Public Act 097-1158
 
HB4177 EnrolledLRB097 15168 JDS 60268 b

    AN ACT concerning government.
 
    Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
represented in the General Assembly:
 
    Section 5. The Illinois Public Labor Relations Act is
amended by changing Sections 3 and 7 and adding Section 28 as
follows:
 
    (5 ILCS 315/3)  (from Ch. 48, par. 1603)
    Sec. 3. Definitions. As used in this Act, unless the
context otherwise requires:
    (a) "Board" means the Illinois Labor Relations Board or,
with respect to a matter over which the jurisdiction of the
Board is assigned to the State Panel or the Local Panel under
Section 5, the panel having jurisdiction over the matter.
    (b) "Collective bargaining" means bargaining over terms
and conditions of employment, including hours, wages, and other
conditions of employment, as detailed in Section 7 and which
are not excluded by Section 4.
    (c) "Confidential employee" means an employee who, in the
regular course of his or her duties, assists and acts in a
confidential capacity to persons who formulate, determine, and
effectuate management policies with regard to labor relations
or who, in the regular course of his or her duties, has
authorized access to information relating to the effectuation
or review of the employer's collective bargaining policies.
    (d) "Craft employees" means skilled journeymen, crafts
persons, and their apprentices and helpers.
    (e) "Essential services employees" means those public
employees performing functions so essential that the
interruption or termination of the function will constitute a
clear and present danger to the health and safety of the
persons in the affected community.
    (f) "Exclusive representative", except with respect to
non-State fire fighters and paramedics employed by fire
departments and fire protection districts, non-State peace
officers, and peace officers in the Department of State Police,
means the labor organization that has been (i) designated by
the Board as the representative of a majority of public
employees in an appropriate bargaining unit in accordance with
the procedures contained in this Act, (ii) historically
recognized by the State of Illinois or any political
subdivision of the State before July 1, 1984 (the effective
date of this Act) as the exclusive representative of the
employees in an appropriate bargaining unit, (iii) after July
1, 1984 (the effective date of this Act) recognized by an
employer upon evidence, acceptable to the Board, that the labor
organization has been designated as the exclusive
representative by a majority of the employees in an appropriate
bargaining unit; (iv) recognized as the exclusive
representative of personal care attendants or personal
assistants under Executive Order 2003-8 prior to the effective
date of this amendatory Act of the 93rd General Assembly, and
the organization shall be considered to be the exclusive
representative of the personal care attendants or personal
assistants as defined in this Section; or (v) recognized as the
exclusive representative of child and day care home providers,
including licensed and license exempt providers, pursuant to an
election held under Executive Order 2005-1 prior to the
effective date of this amendatory Act of the 94th General
Assembly, and the organization shall be considered to be the
exclusive representative of the child and day care home
providers as defined in this Section.
    With respect to non-State fire fighters and paramedics
employed by fire departments and fire protection districts,
non-State peace officers, and peace officers in the Department
of State Police, "exclusive representative" means the labor
organization that has been (i) designated by the Board as the
representative of a majority of peace officers or fire fighters
in an appropriate bargaining unit in accordance with the
procedures contained in this Act, (ii) historically recognized
by the State of Illinois or any political subdivision of the
State before January 1, 1986 (the effective date of this
amendatory Act of 1985) as the exclusive representative by a
majority of the peace officers or fire fighters in an
appropriate bargaining unit, or (iii) after January 1, 1986
(the effective date of this amendatory Act of 1985) recognized
by an employer upon evidence, acceptable to the Board, that the
labor organization has been designated as the exclusive
representative by a majority of the peace officers or fire
fighters in an appropriate bargaining unit.
    Where a historical pattern of representation exists for the
workers of a water system that was owned by a public utility,
as defined in Section 3-105 of the Public Utilities Act, prior
to becoming certified employees of a municipality or
municipalities once the municipality or municipalities have
acquired the water system as authorized in Section 11-124-5 of
the Illinois Municipal Code, the Board shall find the labor
organization that has historically represented the workers to
be the exclusive representative under this Act, and shall find
the unit represented by the exclusive representative to be the
appropriate unit.
    (g) "Fair share agreement" means an agreement between the
employer and an employee organization under which all or any of
the employees in a collective bargaining unit are required to
pay their proportionate share of the costs of the collective
bargaining process, contract administration, and pursuing
matters affecting wages, hours, and other conditions of
employment, but not to exceed the amount of dues uniformly
required of members. The amount certified by the exclusive
representative shall not include any fees for contributions
related to the election or support of any candidate for
political office. Nothing in this subsection (g) shall preclude
an employee from making voluntary political contributions in
conjunction with his or her fair share payment.
