ||
partnership, the names and addresses of all partners, both | ||
general and limited. | ||
(d) No person may be licensed as a video gaming terminal | ||
manufacturer, distributor, supplier, operator, handler, | ||
licensed establishment, licensed truck stop establishment, | ||
licensed fraternal establishment, or licensed veterans | ||
establishment if that person has been found by the Board to: | ||
(1) have a background, including a criminal record, | ||
reputation, habits, social or business associations, or | ||
prior activities that pose a threat to the public interests | ||
of the State or to the security and integrity of video | ||
gaming; | ||
(2) create or enhance the dangers of unsuitable, | ||
unfair, or illegal practices, methods, and activities in | ||
the conduct of video gaming; or |
(3) present questionable business practices and | ||
financial arrangements incidental to the conduct of video | ||
gaming activities. | ||
(e) Any applicant for any license under this Act has the | ||
burden of proving his or her qualifications to the satisfaction | ||
of the Board. The Board may adopt rules to establish additional | ||
qualifications and requirements to preserve the integrity and | ||
security of video gaming in this State. | ||
(f) (b) A non-refundable application fee shall be paid at | ||
the time an
application for a license is filed with the Board | ||
in the following amounts:
| ||
(1) Manufacturer ..........................$5,000
| ||
(2) Distributor ...........................$5,000
| ||
(3) Terminal operator .....................$5,000
| ||
(4) Supplier ..............................$2,500
| ||
(5) Technician ..............................$100
| ||
(6) Terminal Handler ..............................$50 | ||
(c) (Blank). | ||
(g) (d) Each licensed distributor, terminal operator, or | ||
person with a
substantial interest in a distributor or terminal | ||
operator must have
resided in Illinois for at least 24 months | ||
prior to application unless he
or she has performed his or her | ||
respective business in Illinois for at least 48
months prior
to | ||
the effective date of this Act. | ||
The Board shall establish an
annual fee for each license | ||
not to exceed the following: |
(1) Manufacturer .........................$10,000
| ||
(2) Distributor ..........................$10,000
| ||
(3) Terminal operator .....................$5,000
| ||
(4) Supplier ..............................$2,000
| ||
(5) Technician ..............................$100
| ||
(6) Licensed establishment, licensed truck stop
| ||
establishment, licensed fraternal establishment,
| ||
or licensed veterans establishment ..............$100
| ||
(7) Video gaming terminal ...................$100
| ||
(8) Terminal Handler ..............................$50
| ||
(Source: 09600HB0255enr.) | ||
(09600HB0255enr. Sec. 50)
| ||
Sec. 50. Distribution of license fees.
| ||
(a) All fees collected under Section 45 shall be deposited | ||
into the State Gaming
Fund.
| ||
(b) Fees collected under Section 45 shall be used as | ||
follows:
| ||
(1) Twenty-five percent shall be paid , subject to | ||
appropriation by the General Assembly, to the Department of | ||
Human Services for administration of to programs for the | ||
treatment of
compulsive gambling.
| ||
(2) Seventy-five percent shall be used for the | ||
administration of this
Act.
| ||
(c) All licenses issued by the Board under this Act are | ||
renewable annually
unless sooner cancelled or terminated. No |
license issued under this Act is
transferable or assignable.
| ||
(Source: 09600HB0255enr.) | ||
(09600HB0255enr. Sec. 58)
| ||
Sec. 58. Location of terminals. Video gaming terminals | ||
must be located
in an area restricted to persons over 21 years | ||
of age the entrance to which is within the view of at least one | ||
employee, who is over 21 years of age, of the
establishment in | ||
which they are located. The placement of video gaming terminals | ||
in licensed establishments, licensed truck stop | ||
establishments, licensed fraternal establishments, and | ||
licensed veterans establishments shall be subject to the rules | ||
promulgated by the Board pursuant to the Illinois | ||
Administrative Procedure Act.
| ||
(Source: 09600HB0255enr.)
| ||
(09600HB0255enr. Sec. 60)
| ||
Sec. 60. Imposition and distribution of tax.
| ||
(a) A tax of 30% is imposed on net terminal income
and | ||
shall be collected by the Board.
| ||
(b) Of the tax collected under this Section, five-sixths | ||
shall be
deposited into the Capital Projects Fund and one-sixth | ||
shall be deposited into the Local Government Video Gaming | ||
Distributive Fund.
| ||
(c) Revenues generated from the play of video gaming | ||
terminals shall be
deposited by the terminal operator, who is |
responsible for tax payments, in
a specially created, separate | ||
bank account maintained by the video gaming
terminal operator
| ||
to allow for electronic fund transfers of moneys for tax | ||
payment.
| ||
(d) Each licensed establishment, licensed truck stop | ||
establishment, licensed fraternal establishment,
and licensed | ||
veterans establishment shall maintain an adequate video gaming
| ||
fund, with the amount to be determined by the Board.
| ||
(e) The State's percentage of net terminal income shall be | ||
reported and remitted to the Board within 15 days after the | ||
15th day of each month and within 15 days after the end of each | ||
month by the video terminal operator. A video terminal operator | ||
who falsely reports or fails to report the amount due required | ||
by this Section is guilty of a Class 4 felony and is subject to | ||
termination of his or her license by the Board. Each video | ||
terminal operator shall keep a record of net terminal income in | ||
such form as the Board may require. All payments not remitted | ||
when due shall be paid together with a penalty assessment on | ||
the unpaid balance at a rate of 1.5% per month. | ||
(Source: 09600HB0255enr.) | ||
(09600HB0255enr. Sec. 80 new) | ||
Sec. 80. Applicability of Illinois Riverboat Gambling Act. | ||
The provisions of the Illinois Riverboat Gambling Act, and all | ||
rules promulgated thereunder, shall apply to the Video Gaming | ||
Act, except where there is a conflict between the 2 Acts. All |
provisions of the Uniform Penalty and Interest Act shall apply, | ||
as far as practicable, to the subject matter of this Act to the | ||
same extent as if such provisions were included herein. | ||
(09600HB0255enr. Sec. 85 new) | ||
Sec. 85. Severability. The provisions of the Video Gaming | ||
Act are severable pursuant to Section 1.31 of the Statute on | ||
Statutes. | ||
Section 60-10. If and only if House Bill 255 of the 96th | ||
General Assembly becomes law, the Illinois Lottery Law is | ||
amended by changing Sections 3, 7.12, 7.17, 9, and 9.1 as | ||
follows:
| ||
(20 ILCS 1605/3) (from Ch. 120, par. 1153)
| ||
Sec. 3. For the purposes of this Act:
| ||
a. "Lottery" or "State Lottery" means the lottery or | ||
lotteries
established and operated pursuant to this Act.
| ||
b. "Board" means the Lottery Control Board created by this | ||
Act.
| ||
c. "Department" means the Department of Revenue.
| ||
d. "Director" means the Director of Revenue.
| ||
e. "Chairman" means the Chairman of the Lottery Control | ||
Board.
| ||
f. "Multi-state game directors" means such persons, | ||
including the
Superintendent, as may be designated by an
|
agreement between the Division and one or more additional
| ||
lotteries operated under the laws of another state or states.
| ||
g. "Division" means the Division of the State Lottery of | ||
the Department of Revenue.
| ||
h. "Superintendent" means the Superintendent of the | ||
Division of the State Lottery of the Department of Revenue.
| ||
i. "Management agreement" means an agreement or contract | ||
between the Department on behalf of the State with a private | ||
manager, as an independent contractor, whereby the private | ||
manager provides management services to the Lottery in exchange | ||
for the receipt of no more than 5% of Lottery profits ticket | ||
and share sales and related proceeds so long as the Department | ||
continues to exercise actual control over all significant | ||
business decisions made by the private manager as set forth in | ||
Section 9.1. | ||
j. "Person" means any individual, firm, association, joint | ||
venture, partnership, estate, trust, syndicate, fiduciary, | ||
corporation, or other legal entity, group, or combination. | ||
k. "Private manager" means a person that provides | ||
management services to the Lottery on behalf of the Department | ||
under a management agreement. | ||
l. "Profits" means total revenues accruing from the sale of | ||
lottery tickets or shares and related proceeds minus (1) the | ||
payment of prizes and retailer bonuses and (2) the payment of | ||
costs incurred in the operation and administration of the | ||
lottery, excluding costs of services directly rendered by a |
private manager. | ||
(Source: P.A. 94-776, eff. 5-19-06; 09600HB0255enr.)
| ||
(20 ILCS 1605/7.12) | ||
Sec. 7.12. Internet pilot program. The General Assembly | ||
finds that: | ||
(1) the consumer market in Illinois has changed since | ||
the creation of the Illinois State Lottery in 1974; | ||
(2) the Internet has become an integral part of | ||
everyday life for a significant number of Illinois | ||
residents not only in regards to their professional life, | ||
but also in regards to personal business and communication; | ||
and | ||
(3) the current practices of selling lottery tickets | ||
does not appeal to the new form of market participants who | ||
prefer to make purchases on the internet at their own | ||
convenience. | ||
It is the intent of the General Assembly to create an | ||
Internet pilot program for the sale of lottery tickets to | ||
capture this new form of market participant. | ||
The Department shall create a pilot program that allows an | ||
individual to purchase lottery tickets or shares on the | ||
Internet without using a Lottery retailer with on-line status, | ||
as those terms are defined by rule. The Department shall adopt | ||
rules necessary for the administration of this program. These | ||
rules shall include requirements for marketing of the Lottery |
to infrequent players. The provisions of this Act and the rules | ||
adopted under this Act shall apply to the sale of lottery | ||
tickets or shares under this program. | ||
Before beginning the pilot program, the Department of | ||
Revenue must seek a clarifying memorandum from the federal | ||
Department of Justice that it is legal for Illinois residents | ||
and non-Illinois residents to purchase and the private company | ||
to sell lottery tickets on the Internet on behalf of the State | ||
of Illinois under the federal Unlawful Internet Gambling | ||
Enforcement Act of 2006. | ||
The Department shall limit the individuals authorized to | ||
purchase lottery tickets on the Internet to individuals who are | ||
18 years of age or older and Illinois residents, unless the | ||
clarifying memorandum from the federal Department of Justice | ||
indicates that it is legal for non-Illinois residents to | ||
purchase lottery tickets on the Internet, and shall set a | ||
limitation on the monthly purchases that may be made through | ||
any one individual's lottery account. The Department is | ||
obligated to implement the pilot program set forth in this | ||
Section and Sections 7.15, 7.16, and 7.17 only at such time, | ||
and to such extent, that the Department of Justice issues a | ||
clarifying memorandum finding such program to be permitted | ||
under federal law to the extent permitted by the federal | ||
Department of Justice in its clarifying memorandum . Only Lotto | ||
and Mega Million games offered by the Illinois Lottery may be | ||
offered through the pilot program. |
The pilot program must be conducted pursuant to a contract | ||
with a private vendor that has the expertise, technical | ||
capability, and knowledge of the Illinois lottery marketplace | ||
to conduct the program. The Department of the Lottery must seek | ||
ensure cooperation from existing vendors for the program. | ||
The pilot program shall last for not less than 36 months, | ||
but not more than 48 months.
| ||
(Source: 09600HB0255sam001.) | ||
(20 ILCS 1605/7.17)
| ||
Sec. 7.17. Contracts. The contract with a private vendor | ||
to fulfill the pilot program requirements of Sections 7.12, | ||
7.15, and 7.16 of this Act must be separate from lottery | ||
contracts existing on the effective date of this Section. To | ||
the extent feasible based upon the receipt of the clarifying | ||
memorandum permitting the program to proceed, the The | ||
Department shall enter into a contract with a private vendor no | ||
later than December 1, 2009 and the private vendor must begin | ||
performance on the contract no later than January 1, 2010. The | ||
Department must ensure cooperation from all existing | ||
contractors supporting the Lottery and any private manager | ||
selected under Section 9.1 of the Act. | ||
All contracts entered into (i) with a private vendor to | ||
fulfill the requirements for the pilot program under Section | ||
7.12 or (ii) for the development and provision of technology | ||
and controls under this Section shall be awarded pursuant to |
Section 20-35 of the Illinois Procurement Code. | ||
The Department shall award contracts for the development | ||
and provision of technology and controls to ensure compliance | ||
with the age and residency requirements for the purchase of | ||
lottery tickets on the Internet pursuant to competitive bidding | ||
processes. The technology and controls must include | ||
appropriate data security standards to prevent unauthorized | ||
access to Internet lottery accounts.
| ||
(Source: 09600HB0255sam001.)
| ||
(20 ILCS 1605/9) (from Ch. 120, par. 1159)
| ||
Sec. 9. The Superintendent, as administrative head of
the | ||
Division, shall direct and supervise all its administrative and
| ||
technical activities and shall report to the Director. In | ||
addition to the duties imposed upon him
elsewhere in this Act, | ||
it
shall be the Superintendent's duty:
| ||
a. To supervise and administer the operation of the lottery | ||
in
accordance with the provisions of this Act or such
rules and | ||
regulations of the Department
adopted thereunder.
| ||
b. To attend meetings of the Board or to appoint a designee | ||
to
attend in his stead.
| ||
c. To employ and direct such personnel in accord with the | ||
Personnel Code,
as may be necessary to carry out the purposes | ||
of this Act. The Superintendent may, subject to the approval of | ||
the Director, use the services, personnel, or facilities of the | ||
Department.
In addition, the Superintendent
may by agreement |
secure such services as he or she may deem necessary
from any | ||
other department, agency, or unit of the State government, and
| ||
may employ and compensate such consultants and technical | ||
assistants as may
be required and is otherwise permitted by | ||
law.
| ||
d. To license, in accordance with the provisions of | ||
Sections 10 and 10.1
of this Act and the rules and regulations | ||
of the Department
adopted thereunder,
as agents to sell lottery | ||
tickets such persons as in his opinion will best
serve the | ||
public convenience and promote the sale of tickets or shares.
| ||
The Superintendent may require a bond from every licensed | ||
agent, in such
amount as provided in the rules and regulations | ||
of the Department. Every licensed
agent shall prominently | ||
display his license, or a copy thereof, as provided
in the | ||
rules and regulations of the Department.
| ||
e. To suspend or revoke any license issued pursuant to this | ||
Act or the
rules and regulations promulgated by the Department | ||
thereunder.
| ||
f. To confer regularly as necessary or desirable and not
| ||
less than once
every month with the Lottery Control Board on | ||
the operation and administration
of the Lottery; to make | ||
available for inspection by the Board or any member
of the | ||
Board, upon request, all books, records, files, and other | ||
information
and documents of his office; to advise the Board | ||
and recommend such rules
and regulations and such other matters | ||
as he deems necessary and advisable
to improve the operation |
and administration of the lottery.
| ||
g. To enter into contracts for the operation of the | ||
lottery, or any part
thereof, and into contracts for the | ||
promotion of the lottery on behalf of
the Department with any | ||
person, firm or corporation, to perform any of the
functions | ||
provided for in this Act or the rules and regulations | ||
promulgated
thereunder. The Department shall not expend State | ||
funds on a contractual
basis for such functions unless those | ||
functions and expenditures are expressly
authorized by the | ||
General Assembly.
| ||
h. To enter into an agreement or agreements with the | ||
management of state
lotteries operated pursuant to the laws of | ||
other states for the purpose of
creating and operating a | ||
multi-state lottery game wherein a separate and
distinct prize | ||
pool would be combined to award larger prizes to the public
| ||
than could be offered by the several state lotteries, | ||
individually. No
tickets or shares offered in connection with a | ||
multi-state lottery game
shall be sold within the State of | ||
Illinois, except those offered by and
through the Department. | ||
No such agreement shall purport to pledge the full
faith and | ||
credit of the State of Illinois, nor shall the Department | ||
expend
State funds on a contractual basis in connection with | ||
any such game unless
such expenditures are expressly authorized | ||
by the General Assembly,
provided, however, that in the event | ||
of error or omission by the Illinois
State Lottery in the | ||
conduct of the game, as determined by the multi-state
game |
directors, the Department shall be authorized to pay a prize | ||
winner or
winners the lesser of a disputed prize or $1,000,000, | ||
any such payment to
be made solely from funds appropriated for | ||
game prize purposes. The
Department shall be authorized to | ||
share in the ordinary operating expenses
of any such | ||
multi-state lottery game, from funds appropriated by the | ||
General Assembly,
and in the event the multi-state game control | ||
offices are physically
located within the State of Illinois, | ||
the Department is authorized to
advance start-up operating | ||
costs not to exceed $150,000, subject to
proportionate | ||
reimbursement of such costs by the other participating state
| ||
lotteries. The Department shall be authorized to share | ||
proportionately in
the costs of establishing a liability | ||
reserve fund from funds appropriated
by the General Assembly. | ||
The Department is authorized to transfer prize
award funds | ||
attributable to Illinois sales of multi-state lottery game | ||
tickets to
the multi-state control office, or its designated | ||
depository, for deposit
to such game pool account or accounts | ||
as may be established by the
multi-state game directors, the | ||
records of which account or accounts shall
be available at all | ||
times for inspection in an audit by the Auditor General
of | ||
Illinois and any other auditors pursuant to the laws of the | ||
State of
Illinois.
No multi-state game prize awarded to a | ||
nonresident of Illinois, with
respect to a ticket or share | ||
purchased in a state other than the State of
Illinois, shall be | ||
deemed to be a prize awarded under this Act for the
purpose of |
taxation under the Illinois Income Tax Act.
All of the net | ||
revenues accruing from the sale of multi-state lottery
tickets | ||
or shares shall be transferred into the Common School Fund | ||
pursuant
to Section 7.2.
The Department shall promulgate such | ||
rules as may be appropriate to
implement the provisions of this | ||
Section.
| ||
i. To make a continuous study and investigation of (1) the | ||
operation and
the administration of similar laws which may be | ||
in effect in other states
or countries, (2) any literature on | ||
the subject which from time to time
may be published or | ||
available, (3) any Federal laws which may affect the
operation | ||
of the
lottery, and (4) the reaction of Illinois citizens to | ||
existing and potential
features of the lottery with a view to | ||
recommending or effecting changes
that will tend to serve the | ||
purposes of this Act.
| ||
j. To report monthly to the State Treasurer and the Lottery | ||
Control Board
a full and complete statement of lottery | ||
revenues, prize disbursements and
other expenses for each month | ||
and the amounts to be transferred to the Common
School Fund | ||
pursuant to Section 7.2 or such other funds as are otherwise
| ||
authorized by Section 21.2 of this Act, and to
make an annual | ||
report, which shall include a full and complete statement
of | ||
lottery revenues, prize disbursements and other expenses, to | ||
the Governor
and the Board. All reports required by this | ||
subsection shall be public
and copies of all
such reports shall | ||
be sent to the Speaker of the House, the President of
the |
Senate, and the minority leaders of both houses.
| ||
(Source: P.A. 94-776, eff. 5-19-06.)
| ||
(20 ILCS 1605/9.1)
| ||
Sec. 9.1. Private manager and management agreement. | ||
(a) As used in this Section: | ||
"Offeror" means a person or group of persons that responds | ||
to a request for qualifications under this Section. | ||
"Request for qualifications" means all materials and | ||
documents prepared by the Department to solicit the following | ||
from offerors: | ||
(1) Statements of qualifications. | ||
(2) Proposals to enter into a management agreement. | ||
"Final offeror" means the offeror ultimately selected by | ||
the Governor to be the private manager for the Lottery under | ||
subsection (h) of this Section. | ||
(b) By March 1, 2010, the Department shall enter into a | ||
management agreement with a private manager for the total | ||
management of the Lottery with integrated functions, such as | ||
lottery game design, supply of goods and services, and | ||
advertising and as specified in this Section. | ||
(c) Pursuant to the terms of this subsection In connection | ||
with the selection of the private manager , the Department shall | ||
endeavor to expeditiously terminate the existing contracts in | ||
support of the Lottery in effect on the effective date of this | ||
amendatory Act of the 96th General Assembly in connection with |
the selection of the private manager. As part of its obligation | ||
to terminate these contracts and select the private manager, | ||
the Department shall establish a mutually agreeable timetable | ||
to transfer the functions of existing contractors to the | ||
private manager so that existing Lottery operations are not | ||
materially diminished or impaired during the transition. To | ||
that end, the Department shall do the following as follows : | ||
(1) where such contracts contain a provision | ||
authorizing termination upon notice, the Department shall | ||
provide notice of termination to occur upon the mutually | ||
agreed timetable for transfer of functions the effective | ||
date of the management agreement with the private manager ; | ||
(2) upon the expiration of any initial term or renewal | ||
term of the current Lottery contracts, the Department shall | ||
not renew such contract for a term extending beyond the | ||
mutually agreed timetable for transfer of functions | ||
effective date of the management agreement with the private | ||
manager ; or | ||
(3) in the event any current contract provides for | ||
termination of that contract upon the implementation of a | ||
contract with the private manager, the Department shall | ||
perform all necessary actions to terminate the contract on | ||
the date that coincides with the mutually agreed timetable | ||
for transfer of functions . | ||
If the contracts to support the current operation of the | ||
Lottery in effect on the effective date of this amendatory Act |
of the 96th General Assembly are not subject to termination as | ||
provided for in this subsection (c), then the Department may | ||
include a provision in the contract with the private manager | ||
specifying a mutually agreeable methodology for incorporation. | ||
(c-5) The Department shall include provisions in the | ||
management agreement whereby the private manager shall, for a | ||
fee, and pursuant to a contract negotiated with the Department | ||
(the "Employee Use Contract"), utilize the services of current | ||
Department employees to assist in the administration and | ||
operation of the Lottery. The Department shall be the employer | ||
of all such bargaining unit employees assigned to perform such | ||
work for the private manager, and such employees shall be State | ||
employees, as defined by the Personnel Code. Department | ||
employees shall operate under the same employment policies, | ||
rules, regulations, and procedures, as other employees of the | ||
Department. In addition, neither historical representation | ||
rights under the Illinois Public Labor Relations Act, nor | ||
existing collective bargaining agreements, shall be disturbed | ||
by the management agreement with the private manager for the | ||
management of the Lottery. | ||
(d) The management agreement with the private manager shall | ||
include all of the following: | ||
(1) A term not to exceed 10 years, including any | ||
renewals. | ||
(2) A provision specifying that the Department: | ||
(A) shall exercise actual control over all |
significant business decisions; | ||
(A-5) (A) has the authority to direct or | ||
countermand operating decisions by the private manager | ||
at any time; | ||
(B) has ready access at any time to information | ||
regarding Lottery operations; | ||
(C) has the right to demand and receive information | ||
from the private manager concerning any aspect of the | ||
Lottery operations at any time; and | ||
(D) retains ownership of all trade names, | ||
trademarks, and intellectual property associated with | ||
the Lottery. | ||
(3) A provision imposing an affirmative duty on the | ||
private manager to provide the Department with material | ||
information and with any information the private manager | ||
reasonably believes the Department would want to know to | ||
enable the Department to conduct the Lottery. | ||
(4) A provision requiring the private manager to | ||
provide the Department with advance notice of any operating | ||
decision that bears significantly on the public interest, | ||
including, but not limited to, decisions on the kinds of | ||
games to be offered to the public and decisions affecting | ||
the relative risk and reward of the games being offered, so | ||
the Department has a reasonable opportunity to evaluate and | ||
countermand that decision. | ||
(5) A provision providing the private manager with a |
percentage , not to exceed 5%, of Lottery profits ticket or | ||
share sales or related proceeds in consideration for | ||
managing the Lottery, including terms that may provide the | ||
private manager with an increase in compensation if Lottery | ||
revenues grow by a specified percentage in a given year. | ||
(6) (Blank). | ||
(7) A provision requiring the deposit of all Lottery | ||
proceeds to be deposited into the State Lottery Fund. | ||
(8) A provision requiring the private manager to locate | ||
its principal office within the State. | ||
(8-5) A provision encouraging that at least 20% of the | ||
cost of contracts entered into for goods and services by | ||
the private manager in connection with its management of | ||
the Lottery, other than contracts with sales agents or | ||
technical advisors, be awarded to businesses that are a | ||
minority owned business, a female owned business, or a | ||
business owned by a person with disability, as those terms | ||
are defined in the Business Enterprise for Minorities, | ||
Females, and Persons with Disabilities Act. | ||
(9) A requirement that so long as the private manager | ||
complies with all the conditions of the agreement under the | ||
oversight of the Department, the private manager shall have | ||
the following duties and obligations with respect to the | ||
management of the Lottery: | ||
(A) The right to use equipment and other assets | ||
used in the operation of the Lottery. |
(B) The rights and obligations under contracts | ||
with retailers with retailers and vendors. | ||
(C) The implementation of a comprehensive security | ||
program by the private manager. | ||
(D) The implementation of a comprehensive system | ||
of internal audits. | ||
(E) The implementation of a program by the private | ||
manager to curb compulsive gambling by persons playing | ||
the Lottery. | ||
(F) A system for determining (i) the type of | ||
Lottery games, (ii) the method of selecting winning | ||
tickets, (iii) the manner of payment of prizes to | ||
holders of winning tickets, (iv) the frequency of | ||
drawings of winning tickets, (v) the method to be used | ||
in selling tickets, (vi) a system for verifying the | ||
validity of tickets claimed to be winning tickets, | ||
(vii) the basis upon which retailer commissions are | ||
established by the manager, and (viii) minimum | ||
payouts. | ||
(10) A requirement that advertising and promotion must | ||
be consistent with Section 7.8a of this Act. | ||
(11) A requirement that the private manager market the | ||
Lottery to those residents who are new, infrequent, or | ||
lapsed players of the Lottery, especially those who are | ||
most likely to make regular purchases on the Internet as | ||
permitted by law. |
(12) A code of ethics for the private manager's | ||
officers and employees. | ||
(13) A requirement that the Department monitor and | ||
oversee the private manager's practices and take action | ||
that the Department considers appropriate to ensure that | ||
the private manager is in compliance with the terms of the | ||
management agreement, while allowing the manager, unless | ||
specifically prohibited by law or the management | ||
agreement, to negotiate and sign its own contracts with | ||
vendors. | ||
(14) A provision requiring the private manager to | ||
periodically file, at least on an annual basis, appropriate | ||
financial statements in a form and manner acceptable to the | ||
Department. | ||
(15) Cash reserves requirements. | ||
(16) Procedural requirements for obtaining the prior | ||
approval of the Department when a management agreement or | ||
an interest in a management agreement is sold, assigned, | ||
transferred, or pledged as collateral to secure financing. | ||
(17) Grounds for the termination of the management | ||
agreement by the Department or the private manager. | ||
(18) Procedures for amendment of the agreement. | ||
(19) (Blank) A provision prohibiting the Department | ||
from entering into another management agreement under this | ||
section as long as the original management agreement has | ||
not been terminated . |
(20) The transition of rights and obligations, | ||
including any associated equipment or other assets used in | ||
the operation of the Lottery, from the manager to any | ||
successor manager of the lottery, including the | ||
Department, following the termination of or foreclosure | ||
upon the management agreement. | ||
(21) Right of use of copyrights, trademarks, and | ||
service marks held by the Department in the name of the | ||
State. The agreement must provide that any use of them by | ||
the manager shall only be for the purpose of fulfilling its | ||
obligations under the management agreement during the term | ||
of the agreement. | ||
(e) Notwithstanding any other law to the contrary, the | ||
Department shall select a private manager through a competitive | ||
request for qualifications process consistent with Section | ||
20-35 of the Illinois Procurement Code, which shall take into | ||
account: | ||
(1) the offeror's ability to market the Lottery to | ||
those residents who are new, infrequent, or lapsed players | ||
of the Lottery, especially those who are most likely to | ||
make regular purchases on the Internet; | ||
(2) the offeror's ability to address the State's | ||
concern with the social effects of gambling on those who | ||
can least afford to do so; | ||
(3) the offeror's ability to provide the most | ||
successful management of the Lottery for the benefit of the |
people of the State based on current and past business | ||
practices or plans of the offeror; and | ||
(4) the offeror's poor or inadequate past performance | ||
in servicing, equipping, operating or managing a lottery on | ||
behalf of Illinois, another State or foreign government and | ||
attracting persons who are not currently regular players of | ||
a lottery. | ||
(f) The Department may shall retain the services of an | ||
advisor or advisors with significant experience in the | ||
management, operation, and procurement of goods, services, and | ||
equipment for a government-run lottery to assist in the | ||
preparation of the terms of the request for qualifications. No | ||
advisor or advisors retained may be affiliated with an offeror | ||
or have any prior or present affiliation with any potential | ||
offeror, or with a contractor or subcontractor presently | ||
providing goods, services or equipment to the Department to | ||
support the Lottery.
