Sen. Michael E. Hastings

Filed: 5/31/2021

 

 


 

 


 
10200HB3743sam002LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1
AMENDMENT TO HOUSE BILL 3743

2    AMENDMENT NO. ______. Amend House Bill 3743, AS AMENDED,
3by replacing everything after the enacting clause with the
4following:
 
5    "Section 5. The Department of State Police Law of the
6Civil Administrative Code of Illinois is amended by changing
7Section 2605-53 as follows:
 
8    (20 ILCS 2605/2605-53)
9    Sec. 2605-53. 9-1-1 system; sexual assault and sexual
10abuse.
11    (a) The Office of the Statewide 9-1-1 Administrator, in
12consultation with the Office of the Attorney General and the
13Illinois Law Enforcement Training Standards Board, shall:
14        (1) develop comprehensive guidelines for
15    evidence-based, trauma-informed, victim-centered handling
16    of sexual assault or sexual abuse calls by Public Safety

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 2 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1    Answering Point telecommunicators tele-communicators; and
2        (2) adopt rules and minimum standards for an
3    evidence-based, trauma-informed, victim-centered training
4    curriculum for handling of sexual assault or sexual abuse
5    calls for Public Safety Answering Point telecommunicators
6    tele-communicators ("PSAP").
7    (a-5) Within one year after the effective date of this
8amendatory Act of the 102nd General Assembly, the Office of
9the Statewide 9-1-1 Administrator, in consultation with the
10Statewide 9-1-1 Advisory Board, shall:
11        (1) develop comprehensive guidelines for training on
12    emergency dispatch procedures, including but not limited
13    to emergency medical dispatch, and the delivery of 9-1-1
14    services and professionalism for public safety
15    telecommunicators and public safety telecommunicator
16    supervisors; and
17        (2) adopt rules and minimum standards for continuing
18    education on emergency dispatch procedures, including but
19    not limited to emergency medical dispatch, and the
20    delivery of 9-1-1 services and professionalism for public
21    safety telecommunicators and public safety
22    telecommunicator Supervisors; and
23    (a-10) The Office of the Statewide 9-1-1 Administrator may
24as necessary establish by rule appropriate testing and
25certification processes consistent with the training required
26by this Section.

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 3 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1    (b) Training requirements:
2        (1) Newly hired PSAP telecommunicators
3    tele-communicators must complete the sexual assault and
4    sexual abuse training curriculum established in subsection
5    (a) of this Section prior to handling emergency calls.
6        (2) All existing PSAP telecommunicators
7    tele-communicators shall complete the sexual assault and
8    sexual abuse training curriculum established in subsection
9    (a) of this Section within 2 years of the effective date of
10    this amendatory Act of the 99th General Assembly.
11        (3) Newly hired public safety telecommunicators shall
12    complete the emergency dispatch procedures training
13    curriculum established in subsection (a-5) of this Section
14    prior to independently handling emergency calls within one
15    year of the Statewide 9-1-1 Administrator establishing the
16    required guidelines, rules, and standards.
17        (4) All public safety telecommunicators and public
18    safety telecommunicator supervisors who were not required
19    to complete new hire training prior to handling emergency
20    calls, must either demonstrate proficiency or complete the
21    training established in subsection (a-5) of this Section
22    within one year of the Statewide 9-1-1 Administrator
23    establishing the required guidelines, rules, and
24    standards.
25        (5) Upon completion of the training required in either
26    paragraph (3) or (4) of subsection (b) whichever is

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 4 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1    applicable, all public safety telecommunicators and public
2    safety telecommunicator supervisors shall complete the
3    continuing education training regarding the delivery of
4    9-1-1 services and professionalism biennially.
5    (c) The Illinois State Police may adopt rules for the
6administration of this Section.
7(Source: P.A. 99-801, eff. 1-1-17.)
 
8    Section 10. The Emergency Telephone System Act is amended
9by changing Sections 2, 3, 5, 6, 7, 8, 10, 10.3, 14, 15.2,
1015.2a, 15.3, 15.3a, 15.4, 15.4a, 15.6, 15.6a, 15.6b, 17.5, 19,
1120, 30, 40, 45, and 99 and by adding Sections 6.2, 7.1, and
1211.5 as follows:
 
13    (50 ILCS 750/2)  (from Ch. 134, par. 32)
14    (Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2021)
15    Sec. 2. Definitions. As used in this Act, unless the
16context otherwise requires:
17    "9-1-1 network" means the network used for the delivery of
189-1-1 calls and messages over dedicated and redundant
19facilities to a primary or backup 9-1-1 PSAP that meets the
20appropriate grade of service P.01 grade of service standards
21for basic 9-1-1 and enhanced 9-1-1 services or meets national
22I3 industry call delivery standards for Next Generation 9-1-1
23services.
24    "9-1-1 system" means the geographic area that has been

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 5 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1granted an order of authority by the Commission or the
2Statewide 9-1-1 Administrator to use "9-1-1" as the primary
3emergency telephone number, including but not limited to the
4network, software applications, databases, CPE components and
5operational and management procedures required to provide
69-1-1 service.
7    "9-1-1 Authority" means includes an Emergency Telephone
8System Board, Joint Emergency Telephone System Board that
9provides for the management and operation of a 9-1-1 system ,
10and a qualified governmental entity. "9-1-1 Authority"
11includes the Department of State Police only to the extent it
12provides 9-1-1 services under this Act.
13    "9-1-1 System Manager" means the manager, director,
14administrator, or coordinator who at the direction of his or
15her Emergency Telephone System Board is responsible for the
16implementation and execution of the order of authority issued
17by the Commission or the Statewide 9-1-1 Administrator through
18the programs, policies, procedures, and daily operations of
19the 9-1-1 system consistent with the provisions of this Act.
20    "Administrator" means the Statewide 9-1-1 Administrator.
21    "Advanced service" means any telecommunications service
22with or without dynamic bandwidth allocation, including, but
23not limited to, ISDN Primary Rate Interface (PRI), that,
24through the use of a DS-1, T-1, or other un-channelized or
25multi-channel transmission facility, is capable of
26transporting either the subscriber's inter-premises voice

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 6 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1telecommunications services to the public switched network or
2the subscriber's 9-1-1 calls to the public agency.
3    "Aggregator" means an entity that ingresses 9-1-1 calls of
4multiple traffic types or 9-1-1 calls from multiple
5originating service providers and combines them on a trunk
6group or groups (or equivalent egress connection arrangement
7to a 9-1-1 system provider's E9-1-1/NG9-1-1 network or
8system), and that uses the routing information provided in the
9received call setup signaling to select the appropriate trunk
10group and proceeds to signal call setup toward the 9-1-1
11system provider. "Aggregator" includes an originating service
12provider that provides aggregation functions for its own 9-1-1
13calls. "Aggregator" also includes an aggregation network or an
14aggregation entity that provides aggregator services for other
15types of system providers, such as cloud-based services or
16enterprise networks as its client.
17    "ALI" or "automatic location identification" means, in an
18E9-1-1 system, the automatic display at the public safety
19answering point of the caller's telephone number, the address
20or location of the caller's telephone, and supplementary
21emergency services information of the location from which a
22call originates.
23    "ANI" or "automatic number identification" means the
24automatic display of the 10 digit telephone number associated
25with the caller's telephone number 9-1-1 calling party's
26number on the PSAP monitor.

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 7 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1    "Automatic alarm" and "automatic alerting device" mean any
2device that will access the 9-1-1 system for emergency
3services upon activation and does not provide for two-way
4communication.
5    "Answering point" means a PSAP, SAP, Backup PSAP, Unmanned
6Backup Answering Point, or VAP.
7    "Authorized entity" means an answering point or
8participating agency other than a decommissioned PSAP.
9    "Backup PSAP" means an a public safety answering point
10that meets the appropriate standards of service and serves as
11an alternate to the PSAP operating independently from the PSAP
12for enhanced systems and is at a different location, that has
13the capability to direct dispatch for the PSAP or otherwise
14transfer emergency calls directly to an authorized entity. and
15operates independently from the PSAP. A backup PSAP may accept
16overflow calls from the PSAP or be activated if the primary
17PSAP is disabled.
18    "Board" means an Emergency Telephone System Board or a
19Joint Emergency Telephone System Board created pursuant to
20Section 15.4.
21    "Carrier" includes a telecommunications carrier and a
22wireless carrier.
23    "Commission" means the Illinois Commerce Commission.
24    "Computer aided dispatch" or "CAD" means a computer-based
25system that aids public safety telecommunicators PSAP
26telecommunicators by automating selected dispatching and

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 8 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1recordkeeping activities.
2    "Direct dispatch dispatch method" means a 9-1-1 service
3wherein upon receipt of an emergency call, that provides for
4the direct dispatch by a public safety telecommunicator
5transmits - without delay, transfer, relay, or referral - all
6relevant available information to PSAP telecommunicator of the
7appropriate public safety personnel or emergency responders
8unit upon receipt of an emergency call and the decision as to
9the proper action to be taken.
10    "Decommissioned" means the revocation of a PSAPs authority
11to handle 9-1-1 calls as an answering point within the 9-1-1
12network.
13    "Department" means the Department of State Police.
14    "DS-1, T-1, or similar un-channelized or multi-channel
15transmission facility" means a facility that can transmit and
16receive a bit rate of at least 1.544 megabits per second
17(Mbps).
18    "Dynamic bandwidth allocation" means the ability of the
19facility or customer to drop and add channels, or adjust
20bandwidth, when needed in real time for voice or data
21purposes.
22    "Emergency call" means any type of request for emergency
23assistance through a 9-1-1 network either to the digits 9-1-1
24or the emergency 24/7 10-digit telephone number for all
25answering points. An emergency call is not limited to a voice
26telephone call. It could be a two-way video call, an

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 9 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1interactive text, Teletypewriter (TTY), an SMS, an Instant
2Message, or any new mechanism for communications available in
3the future. An emergency call occurs when the request for
4emergency assistance is received by a public safety
5telecommunicator.
6    "Enhanced 9-1-1" or "E9-1-1" means a telephone system that
7includes network switching, database and PSAP premise elements
8capable of providing automatic location identification data,
9selective routing, selective transfer, fixed transfer, and a
10call back number, including any enhanced 9-1-1 service so
11designated by the Federal Communications Commission in its
12report and order in WC Dockets Nos. 04-36 and 05-196, or any
13successor proceeding.
14    "ETSB" means an emergency telephone system board appointed
15by the corporate authorities of any county or municipality
16that provides for the management and operation of a 9-1-1
17system.
18    "Grade of service" means P.01 for enhanced 9-1-1 services
19or the NENA i3 Solution adopted standard for NG9-1-1.
20    "Hearing-impaired individual" means a person with a
21permanent hearing loss who can regularly and routinely
22communicate by telephone only through the aid of devices which
23can send and receive written messages over the telephone
24network.
25    "Hosted supplemental 9-1-1 service" means a database
26service that:

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 10 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1        (1) electronically provides information to 9-1-1 call
2    takers when a call is placed to 9-1-1;
3        (2) allows telephone subscribers to provide
4    information to 9-1-1 to be used in emergency scenarios;
5        (3) collects a variety of formatted data relevant to
6    9-1-1 and first responder needs, which may include, but is
7    not limited to, photographs of the telephone subscribers,
8    physical descriptions, medical information, household
9    data, and emergency contacts;
10        (4) allows for information to be entered by telephone
11    subscribers through a secure website where they can elect
12    to provide as little or as much information as they
13    choose;
14        (5) automatically displays data provided by telephone
15    subscribers to 9-1-1 call takers for all types of
16    telephones when a call is placed to 9-1-1 from a
17    registered and confirmed phone number;
18        (6) supports the delivery of telephone subscriber
19    information through a secure internet connection to all
20    emergency telephone system boards;
21        (7) works across all 9-1-1 call taking equipment and
22    allows for the easy transfer of information into a
23    computer aided dispatch system; and
24        (8) may be used to collect information pursuant to an
25    Illinois Premise Alert Program as defined in the Illinois
26    Premise Alert Program (PAP) Act.

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 11 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1    "Interconnected voice over Internet protocol provider" or
2"Interconnected VoIP provider" has the meaning given to that
3term under Section 13-235 of the Public Utilities Act.
4    "Joint ETSB" means a Joint Emergency Telephone System
5Board established by intergovernmental agreement of two or
6more municipalities or counties, or a combination thereof, to
7provide for the management and operation of a 9-1-1 system.
8    "Local public agency" means any unit of local government
9or special purpose district located in whole or in part within
10this State that provides or has authority to provide
11firefighting, police, ambulance, medical, or other emergency
12services.
13    "Mechanical dialer" means any device that accesses either
14manually or remotely triggers a dialing device to access the
159-1-1 system without human intervention and does not provide
16for two-way communication.
17    "Master Street Address Guide" or "MSAG" is a database of
18street names and house ranges within their associated
19communities defining emergency service zones (ESZs) and their
20associated emergency service numbers (ESNs) to enable proper
21routing of 9-1-1 calls.
22    "Mobile telephone number" or "MTN" means the telephone
23number assigned to a wireless telephone at the time of initial
24activation.
25    "Network connections" means the number of voice grade
26communications channels directly between a subscriber and a

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 12 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1telecommunications carrier's public switched network, without
2the intervention of any other telecommunications carrier's
3switched network, which would be required to carry the
4subscriber's inter-premises traffic and which connection
5either (1) is capable of providing access through the public
6switched network to a 9-1-1 Emergency Telephone System, if one
7exists, or (2) if no system exists at the time a surcharge is
8imposed under Section 15.3, that would be capable of providing
9access through the public switched network to the local 9-1-1
10Emergency Telephone System if one existed. Where multiple
11voice grade communications channels are connected to a
12telecommunications carrier's public switched network through a
13private branch exchange (PBX) service, there shall be
14determined to be one network connection for each trunk line
15capable of transporting either the subscriber's inter-premises
16traffic to the public switched network or the subscriber's
179-1-1 calls to the public agency. Where multiple voice grade
18communications channels are connected to a telecommunications
19carrier's public switched network through Centrex centrex type
20service, the number of network connections shall be equal to
21the number of PBX trunk equivalents for the subscriber's
22service or other multiple voice grade communication channels
23facility, as determined by reference to any generally
24applicable exchange access service tariff filed by the
25subscriber's telecommunications carrier with the Commission.
26    "Network costs" means those recurring costs that directly

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 13 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1relate to the operation of the 9-1-1 network as determined by
2the Statewide 9-1-1 Administrator with the advice of the
3Statewide 9-1-1 Advisory Board, which may include, but need
4not be limited to, some or all of the following: costs for
5interoffice trunks, selective routing charges, transfer lines
6and toll charges for 9-1-1 services, Automatic Location
7Information (ALI) database charges, independent local exchange
8carrier charges and non-system provider charges, carrier
9charges for third party database for on-site customer premises
10equipment, back-up PSAP trunks for non-system providers,
11periodic database updates as provided by carrier (also known
12as "ALI data dump"), regional ALI storage charges, circuits
13for call delivery (fiber or circuit connection), NG9-1-1
14costs, and all associated fees, taxes, and surcharges on each
15invoice. "Network costs" shall not include radio circuits or
16toll charges that are other than for 9-1-1 services.
17    "Next generation 9-1-1" or "NG9-1-1" means a secure an
18Internet Protocol-based (IP-based) open-standards system
19comprised of hardware, software, data, and operational
20policies and procedures that: managed ESInets, functional
21elements and applications, and databases that replicate
22traditional E9-1-1 features and functions and provide
23additional capabilities. "NG9-1-1" systems are designed to
24provide access to emergency services from all connected
25communications sources, and provide multimedia data
26capabilities for PSAPs and other emergency services

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 14 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1organizations.
2            (A) provides standardized interfaces from
3        emergency call and message services to support
4        emergency communications;
5            (B) processes all types of emergency calls,
6        including voice, text, data, and multimedia
7        information;
8            (C) acquires and integrates additional emergency
9        call data useful to call routing and handling;
10            (D) delivers the emergency calls, messages, and
11        data to the appropriate public safety answering point
12        and other appropriate emergency entities based on the
13        location of the caller;
14            (E) supports data, video, and other communications
15        needs for coordinated incident response and
16        management; and
17            (F) interoperates with services and networks used
18        by first responders to facilitate emergency response.
19    "NG9-1-1 costs" means those recurring costs that directly
20relate to the Next Generation 9-1-1 service as determined by
21the Statewide 9-1-1 Administrator with the advice of the
22Statewide 9-1-1 Advisory Board, which may include including,
23but need not be limited to, costs for NENA i3 Core Components
24(Border Control Function (BCF), Emergency Call Routing
25Function (ECRF), Location Validation Function (LVF), Emergency
26Services Routing Proxy (ESRP), Policy Store/Policy Routing

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 15 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1Functions (PSPRF) and Location Information Servers (LIS)),
2Statewide ESInet, software external to the PSAP (data
3collection, identity management, aggregation and GIS
4functionality), and gateways (legacy 9-1-1 tandems or gateways
5or both). Emergency System Routing Proxy (ESRP), Emergency
6Call Routing Function/Location Validation Function (ECRF/LVF),
7Spatial Information Function (SIF), the Border Control
8Function (BCF), and the Emergency Services Internet Protocol
9networks (ESInets), legacy network gateways, and all
10associated fees, taxes, and surcharges on each invoice.
11    "Originating service provider" or "OSP" means the entity
12that provides services to end users that may be used to
13originate voice or nonvoice 9-1-1 requests for assistance and
14who would interconnect, in any of various fashions, to the
159-1-1 system provider for purposes of delivering 9-1-1 traffic
16to the public safety answering points.
17    "Private branch exchange" or "PBX" means a private
18telephone system and associated equipment located on the
19user's property that provides communications between internal
20stations and external networks.
21    "Private business switch service" means network and
22premises based systems including a VoIP, Centrex type service,
23or PBX service, even though key telephone systems or
24equivalent telephone systems registered with the Federal
25Communications Commission under 47 CFR C.F.R. Part 68 are
26directly connected to Centrex type and PBX systems. "Private

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 16 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1business switch service" does not include key telephone
2systems or equivalent telephone systems registered with the
3Federal Communications Commission under 47 CFR C.F.R. Part 68
4when not used in conjunction with a VoIP, Centrex type, or PBX
5systems. "Private business switch service" typically includes,
6but is not limited to, private businesses, corporations, and
7industries where the telecommunications service is primarily
8for conducting business.
9    "Private residential switch service" means network and
10premise based systems including a VoIP, Centrex type service,
11or PBX service or key telephone systems or equivalent
12telephone systems registered with the Federal Communications
13Commission under 47 C.F.R. Part 68 that are directly connected
14to a VoIP, Centrex type service, or PBX systems equipped for
15switched local network connections or 9-1-1 system access to
16residential end users through a private telephone switch.
17"Private residential switch service" does not include key
18telephone systems or equivalent telephone systems registered
19with the Federal Communications Commission under 47 C.F.R.
20Part 68 when not used in conjunction with a VoIP, Centrex type,
21or PBX systems. "Private residential switch service" typically
22includes, but is not limited to, apartment complexes,
23condominiums, and campus or university environments where
24shared tenant service is provided and where the usage of the
25telecommunications service is primarily residential.
26    "Public agency" means the State, and any unit of local

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 17 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1government or special purpose district located in whole or in
2part within this State, that provides or has authority to
3provide firefighting, police, ambulance, medical, or other
4emergency services.
5    "Public safety agency" means a functional division of a
6public agency that provides firefighting, police, medical, or
7other emergency services to respond to and manage emergency
8incidents. For the purpose of providing wireless service to
9users of 9-1-1 emergency services, as expressly provided for
10in this Act, the Department of State Police may be considered a
11public safety agency.
12    "Public safety answering point" or "PSAP" means the
13primary answering location of an emergency call that meets the
14appropriate standards of service and is responsible for
15receiving and processing is a set of call-takers authorized by
16a governing body and operating under common management that
17receive 9-1-1 calls and asynchronous event notifications for a
18defined geographic area and processes those calls and events
19according to a specified operational policy.
20    "PSAP representative" means the manager or supervisor of a
21Public Safety Answering Point (PSAP) who oversees the daily
22operational functions and is responsible for the overall
23management and administration of the PSAP.
24    "Public safety telecommunicator" means any person employed
25in a full-time or part-time capacity at an answering point
26whose duties or responsibilities include answering, receiving,

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 18 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1or transferring an emergency call for dispatch to the
2appropriate emergency responder.
3    "Public safety telecommunicator supervisor" means any
4person employed in a full-time or part-time capacity at an
5answering point or by a 9-1-1 Authority, whose primary duties
6or responsibilities are to direct, administer, or manage any
7public safety telecommunicator and whose responsibilities
8include answering, receiving, or transferring an emergency
9call for dispatch to the appropriate responders.
10    "Qualified governmental entity" means a unit of local
11government authorized to provide 9-1-1 services pursuant to
12this Act where no emergency telephone system board exists.
13    "Referral method" means a 9-1-1 service in which the
14public safety telecommunicator PSAP telecommunicator provides
15the calling party with the telephone number of the appropriate
16public safety agency or other provider of emergency services.
17    "Regular service" means any telecommunications service,
18other than advanced service, that is capable of transporting
19either the subscriber's inter-premises voice
20telecommunications services to the public switched network or
21the subscriber's 9-1-1 calls to the public agency.
22    "Relay method" means a 9-1-1 service in which the public
23safety telecommunicator PSAP telecommunicator takes the
24pertinent information from a caller and relays that
25information to the appropriate public safety agency or other
26provider of emergency services.

