102ND GENERAL ASSEMBLY
State of Illinois
2021 and 2022
HB0367

 

Introduced 1/29/2021, by Rep. Sonya M. Harper

 

SYNOPSIS AS INTRODUCED:
 
See Index

    Creates the Community Improvement Land Bank Act. Provides for the creation of community improvement land banks by a county, municipality, or township, or any combination of those units, for the main purposes of advancing, encouraging, and promoting the industrial, economic, commercial, and civic development of a community or area and facilitating the reclamation, rehabilitation, and reutilization of vacant, abandoned, tax-foreclosed, or other real property within the county, municipality, or township for whose benefit the land bank is being organized. Provides procedures for creating the community improvement land banks, the powers of a land bank (including to purchase and sell tax delinquent properties), and the creation and composition of the board of directors of land banks. Limits the liability of the community improvement land banks. Allows the county, municipality, or township to have the land bank create a land reutilization program to facilitate the effective reutilization of nonproductive land situated within its boundaries and contains requirements of such a program. Defines terms. Amends various Acts and Codes making conforming changes. Effective Immediately.


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FISCAL NOTE ACT MAY APPLY
HOUSING AFFORDABILITY IMPACT NOTE ACT MAY APPLY

 

 

A BILL FOR

 

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1    AN ACT concerning local government.
 
2    Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
3represented in the General Assembly:
 
4
Article 1. General Provisions.

 
5    Section 1-1. Short title. This Act may be cited as the
6Community Improvement Land Bank Act.
 
7    Section 1-5. Definitions. As used in this Act:
8    "Abandoned property" means real property previously used
9for, or that has the potential to be used for, commercial or
10industrial purposes that reverted to the ownership of the
11State, a county, a municipality, or a township, through
12donation, purchase, tax delinquency, foreclosure, default, or
13settlement, including conveyance by deed in lieu of
14foreclosure; or privately owned property that has been vacant
15for a period of not less than 3 years.
16    "Community improvement land bank" or "land bank" means an
17economic development land bank or a county land reutilization
18land bank.
19    "County land reutilization land bank" means a land bank
20organized for the purposes described in paragraph (2) of
21subsection (a) of Section 5-5.
22    "Economic development land bank" means a land bank

 

 

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1organized for the purposes described in paragraph (1) of
2subsection (a) of Section 5-5.
3    "Delinquent land" means property deemed delinquent under
4Article 21 of the Property Tax Code.
5    "Governmental unit" means a county, municipality, or
6township.
7    "Land reutilization program" means the procedures and
8activities concerning the acquisition, management, and
9disposition of affected delinquent lands set forth in Sections
1010-5 through 10-70.
11    "Land within a reutilization unit's boundaries" means land
12within each county, municipality, or township which created
13the reutilization unit.
14    "Minimum bid" means a bid in an amount equal to the sum of
15the taxes, assessments, charges, penalties, and interest due
16and payable on the parcel as noted in the certificate of
17correctness under Section 21-195 of the Property Tax Code and
18prior to the transfer of the deed of the parcel to the
19purchaser following confirmation of sale, plus the costs of
20foreclosure or forfeiture proceedings against the property.
21    "Nonproductive land" means a parcel of delinquent land
22against which a foreclosure or forfeiture proceeding under
23Article 21 of the Property Tax Code has been instituted and to
24which one of the following criteria applies:
25        (1) there are no buildings or structures located on
26    the land;

 

 

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1        (2) the land is abandoned property;
2        (3) none of the buildings or other structures located
3    on the parcel are occupied, and the county, township, or
4    municipality within whose boundaries the parcel is
5    situated has instituted proceedings for the removal or
6    demolition of such buildings or other structures because
7    of their insecure, unsafe, or structurally defective
8    condition; or
9        (4) none of the buildings or structures located on the
10    parcel are occupied at the time the foreclosure proceeding
11    is initiated, and the municipality, county, township, or
12    reutilization unit determines that the parcel is eligible
13    for acquisition through a land reutilization program.
14    "Occupancy" means the actual, continuous, and exclusive
15use and possession of a parcel by a person having a lawful
16right to such use and possession.
17    "Reutilization unit" means a community improvement land
18bank that has elected to implement a land reutilization
19program under subsection (a) of Section 10-5. A county land
20reutilization land bank is automatically a "reutilization
21unit" for all purposes of this Act, except as otherwise
22provided in this Act.
 
23
Article 5. Community Improvement Land Banks.

 
24    Section 5-5. Community improvement land bank creation.

 

 

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1    (a) A community improvement land bank may be created as
2provided in this Section for the purposes of:
3        (1) advancing, encouraging, and promoting the
4    industrial, economic, commercial, and civic development of
5    a community or area;
6        (2) facilitating the reclamation, rehabilitation, and
7    reutilization of vacant, abandoned, tax-foreclosed, or
8    other real property within the governmental unit for whose
9    benefit the land bank is being organized, but not limited
10    to the purposes described in this paragraph;
11        (3) efficiently holding and managing vacant,
12    abandoned, or tax-foreclosed real property pending its
13    reclamation, rehabilitation, and reutilization;
14        (4) assisting governmental entities and other
15    nonprofit or for-profit persons to assemble, clear, and
16    clear the title of property described in this Act in a
17    coordinated manner; or
18        (5) promoting economic and housing development in the
19    governmental unit or region.
20    (b) A community improvement land bank may be created:
21        (1) by one or more governmental units for the
22    industrial, commercial, distribution, and research
23    development in each governmental unit if each governmental
24    unit has determined that the policy of the governmental
25    unit is to promote the health, safety, morals, and general
26    welfare of its inhabitants through the creation of a

 

 

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1    community improvement land bank;
2        (2) solely by a county as the agency for the
3    reclamation, rehabilitation, and reutilization of vacant,
4    abandoned, tax-foreclosed, or other real property in the
5    county; or
6        (3) by a municipality or township for the reclamation,
7    rehabilitation, and reutilization of vacant, abandoned,
8    tax-foreclosed, or other real property within the
9    municipality or township if the municipality or township
10    enters into an intergovernmental agreement with a county
11    community improvement land bank creating the land bank as
12    the agency of the municipality or township.
13    (c) A land bank shall be created under this Section by
14ordinance or intergovernmental agreement of the governing
15board of the governmental unit. The ordinance or
16intergovernmental agreement may allow the land bank to provide
17any one or more of the following:
18        (1) Prepare a plan for the governmental unit or units
19    of industrial, commercial, distribution, and research
20    development, or of reclamation, rehabilitation, and
21    reutilization of vacant, abandoned, tax-foreclosed, or
22    other real property. The plan shall provide the extent to
23    which the community improvement land bank shall
24    participate in carrying out such plan. The plan shall be
25    confirmed by the governing board or boards of the
26    governmental unit or units. A community improvement land

 

 

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1    bank may insure mortgage payments required by a first
2    mortgage on any industrial, economic, commercial, or civic
3    property for which funds have been loaned by any person,
4    corporation, bank, or financial or lending institution
5    upon such terms and conditions as the community
6    improvement land bank may prescribe. A community
7    improvement land bank may incur debt, mortgage its
8    property acquired under this Section or otherwise, and
9    issue its obligations, for the purpose of acquiring,
10    constructing, improving, and equipping buildings,
11    structures, and other properties, and acquire sites
12    therefor, for lease or sale by the community improvement
13    land bank in order to carry out its participation in such
14    plan. Except for moneys pledged by a unit of local
15    government from revenue from penalties and interest on
16    delinquent real property taxes, any such debt shall be
17    solely that of the land bank and shall not be secured by
18    the pledge of any moneys received or to be received from
19    any governmental units. All revenue bonds issued under
20    this Section are lawful investments of banks, savings and
21    loan associations, deposit guarantee associations, trust
22    companies, trustees, fiduciaries, trustees or other
23    officers having charge of sinking or bond retirement funds
24    of units of local government, and of domestic insurance
25    companies. Not less than two-fifths of the board of
26    directors of a economic development land bank shall be

 

 

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1    composed of mayors, members of city councils, village
2    presidents, village trustees, township supervisors,
3    township trustees, members of county boards or boards of
4    county commissioners, or any other appointed or elected
5    officers of the governmental units, provided that at least
6    one officer from each governmental unit shall be a member
7    of the governing board of the land bank. Membership on the
8    board of directors of a community improvement land bank
9    does not constitute the holding of a public office or
10    employment. The governing board of a county land
11    reutilization land bank shall be comprised of the members
12    set forth in Section 5-15. Membership on such boards of
13    directors shall not constitute an interest, either direct
14    or indirect, in a contract or expenditure of money by any
15    municipality, township, county, or other unit of local
16    government. No member of such a board of directors shall
17    be disqualified from holding any public office or
18    employment, nor shall such member forfeit any such office
19    or employment, by reason of membership on the board of
20    director of a community improvement land bank,
21    notwithstanding any other provision of law.
22        Actions taken under this paragraph (1) shall be in
23    accordance with any applicable planning or zoning
24    regulations.
25        (2) Authorization for the community improvement land
26    bank to sell or to lease any real property or interests in

 

 

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1    real property owned by the governmental unit or units
2    determined from time to time by the governing board or
3    boards of the units not to be required by such
4    governmental unit or units for its purposes, for uses
5    determined by the governing board or boards as those that
6    will promote the welfare of the people of the governmental
7    unit or units, stabilize the economy, provide employment,
8    assist in the development of industrial, commercial,
9    distribution, and research activities to the benefit of
10    the people of the governmental unit or units, will provide
11    additional opportunities for their gainful employment, or
12    will promote the reclamation, rehabilitation, and
13    reutilization of vacant, abandoned, tax-foreclosed, or
14    other real property within the governmental unit or units.
15    The governing board or boards shall specify the
16    consideration for such sale or lease and any other terms.
17    Any determinations made by the governing board or boards
18    under this Act shall be conclusive. The community
19    improvement land bank acting through its officers and on
20    behalf of the governmental unit or units shall execute the
21    necessary instruments, including deeds conveying the title
22    of the governmental unit or units or leases, to accomplish
23    such sale or lease. Such conveyance or lease shall be made
24    without advertising and receipt of bids. A copy of such
25    agreement shall be recorded in the office of the county
26    recorder of deeds of any county in which real property or

 

 

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1    interests in real property to be sold or leased are
2    situated prior to the recording of a deed or lease
3    executed pursuant to such agreement.
4        (3) That the governmental unit or units adopting the
5    ordinance or intergovernmental agreement shall convey to
6    the community improvement land bank real property and
7    interests in real property owned by the governmental unit
8    or units and determined by the governing board or boards
9    thereof not to be required by the governmental unit or
10    units for its purposes and that such conveyance of such
11    real property or interests in real property will promote
12    the welfare of the people of the governmental unit or
13    units, stabilize the economy, provide employment, assist
14    in the development of industrial, commercial,
15    distribution, and research activities to the benefit of
16    the people of the governmental unit or units, provide
17    additional opportunities for their gainful employment or
18    will promote the reclamation, rehabilitation, and
19    reutilization of vacant, abandoned, tax-foreclosed, or
20    other real property in the governmental unit or units, for
21    the consideration and upon the terms established in the
22    ordinance or intergovernmental agreement, and further
23    that, as the agency for development or land reutilization,
24    the community improvement land bank may acquire from
25    others additional real property or interests in real
26    property, and any real property or interests in real

 

 

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1    property so conveyed by it for uses that will promote the
2    welfare of the people of the governmental unit or units,
3    stabilize the economy, provide employment, assist in the
4    development of industrial, commercial, distribution, and
5    research activities required for the people of the
6    governmental unit or units and for their gainful
7    employment or will promote the reclamation,
8    rehabilitation, and reutilization of vacant, abandoned,
9    tax-foreclosed, or other real property in the governmental
10    unit or units. Any conveyance or lease by the governmental
11    unit or units to the community improvement land bank shall
12    be made without advertising and receipt of bids. If any
13    real property or interests in real property conveyed by a
14    governmental unit or units under this Act are sold by the
15    community improvement land bank at a price in excess of
16    the consideration received by the governmental unit or
17    units from the community improvement land bank, such
18    excess shall be paid to such governmental unit or units
19    after deducting, to the extent and in the manner provided
20    in the ordinance or intergovernmental agreement, the costs
21    of such acquisition and sale, taxes, assessments, costs of
22    maintenance, costs of improvements to the real property by
23    the community improvement land bank, service fees, and any
24    debt service charges of the land bank attributable to such
25    real property or interests.
26    Any ordinance or intergovernmental agreement entered into

 

 

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1under this Section may be amended or supplemented from time to
2time by the governmental unit or units.
3    An economic development land bank created under this
4Section shall promote and encourage the establishment and
5growth in such unit of industrial, commercial, distribution,
6and research facilities. A county land reutilization land bank
7created under this Section shall promote the reclamation,
8rehabilitation, and reutilization of vacant, abandoned,
9tax-foreclosed, or other real property in the county.
10    (d) A land bank created under this Section is a unit of
11local government separate from the county, municipality, or
12township that created the land bank.
 
13    Section 5-10. Community improvement land bank powers.
14    (a) A community improvement land bank has the following
15powers in addition to those granted to the land bank under
16Section 5-5:
17        (1) To borrow money for any of the purposes of the
18    community improvement land bank by means of loans, lines
19    of credit, or any other financial instruments or
20    securities, including the issuance of its bonds,
21    debentures, notes, or other evidences of indebtedness,
22    whether secured or unsecured, and to secure the same by
23    mortgage, pledge, deed of trust, or other lien on its
24    property, franchises, rights, and privileges of every kind
25    and nature or any part thereof or interest therein.

 

 

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1        (2) A county land reutilization land bank may request,
2    by resolution, one or more of the following:
3            (A) That the county board or board of county
4        commissioners of the county served by the land bank
5        pledge revenue from penalties and interest on
6        delinquent real property taxes as security for such
7        borrowing by the land bank.
8            (B) If the land subject to reutilization is
9        located within an unincorporated area of the county,
10        that the county board or board of county commissioners
11        issue notes for the purpose of constructing public
12        infrastructure improvements and take other actions as
13        the board determines are in the interest of the county
14        and are authorized under law.
15            (C) If the land subject to reutilization is
16        located within a municipality or township, that the
17        municipality or township issue bonds for the purpose
18        of constructing public infrastructure improvements and
19        take such other actions as the municipality or
20        township determines are in its interest and are
21        authorized under law.
22        (3) To make loans to any person, firm, partnership,
23    land bank, joint stock company, association, or trust, and
24    to establish and regulate the terms and conditions with
25    respect to any such loans; provided that an economic
26    development land bank shall not approve any application

 

 

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1    for a loan unless and until the person applying for said
2    loan shows that the person has applied for the loan
3    through ordinary banking or commercial channels and that
4    the loan has been refused by at least one bank or other
5    financial institution. Nothing in this paragraph shall
6    preclude a county land reutilization land bank from making
7    revolving loans to community development corporations,
8    private entities, or any person for the purposes contained
9    in the land bank's plan under Section 5-5.
10        (4) To purchase, receive, hold, manage, lease,
11    lease-purchase, or otherwise acquire and to sell, convey,
12    transfer, lease, sublease, or otherwise dispose of real
13    and personal property, including, but not limited to, any
14    real or personal property acquired by the community
15    improvement land bank from time to time in the
16    satisfaction of debts or enforcement of obligations, and
17    to enter into contracts with third parties, including the
18    federal government, the State, another unit of local
19    government, or any other entity. A community improvement
20    land bank shall not acquire an interest in real property
21    if such acquisition causes the number of occupied real
22    properties held by the land bank to exceed the greater of
23    either 50 properties or 25% of all real property held by
24    the land bank for reutilization, reclamation, or
25    rehabilitation.
26        As used in this paragraph (4), "occupied real

 

 

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1    properties" includes all real properties where:
2            (A) a building, structure, land, or other
3        improvement that is subject to taxation and that is
4        located on the parcel is physically inhabited as a
5        dwelling;
6            (B) a trade or business is actively being
7        conducted on the parcel by the owner, a tenant, or
8        another party occupying the parcel pursuant to a lease
9        or other legal authority, or in a building, structure,
10        or other improvement that is subject to taxation and
11        that is located on the parcel; or
12            (C) the parcel is inhabited and there are signs
13        that it is undergoing a change in tenancy and remains
14        legally habitable, or that it is undergoing
15        improvements, as indicated by an application for a
16        building permit or other facts indicating that the
17        parcel is experiencing ongoing improvements.
18        (5) To acquire the good will, business, rights, real
19    and personal property, and other assets, or any part
20    thereof or interest therein, of any persons, firms,
21    partnerships, corporations, joint stock companies,
22    associations, or trusts and to assume, undertake, or pay
23    the obligations, debts, and liabilities of any such
24    person, firm, partnership, corporation, joint stock
25    company, association, or trust; to acquire, reclaim,
26    manage, or contract for the management of improved or

 

 

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1    unimproved and underutilized real estate for the purpose
2    of constructing industrial plants, other business
3    establishments, or housing thereon, or causing the same to
4    occur, for the purpose of assembling and enhancing
5    utilization of the real estate, or for the purpose of
6    disposing of such real estate to others in whole or in part
7    for the construction of industrial plants, other business
8    establishments, or housing; and to acquire, reclaim,
9    manage, contract for the management of, construct or
10    reconstruct, alter, repair, maintain, operate, sell,
11    convey, transfer, lease, sublease, or otherwise dispose of
12    industrial plants, business establishments, or housing.
13        (6) To acquire, subscribe for, own, hold, sell,
14    assign, transfer, mortgage, pledge, or otherwise dispose
15    of the stock, shares, bonds, debentures, notes, or other
16    securities and evidences of interest in, or indebtedness
17    of, any person, firm, corporation, joint stock company,
18    association, or trust, and while the owner or holder
19    thereof, to exercise all the rights, powers, and
20    privileges of ownership, including the right to vote
21    therein, provided that no tax revenue, if any, received by
22    a community improvement land bank shall be used for such
23    acquisition or subscription.
24        (7) To mortgage, pledge, or otherwise encumber any
25    property acquired pursuant to the powers contained in
26    paragraph (4), (5), or (6).

 

 

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1        (8) To become a member of or a stockholder in a
2    community or State development corporation or development
3    authority.
4        (9) To serve as an agent for grant applications and
5    for the administration of grants, or to make applications
6    as principal for grants for county land reutilization land
7    banks.
8        (10) To exercise the powers enumerated under Article
9    10.
10        (11) To engage in code enforcement and nuisance
11    abatement, including, but not limited to, cutting grass
12    and weeds, boarding up vacant or abandoned structures, and
13    demolishing condemned structures on properties that are
14    subject to a delinquent tax or assessment lien, or
15    property for which a unit of local government has
16    contracted with a community improvement land bank to
17    provide code enforcement or nuisance abatement assistance.
18        (12) To charge fees or exchange in-kind goods or
19    services for services rendered to units of local
20    government and other persons or entities for whom services
21    are rendered.
22        (13) To employ and provide compensation for an
23    executive director who shall manage the operations of a
24    community improvement land bank and employ others for the
25    benefit of the land bank as approved and funded by the
26    board of directors. No employee of the land bank is or

 

 

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1    shall be deemed to be an employee of the governmental unit
2    whose benefit the land bank is organized solely because
3    the employee is employed by the land bank.
4        (14) To purchase tax certificates at auction,
5    negotiated sale, or from a third party who purchased and
6    is a holder of one or more tax certificates issued under
7    Article 21 of the Property Tax Code.
8        (15) To be assigned a mortgage on real property from a
9    mortgagee in lieu of acquiring such real property subject
10    to a mortgage.
11        (16) To do all acts and things necessary or convenient
12    to carry out the purposes of this Act including, but not
13    limited to, contracting with the federal government, the
14    State, a unit of local government, an elected or appointed
15    official, or any other party, whether nonprofit or
16    for-profit, to provide services to the land bank.
17    (b) The powers enumerated in this Act shall not be
18construed to limit the general powers of a community
19improvement land bank.
20    (c) Ownership of real property by an economic development
21land bank does not constitute public ownership unless the
22economic development land bank has applied for and been
23granted a tax exemption for the property.
 