    (g-1) "Fire fighter" means, for the purposes of this Act
only, any person who has been or is hereafter appointed to a
fire department or fire protection district or employed by a
state university and sworn or commissioned to perform fire
fighter duties or paramedic duties, except that the following
persons are not included: part-time fire fighters, auxiliary,
reserve or voluntary fire fighters, including paid on-call fire
fighters, clerks and dispatchers or other civilian employees of
a fire department or fire protection district who are not
routinely expected to perform fire fighter duties, or elected
officials.
    (g-2) "General Assembly of the State of Illinois" means the
legislative branch of the government of the State of Illinois,
as provided for under Article IV of the Constitution of the
State of Illinois, and includes but is not limited to the House
of Representatives, the Senate, the Speaker of the House of
Representatives, the Minority Leader of the House of
Representatives, the President of the Senate, the Minority
Leader of the Senate, the Joint Committee on Legislative
Support Services and any legislative support services agency
listed in the Legislative Commission Reorganization Act of
1984.
    (h) "Governing body" means, in the case of the State, the
State Panel of the Illinois Labor Relations Board, the Director
of the Department of Central Management Services, and the
Director of the Department of Labor; the county board in the
case of a county; the corporate authorities in the case of a
municipality; and the appropriate body authorized to provide
for expenditures of its funds in the case of any other unit of
government.
    (i) "Labor organization" means any organization in which
public employees participate and that exists for the purpose,
in whole or in part, of dealing with a public employer
concerning wages, hours, and other terms and conditions of
employment, including the settlement of grievances.
    (j) "Managerial employee" means an individual who is
engaged predominantly in executive and management functions
and is charged with the responsibility of directing the
effectuation of management policies and practices.
    (k) "Peace officer" means, for the purposes of this Act
only, any persons who have been or are hereafter appointed to a
police force, department, or agency and sworn or commissioned
to perform police duties, except that the following persons are
not included: part-time police officers, special police
officers, auxiliary police as defined by Section 3.1-30-20 of
the Illinois Municipal Code, night watchmen, "merchant
police", court security officers as defined by Section 3-6012.1
of the Counties Code, temporary employees, traffic guards or
wardens, civilian parking meter and parking facilities
personnel or other individuals specially appointed to aid or
direct traffic at or near schools or public functions or to aid
in civil defense or disaster, parking enforcement employees who
are not commissioned as peace officers and who are not armed
and who are not routinely expected to effect arrests, parking
lot attendants, clerks and dispatchers or other civilian
employees of a police department who are not routinely expected
to effect arrests, or elected officials.
    (l) "Person" includes one or more individuals, labor
organizations, public employees, associations, corporations,
legal representatives, trustees, trustees in bankruptcy,
receivers, or the State of Illinois or any political
subdivision of the State or governing body, but does not
include the General Assembly of the State of Illinois or any
individual employed by the General Assembly of the State of
Illinois.
    (m) "Professional employee" means any employee engaged in
work predominantly intellectual and varied in character rather
than routine mental, manual, mechanical or physical work;
involving the consistent exercise of discretion and adjustment
in its performance; of such a character that the output
produced or the result accomplished cannot be standardized in
relation to a given period of time; and requiring advanced
knowledge in a field of science or learning customarily
acquired by a prolonged course of specialized intellectual
instruction and study in an institution of higher learning or a
hospital, as distinguished from a general academic education or
from apprenticeship or from training in the performance of
routine mental, manual, or physical processes; or any employee
who has completed the courses of specialized intellectual
instruction and study prescribed in this subsection (m) and is
performing related work under the supervision of a professional
person to qualify to become a professional employee as defined
in this subsection (m).
