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Public Act 095-0527
Public Act 0527 95TH GENERAL ASSEMBLY
|
Public Act 095-0527 |
HB0617 Enrolled |
LRB095 05208 RCE 25282 b |
|
| AN ACT concerning State government.
| Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
| represented in the General Assembly:
| Section 5. The Children and Family Services Act is amended | by changing Section 35.5 and by adding Section 35.7 as follows:
| (20 ILCS 505/35.5)
| Sec. 35.5. Inspector General.
| (a) The Governor shall appoint, and the Senate shall | confirm, an Inspector
General who shall
have the authority to | conduct investigations into allegations of or incidents
of | possible misconduct, misfeasance, malfeasance, or violations | of rules,
procedures, or laws by any employee, foster parent, | service provider, or
contractor of the Department of Children | and Family Services. The Inspector
General shall make | recommendations
to the Director of Children and Family Services | concerning sanctions or
disciplinary actions against | Department
employees or providers of service under contract to | the Department. The Director of Children and Family Services | shall provide the Inspector General with an implementation | report on the status of any corrective actions taken on | recommendations under review and shall continue sending | updated reports until the corrective action is completed. The | Director shall provide a written response to the Inspector |
| General indicating the status of any sanctions or disciplinary | actions against employees or providers of service involving any | investigation subject to review. In any case, information | included in the reports to the Inspector General and Department | responses shall be subject to the public disclosure | requirements of the Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act.
| Any
investigation
conducted by the Inspector General shall be | independent and separate from the
investigation mandated by the | Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act. The
Inspector General | shall be appointed for a term of 4 years. The Inspector
General | shall function independently within the Department of Children | and Family Services with respect to
be independent of the | operations of the Office of Inspector General, including the | performance of investigations and issuance of findings and | recommendations,
Department and shall
report to the Director of | Children and Family Services and the Governor and
perform other
| duties the Director may designate. The Inspector General shall | adopt rules
as necessary to carry out the
functions, purposes, | and duties of the office of Inspector General in the
Department | of Children and Family Services, in accordance with the | Illinois
Administrative Procedure Act and any other applicable | law.
| (b) The Inspector
General shall have access to all | information and personnel necessary to perform
the duties of | the office. To minimize duplication of efforts, and to assure
| consistency and conformance with the requirements and |
| procedures established in
the B.H. v. Suter consent decree and | to share resources
when appropriate, the Inspector General | shall coordinate his or her
activities with the Bureau of | Quality Assurance within the Department.
| (c) The Inspector General shall be the primary liaison | between the
Department and the Department of State Police with | regard to investigations
conducted under the Inspector | General's auspices.
If the Inspector General determines that a | possible criminal act
has been committed,
or that special | expertise is required in the investigation, he or she shall
| immediately notify the Department of State Police.
All | investigations conducted by the Inspector General shall be
| conducted in a manner designed to ensure the preservation of | evidence for
possible use in a criminal prosecution.
| (d) The Inspector General may recommend to the Department | of Children and
Family Services, the Department of Public | Health, or any other appropriate
agency, sanctions to be | imposed against service providers under the
jurisdiction of or | under contract with the Department for the protection of
| children in the custody or under the guardianship of the | Department who
received services from those providers. The | Inspector General may seek the
assistance of the Attorney | General or any of the several State's Attorneys in
imposing | sanctions.
| (e) The Inspector General shall at all times be granted | access to any foster
home, facility, or program operated for or |
| licensed or funded by the
Department.
| (f) Nothing in this Section shall limit investigations by | the Department of
Children and Family Services that may | otherwise be required by law or that may
be necessary in that | Department's capacity as the central administrative
authority | for child welfare.
