Public Act 097-0233
 
SB2185 EnrolledLRB097 10195 RLJ 50388 b

    AN ACT concerning government.
 
    Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
represented in the General Assembly:
 
    Section 1. The State Treasurer Act is amended by changing
Section 16.5 as follows:
 
    (15 ILCS 505/16.5)
    Sec. 16.5. College Savings Pool. The State Treasurer may
establish and administer a College Savings Pool to supplement
and enhance the investment opportunities otherwise available
to persons seeking to finance the costs of higher education.
The State Treasurer, in administering the College Savings Pool,
may receive moneys paid into the pool by a participant and may
serve as the fiscal agent of that participant for the purpose
of holding and investing those moneys.
    "Participant", as used in this Section, means any person
who has authority to withdraw funds, change the designated
beneficiary, or otherwise exercise control over an account.
"Donor", as used in this Section, means any person who makes
investments in the pool. "Designated beneficiary", as used in
this Section, means any person on whose behalf an account is
established in the College Savings Pool by a participant. Both
in-state and out-of-state persons may be participants, donors,
and designated beneficiaries in the College Savings Pool. The
College Savings Pool must be available to any individual with a
valid social security number or taxpayer identification number
for the benefit of any individual with a valid social security
number or taxpayer identification number, unless a contract in
effect on the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 97th
General Assembly does not allow for taxpayer identification
numbers, in which case taxpayer identification numbers must be
allowed upon the expiration of the contract.
    New accounts in the College Savings Pool may be processed
through participating financial institutions. "Participating
financial institution", as used in this Section, means any
financial institution insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation and lawfully doing business in the State of
Illinois and any credit union approved by the State Treasurer
and lawfully doing business in the State of Illinois that
agrees to process new accounts in the College Savings Pool.
Participating financial institutions may charge a processing
fee to participants to open an account in the pool that shall
not exceed $30 until the year 2001. Beginning in 2001 and every
year thereafter, the maximum fee limit shall be adjusted by the
Treasurer based on the Consumer Price Index for the North
Central Region as published by the United States Department of
Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics for the immediately preceding
calendar year. Every contribution received by a financial
institution for investment in the College Savings Pool shall be
transferred from the financial institution to a location
selected by the State Treasurer within one business day
following the day that the funds must be made available in
accordance with federal law. All communications from the State
Treasurer to participants and donors shall reference the
participating financial institution at which the account was
processed.
    The Treasurer may invest the moneys in the College Savings
Pool in the same manner and in the same types of investments
provided for the investment of moneys by the Illinois State
Board of Investment. To enhance the safety and liquidity of the
College Savings Pool, to ensure the diversification of the
investment portfolio of the pool, and in an effort to keep
investment dollars in the State of Illinois, the State
Treasurer may make a percentage of each account available for
investment in participating financial institutions doing
business in the State. The State Treasurer may deposit with the
participating financial institution at which the account was
processed the following percentage of each account at a
prevailing rate offered by the institution, provided that the
deposit is federally insured or fully collateralized and the
institution accepts the deposit: 10% of the total amount of
each account for which the current age of the beneficiary is
less than 7 years of age, 20% of the total amount of each
account for which the beneficiary is at least 7 years of age
and less than 12 years of age, and 50% of the total amount of
each account for which the current age of the beneficiary is at
least 12 years of age. The Treasurer shall develop, publish,
and implement an investment policy covering the investment of
the moneys in the College Savings Pool. The policy shall be
published (i) at least once each year in at least one newspaper
of general circulation in both Springfield and Chicago and (ii)
each year as part of the audit of the College Savings Pool by
the Auditor General, which shall be distributed to all
participants. The Treasurer shall notify all participants in
writing, and the Treasurer shall publish in a newspaper of
general circulation in both Chicago and Springfield, any
changes to the previously published investment policy at least
30 calendar days before implementing the policy. Any investment
policy adopted by the Treasurer shall be reviewed and updated
if necessary within 90 days following the date that the State
Treasurer takes office.
    Participants shall be required to use moneys distributed
from the College Savings Pool for qualified expenses at
eligible educational institutions. "Qualified expenses", as
used in this Section, means the following: (i) tuition, fees,
and the costs of books, supplies, and equipment required for
enrollment or attendance at an eligible educational
institution and (ii) certain room and board expenses incurred
while attending an eligible educational institution at least
half-time. "Eligible educational institutions", as used in
this Section, means public and private colleges, junior
colleges, graduate schools, and certain vocational
institutions that are described in Section 481 of the Higher
Education Act of 1965 (20 U.S.C. 1088) and that are eligible to
participate in Department of Education student aid programs. A
student shall be considered to be enrolled at least half-time
if the student is enrolled for at least half the full-time
academic work load for the course of study the student is
pursuing as determined under the standards of the institution
at which the student is enrolled. Distributions made from the
pool for qualified expenses shall be made directly to the
eligible educational institution, directly to a vendor, or in
the form of a check payable to both the beneficiary and the
institution or vendor. Any moneys that are distributed in any
other manner or that are used for expenses other than qualified
expenses at an eligible educational institution shall be
subject to a penalty of 10% of the earnings unless the
beneficiary dies, becomes disabled, or receives a scholarship
that equals or exceeds the distribution. Penalties shall be
withheld at the time the distribution is made.