    (n) "Public employee" or "employee", for the purposes of
this Act, means any individual employed by a public employer,
including (i) interns and residents at public hospitals, (ii)
as of the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 93rd
General Assembly, but not before, personal care attendants and
personal assistants working under the Home Services Program
under Section 3 of the Disabled Persons Rehabilitation Act,
subject to the limitations set forth in this Act and in the
Disabled Persons Rehabilitation Act, and (iii) as of the
effective date of this amendatory Act of the 94th General
Assembly, but not before, child and day care home providers
participating in the child care assistance program under
Section 9A-11 of the Illinois Public Aid Code, subject to the
limitations set forth in this Act and in Section 9A-11 of the
Illinois Public Aid Code, and (iv) as of the effective date of
this amendatory Act of the 97th General Assembly, but not
before except as otherwise provided in this subsection (n),
home care and home health workers who function as personal care
attendants, personal assistants, and individual maintenance
home health workers and who also work under the Home Services
Program under Section 3 of the Disabled Persons Rehabilitation
Act, no matter whether the State provides those services
through direct fee-for-service arrangements, with the
assistance of a managed care organization or other
intermediary, or otherwise, but excluding all of the following:
employees of the General Assembly of the State of Illinois;
elected officials; executive heads of a department; members of
boards or commissions; the Executive Inspectors General; any
special Executive Inspectors General; employees of each Office
of an Executive Inspector General; commissioners and employees
of the Executive Ethics Commission; the Auditor General's
Inspector General; employees of the Office of the Auditor
General's Inspector General; the Legislative Inspector
General; any special Legislative Inspectors General; employees
of the Office of the Legislative Inspector General;
commissioners and employees of the Legislative Ethics
Commission; employees of any agency, board or commission
created by this Act; employees appointed to State positions of
a temporary or emergency nature; all employees of school
districts and higher education institutions except
firefighters and peace officers employed by a state university
and except peace officers employed by a school district in its
own police department in existence on the effective date of
this amendatory Act of the 96th General Assembly; managerial
employees; short-term employees; confidential employees;
independent contractors; and supervisors except as provided in
this Act.
    Home care and home health workers who function as personal
Personal care attendants, and personal assistants, and
individual maintenance home health workers and who also work
under the Home Services Program under Section 3 of the Disabled
Persons Rehabilitation Act shall not be considered public
employees for any purposes not specifically provided for in
Public Act 93-204 or this amendatory Act of the 97th General
Assembly the amendatory Act of the 93rd General Assembly,
including but not limited to, purposes of vicarious liability
in tort and purposes of statutory retirement or health
insurance benefits. Home care and home health workers who
function as personal Personal care attendants, and personal
assistants, and individual maintenance home health workers and
who also work under the Home Services Program under Section 3
of the Disabled Persons Rehabilitation Act shall not be covered
by the State Employees Group Insurance Act of 1971 (5 ILCS
375/).
    Child and day care home providers shall not be considered
public employees for any purposes not specifically provided for
in this amendatory Act of the 94th General Assembly, including
but not limited to, purposes of vicarious liability in tort and
purposes of statutory retirement or health insurance benefits.
Child and day care home providers shall not be covered by the
State Employees Group Insurance Act of 1971.
    Notwithstanding Section 9, subsection (c), or any other
provisions of this Act, all peace officers above the rank of
captain in municipalities with more than 1,000,000 inhabitants
shall be excluded from this Act.
    (o) Except as otherwise in subsection (o-5), "public
employer" or "employer" means the State of Illinois; any
political subdivision of the State, unit of local government or
school district; authorities including departments, divisions,
bureaus, boards, commissions, or other agencies of the
foregoing entities; and any person acting within the scope of
his or her authority, express or implied, on behalf of those
entities in dealing with its employees. As of the effective
date of the amendatory Act of the 93rd General Assembly, but
not before, the State of Illinois shall be considered the
employer of the personal care attendants and personal
assistants working under the Home Services Program under
Section 3 of the Disabled Persons Rehabilitation Act, subject
to the limitations set forth in this Act and in the Disabled
Persons Rehabilitation Act. As of the effective date of this
amendatory Act of the 97th General Assembly, but not before
except as otherwise provided in this subsection (o), the State
shall be considered the employer of home care and home health
workers who function as personal care attendants, personal
assistants, and individual maintenance home health workers and
who also work under the Home Services Program under Section 3
of the Disabled Persons Rehabilitation Act, no matter whether
the State provides those services through direct
fee-for-service arrangements, with the assistance of a managed
care organization or other intermediary, or otherwise, but
subject to the limitations set forth in this Act and the
Disabled Persons Rehabilitation Act. The State shall not be
considered to be the employer of home care and home health
workers who function as personal care attendants, and personal
assistants, and individual maintenance home health workers and
who also work under the Home Services Program under Section 3
of the Disabled Persons Rehabilitation Act, for any purposes
not specifically provided for in Public Act 93-204 or this
amendatory Act of the 97th General Assembly this amendatory Act
of the 93rd General Assembly, including but not limited to,
purposes of vicarious liability in tort and purposes of
statutory retirement or health insurance benefits. Home care
and home health workers who function as personal Personal care
attendants, and personal assistants, and individual
maintenance home health workers and who also work under the
Home Services Program under Section 3 of the Disabled Persons
Rehabilitation Act shall not be covered by the State Employees
Group Insurance Act of 1971 (5 ILCS 375/). As of the effective
date of this amendatory Act of the 94th General Assembly but
not before, the State of Illinois shall be considered the
employer of the day and child care home providers participating
in the child care assistance program under Section 9A-11 of the
Illinois Public Aid Code, subject to the limitations set forth
in this Act and in Section 9A-11 of the Illinois Public Aid
Code. The State shall not be considered to be the employer of
child and day care home providers for any purposes not
specifically provided for in this amendatory Act of the 94th
General Assembly, including but not limited to, purposes of
vicarious liability in tort and purposes of statutory
retirement or health insurance benefits. Child and day care
home providers shall not be covered by the State Employees
Group Insurance Act of 1971.
