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Public Act 102-0604 Public Act 0604 102ND GENERAL ASSEMBLY |
Public Act 102-0604 | HB3100 Enrolled | LRB102 11784 KTG 17119 b |
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| AN ACT concerning children.
| Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
| represented in the General Assembly:
| Section 5. The Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act is | amended by changing Section 4 as follows:
| (325 ILCS 5/4)
| Sec. 4. Persons required to report; privileged | communications;
transmitting false report. | (a) The following persons are required to immediately | report to the Department when they have reasonable cause to | believe that a child known to them in their professional or | official capacities may be an abused child or a neglected | child: | (1) Medical personnel, including any: physician | licensed to practice medicine in any of its branches | (medical doctor or doctor of osteopathy); resident; | intern; medical administrator or personnel engaged in the | examination, care, and treatment of persons; psychiatrist; | surgeon; dentist; dental hygienist; chiropractic | physician; podiatric physician; physician assistant; | emergency medical technician; acupuncturist; registered | nurse; licensed practical nurse; advanced practice | registered nurse; genetic counselor; respiratory care |
| practitioner; home health aide; or certified nursing | assistant. | (2) Social services and mental health personnel, | including any: licensed professional counselor; licensed | clinical professional counselor; licensed social worker; | licensed clinical social worker; licensed psychologist or | assistant working under the direct supervision of a | psychologist; associate licensed marriage and family | therapist; licensed marriage and family therapist; field | personnel of the Departments of Healthcare and Family | Services, Public Health, Human Services, Human Rights, or | Children and Family Services; supervisor or administrator | of the General Assistance program established under | Article VI of the Illinois Public Aid Code; social | services administrator; or substance abuse treatment | personnel. | (3) Crisis intervention personnel, including any: | crisis line or hotline personnel; or domestic violence | program personnel. | (4)
Education personnel, including any: school | personnel (including administrators and certified and | non-certified school employees); personnel of institutions | of higher education; educational advocate assigned to a | child in accordance with the School Code; member of a | school board or the Chicago Board of Education or the | governing body of a private school (but only to the extent |
| required under subsection (d)); or truant officer. | (5)
Recreation or athletic program or facility | personnel. | (6)
Child care personnel, including any: early | intervention provider as defined in the Early Intervention | Services System Act; director or staff assistant of a | nursery school or a child day care center; or foster | parent, homemaker, or child care worker. | (7)
Law enforcement personnel, including any: law | enforcement officer; field personnel of the Department of | Juvenile Justice; field personnel of the Department of | Corrections; probation officer; or animal control officer | or field investigator of the Department of Agriculture's | Bureau of Animal Health and Welfare. | (8)
Any funeral home director; funeral home director | and embalmer; funeral home employee; coroner; or medical | examiner. | (9)
Any member of the clergy. | (10) Any physician, physician assistant, registered | nurse, licensed practical nurse, medical technician, | certified nursing assistant, licensed social worker, | licensed clinical social worker, or licensed professional | counselor of any office, clinic, or any other physical | location that provides abortions, abortion referrals, or | contraceptives. | (b) When 2 or more persons who work within the same |
| workplace and are required to report under this Act share a | reasonable cause to believe that a child may be an abused or | neglected child, one of those reporters may be designated to | make a single report. The report shall include the names and | contact information for the other mandated reporters sharing | the reasonable cause to believe that a child may be an abused | or neglected child. The designated reporter must provide | written confirmation of the report to those mandated reporters | within 48 hours. If confirmation is not provided, those | mandated reporters are individually responsible for | immediately ensuring a report is made. Nothing in this Section | precludes or may be used to preclude any person from reporting | child abuse or child neglect. | (c)(1) As used in this Section, "a child known to them in | their professional or official capacities" means: | (A) the mandated reporter comes into contact with the | child in the course of the reporter's employment or | practice of a profession, or through a regularly scheduled | program, activity, or service; | (B) the mandated reporter is affiliated with an | agency, institution, organization, school, school | district, regularly established church or religious | organization, or other entity that is directly responsible | for the care, supervision, guidance, or training of the | child; or | (C) a person makes a specific disclosure to the |
| mandated reporter that an identifiable child is the victim | of child abuse or child neglect, and the disclosure | happens while the mandated reporter is engaged in his or | her employment or practice of a profession, or in a | regularly scheduled program, activity, or service. | (2) Nothing in this Section requires a child to come | before the mandated reporter in order for the reporter to make | a report of suspected child abuse or child neglect.
| (d) If an allegation is raised to a school board member | during the course of an open or closed school board meeting | that a child who is enrolled in the school district of which he | or she is a board member is an abused child as defined in | Section 3 of this Act, the member shall direct or cause the | school board to direct the superintendent of the school | district or other equivalent school administrator to comply | with the requirements of this Act concerning the reporting of | child abuse. For purposes of this paragraph, a school board | member is granted the authority in his or her individual | capacity to direct the superintendent of the school district | or other equivalent school administrator to comply with the | requirements of this Act concerning the reporting of child | abuse.