    The Treasurer shall limit the contributions that may be
made on behalf of a designated beneficiary based on the
limitations established by the Internal Revenue Service. The
contributions made on behalf of a beneficiary who is also a
beneficiary under the Illinois Prepaid Tuition Program shall be
further restricted to ensure that the contributions in both
programs combined do not exceed the limit established for the
College Savings Pool. The Treasurer shall provide the Illinois
Student Assistance Commission each year at a time designated by
the Commission, an electronic report of all participant
accounts in the Treasurer's College Savings Pool, listing total
contributions and disbursements from each individual account
during the previous calendar year. As soon thereafter as is
possible following receipt of the Treasurer's report, the
Illinois Student Assistance Commission shall, in turn, provide
the Treasurer with an electronic report listing those College
Savings Pool participants who also participate in the State's
prepaid tuition program, administered by the Commission. The
Commission shall be responsible for filing any combined tax
reports regarding State qualified savings programs required by
the United States Internal Revenue Service. The Treasurer shall
work with the Illinois Student Assistance Commission to
coordinate the marketing of the College Savings Pool and the
Illinois Prepaid Tuition Program when considered beneficial by
the Treasurer and the Director of the Illinois Student
Assistance Commission. The Treasurer's office shall not
publicize or otherwise market the College Savings Pool or
accept any moneys into the College Savings Pool prior to March
1, 2000. The Treasurer shall provide a separate accounting for
each designated beneficiary to each participant, the Illinois
Student Assistance Commission, and the participating financial
institution at which the account was processed. No interest in
the program may be pledged as security for a loan. Moneys held
in an account invested in the Illinois College Savings Pool
shall be exempt from all claims of the creditors of the
participant, donor, or designated beneficiary of that account,
except for the non-exempt College Savings Pool transfers to or
from the account as defined under subsection (j) of Section
12-1001 of the Code of Civil Procedure (735 ILCS 5/12-1001(j)).
    The assets of the College Savings Pool and its income and
operation shall be exempt from all taxation by the State of
Illinois and any of its subdivisions. The accrued earnings on
investments in the Pool once disbursed on behalf of a
designated beneficiary shall be similarly exempt from all
taxation by the State of Illinois and its subdivisions, so long
as they are used for qualified expenses. Contributions to a
College Savings Pool account during the taxable year may be
deducted from adjusted gross income as provided in Section 203
of the Illinois Income Tax Act. The provisions of this
paragraph are exempt from Section 250 of the Illinois Income
Tax Act.
    The Treasurer shall adopt rules he or she considers
necessary for the efficient administration of the College
Savings Pool. The rules shall provide whatever additional
parameters and restrictions are necessary to ensure that the
College Savings Pool meets all of the requirements for a
qualified state tuition program under Section 529 of the
Internal Revenue Code (26 U.S.C. 529). The rules shall provide
for the administration expenses of the pool to be paid from its
earnings and for the investment earnings in excess of the
expenses and all moneys collected as penalties to be credited
or paid monthly to the several participants in the pool in a
manner which equitably reflects the differing amounts of their
respective investments in the pool and the differing periods of
time for which those amounts were in the custody of the pool.
Also, the rules shall require the maintenance of records that
enable the Treasurer's office to produce a report for each
account in the pool at least annually that documents the
account balance and investment earnings. Notice of any proposed
amendments to the rules and regulations shall be provided to
all participants prior to adoption. Amendments to rules and
regulations shall apply only to contributions made after the
adoption of the amendment.
    Upon creating the College Savings Pool, the State Treasurer
shall give bond with 2 or more sufficient sureties, payable to
and for the benefit of the participants in the College Savings
Pool, in the penal sum of $1,000,000, conditioned upon the
faithful discharge of his or her duties in relation to the
College Savings Pool.
(Source: P.A. 95-23, eff. 8-3-07; 95-306, eff. 1-1-08; 95-521,
eff. 8-28-07; 95-876, eff. 8-21-08.)
 
    Section 3. The School Code is amended by changing Section
21-25 as follows:
 
    (105 ILCS 5/21-25)  (from Ch. 122, par. 21-25)
    Sec. 21-25. School service personnel certificate.
    (a) For purposes of this Section, "school service
personnel" means persons employed and performing appropriate
services in an Illinois public or State-operated elementary
school, secondary school, or cooperative or joint agreement
with a governing body or board of control or a charter school
operating in compliance with the Charter Schools Law in a
position requiring a school service personnel certificate.
    Subject to the provisions of Section 21-1a, a school
service personnel certificate shall be issued to those
applicants of good character, good health, a citizen of the
United States and at least 19 years of age who have a
Bachelor's degree with not fewer than 120 semester hours from a
regionally accredited institution of higher learning and who
meets the requirements established by the State Superintendent
of Education in consultation with the State Teacher
Certification Board. A school service personnel certificate
with a school nurse endorsement may be issued to a person who
holds a bachelor of science degree from an institution of
higher learning accredited by the North Central Association or
other comparable regional accrediting association. Persons
seeking any other endorsement on the school service personnel
certificate shall be recommended for the endorsement by a
recognized teacher education institution as having completed a
program of preparation approved by the State Superintendent of
Education in consultation with the State Teacher Certification
Board.