    "Public employer" or "employer" as used in this Act,
however, does not mean and shall not include the General
Assembly of the State of Illinois, the Executive Ethics
Commission, the Offices of the Executive Inspectors General,
the Legislative Ethics Commission, the Office of the
Legislative Inspector General, the Office of the Auditor
General's Inspector General, and educational employers or
employers as defined in the Illinois Educational Labor
Relations Act, except with respect to a state university in its
employment of firefighters and peace officers and except with
respect to a school district in the employment of peace
officers in its own police department in existence on the
effective date of this amendatory Act of the 96th General
Assembly. County boards and county sheriffs shall be designated
as joint or co-employers of county peace officers appointed
under the authority of a county sheriff. Nothing in this
subsection (o) shall be construed to prevent the State Panel or
the Local Panel from determining that employers are joint or
co-employers.
    (o-5) With respect to wages, fringe benefits, hours,
holidays, vacations, proficiency examinations, sick leave, and
other conditions of employment, the public employer of public
employees who are court reporters, as defined in the Court
Reporters Act, shall be determined as follows:
        (1) For court reporters employed by the Cook County
    Judicial Circuit, the chief judge of the Cook County
    Circuit Court is the public employer and employer
    representative.
        (2) For court reporters employed by the 12th, 18th,
    19th, and, on and after December 4, 2006, the 22nd judicial
    circuits, a group consisting of the chief judges of those
    circuits, acting jointly by majority vote, is the public
    employer and employer representative.
        (3) For court reporters employed by all other judicial
    circuits, a group consisting of the chief judges of those
    circuits, acting jointly by majority vote, is the public
    employer and employer representative.
    (p) "Security employee" means an employee who is
responsible for the supervision and control of inmates at
correctional facilities. The term also includes other
non-security employees in bargaining units having the majority
of employees being responsible for the supervision and control
of inmates at correctional facilities.
    (q) "Short-term employee" means an employee who is employed
for less than 2 consecutive calendar quarters during a calendar
year and who does not have a reasonable assurance that he or
she will be rehired by the same employer for the same service
in a subsequent calendar year.
    (r) "Supervisor" is an employee whose principal work is
substantially different from that of his or her subordinates
and who has authority, in the interest of the employer, to
hire, transfer, suspend, lay off, recall, promote, discharge,
direct, reward, or discipline employees, to adjust their
grievances, or to effectively recommend any of those actions,
if the exercise of that authority is not of a merely routine or
clerical nature, but requires the consistent use of independent
judgment. Except with respect to police employment, the term
"supervisor" includes only those individuals who devote a
preponderance of their employment time to exercising that
authority, State supervisors notwithstanding. In addition, in
determining supervisory status in police employment, rank
shall not be determinative. The Board shall consider, as
evidence of bargaining unit inclusion or exclusion, the common
law enforcement policies and relationships between police
officer ranks and certification under applicable civil service
law, ordinances, personnel codes, or Division 2.1 of Article 10
of the Illinois Municipal Code, but these factors shall not be
the sole or predominant factors considered by the Board in
determining police supervisory status.
    Notwithstanding the provisions of the preceding paragraph,
in determining supervisory status in fire fighter employment,
no fire fighter shall be excluded as a supervisor who has
established representation rights under Section 9 of this Act.
Further, in new fire fighter units, employees shall consist of
fire fighters of the rank of company officer and below. If a
company officer otherwise qualifies as a supervisor under the
preceding paragraph, however, he or she shall not be included
in the fire fighter unit. If there is no rank between that of
chief and the highest company officer, the employer may
designate a position on each shift as a Shift Commander, and
the persons occupying those positions shall be supervisors. All
other ranks above that of company officer shall be supervisors.
    (s)(1) "Unit" means a class of jobs or positions that are
held by employees whose collective interests may suitably be
represented by a labor organization for collective bargaining.
