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Public Act 094-0665
Public Act 0665 94TH GENERAL ASSEMBLY
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Public Act 094-0665 |
HB2531 Enrolled |
LRB094 09883 RAS 40141 b |
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| AN ACT concerning regulation.
| Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
| represented in the General Assembly:
| Section 5. The Health Care Worker Background Check Act is | amended by changing Sections 5, 10, 15, 25, 30, and 40 and by | adding Section 70 as follows:
| (225 ILCS 46/5)
| Sec. 5. Purpose. The General Assembly finds that it is in | the public
interest to protect the most frail and disabled | citizens of the State of
Illinois from possible harm
through a | criminal background check of certain health care workers and | all employees of licensed and certified long-term care | facilities who have or may have contact with residents or have | access to the living quarters or the financial, medical, or | personal records of residents .
| (Source: P.A. 89-197, eff. 7-21-95.)
| (225 ILCS 46/10)
| Sec. 10. Applicability. This Act applies to all individuals | employed or
retained by a health care employer as home health | care aides, nurse aides,
personal care assistants, private duty | nurse aides, day
training personnel, or an individual working | in any similar health-related
occupation where he or she | provides direct care or has access to long-term care residents | or the living quarters or financial, medical, or personal | records of long-term care residents. This Act also applies to | all employees of licensed or certified long-term care | facilities who have or may have contact with residents or | access to the living quarters or the financial, medical, or | personal records of residents .
| (Source: P.A. 89-197, eff. 7-21-95; 89-674, eff. 8-14-96.)
|
| (225 ILCS 46/15)
| Sec. 15. Definitions. For the purposes of this Act, the | following
definitions apply:
| "Applicant" means an individual seeking employment with a | health care
employer who has received a bona fide conditional | offer of employment.
| "Conditional offer of employment" means a bona fide offer | of employment by a
health care employer to an applicant, which | is contingent upon the receipt of a
report from the Department | of State Police indicating that the applicant does
not have a | record of conviction of any of the criminal offenses enumerated | in
Section 25.
| "Direct care" means the provision of nursing care or | assistance with feeding,
dressing, movement, bathing, | toileting, or other personal needs. The entity
responsible for | inspecting and licensing, certifying, or registering the
| health care employer may, by administrative rule, prescribe | guidelines for
interpreting this definition with regard to the | health care employers that it
licenses.
| "Health care employer" means:
| (1) the owner or licensee of any of the
following:
| (i) a community living facility, as defined in the | Community Living
Facilities Act;
| (ii) a life care facility, as defined in the Life | Care Facilities Act;
| (iii) a long-term care facility, as defined in the | Nursing Home Care Act;
| (iv) a home health agency, as defined in the Home | Health Agency Licensing
Act;
| (v) a full hospice, as defined in the Hospice | Program Licensing Act;
| (vi) a hospital, as defined in the Hospital | Licensing Act;
| (vii) a community residential alternative, as | defined in the Community
Residential Alternatives | Licensing Act;
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| (viii) a nurse agency, as defined in the Nurse | Agency Licensing Act;
| (ix) a respite care provider, as defined in the | Respite Program Act;
| (ix-a) an establishment licensed under the | Assisted Living and Shared
Housing Act;
| (x) a supportive living program, as defined in the | Illinois Public Aid
Code;
| (xi) early childhood intervention programs as | described in 59 Ill. Adm.
Code 121;
| (xii) the University of Illinois Hospital, | Chicago;
| (xiii) programs funded by the Department on Aging | through the Community
Care Program;
| (xiv) programs certified to participate in the | Supportive Living Program
authorized pursuant to | Section 5-5.01a of the Illinois Public Aid Code;
| (xv) programs listed by the Emergency Medical | Services (EMS) Systems Act
as
Freestanding Emergency | Centers;
| (xvi) locations licensed under the Alternative | Health Care Delivery
Act;
| (2) a day training program certified by the Department | of Human Services;
| (3) a community integrated living arrangement operated | by a community
mental health and developmental service | agency, as defined in the
Community-Integrated Living | Arrangements Licensing and Certification Act; or
| (4) the State Long Term Care Ombudsman Program, | including any regional long term care ombudsman programs | under Section 4.04 of the Illinois Act on the Aging, only | for the purpose of securing background checks.