| (g) The Inspector General shall have the power to subpoena | witnesses and
compel the production of books and papers | pertinent to an investigation
authorized by this Act. The power | to subpoena or to compel the
production of books and papers, | however, shall not extend to the person or
documents of a
labor | organization or its representatives insofar as the person or | documents of
a labor organization relate to the function of | representing an employee subject
to investigation under this | Act. Any person who fails to appear in response to
a subpoena | or to answer any question or produce any books or papers | pertinent
to an investigation under this Act, except as | otherwise provided in this
Section, or who knowingly gives | false testimony in relation to an investigation
under this Act | is guilty of a Class A misdemeanor.
| (h) The Inspector General shall provide to the General | Assembly and the
Governor, no later than January 1 of each | year, a summary of reports and
investigations made under this | Section for the prior fiscal year. The
summaries shall detail | the imposition of sanctions and the final disposition
of those | recommendations. The summaries shall not contain any |
| confidential or
identifying information concerning the | subjects of the reports and
investigations. The summaries also | shall include detailed recommended
administrative actions and | matters for consideration by the General Assembly.
| (Source: P.A. 90-512, eff. 8-22-97.)
| (20 ILCS 505/35.7 new)
| Sec. 35.7. Error Reduction Implementations Plans; | Inspector General. | (a) The Inspector General of the Department of Children and | Family Services shall develop Error Reduction Implementation | Plans, as necessary, to remedy patterns of errors or | problematic practices that compromise or threaten the safety of | children as identified in the DCFS Office of the Inspector | General (OIG) death or serious injury investigations and Child | Death Review Teams recommendations. The Error Reduction | Implementation Plans shall include both training and on-site | components. The Inspector General shall submit proposed Error | Reduction Implementation Plans to the Director for review. The | Director may approve the plans submitted, or approve plans | amended by the Office of the Inspector General, taking into | consideration polices and procedures that govern the function | and performance of any affected frontline staff. The Director | shall document the basis for disapproval of any submitted or | amended plan. The Department shall deploy Error Reduction | Safety Teams to implement the Error Reduction Implementation |
| Plans. The Error Reduction Safety Teams shall be composed of | Quality Assurance and Division of Training staff to implement | hands-on training and Error Reduction Implementation Plans. | The teams shall work in the offices of the Department or of | agencies, or both, as required by the Error Reduction | Implementation Plans, and shall work to ensure that systems are | in place to continue reform efforts after the departure of the | teams. The Director shall develop a method to ensure consistent | compliance with any Error Reduction Implementation Plans, the | provisions of which shall be incorporated into the plan. | (b) Quality Assurance shall prepare public reports | annually detailing the following: the substance of any Error | Reduction Implementation Plan approved; any deviations from | the Error Reduction Plan; whether adequate staff was available | to perform functions necessary to the Error Reduction | Implementation Plan, including identification and reporting of | any staff needs; other problems noted or barriers to | implementing the Error Reduction Implementation Plan; and | recommendations for additional training, amendments to rules | and procedures, or other systemic reform identified by the | teams. Quality Assurance shall work with affected frontline | staff to implement provisions of the approved Error Reduction | Implementation Plans related to staff function and | performance. | (c) The Error Reduction Teams shall implement training and | reform protocols through incubating change in each region, |
| Department office, or purchase of service office, as required. | The teams shall administer hands-on assistance, supervision, | and management while ensuring that the office, region, or | agency develops the skills and systems necessary to incorporate | changes on a permanent basis. For each Error Reduction | Implementation Plan, the Team shall determine whether adequate | staff is available to fulfill the Error Reduction | Implementation Plan, provide case-by-case supervision to | ensure that the plan is implemented, and ensure that management | puts systems in place to enable the reforms to continue. Error | Reduction Teams shall work with affected frontline staff to | ensure that provisions of the approved Error Reduction | Implementation Plans relating to staff functions and | performance are achieved to effect necessary reforms. | (d) The OIG shall develop and submit new Error Reduction | Implementation Plans as necessary. To implement each Error | Reduction Implementation Plan, as approved by the Director, the | OIG shall work with Quality Assurance members of the Error | Reduction Teams designated by the Department. The teams shall | be comprised of staff from Quality Assurance and Training. | Training shall work with the OIG and with the child death | review teams to develop a curriculum to address errors | identified that compromise the safety of children. Following | the training roll-out, the Teams shall work on-site in | identified offices. The Teams shall review and supervise all | work relevant to the Error Reduction Implementation Plan. |
| Quality Assurance shall identify outcome measures and track | compliance with the training curriculum. Each quarter, Quality | Assurance shall prepare a report detailing compliance with the | Error Reduction Implementation Plan and alert the Director to | staffing needs or other needs to accomplish the goals of the | Error Reduction Implementation Plan. The report shall be | transmitted to the Director, the OIG, and all management staff | involved in the Error Reduction Implementation Plan. | (e) The Director shall review quarterly Quality Assurance | reports and determine adherence to the Error Reduction | Implementation Plan using criteria and standards developed by | the Department.