| Notwithstanding any other provision of this Act, if an | employee of a school district has made a report or caused a | report to be made to the Department under this Act involving | the conduct of a current or former employee of the school |
| district and a request is made by another school district for | the provision of information concerning the job performance or | qualifications of the current or former employee because he or | she is an applicant for employment with the requesting school | district, the general superintendent of the school district to | which the request is being made must disclose to the | requesting school district the fact that an employee of the | school district has made a report involving the conduct of the | applicant or caused a report to be made to the Department, as | required under this Act. Only the fact that an employee of the | school district has made a report involving the conduct of the | applicant or caused a report to be made to the Department may | be disclosed by the general superintendent of the school | district to which the request for information concerning the | applicant is made, and this fact may be disclosed only in cases | where the employee and the general superintendent have not | been informed by the Department that the allegations were | unfounded. An employee of a school district who is or has been | the subject of a report made pursuant to this Act during his or | her employment with the school district must be informed by | that school district that if he or she applies for employment | with another school district, the general superintendent of | the former school district, upon the request of the school | district to which the employee applies, shall notify that | requesting school district that the employee is or was the | subject of such a report.
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| (e) Whenever
such person is required to report under this | Act in his capacity as a member of
the staff of a medical or | other public or private institution, school, facility
or | agency, or as a member of the clergy, he shall
make report | immediately to the Department in accordance
with the | provisions of this Act and may also notify the person in charge | of
such institution, school, facility or agency, or church, | synagogue, temple,
mosque, or other religious institution, or | his
designated agent that such
report has been made. Under no | circumstances shall any person in charge of
such institution, | school, facility or agency, or church, synagogue, temple,
| mosque, or other religious institution, or his
designated | agent to whom
such notification has been made, exercise any | control, restraint, modification
or other change in the report | or the forwarding of such report to the
Department.
| (f) In addition to the persons required to report | suspected cases of child abuse or child neglect under this | Section, any other person may make a report if such person has | reasonable cause to believe a child may be an abused child or a | neglected child. | (g) The privileged quality of communication between any | professional
person required to report
and his patient or | client shall not apply to situations involving abused or
| neglected children and shall not constitute grounds for | failure to report
as required by this Act or constitute | grounds for failure to share information or documents with the |
| Department during the course of a child abuse or neglect | investigation. If requested by the professional, the | Department shall confirm in writing that the information or | documents disclosed by the professional were gathered in the | course of a child abuse or neglect investigation.
| The reporting requirements of this Act shall not apply to | the contents of a privileged communication between an attorney | and his or her client or to confidential information within | the meaning of Rule 1.6 of the Illinois Rules of Professional | Conduct relating to the legal representation of an individual | client. | A member of the clergy may claim the privilege under | Section 8-803 of the
Code of Civil Procedure.
| (h) Any office, clinic, or any other physical location | that provides abortions, abortion referrals, or contraceptives | shall provide to all office personnel copies of written | information and training materials about abuse and neglect and | the requirements of this Act that are provided to employees of | the office, clinic, or physical location who are required to | make reports to the Department under this Act, and instruct | such office personnel to bring to the attention of an employee | of the office, clinic, or physical location who is required to | make reports to the Department under this Act any reasonable | suspicion that a child known to him or her in his or her | professional or official capacity may be an abused child or a | neglected child.
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| (i) Any person who enters into
employment on and after | July 1, 1986 and is mandated by virtue of that
employment to | report under this Act, shall sign a statement on a form
| prescribed by the Department, to the effect that the employee | has knowledge
and understanding of the reporting requirements | of this Act. On and after January 1, 2019, the statement
shall | also include information about available mandated reporter | training provided by the Department. The statement
shall be | signed prior to commencement of the employment. The signed
| statement shall be retained by the employer. The cost of | printing,
distribution, and filing of the statement shall be | borne by the employer.