    (b) Until August 30, 2002, a school service personnel
certificate endorsed for school social work may be issued to a
student who has completed a school social work program that has
not been approved by the State Superintendent of Education,
provided that each of the following conditions is met:
        (1) The program was offered by a recognized, public
    teacher education institution that first enrolled students
    in its master's degree program in social work in 1998;
        (2) The student applying for the school service
    personnel certificate was enrolled in the institution's
    master's degree program in social work on or after May 11,
    1998;
        (3) The State Superintendent verifies that the student
    has completed coursework that is substantially similar to
    that required in approved school social work programs,
    including (i) not fewer than 600 clock hours of a
    supervised internship in a school setting or (ii) if the
    student has completed part of a supervised internship in a
    school setting prior to the effective date of this
    amendatory Act of the 92nd General Assembly and receives
    the prior approval of the State Superintendent, not fewer
    than 300 additional clock hours of supervised work in a
    public school setting under the supervision of a certified
    school social worker who certifies that the supervised work
    was completed in a satisfactory manner; and
        (4) The student has passed a test of basic skills and
    the test of subject matter knowledge required by Section
    21-1a.
    This subsection (b) does not apply after August 29, 2002.
    (c) A school service personnel certificate shall be
endorsed with the area of Service as determined by the State
Superintendent of Education in consultation with the State
Teacher Certification Board.
    The holder of such certificate shall be entitled to all of
the rights and privileges granted holders of a valid teaching
certificate, including teacher benefits, compensation and
working conditions.
    When the holder of such certificate has earned a master's
degree, including 8 semester hours of graduate professional
education from a recognized institution of higher learning, and
has at least 2 years of successful school experience while
holding such certificate, the certificate may be endorsed for
supervision.
    (d) Persons who have successfully achieved National Board
certification through the National Board for Professional
Teaching Standards shall be issued a Master School Service
Personnel Certificate, valid for 10 years and renewable
thereafter every 10 years through compliance with requirements
set forth by the State Board of Education, in consultation with
the State Teacher Certification Board. However, each holder of
a Master School Service Personnel Certificate shall be eligible
for a corresponding position in this State in the areas for
which he or she holds a Master Certificate without satisfying
any other requirements of this Code, except for those
requirements pertaining to criminal background checks.
    (e) School service personnel certificates are renewable
every 5 years and may be renewed as provided in this Section.
Requests for renewals must be submitted, in a format prescribed
by the State Board of Education, to the regional office of
education responsible for the school where the holder is
employed.
    Upon completion of at least 80 hours of continuing
professional development as provided in this subsection (e), a
person who holds a valid school service personnel certificate
shall have his or her certificate renewed for a period of 5
years. A person who (i) holds an active license issued by the
State as a clinical professional counselor, a professional
counselor, a clinical social worker, a social worker, or a
speech-language pathologist; (ii) holds national certification
as a Nationally Certified School Psychologist from the National
School Psychology Certification Board; (iii) is nationally
certified as a National Certified School Nurse from the
National Board for Certification of School Nurses; (iv) is
nationally certified as a National Certified Counselor or
National Certified School Counselor from the National Board for
Certified Counselors; or (v) holds a Certificate of Clinical
Competence from the American Speech-Language-Hearing
Association shall be deemed to have satisfied the continuing
professional development requirements established by the State
Board of Education and the State Teacher Certification Board to
renew a school service personnel certificate.
    School service personnel certificates may be renewed by the
State Teacher Certification Board based upon proof of
continuing professional development. The State Board of
Education shall (i) establish a procedure for renewing school
service personnel certificates, which shall include without
limitation annual timelines for the renewal process and the
components set forth in this Section; (ii) approve or
disapprove the providers of continuing professional
development activities; and (iii) provide, on a timely basis to
all school service personnel certificate holders, regional
superintendents of schools, school districts, and others with
an interest in continuing professional development,
information about the standards and requirements established
pursuant to this subsection (e).
    Any school service personnel certificate held by an
individual employed and performing services in an Illinois
public or State-operated elementary school, secondary school,
or cooperative or joint agreement with a governing body or
board of control in a certificated school service personnel
position or in a charter school in compliance with the Charter
Schools Law must be maintained Valid and Active through
certificate renewal activities specified in the certificate
renewal procedure established pursuant to this Section,
provided that a holder of a Valid and Active certificate who is
only employed on either a part-time basis or day-to-day basis
as a substitute shall pay only the required registration fee to
renew his or her certificate and maintain it as Valid and
Active. All other school service personnel certificates held
may be maintained as Valid and Exempt through the registration
process provided for in the certificate renewal procedure
established pursuant to Section 21-14 of this Code. A Valid and
Exempt certificate must be immediately activated, through
procedures developed by the State Board of Education upon the
certificate holder becoming employed and performing services
in an Illinois public or State-operated elementary school,
secondary school, or cooperative or joint agreement with a
governing body or board of control in a certificated school
service personnel position or in a charter school operating in
compliance with the Charter Schools Law. A holder of a Valid
and Exempt certificate may activate his or her certificate
through procedures provided for in the certificate renewal
procedure established pursuant to this Section.