The Department shall not include terms in | ||
the request for qualifications that provides an advantage | ||
whether directly or indirectly to any contractor or | ||
subcontractor presently presenting providing goods, services | ||
or equipment to the Department to support the Lottery, | ||
including terms contained in a contractor or subcontractor's | ||
responses to requests for proposals or qualifications | ||
submitted to Illinois, another State or foreign government. The | ||
request for proposals offered by the Department on December 22, | ||
2008 as "LOT08GAMESYS" and reference number "22016176" is |
declared void. | ||
The Department shall issue the request for qualifications | ||
no later than 30 calendar days after the effective date of this | ||
amendatory Act of the 96th General Assembly. The deadline for | ||
the submission of responsive qualifications proposals shall be | ||
30 calendar days after the date the request for qualifications | ||
is issued. | ||
(g) The Department shall select at least 2 offerors as | ||
finalists to potentially serve as the private manager no later | ||
than February 1, 2010. Upon making preliminary selections, the | ||
Department shall schedule a public hearing on the finalists' | ||
proposals and provide public notice of the hearing at least 7 | ||
calendar days before the hearing. The notice must include all | ||
of the following: | ||
(1) The date, time, and place of the hearing. | ||
(2) The subject matter of the hearing. | ||
(3) A brief description of the management agreement to | ||
be awarded. | ||
(4) The identity of the offerors that have been | ||
selected as finalists to serve as the private manager. | ||
(5) The address and telephone number of the Department. | ||
(h) At the public hearing, the Department shall (i) provide | ||
sufficient time for each finalist to present and explain its | ||
proposal to the Department and the Governor or the Governor's | ||
designee, including an opportunity to respond to questions | ||
posed by the Department, Governor, or designee and (ii) allow |
the public and non-selected offerors to comment on the | ||
presentations. The Governor or a designee shall attend the | ||
public hearing. After the public hearing, the Department shall | ||
have 14 calendar days to recommend to the Governor whether a | ||
management agreement should be entered into with a particular | ||
finalist. After reviewing the Department's recommendation, the | ||
Governor may accept or reject the Department's recommendation, | ||
and shall select a final offeror as the private manager by | ||
publication of a notice in the Illinois Procurement Bulletin. | ||
The Governor shall include in the notice a detailed explanation | ||
and the reasons why the final offeror is superior to other | ||
offerors and will provide management services in a manner that | ||
best achieves the objectives of this Section. The Governor | ||
shall designate a final offeror as the private manager with | ||
sufficient time for the Department to enter into a management | ||
agreement on or before March 1, 2010. The Governor shall also | ||
sign the management agreement with the private manager. | ||
(i) Any action to contest the validity of a management | ||
agreement entered into under this Section must be brought | ||
within 14 calendar days after the publication of the notice of | ||
the designation of the private manager as provided in | ||
subsection (h) of this Section. | ||
(j) The Lottery shall remain, for so long as a private | ||
manager manages the Lottery in accordance with provisions of | ||
this Act, a Lottery conducted by the State, and the State shall | ||
not be authorized to sell or transfer the Lottery to a third |
party. | ||
(k) Any tangible personal property used exclusively in | ||
connection with the lottery that is owned by the Department and | ||
leased to the private manager shall be owned by the Department | ||
in the name of the State and shall be considered to be public | ||
property devoted to an essential public and governmental | ||
function. | ||
(l) The Department may exercise any of its powers under | ||
this Section or any other law as necessary or desirable for the | ||
execution of the Department's powers under this Section. | ||
(m) Neither this Section nor any management agreement | ||
entered into under this Section prohibits the General Assembly | ||
from authorizing forms of gambling that are not in direct | ||
competition with the Lottery. | ||
(n) The private manager shall be subject to a complete | ||
investigation in the third, seventh, and tenth years of the | ||
agreement (if the agreement is for a 10-year term) by the | ||
Department in cooperation with the Auditor General to determine | ||
whether the private manager has complied with this Section and | ||
the management agreement. The private manager shall bear the | ||
cost of an investigation or reinvestigation of the private | ||
manager under this subsection. | ||
(o) The powers conferred by this Section are in addition | ||
and supplemental to the powers conferred by any other law. If | ||
any other law or rule is inconsistent with this Section, this | ||
Section controls as to any management agreement entered into |
under this Section. This Section and any rules adopted under | ||
this Section contain full and complete authority for a | ||
management agreement between the Department and a manager. No | ||
law, procedure, proceeding, publication, notice, consent, | ||
approval, order, or act by the Department or any other officer, | ||
Department, agency, or instrumentality of the State or any | ||
political subdivision is required for the Department to enter | ||
into a management agreement under this Section. This Section | ||
contains full and complete authority for the Department to | ||
approve any subcontracts entered into by a private manager | ||
under the terms of a management agreement. | ||
Except as provided in Sections 21.2, 21.5, 21.6, 21.7, and | ||
21.8 Notwithstanding any other State law to the contrary , the | ||
Department shall distribute all proceeds of lottery tickets and | ||
shares sold in the following priority and manner: | ||
(1) The payment of prizes and retailer bonuses. Provide | ||
the sums due to the private manager under the management | ||
agreement with the Department. | ||
(2) The payment of costs incurred in the operation and | ||
administration of the Lottery, including the payment of | ||
sums due to the private manager under the management | ||
agreement with the Department and payment of Provide the | ||
sums due to the private vendor for lottery tickets and | ||
shares sold on the Internet via the pilot program as | ||
compensation under its contract with the Department. | ||
(3) On the last day of each month or as soon thereafter |
as possible, the State Comptroller shall direct and the | ||
State Treasurer shall transfer from the Lottery Fund to the | ||
Common School Fund an amount that is equal to the proceeds | ||
transferred in the corresponding month of fiscal year 2009, | ||
as adjusted for inflation, to the Common School Fund. | ||
(4) On or before the last day of each fiscal year, | ||
deposit any remaining proceeds, subject to payments under | ||
items (1), (2), and (3) into the Capital Projects Fund each | ||
fiscal year.
| ||
(Source: 09600HB0255enr.) | ||
Section 60-15. If and only if House Bill 255 of the 96th | ||
General Assembly becomes law, the Use Tax Act is amended by | ||
changing Section 3-10 as follows:
| ||
(35 ILCS 105/3-10) (from Ch. 120, par. 439.3-10)
| ||
Sec. 3-10. Rate of tax. Unless otherwise provided in this | ||
Section, the tax
imposed by this Act is at the rate of 6.25% of | ||
either the selling price or the
fair market value, if any, of | ||
the tangible personal property. In all cases
where property | ||
functionally used or consumed is the same as the property that
| ||
was purchased at retail, then the tax is imposed on the selling | ||
price of the
property. In all cases where property functionally | ||
used or consumed is a
by-product or waste product that has been | ||
refined, manufactured, or produced
from property purchased at | ||
retail, then the tax is imposed on the lower of the
fair market |
value, if any, of the specific property so used in this State | ||
or on
the selling price of the property purchased at retail. | ||
For purposes of this
Section "fair market value" means the | ||
price at which property would change
hands between a willing | ||
buyer and a willing seller, neither being under any
compulsion | ||
to buy or sell and both having reasonable knowledge of the
| ||
relevant facts. The fair market value shall be established by | ||
Illinois sales by
the taxpayer of the same property as that | ||
functionally used or consumed, or if
there are no such sales by | ||
the taxpayer, then comparable sales or purchases of
property of | ||
like kind and character in Illinois.
| ||
Beginning on July 1, 2000 and through December 31, 2000, | ||
with respect to
motor fuel, as defined in Section 1.1 of the | ||
Motor Fuel Tax
Law, and gasohol, as defined in Section 3-40 of | ||
the Use Tax Act, the tax is
imposed at the rate of 1.25%.
| ||
With respect to gasohol, the tax imposed by this Act | ||
applies to (i) 70%
of the proceeds of sales made on or after | ||
January 1, 1990, and before
July 1, 2003, (ii) 80% of the | ||
proceeds of sales made
on or after July 1, 2003 and on or | ||
before December 31, 2013, and (iii) 100% of the proceeds of | ||
sales made
thereafter.
If, at any time, however, the tax under | ||
this Act on sales of gasohol is
imposed at the
rate of 1.25%, | ||
then the tax imposed by this Act applies to 100% of the | ||
proceeds
of sales of gasohol made during that time.
| ||
With respect to majority blended ethanol fuel, the tax | ||
imposed by this Act
does
not apply
to the proceeds of sales |
made on or after July 1, 2003 and on or before
December
31, | ||
2013 but applies to 100% of the proceeds of sales made | ||
thereafter.
| ||
With respect to biodiesel blends with no less than 1% and | ||
no more than 10%
biodiesel, the tax imposed by this Act applies | ||
to (i) 80% of the
proceeds of sales made on or after July 1, | ||
2003 and on or before December 31,
2013 and (ii) 100% of the | ||
proceeds of sales made
thereafter.
If, at any time, however, | ||
the tax under this Act on sales of biodiesel blends
with no | ||
less than 1% and no more than 10% biodiesel
is imposed at the | ||
rate of
1.25%, then the
tax imposed by this Act applies to 100% | ||
of the proceeds of sales of biodiesel
blends with no less than | ||
1% and no more than 10% biodiesel
made
during that time.
| ||
With respect to 100% biodiesel and biodiesel blends with | ||
more than 10%
but no more than 99% biodiesel, the tax imposed | ||
by this Act does not apply to
the
proceeds of sales made on or | ||
after July 1, 2003 and on or before
December 31, 2013 but | ||
applies to 100% of the proceeds of sales made
thereafter.
| ||
With respect to food for human consumption that is to be | ||
consumed off the
premises where it is sold (other than | ||
alcoholic beverages, soft drinks, and
food that has been | ||
prepared for immediate consumption) and prescription and
| ||
nonprescription medicines, drugs, medical appliances, | ||
modifications to a motor
vehicle for the purpose of rendering | ||
it usable by a disabled person, and
insulin, urine testing | ||
materials, syringes, and needles used by diabetics, for
human |
use, the tax is imposed at the rate of 1%. For the purposes of | ||
this
Section, until August 1, 2009: the term "soft drinks" | ||
means any complete, finished, ready-to-use,
non-alcoholic | ||
drink, whether carbonated or not, including but not limited to
| ||
soda water, cola, fruit juice, vegetable juice, carbonated | ||
water, and all other
preparations commonly known as soft drinks | ||
of whatever kind or description that
are contained in any | ||
closed or sealed bottle, can, carton, or container,
regardless | ||
of size; but "soft drinks" does not include coffee, tea, | ||
non-carbonated
water, infant formula, milk or milk products as | ||
defined in the Grade A
Pasteurized Milk and Milk Products Act, | ||
or drinks containing 50% or more
natural fruit or vegetable | ||
juice.
| ||
Notwithstanding any other provisions of this
Act, | ||
beginning August 1, 2009, "soft drinks" means mean | ||
non-alcoholic beverages that contain natural or artificial | ||
sweeteners. "Soft drinks" do not include beverages that contain | ||
milk or milk products, soy, rice or similar milk substitutes, | ||
or greater than 50% of vegetable or fruit juice by volume. | ||
Until August 1, 2009, and notwithstanding Notwithstanding | ||
any other provisions of this
Act, "food for human consumption | ||
that is to be consumed off the premises where
it is sold" | ||
includes all food sold through a vending machine, except soft
| ||
drinks, candy, and food products that are dispensed hot from a | ||
vending machine,
regardless of the location of the vending | ||
machine. Beginning August 1, 2009, and notwithstanding any |
other provisions of this Act, "food for human consumption that | ||
is to be consumed off the premises where it is sold" includes | ||
all food sold through a vending machine, except soft drinks, | ||
candy, and food products that are dispensed hot from a vending | ||
machine, regardless of the location of the vending machine.
| ||
Notwithstanding any other provisions of this
Act, | ||
beginning August 1, 2009, "food for human consumption that is | ||
to be consumed off the premises where
it is sold" does not | ||
include candy. For purposes of this Section, "candy" means a | ||
preparation of sugar, honey, or other natural or artificial | ||
sweeteners in combination with chocolate, fruits, nuts or other | ||
ingredients or flavorings in the form of bars, drops, or | ||
pieces. "Candy" does not include any preparation that contains | ||
flour or requires refrigeration. | ||
Notwithstanding any other provisions of this
Act, | ||
beginning August 1, 2009, "nonprescription medicines and | ||
drugs" does not include grooming and hygiene products. For | ||
purposes of this Section, "grooming and hygiene products" | ||
includes, but is not limited to, soaps and cleaning solutions, | ||
shampoo, toothpaste, mouthwash, antiperspirants, and sun tan | ||
lotions and screens, unless those products are available by | ||
prescription only, regardless of whether the products meet the | ||
definition of "over-the-counter-drugs". For the purposes of | ||
this paragraph, "over-the-counter-drug" means a drug for human | ||
use that contains a label that identifies the product as a drug | ||
as required by 21 C.F.R. § 201.66. The "over-the-counter-drug" |
label includes: | ||
(A) A "Drug Facts" panel; or | ||
(B) A statement of the "active ingredient(s)" with a | ||
list of those ingredients contained in the compound, | ||
substance or preparation. | ||
If the property that is purchased at retail from a retailer | ||
is acquired
outside Illinois and used outside Illinois before | ||
being brought to Illinois
for use here and is taxable under | ||
this Act, the "selling price" on which
the tax is computed | ||
shall be reduced by an amount that represents a
reasonable | ||
allowance for depreciation for the period of prior out-of-state | ||
use.
| ||
(Source: P.A. 93-17, eff. 6-11-03; 09600HB0255enr.)
| ||
Section 60-20. If and only if House Bill 255 of the 96th | ||
General Assembly becomes law, the Service Use Tax Act is | ||
amended by changing Section 3-10 as follows:
| ||
(35 ILCS 110/3-10) (from Ch. 120, par. 439.33-10)
| ||
Sec. 3-10. Rate of tax. Unless otherwise provided in this | ||
Section,
the tax imposed by this Act is at the rate of 6.25% of | ||
the selling
price of tangible personal property transferred as | ||
an incident to the sale
of service, but, for the purpose of | ||
computing this tax, in no event shall
the selling price be less | ||
than the cost price of the property to the
serviceman.
| ||
Beginning on July 1, 2000 and through December 31, 2000, |
with respect to
motor fuel, as defined in Section 1.1 of the | ||
Motor Fuel Tax
Law, and gasohol, as defined in Section 3-40 of | ||
the Use Tax Act, the tax is
imposed at
the rate of 1.25%.
| ||
With respect to gasohol, as defined in the Use Tax Act, the | ||
tax imposed
by this Act applies to (i) 70% of the selling price | ||
of property transferred
as an incident to the sale of service | ||
on or after January 1, 1990,
and before July 1, 2003, (ii) 80% | ||
of the selling price of
property transferred as an incident to | ||
the sale of service on or after July
1, 2003 and on or before | ||
December 31, 2013, and (iii)
100% of the selling price | ||
thereafter.
If, at any time, however, the tax under this Act on | ||
sales of gasohol, as
defined in
the Use Tax Act, is imposed at | ||
the rate of 1.25%, then the
tax imposed by this Act applies to | ||
100% of the proceeds of sales of gasohol
made during that time.
| ||
With respect to majority blended ethanol fuel, as defined | ||
in the Use Tax Act,
the
tax
imposed by this Act does not apply | ||
to the selling price of property transferred
as an incident to | ||
the sale of service on or after July 1, 2003 and on or before
| ||
December 31, 2013 but applies to 100% of the selling price | ||
thereafter.
| ||
With respect to biodiesel blends, as defined in the Use Tax | ||
Act, with no less
than 1% and no
more than 10% biodiesel, the | ||
tax imposed by this Act
applies to (i) 80% of the selling price | ||
of property transferred as an incident
to the sale of service | ||
on or after July 1, 2003 and on or before December 31,
2013 and | ||
(ii) 100% of the proceeds of the selling price
thereafter.
If, |
at any time, however, the tax under this Act on sales of | ||
biodiesel blends,
as
defined in the Use Tax Act, with no less | ||
than 1% and no more than 10% biodiesel
is imposed at the rate | ||
of 1.25%, then the
tax imposed by this Act applies to 100% of | ||
the proceeds of sales of biodiesel
blends with no less than 1% | ||
and no more than 10% biodiesel
made
during that time.
| ||
With respect to 100% biodiesel, as defined in the Use Tax | ||
Act, and biodiesel
blends, as defined in the Use Tax Act, with
| ||
more than 10% but no more than 99% biodiesel, the tax imposed | ||
by this Act
does not apply to the proceeds of the selling price | ||
of property transferred
as an incident to the sale of service | ||
on or after July 1, 2003 and on or before
December 31, 2013 but | ||
applies to 100% of the selling price thereafter.
| ||
At the election of any registered serviceman made for each | ||
fiscal year,
sales of service in which the aggregate annual | ||
cost price of tangible
personal property transferred as an | ||
incident to the sales of service is
less than 35%, or 75% in | ||
the case of servicemen transferring prescription
drugs or | ||
servicemen engaged in graphic arts production, of the aggregate
| ||
annual total gross receipts from all sales of service, the tax | ||
imposed by
this Act shall be based on the serviceman's cost | ||
price of the tangible
personal property transferred as an | ||
incident to the sale of those services.
| ||
The tax shall be imposed at the rate of 1% on food prepared | ||
for
immediate consumption and transferred incident to a sale of | ||
service subject
to this Act or the Service Occupation Tax Act |
by an entity licensed under
the Hospital Licensing Act, the | ||
Nursing Home Care Act, or the
Child Care
Act of 1969. The tax | ||
shall
also be imposed at the rate of 1% on food for human | ||
consumption that is to be
consumed off the premises where it is | ||
sold (other than alcoholic beverages,
soft drinks, and food | ||
that has been prepared for immediate consumption and is
not | ||
otherwise included in this paragraph) and prescription and | ||
nonprescription
medicines, drugs, medical appliances, | ||
modifications to a motor vehicle for the
purpose of rendering | ||
it usable by a disabled person, and insulin, urine testing
| ||
materials,
syringes, and needles used by diabetics, for
human | ||
use. For the purposes of this Section, until August 1, 2009: | ||
the term "soft drinks" means any
complete, finished, | ||
ready-to-use, non-alcoholic drink, whether carbonated or
not, | ||
including but not limited to soda water, cola, fruit juice, | ||
vegetable
juice, carbonated water, and all other preparations | ||
commonly known as soft
drinks of whatever kind or description | ||
that are contained in any closed or
sealed bottle, can, carton, | ||
or container, regardless of size; but "soft drinks"
does not | ||
include coffee, tea, non-carbonated water, infant formula, | ||
milk or
milk products as defined in the Grade A Pasteurized | ||
Milk and Milk Products Act,
or drinks containing 50% or more | ||
natural fruit or vegetable juice.
| ||
Notwithstanding any other provisions of this
Act, | ||
beginning August 1, 2009, "soft drinks" means mean | ||
non-alcoholic beverages that contain natural or artificial |
sweeteners. "Soft drinks" do not include beverages that contain | ||
milk or milk products, soy, rice or similar milk substitutes, | ||
or greater than 50% of vegetable or fruit juice by volume. | ||
Until August 1, 2009, and notwithstanding Notwithstanding | ||
any other provisions of this Act, "food for human
consumption | ||
that is to be consumed off the premises where it is sold" | ||
includes
all food sold through a vending machine, except soft | ||
drinks, candy, and food products
that are dispensed hot from a | ||
vending machine, regardless of the location of
the vending | ||
machine. Beginning August 1, 2009, and notwithstanding any | ||
other provisions of this Act, "food for human consumption that | ||
is to be consumed off the premises where it is sold" includes | ||
all food sold through a vending machine, except soft drinks, | ||
candy, and food products that are dispensed hot from a vending | ||
machine, regardless of the location of the vending machine.
| ||
Notwithstanding any other provisions of this
Act, | ||
beginning August 1, 2009, "food for human consumption that is | ||
to be consumed off the premises where
it is sold" does not | ||
include candy. For purposes of this Section, "candy" means a | ||
preparation of sugar, honey, or other natural or artificial | ||
sweeteners in combination with chocolate, fruits, nuts or other | ||
ingredients or flavorings in the form of bars, drops, or | ||
pieces. "Candy" does not include any preparation that contains | ||
flour or requires refrigeration. | ||
Notwithstanding any other provisions of this
Act, | ||
beginning August 1, 2009, "nonprescription medicines and |
drugs" does not include grooming and hygiene products. For | ||
purposes of this Section, "grooming and hygiene products" | ||
includes, but is not limited to, soaps and cleaning solutions, | ||
shampoo, toothpaste, mouthwash, antiperspirants, and sun tan | ||
lotions and screens, unless those products are available by | ||
prescription only, regardless of whether the products meet the | ||
definition of "over-the-counter-drugs". For the purposes of | ||
this paragraph, "over-the-counter-drug" means a drug for human | ||
use that contains a label that identifies the product as a drug | ||
as required by 21 C.F.R. § 201.66. The "over-the-counter-drug" | ||
label includes: | ||
(A) A "Drug Facts" panel; or | ||
(B) A statement of the "active ingredient(s)" with a | ||
list of those ingredients contained in the compound, | ||
substance or preparation. | ||
If the property that is acquired from a serviceman is | ||
acquired outside
Illinois and used outside Illinois before | ||
being brought to Illinois for use
here and is taxable under | ||
this Act, the "selling price" on which the tax
is computed | ||
shall be reduced by an amount that represents a reasonable
| ||
allowance for depreciation for the period of prior out-of-state | ||
use.
| ||
(Source: P.A. 93-17, eff. 6-11-03; 09600HB0255enr.)
| ||
Section 60-25. If and only if House Bill 255 of the 96th | ||
General Assembly becomes law, the Service Occupation Tax Act is |
amended by changing Section 3-10 as follows:
| ||
(35 ILCS 115/3-10) (from Ch. 120, par. 439.103-10)
| ||
Sec. 3-10. Rate of tax. Unless otherwise provided in this | ||
Section,
the tax imposed by this Act is at the rate of 6.25% of | ||
the "selling price",
as defined in Section 2 of the Service Use | ||
Tax Act, of the tangible
personal property. For the purpose of | ||
computing this tax, in no event
shall the "selling price" be | ||
less than the cost price to the serviceman of
the tangible | ||
personal property transferred. The selling price of each item
| ||
of tangible personal property transferred as an incident of a | ||
sale of
service may be shown as a distinct and separate item on | ||
the serviceman's
billing to the service customer. If the | ||
selling price is not so shown, the
selling price of the | ||
tangible personal property is deemed to be 50% of the
| ||
serviceman's entire billing to the service customer. When, | ||
however, a
serviceman contracts to design, develop, and produce | ||
special order machinery or
equipment, the tax imposed by this | ||
Act shall be based on the serviceman's
cost price of the | ||
tangible personal property transferred incident to the
| ||
completion of the contract.
| ||
Beginning on July 1, 2000 and through December 31, 2000, | ||
with respect to
motor fuel, as defined in Section 1.1 of the | ||
Motor Fuel Tax
Law, and gasohol, as defined in Section 3-40 of | ||
the Use Tax Act, the tax is
imposed at
the rate of 1.25%.
| ||
With respect to gasohol, as defined in the Use Tax Act, the |
tax imposed
by this Act shall apply to (i) 70% of the cost | ||
price of property
transferred as
an incident to the sale of | ||
service on or after January 1, 1990, and before
July 1, 2003, | ||
(ii) 80% of the selling price of property transferred as an
| ||
incident to the sale of service on or after July
1, 2003 and on | ||
or before December 31, 2013, and (iii) 100%
of
the cost price
| ||
thereafter.
If, at any time, however, the tax under this Act on | ||
sales of gasohol, as
defined in
the Use Tax Act, is imposed at | ||
the rate of 1.25%, then the
tax imposed by this Act applies to | ||
100% of the proceeds of sales of gasohol
made during that time.
| ||
With respect to majority blended ethanol fuel, as defined | ||
in the Use Tax Act,
the
tax
imposed by this Act does not apply | ||
to the selling price of property transferred
as an incident to | ||
the sale of service on or after July 1, 2003 and on or before
| ||
December 31, 2013 but applies to 100% of the selling price | ||
thereafter.
| ||
With respect to biodiesel blends, as defined in the Use Tax | ||
Act, with no less
than 1% and no
more than 10% biodiesel, the | ||
tax imposed by this Act
applies to (i) 80% of the selling price | ||
of property transferred as an incident
to the sale of service | ||
on or after July 1, 2003 and on or before December 31,
2013 and | ||
(ii) 100% of the proceeds of the selling price
thereafter.
If, | ||
at any time, however, the tax under this Act on sales of | ||
biodiesel blends,
as
defined in the Use Tax Act, with no less | ||
than 1% and no more than 10% biodiesel
is imposed at the rate | ||
of 1.25%, then the
tax imposed by this Act applies to 100% of |
the proceeds of sales of biodiesel
blends with no less than 1% | ||
and no more than 10% biodiesel
made
during that time.
| ||
With respect to 100% biodiesel, as defined in the Use Tax | ||
Act, and biodiesel
blends, as defined in the Use Tax Act, with
| ||
more than 10% but no more than 99% biodiesel material, the tax | ||
imposed by this
Act
does not apply to the proceeds of the | ||
selling price of property transferred
as an incident to the | ||
sale of service on or after July 1, 2003 and on or before
| ||
December 31, 2013 but applies to 100% of the selling price | ||
thereafter.
| ||
At the election of any registered serviceman made for each | ||
fiscal year,
sales of service in which the aggregate annual | ||
cost price of tangible
personal property transferred as an | ||
incident to the sales of service is
less than 35%, or 75% in | ||
the case of servicemen transferring prescription
drugs or | ||
servicemen engaged in graphic arts production, of the aggregate
| ||
annual total gross receipts from all sales of service, the tax | ||
imposed by
this Act shall be based on the serviceman's cost | ||
price of the tangible
personal property transferred incident to | ||
the sale of those services.
| ||
The tax shall be imposed at the rate of 1% on food prepared | ||
for
immediate consumption and transferred incident to a sale of | ||
service subject
to this Act or the Service Occupation Tax Act | ||
by an entity licensed under
the Hospital Licensing Act, the | ||
Nursing Home Care Act, or the
Child Care Act of 1969. The tax | ||
shall
also be imposed at the rate of 1% on food for human |
consumption that is
to be consumed off the
premises where it is | ||
sold (other than alcoholic beverages, soft drinks, and
food | ||
that has been prepared for immediate consumption and is not
| ||
otherwise included in this paragraph) and prescription and
| ||
nonprescription medicines, drugs, medical appliances, | ||
modifications to a motor
vehicle for the purpose of rendering | ||
it usable by a disabled person, and
insulin, urine testing | ||
materials, syringes, and needles used by diabetics, for
human | ||
use. For the purposes of this Section, until August 1, 2009: | ||
the term "soft drinks" means any
complete, finished, | ||
ready-to-use, non-alcoholic drink, whether carbonated or
not, | ||
including but not limited to soda water, cola, fruit juice, | ||
vegetable
juice, carbonated water, and all other preparations | ||
commonly known as soft
drinks of whatever kind or description | ||
that are contained in any closed or
sealed can, carton, or | ||
container, regardless of size; but "soft drinks" does not
| ||
include coffee, tea, non-carbonated water, infant formula, | ||
milk or milk
products as defined in the Grade A Pasteurized | ||
Milk and Milk Products Act, or
drinks containing 50% or more | ||
natural fruit or vegetable juice.
| ||
Notwithstanding any other provisions of this
Act, | ||
beginning August 1, 2009, "soft drinks" means mean | ||
non-alcoholic beverages that contain natural or artificial | ||
sweeteners. "Soft drinks" do not include beverages that contain | ||
milk or milk products, soy, rice or similar milk substitutes, | ||
or greater than 50% of vegetable or fruit juice by volume. |
Until August 1, 2009, and notwithstanding Notwithstanding | ||
any other provisions of this Act, "food for human consumption
| ||
that is to be consumed off the premises where it is sold" | ||
includes all food
sold through a vending machine, except soft | ||
drinks, candy, and food products that are
dispensed hot from a | ||
vending machine, regardless of the location of the vending
| ||
machine. Beginning August 1, 2009, and notwithstanding any | ||
other provisions of this Act, "food for human consumption that | ||
is to be consumed off the premises where it is sold" includes | ||
all food sold through a vending machine, except soft drinks, | ||
candy, and food products that are dispensed hot from a vending | ||
machine, regardless of the location of the vending machine.
| ||
Notwithstanding any other provisions of this
Act, | ||
beginning August 1, 2009, "food for human consumption that is | ||
to be consumed off the premises where
it is sold" does not | ||
include candy. For purposes of this Section, "candy" means a | ||
preparation of sugar, honey, or other natural or artificial | ||
sweeteners in combination with chocolate, fruits, nuts or other | ||
ingredients or flavorings in the form of bars, drops, or | ||
pieces. "Candy" does not include any preparation that contains | ||
flour or requires refrigeration. | ||
Notwithstanding any other provisions of this
Act, | ||
beginning August 1, 2009, "nonprescription medicines and | ||
drugs" does not include grooming and hygiene products. For | ||
purposes of this Section, "grooming and hygiene products" | ||
includes, but is not limited to, soaps and cleaning solutions, |
shampoo, toothpaste, mouthwash, antiperspirants, and sun tan | ||
lotions and screens, unless those products are available by | ||
prescription only, regardless of whether the products meet the | ||
definition of "over-the-counter-drugs". For the purposes of | ||
this paragraph, "over-the-counter-drug" means a drug for human | ||
use that contains a label that identifies the product as a drug | ||
as required by 21 C.F.R. § 201.66. The "over-the-counter-drug" | ||
label includes: | ||
(A) A "Drug Facts" panel; or | ||
(B) A statement of the "active ingredient(s)" with a | ||
list of those ingredients contained in the compound, | ||
substance or preparation. | ||
(Source: P.A. 93-17, eff. 6-11-03; 09600HB0255enr.)
| ||
Section 60-30. If and only if House Bill 255 of the 96th | ||
General Assembly becomes law, the Retailers' Occupation Tax Act | ||
is amended by changing Section 2-10 as follows:
| ||
(35 ILCS 120/2-10) (from Ch. 120, par. 441-10)
| ||
Sec. 2-10. Rate of tax. Unless otherwise provided in this | ||
Section,
the tax imposed by this Act is at the rate of 6.25% of | ||
gross receipts
from sales of tangible personal property made in | ||
the course of business.
| ||
Beginning on July 1, 2000 and through December 31, 2000, | ||
with respect to
motor fuel, as defined in Section 1.1 of the | ||
Motor Fuel Tax
Law, and gasohol, as defined in Section 3-40 of |
the Use Tax Act, the tax is
imposed at the rate of 1.25%.
| ||
Within 14 days after the effective date of this amendatory | ||
Act of the 91st
General Assembly, each retailer of motor fuel | ||
and gasohol shall cause the
following notice to be posted in a | ||
prominently visible place on each retail
dispensing device that | ||
is used to dispense motor
fuel or gasohol in the State of | ||
Illinois: "As of July 1, 2000, the State of
Illinois has | ||
eliminated the State's share of sales tax on motor fuel and
| ||
gasohol through December 31, 2000. The price on this pump | ||
should reflect the
elimination of the tax." The notice shall be | ||
printed in bold print on a sign
that is no smaller than 4 | ||
inches by 8 inches. The sign shall be clearly
visible to | ||
customers. Any retailer who fails to post or maintain a | ||
required
sign through December 31, 2000 is guilty of a petty | ||
offense for which the fine
shall be $500 per day per each | ||
retail premises where a violation occurs.
| ||
With respect to gasohol, as defined in the Use Tax Act, the | ||
tax imposed
by this Act applies to (i) 70% of the proceeds of | ||
sales made on or after
January 1, 1990, and before July 1, | ||
2003, (ii) 80% of the proceeds of
sales made on or after July | ||
1, 2003 and on or before December 31,
2013, and (iii) 100% of | ||
the proceeds of sales
made thereafter.