Except with respect to non-State fire fighters and paramedics
employed by fire departments and fire protection districts,
non-State peace officers, and peace officers in the Department
of State Police, a bargaining unit determined by the Board
shall not include both employees and supervisors, or
supervisors only, except as provided in paragraph (2) of this
subsection (s) and except for bargaining units in existence on
July 1, 1984 (the effective date of this Act). With respect to
non-State fire fighters and paramedics employed by fire
departments and fire protection districts, non-State peace
officers, and peace officers in the Department of State Police,
a bargaining unit determined by the Board shall not include
both supervisors and nonsupervisors, or supervisors only,
except as provided in paragraph (2) of this subsection (s) and
except for bargaining units in existence on January 1, 1986
(the effective date of this amendatory Act of 1985). A
bargaining unit determined by the Board to contain peace
officers shall contain no employees other than peace officers
unless otherwise agreed to by the employer and the labor
organization or labor organizations involved. Notwithstanding
any other provision of this Act, a bargaining unit, including a
historical bargaining unit, containing sworn peace officers of
the Department of Natural Resources (formerly designated the
Department of Conservation) shall contain no employees other
than such sworn peace officers upon the effective date of this
amendatory Act of 1990 or upon the expiration date of any
collective bargaining agreement in effect upon the effective
date of this amendatory Act of 1990 covering both such sworn
peace officers and other employees.
    (2) Notwithstanding the exclusion of supervisors from
bargaining units as provided in paragraph (1) of this
subsection (s), a public employer may agree to permit its
supervisory employees to form bargaining units and may bargain
with those units. This Act shall apply if the public employer
chooses to bargain under this subsection.
    (3) Public employees who are court reporters, as defined in
the Court Reporters Act, shall be divided into 3 units for
collective bargaining purposes. One unit shall be court
reporters employed by the Cook County Judicial Circuit; one
unit shall be court reporters employed by the 12th, 18th, 19th,
and, on and after December 4, 2006, the 22nd judicial circuits;
and one unit shall be court reporters employed by all other
judicial circuits.
(Source: P.A. 96-1257, eff. 7-23-10; 97-586, eff. 8-26-11.)
 
    (5 ILCS 315/7)  (from Ch. 48, par. 1607)
    Sec. 7. Duty to bargain. A public employer and the
exclusive representative have the authority and the duty to
bargain collectively set forth in this Section.
    For the purposes of this Act, "to bargain collectively"
means the performance of the mutual obligation of the public
employer or his designated representative and the
representative of the public employees to meet at reasonable
times, including meetings in advance of the budget-making
process, and to negotiate in good faith with respect to wages,
hours, and other conditions of employment, not excluded by
Section 4 of this Act, or the negotiation of an agreement, or
any question arising thereunder and the execution of a written
contract incorporating any agreement reached if requested by
either party, but such obligation does not compel either party
to agree to a proposal or require the making of a concession.
    The duty "to bargain collectively" shall also include an
obligation to negotiate over any matter with respect to wages,
hours and other conditions of employment, not specifically
provided for in any other law or not specifically in violation
of the provisions of any law. If any other law pertains, in
part, to a matter affecting the wages, hours and other
conditions of employment, such other law shall not be construed
as limiting the duty "to bargain collectively" and to enter
into collective bargaining agreements containing clauses which
either supplement, implement, or relate to the effect of such
provisions in other laws.
    The duty "to bargain collectively" shall also include
negotiations as to the terms of a collective bargaining
agreement. The parties may, by mutual agreement, provide for
arbitration of impasses resulting from their inability to agree
upon wages, hours and terms and conditions of employment to be
included in a collective bargaining agreement. Such
arbitration provisions shall be subject to the Illinois
"Uniform Arbitration Act" unless agreed by the parties.
    The duty "to bargain collectively" shall also mean that no
party to a collective bargaining contract shall terminate or
modify such contract, unless the party desiring such
termination or modification:
        (1) serves a written notice upon the other party to the
    contract of the proposed termination or modification 60
    days prior to the expiration date thereof, or in the event
    such contract contains no expiration date, 60 days prior to
    the time it is proposed to make such termination or
    modification;
        (2) offers to meet and confer with the other party for
    the purpose of negotiating a new contract or a contract
    containing the proposed modifications;
        (3) notifies the Board within 30 days after such notice
    of the existence of a dispute, provided no agreement has
    been reached by that time; and
        (4) continues in full force and effect, without
    resorting to strike or lockout, all the terms and
    conditions of the existing contract for a period of 60 days
    after such notice is given to the other party or until the
    expiration date of such contract, whichever occurs later.
    The duties imposed upon employers, employees and labor
organizations by paragraphs (2), (3) and (4) shall become
inapplicable upon an intervening certification of the Board,
under which the labor organization, which is a party to the
contract, has been superseded as or ceased to be the exclusive
representative of the employees pursuant to the provisions of
subsection (a) of Section 9, and the duties so imposed shall
not be construed as requiring either party to discuss or agree
to any modification of the terms and conditions contained in a
contract for a fixed period, if such modification is to become
effective before such terms and conditions can be reopened
under the provisions of the contract.