24    Section 5-15. County land reutilization land bank board of
25directors.

 

 

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1    (a) The board of directors of a county land reutilization
2land bank shall be composed of 5, 7, or 9 members, including
3the county treasurer, at least 2 of the members of the county
4board or board of county commissioners, one representative of
5the largest municipality, based on the population according to
6the most recent federal decennial census, that is located in
7the county, one representative of a township, or, if no
8townships in a county, one representative from an
9unincorporated area of the county, and the remaining members
10selected by the county board members or county commissioners.
11The township representative shall be chosen by a majority of
12the boards of township trustees of townships in the county. At
13least one board member shall have private sector or nonprofit
14experience in rehabilitation or real estate acquisitions. The
15county treasurer and the county board members or county
16commissioners each may appoint one representative to act, as a
17director of the land bank, for each officer at any of the
18meetings of the land bank. Except as may otherwise be
19authorized by the regulations of the land bank, all members of
20the board of directors shall serve without compensation, but
21shall be reimbursed for actual and necessary expenses.
22    (b) At the first meeting of the board of directors of a
23county land reutilization land bank, the board shall adopt
24regulations for governing the land bank, the conduct of its
25affairs, and the management of its property, consistent with
26this Act.
 

 

 

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1    Section 5-20. Annual financial report.
2    (a) Each community improvement land bank shall prepare an
3annual financial report that is prepared according to
4generally accepted accounting principles and is certified by
5the board of directors of the land bank, its treasurer, or
6other chief fiscal officer to the best knowledge and belief of
7those persons certifying the report. The financial report
8shall be filed with the Auditor General within 120 days
9following the last day of the land bank's fiscal year, unless
10the Auditor General extends that deadline. The Auditor General
11may establish terms and conditions for granting any extension
12of that deadline. The financial report shall be published on
13the land bank's web site, or if the land bank does not have a
14web site, on the web site of the county in which the land bank
15is located.
16    Each community improvement land bank shall submit to
17audits by the Auditor General. However, a community
18improvement land bank may request the performance of any of
19those audits by an independent CPA or CPA firm, as those terms
20are defined in the Illinois Public Accounting Act.
21    The Auditor General is authorized to receive and file the
22annual financial reports required by this Section and the
23reports of all audits performed in accordance with this
24Section. The Auditor General shall analyze those annual
25financial reports and the reports of those audits to determine

 

 

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1whether the activities of a community improvement land bank
2involved are in accordance with this Section.
3    (b) If any community improvement land bank fails to
4prepare an annual financial report as required by subsection
5(a) and to file that report with the Auditor General within 90
6after the time prescribed for that filing by subsection (a)
7or, if the Auditor General determines that any community
8improvement land bank cannot be audited and declares it to be
9unauditable and the land bank fails to then prepare an annual
10financial report as required by subsection (a) and to file
11that report with the Auditor General within 90 days after the
12time that the Auditor General declared the land bank to be
13unauditable, the Auditor General shall certify that fact to
14the governmental unit that created the land bank. The
15governmental unit then shall dissolve the community
16improvement land bank involved by adopting a resolution and by
17attaching the certificate of the Auditor General or a true
18copy of it. All of the rights, privileges, and franchises
19conferred upon that community improvement land bank by
20ordinance approving the land bank shall cease. The county
21clerk shall immediately notify that community improvement land
22bank of the action taken. Reinstatement may be accomplished
23within 2 years after the dissolution upon proper filing of all
24delinquent annual financial reports to the satisfaction of the
25Auditor General and the filing of the Auditor General's
26certificate reflecting that satisfaction with the county

 

 

HB0367- 21 -LRB102 00205 AWJ 10207 b

1clerk. That filing may be made by any officer, member,
2creditor, receiver, lessee, or sublessee of the community
3improvement land bank involved, and any such person or agent
4of any such person shall be granted access to the books and
5records of the land bank for that purpose. The rights,
6privileges, and franchises of a community improvement land
7bank whose articles have been reinstated or restored under
8this Act.
 
9    Section 5-25. Dissolution, liquidation, or failure to
10reinstate. If there is a voluntary or involuntary dissolution,
11liquidation, or failure to reinstate a community improvement
12land bank after dissolution of the land bank under Section
135-20, any remaining assets shall be applied as follows:
14        (1) For an economic development land bank, to such
15    civic projects or public charitable purposes in the
16    community or area as may be determined by the board of
17    directors with the approval of the circuit court of the
18    county.
19        (2) For a county land reutilization land bank, as
20    determined by the county board or board of county
21    commissioners with the written approval of the county
22    treasurer. Pending the determination, the remaining assets
23    shall be transferred to the general fund of the county to
24    be held and accounted for in a separate account until
25    applied as determined by the county board or board of

 

 

HB0367- 22 -LRB102 00205 AWJ 10207 b

1    county commissioners. For land banks created under
2    paragraph (3) of subsection (b) of Section 5-5, the
3    remaining assets shall be distributed as provided by the
4    intergovernmental agreement.
 
5    Section 5-30. Confidentiality of information; open
6meetings.
7    (a) After a community improvement land bank is created
8under Section 5-5, the following apply:
9        (1) Financial and proprietary information, including
10    trade secrets, submitted by or on behalf of an entity to
11    the community improvement land bank in connection with the
12    relocation, location, expansion, improvement, or
13    preservation of the business of that entity, or in the
14    pursuit of any one or more of the purposes under this Act
15    is confidential information and is not a public record
16    subject to the Freedom of Information Act.
17        (2) Any other information submitted by or on behalf of
18    an entity to the community improvement land bank in
19    connection with the relocation, location, expansion,
20    improvement, or preservation of the business of that
21    entity held or kept by the community improvement land
22    bank, or by any governmental unit for which the community
23    improvement land bank is acting as agent, is confidential
24    information and is not a public record subject to the
25    Freedom of Information Act, until the entity commits in

 

 

HB0367- 23 -LRB102 00205 AWJ 10207 b

1    writing to proceed with the relocation, location,
2    expansion, improvement, preservation of its business, or
3    other purpose under this Act.
4    (b) When the board of directors of a community improvement
5land bank or any committee or subcommittee of such a board
6meets to consider information that is not a public record
7pursuant to subsection (a), the board, committee, or
8subcommittee, by majority vote of all members present, may
9close the meeting during consideration of the confidential
10information. The board, committee, or subcommittee shall
11consider no other information during the closed session.
12    (c) Except as provided in subsection (b), all meetings
13shall be open to the public.
 
14    Section 5-35. Community improvement land banks in
15redevelopment project areas. The board of directors of a
16community improvement land bank in which all or a part of a
17redevelopment project area, created pursuant to the Tax
18Increment Allocation Redevelopment Act, is located may accept
19funds from the special tax allocation fund from the
20municipality that created the redevelopment project area. The
21board shall use all such contributions to promote the
22redevelopment project area to potential business patrons, to
23recruit businesses to relocate or expand to the redevelopment
24project area, and to attract and promote events and activities
25that generate revenue or enhance public welfare within the

 

 

HB0367- 24 -LRB102 00205 AWJ 10207 b

1redevelopment project area. The board shall periodically
2report to the city council of the municipality on the
3expenditure of the contributions and plans for the utilization
4of future contributions. If any contributions received by a
5community improvement land bank under this Section remain
6after the dissolution or expiration of the redevelopment
7project area, the board shall pay the remaining amount to the
8contributing municipality, which shall credit the money to its
9general fund.
 
10    Section 5-40. Immunity of community improvement land
11banks. A community improvement land bank is not liable for
12civil or other damages as a result of conduct, other than
13willful or wanton misconduct, in connection with a parcel of
14land acquired by the community improvement land bank under
15this Act, including, but not limited to, a violation of
16permit, license, variance, or plan approval requirements.
 
17
Article 10. Land Reutilization Program.

 
18    Section 10-5. Procedures to facilitate reutilization of
19nonproductive land.
20    (a) A governmental unit may elect to have the community
21improvement land bank facilitate the effective reutilization
22of nonproductive land situated within its boundaries as
23provided in this Article. The ordinance or intergovernmental

 

 

HB0367- 25 -LRB102 00205 AWJ 10207 b

1agreement creating the community improvement land bank under
2this Article shall also state that: (i) the existence of
3nonproductive land within its boundaries is such as to
4necessitate the implementation of a land reutilization program
5to foster either the return of such nonproductive land to tax
6revenue generating status or the devotion thereof to public
7use; and (ii) the county auditor, or the county clerk if the
8county does not have an auditor, shall prepare delinquent
9property tax ledgers for the community improvement land bank.
10    (b) If a governmental unit designates a community
11improvement land bank as a reutilization unit under subsection
12(a), the powers extended to the land bank under this Article
13shall be construed as additional powers.
14    (c) A governmental unit shall promptly deliver certified
15copies of such ordinance to the county auditor, or, if none,
16the county clerk, and treasurer of each county in which the
17reutilization unit is situated. On and after the effective
18date of such ordinance, the foreclosure, sale, management, and
19disposition of all nonproductive land within the reutilization
20unit's boundaries shall be governed by the procedures set
21forth in this Article.
22    (d) If a county land reutilization land bank and a
23municipality or township enters into an intergovernmental
24agreement to implement a land reutilization program within the
25boundaries of the municipality or township through the county
26land reutilization land bank for the purposes of this Article,

 

 

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1any property acquired by a county land reutilization land bank
2under such an intergovernmental agreement, other than the tax
3foreclosure procedures, shall be subject to a priority right
4of acquisition by the municipality or township in which the
5property is located for a period of 30 days after the county
6land reutilization land bank first records the deed evidencing
7acquisition of such property with the county recorder. A
8municipality or township claiming a priority right of
9acquisition shall file, and the county recorder shall record,
10an instrument evidencing such right within the 30-day period.
11The instrument shall include the name and address of the
12applicable municipality or township, the parcel or other
13identifying number, and an affirmative statement by the
14municipality or township that it intends to acquire the
15property. If the municipality or township records such an
16instrument within the 30-day period, then the priority right
17of acquisition shall be effective for a period of 90 days after
18the instrument is recorded. If the municipality or township
19does not record the instrument expressing its intent to
20acquire the property or, if having timely recorded such
21instrument does not thereafter acquire and record a deed
22within the 90-day period following the recording of its intent
23to acquire the property, then the county land reutilization
24land bank may dispose of such property free and clear of any
25claim or interest of such municipality or township. If a
26municipality or township does not record an instrument of

 

 

HB0367- 27 -LRB102 00205 AWJ 10207 b

1intent to acquire property within the 30-day period, or if a
2municipality or township, after timely recording an instrument
3of intent to acquire a parcel, does not thereafter acquire the
4parcel within 90 days and record a deed subsequently with the
5county recorder, the municipality or township has no
6statutory, legal, or equitable claim or estate in property
7acquired by the county land reutilization land bank. This
8Section shall not be construed to constitute an exception to
9free and clear title to the property held by a county land
10reutilization land bank or any of its subsequent transferees,
11or to preclude a county land reutilization land bank and any
12municipality or township from entering into an agreement that
13disposes of property on terms to which they may thereafter
14mutually agree.
 
15    Section 10-10. Sale of nonproductive delinquent land to
16reutilization unit.
17    (a) On and after the effective date of an ordinance or
18intergovernmental agreement adopted pursuant to Section 10-5,
19nonproductive land within a reutilization unit's boundaries
20that the unit wishes to acquire and that has either been
21advertised and offered for sale or is otherwise available for
22acquisition pursuant to a foreclosure proceeding as provided
23in Article 21 of the Property Tax Code, but is not sold for
24want of a minimum bid, shall be sold or transferred to the
25reutilization unit in the manner set forth in this Section and

 

 

HB0367- 28 -LRB102 00205 AWJ 10207 b

1Article 21 of the Property Tax Code.
2    (b) Upon receipt of an ordinance under Section 10-5, the
3county auditor or county clerk shall compile and deliver to
4the reutilization unit the delinquent property tax ledger of
5land within the reutilization unit of which a foreclosure
6proceeding under Article 21 of the Property Tax Code has been
7instituted and is pending. The county auditor or county clerk
8shall notify the reutilization unit of the identity of all
9delinquent land within the reutilization unit whenever a
10foreclosure proceeding pursuant to Article 21 of the Property
11Tax Code is commenced with respect to that land that is not on
12the delinquent property tax ledger last sent to the
13reutilization unit.
14    (c) The reutilization unit may select from the delinquent
15property tax ledger the delinquent lands that constitute
16nonproductive lands that it will acquire and shall notify the
17county collector of its selection prior to the advertisement
18and sale of the nonproductive lands. Selected nonproductive
19lands subject to such foreclosure or forfeiture proceedings
20that require a sale shall be advertised for sale and be sold,
21without appraisal, as provided in Article 21 of the Property
22Tax Code. Except for properties being redeemed under Division
237 of Article 21 of the Property Tax Code, all nonproductive
24lands so selected, when advertised for sale pursuant to a
25foreclosure proceeding, shall be advertised separately from
26the advertisement applicable to other delinquent lands. The

 

 

HB0367- 29 -LRB102 00205 AWJ 10207 b

1minimum amount for which selected nonproductive lands will be
2sold, including those lands subject to a foreclosure
3proceeding, as specified in the advertisement for sale, shall
4equal the sum of the taxes, assessments, charges, penalties,
5interest, and costs due on the parcel as determined under
6Article 21 of the Property Tax Code. The advertisement
7relating to the selected nonproductive lands also shall
8include a statement that the lands have been determined by the
9reutilization unit to be nonproductive lands and that, if no
10bid for the appropriate amount specified in this Section is
11received, such lands shall be sold or transferred to the
12reutilization unit.
13    (d) If any nonproductive land selected by a reutilization
14unit is advertised and offered for sale at one sale pursuant to
15this Section but is not sold for want of a minimum bid, the
16reutilization unit that selected the nonproductive land shall
17be deemed to have submitted the winning bid at such sale, and
18the land is deemed sold to the reutilization unit for no
19consideration other than the amounts charged under subsection
20(e) and (f). If more than one reutilization unit selects the
21same parcel or parcels of land, the unit that first notifies
22the county collector of such selection shall be the
23reutilization unit deemed to have submitted the winning bid
24under this Section. The county collector conducting the sale
25shall announce the bid of the reutilization unit at the sale
26and shall report the proceedings to the court for confirmation

 

 

HB0367- 30 -LRB102 00205 AWJ 10207 b

1of sale.
2    (e) Upon the sale or transfer of any nonproductive land to
3a reutilization unit, the county collector shall charge the
4costs, as determined by the court, incurred in the foreclosure
5proceeding instituted under Article 21 of the Property Tax
6Code and applicable to the nonproductive land to the taxing
7districts, including the reutilization unit, in direct
8proportion to their interest in the taxes, assessments,
9charges, penalties, and interest on the nonproductive land due
10and payable at the time the land was sold pursuant to the
11foreclosure proceeding. The interest of each taxing district
12in the taxes, assessments, charges, penalties, and interest on
13the nonproductive land shall bear the same proportion to the
14amount of those taxes, assessments, charges, penalties, and
15interest that the amount of taxes levied by each district
16against the nonproductive land in the preceding tax year bears
17to the taxes levied by all such districts against the
18nonproductive land in the preceding tax year, except that the
19reutilization unit shall be deemed to have the proportionate
20interest of the governmental unit or units that created the
21reutilization unit in the taxes, assessments, charges,
22penalties, and interest on the nonproductive land in that
23governmental unit or units. The collector shall retain at the
24next apportionment the amount charged to each such taxing
25district, except that in the case of nonproductive land sold
26or transferred to a reutilization unit, the auditor shall

 

 

HB0367- 31 -LRB102 00205 AWJ 10207 b

1provide an invoice to the reutilization unit for the amount
2charged to it.
3    (f) The county collector conducting the sale shall execute
4and record a deed conveying title to the land upon the filing
5of the entry of the confirmation of sale, unless the
6nonproductive land is redeemed under Division 7 of Article 21
7of the Property Tax Code. Once the deed has been recorded, the
8collector shall deliver the deed to the reutilization unit;
9thereupon, title to the land is incontestable in the
10reutilization unit and free and clear of all liens and
11encumbrances, except those easements and covenants of record
12running with the land and created prior to the time at which
13the taxes or assessments, for the nonpayment of which the land
14is sold or transferred at foreclosure, became due and payable.
15    When title to a parcel of land upon which a lien has been
16placed under Article 21 of the Property Tax Code is
17transferred to a reutilization unit under this Section, the
18lien on the parcel shall be extinguished if the lien is for
19costs or charges that were incurred before the date of the
20transfer to the unit and if the unit did not incur the costs or
21charges, regardless of whether the lien was attached or the
22costs or charges were certified before the date of transfer.
23In such a case, the unit and its successors in title shall take
24title to the property free and clear of any such lien and shall
25be immune from liability in any action to collect such costs or
26charges.

 

 

HB0367- 32 -LRB102 00205 AWJ 10207 b

1    If a reutilization unit takes title to property under this
2Section before any costs or charges have been certified or any
3lien has been placed with respect to the property under
4Article 21 of the Property Tax Code, the unit shall be deemed a
5bona fide purchaser for value without knowledge of such costs
6or lien, regardless of whether the unit had actual or
7constructive knowledge of the costs or lien, and any such lien
8shall be void and unenforceable against the unit and its
9successors in title.
10    At the time of the sale or transfer, the collector shall
11collect and the reutilization unit shall pay the fee required
12by law for transferring and recording of deeds.
13    The title is not invalid because of any irregularity,
14informality, or omission of any proceeding or in any processes
15of taxation if such irregularity, informality, or omission
16does not abrogate any provision for notice to holders of
17title, lien, or mortgage to, or other interests in, the
18foreclosed lands.
 
19    Section 10-15. Petition to vacate transfer of delinquent
20land by reutilization unit.
21    (a) If, in any foreclosure proceeding initiated under
22Article 21 of the Property Tax Code, a county board of review
23or circuit court issues an order of foreclosure, order of
24sale, or confirmation of sale that transfers a delinquent land
25to a reutilization unit, the reutilization unit may file a

 

 

HB0367- 33 -LRB102 00205 AWJ 10207 b

1petition with the board or court to vacate the order or
2confirmation of sale on the basis that such reutilization unit
3does not wish to acquire the land. The reutilization unit may
4file such a petition notwithstanding any prior request by the
5reutilization unit or a party acting on behalf of the
6reutilization unit to acquire the land.
7    If the reutilization unit files the petition within 60
8days after the order or confirmation of sale, the board or
9court shall vacate the order or confirmation of sale. If the
10reutilization unit files the petition more than 60 days after
11the order or confirmation of sale, the board or court may
12vacate the order or confirmation of sale at its discretion
13based upon clerical mistakes; mistake, inadvertence, surprise,
14or excusable neglect; newly discovered evidence which by due
15diligence could not have been discovered in time for the prior
16proceedings; fraud, misrepresentation, or other misconduct of
17an adverse party; or any other reason justifying relief from
18the judgment.
19    (b) A reutilization unit that files a petition under
20subsection (a) shall not be required to intervene in the
21proceeding to which the petition relates, but shall file the
22petition in the same manner as would a party to the action.
23Upon filing the petition, the reutilization unit shall serve
24notice of the petition upon all parties to the action, except
25any party that previously failed to answer, plead, or appear
26in the proceeding or that is deemed to be in default.

 

 

HB0367- 34 -LRB102 00205 AWJ 10207 b

1    (c) Upon the vacation of a order or confirmation of sale
2under subsection (a), the circuit court or board of review
3shall reinstate the proceeding and schedule any further
4hearing or disposition required by law. The court or board
5shall not issue any further order or confirmation of sale
6transferring the delinquent land to the reutilization unit
7unless the reutilization unit petitions the court or board to
8acquire the land under Section 10-10 at least 7 days before a
9scheduled final hearing or sale of the land pursuant to the
10proceeding. In such a case, the reutilization unit shall not
11file, and the court or board shall not approve, any subsequent
12petition to vacate a order or confirmation of sale
13transferring the land to the reutilization unit.
 