If, at any time, | ||
however, the tax under this Act on sales of gasohol, as
defined | ||
in
the Use Tax Act, is imposed at the rate of 1.25%, then the
| ||
tax imposed by this Act applies to 100% of the proceeds of | ||
sales of gasohol
made during that time.
|
With respect to majority blended ethanol fuel, as defined | ||
in the Use Tax Act,
the
tax
imposed by this Act does not apply | ||
to the proceeds of sales made on or after
July 1, 2003 and on or | ||
before December 31, 2013 but applies to 100% of the
proceeds of | ||
sales made thereafter.
| ||
With respect to biodiesel blends, as defined in the Use Tax | ||
Act, with no less
than 1% and no
more than 10% biodiesel, the | ||
tax imposed by this Act
applies to (i) 80% of the proceeds of | ||
sales made on or after July 1, 2003
and on or before December | ||
31, 2013 and (ii) 100% of the
proceeds of sales made | ||
thereafter.
If, at any time, however, the tax under this Act on | ||
sales of biodiesel blends,
as
defined in the Use Tax Act, with | ||
no less than 1% and no more than 10% biodiesel
is imposed at | ||
the rate of 1.25%, then the
tax imposed by this Act applies to | ||
100% of the proceeds of sales of biodiesel
blends with no less | ||
than 1% and no more than 10% biodiesel
made
during that time.
| ||
With respect to 100% biodiesel, as defined in the Use Tax | ||
Act, and biodiesel
blends, as defined in the Use Tax Act, with
| ||
more than 10% but no more than 99% biodiesel, the tax imposed | ||
by this Act
does not apply to the proceeds of sales made on or | ||
after July 1, 2003
and on or before December 31, 2013 but | ||
applies to 100% of the
proceeds of sales made thereafter.
| ||
With respect to food for human consumption that is to be | ||
consumed off the
premises where it is sold (other than | ||
alcoholic beverages, soft drinks, and
food that has been | ||
prepared for immediate consumption) and prescription and
|
nonprescription medicines, drugs, medical appliances, | ||
modifications to a motor
vehicle for the purpose of rendering | ||
it usable by a disabled person, and
insulin, urine testing | ||
materials, syringes, and needles used by diabetics, for
human | ||
use, the tax is imposed at the rate of 1%. For the purposes of | ||
this
Section, until August 1, 2009: the term "soft drinks" | ||
means any complete, finished, ready-to-use,
non-alcoholic | ||
drink, whether carbonated or not, including but not limited to
| ||
soda water, cola, fruit juice, vegetable juice, carbonated | ||
water, and all other
preparations commonly known as soft drinks | ||
of whatever kind or description that
are contained in any | ||
closed or sealed bottle, can, carton, or container,
regardless | ||
of size; but "soft drinks" does not include coffee, tea, | ||
non-carbonated
water, infant formula, milk or milk products as | ||
defined in the Grade A
Pasteurized Milk and Milk Products Act, | ||
or drinks containing 50% or more
natural fruit or vegetable | ||
juice.
| ||
Notwithstanding any other provisions of this
Act, | ||
beginning August 1, 2009, "soft drinks" means mean | ||
non-alcoholic beverages that contain natural or artificial | ||
sweeteners. "Soft drinks" do not include beverages that contain | ||
milk or milk products, soy, rice or similar milk substitutes, | ||
or greater than 50% of vegetable or fruit juice by volume. | ||
Until August 1, 2009, and notwithstanding Notwithstanding | ||
any other provisions of this
Act, "food for human consumption | ||
that is to be consumed off the premises where
it is sold" |
includes all food sold through a vending machine, except soft
| ||
drinks, candy, and food products that are dispensed hot from a | ||
vending machine,
regardless of the location of the vending | ||
machine. Beginning August 1, 2009, and notwithstanding any | ||
other provisions of this Act, "food for human consumption that | ||
is to be consumed off the premises where it is sold" includes | ||
all food sold through a vending machine, except soft drinks, | ||
candy, and food products that are dispensed hot from a vending | ||
machine, regardless of the location of the vending machine.
| ||
Notwithstanding any other provisions of this
Act, | ||
beginning August 1, 2009, "food for human consumption that is | ||
to be consumed off the premises where
it is sold" does not | ||
include candy. For purposes of this Section, "candy" means a | ||
preparation of sugar, honey, or other natural or artificial | ||
sweeteners in combination with chocolate, fruits, nuts or other | ||
ingredients or flavorings in the form of bars, drops, or | ||
pieces. "Candy" does not include any preparation that contains | ||
flour or requires refrigeration. | ||
Notwithstanding any other provisions of this
Act, | ||
beginning August 1, 2009, "nonprescription medicines and | ||
drugs" does not include grooming and hygiene products. For | ||
purposes of this Section, "grooming and hygiene products" | ||
includes, but is not limited to, soaps and cleaning solutions, | ||
shampoo, toothpaste, mouthwash, antiperspirants, and sun tan | ||
lotions and screens, unless those products are available by | ||
prescription only, regardless of whether the products meet the |
definition of "over-the-counter-drugs". For the purposes of | ||
this paragraph, "over-the-counter-drug" means a drug for human | ||
use that contains a label that identifies the product as a drug | ||
as required by 21 C.F.R. § 201.66. The "over-the-counter-drug" | ||
label includes: | ||
(A) A "Drug Facts" panel; or | ||
(B) A statement of the "active ingredient(s)" with a | ||
list of those ingredients contained in the compound, | ||
substance or preparation. | ||
(Source: P.A. 93-17, eff. 6-11-03; 09600HB0255enr.)
| ||
Section 60-32. If and only if House Bill 255 of the 96th | ||
General Assembly becomes law, the Riverboat Gambling Act is | ||
amended by changing Section 13 and adding Section 24 as | ||
follows:
| ||
(230 ILCS 10/13) (from Ch. 120, par. 2413)
| ||
Sec. 13. Wagering tax; rate; distribution.
| ||
(a) Until January 1, 1998, a tax is imposed on the adjusted | ||
gross
receipts received from gambling games authorized under | ||
this Act at the rate of
20%.
| ||
(a-1) From January 1, 1998 until July 1, 2002, a privilege | ||
tax is
imposed on persons engaged in the business of conducting | ||
riverboat gambling
operations, based on the adjusted gross | ||
receipts received by a licensed owner
from gambling games | ||
authorized under this Act at the following rates:
|
15% of annual adjusted gross receipts up to and | ||
including $25,000,000;
| ||
20% of annual adjusted gross receipts in excess of | ||
$25,000,000 but not
exceeding $50,000,000;
| ||
25% of annual adjusted gross receipts in excess of | ||
$50,000,000 but not
exceeding $75,000,000;
| ||
30% of annual adjusted gross receipts in excess of | ||
$75,000,000 but not
exceeding $100,000,000;
| ||
35% of annual adjusted gross receipts in excess of | ||
$100,000,000.
| ||
(a-2) From July 1, 2002 until July 1, 2003, a privilege tax | ||
is imposed on
persons engaged in the business of conducting | ||
riverboat gambling operations,
other than licensed managers | ||
conducting riverboat gambling operations on behalf
of the | ||
State, based on the adjusted gross receipts received by a | ||
licensed
owner from gambling games authorized under this Act at | ||
the following rates:
| ||
15% of annual adjusted gross receipts up to and | ||
including $25,000,000;
| ||
22.5% of annual adjusted gross receipts in excess of | ||
$25,000,000 but not
exceeding $50,000,000;
| ||
27.5% of annual adjusted gross receipts in excess of | ||
$50,000,000 but not
exceeding $75,000,000;
| ||
32.5% of annual adjusted gross receipts in excess of | ||
$75,000,000 but not
exceeding $100,000,000;
| ||
37.5% of annual adjusted gross receipts in excess of |
$100,000,000 but not
exceeding $150,000,000;
| ||
45% of annual adjusted gross receipts in excess of | ||
$150,000,000 but not
exceeding $200,000,000;
| ||
50% of annual adjusted gross receipts in excess of | ||
$200,000,000.
| ||
(a-3) Beginning July 1, 2003, a privilege tax is imposed on | ||
persons engaged
in the business of conducting riverboat | ||
gambling operations, other than
licensed managers conducting | ||
riverboat gambling operations on behalf of the
State, based on | ||
the adjusted gross receipts received by a licensed owner from
| ||
gambling games authorized under this Act at the following | ||
rates:
| ||
15% of annual adjusted gross receipts up to and | ||
including $25,000,000;
| ||
27.5% of annual adjusted gross receipts in excess of | ||
$25,000,000 but not
exceeding $37,500,000;
| ||
32.5% of annual adjusted gross receipts in excess of | ||
$37,500,000 but not
exceeding $50,000,000;
| ||
37.5% of annual adjusted gross receipts in excess of | ||
$50,000,000 but not
exceeding $75,000,000;
| ||
45% of annual adjusted gross receipts in excess of | ||
$75,000,000 but not
exceeding $100,000,000;
| ||
50% of annual adjusted gross receipts in excess of | ||
$100,000,000 but not
exceeding $250,000,000;
| ||
70% of annual adjusted gross receipts in excess of | ||
$250,000,000.
|
An amount equal to the amount of wagering taxes collected | ||
under this
subsection (a-3) that are in addition to the amount | ||
of wagering taxes that
would have been collected if the | ||
wagering tax rates under subsection (a-2)
were in effect shall | ||
be paid into the Common School Fund.
| ||
The privilege tax imposed under this subsection (a-3) shall | ||
no longer be
imposed beginning on the earlier of (i) July 1, | ||
2005; (ii) the first date
after June 20, 2003 that riverboat | ||
gambling operations are conducted
pursuant to a dormant | ||
license; or (iii) the first day that riverboat gambling
| ||
operations are conducted under the authority of an owners | ||
license that is in
addition to the 10 owners licenses initially | ||
authorized under this Act.
For the purposes of this subsection | ||
(a-3), the term "dormant license"
means an owners license that | ||
is authorized by this Act under which no
riverboat gambling | ||
operations are being conducted on June 20, 2003.
| ||
(a-4) Beginning on the first day on which the tax imposed | ||
under
subsection (a-3) is no longer imposed, a privilege tax is | ||
imposed on persons
engaged in the business of conducting | ||
riverboat gambling operations, other
than licensed managers | ||
conducting riverboat gambling operations on behalf of
the | ||
State, based on the adjusted gross receipts received by a | ||
licensed owner
from gambling games authorized under this Act at | ||
the following rates:
| ||
15% of annual adjusted gross receipts up to and | ||
including $25,000,000;
|
22.5% of annual adjusted gross receipts in excess of | ||
$25,000,000 but not
exceeding $50,000,000;
| ||
27.5% of annual adjusted gross receipts in excess of | ||
$50,000,000 but not
exceeding $75,000,000;
| ||
32.5% of annual adjusted gross receipts in excess of | ||
$75,000,000 but not
exceeding $100,000,000;
| ||
37.5% of annual adjusted gross receipts in excess of | ||
$100,000,000 but not
exceeding $150,000,000;
| ||
45% of annual adjusted gross receipts in excess of | ||
$150,000,000 but not
exceeding $200,000,000;
| ||
50% of annual adjusted gross receipts in excess of | ||
$200,000,000.
| ||
(a-8) Riverboat gambling operations conducted by a | ||
licensed manager on
behalf of the State are not subject to the | ||
tax imposed under this Section.
| ||
(a-10) The taxes imposed by this Section shall be paid by | ||
the licensed
owner to the Board not later than 3:00 o'clock | ||
p.m. of the day after the day
when the wagers were made.
| ||
(a-15) If the privilege tax imposed under subsection (a-3) | ||
is no longer imposed pursuant to item (i) of the last paragraph | ||
of subsection (a-3), then by June 15 of each year, each owners | ||
licensee, other than an owners licensee that admitted 1,000,000 | ||
persons or
fewer in calendar year 2004, must, in addition to | ||
the payment of all amounts otherwise due under this Section, | ||
pay to the Board a reconciliation payment in the amount, if | ||
any, by which the licensed owner's base amount exceeds the |
amount of net privilege tax paid by the licensed owner to the | ||
Board in the then current State fiscal year. A licensed owner's | ||
net privilege tax obligation due for the balance of the State | ||
fiscal year shall be reduced up to the total of the amount paid | ||
by the licensed owner in its June 15 reconciliation payment. | ||
The obligation imposed by this subsection (a-15) is binding on | ||
any person, firm, corporation, or other entity that acquires an | ||
ownership interest in any such owners license. The obligation | ||
imposed under this subsection (a-15) terminates on the earliest | ||
of: (i) July 1, 2007, (ii) the first day after the effective | ||
date of this amendatory Act of the 94th General Assembly that | ||
riverboat gambling operations are conducted pursuant to a | ||
dormant license, (iii) the first day that riverboat gambling | ||
operations are conducted under the authority of an owners | ||
license that is in addition to the 10 owners licenses initially | ||
authorized under this Act, or (iv) the first day that a | ||
licensee under the Illinois Horse Racing Act of 1975 conducts | ||
gaming operations with slot machines or other electronic gaming | ||
devices. The Board must reduce the obligation imposed under | ||
this subsection (a-15) by an amount the Board deems reasonable | ||
for any of the following reasons: (A) an act or acts of God, | ||
(B) an act of bioterrorism or terrorism or a bioterrorism or | ||
terrorism threat that was investigated by a law enforcement | ||
agency, or (C) a condition beyond the control of the owners | ||
licensee that does not result from any act or omission by the | ||
owners licensee or any of its agents and that poses a hazardous |
threat to the health and safety of patrons. If an owners | ||
licensee pays an amount in excess of its liability under this | ||
Section, the Board shall apply the overpayment to future | ||
payments required under this Section. | ||
For purposes of this subsection (a-15): | ||
"Act of God" means an incident caused by the operation of | ||
an extraordinary force that cannot be foreseen, that cannot be | ||
avoided by the exercise of due care, and for which no person | ||
can be held liable.
| ||
"Base amount" means the following: | ||
For a riverboat in Alton, $31,000,000.
| ||
For a riverboat in East Peoria, $43,000,000.
| ||
For the Empress riverboat in Joliet, $86,000,000.
| ||
For a riverboat in Metropolis, $45,000,000.
| ||
For the Harrah's riverboat in Joliet, $114,000,000.
| ||
For a riverboat in Aurora, $86,000,000.
| ||
For a riverboat in East St. Louis, $48,500,000.
| ||
For a riverboat in Elgin, $198,000,000.
| ||
"Dormant license" has the meaning ascribed to it in | ||
subsection (a-3).
| ||
"Net privilege tax" means all privilege taxes paid by a | ||
licensed owner to the Board under this Section, less all | ||
payments made from the State Gaming Fund pursuant to subsection | ||
(b) of this Section. | ||
The changes made to this subsection (a-15) by Public Act | ||
94-839 are intended to restate and clarify the intent of Public |
Act 94-673 with respect to the amount of the payments required | ||
to be made under this subsection by an owners licensee to the | ||
Board.
| ||
(b) Until January 1, 1998, 25% of the tax revenue deposited | ||
in the State
Gaming Fund under this Section shall be paid, | ||
subject to appropriation by the
General Assembly, to the unit | ||
of local government which is designated as the
home dock of the | ||
riverboat. Beginning January 1, 1998, from the tax revenue
| ||
deposited in the State Gaming Fund under this Section, an | ||
amount equal to 5% of
adjusted gross receipts generated by a | ||
riverboat shall be paid monthly, subject
to appropriation by | ||
the General Assembly, to the unit of local government that
is | ||
designated as the home dock of the riverboat. From the tax | ||
revenue
deposited in the State Gaming Fund pursuant to | ||
riverboat gambling operations
conducted by a licensed manager | ||
on behalf of the State, an amount equal to 5%
of adjusted gross | ||
receipts generated pursuant to those riverboat gambling
| ||
operations shall be paid monthly,
subject to appropriation by | ||
the General Assembly, to the unit of local
government that is | ||
designated as the home dock of the riverboat upon which
those | ||
riverboat gambling operations are conducted.
| ||
(c) Appropriations, as approved by the General Assembly, | ||
may be made
from the State Gaming Fund to the Department of | ||
Revenue and the Department
of State Police for the | ||
administration and enforcement of this Act and the Video Gaming | ||
Act , or to the
Department of Human Services for the |
administration of programs to treat
problem gambling.
| ||
(c-5) Before May 26, 2006 (the effective date of Public Act | ||
94-804) and beginning on the effective date of this amendatory | ||
Act of the 95th General Assembly, unless any organization | ||
licensee under the Illinois Horse Racing Act of 1975 begins to | ||
operate a slot machine or video game of chance under the | ||
Illinois Horse Racing Act of 1975 or this Act, after the | ||
payments required under subsections (b) and (c) have been
made, | ||
an amount equal to 15% of the adjusted gross receipts of (1) an | ||
owners
licensee that relocates pursuant to Section 11.2,
(2) an | ||
owners licensee
conducting riverboat gambling operations
| ||
pursuant to an
owners license that is initially issued after | ||
June
25, 1999,
or (3) the first
riverboat gambling operations | ||
conducted by a licensed manager on behalf of the
State under | ||
Section 7.3,
whichever comes first, shall be paid from the | ||
State
Gaming Fund into the Horse Racing Equity Fund.
| ||
(c-10) Each year the General Assembly shall appropriate | ||
from the General
Revenue Fund to the Education Assistance Fund | ||
an amount equal to the amount
paid into the Horse Racing Equity | ||
Fund pursuant to subsection (c-5) in the
prior calendar year.
| ||
(c-15) After the payments required under subsections (b), | ||
(c), and (c-5)
have been made, an amount equal to 2% of the | ||
adjusted gross receipts of (1)
an owners licensee that | ||
relocates pursuant to Section 11.2, (2) an owners
licensee | ||
conducting riverboat gambling operations pursuant to
an
owners | ||
license that is initially issued after June 25, 1999,
or (3) |
the first
riverboat gambling operations conducted by a licensed | ||
manager on behalf of the
State under Section 7.3,
whichever | ||
comes first, shall be paid, subject to appropriation
from the | ||
General Assembly, from the State Gaming Fund to each home rule
| ||
county with a population of over 3,000,000 inhabitants for the | ||
purpose of
enhancing the county's criminal justice system.
| ||
(c-20) Each year the General Assembly shall appropriate | ||
from the General
Revenue Fund to the Education Assistance Fund | ||
an amount equal to the amount
paid to each home rule county | ||
with a population of over 3,000,000 inhabitants
pursuant to | ||
subsection (c-15) in the prior calendar year.
| ||
(c-25) After the payments required under subsections (b), | ||
(c), (c-5) and
(c-15) have been made, an amount equal to 2% of | ||
the
adjusted gross receipts of (1) an owners licensee
that
| ||
relocates pursuant to Section 11.2, (2) an
owners
licensee | ||
conducting riverboat gambling operations pursuant to
an
owners | ||
license
that is initially issued after June 25, 1999,
or (3) | ||
the first
riverboat gambling operations conducted by a licensed | ||
manager on behalf of the
State under Section 7.3,
whichever
| ||
comes first,
shall be paid from the State
Gaming Fund to | ||
Chicago State University.
| ||
(d) From time to time, the
Board shall transfer the | ||
remainder of the funds
generated by this Act into the Education
| ||
Assistance Fund, created by Public Act 86-0018, of the State of | ||
Illinois.
| ||
(e) Nothing in this Act shall prohibit the unit of local |
government
designated as the home dock of the riverboat from | ||
entering into agreements
with other units of local government | ||
in this State or in other states to
share its portion of the | ||
tax revenue.
| ||
(f) To the extent practicable, the Board shall administer | ||
and collect the
wagering taxes imposed by this Section in a | ||
manner consistent with the
provisions of Sections 4, 5, 5a, 5b, | ||
5c, 5d, 5e, 5f, 5g, 5i, 5j, 6, 6a, 6b,
6c, 8, 9, and 10 of the | ||
Retailers' Occupation Tax Act and Section 3-7 of the
Uniform | ||
Penalty and Interest Act.
| ||
(Source: P.A. 94-673, eff. 8-23-05; 94-804, eff. 5-26-06; | ||
94-839, eff. 6-6-06; 95-331, eff. 8-21-07; 95-1008, eff. | ||
12-15-08.)
| ||
(230 ILCS 10/24 new)
| ||
Sec. 24. Applicability of Illinois Riverboat Gambling Act. | ||
The provisions of the Illinois Riverboat Gambling Act, and all | ||
rules promulgated thereunder, shall apply to the Video Gaming | ||
Act, except where there is a conflict between the 2 Acts.
| ||
Section 60-35. If and only if House Bill 255 of the 96th | ||
General Assembly becomes law, the Liquor Control Act of 1934 is | ||
amended by changing Section 8-1 as follows:
| ||
(235 ILCS 5/8-1) (from Ch. 43, par. 158)
| ||
Sec. 8-1.
A tax is imposed upon the privilege of engaging |
in business as a
manufacturer or as an importing distributor of | ||
alcoholic liquor other than beer
at the rate of $0.185 per | ||
gallon for cider containing not less than
0.5% alcohol by | ||
volume nor more than 7% alcohol by volume, $0.73
per gallon | ||
until August 1, 2009 and $1.39 per gallon beginning August 1, | ||
2009 for wine other than
cider containing less than 7% alcohol | ||
by volume, and $4.50
per gallon until August 1, 2009 and $8.55 | ||
per gallon beginning August 1, 2009 on alcohol and spirits | ||
manufactured and sold or used by such
manufacturer, or as agent | ||
for any other person, or sold or used by such
importing | ||
distributor, or as agent for any other person. A tax is imposed
| ||
upon the privilege of engaging in business as a manufacturer of | ||
beer or as an
importing distributor of beer at the rate of | ||
$0.185 per gallon until August 1, 2009 and $0.231 per gallon | ||
beginning August 1, 2009 on
all beer manufactured and sold or | ||
used by such manufacturer, or as agent for
any other person, or | ||
sold or used by such importing distributor, or as agent
for any | ||
other person. Any brewer manufacturing beer in this State shall | ||
be
entitled to and given a credit or refund of 75% of the tax | ||
imposed on each
gallon of beer up to 4.9 million gallons per | ||
year in any given calendar year
for tax paid or payable on beer | ||
produced and sold in the State of Illinois.
| ||
For the purpose of this Section, "cider" means any | ||
alcoholic beverage
obtained by the alcohol fermentation of the | ||
juice of apples or pears
including, but not limited to, | ||
flavored, sparkling, or carbonated cider.
|
The credit or refund created by this Act shall apply to all | ||
beer taxes
in the calendar years 1982 through 1986.
| ||
The increases made by this amendatory Act of the 91st | ||
General Assembly in
the rates of taxes imposed under this | ||
Section shall apply beginning on July
1, 1999.
| ||
A tax at the rate of 1¢ per gallon on beer and 48¢ per | ||
gallon on
alcohol and spirits is also imposed upon the | ||
privilege of engaging in
business as a retailer or as a | ||
distributor who is not also an importing
distributor with | ||
respect to all beer and all alcohol and spirits owned
or | ||
possessed by such retailer or distributor when this amendatory | ||
Act of
1969 becomes effective, and with respect to which the | ||
additional tax
imposed by this amendatory Act upon | ||
manufacturers and importing
distributors does not apply. | ||
Retailers and distributors who are subject
to the additional | ||
tax imposed by this paragraph of this Section shall be
required | ||
to inventory such alcoholic liquor and to pay this additional
| ||
tax in a manner prescribed by the Department.
| ||
The provisions of this Section shall be construed to apply | ||
to any
importing distributor engaging in business in this | ||
State, whether
licensed or not.
| ||
However, such tax is not imposed upon any such business as | ||
to any
alcoholic liquor shipped outside Illinois by an Illinois | ||
licensed
manufacturer or importing distributor, nor as to any | ||
alcoholic liquor
delivered in Illinois by an Illinois licensed | ||
manufacturer or importing
distributor to a purchaser for |
immediate transportation by the purchaser
to another state into | ||
which the purchaser has a legal right, under the
laws of such | ||
state, to import such alcoholic liquor, nor as to any
alcoholic | ||
liquor other than beer sold by one Illinois licensed
| ||
manufacturer or importing distributor to another Illinois | ||
licensed
manufacturer or importing distributor to the extent to | ||
which the sale of
alcoholic liquor other than beer by one | ||
Illinois licensed manufacturer
or importing distributor to | ||
another Illinois licensed manufacturer or
importing | ||
distributor is authorized by the licensing provisions of this
| ||
Act, nor to alcoholic liquor whether manufactured in or | ||
imported into
this State when sold to a "non-beverage user" | ||
licensed by the State for
use in the manufacture of any of the | ||
following when they are unfit for
beverage purposes:
| ||
Patent and proprietary medicines and medicinal, | ||
antiseptic, culinary
and toilet preparations;
| ||
Flavoring extracts and syrups and food products;
| ||
Scientific, industrial and chemical products, excepting | ||
denatured
alcohol;
| ||
Or for scientific, chemical, experimental or mechanical | ||
purposes;
| ||
Nor is the tax imposed upon the privilege of engaging in | ||
any business
in interstate commerce or otherwise, which | ||
business may not, under the
Constitution and Statutes of the | ||
United States, be made the subject of
taxation by this State.
| ||
The tax herein imposed shall be in addition to all other |
occupation
or privilege taxes imposed by the State of Illinois | ||
or political
subdivision thereof.
| ||
If any alcoholic liquor manufactured in or imported into | ||
this State
is sold to a licensed manufacturer or importing | ||
distributor by a
licensed manufacturer or importing | ||
distributor to be used solely as an
ingredient in the | ||
manufacture of any beverage for human consumption, the
tax | ||
imposed upon such purchasing manufacturer or importing | ||
distributor
shall be reduced by the amount of the taxes which | ||
have been paid by the
selling manufacturer or importing | ||
distributor under this Act as to such
alcoholic liquor so used | ||
to the Department of Revenue.
| ||
If any person received any alcoholic liquors from a | ||
manufacturer or
importing distributor, with respect to which | ||
alcoholic liquors no tax is
imposed under this Article, and | ||
such alcoholic liquor shall thereafter
be disposed of in such | ||
manner or under such circumstances as may cause
the same to | ||
become the base for the tax imposed by this Article, such
| ||
person shall make the same reports and returns, pay the same | ||
taxes and
be subject to all other provisions of this Article | ||
relating to
manufacturers and importing distributors.
| ||
Nothing in this Article shall be construed to require the | ||
payment to
the Department of the taxes imposed by this Article | ||
more than once with
respect to any quantity of alcoholic liquor | ||
sold or used within this
State.
| ||
No tax is imposed by this Act on sales of alcoholic liquor |
by
Illinois licensed foreign importers to Illinois licensed | ||
importing
distributors.