| Section 10. The Child Death Review Team Act is amended by | changing Sections 15, 20, 25, and 40 and by adding Section 45 | as follows:
| (20 ILCS 515/15)
| Sec. 15. Child death review teams; establishment.
| (a) The Director, in consultation with the Executive | Council, law
enforcement, and other
professionals who work in | the field of investigating, treating, or preventing
child abuse | or neglect in that subregion, shall appoint members to a child
| death review
team in each of the Department's administrative | subregions of the State outside
Cook County and at least one | child death review team in Cook County. The
members of a team |
| shall be appointed for 2-year terms and
shall be eligible for | reappointment upon the expiration of the terms. The Director | must fill any vacancy in a team within 60 days after that | vacancy occurs.
| (b) Each child death review team shall consist of at least | one member from
each of the following categories:
| (1) Pediatrician or other physician knowledgeable | about child abuse and
neglect.
| (2) Representative of the Department.
| (3) State's attorney or State's attorney's | representative.
| (4) Representative of a local law enforcement agency.
| (5) Psychologist or psychiatrist.
| (6) Representative of a local health department.
| (7) Representative of a school district or other | education or child care
interests.
| (8) Coroner or forensic pathologist.
| (9) Representative of a child welfare agency or child | advocacy
organization.
| (10) Representative of a local hospital, trauma | center, or provider of
emergency medical services.
| (11) Representative of the Department of State Police.
| Each child death review team may make recommendations to | the Director
concerning additional appointments.
| Each child death review team member must have demonstrated | experience and an
interest in investigating, treating, or |
| preventing child abuse or neglect.
| (c) Each child death review team shall select a chairperson | from among its
members.
The chairperson shall also serve on the | Illinois Child Death Review Teams
Executive
Council. | (d) The child death review teams shall be funded under a | separate line item in the Department's annual budget.
| (Source: P.A. 92-468, eff. 8-22-01.)
| (20 ILCS 515/20)
| Sec. 20. Reviews of child deaths.
| (a) Every child death shall be reviewed by the team in the | subregion which
has
primary case management responsibility. | The deceased child must be one of the
following:
| (1) A ward of the Department.
| (2) The subject of an open service case maintained by | the Department.
| (3) The subject of a pending child abuse or neglect | investigation.
| (4) A child who was the subject of an abuse or neglect | investigation at
any time
during the 12 months preceding | the child's death.
| (5) Any other child whose death is reported to the | State central
register as a result of alleged child abuse | or neglect which report is
subsequently indicated.
| A child death review team may, at its discretion, review | other sudden,
unexpected, or unexplained child deaths , and |
| cases of serious or fatal injuries to a child identified under | the Child Advocacy Center Act .
| (b) A child death review team's purpose in conducting | reviews of child
deaths
is to do the following:
| (1) Assist in determining the cause and manner of the | child's death, when
requested.
| (2) Evaluate means by which the death might have been | prevented.
| (3) Report its findings to appropriate agencies and | make recommendations
that may help to reduce the number of | child deaths caused by abuse or neglect.