14    Section 10-20. Selection of forfeited lands that
15constitute nonproductive lands that reutilization unit wishes
16to acquire.
17    (a) Upon receipt of an ordinance adopted pursuant to
18Section 10-5, the county auditor or county clerk shall include
19in the delinquent tax ledger a list of all delinquent lands
20within a reutilization unit's boundaries that have been
21forfeited to the State pursuant to Article 21 of the Property
22Tax Code and thereafter shall notify the reutilization unit of
23any additions to or deletions from such list.
24    The reutilization unit may select from such lists the
25forfeited lands that constitute nonproductive lands that the

 

 

HB0367- 35 -LRB102 00205 AWJ 10207 b

1unit wishes to acquire, and shall notify the county collector
2of its selection prior to the advertisement and sale of such
3lands. The selected nonproductive lands shall be advertised
4for sale and be sold to the highest bidder for an amount at
5least sufficient to pay the amount determined under Article 21
6of the Property Tax Code. All nonproductive lands forfeited to
7the State and selected by a reutilization unit, when
8advertised for sale pursuant to the relevant procedures, shall
9be advertised separately from the advertisement applicable to
10other forfeited lands. The advertisement relating to the
11selected nonproductive lands also shall include a statement
12that the lands have been selected by the reutilization unit as
13nonproductive lands that it wishes to acquire and that, if at
14the forfeiture sale no bid for the sum of the taxes,
15assessments, charges, penalties, interest, and costs due on
16the parcel is received, the lands shall be sold to the
17reutilization unit.
18    (b) If any nonproductive land that has been forfeited to
19the State and selected by a reutilization unit is advertised
20and offered for sale by the collector pursuant to Article 21 of
21the Property Tax Code, but no minimum bid is received, the
22reutilization unit shall be deemed to have submitted the
23winning bid, and the land is deemed sold to the reutilization
24unit for no consideration other than the fee charged under
25subsection (c). If more than one reutilization unit selects
26the same parcel or parcels of land, the reutilization unit

 

 

HB0367- 36 -LRB102 00205 AWJ 10207 b

1deemed to have submitted the winning bid under this subsection
2shall be determined as provided in subsection (d) of Section
310-10.
4    The collector shall announce the bid at the sale and shall
5declare the selected nonproductive land to be sold to the
6reutilization unit. The land shall be sold and transferred to
7the reutilization unit as provided in Section 21 of the
8Property Tax Code.
9    (c) Upon transfer of the nonproductive land to the
10reutilization unit under subsection (b), all previous title is
11extinguished, and the title in the reutilization unit is
12incontestable and free and clear from all liens and
13encumbrances, except taxes and special assessments that are
14not due at the time of the sale and any easements and covenants
15of record running with the land and created prior to the time
16at which the taxes or assessments, for the nonpayment of which
17the nonproductive land was forfeited, became due and payable.
18    When title to a parcel of land upon which a lien has been
19placed under Article 21 of the Property Tax Code is
20transferred to a reutilization unit under this Section, the
21lien on the parcel shall be extinguished if the lien is for
22costs or charges that were incurred before the date of the
23transfer to the unit and if the unit did not incur the costs or
24charges, regardless of whether the lien was attached or the
25costs or charges were certified before the date of transfer.
26In such a case, the unit and its successors in title shall take

 

 

HB0367- 37 -LRB102 00205 AWJ 10207 b

1title to the property free and clear of any such lien and shall
2be immune from liability in any action to collect such costs or
3charges.
4    If a reutilization unit takes title to property before any
5costs or charges have been certified or any lien has been
6placed with respect to the property under Article 21 of the
7Property Tax Code, the unit shall be deemed a bona fide
8purchaser for value without knowledge of such costs or lien,
9regardless of whether the unit had actual or constructive
10knowledge of the costs or lien, and any such lien shall be void
11and unenforceable against the unit and its successors in
12title.
13    At the time of the sale, the collector shall collect and
14the reutilization unit shall pay the fee required by law for
15transferring and recording of deeds, incurred in any
16proceeding instituted under Article 21 of the Property Tax
17Code or incurred as a result of the forfeiture and sale of the
18nonproductive land to the taxing districts, including the
19reutilization unit, in direct proportion to their interest in
20the taxes, assessments, charges, interest, and penalties on
21the nonproductive land due and payable at the time the land was
22sold at the forfeiture sale. The interest of each taxing
23district in the taxes, assessments, charges, penalties, and
24interest on the nonproductive land shall bear the same
25proportion to the amount of those taxes, assessments, charges,
26penalties, and interest that the amount of taxes levied by

 

 

HB0367- 38 -LRB102 00205 AWJ 10207 b

1each district against the nonproductive land in the preceding
2tax year bears to the taxes levied by all such districts
3against the nonproductive land in the preceding tax year,
4except that the reutilization unit shall be deemed to have the
5proportionate interest of the governmental unit or units that
6created the reutilization unit in the taxes, assessments,
7charges, penalties, and interest on the nonproductive land in
8the governmental unit or units. The collector shall retain at
9the next apportionment the amount charged to each such taxing
10district, except that in the case of nonproductive land
11conveyed to a reutilization unit the collector shall invoice
12the unit the amount charged to it.
13    (d) If no unit of local government, including a
14reutilization unit, has requested to purchase a parcel of land
15at a foreclosure sale, any lands otherwise forfeited to the
16State for want of a bid at the foreclosure sale may, upon the
17request of a reutilization unit, be transferred directly to
18the reutilization unit without appraisal or public bidding.
 
19    Section 10-25. Title to land incontestable after one year
20from recording of deed. Whenever nonproductive land is sold
21under Section 10-10, 10-15, or 10-20 to a reutilization unit,
22no action shall be commenced, nor shall any defense be
23asserted, after one year from the date the deed conveying such
24land to the reutilization unit is recorded, to question the
25validity of the title vested in the reutilization unit by such

 

 

HB0367- 39 -LRB102 00205 AWJ 10207 b

1sale for any irregularity, informality, or omission in the
2proceedings relative to the foreclosure, forfeiture, or sale
3of such nonproductive land to the reutilization unit.
 
4    Section 10-30. Land management in the reutilization
5program. A reutilization unit, other than a county land
6reutilization land bank, shall assume possession and control
7of any nonproductive land acquired by it under Section 10-10,
810-15, 10-20, or 10-50 and any other land it acquires as a part
9of its land reutilization program. The reutilization unit
10shall hold and administer such property for the benefit of
11itself and of other taxing districts having an interest in the
12taxes, assessments, charges, interest, and penalties due and
13owing thereon at the time of the property's acquisition by the
14reutilization unit. In its administration of such
15nonproductive land as a part of a land reutilization program,
16the reutilization unit shall:
17        (1) Manage, maintain, and protect, or temporarily use
18    for a public purpose such land in such manner as it deems
19    appropriate.
20        (2) Compile and maintain a written inventory of all
21    such land. The inventory shall be available for public
22    inspection and distribution at all times.
23        (3) Study, analyze, and evaluate potential, present,
24    and future uses for such land which would provide for the
25    effective reutilization of the nonproductive land.

 

 

HB0367- 40 -LRB102 00205 AWJ 10207 b

1        (4) Plan for, and use its best efforts to consummate,
2    the sale or other disposition of such land at such times
3    and upon such terms and conditions as it deems appropriate
4    to the fulfillment of the purposes and objectives of its
5    land reutilization program.
6        (5) Establish and maintain records and accounts
7    reflecting all transactions, expenditures, and revenues
8    relating to its land reutilization program, including
9    separate itemizations of all transactions, expenditures,
10    and revenues concerning each individual parcel of real
11    property acquired as a part of such program.
 
12    Section 10-35. Sale of land acquired in land reutilization
13program.
14    (a) As used in this Section, "fair market value" means the
15appraised value of the nonproductive land made with reference
16to such redevelopment and reutilization restrictions as may be
17imposed by the reutilization unit as a condition of sale or as
18may be otherwise applicable to such land.
19    (b) A reutilization unit may, without competitive bidding,
20sell any land acquired by it as a part of its land
21reutilization program at such times, to such persons, and upon
22such terms and conditions, and subject to such restrictions
23and covenants as it deems necessary or appropriate to assure
24the land's effective reutilization. Such land shall be sold at
25not less than its fair market value. However, upon the

 

 

HB0367- 41 -LRB102 00205 AWJ 10207 b

1approval of the governing boards of those taxing districts
2entitled to share in the proceeds from the sale thereof, the
3reutilization unit may either retain such land for devotion by
4it to public use, or sell, lease, or otherwise transfer any
5such land to another unit of local government for the devotion
6to public use by such unit of local government for a
7consideration less than fair market value.
8    Whenever a reutilization unit sells any land acquired as
9part of its land reutilization program for an amount equal to
10or greater than fair market value, it shall execute and
11deliver all agreements and instruments incident thereto. The
12reutilization unit may execute and deliver all agreements and
13instruments without procuring any approval, consent,
14conveyance, or other instrument from any other person or
15entity, including the other taxing districts entitled to share
16in the proceeds from the sale thereof.
17    A reutilization unit may, for purposes of land
18disposition, consolidate, assemble, or subdivide individual
19parcels of land acquired as part of its land reutilization
20program.
 
21    Section 10-40. Disposing of proceeds of sale. When a
22reutilization unit sells any land acquired as a part of its
23land reutilization program, the proceeds from such sale shall
24be applied and distributed in the following order:
25        (1) To the reutilization unit in reimbursement of its

 

 

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1    expenses incurred on account of the acquisition,
2    administration, management, maintenance, and disposition
3    of such land, and such other expenses of the land
4    reutilization program as the reutilization unit may
5    apportion to such land.
6        (2) To the county treasurer to reimburse those taxing
7    districts to which the county auditor charged the costs of
8    foreclosure pursuant to Section 10-15, or costs of
9    forfeiture pursuant to Section 10-20. If the proceeds of
10    the sale of the nonproductive lands, after making the
11    payment required under this Section, are not sufficient to
12    reimburse the full amounts charged to taxing districts as
13    costs under Section 10-15 or 10-20, the balance of the
14    proceeds shall be used to reimburse the taxing districts
15    in the same proportion as the costs were charged.
16        (3) To the county treasurer for distribution to the
17    taxing districts charged costs under Section 10-15 or
18    10-20, in the same proportion as they were charged costs
19    by the county collector, an amount representing both of
20    the following:
21            (A) the taxes, assessments, charges, penalties,
22        and interest due and owing on such land as of the date
23        of acquisition by the reutilization unit; and
24            (B) the taxes, assessments, charges, penalties,
25        and interest that would have been due and payable with
26        respect to such land from such date of acquisition

 

 

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1        were such land not exempt from taxation pursuant to
2        Section 10-55.
3        (4) The balance, if any, to be retained by the
4    reutilization unit for application to the payment of costs
5    and expenses of its land reutilization program.
 
6    Section 10-45. Committee of representatives of taxing
7districts; neighborhood advisory committee.
8    (a) A reutilization unit shall keep all taxing districts
9having an interest in the taxes, assessments, charges,
10interest, and penalties on the real property acquired as part
11of the land reutilization program informed concerning the
12administration of its land reutilization program and may
13establish a committee comprised of a representative of each
14such taxing district. Each member of the committee shall be
15appointed by, and serve at the pleasure of, the taxing
16district the member represents. A representative may be an
17employee of the taxing district. All members shall serve
18without compensation. The committee may meet in person or by
19electronic or telephonic means, at the discretion of the
20reutilization unit, at least annually to review the operations
21of the land reutilization program and to advise the
22reutilization unit concerning any matter relating to such
23program which comes before the committee.
24    (b) A reutilization unit, as a part of its land
25reutilization program, may establish separate neighborhood

 

 

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1advisory committees consisting of persons living or owning
2property within each neighborhood affected by the program. The
3reutilization unit shall determine the boundaries of each
4neighborhood and which neighborhoods are affected by the
5program. Each neighborhood advisory committee shall be
6appointed by the chief executive officer of the reutilization
7unit for 2-year overlapping terms and shall be composed of at
8least 3 persons. The reutilization unit shall consult with
9each neighborhood advisory committee at least annually to
10review the operations of the land reutilization program and to
11receive the advice of the members of the neighborhood advisory
12committee concerning any matter relating to the program which
13comes before the committees, including a specific interim use
14plan for the land.
 
15    Section 10-50. Accepting conveyance in lieu of
16foreclosure. A reutilization unit may accept a conveyance in
17lieu of foreclosure of delinquent land from the owners
18thereof. Such conveyance may only be accepted with the consent
19of the county collector if acting under foreclosure or
20forfeiture proceedings under Article 21 of the Property Tax
21Code. If a reutilization unit certifies to the collector in
22writing that the delinquent land is abandoned property, the
23collector shall consent to the conveyance. If the
24reutilization unit does not certify to the collector in
25writing that the delinquent land is abandoned property, the

 

 

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1collector may consent to the conveyance for any purpose
2authorized in this Article. The owners or the reutilization
3unit shall pay, as agreed between the owner and reutilization
4unit, all expenses incurred by the county in connection with
5any foreclosure or forfeiture proceeding filed pursuant to
6Article 21 of the Property Tax Code relative to such land. The
7owner shall present the reutilization unit with satisfactory
8evidence that the reutilization unit will obtain by such
9conveyance fee simple title to such delinquent land. Unless
10otherwise agreed to by the reutilization unit accepting the
11conveyance, the title shall be free and clear of all liens and
12encumbrances, except such easements and covenants of record
13running with the land as were created prior to the time of the
14conveyance and delinquent taxes, assessments, penalties,
15interest, and charges, and taxes and special assessments that
16are a lien on the real property at the time of the conveyance.
17    Real property acquired by a reutilization unit under this
18Section shall not be subject to foreclosure or forfeiture
19under Article 21 of the Property Tax Code. The sale or other
20transfer, as authorized by Section 10-35, of real property
21acquired under this Section shall extinguish the lien on the
22title for all taxes, assessments, penalties, interest, and
23charges delinquent at the time of the conveyance of the
24delinquent land to the reutilization unit.
 
25    Section 10-55. Tax exemption for lands acquired. All lands

 

 

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1acquired and held by a reutilization unit pursuant to this
2Article shall be deemed real property used for a public
3purpose and shall be exempt from taxation until sold.
 
4    Section 10-60. Discontinuing land reutilization program. A
5reutilization unit may discontinue its land reutilization
6program at any time by repealing the provisions of the
7ordinance enacted under Section 10-5 establishing the program,
8but it shall continue to be governed by the procedures set
9forth in this Article concerning the administration and
10disposition of real property acquired as a part of its land
11reutilization program until all such lands have been sold or
12otherwise transferred and the proceeds thereof distributed in
13compliance with this Article.
 
14    Section 10-65. Public auction of land after 15 years. Real
15property acquired and held by a reutilization unit pursuant to
16this Article that is not sold or otherwise transferred within
1715 years after such acquisition shall be offered for sale at
18public auction during the 16th year after acquisition. If the
19real property is not sold at that time, it may be disposed of
20or retained for any lawful purpose without further application
21of this Article.
22    Notice of the sale shall contain a description of each
23parcel, the parcel number, and the full street address when
24available. The notice shall be published once a week for 3

 

 

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1consecutive weeks prior to the sale in a newspaper of general
2circulation within the reutilization unit.
3    Each parcel, subsequent to the 15th year after its
4acquisition as part of a land reutilization program, shall be
5sold for an amount not less than the greater of:
6        (A) two-thirds of its fair market value; or
7        (B) the total amount of accrued taxes, assessments,
8    penalties, interest, charges, and costs incurred by the
9    reutilization unit in the acquisition, maintenance, and
10    disposal of each parcel and the parcel's share of the
11    costs and expenses of the land reutilization program.
 
12    Section 10-70. Removing unpaid taxes and assessments from
13tax lists after purchase.
14    (a) When a reutilization unit purchases nonproductive land
15under Section 10-10, 10-15, or 10-20, the county collector
16shall remove from the collector's tax lists and duplicates all
17taxes, assessments, charges, penalties, and interest that are
18due and payable on the land at the time of the sale in the same
19manner as if the property had been sold to any other buyer at
20the foreclosure or forfeiture sale.
21    (b) The county collector shall certify to a reutilization
22unit, other than a county land reutilization land bank, that
23purchases nonproductive land under Section 10-10, 10-15, or
2410-20 a record of all of the taxes, assessments, charges,
25interest, and penalties that were due on the parcel at the time

 

 

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1of the sale; the taxing districts to which they were owed; and
2the proportion of that amount that was owed to each taxing
3district. Except with respect to a county land reutilization
4land bank, the certification shall be used by such a
5reutilization unit in distributing the proceeds of any sale of
6the land in accordance with subparagraph (A) of paragraph (3)
7of Section 10-40.
 
8    Section 10-75. Acquisition of tax-delinquent real property
9for redevelopment free from lien for delinquent taxes.
10    (a) As used in this Section:
11        "Delinquent taxes" means the cumulative amount of
12    unpaid taxes, assessments, recoupment charges, penalties,
13    and interest charged against eligible delinquent land that
14    became delinquent before transfer of title to a
15    reutilization unit.
16        "Eligible delinquent land" means delinquent land
17    included in a delinquent tax ledger under Section 21-11 of
18    the Property Tax Code, excluding land for which a
19    certificate of purchase has been made and delivered under
20    Section 21-250 of the Property Tax Code.
21        "Foreclosure costs" means the sum of all costs or
22    other charges of publication, service of notice,
23    prosecution, or other proceedings against the land under
24    Article 21 of the Property Tax Code as may pertain to
25    delinquent land or be fairly apportioned to it by the

 

 

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1    county treasurer.
2        "Tax foreclosure sale" means a sale of delinquent land
3    pursuant to foreclosure proceedings under Article 21 of
4    the Property Tax Code.
5        "Taxing authority" means the governing body of any
6    taxing unit in which is located a parcel of eligible
7    delinquent land acquired or to be acquired by a
8    reutilization unit in which a declaration under subsection
9    (b) is in effect.
10    (b) The board of directors of a reutilization unit may
11declare by resolution that it is in the public interest for the
12reutilization unit to acquire tax-delinquent real property
13within the governmental unit that organized the reutilization
14unit for the public purpose of redeveloping the property or
15otherwise rendering it suitable for productive, tax-paying
16use. If a reutilization unit has made such a declaration, the
17reutilization unit may purchase or otherwise acquire title to
18eligible delinquent land, other than by appropriation, and the
19title shall pass free and clear of the lien for delinquent
20taxes as provided in subsection (d).
21    (c) With respect to any parcel of eligible delinquent land
22purchased or acquired by a reutilization unit in which a
23declaration is in effect under this Section, the reutilization
24unit may obtain the consent of each taxing authority for
25release of any claim on the delinquent taxes and associated
26costs attaching to that property at the time of conveyance to

 

 

HB0367- 50 -LRB102 00205 AWJ 10207 b

1the reutilization unit. Consent shall be obtained in writing,
2and shall be certified by the taxing authority granting
3consent or by the fiscal officer or other person authorized by
4the taxing authority to provide such consent. Consent may be
5obtained before or after title to the eligible delinquent land
6is transferred to the reutilization unit.
7    The taxing authority of a taxing unit and a reutilization
8unit in which a declaration is in effect under this Section may
9enter into an agreement whereby the taxing authority consents
10in advance to release of the taxing authority's claim on
11delinquent taxes and associated costs with respect to all or a
12specified number of parcels of eligible delinquent land that
13may be purchased or acquired by the reutilization unit for the
14purposes of this Section. The agreement shall provide for: any
15terms and conditions on the release of such claim as are
16mutually agreeable to the taxing authority and reutilization
17unit, including any notice to be provided by the reutilization
18unit to the taxing authority of the purchase or acquisition of
19eligible delinquent land situated in the taxing unit; any
20option vesting in the taxing authority to revoke its release
21with respect to any parcel of eligible delinquent land before
22the release becomes effective; and the manner in which notice
23of such revocation shall be effected. Nothing in this Section
24or in such an agreement shall be construed to bar a taxing
25authority from revoking its advance consent with respect to
26any parcels of eligible delinquent land purchased or acquired

 

 

HB0367- 51 -LRB102 00205 AWJ 10207 b

1by the reutilization unit before the reutilization unit enters
2into a purchase or other agreement for acquisition of the
3parcels.
4    (d) The lien for the delinquent taxes and associated costs
5for which all of the taxing authorities have consented to
6release their claims under this Section is hereby
7extinguished, and the transfer of title to such delinquent
8land to the reutilization unit shall be transferred free and
9clear of the lien for such taxes and costs. If a taxing
10authority does not consent to the release of its claim on
11delinquent taxes and associated costs, the entire amount of
12the lien for such taxes and costs shall continue as otherwise
13provided by law until paid or otherwise discharged according
14to law.
15    (e) All eligible delinquent land acquired by a
16reutilization unit under this Section is real property held
17for a public purpose and is exempted from taxation until the
18reutilization unit sells or otherwise disposes of property.
19    (f) If a reutilization unit sells or otherwise disposes of
20delinquent land it purchased or acquired and for which all or a
21portion of a taxing authority's claim for delinquent taxes was
22released under this Section, whether by consent of the taxing
23authority or pursuant to subsection (d), the net proceeds from
24such sale or disposition shall be used for such redevelopment
25purposes the governing board of the reutilization unit.
 