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 19 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1    "Remit period" means the billing period, one month in
2duration, for which a wireless carrier remits a surcharge and
3provides subscriber information by zip code to the Department,
4in accordance with Section 20 of this Act.
5    "Secondary Answering Point" or "SAP" means a location,
6other than a PSAP, that is able to receive the voice, data, and
7call back number of E9-1-1 or NG9-1-1 emergency calls
8transferred from a PSAP and completes the call taking process
9by dispatching police, medical, fire, or other emergency
10responders.
11    "Statewide wireless emergency 9-1-1 system" means all
12areas of the State where an emergency telephone system board
13or, in the absence of an emergency telephone system board, a
14qualified governmental entity, has not declared its intention
15for one or more of its public safety answering points to serve
16as a primary wireless 9-1-1 public safety answering point for
17its jurisdiction. The operator of the statewide wireless
18emergency 9-1-1 system shall be the Department of State
19Police.
20    "System" means the communications equipment and related
21software applications required to produce a response by the
22appropriate emergency public safety agency or other provider
23of emergency services as a result of an emergency call being
24placed to 9-1-1.
25    "System provider" means the contracted entity providing
269-1-1 network and database services.

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 20 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1    "Telecommunications carrier" means those entities included
2within the definition specified in Section 13-202 of the
3Public Utilities Act, and includes those carriers acting as
4resellers of telecommunications services. "Telecommunications
5carrier" includes telephone systems operating as mutual
6concerns. "Telecommunications carrier" does not include a
7wireless carrier.
8    "Telecommunications technology" means equipment that can
9send and receive written messages over the telephone network.
10    "Transfer method" means a 9-1-1 service in which the
11public safety telecommunicator, who receives an emergency PSAP
12telecommunicator receiving a call, transmits, redirects, or
13conferences transfers that call to the appropriate public
14safety agency or other provider of emergency services.
15Transfer shall not include a relay or referral of the
16information without transferring the caller.
17    "Transmitting messages" shall have the meaning given to
18that term under Section 8-11-2 of the Illinois Municipal Code.
19    "Trunk line" means a transmission path, or group of
20transmission paths, connecting a subscriber's PBX to a
21telecommunications carrier's public switched network. In the
22case of regular service, each voice grade communications
23channel or equivalent amount of bandwidth capable of
24transporting either the subscriber's inter-premises voice
25telecommunications services to the public switched network or
26the subscriber's 9-1-1 calls to the public agency shall be

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 21 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1considered a trunk line, even if it is bundled with other
2channels or additional bandwidth. In the case of advanced
3service, each DS-1, T-1, or other un-channelized or
4multi-channel transmission facility that is capable of
5transporting either the subscriber's inter-premises voice
6telecommunications services to the public switched network or
7the subscriber's 9-1-1 calls to the public agency shall be
8considered a single trunk line, even if it contains multiple
9voice grade communications channels or otherwise supports 2 or
10more voice grade calls at a time; provided, however, that each
11additional increment of up to 24 voice grade channels of
12transmission capacity that is capable of transporting either
13the subscriber's inter-premises voice telecommunications
14services to the public switched network or the subscriber's
159-1-1 calls to the public agency shall be considered an
16additional trunk line.
17    "Unmanned backup answering point PSAP" means an a public
18safety answering point that serves as an alternate to the PSAP
19at an alternate location and is typically unmanned but can be
20activated if the primary PSAP is disabled.
21    "Virtual answering point" or "VAP" means a temporary or
22nonpermanent location that is capable of receiving an
23emergency call, contains a fully functional worksite that is
24not bound to a specific location, but rather is portable and
25scalable, connecting public safety telecommunicators emergency
26call takers or dispatchers to the work process, and is capable

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 22 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1of completing the call dispatching process.
2    "Voice-impaired individual" means a person with a
3permanent speech disability which precludes oral
4communication, who can regularly and routinely communicate by
5telephone only through the aid of devices which can send and
6receive written messages over the telephone network.
7    "Wireless carrier" means a provider of two-way cellular,
8broadband PCS, geographic area 800 MHZ and 900 MHZ Commercial
9Mobile Radio Service (CMRS), Wireless Communications Service
10(WCS), or other Commercial Mobile Radio Service (CMRS), as
11defined by the Federal Communications Commission, offering
12radio communications that may provide fixed, mobile, radio
13location, or satellite communication services to individuals
14or businesses within its assigned spectrum block and
15geographical area or that offers real-time, two-way voice
16service that is interconnected with the public switched
17network, including a reseller of such service.
18    "Wireless enhanced 9-1-1" means the ability to relay the
19telephone number of the originator of a 9-1-1 call and
20location information from any mobile handset or text telephone
21device accessing the wireless system to the designated
22wireless public safety answering point as set forth in the
23order of the Federal Communications Commission, FCC Docket No.
2494-102, adopted June 12, 1996, with an effective date of
25October 1, 1996, and any subsequent amendment thereto.
26    "Wireless public safety answering point" means the

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 23 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1functional division of a 9-1-1 authority accepting wireless
29-1-1 calls.
3    "Wireless subscriber" means an individual or entity to
4whom a wireless service account or number has been assigned by
5a wireless carrier, other than an account or number associated
6with prepaid wireless telecommunication service.
7(Source: P.A. 99-6, eff. 1-1-16; 100-20, eff. 7-1-17.)
 
8    (50 ILCS 750/3)  (from Ch. 134, par. 33)
9    (Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2021)
10    Sec. 3. (a) By July 1, 2017, every local public agency
11shall be within the jurisdiction of a 9-1-1 system.
12    (b) Within 18 months of the awarding of a contract to a
13vendor certified under Section 13-900 of the Public Utilities
14Act to provide Next Generation 9-1-1 service By December 31,
152021, every 9-1-1 system in Illinois, except in a municipality
16with a population over 500,000, shall provide Next Generation
179-1-1 service. A municipality with a population over 500,000
18shall provide Next Generation 9-1-1 service by December 31,
192023.
20    (c) Nothing in this Act shall be construed to prohibit or
21discourage in any way the formation of multijurisdictional or
22regional systems, and any system established pursuant to this
23Act may include the territory of more than one public agency or
24may include a segment of the territory of a public agency.
25(Source: P.A. 100-20, eff. 7-1-17; 101-639, eff. 6-12-20.)
 

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 24 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1    (50 ILCS 750/5)  (from Ch. 134, par. 35)
2    (Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2021)
3    Sec. 5. The digits "9-1-1" shall be the primary emergency
4telephone number within the system, but a public agency or
5public safety agency shall maintain a separate secondary
610-digit seven digit emergency backup number for at least 6
7six months after the "9-1-1" system is established and in
8operation, and shall maintain a separate number for
9nonemergency telephone calls.
10(Source: P.A. 100-20, eff. 7-1-17.)
 
11    (50 ILCS 750/6)  (from Ch. 134, par. 36)
12    (Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2021)
13    Sec. 6. Capabilities of system; pay telephones. All
14systems shall be designed to meet the specific requirements of
15each community and public agency served by the system. Every
16system shall be designed to have the capability to of
17utilizing the direct dispatch or to method, relay method,
18transfer method, or referral method in response to emergency
19calls. The General Assembly finds and declares that the most
20critical aspect of the design of any system is the procedure
21established for handling a telephone request for emergency
22services.
23    In addition, to maximize efficiency and utilization of the
24system, all pay telephones within each system shall enable a

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 25 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1caller to dial "9-1-1" for emergency services without the
2necessity of inserting a coin. This paragraph does not apply
3to pay telephones located in penal institutions, as defined in
4Section 2-14 of the Criminal Code of 2012, that have been
5designated for the exclusive use of committed persons.
6(Source: P.A. 99-6, eff. 1-1-16; 100-20, eff. 7-1-17.)
 
7    (50 ILCS 750/6.2 new)
8    Sec. 6.2. Every 9-1-1 system shall be able to accept text
9to 9-1-1 no later than January 1, 2023. The Illinois State
10Police shall adopt rules for the implementation of this
11Section.
 
12    (50 ILCS 750/7)  (from Ch. 134, par. 37)
13    (Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2021)
14    Sec. 7. The General Assembly finds that, because of
15overlapping jurisdiction of public agencies, public safety
16agencies and telephone service areas, the Administrator, with
17the advice and recommendation of the Statewide 9-1-1 Advisory
18Board, shall establish a general overview or plan to
19effectuate the purposes of this Act within the time frame
20provided in this Act. The General Assembly further finds and
21declares that direct dispatch should be used if possible to
22shorten the time required for the public to request and
23receive emergency aid. The Administrator shall minimize the
24use of transfer, relay, and referral of an emergency call if

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 26 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1possible and encourage Backup PSAPs to be able to direct
2dispatch. Transfer, relay, and referral of an emergency call
3to an entity other than an answering point or the Illinois
4State Police shall not be used in response to emergency calls
5unless exigent circumstances exist. In order to insure that
6proper preparation and implementation of emergency telephone
7systems are accomplished by all public agencies as required
8under this Act, the Department, with the advice and assistance
9of the Attorney General, shall secure compliance by public
10agencies as provided in this Act.
11(Source: P.A. 99-6, eff. 1-1-16; 100-20, eff. 7-1-17.)
 
12    (50 ILCS 750/7.1 new)
13    Sec. 7.1. Training.
14    (a) Each 9-1-1 Authority, as well as its answering points,
15shall ensure its public safety telecommunicators and public
16safety telecommunicator Supervisors comply with the training,
17testing, and certification requirements established pursuant
18to Section 2605-53 of the Department of State Police Law.
19    (b) Each 9-1-1 Authority, as well as its answering points,
20shall maintain a record regarding its public safety
21telecommunicators and public safety telecommunicator
22Supervisors compliance with this Section for at least 7 years
23and shall make the training records available for inspection
24by the Administrator upon request.
25    (c) Costs incurred for the development of standards,

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 27 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1training, testing and certification shall be expenses paid by
2the Department from the funds available to the Administrator
3and the Statewide 9-1-1 Advisory Board under Section 30 of
4this Act. Nothing in this subsection shall prohibit the use of
5grants or other nonsurcharge funding sources available for
6this purpose.
 
7    (50 ILCS 750/8)  (from Ch. 134, par. 38)
8    (Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2021)
9    Sec. 8. The Administrator, with the advice and
10recommendation of the Statewide 9-1-1 Advisory Board, shall
11coordinate the implementation of systems established under
12this Act. To assist with this coordination, all systems
13authorized to operate under this Act shall register with the
14Administrator information regarding its composition and
15organization, including, but not limited to, identification of
16the 9-1-1 System Manager and all answering points.
17Decommissioned PSAPs shall not be registered and are not part
18of the 9-1-1 system in Illinois PSAPs, SAPs, VAPs, Backup
19PSAPs, and Unmanned Backup PSAPs. The Department may adopt
20rules for the administration of this Section.
21(Source: P.A. 99-6, eff. 1-1-16; 100-20, eff. 7-1-17.)
 
22    (50 ILCS 750/10)  (from Ch. 134, par. 40)
23    (Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2021)
24    Sec. 10. (a) The Administrator, with the advice and

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 28 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1recommendation of the Statewide 9-1-1 Advisory Board, shall
2establish uniform technical and operational standards for all
39-1-1 systems in Illinois. All findings, orders, decisions,
4rules, and regulations issued or promulgated by the Commission
5under this Act or any other Act establishing or conferring
6power on the Commission with respect to emergency
7telecommunications services, shall continue in force.
8Notwithstanding the provisions of this Section, where
9applicable, the Administrator shall, with the advice and
10recommendation of the Statewide 9-1-1 Advisory Board, amend
11the Commission's findings, orders, decisions, rules, and
12regulations to conform to the specific provisions of this Act
13as soon as practicable after the effective date of this
14amendatory Act of the 99th General Assembly.
15    (a-5) All 9-1-1 systems are responsible for complying with
16the uniform technical and operational standards adopted by the
17Administrator and the Illinois State Police with the advice
18and recommendation of the Statewide 9-1-1 Advisory Board.
19    (b) The Department may adopt emergency rules necessary to
20implement the provisions of this amendatory Act of the 99th
21General Assembly under subsection (t) of Section 5-45 of the
22Illinois Administrative Procedure Act.
23    (c) Nothing in this Act shall deprive the Commission of
24any authority to regulate the provision by telecommunication
25carriers or 9-1-1 system service providers of
26telecommunication or other services under the Public Utilities

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 29 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1Act.
2    (d) For rules that implicate both the regulation of 9-1-1
3authorities under this Act and the regulation of
4telecommunication carriers and 9-1-1 system service providers
5under the Public Utilities Act, the Department and the
6Commission may adopt joint rules necessary for implementation.
7    (e) Any findings, orders, or decisions of the
8Administrator under this Section shall be deemed a final
9administrative decision and shall be subject to judicial
10review under the Administrative Review Law.
11(Source: P.A. 99-6, eff. 1-1-16; 100-20, eff. 7-1-17.)
 
12    (50 ILCS 750/10.3)
13    (Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2021)
14    Sec. 10.3. Notice of address change. The Emergency
15Telephone System Board or qualified governmental entity in any
16county implementing a 9-1-1 system that changes any person's
17address (when the person whose address has changed has not
18moved to a new residence) shall notify the person (i) of the
19person's new address and (ii) that the person should contact
20the local election authority to determine if the person should
21re-register to vote.
22(Source: P.A. 100-20, eff. 7-1-17.)
 
23    (50 ILCS 750/11.5 new)
24    Sec. 11.5. Aggregator and originating service provider

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 30 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1responsibilities.
2    (a) Each aggregator, and the originating service providers
3whose 9-1-1 calls are being aggregated by the aggregator,
4shall comply with their respective requirements in 83 Ill.
5Adm. Code Part 725.410.
6    (b) Beginning July 1, 2021, each aggregator that is
7operating within the State must email the Office of the
8Statewide 9-1-1 Administrator to provide the following
9information that supports the implementation of and the
10migration to the Statewide NG9-1-1 system:
11        (1) A company 9-1-1 contact, address, email, and phone
12    number.
13        (2) A list of originating service providers that the
14    aggregator transports 9-1-1 calls for and then to the
15    appropriate 9-1-1 system provider. New or current
16    aggregators must update the required information within 30
17    days of implementing any changes in information required
18    by this subsection.
19    (c) Each aggregator shall establish procedures for
20receiving No Record Found errors from the 9-1-1 System
21Provider, identifying the originating service provider who
22delivered the call to the aggregator, and referring the No
23Record Found errors to that originating service provider.
24    (d) Each originating service provider shall establish
25procedures with the 9-1-1 system provider for preventing and
26resolving No Record Found errors in the 9-1-1 database and

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 31 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1make every effort to ensure 9-1-1 calls are sent to the
2appropriate public safety answering point.
3    (e) If a 9-1-1 system is being transitioned to NG9-1-1
4service or to a new provider, each aggregator shall be
5responsible for coordinating any modifications that are needed
6to ensure that the originating service provider provides the
7required level of service to its customers. Each aggregator
8shall coordinate those network changes or additions for those
9migrations in a timely manner with the appropriate 9-1-1
10system provider who shall be managing its respective
11implementation schedule and cut over. Each aggregator shall
12send notice to its originating service provider customers of
13the aggregator's successful turn up of the network changes or
14additions supporting the migration and include the necessary
15information for the originating service provider's migration
16(such as public safety answering point name, Federal
17Communications Commission Identification, and Emergency
18Services Routing Number). The notice shall be provided to the
19originating service providers within 2 weeks of acceptance
20testing and conversion activities between the aggregator and
21the 9-1-1 system provider.
22    (f) The 9-1-1 system provider shall coordinate directly
23with the originating service providers (unless the aggregator
24separately agrees to coordinate with the originating service
25providers) for migration, but in no case shall that migration
26exceed 30 days after receipt of notice from the aggregator,

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 32 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1unless agreed to by the originating service provider and 9-1-1
2system provider.
3    (g) Each aggregator shall coordinate test calls with the
49-1-1 system provider and the 9-1-1 Authority when turning up
5new circuits or making network changes. Each originating
6service provider shall perform testing of its network and
7provisioning upon notification from the aggregator that the
8network has been tested and accepted with the 9-1-1 system
9provider.
10    (h) Each aggregator and originating service provider
11customer shall deliver all 9-1-1 calls, audio, data, and
12location to the 9-1-1 system at a location determined by the
13State.
 
14    (50 ILCS 750/14)  (from Ch. 134, par. 44)
15    (Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2021)
16    Sec. 14. The General Assembly declares that a major
17purpose of this Act is to ensure that 9-1-1 systems have
18redundant methods of dispatch for: (1) each public safety
19agency within its jurisdiction, herein known as participating
20agencies; and (2) 9-1-1 systems whose jurisdictional
21boundaries are contiguous, herein known as adjacent 9-1-1
22systems, when an emergency request for service is received for
23a public safety agency that needs to be dispatched by the
24adjacent 9-1-1 system. Another primary purpose of this Section
25is to eliminate instances in which a public safety agency

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 33 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1refuses, once dispatched, to render aid outside of the
2jurisdictional boundaries of the public safety agency.
3Therefore, in implementing a 9-1-1 system under this Act, all
49-1-1 authorities shall enter into call handling and aid
5outside jurisdictional boundaries agreements with each
6participating agency and adjacent 9-1-1 system. The agreements
7shall provide a primary and secondary means of dispatch. It
8must also provide that, once an emergency unit is dispatched
9in response to a request through the system, such unit shall
10render its services to the requesting party without regard to
11whether the unit is operating outside its normal
12jurisdictional boundaries. Certified notification of the
13continuation of call handling and aid outside jurisdictional
14boundaries agreements shall be made among the involved parties
15on an annual basis. The Illinois State Police may adopt rules
16for the administration of this Section.
17(Source: P.A. 100-20, eff. 7-1-17.)
 