| (4) Promote continuing education for professionals | involved in
investigating, treating, and preventing child | abuse and neglect as a means of
preventing child deaths due | to abuse or neglect.
| (5) Make specific recommendations to the Director and | the Inspector
General of the Department concerning the | prevention of child deaths due to
abuse or neglect and the | establishment of protocols for investigating child
deaths.
| (c) A child death review team shall review a child death as | soon as
practical and not later than
90 days following
the
| completion by the Department of the investigation of the death | under the
Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act. When there | has been no investigation
by the Department, the child death | review team shall review a child's death
within 90 days after | obtaining the information necessary to complete the review
from |
| the coroner, pathologist, medical examiner, or law enforcement | agency,
depending on the nature of the case. A child death
| review
team shall meet at
least once in
each calendar quarter.
| (d) The Director shall, within 90 days, review and reply to | recommendations
made by a team under
item (5) of
subsection | (b). The Director shall implement recommendations as feasible | and
appropriate and shall respond in writing to explain the | implementation or
nonimplementation of the recommendations.
| (Source: P.A. 90-239, eff. 7-28-97; 90-608, eff. 6-30-98.)
| (20 ILCS 515/25)
| Sec. 25. Team access to information.
| (a) The Department shall provide to a child death review | team, on the
request of the team chairperson, all records and | information in the
Department's
possession that are relevant to | the team's review of a child death, including
records and | information concerning previous reports or investigations of
| suspected child abuse or neglect.
| (b) A child death review team shall have access to all | records and
information that are relevant to its review of a | child death
and in the
possession of a State or local | governmental agency , including, but not limited to, | information gained through the Child Advocacy Center protocol | for cases of serious or fatal injury to a child . These records | and
information include, without limitation, birth | certificates, all relevant
medical and mental health records, |
| records of law
enforcement agency investigations, records of | coroner or medical examiner
investigations, records of the | Department of Corrections concerning a person's
parole, | records of a probation and court services department, and | records of a
social services agency that provided services
to | the child or the child's family.
| (Source: P.A. 91-812, eff. 6-13-00.)
| (20 ILCS 515/40)
| Sec. 40. Illinois Child Death Review Teams Executive | Council.
| (a) The Illinois Child Death Review Teams Executive | Council, consisting of
the
chairpersons of the 9 child death | review teams in Illinois, is the coordinating
and
oversight | body for child death review teams and activities in Illinois. | The
vice-chairperson of a child death review team, as | designated by the
chairperson, may
serve
as a back-up member or | an alternate member of the Executive Council, if the
| chairperson of the child death review team is unavailable to | serve on the
Executive Council. The Inspector General of the | Department, ex officio, is a
non-voting member of the Executive | Council. The Director may
appoint to the Executive Council any
| ex-officio members deemed necessary. Persons with
expertise | needed by the Executive Council may be invited to meetings. The
| Executive Council must select from its members a chairperson | and a
vice-chairperson, each
to serve a 2-year, renewable term.
|
| The Executive Council must meet at least 4 times during | each calendar year.
| (b) The Department must provide or arrange for the staff | support necessary
for the
Executive Council to carry out its | duties.
The Director, in cooperation and consultation with the | Executive Council, shall
appoint, reappoint, and remove team | members. From funds available, the Director may select from a | list of 2 or more candidates recommended by the Executive | Council to serve as the Child Death Review Teams Executive | Director. The Child Death Review Teams Executive Director shall | oversee the operations of the child death review teams and | shall report directly to the Executive Council.
| (c) The Executive Council has, but is not limited to, the | following duties:
| (1) To serve as the voice of child death review teams | in Illinois.
| (2) To oversee the regional teams in order to ensure | that the teams' work
is
coordinated and in compliance with | the statutes and the operating protocol.
| (3) To ensure that the data, results, findings, and | recommendations of the
teams are
adequately used to make | any necessary changes in the policies, procedures, and
| statutes in order to protect children in a timely manner.