| "Initiate" means the obtaining of the authorization for a | record check from
a student, applicant, or employee. The | educational entity or health care
employer or its designee | shall transmit all necessary information and fees
to the |
| Illinois State Police within 10 working days after receipt of | the
authorization.
| "Long-term care facility" means a facility licensed by the | State or certified under federal law as a long-term care | facility, a supportive living facility, an assisted living | establishment, or a shared housing establishment or registered | as a board and care home.
| (Source: P.A. 92-16, eff. 6-28-01; 93-878, eff. 1-1-05.)
| (225 ILCS 46/25)
| Sec. 25. Persons ineligible to be hired by health care | employers and long-term care facilities .
| (a) After January 1, 1996, or January 1, 1997, as | applicable, no
health care employer shall knowingly hire, | employ, or retain any
individual in a position with duties | involving direct care for clients,
patients, or residents, and | no long-term care facility shall knowingly hire, employ, or | retain any individual in a position with duties that involve or | may involve contact with residents or access to the living | quarters or the financial, medical, or personal records of | residents, who has been convicted of committing or attempting | to
commit one or more of the offenses defined in Sections | 8-1.1, 8-1.2, 9-1,
9-1.2, 9-2, 9-2.1, 9-3, 9-3.1, 9-3.2, 9-3.3, | 10-1, 10-2, 10-3, 10-3.1, 10-4,
10-5, 10-7, 11-6, 11-9.1, | 11-19.2, 11-20.1, 12-1, 12-2, 12-3, 12-3.1,
12-3.2, 12-4, | 12-4.1, 12-4.2, 12-4.3, 12-4.4, 12-4.5, 12-4.6, 12-4.7, | 12-7.4,
12-11, 12-13, 12-14, 12-14.1, 12-15, 12-16, 12-19, | 12-21, 12-21.6, 12-32,
12-33, 16-1, 16-1.3,
16A-3, 17-3, 18-1, | 18-2, 18-3, 18-4, 18-5, 19-1, 19-3, 19-4, 20-1, 20-1.1,
24-1, | 24-1.2, 24-1.5, or 33A-2 of the Criminal Code of 1961; those | provided in
Section 4 of the Wrongs to Children Act; those | provided in Section 53 of the
Criminal Jurisprudence Act; those | defined in Section 5, 5.1, 5.2, 7, or 9 of
the Cannabis Control | Act; or those defined in Sections 401, 401.1, 404, 405,
405.1, | 407, or 407.1 of the Illinois Controlled Substances Act, unless | the
applicant or employee obtains a waiver pursuant to Section |
| 40.
| (a-1) After January 1, 2004, no health care employer shall | knowingly hire
any individual in a position with duties | involving direct care for clients,
patients, or residents , and | no long-term care facility shall knowingly hire any individual | in a position with duties that involve or may involve contact | with residents or access to the living quarters or the | financial, medical, or personal records of residents, who has | (i) been convicted of committing or attempting
to commit one or | more of the offenses defined in Section 12-3.3, 12-4.2-5,
16-2, | 16G-15, 16G-20, 18-5, 20-1.2, 24-1.1, 24-1.2-5, 24-1.6, | 24-3.2, or 24-3.3
of the Criminal Code of 1961; Section 4, 5, | 6, 8, or 17.02 of the Illinois
Credit Card and Debit Card Act; | or Section 5.1 of the Wrongs to Children Act;
or (ii) violated | Section 10-5 of the Nursing and Advanced Practice Nursing Act.
| A UCIA criminal history record check need not be redone for | health care
employees who have been continuously employed by a | health care employer since
January 1, 2004, but nothing in this | Section prohibits a health care employer
from initiating a | criminal history check for these employees.