| ||
All of the proceeds of the additional tax imposed by this | ||
amendatory Act of the 96th General Assembly shall be deposited | ||
by the Department into the Capital Projects Fund. The remainder | ||
of the tax imposed by this Act shall be deposited by the | ||
Department into the General Revenue Fund. | ||
The provisions of this Section 8-1 are severable under | ||
Section 1.31 of the Statute on Statutes. | ||
(Source: P.A. 90-625, eff. 7-10-98; 91-38, eff. 6-15-99; | ||
09600HB0255enr.)
| ||
Section 60-40. If and only if House Bill 255 of the 96th | ||
General Assembly becomes law, the Illinois Vehicle Code is | ||
amended by changing Sections 15-102, 15-107, and 15-111 as | ||
follows:
| ||
(625 ILCS 5/15-102) (from Ch. 95 1/2, par. 15-102)
| ||
Sec. 15-102. Width of Vehicles.
| ||
(a) On Class III and non-designated State and local | ||
highways, the total
outside width of any vehicle or load | ||
thereon shall not exceed 8 feet.
| ||
(b) Except during those times when, due to insufficient | ||
light or unfavorable
atmospheric conditions, persons and | ||
vehicles on the highway are not clearly
discernible at a | ||
distance of 1000 feet, the following vehicles may exceed
the 8 |
feet limitation during the period from a half hour before
| ||
sunrise to a half hour after sunset:
| ||
(1) Loads of hay, straw or other similar farm products | ||
provided that the
load is not more than 12 feet wide.
| ||
(2) Implements of husbandry being transported on | ||
another vehicle and the
transporting vehicle while loaded.
| ||
The following requirements apply to the transportation | ||
on another vehicle
of an implement of husbandry wider than | ||
8 feet 6 inches on the National System
of Interstate and | ||
Defense Highways or other highways in the system of State
| ||
highways:
| ||
(A) The driver of a vehicle transporting an | ||
implement of husbandry
that exceeds 8 feet 6 inches in | ||
width shall obey all traffic laws and shall
check the | ||
roadways prior to making a movement in order to ensure | ||
that adequate
clearance is available for the movement. | ||
It is prima facie evidence that the
driver of a vehicle | ||
transporting an implement of husbandry has failed to | ||
check
the roadway prior to making a movement if the | ||
vehicle is involved in a
collision with a bridge, | ||
overpass, fixed structure, or properly placed traffic
| ||
control device or if the vehicle blocks traffic due
to | ||
its inability to proceed because of a bridge, overpass, | ||
fixed structure, or
properly placed traffic control | ||
device.
| ||
(B) Flags shall be displayed so as to wave freely |
at the extremities of
overwidth objects and at the | ||
extreme ends of all protrusions, projections, and
| ||
overhangs. All flags shall be clean, bright red flags | ||
with no advertising,
wording, emblem, or insignia | ||
inscribed upon them and at least 18 inches square.
| ||
(C) "OVERSIZE LOAD" signs are mandatory on the | ||
front and rear of all
vehicles with loads over 10 feet | ||
wide. These signs must have 12-inch high
black letters | ||
with a 2-inch stroke on a yellow sign that is 7 feet | ||
wide by 18
inches high.
| ||
(D) One civilian escort vehicle is required for a | ||
load that exceeds 14
feet 6 inches in width and 2 | ||
civilian escort vehicles are required for a
load that | ||
exceeds 16 feet in width on the National System of | ||
Interstate and
Defense Highways or other highways in | ||
the system of State highways.
| ||
(E) The requirements for a civilian escort vehicle | ||
and driver are as
follows:
| ||
(1) The civilian escort vehicle shall be a | ||
passenger car or a second
division vehicle not | ||
exceeding a gross vehicle weight of 8,000 pounds | ||
that is
designed to afford clear and unobstructed | ||
vision to both front and rear.
| ||
(2) The escort vehicle driver must be properly | ||
licensed to operate
the vehicle.
| ||
(3) While in use, the escort vehicle must be |
equipped with illuminated
rotating, oscillating, | ||
or flashing amber lights or flashing amber strobe | ||
lights
mounted on top that are of sufficient | ||
intensity to be visible at 500 feet in
normal | ||
sunlight.
| ||
(4) "OVERSIZE LOAD" signs are mandatory on all | ||
escort vehicles. The
sign on an escort vehicle | ||
shall have 8-inch high black letters on a yellow
| ||
sign that is 5 feet wide by 12 inches high.
| ||
(5) When only one escort vehicle is required | ||
and it is operating on a
two-lane highway, the | ||
escort vehicle shall travel approximately 300 feet | ||
ahead
of the load. The rotating, oscillating, or | ||
flashing lights or flashing amber
strobe lights | ||
and an "OVERSIZE LOAD" sign shall be displayed on | ||
the escort
vehicle and shall be visible from the | ||
front. When only one escort vehicle is
required and | ||
it is operating on a multilane divided highway, the | ||
escort vehicle
shall travel approximately 300 feet | ||
behind the load and the sign and lights
shall be | ||
visible from the rear.
| ||
(6) When 2 escort vehicles are required, one | ||
escort shall travel
approximately 300 feet ahead | ||
of the load and the second escort shall travel
| ||
approximately 300 feet behind the load. The | ||
rotating, oscillating, or flashing
lights or |
flashing amber strobe lights and an "OVERSIZE | ||
LOAD" sign shall be
displayed on the escort | ||
vehicles and shall be visible from the front on the
| ||
lead escort and from the rear on the trailing | ||
escort.
| ||
(7) When traveling within the corporate limits | ||
of a municipality, the
escort vehicle shall | ||
maintain a reasonable and proper distance from the
| ||
oversize load, consistent with existing traffic | ||
conditions.
| ||
(8) A separate escort shall be provided for | ||
each load hauled.
| ||
(9) The driver of an escort vehicle shall obey | ||
all traffic laws.
| ||
(10) The escort vehicle must be in safe | ||
operational condition.
| ||
(11) The driver of the escort vehicle must be | ||
in radio contact with
the driver of the vehicle | ||
carrying the oversize load.
| ||
(F) A transport vehicle while under load of more | ||
than 8 feet 6 inches
in width must be equipped with an | ||
illuminated rotating, oscillating, or
flashing amber | ||
light or lights or a flashing amber strobe light or | ||
lights
mounted on the top of the cab that are of | ||
sufficient intensity to be visible at
500 feet in | ||
normal sunlight. If the load on the transport vehicle |
blocks the
visibility of the amber lighting from the | ||
rear of the vehicle, the vehicle must
also be equipped | ||
with an illuminated rotating, oscillating, or flashing | ||
amber
light or lights or a flashing amber strobe light | ||
or lights mounted on the rear
of the load that are of | ||
sufficient intensity to be visible at 500 feet in
| ||
normal sunlight.
| ||
(G) When a flashing amber light is required on the | ||
transport vehicle
under load and it is operating on a | ||
two-lane highway, the transport vehicle
shall display | ||
to the rear at least one rotating, oscillating, or | ||
flashing light
or a flashing amber strobe light and an | ||
"OVERSIZE LOAD" sign. When a flashing
amber light is | ||
required on the transport vehicle under load and it is | ||
operating
on a multilane divided highway, the sign and | ||
light shall be visible from the
rear.
| ||
(H) Maximum speed shall be 45 miles per hour on all | ||
such moves or 5
miles per hour above the posted minimum | ||
speed limit, whichever is greater, but
the vehicle | ||
shall not at any time exceed the posted maximum speed | ||
limit.
| ||
(3) Portable buildings designed and used for | ||
agricultural and livestock
raising operations that are not | ||
more than 14 feet wide and with not more
than a 1 foot | ||
overhang along the left side of the hauling vehicle. | ||
However,
the buildings shall not be transported more than |
10 miles and not on any
route that is part of the National | ||
System of Interstate and Defense Highways.
| ||
All buildings when being transported shall display at least | ||
2 red
cloth flags, not less than 12 inches square, mounted as | ||
high as practicable
on the left and right side of the building.
| ||
A State Police escort shall be required if it is necessary | ||
for this load
to use part of the left lane when crossing any 2 | ||
laned State highway bridge.
| ||
(c) Vehicles propelled by electric power obtained from | ||
overhead trolley
wires operated wholly within the corporate | ||
limits of a municipality are
also exempt from the width | ||
limitation.
| ||
(d) Exemptions are also granted to vehicles designed for | ||
the carrying
of more than 10 persons under the following | ||
conditions:
| ||
(1) (Blank);
| ||
(2) When operated within any public transportation | ||
service with the
approval of local authorities or an | ||
appropriate public body authorized by
law to provide public | ||
transportation. Any vehicle so operated may be
8 feet 6 | ||
inches in width; or
| ||
(3) When a county engineer or superintendent of | ||
highways, after giving due
consideration to the mass | ||
transportation needs of the area and to the width and
| ||
condition of the road, has determined that the operation of | ||
buses wider than 8
feet will not pose an undue safety |
hazard on a particular county or township
road segment, he | ||
or she may authorize buses not to exceed 8 feet 6 inches in
| ||
width on any highway under that engineer's or | ||
superintendent's jurisdiction. | ||
(d-1) A recreational vehicle, as defined in Section 1-169, | ||
may exceed 8 feet 6 inches in width if:
| ||
(1) the excess width is attributable to appurtenances | ||
that extend 6 inches or less beyond either side of the body | ||
of the vehicle; and
| ||
(2) the roadway on which the vehicle is traveling has | ||
marked lanes for vehicular traffic that are at least 11 | ||
feet in width. | ||
As used in this subsection (d-1) and in subsection (d-2), | ||
the term appurtenance includes (i) a retracted awning and its | ||
support hardware and (ii) any appendage that is intended to be | ||
an integral part of a recreation vehicle. | ||
(d-2) A recreational vehicle that exceeds 8 feet 6 inches | ||
in width as provided in subsection (d-1) may travel any roadway | ||
of the State if the vehicle is being operated between a roadway | ||
permitted under subsection (d-1) and: | ||
(1) the location where the recreation vehicle is | ||
garaged; | ||
(2) the destination of the recreation vehicle; or | ||
(3) a facility for food, fuel, repair, services, or | ||
rest.
| ||
(e) A vehicle and load traveling upon the National System |
of Interstate
and Defense Highways or any other highway in the | ||
system of State highways
that has been designated as a Class I | ||
or Class II highway by the
Department, or any street or highway | ||
designated by local authorities, may have a total outside width | ||
of 8 feet 6
inches, provided that certain safety devices that | ||
the Department
determines as necessary for the safe and | ||
efficient operation of motor
vehicles shall not be included in | ||
the calculation of width.
| ||
(e-1) A vehicle and load more than 8 feet wide but not | ||
exceeding 8 feet 6
inches in width is
allowed
access according | ||
to the following:
| ||
(1) A vehicle and load not exceeding 80,000 pounds in | ||
weight is
allowed access from any State designated highway | ||
onto any county,
township, or municipal highway for a | ||
distance of 5 highway miles for the
purpose of loading and | ||
unloading, provided:
| ||
(A) The vehicle and load does not exceed 65 feet | ||
overall length.
| ||
(B) There is no sign prohibiting that access.
| ||
(C) The route is not being used as a thoroughfare | ||
between State
designated highways.
| ||
(2) A vehicle and load not exceeding 80,000 pounds in | ||
weight is allowed
access from any State designated highway | ||
onto any county or township
highway for a distance of 5 | ||
highway miles or onto any municipal
highway for a distance | ||
of one highway mile for the purpose of food, fuel,
repairs, |
and rest, provided:
| ||
(A) The vehicle and load does not exceed 65 feet | ||
overall length.
| ||
(B) There is no sign prohibiting that access.
| ||
(C) The route is not being used as a thoroughfare | ||
between State
designated highways.
| ||
(3) A vehicle and load not exceeding 80,000 pounds in | ||
weight is allowed
access from a Class I highway onto any | ||
street or highway for a distance
of one highway mile for | ||
the purpose of loading, unloading, food, fuel,
repairs, and | ||
rest, provided there is no sign prohibiting that access.
| ||
(4) A vehicle and load not exceeding 80,000 pounds in | ||
weight is allowed
access from a Class I or Class II highway | ||
onto any State highway or any
locally designated highway | ||
for a distance of 5 highway miles for the
purpose of | ||
loading, unloading, food, fuel, repairs, and rest.
| ||
(5) A trailer or semi-trailer not exceeding 28 feet 6 | ||
inches in length,
that was
originally in combination with a | ||
truck tractor, shall have unlimited access
to points of | ||
loading and unloading.
| ||
(6) All household goods carriers shall have unlimited | ||
access to points of
loading and unloading.
| ||
Section 5-35 of the Illinois Administrative Procedure Act | ||
relating to
procedures for rulemaking shall not apply to the | ||
designation of highways under
this paragraph (e).
| ||
(f) Mirrors required by Section 12-502 of this Code and |
other safety devices
identified by the Department may project | ||
up to 14 inches beyond each side of
a bus and up to 6 inches | ||
beyond each
side
of any other vehicle, and that projection | ||
shall not be deemed a
violation of the width restrictions of | ||
this Section.
| ||
(g) Any person who is convicted of violating this Section | ||
is subject to
the penalty as provided in paragraph (b) of | ||
Section 15-113.
| ||
(Source: P.A. 93-177, eff. 7-11-03; 94-949, eff. 1-1-07; | ||
09600HB0255enr.)
| ||
(625 ILCS 5/15-107)
(from Ch. 95 1/2, par. 15-107)
| ||
Sec. 15-107. Length of vehicles.
| ||
(a) The maximum length of a single vehicle on any highway | ||
of this State
may not exceed 42 feet except the following:
| ||
(1) Semitrailers.
| ||
(2) Charter or regulated route buses may be up to 45 | ||
feet in length, not
including energy absorbing bumpers.
| ||
(a-1) A motor home as defined in Section 1-145.01 may be up | ||
to 45 feet
in length, not including energy absorbing bumpers. | ||
The length limitations
described in this subsection (a-1) shall | ||
be exclusive of energy-absorbing
bumpers and rear view mirrors.
| ||
(b) On all non-State highways, the maximum length of | ||
vehicles in
combinations
is as follows:
| ||
(1) A truck tractor in combination with a semitrailer | ||
may
not exceed 55 feet overall dimension.
|
(2) A truck tractor-semitrailer-trailer may not exceed | ||
60 feet
overall dimension.
| ||
(3) Combinations specially designed to transport motor | ||
vehicles or
boats may not exceed 60 feet overall dimension.
| ||
Vehicles operating during daylight hours when transporting | ||
poles, pipes,
machinery, or other objects of a structural | ||
nature that cannot readily be
dismembered are exempt from | ||
length limitations, provided that no object may
exceed 80 feet | ||
in length and the overall dimension of the vehicle including | ||
the
load
may not exceed 100 feet. This exemption does not apply | ||
to operation on a
Saturday, Sunday, or legal holiday. Legal | ||
holidays referred to in this Section
are
the days on which the | ||
following traditional holidays are celebrated: New
Year's
Day; | ||
Memorial Day; Independence Day; Labor Day; Thanksgiving Day; | ||
and
Christmas Day.
| ||
Vehicles and loads operated by a public utility while en | ||
route to make
emergency repairs to public service facilities or | ||
properties are exempt from
length
limitations, provided that | ||
during night operations every vehicle and its load
must
be | ||
equipped with a sufficient number of clearance lamps on both | ||
sides and
marker lamps on the extreme ends of any projecting | ||
load to clearly mark the
dimensions of the load.
| ||
A tow truck in combination with a disabled vehicle or | ||
combination of
disabled vehicles, as provided in paragraph (6) | ||
of subsection (c) of this
Section, is
exempt from length | ||
limitations.
|
All other combinations not listed in this subsection (b) | ||
may not exceed 60
feet overall dimension.
| ||
(c) Except as provided in subsections (c-1) and (c-2), | ||
combinations of vehicles may not exceed a total of 2 vehicles | ||
except
the
following:
| ||
(1) A truck tractor semitrailer may draw one trailer.
| ||
(2) A truck tractor semitrailer may draw one converter | ||
dolly.
| ||
(3) A truck tractor semitrailer may draw one vehicle | ||
that is defined
in Chapter 1 as special mobile equipment, | ||
provided the overall dimension does
not
exceed 60 feet.
| ||
(4) A truck in transit may draw 3 trucks in transit | ||
coupled
together by the triple saddlemount method.
| ||
(5) Recreational vehicles consisting of 3 vehicles, | ||
provided
the following:
| ||
(A) The total overall dimension does not exceed 60
| ||
feet.
| ||
(B) The towing vehicle is a properly registered
| ||
vehicle capable of towing another vehicle using a | ||
fifth-wheel type assembly.
| ||
(C) The second vehicle in the combination of | ||
vehicles is
a recreational vehicle that is towed by a
| ||
fifth-wheel assembly. This vehicle must be
properly | ||
registered and must be equipped with
brakes, | ||
regardless of weight.
| ||
(D) The third vehicle must be the
lightest of the 3 |
vehicles and be a trailer or
semitrailer designed or | ||
used for
transporting a boat, all-terrain vehicle,
| ||
personal watercraft, or motorcycle.
| ||
(E) The towed vehicles may be only for the use
of | ||
the operator of the towing vehicle.
| ||
(F) All vehicles must be properly equipped with
| ||
operating brakes and safety equipment required by this | ||
Code, except the
additional
brake requirement in | ||
subdivision (C) of this subparagraph (5).
| ||
(6) A tow truck in combination with a disabled vehicle | ||
or combination
of
disabled vehicles, provided the towing | ||
vehicle:
| ||
(A) Is specifically designed as a tow truck having | ||
a gross vehicle
weight rating of
at least 18,000 pounds | ||
and equipped with air brakes, provided that air brakes
| ||
are
required only if the towing vehicle is towing a | ||
vehicle, semitrailer, or
tractor-trailer combination | ||
that is equipped with air brakes. For the purpose
of | ||
this
subsection, gross vehicle weight rating, or GVWR, | ||
means the value
specified by the manufacturer as the | ||
loaded weight of the tow truck.
| ||
(B) Is equipped with flashing, rotating, or | ||
oscillating amber lights,
visible for at
least 500 feet | ||
in all directions.
| ||
(C) Is capable of utilizing the lighting and | ||
braking systems of the
disabled
vehicle or combination |
of vehicles.
| ||
(D) Does not engage a tow exceeding 50 highway | ||
miles from the initial
point of
wreck or disablement to | ||
a place of repair. Any additional movement of the
| ||
vehicles may occur only upon issuance of authorization | ||
for that movement under
the provisions of Sections | ||
15-301 through 15-319 of this Code.
| ||
The Department may by rule or regulation prescribe | ||
additional
requirements
regarding length limitations for a | ||
tow truck towing another vehicle.
| ||
For purposes of this Section, a tow-dolly that merely | ||
serves as
substitute
wheels for another legally licensed | ||
vehicle is considered part of the
licensed
vehicle and not | ||
a separate vehicle.
| ||
(7) Commercial vehicles consisting of 3 vehicles, | ||
provided the following: | ||
(A) The total overall dimension does not exceed 65 | ||
feet. | ||
(B) The towing vehicle is a properly registered | ||
vehicle capable of towing another vehicle using a | ||
fifth-wheel type assembly or a goose-neck hitch ball. | ||
(C) The third vehicle must be the lightest of the 3 | ||
vehicles and be a trailer or semitrailer. | ||
(D) All vehicles must be properly equipped with | ||
operating brakes and safety equipment required by this | ||
Code.
|
(E) The combination of vehicles must be operated by | ||
a person who holds a commercial driver's license (CDL).
| ||
(F) The combination of vehicles must be en route to | ||
a location where new or used trailers are sold by an | ||
Illinois or out-of-state licensed new or used trailer | ||
dealer.
| ||
(c-1) A combination of 3 vehicles is allowed access to any | ||
State designated highway if: | ||
(1) the length of neither towed vehicle exceeds 28.5 | ||
feet; | ||
(2) the overall wheel base of the combination of | ||
vehicles does not exceed 62 feet; and
| ||
(3) the combination of vehicles is en route to a | ||
location where new or used trailers are sold by an Illinois | ||
or out-of-state licensed new or used trailer dealer.
| ||
(c-2) A combination of 3 vehicles is allowed access from | ||
any State designated highway onto any county, township, or | ||
municipal highway for a distance of 5 highway miles for the | ||
purpose of delivery or collection of one or both of the towed | ||
vehicles if: | ||
(1) the length of neither towed vehicle exceeds 28.5 | ||
feet; | ||
(2) the combination of vehicles does not exceed 40,000 | ||
pounds in gross weight and 8 feet 6 inches in width; | ||
(3) there is no sign prohibiting that access; | ||
(4) the route is not being used as a thoroughfare |
between State designated highways; and
| ||
(5) the combination of vehicles is en route to a | ||
location where new or used trailers are sold by an Illinois | ||
or out-of-state licensed new or used trailer dealer.
| ||
(d) On Class I highways there are no overall length | ||
limitations on motor
vehicles
operating in combinations | ||
provided:
| ||
(1) The length of a semitrailer, unladen or with load,
| ||
in combination with a truck tractor may not exceed 53 feet.
| ||
(2) The distance between the kingpin and the center of
| ||
the rear axle of a semitrailer longer than 48 feet, in | ||
combination
with a truck tractor, may not exceed 45 feet 6 | ||
inches.
| ||
(3) The length of a semitrailer or trailer, unladen or
| ||
with load, operated in a truck tractor-semitrailer-trailer
| ||
combination, may not exceed 28 feet 6 inches.
| ||
(4) Maxi-cube combinations, as defined in Chapter 1,
| ||
may not exceed 65 feet overall dimension.
| ||
(5) Combinations of vehicles specifically designed to
| ||
transport motor vehicles or boats may not exceed 65 feet
| ||
overall dimension. The length limitation is inclusive of
| ||
front and rear bumpers but exclusive of the overhang of the
| ||
transported vehicles, as provided in paragraph (i) of this
| ||
Section.
| ||
(6) Stinger steered semitrailer vehicles as defined in
| ||
Chapter 1, specifically designed to transport motor |
vehicles or
boats, may not exceed 75 feet overall | ||
dimension. The length
limitation is inclusive of front and | ||
rear bumpers but
exclusive of the overhang of the | ||
transported vehicles, as
provided in paragraph (i) of this | ||
Section.
| ||
(7) A truck in transit transporting 3 trucks coupled
| ||
together by the triple saddlemount method may not
exceed 75 | ||
feet overall dimension.
| ||
Vehicles operating during daylight hours when transporting | ||
poles, pipes,
machinery, or other objects of a structural | ||
nature that cannot readily be
dismembered are exempt from | ||
length limitations, provided that no object may
exceed 80 feet | ||
in length and the overall dimension of the vehicle including | ||
the
load
may not exceed 100 feet. This exemption does not apply | ||
to operation on a
Saturday, Sunday, or legal holiday. Legal | ||
holidays referred to in this Section
are
the days on which the | ||
following traditional holidays are celebrated: New
Year's
Day; | ||
Memorial Day; Independence Day; Labor Day; Thanksgiving Day; | ||
and
Christmas Day.
| ||
Vehicles and loads operated by a public utility while en | ||
route to make
emergency repairs to public service facilities or | ||
properties are exempt from
length
limitations, provided that | ||
during night operations every vehicle and its load
must
be | ||
equipped with a sufficient number of clearance lamps on both | ||
sides and
marker lamps on the extreme ends of any projecting | ||
load to clearly mark the
dimensions of the load.
|
A tow truck in combination with a disabled vehicle or | ||
combination of
disabled vehicles, as provided in paragraph (6) | ||
of subsection (c) of this
Section, is
exempt from length | ||
limitations.
| ||
The length limitations described in this paragraph (d) | ||
shall be exclusive
of safety and energy conservation devices,
| ||
such as bumpers, refrigeration
units or air compressors and | ||
other devices, that the Department may interpret
as necessary | ||
for safe and efficient
operation; except that no device | ||
excluded under this paragraph shall have by
its design or use | ||
the capability to carry cargo.
| ||
Section 5-35 of the Illinois Administrative Procedure Act | ||
relating to
procedures for rulemaking shall not apply to the | ||
designation of highways under
this paragraph (d).
| ||
(e) On Class II highways there are no overall length | ||
limitations on motor
vehicles
operating in combinations, | ||
provided:
| ||
(1) The length of a semitrailer, unladen or with load,
| ||
in combination with a truck tractor, may not exceed 53 feet
| ||
overall dimension.
| ||
(2) The distance between the kingpin and the center of
| ||
the rear axle of a semitrailer longer than 48 feet, in | ||
combination
with a truck tractor, may not exceed 45 feet 6 | ||
inches.
| ||
(3) A truck tractor-semitrailer-trailer combination | ||
may
not exceed 65 feet in dimension from front axle to rear
|
axle.
| ||
(4) The length of a semitrailer or trailer, unladen or
| ||
with load, operated in a truck tractor-semitrailer-trailer
| ||
combination, may not exceed 28 feet 6 inches.
| ||
(5) Maxi-cube combinations, as defined in Chapter 1,
| ||
may not exceed 65 feet overall dimension.
| ||
(6) A combination of vehicles, specifically designed | ||
to
transport motor vehicles or boats, may not exceed 65 | ||
feet
overall dimension. The length limitation is inclusive | ||
of
front and rear bumpers but exclusive of the overhang of | ||
the
transported vehicles, as provided in paragraph (i) of | ||
this
Section.
| ||
(7) Stinger steered semitrailer vehicles, as defined | ||
in
Chapter 1, specifically designed to transport motor | ||
vehicles or
boats, may not exceed 75 feet overall | ||
dimension. The length
limitation is inclusive of front and | ||
rear bumpers but
exclusive of the overhang of the | ||
transported vehicles, as
provided in paragraph (i) of this | ||
Section.
| ||
(8) A truck in transit transporting 3 trucks coupled | ||
together by the
triple
saddlemount method may not exceed 75 | ||
feet overall dimension.
| ||
Vehicles operating during daylight hours when transporting | ||
poles, pipes,
machinery, or other objects of a structural | ||
nature that cannot readily be
dismembered are exempt from | ||
length limitations, provided that no object may
exceed 80 feet |
in length and the overall dimension of the vehicle including | ||
the
load
may not exceed 100 feet. This exemption does not apply | ||
to operation on a
Saturday, Sunday, or legal holiday. Legal | ||
holidays referred to in this Section
are
the days on which the | ||
following traditional holidays are celebrated: New Year's
Day; | ||
Memorial Day; Independence Day; Labor Day; Thanksgiving Day; | ||
and
Christmas Day.
| ||
Vehicles and loads operated by a public utility while en | ||
route to make
emergency repairs to public service facilities or | ||
properties are exempt from
length
limitations, provided that | ||
during night operations every vehicle and its load
must
be | ||
equipped with a sufficient number of clearance lamps on both | ||
sides and
marker lamps on the extreme ends of any projecting | ||
load to clearly mark the
dimensions of the load.
| ||
A tow truck in combination with a disabled vehicle or | ||
combination of
disabled vehicles, as provided in paragraph (6) | ||
of subsection (c) of this
Section, is
exempt from length | ||
limitations.
| ||
Local authorities, with respect to
streets and highways | ||
under their jurisdiction, may also by ordinance or
resolution | ||
allow length limitations of this subsection (e).
| ||
The length limitations described in this paragraph (e) | ||
shall be exclusive
of safety and energy conservation devices, | ||
such as bumpers, refrigeration units
or air compressors and | ||
other devices, that the Department may interpret as
necessary | ||
for safe and efficient operation; except that no device |
excluded
under this paragraph shall have by its design or use | ||
the capability to carry
cargo.
| ||
(e-1) Combinations of vehicles not exceeding 65 feet | ||
overall length are
allowed access as follows:
| ||
(1) From any State designated highway onto any county, | ||
township, or
municipal highway for a distance of 5 highway | ||
miles for the purpose of
loading and unloading, provided:
| ||
(A) The vehicle does not exceed 80,000 pounds in | ||
gross weight
and 8 feet 6 inches in width.
| ||
(B) There is no sign prohibiting that access.
| ||
(C) The route is not being used as a thoroughfare | ||
between State
designated highways.
| ||
(2) From any State designated highway onto any county | ||
or township
highway for a distance of 5 highway miles or | ||
onto any municipal highway for
a distance of one
highway | ||
mile for the purpose of food, fuel, repairs, and rest,
| ||
provided:
| ||
(A) The vehicle does not exceed 80,000 pounds in | ||
gross weight
and 8 feet 6 inches in width.
| ||
(B) There is no sign prohibiting that access.
| ||
(C) The route is not being used as a thoroughfare | ||
between State
designated highways.
| ||
(e-2) Except as provided in subsection (e-3), combinations | ||
of vehicles over
65
feet in length, with no overall length
| ||
limitation except as provided in subsections (d) and (e) of | ||
this Section, are
allowed access as follows:
|
(1) From a Class I highway onto any street or highway | ||
for a distance of
one highway mile for the purpose of | ||
loading, unloading, food, fuel, repairs,
and rest, | ||
provided there is no sign prohibiting that access.
| ||
(2) From a Class I or Class II highway onto any State | ||
highway or any
locally designated highway for a distance of | ||
5 highway miles for the purpose
of loading, unloading, | ||
food, fuel, repairs, and rest.
| ||
(e-3) Combinations of vehicles over 65 feet in length | ||
operated by household
goods carriers, with no overall length | ||
limitations except as provided in
subsections (d) and (e) of | ||
this Section, have unlimited access to points of
loading
and | ||
unloading.
| ||
Section 5-35 of the Illinois Administrative Procedure Act | ||
relating to
procedures for rulemaking shall not apply to the | ||
designation of highways under
this paragraph (e).
| ||
(f) On Class III and other non-designated State highways, | ||
the length
limitations
for vehicles in combination are as | ||
follows:
| ||
(1) Truck tractor-semitrailer combinations, must
| ||
comply with either a maximum 55 feet overall wheel base or
| ||
a maximum 65 feet extreme overall dimension.
| ||
(2) Semitrailers, unladen or with load, may not exceed
| ||
53 feet overall dimension.
| ||
(3) No truck tractor-semitrailer-trailer combination | ||
may
exceed 60 feet extreme overall dimension.
|
(4) The distance between the kingpin and the center | ||
axle of a
semitrailer longer than 48 feet, in combination | ||
with a truck tractor, may
not exceed 42 feet 6 inches.
| ||
(g) Length limitations in the preceding subsections of this | ||
Section 15-107
do not apply to the following:
| ||
(1) Vehicles operated in the daytime, except on | ||
Saturdays, Sundays, or
legal holidays, when transporting | ||
poles, pipe, machinery, or other objects of a
structural | ||
nature that cannot readily be dismembered, provided the | ||
overall
length of vehicle and load may not exceed 100 feet | ||
and no object exceeding 80
feet in length may be | ||
transported unless a permit has been obtained as
authorized | ||
in Section 15-301.
| ||
(2) Vehicles and loads operated by a public utility | ||
while en route to make
emergency repairs to public service | ||
facilities or properties, but during
night operation every | ||
vehicle and its load must be equipped with
a
sufficient | ||
number of clearance lamps on both sides and marker lamps | ||
upon the
extreme ends of any projecting load to clearly | ||
mark the dimensions of the load.
| ||
(3) A tow truck in combination with a disabled vehicle | ||
or combination of
disabled vehicles, provided the towing | ||
vehicle meets the following conditions:
| ||
(A) It is specifically designed as a tow truck | ||
having a gross vehicle
weight
rating of at least 18,000 | ||
pounds and equipped with air brakes, provided that
air
|
brakes are required only if the towing vehicle is | ||
towing a vehicle,
semitrailer, or tractor-trailer | ||
combination that is equipped with air brakes.
| ||
(B) It is equipped with flashing, rotating, or | ||
oscillating amber lights,
visible for at least 500 feet | ||
in all directions.
| ||
(C) It is capable of utilizing the lighting and | ||
braking systems of the
disabled vehicle or combination | ||
of vehicles.
| ||
(D) It does not engage in a tow exceeding 50 miles | ||
from the initial
point
of wreck or disablement.
| ||
The Department may by rule or regulation prescribe | ||
additional requirements
regarding length limitations for a tow | ||
truck towing another vehicle.