18    (50 ILCS 750/15.2)  (from Ch. 134, par. 45.2)
19    (Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2021)
20    Sec. 15.2. Any person placing an "emergency call" to
21calling the number "911" for the purpose of making an a false
22alarm or complaint and reporting false information when, at
23the time the call or transmission is made, the person knows
24there is no reasonable ground for making the call or
25transmission and further knows that the call or transmission

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 34 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1could result in the emergency response of any public safety
2agency, is subject to the provisions of Section 26-1 of the
3Criminal Code of 2012.
4(Source: P.A. 100-20, eff. 7-1-17.)
 
5    (50 ILCS 750/15.2a)  (from Ch. 134, par. 45.2a)
6    (Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2021)
7    Sec. 15.2a. The installation of or connection to a
8telephone company's network of any automatic alarm, automatic
9alerting device, or mechanical dialer that causes the number
109-1-1 to be dialed in order to directly access emergency
11services and does not provide for 2-way communication is
12prohibited in a 9-1-1 system.
13    This Section does not apply to a person who connects to a
149-1-1 network using automatic crash notification technology
15subject to an established protocol.
16    This Section does not apply to devices used to enable
17access to the 9-1-1 system for cognitively-impaired or special
18needs persons or for persons with disabilities in an emergency
19situation reported by a caregiver after initiating a missing
20person's report. The device must have the capability to be
21activated and controlled remotely by trained personnel at a
22service center to prevent falsely activated or repeated calls
23to the 9-1-1 system in a single incident. The device must have
24the technical capability to generate location information to
25the 9-1-1 system. Under no circumstances shall a device be

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 35 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1sold for use in a geographical jurisdiction where the 9-1-1
2system has not deployed wireless phase II location technology.
3The alerting device shall also provide for either 2-way
4communication or send a pre-recorded message to a 9-1-1
5provider explaining the nature of the emergency so that the
69-1-1 provider will be able to dispatch the appropriate
7emergency responder.
8    Violation of this Section is a Class A misdemeanor. A
9second or subsequent violation of this Section is a Class 4
10felony.
11(Source: P.A. 99-143, eff. 7-27-15; 100-20, eff. 7-1-17.)
 
12    (50 ILCS 750/15.3)  (from Ch. 134, par. 45.3)
13    (Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2021)
14    Sec. 15.3. Local non-wireless surcharge.
15    (a) Except as provided in subsection (l) of this Section,
16the corporate authorities of any municipality or any county
17may, subject to the limitations of subsections (c), (d), and
18(h), and in addition to any tax levied pursuant to the
19Simplified Municipal Telecommunications Tax Act, impose a
20monthly surcharge on billed subscribers of network connection
21provided by telecommunication carriers engaged in the business
22of transmitting messages by means of electricity originating
23within the corporate limits of the municipality or county
24imposing the surcharge at a rate per network connection
25determined in accordance with subsection (c), however the

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 36 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1monthly surcharge shall not apply to a network connection
2provided for use with pay telephone services. Provided,
3however, that where multiple voice grade communications
4channels are connected between the subscriber's premises and a
5public switched network through private branch exchange (PBX)
6or centrex type service, a municipality imposing a surcharge
7at a rate per network connection, as determined in accordance
8with this Act, shall impose:
9        (i) in a municipality with a population of 500,000 or
10    less or in any county, 5 such surcharges per network
11    connection, as defined under Section 2 of this Act, for
12    both regular service and advanced service provisioned
13    trunk lines;
14        (ii) in a municipality with a population, prior to
15    March 1, 2010, of 500,000 or more, 5 surcharges per
16    network connection, as defined under Section 2 of this
17    Act, for both regular service and advanced service
18    provisioned trunk lines;
19        (iii) in a municipality with a population, as of March
20    1, 2010, of 500,000 or more, 5 surcharges per network
21    connection, as defined under Section 2 of this Act, for
22    regular service provisioned trunk lines, and 12 surcharges
23    per network connection, as defined under Section 2 of this
24    Act, for advanced service provisioned trunk lines, except
25    where an advanced service provisioned trunk line supports
26    at least 2 but fewer than 23 simultaneous voice grade

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 37 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1    calls ("VGC's"), a telecommunication carrier may elect to
2    impose fewer than 12 surcharges per trunk line as provided
3    in subsection (iv) of this Section; or
4        (iv) for an advanced service provisioned trunk line
5    connected between the subscriber's premises and the public
6    switched network through a P.B.X., where the advanced
7    service provisioned trunk line is capable of transporting
8    at least 2 but fewer than 23 simultaneous VGC's per trunk
9    line, the telecommunications carrier collecting the
10    surcharge may elect to impose surcharges in accordance
11    with the table provided in this Section, without limiting
12    any telecommunications carrier's obligations to otherwise
13    keep and maintain records. Any telecommunications carrier
14    electing to impose fewer than 12 surcharges per an
15    advanced service provisioned trunk line shall keep and
16    maintain records adequately to demonstrate the VGC
17    capability of each advanced service provisioned trunk line
18    with fewer than 12 surcharges imposed, provided that 12
19    surcharges shall be imposed on an advanced service
20    provisioned trunk line regardless of the VGC capability
21    where a telecommunications carrier cannot demonstrate the
22    VGC capability of the advanced service provisioned trunk
23    line.
 
24Facility VGC's 911 Surcharges
25Advanced service provisioned trunk line 18-23 12

 

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 38 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1Advanced service provisioned trunk line 12-17 10
2Advanced service provisioned trunk line 2-11 8
3    Subsections (i), (ii), (iii), and (iv) are not intended to
4make any change in the meaning of this Section, but are
5intended to remove possible ambiguity, thereby confirming the
6intent of paragraph (a) as it existed prior to and following
7the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 97th General
8Assembly.
9    For mobile telecommunications services, if a surcharge is
10imposed it shall be imposed based upon the municipality or
11county that encompasses the customer's place of primary use as
12defined in the Mobile Telecommunications Sourcing Conformity
13Act. A municipality may enter into an intergovernmental
14agreement with any county in which it is partially located,
15when the county has adopted an ordinance to impose a surcharge
16as provided in subsection (c), to include that portion of the
17municipality lying outside the county in that county's
18surcharge referendum. If the county's surcharge referendum is
19approved, the portion of the municipality identified in the
20intergovernmental agreement shall automatically be
21disconnected from the county in which it lies and connected to
22the county which approved the referendum for purposes of a
23surcharge on telecommunications carriers.
24    (b) For purposes of computing the surcharge imposed by
25subsection (a), the network connections to which the surcharge

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 39 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1shall apply shall be those in-service network connections,
2other than those network connections assigned to the
3municipality or county, where the service address for each
4such network connection or connections is located within the
5corporate limits of the municipality or county levying the
6surcharge. Except for mobile telecommunication services, the
7"service address" shall mean the location of the primary use
8of the network connection or connections. For mobile
9telecommunication services, "service address" means the
10customer's place of primary use as defined in the Mobile
11Telecommunications Sourcing Conformity Act.
12    (c) Upon the passage of an ordinance to impose a surcharge
13under this Section the clerk of the municipality or county
14shall certify the question of whether the surcharge may be
15imposed to the proper election authority who shall submit the
16public question to the electors of the municipality or county
17in accordance with the general election law; provided that
18such question shall not be submitted at a consolidated primary
19election. The public question shall be in substantially the
20following form:
21-------------------------------------------------------------
22    Shall the county (or city, village
23or incorporated town) of ..... impose          YES
24a surcharge of up to ...¢ per month per
25network connection, which surcharge will
26be added to the monthly bill you receive   ------------------

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 40 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1for telephone or telecommunications
2charges, for the purpose of installing
3(or improving) a 9-1-1 Emergency               NO
4Telephone System?
5-------------------------------------------------------------
6    If a majority of the votes cast upon the public question
7are in favor thereof, the surcharge shall be imposed.
8    However, if a Joint Emergency Telephone System Board is to
9be created pursuant to an intergovernmental agreement under
10Section 15.4, the ordinance to impose the surcharge shall be
11subject to the approval of a majority of the total number of
12votes cast upon the public question by the electors of all of
13the municipalities or counties, or combination thereof, that
14are parties to the intergovernmental agreement.
15    The referendum requirement of this subsection (c) shall
16not apply to any municipality with a population over 500,000
17or to any county in which a proposition as to whether a
18sophisticated 9-1-1 Emergency Telephone System should be
19installed in the county, at a cost not to exceed a specified
20monthly amount per network connection, has previously been
21approved by a majority of the electors of the county voting on
22the proposition at an election conducted before the effective
23date of this amendatory Act of 1987.
24    (d) A county may not impose a surcharge, unless requested
25by a municipality, in any incorporated area which has
26previously approved a surcharge as provided in subsection (c)

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 41 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1or in any incorporated area where the corporate authorities of
2the municipality have previously entered into a binding
3contract or letter of intent with a telecommunications carrier
4to provide sophisticated 9-1-1 service through municipal
5funds.
6    (e) A municipality or county may at any time by ordinance
7change the rate of the surcharge imposed under this Section if
8the new rate does not exceed the rate specified in the
9referendum held pursuant to subsection (c).
10    (f) The surcharge authorized by this Section shall be
11collected from the subscriber by the telecommunications
12carrier providing the subscriber the network connection as a
13separately stated item on the subscriber's bill.
14    (g) The amount of surcharge collected by the
15telecommunications carrier shall be paid to the particular
16municipality or county or Joint Emergency Telephone System
17Board not later than 30 days after the surcharge is collected,
18net of any network or other 9-1-1 or sophisticated 9-1-1
19system charges then due the particular telecommunications
20carrier, as shown on an itemized bill. The telecommunications
21carrier collecting the surcharge shall also be entitled to
22deduct 3% of the gross amount of surcharge collected to
23reimburse the telecommunications carrier for the expense of
24accounting and collecting the surcharge.
25    (h) Except as expressly provided in subsection (a) of this
26Section, on or after the effective date of this amendatory Act

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 42 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1of the 98th General Assembly and until December 31, 2017, a
2municipality with a population of 500,000 or more shall not
3impose a monthly surcharge per network connection in excess of
4the highest monthly surcharge imposed as of January 1, 2014 by
5any county or municipality under subsection (c) of this
6Section. Beginning January 1, 2018 and until December 31, 2023
72021, a municipality with a population over 500,000 may not
8impose a monthly surcharge in excess of $5.00 per network
9connection. On or after January 1, 2024 2022, a municipality
10with a population over 500,000 may not impose a monthly
11surcharge in excess of $2.50 per network connection.
12    (i) Any municipality or county or joint emergency
13telephone system board that has imposed a surcharge pursuant
14to this Section prior to the effective date of this amendatory
15Act of 1990 shall hereafter impose the surcharge in accordance
16with subsection (b) of this Section.
17    (j) The corporate authorities of any municipality or
18county may issue, in accordance with Illinois law, bonds,
19notes or other obligations secured in whole or in part by the
20proceeds of the surcharge described in this Section. The State
21of Illinois pledges and agrees that it will not limit or alter
22the rights and powers vested in municipalities and counties by
23this Section to impose the surcharge so as to impair the terms
24of or affect the security for bonds, notes or other
25obligations secured in whole or in part with the proceeds of
26the surcharge described in this Section. The pledge and

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 43 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1agreement set forth in this Section survive the termination of
2the surcharge under subsection (l) by virtue of the
3replacement of the surcharge monies guaranteed under Section
420; the State of Illinois pledges and agrees that it will not
5limit or alter the rights vested in municipalities and
6counties to the surcharge replacement funds guaranteed under
7Section 20 so as to impair the terms of or affect the security
8for bonds, notes or other obligations secured in whole or in
9part with the proceeds of the surcharge described in this
10Section.
11    (k) Any surcharge collected by or imposed on a
12telecommunications carrier pursuant to this Section shall be
13held to be a special fund in trust for the municipality, county
14or Joint Emergency Telephone Board imposing the surcharge.
15Except for the 3% deduction provided in subsection (g) above,
16the special fund shall not be subject to the claims of
17creditors of the telecommunication carrier.
18    (l) Any surcharge imposed pursuant to this Section by a
19county or municipality, other than a municipality with a
20population in excess of 500,000, shall cease to be imposed on
21January 1, 2016.
22(Source: P.A. 100-20, eff. 7-1-17; 101-639, eff. 6-12-20.)
 
23    (50 ILCS 750/15.3a)
24    (Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2021)
25    Sec. 15.3a. Local wireless surcharge.

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 44 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1    (a) Notwithstanding any other provision of this Act, a
2unit of local government or emergency telephone system board
3providing wireless 9-1-1 service and imposing and collecting a
4wireless carrier surcharge prior to July 1, 1998 may continue
5its practices of imposing and collecting its wireless carrier
6surcharge, but, except as provided in subsection (b) of this
7Section, in no event shall that monthly surcharge exceed $2.50
8per commercial mobile radio service (CMRS) connection or
9in-service telephone number billed on a monthly basis. For
10mobile telecommunications services provided on and after
11August 1, 2002, any surcharge imposed shall be imposed based
12upon the municipality or county that encompasses the
13customer's place of primary use as defined in the Mobile
14Telecommunications Sourcing Conformity Act.
15    (b) Until December 31, 2017, the corporate authorities of
16a municipality with a population in excess of 500,000 on the
17effective date of this amendatory Act of the 99th General
18Assembly may by ordinance continue to impose and collect a
19monthly surcharge per commercial mobile radio service (CMRS)
20connection or in-service telephone number billed on a monthly
21basis that does not exceed the highest monthly surcharge
22imposed as of January 1, 2014 by any county or municipality
23under subsection (c) of Section 15.3 of this Act. Beginning
24January 1, 2018, and until December 31, 2023 2021, a
25municipality with a population in excess of 500,000 may by
26ordinance continue to impose and collect a monthly surcharge

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 45 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1per commercial mobile radio service (CMRS) connection or
2in-service telephone number billed on a monthly basis that
3does not exceed $5.00. On or after January 1, 2024 2022, the
4municipality may continue imposing and collecting its wireless
5carrier surcharge as provided in and subject to the
6limitations of subsection (a) of this Section.
7    (c) In addition to any other lawful purpose, a
8municipality with a population over 500,000 may use the moneys
9collected under this Section for any anti-terrorism or
10emergency preparedness measures, including, but not limited
11to, preparedness planning, providing local matching funds for
12federal or State grants, personnel training, and specialized
13equipment, including surveillance cameras, as needed to deal
14with natural and terrorist-inspired emergency situations or
15events.
16(Source: P.A. 100-20, eff. 7-1-17; 101-639, eff. 6-12-20.)
 
17    (50 ILCS 750/15.4)  (from Ch. 134, par. 45.4)
18    (Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2021)
19    Sec. 15.4. Emergency Telephone System Board; powers.
20    (a) Except as provided in subsection (e) of this Section,
21the corporate authorities of any county or municipality may
22establish an Emergency Telephone System Board.
23    The corporate authorities shall provide for the manner of
24appointment and the number of members of the Board, provided
25that the board shall consist of not fewer than 5 members, one

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 46 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1of whom must be a public member who is a resident of the local
2exchange service territory included in the 9-1-1 coverage
3area, one of whom (in counties with a population less than
4100,000) may be a member of the county board, and at least 3 of
5whom shall be representative of the 9-1-1 public safety
6agencies, including but not limited to police departments,
7fire departments, emergency medical services providers, and
8emergency services and disaster agencies, and appointed on the
9basis of their ability or experience. In counties with a
10population of more than 100,000 but less than 2,000,000, a
11member of the county board may serve on the Emergency
12Telephone System Board. Elected officials, including members
13of a county board, are also eligible to serve on the board.
14Members of the board shall serve without compensation but
15shall be reimbursed for their actual and necessary expenses.
16Any 2 or more municipalities, counties, or combination
17thereof, may, instead of establishing individual boards,
18establish by intergovernmental agreement a Joint Emergency
19Telephone System Board pursuant to this Section. The manner of
20appointment of such a joint board shall be prescribed in the
21agreement. On or after the effective date of this amendatory
22Act of the 100th General Assembly, any new intergovernmental
23agreement entered into to establish or join a Joint Emergency
24Telephone System Board shall provide for the appointment of a
25PSAP representative to the board.
26    Upon the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 98th

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 47 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1General Assembly, appointed members of the Emergency Telephone
2System Board shall serve staggered 3-year terms if: (1) the
3Board serves a county with a population of 100,000 or less; and
4(2) appointments, on the effective date of this amendatory Act
5of the 98th General Assembly, are not for a stated term. The
6corporate authorities of the county or municipality shall
7assign terms to the board members serving on the effective
8date of this amendatory Act of the 98th General Assembly in the
9following manner: (1) one-third of board members' terms shall
10expire on January 1, 2015; (2) one-third of board members'
11terms shall expire on January 1, 2016; and (3) remaining board
12members' terms shall expire on January 1, 2017. Board members
13may be re-appointed upon the expiration of their terms by the
14corporate authorities of the county or municipality.
15    The corporate authorities of a county or municipality may,
16by a vote of the majority of the members elected, remove an
17Emergency Telephone System Board member for misconduct,
18official misconduct, or neglect of office.
19    (b) The powers and duties of the board shall be defined by
20ordinance of the municipality or county, or by
21intergovernmental agreement in the case of a joint board. The
22powers and duties shall include, but need not be limited to the
23following:
24        (1) Planning a 9-1-1 system.
25        (2) Coordinating and supervising the implementation,
26    upgrading, or maintenance of the system, including the

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 48 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1    establishment of equipment specifications and coding
2    systems.
3        (3) Receiving moneys from the surcharge imposed under
4    Section 15.3, or disbursed to it under Section 30, and
5    from any other source, for deposit into the Emergency
6    Telephone System Fund.
7        (4) Authorizing all disbursements from the fund.
8        (5) Hiring any staff necessary for the implementation
9    or upgrade of the system.
10        (6) (Blank).
11        (7) Designating a 9-1-1 System Manager, whose duties
12    and responsibilities shall be set forth by the Emergency
13    Telephone System Board in writing.
14    (c) All moneys received by a board pursuant to a surcharge
15imposed under Section 15.3, or disbursed to it under Section
1630, shall be deposited into a separate interest-bearing
17Emergency Telephone System Fund account. The treasurer of the
18municipality or county that has established the board or, in
19the case of a joint board, any municipal or county treasurer
20designated in the intergovernmental agreement, shall be
21custodian of the fund. All interest accruing on the fund shall
22remain in the fund. No expenditures may be made from such fund
23except upon the direction of the board by resolution passed by
24a majority of all members of the board.
25    (d) The board shall complete a Master Street Address Guide
26database before implementation of the 9-1-1 system. The error

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 49 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1ratio of the database shall not at any time exceed 1% of the
2total database.
3    (e) On and after January 1, 2016, no municipality or
4county may create an Emergency Telephone System Board unless
5the board is a Joint Emergency Telephone System Board. The
6corporate authorities of any county or municipality entering
7into an intergovernmental agreement to create or join a Joint
8Emergency Telephone System Board shall rescind an ordinance or
9ordinances creating a single Emergency Telephone System Board
10and shall eliminate the single Emergency Telephone System
11Board, effective upon the creation of the Joint Emergency
12Telephone System Board, with regulatory approval by the
13Administrator, or joining of the Joint Emergency Telephone
14System Board. Nothing in this Section shall be construed to
15require the dissolution of an Emergency Telephone System Board
16that is not succeeded by a Joint Emergency Telephone System
17Board or is not required to consolidate under Section 15.4a of
18this Act.
19    (f) Within one year after the effective date of this
20amendatory Act of the 100th General Assembly, any corporate
21authorities of a county or municipality, other than a
22municipality with a population of more than 500,000, operating
23a 9-1-1 system without an Emergency Telephone System Board or
24Joint Emergency Telephone System Board shall create or join a
25Joint Emergency Telephone System Board.
26(Source: P.A. 99-6, eff. 1-1-16; 100-20, eff. 7-1-17.)
 