| (4) To collaborate with the General Assembly, the | Department, and others
in order to
develop any legislation | needed to prevent child fatalities and to protect
children.
|
| (5) To assist in the development of quarterly and | annual reports based on
the work
and the findings of the | teams.
| (6) To ensure that the regional teams' review processes | are standardized
in order to
convey data, findings, and | recommendations in a usable format.
| (7) To serve as a link with child death review teams | throughout the
country and to
participate in national child | death review team activities.
| (8) To develop an annual statewide symposium to update | the knowledge and
skills of
child death review team members | and to promote the exchange of information
between teams.
| (9) To provide the child death review teams with the | most current
information and practices concerning child | death review and related topics.
| (10) To perform any other functions necessary to | enhance the capability of
the child death review teams to | reduce and prevent child injuries and
fatalities.
| (d) In any instance when a child death review team does not | operate in
accordance with
established protocol, the Director, | in consultation and cooperation
with the Executive Council,
| must take any necessary actions to bring the team into | compliance
with the
protocol.
| (Source: P.A. 92-468, eff. 8-22-01.)
| (20 ILCS 515/45 new)
|
| Sec. 45. Child Death Investigation Task Force; pilot | program. The Child Death Review Teams Executive Council may, | from funds appropriated by the Illinois General Assembly to the | Department and provided to the Child Death Review Teams | Executive Council for this purpose, or from funds that may | otherwise be provided for this purpose from other public or | private sources, establish a 3-year pilot program in the | Southern Region of the State, as designated by the Department, | under which a special Child Death Investigation Task Force will | be created by the Child Death Review Teams Executive Council to | develop and implement a plan for the investigation of sudden, | unexpected, or unexplained deaths of children under 18 years of | age occurring within that region. The plan shall include a | protocol to be followed by child death review teams in the | review of child deaths authorized under paragraph (a)(5) of | Section 20 of this Act. The plan must include provisions for | local or State law enforcement agencies, hospitals, or coroners | to promptly notify the Task Force of a death or serious | life-threatening injury to a child, and for the Child Death | Investigation Task Force to review the death and submit a | report containing findings and recommendations to the Child | Death Review Teams Executive Council, the Director, the | Department of Children and Family Services Inspector General, | the appropriate State's Attorney, and the State Representative | and State Senator in whose legislative districts the case | arose. The plan may include coordination with any investigation |
| conducted under the Children's Advocacy Center Act. By January | 1, 2010, the Child Death Review Teams Executive Council shall | submit a report to the Director, the General Assembly, and the | Governor summarizing the results of the pilot program together | with any recommendations for statewide implementation of a | protocol for the investigating all sudden, unexpected, or | unexplained child deaths. | Section 15. The Children's Advocacy Center Act is amended | by changing Sections 3 and 4 as follows:
| (55 ILCS 80/3) (from Ch. 23, par. 1803)
| Sec. 3. Child Advocacy Advisory Board.
| (a) Each county in the State of Illinois shall establish a | Child Advocacy
Advisory Board ("Advisory Board").
| Each of the following county officers or State agencies | shall designate a
representative to serve on the Advisory | Board: the sheriff,
the Illinois Department of Children and | Family Services,
the State's attorney ,
and the county mental | health department , and the Department of State Police .
| The chairman may appoint additional members of the Advisory | Board as is
deemed necessary to accomplish the purposes of this | Act, the additional
members to include but not be limited to | representatives of local law
enforcement agencies , and the | Circuit Courts .
| (b) The Advisory Board shall organize itself and elect from |
| among its
members a chairman and such other officers as are | deemed necessary. Until a
chairman is so elected, the State's | attorney shall serve as interim
chairman.
| (c) The Advisory Board shall adopt, by a majority of the | members, a
written child sexual abuse protocol within one year | after the effective
date of this Act.