The towing vehicle, however, may | ||
tow any disabled vehicle from the initial
point of wreck or | ||
disablement to a point where repairs are actually to occur.
| ||
This movement shall be valid only on State routes.
The tower | ||
must abide by posted bridge weight limits.
| ||
For the purpose of this subsection, gross vehicle weight | ||
rating, or GVWR,
shall mean the value specified by the | ||
manufacturer as the loaded weight of
the tow truck. Legal | ||
holidays referred to in this Section shall be
specified as the | ||
day on which the following traditional holidays are
celebrated:
| ||
New Year's Day;
| ||
Memorial Day;
| ||
Independence Day;
|
Labor Day;
| ||
Thanksgiving Day; and
| ||
Christmas Day.
| ||
(h) The load upon any vehicle operated alone, or the load | ||
upon the
front vehicle of a combination of vehicles, shall not | ||
extend more than 3
feet beyond the front wheels of the vehicle | ||
or the front bumper of the
vehicle if it is equipped with a | ||
front bumper.
The provisions of this subsection (h) shall not | ||
apply to any vehicle or
combination of vehicles specifically | ||
designed for the collection and
transportation of waste, | ||
garbage, or recyclable materials during the vehicle's
| ||
operation in the course of collecting
garbage, waste, or
| ||
recyclable materials if the vehicle is traveling at a speed not | ||
in
excess of
15 miles per hour during the vehicle's operation | ||
and in the course of
collecting garbage, waste, or recyclable | ||
materials. However, in no instance
shall the load extend more | ||
than 7 feet beyond the front wheels of the vehicle
or the front | ||
bumper of the vehicle if it is equipped with a front bumper.
| ||
(i) The load upon the front vehicle of a combination of | ||
vehicles
specifically designed to transport motor vehicles | ||
shall not extend more
than 3 feet beyond the foremost part of | ||
the transporting vehicle and the
load upon the rear | ||
transporting vehicle shall not extend more than 4 feet
beyond | ||
the rear of the bed or body of the vehicle. This paragraph | ||
shall
only be applicable upon highways designated in paragraphs | ||
(d) and (e) of
this Section.
|
(j) Articulated vehicles comprised of 2 sections, neither | ||
of which
exceeds a length of 42 feet, designed for the carrying | ||
of more than 10
persons, may be up to 60 feet in length, not | ||
including energy absorbing
bumpers, provided that the vehicles | ||
are:
| ||
1. operated by or for any public body or motor carrier | ||
authorized by law
to provide public transportation | ||
services; or
| ||
2. operated in local public transportation service by | ||
any other person
and the municipality in which the service | ||
is to be provided approved the
operation of the vehicle.
| ||
(j-1) (Blank).
| ||
(k) Any person who is convicted of violating this Section | ||
is subject
to the penalty as provided in paragraph (b) of | ||
Section 15-113.
| ||
(l) (Blank).
| ||
(Source: P.A. 93-177, eff. 7-11-03; 93-1023, eff. 8-25-04; | ||
94-713, eff. 6-1-06; 09600HB0255enr.)
| ||
(625 ILCS 5/15-111) (from Ch. 95 1/2, par. 15-111)
| ||
Sec. 15-111. Wheel and axle loads and gross weights.
| ||
(a) On non-designated highways, no vehicle or combination | ||
of vehicles
equipped
with pneumatic tires may be operated, | ||
unladen or with load,
when the total weight transmitted to the | ||
road surface
exceeds 20,000 pounds on a single axle or 34,000 | ||
pounds on a tandem axle with
no axle within the tandem |
exceeding 20,000 pounds except:
| ||
(1) when a different limit is established and posted in | ||
accordance with
Section 15-316 of this Code;
| ||
(2) vehicles for which the Department of | ||
Transportation and local
authorities issue overweight
| ||
permits under authority of Section 15-301 of this Code;
| ||
(3) tow trucks subject to the conditions provided in | ||
subsection (d)
may not exceed 24,000 pounds on a single | ||
rear axle or 44,000 pounds on a tandem
rear axle;
| ||
(4) any single axle of a 2-axle truck weighing 36,000 | ||
pounds or
less and not a part of a combination of vehicles, | ||
shall not exceed 20,000
pounds;
| ||
(5) any single axle of a 2-axle truck equipped with a | ||
personnel
lift or digger derrick, weighing 36,000 pounds or | ||
less, owned and operated by a
public utility, shall not | ||
exceed 20,000 pounds;
| ||
(6) any single axle of a 2-axle truck specially | ||
equipped with a front
loading compactor used exclusively | ||
for garbage, refuse, or recycling may not
exceed 20,000 | ||
pounds per axle, provided that the gross weight of the | ||
vehicle
does not exceed 40,000 pounds;
| ||
(7) a truck, not in combination and specially equipped | ||
with a
selfcompactor or an industrial roll-off hoist and | ||
roll-off container, used
exclusively for garbage or refuse | ||
operations may, when laden, transmit upon the
road surface | ||
the following maximum
weights: 22,000 pounds on a single |
axle; 40,000 pounds on a tandem axle;
| ||
(8) a truck, not in combination and used exclusively | ||
for the collection of
rendering materials,
may, when laden, | ||
transmit upon the road surface the
following maximum | ||
weights:
22,000 pounds on a single axle; 40,000 pounds on a | ||
tandem axle;
| ||
(9) tandem axles on a 3-axle truck registered as a | ||
Special Hauling
Vehicle, manufactured prior to or in the | ||
model year of 2014 and
first
registered in Illinois prior | ||
to January 1, 2015, with a distance
greater than
72 inches | ||
but not more than 96 inches between any series of 2 axles, | ||
is
allowed a combined weight on the series not to exceed | ||
36,000 pounds and neither
axle of the series may exceed | ||
20,000 pounds. Any vehicle of this type
manufactured
after | ||
the model year of 2014 or first registered in Illinois | ||
after
December 31,
2014 may not exceed a combined weight of | ||
34,000 pounds through the
series of
2 axles and neither | ||
axle of the series may exceed 20,000 pounds;
| ||
(10) a 4-axle truck mixer
registered as a Special | ||
Hauling Vehicle, used
exclusively for the mixing and | ||
transportation of concrete in the plastic state and | ||
manufactured
prior to or in the model year of 2014 and | ||
first registered in
Illinois prior to
January 1, 2015, is | ||
allowed the following maximum weights: 20,000 pounds on any | ||
single axle; 36,000 pounds on any series of 2 axles greater | ||
than 72 inches but not more than 96 inches; and 34,000 |
pounds on any series of 2 axles greater than 40 inches but | ||
not more than 72 inches;
| ||
(11) 4-axle vehicles or a 5 or more axle combination of | ||
vehicles: The
weight
transmitted upon the road surface | ||
through any series of 3 axles whose centers
are
more than | ||
96 inches apart, measured between extreme axles in the | ||
series, may
not exceed those allowed in the table contained | ||
in subsection (f) of this
Section. No axle or tandem axle | ||
of the series may exceed the maximum weight
permitted under | ||
this Section for a single or tandem axle.
| ||
No vehicle or combination of vehicles equipped with other | ||
than pneumatic
tires may be operated, unladen or with load, | ||
upon the highways of this State
when the gross weight on the | ||
road surface through any wheel exceeds 800
pounds per inch | ||
width of tire tread or when the gross weight on the road
| ||
surface through any axle exceeds 16,000 pounds.
| ||
(b) On non-designated highways, the gross weight of | ||
vehicles and
combination of vehicles including
the weight of | ||
the vehicle or combination and its maximum load shall be
| ||
subject to the federal bridge formula provided in subsection | ||
(f) of this Section.
| ||
VEHICLES OPERATING ON CRAWLER TYPE TRACKS ..... 40,000 pounds
| ||
TRUCKS EQUIPPED WITH SELFCOMPACTORS
| ||
OR ROLL-OFF HOISTS AND ROLL-OFF CONTAINERS FOR GARBAGE,
|
REFUSE, OR RECYCLING HAULS ONLY AND TRUCKS USED FOR
| ||
THE COLLECTION OF RENDERING MATERIALS
| ||
On Highway Not Part of National System
| ||
of Interstate and Defense Highways
| ||
with 2 axles 36,000 pounds
| ||
with 3 axles 54,000 pounds
| ||
TWO AXLE TRUCKS EQUIPPED WITH
| ||
A FRONT LOADING COMPACTOR USED EXCLUSIVELY
| ||
FOR THE COLLECTION OF GARBAGE, REFUSE, OR RECYCLING
| ||
with 2 axles 40,000 pounds
| ||
A 4-axle truck mixer registered as a Special Hauling | ||
Vehicle, used exclusively for mixing and transportation of | ||
concrete in the plastic state, manufactured before or in the | ||
model year of 2014, and first registered in Illinois before | ||
January 1, 2015, is allowed a maximum gross weight listed in | ||
the table of subsection (f) of this Section for 4 axles. This | ||
vehicle, while loaded with concrete in the plastic state, is | ||
not subject to the series of 3 axles requirement provided for | ||
in subdivision (a)(11) of this Section, but no axle or tandem | ||
axle of the series may exceed the maximum weight permitted | ||
under subdivision (a)(10) of this Section.
| ||
(b-1) As used in this Section, a "recycling haul" or | ||
"recycling operation" means the hauling of segregated, | ||
non-hazardous, non-special, homogeneous non-putrescible |
materials, such as paper, glass, cans, or plastic, for | ||
subsequent use in the secondary materials market.
| ||
(c) Cities having a population of more than 50,000 may | ||
permit by
ordinance axle loads on 2 axle motor vehicles 33 1/2% | ||
above those
provided for herein, but the increase shall not | ||
become effective until the
city has officially notified the | ||
Department of the passage of the
ordinance and shall not apply | ||
to those vehicles when outside of the limits
of the city, nor | ||
shall the gross weight of any 2 axle motor vehicle
operating | ||
over any street of the city exceed 40,000 pounds.
| ||
(d) Weight limitations shall not apply to vehicles | ||
(including loads)
operated by a public utility when | ||
transporting equipment required for
emergency repair of public | ||
utility facilities or properties or water wells.
| ||
A combination of vehicles, including a tow truck and a | ||
disabled vehicle
or disabled combination of vehicles, that | ||
exceeds the weight restriction
imposed by this Code, may be | ||
operated on a public highway in this State
provided that | ||
neither the disabled vehicle nor any vehicle being towed nor
| ||
the tow truck itself shall exceed the weight limitations | ||
permitted
under this Chapter. During the towing operation, | ||
neither the tow truck nor
the vehicle combination shall exceed
| ||
24,000 pounds on a single
rear axle and
44,000 pounds on a | ||
tandem rear axle, provided the towing vehicle:
| ||
(1) is specifically designed as a tow truck having a | ||
gross vehicle
weight
rating of at least 18,000 pounds and |
is equipped with air brakes, provided that
air
brakes are | ||
required only if the towing vehicle is towing a vehicle,
| ||
semitrailer, or tractor-trailer combination that is | ||
equipped with air brakes;
| ||
(2) is equipped with flashing, rotating, or | ||
oscillating amber lights,
visible for at least 500 feet in | ||
all directions;
| ||
(3) is capable of utilizing the lighting and braking | ||
systems of the
disabled vehicle or combination of vehicles; | ||
and
| ||
(4) does not engage in a tow exceeding 20 miles from | ||
the initial point of
wreck or disablement. Any additional | ||
movement of the vehicles may occur only
upon issuance of | ||
authorization for that movement under the provisions of
| ||
Sections 15-301 through 15-319 of this Code. The towing | ||
vehicle, however,
may tow any disabled vehicle from the
| ||
initial point of wreck or disablement to a point where | ||
repairs are actually to
occur. This movement shall be valid | ||
only on State routes.
The tower must abide by posted bridge | ||
weight
limits.
| ||
Gross weight limits shall not apply to the combination of | ||
the tow truck
and vehicles being towed. The tow truck license | ||
plate must cover the
operating empty weight of the tow truck | ||
only. The weight
of each vehicle being towed shall be covered | ||
by a valid license plate issued to
the owner or operator of the | ||
vehicle being towed and displayed on that vehicle.
If no valid |
plate issued to the owner or operator of that vehicle is | ||
displayed
on that vehicle, or the plate displayed on that | ||
vehicle does not cover the
weight of the vehicle, the weight of | ||
the vehicle shall be covered by
the third tow truck plate | ||
issued to the owner or operator of the tow truck and
| ||
temporarily affixed to the vehicle being towed. If a roll-back | ||
carrier is registered and being used as a tow truck, however, | ||
the license plate or plates for the tow truck must cover the | ||
gross vehicle weight, including any load carried on the bed of | ||
the roll-back carrier.
| ||
The Department may by rule or regulation prescribe | ||
additional requirements.
However, nothing in this Code shall | ||
prohibit a tow truck under
instructions of a police officer | ||
from legally clearing a disabled vehicle,
that may be in | ||
violation of weight limitations of this Chapter, from the
| ||
roadway to the berm or shoulder of the highway.
If in the | ||
opinion of the police officer that location is unsafe, the | ||
officer
is authorized to have the disabled vehicle towed to the | ||
nearest place of
safety.
| ||
For the purpose of this subsection, gross vehicle weight | ||
rating, or
GVWR, shall mean the value specified by the | ||
manufacturer as the loaded
weight of the tow truck.
| ||
(e) No vehicle or combination of vehicles equipped with | ||
pneumatic tires
shall be operated, unladen or with load, upon | ||
the highways of this State in
violation of the provisions of | ||
any permit issued under the provisions of
Sections 15-301 |
through 15-319 of this Chapter.
| ||||||||
(f) No vehicle or combination of vehicles with
pneumatic | ||||||||
tires may be operated, unladen or with load,
when the total | ||||||||
weight on the road surface
exceeds the following: 20,000 pounds | ||||||||
on a single axle; 34,000 pounds on a
tandem axle with no axle | ||||||||
within the tandem exceeding 20,000 pounds; 80,000
pounds gross | ||||||||
weight for vehicle combinations of 5 or more axles;
or a total | ||||||||
weight on a group of 2 or more consecutive axles in excess of | ||||||||
that
weight produced by the application of the following | ||||||||
formula: W = 500 times the
sum of (LN divided by N-1) + 12N + | ||||||||
36, where "W" equals overall total weight on
any group of 2 or | ||||||||
more consecutive axles to the nearest 500 pounds, "L" equals
| ||||||||
the
distance measured to the nearest foot between extremes of | ||||||||
any group of 2 or
more consecutive axles, and "N" equals the | ||||||||
number of axles in the group under
consideration.
| ||||||||
The above formula when expressed in tabular form results in | ||||||||
allowable loads
as follows:
| ||||||||
Distance measured
| ||||||||
to the nearest
| ||||||||
foot between the
| ||||||||
extremes of any Maximum weight in pounds
| ||||||||
group of 2 or of any group of
| ||||||||
more consecutive 2 or more consecutive axles
| ||||||||
axles
| ||||||||
|
|
|
| ||||||||||||||
*If the distance between 2 axles is 96 inches or less, the 2 | ||||||||||||||
axles are
tandem axles and the maximum total weight may not | ||||||||||||||
exceed 34,000 pounds,
notwithstanding the higher limit | ||||||||||||||
resulting from the application of the formula.
| ||||||||||||||
Vehicles not in a combination having more than 4 axles may | ||||||||||||||
not exceed the
weight in the table in this subsection (f) for 4 | ||||||||||||||
axles measured between the
extreme axles of the
vehicle.
| ||||||||||||||
Vehicles in a combination having more than 6 axles may not | ||||||||||||||
exceed the weight
in the table in this subsection (f) for 6 | ||||||||||||||
axles measured between the extreme
axles of the
combination.
| ||||||||||||||
Local authorities, with respect
to streets and highways | ||||||||||||||
under their jurisdiction, without additional
fees, may also by | ||||||||||||||
ordinance or resolution allow the weight limitations of this
| ||||||||||||||
subsection, provided the maximum gross weight on any one axle | ||||||||||||||
shall not exceed
20,000 pounds and the maximum total weight on | ||||||||||||||
any tandem axle
shall not exceed
34,000 pounds, on designated | ||||||||||||||
highways when appropriate regulatory signs giving
notice are | ||||||||||||||
erected upon the street or highway or portion of any street or
| ||||||||||||||
highway affected by the ordinance or resolution.
| ||||||||||||||
The following are exceptions to the above formula:
| ||||||||||||||
(1) Two consecutive sets of tandem axles may carry a | ||||||||||||||
total weight of
34,000
pounds each if the overall distance | ||||||||||||||
between the first and last axles of the
consecutive sets of | ||||||||||||||
tandem axles is 36 feet or more.
|
(2) Vehicles for which a different limit is established | ||
and posted in
accordance with Section 15-316 of this Code.
| ||
(3) Vehicles for which the Department of | ||
Transportation and local
authorities issue overweight
| ||
permits under authority of Section 15-301 of this Code. | ||
These vehicles are
not subject
to the bridge formula.
| ||
(4) Tow trucks subject to the conditions provided in | ||
subsection (d)
may not exceed 24,000 pounds on a single | ||
rear axle or 44,000 pounds on a tandem
rear axle.
| ||
(5) A tandem axle on a 3-axle truck registered as a | ||
Special Hauling
Vehicle, manufactured prior to or in the | ||
model year of 2014, and
registered in Illinois prior to | ||
January 1, 2015, with a distance
between 2
axles
in a | ||
series greater than 72 inches but not more than 96 inches | ||
may not exceed
a total weight of 36,000 pounds and neither | ||
axle of the series may exceed 20,000
18,000 pounds.
| ||
(6) A truck not in combination, equipped with a self | ||
compactor or an
industrial roll-off hoist and roll-off | ||
container, used exclusively for garbage,
refuse, or | ||
recycling operations, may, when laden, transmit upon the | ||
road surface,
except when on part of the National System of | ||
Interstate and Defense
Highways, the following maximum | ||
weights: 22,000 pounds on a
single axle; 40,000 pounds on a | ||
tandem axle; 36,000 pounds gross weight on a
2-axle | ||
vehicle; 54,000 pounds gross weight on a 3-axle vehicle.
| ||
This vehicle is not subject to the bridge formula.
|
(7) Combinations of vehicles, registered as Special | ||
Hauling Vehicles that
include a semitrailer manufactured | ||
prior to or in the model year of 2014, and
registered in | ||
Illinois prior to January 1, 2015, having 5 axles
with a
| ||
distance of 42 feet or less between extreme axles, may not | ||
exceed the
following maximum weights: 20,000 18,000 pounds | ||
on a single axle; 34,000 32,000 pounds on a
tandem axle; | ||
and 72,000 pounds gross weight. This combination of | ||
vehicles is
not subject
to the bridge formula. For all | ||
those combinations of vehicles that include a
semitrailer | ||
manufactured after the effective date of this amendatory | ||
Act of
the 92nd General Assembly, the overall distance | ||
between the first and last
axles of the 2 sets of
tandems | ||
must be 18 feet 6 inches or
more. Any combination of | ||
vehicles that has had its cargo
container replaced in its | ||
entirety after December 31, 2014 may not
exceed
the weights | ||
allowed by the bridge formula.
| ||
(8) A 4-axle truck mixer registered as a Special | ||
Hauling Vehicle, used exclusively for the mixing and | ||
transportation of concrete in the plastic state, | ||
manufactured before or in the model year of 2014, first | ||
registered in Illinois before January 1, 2015, and not | ||
operated on a highway that is part of the National System | ||
of Interstate Highways, is allowed the following maximum | ||
weights: 20,000 pounds on any single axle; 36,000 pounds on | ||
a series of axles greater than 72 inches but not more than |
96 inches; and 34,000 pounds on any series of 2 axles | ||
greater than 40 inches but not more than 72 inches. The | ||
gross weight of this vehicle may not exceed the weights | ||
allowed by the bridge formula for 4 axles. The bridge | ||
formula does not apply to any series of 3 axles while the | ||
vehicle is transporting concrete in the plastic state, but | ||
no axle or tandem axle of the series may exceed the maximum | ||
weight permitted under this subsection (f).
| ||
No vehicle or combination of vehicles equipped with other | ||
than pneumatic
tires may be operated, unladen or with load, | ||
upon the highways of this State
when the gross weight on the | ||
road surface through any wheel exceeds 800
pounds per inch | ||
width of tire tread or when the gross weight on the road
| ||
surface through any axle exceeds 16,000 pounds.
| ||
(f-1) A vehicle and load not exceeding 80,000 pounds is | ||
allowed travel on non-designated highways so long as there is | ||
no sign prohibiting that access.
| ||
(g) No person shall operate a vehicle or combination of | ||
vehicles over
a bridge or other elevated structure constituting | ||
part of a highway with a
gross weight that is greater than the | ||
maximum weight permitted by the
Department, when the structure | ||
is sign posted as provided in this Section.
| ||
(h) The Department upon request from any local authority | ||
shall, or upon
its own initiative may, conduct an investigation | ||
of any bridge or other
elevated structure constituting a part | ||
of a highway, and if it finds that
the structure cannot with |
safety to itself withstand the weight of vehicles
otherwise | ||
permissible under this Code the Department shall determine and
| ||
declare the maximum weight of vehicles that the structures can | ||
withstand,
and shall cause or permit suitable signs stating | ||
maximum weight to be
erected and maintained before each end of | ||
the structure. No person shall
operate a vehicle or combination | ||
of vehicles over any structure with a
gross weight that is | ||
greater than the posted maximum weight.
| ||
(i) Upon the trial of any person charged with a violation | ||
of subsections
(g) or (h) of this Section, proof of the | ||
determination of the maximum
allowable weight by the Department | ||
and the existence of the signs,
constitutes conclusive evidence | ||
of the maximum weight that can be
maintained with safety to the | ||
bridge or structure.
| ||
(Source: P.A. 94-464, eff. 1-1-06; 94-926, eff. 1-1-07; 95-51, | ||
eff. 1-1-08; 09600HB0255enr.)
| ||
Section 60-45. If and only if House Bill 255 of the 96th | ||
General Assembly becomes law, the Criminal Code of 1961 is | ||
amended by changing Section 28-1 as follows:
| ||
(720 ILCS 5/28-1) (from Ch. 38, par. 28-1)
| ||
Sec. 28-1. Gambling.
| ||
(a) A person commits gambling when he:
| ||
(1) Plays a game of chance or skill for money or other | ||
thing of
value, unless excepted in subsection (b) of this |
Section; or
| ||
(2) Makes a wager upon the result of any game, contest, | ||
or any
political nomination, appointment or election; or
| ||
(3) Operates, keeps, owns, uses, purchases, exhibits, | ||
rents, sells,
bargains for the sale or lease of, | ||
manufactures or distributes any
gambling device; or
| ||
(4) Contracts to have or give himself or another the | ||
option to buy
or sell, or contracts to buy or sell, at a | ||
future time, any grain or
other commodity whatsoever, or | ||
any stock or security of any company,
where it is at the | ||
time of making such contract intended by both parties
| ||
thereto that the contract to buy or sell, or the option, | ||
whenever
exercised, or the contract resulting therefrom, | ||
shall be settled, not by
the receipt or delivery of such | ||
property, but by the payment only of
differences in prices | ||
thereof; however, the issuance, purchase, sale,
exercise, | ||
endorsement or guarantee, by or through a person registered
| ||
with the Secretary of State pursuant to Section 8 of the | ||
Illinois
Securities Law of 1953, or by or through a person | ||
exempt from such
registration under said Section 8, of a | ||
put, call, or other option to
buy or sell securities which | ||
have been registered with the Secretary of
State or which | ||
are exempt from such registration under Section 3 of the
| ||
Illinois Securities Law of 1953 is not gambling within the | ||
meaning of
this paragraph (4); or
| ||
(5) Knowingly owns or possesses any book, instrument or |
apparatus by
means of which bets or wagers have been, or | ||
are, recorded or registered,
or knowingly possesses any | ||
money which he has received in the course of
a bet or | ||
wager; or
| ||
(6) Sells pools upon the result of any game or contest | ||
of skill or
chance, political nomination, appointment or | ||
election; or
| ||
(7) Sets up or promotes any lottery or sells, offers to | ||
sell or
transfers any ticket or share for any lottery; or
| ||
(8) Sets up or promotes any policy game or sells, | ||
offers to sell or
knowingly possesses or transfers any | ||
policy ticket, slip, record,
document or other similar | ||
device; or
| ||
(9) Knowingly drafts, prints or publishes any lottery | ||
ticket or share,
or any policy ticket, slip, record, | ||
document or similar device, except for
such activity | ||
related to lotteries, bingo games and raffles authorized by
| ||
and conducted in accordance with the laws of Illinois or | ||
any other state or
foreign government; or
| ||
(10) Knowingly advertises any lottery or policy game, | ||
except for such
activity related to lotteries, bingo games | ||
and raffles authorized by and
conducted in accordance with | ||
the laws of Illinois or any other state; or
| ||
(11) Knowingly transmits information as to wagers, | ||
betting odds, or
changes in betting odds by telephone, | ||
telegraph, radio, semaphore or
similar means; or knowingly |
installs or maintains equipment for the
transmission or | ||
receipt of such information; except that nothing in this
| ||
subdivision (11) prohibits transmission or receipt of such | ||
information
for use in news reporting of sporting events or | ||
contests; or
| ||
(12) Knowingly establishes, maintains, or operates an | ||
Internet site that
permits a person to play a game of
| ||
chance or skill for money or other thing of value by means | ||
of the Internet or
to make a wager upon the
result of any | ||
game, contest, political nomination, appointment, or
| ||
election by means of the Internet. This item (12) does not | ||
apply to activities referenced in items (6) and (6.1) of | ||
subsection (b) of this Section.
| ||
(b) Participants in any of the following activities shall | ||
not be
convicted of gambling therefor:
| ||
(1) Agreements to compensate for loss caused by the | ||
happening of
chance including without limitation contracts | ||
of indemnity or guaranty
and life or health or accident | ||
insurance.