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 50 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1    (50 ILCS 750/15.4a)
2    (Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2021)
3    Sec. 15.4a. Consolidation.
4    (a) By July 1, 2017, and except as otherwise provided in
5this Section, Emergency Telephone System Boards, Joint
6Emergency Telephone System Boards, qualified governmental
7entities, and PSAPs shall be consolidated as follows, subject
8to subsections (b) and (c) of this Section:
9        (1) In any county with a population of at least
10    250,000 that has a single Emergency Telephone System
11    Board, or qualified governmental entity and more than 2
12    PSAPs, shall reduce the number of PSAPs by at least 50% or
13    to 2 PSAPs, whichever is greater. Nothing in this
14    paragraph shall preclude consolidation resulting in one
15    PSAP in the county.
16        (2) In any county with a population of at least
17    250,000 that has more than one Emergency Telephone System
18    Board, Joint Emergency Telephone System Board, or
19    qualified governmental entity, any 9-1-1 Authority serving
20    a population of less than 25,000 shall be consolidated
21    such that no 9-1-1 Authority in the county serves a
22    population of less than 25,000.
23        (3) In any county with a population of at least
24    250,000 but less than 1,000,000 that has more than one
25    Emergency Telephone System Board, Joint Emergency

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 51 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1    Telephone System Board, or qualified governmental entity,
2    each 9-1-1 Authority shall reduce the number of PSAPs by
3    at least 50% or to 2 PSAPs, whichever is greater. Nothing
4    in this paragraph shall preclude consolidation of a 9-1-1
5    Authority into a Joint Emergency Telephone System Board,
6    and nothing in this paragraph shall preclude consolidation
7    resulting in one PSAP in the county.
8        (4) In any county with a population of less than
9    250,000 that has a single Emergency Telephone System Board
10    or qualified governmental entity and more than 2 PSAPs,
11    the 9-1-1 Authority shall reduce the number of PSAPs by at
12    least 50% or to 2 PSAPs, whichever is greater. Nothing in
13    this paragraph shall preclude consolidation resulting in
14    one PSAP in the county.
15        (5) In any county with a population of less than
16    250,000 that has more than one Emergency Telephone System
17    Board or , Joint Emergency Telephone System Board, or
18    qualified governmental entity and more than 2 PSAPS, the
19    9-1-1 Authorities shall be consolidated into a single
20    joint board, and the number of PSAPs shall be reduced by at
21    least 50% or to 2 PSAPs, whichever is greater. Nothing in
22    this paragraph shall preclude consolidation resulting in
23    one PSAP in the county.
24        (6) Any 9-1-1 Authority that does not have a PSAP
25    within its jurisdiction shall be consolidated through an
26    intergovernmental agreement with an existing 9-1-1

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 52 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1    Authority that has a PSAP to create a Joint Emergency
2    Telephone Board.
3        (7) The corporate authorities of each county that has
4    no 9-1-1 service as of January 1, 2016 shall provide
5    enhanced 9-1-1 wireline and wireless enhanced 9-1-1
6    service for that county by either (i) entering into an
7    intergovernmental agreement with an existing Emergency
8    Telephone System Board to create a new Joint Emergency
9    Telephone System Board, or (ii) entering into an
10    intergovernmental agreement with the corporate authorities
11    that have created an existing Joint Emergency Telephone
12    System Board.
13    (b) By July 1, 2016, each county required to consolidate
14pursuant to paragraph (7) of subsection (a) of this Section
15and each 9-1-1 Authority required to consolidate pursuant to
16paragraphs (1) through (6) of subsection (a) of this Section
17shall file a plan for consolidation or a request for a waiver
18pursuant to subsection (c) of this Section with the Office of
19the Statewide 9-1-1 Administrator.
20        (1) No county or 9-1-1 Authority may avoid the
21    requirements of this Section by converting primary PSAPs
22    to secondary or virtual answering points; however a PSAP
23    may be decommissioned. Staff from decommissioned PSAPs may
24    remain to perform nonemergency police, fire, or EMS
25    responsibilities. Any county or 9-1-1 Authority not in
26    compliance with this Section shall be ineligible to

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 53 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1    receive consolidation grant funds issued under Section
2    15.4b of this Act or monthly disbursements otherwise due
3    under Section 30 of this Act, until the county or 9-1-1
4    Authority is in compliance.
5        (2) Within 60 calendar days of receiving a
6    consolidation plan or waiver, the Statewide 9-1-1 Advisory
7    Board shall hold at least one public hearing on the plan
8    and provide a recommendation to the Administrator. Notice
9    of the hearing shall be provided to the respective entity
10    to which the plan applies.
11        (3) Within 90 calendar days of receiving a
12    consolidation plan, the Administrator shall approve the
13    plan or waiver, approve the plan as modified, or grant a
14    waiver pursuant to subsection (c) of this Section. In
15    making his or her decision, the Administrator shall
16    consider any recommendation from the Statewide 9-1-1
17    Advisory Board regarding the plan. If the Administrator
18    does not follow the recommendation of the Board, the
19    Administrator shall provide a written explanation for the
20    deviation in his or her decision.
21        (4) The deadlines provided in this subsection may be
22    extended upon agreement between the Administrator and
23    entity which submitted the plan.
24    (c) A waiver from a consolidation required under
25subsection (a) of this Section may be granted if the
26Administrator finds that the consolidation will result in a

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 54 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1substantial threat to public safety, is economically
2unreasonable, or is technically infeasible.
3    (d) Any decision of the Administrator under this Section
4shall be deemed a final administrative decision and shall be
5subject to judicial review under the Administrative Review
6Law.
7(Source: P.A. 99-6, eff. 1-1-16; 100-20, eff. 7-1-17.)
 
8    (50 ILCS 750/15.6)
9    (Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2021)
10    Sec. 15.6. Enhanced 9-1-1 service; business service.
11    (a) After June 30, 2000, or within 18 months after
12enhanced 9-1-1 service becomes available, any entity that
13installs or operates a private business switch service and
14provides telecommunications facilities or services to
15businesses shall assure that the system is connected to the
16public switched network in a manner that calls to 9-1-1 result
17in automatic number and location identification. For buildings
18having their own street address and containing workspace of
1940,000 square feet or less, location identification shall
20include the building's street address. For buildings having
21their own street address and containing workspace of more than
2240,000 square feet, location identification shall include the
23building's street address and one distinct location
24identification per 40,000 square feet of workspace. Separate
25buildings containing workspace of 40,000 square feet or less

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 55 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1having a common public street address shall have a distinct
2location identification for each building in addition to the
3street address.
4    (b) Exemptions. Buildings containing workspace of more
5than 40,000 square feet are exempt from the multiple location
6identification requirements of subsection (a) if the building
7maintains, at all times, alternative and adequate means of
8signaling and responding to emergencies. Those means shall
9include, but not be limited to, a telephone system that
10provides the physical location of 9-1-1 calls coming from
11within the building. Health care facilities are presumed to
12meet the requirements of this paragraph if the facilities are
13staffed with medical or nursing personnel 24 hours per day and
14if an alternative means of providing information about the
15source of an emergency call exists. Buildings under this
16exemption must provide 9-1-1 service that provides the
17building's street address.
18    Buildings containing workspace of more than 40,000 square
19feet are exempt from subsection (a) if the building maintains,
20at all times, alternative and adequate means of signaling and
21responding to emergencies, including a telephone system that
22provides the location of a 9-1-1 call coming from within the
23building, and the building is serviced by its own medical,
24fire and security personnel. Buildings under this exemption
25are subject to emergency phone system certification by the
26Administrator.

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 56 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1    Buildings in communities not serviced by enhanced 9-1-1
2service are exempt from subsection (a).
3    Correctional institutions and facilities, as defined in
4subsection (d) of Section 3-1-2 of the Unified Code of
5Corrections, are exempt from subsection (a).
6    (c) This Act does not apply to any PBX telephone extension
7that uses radio transmissions to convey electrical signals
8directly between the telephone extension and the serving PBX.
9    (d) An entity that violates this Section is guilty of a
10business offense and shall be fined not less than $1,000 and
11not more than $5,000.
12    (e) Nothing in this Section shall be construed to preclude
13the Attorney General on behalf of the Department or on his or
14her own initiative, or any other interested person, from
15seeking judicial relief, by mandamus, injunction, or
16otherwise, to compel compliance with this Section.
17    (f) The Department may promulgate rules for the
18administration of this Section.
19(Source: P.A. 99-6, eff. 1-1-16; 100-20, eff. 7-1-17.)
 
20    (50 ILCS 750/15.6a)
21    (Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2021)
22    Sec. 15.6a. Wireless emergency 9-1-1 service.
23    (a) The digits "9-1-1" shall be the designated emergency
24telephone number within the wireless system.
25    (b) The Department may set non-discriminatory and uniform

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 57 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1technical and operational standards consistent with the rules
2of the Federal Communications Commission for directing calls
3to authorized public safety answering points. These standards
4shall not in any way prescribe the technology or manner a
5wireless carrier shall use to deliver wireless 9-1-1 or
6wireless E9-1-1 calls, and these standards shall not exceed
7the requirements set by the Federal Communications Commission;
8however, standards for directing calls to the authorized
9public safety answering point shall be included. The authority
10given to the Department in this Section is limited to setting
11standards as set forth herein and does not constitute
12authority to regulate wireless carriers.
13    (c) For the purpose of providing wireless 9-1-1 emergency
14services, an emergency telephone system board or, in the
15absence of an emergency telephone system board, a qualified
16governmental entity, may declare its intention for one or more
17of its public safety answering points to serve as a primary
18wireless 9-1-1 public safety answering point for its
19jurisdiction by notifying the Administrator in writing within
206 months after receiving its authority to operate a 9-1-1
21system under this Act. In addition, 2 or more emergency
22telephone system boards or qualified governmental entities
23may, by virtue of an intergovernmental agreement, provide
24wireless 9-1-1 service. Until the jurisdiction comes into
25compliance with Section 15.4a of this Act, the Department of
26State Police shall be the primary wireless 9-1-1 public safety

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 58 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1answering point for any jurisdiction that did not provide
2notice to the Illinois Commerce Commission and the Department
3prior to January 1, 2016.
4    (d) The Administrator, upon a request from a qualified
5governmental entity or an emergency telephone system board and
6with the advice and recommendation of the Statewide 9-1-1
7Advisory Board, may grant authority to the emergency telephone
8system board or a qualified governmental entity to provide
9wireless 9-1-1 service in areas for which the Department has
10accepted wireless 9-1-1 responsibility. The Administrator
11shall maintain a current list of all 9-1-1 systems and
12qualified governmental entities providing wireless 9-1-1
13service under this Act.
14(Source: P.A. 99-6, eff. 1-1-16; 100-20, eff. 7-1-17.)
 
15    (50 ILCS 750/15.6b)
16    (Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2021)
17    Sec. 15.6b. Next Generation 9-1-1 service.
18    (a) The Administrator, with the advice and recommendation
19of the Statewide 9-1-1 Advisory Board, shall develop and
20implement a plan for a statewide Next Generation 9-1-1
21network. The Next Generation 9-1-1 network must be an Internet
22protocol-based platform that at a minimum provides:
23        (1) improved 9-1-1 call delivery;
24        (2) enhanced interoperability;
25        (3) increased ease of communication between 9-1-1

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 59 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1    service providers, allowing immediate transfer of 9-1-1
2    calls, caller information, photos, and other data
3    statewide;
4        (4) a hosted solution with redundancy built in; and
5        (5) compliance with the most current NENA Standards i3
6    Solution 08-003.
7    (b) By July 1, 2016, the Administrator, with the advice
8and recommendation of the Statewide 9-1-1 Advisory Board,
9shall design and issue a competitive request for a proposal to
10secure the services of a consultant to complete a feasibility
11study on the implementation of a statewide Next Generation
129-1-1 network in Illinois. By July 1, 2017, the consultant
13shall complete the feasibility study and make recommendations
14as to the appropriate procurement approach for developing a
15statewide Next Generation 9-1-1 network.
16    (c) Within 12 months of the final report from the
17consultant under subsection (b) of this Section, the
18Department shall procure and finalize a contract with a vendor
19certified under Section 13-900 of the Public Utilities Act to
20establish a statewide Next Generation 9-1-1 network. The
21Illinois State Police, in consultation with and subject to the
22approval of the Chief Procurement Officer, may procure a
23single contract or multiple contracts to implement the
24provisions of this Section. A contract or contracts under this
25subsection are not subject to the provisions of the Illinois
26Procurement Code, except for Sections 20-60, 20-65, 20-70, and

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 60 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

120-160 and Article 50 of that Code, provided that the Chief
2Procurement Officer may, in writing with justification, waive
3any certification required under Article 50 of the Illinois
4Procurement Code. This exemption is inoperative 2 years from
5the effective date of this Amendatory Act of the 102nd General
6Assembly. Within 18 months of securing the contract By July 1,
72021, the vendor shall implement a Next Generation 9-1-1
8network that allows 9-1-1 systems providing 9-1-1 service to
9Illinois residents to access the system utilizing their
10current infrastructure if it meets the standards adopted by
11the Department.
12(Source: P.A. 100-20, eff. 7-1-17; 101-639, eff. 6-12-20.)
 
13    (50 ILCS 750/17.5)
14    (Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2021)
15    Sec. 17.5. Statewide 9-1-1 Call Directory call transfer,
16forward, or relay.
17    (a) The General Assembly finds the following:
18        (1) Some 9-1-1 systems throughout this State do not
19    have a procedure in place to manually transfer, forward,
20    or relay 9-1-1 calls originating within one 9-1-1 system's
21    jurisdiction, but which should properly be answered and
22    dispatched by another 9-1-1 system, to the appropriate
23    9-1-1 system for answering and dispatch of first
24    responders.
25        (2) On January 1, 2016, the General Assembly gave

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 61 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1    oversight authority of 9-1-1 systems to the Department of
2    State Police.
3        (3) Since that date, the Department of State Police
4    has authorized individual 9-1-1 systems in counties and
5    municipalities to implement and upgrade enhanced 9-1-1
6    systems throughout the State.
7    (b) The Department shall prepare a directory of all
8authorized 9-1-1 systems in the State. The directory shall
9include an emergency 24/7 10-digit telephone number for all
10primary public safety answering points located in each 9-1-1
11system to which 9-1-1 calls from another jurisdiction can be
12transferred. This directory shall be made available to each
139-1-1 authority for its use in establishing standard operating
14procedures regarding calls outside its 9-1-1 jurisdiction.
15    (c) Each 9-1-1 system shall provide the Department with
16the following information:
17        (1) The name of the PSAP, a list of every
18    participating agency, and the county the PSAP is in,
19    including college and university public safety entities.
20        (2) The 24/7 10-digit emergency telephone number and
21    email address for the dispatch agency to which 9-1-1 calls
22    originating in another 9-1-1 jurisdiction can be
23    transferred or by which the PSAP can be contacted via
24    email to exchange information. The emergency telephone
25    number must be a direct line that is not answered by an
26    automated system but rather is answered by a person. Each

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 62 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1    9-1-1 system shall provide the Department with any changes
2    to the participating agencies and this number and email
3    address immediately upon the change occurring. Each 9-1-1
4    system shall provide the PSAP information and , the 24/7
5    10-digit emergency telephone number and email address to
6    the Manager of the Department's 9-1-1 Program within 30
7    days of the effective date of this amendatory Act of the
8    102nd 100th General Assembly.
9        (3) The standard operating procedure describing the
10    manner in which the 9-1-1 system will transfer, forward,
11    or relay 9-1-1 calls originating within its jurisdiction,
12    but which should properly be answered and dispatched by
13    another 9-1-1 system, to the appropriate 9-1-1 system.
14    Each 9-1-1 system shall provide the standard operating
15    procedures to the Manager of the Department's 9-1-1
16    Program within 180 days after the effective date of this
17    amendatory Act of the 100th General Assembly.
18    (d) Unless exigent circumstances dictate otherwise, each
199-1-1 system's public safety telecommunicators shall be
20responsible for remaining on the line with the caller when a
219-1-1 call originates within its jurisdiction to ensure the
229-1-1 call is transferred to the appropriate authorized entity
23for answer and dispatch until a public safety telecommunicator
24is on the line and confirms jurisdiction for the call.
25(Source: P.A. 100-20, eff. 7-1-17.)
 

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 63 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1    (50 ILCS 750/19)
2    (Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2021)
3    Sec. 19. Statewide 9-1-1 Advisory Board.
4    (a) Beginning July 1, 2015, there is created the Statewide
59-1-1 Advisory Board within the Department of State Police.
6The Board shall consist of the following 11 voting members:
7        (1) The Director of the State Police, or his or her
8    designee, who shall serve as chairman.
9        (2) The Executive Director of the Commission, or his
10    or her designee.
11        (3) Nine members appointed by the Governor as follows:
12            (A) one member representing the Illinois chapter
13        of the National Emergency Number Association, or his
14        or her designee;
15            (B) one member representing the Illinois chapter
16        of the Association of Public-Safety Communications
17        Officials, or his or her designee;
18            (C) one member representing a county 9-1-1 system
19        from a county with a population of less than 37,000
20        50,000;
21            (C-5) one member representing a county 9-1-1
22        system from a county with a population between 37,000
23        and 100,000;
24            (D) one member representing a county 9-1-1 system
25        from a county with a population between 100,001 50,000
26        and 250,000;

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 64 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1            (E) one member representing a county 9-1-1 system
2        from a county with a population of more than 250,000;
3            (F) one member representing a municipal or
4        intergovernmental cooperative 9-1-1 system, excluding
5        any single municipality over 500,000 municipality with
6        a population of less than 500,000 in a county with a
7        population in excess of 2,000,000;
8            (G) one member representing the Illinois
9        Association of Chiefs of Police;
10            (H) one member representing the Illinois Sheriffs'
11        Association; and
12            (I) one member representing the Illinois Fire
13        Chiefs Association.
14    The Governor shall appoint the following non-voting
15members: (i) one member representing an incumbent local
16exchange 9-1-1 system provider; (ii) one member representing a
17non-incumbent local exchange 9-1-1 system provider; (iii) one
18member representing a large wireless carrier; (iv) one member
19representing an incumbent local exchange carrier; (v) one
20member representing the Illinois Broadband and
21Telecommunications Association; (vi) one member representing
22the Illinois Broadband and Cable Television and Communication
23Association of Illinois; and (vii) one member representing the
24Illinois State Ambulance Association. The Speaker of the House
25of Representatives, the Minority Leader of the House of
26Representatives, the President of the Senate, and the Minority

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 65 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1Leader of the Senate may each appoint a member of the General
2Assembly to temporarily serve as a non-voting member of the
3Board during the 12 months prior to the repeal date of this Act
4to discuss legislative initiatives of the Board.
5    (b) The Governor shall make initial appointments to the
6Statewide 9-1-1 Advisory Board by August 31, 2015. Six of the
7voting members appointed by the Governor shall serve an
8initial term of 2 years, and the remaining voting members
9appointed by the Governor shall serve an initial term of 3
10years. Thereafter, each appointment by the Governor shall be
11for a term of 3 years. Non-voting members shall serve for a
12term of 3 years. Vacancies shall be filled in the same manner
13as the original appointment. Persons appointed to fill a
14vacancy shall serve for the balance of the unexpired term.
15    Members of the Statewide 9-1-1 Advisory Board shall serve
16without compensation.
17    (c) The 9-1-1 Services Advisory Board, as constituted on
18June 1, 2015 without the legislative members, shall serve in
19the role of the Statewide 9-1-1 Advisory Board until all
20appointments of voting members have been made by the Governor
21under subsection (a) of this Section.
22    (d) The Statewide 9-1-1 Advisory Board shall:
23        (1) advise the Department of State Police and the
24    Statewide 9-1-1 Administrator on the oversight of 9-1-1
25    systems and the development and implementation of a
26    uniform statewide 9-1-1 system;

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 66 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1        (2) make recommendations to the Governor and the
2    General Assembly regarding improvements to 9-1-1 services
3    throughout the State; and
4        (3) exercise all other powers and duties provided in
5    this Act.
6    (e) The Statewide 9-1-1 Advisory Board shall submit to the
7General Assembly a report by March 1 of each year providing an
8update on the transition to a statewide 9-1-1 system and
9recommending any legislative action.
10    (f) The Department of State Police shall provide
11administrative support to the Statewide 9-1-1 Advisory Board.
12(Source: P.A. 99-6, eff. 6-29-15; 100-20, eff. 7-1-17.)
 