| A health care employer is not required to retain an | individual in a position
with duties involving direct care for | clients, patients, or residents , and no long-term care facility | is required to retain an individual in a position with duties | that involve or may involve contact with residents or access to | the living quarters or the financial, medical, or personal | records of residents, who has
been convicted of committing or | attempting to commit one or more of
the offenses enumerated in | this subsection.
| (b) A health care employer shall not hire, employ, or | retain any
individual in a position with duties involving | direct care of clients,
patients, or residents , and no | long-term care facility shall knowingly hire, employ, or retain | any individual in a position with duties that involve or may | involve contact with residents or access to the living quarters | or the financial, medical, or personal records of residents, if |
| the health care employer becomes aware that the
individual has | been convicted in another state of committing or attempting to
| commit an offense that has the same or similar elements as an | offense listed in
subsection (a) or (a-1), as verified by court | records, records from a state
agency, or an FBI criminal | history record check. This shall not be construed to
mean that | a health care employer has an obligation to conduct a criminal
| history records check in other states in which an employee has | resided.
| (Source: P.A. 93-224, eff. 7-18-03.)
| (225 ILCS 46/30)
| Sec. 30. Non-fingerprint based UCIA criminal records | check.
| (a) Beginning on January 1, 1997,
an educational entity, | other than a secondary school, conducting a nurse aide
training | program must initiate
a UCIA criminal history records
check | prior to entry of an individual into the training program. A | nurse aide
seeking to be included on the nurse aide registry | shall authorize
the Department of Public Health
or its
designee | that tests nurse aides or the health care employer or its | designee
to
request a criminal history record check pursuant to | the Uniform Conviction
Information Act (UCIA) for each nurse | aide applying for inclusion on the State
nurse
aide registry. | Any nurse aide not
submitting the required authorization and
| information for the record check will not be added to the State | nurse
aide registry. A nurse aide will not be entered on the | State nurse aide
registry if the report from the Department of | State Police indicates that the
nurse aide has a record of | conviction of any of the criminal offenses
enumerated in | Section 25 unless the nurse aide's identity is validated and
it | is
determined that the nurse aide does
not have a disqualifying | criminal history record
based upon a
fingerprint-based records | check pursuant to Section 35 or the
nurse aide receives a | waiver pursuant to Section 40.
| (b) The Department of Public Health shall notify each |
| health care
employer inquiring as
to the information on the | State nurse aide registry of the date of the nurse
aide's last | UCIA criminal history record check. If it has been more than | one
year since the records check, the health care employer must | initiate or have
initiated on his or her behalf a UCIA
criminal | history record check for the nurse
aide pursuant to this | Section. The health care employer must send a copy of
the | results of the record check to the State nurse aide registry | for
an individual employed as a nurse aide.
| (c) Beginning January 1, 1996, a health care employer who | makes a
conditional offer of employment to an applicant other | than a nurse
aide for position with duties that involve direct | care for clients, patients,
or residents must initiate or have | initiated on his or her behalf a UCIA
criminal history record | check for that
applicant.
| (d) No later than January 1, 1997, a health care employer | must initiate or
have initiated on his or her behalf a
UCIA | criminal history record check for all
employees other than | those enumerated in subsections (a), (b), and (c) of this
| Section with duties that involve direct care for clients, | patients, or
residents.
A health care employer having actual | knowledge from a source other than a
non-fingerprint check that | an employee has been
convicted of committing or attempting to | commit one of the offenses enumerated
in Section 25 of this Act | must initiate a fingerprint-based background check
within 10
| working days of acquiring that knowledge. The employer may | continue to
employ
that individual in a direct
care position, | may reassign that individual to a non-direct care position, or
| may suspend the individual until the results of the | fingerprint-based
background check are received.
| (d-5) Beginning January 1, 2006, each long-term care | facility operating in the State must initiate, or
have | initiated on its behalf, a
criminal history record check for | all
employees hired on or after January 1, 2006 with duties | that involve or may involve contact with residents or access to | the living quarters or the financial, medical, or personal |
| records of residents.
| (e) The request for a UCIA criminal history record check | must be in the form
prescribed by the Department of State
| Police.