 

 

HB0367- 52 -LRB102 00205 AWJ 10207 b

1
Article 90. Amendatory Provisions.

 
2    Section 90-5. The Freedom of Information Act is amended by
3changing Section 7 as follows:
 
4    (5 ILCS 140/7)  (from Ch. 116, par. 207)
5    Sec. 7. Exemptions.
6    (1) When a request is made to inspect or copy a public
7record that contains information that is exempt from
8disclosure under this Section, but also contains information
9that is not exempt from disclosure, the public body may elect
10to redact the information that is exempt. The public body
11shall make the remaining information available for inspection
12and copying. Subject to this requirement, the following shall
13be exempt from inspection and copying:
14        (a) Information specifically prohibited from
15    disclosure by federal or State law or rules and
16    regulations implementing federal or State law.
17        (b) Private information, unless disclosure is required
18    by another provision of this Act, a State or federal law or
19    a court order.
20        (b-5) Files, documents, and other data or databases
21    maintained by one or more law enforcement agencies and
22    specifically designed to provide information to one or
23    more law enforcement agencies regarding the physical or
24    mental status of one or more individual subjects.

 

 

HB0367- 53 -LRB102 00205 AWJ 10207 b

1        (c) Personal information contained within public
2    records, the disclosure of which would constitute a
3    clearly unwarranted invasion of personal privacy, unless
4    the disclosure is consented to in writing by the
5    individual subjects of the information. "Unwarranted
6    invasion of personal privacy" means the disclosure of
7    information that is highly personal or objectionable to a
8    reasonable person and in which the subject's right to
9    privacy outweighs any legitimate public interest in
10    obtaining the information. The disclosure of information
11    that bears on the public duties of public employees and
12    officials shall not be considered an invasion of personal
13    privacy.
14        (d) Records in the possession of any public body
15    created in the course of administrative enforcement
16    proceedings, and any law enforcement or correctional
17    agency for law enforcement purposes, but only to the
18    extent that disclosure would:
19            (i) interfere with pending or actually and
20        reasonably contemplated law enforcement proceedings
21        conducted by any law enforcement or correctional
22        agency that is the recipient of the request;
23            (ii) interfere with active administrative
24        enforcement proceedings conducted by the public body
25        that is the recipient of the request;
26            (iii) create a substantial likelihood that a

 

 

HB0367- 54 -LRB102 00205 AWJ 10207 b

1        person will be deprived of a fair trial or an impartial
2        hearing;
3            (iv) unavoidably disclose the identity of a
4        confidential source, confidential information
5        furnished only by the confidential source, or persons
6        who file complaints with or provide information to
7        administrative, investigative, law enforcement, or
8        penal agencies; except that the identities of
9        witnesses to traffic accidents, traffic accident
10        reports, and rescue reports shall be provided by
11        agencies of local government, except when disclosure
12        would interfere with an active criminal investigation
13        conducted by the agency that is the recipient of the
14        request;
15            (v) disclose unique or specialized investigative
16        techniques other than those generally used and known
17        or disclose internal documents of correctional
18        agencies related to detection, observation or
19        investigation of incidents of crime or misconduct, and
20        disclosure would result in demonstrable harm to the
21        agency or public body that is the recipient of the
22        request;
23            (vi) endanger the life or physical safety of law
24        enforcement personnel or any other person; or
25            (vii) obstruct an ongoing criminal investigation
26        by the agency that is the recipient of the request.

 

 

HB0367- 55 -LRB102 00205 AWJ 10207 b

1        (d-5) A law enforcement record created for law
2    enforcement purposes and contained in a shared electronic
3    record management system if the law enforcement agency
4    that is the recipient of the request did not create the
5    record, did not participate in or have a role in any of the
6    events which are the subject of the record, and only has
7    access to the record through the shared electronic record
8    management system.
9        (e) Records that relate to or affect the security of
10    correctional institutions and detention facilities.
11        (e-5) Records requested by persons committed to the
12    Department of Corrections, Department of Human Services
13    Division of Mental Health, or a county jail if those
14    materials are available in the library of the correctional
15    institution or facility or jail where the inmate is
16    confined.
17        (e-6) Records requested by persons committed to the
18    Department of Corrections, Department of Human Services
19    Division of Mental Health, or a county jail if those
20    materials include records from staff members' personnel
21    files, staff rosters, or other staffing assignment
22    information.
23        (e-7) Records requested by persons committed to the
24    Department of Corrections or Department of Human Services
25    Division of Mental Health if those materials are available
26    through an administrative request to the Department of

 

 

HB0367- 56 -LRB102 00205 AWJ 10207 b

1    Corrections or Department of Human Services Division of
2    Mental Health.
3        (e-8) Records requested by a person committed to the
4    Department of Corrections, Department of Human Services
5    Division of Mental Health, or a county jail, the
6    disclosure of which would result in the risk of harm to any
7    person or the risk of an escape from a jail or correctional
8    institution or facility.
9        (e-9) Records requested by a person in a county jail
10    or committed to the Department of Corrections or
11    Department of Human Services Division of Mental Health,
12    containing personal information pertaining to the person's
13    victim or the victim's family, including, but not limited
14    to, a victim's home address, home telephone number, work
15    or school address, work telephone number, social security
16    number, or any other identifying information, except as
17    may be relevant to a requester's current or potential case
18    or claim.
19        (e-10) Law enforcement records of other persons
20    requested by a person committed to the Department of
21    Corrections, Department of Human Services Division of
22    Mental Health, or a county jail, including, but not
23    limited to, arrest and booking records, mug shots, and
24    crime scene photographs, except as these records may be
25    relevant to the requester's current or potential case or
26    claim.

 

 

HB0367- 57 -LRB102 00205 AWJ 10207 b

1        (f) Preliminary drafts, notes, recommendations,
2    memoranda and other records in which opinions are
3    expressed, or policies or actions are formulated, except
4    that a specific record or relevant portion of a record
5    shall not be exempt when the record is publicly cited and
6    identified by the head of the public body. The exemption
7    provided in this paragraph (f) extends to all those
8    records of officers and agencies of the General Assembly
9    that pertain to the preparation of legislative documents.
10        (g) Trade secrets and commercial or financial
11    information obtained from a person or business where the
12    trade secrets or commercial or financial information are
13    furnished under a claim that they are proprietary,
14    privileged, or confidential, and that disclosure of the
15    trade secrets or commercial or financial information would
16    cause competitive harm to the person or business, and only
17    insofar as the claim directly applies to the records
18    requested.
19        The information included under this exemption includes
20    all trade secrets and commercial or financial information
21    obtained by a public body, including a public pension
22    fund, from a private equity fund or a privately held
23    company within the investment portfolio of a private
24    equity fund as a result of either investing or evaluating
25    a potential investment of public funds in a private equity
26    fund. The exemption contained in this item does not apply

 

 

HB0367- 58 -LRB102 00205 AWJ 10207 b

1    to the aggregate financial performance information of a
2    private equity fund, nor to the identity of the fund's
3    managers or general partners. The exemption contained in
4    this item does not apply to the identity of a privately
5    held company within the investment portfolio of a private
6    equity fund, unless the disclosure of the identity of a
7    privately held company may cause competitive harm.
8        Nothing contained in this paragraph (g) shall be
9    construed to prevent a person or business from consenting
10    to disclosure.
11        (h) Proposals and bids for any contract, grant, or
12    agreement, including information which if it were
13    disclosed would frustrate procurement or give an advantage
14    to any person proposing to enter into a contractor
15    agreement with the body, until an award or final selection
16    is made. Information prepared by or for the body in
17    preparation of a bid solicitation shall be exempt until an
18    award or final selection is made.
19        (i) Valuable formulae, computer geographic systems,
20    designs, drawings and research data obtained or produced
21    by any public body when disclosure could reasonably be
22    expected to produce private gain or public loss. The
23    exemption for "computer geographic systems" provided in
24    this paragraph (i) does not extend to requests made by
25    news media as defined in Section 2 of this Act when the
26    requested information is not otherwise exempt and the only

 

 

HB0367- 59 -LRB102 00205 AWJ 10207 b

1    purpose of the request is to access and disseminate
2    information regarding the health, safety, welfare, or
3    legal rights of the general public.
4        (j) The following information pertaining to
5    educational matters:
6            (i) test questions, scoring keys and other
7        examination data used to administer an academic
8        examination;
9            (ii) information received by a primary or
10        secondary school, college, or university under its
11        procedures for the evaluation of faculty members by
12        their academic peers;
13            (iii) information concerning a school or
14        university's adjudication of student disciplinary
15        cases, but only to the extent that disclosure would
16        unavoidably reveal the identity of the student; and
17            (iv) course materials or research materials used
18        by faculty members.
19        (k) Architects' plans, engineers' technical
20    submissions, and other construction related technical
21    documents for projects not constructed or developed in
22    whole or in part with public funds and the same for
23    projects constructed or developed with public funds,
24    including, but not limited to, power generating and
25    distribution stations and other transmission and
26    distribution facilities, water treatment facilities,

 

 

HB0367- 60 -LRB102 00205 AWJ 10207 b

1    airport facilities, sport stadiums, convention centers,
2    and all government owned, operated, or occupied buildings,
3    but only to the extent that disclosure would compromise
4    security.
5        (l) Minutes of meetings of public bodies closed to the
6    public as provided in the Open Meetings Act until the
7    public body makes the minutes available to the public
8    under Section 2.06 of the Open Meetings Act.
9        (m) Communications between a public body and an
10    attorney or auditor representing the public body that
11    would not be subject to discovery in litigation, and
12    materials prepared or compiled by or for a public body in
13    anticipation of a criminal, civil, or administrative
14    proceeding upon the request of an attorney advising the
15    public body, and materials prepared or compiled with
16    respect to internal audits of public bodies.
17        (n) Records relating to a public body's adjudication
18    of employee grievances or disciplinary cases; however,
19    this exemption shall not extend to the final outcome of
20    cases in which discipline is imposed.
21        (o) Administrative or technical information associated
22    with automated data processing operations, including, but
23    not limited to, software, operating protocols, computer
24    program abstracts, file layouts, source listings, object
25    modules, load modules, user guides, documentation
26    pertaining to all logical and physical design of

 

 

HB0367- 61 -LRB102 00205 AWJ 10207 b

1    computerized systems, employee manuals, and any other
2    information that, if disclosed, would jeopardize the
3    security of the system or its data or the security of
4    materials exempt under this Section.
5        (p) Records relating to collective negotiating matters
6    between public bodies and their employees or
7    representatives, except that any final contract or
8    agreement shall be subject to inspection and copying.
9        (q) Test questions, scoring keys, and other
10    examination data used to determine the qualifications of
11    an applicant for a license or employment.
12        (r) The records, documents, and information relating
13    to real estate purchase negotiations until those
14    negotiations have been completed or otherwise terminated.
15    With regard to a parcel involved in a pending or actually
16    and reasonably contemplated eminent domain proceeding
17    under the Eminent Domain Act, records, documents, and
18    information relating to that parcel shall be exempt except
19    as may be allowed under discovery rules adopted by the
20    Illinois Supreme Court. The records, documents, and
21    information relating to a real estate sale shall be exempt
22    until a sale is consummated.
23        (s) Any and all proprietary information and records
24    related to the operation of an intergovernmental risk
25    management association or self-insurance pool or jointly
26    self-administered health and accident cooperative or pool.

 

 

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1    Insurance or self insurance (including any
2    intergovernmental risk management association or self
3    insurance pool) claims, loss or risk management
4    information, records, data, advice or communications.
5        (t) Information contained in or related to
6    examination, operating, or condition reports prepared by,
7    on behalf of, or for the use of a public body responsible
8    for the regulation or supervision of financial
9    institutions, insurance companies, or pharmacy benefit
10    managers, unless disclosure is otherwise required by State
11    law.
12        (u) Information that would disclose or might lead to
13    the disclosure of secret or confidential information,
14    codes, algorithms, programs, or private keys intended to
15    be used to create electronic or digital signatures under
16    the Electronic Commerce Security Act.
17        (v) Vulnerability assessments, security measures, and
18    response policies or plans that are designed to identify,
19    prevent, or respond to potential attacks upon a
20    community's population or systems, facilities, or
21    installations, the destruction or contamination of which
22    would constitute a clear and present danger to the health
23    or safety of the community, but only to the extent that
24    disclosure could reasonably be expected to jeopardize the
25    effectiveness of the measures or the safety of the
26    personnel who implement them or the public. Information

 

 

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1    exempt under this item may include such things as details
2    pertaining to the mobilization or deployment of personnel
3    or equipment, to the operation of communication systems or
4    protocols, or to tactical operations.
5        (w) (Blank).
6        (x) Maps and other records regarding the location or
7    security of generation, transmission, distribution,
8    storage, gathering, treatment, or switching facilities
9    owned by a utility, by a power generator, or by the
10    Illinois Power Agency.
11        (y) Information contained in or related to proposals,
12    bids, or negotiations related to electric power
13    procurement under Section 1-75 of the Illinois Power
14    Agency Act and Section 16-111.5 of the Public Utilities
15    Act that is determined to be confidential and proprietary
16    by the Illinois Power Agency or by the Illinois Commerce
17    Commission.
18        (z) Information about students exempted from
19    disclosure under Sections 10-20.38 or 34-18.29 of the
20    School Code, and information about undergraduate students
21    enrolled at an institution of higher education exempted
22    from disclosure under Section 25 of the Illinois Credit
23    Card Marketing Act of 2009.
24        (aa) Information the disclosure of which is exempted
25    under the Viatical Settlements Act of 2009.
26        (bb) Records and information provided to a mortality

 

 

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1    review team and records maintained by a mortality review
2    team appointed under the Department of Juvenile Justice
3    Mortality Review Team Act.
4        (cc) Information regarding interments, entombments, or
5    inurnments of human remains that are submitted to the
6    Cemetery Oversight Database under the Cemetery Care Act or
7    the Cemetery Oversight Act, whichever is applicable.
8        (dd) Correspondence and records (i) that may not be
9    disclosed under Section 11-9 of the Illinois Public Aid
10    Code or (ii) that pertain to appeals under Section 11-8 of
11    the Illinois Public Aid Code.
12        (ee) The names, addresses, or other personal
13    information of persons who are minors and are also
14    participants and registrants in programs of park
15    districts, forest preserve districts, conservation
16    districts, recreation agencies, and special recreation
17    associations.
18        (ff) The names, addresses, or other personal
19    information of participants and registrants in programs of
20    park districts, forest preserve districts, conservation
21    districts, recreation agencies, and special recreation
22    associations where such programs are targeted primarily to
23    minors.
24        (gg) Confidential information described in Section
25    1-100 of the Illinois Independent Tax Tribunal Act of
26    2012.

 

 

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1        (hh) The report submitted to the State Board of
2    Education by the School Security and Standards Task Force
3    under item (8) of subsection (d) of Section 2-3.160 of the
4    School Code and any information contained in that report.
5        (ii) Records requested by persons committed to or
6    detained by the Department of Human Services under the
7    Sexually Violent Persons Commitment Act or committed to
8    the Department of Corrections under the Sexually Dangerous
9    Persons Act if those materials: (i) are available in the
10    library of the facility where the individual is confined;
11    (ii) include records from staff members' personnel files,
12    staff rosters, or other staffing assignment information;
13    or (iii) are available through an administrative request
14    to the Department of Human Services or the Department of
15    Corrections.
16        (jj) Confidential information described in Section
17    5-535 of the Civil Administrative Code of Illinois.
18        (kk) The public body's credit card numbers, debit card
19    numbers, bank account numbers, Federal Employer
20    Identification Number, security code numbers, passwords,
21    and similar account information, the disclosure of which
22    could result in identity theft or impression or defrauding
23    of a governmental entity or a person.
24        (ll) (kk) Records concerning the work of the threat
25    assessment team of a school district.
26        (mm) Records identified under subsection (a) of

 

 

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1    Section 5-30 of the Community Improvement Land Bank Act.
2    (1.5) Any information exempt from disclosure under the
3Judicial Privacy Act shall be redacted from public records
4prior to disclosure under this Act.
5    (2) A public record that is not in the possession of a
6public body but is in the possession of a party with whom the
7agency has contracted to perform a governmental function on
8behalf of the public body, and that directly relates to the
9governmental function and is not otherwise exempt under this
10Act, shall be considered a public record of the public body,
11for purposes of this Act.
12    (3) This Section does not authorize withholding of
13information or limit the availability of records to the
14public, except as stated in this Section or otherwise provided
15in this Act.
16(Source: P.A. 100-26, eff. 8-4-17; 100-201, eff. 8-18-17;
17100-732, eff. 8-3-18; 101-434, eff. 1-1-20; 101-452, eff.
181-1-20; 101-455, eff. 8-23-19; revised 9-27-19.)
 
19    Section 90-10. The Illinois Finance Authority Act is
20amended by changing Sections 815-10, 815-20, 815-25, and
21815-30 as follows:
 
22    (20 ILCS 3501/815-10)
23    Sec. 815-10. Definitions. The following terms, whenever
24used or referred to in this Article, shall have the following

 

 

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1meanings ascribed to them, except where the context clearly
2requires otherwise:
3    (a) "Property" means land, parcels or combination of
4parcels, structures, and all improvements, easements and
5franchises.
6    (b) "Redevelopment area" means any property which is a
7contiguous area of at least 2 acres but less than 160 acres in
8the aggregate located within one and one-half miles of the
9corporate limits of a municipality and not included within any
10municipality, where, (1) if improved, a substantial proportion
11of the industrial, commercial and residential buildings or
12improvements are detrimental to the public safety, health,
13morals or welfare because of a combination of any of the
14following factors: age; physical configuration; dilapidation;
15structural or economic obsolescence; deterioration; illegal
16use of individual structures; presence of structures below
17minimum code standards; excessive and sustained vacancies;
18overcrowding of structures and community facilities;
19inadequate ventilation, light, sewer, water, transportation
20and other infrastructure facilities; inadequate utilities;
21excessive land coverage; deleterious land use or layout;
22depreciation or lack of physical maintenance; and lack of
23community planning; or (2) if vacant, the sound utilization of
24land for industrial projects is impaired by a combination of 2
25or more of the following factors: obsolete platting of the
26vacant land; diversity of ownership of such land; tax and

 

 

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1special assessment delinquencies on such land; and
2deterioration of structures or site improvements in
3neighboring areas to the vacant land, or the area immediately
4prior to becoming vacant qualified as a redevelopment improved
5area; or (3) if an improved area within the boundaries of a
6development project is located within the corporate limits of
7the municipality in which 50% or more of the structures in the
8area have an age of 35 years or more, such area does not
9qualify under clause (1) but is detrimental to the public
10safety, health, morals or welfare and such area may become a
11redevelopment area pursuant to clause (1) because of a
12combination of 3 or more of the factors specified in clause
13(1).
14    (c) "Enterprise" means an individual, corporation,
15partnership, joint venture, trust, estate, or unincorporated
16association.
17    (d) "Development plan" means the comprehensive program of
18the Authority and the participating entity to reduce or
19eliminate those conditions the existence of which qualified
20the project area as a redevelopment area. Each development
21plan shall set forth in writing the program to be undertaken to
22accomplish such objectives and shall include, without
23limitation, estimated development project costs, the sources
24of funds to pay costs, the nature and term of any obligations
25to be issued, the most recent equalized assessed valuation of
26the project area, an estimate as to the equalized assessed

 

 

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1valuation after development and the general land uses to apply
2in the project area.
3    (e) "Development project" means any project in furtherance
4of the objectives of a development plan, including any
5building or buildings or building addition or other structures
6to be newly constructed, renovated or improved and suitable
7for use by an enterprise as an industrial project, and
8includes the sites and other rights in the property on which
9such buildings or structures are located.
10    (f) "Participating entity" means a municipality, a local
11industrial development agency or an enterprise or any
12combination thereof.
13    (g) "Community improvement land bank" has the meaning
14given to that term in Section 1-5 of the Community Improvement
15Land Bank Act.
16(Source: P.A. 95-331, eff. 8-21-07.)
 