    Collective bargaining for home care and home health workers
who function as personal care attendants, and personal
assistants, and individual maintenance home health workers
under the Home Services Program shall be limited to the terms
and conditions of employment under the State's control, as
defined in Public Act 93-204 or this amendatory Act of the 97th
General Assembly, as applicable the amendatory Act of the 93rd
General Assembly.
    Collective bargaining for child and day care home providers
under the child care assistance program shall be limited to the
terms and conditions of employment under the State's control,
as defined in this amendatory Act of the 94th General Assembly.
    Notwithstanding any other provision of this Section,
whenever collective bargaining is for the purpose of
establishing an initial agreement following original
certification of units with fewer than 35 employees, with
respect to public employees other than peace officers, fire
fighters, and security employees, the following apply:
        (1) Not later than 10 days after receiving a written
    request for collective bargaining from a labor
    organization that has been newly certified as a
    representative as defined in Section 6(c), or within such
    further period as the parties agree upon, the parties shall
    meet and commence to bargain collectively and shall make
    every reasonable effort to conclude and sign a collective
    bargaining agreement.
        (2) If anytime after the expiration of the 90-day
    period beginning on the date on which bargaining is
    commenced the parties have failed to reach an agreement,
    either party may notify the Illinois Public Labor Relations
    Board of the existence of a dispute and request mediation
    in accordance with the provisions of Section 14 of this
    Act.
        (3) If after the expiration of the 30-day period
    beginning on the date on which mediation commenced, or such
    additional period as the parties may agree upon, the
    mediator is not able to bring the parties to agreement by
    conciliation, either the exclusive representative of the
    employees or the employer may request of the other, in
    writing, arbitration and shall submit a copy of the request
    to the board. Upon submission of the request for
    arbitration, the parties shall be required to participate
    in the impasse arbitration procedures set forth in Section
    14 of this Act, except the right to strike shall not be
    considered waived pursuant to Section 17 of this Act, until
    the actual convening of the arbitration hearing.
(Source: P.A. 96-598, eff. 1-1-10.)
 
    (5 ILCS 315/28 new)
    Sec. 28. Applicability of changes made by amendatory Act of
the 97th General Assembly. Nothing in this amendatory Act of
the 97th General Assembly applies to workers or consumers in
the Home Based Support Services Program in the Department of
Human Services Division of Developmental Disabilities.
 
    Section 10. The Disabled Persons Rehabilitation Act is
amended by changing Section 3 as follows:
 
    (20 ILCS 2405/3)  (from Ch. 23, par. 3434)
    Sec. 3. Powers and duties. The Department shall have the
powers and duties enumerated herein:
    (a) To co-operate with the federal government in the
administration of the provisions of the federal Rehabilitation
Act of 1973, as amended, of the Workforce Investment Act of
1998, and of the federal Social Security Act to the extent and
in the manner provided in these Acts.
    (b) To prescribe and supervise such courses of vocational
training and provide such other services as may be necessary
for the habilitation and rehabilitation of persons with one or
more disabilities, including the administrative activities
under subsection (e) of this Section, and to co-operate with
State and local school authorities and other recognized
agencies engaged in habilitation, rehabilitation and
comprehensive rehabilitation services; and to cooperate with
the Department of Children and Family Services regarding the
care and education of children with one or more disabilities.
    (c) (Blank).
    (d) To report in writing, to the Governor, annually on or
before the first day of December, and at such other times and
in such manner and upon such subjects as the Governor may
require. The annual report shall contain (1) a statement of the
existing condition of comprehensive rehabilitation services,
habilitation and rehabilitation in the State; (2) a statement
of suggestions and recommendations with reference to the
development of comprehensive rehabilitation services,
habilitation and rehabilitation in the State; and (3) an
itemized statement of the amounts of money received from
federal, State and other sources, and of the objects and
purposes to which the respective items of these several amounts
have been devoted.
    (e) (Blank).
    (f) To establish a program of services to prevent
unnecessary institutionalization of persons with Alzheimer's
disease and related disorders or persons in need of long term
care who are established as blind or disabled as defined by the
Social Security Act, thereby enabling them to remain in their
own homes or other living arrangements. Such preventive
services may include, but are not limited to, any or all of the
following:
        (1) home health services;
        (2) home nursing services;
        (3) homemaker services;
        (4) chore and housekeeping services;
        (5) day care services;
        (6) home-delivered meals;
        (7) education in self-care;
        (8) personal care services;
        (9) adult day health services;
        (10) habilitation services;
        (11) respite care; or
        (12) other nonmedical social services that may enable
    the person to become self-supporting.