An Advisory Board | adopting a protocol after the effective date of this
amendatory | Act of 1996 shall, prior to finalization, submit its draft to | the
Illinois Child Advocacy Commission for review and comments. | After considering
the comments of the Illinois Child Advocacy | Commission and upon finalization of
its protocol, the Advisory | Board shall file the protocol with the Department of
Children | and Family Services.
A copy shall be furnished
to the Illinois | Child Advocacy Commission and to each agency in the county
or | counties which has any involvement with the
cases of sexually | abused children.
| The Illinois Child Advocacy Commission shall consist of the | Attorney
General and the Directors of the Illinois State Police | and the Department of
Children and Family Services or their | designees. Additional members may be
appointed to the Illinois | Child Advocacy Commission as deemed necessary by the
Attorney | General and the Directors of the Illinois State Police and the
| Department of Children and Family Services. The Illinois Child | Advocacy
Commission may also provide technical assistance and | guidance to the Advisory
Boards.
| (d) The purpose of the protocol shall be to ensure |
| coordination
and cooperation among all agencies involved in | child sexual abuse cases
so as to increase the efficiency and | effectiveness of those agencies,
to minimize the stress created | for the child and his or her family by the
investigatory and | judicial process, and to ensure that more effective
treatment | is provided for the child and his or her family.
| (e) The protocol shall be a written document outlining in | detail the
procedures to be used in investigating and | prosecuting cases arising from
alleged child sexual abuse and | in coordinating treatment referrals for the
child and his or | her family. In preparing the written protocol, the Advisory
| Board shall consider the following:
| (1) An interdisciplinary, coordinated systems approach | to the
investigation of child sexual abuse which shall | include, at a minimum;
| (i) an interagency notification procedure;
| (ii) a dispute resolution process between the | involved agencies when a
conflict arises on how to | proceed with the investigation of a case;
| (iii) a policy on interagency decision-making; and
| (iv) a description of the role each agency has in | the investigation of
the case;
| (2) A safe, separate space with assigned personnel | designated for the
investigation and coordination of child | sexual abuse cases;
| (3) An interdisciplinary case review process for |
| purposes of
decision-making, problem solving, systems | coordination, and information
sharing;
| (4) A comprehensive tracking system to receive and | coordinate information
concerning child sexual abuse cases | from each participating agency;
| (5) Interdisciplinary specialized training for all | professionals
involved with the victims and families of | child sexual abuse cases;
and
| (6) A process for evaluating the implementation and | effectiveness of the
protocol.
| (f) The Advisory Board shall evaluate the implementation | and
effectiveness of the protocol required under subsection (c) | of this Section on
an annual basis, and shall propose | appropriate modifications to the protocol to
maximize its | effectiveness. A report of the Advisory Board's review, along
| with proposed modifications, shall be submitted to the Illinois | Child Advocacy
Commission for its review and comments. After | considering the comments of the
Illinois Child Advocacy | Commission and adopting modifications, the Advisory
Board | shall file its amended protocol with the
Department of Children | and Family Services. A copy of the Advisory Board's
review and | amended protocol shall be furnished to the Illinois Child | Advocacy
Commission and to each agency in the county or | counties having any involvement
with the cases covered by the | protocol.
| (g) The Advisory Board shall
may adopt, by a majority of |
| the members, a written
protocol for coordinating cases of
| serious or fatal injury to a child physical abuse cases , | following the
procedures and purposes described in subsections | (c), (d), (e), and (f) of this
Section.
The protocol shall be a | written document outlining in detail the procedures
that will | be used by all of the agencies involved in investigating and
| prosecuting cases arising from alleged cases of serious or | fatal injury to a child physical abuse and in
coordinating | treatment referrals for the child and his or her family.
| (Source: P.A. 89-543, eff. 1-1-97.)
| (55 ILCS 80/4) (from Ch. 23, par. 1804)
| Sec. 4. Children's Advocacy Center.
| (a) A Children's Advocacy Center ("Center") may be
| established to coordinate the activities of the various | agencies involved
in the investigation, prosecution and | treatment referral of child
sexual abuse. The Advisory Board | shall serve as the governing board for
the Center.