13    (50 ILCS 750/20)
14    (Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2021)
15    Sec. 20. Statewide surcharge.
16    (a) On and after January 1, 2016, and except with respect
17to those customers who are subject to surcharges as provided
18in Sections 15.3 and 15.3a of this Act, a monthly surcharge
19shall be imposed on all customers of telecommunications
20carriers and wireless carriers as follows:
21        (1) Each telecommunications carrier shall impose a
22    monthly surcharge per network connection; provided,
23    however, the monthly surcharge shall not apply to a
24    network connection provided for use with pay telephone
25    services. Where multiple voice grade communications

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 67 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1    channels are connected between the subscriber's premises
2    and a public switched network through private branch
3    exchange (PBX), Centrex centrex type service, or other
4    multiple voice grade communication channels facility,
5    there shall be imposed 5 such surcharges per network
6    connection for both regular service and advanced service
7    provisioned trunk lines. Until December 31, 2017, the
8    surcharge shall be $0.87 per network connection and on and
9    after January 1, 2018, the surcharge shall be $1.50 per
10    network connection.
11        (2) Each wireless carrier shall impose and collect a
12    monthly surcharge per CMRS connection that either has a
13    telephone number within an area code assigned to Illinois
14    by the North American Numbering Plan Administrator or has
15    a billing address in this State. Until December 31, 2017,
16    the surcharge shall be $0.87 per connection and on and
17    after January 1, 2018, the surcharge shall be $1.50 per
18    connection.
19    (b) State and local taxes shall not apply to the
20surcharges imposed under this Section.
21    (c) The surcharges imposed by this Section shall be stated
22as a separately stated item on subscriber bills.
23    (d) The telecommunications carrier collecting the
24surcharge may deduct and retain 1.74% an amount not to exceed
253% of the gross amount of surcharge collected to reimburse the
26telecommunications carrier for the expense of accounting and

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 68 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1collecting the surcharge. On and after July 1, 2022, the
2wireless carrier collecting a surcharge under this Section may
3deduct and retain 1.74% an amount not to exceed 3% of the gross
4amount of the surcharge collected to reimburse the wireless
5carrier for the expense of accounting and collecting the
6surcharge.
7    (d-5) Notwithstanding the provisions of subsection (d) of
8this Section, an amount not greater than 2.5% may be deducted
9and retained if the telecommunications or wireless carrier can
10support through documentation, expenses that exceed the 1.74%
11allowed. The documentation shall be submitted to the Illinois
12State Police and input obtained from the Statewide 9-1-1
13Advisory Board prior to approval of the deduction.
14    (e) Surcharges imposed under this Section shall be
15collected by the carriers and shall be remitted to the
16Department, either by check or electronic funds transfer, by
17the end of the next calendar month after the calendar month in
18which it was collected for deposit into the Statewide 9-1-1
19Fund. Carriers are not required to remit surcharge moneys that
20are billed to subscribers but not yet collected.
21    The first remittance by wireless carriers shall include
22the number of subscribers by zip code, and the 9-digit zip code
23if currently being used or later implemented by the carrier,
24that shall be the means by which the Department shall
25determine distributions from the Statewide 9-1-1 Fund. This
26information shall be updated at least once each year. Any

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 69 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1carrier that fails to provide the zip code information
2required under this subsection (e) shall be subject to the
3penalty set forth in subsection (g) of this Section.
4    (f) If, within 8 calendar days after it is due under
5subsection (e) of this Section, a carrier does not remit the
6surcharge or any portion thereof required under this Section,
7then the surcharge or portion thereof shall be deemed
8delinquent until paid in full, and the Department may impose a
9penalty against the carrier in an amount equal to the greater
10of:
11        (1) $25 for each month or portion of a month from the
12    time an amount becomes delinquent until the amount is paid
13    in full; or
14        (2) an amount equal to the product of 1% and the sum of
15    all delinquent amounts for each month or portion of a
16    month that the delinquent amounts remain unpaid.
17    A penalty imposed in accordance with this subsection (f)
18for a portion of a month during which the carrier pays the
19delinquent amount in full shall be prorated for each day of
20that month that the delinquent amount was paid in full. Any
21penalty imposed under this subsection (f) is in addition to
22the amount of the delinquency and is in addition to any other
23penalty imposed under this Section.
24    (g) If, within 8 calendar days after it is due, a wireless
25carrier does not provide the number of subscribers by zip code
26as required under subsection (e) of this Section, then the

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 70 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1report is deemed delinquent and the Department may impose a
2penalty against the carrier in an amount equal to the greater
3of:
4        (1) $25 for each month or portion of a month that the
5    report is delinquent; or
6        (2) an amount equal to the product of $0.01 and the
7    number of subscribers served by the carrier for each month
8    or portion of a month that the delinquent report is not
9    provided.
10    A penalty imposed in accordance with this subsection (g)
11for a portion of a month during which the carrier provides the
12number of subscribers by zip code as required under subsection
13(e) of this Section shall be prorated for each day of that
14month during which the carrier had not provided the number of
15subscribers by zip code as required under subsection (e) of
16this Section. Any penalty imposed under this subsection (g) is
17in addition to any other penalty imposed under this Section.
18    (h) A penalty imposed and collected in accordance with
19subsection (f) or (g) of this Section shall be deposited into
20the Statewide 9-1-1 Fund for distribution according to Section
2130 of this Act.
22    (i) The Department may enforce the collection of any
23delinquent amount and any penalty due and unpaid under this
24Section by legal action or in any other manner by which the
25collection of debts due the State of Illinois may be enforced
26under the laws of this State. The Department may excuse the

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 71 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1payment of any penalty imposed under this Section if the
2Administrator determines that the enforcement of this penalty
3is unjust.
4    (j) Notwithstanding any provision of law to the contrary,
5nothing shall impair the right of wireless carriers to recover
6compliance costs for all emergency communications services
7that are not reimbursed out of the Wireless Carrier
8Reimbursement Fund directly from their wireless subscribers by
9line-item charges on the wireless subscriber's bill. Those
10compliance costs include all costs incurred by wireless
11carriers in complying with local, State, and federal
12regulatory or legislative mandates that require the
13transmission and receipt of emergency communications to and
14from the general public, including, but not limited to,
15E9-1-1.
16(Source: P.A. 99-6, eff. 1-1-16; 100-20, eff. 7-1-17.)
 
17    (50 ILCS 750/30)
18    (Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2021)
19    Sec. 30. Statewide 9-1-1 Fund; surcharge disbursement.
20    (a) A special fund in the State treasury known as the
21Wireless Service Emergency Fund shall be renamed the Statewide
229-1-1 Fund. Any appropriations made from the Wireless Service
23Emergency Fund shall be payable from the Statewide 9-1-1 Fund.
24The Fund shall consist of the following:
25        (1) 9-1-1 wireless surcharges assessed under the

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 72 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1    Wireless Emergency Telephone Safety Act.
2        (2) 9-1-1 surcharges assessed under Section 20 of this
3    Act.
4        (3) Prepaid wireless 9-1-1 surcharges assessed under
5    Section 15 of the Prepaid Wireless 9-1-1 Surcharge Act.
6        (4) Any appropriations, grants, or gifts made to the
7    Fund.
8        (5) Any income from interest, premiums, gains, or
9    other earnings on moneys in the Fund.
10        (6) Money from any other source that is deposited in
11    or transferred to the Fund.
12    (b) Subject to appropriation and availability of funds,
13the Department shall distribute the 9-1-1 surcharges monthly
14as follows:
15        (1) From each surcharge collected and remitted under
16    Section 20 of this Act:
17            (A) $0.013 shall be distributed monthly in equal
18        amounts to each County Emergency Telephone System
19        Board or qualified governmental entity in counties
20        with a population under 100,000 according to the most
21        recent census data which is authorized to serve as a
22        primary wireless 9-1-1 public safety answering point
23        for the county and to provide wireless 9-1-1 service
24        as prescribed by subsection (b) of Section 15.6a of
25        this Act, and which does provide such service.
26            (B) $0.033 shall be transferred by the Comptroller

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 73 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1        at the direction of the Department to the Wireless
2        Carrier Reimbursement Fund until June 30, 2017; from
3        July 1, 2017 through June 30, 2018, $0.026 shall be
4        transferred; from July 1, 2018 through June 30, 2019,
5        $0.020 shall be transferred; from July 1, 2019,
6        through June 30, 2020, $0.013 shall be transferred;
7        from July 1, 2020 through June 30, 2021, $0.007 will be
8        transferred; and after June 30, 2021, no transfer
9        shall be made to the Wireless Carrier Reimbursement
10        Fund.
11            (C) Until December 31, 2017, $0.007 and on and
12        after January 1, 2018, $0.017 shall be used to cover
13        the Department's administrative costs.
14            (D) Beginning January 1, 2018, until June 30,
15        2020, $0.12, and on and after July 1, 2020, $0.04 shall
16        be used to make monthly proportional grants to the
17        appropriate 9-1-1 Authority currently taking wireless
18        9-1-1 based upon the United States Postal Zip Code of
19        the billing addresses of subscribers wireless
20        carriers.
21            (E) Until June 30, 2023 2021, $0.05 shall be used
22        by the Department for grants for NG9-1-1 expenses,
23        with priority given to 9-1-1 Authorities that provide
24        9-1-1 service within the territory of a Large Electing
25        Provider as defined in Section 13-406.1 of the Public
26        Utilities Act.

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 74 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1            (F) On and after July 1, 2020, $0.13 shall be used
2        for the implementation of and continuing expenses for
3        the Statewide NG9-1-1 system.
4        (2) After disbursements under paragraph (1) of this
5    subsection (b), all remaining funds in the Statewide 9-1-1
6    Fund shall be disbursed in the following priority order:
7            (A) The Fund shall pay monthly to:
8                (i) the 9-1-1 Authorities that imposed
9            surcharges under Section 15.3 of this Act and were
10            required to report to the Illinois Commerce
11            Commission under Section 27 of the Wireless
12            Emergency Telephone Safety Act on October 1, 2014,
13            except a 9-1-1 Authority in a municipality with a
14            population in excess of 500,000, an amount equal
15            to the average monthly wireline and VoIP surcharge
16            revenue attributable to the most recent 12-month
17            period reported to the Department under that
18            Section for the October 1, 2014 filing, subject to
19            the power of the Department to investigate the
20            amount reported and adjust the number by order
21            under Article X of the Public Utilities Act, so
22            that the monthly amount paid under this item
23            accurately reflects one-twelfth of the aggregate
24            wireline and VoIP surcharge revenue properly
25            attributable to the most recent 12-month period
26            reported to the Commission; or

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 75 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1                (ii) county qualified governmental entities
2            that did not impose a surcharge under Section 15.3
3            as of December 31, 2015, and counties that did not
4            impose a surcharge as of June 30, 2015, an amount
5            equivalent to their population multiplied by .37
6            multiplied by the rate of $0.69; counties that are
7            not county qualified governmental entities and
8            that did not impose a surcharge as of December 31,
9            2015, shall not begin to receive the payment
10            provided for in this subsection until E9-1-1 and
11            wireless E9-1-1 services are provided within their
12            counties; or
13                (iii) counties without 9-1-1 service that had
14            a surcharge in place by December 31, 2015, an
15            amount equivalent to their population multiplied
16            by .37 multiplied by their surcharge rate as
17            established by the referendum.
18            (B) All 9-1-1 network costs for systems outside of
19        municipalities with a population of at least 500,000
20        shall be paid by the Department directly to the
21        vendors.
22            (C) All expenses incurred by the Administrator and
23        the Statewide 9-1-1 Advisory Board and costs
24        associated with procurement under Section 15.6b
25        including requests for information and requests for
26        proposals.

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 76 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1            (D) Funds may be held in reserve by the Statewide
2        9-1-1 Advisory Board and disbursed by the Department
3        for grants under Section 15.4b of this Act and for
4        NG9-1-1 expenses up to $12.5 million per year in State
5        fiscal years 2016 and 2017; up to $20 million in State
6        fiscal year 2018; up to $20.9 million in State fiscal
7        year 2019; up to $15.3 million in State fiscal year
8        2020; up to $16.2 million in State fiscal year 2021; up
9        to $23.1 million in State fiscal year 2022; and up to
10        $17.0 million per year for State fiscal year 2023 and
11        each year thereafter. The amount held in reserve in
12        State fiscal years 2021, 2022, and 2023 2018 and 2019
13        shall not be less than $6.5 million. Disbursements
14        under this subparagraph (D) shall be prioritized as
15        follows: (i) consolidation grants prioritized under
16        subsection (a) of Section 15.4b of this Act; (ii)
17        NG9-1-1 expenses; and (iii) consolidation grants under
18        Section 15.4b of this Act for consolidation expenses
19        incurred between January 1, 2010, and January 1, 2016.
20            (E) All remaining funds per remit month shall be
21        used to make monthly proportional grants to the
22        appropriate 9-1-1 Authority currently taking wireless
23        9-1-1 based upon the United States Postal Zip Code of
24        the billing addresses of subscribers of wireless
25        carriers.
26    (c) The moneys deposited into the Statewide 9-1-1 Fund

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 77 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1under this Section shall not be subject to administrative
2charges or chargebacks unless otherwise authorized by this
3Act.
4    (d) Whenever two or more 9-1-1 Authorities consolidate,
5the resulting Joint Emergency Telephone System Board shall be
6entitled to the monthly payments that had theretofore been
7made to each consolidating 9-1-1 Authority. Any reserves held
8by any consolidating 9-1-1 Authority shall be transferred to
9the resulting Joint Emergency Telephone System Board. Whenever
10a county that has no 9-1-1 service as of January 1, 2016 enters
11into an agreement to consolidate to create or join a Joint
12Emergency Telephone System Board, the Joint Emergency
13Telephone System Board shall be entitled to the monthly
14payments that would have otherwise been paid to the county if
15it had provided 9-1-1 service.
16(Source: P.A. 100-20, eff. 7-1-17; 101-639, eff. 6-12-20.)
 
17    (50 ILCS 750/40)
18    (Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2021)
19    Sec. 40. Financial reports.
20    (a) The Department shall create uniform accounting
21procedures, with such modification as may be required to give
22effect to statutory provisions applicable only to
23municipalities with a population in excess of 500,000, that
24any emergency telephone system board, qualified governmental
25entity, or unit of local government receiving surcharge money

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 78 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1pursuant to Section 15.3, 15.3a, or 30 of this Act must follow.
2    (b) By January 31, 2018, and every January 31 thereafter,
3each emergency telephone system board, qualified governmental
4entity, or unit of local government receiving surcharge money
5pursuant to Section 15.3, 15.3a, or 30 shall report to the
6Department audited financial statements showing total revenue
7and expenditures for the period beginning with the end of the
8period covered by the last submitted report through the end of
9the previous calendar year in a form and manner as prescribed
10by the Department. Such financial information shall include:
11        (1) a detailed summary of revenue from all sources
12    including, but not limited to, local, State, federal, and
13    private revenues, and any other funds received;
14        (2) all expenditures made during the reporting period
15    from distributions under this Act;
16        (3) call data and statistics, when available, from the
17    reporting period, as specified by the Department and
18    collected in accordance with any reporting method
19    established or required by the Department;
20        (4) all costs associated with dispatching appropriate
21    public safety agencies to respond to 9-1-1 calls received
22    by the PSAP; and
23        (5) all funding sources and amounts of funding used
24    for costs described in paragraph (4) of this subsection
25    (b).
26    The emergency telephone system board, qualified

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 79 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1governmental entity, or unit of local government is
2responsible for any costs associated with auditing such
3financial statements. The Department shall post the audited
4financial statements on the Department's website.
5    (c) Along with its audited financial statement, each
6emergency telephone system board, qualified governmental
7entity, or unit of local government receiving a grant under
8Section 15.4b of this Act shall include a report of the amount
9of grant moneys received and how the grant moneys were used. In
10case of a conflict between this requirement and the Grant
11Accountability and Transparency Act, or with the rules of the
12Governor's Office of Management and Budget adopted thereunder,
13that Act and those rules shall control.
14    (d) If an emergency telephone system board or qualified
15governmental entity that receives funds from the Statewide
169-1-1 Fund fails to file the 9-1-1 system financial reports as
17required under this Section, the Department shall suspend and
18withhold monthly disbursements otherwise due to the emergency
19telephone system board or qualified governmental entity under
20Section 30 of this Act until the report is filed.
21    Any monthly disbursements that have been withheld for 12
22months or more shall be forfeited by the emergency telephone
23system board or qualified governmental entity and shall be
24distributed proportionally by the Department to compliant
25emergency telephone system boards and qualified governmental
26entities that receive funds from the Statewide 9-1-1 Fund.

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 80 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1    Any emergency telephone system board or qualified
2governmental entity not in compliance with this Section shall
3be ineligible to receive any consolidation grant or
4infrastructure grant issued under this Act.
5    (e) The Department may adopt emergency rules necessary to
6implement the provisions of this Section.
7    (f) Any findings or decisions of the Department under this
8Section shall be deemed a final administrative decision and
9shall be subject to judicial review under the Administrative
10Review Law.
11    (g) Beginning October 1, 2017, the Department shall
12provide a quarterly report to the Statewide 9-1-1 Advisory
13Board of its expenditures from the Statewide 9-1-1 Fund for
14the prior fiscal quarter.
15(Source: P.A. 99-6, eff. 1-1-16; 100-20, eff. 7-1-17.)
 
16    (50 ILCS 750/99)
17    (Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2021)
18    Sec. 99. Repealer. This Act is repealed on December 31,
192023 2021.
20(Source: P.A. 100-20, eff. 7-1-17; 101-639, eff. 6-12-20.)
 