    The Department shall establish eligibility standards for
such services taking into consideration the unique economic and
social needs of the population for whom they are to be
provided. Such eligibility standards may be based on the
recipient's ability to pay for services; provided, however,
that any portion of a person's income that is equal to or less
than the "protected income" level shall not be considered by
the Department in determining eligibility. The "protected
income" level shall be determined by the Department, shall
never be less than the federal poverty standard, and shall be
adjusted each year to reflect changes in the Consumer Price
Index For All Urban Consumers as determined by the United
States Department of Labor. The standards must provide that a
person may have not more than $10,000 in assets to be eligible
for the services, and the Department may increase the asset
limitation by rule. Additionally, in determining the amount and
nature of services for which a person may qualify,
consideration shall not be given to the value of cash, property
or other assets held in the name of the person's spouse
pursuant to a written agreement dividing marital property into
equal but separate shares or pursuant to a transfer of the
person's interest in a home to his spouse, provided that the
spouse's share of the marital property is not made available to
the person seeking such services.
    The services shall be provided to eligible persons to
prevent unnecessary or premature institutionalization, to the
extent that the cost of the services, together with the other
personal maintenance expenses of the persons, are reasonably
related to the standards established for care in a group
facility appropriate to their condition. These
non-institutional services, pilot projects or experimental
facilities may be provided as part of or in addition to those
authorized by federal law or those funded and administered by
the Illinois Department on Aging.
    Personal care attendants shall be paid:
        (i) A $5 per hour minimum rate beginning July 1, 1995.
        (ii) A $5.30 per hour minimum rate beginning July 1,
    1997.
        (iii) A $5.40 per hour minimum rate beginning July 1,
    1998.
    Solely for the purposes of coverage under the Illinois
Public Labor Relations Act (5 ILCS 315/), personal care
attendants and personal assistants providing services under
the Department's Home Services Program shall be considered to
be public employees, and the State of Illinois shall be
considered to be their employer as of the effective date of
this amendatory Act of the 93rd General Assembly, but not
before. Solely for the purposes of coverage under the Illinois
Public Labor Relations Act, home care and home health workers
who function as personal care attendants, personal assistants,
and individual maintenance home health workers and who also
provide services under the Department's Home Services Program
shall be considered to be public employees, no matter whether
the State provides such services through direct
fee-for-service arrangements, with the assistance of a managed
care organization or other intermediary, or otherwise, and the
State of Illinois shall be considered to be the employer of
those persons as of the effective date of this amendatory Act
of the 97th General Assembly, but not before except as
otherwise provided under this subsection (f). The State shall
engage in collective bargaining with an exclusive
representative of home care and home health workers who
function as personal care attendants, and personal assistants,
and individual maintenance home health workers working under
the Home Services Program concerning their terms and conditions
of employment that are within the State's control. Nothing in
this paragraph shall be understood to limit the right of the
persons receiving services defined in this Section to hire and
fire home care and home health workers who function as personal
care attendants, and personal assistants, and individual
maintenance home health workers working under the Home Services
Program or to supervise them within the limitations set by the
Home Services Program. The State shall not be considered to be
the employer of home care and home health workers who function
as personal care attendants, and personal assistants, and
individual maintenance home health workers working under the
Home Services Program for any purposes not specifically
provided in Public Act 93-204 or this amendatory Act of the
97th General Assembly this amendatory Act of the 93rd General
Assembly, including but not limited to, purposes of vicarious
liability in tort and purposes of statutory retirement or
health insurance benefits. Home care and home health workers
who function as personal Personal care attendants, and personal
assistants, and individual maintenance home health workers and
who also provide services under the Department's Home Services
Program shall not be covered by the State Employees Group
Insurance Act of 1971 (5 ILCS 375/).
    The Department shall execute, relative to the nursing home
prescreening project, as authorized by Section 4.03 of the
Illinois Act on the Aging, written inter-agency agreements with
the Department on Aging and the Department of Public Aid (now
Department of Healthcare and Family Services), to effect the
following: (i) intake procedures and common eligibility
criteria for those persons who are receiving non-institutional
services; and (ii) the establishment and development of
non-institutional services in areas of the State where they are
not currently available or are undeveloped. On and after July
1, 1996, all nursing home prescreenings for individuals 18
through 59 years of age shall be conducted by the Department.