    A school service personnel certificate that has been
maintained as Valid and Active for the 5 years of the
certificate's validity shall be renewed as Valid and Active
upon the certificate holder (i) completing the National Board
for Professional Teaching Standards process in an area of
concentration comparable to the holder's school service
personnel certificate of endorsement or (ii) earning 80
continuing professional development units as described in this
Section. If, however, the certificate holder has maintained the
certificate as Valid and Exempt for a portion of the 5-year
period of validity, the number of continuing professional
development units needed to renew the certificate as Valid and
Active must be proportionately reduced by the amount of time
the certificate was Valid and Exempt. If a certificate holder
is employed and performs services requiring the holder's school
service personnel certificate on a part-time basis for all or a
portion of the certificate's 5-year period of validity, the
number of continuing professional development units needed to
renew the certificate as Valid and Active shall be reduced by
50% for the amount of time the certificate holder has been
employed and performing such services on a part-time basis.
"Part-time" means less than 50% of the school day or school
term.
    Beginning July 1, 2008, in order to satisfy the
requirements for continuing professional development provided
for in this Section, each Valid and Active school service
personnel certificate holder shall complete professional
development activities that address the certificate or those
certificates that are required of his or her certificated
position, if the certificate holder is employed and performing
services in an Illinois public or State operated elementary
school, secondary school, or cooperative or joint agreement
with a governing body or board of control, or that certificate
or those certificates most closely related to his or her
teaching position, if the certificate holder is employed in a
charter school. Except as otherwise provided in this subsection
(e), the certificate holder's activities must address and must
reflect the following continuing professional development
purposes:
        (1) Advance both the certificate holder's knowledge
    and skills consistent with the Illinois Standards for the
    service area in which the certificate is endorsed in order
    to keep the certificate holder current in that area.
        (2) Develop the certificate holder's knowledge and
    skills in areas determined by the State Board of Education
    to be critical for all school service personnel.
        (3) Address the knowledge, skills, and goals of the
    certificate holder's local school improvement plan, if the
    certificate holder is employed in an Illinois public or
    State-operated elementary school, secondary school, or
    cooperative or joint agreement with a governing body or
    board of control.
        (4) Address the needs of serving students with
    disabilities, including adapting and modifying clinical or
    professional practices to meet the needs of students with
    disabilities and serving such students in the least
    restrictive environment.
        (5) Address the needs of serving students who are the
    children of immigrants, including, if the certificate
    holder is employed as a counselor in an Illinois public or
    State-operated secondary school, opportunities for higher
    education for students who are undocumented immigrants.
    The coursework or continuing professional development
units ("CPDU") required under this subsection (e) must total 80
CPDUs or the equivalent and must address 4 3 of the 5 4
purposes described in items (1) through (5) (4) of this
subsection (e). Holders of school service personnel
certificates may fulfill this obligation with any combination
of semester hours or CPDUs as follows:
        (A) Collaboration and partnership activities related
    to improving the school service personnel certificate
    holder's knowledge and skills, including (i) participating
    on collaborative planning and professional improvement
    teams and committees; (ii) peer review and coaching; (iii)
    mentoring in a formal mentoring program, including service
    as a consulting teacher participating in a remediation
    process formulated under Section 24A-5 of this Code; (iv)
    participating in site-based management or decision-making
    teams, relevant committees, boards, or task forces
    directly related to school improvement plans; (v)
    coordinating community resources in schools, if the
    project is a specific goal of the school improvement plan;
    (vi) facilitating parent education programs for a school,
    school district, or regional office of education directly
    related to student achievement or school improvement
    plans; (vii) participating in business, school, or
    community partnerships directly related to student
    achievement or school improvement plans; or (viii)
    supervising a student teacher (student services personnel)
    or teacher education candidate in clinical supervision,
    provided that the supervision may be counted only once
    during the course of 5 years.
        (B) Coursework from a regionally accredited
    institution of higher learning related to one of the
    purposes listed in items (1) through (4) of this subsection
    (e), which shall apply at the rate of 15 continuing
    professional development units per semester hour of credit
    earned during the previous 5-year period when the status of
    the holder's school service personnel certificate was
    Valid and Active. Proportionate reductions shall apply
    when the holder's status was Valid and Active for less than
    the 5-year period preceding the renewal.
        (C) Teaching college or university courses in areas
    relevant to the certificate area being renewed, provided
    that the teaching may be counted only once during the
    course of 5 years.