| ||
(2) Offers of prizes, award or compensation to the | ||
actual
contestants in any bona fide contest for the | ||
determination of skill,
speed, strength or endurance or to | ||
the owners of animals or vehicles
entered in such contest.
| ||
(3) Pari-mutuel betting as authorized by the law of | ||
this State.
| ||
(4) Manufacture of gambling devices, including the |
acquisition of
essential parts therefor and the assembly | ||
thereof, for transportation in
interstate or foreign | ||
commerce to any place outside this State when such
| ||
transportation is not prohibited by any applicable Federal | ||
law; or the
manufacture, distribution, or possession of | ||
video gaming terminals, as
defined in the Video Gaming Act, | ||
by manufacturers, distributors, and
terminal operators | ||
licensed to do so under the Video Gaming Act.
| ||
(5) The game commonly known as "bingo", when conducted | ||
in accordance
with the Bingo License and Tax Act.
| ||
(6) Lotteries when conducted by the State of Illinois | ||
or a third party pursuant to a Management Agreement with | ||
the State of Illinois in accordance
with the Illinois | ||
Lottery Law. This exemption includes any activity | ||
conducted by the Department of Revenue to sell lottery | ||
tickets pursuant to the provisions of the Illinois Lottery | ||
Law and its rules.
| ||
(6.1) The purchase of lottery tickets through the | ||
Internet for a lottery conducted by the State of Illinois | ||
under the program established in Section 7.12 of the | ||
Illinois Lottery Law.
| ||
(7) Possession of an antique slot machine that is | ||
neither used nor
intended to be used in the operation or | ||
promotion of any unlawful
gambling activity or enterprise. | ||
For the purpose of this subparagraph
(b)(7), an antique | ||
slot machine is one manufactured 25 years ago or earlier.
|
(8) Raffles when conducted in accordance with the | ||
Raffles Act.
| ||
(9) Charitable games when conducted in accordance with | ||
the Charitable
Games Act.
| ||
(10) Pull tabs and jar games when conducted under the | ||
Illinois Pull
Tabs and Jar Games Act.
| ||
(11) Gambling games conducted on riverboats when
| ||
authorized by the Riverboat Gambling Act.
| ||
(12) Video gaming terminal games at a licensed | ||
establishment, licensed truck stop establishment,
licensed
| ||
fraternal establishment, or licensed veterans | ||
establishment when
conducted in accordance with the Video | ||
Gaming Act. | ||
(c) Sentence.
| ||
Gambling under subsection (a)(1) or (a)(2) of this Section | ||
is a
Class A misdemeanor. Gambling under any of subsections | ||
(a)(3) through
(a)(11) of this Section is a Class A | ||
misdemeanor. A second or
subsequent conviction under any of | ||
subsections (a)(3) through (a)(11),
is a Class 4 felony. | ||
Gambling under subsection (a)(12) of this Section is a
Class A
| ||
misdemeanor. A second or subsequent conviction under | ||
subsection (a)(12) is a
Class 4 felony.
| ||
(d) Circumstantial evidence.
| ||
In prosecutions under subsection (a)(1) through (a)(12) of
| ||
this
Section circumstantial evidence shall have the same | ||
validity and weight as
in any criminal prosecution.
|
(Source: P.A. 91-257, eff. 1-1-00; 09600HB0255enr.)
| ||
Section 60-50. If and only if House Bill 255 of the 96th | ||
General Assembly becomes law, Section 9999 is amended as | ||
follows: | ||
(09600HB0255enr. Sec. 9999) | ||
Sec. 9999. Effective date. This Act takes effect July 1, | ||
2009, except that the changes to Sections 15-102, 15-107, | ||
15-111, 15-112, 15-113, 15-306, 15-307, and 16-105 of the | ||
Illinois Vehicle Code take effect January 1, 2010; but this Act | ||
does not take effect at all unless House Bill 312 of the 96th | ||
General Assembly, as amended, becomes law. | ||
(Source: 09600HB0255enr.) | ||
Section 60-95. No acceleration or delay. Where this Act | ||
makes changes in a statute that is represented in this Act by | ||
text that is not yet or no longer in effect (for example, a | ||
Section represented by multiple versions), the use of that text | ||
does not accelerate or delay the taking effect of (i) the | ||
changes made by this Act or (ii) provisions derived from any | ||
other Public Act. | ||
Article 65. | ||
Section 65-5. The River Edge Redevelopment Zone Act is |
amended by changing Section 10-5.3 as follows: | ||
(65 ILCS 115/10-5.3)
| ||
Sec. 10-5.3. Certification of River Edge Redevelopment | ||
Zones. | ||
(a) Approval of designated River Edge Redevelopment Zones | ||
shall be made by the Department by certification of the | ||
designating ordinance. The Department shall promptly issue a | ||
certificate for each zone upon its approval. The certificate | ||
shall be signed by the Director of the Department, shall make | ||
specific reference to the designating ordinance, which shall be | ||
attached thereto, and shall be filed in the office of the | ||
Secretary of State. A certified copy of the River Edge | ||
Redevelopment Zone Certificate, or a duplicate original | ||
thereof, shall be recorded in the office of the recorder of | ||
deeds of the county in which the River Edge Redevelopment Zone | ||
lies. | ||
(b) A River Edge Redevelopment Zone shall be effective upon | ||
its certification. The Department shall transmit a copy of the | ||
certification to the Department of Revenue, and to the | ||
designating municipality.
Upon certification of a River Edge | ||
Redevelopment Zone, the terms and provisions of the designating | ||
ordinance shall be in effect, and may not be amended or | ||
repealed except in accordance with Section 10-5.4. | ||
(c) A River Edge Redevelopment Zone shall be in effect for | ||
the period stated in the certificate, which shall in no event |
exceed 30 calendar years. Zones shall terminate at midnight of | ||
December 31 of the final calendar year of the certified term, | ||
except as provided in Section 10-5.4. | ||
(d) In calendar years 2006 and 2007, the Department may | ||
certify one pilot River Edge Redevelopment Zone in the City of | ||
East St. Louis, one pilot River Edge Redevelopment Zone in the | ||
City of Rockford, and one pilot River Edge Redevelopment Zone | ||
in the City of Aurora. | ||
In calendar year 2009, the Department may certify one pilot | ||
River Edge Redevelopment Zone in the City of Elgin. | ||
Thereafter the Department may not certify any additional | ||
River Edge Redevelopment Zones, but may amend and rescind | ||
certifications of existing River Edge Redevelopment Zones in | ||
accordance with Section 10-5.4. | ||
(e) A municipality in which a River Edge Redevelopment Zone | ||
has been certified must submit to the Department, within 60 | ||
days after the certification, a plan for encouraging the | ||
participation by minority persons, females, persons with | ||
disabilities, and veterans in the zone. The Department may | ||
assist the municipality in developing and implementing the | ||
plan. The terms "minority person", "female", and "person with a | ||
disability" have the meanings set forth under Section 2 of the | ||
Business Enterprise for Minorities, Females, and Persons with | ||
Disabilities Act. "Veteran" means an Illinois resident who is a | ||
veteran as defined in subsection (h) of Section 1491 of Title | ||
10 of the United States Code.
|
(Source: P.A. 94-1021, eff. 7-12-06; 94-1022, eff. 7-12-06.) | ||
Article 70. | ||
Section 70-5. Findings. The General Assembly finds that | ||
parts of Illinois lack access to high-speed information and | ||
communication (broadband) networks. Such networks impact | ||
access to jobs, education, health care, public safety and | ||
quality of life in Illinois.
The 2009 American Recovery and | ||
Reinvestment Act (ARRA) represents an unprecedented federal | ||
investment in core infrastructure, including over
$7 billion in | ||
competitive grants and loans available through the United | ||
States Departments of Agriculture and Commerce for core | ||
broadband infrastructure.
It is the policy of Illinois to | ||
secure every viable stimulus project from undue delays, | ||
especially those awarded competitively, tied to deadlines, and | ||
connected to core infrastructure. Encouraging network | ||
development will help Illinois' public and private entities | ||
compete for and manage broadband infrastructure projects. | ||
Section 70-7. The Secretary of State Act is amended by | ||
changing Section 5 as follows:
| ||
(15 ILCS 305/5) (from Ch. 124, par. 5)
| ||
Sec. 5. It shall be the duty of the Secretary of State:
| ||
1. To countersign and affix the seal of state to all |
commissions
required by law to be issued by the Governor.
| ||
2. To make a register of all appointments by the Governor, | ||
specifying
the person appointed, the office conferred, the date | ||
of the appointment,
the date when bond or oath is taken and the | ||
date filed. If Senate
confirmation is required, the date of the | ||
confirmation shall be included
in the register.
| ||
3. To make proper indexes to public acts, resolutions, | ||
papers and
documents in his office.
| ||
3-a. To review all rules of all State agencies adopted in | ||
compliance
with the
codification system prescribed by the | ||
Secretary. The review shall be for the
purposes and include all | ||
the powers and duties provided in the Illinois
Administrative | ||
Procedure Act. The Secretary of State shall cooperate with the
| ||
Legislative Information System to insure the accuracy of the | ||
text of the rules
maintained under the Legislative Information | ||
System Act.
| ||
4. To give any person requiring the same paying the lawful | ||
fees
therefor, a copy of any law, act, resolution, record or | ||
paper in his
office, and attach thereto his certificate, under | ||
the seal of the state.
| ||
5. To take charge of and preserve from waste, and keep in | ||
repair,
the houses, lots, grounds and appurtenances, situated | ||
in the City of
Springfield, and belonging to or occupied by the | ||
State, the care of
which is not otherwise provided for by law, | ||
and to take charge of and
preserve from waste, and keep in | ||
repair, the houses, lots, grounds and
appurtenances, situated |
in the State outside the City of Springfield
where such houses, | ||
lots, grounds and appurtenances are occupied by the
Secretary | ||
of State and no other State officer or agency.
| ||
6. To supervise the distribution of the laws.
| ||
7. To perform such other duties as may be required by law. | ||
The
Secretary of State may, within appropriations authorized by | ||
the General
Assembly, maintain offices in the State Capital and | ||
in such other places
in the State as he may deem necessary to | ||
properly carry out the powers
and duties vested in him by law.
| ||
8. In addition to all other authority granted to the | ||
Secretary by law, subject to appropriation, to make grants or | ||
otherwise provide assistance to, among others without | ||
limitation, units of local government, school districts, | ||
educational institutions, private agencies, not-for-profit | ||
organizations, and for-profit entities for the health, safety, | ||
and welfare of Illinois residents for purposes related to | ||
education, transportation, construction, capital improvements, | ||
social services, and any other lawful public purpose. Upon | ||
request of the Secretary, all State agencies are mandated to | ||
provide the Secretary with assistance in administering the | ||
grants. | ||
(Source: P.A. 91-357, eff. 7-29-99.)
| ||
Section 70-10. The Public Utilities Act is amended by | ||
adding Section 8-511 as follows: |
(220 ILCS 5/8-511 new) | ||
Sec. 8-511. Network equipment attachment agreements; | ||
Stimulus-funded broadband network providers. | ||
(a) For purposes of this Section: | ||
"Stimulus-funded broadband network provider" or "SBNP" | ||
means an Illinois-based recipient of grant or loan funding | ||
authorized by the ARRA and awarded through the United States | ||
Department of Agriculture's Rural Utilities Service (RUS) or | ||
the United States Department of Commerce's National | ||
Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA). | ||
(b) Access to government and public utility assets, | ||
including towers, water towers, buildings, street lights, | ||
traffic poles, and pole arms for Stimulus-funded broadband | ||
network providers (SBNPs) must be provided at rates and under | ||
conditions that are just and reasonable. | ||
(c) SBNPs whose federally-approved plans include the | ||
attachments listed in subsection (b) of this Section are | ||
required to enter into agreements with the asset owners. The | ||
agreements shall: | ||
(1) contain rates, terms, conditions, and timetables; | ||
and | ||
(2) be for the purpose of attaching any equipment | ||
necessary for the provision of broadband network services, | ||
including antennas, base stations, routers, and switching, | ||
processing, transmission, and distribution equipment with | ||
consideration for the safety of those installing and |
maintaining the pole attachments. | ||
The SBNP shall adhere to all applicable National Electrical | ||
Safety Code Guidelines and shall not place ancillary equipment | ||
such as power supplies, equipment cabinets, and multiplexers in | ||
the climbing space of a pole, unless expressly authorized to do | ||
so by the pole owner.
If relevant assets are co-owned by 2 or | ||
more entities, then an agreement for access shall only be | ||
necessary with the majority owner. If the SBNP and the asset | ||
owner are unable to reach an agreement on rates, terms, | ||
conditions, or timetables, then either party may, in its | ||
discretion, pursue procedures under subsection (d) of this | ||
Section. | ||
(d) The Commission shall adopt rules concerning access | ||
rates, terms, conditions, and timetables for agreements | ||
required under this Section and any necessary additional | ||
procedures for hearing and resolving contested cases. For | ||
purposes of enforcing any determinations resulting from | ||
contested cases originating under this Section, the Commission | ||
shall take action as it deems appropriate. | ||
(e) If the Commission finds that an asset owner violated | ||
any provision of this Section or any Commission order under | ||
this Section, then it shall order the asset owner: | ||
(1) to grant access to the SBNP; and | ||
(2) to cease and desist from violating the provisions | ||
of this Section. | ||
Orders issued by the Commission shall be enforceable as in |
any other matter before the Commission. | ||
(f) This Section applies to any attachment agreement that | ||
is entered into by parties after the effective date of this | ||
amendatory Act of the 96th General Assembly. | ||
(g) Any stimulus-funded broadband network provider using | ||
existing above ground right-of-ways and underground utilities | ||
shall provide reasonable public notice to easement owners of | ||
their proposed fiber optic cable route. If no easement owner | ||
along the proposed route files a written objection within 30 | ||
days with the Commission, then the SBNP is authorized to | ||
commence network deployment. Easement owners that formally | ||
object must enter into a dispute resolution process with the | ||
SBNP that is authorized by the Commission. | ||
(h) If, in the process of installing broadband | ||
infrastructure along existing right of way, farm drainage is | ||
damaged, then the easement or landowner shall be reimbursed by | ||
the SBNP for any repair costs they incur. | ||
Section 70-15. The Illinois Highway Code is amended by | ||
adding Section 9-131 as follows: | ||
(605 ILCS 5/9-131 new)
| ||
Sec. 9-131. Installation of fiber-optic network conduit. | ||
(a) For purposes of this Section: | ||
"Fiber-optic network conduit" means a pipe or duct used to | ||
enclose fiber-optic cable facilities buried alongside the |
roadway or surface mounted on bridges, overpasses, and other | ||
facilities where below ground placement is impossible or | ||
impractical. | ||
(b) In order to ensure affordable high-speed, world-class | ||
core information and communication networks are available | ||
throughout Illinois, the Illinois Department of Transportation | ||
and the Department of Central Management Services shall | ||
collaborate to install fiber-optic network conduit where it | ||
does not already exist in every new State-funded construction | ||
project that opens, bores, or trenches alongside a State-owned | ||
infrastructure, including, but not limited to, roadways and | ||
bridges. The Department of Central Management Services or the | ||
Department of Transportation may permit a third party to manage | ||
the fiber and conduit leasing. The Department of Central | ||
Management Services and the Department of Transportation shall | ||
take reasonable steps to ensure market-based, | ||
non-discriminatory pricing. Public bidding notices for such | ||
projects must describe the need for fiber-optic conduit or | ||
cable. The Department of Transportation shall report annually | ||
to the Governor and the General Assembly on the progress and | ||
any associated costs incurred by this Section. This Section | ||
does not prohibit the State from purchasing or installing | ||
fiber-optic cable within the fiber-optic network conduit. | ||
Article 75. |
Section 75-5. The School Construction Law is amended by | ||
changing Sections 5-25, 5-30, and 5-57 as follows:
| ||
(105 ILCS 230/5-25)
| ||
Sec. 5-25. Eligibility and project standards.
| ||
(a) The State Board of Education shall establish | ||
eligibility standards for
school construction project grants | ||
and debt service grants. These standards
shall include minimum | ||
enrollment requirements for eligibility for school
| ||
construction project grants of 200 students for elementary | ||
districts, 200
students for high school districts, and 400 | ||
students for unit districts. The
State Board of Education shall | ||
approve a district's eligibility for a school
construction | ||
project grant or a debt service grant pursuant to the | ||
established
standards.
| ||
(b) The Capital Development Board shall establish
project | ||
standards for all school construction project grants provided | ||
pursuant
to this Article. These standards shall include space | ||
and capacity standards as
well as the determination of | ||
recognized project costs that shall be eligible
for State | ||
financial assistance and enrichment costs that shall not be | ||
eligible
for State financial assistance.
| ||
(c) The State Board of Education and the Capital | ||
Development Board shall
not establish standards that | ||
disapprove or otherwise establish limitations
that restrict | ||
the eligibility of (i) a school district with a population |
exceeding
500,000 for a school construction project grant based | ||
on the fact that any or
all of the school construction project | ||
grant will be used to pay debt service
or to make lease | ||
payments, as authorized by subsection (b) of Section 5-35 of
| ||
this Law , or (ii) a school district located in whole or in part | ||
in a county that imposes a tax for school facility purposes | ||
pursuant to Section 5-1006.7 of the Counties Code .
| ||
(Source: P.A. 90-548, eff. 1-1-98; 91-38, eff. 6-15-99.)
| ||
(105 ILCS 230/5-30)
| ||
Sec. 5-30. Priority of school construction projects. The | ||
State Board of
Education shall develop standards for the | ||
determination of priority needs
concerning school construction | ||
projects based upon approved district facilities
plans. Such | ||
standards shall call for prioritization based on
the degree of | ||
need and project type in the following order:
| ||
(1) Replacement or reconstruction of school buildings | ||
destroyed or damaged
by flood, tornado, fire, earthquake, | ||
or other disasters, either man-made or
produced by nature;
| ||
(2) Projects designed to alleviate a shortage of | ||
classrooms due to
population growth or to replace aging | ||
school buildings;
| ||
(3) Projects resulting from interdistrict | ||
reorganization
of school districts contingent on local | ||
referenda;
| ||
(4) Replacement or reconstruction of school
facilities |
determined to be severe and continuing health or life | ||
safety
hazards;
| ||
(5) Alterations necessary to provide accessibility for | ||
qualified individuals
with disabilities; and
| ||
(6) Other unique solutions to facility needs.
| ||
Except for those changes absolutely necessary to comply with | ||
the changes made to subsection (c) of Section 5-25 of this Law | ||
by this amendatory Act of the 96th General Assembly, the The | ||
State Board of Education may not make any material changes to | ||
the standards in effect on May 18, 2004, unless the State Board | ||
of Education is specifically authorized by law.
| ||
(Source: P.A. 93-679, eff. 6-30-04.)
| ||
(105 ILCS 230/5-57) | ||
Sec. 5-57. Administration of powers; no changes. | ||
Notwithstanding any other law to the contrary and except for | ||
those changes absolutely necessary to comply with the changes | ||
made to subsection (c) of Section 5-25 of this Law by this | ||
amendatory Act of the 96th General Assembly , the Capital | ||
Development Board may not make any material changes in the | ||
administration of its powers granted under this Law from how it | ||
administered those powers on May 18, 2004, unless specifically | ||
authorized by law.
| ||
(Source: P.A. 93-679, eff. 6-30-04.) | ||
Article 80. |
Section 80-5. The Department of Commerce and Economic | ||
Opportunity Law of the
Civil Administrative Code of Illinois is | ||
amended by adding Section 605-390 as follows: | ||
(20 ILCS 605/605-390 new) | ||
Sec. 605-390. Use of Illinois resident labor. To the extent | ||
permitted by any applicable federal law or regulation, for all | ||
work performed for State construction projects which are funded | ||
in whole or in part by a capital infrastructure bill enacted by | ||
the 96th General Assembly by sums appropriated to the Illinois | ||
Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity, at least 50% | ||
of the total labor hours must be performed by actual residents | ||
of the State of Illinois. For purposes of this Section, "actual | ||
residents of the State of Illinois" means persons domiciled in | ||
the State of Illinois. The Department of Labor shall promulgate | ||
rules providing for the enforcement of this Section. | ||
Section 80-10. The Department of Natural Resources | ||
(Conservation) Law of the
Civil Administrative Code of Illinois | ||
is amended by adding Section 805-350 as follows: | ||
(20 ILCS 805/805-350 new) | ||
Sec. 805-350. Use of Illinois resident labor. To the extent | ||
permitted by any applicable federal law or regulation, for all | ||
work performed for State construction projects which are funded |
in whole or in part by a capital infrastructure bill enacted by | ||
the 96th General Assembly by sums appropriated to the Illinois | ||
Department of Natural Resources, at least 50% of the total | ||
labor hours must be performed by actual residents of the State | ||
of Illinois. For purposes of this Section, "actual residents of | ||
the State of Illinois" means persons domiciled in the State of | ||
Illinois. The Department of Labor shall promulgate rules | ||
providing for the enforcement of this Section. | ||
Section 80-15. The Department of Natural Resources (Mines | ||
and Minerals)
Law of the Civil Administrative Code of Illinois | ||
is amended by adding Section 1905-12 as follows: | ||
(20 ILCS 1905/1905-12 new) | ||
Sec. 1905-12. Use of Illinois resident labor. To the extent | ||
permitted by any applicable federal law or regulation, for all | ||
work performed for State construction projects which are funded | ||
in whole or in part by a capital infrastructure bill enacted by | ||
the 96th General Assembly by sums appropriated to the Illinois | ||
Department of Natural Resources, at least 50% of the total | ||
labor hours must be performed by actual residents of the State | ||
of Illinois. For purposes of this Section, "actual residents of | ||
the State of Illinois" means persons domiciled in the State of | ||
Illinois. The Department of Labor shall promulgate rules | ||
providing for the enforcement of this Section. |
Section 80-20. The Department of Transportation Law of the
| ||
Civil Administrative Code of Illinois is amended by adding | ||
Section 2705-260 as follows: | ||
(20 ILCS 2705/2705-260 new) | ||
Sec. 2705-260. Use of Illinois resident labor. To the | ||
extent permitted by any applicable federal law or regulation, | ||
for all work performed for State construction projects which | ||
are funded in whole or in part by a capital infrastructure bill | ||
enacted by the 96th General Assembly by sums appropriated to | ||
the Illinois Department of Transportation, at least 50% of the | ||
total labor hours must be performed by actual residents of the | ||
State of Illinois. For purposes of this Section, "actual | ||
residents of the State of Illinois" means persons domiciled in | ||
the State of Illinois. The Department of Labor shall promulgate | ||
rules providing for the enforcement of this Section. | ||
Section 80-25. The Capital Development Board Act is amended | ||
by adding Section 10.17 as follows: | ||
(20 ILCS 3105/10.17 new) | ||
Sec. 10.17. Use of Illinois resident labor. To the extent | ||
permitted by any applicable federal law or regulation, for all | ||
work performed for State construction projects which are funded | ||
in whole or in part by a capital infrastructure bill enacted by | ||
the 96th General Assembly by sums appropriated to the Capital |
Development Board, at least 50% of the total labor hours must | ||
be performed by actual residents of the State of Illinois. For | ||
purposes of this Section, "actual residents of the State of | ||
Illinois" means persons domiciled in the State of Illinois. The | ||
Department of Labor shall promulgate rules providing for the | ||
enforcement of this Section. | ||
Section 80-30. The Environmental Protection Act is amended | ||
by changing Section 4 as follows:
| ||
(415 ILCS 5/4) (from Ch. 111 1/2, par. 1004)
| ||
Sec. 4. Environmental Protection Agency; establishment; | ||
duties.
| ||
(a) There is established in the Executive Branch of the | ||
State Government an
agency to be known as the Environmental | ||
Protection Agency. This Agency shall
be under the supervision | ||
and direction of a Director who shall be appointed by
the | ||
Governor with the advice and consent of the Senate. The term of | ||
office
of the Director shall expire on the third Monday of | ||
January in odd numbered
years, provided that he or she shall | ||
hold office until a successor is appointed
and has qualified. | ||
The Director shall
receive an annual salary as set by the | ||
Governor from time to time or as set by
the Compensation Review | ||
Board, whichever is greater. If set by the Governor,
the | ||
Director's annual salary may not exceed 85% of the Governor's | ||
annual
salary. The Director, in accord with the Personnel Code, |
shall employ and
direct such personnel, and shall provide for | ||
such laboratory and other
facilities, as may be necessary to | ||
carry out the purposes of this Act. In
addition, the Director | ||
may by agreement secure such services as he or she
may deem | ||
necessary from any other department, agency, or unit of the | ||
State
Government, and may employ and compensate such | ||
consultants and technical
assistants as may be required.
| ||
(b) The Agency shall have the duty to collect and | ||
disseminate such
information, acquire such technical data, and | ||
conduct such experiments
as may be required to carry out the | ||
purposes of this Act, including
ascertainment of the quantity | ||
and nature of discharges from any
contaminant source and data | ||
on those sources, and to operate and arrange
for the operation | ||
of devices for the monitoring of environmental quality.
| ||
(c) The Agency shall have authority to conduct a program of
| ||
continuing surveillance and of regular or periodic inspection | ||
of actual
or potential contaminant or noise sources, of public | ||
water supplies, and
of refuse disposal sites.
| ||
(d) In accordance with constitutional limitations,
the | ||
Agency shall have authority to enter at all reasonable times
| ||
upon any private or public property for the purpose of:
| ||
(1) Inspecting and investigating to ascertain possible | ||
violations of
this Act, any rule or regulation adopted | ||
under this Act, any permit or
term or condition of a | ||
permit, or any Board order; or
| ||
(2) In accordance with the provisions of this Act, |
taking whatever
preventive or corrective action, including | ||
but not limited to removal or
remedial action, that is | ||
necessary or appropriate whenever there is a
release or a | ||
substantial threat of a release of (A) a hazardous
| ||
substance or pesticide or (B) petroleum from an underground | ||
storage tank.
| ||
(e) The Agency shall have the duty to investigate | ||
violations of this
Act, any rule or regulation adopted under | ||
this Act, any permit or
term or condition of a permit, or any | ||
Board order;
to issue administrative citations as provided in | ||
Section 31.1 of this
Act; and to take such summary enforcement | ||
action as is provided
for by Section 34 of this Act.
| ||
(f) The Agency shall appear before the Board in any hearing | ||
upon a
petition for variance, the denial of a permit, or the | ||
validity or effect
of a rule or regulation of the Board, and | ||
shall have the authority to
appear before the Board in any | ||
hearing under the Act.
| ||
(g) The Agency shall have the duty to administer, in accord | ||
with
Title X of this Act, such permit and certification systems | ||
as may be
established by this Act or by regulations adopted | ||
thereunder.