17    (20 ILCS 3501/815-20)
18    Sec. 815-20. Powers and Duties.
19    (a) The Authority shall have the following powers with
20respect to redevelopment areas:
21        (1) To acquire and possess property in a redevelopment
22    area;
23        (2) To clear any such areas so acquired by demolition
24    of existing structures and buildings and to make necessary
25    improvements to the property essential to its reuse in

 

 

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1    conformity with a development plan; and
2        (3) To convey property for use in accordance with a
3    development plan.
4    (b) Before acquiring property under this Section the
5Authority shall hold a public hearing after notice published
6in a newspaper of general circulation in the county in which
7the property is located and shall find:
8        (1) The property is in a redevelopment area;
9        (2) Such acquisition or possession is necessary or
10    reasonably required to retain existing enterprises or
11    attract new enterprises and to promote sound economic
12    growth and to carry out the purposes of Section 815-5
13    through 815-30 of this Act;
14        (3) The assembly of property is not unduly competitive
15    with similar assemblies by private enterprise or community
16    improvement land banks in the area or surrounding areas;
17    and
18        (4) The participating entity, without the involvement
19    of the Authority, would be unlikely, unwilling or unable
20    to undertake such redevelopment of the property as was
21    necessary for economic development.
22    (c) No property may be acquired by the Authority unless
23the acquisition is consented to by resolution of the corporate
24authorities of the municipality with jurisdiction over the
25property under Section 11-12-6 of the Municipal Code.
26    (d) The Authority may acquire any interest in property in

 

 

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1a redevelopment area by purchase, lease, or gift, but shall
2not have the power of condemnation.
3    (e) No property shall be acquired under this Section
4unless the Authority has adopted a development plan under the
5provisions of Section 815-25.
6(Source: P.A. 93-205, eff. 1-1-04.)
 
7    (20 ILCS 3501/815-25)
8    Sec. 815-25. Development Plans.
9    (a) No development plan shall be approved by the Authority
10unless after a public hearing held upon notice published in a
11newspaper of general circulation in the county where the
12property is located, the Authority finds:
13        (1) The plan provides for projects which will reduce
14    unemployment;
15        (2) The redevelopment area on the whole has not been
16    subject to growth and development through investment by
17    private enterprise or community improvement land banks and
18    would not reasonably be anticipated to be developed
19    without the adoption of the development plan;
20        (3) The corporate authorities of the municipality with
21    jurisdiction over the property under Section 11-12-6 of
22    the Municipal Code have by resolution found that the
23    development plan conforms to the comprehensive plan of the
24    municipality;
25        (4) A participating entity has agreed to enter into

 

 

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1    such contracts and other agreements as are necessary to
2    acquire, redevelop and improve the property in accordance
3    with the development plan;
4        (5) The acquisition of the property, its possession
5    and ultimate use according to the development plan can be
6    financed by participating entities and the Authority and
7    the development plan will be completed and all obligations
8    of the Authority incurred in connection with the
9    redevelopment plan will be retired within 20 years from
10    the Authority's approval of the development plan; and
11        (6) The development plan meets such other requirements
12    as the Authority may establish by rule.
13    (b) The Authority may dispose of any property which is the
14subject of a development plan in such manner, whether by sale,
15lease or otherwise, and for such price, rental or other
16consideration, including an amount not less than 2/3 of its
17acquisition cost, payable over such term, and bearing interest
18as to deferred payments, and secured in such manner, by
19mortgage or otherwise, all as the Authority shall provide in
20the development plan.
21    (c) Pending disposition of such land, any existing
22property acquired by the Authority in the course of carrying
23out the provisions of this Act may be adequately and properly
24preserved, and may be maintained, leased or administered by
25the Authority by a contract made by the Authority with any
26participating entity, enterprise or individual with experience

 

 

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1in the area of property development, management or
2administration.
3    (d) Whenever the Authority shall have approved a
4development plan, the Authority may amend the development plan
5from time to time in conformity with this Section.
6(Source: P.A. 93-205, eff. 1-1-04.)
 
7    (20 ILCS 3501/815-30)
8    Sec. 815-30. Local Planning; Relocation Costs. The
9Authority may arrange or contract with a municipality, or
10municipalities, or a community improvement land bank or land
11banks for the planning, re-planning, opening, grading or
12closing of streets, roads, alleys or other places or for the
13furnishing of facilities or for the acquisition by the
14municipality, or municipalities, or community improvement land
15bank or land banks of property or property rights or for the
16furnishing of property or services in connection with a
17development project or projects. The Authority is hereby
18authorized to pay the reasonable relocation costs, up to a
19total of $25,000 per relocatee, of persons and businesses
20displaced as a result of carrying out a development plan as
21authorized by this Article.
22(Source: P.A. 93-205, eff. 1-1-04.)
 
23    Section 90-15. The Illinois State Auditing Act is amended
24by changing Section 3-1 as follows:
 

 

 

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1    (30 ILCS 5/3-1)  (from Ch. 15, par. 303-1)
2    Sec. 3-1. Jurisdiction of Auditor General. The Auditor
3General has jurisdiction over all State agencies to make post
4audits and investigations authorized by or under this Act or
5the Constitution.
6    The Auditor General has jurisdiction over local government
7agencies and private agencies only:
8        (a) to make such post audits authorized by or under
9    this Act as are necessary and incidental to a post audit of
10    a State agency or of a program administered by a State
11    agency involving public funds of the State, but this
12    jurisdiction does not include any authority to review
13    local governmental agencies in the obligation, receipt,
14    expenditure or use of public funds of the State that are
15    granted without limitation or condition imposed by law,
16    other than the general limitation that such funds be used
17    for public purposes;
18        (b) to make investigations authorized by or under this
19    Act or the Constitution; and
20        (c) to make audits of the records of local government
21    agencies to verify actual costs of state-mandated programs
22    when directed to do so by the Legislative Audit Commission
23    at the request of the State Board of Appeals under the
24    State Mandates Act; and .
25        (d) to audit annual financial reports of community

 

 

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1    improvement land banks under Section 5-20 of the Community
2    Improvement Land Bank Act.
3    In addition to the foregoing, the Auditor General may
4conduct an audit of the Metropolitan Pier and Exposition
5Authority, the Regional Transportation Authority, the Suburban
6Bus Division, the Commuter Rail Division and the Chicago
7Transit Authority and any other subsidized carrier when
8authorized by the Legislative Audit Commission. Such audit may
9be a financial, management or program audit, or any
10combination thereof.
11    The audit shall determine whether they are operating in
12accordance with all applicable laws and regulations. Subject
13to the limitations of this Act, the Legislative Audit
14Commission may by resolution specify additional determinations
15to be included in the scope of the audit.
16    In addition to the foregoing, the Auditor General must
17also conduct a financial audit of the Illinois Sports
18Facilities Authority's expenditures of public funds in
19connection with the reconstruction, renovation, remodeling,
20extension, or improvement of all or substantially all of any
21existing "facility", as that term is defined in the Illinois
22Sports Facilities Authority Act.
23    The Auditor General may also conduct an audit, when
24authorized by the Legislative Audit Commission, of any
25hospital which receives 10% or more of its gross revenues from
26payments from the State of Illinois, Department of Healthcare

 

 

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1and Family Services (formerly Department of Public Aid),
2Medical Assistance Program.
3    The Auditor General is authorized to conduct financial and
4compliance audits of the Illinois Distance Learning Foundation
5and the Illinois Conservation Foundation.
6    As soon as practical after the effective date of this
7amendatory Act of 1995, the Auditor General shall conduct a
8compliance and management audit of the City of Chicago and any
9other entity with regard to the operation of Chicago O'Hare
10International Airport, Chicago Midway Airport and Merrill C.
11Meigs Field. The audit shall include, but not be limited to, an
12examination of revenues, expenses, and transfers of funds;
13purchasing and contracting policies and practices; staffing
14levels; and hiring practices and procedures. When completed,
15the audit required by this paragraph shall be distributed in
16accordance with Section 3-14.
17    The Auditor General shall conduct a financial and
18compliance and program audit of distributions from the
19Municipal Economic Development Fund during the immediately
20preceding calendar year pursuant to Section 8-403.1 of the
21Public Utilities Act at no cost to the city, village, or
22incorporated town that received the distributions.
23    The Auditor General must conduct an audit of the Health
24Facilities and Services Review Board pursuant to Section 19.5
25of the Illinois Health Facilities Planning Act.
26    The Auditor General of the State of Illinois shall

 

 

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1annually conduct or cause to be conducted a financial and
2compliance audit of the books and records of any county water
3commission organized pursuant to the Water Commission Act of
41985 and shall file a copy of the report of that audit with the
5Governor and the Legislative Audit Commission. The filed audit
6shall be open to the public for inspection. The cost of the
7audit shall be charged to the county water commission in
8accordance with Section 6z-27 of the State Finance Act. The
9county water commission shall make available to the Auditor
10General its books and records and any other documentation,
11whether in the possession of its trustees or other parties,
12necessary to conduct the audit required. These audit
13requirements apply only through July 1, 2007.
14    The Auditor General must conduct audits of the Rend Lake
15Conservancy District as provided in Section 25.5 of the River
16Conservancy Districts Act.
17    The Auditor General must conduct financial audits of the
18Southeastern Illinois Economic Development Authority as
19provided in Section 70 of the Southeastern Illinois Economic
20Development Authority Act.
21    The Auditor General shall conduct a compliance audit in
22accordance with subsections (d) and (f) of Section 30 of the
23Innovation Development and Economy Act.
24(Source: P.A. 95-331, eff. 8-21-07; 96-31, eff. 6-30-09;
2596-939, eff. 6-24-10.)
 

 

 

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1    Section 90-20. The Property Tax Code is amended by adding
2Sections 21-11 and 21-450 as follows:
 
3    (35 ILCS 200/21-11 new)
4    Sec. 21-11. Delinquent tax ledger; community improvement
5land banks. If a county, municipality, or township makes an
6election under subsection (a) of Section 10-5 of the Community
7Improvement Land Bank Act and notifies the county auditor or,
8if no county auditor, the county clerk, under subsection (c)
9of that Section, the auditor or clerk shall create delinquent
10property tax ledgers for the reutilization unit, as that term
11is defined in the Community Improvement Land Bank Act, in a
12form and manner prescribed by the auditor or clerk.
13    The auditor or clerk shall compile and deliver a copy of
14the delinquent property tax ledger to the reutilization unit
15as provided in subsection (b) of Section 10-10 and include in
16such ledger a list as provided in subsection (a) of Section
1710-20 of the Community Improvement land bank Act.
 
18    (35 ILCS 200/21-450 new)
19    Sec. 21-450. Community Improvement Land Bank Act. To the
20extent that foreclosure or forfeiture proceedings under the
21Community Improvement Land Bank Act conflict with this
22Article, the procedures under the Community Improvement Land
23Bank Act prevail.
 

 

 

HB0367- 79 -LRB102 00205 AWJ 10207 b

1    Section 90-25. The Illinois Municipal Code is amended by
2changing Section 11-74.4-3 as follows:
 
3    (65 ILCS 5/11-74.4-3)  (from Ch. 24, par. 11-74.4-3)
4    Sec. 11-74.4-3. Definitions. The following terms, wherever
5used or referred to in this Division 74.4 shall have the
6following respective meanings, unless in any case a different
7meaning clearly appears from the context.
8    (a) For any redevelopment project area that has been
9designated pursuant to this Section by an ordinance adopted
10prior to November 1, 1999 (the effective date of Public Act
1191-478), "blighted area" shall have the meaning set forth in
12this Section prior to that date.
13    On and after November 1, 1999, "blighted area" means any
14improved or vacant area within the boundaries of a
15redevelopment project area located within the territorial
16limits of the municipality where:
17        (1) If improved, industrial, commercial, and
18    residential buildings or improvements are detrimental to
19    the public safety, health, or welfare because of a
20    combination of 5 or more of the following factors, each of
21    which is (i) present, with that presence documented, to a
22    meaningful extent so that a municipality may reasonably
23    find that the factor is clearly present within the intent
24    of the Act and (ii) reasonably distributed throughout the
25    improved part of the redevelopment project area:

 

 

HB0367- 80 -LRB102 00205 AWJ 10207 b

1            (A) Dilapidation. An advanced state of disrepair
2        or neglect of necessary repairs to the primary
3        structural components of buildings or improvements in
4        such a combination that a documented building
5        condition analysis determines that major repair is
6        required or the defects are so serious and so
7        extensive that the buildings must be removed.
8            (B) Obsolescence. The condition or process of
9        falling into disuse. Structures have become ill-suited
10        for the original use.
11            (C) Deterioration. With respect to buildings,
12        defects including, but not limited to, major defects
13        in the secondary building components such as doors,
14        windows, porches, gutters and downspouts, and fascia.
15        With respect to surface improvements, that the
16        condition of roadways, alleys, curbs, gutters,
17        sidewalks, off-street parking, and surface storage
18        areas evidence deterioration, including, but not
19        limited to, surface cracking, crumbling, potholes,
20        depressions, loose paving material, and weeds
21        protruding through paved surfaces.
22            (D) Presence of structures below minimum code
23        standards. All structures that do not meet the
24        standards of zoning, subdivision, building, fire, and
25        other governmental codes applicable to property, but
26        not including housing and property maintenance codes.

 

 

HB0367- 81 -LRB102 00205 AWJ 10207 b

1            (E) Illegal use of individual structures. The use
2        of structures in violation of applicable federal,
3        State, or local laws, exclusive of those applicable to
4        the presence of structures below minimum code
5        standards.
6            (F) Excessive vacancies. The presence of buildings
7        that are unoccupied or under-utilized and that
8        represent an adverse influence on the area because of
9        the frequency, extent, or duration of the vacancies.
10            (G) Lack of ventilation, light, or sanitary
11        facilities. The absence of adequate ventilation for
12        light or air circulation in spaces or rooms without
13        windows, or that require the removal of dust, odor,
14        gas, smoke, or other noxious airborne materials.
15        Inadequate natural light and ventilation means the
16        absence of skylights or windows for interior spaces or
17        rooms and improper window sizes and amounts by room
18        area to window area ratios. Inadequate sanitary
19        facilities refers to the absence or inadequacy of
20        garbage storage and enclosure, bathroom facilities,
21        hot water and kitchens, and structural inadequacies
22        preventing ingress and egress to and from all rooms
23        and units within a building.
24            (H) Inadequate utilities. Underground and overhead
25        utilities such as storm sewers and storm drainage,
26        sanitary sewers, water lines, and gas, telephone, and

 

 

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1        electrical services that are shown to be inadequate.
2        Inadequate utilities are those that are: (i) of
3        insufficient capacity to serve the uses in the
4        redevelopment project area, (ii) deteriorated,
5        antiquated, obsolete, or in disrepair, or (iii)
6        lacking within the redevelopment project area.
7            (I) Excessive land coverage and overcrowding of
8        structures and community facilities. The
9        over-intensive use of property and the crowding of
10        buildings and accessory facilities onto a site.
11        Examples of problem conditions warranting the
12        designation of an area as one exhibiting excessive
13        land coverage are: (i) the presence of buildings
14        either improperly situated on parcels or located on
15        parcels of inadequate size and shape in relation to
16        present-day standards of development for health and
17        safety and (ii) the presence of multiple buildings on
18        a single parcel. For there to be a finding of excessive
19        land coverage, these parcels must exhibit one or more
20        of the following conditions: insufficient provision
21        for light and air within or around buildings,
22        increased threat of spread of fire due to the close
23        proximity of buildings, lack of adequate or proper
24        access to a public right-of-way, lack of reasonably
25        required off-street parking, or inadequate provision
26        for loading and service.

 

 

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1            (J) Deleterious land use or layout. The existence
2        of incompatible land-use relationships, buildings
3        occupied by inappropriate mixed-uses, or uses
4        considered to be noxious, offensive, or unsuitable for
5        the surrounding area.
6            (K) Environmental clean-up. The proposed
7        redevelopment project area has incurred Illinois
8        Environmental Protection Agency or United States
9        Environmental Protection Agency remediation costs for,
10        or a study conducted by an independent consultant
11        recognized as having expertise in environmental
12        remediation has determined a need for, the clean-up of
13        hazardous waste, hazardous substances, or underground
14        storage tanks required by State or federal law,
15        provided that the remediation costs constitute a
16        material impediment to the development or
17        redevelopment of the redevelopment project area.
18            (L) Lack of community planning. The proposed
19        redevelopment project area was developed prior to or
20        without the benefit or guidance of a community plan.
21        This means that the development occurred prior to the
22        adoption by the municipality of a comprehensive or
23        other community plan or that the plan was not followed
24        at the time of the area's development. This factor
25        must be documented by evidence of adverse or
26        incompatible land-use relationships, inadequate street

 

 

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1        layout, improper subdivision, parcels of inadequate
2        shape and size to meet contemporary development
3        standards, or other evidence demonstrating an absence
4        of effective community planning.
5            (M) The total equalized assessed value of the
6        proposed redevelopment project area has declined for 3
7        of the last 5 calendar years prior to the year in which
8        the redevelopment project area is designated or is
9        increasing at an annual rate that is less than the
10        balance of the municipality for 3 of the last 5
11        calendar years for which information is available or
12        is increasing at an annual rate that is less than the
13        Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers published
14        by the United States Department of Labor or successor
15        agency for 3 of the last 5 calendar years prior to the
16        year in which the redevelopment project area is
17        designated.
18        (2) If vacant, the sound growth of the redevelopment
19    project area is impaired by a combination of 2 or more of
20    the following factors, each of which is (i) present, with
21    that presence documented, to a meaningful extent so that a
22    municipality may reasonably find that the factor is
23    clearly present within the intent of the Act and (ii)
24    reasonably distributed throughout the vacant part of the
25    redevelopment project area to which it pertains:
26            (A) Obsolete platting of vacant land that results

 

 

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1        in parcels of limited or narrow size or configurations
2        of parcels of irregular size or shape that would be
3        difficult to develop on a planned basis and in a manner
4        compatible with contemporary standards and
5        requirements, or platting that failed to create
6        rights-of-ways for streets or alleys or that created
7        inadequate right-of-way widths for streets, alleys, or
8        other public rights-of-way or that omitted easements
9        for public utilities.
10            (B) Diversity of ownership of parcels of vacant
11        land sufficient in number to retard or impede the
12        ability to assemble the land for development.
13            (C) Tax and special assessment delinquencies exist
14        or the property has been the subject of tax sales under
15        the Property Tax Code within the last 5 years.
16            (D) Deterioration of structures or site
17        improvements in neighboring areas adjacent to the
18        vacant land.
19            (E) The area has incurred Illinois Environmental
20        Protection Agency or United States Environmental
21        Protection Agency remediation costs for, or a study
22        conducted by an independent consultant recognized as
23        having expertise in environmental remediation has
24        determined a need for, the clean-up of hazardous
25        waste, hazardous substances, or underground storage
26        tanks required by State or federal law, provided that

 

 

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1        the remediation costs constitute a material impediment
2        to the development or redevelopment of the
3        redevelopment project area.
4            (F) The total equalized assessed value of the
5        proposed redevelopment project area has declined for 3
6        of the last 5 calendar years prior to the year in which
7        the redevelopment project area is designated or is
8        increasing at an annual rate that is less than the
9        balance of the municipality for 3 of the last 5
10        calendar years for which information is available or
11        is increasing at an annual rate that is less than the
12        Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers published
13        by the United States Department of Labor or successor
14        agency for 3 of the last 5 calendar years prior to the
15        year in which the redevelopment project area is
16        designated.
17        (3) If vacant, the sound growth of the redevelopment
18    project area is impaired by one of the following factors
19    that (i) is present, with that presence documented, to a
20    meaningful extent so that a municipality may reasonably
21    find that the factor is clearly present within the intent
22    of the Act and (ii) is reasonably distributed throughout
23    the vacant part of the redevelopment project area to which
24    it pertains:
25            (A) The area consists of one or more unused
26        quarries, mines, or strip mine ponds.