        (D) Conferences, workshops, institutes, seminars, or
    symposiums designed to improve the certificate holder's
    knowledge and skills in the service area and applicable to
    the purposes listed in items (1) through (5) (4) of this
    subsection (e). One CPDU shall be awarded for each hour of
    attendance. No one shall receive credit for conferences,
    workshops, institutes, seminars, or symposiums that are
    designed for entertainment, promotional, or commercial
    purposes or that are solely inspirational or motivational.
    The State Superintendent of Education and regional
    superintendents of schools are authorized to review the
    activities and events provided or to be provided under this
    subdivision (D) and to investigate complaints regarding
    those activities and events. Either the State
    Superintendent of Education or a regional superintendent
    of schools may recommend that the State Board of Education
    disapprove those activities and events considered to be
    inconsistent with this subdivision (D).
        (E) Completing non-university credit directly related
    to student achievement, school improvement plans, or State
    priorities.
        (F) Participating in or presenting at workshops,
    seminars, conferences, institutes, or symposiums.
        (G) Training as external reviewers for quality
    assurance.
        (H) Training as reviewers of university teacher
    preparation programs.
        (I) Other educational experiences related to improving
    the school service personnel's knowledge and skills as a
    teacher, including (i) participating in action research
    and inquiry projects; (ii) traveling related to one's
    assignment and directly related to school service
    personnel achievement or school improvement plans and
    approved by the regional superintendent of schools or his
    or her designee at least 30 days prior to the travel
    experience, provided that the traveling shall not include
    time spent commuting to destinations where the learning
    experience will occur; (iii) participating in study groups
    related to student achievement or school improvement
    plans; (iv) serving on a statewide education-related
    committee, including without limitation the State Teacher
    Certification Board, State Board of Education strategic
    agenda teams, or the State Advisory Council on Education of
    Children with Disabilities; (v) participating in
    work/learn programs or internships; or (vi) developing a
    portfolio of student and teacher work.
        (J) Professional leadership experiences related to
    improving the teacher's knowledge and skills as a teacher,
    including (i) participating in curriculum development or
    assessment activities at the school, school district,
    regional office of education, State, or national level;
    (ii) participating in team or department leadership in a
    school or school district; (iii) participating on external
    or internal school or school district review teams; (iv)
    publishing educational articles, columns, or books
    relevant to the certificate area being renewed; or (v)
    participating in non-strike-related professional
    association or labor organization service or activities
    related to professional development.
(Source: P.A. 94-105, eff. 7-1-05; 95-592, eff. 7-1-08.)
 
    Section 5. The Higher Education Student Assistance Act is
amended by adding Section 67 and by changing Section 75 as
follows:
 
    (110 ILCS 947/67 new)
    Sec. 67. Illinois DREAM Fund Commission.
    (a) The Illinois Student Assistance Commission shall
establish an Illinois DREAM Fund Commission. The Governor shall
appoint, with the advice and consent of the Senate, members to
the Illinois DREAM Fund Commission, which shall be comprised of
9 members representing the geographic and ethnic diversity of
this State, including students, college and university
administrators and faculty, and other individuals committed to
advancing the educational opportunities of the children of
immigrants.
    (b) The Illinois DREAM Fund Commission is charged with all
of the following responsibilities:
        (1) Administering this Section and raising funds for
    the Illinois DREAM Fund.
        (2) Establishing a not-for-profit entity charged with
    raising funds for the administration of this Section, any
    educational or training programs the Commission is tasked
    with administering, and funding scholarships to students
    who are the children of immigrants to the United States.
        (3) Publicizing the availability of scholarships from
    the Illinois DREAM Fund.
        (4) Selecting the recipients of scholarships funded
    through the Illinois DREAM Fund.
        (5) Researching issues pertaining to the availability
    of assistance with the costs of higher education for the
    children of immigrants and other issues regarding access
    for and the performance of the children of immigrants
    within higher education.
        (6) Overseeing implementation of the other provisions
    of this amendatory Act of the 97th General Assembly.
        (7) Establishing and administering training programs
    for high school counselors and counselors, admissions
    officers, and financial aid officers of public
    institutions of higher education. The training programs
    shall instruct participants on the educational
    opportunities available to college-bound students who are
    the children of immigrants, including, but not limited to,
    in-state tuition and scholarship programs. The Illinois
    DREAM Fund Commission may also establish a public awareness
    campaign regarding educational opportunities available to
    college bound students who are the children of immigrants.
    The Illinois DREAM Fund Commission shall establish, by
rule, procedures for accepting and evaluating applications for
scholarships from the children of immigrants and issuing
scholarships to selected student applicants.
    (c) To receive a scholarship under this Section, a student
must meet all of the following qualifications:
        (1) Have resided with his or her parents or guardian
    while attending a public or private high school in this
    State.
        (2) Have graduated from a public or private high school
    or received the equivalent of a high school diploma in this
    State.
        (3) Have attended school in this State for at least 3
    years as of the date he or she graduated from high school
    or received the equivalent of a high school diploma.
        (4) Have at least one parent who immigrated to the
    United States.
    (d) The Illinois Student Assistance Commission shall
establish an Illinois DREAM Fund to provide scholarships under
this Section. The Illinois DREAM Fund shall be funded entirely
from private contributions.