21    (50 ILCS 750/9 rep.)
22    (50 ILCS 750/13 rep.)
23    (50 ILCS 750/17 rep.)
24    Section 15. The Emergency Telephone System Act is amended

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 81 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1by repealing Sections 9, 13, and 17.
 
2    Section 20. The Prepaid Wireless 9-1-1 Surcharge Act is
3amended by changing Section 15 as follows:
 
4    (50 ILCS 753/15)
5    Sec. 15. Prepaid wireless 9-1-1 surcharge.
6    (a) Until September 30, 2015, there is hereby imposed on
7consumers a prepaid wireless 9-1-1 surcharge of 1.5% per
8retail transaction. Beginning October 1, 2015, the prepaid
9wireless 9-1-1 surcharge shall be 3% per retail transaction.
10The surcharge authorized by this subsection (a) does not apply
11in a home rule municipality having a population in excess of
12500,000.
13    (a-5) On or after the effective date of this amendatory
14Act of the 98th General Assembly and until December 31, 2023
152020, a home rule municipality having a population in excess
16of 500,000 on the effective date of this amendatory Act may
17impose a prepaid wireless 9-1-1 surcharge not to exceed 9% per
18retail transaction sourced to that jurisdiction and collected
19and remitted in accordance with the provisions of subsection
20(b-5) of this Section. On or after January 1, 2021, a home rule
21municipality having a population in excess of 500,000 on the
22effective date of this Act may only impose a prepaid wireless
239-1-1 surcharge not to exceed 7% per retail transaction
24sourced to that jurisdiction and collected and remitted in

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 82 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1accordance with the provisions of subsection (b-5).
2    (b) The prepaid wireless 9-1-1 surcharge shall be
3collected by the seller from the consumer with respect to each
4retail transaction occurring in this State and shall be
5remitted to the Department by the seller as provided in this
6Act. The amount of the prepaid wireless 9-1-1 surcharge shall
7be separately stated as a distinct item apart from the charge
8for the prepaid wireless telecommunications service on an
9invoice, receipt, or other similar document that is provided
10to the consumer by the seller or shall be otherwise disclosed
11to the consumer. If the seller does not separately state the
12surcharge as a distinct item to the consumer as provided in
13this Section, then the seller shall maintain books and records
14as required by this Act which clearly identify the amount of
15the 9-1-1 surcharge for retail transactions.
16    For purposes of this subsection (b), a retail transaction
17occurs in this State if (i) the retail transaction is made in
18person by a consumer at the seller's business location and the
19business is located within the State; (ii) the seller is a
20provider and sells prepaid wireless telecommunications service
21to a consumer located in Illinois; (iii) the retail
22transaction is treated as occurring in this State for purposes
23of the Retailers' Occupation Tax Act; or (iv) a seller that is
24included within the definition of a "retailer maintaining a
25place of business in this State" under Section 2 of the Use Tax
26Act makes a sale of prepaid wireless telecommunications

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 83 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1service to a consumer located in Illinois. In the case of a
2retail transaction which does not occur in person at a
3seller's business location, if a consumer uses a credit card
4to purchase prepaid wireless telecommunications service
5on-line or over the telephone, and no product is shipped to the
6consumer, the transaction occurs in this State if the billing
7address for the consumer's credit card is in this State.
8    (b-5) The prepaid wireless 9-1-1 surcharge imposed under
9subsection (a-5) of this Section shall be collected by the
10seller from the consumer with respect to each retail
11transaction occurring in the municipality imposing the
12surcharge. The amount of the prepaid wireless 9-1-1 surcharge
13shall be separately stated on an invoice, receipt, or other
14similar document that is provided to the consumer by the
15seller or shall be otherwise disclosed to the consumer. If the
16seller does not separately state the surcharge as a distinct
17item to the consumer as provided in this Section, then the
18seller shall maintain books and records as required by this
19Act which clearly identify the amount of the 9-1-1 surcharge
20for retail transactions.
21    For purposes of this subsection (b-5), a retail
22transaction occurs in the municipality if (i) the retail
23transaction is made in person by a consumer at the seller's
24business location and the business is located within the
25municipality; (ii) the seller is a provider and sells prepaid
26wireless telecommunications service to a consumer located in

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 84 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1the municipality; (iii) the retail transaction is treated as
2occurring in the municipality for purposes of the Retailers'
3Occupation Tax Act; or (iv) a seller that is included within
4the definition of a "retailer maintaining a place of business
5in this State" under Section 2 of the Use Tax Act makes a sale
6of prepaid wireless telecommunications service to a consumer
7located in the municipality. In the case of a retail
8transaction which does not occur in person at a seller's
9business location, if a consumer uses a credit card to
10purchase prepaid wireless telecommunications service on-line
11or over the telephone, and no product is shipped to the
12consumer, the transaction occurs in the municipality if the
13billing address for the consumer's credit card is in the
14municipality.
15    (c) The prepaid wireless 9-1-1 surcharge is imposed on the
16consumer and not on any provider. The seller shall be liable to
17remit all prepaid wireless 9-1-1 surcharges that the seller
18collects from consumers as provided in Section 20, including
19all such surcharges that the seller is deemed to collect where
20the amount of the surcharge has not been separately stated on
21an invoice, receipt, or other similar document provided to the
22consumer by the seller. The surcharge collected or deemed
23collected by a seller shall constitute a debt owed by the
24seller to this State, and any such surcharge actually
25collected shall be held in trust for the benefit of the
26Department.

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 85 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1    For purposes of this subsection (c), the surcharge shall
2not be imposed or collected from entities that have an active
3tax exemption identification number issued by the Department
4under Section 1g of the Retailers' Occupation Tax Act.
5    (d) The amount of the prepaid wireless 9-1-1 surcharge
6that is collected by a seller from a consumer, if such amount
7is separately stated on an invoice, receipt, or other similar
8document provided to the consumer by the seller, shall not be
9included in the base for measuring any tax, fee, surcharge, or
10other charge that is imposed by this State, any political
11subdivision of this State, or any intergovernmental agency.
12    (e) (Blank).
13    (e-5) Any changes in the rate of the surcharge imposed by a
14municipality under the authority granted in subsection (a-5)
15of this Section shall be effective on the first day of the
16first calendar month to occur at least 60 days after the
17enactment of the change. The Department shall provide not less
18than 30 days' notice of the increase or reduction in the rate
19of such surcharge on the Department's website.
20    (f) When prepaid wireless telecommunications service is
21sold with one or more other products or services for a single,
22non-itemized price, then the percentage specified in
23subsection (a) or (a-5) of this Section 15 shall be applied to
24the entire non-itemized price unless the seller elects to
25apply the percentage to (i) the dollar amount of the prepaid
26wireless telecommunications service if that dollar amount is

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 86 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1disclosed to the consumer or (ii) the portion of the price that
2is attributable to the prepaid wireless telecommunications
3service if the retailer can identify that portion by
4reasonable and verifiable standards from its books and records
5that are kept in the regular course of business for other
6purposes, including, but not limited to, books and records
7that are kept for non-tax purposes. However, if a minimal
8amount of prepaid wireless telecommunications service is sold
9with a prepaid wireless device for a single, non-itemized
10price, then the seller may elect not to apply the percentage
11specified in subsection (a) or (a-5) of this Section 15 to such
12transaction. For purposes of this subsection, an amount of
13service denominated as 10 minutes or less or $5 or less is
14considered minimal.
15    (g) The prepaid wireless 9-1-1 surcharge imposed under
16subsections (a) and (a-5) of this Section is not imposed on the
17provider or the consumer for wireless Lifeline service where
18the consumer does not pay the provider for the service. Where
19the consumer purchases from the provider optional minutes,
20texts, or other services in addition to the federally funded
21Lifeline benefit, a consumer must pay the prepaid wireless
229-1-1 surcharge, and it must be collected by the seller
23according to subsection (b-5).
24(Source: P.A. 99-6, eff. 6-29-15; 100-20, eff. 7-1-17.)
 
25    Section 25. The Small Wireless Facilities Deployment Act

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 87 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1is amended by changing Sections 15 and 90 and by adding Section
245 as follows:
 
3    (50 ILCS 840/15)  (was 50 ILCS 835/15)
4    (Section scheduled to be repealed on June 1, 2021)
5    Sec. 15. Regulation of small wireless facilities.
6    (a) This Section applies to activities of a wireless
7provider within or outside rights-of-way.
8    (b) Except as provided in this Section, an authority may
9not prohibit, regulate, or charge for the collocation of small
10wireless facilities.
11    (c) Small wireless facilities shall be classified as
12permitted uses and subject to administrative review in
13conformance with this Act, except as provided in paragraph (5)
14of subsection (d) of this Section regarding height exceptions
15or variances, but not subject to zoning review or approval if
16they are collocated (i) in rights-of-way in any zone, or (ii)
17outside rights-of-way in property zoned exclusively for
18commercial or industrial use.
19    (d) An authority may require an applicant to obtain one or
20more permits to collocate a small wireless facility. An
21authority shall receive applications for, process, and issue
22permits subject to the following requirements:
23        (1) An authority may not directly or indirectly
24    require an applicant to perform services unrelated to the
25    collocation for which approval is sought, such as in-kind

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 88 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1    contributions to the authority, including reserving fiber,
2    conduit, or utility pole space for the authority on the
3    wireless provider's utility pole. An authority may reserve
4    space on authority utility poles for future public safety
5    uses or for the authority's electric utility uses, but a
6    reservation of space may not preclude the collocation of a
7    small wireless facility unless the authority reasonably
8    determines that the authority utility pole cannot
9    accommodate both uses.
10        (2) An applicant shall not be required to provide more
11    information to obtain a permit than the authority requires
12    of a communications service provider that is not a
13    wireless provider that requests to attach facilities to a
14    structure; however, a wireless provider may be required to
15    provide the following information when seeking a permit to
16    collocate small wireless facilities on a utility pole or
17    wireless support structure:
18            (A) site specific structural integrity and, for an
19        authority utility pole, make-ready analysis prepared
20        by a structural engineer, as that term is defined in
21        Section 4 of the Structural Engineering Practice Act
22        of 1989;
23            (B) the location where each proposed small
24        wireless facility or utility pole would be installed
25        and photographs of the location and its immediate
26        surroundings depicting the utility poles or structures

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 89 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1        on which each proposed small wireless facility would
2        be mounted or location where utility poles or
3        structures would be installed;
4            (C) specifications and drawings prepared by a
5        structural engineer, as that term is defined in
6        Section 4 of the Structural Engineering Practice Act
7        of 1989, for each proposed small wireless facility
8        covered by the application as it is proposed to be
9        installed;
10            (D) the equipment type and model numbers for the
11        antennas and all other wireless equipment associated
12        with the small wireless facility;
13            (E) a proposed schedule for the installation and
14        completion of each small wireless facility covered by
15        the application, if approved; and
16            (F) certification that the collocation complies
17        with paragraph (6) to the best of the applicant's
18        knowledge; and .
19            (G) the wireless provider's certification from a
20        radio engineer that it operates the small wireless
21        facility within all applicable FCC standards.
22        (3) Subject to paragraph (6), an authority may not
23    require the placement of small wireless facilities on any
24    specific utility pole, or category of utility poles, or
25    require multiple antenna systems on a single utility pole;
26    however, with respect to an application for the

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 90 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1    collocation of a small wireless facility associated with a
2    new utility pole, an authority may propose that the small
3    wireless facility be collocated on an existing utility
4    pole or existing wireless support structure within 200 100
5    feet of the proposed collocation, which the applicant
6    shall accept if it has the right to use the alternate
7    structure on reasonable terms and conditions and the
8    alternate location and structure does not impose technical
9    limits or additional material costs as determined by the
10    applicant. The authority may require the applicant to
11    provide a written certification describing the property
12    rights, technical limits or material cost reasons the
13    alternate location does not satisfy the criteria in this
14    paragraph (3).
15        (4) Subject to paragraph (6), an authority may not
16    limit the placement of small wireless facilities mounted
17    on a utility pole or a wireless support structure by
18    minimum horizontal separation distances.
19        (5) An authority may limit the maximum height of a
20    small wireless facility to 10 feet above the utility pole
21    or wireless support structure on which the small wireless
22    facility is collocated. Subject to any applicable waiver,
23    zoning, or other process that addresses wireless provider
24    requests for an exception or variance and does not
25    prohibit granting of such exceptions or variances, the
26    authority may limit the height of new or replacement

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 91 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1    utility poles or wireless support structures on which
2    small wireless facilities are collocated to the higher of:
3    (i) 10 feet in height above the tallest existing utility
4    pole, other than a utility pole supporting only wireless
5    facilities, that is in place on the date the application
6    is submitted to the authority, that is located within 300
7    feet of the new or replacement utility pole or wireless
8    support structure and that is in the same right-of-way
9    within the jurisdictional boundary of the authority,
10    provided the authority may designate which intersecting
11    right-of-way within 300 feet of the proposed utility pole
12    or wireless support structures shall control the height
13    limitation for such facility; or (ii) 45 feet above ground
14    level.
15        (6) An authority may require that:
16            (A) the wireless provider's operation of the small
17        wireless facilities does not interfere with the
18        frequencies used by a public safety agency for public
19        safety communications; a wireless provider shall
20        install small wireless facilities of the type and
21        frequency that will not cause unacceptable
22        interference with a public safety agency's
23        communications equipment; unacceptable interference
24        will be determined by and measured in accordance with
25        industry standards and the FCC's regulations
26        addressing unacceptable interference to public safety

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 92 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1        spectrum or any other spectrum licensed by a public
2        safety agency; if a small wireless facility causes
3        such interference, and the wireless provider has been
4        given written notice of the interference by the public
5        safety agency, the wireless provider, at its own
6        expense, shall take all reasonable steps necessary to
7        correct and eliminate the interference, including, but
8        not limited to, powering down the small wireless
9        facility and later powering up the small wireless
10        facility for intermittent testing, if necessary; the
11        authority may terminate a permit for a small wireless
12        facility based on such interference if the wireless
13        provider is not making a good faith effort to remedy
14        the problem in a manner consistent with the abatement
15        and resolution procedures for interference with public
16        safety spectrum established by the FCC including 47
17        CFR 22.970 through 47 CFR 22.973 and 47 CFR 90.672
18        through 47 CFR 90.675;
19            (B) the wireless provider comply with requirements
20        that are imposed by a contract between an authority
21        and a private property owner that concern design or
22        construction standards applicable to utility poles and
23        ground-mounted equipment located in the right-of-way;
24            (C) the wireless provider comply with applicable
25        spacing requirements in applicable codes and
26        ordinances concerning the location of ground-mounted

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 93 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1        equipment located in the right-of-way if the
2        requirements include a waiver, zoning, or other
3        process that addresses wireless provider requests for
4        exception or variance and do not prohibit granting of
5        such exceptions or variances;
6            (D) the wireless provider comply with local code
7        provisions or regulations concerning undergrounding
8        requirements that prohibit the installation of new or
9        the modification of existing utility poles in a
10        right-of-way without prior approval if the
11        requirements include a waiver, zoning, or other
12        process that addresses requests to install such new
13        utility poles or modify such existing utility poles
14        and do not prohibit the replacement of utility poles;
15            (E) the wireless provider comply with generally
16        applicable standards that are consistent with this Act
17        and adopted by an authority for construction and
18        public safety in the rights-of-way, including, but not
19        limited to, reasonable and nondiscriminatory wiring
20        and cabling requirements, grounding requirements,
21        utility pole extension requirements, acoustic
22        regulations, and signage limitations; and shall comply
23        with reasonable and nondiscriminatory requirements
24        that are consistent with this Act and adopted by an
25        authority regulating the location, size, surface area
26        and height of small wireless facilities, or the

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 94 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1        abandonment and removal of small wireless facilities;
2            (F) the wireless provider not collocate small
3        wireless facilities on authority utility poles that
4        are part of an electric distribution or transmission
5        system within the communication worker safety zone of
6        the pole or the electric supply zone of the pole;
7        however, the antenna and support equipment of the
8        small wireless facility may be located in the
9        communications space on the authority utility pole and
10        on the top of the pole, if not otherwise unavailable,
11        if the wireless provider complies with applicable
12        codes for work involving the top of the pole; for
13        purposes of this subparagraph (F), the terms
14        "communications space", "communication worker safety
15        zone", and "electric supply zone" have the meanings
16        given to those terms in the National Electric Safety
17        Code as published by the Institute of Electrical and
18        Electronics Engineers;
19            (G) the wireless provider comply with the
20        applicable codes and local code provisions or
21        regulations that concern public safety;
22            (H) the wireless provider comply with written
23        design standards that are generally applicable for
24        decorative utility poles, or reasonable stealth,
25        concealment, and aesthetic requirements that are
26        identified by the authority in an ordinance, written

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 95 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1        policy adopted by the governing board of the
2        authority, a comprehensive plan, or other written
3        design plan that applies to other occupiers of the
4        rights-of-way, including on a historic landmark or in
5        a historic district; and
6            (I) subject to subsection (c) of this Section, and
7        except for facilities excluded from evaluation for
8        effects on historic properties under 47 CFR
9        1.1307(a)(4), reasonable, technically feasible and
10        non-discriminatory design or concealment measures in a
11        historic district or historic landmark; any such
12        design or concealment measures, including restrictions
13        on a specific category of poles, may not have the
14        effect of prohibiting any provider's technology; such
15        design and concealment measures shall not be
16        considered a part of the small wireless facility for
17        purposes of the size restrictions of a small wireless
18        facility; this paragraph may not be construed to limit
19        an authority's enforcement of historic preservation in
20        conformance with the requirements adopted pursuant to
21        the Illinois State Agency Historic Resources
22        Preservation Act or the National Historic Preservation
23        Act of 1966, 54 U.S.C. Section 300101 et seq., and the
24        regulations adopted to implement those laws; and .
25            (J) When a wireless provider replaces or adds a
26        new radio transceiver or antennas to an existing small

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 96 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1        wireless facility, certification by the wireless
2        provider from a radio engineer that the continuing
3        operation of the small wireless facility complies with
4        all applicable FCC standards.
5        (7) Within 30 days after receiving an application, an
6    authority must determine whether the application is
7    complete and notify the applicant. If an application is
8    incomplete, an authority must specifically identify the
9    missing information. An application shall be deemed
10    complete if the authority fails to provide notification to
11    the applicant within 30 days after when all documents,
12    information, and fees specifically enumerated in the
13    authority's permit application form are submitted by the
14    applicant to the authority. Processing deadlines are
15    tolled from the time the authority sends the notice of
16    incompleteness to the time the applicant provides the
17    missing information.
18        (8) An authority shall process applications as
19    follows:
20            (A) an application to collocate a small wireless
21        facility on an existing utility pole or wireless
22        support structure shall be processed on a
23        nondiscriminatory basis and deemed approved if the
24        authority fails to approve or deny the application
25        within 90 days; however, if an applicant intends to
26        proceed with the permitted activity on a deemed

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 97 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1        approved basis, the applicant must notify the
2        authority in writing of its intention to invoke the
3        deemed approved remedy no sooner than 75 days after
4        the submission of a completed application; the permit
5        shall be deemed approved on the latter of the 90th day
6        after submission of the complete application or the
7        10th day after the receipt of the deemed approved
8        notice by the authority; the receipt of the deemed
9        approved notice shall not preclude the authority's
10        denial of the permit request within the time limits as
11        provided under this Act; and
12            (B) an application to collocate a small wireless
13        facility that includes the installation of a new
14        utility pole shall be processed on a nondiscriminatory
15        basis and deemed approved if the authority fails to
16        approve or deny the application within 120 days;
17        however, if an applicant intends to proceed with the
18        permitted activity on a deemed approved basis, the
19        applicant must notify the authority in writing of its
20        intention to invoke the deemed approved remedy no
21        sooner than 105 days after the submission of a
22        completed application; the permit shall be deemed
23        approved on the latter of the 120th day after
24        submission of the complete application or the 10th day
25        after the receipt of the deemed approved notice by the
26        authority; the receipt of the deemed approved notice