The Agency may enter into written delegation | ||
agreements with any department,
agency, or unit of State or | ||
local government under which all or portions
of this duty may | ||
be delegated for public water supply storage and transport
| ||
systems, sewage collection and transport systems, air | ||
pollution control
sources with uncontrolled emissions of 100 |
tons per year or less and
application of algicides to waters of | ||
the State. Such delegation
agreements will require that the | ||
work to be performed thereunder will be
in accordance with | ||
Agency criteria, subject to Agency review, and shall
include | ||
such financial and program auditing by the Agency as may be | ||
required.
| ||
(h) The Agency shall have authority to require the | ||
submission of
complete plans and specifications from any | ||
applicant for a permit
required by this Act or by regulations | ||
thereunder, and to require the
submission of such reports | ||
regarding actual or potential violations of
this Act, any rule | ||
or regulation adopted under this Act, any permit or
term or | ||
condition of a permit, or any Board order, as may be necessary | ||
for the purposes of
this Act.
| ||
(i) The Agency shall have authority to make recommendations | ||
to the
Board for the adoption of regulations under Title VII of | ||
the Act.
| ||
(j) The Agency shall have the duty to represent the State | ||
of
Illinois in any and all matters pertaining to plans, | ||
procedures, or
negotiations for interstate compacts or other | ||
governmental arrangements
relating to environmental | ||
protection.
| ||
(k) The Agency shall have the authority to accept, receive, | ||
and
administer on behalf of the State any grants, gifts, loans, | ||
indirect cost
reimbursements, or other funds made available to | ||
the State from any source
for purposes of this Act or for air |
or water pollution control, public water
supply, solid waste | ||
disposal, noise abatement, or other environmental
protection | ||
activities, surveys, or programs. Any federal funds received by | ||
the
Agency pursuant to this subsection shall be deposited in a | ||
trust fund with the
State Treasurer and held and disbursed by | ||
him in accordance with Treasurer as
Custodian of Funds Act, | ||
provided that such monies shall be used only for the
purposes | ||
for which they are contributed and any balance remaining shall | ||
be
returned to the contributor.
| ||
The Agency is authorized to promulgate such regulations and | ||
enter
into such contracts as it may deem necessary for carrying | ||
out the
provisions of this subsection.
| ||
(l) The Agency is hereby designated as water pollution | ||
agency for
the state for all purposes of the Federal Water | ||
Pollution Control Act, as
amended; as implementing agency for | ||
the State for all purposes of the Safe
Drinking Water Act, | ||
Public Law 93-523, as now or hereafter amended, except
Section | ||
1425 of that Act; as air pollution agency for the state for all
| ||
purposes of the Clean Air Act of 1970, Public Law 91-604, | ||
approved December 31,
1970, as amended; and as solid waste | ||
agency for the state for all purposes of
the Solid Waste | ||
Disposal Act, Public Law 89-272, approved October 20, 1965,
and | ||
amended by the Resource Recovery Act of 1970, Public Law | ||
91-512, approved
October 26, 1970, as amended, and amended by | ||
the Resource Conservation and
Recovery Act of 1976, (P.L. | ||
94-580) approved October 21, 1976, as amended; as
noise control |
agency for the state for all purposes of the Noise Control Act | ||
of
1972, Public Law 92-574, approved October 27, 1972, as | ||
amended; and as
implementing agency for the State for all | ||
purposes of the Comprehensive
Environmental Response, | ||
Compensation, and Liability Act of 1980 (P.L. 96-510),
as | ||
amended; and otherwise as pollution control agency for the | ||
State pursuant
to federal laws integrated with the foregoing | ||
laws, for financing purposes or
otherwise. The Agency is hereby | ||
authorized to take all action necessary or
appropriate to | ||
secure to the State the benefits of such federal Acts, provided
| ||
that the Agency shall transmit to the United States without | ||
change any
standards adopted by the Pollution Control Board | ||
pursuant to Section 5(c) of
this Act. This subsection (l) of | ||
Section 4 shall not be construed to bar or
prohibit the | ||
Environmental Protection Trust Fund Commission from accepting,
| ||
receiving, and administering on behalf of the State any grants, | ||
gifts,
loans or other funds for which the Commission is | ||
eligible pursuant to the
Environmental Protection Trust Fund | ||
Act. The Agency is hereby designated as
the State agency for | ||
all purposes of administering the requirements of Section
313 | ||
of the federal Emergency Planning and Community Right-to-Know | ||
Act of 1986.
| ||
Any municipality, sanitary district, or other political | ||
subdivision,
or any Agency of the State or interstate Agency, | ||
which makes application
for loans or grants under such federal | ||
Acts shall notify the Agency of
such application; the Agency |
may participate in proceedings under such
federal Acts.
| ||
(m) The Agency shall have authority, consistent with | ||
Section 5(c)
and other provisions of this Act, and for purposes | ||
of Section 303(e) of
the Federal Water Pollution Control Act, | ||
as now or hereafter amended,
to engage in planning processes | ||
and activities and to develop
plans in cooperation with units | ||
of local government, state agencies and
officers, and other | ||
appropriate persons in connection with the
jurisdiction or | ||
duties of each such unit, agency, officer or person.
Public | ||
hearings shall be held on the planning process, at which any
| ||
person shall be permitted to appear and be heard, pursuant to | ||
procedural
regulations promulgated by the Agency.
| ||
(n) In accordance with the powers conferred upon the Agency | ||
by
Sections 10(g), 13(b), 19, 22(d) and 25 of this Act, the | ||
Agency shall
have authority to establish and enforce minimum | ||
standards for the
operation of laboratories relating to | ||
analyses and laboratory tests for
air pollution, water | ||
pollution, noise emissions, contaminant discharges
onto land | ||
and sanitary, chemical, and mineral quality of water
| ||
distributed by a public water supply. The Agency may enter into | ||
formal
working agreements with other departments or agencies of | ||
state
government under which all or portions of this authority | ||
may be
delegated to the cooperating department or agency.
| ||
(o) The Agency shall have the authority to issue | ||
certificates of
competency to persons and laboratories meeting | ||
the minimum standards
established by the Agency in accordance |
with Section 4(n) of this Act
and to promulgate and enforce | ||
regulations relevant to the issuance and
use of such | ||
certificates. The Agency may enter into formal working
| ||
agreements with other departments or agencies of state | ||
government under
which all or portions of this authority may be | ||
delegated to the
cooperating department or agency.
| ||
(p) Except as provided in Section 17.7, the Agency shall | ||
have the
duty to analyze samples as required
from each public | ||
water supply to determine compliance with the
contaminant | ||
levels specified by the Pollution Control Board. The maximum
| ||
number of samples which the Agency shall be required to analyze | ||
for
microbiological quality shall be 6 per month, but the | ||
Agency may, at its
option, analyze a larger number each month | ||
for any supply. Results of
sample analyses for additional | ||
required bacteriological testing,
turbidity, residual chlorine | ||
and radionuclides are to be provided to the
Agency in | ||
accordance with Section 19. Owners of water supplies may enter
| ||
into agreements with the Agency to provide for reduced Agency
| ||
participation in sample analyses.
| ||
(q) The Agency shall have the authority to provide notice | ||
to any
person who may be liable pursuant to Section 22.2(f) of | ||
this Act for a
release or a substantial threat of a release of | ||
a hazardous substance or
pesticide. Such notice shall include | ||
the identified response action and an
opportunity for such | ||
person to perform the response action.
| ||
(r) The Agency may enter into written delegation agreements |
with any
unit of local government under which it may delegate | ||
all or portions of its
inspecting, investigating and | ||
enforcement functions. Such delegation
agreements shall | ||
require that work performed thereunder be in accordance
with | ||
Agency criteria and subject to Agency review.
Notwithstanding | ||
any other provision of law to the contrary, no unit of
local | ||
government shall be liable for any injury resulting from the | ||
exercise
of its authority pursuant to such a delegation | ||
agreement unless the injury
is proximately caused by the | ||
willful and wanton negligence of an agent or
employee of the | ||
unit of local government, and any policy of insurance
coverage | ||
issued to a unit of local government may provide for the denial | ||
of
liability and the nonpayment of claims based upon injuries | ||
for which the unit
of local government is not liable pursuant | ||
to this subsection (r).
| ||
(s) The Agency shall have authority to take whatever | ||
preventive or
corrective action is necessary or appropriate, | ||
including but not limited to
expenditure of monies appropriated | ||
from the Build Illinois Bond Fund and
the Build Illinois | ||
Purposes Fund for removal or remedial action, whenever
any | ||
hazardous substance or pesticide is released or
there is a | ||
substantial threat of such a release into the environment. The
| ||
State, the Director, and any State employee shall be | ||
indemnified for any
damages or injury arising out of or | ||
resulting from any action taken under
this subsection. The | ||
Director of the Agency is authorized to enter into
such |
contracts and agreements as are necessary
to carry out the | ||
Agency's duties under this subsection.
| ||
(t) The Agency shall have authority to distribute grants, | ||
subject to
appropriation by the General Assembly, for financing | ||
and construction of
municipal wastewater facilities. With | ||
respect to all monies appropriated
from the Build Illinois Bond | ||
Fund and the Build Illinois Purposes
Fund for wastewater | ||
facility grants, the Agency shall make
distributions in | ||
conformity with the rules and regulations established
pursuant | ||
to the Anti-Pollution Bond Act, as now or hereafter amended.
| ||
(u) Pursuant to the Illinois Administrative Procedure Act, | ||
the
Agency shall have the authority to adopt such rules as are | ||
necessary or
appropriate for the Agency to implement Section | ||
31.1 of this Act.
| ||
(v) (Blank.)
| ||
(w) Neither the State, nor the Director, nor the Board, nor | ||
any State
employee shall be liable for any damages or injury | ||
arising out of or
resulting from any action taken under | ||
subsection (s).
| ||
(x)(1) The Agency shall have authority to distribute | ||
grants, subject to
appropriation by the General Assembly, | ||
to units of local government for
financing and construction | ||
of public water supply facilities. With respect
to all | ||
monies appropriated from the Build Illinois Bond Fund or | ||
the Build
Illinois Purposes Fund for public water supply | ||
grants, such grants shall be
made in accordance with rules |
promulgated by the Agency.
Such rules shall include a | ||
requirement for a local match of 30% of the
total project | ||
cost for projects funded through such grants.
| ||
(2) The Agency shall not terminate a grant to a unit of | ||
local government
for the financing and construction of | ||
public water supply facilities unless
and until the Agency | ||
adopts rules that set forth precise and complete
standards, | ||
pursuant to Section 5-20 of the Illinois Administrative
| ||
Procedure Act, for the termination of such grants. The | ||
Agency shall not
make determinations on whether specific | ||
grant conditions are necessary to
ensure the integrity of a | ||
project or on whether subagreements shall be
awarded, with | ||
respect to grants for the financing and construction of
| ||
public water supply facilities, unless and until the Agency | ||
adopts rules
that set forth precise and complete standards, | ||
pursuant to Section 5-20
of the Illinois Administrative | ||
Procedure Act, for making such
determinations. The Agency | ||
shall not issue a stop-work order in relation to
such | ||
grants unless and until the Agency adopts precise and | ||
complete standards,
pursuant to Section 5-20 of the | ||
Illinois Administrative Procedure Act, for
determining | ||
whether to issue a stop-work order.
| ||
(y) The Agency shall have authority to release any person | ||
from further
responsibility for preventive or corrective | ||
action under this Act following
successful completion of | ||
preventive or corrective action undertaken by such
person upon |
written request by the person.
| ||
(z) To the extent permitted by any applicable federal law | ||
or regulation, for all work performed for State construction | ||
projects which are funded in whole or in part by a capital | ||
infrastructure bill enacted by the 96th General Assembly by | ||
sums appropriated to the Environmental Protection Agency, at | ||
least 50% of the total labor hours must be performed by actual | ||
residents of the State of Illinois. For purposes of this | ||
subsection, "actual residents of the State of Illinois" means | ||
persons domiciled in the State of Illinois. The Department of | ||
Labor shall promulgate rules providing for the enforcement of | ||
this subsection. | ||
(Source: P.A. 92-574, eff. 6-26-02; 93-152, eff. 7-10-03.)
| ||
Section 80-90. Severability. The provisions of this | ||
Article 80 are severable under Section 1.31 of the Statute on | ||
Statutes. | ||
Article 85. | ||
Section 85-5. The Department of Revenue Law of the
Civil | ||
Administrative Code of Illinois is amended by changing Section | ||
2505-305 as follows:
| ||
(20 ILCS 2505/2505-305) (was 20 ILCS 2505/39b15.1)
| ||
Sec. 2505-305. Investigators.
|
(a) The Department has the power to
appoint investigators | ||
to conduct all investigations,
searches, seizures, arrests, | ||
and other duties imposed under the provisions
of any law | ||
administered by the Department
or the Illinois Gaming Board .
| ||
Except as provided in subsection (c), these investigators have
| ||
and
may exercise all the powers of peace officers solely for | ||
the purpose of
enforcing taxing measures administered by the | ||
Department
or the Illinois Gaming Board .
| ||
(b) The Director must authorize to each investigator | ||
employed under this
Section and
to any other employee of the | ||
Department exercising the powers of a peace
officer a
distinct | ||
badge that, on its face, (i) clearly states that the badge is
| ||
authorized
by the
Department and (ii)
contains a unique | ||
identifying number.
No other badge shall be authorized by
the | ||
Department.
| ||
(c) The Department may enter into agreements with the | ||
Illinois Gaming Board providing that investigators appointed | ||
under this Section shall exercise the peace officer powers set | ||
forth in paragraph (20.6) of subsection (c) of Section 5 of the | ||
Riverboat Gambling Act.
Investigators appointed under this | ||
Section who are assigned to the
Illinois Gaming Board have and | ||
may exercise all
the rights and powers
of peace officers,
| ||
provided that these powers shall be limited to offenses or | ||
violations occurring
or committed on a riverboat or dock, as | ||
defined in subsections (d) and (f) of
Section 4 of the | ||
Riverboat
Gambling Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 91-239, eff. 1-1-00; 91-883, eff. 1-1-01; 92-493, | ||
eff. 1-1-02.)
| ||
Section 85-20. The Illinois Pension Code is amended by | ||
changing Sections 14-110 and 14-152.1 as follows:
| ||
(40 ILCS 5/14-110) (from Ch. 108 1/2, par. 14-110)
| ||
Sec. 14-110. Alternative retirement annuity.
| ||
(a) Any member who has withdrawn from service with not less | ||
than 20
years of eligible creditable service and has attained | ||
age 55, and any
member who has withdrawn from service with not | ||
less than 25 years of
eligible creditable service and has | ||
attained age 50, regardless of whether
the attainment of either | ||
of the specified ages occurs while the member is
still in | ||
service, shall be entitled to receive at the option of the | ||
member,
in lieu of the regular or minimum retirement annuity, a | ||
retirement annuity
computed as follows:
| ||
(i) for periods of service as a noncovered employee:
if | ||
retirement occurs on or after January 1, 2001, 3% of final
| ||
average compensation for each year of creditable service; | ||
if retirement occurs
before January 1, 2001, 2 1/4% of | ||
final average compensation for each of the
first 10 years | ||
of creditable service, 2 1/2% for each year above 10 years | ||
to
and including 20 years of creditable service, and 2 3/4% | ||
for each year of
creditable service above 20 years; and
| ||
(ii) for periods of eligible creditable service as a |
covered employee:
if retirement occurs on or after January | ||
1, 2001, 2.5% of final average
compensation for each year | ||
of creditable service; if retirement occurs before
January | ||
1, 2001, 1.67% of final average compensation for each of | ||
the first
10 years of such service, 1.90% for each of the | ||
next 10 years of such service,
2.10% for each year of such | ||
service in excess of 20 but not exceeding 30, and
2.30% for | ||
each year in excess of 30.
| ||
Such annuity shall be subject to a maximum of 75% of final | ||
average
compensation if retirement occurs before January 1, | ||
2001 or to a maximum
of 80% of final average compensation if | ||
retirement occurs on or after January
1, 2001.
| ||
These rates shall not be applicable to any service | ||
performed
by a member as a covered employee which is not | ||
eligible creditable service.
Service as a covered employee | ||
which is not eligible creditable service
shall be subject to | ||
the rates and provisions of Section 14-108.
| ||
(b) For the purpose of this Section, "eligible creditable | ||
service" means
creditable service resulting from service in one | ||
or more of the following
positions:
| ||
(1) State policeman;
| ||
(2) fire fighter in the fire protection service of a | ||
department;
| ||
(3) air pilot;
| ||
(4) special agent;
| ||
(5) investigator for the Secretary of State;
|
(6) conservation police officer;
| ||
(7) investigator for the Department of Revenue or the | ||
Illinois Gaming Board ;
| ||
(8) security employee of the Department of Human | ||
Services;
| ||
(9) Central Management Services security police | ||
officer;
| ||
(10) security employee of the Department of | ||
Corrections or the Department of Juvenile Justice;
| ||
(11) dangerous drugs investigator;
| ||
(12) investigator for the Department of State Police;
| ||
(13) investigator for the Office of the Attorney | ||
General;
| ||
(14) controlled substance inspector;
| ||
(15) investigator for the Office of the State's | ||
Attorneys Appellate
Prosecutor;
| ||
(16) Commerce Commission police officer;
| ||
(17) arson investigator;
| ||
(18) State highway maintenance worker.
| ||
A person employed in one of the positions specified in this | ||
subsection is
entitled to eligible creditable service for | ||
service credit earned under this
Article while undergoing the | ||
basic police training course approved by the
Illinois Law | ||
Enforcement Training
Standards Board, if
completion of that | ||
training is required of persons serving in that position.
For | ||
the purposes of this Code, service during the required basic |
police
training course shall be deemed performance of the | ||
duties of the specified
position, even though the person is not | ||
a sworn peace officer at the time of
the training.
| ||
(c) For the purposes of this Section:
| ||
(1) The term "state policeman" includes any title or | ||
position
in the Department of State Police that is held by | ||
an individual employed
under the State Police Act.
| ||
(2) The term "fire fighter in the fire protection | ||
service of a
department" includes all officers in such fire | ||
protection service
including fire chiefs and assistant | ||
fire chiefs.
| ||
(3) The term "air pilot" includes any employee whose | ||
official job
description on file in the Department of | ||
Central Management Services, or
in the department by which | ||
he is employed if that department is not covered
by the | ||
Personnel Code, states that his principal duty is the | ||
operation of
aircraft, and who possesses a pilot's license; | ||
however, the change in this
definition made by this | ||
amendatory Act of 1983 shall not operate to exclude
any | ||
noncovered employee who was an "air pilot" for the purposes | ||
of this
Section on January 1, 1984.
| ||
(4) The term "special agent" means any person who by | ||
reason of
employment by the Division of Narcotic Control, | ||
the Bureau of Investigation
or, after July 1, 1977, the | ||
Division of Criminal Investigation, the
Division of | ||
Internal Investigation, the Division of Operations, or any
|
other Division or organizational
entity in the Department | ||
of State Police is vested by law with duties to
maintain | ||
public order, investigate violations of the criminal law of | ||
this
State, enforce the laws of this State, make arrests | ||
and recover property.
The term "special agent" includes any | ||
title or position in the Department
of State Police that is | ||
held by an individual employed under the State
Police Act.
| ||
(5) The term "investigator for the Secretary of State" | ||
means any person
employed by the Office of the Secretary of | ||
State and vested with such
investigative duties as render | ||
him ineligible for coverage under the Social
Security Act | ||
by reason of Sections 218(d)(5)(A), 218(d)(8)(D) and | ||
218(l)(1)
of that Act.
| ||
A person who became employed as an investigator for the | ||
Secretary of
State between January 1, 1967 and December 31, | ||
1975, and who has served as
such until attainment of age | ||
60, either continuously or with a single break
in service | ||
of not more than 3 years duration, which break terminated | ||
before
January 1, 1976, shall be entitled to have his | ||
retirement annuity
calculated in accordance with | ||
subsection (a), notwithstanding
that he has less than 20 | ||
years of credit for such service.
| ||
(6) The term "Conservation Police Officer" means any | ||
person employed
by the Division of Law Enforcement of the | ||
Department of Natural Resources and
vested with such law | ||
enforcement duties as render him ineligible for coverage
|
under the Social Security Act by reason of Sections | ||
218(d)(5)(A), 218(d)(8)(D),
and 218(l)(1) of that Act. The | ||
term "Conservation Police Officer" includes
the positions | ||
of Chief Conservation Police Administrator and Assistant
| ||
Conservation Police Administrator.
| ||
(7) The term "investigator for the Department of | ||
Revenue" means any
person employed by the Department of | ||
Revenue and vested with such
investigative duties as render | ||
him ineligible for coverage under the Social
Security Act | ||
by reason of Sections 218(d)(5)(A), 218(d)(8)(D) and | ||
218(l)(1)
of that Act.
| ||
The term "investigator for the Illinois Gaming Board" | ||
means any
person employed as such by the Illinois Gaming | ||
Board and vested with such
peace officer duties as render | ||
the person ineligible for coverage under the Social
| ||
Security Act by reason of Sections 218(d)(5)(A), | ||
218(d)(8)(D), and 218(l)(1)
of that Act.
| ||
(8) The term "security employee of the Department of | ||
Human Services"
means any person employed by the Department | ||
of Human Services who (i) is
employed at the Chester Mental | ||
Health Center and has daily contact with the
residents | ||
thereof, (ii) is employed within a security unit at a | ||
facility
operated by the Department and has daily contact | ||
with the residents of the
security unit, (iii) is employed | ||
at a facility operated by the Department
that includes a | ||
security unit and is regularly scheduled to work at least
|
50% of his or her working hours within that security unit, | ||
or (iv) is a mental health police officer.
"Mental health | ||
police officer" means any person employed by the Department | ||
of
Human Services in a position pertaining to the | ||
Department's mental health and
developmental disabilities | ||
functions who is vested with such law enforcement
duties as | ||
render the person ineligible for coverage under the Social | ||
Security
Act by reason of Sections 218(d)(5)(A), | ||
218(d)(8)(D) and 218(l)(1) of that
Act. "Security unit" | ||
means that portion of a facility that is devoted to
the | ||
care, containment, and treatment of persons committed to | ||
the Department of
Human Services as sexually violent | ||
persons, persons unfit to stand trial, or
persons not | ||
guilty by reason of insanity. With respect to past | ||
employment,
references to the Department of Human Services | ||
include its predecessor, the
Department of Mental Health | ||
and Developmental Disabilities.
| ||
The changes made to this subdivision (c)(8) by Public | ||
Act 92-14 apply to persons who retire on or after January | ||
1,
2001, notwithstanding Section 1-103.1.
| ||
(9) "Central Management Services security police | ||
officer" means any
person employed by the Department of | ||
Central Management Services who is
vested with such law | ||
enforcement duties as render him ineligible for
coverage | ||
under the Social Security Act by reason of Sections | ||
218(d)(5)(A),
218(d)(8)(D) and 218(l)(1) of that Act.
|
(10) For a member who first became an employee under | ||
this Article before July 1, 2005, the term "security | ||
employee of the Department of Corrections or the Department | ||
of Juvenile Justice"
means any employee of the Department | ||
of Corrections or the Department of Juvenile Justice or the | ||
former
Department of Personnel, and any member or employee | ||
of the Prisoner
Review Board, who has daily contact with | ||
inmates or youth by working within a
correctional facility | ||
or Juvenile facility operated by the Department of Juvenile | ||
Justice or who is a parole officer or an employee who has
| ||
direct contact with committed persons in the performance of | ||
his or her
job duties. For a member who first becomes an | ||
employee under this Article on or after July 1, 2005, the | ||
term means an employee of the Department of Corrections or | ||
the Department of Juvenile Justice who is any of the | ||
following: (i) officially headquartered at a correctional | ||
facility or Juvenile facility operated by the Department of | ||
Juvenile Justice, (ii) a parole officer, (iii) a member of | ||
the apprehension unit, (iv) a member of the intelligence | ||
unit, (v) a member of the sort team, or (vi) an | ||
investigator.
| ||
(11) The term "dangerous drugs investigator" means any | ||
person who is
employed as such by the Department of Human | ||
Services.
| ||
(12) The term "investigator for the Department of State | ||
Police" means
a person employed by the Department of State |
Police who is vested under
Section 4 of the Narcotic | ||
Control Division Abolition Act with such
law enforcement | ||
powers as render him ineligible for coverage under the
| ||
Social Security Act by reason of Sections 218(d)(5)(A), | ||
218(d)(8)(D) and
218(l)(1) of that Act.
| ||
(13) "Investigator for the Office of the Attorney | ||
General" means any
person who is employed as such by the | ||
Office of the Attorney General and
is vested with such | ||
investigative duties as render him ineligible for
coverage | ||
under the Social Security Act by reason of Sections | ||
218(d)(5)(A),
218(d)(8)(D) and 218(l)(1) of that Act. For | ||
the period before January 1,
1989, the term includes all | ||
persons who were employed as investigators by the
Office of | ||
the Attorney General, without regard to social security | ||
status.
| ||
(14) "Controlled substance inspector" means any person | ||
who is employed
as such by the Department of Professional | ||
Regulation and is vested with such
law enforcement duties | ||
as render him ineligible for coverage under the Social
| ||
Security Act by reason of Sections 218(d)(5)(A), | ||
218(d)(8)(D) and 218(l)(1) of
that Act. The term | ||
"controlled substance inspector" includes the Program
| ||
Executive of Enforcement and the Assistant Program | ||
Executive of Enforcement.
| ||
(15) The term "investigator for the Office of the | ||
State's Attorneys
Appellate Prosecutor" means a person |
employed in that capacity on a full
time basis under the | ||
authority of Section 7.06 of the State's Attorneys
| ||
Appellate Prosecutor's Act.
| ||
(16) "Commerce Commission police officer" means any | ||
person employed
by the Illinois Commerce Commission who is | ||
vested with such law
enforcement duties as render him | ||
ineligible for coverage under the Social
Security Act by | ||
reason of Sections 218(d)(5)(A), 218(d)(8)(D), and
| ||
218(l)(1) of that Act.
| ||
(17) "Arson investigator" means any person who is | ||
employed as such by
the Office of the State Fire Marshal | ||
and is vested with such law enforcement
duties as render | ||
the person ineligible for coverage under the Social | ||
Security
Act by reason of Sections 218(d)(5)(A), | ||
218(d)(8)(D), and 218(l)(1) of that
Act. A person who was | ||
employed as an arson
investigator on January 1, 1995 and is | ||
no longer in service but not yet
receiving a retirement | ||
annuity may convert his or her creditable service for
| ||
employment as an arson investigator into eligible | ||
creditable service by paying
to the System the difference | ||
between the employee contributions actually paid
for that | ||
service and the amounts that would have been contributed if | ||
the
applicant were contributing at the rate applicable to | ||
persons with the same
social security status earning | ||
eligible creditable service on the date of
application.
| ||
(18) The term "State highway maintenance worker" means |
a person who is
either of the following:
| ||
(i) A person employed on a full-time basis by the | ||
Illinois
Department of Transportation in the position | ||
of
highway maintainer,
highway maintenance lead | ||
worker,
highway maintenance lead/lead worker,
heavy | ||
construction equipment operator,
power shovel | ||
operator, or
bridge mechanic; and
whose principal | ||
responsibility is to perform, on the roadway, the | ||
actual
maintenance necessary to keep the highways that | ||
form a part of the State
highway system in serviceable | ||
condition for vehicular traffic.
| ||
(ii) A person employed on a full-time basis by the | ||
Illinois
State Toll Highway Authority in the position | ||
of
equipment operator/laborer H-4,
equipment | ||
operator/laborer H-6,
welder H-4,
welder H-6,
| ||
mechanical/electrical H-4,
mechanical/electrical H-6,
| ||
water/sewer H-4,
water/sewer H-6,
sign maker/hanger | ||
H-4,
sign maker/hanger H-6,
roadway lighting H-4,
| ||
roadway lighting H-6,
structural H-4,
structural H-6,
| ||
painter H-4, or
painter H-6; and
whose principal | ||
responsibility is to perform, on the roadway, the | ||
actual
maintenance necessary to keep the Authority's | ||
tollways in serviceable condition
for vehicular | ||
traffic.
| ||
(d) A security employee of the Department of Corrections or | ||
the Department of Juvenile Justice, and a security
employee of |
the Department of Human Services who is not a mental health | ||
police
officer, shall not be eligible for the alternative | ||
retirement annuity provided
by this Section unless he or she | ||
meets the following minimum age and service
requirements at the | ||
time of retirement:
| ||
(i) 25 years of eligible creditable service and age 55; | ||
or
| ||
(ii) beginning January 1, 1987, 25 years of eligible | ||
creditable service
and age 54, or 24 years of eligible | ||
creditable service and age 55; or
| ||
(iii) beginning January 1, 1988, 25 years of eligible | ||
creditable service
and age 53, or 23 years of eligible | ||
creditable service and age 55; or
| ||
(iv) beginning January 1, 1989, 25 years of eligible | ||
creditable service
and age 52, or 22 years of eligible | ||
creditable service and age 55; or
| ||
(v) beginning January 1, 1990, 25 years of eligible | ||
creditable service
and age 51, or 21 years of eligible | ||
creditable service and age 55; or
| ||
(vi) beginning January 1, 1991, 25 years of eligible | ||
creditable service
and age 50, or 20 years of eligible | ||
creditable service and age 55.
| ||
Persons who have service credit under Article 16 of this | ||
Code for service
as a security employee of the Department of | ||
Corrections or the Department of Juvenile Justice, or the | ||
Department
of Human Services in a position requiring |
certification as a teacher may
count such service toward | ||
establishing their eligibility under the service
requirements | ||
of this Section; but such service may be used only for
| ||
establishing such eligibility, and not for the purpose of | ||
increasing or
calculating any benefit.
| ||
(e) If a member enters military service while working in a | ||
position in
which eligible creditable service may be earned, | ||
and returns to State
service in the same or another such | ||
position, and fulfills in all other
respects the conditions | ||
prescribed in this Article for credit for military
service, | ||
such military service shall be credited as eligible creditable
| ||
service for the purposes of the retirement annuity prescribed | ||
in this Section.
| ||
(f) For purposes of calculating retirement annuities under | ||
this
Section, periods of service rendered after December 31, | ||
1968 and before
October 1, 1975 as a covered employee in the | ||
position of special agent,
conservation police officer, mental | ||
health police officer, or investigator
for the Secretary of | ||
State, shall be deemed to have been service as a
noncovered | ||
employee, provided that the employee pays to the System prior | ||
to
retirement an amount equal to (1) the difference between the | ||
employee
contributions that would have been required for such | ||
service as a
noncovered employee, and the amount of employee | ||
contributions actually
paid, plus (2) if payment is made after | ||
July 31, 1987, regular interest
on the amount specified in item | ||
(1) from the date of service to the date
of payment.
|
For purposes of calculating retirement annuities under | ||
this Section,
periods of service rendered after December 31, | ||
1968 and before January 1,
1982 as a covered employee in the | ||
position of investigator for the
Department of Revenue shall be | ||
deemed to have been service as a noncovered
employee, provided | ||
that the employee pays to the System prior to retirement
an | ||
amount equal to (1) the difference between the employee | ||
contributions
that would have been required for such service as | ||
a noncovered employee,
and the amount of employee contributions | ||
actually paid, plus (2) if payment
is made after January 1, | ||
1990, regular interest on the amount specified in
item (1) from | ||
the date of service to the date of payment.