 
    (110 ILCS 947/75)
    Sec. 75. College savings programs.
    (a) Purpose. The General Assembly finds and hereby declares
that for the benefit of the people of the State of Illinois,
the conduct and increase of their commerce, the protection and
enhancement of their welfare, the development of continued
prosperity and the improvement of their health and living
conditions, it is essential that all citizens with the
intellectual ability and motivation be able to obtain a higher
education. The General Assembly further finds that rising
tuition costs, increasingly restrictive eligibility criteria
for existing federal and State student aid programs and other
trends in higher education finance have impeded access to a
higher education for many middle-income families; and that to
remedy these concerns, it is of utmost importance that families
be provided with investment alternatives to enhance their
financial access to institutions of higher education. It is the
intent of this Section to establish College Savings Programs
appropriate for families from various income groups, to
encourage Illinois families to save and invest in anticipation
of their children's education, and to encourage enrollment in
institutions of higher education, all in execution of the
public policy set forth above and elsewhere in this Act.
College Savings Programs established under this Section must be
available to any individual with a valid social security number
or taxpayer identification number for the benefit of any
individual with a valid social security number or taxpayer
identification number.
    (b) The Commission is authorized to develop and provide a
program of college savings instruments to qualifying Illinois
residents citizens. The program shall be structured to
encourage parents to plan ahead for the college education of
their children and to permit the long-term accumulation of
savings which can be used to finance the family's share of the
cost of a higher education. Income, up to $2,000 annually per
account, which is derived by individuals from investments made
in accordance with College Savings Programs established under
this Section shall be free from all taxation by the State and
its political subdivisions, except for estate, transfer, and
inheritance taxes.
    (c) The Commission is authorized to contract with private
financial institutions and other businesses, individuals, and
other appropriate parties to establish and operate the College
Savings Programs. The Commission may negotiate contracts with
private financial and investment companies, establish College
Savings Programs, and monitor the vendors administering the
programs in whichever manner the Commission determines is best
suited to accomplish the purposes of this Section. The Auditor
General shall periodically review the operation of the College
Savings Programs and shall advise the Commission and the
General Assembly of his findings.
    (d) In determining the type of instruments to be offered,
the Commission shall consult with, and receive the assistance
of, the Illinois Board of Higher Education, the Governor's
Office of Management and Budget, the State Board of
Investments, the Governor, and other appropriate State
agencies and private parties.
    (e) The Commission shall market and promote the College
Savings Programs to the citizens of Illinois.
    (f) The Commission shall assist the State Comptroller and
State Treasurer in establishing a payroll deduction plan
through which State employees may participate in the College
Savings Programs. The Department of Labor, Department of
Employment Security, Department of Revenue, and other
appropriate agencies shall assist the Commission in educating
Illinois employers about the College Savings Programs, and
shall assist the Commission in securing employers'
participation in a payroll deduction plan and other initiatives
which maximize participation in the College Savings Programs.
    (g) The Commission shall examine means by which the State,
through a series of matching contributions or other incentives,
may most effectively encourage Illinois families to
participate in the College Savings Programs. The Commission
shall report its conclusions and recommendations to the
Governor and General Assembly no later than February 15, 1990.
    (h) The College Savings Programs established pursuant to
this Section shall not be subject to the provisions of the
Illinois Administrative Procedure Act. The Commission shall
provide that appropriate disclosures are provided to all
citizens who participate in the College Savings Programs.
(Source: P.A. 94-793, eff. 5-19-06.)
 
    Section 10. The Illinois Prepaid Tuition Act is amended by
changing Section 45 as follows:
 
    (110 ILCS 979/45)
    Sec. 45. Illinois prepaid tuition contracts.
    (a) The Commission may enter into an Illinois prepaid
tuition contract with a purchaser under which the Commission
contracts on behalf of the State to pay full tuition and
mandatory fees at an Illinois public university or Illinois
community college for a qualified beneficiary to attend the
eligible institution to which the qualified beneficiary is
admitted. Each contract shall contain terms, conditions, and
provisions that the Commission determines to be necessary for
ensuring the educational objectives and sustainable financial
viability of the Illinois prepaid tuition program.
    (b) Each contract shall have one designated purchaser and
one designated qualified beneficiary. Unless otherwise
specified in the contract, the purchaser owns the contract and
retains any tax liability for its assets only until the first
distribution of benefits. Contracts shall be purchased in units
of 15 credit hours.
    (c) Without exception, benefits may be received by a
qualified beneficiary of an Illinois prepaid tuition contract
no earlier than 3 years from the date the contract is
purchased.
    (d) A prepaid tuition contract shall contain, but is not
limited to, provisions for (i) refunds or withdrawals in
certain circumstances, with or without interest or penalties;
(ii) conversion of the contract at the time of distribution
from accrued prepayment value at one type of eligible
institution to the accrued prepayment value at a different type
of eligible institution; (iii) portability of the accrued value
of the prepayment value for use at an eligible institution
located outside this State; (iv) transferability of the
contract benefits within the qualified beneficiary's immediate
family; and (v) a specified benefit period during which the
contract may be redeemed.