| (j) Persons required to report child abuse or child | neglect as provided under this Section must complete an | initial mandated reporter training , including a section on | implicit bias, within 3 months of their date of engagement in a | professional or official capacity as a mandated reporter, or | within the time frame of any other applicable State law that | governs training requirements for a specific profession, and | at least every 3 years thereafter. The initial requirement | only applies to the first time they engage in their | professional or official capacity. In lieu of training every 3 | years, medical personnel, as listed in paragraph (1) of | subsection (a), must meet the requirements described in | subsection (k). | The mandated reporter trainings shall be in-person or |
| web-based, and shall include, at a minimum, information on the | following topics: (i) indicators for recognizing child abuse | and child neglect, as defined under this Act; (ii) the process | for reporting suspected child abuse and child neglect in | Illinois as required by this Act and the required | documentation; (iii) responding to a child in a | trauma-informed manner; and (iv) understanding the response of | child protective services and the role of the reporter after a | call has been made. Child-serving organizations are encouraged | to provide in-person annual trainings. | The implicit bias section shall be in-person or web-based, | and shall include, at a minimum, information on the following | topics: (i) implicit bias and (ii) racial and ethnic | sensitivity. As used in this subsection, "implicit bias" means | the attitudes or internalized stereotypes that affect people's | perceptions, actions, and decisions in an unconscious manner | and that exist and often contribute to unequal treatment of | people based on race, ethnicity, gender identity, sexual | orientation, age, disability, and other characteristics. The | implicit bias section shall provide tools to adjust automatic | patterns of thinking and ultimately eliminate discriminatory | behaviors. During these trainings mandated reporters shall | complete the following: (1) a pretest to assess baseline | implicit bias levels; (2) an implicit bias training task; and | (3) a posttest to reevaluate bias levels after training. The | implicit bias curriculum for mandated reporters shall be |
| developed within one year after the effective date of this | amendatory Act of the 102nd General Assembly and shall be | created in consultation with organizations demonstrating | expertise and or experience in the areas of implicit bias, | youth and adolescent developmental issues, prevention of child | abuse, exploitation, and neglect, culturally diverse family | systems, and the child welfare system. | The mandated reporter training , including a section on | implicit bias, shall be provided through the Department, | through an entity authorized to provide continuing education | for professionals licensed through the Department of Financial | and Professional Regulation, the State Board of Education, the | Illinois Law Enforcement Training Standards Board, or the | Department of State Police, or through an organization | approved by the Department to provide mandated reporter | training , including a section on implicit bias . The Department | must make available a free web-based training for reporters. | Each mandated reporter shall report to his or her employer | and, when applicable, to his or her licensing or certification | board that he or she received the mandated reporter training. | The mandated reporter shall maintain records of completion. | Beginning January 1, 2021, if a mandated reporter receives | licensure from the Department of Financial and Professional | Regulation or the State Board of Education, and his or her | profession has continuing education requirements, the training | mandated under this Section shall count toward meeting the |
| licensee's required continuing education hours. | (k)(1) Medical personnel, as listed in paragraph (1) of | subsection (a), who work with children in their professional | or official capacity, must complete mandated reporter training | at least every 6 years. Such medical personnel, if licensed, | must attest at each time of licensure renewal on their renewal | form that they understand they are a mandated reporter of | child abuse and neglect, that they are aware of the process for | making a report, that they know how to respond to a child in a | trauma-informed manner, and that they are aware of the role of | child protective services and the role of a reporter after a | call has been made. | (2) In lieu of repeated training, medical personnel, as | listed in paragraph (1) of subsection (a), who do not work with | children in their professional or official capacity, may | instead attest each time at licensure renewal on their renewal | form that they understand they are a mandated reporter of | child abuse and neglect, that they are aware of the process for | making a report, that they know how to respond to a child in a | trauma-informed manner, and that they are aware of the role of | child protective services and the role of a reporter after a | call has been made. Nothing in this paragraph precludes | medical personnel from completing mandated reporter training | and receiving continuing education credits for that training. | (l) The Department shall provide copies of this Act, upon | request, to all
employers employing persons who shall be |
| required under the provisions of
this Section to report under | this Act.
| (m) Any person who knowingly transmits a false report to | the Department
commits the offense of disorderly conduct under | subsection (a)(7) of
Section 26-1 of the Criminal Code of | 2012. A violation of this provision is a Class 4 felony.
| Any person who knowingly and willfully violates any | provision of this
Section other than a second or subsequent | violation of transmitting a
false report as described in the
| preceding paragraph, is guilty of a
Class A misdemeanor for
a | first violation and a Class
4 felony for a
second or subsequent | violation; except that if the person acted as part
of a plan or | scheme having as its object the
prevention of discovery of an | abused or neglected child by lawful authorities
for the
| purpose of protecting or insulating any person or entity from | arrest or
prosecution, the
person is guilty of a Class 4 felony | for a first offense and a Class 3 felony
for a second or
| subsequent offense (regardless of whether the second or | subsequent offense
involves any
of the same facts or persons | as the first or other prior offense).
| (n) A child whose parent, guardian or custodian in good | faith selects and depends
upon spiritual means through prayer | alone for the treatment or cure of
disease or remedial care may | be considered neglected or abused, but not for
the sole reason | that his parent, guardian or custodian accepts and
practices | such beliefs.
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| (o) A child shall not be considered neglected or abused | solely because the
child is not attending school in accordance | with the requirements of
Article 26 of the School Code, as | amended.
| (p) Nothing in this Act prohibits a mandated reporter who | reasonably believes that an animal is being abused or | neglected in violation of the Humane Care for Animals Act from | reporting animal abuse or neglect to the Department of | Agriculture's Bureau of Animal Health and Welfare. | (q) A home rule unit may not regulate the reporting of | child abuse or neglect in a manner inconsistent with the | provisions of this Section. This Section is a limitation under | subsection (i) of Section 6 of Article VII of the Illinois | Constitution on the concurrent exercise by home rule units of | powers and functions exercised by the State. | (r) For purposes of this Section "child abuse or neglect" | includes abuse or neglect of an adult resident as defined in | this Act. | (Source: P.A. 100-513, eff. 1-1-18; 100-1071, eff. 1-1-19; | 101-564, eff. 1-1-20 .)
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Effective Date: 1/1/2022
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