| (f) The applicant or employee must be notified of the | following whenever a
non-fingerprint check is made:
| (i) that the health care employer shall request or have | requested on his
or her behalf a UCIA criminal history
| record check pursuant to this Act;
| (ii) that the applicant or employee has a right to | obtain a copy of the
criminal records report from the | health care employer, challenge the
accuracy and | completeness of the report,
and request a waiver under | Section 40 of this Act;
| (iii) that the applicant, if hired conditionally, may | be terminated if the
criminal records report indicates that | the applicant has a record of conviction
of any of the | criminal offenses enumerated in Section 25 unless the | applicant's
identity is validated and it
is determined that | the applicant does
not have a
disqualifying criminal | history record
based on a fingerprint-based records check | pursuant to
Section 35.
| (iv) that the applicant, if not hired conditionally, | shall not be hired if
the criminal records report indicates | that the applicant has a record of
conviction of any of the | criminal offenses enumerated in Section 25 unless the
| applicant's record is cleared based on a fingerprint-based | records check
pursuant to Section 35.
| (v) that the employee may be terminated if the criminal | records report
indicates that the employee has a record of | conviction of any of the criminal
offenses enumerated in | Section 25 unless the employee's
record is cleared
based on | a fingerprint-based records check pursuant to Section 35.
| (g) A health care employer may conditionally employ an | applicant to provide
direct care
for
up to 3 months pending the | results of a UCIA criminal history record check.
|
| (Source: P.A. 91-598, eff. 1-1-00.)
| (225 ILCS 46/40)
| Sec. 40. Waiver.
| (a) An applicant, employee, or nurse aide may request a | waiver of the
prohibition against
employment by submitting the | following information to the entity responsible
for | inspecting, licensing, certifying, or registering the health | care employer
within 5 working days after the receipt of the | criminal records
report:
| (1) Information necessary to initiate a | fingerprint-based UCIA
criminal records check in a form and | manner prescribed by the
Department of State Police; and
| (2) The fee for a fingerprint-based UCIA criminal | records
check, which shall not exceed the actual cost of | the record check.
| (a-5) The entity responsible for inspecting, licensing, | certifying, or
registering the health care employer may accept | the results of the
fingerprint-based UCIA criminal records | check instead of the items required by
paragraphs (1) and (2) | of subsection (a).
| (b) The entity responsible for inspecting, licensing, | certifying, or
registering the health care employer may grant a | waiver based upon any
mitigating circumstances, which may | include, but need not be limited to:
| (1) The age of the individual at which the crime was | committed;
| (2) The circumstances surrounding the crime;
| (3) The length of time since the conviction;
| (4) The applicant or employee's criminal history since | the conviction;
| (5) The applicant or employee's work history;
| (6) The applicant or employee's current employment | references;
| (7) The applicant or employee's character references;
| (8) Nurse aide registry records; and
|
| (9) Other evidence demonstrating the ability of the | applicant or employee
to perform the employment | responsibilities competently and evidence that the
| applicant or employee does not pose a threat to the health | or safety of
residents, patients, or clients.
| (c) The entity responsible for inspecting, licensing, | certifying, or
registering a health care employer must inform | the health care employer
if a waiver is being sought and must | act upon the waiver request within 30 days
of
receipt of all | necessary information, as defined by rule.
| (d) An individual shall not be employed in a direct care | position from the
time that the employer receives the results | of a non-fingerprint check
containing disqualifying conditions | until the time that the individual receives
a waiver from the | Department. If the individual challenges the
results of the
| non-fingerprint check, the employer may continue to employ the | individual in a
direct care position if the individual presents | convincing evidence to the
employer that the non-fingerprint | check is invalid. If the individual
challenges the results of | the non-fingerprint check, his or her identity shall
be | validated by a fingerprint-based records check in accordance | with Section
35.
| (e) The entity responsible for inspecting, licensing,
| certifying, or
registering the health care employer shall be | immune from liability for any
waivers granted under this | Section.
| (f) A health care employer is not obligated to employ or | offer
permanent
employment to an applicant, or to retain an | employee who is granted a waiver
under this Section.