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 98 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1        shall not preclude the authority's denial of the
2        permit request within the time limits as provided
3        under this Act.
4        (9) An authority shall approve an application unless
5    the application does not meet the requirements of this
6    Act. If an authority determines that applicable codes,
7    local code provisions or regulations that concern public
8    safety, or the requirements of paragraph (6) require that
9    the utility pole or wireless support structure be replaced
10    before the requested collocation, approval may be
11    conditioned on the replacement of the utility pole or
12    wireless support structure at the cost of the provider.
13    The authority must document the basis for a denial,
14    including the specific code provisions or application
15    conditions on which the denial was based, and send the
16    documentation to the applicant on or before the day the
17    authority denies an application. The applicant may cure
18    the deficiencies identified by the authority and resubmit
19    the revised application once within 30 days after notice
20    of denial is sent to the applicant without paying an
21    additional application fee. The authority shall approve or
22    deny the revised application within 30 days after the
23    applicant resubmits the application or it is deemed
24    approved; however, the applicant must notify the authority
25    in writing of its intention to proceed with the permitted
26    activity on a deemed approved basis, which may be

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 99 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1    submitted with the resubmitted application. Any subsequent
2    review shall be limited to the deficiencies cited in the
3    denial. However, this revised application cure does not
4    apply if the cure requires the review of a new location,
5    new or different structure to be collocated upon, new
6    antennas, or other wireless equipment associated with the
7    small wireless facility.
8        (10) The time period for applications may be further
9    tolled by:
10            (A) the express agreement in writing by both the
11        applicant and the authority; or
12            (B) a local, State, or federal disaster
13        declaration or similar emergency that causes the
14        delay.
15        (11) An applicant seeking to collocate small wireless
16    facilities within the jurisdiction of a single authority
17    shall be allowed, at the applicant's discretion, to file a
18    consolidated application and receive a single permit for
19    the collocation of up to 25 small wireless facilities if
20    the collocations each involve substantially the same type
21    of small wireless facility and substantially the same type
22    of structure. If an application includes multiple small
23    wireless facilities, the authority may remove small
24    wireless facility collocations from the application and
25    treat separately small wireless facility collocations for
26    which incomplete information has been provided or that do

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 100 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1    not qualify for consolidated treatment or that are denied.
2    The authority may issue separate permits for each
3    collocation that is approved in a consolidated
4    application.
5        (12) Collocation for which a permit is granted shall
6    be completed within 180 days after issuance of the permit,
7    unless the authority and the wireless provider agree to
8    extend this period or a delay is caused by make-ready work
9    for an authority utility pole or by the lack of commercial
10    power or backhaul availability at the site, provided the
11    wireless provider has made a timely request within 60 days
12    after the issuance of the permit for commercial power or
13    backhaul services, and the additional time to complete
14    installation does not exceed 360 days after issuance of
15    the permit. Otherwise, the permit shall be void unless the
16    authority grants an extension in writing to the applicant.
17        (13) The duration of a permit shall be for a period of
18    not less than 5 years, and the permit shall be renewed for
19    equivalent durations unless the authority makes a finding
20    that the small wireless facilities or the new or modified
21    utility pole do not comply with the applicable codes or
22    local code provisions or regulations in paragraphs (6) and
23    (9). If this Act is repealed as provided in Section 90,
24    renewals of permits shall be subject to the applicable
25    authority code provisions or regulations in effect at the
26    time of renewal.

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 101 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1        (14) An authority may not prohibit, either expressly
2    or de facto, the (i) filing, receiving, or processing
3    applications, or (ii) issuing of permits or other
4    approvals, if any, for the collocation of small wireless
5    facilities unless there has been a local, State, or
6    federal disaster declaration or similar emergency that
7    causes the delay.
8        (15) Applicants shall submit applications, supporting
9    information, and notices by personal delivery or as
10    otherwise required by the authority. An authority may
11    require that permits, supporting information, and notices
12    be submitted by personal delivery at the authority's
13    designated place of business, by regular mail postmarked
14    on the date due, or by any other commonly used means,
15    including electronic mail, as required by the authority.
16    (e) Application fees are subject to the following
17requirements:
18        (1) An authority may charge an application fee of up
19    to $650 for an application to collocate a single small
20    wireless facility on an existing utility pole or wireless
21    support structure and up to $350 for each small wireless
22    facility addressed in an application to collocate more
23    than one small wireless facility on existing utility poles
24    or wireless support structures.
25        (2) An authority may charge an application fee of
26    $1,000 for each small wireless facility addressed in an

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 102 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1    application that includes the installation of a new
2    utility for such collocation.
3        (3) Notwithstanding any contrary provision of State
4    law or local ordinance, applications pursuant to this
5    Section must be accompanied by the required application
6    fee.
7        (4) Within 2 months after the effective date of this
8    Act, an authority shall make available application fees
9    consistent with this subsection, through ordinance, or in
10    a written schedule of permit fees adopted by the
11    authority.
12    (f) An authority shall not require an application,
13approval, or permit, or require any fees or other charges,
14from a communications service provider authorized to occupy
15the rights-of-way, for: (i) routine maintenance; (ii) the
16replacement of wireless facilities with wireless facilities
17that are substantially similar, the same size, or smaller if
18the wireless provider notifies the authority at least 10 days
19prior to the planned replacement and includes equipment
20specifications for the replacement of equipment consistent
21with the requirements of subparagraph (D) of paragraph (2) of
22subsection (d) of this Section; or (iii) the installation,
23placement, maintenance, operation, or replacement of micro
24wireless facilities that are suspended on cables that are
25strung between existing utility poles in compliance with
26applicable safety codes. However, an authority may require a

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 103 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1permit to work within rights-of-way for activities that affect
2traffic patterns or require lane closures.
3    (g) Nothing in this Act authorizes a person to collocate
4small wireless facilities on: (1) property owned by a private
5party or property owned or controlled by a unit of local
6government that is not located within rights-of-way, subject
7to subsection (j) of this Section, or a privately owned
8utility pole or wireless support structure without the consent
9of the property owner; (2) property owned, leased, or
10controlled by a park district, forest preserve district, or
11conservation district for public park, recreation, or
12conservation purposes without the consent of the affected
13district, excluding the placement of facilities on
14rights-of-way located in an affected district that are under
15the jurisdiction and control of a different unit of local
16government as provided by the Illinois Highway Code; or (3)
17property owned by a rail carrier registered under Section
1818c-7201 of the Illinois Vehicle Code, Metra Commuter Rail or
19any other public commuter rail service, or an electric utility
20as defined in Section 16-102 of the Public Utilities Act,
21without the consent of the rail carrier, public commuter rail
22service, or electric utility. The provisions of this Act do
23not apply to an electric or gas public utility or such
24utility's wireless facilities if the facilities are being
25used, developed, and maintained consistent with the provisions
26of subsection (i) of Section 16-108.5 of the Public Utilities

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 104 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1Act.
2    For the purposes of this subsection, "public utility" has
3the meaning given to that term in Section 3-105 of the Public
4Utilities Act. Nothing in this Act shall be construed to
5relieve any person from any requirement (1) to obtain a
6franchise or a State-issued authorization to offer cable
7service or video service or (2) to obtain any required
8permission to install, place, maintain, or operate
9communications facilities, other than small wireless
10facilities subject to this Act.
11    (h) Agreements between authorities and wireless providers
12that relate to the collocation of small wireless facilities in
13the right-of-way, including the collocation of small wireless
14facilities on authority utility poles, that are in effect on
15the effective date of this Act remain in effect for all small
16wireless facilities collocated on the authority's utility
17poles pursuant to applications submitted to the authority
18before the effective date of this Act, subject to applicable
19termination provisions. Such agreements entered into after the
20effective date of the Act shall comply with the Act.
21    (i) An authority shall allow the collocation of small
22wireless facilities on authority utility poles subject to the
23following:
24        (1) An authority may not enter into an exclusive
25    arrangement with any person for the right to attach small
26    wireless facilities to authority utility poles.

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 105 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1        (2) The rates and fees for collocations on authority
2    utility poles shall be nondiscriminatory regardless of the
3    services provided by the collocating person.
4        (3) An authority may charge an annual recurring rate
5    to collocate a small wireless facility on an authority
6    utility pole located in a right-of-way that equals (i)
7    $200 per year or (ii) the actual, direct, and reasonable
8    costs related to the wireless provider's use of space on
9    the authority utility pole. Rates for collocation on
10    authority utility poles located outside of a right-of-way
11    are not subject to these limitations. In any controversy
12    concerning the appropriateness of a cost-based rate for an
13    authority utility pole located within a right-of-way, the
14    authority shall have the burden of proving that the rate
15    does not exceed the actual, direct, and reasonable costs
16    for the applicant's proposed use of the authority utility
17    pole. Nothing in this paragraph (3) prohibits a wireless
18    provider and an authority from mutually agreeing to an
19    annual recurring rate of less than $200 to collocate a
20    small wireless facility on an authority utility pole.
21        (4) Authorities or other persons owning or controlling
22    authority utility poles within the right-of-way shall
23    offer rates, fees, and other terms that comply with
24    subparagraphs (A) through (E) of this paragraph (4).
25    Within 2 months after the effective date of this Act, an
26    authority or a person owning or controlling authority

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 106 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1    utility poles shall make available, through ordinance or
2    an authority utility pole attachment agreement, license or
3    other agreement that makes available to wireless
4    providers, the rates, fees, and terms for the collocation
5    of small wireless facilities on authority utility poles
6    that comply with this Act and with subparagraphs (A)
7    through (E) of this paragraph (4). In the absence of such
8    an ordinance or agreement that complies with this Act, and
9    until such a compliant ordinance or agreement is adopted,
10    wireless providers may collocate small wireless facilities
11    and install utility poles under the requirements of this
12    Act.
13            (A) The rates, fees, and terms must be
14        nondiscriminatory, competitively neutral, and
15        commercially reasonable, and may address, among other
16        requirements, the requirements in subparagraphs (A)
17        through (I) of paragraph (6) of subsection (d) of this
18        Section; subsections (e), (i), and (k) of this
19        Section; Section 30; and Section 35, and must comply
20        with this Act.
21            (B) For authority utility poles that support
22        aerial facilities used to provide communications
23        services or electric service, wireless providers shall
24        comply with the process for make-ready work under 47
25        U.S.C. 224 and its implementing regulations, and the
26        authority shall follow a substantially similar process

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 107 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1        for make-ready work except to the extent that the
2        timing requirements are otherwise addressed in this
3        Act. The good-faith estimate of the person owning or
4        controlling the authority utility pole for any
5        make-ready work necessary to enable the pole to
6        support the requested collocation shall include
7        authority utility pole replacement, if necessary.
8            (C) For authority utility poles that do not
9        support aerial facilities used to provide
10        communications services or electric service, the
11        authority shall provide a good-faith estimate for any
12        make-ready work necessary to enable the authority
13        utility pole to support the requested collocation,
14        including pole replacement, if necessary, within 90
15        days after receipt of a complete application.
16        Make-ready work, including any authority utility pole
17        replacement, shall be completed within 60 days of
18        written acceptance of the good-faith estimate by the
19        applicant at the wireless provider's sole cost and
20        expense. Alternatively, if the authority determines
21        that applicable codes or public safety regulations
22        require the authority utility pole to be replaced to
23        support the requested collocation, the authority may
24        require the wireless provider to replace the authority
25        utility pole at the wireless provider's sole cost and
26        expense.

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 108 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1            (D) The authority shall not require more
2        make-ready work than required to meet applicable codes
3        or industry standards. Make-ready work may include
4        work needed to accommodate additional public safety
5        communications needs that are identified in a
6        documented and approved plan for the deployment of
7        public safety equipment as specified in paragraph (1)
8        of subsection (d) of this Section and included in an
9        existing or preliminary authority or public service
10        agency budget for attachment within one year of the
11        application. Fees for make-ready work, including any
12        authority utility pole replacement, shall not exceed
13        actual costs or the amount charged to communications
14        service providers for similar work and shall not
15        include any consultants' fees or expenses for
16        authority utility poles that do not support aerial
17        facilities used to provide communications services or
18        electric service. Make-ready work, including any pole
19        replacement, shall be completed within 60 days of
20        written acceptance of the good-faith estimate by the
21        wireless provider, at its sole cost and expense.
22            (E) A wireless provider that has an existing
23        agreement with the authority on the effective date of
24        the Act may accept the rates, fees, and terms that an
25        authority makes available under this Act for the
26        collocation of small wireless facilities or the

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 109 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1        installation of new utility poles for the collocation
2        of small wireless facilities that are the subject of
3        an application submitted 2 or more years after the
4        effective date of the Act as provided in this
5        paragraph (4) by notifying the authority that it opts
6        to accept such rates, fees, and terms. The existing
7        agreement remains in effect, subject to applicable
8        termination provisions, for the small wireless
9        facilities the wireless provider has collocated on the
10        authority's utility poles pursuant to applications
11        submitted to the authority before the wireless
12        provider provides such notice and exercises its option
13        under this subparagraph.
14    (j) An authority shall authorize the collocation of small
15wireless facilities on utility poles owned or controlled by
16the authority that are not located within rights-of-way to the
17same extent the authority currently permits access to utility
18poles for other commercial projects or uses. The collocations
19shall be subject to reasonable and nondiscriminatory rates,
20fees, and terms as provided in an agreement between the
21authority and the wireless provider.
22    (k) Nothing in this Section precludes an authority from
23adopting reasonable rules with respect to the removal of
24abandoned small wireless facilities. A small wireless facility
25that is not operated for a continuous period of 12 months shall
26be considered abandoned and the owner of the facility must

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 110 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1remove the small wireless facility within 90 days after
2receipt of written notice from the authority notifying the
3owner of the abandonment. The notice shall be sent by
4certified or registered mail, return receipt requested, by the
5authority to the owner at the last known address of the owner.
6If the small wireless facility is not removed within 90 days of
7such notice, the authority may remove or cause the removal of
8the such facility pursuant to the terms of its pole attachment
9agreement for authority utility poles or through whatever
10actions are provided for abatement of nuisances or by other
11law for removal and cost recovery. An authority may require a
12wireless provider to provide written notice to the authority
13if it sells or transfers small wireless facilities subject to
14this Act within the jurisdictional boundary of the authority.
15Such notice shall include the name and contact information of
16the new wireless provider.
17    (l) Nothing in this Section requires an authority to
18install or maintain any specific utility pole or to continue
19to install or maintain utility poles in any location if the
20authority makes a non-discriminatory decision to eliminate
21above-ground utility poles of a particular type generally,
22such as electric utility poles, in all or a significant
23portion of its geographic jurisdiction. For authority utility
24poles with collocated small wireless facilities in place when
25an authority makes a decision to eliminate above-ground
26utility poles of a particular type generally, the authority

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 111 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1shall either (i) continue to maintain the authority utility
2pole or install and maintain a reasonable alternative utility
3pole or wireless support structure for the collocation of the
4small wireless facility, or (ii) offer to sell the utility
5pole to the wireless provider at a reasonable cost or allow the
6wireless provider to install its own utility pole so it can
7maintain service from that location.
8(Source: P.A. 100-585, eff. 6-1-18.)
 
9    (50 ILCS 840/45 new)
10    Sec. 45. Continuation of Act; validation.
11    (a) The General Assembly finds and declares that this
12amendatory Act of the 102nd General Assembly manifests the
13intention of the General Assembly to extend the repeal of this
14Act and have this Act continue in effect until December 31,
152024.
16    (b) This Section shall be deemed to have been in
17continuous effect since June 1, 2021 and it shall continue to
18be in effect henceforward until it is otherwise lawfully
19repealed. All previously enacted amendments to this Act taking
20effect on or after June 1, 2021, are hereby validated. All
21actions taken in reliance on or under this Act by any person or
22entity are hereby validated.
23    (c) In order to ensure the continuing effectiveness of
24this Act, it is set forth in full and reenacted by this
25amendatory Act of the 102nd General Assembly. Striking and

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 112 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1underscoring are used only to show changes being made to the
2base text. This reenactment is intended as a continuation of
3this Act. It is not intended to supersede any amendment to this
4Act that is enacted by the 102nd General Assembly.
 
5    (50 ILCS 840/90)  (was 50 ILCS 835/90)
6    (Section scheduled to be repealed on June 1, 2021)
7    Sec. 90. Repeal. This Act is repealed on December 31, 2024
8June 1, 2021.
9(Source: P.A. 100-585, eff. 6-1-18.)
 
10    Section 30. The Illinois Municipal Code is amended by
11adding Section 11-80-24 as follows:
 
12    (65 ILCS 5/11-80-24 new)
13    Sec. 11-80-24. Collocation of small wireless facilities.
14    (a) A municipality may propose that a small wireless
15facility be collocated on an existing utility pole within 200
16feet of the wireless providers proposed location within its
17public rights-of-way under paragraph (3) of subsection (d) of
18Section 15 of the Small Wireless Facilities Deployment Act and
19the entity owning the utility pole shall provide access for
20that purpose.
21    (b) Any fee charged for the use of a utility pole under
22this Section shall be at the lowest rate charged by the entity
23owning the utility pole for other wireless providers and shall

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 113 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1not exceed the entity's actual costs.
2    (c) Nothing in this Section alters anything in Section 15
3of the Small Wireless Facilities Deployment Act.
 
4    Section 35. The Public Utilities Act is amended by
5changing Sections 13-406, 13-1200, 21-401, and 21-1601 as
6follows:
 
7    (220 ILCS 5/13-406)  (from Ch. 111 2/3, par. 13-406)
8    (Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2021)
9    Sec. 13-406. Abandonment of service.
10    (a) No telecommunications carrier offering or providing
11noncompetitive telecommunications service pursuant to a valid
12Certificate of Service Authority or certificate of public
13convenience and necessity shall discontinue or abandon such
14service once initiated until and unless it shall demonstrate,
15and the Commission finds, after notice and hearing, that such
16discontinuance or abandonment will not deprive customers of
17any necessary or essential telecommunications service or
18access thereto and is not otherwise contrary to the public
19interest. No telecommunications carrier offering or providing
20competitive telecommunications service shall completely
21discontinue or abandon such service to an identifiable class
22or group of customers once initiated except upon 60 days' days
23notice to the Commission and affected customers. The
24Commission may, upon its own motion or upon complaint,

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 114 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1investigate the proposed discontinuance or abandonment of a
2competitive telecommunications service and may, after notice
3and hearing, prohibit such proposed discontinuance or
4abandonment if the Commission finds that it would be contrary
5to the public interest. If the Commission does not provide
6notice of a hearing within 60 calendar days after the
7notification or holds a hearing and fails to find that the
8proposed discontinuation or abandonment would be contrary to
9the public interest, the provider may discontinue or abandon
10such service after providing at least 30 days' days notice to
11affected customers. This Section does not apply to a Large
12Electing Provider proceeding under Section 13-406.1.
13    (b) A Small Electing Provider may choose to cease offering
14or providing a telecommunications service pursuant to either
15this Section or Section 13-406.1 of this Act in the same manner
16as a Large Electing Provider. A Small Electing Provider that
17elects to cease offering or providing a telecommunications
18service pursuant to Section 13-406.1 shall be subject to all
19of the provisions that apply to a Large Electing Provider
20under Section 13-406.1. In this subsection (b), "Small
21Electing Provider" means an incumbent local exchange carrier,
22as defined in Section 13-202.5 of this Act, that is an Electing
23Provider, as defined in Section 13-506.2 of this Act, and
24that, together with all of its incumbent local exchange
25carrier affiliates offering telecommunications services within
26the State of Illinois, has fewer than 40,000 subscriber access

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 115 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1lines as of January 1, 2020.
2(Source: P.A. 100-20, eff. 7-1-17.)
 