    (e) Each Illinois prepaid tuition contract also shall
contain, at minimum, all of the following:
        (1) The amount of payment or payments and the number of
    payments required from a purchaser on behalf of a qualified
    beneficiary.
        (2) The terms and conditions under which purchasers
    shall remit payments, including, but not limited to, the
    date or dates upon which each payment shall be due.
        (3) Provisions for late payment charges and for
    default.
        (4) Provisions for penalty fees payable incident to an
    authorized withdrawal.
        (5) The name, date of birth, and social security number
    or taxpayer identification number of the qualified
    beneficiary on whose behalf the contract is drawn and the
    terms and conditions under which the contract may be
    transferred to another qualified beneficiary.
        (6) The name and social security number or taxpayer
    identification number of any person who may terminate the
    contract, together with terms that specify whether the
    contract may be terminated by the purchaser, the qualified
    beneficiary, a specific designated person, or any
    combination of these persons.
        (7) The terms and conditions under which a contract may
    be terminated, the name and social security number or
    taxpayer identification number of the person entitled to
    any refund due as a result of the termination of the
    contract pursuant to those terms and conditions, and the
    method for determining the amount of a refund.
        (8) The time limitations, if any, within which the
    qualified beneficiary must claim his or her benefits
    through the program.
        (9) Other terms and conditions determined by the
    Commission to be appropriate.
    (f) In addition to the contract provisions set forth in
subsection (e), each Illinois prepaid tuition contract shall
include:
        (1) The number of credit hours contracted by the
    purchaser.
        (2) The type of eligible institution and the prepaid
    tuition plan toward which the credit hours shall be
    applied.
        (3) The explicit contractual obligation of the
    Commission to the qualified beneficiary to provide a
    specific number of credit hours of undergraduate
    instruction at an eligible institution, not to exceed the
    maximum number of credit hours required for the conference
    of a degree that corresponds to the plan purchased on
    behalf of the qualified beneficiary.
    (g) The Commission shall indicate by rule the conditions
under which refunds are payable to a contract purchaser.
Generally, no refund shall exceed the amount paid into the
Illinois Prepaid Tuition Trust Fund by the purchaser. In the
event that a contract is converted from a Public University
Plan described in subsection (j) of this Section to a Community
College Plan described in subsection (k) of this Section, the
refund amount shall be reduced by the amount transferred to the
Illinois community college on behalf of the qualified
beneficiary. Except where the Commission may otherwise rule,
refunds may exceed the amount paid into the Illinois Prepaid
Tuition Trust Fund only under the following circumstances:
        (1) If the qualified beneficiary is awarded a grant or
    scholarship at a public institution of higher education,
    the terms of which duplicate the benefits included in the
    Illinois prepaid tuition contract, then moneys paid for the
    purchase of the contract shall be returned to the
    purchaser, upon request, in semester installments that
    coincide with the matriculation by the qualified
    beneficiary, in an amount equal to the current cost of
    tuition and mandatory fees at the public institution of
    higher education where the qualified beneficiary is
    enrolled.
        (1.5) If the qualified beneficiary is awarded a grant
    or scholarship while enrolled at either an eligible
    nonpublic institution of higher education or an eligible
    public or private out-of-state higher education
    institution, the terms of which duplicate the benefits
    included in the Illinois prepaid tuition contract, then
    money paid for the purchase of the contract shall be
    returned to the purchaser, upon request, in semester
    installments that coincide with the matriculation by the
    qualified beneficiary. The amount paid shall not exceed the
    current average mean-weighted credit hour value of the
    registration fees purchased under the contract.
        (2) In the event of the death or total disability of
    the qualified beneficiary, moneys paid for the purchase of
    the Illinois prepaid tuition contract shall be returned to
    the purchaser together with all accrued earnings.
        (3) If an Illinois prepaid tuition contract is
    converted from a Public University Plan to a Community
    College Plan, then the amount refunded shall be the value
    of the original Illinois prepaid tuition contract minus the
    value of the contract after conversion.
    No refund shall be authorized under an Illinois prepaid
tuition contract for any semester partially attended but not
completed.
    The Commission, by rule, shall set forth specific
procedures for making contract payments in conjunction with
grants and scholarships awarded to contract beneficiaries.
    Moneys paid into or out of the Illinois Prepaid Tuition
Trust Fund by or on behalf of the purchaser or the qualified
beneficiary of an Illinois prepaid tuition contract are exempt
from all claims of creditors of the purchaser or beneficiary,
so long as the contract has not been terminated.
    The State or any State agency, county, municipality, or
other political subdivision, by contract or collective
bargaining agreement, may agree with any employee to remit
payments toward the purchase of Illinois prepaid tuition
contracts through payroll deductions made by the appropriate
officer or officers of the entity making the payments. Such
payments shall be held and administered in accordance with this
Act.
    (h) Nothing in this Act shall be construed as a promise or
guarantee that a qualified beneficiary will be admitted to an
eligible institution or to a particular eligible institution,
will be allowed to continue enrollment at an eligible
institution after admission, or will be graduated from an
eligible institution.