 

 

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1            (B) The area consists of unused rail yards, rail
2        tracks, or railroad rights-of-way.
3            (C) The area, prior to its designation, is subject
4        to (i) chronic flooding that adversely impacts on real
5        property in the area as certified by a registered
6        professional engineer or appropriate regulatory agency
7        or (ii) surface water that discharges from all or a
8        part of the area and contributes to flooding within
9        the same watershed, but only if the redevelopment
10        project provides for facilities or improvements to
11        contribute to the alleviation of all or part of the
12        flooding.
13            (D) The area consists of an unused or illegal
14        disposal site containing earth, stone, building
15        debris, or similar materials that were removed from
16        construction, demolition, excavation, or dredge sites.
17            (E) Prior to November 1, 1999, the area is not less
18        than 50 nor more than 100 acres and 75% of which is
19        vacant (notwithstanding that the area has been used
20        for commercial agricultural purposes within 5 years
21        prior to the designation of the redevelopment project
22        area), and the area meets at least one of the factors
23        itemized in paragraph (1) of this subsection, the area
24        has been designated as a town or village center by
25        ordinance or comprehensive plan adopted prior to
26        January 1, 1982, and the area has not been developed

 

 

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1        for that designated purpose.
2            (F) The area qualified as a blighted improved area
3        immediately prior to becoming vacant, unless there has
4        been substantial private investment in the immediately
5        surrounding area.
6    (b) For any redevelopment project area that has been
7designated pursuant to this Section by an ordinance adopted
8prior to November 1, 1999 (the effective date of Public Act
991-478), "conservation area" shall have the meaning set forth
10in this Section prior to that date.
11    On and after November 1, 1999, "conservation area" means
12any improved area within the boundaries of a redevelopment
13project area located within the territorial limits of the
14municipality in which 50% or more of the structures in the area
15have an age of 35 years or more. Such an area is not yet a
16blighted area but because of a combination of 3 or more of the
17following factors is detrimental to the public safety, health,
18morals or welfare and such an area may become a blighted area:
19        (1) Dilapidation. An advanced state of disrepair or
20    neglect of necessary repairs to the primary structural
21    components of buildings or improvements in such a
22    combination that a documented building condition analysis
23    determines that major repair is required or the defects
24    are so serious and so extensive that the buildings must be
25    removed.
26        (2) Obsolescence. The condition or process of falling

 

 

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1    into disuse. Structures have become ill-suited for the
2    original use.
3        (3) Deterioration. With respect to buildings, defects
4    including, but not limited to, major defects in the
5    secondary building components such as doors, windows,
6    porches, gutters and downspouts, and fascia. With respect
7    to surface improvements, that the condition of roadways,
8    alleys, curbs, gutters, sidewalks, off-street parking, and
9    surface storage areas evidence deterioration, including,
10    but not limited to, surface cracking, crumbling, potholes,
11    depressions, loose paving material, and weeds protruding
12    through paved surfaces.
13        (4) Presence of structures below minimum code
14    standards. All structures that do not meet the standards
15    of zoning, subdivision, building, fire, and other
16    governmental codes applicable to property, but not
17    including housing and property maintenance codes.
18        (5) Illegal use of individual structures. The use of
19    structures in violation of applicable federal, State, or
20    local laws, exclusive of those applicable to the presence
21    of structures below minimum code standards.
22        (6) Excessive vacancies. The presence of buildings
23    that are unoccupied or under-utilized and that represent
24    an adverse influence on the area because of the frequency,
25    extent, or duration of the vacancies.
26        (7) Lack of ventilation, light, or sanitary

 

 

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1    facilities. The absence of adequate ventilation for light
2    or air circulation in spaces or rooms without windows, or
3    that require the removal of dust, odor, gas, smoke, or
4    other noxious airborne materials. Inadequate natural light
5    and ventilation means the absence or inadequacy of
6    skylights or windows for interior spaces or rooms and
7    improper window sizes and amounts by room area to window
8    area ratios. Inadequate sanitary facilities refers to the
9    absence or inadequacy of garbage storage and enclosure,
10    bathroom facilities, hot water and kitchens, and
11    structural inadequacies preventing ingress and egress to
12    and from all rooms and units within a building.
13        (8) Inadequate utilities. Underground and overhead
14    utilities such as storm sewers and storm drainage,
15    sanitary sewers, water lines, and gas, telephone, and
16    electrical services that are shown to be inadequate.
17    Inadequate utilities are those that are: (i) of
18    insufficient capacity to serve the uses in the
19    redevelopment project area, (ii) deteriorated, antiquated,
20    obsolete, or in disrepair, or (iii) lacking within the
21    redevelopment project area.
22        (9) Excessive land coverage and overcrowding of
23    structures and community facilities. The over-intensive
24    use of property and the crowding of buildings and
25    accessory facilities onto a site. Examples of problem
26    conditions warranting the designation of an area as one

 

 

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1    exhibiting excessive land coverage are: the presence of
2    buildings either improperly situated on parcels or located
3    on parcels of inadequate size and shape in relation to
4    present-day standards of development for health and safety
5    and the presence of multiple buildings on a single parcel.
6    For there to be a finding of excessive land coverage,
7    these parcels must exhibit one or more of the following
8    conditions: insufficient provision for light and air
9    within or around buildings, increased threat of spread of
10    fire due to the close proximity of buildings, lack of
11    adequate or proper access to a public right-of-way, lack
12    of reasonably required off-street parking, or inadequate
13    provision for loading and service.
14        (10) Deleterious land use or layout. The existence of
15    incompatible land-use relationships, buildings occupied by
16    inappropriate mixed-uses, or uses considered to be
17    noxious, offensive, or unsuitable for the surrounding
18    area.
19        (11) Lack of community planning. The proposed
20    redevelopment project area was developed prior to or
21    without the benefit or guidance of a community plan. This
22    means that the development occurred prior to the adoption
23    by the municipality of a comprehensive or other community
24    plan or that the plan was not followed at the time of the
25    area's development. This factor must be documented by
26    evidence of adverse or incompatible land-use

 

 

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1    relationships, inadequate street layout, improper
2    subdivision, parcels of inadequate shape and size to meet
3    contemporary development standards, or other evidence
4    demonstrating an absence of effective community planning.
5        (12) The area has incurred Illinois Environmental
6    Protection Agency or United States Environmental
7    Protection Agency remediation costs for, or a study
8    conducted by an independent consultant recognized as
9    having expertise in environmental remediation has
10    determined a need for, the clean-up of hazardous waste,
11    hazardous substances, or underground storage tanks
12    required by State or federal law, provided that the
13    remediation costs constitute a material impediment to the
14    development or redevelopment of the redevelopment project
15    area.
16        (13) The total equalized assessed value of the
17    proposed redevelopment project area has declined for 3 of
18    the last 5 calendar years for which information is
19    available or is increasing at an annual rate that is less
20    than the balance of the municipality for 3 of the last 5
21    calendar years for which information is available or is
22    increasing at an annual rate that is less than the
23    Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers published by
24    the United States Department of Labor or successor agency
25    for 3 of the last 5 calendar years for which information is
26    available.

 

 

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1    (c) "Industrial park" means an area in a blighted or
2conservation area suitable for use by any manufacturing,
3industrial, research or transportation enterprise, of
4facilities to include but not be limited to factories, mills,
5processing plants, assembly plants, packing plants,
6fabricating plants, industrial distribution centers,
7warehouses, repair overhaul or service facilities, freight
8terminals, research facilities, test facilities or railroad
9facilities.
10    (d) "Industrial park conservation area" means an area
11within the boundaries of a redevelopment project area located
12within the territorial limits of a municipality that is a
13labor surplus municipality or within 1 1/2 miles of the
14territorial limits of a municipality that is a labor surplus
15municipality if the area is annexed to the municipality; which
16area is zoned as industrial no later than at the time the
17municipality by ordinance designates the redevelopment project
18area, and which area includes both vacant land suitable for
19use as an industrial park and a blighted area or conservation
20area contiguous to such vacant land.
21    (e) "Labor surplus municipality" means a municipality in
22which, at any time during the 6 months before the municipality
23by ordinance designates an industrial park conservation area,
24the unemployment rate was over 6% and was also 100% or more of
25the national average unemployment rate for that same time as
26published in the United States Department of Labor Bureau of

 

 

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1Labor Statistics publication entitled "The Employment
2Situation" or its successor publication. For the purpose of
3this subsection, if unemployment rate statistics for the
4municipality are not available, the unemployment rate in the
5municipality shall be deemed to be the same as the
6unemployment rate in the principal county in which the
7municipality is located.
8    (f) "Municipality" shall mean a city, village,
9incorporated town, or a township that is located in the
10unincorporated portion of a county with 3 million or more
11inhabitants, if the county adopted an ordinance that approved
12the township's redevelopment plan.
13    (g) "Initial Sales Tax Amounts" means the amount of taxes
14paid under the Retailers' Occupation Tax Act, Use Tax Act,
15Service Use Tax Act, the Service Occupation Tax Act, the
16Municipal Retailers' Occupation Tax Act, and the Municipal
17Service Occupation Tax Act by retailers and servicemen on
18transactions at places located in a State Sales Tax Boundary
19during the calendar year 1985.
20    (g-1) "Revised Initial Sales Tax Amounts" means the amount
21of taxes paid under the Retailers' Occupation Tax Act, Use Tax
22Act, Service Use Tax Act, the Service Occupation Tax Act, the
23Municipal Retailers' Occupation Tax Act, and the Municipal
24Service Occupation Tax Act by retailers and servicemen on
25transactions at places located within the State Sales Tax
26Boundary revised pursuant to Section 11-74.4-8a(9) of this

 

 

HB0367- 95 -LRB102 00205 AWJ 10207 b

1Act.
2    (h) "Municipal Sales Tax Increment" means an amount equal
3to the increase in the aggregate amount of taxes paid to a
4municipality from the Local Government Tax Fund arising from
5sales by retailers and servicemen within the redevelopment
6project area or State Sales Tax Boundary, as the case may be,
7for as long as the redevelopment project area or State Sales
8Tax Boundary, as the case may be, exist over and above the
9aggregate amount of taxes as certified by the Illinois
10Department of Revenue and paid under the Municipal Retailers'
11Occupation Tax Act and the Municipal Service Occupation Tax
12Act by retailers and servicemen, on transactions at places of
13business located in the redevelopment project area or State
14Sales Tax Boundary, as the case may be, during the base year
15which shall be the calendar year immediately prior to the year
16in which the municipality adopted tax increment allocation
17financing. For purposes of computing the aggregate amount of
18such taxes for base years occurring prior to 1985, the
19Department of Revenue shall determine the Initial Sales Tax
20Amounts for such taxes and deduct therefrom an amount equal to
214% of the aggregate amount of taxes per year for each year the
22base year is prior to 1985, but not to exceed a total deduction
23of 12%. The amount so determined shall be known as the
24"Adjusted Initial Sales Tax Amounts". For purposes of
25determining the Municipal Sales Tax Increment, the Department
26of Revenue shall for each period subtract from the amount paid

 

 

HB0367- 96 -LRB102 00205 AWJ 10207 b

1to the municipality from the Local Government Tax Fund arising
2from sales by retailers and servicemen on transactions located
3in the redevelopment project area or the State Sales Tax
4Boundary, as the case may be, the certified Initial Sales Tax
5Amounts, the Adjusted Initial Sales Tax Amounts or the Revised
6Initial Sales Tax Amounts for the Municipal Retailers'
7Occupation Tax Act and the Municipal Service Occupation Tax
8Act. For the State Fiscal Year 1989, this calculation shall be
9made by utilizing the calendar year 1987 to determine the tax
10amounts received. For the State Fiscal Year 1990, this
11calculation shall be made by utilizing the period from January
121, 1988, until September 30, 1988, to determine the tax
13amounts received from retailers and servicemen pursuant to the
14Municipal Retailers' Occupation Tax and the Municipal Service
15Occupation Tax Act, which shall have deducted therefrom
16nine-twelfths of the certified Initial Sales Tax Amounts, the
17Adjusted Initial Sales Tax Amounts or the Revised Initial
18Sales Tax Amounts as appropriate. For the State Fiscal Year
191991, this calculation shall be made by utilizing the period
20from October 1, 1988, to June 30, 1989, to determine the tax
21amounts received from retailers and servicemen pursuant to the
22Municipal Retailers' Occupation Tax and the Municipal Service
23Occupation Tax Act which shall have deducted therefrom
24nine-twelfths of the certified Initial Sales Tax Amounts,
25Adjusted Initial Sales Tax Amounts or the Revised Initial
26Sales Tax Amounts as appropriate. For every State Fiscal Year

 

 

HB0367- 97 -LRB102 00205 AWJ 10207 b

1thereafter, the applicable period shall be the 12 months
2beginning July 1 and ending June 30 to determine the tax
3amounts received which shall have deducted therefrom the
4certified Initial Sales Tax Amounts, the Adjusted Initial
5Sales Tax Amounts or the Revised Initial Sales Tax Amounts, as
6the case may be.
7    (i) "Net State Sales Tax Increment" means the sum of the
8following: (a) 80% of the first $100,000 of State Sales Tax
9Increment annually generated within a State Sales Tax
10Boundary; (b) 60% of the amount in excess of $100,000 but not
11exceeding $500,000 of State Sales Tax Increment annually
12generated within a State Sales Tax Boundary; and (c) 40% of all
13amounts in excess of $500,000 of State Sales Tax Increment
14annually generated within a State Sales Tax Boundary. If,
15however, a municipality established a tax increment financing
16district in a county with a population in excess of 3,000,000
17before January 1, 1986, and the municipality entered into a
18contract or issued bonds after January 1, 1986, but before
19December 31, 1986, to finance redevelopment project costs
20within a State Sales Tax Boundary, then the Net State Sales Tax
21Increment means, for the fiscal years beginning July 1, 1990,
22and July 1, 1991, 100% of the State Sales Tax Increment
23annually generated within a State Sales Tax Boundary; and
24notwithstanding any other provision of this Act, for those
25fiscal years the Department of Revenue shall distribute to
26those municipalities 100% of their Net State Sales Tax

 

 

HB0367- 98 -LRB102 00205 AWJ 10207 b

1Increment before any distribution to any other municipality
2and regardless of whether or not those other municipalities
3will receive 100% of their Net State Sales Tax Increment. For
4Fiscal Year 1999, and every year thereafter until the year
52007, for any municipality that has not entered into a
6contract or has not issued bonds prior to June 1, 1988 to
7finance redevelopment project costs within a State Sales Tax
8Boundary, the Net State Sales Tax Increment shall be
9calculated as follows: By multiplying the Net State Sales Tax
10Increment by 90% in the State Fiscal Year 1999; 80% in the
11State Fiscal Year 2000; 70% in the State Fiscal Year 2001; 60%
12in the State Fiscal Year 2002; 50% in the State Fiscal Year
132003; 40% in the State Fiscal Year 2004; 30% in the State
14Fiscal Year 2005; 20% in the State Fiscal Year 2006; and 10% in
15the State Fiscal Year 2007. No payment shall be made for State
16Fiscal Year 2008 and thereafter.
17    Municipalities that issued bonds in connection with a
18redevelopment project in a redevelopment project area within
19the State Sales Tax Boundary prior to July 29, 1991, or that
20entered into contracts in connection with a redevelopment
21project in a redevelopment project area before June 1, 1988,
22shall continue to receive their proportional share of the
23Illinois Tax Increment Fund distribution until the date on
24which the redevelopment project is completed or terminated.
25If, however, a municipality that issued bonds in connection
26with a redevelopment project in a redevelopment project area

 

 

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1within the State Sales Tax Boundary prior to July 29, 1991
2retires the bonds prior to June 30, 2007 or a municipality that
3entered into contracts in connection with a redevelopment
4project in a redevelopment project area before June 1, 1988
5completes the contracts prior to June 30, 2007, then so long as
6the redevelopment project is not completed or is not
7terminated, the Net State Sales Tax Increment shall be
8calculated, beginning on the date on which the bonds are
9retired or the contracts are completed, as follows: By
10multiplying the Net State Sales Tax Increment by 60% in the
11State Fiscal Year 2002; 50% in the State Fiscal Year 2003; 40%
12in the State Fiscal Year 2004; 30% in the State Fiscal Year
132005; 20% in the State Fiscal Year 2006; and 10% in the State
14Fiscal Year 2007. No payment shall be made for State Fiscal
15Year 2008 and thereafter. Refunding of any bonds issued prior
16to July 29, 1991, shall not alter the Net State Sales Tax
17Increment.
18    (j) "State Utility Tax Increment Amount" means an amount
19equal to the aggregate increase in State electric and gas tax
20charges imposed on owners and tenants, other than residential
21customers, of properties located within the redevelopment
22project area under Section 9-222 of the Public Utilities Act,
23over and above the aggregate of such charges as certified by
24the Department of Revenue and paid by owners and tenants,
25other than residential customers, of properties within the
26redevelopment project area during the base year, which shall

 

 

HB0367- 100 -LRB102 00205 AWJ 10207 b

1be the calendar year immediately prior to the year of the
2adoption of the ordinance authorizing tax increment allocation
3financing.
4    (k) "Net State Utility Tax Increment" means the sum of the
5following: (a) 80% of the first $100,000 of State Utility Tax
6Increment annually generated by a redevelopment project area;
7(b) 60% of the amount in excess of $100,000 but not exceeding
8$500,000 of the State Utility Tax Increment annually generated
9by a redevelopment project area; and (c) 40% of all amounts in
10excess of $500,000 of State Utility Tax Increment annually
11generated by a redevelopment project area. For the State
12Fiscal Year 1999, and every year thereafter until the year
132007, for any municipality that has not entered into a
14contract or has not issued bonds prior to June 1, 1988 to
15finance redevelopment project costs within a redevelopment
16project area, the Net State Utility Tax Increment shall be
17calculated as follows: By multiplying the Net State Utility
18Tax Increment by 90% in the State Fiscal Year 1999; 80% in the
19State Fiscal Year 2000; 70% in the State Fiscal Year 2001; 60%
20in the State Fiscal Year 2002; 50% in the State Fiscal Year
212003; 40% in the State Fiscal Year 2004; 30% in the State
22Fiscal Year 2005; 20% in the State Fiscal Year 2006; and 10% in
23the State Fiscal Year 2007. No payment shall be made for the
24State Fiscal Year 2008 and thereafter.
25    Municipalities that issue bonds in connection with the
26redevelopment project during the period from June 1, 1988

 

 

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1until 3 years after the effective date of this Amendatory Act
2of 1988 shall receive the Net State Utility Tax Increment,
3subject to appropriation, for 15 State Fiscal Years after the
4issuance of such bonds. For the 16th through the 20th State
5Fiscal Years after issuance of the bonds, the Net State
6Utility Tax Increment shall be calculated as follows: By
7multiplying the Net State Utility Tax Increment by 90% in year
816; 80% in year 17; 70% in year 18; 60% in year 19; and 50% in
9year 20. Refunding of any bonds issued prior to June 1, 1988,
10shall not alter the revised Net State Utility Tax Increment
11payments set forth above.
12    (l) "Obligations" mean bonds, loans, debentures, notes,
13special certificates or other evidence of indebtedness issued
14by the municipality to carry out a redevelopment project or to
15refund outstanding obligations.
16    (m) "Payment in lieu of taxes" means those estimated tax
17revenues from real property in a redevelopment project area
18derived from real property that has been acquired by a
19municipality which according to the redevelopment project or
20plan is to be used for a private use which taxing districts
21would have received had a municipality not acquired the real
22property and adopted tax increment allocation financing and
23which would result from levies made after the time of the
24adoption of tax increment allocation financing to the time the
25current equalized value of real property in the redevelopment
26project area exceeds the total initial equalized value of real

