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92nd General Assembly

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Public Act 92-0161

SB534 Enrolled                                 LRB9203271LBgc

    AN ACT concerning hearing instruments.

    Be it enacted by the People of  the  State  of  Illinois,
represented in the General Assembly:

    Section  5.  The  Hearing  Instrument Consumer Protection
Act is amended by changing Section 8 as follows:

    (225 ILCS 50/8) (from Ch. 111, par. 7408)
    Sec. 8.  Applicant qualifications; examination.
    (a)  In   order   to   protect   persons   with   hearing
impairments, the Department shall authorize or shall  conduct
an  appropriate  examination  for persons who dispense, test,
select, recommend, fit, or service hearing instruments.   The
frequency of holding these examinations shall  be  determined
by  the Department by rule.  Those who successfully pass such
an examination  shall  be  issued  a  license  as  a  hearing
instrument  dispenser,  which shall be effective for a 2-year
period.
    (b)  Applicants shall be:
         (1)  at least 18 years of age;
         (2)  of good moral character;
         (3)  a high school graduate or the equivalent;
         (4)  free of contagious or infectious disease; and
         (5)  a citizen or person who has  the  status  as  a
    legal alien.
    Felony  convictions of the applicant and findings against
the applicant involving matters set forth in Sections 17  and
18  shall  be  considered in determining moral character, but
such a conviction or finding  shall  not  make  an  applicant
ineligible to register for examination.
    (c)  Prior  to  engaging  in  the  practice  of  fitting,
dispensing,  or  servicing  hearing instruments, an applicant
shall  demonstrate,  by  means  of  written   and   practical
examinations,  that  such person is qualified to practice the
testing,  selecting,  recommending,  fitting,   selling,   or
servicing  of hearing instruments as defined in this Act.  An
applicant who fails to obtain  a  license  within  12  months
after  passing  both  the  written and practical examinations
must take and pass those examinations again in  order  to  be
eligible to receive a license.
    The  Department  shall, by rule, determine the conditions
under which an individual is examined.
    (d)  Proof of having  met  the  minimum  requirements  of
continuing  education  as  determined  by  the Board shall be
required of all license renewals.    Pursuant  to  rule,  the
continuing  education  requirements may, upon petition to the
Board,  be  waived  in  whole  or  in  part  if  the  hearing
instrument dispenser can demonstrate that he or she served in
the Coast Guard or Armed Forces, had an extreme hardship,  or
obtained  his  or  her  license by examination or endorsement
within the preceding renewal period.
    (e)  Beginning January 1, 2003 2001, persons applying for
an  initial  license  must  demonstrate  having   earned   an
associate   degree  or  its  equivalent  from  an  accredited
institution  of  higher  education   and   meet   the   other
requirements  of  this  Section.   In addition, the applicant
must demonstrate the successful  completion  of  12  semester
hours  or  18  quarter hours of academic undergraduate course
work in an accredited institution consisting  of  3  semester
hours  of  anatomy  and  physiology of the speech and hearing
mechanism, 3 semester hours of hearing  science,  3  semester
hours  of  introduction to audiology, and 3 semester hours of
aural  rehabilitation,  or  the  quarter   hour   equivalent.
Persons licensed before January 1, 2003 2001 who have a valid
license  on  that date may have their license renewed without
meeting the requirements of this subsection.
(Source: P.A. 91-932, eff. 1-1-01.)
    Section 99.  Effective date.  This Act takes effect  upon
becoming law.
    Passed in the General Assembly May 08, 2001.
    Approved July 25, 2001.

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