    (i) The Commission shall develop and make prepaid tuition
contracts available under a minimum of at least 2 independent
plans to be known as the Public University Plan and the
Community College Plan.
    Contracts shall be purchased in units of 15 credit hours at
either an Illinois public university or an Illinois community
college. The minimum purchase amount per qualified beneficiary
shall be one unit or 15 credit hours. The maximum purchase
amount shall be 9 units (or 135 credit hours) for the Public
University Plan and 4 units (or 60 credit hours) for the
Community College Plan.
    (j) Public University Plan. Through the Public University
Plan, the Illinois prepaid tuition contract shall provide
prepaid registration fees, which include full tuition costs as
well as mandatory fees, for a specified number of undergraduate
credit hours, not to exceed the maximum number of credit hours
required for the conference of a baccalaureate degree. In
determining the cost of participation in the Public University
Plan, the Commission shall reference the combined
mean-weighted current registration fees from Illinois public
universities.
    In the event that a qualified beneficiary for whatever
reason chooses to attend an Illinois community college, the
qualified beneficiary may convert the average number of credit
hours required for the conference of an associate degree from
the Public University Plan to the Community College Plan and
may retain the remaining Public University Plan credit hours or
may request a refund for prepaid credit hours in excess of
those required for conference of an associate degree. In
determining the amount of any refund, the Commission also shall
recognize the current relative credit hour cost of the 2 plans
when making any conversion.
    Qualified beneficiaries shall bear the cost of any
laboratory or other non-mandatory fees associated with
enrollment in specific courses. Qualified beneficiaries who
are not Illinois residents shall bear the difference in cost
between in-state registration fees guaranteed by the prepaid
tuition contract and tuition and other charges assessed upon
out-of-state students by the eligible institution.
    (k) Community College Plan. Through the Community College
Plan, the Illinois prepaid tuition contract shall provide
prepaid registration fees, which include full tuition costs as
well as mandatory fees, for a specified number of undergraduate
credit hours, not to exceed the maximum number of credit hours
required for the conference of an associate degree. In
determining the cost of participation in the Community College
Plan, the Commission shall reference the combined
mean-weighted current registration fees from all Illinois
community colleges.
    In the event that a qualified beneficiary for whatever
reason chooses to attend an Illinois public university, the
qualified beneficiary's prepaid tuition contract shall be
converted for use at that Illinois public university by
referencing the current average mean-weighted credit hour
value of registration fees at Illinois community colleges
relative to the corresponding value of registration fees at
Illinois public universities.
    Qualified beneficiaries shall bear the cost of any
laboratory or other non-mandatory fees associated with
enrollment in specific courses. Qualified beneficiaries who
are not Illinois residents shall bear the difference in cost
between in-state registration fees guaranteed by the prepaid
tuition contract and tuition and other charges assessed upon
out-of-state students by the eligible institution.
    (l) A qualified beneficiary may apply the benefits of any
Illinois prepaid tuition contract toward a nonpublic
institution of higher education. In the event that a qualified
beneficiary for whatever reason chooses to attend a nonpublic
institution of higher education, the qualified beneficiary's
prepaid tuition contract shall be converted for use at that
nonpublic institution of higher education by referencing the
current average mean-weighted credit hour value of
registration fees purchased under the contract. The Commission
shall transfer, or cause to have transferred, this amount, less
a transfer fee, to the nonpublic institution on behalf of the
beneficiary. In the event that the cost of registration charged
to the beneficiary at the nonpublic institution of higher
education is less than the aggregate value of the Illinois
prepaid tuition contract, any remaining amount shall be
transferred in subsequent semesters until the transfer value is
fully depleted.
    (m) A qualified beneficiary may apply the benefits of any
Illinois prepaid tuition contract toward an eligible
out-of-state college or university. Institutional eligibility
for out-of-state colleges and universities shall be determined
by the Commission according to standards substantially
equivalent to those for an eligible institution located in this
State, as described in the definition of "institution of higher
learning" in Section 10 of the Higher Education Student
Assistance Act. In the event that a qualified beneficiary for
whatever reason chooses to attend an eligible out-of-state
college or university, the qualified beneficiary's prepaid
tuition contract shall be converted for use at that college or
university by referencing the current average mean-weighted
credit hour value of registration fees purchased under the
contract. The Commission shall transfer, or cause to have
transferred, this amount, less a transfer fee, to the college
or university on behalf of the beneficiary. In the event that
the cost of registration charged to the beneficiary at the
eligible out-of-state college or university is less than the
aggregate value of the Illinois prepaid tuition contract, any
remaining amount shall be transferred in subsequent semesters
until the transfer value is fully depleted.
    (n) Illinois prepaid tuition contracts may be purchased
either by lump sum or by installments. No penalty shall be
assessed for early payment of installment contracts.
    (o) The Commission shall annually adjust the price of new
contracts, in accordance with the annual changes in
registration fees at Illinois public universities and
community colleges.
(Source: P.A. 95-217, eff. 8-16-07; 96-1282, eff. 7-26-10.)
 
    Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon
becoming law.