| ||
(g) A State policeman may elect, not later than January 1, | ||
1990, to
establish eligible creditable service for up to 10 | ||
years of his service as
a policeman under Article 3, by filing | ||
a written election with the Board,
accompanied by payment of an | ||
amount to be determined by the Board, equal to
(i) the | ||
difference between the amount of employee and employer
| ||
contributions transferred to the System under Section 3-110.5, | ||
and the
amounts that would have been contributed had such | ||
contributions been made
at the rates applicable to State | ||
policemen, plus (ii) interest thereon at
the effective rate for | ||
each year, compounded annually, from the date of
service to the | ||
date of payment.
| ||
Subject to the limitation in subsection (i), a State | ||
policeman may elect,
not later than July 1, 1993, to establish |
eligible creditable service for
up to 10 years of his service | ||
as a member of the County Police Department
under Article 9, by | ||
filing a written election with the Board, accompanied
by | ||
payment of an amount to be determined by the Board, equal to | ||
(i) the
difference between the amount of employee and employer | ||
contributions
transferred to the System under Section 9-121.10 | ||
and the amounts that would
have been contributed had those | ||
contributions been made at the rates
applicable to State | ||
policemen, plus (ii) interest thereon at the effective
rate for | ||
each year, compounded annually, from the date of service to the
| ||
date of payment.
| ||
(h) Subject to the limitation in subsection (i), a State | ||
policeman or
investigator for the Secretary of State may elect | ||
to establish eligible
creditable service for up to 12 years of | ||
his service as a policeman under
Article 5, by filing a written | ||
election with the Board on or before January
31, 1992, and | ||
paying to the System by January 31, 1994 an amount to be
| ||
determined by the Board, equal to (i) the difference between | ||
the amount of
employee and employer contributions transferred | ||
to the System under Section
5-236, and the amounts that would | ||
have been contributed had such
contributions been made at the | ||
rates applicable to State policemen, plus
(ii) interest thereon | ||
at the effective rate for each year, compounded
annually, from | ||
the date of service to the date of payment.
| ||
Subject to the limitation in subsection (i), a State | ||
policeman,
conservation police officer, or investigator for |
the Secretary of State may
elect to establish eligible | ||
creditable service for up to 10 years of
service as a sheriff's | ||
law enforcement employee under Article 7, by filing
a written | ||
election with the Board on or before January 31, 1993, and | ||
paying
to the System by January 31, 1994 an amount to be | ||
determined by the Board,
equal to (i) the difference between | ||
the amount of employee and
employer contributions transferred | ||
to the System under Section
7-139.7, and the amounts that would | ||
have been contributed had such
contributions been made at the | ||
rates applicable to State policemen, plus
(ii) interest thereon | ||
at the effective rate for each year, compounded
annually, from | ||
the date of service to the date of payment.
| ||
Subject to the limitation in subsection (i), a State | ||
policeman,
conservation police officer, or investigator for | ||
the Secretary of State may
elect to establish eligible | ||
creditable service for up to 5 years of
service as a police | ||
officer under Article 3, a policeman under Article 5, a | ||
sheriff's law enforcement employee under Article 7, a member of | ||
the county police department under Article 9, or a police | ||
officer under Article 15 by filing
a written election with the | ||
Board and paying
to the System an amount to be determined by | ||
the Board,
equal to (i) the difference between the amount of | ||
employee and
employer contributions transferred to the System | ||
under Section
3-110.6, 5-236, 7-139.8, 9-121.10, or 15-134.4 | ||
and the amounts that would have been contributed had such
| ||
contributions been made at the rates applicable to State |
policemen, plus
(ii) interest thereon at the effective rate for | ||
each year, compounded
annually, from the date of service to the | ||
date of payment. | ||
(i) The total amount of eligible creditable service | ||
established by any
person under subsections (g), (h), (j), (k), | ||
and (l) of this
Section shall not exceed 12 years.
| ||
(j) Subject to the limitation in subsection (i), an | ||
investigator for
the Office of the State's Attorneys Appellate | ||
Prosecutor or a controlled
substance inspector may elect to
| ||
establish eligible creditable service for up to 10 years of his | ||
service as
a policeman under Article 3 or a sheriff's law | ||
enforcement employee under
Article 7, by filing a written | ||
election with the Board, accompanied by
payment of an amount to | ||
be determined by the Board, equal to (1) the
difference between | ||
the amount of employee and employer contributions
transferred | ||
to the System under Section 3-110.6 or 7-139.8, and the amounts
| ||
that would have been contributed had such contributions been | ||
made at the
rates applicable to State policemen, plus (2) | ||
interest thereon at the
effective rate for each year, | ||
compounded annually, from the date of service
to the date of | ||
payment.
| ||
(k) Subject to the limitation in subsection (i) of this | ||
Section, an
alternative formula employee may elect to establish | ||
eligible creditable
service for periods spent as a full-time | ||
law enforcement officer or full-time
corrections officer | ||
employed by the federal government or by a state or local
|
government located outside of Illinois, for which credit is not | ||
held in any
other public employee pension fund or retirement | ||
system. To obtain this
credit, the applicant must file a | ||
written application with the Board by March
31, 1998, | ||
accompanied by evidence of eligibility acceptable to the Board | ||
and
payment of an amount to be determined by the Board, equal | ||
to (1) employee
contributions for the credit being established, | ||
based upon the applicant's
salary on the first day as an | ||
alternative formula employee after the employment
for which | ||
credit is being established and the rates then applicable to
| ||
alternative formula employees, plus (2) an amount determined by | ||
the Board
to be the employer's normal cost of the benefits | ||
accrued for the credit being
established, plus (3) regular | ||
interest on the amounts in items (1) and (2) from
the first day | ||
as an alternative formula employee after the employment for | ||
which
credit is being established to the date of payment.
| ||
(l) Subject to the limitation in subsection (i), a security | ||
employee of
the Department of Corrections may elect, not later | ||
than July 1, 1998, to
establish eligible creditable service for | ||
up to 10 years of his or her service
as a policeman under | ||
Article 3, by filing a written election with the Board,
| ||
accompanied by payment of an amount to be determined by the | ||
Board, equal to
(i) the difference between the amount of | ||
employee and employer contributions
transferred to the System | ||
under Section 3-110.5, and the amounts that would
have been | ||
contributed had such contributions been made at the rates |
applicable
to security employees of the Department of | ||
Corrections, plus (ii) interest
thereon at the effective rate | ||
for each year, compounded annually, from the date
of service to | ||
the date of payment.
| ||
(m) The amendatory changes to this Section made by this | ||
amendatory Act of the 94th General Assembly apply only to: (1) | ||
security employees of the Department of Juvenile Justice | ||
employed by the Department of Corrections before the effective | ||
date of this amendatory Act of the 94th General Assembly and | ||
transferred to the Department of Juvenile Justice by this | ||
amendatory Act of the 94th General Assembly; and (2) persons | ||
employed by the Department of Juvenile Justice on or after the | ||
effective date of this amendatory Act of the 94th General | ||
Assembly who are required by subsection (b) of Section 3-2.5-15 | ||
of the Unified Code of Corrections to have a bachelor's or | ||
advanced degree from an accredited college or university with a | ||
specialization in criminal justice, education, psychology, | ||
social work, or a closely related social science or, in the | ||
case of persons who provide vocational training, who are | ||
required to have adequate knowledge in the skill for which they | ||
are providing the vocational training.
| ||
(n) A person employed in a position under subsection (b) of | ||
this Section who has purchased service credit under subsection | ||
(j) of Section 14-104 or subsection (b) of Section 14-105 in | ||
any other capacity under this Article may convert up to 5 years | ||
of that service credit into service credit covered under this |
Section by paying to the Fund an amount equal to (1) the | ||
additional employee contribution required under Section | ||
14-133, plus (2) the additional employer contribution required | ||
under Section 14-131, plus (3) interest on items (1) and (2) at | ||
the actuarially assumed rate from the date of the service to | ||
the date of payment. | ||
(Source: P.A. 94-4, eff. 6-1-05; 94-696, eff. 6-1-06; 95-530, | ||
eff. 8-28-07; 95-1036, eff. 2-17-09.)
| ||
(40 ILCS 5/14-152.1)
| ||
Sec. 14-152.1. Application and expiration of new benefit | ||
increases. | ||
(a) As used in this Section, "new benefit increase" means | ||
an increase in the amount of any benefit provided under this | ||
Article, or an expansion of the conditions of eligibility for | ||
any benefit under this Article, that results from an amendment | ||
to this Code that takes effect after June 1, 2005 ( the | ||
effective date of Public Act 94-4)
this amendatory Act of the | ||
94th General Assembly . "New benefit increase", however, does | ||
not include any benefit increase resulting from the changes | ||
made to this Article by this amendatory Act of the 96th General | ||
Assembly.
| ||
(b) Notwithstanding any other provision of this Code or any | ||
subsequent amendment to this Code, every new benefit increase | ||
is subject to this Section and shall be deemed to be granted | ||
only in conformance with and contingent upon compliance with |
the provisions of this Section.
| ||
(c) The Public Act enacting a new benefit increase must | ||
identify and provide for payment to the System of additional | ||
funding at least sufficient to fund the resulting annual | ||
increase in cost to the System as it accrues. | ||
Every new benefit increase is contingent upon the General | ||
Assembly providing the additional funding required under this | ||
subsection. The Commission on Government Forecasting and | ||
Accountability shall analyze whether adequate additional | ||
funding has been provided for the new benefit increase and | ||
shall report its analysis to the Public Pension Division of the | ||
Department of Financial and Professional Regulation. A new | ||
benefit increase created by a Public Act that does not include | ||
the additional funding required under this subsection is null | ||
and void. If the Public Pension Division determines that the | ||
additional funding provided for a new benefit increase under | ||
this subsection is or has become inadequate, it may so certify | ||
to the Governor and the State Comptroller and, in the absence | ||
of corrective action by the General Assembly, the new benefit | ||
increase shall expire at the end of the fiscal year in which | ||
the certification is made.
| ||
(d) Every new benefit increase shall expire 5 years after | ||
its effective date or on such earlier date as may be specified | ||
in the language enacting the new benefit increase or provided | ||
under subsection (c). This does not prevent the General | ||
Assembly from extending or re-creating a new benefit increase |
by law. | ||
(e) Except as otherwise provided in the language creating | ||
the new benefit increase, a new benefit increase that expires | ||
under this Section continues to apply to persons who applied | ||
and qualified for the affected benefit while the new benefit | ||
increase was in effect and to the affected beneficiaries and | ||
alternate payees of such persons, but does not apply to any | ||
other person, including without limitation a person who | ||
continues in service after the expiration date and did not | ||
apply and qualify for the affected benefit while the new | ||
benefit increase was in effect.
| ||
(Source: P.A. 94-4, eff. 6-1-05.) | ||
Section 85-25. The Riverboat Gambling Act is amended by | ||
changing Section 5 as follows:
| ||
(230 ILCS 10/5) (from Ch. 120, par. 2405)
| ||
Sec. 5. Gaming Board.
| ||
(a) (1) There is hereby established within the Department | ||
of Revenue an
Illinois Gaming Board which shall have the powers | ||
and duties specified in
this Act, and all other powers | ||
necessary and proper to fully and
effectively execute this Act | ||
for the purpose of administering, regulating,
and enforcing the | ||
system of riverboat gambling established by this Act. Its
| ||
jurisdiction shall extend under this Act to every person, | ||
association,
corporation, partnership and trust involved in |
riverboat gambling
operations in the State of Illinois.
| ||
(2) The Board shall consist of 5 members to be appointed by | ||
the Governor
with the advice and consent of the Senate, one of | ||
whom shall be designated
by the Governor to be chairman. Each | ||
member shall have a reasonable
knowledge of the practice, | ||
procedure and principles of gambling operations.
Each member | ||
shall either be a resident of Illinois or shall certify that he
| ||
will become a resident of Illinois before taking office. At | ||
least one member
shall be experienced in law enforcement and | ||
criminal investigation, at
least one member shall be a | ||
certified public accountant experienced in
accounting and | ||
auditing, and at least one member shall be a lawyer licensed
to | ||
practice law in Illinois.
| ||
(3) The terms of office of the Board members shall be 3 | ||
years, except
that the terms of office of the initial Board | ||
members appointed pursuant to
this Act will commence from the | ||
effective date of this Act and run as
follows: one for a term | ||
ending July 1, 1991, 2 for a term ending July 1,
1992, and 2 for | ||
a term ending July 1, 1993. Upon the expiration of the
| ||
foregoing terms, the successors of such members shall serve a | ||
term for 3
years and until their successors are appointed and | ||
qualified for like terms.
Vacancies in the Board shall be | ||
filled for the unexpired term in like
manner as original | ||
appointments. Each member of the Board shall be
eligible for | ||
reappointment at the discretion of the Governor with the
advice | ||
and consent of the Senate.
|
(4) Each member of the Board shall receive $300 for each | ||
day the
Board meets and for each day the member conducts any | ||
hearing pursuant to
this Act. Each member of the Board shall | ||
also be reimbursed for all actual
and necessary expenses and | ||
disbursements incurred in the execution of official
duties.
| ||
(5) No person shall be appointed a member of the Board or | ||
continue to be
a member of the Board who is, or whose spouse, | ||
child or parent is, a member
of the board of directors of, or a | ||
person financially interested in, any
gambling operation | ||
subject to the jurisdiction of this Board, or any race
track, | ||
race meeting, racing association or the operations thereof | ||
subject
to the jurisdiction of the Illinois Racing Board. No | ||
Board member shall
hold any other public office for which he | ||
shall receive compensation other
than necessary travel or other | ||
incidental expenses. No person shall be a
member of the Board | ||
who is not of good moral character or who has been
convicted | ||
of, or is under indictment for, a felony under the laws of
| ||
Illinois or any other state, or the United States.
| ||
(6) Any member of the Board may be removed by the Governor | ||
for neglect
of duty, misfeasance, malfeasance, or nonfeasance | ||
in office.
| ||
(7) Before entering upon the discharge of the duties of his | ||
office, each
member of the Board shall take an oath that he | ||
will faithfully execute the
duties of his office according to | ||
the laws of the State and the rules and
regulations adopted | ||
therewith and shall give bond to the State of Illinois,
|
approved by the Governor, in the sum of $25,000. Every such | ||
bond, when
duly executed and approved, shall be recorded in the | ||
office of the
Secretary of State. Whenever the Governor | ||
determines that the bond of any
member of the Board has become | ||
or is likely to become invalid or
insufficient, he shall | ||
require such member forthwith to renew his bond,
which is to be | ||
approved by the Governor. Any member of the Board who fails
to | ||
take oath and give bond within 30 days from the date of his | ||
appointment,
or who fails to renew his bond within 30 days | ||
after it is demanded by the
Governor, shall be guilty of | ||
neglect of duty and may be removed by the
Governor. The cost of | ||
any bond given by any member of the Board under this
Section | ||
shall be taken to be a part of the necessary expenses of the | ||
Board.
| ||
(8) Upon the request of the Board, the Department shall | ||
employ such
personnel as may be necessary to carry out the | ||
functions of the Board. No
person shall be employed to serve | ||
the Board who is, or whose spouse, parent
or child is, an | ||
official of, or has a financial interest in or financial
| ||
relation with, any operator engaged in gambling operations | ||
within this
State or any organization engaged in conducting | ||
horse racing within this
State. Any employee violating these | ||
prohibitions shall be subject to
termination of employment.
| ||
(9) An Administrator shall perform any and all duties that | ||
the Board
shall assign him. The salary of the Administrator | ||
shall be determined by
the Board and approved by the Director |
of the Department and, in addition,
he shall be reimbursed for | ||
all actual and necessary expenses incurred by
him in discharge | ||
of his official duties. The Administrator shall keep
records of | ||
all proceedings of the Board and shall preserve all records,
| ||
books, documents and other papers belonging to the Board or | ||
entrusted to
its care. The Administrator shall devote his full | ||
time to the duties of
the office and shall not hold any other | ||
office or employment.
| ||
(b) The Board shall have general responsibility for the | ||
implementation
of this Act. Its duties include, without | ||
limitation, the following:
| ||
(1) To decide promptly and in reasonable order all | ||
license applications.
Any party aggrieved by an action of | ||
the Board denying, suspending,
revoking, restricting or | ||
refusing to renew a license may request a hearing
before | ||
the Board. A request for a hearing must be made to the | ||
Board in
writing within 5 days after service of notice of | ||
the action of the Board.
Notice of the action of the Board | ||
shall be served either by personal
delivery or by certified | ||
mail, postage prepaid, to the aggrieved party.
Notice | ||
served by certified mail shall be deemed complete on the | ||
business
day following the date of such mailing. The Board | ||
shall conduct all
requested hearings promptly and in | ||
reasonable order;
| ||
(2) To conduct all hearings pertaining to civil | ||
violations of this Act
or rules and regulations promulgated |
hereunder;
| ||
(3) To promulgate such rules and regulations as in its | ||
judgment may be
necessary to protect or enhance the | ||
credibility and integrity of gambling
operations | ||
authorized by this Act and the regulatory process | ||
hereunder;
| ||
(4) To provide for the establishment and collection of | ||
all license and
registration fees and taxes imposed by this | ||
Act and the rules and
regulations issued pursuant hereto. | ||
All such fees and taxes shall be
deposited into the State | ||
Gaming Fund;
| ||
(5) To provide for the levy and collection of penalties | ||
and fines for the
violation of provisions of this Act and | ||
the rules and regulations
promulgated hereunder. All such | ||
fines and penalties shall be deposited
into the Education | ||
Assistance Fund, created by Public Act 86-0018, of the
| ||
State of Illinois;
| ||
(6) To be present through its inspectors and agents any | ||
time gambling
operations are conducted on any riverboat for | ||
the purpose of certifying the
revenue thereof, receiving | ||
complaints from the public, and conducting such
other | ||
investigations into the conduct of the gambling games and | ||
the
maintenance of the equipment as from time to time the | ||
Board may deem
necessary and proper;
| ||
(7) To review and rule upon any complaint by a licensee
| ||
regarding any investigative procedures of the State which |
are unnecessarily
disruptive of gambling operations. The | ||
need to inspect and investigate
shall be presumed at all | ||
times. The disruption of a licensee's operations
shall be | ||
proved by clear and convincing evidence, and establish | ||
that: (A)
the procedures had no reasonable law enforcement | ||
purposes, and (B) the
procedures were so disruptive as to | ||
unreasonably inhibit gambling operations;
| ||
(8) To hold at least one meeting each quarter of the | ||
fiscal
year. In addition, special meetings may be called by | ||
the Chairman or any 2
Board members upon 72 hours written | ||
notice to each member. All Board
meetings shall be subject | ||
to the Open Meetings Act. Three members of the
Board shall | ||
constitute a quorum, and 3 votes shall be required for any
| ||
final determination by the Board. The Board shall keep a | ||
complete and
accurate record of all its meetings. A | ||
majority of the members of the Board
shall constitute a | ||
quorum for the transaction of any business, for the
| ||
performance of any duty, or for the exercise of any power | ||
which this Act
requires the Board members to transact, | ||
perform or exercise en banc, except
that, upon order of the | ||
Board, one of the Board members or an
administrative law | ||
judge designated by the Board may conduct any hearing
| ||
provided for under this Act or by Board rule and may | ||
recommend findings and
decisions to the Board. The Board | ||
member or administrative law judge
conducting such hearing | ||
shall have all powers and rights granted to the
Board in |
this Act. The record made at the time of the hearing shall | ||
be
reviewed by the Board, or a majority thereof, and the | ||
findings and decision
of the majority of the Board shall | ||
constitute the order of the Board in
such case;
| ||
(9) To maintain records which are separate and distinct | ||
from the records
of any other State board or commission. | ||
Such records shall be available
for public inspection and | ||
shall accurately reflect all Board proceedings;
| ||
(10) To file a written annual report with the Governor | ||
on or before
March 1 each year and such additional reports | ||
as the Governor may request.
The annual report shall | ||
include a statement of receipts and disbursements
by the | ||
Board, actions taken by the Board, and any additional | ||
information
and recommendations which the Board may deem | ||
valuable or which the Governor
may request;
| ||
(11) (Blank); and
| ||
(12) To assume responsibility for the administration | ||
and
enforcement of the Bingo License and Tax Act, the | ||
Charitable Games Act, and
the Pull Tabs and Jar Games Act | ||
if such responsibility is delegated to it
by the Director | ||
of Revenue.
| ||
(c) The Board shall have jurisdiction over and shall | ||
supervise all
gambling operations governed by this Act. The | ||
Board shall have all powers
necessary and proper to fully and | ||
effectively execute the provisions of
this Act, including, but | ||
not limited to, the following:
|
(1) To investigate applicants and determine the | ||
eligibility of
applicants for licenses and to select among | ||
competing applicants the
applicants which best serve the | ||
interests of the citizens of Illinois.
| ||
(2) To have jurisdiction and supervision over all | ||
riverboat gambling
operations in this State and all persons | ||
on riverboats where gambling
operations are conducted.
| ||
(3) To promulgate rules and regulations for the purpose | ||
of administering
the provisions of this Act and to | ||
prescribe rules, regulations and
conditions under which | ||
all riverboat gambling in the State shall be
conducted. | ||
Such rules and regulations are to provide for the | ||
prevention of
practices detrimental to the public interest | ||
and for the best interests of
riverboat gambling, including | ||
rules and regulations regarding the
inspection of such | ||
riverboats and the review of any permits or licenses
| ||
necessary to operate a riverboat under any laws or | ||
regulations applicable
to riverboats, and to impose | ||
penalties for violations thereof.
| ||
(4) To enter the office, riverboats, facilities, or | ||
other
places of business of a licensee, where evidence of | ||
the compliance or
noncompliance with the provisions of this | ||
Act is likely to be found.
| ||
(5) To investigate alleged violations of this Act or | ||
the
rules of the Board and to take appropriate disciplinary
| ||
action against a licensee or a holder of an occupational |
license for a
violation, or institute appropriate legal | ||
action for enforcement, or both.
| ||
(6) To adopt standards for the licensing of all persons | ||
under this Act,
as well as for electronic or mechanical | ||
gambling games, and to establish
fees for such licenses.
| ||
(7) To adopt appropriate standards for all riverboats
| ||
and facilities.
| ||
(8) To require that the records, including financial or | ||
other statements
of any licensee under this Act, shall be | ||
kept in such manner as prescribed
by the Board and that any | ||
such licensee involved in the ownership or
management of | ||
gambling operations submit to the Board an annual balance
| ||
sheet and profit and loss statement, list of the | ||
stockholders or other
persons having a 1% or greater | ||
beneficial interest in the gambling
activities of each | ||
licensee, and any other information the Board deems
| ||
necessary in order to effectively administer this Act and | ||
all rules,
regulations, orders and final decisions | ||
promulgated under this Act.
| ||
(9) To conduct hearings, issue subpoenas for the | ||
attendance of
witnesses and subpoenas duces tecum for the | ||
production of books, records
and other pertinent documents | ||
in accordance with the Illinois
Administrative Procedure | ||
Act, and to administer oaths and affirmations to
the | ||
witnesses, when, in the judgment of the Board, it is | ||
necessary to
administer or enforce this Act or the Board |
rules.
| ||
(10) To prescribe a form to be used by any licensee | ||
involved in the
ownership or management of gambling | ||
operations as an
application for employment for their | ||
employees.
| ||
(11) To revoke or suspend licenses, as the Board may | ||
see fit and in
compliance with applicable laws of the State | ||
regarding administrative
procedures, and to review | ||
applications for the renewal of licenses. The
Board may | ||
suspend an owners license, without notice or hearing upon a
| ||
determination that the safety or health of patrons or | ||
employees is
jeopardized by continuing a riverboat's | ||
operation. The suspension may
remain in effect until the | ||
Board determines that the cause for suspension
has been | ||
abated. The Board may revoke the owners license upon a
| ||
determination that the owner has not made satisfactory | ||
progress toward
abating the hazard.
| ||
(12) To eject or exclude or authorize the ejection or | ||
exclusion of, any
person from riverboat gambling | ||
facilities where such person is in violation
of this Act, | ||
rules and regulations thereunder, or final orders of the
| ||
Board, or where such person's conduct or reputation is such | ||
that his
presence within the riverboat gambling facilities | ||
may, in the opinion of
the Board, call into question the | ||
honesty and integrity of the gambling
operations or | ||
interfere with orderly conduct thereof; provided that the
|
propriety of such ejection or exclusion is subject to | ||
subsequent hearing
by the Board.
| ||
(13) To require all licensees of gambling operations to | ||
utilize a
cashless wagering system whereby all players' | ||
money is converted to tokens,
electronic cards, or chips | ||
which shall be used only for wagering in the
gambling | ||
establishment.
| ||
(14) (Blank).
| ||
(15) To suspend, revoke or restrict licenses, to | ||
require the
removal of a licensee or an employee of a | ||
licensee for a violation of this
Act or a Board rule or for | ||
engaging in a fraudulent practice, and to
impose civil | ||
penalties of up to $5,000 against individuals and up to
| ||
$10,000 or an amount equal to the daily gross receipts, | ||
whichever is
larger, against licensees for each violation | ||
of any provision of the Act,
any rules adopted by the | ||
Board, any order of the Board or any other action
which, in | ||
the Board's discretion, is a detriment or impediment to | ||
riverboat
gambling operations.
| ||
(16) To hire employees to gather information, conduct | ||
investigations
and carry out any other tasks contemplated | ||
under this Act.
| ||
(17) To establish minimum levels of insurance to be | ||
maintained by
licensees.
| ||
(18) To authorize a licensee to sell or serve alcoholic | ||
liquors, wine or
beer as defined in the Liquor Control Act |
of 1934 on board a riverboat
and to have exclusive | ||
authority to establish the hours for sale and
consumption | ||
of alcoholic liquor on board a riverboat, notwithstanding | ||
any
provision of the Liquor Control Act of 1934 or any | ||
local ordinance, and
regardless of whether the riverboat | ||
makes excursions. The
establishment of the hours for sale | ||
and consumption of alcoholic liquor on
board a riverboat is | ||
an exclusive power and function of the State. A home
rule | ||
unit may not establish the hours for sale and consumption | ||
of alcoholic
liquor on board a riverboat. This amendatory | ||
Act of 1991 is a denial and
limitation of home rule powers | ||
and functions under subsection (h) of
Section 6 of Article | ||
VII of the Illinois Constitution.
| ||
(19) After consultation with the U.S. Army Corps of | ||
Engineers, to
establish binding emergency orders upon the | ||
concurrence of a majority of
the members of the Board | ||
regarding the navigability of water, relative to
| ||
excursions,
in the event
of extreme weather conditions, | ||
acts of God or other extreme circumstances.
| ||
(20) To delegate the execution of any of its powers | ||
under this Act for
the purpose of administering and | ||
enforcing this Act and its rules and
regulations hereunder.
| ||
(20.6) To appoint investigators to conduct | ||
investigations, searches, seizures, arrests, and other | ||
duties imposed under this Act, as deemed necessary by the | ||
Board. These investigators have and may exercise all of the |
rights and powers of peace officers, provided that these | ||
powers shall be limited to offenses or violations occurring | ||
or committed on a riverboat or dock, as defined in | ||
subsections (d) and (f) of Section 4, or as otherwise | ||
provided by this Act or any other law. | ||
(20.7) To contract with the Department of State Police | ||
for the use of trained and qualified State police officers | ||
and with the Department of Revenue for the use of trained | ||
and qualified Department of Revenue investigators to | ||
conduct investigations, searches, seizures, arrests, and | ||
other duties imposed under this Act and to exercise all of | ||
the rights and powers of peace officers, provided that the | ||
powers of Department of Revenue investigators under this | ||
subdivision (20.7) shall be limited to offenses or | ||
violations occurring or committed on a riverboat or dock, | ||
as defined in subsections (d) and (f) of Section 4, or as | ||
otherwise provided by this Act or any other law. In the | ||
event the Department of State Police or the Department of | ||
Revenue is unable to fill contracted police or | ||
investigative positions, the Board may appoint | ||
investigators to fill those positions pursuant to | ||
subdivision (20.6).
| ||
(21) To take any other action as may be reasonable or | ||
appropriate to
enforce this Act and rules and regulations | ||
hereunder.
| ||
(d) The Board may seek and shall receive the cooperation of |
the
Department of State Police in conducting background | ||
investigations of
applicants and in fulfilling its | ||
responsibilities under
this Section. Costs incurred by the | ||
Department of State Police as
a result of such cooperation | ||
shall be paid by the Board in conformance
with the requirements | ||
of Section 2605-400 of the Department of State Police Law
(20 | ||
ILCS 2605/2605-400).
| ||
(e) The Board must authorize to each investigator and to | ||
any other
employee of the Board exercising the powers of a | ||
peace officer a distinct badge
that, on its face, (i) clearly | ||
states that the badge is authorized by the Board
and
(ii) | ||
contains a unique identifying number. No other badge shall be | ||
authorized
by the Board.
| ||
(Source: P.A. 91-40, eff. 1-1-00; 91-239, eff. 1-1-00; 91-883, | ||
eff.
1-1-01.)
| ||
Article 99.
| ||
Section 99-99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon | ||
becoming law.
|