 

 

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1property in said area.
2    (n) "Redevelopment plan" means the comprehensive program
3of the municipality for development or redevelopment intended
4by the payment of redevelopment project costs to reduce or
5eliminate those conditions the existence of which qualified
6the redevelopment project area as a "blighted area" or
7"conservation area" or combination thereof or "industrial park
8conservation area," and thereby to enhance the tax bases of
9the taxing districts which extend into the redevelopment
10project area, provided that, with respect to redevelopment
11project areas described in subsections (p-1) and (p-2),
12"redevelopment plan" means the comprehensive program of the
13affected municipality for the development of qualifying
14transit facilities. On and after November 1, 1999 (the
15effective date of Public Act 91-478), no redevelopment plan
16may be approved or amended that includes the development of
17vacant land (i) with a golf course and related clubhouse and
18other facilities or (ii) designated by federal, State, county,
19or municipal government as public land for outdoor
20recreational activities or for nature preserves and used for
21that purpose within 5 years prior to the adoption of the
22redevelopment plan. For the purpose of this subsection,
23"recreational activities" is limited to mean camping and
24hunting. Each redevelopment plan shall set forth in writing
25the program to be undertaken to accomplish the objectives and
26shall include but not be limited to:

 

 

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1        (A) an itemized list of estimated redevelopment
2    project costs;
3        (B) evidence indicating that the redevelopment project
4    area on the whole has not been subject to growth and
5    development through investment by private enterprise,
6    provided that such evidence shall not be required for any
7    redevelopment project area located within a transit
8    facility improvement area established pursuant to Section
9    11-74.4-3.3;
10        (C) an assessment of any financial impact of the
11    redevelopment project area on or any increased demand for
12    services from any taxing district affected by the plan and
13    any program to address such financial impact or increased
14    demand;
15        (D) the sources of funds to pay costs;
16        (E) the nature and term of the obligations to be
17    issued;
18        (F) the most recent equalized assessed valuation of
19    the redevelopment project area;
20        (G) an estimate as to the equalized assessed valuation
21    after redevelopment and the general land uses to apply in
22    the redevelopment project area;
23        (H) a commitment to fair employment practices and an
24    affirmative action plan;
25        (I) if it concerns an industrial park conservation
26    area, the plan shall also include a general description of

 

 

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1    any proposed developer, user and tenant of any property, a
2    description of the type, structure and general character
3    of the facilities to be developed, a description of the
4    type, class and number of new employees to be employed in
5    the operation of the facilities to be developed; and
6        (J) if property is to be annexed to the municipality,
7    the plan shall include the terms of the annexation
8    agreement.
9    The provisions of items (B) and (C) of this subsection (n)
10shall not apply to a municipality that before March 14, 1994
11(the effective date of Public Act 88-537) had fixed, either by
12its corporate authorities or by a commission designated under
13subsection (k) of Section 11-74.4-4, a time and place for a
14public hearing as required by subsection (a) of Section
1511-74.4-5. No redevelopment plan shall be adopted unless a
16municipality complies with all of the following requirements:
17        (1) The municipality finds that the redevelopment
18    project area on the whole has not been subject to growth
19    and development through investment by private enterprise
20    and would not reasonably be anticipated to be developed
21    without the adoption of the redevelopment plan, provided,
22    however, that such a finding shall not be required with
23    respect to any redevelopment project area located within a
24    transit facility improvement area established pursuant to
25    Section 11-74.4-3.3.
26        (2) The municipality finds that the redevelopment plan

 

 

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1    and project conform to the comprehensive plan for the
2    development of the municipality as a whole, or, for
3    municipalities with a population of 100,000 or more,
4    regardless of when the redevelopment plan and project was
5    adopted, the redevelopment plan and project either: (i)
6    conforms to the strategic economic development or
7    redevelopment plan issued by the designated planning
8    authority of the municipality, or (ii) includes land uses
9    that have been approved by the planning commission of the
10    municipality.
11        (3) The redevelopment plan establishes the estimated
12    dates of completion of the redevelopment project and
13    retirement of obligations issued to finance redevelopment
14    project costs. Those dates may not be later than the dates
15    set forth under Section 11-74.4-3.5.
16        A municipality may by municipal ordinance amend an
17    existing redevelopment plan to conform to this paragraph
18    (3) as amended by Public Act 91-478, which municipal
19    ordinance may be adopted without further hearing or notice
20    and without complying with the procedures provided in this
21    Act pertaining to an amendment to or the initial approval
22    of a redevelopment plan and project and designation of a
23    redevelopment project area.
24        (3.5) The municipality finds, in the case of an
25    industrial park conservation area, also that the
26    municipality is a labor surplus municipality and that the

 

 

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1    implementation of the redevelopment plan will reduce
2    unemployment, create new jobs and by the provision of new
3    facilities enhance the tax base of the taxing districts
4    that extend into the redevelopment project area.
5        (4) If any incremental revenues are being utilized
6    under Section 8(a)(1) or 8(a)(2) of this Act in
7    redevelopment project areas approved by ordinance after
8    January 1, 1986, the municipality finds: (a) that the
9    redevelopment project area would not reasonably be
10    developed without the use of such incremental revenues,
11    and (b) that such incremental revenues will be exclusively
12    utilized for the development of the redevelopment project
13    area.
14        (5) If: (a) the redevelopment plan will not result in
15    displacement of residents from 10 or more inhabited
16    residential units, and the municipality certifies in the
17    plan that such displacement will not result from the plan;
18    or (b) the redevelopment plan is for a redevelopment
19    project area located within a transit facility improvement
20    area established pursuant to Section 11-74.4-3.3, and the
21    applicable project is subject to the process for
22    evaluation of environmental effects under the National
23    Environmental Policy Act of 1969, 42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.,
24    then a housing impact study need not be performed. If,
25    however, the redevelopment plan would result in the
26    displacement of residents from 10 or more inhabited

 

 

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1    residential units, or if the redevelopment project area
2    contains 75 or more inhabited residential units and no
3    certification is made, then the municipality shall
4    prepare, as part of the separate feasibility report
5    required by subsection (a) of Section 11-74.4-5, a housing
6    impact study.
7        Part I of the housing impact study shall include (i)
8    data as to whether the residential units are single family
9    or multi-family units, (ii) the number and type of rooms
10    within the units, if that information is available, (iii)
11    whether the units are inhabited or uninhabited, as
12    determined not less than 45 days before the date that the
13    ordinance or resolution required by subsection (a) of
14    Section 11-74.4-5 is passed, and (iv) data as to the
15    racial and ethnic composition of the residents in the
16    inhabited residential units. The data requirement as to
17    the racial and ethnic composition of the residents in the
18    inhabited residential units shall be deemed to be fully
19    satisfied by data from the most recent federal census.
20        Part II of the housing impact study shall identify the
21    inhabited residential units in the proposed redevelopment
22    project area that are to be or may be removed. If inhabited
23    residential units are to be removed, then the housing
24    impact study shall identify (i) the number and location of
25    those units that will or may be removed, (ii) the
26    municipality's plans for relocation assistance for those

 

 

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1    residents in the proposed redevelopment project area whose
2    residences are to be removed, (iii) the availability of
3    replacement housing for those residents whose residences
4    are to be removed, and shall identify the type, location,
5    and cost of the housing, and (iv) the type and extent of
6    relocation assistance to be provided.
7        (6) On and after November 1, 1999, the housing impact
8    study required by paragraph (5) shall be incorporated in
9    the redevelopment plan for the redevelopment project area.
10        (7) On and after November 1, 1999, no redevelopment
11    plan shall be adopted, nor an existing plan amended, nor
12    shall residential housing that is occupied by households
13    of low-income and very low-income persons in currently
14    existing redevelopment project areas be removed after
15    November 1, 1999 unless the redevelopment plan provides,
16    with respect to inhabited housing units that are to be
17    removed for households of low-income and very low-income
18    persons, affordable housing and relocation assistance not
19    less than that which would be provided under the federal
20    Uniform Relocation Assistance and Real Property
21    Acquisition Policies Act of 1970 and the regulations under
22    that Act, including the eligibility criteria. Affordable
23    housing may be either existing or newly constructed
24    housing. For purposes of this paragraph (7), "low-income
25    households", "very low-income households", and "affordable
26    housing" have the meanings set forth in the Illinois

 

 

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1    Affordable Housing Act. The municipality shall make a good
2    faith effort to ensure that this affordable housing is
3    located in or near the redevelopment project area within
4    the municipality.
5        (8) On and after November 1, 1999, if, after the
6    adoption of the redevelopment plan for the redevelopment
7    project area, any municipality desires to amend its
8    redevelopment plan to remove more inhabited residential
9    units than specified in its original redevelopment plan,
10    that change shall be made in accordance with the
11    procedures in subsection (c) of Section 11-74.4-5.
12        (9) For redevelopment project areas designated prior
13    to November 1, 1999, the redevelopment plan may be amended
14    without further joint review board meeting or hearing,
15    provided that the municipality shall give notice of any
16    such changes by mail to each affected taxing district and
17    registrant on the interested party registry, to authorize
18    the municipality to expend tax increment revenues for
19    redevelopment project costs defined by paragraphs (5) and
20    (7.5), subparagraphs (E) and (F) of paragraph (11), and
21    paragraph (11.5) of subsection (q) of Section 11-74.4-3,
22    so long as the changes do not increase the total estimated
23    redevelopment project costs set out in the redevelopment
24    plan by more than 5% after adjustment for inflation from
25    the date the plan was adopted.
26    (o) "Redevelopment project" means any public and private

 

 

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1development project in furtherance of the objectives of a
2redevelopment plan. On and after November 1, 1999 (the
3effective date of Public Act 91-478), no redevelopment plan
4may be approved or amended that includes the development of
5vacant land (i) with a golf course and related clubhouse and
6other facilities or (ii) designated by federal, State, county,
7or municipal government as public land for outdoor
8recreational activities or for nature preserves and used for
9that purpose within 5 years prior to the adoption of the
10redevelopment plan. For the purpose of this subsection,
11"recreational activities" is limited to mean camping and
12hunting.
13    (p) "Redevelopment project area" means an area designated
14by the municipality, which is not less in the aggregate than 1
151/2 acres and in respect to which the municipality has made a
16finding that there exist conditions which cause the area to be
17classified as an industrial park conservation area or a
18blighted area or a conservation area, or a combination of both
19blighted areas and conservation areas.
20    (p-1) Notwithstanding any provision of this Act to the
21contrary, on and after August 25, 2009 (the effective date of
22Public Act 96-680), a redevelopment project area may include
23areas within a one-half mile radius of an existing or proposed
24Regional Transportation Authority Suburban Transit Access
25Route (STAR Line) station without a finding that the area is
26classified as an industrial park conservation area, a blighted

 

 

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1area, a conservation area, or a combination thereof, but only
2if the municipality receives unanimous consent from the joint
3review board created to review the proposed redevelopment
4project area.
5    (p-2) Notwithstanding any provision of this Act to the
6contrary, on and after the effective date of this amendatory
7Act of the 99th General Assembly, a redevelopment project area
8may include areas within a transit facility improvement area
9that has been established pursuant to Section 11-74.4-3.3
10without a finding that the area is classified as an industrial
11park conservation area, a blighted area, a conservation area,
12or any combination thereof.
13    (q) "Redevelopment project costs", except for
14redevelopment project areas created pursuant to subsection
15(p-1) or (p-2), means and includes the sum total of all
16reasonable or necessary costs incurred or estimated to be
17incurred, and any such costs incidental to a redevelopment
18plan and a redevelopment project. Such costs include, without
19limitation, the following:
20        (1) Costs of studies, surveys, development of plans,
21    and specifications, implementation and administration of
22    the redevelopment plan including but not limited to staff
23    and professional service costs for architectural,
24    engineering, legal, financial, planning or other services,
25    provided however that no charges for professional services
26    may be based on a percentage of the tax increment

 

 

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1    collected; except that on and after November 1, 1999 (the
2    effective date of Public Act 91-478), no contracts for
3    professional services, excluding architectural and
4    engineering services, may be entered into if the terms of
5    the contract extend beyond a period of 3 years. In
6    addition, "redevelopment project costs" shall not include
7    lobbying expenses. After consultation with the
8    municipality, each tax increment consultant or advisor to
9    a municipality that plans to designate or has designated a
10    redevelopment project area shall inform the municipality
11    in writing of any contracts that the consultant or advisor
12    has entered into with entities or individuals that have
13    received, or are receiving, payments financed by tax
14    increment revenues produced by the redevelopment project
15    area with respect to which the consultant or advisor has
16    performed, or will be performing, service for the
17    municipality. This requirement shall be satisfied by the
18    consultant or advisor before the commencement of services
19    for the municipality and thereafter whenever any other
20    contracts with those individuals or entities are executed
21    by the consultant or advisor;
22        (1.5) After July 1, 1999, annual administrative costs
23    shall not include general overhead or administrative costs
24    of the municipality that would still have been incurred by
25    the municipality if the municipality had not designated a
26    redevelopment project area or approved a redevelopment

 

 

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1    plan;
2        (1.6) The cost of marketing sites within the
3    redevelopment project area to prospective businesses,
4    developers, and investors;
5        (2) Property assembly costs, including but not limited
6    to acquisition of land and other property, real or
7    personal, or rights or interests therein, demolition of
8    buildings, site preparation, site improvements that serve
9    as an engineered barrier addressing ground level or below
10    ground environmental contamination, including, but not
11    limited to parking lots and other concrete or asphalt
12    barriers, and the clearing and grading of land;
13        (3) Costs of rehabilitation, reconstruction or repair
14    or remodeling of existing public or private buildings,
15    fixtures, and leasehold improvements; and the cost of
16    replacing an existing public building if pursuant to the
17    implementation of a redevelopment project the existing
18    public building is to be demolished to use the site for
19    private investment or devoted to a different use requiring
20    private investment; including any direct or indirect costs
21    relating to Green Globes or LEED certified construction
22    elements or construction elements with an equivalent
23    certification;
24        (4) Costs of the construction of public works or
25    improvements, including any direct or indirect costs
26    relating to Green Globes or LEED certified construction

 

 

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1    elements or construction elements with an equivalent
2    certification, except that on and after November 1, 1999,
3    redevelopment project costs shall not include the cost of
4    constructing a new municipal public building principally
5    used to provide offices, storage space, or conference
6    facilities or vehicle storage, maintenance, or repair for
7    administrative, public safety, or public works personnel
8    and that is not intended to replace an existing public
9    building as provided under paragraph (3) of subsection (q)
10    of Section 11-74.4-3 unless either (i) the construction of
11    the new municipal building implements a redevelopment
12    project that was included in a redevelopment plan that was
13    adopted by the municipality prior to November 1, 1999,
14    (ii) the municipality makes a reasonable determination in
15    the redevelopment plan, supported by information that
16    provides the basis for that determination, that the new
17    municipal building is required to meet an increase in the
18    need for public safety purposes anticipated to result from
19    the implementation of the redevelopment plan, or (iii) the
20    new municipal public building is for the storage,
21    maintenance, or repair of transit vehicles and is located
22    in a transit facility improvement area that has been
23    established pursuant to Section 11-74.4-3.3;
24        (5) Costs of job training and retraining projects,
25    including the cost of "welfare to work" programs
26    implemented by businesses located within the redevelopment

 

 

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1    project area;
2        (6) Financing costs, including but not limited to all
3    necessary and incidental expenses related to the issuance
4    of obligations and which may include payment of interest
5    on any obligations issued hereunder including interest
6    accruing during the estimated period of construction of
7    any redevelopment project for which such obligations are
8    issued and for not exceeding 36 months thereafter and
9    including reasonable reserves related thereto;
10        (7) To the extent the municipality by written
11    agreement accepts and approves the same, all or a portion
12    of a taxing district's capital costs resulting from the
13    redevelopment project necessarily incurred or to be
14    incurred within a taxing district in furtherance of the
15    objectives of the redevelopment plan and project;
16        (7.5) For redevelopment project areas designated (or
17    redevelopment project areas amended to add or increase the
18    number of tax-increment-financing assisted housing units)
19    on or after November 1, 1999, an elementary, secondary, or
20    unit school district's increased costs attributable to
21    assisted housing units located within the redevelopment
22    project area for which the developer or redeveloper
23    receives financial assistance through an agreement with
24    the municipality or because the municipality incurs the
25    cost of necessary infrastructure improvements within the
26    boundaries of the assisted housing sites necessary for the

 

 

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1    completion of that housing as authorized by this Act, and
2    which costs shall be paid by the municipality from the
3    Special Tax Allocation Fund when the tax increment revenue
4    is received as a result of the assisted housing units and
5    shall be calculated annually as follows:
6            (A) for foundation districts, excluding any school
7        district in a municipality with a population in excess
8        of 1,000,000, by multiplying the district's increase
9        in attendance resulting from the net increase in new
10        students enrolled in that school district who reside
11        in housing units within the redevelopment project area
12        that have received financial assistance through an
13        agreement with the municipality or because the
14        municipality incurs the cost of necessary
15        infrastructure improvements within the boundaries of
16        the housing sites necessary for the completion of that
17        housing as authorized by this Act since the
18        designation of the redevelopment project area by the
19        most recently available per capita tuition cost as
20        defined in Section 10-20.12a of the School Code less
21        any increase in general State aid as defined in
22        Section 18-8.05 of the School Code or evidence-based
23        funding as defined in Section 18-8.15 of the School
24        Code attributable to these added new students subject
25        to the following annual limitations:
26                (i) for unit school districts with a district

 

 

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1            average 1995-96 Per Capita Tuition Charge of less
2            than $5,900, no more than 25% of the total amount
3            of property tax increment revenue produced by
4            those housing units that have received tax
5            increment finance assistance under this Act;
6                (ii) for elementary school districts with a
7            district average 1995-96 Per Capita Tuition Charge
8            of less than $5,900, no more than 17% of the total
9            amount of property tax increment revenue produced
10            by those housing units that have received tax
11            increment finance assistance under this Act; and
12                (iii) for secondary school districts with a
13            district average 1995-96 Per Capita Tuition Charge
14            of less than $5,900, no more than 8% of the total
15            amount of property tax increment revenue produced
16            by those housing units that have received tax
17            increment finance assistance under this Act.
18            (B) For alternate method districts, flat grant
19        districts, and foundation districts with a district
20        average 1995-96 Per Capita Tuition Charge equal to or
21        more than $5,900, excluding any school district with a
22        population in excess of 1,000,000, by multiplying the
23        district's increase in attendance resulting from the
24        net increase in new students enrolled in that school
25        district who reside in housing units within the
26        redevelopment project area that have received

 

 

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1        financial assistance through an agreement with the
2        municipality or because the municipality incurs the
3        cost of necessary infrastructure improvements within
4        the boundaries of the housing sites necessary for the
5        completion of that housing as authorized by this Act
6        since the designation of the redevelopment project
7        area by the most recently available per capita tuition
8        cost as defined in Section 10-20.12a of the School
9        Code less any increase in general state aid as defined
10        in Section 18-8.05 of the School Code or
11        evidence-based funding as defined in Section 18-8.15
12        of the School Code attributable to these added new
13        students subject to the following annual limitations:
14                (i) for unit school districts, no more than
15            40% of the total amount of property tax increment
16            revenue produced by those housing units that have
17            received tax increment finance assistance under
18            this Act;
19                (ii) for elementary school districts, no more
20            than 27% of the total amount of property tax
21            increment revenue produced by those housing units
22            that have received tax increment finance
23            assistance under this Act; and
24                (iii) for secondary school districts, no more
25            than 13% of the total amount of property tax
26            increment revenue produced by those housing units

 

 