3    (220 ILCS 5/13-1200)
4    (Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2021)
5    Sec. 13-1200. Repealer. This Article is repealed December
631, 2026 2021.
7(Source: P.A. 100-20, eff. 7-1-17; 101-639, eff. 6-12-20.)
 
8    (220 ILCS 5/21-401)
9    (Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2021)
10    Sec. 21-401. Applications.
11    (a)(1) A person or entity seeking to provide cable service
12or video service pursuant to this Article shall not use the
13public rights-of-way for the installation or construction of
14facilities for the provision of cable service or video service
15or offer cable service or video service until it has obtained a
16State-issued authorization to offer or provide cable or video
17service under this Section, except as provided for in item (2)
18of this subsection (a). All cable or video providers offering
19or providing service in this State shall have authorization
20pursuant to either (i) the Cable and Video Competition Law of
212007 (220 ILCS 5/21-100 et seq.); (ii) Section 11-42-11 of the
22Illinois Municipal Code (65 ILCS 5/11-42-11); or (iii) Section
235-1095 of the Counties Code (55 ILCS 5/5-1095).
24    (2) Nothing in this Section shall prohibit a local unit of

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 116 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1government from granting a permit to a person or entity for the
2use of the public rights-of-way to install or construct
3facilities to provide cable service or video service, at its
4sole discretion. No unit of local government shall be liable
5for denial or delay of a permit prior to the issuance of a
6State-issued authorization.
7    (b) The application to the Commission for State-issued
8authorization shall contain a completed affidavit submitted by
9the applicant and signed by an officer or general partner of
10the applicant affirming all of the following:
11        (1) That the applicant has filed or will timely file
12    with the Federal Communications Commission all forms
13    required by that agency in advance of offering cable
14    service or video service in this State.
15        (2) That the applicant agrees to comply with all
16    applicable federal and State statutes and regulations.
17        (3) That the applicant agrees to comply with all
18    applicable local unit of government regulations.
19        (4) An exact description of the cable service or video
20    service area where the cable service or video service will
21    be offered during the term of the State-issued
22    authorization. The service area shall be identified in
23    terms of either (i) exchanges, as that term is defined in
24    Section 13-206 of this Act; (ii) a collection of United
25    States Census Bureau Block numbers (13 digit); (iii) if
26    the area is smaller than the areas identified in either

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 117 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1    (i) or (ii), by geographic information system digital
2    boundaries meeting or exceeding national map accuracy
3    standards; or (iv) local unit of government. The
4    description shall include the number of low-income
5    households within the service area or footprint. If an
6    applicant is an incumbent cable operator, the incumbent
7    cable operator and any successor-in-interest shall be
8    obligated to provide access to cable services or video
9    services within any local units of government at the same
10    levels required by the local franchising authorities for
11    the local unit of government on June 30, 2007 (the
12    effective date of Public Act 95-9), and its application
13    shall provide a description of an area no smaller than the
14    service areas contained in its franchise or franchises
15    within the jurisdiction of the local unit of government in
16    which it seeks to offer cable or video service.
17        (5) The location and telephone number of the
18    applicant's principal place of business within this State
19    and the names of the applicant's principal executive
20    officers who are responsible for communications concerning
21    the application and the services to be offered pursuant to
22    the application, the applicant's legal name, and any name
23    or names under which the applicant does or will provide
24    cable services or video services in this State.
25        (6) A certification that the applicant has
26    concurrently delivered a copy of the application to all

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 118 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1    local units of government that include all or any part of
2    the service area identified in item (4) of this subsection
3    (b) within such local unit of government's jurisdictional
4    boundaries.
5        (7) The expected date that cable service or video
6    service will be initially offered in the area identified
7    in item (4) of this subsection (b). In the event that a
8    holder does not offer cable services or video services
9    within 3 months after the expected date, it shall amend
10    its application and update the expected date service will
11    be offered and explain the delay in offering cable
12    services or video services.
13        (8) For any entity that received State-issued
14    authorization prior to this amendatory Act of the 98th
15    General Assembly as a cable operator and that intends to
16    proceed as a cable operator under this Article, the entity
17    shall file a written affidavit with the Commission and
18    shall serve a copy of the affidavit with any local units of
19    government affected by the authorization within 30 days
20    after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the
21    98th General Assembly stating that the holder will be
22    providing cable service under the State-issued
23    authorization.
24    The application shall include adequate assurance that the
25applicant possesses the financial, managerial, legal, and
26technical qualifications necessary to construct and operate

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 119 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1the proposed system, to promptly repair any damage to the
2public right-of-way caused by the applicant, and to pay the
3cost of removal of its facilities. To accomplish these
4requirements, the applicant may, at the time the applicant
5seeks to use the public rights-of-way in that jurisdiction, be
6required by the State of Illinois or later be required by the
7local unit of government, or both, to post a bond, produce a
8certificate of insurance, or otherwise demonstrate its
9financial responsibility.
10    The application shall include the applicant's general
11standards related to customer service required by Section
1222-501 of this Act, which shall include, but not be limited to,
13installation, disconnection, service and repair obligations;
14appointment hours; employee ID requirements; customer service
15telephone numbers and hours; procedures for billing, charges,
16deposits, refunds, and credits; procedures for termination of
17service; notice of deletion of programming service and changes
18related to transmission of programming or changes or increases
19in rates; use and availability of parental control or lock-out
20devices; complaint procedures and procedures for bill dispute
21resolution and a description of the rights and remedies
22available to consumers if the holder does not materially meet
23their customer service standards; and special services for
24customers with visual, hearing, or mobility disabilities.
25    (c)(1) The applicant may designate information that it
26submits in its application or subsequent reports as

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 120 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1confidential or proprietary, provided that the applicant
2states the reasons the confidential designation is necessary.
3The Commission shall provide adequate protection for such
4information pursuant to Section 4-404 of this Act. If the
5Commission, a local unit of government, or any other party
6seeks public disclosure of information designated as
7confidential, the Commission shall consider the confidential
8designation in a proceeding under the Illinois Administrative
9Procedure Act, and the burden of proof to demonstrate that the
10designated information is confidential shall be upon the
11applicant. Designated information shall remain confidential
12pending the Commission's determination of whether the
13information is entitled to confidential treatment. Information
14designated as confidential shall be provided to local units of
15government for purposes of assessing compliance with this
16Article as permitted under a Protective Order issued by the
17Commission pursuant to the Commission's rules and to the
18Attorney General pursuant to Section 6.5 of the Attorney
19General Act (15 ILCS 205/6.5). Information designated as
20confidential under this Section or determined to be
21confidential upon Commission review shall only be disclosed
22pursuant to a valid and enforceable subpoena or court order or
23as required by the Freedom of Information Act. Nothing herein
24shall delay the application approval timeframes set forth in
25this Article.
26    (2) Information regarding the location of video services

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 121 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1that have been or are being offered to the public and aggregate
2information included in the reports required by this Article
3shall not be designated or treated as confidential.
4    (d)(1) The Commission shall post all applications it
5receives under this Article on its web site within 5 business
6days.
7    (2) The Commission shall notify an applicant for a cable
8service or video service authorization whether the applicant's
9application and affidavit are complete on or before the 15th
10business day after the applicant submits the application. If
11the application and affidavit are not complete, the Commission
12shall state in its notice all of the reasons the application or
13affidavit are incomplete, and the applicant shall resubmit a
14complete application. The Commission shall have 30 days after
15submission by the applicant of a complete application and
16affidavit to issue the service authorization. If the
17Commission does not notify the applicant regarding the
18completeness of the application and affidavit or issue the
19service authorization within the time periods required under
20this subsection, the application and affidavit shall be
21considered complete and the service authorization issued upon
22the expiration of the 30th day.
23    (e) Any authorization issued by the Commission will expire
24on December 31, 2029 2024 and shall contain or include all of
25the following:
26        (1) A grant of authority, including an authorization

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 122 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1    issued prior to this amendatory Act of the 98th General
2    Assembly, to provide cable service or video service in the
3    service area footprint as requested in the application,
4    subject to the provisions of this Article in existence on
5    the date the grant of authority was issued, and any
6    modifications to this Article enacted at any time prior to
7    the date in Section 21-1601 of this Act, and to the laws of
8    the State and the ordinances, rules, and regulations of
9    the local units of government.
10        (2) A grant of authority to use, occupy, and construct
11    facilities in the public rights-of-way for the delivery of
12    cable service or video service in the service area
13    footprint, subject to the laws, ordinances, rules, or
14    regulations of this State and local units of governments.
15        (3) A statement that the grant of authority is subject
16    to lawful operation of the cable service or video service
17    by the applicant, its affiliated entities, or its
18    successors-in-interest.
19    (e-5) The Commission shall notify a local unit of
20government within 3 business days of the grant of any
21authorization within a service area footprint if that
22authorization includes any part of the local unit of
23government's jurisdictional boundaries and state whether the
24holder will be providing video service or cable service under
25the authorization.
26    (f) The authorization issued pursuant to this Section by

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 123 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1the Commission may be transferred to any successor-in-interest
2to the applicant to which it is initially granted without
3further Commission action if the successor-in-interest (i)
4submits an application and the information required by
5subsection (b) of this Section for the successor-in-interest
6and (ii) is not in violation of this Article or of any federal,
7State, or local law, ordinance, rule, or regulation. A
8successor-in-interest shall file its application and notice of
9transfer with the Commission and the relevant local units of
10government no less than 15 business days prior to the
11completion of the transfer. The Commission is not required or
12authorized to act upon the notice of transfer; however, the
13transfer is not effective until the Commission approves the
14successor-in-interest's application. A local unit of
15government or the Attorney General may seek to bar a transfer
16of ownership by filing suit in a court of competent
17jurisdiction predicated on the existence of a material and
18continuing breach of this Article by the holder, a pattern of
19noncompliance with customer service standards by the potential
20successor-in-interest, or the insolvency of the potential
21successor-in-interest. If a transfer is made when there are
22violations of this Article or of any federal, State, or local
23law, ordinance, rule, or regulation, the successor-in-interest
24shall be subject to 3 times the penalties provided for in this
25Article.
26    (g) The authorization issued pursuant to this Section by

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 124 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1the Commission may be terminated, or its cable service or
2video service area footprint may be modified, by the cable
3service provider or video service provider by submitting
4notice to the Commission and to the relevant local unit of
5government containing a description of the change on the same
6terms as the initial description pursuant to item (4) of
7subsection (b) of this Section. The Commission is not required
8or authorized to act upon that notice. It shall be a violation
9of this Article for a holder to discriminate against potential
10residential subscribers because of the race or income of the
11residents in the local area in which the group resides by
12terminating or modifying its cable service or video service
13area footprint. It shall be a violation of this Article for a
14holder to terminate or modify its cable service or video
15service area footprint if it leaves an area with no cable
16service or video service from any provider.
17    (h) The Commission's authority to administer this Article
18is limited to the powers and duties explicitly provided under
19this Article. Its authority under this Article does not
20include or limit the powers and duties that the Commission has
21under the other Articles of this Act, the Illinois
22Administrative Procedure Act, or any other law or regulation
23to conduct proceedings, other than as provided in subsection
24(c), or has to promulgate rules or regulations. The Commission
25shall not have the authority to limit or expand the
26obligations and requirements provided in this Section or to

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 125 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1regulate or control a person or entity to the extent that
2person or entity is providing cable service or video service,
3except as provided in this Article.
4(Source: P.A. 100-20, eff. 7-1-17; 101-639, eff. 6-12-20.)
 
5    (220 ILCS 5/21-1601)
6    Sec. 21-1601. Repealer. Sections 21-101 through 21-1501 of
7this Article are repealed December 31, 2026 2021.
8(Source: P.A. 100-20, eff. 7-1-17; 101-639, eff. 6-12-20.)
 
9    Section 40. The Prevailing Wage Act is amended by changing
10Section 2 and by adding Section 2.1 as follows:
 
11    (820 ILCS 130/2)  (from Ch. 48, par. 39s-2)
12    Sec. 2. This Act applies to the wages of laborers,
13mechanics and other workers employed in any public works, as
14hereinafter defined, by any public body and to anyone under
15contracts for public works. This includes any maintenance,
16repair, assembly, or disassembly work performed on equipment
17whether owned, leased, or rented.
18    As used in this Act, unless the context indicates
19otherwise:
20    "Public works" means all fixed works constructed or
21demolished by any public body, or paid for wholly or in part
22out of public funds. "Public works" as defined herein includes
23all projects financed in whole or in part with bonds, grants,

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 126 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1loans, or other funds made available by or through the State or
2any of its political subdivisions, including but not limited
3to: bonds issued under the Industrial Project Revenue Bond Act
4(Article 11, Division 74 of the Illinois Municipal Code), the
5Industrial Building Revenue Bond Act, the Illinois Finance
6Authority Act, the Illinois Sports Facilities Authority Act,
7or the Build Illinois Bond Act; loans or other funds made
8available pursuant to the Build Illinois Act; loans or other
9funds made available pursuant to the Riverfront Development
10Fund under Section 10-15 of the River Edge Redevelopment Zone
11Act; or funds from the Fund for Illinois' Future under Section
126z-47 of the State Finance Act, funds for school construction
13under Section 5 of the General Obligation Bond Act, funds
14authorized under Section 3 of the School Construction Bond
15Act, funds for school infrastructure under Section 6z-45 of
16the State Finance Act, and funds for transportation purposes
17under Section 4 of the General Obligation Bond Act. "Public
18works" also includes (i) all projects financed in whole or in
19part with funds from the Department of Commerce and Economic
20Opportunity under the Illinois Renewable Fuels Development
21Program Act for which there is no project labor agreement;
22(ii) all work performed pursuant to a public private agreement
23under the Public Private Agreements for the Illiana Expressway
24Act or the Public-Private Agreements for the South Suburban
25Airport Act; and (iii) all projects undertaken under a
26public-private agreement under the Public-Private Partnerships

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 127 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1for Transportation Act. "Public works" also includes all
2projects at leased facility property used for airport purposes
3under Section 35 of the Local Government Facility Lease Act.
4"Public works" also includes the construction of a new wind
5power facility by a business designated as a High Impact
6Business under Section 5.5(a)(3)(E) of the Illinois Enterprise
7Zone Act. "Public works" does not include work done directly
8by any public utility company, whether or not done under
9public supervision or direction, or paid for wholly or in part
10out of public funds. "Public works" also includes construction
11projects performed by a third party contracted by any public
12utility, as described in subsection (a) of Section 2.1, in
13public rights-of-way, as defined in Section 21-201 of the
14Public Utilities Act, whether or not done under public
15supervision or direction, or paid for wholly or in part out of
16public funds. "Public works" also includes construction
17projects that exceed 15 aggregate miles of new fiber optic
18cable, performed by a third party contracted by any public
19utility, as described in subsection (b) of Section 2.1, in
20public rights-of-way, as defined in Section 21-201 of the
21Public Utilities Act, whether or not done under public
22supervision or direction, or paid for wholly or in part out of
23public funds. "Public works" also includes any corrective
24action performed pursuant to Title XVI of the Environmental
25Protection Act for which payment from the Underground Storage
26Tank Fund is requested. "Public works" does not include

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 128 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1projects undertaken by the owner at an owner-occupied
2single-family residence or at an owner-occupied unit of a
3multi-family residence. "Public works" does not include work
4performed for soil and water conservation purposes on
5agricultural lands, whether or not done under public
6supervision or paid for wholly or in part out of public funds,
7done directly by an owner or person who has legal control of
8those lands.
9    "Construction" means all work on public works involving
10laborers, workers or mechanics. This includes any maintenance,
11repair, assembly, or disassembly work performed on equipment
12whether owned, leased, or rented.
13    "Locality" means the county where the physical work upon
14public works is performed, except (1) that if there is not
15available in the county a sufficient number of competent
16skilled laborers, workers and mechanics to construct the
17public works efficiently and properly, "locality" includes any
18other county nearest the one in which the work or construction
19is to be performed and from which such persons may be obtained
20in sufficient numbers to perform the work and (2) that, with
21respect to contracts for highway work with the Department of
22Transportation of this State, "locality" may at the discretion
23of the Secretary of the Department of Transportation be
24construed to include two or more adjacent counties from which
25workers may be accessible for work on such construction.
26    "Public body" means the State or any officer, board or

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 129 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1commission of the State or any political subdivision or
2department thereof, or any institution supported in whole or
3in part by public funds, and includes every county, city,
4town, village, township, school district, irrigation, utility,
5reclamation improvement or other district and every other
6political subdivision, district or municipality of the state
7whether such political subdivision, municipality or district
8operates under a special charter or not.
9    "Labor organization" means an organization that is the
10exclusive representative of an employer's employees recognized
11or certified pursuant to the National Labor Relations Act.
12    The terms "general prevailing rate of hourly wages",
13"general prevailing rate of wages" or "prevailing rate of
14wages" when used in this Act mean the hourly cash wages plus
15annualized fringe benefits for training and apprenticeship
16programs approved by the U.S. Department of Labor, Bureau of
17Apprenticeship and Training, health and welfare, insurance,
18vacations and pensions paid generally, in the locality in
19which the work is being performed, to employees engaged in
20work of a similar character on public works.
21(Source: P.A. 100-1177, eff. 6-1-19.)
 
22    (820 ILCS 130/2.1 new)
23    Sec. 2.1. Public utilities.
24    (a) For purposes of this Act, to the extent permitted by
25and consistent with federal law, "public utility" has the

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 130 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1meaning given that term in Section 3-105 of the Public
2Utilities Act.
3    (b) For purposes of this Act, "public utility" also
4includes:
5        (1) telecommunications carriers, as defined in Section
6    13-202 of the Public Utilities Act, but not including
7    incumbent local exchange carriers that serve fewer than
8    20,000 access lines;
9        (2) providers of cable service or video service, as
10    defined in Section 21-201 of the Public Utilities Act;
11        (3) providers of wireless services, including, but not
12    limited to, private radio service, public mobile service,
13    or commercial mobile service within the meaning of Section
14    332 of the federal Communications Act of 1934 (47 U.S.C.
15    332);
16        (4) interconnected voice over Internet protocol
17    providers as defined in Section 13-235 of the Public
18    Utilities Act;
19        (5) providers of broadband service, as defined in
20    Section 21-201 of the Public Utilities Act; and
21        (6) persons or entities engaged in the installation,
22    repair, or maintenance of fiber optic cable that is or
23    will be used by persons described in paragraphs (1)
24    through (5) of this subsection.
 
25    Section 97. Severability. The provisions of this Act are

 

 

10200HB3743sam002- 131 -LRB102 14600 SPS 27445 a

1severable under Section 1.31 of the Statute on Statutes.
 
2    Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon
3becoming law, except that Section 40 takes effect on January
41, 2022.".