    The Department is authorized to establish a system of
recipient cost-sharing for services provided under this
Section. The cost-sharing shall be based upon the recipient's
ability to pay for services, but in no case shall the
recipient's share exceed the actual cost of the services
provided. Protected income shall not be considered by the
Department in its determination of the recipient's ability to
pay a share of the cost of services. The level of cost-sharing
shall be adjusted each year to reflect changes in the
"protected income" level. The Department shall deduct from the
recipient's share of the cost of services any money expended by
the recipient for disability-related expenses.
    The Department, or the Department's authorized
representative, shall recover the amount of moneys expended for
services provided to or in behalf of a person under this
Section by a claim against the person's estate or against the
estate of the person's surviving spouse, but no recovery may be
had until after the death of the surviving spouse, if any, and
then only at such time when there is no surviving child who is
under age 21, blind, or permanently and totally disabled. This
paragraph, however, shall not bar recovery, at the death of the
person, of moneys for services provided to the person or in
behalf of the person under this Section to which the person was
not entitled; provided that such recovery shall not be enforced
against any real estate while it is occupied as a homestead by
the surviving spouse or other dependent, if no claims by other
creditors have been filed against the estate, or, if such
claims have been filed, they remain dormant for failure of
prosecution or failure of the claimant to compel administration
of the estate for the purpose of payment. This paragraph shall
not bar recovery from the estate of a spouse, under Sections
1915 and 1924 of the Social Security Act and Section 5-4 of the
Illinois Public Aid Code, who precedes a person receiving
services under this Section in death. All moneys for services
paid to or in behalf of the person under this Section shall be
claimed for recovery from the deceased spouse's estate.
"Homestead", as used in this paragraph, means the dwelling
house and contiguous real estate occupied by a surviving spouse
or relative, as defined by the rules and regulations of the
Department of Healthcare and Family Services, regardless of the
value of the property.
    The Department and the Department on Aging shall cooperate
in the development and submission of an annual report on
programs and services provided under this Section. Such joint
report shall be filed with the Governor and the General
Assembly on or before March 30 each year.
    The requirement for reporting to the General Assembly shall
be satisfied by filing copies of the report with the Speaker,
the Minority Leader and the Clerk of the House of
Representatives and the President, the Minority Leader and the
Secretary of the Senate and the Legislative Research Unit, as
required by Section 3.1 of the General Assembly Organization
Act, and filing additional copies with the State Government
Report Distribution Center for the General Assembly as required
under paragraph (t) of Section 7 of the State Library Act.
    (g) To establish such subdivisions of the Department as
shall be desirable and assign to the various subdivisions the
responsibilities and duties placed upon the Department by law.
    (h) To cooperate and enter into any necessary agreements
with the Department of Employment Security for the provision of
job placement and job referral services to clients of the
Department, including job service registration of such clients
with Illinois Employment Security offices and making job
listings maintained by the Department of Employment Security
available to such clients.
    (i) To possess all powers reasonable and necessary for the
exercise and administration of the powers, duties and
responsibilities of the Department which are provided for by
law.
    (j) To establish a procedure whereby new providers of
personal care attendant services shall submit vouchers to the
State for payment two times during their first month of
employment and one time per month thereafter. In no case shall
the Department pay personal care attendants an hourly wage that
is less than the federal minimum wage.
    (k) To provide adequate notice to providers of chore and
housekeeping services informing them that they are entitled to
an interest payment on bills which are not promptly paid
pursuant to Section 3 of the State Prompt Payment Act.
    (l) To establish, operate and maintain a Statewide Housing
Clearinghouse of information on available, government
subsidized housing accessible to disabled persons and
available privately owned housing accessible to disabled
persons. The information shall include but not be limited to
the location, rental requirements, access features and
proximity to public transportation of available housing. The
Clearinghouse shall consist of at least a computerized database
for the storage and retrieval of information and a separate or
shared toll free telephone number for use by those seeking
information from the Clearinghouse. Department offices and
personnel throughout the State shall also assist in the
operation of the Statewide Housing Clearinghouse. Cooperation
with local, State and federal housing managers shall be sought
and extended in order to frequently and promptly update the
Clearinghouse's information.
    (m) To assure that the names and case records of persons
who received or are receiving services from the Department,
including persons receiving vocational rehabilitation, home
services, or other services, and those attending one of the
Department's schools or other supervised facility shall be
confidential and not be open to the general public. Those case
records and reports or the information contained in those
records and reports shall be disclosed by the Director only to
proper law enforcement officials, individuals authorized by a
court, the General Assembly or any committee or commission of
the General Assembly, and other persons and for reasons as the
Director designates by rule. Disclosure by the Director may be
only in accordance with other applicable law.
(Source: P.A. 94-252, eff. 1-1-06; 95-331, eff. 8-21-07.)
 
    Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon
becoming law.