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1            that have received tax increment finance
2            assistance under this Act.
3            (C) For any school district in a municipality with
4        a population in excess of 1,000,000, the following
5        restrictions shall apply to the reimbursement of
6        increased costs under this paragraph (7.5):
7                (i) no increased costs shall be reimbursed
8            unless the school district certifies that each of
9            the schools affected by the assisted housing
10            project is at or over its student capacity;
11                (ii) the amount reimbursable shall be reduced
12            by the value of any land donated to the school
13            district by the municipality or developer, and by
14            the value of any physical improvements made to the
15            schools by the municipality or developer; and
16                (iii) the amount reimbursed may not affect
17            amounts otherwise obligated by the terms of any
18            bonds, notes, or other funding instruments, or the
19            terms of any redevelopment agreement.
20        Any school district seeking payment under this
21        paragraph (7.5) shall, after July 1 and before
22        September 30 of each year, provide the municipality
23        with reasonable evidence to support its claim for
24        reimbursement before the municipality shall be
25        required to approve or make the payment to the school
26        district. If the school district fails to provide the

 

 

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1        information during this period in any year, it shall
2        forfeit any claim to reimbursement for that year.
3        School districts may adopt a resolution waiving the
4        right to all or a portion of the reimbursement
5        otherwise required by this paragraph (7.5). By
6        acceptance of this reimbursement the school district
7        waives the right to directly or indirectly set aside,
8        modify, or contest in any manner the establishment of
9        the redevelopment project area or projects;
10        (7.7) For redevelopment project areas designated (or
11    redevelopment project areas amended to add or increase the
12    number of tax-increment-financing assisted housing units)
13    on or after January 1, 2005 (the effective date of Public
14    Act 93-961), a public library district's increased costs
15    attributable to assisted housing units located within the
16    redevelopment project area for which the developer or
17    redeveloper receives financial assistance through an
18    agreement with the municipality or because the
19    municipality incurs the cost of necessary infrastructure
20    improvements within the boundaries of the assisted housing
21    sites necessary for the completion of that housing as
22    authorized by this Act shall be paid to the library
23    district by the municipality from the Special Tax
24    Allocation Fund when the tax increment revenue is received
25    as a result of the assisted housing units. This paragraph
26    (7.7) applies only if (i) the library district is located

 

 

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1    in a county that is subject to the Property Tax Extension
2    Limitation Law or (ii) the library district is not located
3    in a county that is subject to the Property Tax Extension
4    Limitation Law but the district is prohibited by any other
5    law from increasing its tax levy rate without a prior
6    voter referendum.
7        The amount paid to a library district under this
8    paragraph (7.7) shall be calculated by multiplying (i) the
9    net increase in the number of persons eligible to obtain a
10    library card in that district who reside in housing units
11    within the redevelopment project area that have received
12    financial assistance through an agreement with the
13    municipality or because the municipality incurs the cost
14    of necessary infrastructure improvements within the
15    boundaries of the housing sites necessary for the
16    completion of that housing as authorized by this Act since
17    the designation of the redevelopment project area by (ii)
18    the per-patron cost of providing library services so long
19    as it does not exceed $120. The per-patron cost shall be
20    the Total Operating Expenditures Per Capita for the
21    library in the previous fiscal year. The municipality may
22    deduct from the amount that it must pay to a library
23    district under this paragraph any amount that it has
24    voluntarily paid to the library district from the tax
25    increment revenue. The amount paid to a library district
26    under this paragraph (7.7) shall be no more than 2% of the

 

 

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1    amount produced by the assisted housing units and
2    deposited into the Special Tax Allocation Fund.
3        A library district is not eligible for any payment
4    under this paragraph (7.7) unless the library district has
5    experienced an increase in the number of patrons from the
6    municipality that created the tax-increment-financing
7    district since the designation of the redevelopment
8    project area.
9        Any library district seeking payment under this
10    paragraph (7.7) shall, after July 1 and before September
11    30 of each year, provide the municipality with convincing
12    evidence to support its claim for reimbursement before the
13    municipality shall be required to approve or make the
14    payment to the library district. If the library district
15    fails to provide the information during this period in any
16    year, it shall forfeit any claim to reimbursement for that
17    year. Library districts may adopt a resolution waiving the
18    right to all or a portion of the reimbursement otherwise
19    required by this paragraph (7.7). By acceptance of such
20    reimbursement, the library district shall forfeit any
21    right to directly or indirectly set aside, modify, or
22    contest in any manner whatsoever the establishment of the
23    redevelopment project area or projects;
24        (8) Relocation costs to the extent that a municipality
25    determines that relocation costs shall be paid or is
26    required to make payment of relocation costs by federal or

 

 

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1    State law or in order to satisfy subparagraph (7) of
2    subsection (n);
3        (9) Payment in lieu of taxes;
4        (10) Costs of job training, retraining, advanced
5    vocational education or career education, including but
6    not limited to courses in occupational, semi-technical or
7    technical fields leading directly to employment, incurred
8    by one or more taxing districts, provided that such costs
9    (i) are related to the establishment and maintenance of
10    additional job training, advanced vocational education or
11    career education programs for persons employed or to be
12    employed by employers located in a redevelopment project
13    area; and (ii) when incurred by a taxing district or
14    taxing districts other than the municipality, are set
15    forth in a written agreement by or among the municipality
16    and the taxing district or taxing districts, which
17    agreement describes the program to be undertaken,
18    including but not limited to the number of employees to be
19    trained, a description of the training and services to be
20    provided, the number and type of positions available or to
21    be available, itemized costs of the program and sources of
22    funds to pay for the same, and the term of the agreement.
23    Such costs include, specifically, the payment by community
24    college districts of costs pursuant to Sections 3-37,
25    3-38, 3-40 and 3-40.1 of the Public Community College Act
26    and by school districts of costs pursuant to Sections

 

 

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1    10-22.20a and 10-23.3a of the School Code;
2        (11) Interest cost incurred by a redeveloper related
3    to the construction, renovation or rehabilitation of a
4    redevelopment project provided that:
5            (A) such costs are to be paid directly from the
6        special tax allocation fund established pursuant to
7        this Act;
8            (B) such payments in any one year may not exceed
9        30% of the annual interest costs incurred by the
10        redeveloper with regard to the redevelopment project
11        during that year;
12            (C) if there are not sufficient funds available in
13        the special tax allocation fund to make the payment
14        pursuant to this paragraph (11) then the amounts so
15        due shall accrue and be payable when sufficient funds
16        are available in the special tax allocation fund;
17            (D) the total of such interest payments paid
18        pursuant to this Act may not exceed 30% of the total
19        (i) cost paid or incurred by the redeveloper for the
20        redevelopment project plus (ii) redevelopment project
21        costs excluding any property assembly costs and any
22        relocation costs incurred by a municipality pursuant
23        to this Act;
24            (E) the cost limits set forth in subparagraphs (B)
25        and (D) of paragraph (11) shall be modified for the
26        financing of rehabilitated or new housing units for

 

 

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1        low-income households and very low-income households,
2        as defined in Section 3 of the Illinois Affordable
3        Housing Act. The percentage of 75% shall be
4        substituted for 30% in subparagraphs (B) and (D) of
5        paragraph (11); and
6            (F) instead of the eligible costs provided by
7        subparagraphs (B) and (D) of paragraph (11), as
8        modified by this subparagraph, and notwithstanding any
9        other provisions of this Act to the contrary, the
10        municipality may pay from tax increment revenues up to
11        50% of the cost of construction of new housing units to
12        be occupied by low-income households and very
13        low-income households as defined in Section 3 of the
14        Illinois Affordable Housing Act. The cost of
15        construction of those units may be derived from the
16        proceeds of bonds issued by the municipality under
17        this Act or other constitutional or statutory
18        authority or from other sources of municipal revenue
19        that may be reimbursed from tax increment revenues or
20        the proceeds of bonds issued to finance the
21        construction of that housing.
22            The eligible costs provided under this
23        subparagraph (F) of paragraph (11) shall be an
24        eligible cost for the construction, renovation, and
25        rehabilitation of all low and very low-income housing
26        units, as defined in Section 3 of the Illinois

 

 

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1        Affordable Housing Act, within the redevelopment
2        project area. If the low and very low-income units are
3        part of a residential redevelopment project that
4        includes units not affordable to low and very
5        low-income households, only the low and very
6        low-income units shall be eligible for benefits under
7        this subparagraph (F) of paragraph (11). The standards
8        for maintaining the occupancy by low-income households
9        and very low-income households, as defined in Section
10        3 of the Illinois Affordable Housing Act, of those
11        units constructed with eligible costs made available
12        under the provisions of this subparagraph (F) of
13        paragraph (11) shall be established by guidelines
14        adopted by the municipality. The responsibility for
15        annually documenting the initial occupancy of the
16        units by low-income households and very low-income
17        households, as defined in Section 3 of the Illinois
18        Affordable Housing Act, shall be that of the then
19        current owner of the property. For ownership units,
20        the guidelines will provide, at a minimum, for a
21        reasonable recapture of funds, or other appropriate
22        methods designed to preserve the original
23        affordability of the ownership units. For rental
24        units, the guidelines will provide, at a minimum, for
25        the affordability of rent to low and very low-income
26        households. As units become available, they shall be

 

 

HB0367- 127 -LRB102 00205 AWJ 10207 b

1        rented to income-eligible tenants. The municipality
2        may modify these guidelines from time to time; the
3        guidelines, however, shall be in effect for as long as
4        tax increment revenue is being used to pay for costs
5        associated with the units or for the retirement of
6        bonds issued to finance the units or for the life of
7        the redevelopment project area, whichever is later;
8        (11.5) If the redevelopment project area is located
9    within a municipality with a population of more than
10    100,000, the cost of day care services for children of
11    employees from low-income families working for businesses
12    located within the redevelopment project area and all or a
13    portion of the cost of operation of day care centers
14    established by redevelopment project area businesses to
15    serve employees from low-income families working in
16    businesses located in the redevelopment project area. For
17    the purposes of this paragraph, "low-income families"
18    means families whose annual income does not exceed 80% of
19    the municipal, county, or regional median income, adjusted
20    for family size, as the annual income and municipal,
21    county, or regional median income are determined from time
22    to time by the United States Department of Housing and
23    Urban Development.
24        (12) Costs relating to the development of urban
25    agricultural areas under Division 15.2 of the Illinois
26    Municipal Code.

 

 

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1        (13) Funds transferred to community improvement land
2    banks under Section 5-35 of the Community Improvement Land
3    Bank Act.
4    Unless explicitly stated herein the cost of construction
5of new privately-owned buildings shall not be an eligible
6redevelopment project cost.
7    After November 1, 1999 (the effective date of Public Act
891-478), none of the redevelopment project costs enumerated in
9this subsection shall be eligible redevelopment project costs
10if those costs would provide direct financial support to a
11retail entity initiating operations in the redevelopment
12project area while terminating operations at another Illinois
13location within 10 miles of the redevelopment project area but
14outside the boundaries of the redevelopment project area
15municipality. For purposes of this paragraph, termination
16means a closing of a retail operation that is directly related
17to the opening of the same operation or like retail entity
18owned or operated by more than 50% of the original ownership in
19a redevelopment project area, but it does not mean closing an
20operation for reasons beyond the control of the retail entity,
21as documented by the retail entity, subject to a reasonable
22finding by the municipality that the current location
23contained inadequate space, had become economically obsolete,
24or was no longer a viable location for the retailer or
25serviceman.
26    No cost shall be a redevelopment project cost in a

 

 

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1redevelopment project area if used to demolish, remove, or
2substantially modify a historic resource, after August 26,
32008 (the effective date of Public Act 95-934), unless no
4prudent and feasible alternative exists. "Historic resource"
5for the purpose of this paragraph means (i) a place or
6structure that is included or eligible for inclusion on the
7National Register of Historic Places or (ii) a contributing
8structure in a district on the National Register of Historic
9Places. This paragraph does not apply to a place or structure
10for which demolition, removal, or modification is subject to
11review by the preservation agency of a Certified Local
12Government designated as such by the National Park Service of
13the United States Department of the Interior.
14    If a special service area has been established pursuant to
15the Special Service Area Tax Act or Special Service Area Tax
16Law, then any tax increment revenues derived from the tax
17imposed pursuant to the Special Service Area Tax Act or
18Special Service Area Tax Law may be used within the
19redevelopment project area for the purposes permitted by that
20Act or Law as well as the purposes permitted by this Act.
21    (q-1) For redevelopment project areas created pursuant to
22subsection (p-1), redevelopment project costs are limited to
23those costs in paragraph (q) that are related to the existing
24or proposed Regional Transportation Authority Suburban Transit
25Access Route (STAR Line) station.
26    (q-2) For a redevelopment project area located within a

 

 

HB0367- 130 -LRB102 00205 AWJ 10207 b

1transit facility improvement area established pursuant to
2Section 11-74.4-3.3, redevelopment project costs means those
3costs described in subsection (q) that are related to the
4construction, reconstruction, rehabilitation, remodeling, or
5repair of any existing or proposed transit facility.
6    (r) "State Sales Tax Boundary" means the redevelopment
7project area or the amended redevelopment project area
8boundaries which are determined pursuant to subsection (9) of
9Section 11-74.4-8a of this Act. The Department of Revenue
10shall certify pursuant to subsection (9) of Section 11-74.4-8a
11the appropriate boundaries eligible for the determination of
12State Sales Tax Increment.
13    (s) "State Sales Tax Increment" means an amount equal to
14the increase in the aggregate amount of taxes paid by
15retailers and servicemen, other than retailers and servicemen
16subject to the Public Utilities Act, on transactions at places
17of business located within a State Sales Tax Boundary pursuant
18to the Retailers' Occupation Tax Act, the Use Tax Act, the
19Service Use Tax Act, and the Service Occupation Tax Act,
20except such portion of such increase that is paid into the
21State and Local Sales Tax Reform Fund, the Local Government
22Distributive Fund, the Local Government Tax Fund and the
23County and Mass Transit District Fund, for as long as State
24participation exists, over and above the Initial Sales Tax
25Amounts, Adjusted Initial Sales Tax Amounts or the Revised
26Initial Sales Tax Amounts for such taxes as certified by the

 

 

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1Department of Revenue and paid under those Acts by retailers
2and servicemen on transactions at places of business located
3within the State Sales Tax Boundary during the base year which
4shall be the calendar year immediately prior to the year in
5which the municipality adopted tax increment allocation
6financing, less 3.0% of such amounts generated under the
7Retailers' Occupation Tax Act, Use Tax Act and Service Use Tax
8Act and the Service Occupation Tax Act, which sum shall be
9appropriated to the Department of Revenue to cover its costs
10of administering and enforcing this Section. For purposes of
11computing the aggregate amount of such taxes for base years
12occurring prior to 1985, the Department of Revenue shall
13compute the Initial Sales Tax Amount for such taxes and deduct
14therefrom an amount equal to 4% of the aggregate amount of
15taxes per year for each year the base year is prior to 1985,
16but not to exceed a total deduction of 12%. The amount so
17determined shall be known as the "Adjusted Initial Sales Tax
18Amount". For purposes of determining the State Sales Tax
19Increment the Department of Revenue shall for each period
20subtract from the tax amounts received from retailers and
21servicemen on transactions located in the State Sales Tax
22Boundary, the certified Initial Sales Tax Amounts, Adjusted
23Initial Sales Tax Amounts or Revised Initial Sales Tax Amounts
24for the Retailers' Occupation Tax Act, the Use Tax Act, the
25Service Use Tax Act and the Service Occupation Tax Act. For the
26State Fiscal Year 1989 this calculation shall be made by

 

 

HB0367- 132 -LRB102 00205 AWJ 10207 b

1utilizing the calendar year 1987 to determine the tax amounts
2received. For the State Fiscal Year 1990, this calculation
3shall be made by utilizing the period from January 1, 1988,
4until September 30, 1988, to determine the tax amounts
5received from retailers and servicemen, which shall have
6deducted therefrom nine-twelfths of the certified Initial
7Sales Tax Amounts, Adjusted Initial Sales Tax Amounts or the
8Revised Initial Sales Tax Amounts as appropriate. For the
9State Fiscal Year 1991, this calculation shall be made by
10utilizing the period from October 1, 1988, until June 30,
111989, to determine the tax amounts received from retailers and
12servicemen, which shall have deducted therefrom nine-twelfths
13of the certified Initial State Sales Tax Amounts, Adjusted
14Initial Sales Tax Amounts or the Revised Initial Sales Tax
15Amounts as appropriate. For every State Fiscal Year
16thereafter, the applicable period shall be the 12 months
17beginning July 1 and ending on June 30, to determine the tax
18amounts received which shall have deducted therefrom the
19certified Initial Sales Tax Amounts, Adjusted Initial Sales
20Tax Amounts or the Revised Initial Sales Tax Amounts.
21Municipalities intending to receive a distribution of State
22Sales Tax Increment must report a list of retailers to the
23Department of Revenue by October 31, 1988 and by July 31, of
24each year thereafter.
25    (t) "Taxing districts" means counties, townships, cities
26and incorporated towns and villages, school, road, park,

 

 

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1sanitary, mosquito abatement, forest preserve, public health,
2fire protection, river conservancy, tuberculosis sanitarium
3and any other municipal corporations or districts with the
4power to levy taxes.
5    (u) "Taxing districts' capital costs" means those costs of
6taxing districts for capital improvements that are found by
7the municipal corporate authorities to be necessary and
8directly result from the redevelopment project.
9    (v) As used in subsection (a) of Section 11-74.4-3 of this
10Act, "vacant land" means any parcel or combination of parcels
11of real property without industrial, commercial, and
12residential buildings which has not been used for commercial
13agricultural purposes within 5 years prior to the designation
14of the redevelopment project area, unless the parcel is
15included in an industrial park conservation area or the parcel
16has been subdivided; provided that if the parcel was part of a
17larger tract that has been divided into 3 or more smaller
18tracts that were accepted for recording during the period from
191950 to 1990, then the parcel shall be deemed to have been
20subdivided, and all proceedings and actions of the
21municipality taken in that connection with respect to any
22previously approved or designated redevelopment project area
23or amended redevelopment project area are hereby validated and
24hereby declared to be legally sufficient for all purposes of
25this Act. For purposes of this Section and only for land
26subject to the subdivision requirements of the Plat Act, land

 

 

HB0367- 134 -LRB102 00205 AWJ 10207 b

1is subdivided when the original plat of the proposed
2Redevelopment Project Area or relevant portion thereof has
3been properly certified, acknowledged, approved, and recorded
4or filed in accordance with the Plat Act and a preliminary
5plat, if any, for any subsequent phases of the proposed
6Redevelopment Project Area or relevant portion thereof has
7been properly approved and filed in accordance with the
8applicable ordinance of the municipality.
9    (w) "Annual Total Increment" means the sum of each
10municipality's annual Net Sales Tax Increment and each
11municipality's annual Net Utility Tax Increment. The ratio of
12the Annual Total Increment of each municipality to the Annual
13Total Increment for all municipalities, as most recently
14calculated by the Department, shall determine the proportional
15shares of the Illinois Tax Increment Fund to be distributed to
16each municipality.
17    (x) "LEED certified" means any certification level of
18construction elements by a qualified Leadership in Energy and
19Environmental Design Accredited Professional as determined by
20the U.S. Green Building Council.
21    (y) "Green Globes certified" means any certification level
22of construction elements by a qualified Green Globes
23Professional as determined by the Green Building Initiative.
24(Source: P.A. 99-792, eff. 8-12-16; 100-201, eff. 8-18-17;
25100-465, eff. 8-31-17; 100-1133, eff. 1-1-19.)
 

 

 

HB0367- 135 -LRB102 00205 AWJ 10207 b

1
Article 99. Effective Date.

 
2    Section 99-5. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon
3becoming law.

 

 

HB0367- 136 -LRB102 00205 AWJ 10207 b

1 INDEX
2 Statutes amended in order of appearance
3    New Act
4    5 ILCS 140/7from Ch. 116, par. 207
5    20 ILCS 3501/815-10
6    20 ILCS 3501/815-20
7    20 ILCS 3501/815-25
8    20 ILCS 3501/815-30
9    30 ILCS 5/3-1from Ch. 15, par. 303-1
10    35 ILCS 200/21-11 new
11    35 ILCS 200/21-450 new
12    65 ILCS 5/11-74.4-3from Ch. 24, par. 11-74.4-3