| (Source: P.A. 91-598, eff. 1-1-00.)
| (225 ILCS 46/70 new) | Sec. 70. Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMMS) | grant. | (a) In this Section:
| "Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMMS) grant" |
| means the grant awarded to and distributed by the Department of | Public Health to enhance the conduct of criminal history | records checks of certain health care employees. The CMMS grant | is authorized by Section 307 of the federal Medicare | Prescription Drug, Improvement, and Modernization Act of 2003, | which establishes the framework for a program to evaluate | national and state background checks on prospective employees | with direct access to patients of long-term care facilities or | providers. | "Selected health care employer" means any of the following | selected to participate in the CMMS grant: | (1) a community living facility as defined in the | Community Living Facility Act; | (2) a long-term care facility as defined in the Nursing | Home Care Act; | (3) a home health agency as defined in the Home Health | Agency Licensing Act; | (4) a full hospice as defined in the Hospice Licensing | Act; | (5) an establishment licensed under the Assisted | Living and Shared Housing Act; | (6) a supportive living facility as defined in the | Illinois Public Aid Code; | (7) a day training program certified by the Department | of Human Services; or | (8) a community integrated living arrangement operated | by a community mental health and developmental service | agency as defined in the Community Integrated Living | Arrangements Licensing and Certification Act.
| (b) Selected health care employers shall be phased in to | participate in the CMMS grant between January 1, 2006 and | January 1, 2007, as prescribed by the Department of Public | Health by rule. | (c) With regards to individuals hired on or after January | 1, 2006 who have direct access to residents, patients, or | clients of the selected health care employer, selected health |
| care employers must comply with Section 25 of this Act. | "Individuals who have direct access" includes, but is not | limited to, (i) direct care workers as described in subsection | (a) of Section 25; (ii) individuals licensed by the Department | of Financial and Professional Regulation, such as nurses, | social workers, physical therapists, occupational therapists, | and pharmacists; (iii) individuals who provide services on | site, through contract; and (iv) non-direct care workers, such | as those who work in environmental services, food service, and | administration. | "Individuals who have direct access" does not include | physicians or volunteers. | The Department of Public Health may further define | "individuals who have direct access" by rule.
| (d) Each applicant seeking employment in a position | described in subsection (c) of this Section with a selected | health care employer shall, as a condition of employment, have | his or her fingerprints submitted to the Department of State | Police in an electronic format that complies with the form and | manner for requesting and furnishing criminal history record | information by the Department of State Police and the Federal | Bureau of Investigation criminal history record databases now | and hereafter filed. The Department of State Police shall | forward the fingerprints to the Federal Bureau of Investigation | for a national criminal history records check. The Department | of State Police shall charge a fee for conducting the criminal | history records check, which shall not exceed the actual cost | of the records check and shall be deposited into the State | Police Services Fund. The Department of State Police shall | furnish, pursuant to positive identification, records of | Illinois convictions to the Department of Public Health. | (e) A selected health care employer who makes a conditional | offer of employment to an applicant shall: | (1) ensure that the applicant has complied with the | fingerprinting requirements of this Section; | (2) complete documentation relating to any criminal |
| history record, as revealed by the applicant, as prescribed | by rule by the Department of Public Health; | (3) complete documentation of the applicant's personal | identifiers as prescribed by rule by the Department of | Public Health; and | (4) provide supervision, as prescribed by rule by the | licensing agency, if the applicant is hired and allowed to | work prior to the results of the criminal history records | check being obtained. | (f) A selected health care employer having actual knowledge | from a source that an individual with direct access to a | resident, patient, or client has been convicted of committing | or attempting to commit one of the offenses enumerated in | Section 25 of this Act shall contact the licensing agency or | follow other instructions as prescribed by administrative | rule. | (g) A fingerprint-based criminal history records check | submitted in accordance with subsection (d) of this Section | must be submitted as a fee applicant inquiry in the form and | manner prescribed by the Department of State Police.
| (h) This Section shall be inapplicable upon the conclusion | of the CMMS grant.
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Effective Date: 1/1/2006
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