The | operation of the Center may be funded through grants, | contracts, or any
other available sources. In counties in which | a referendum has been adopted
under Section 5 of this Act, the | Advisory Board, by the majority vote of its members, shall | submit a
proposed annual budget for the operation of the Center | to the county board,
which shall appropriate funds and levy a | tax sufficient to
operate the Center. The county board in each | county in which a
referendum has been adopted shall establish a |
| Children's Advocacy
Center Fund and shall deposit the net | proceeds of the tax authorized by
Section 6 of this Act in that | Fund, which shall be kept separate from all
other county funds | and shall only be used for the purposes of this Act.
| (b) The Advisory Board shall pay from the Children's | Advocacy Center
Fund or from other available funds the salaries | of all employees of the
Center and the expenses of acquiring a | physical plant for
the Center by construction or lease and | maintaining the Center, including
the expenses of | administering the coordination of the investigation,
| prosecution and treatment referral of child sexual
abuse under | the provisions of the protocol
adopted pursuant to this Act.
| (c) Every Center shall include at least the following | components:
| (1) An interdisciplinary, coordinated systems approach | to the
investigation of child sexual abuse which shall | include, at a minimum;
| (i) an interagency notification procedure;
| (ii) a dispute resolution process between the | involved agencies when a
conflict arises on how to | proceed with the investigation of a case;
| (iii) a policy on interagency decision-making; and
| (iv) a description of the role each agency has in | the investigation of
the case;
| (2) A safe, separate space with assigned personnel | designated for the
investigation and coordination of child |
| sexual abuse cases;
| (3) An interdisciplinary case review process for | purposes of
decision-making, problem solving, systems | coordination, and information
sharing;
| (4) A comprehensive tracking system to receive and | coordinate
information concerning child sexual abuse cases | from each participating agency;
| (5) Interdisciplinary specialized training for all | professionals involved
with the victims and families of | child sexual abuse cases; and
| (6) A process for evaluating the effectiveness of the | Center and its
operations.
| (d) In the event that a Center has been established as | provided in this
Section, the Advisory Board of that Center | may, by a majority of the members,
authorize the Center to | coordinate the activities of the various agencies
involved in | the investigation, prosecution, and treatment referral in | cases of serious or fatal injury to a
child physical abuse | cases . The Advisory Board shall provide for the financial
| support of these activities in a manner similar to that set out | in subsections
(a) and (b) of this Section and shall be allowed | to submit a budget that
includes support for physical abuse and | neglect activities to the County Board,
which shall appropriate | funds that may be available under Section 5 of this
Act. In | cooperation with the Department of Children and Family Services | Child Death Review Teams, the Department of Children and Family |
| Services Office of the Inspector General, the Department of | State Police, and other stakeholders, this protocol must be | initially implemented in selected counties to the extent that | State appropriations or funds from other sources for this | purpose allow.
| (e) The Illinois Child Advocacy Commission may also provide | technical
assistance and guidance to the Advisory Boards and | shall make a single annual
grant for the purpose of providing | technical support and assistance for
advocacy center | development in Illinois whenever an appropriation is made by
| the General Assembly specifically for that purpose. The grant | may be made only
to an Illinois not-for-profit corporation that | qualifies for tax treatment
under Section 501(c)(3) of the | Internal Revenue Code and that has a voting
membership | consisting of children's advocacy centers. The grant may be | spent
on staff, office space, equipment, and other expenses | necessary for the
development of resource materials
and other | forms of technical support and assistance. The grantee shall | report
to the Commission on the specific uses of grant funds by | no later than October
1 of each year and shall retain | supporting documentation for a period of at
least
5 years after | the corresponding report is filed.
| (Source: P.A. 91-158, eff. 7-16-99; 92-785, eff. 8-6-02.)
|
Effective Date: 6/1/2008
|
|
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