Rep. Kelly M. Cassidy

Filed: 3/22/2021

 

 


 

 


 
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1
AMENDMENT TO HOUSE BILL 4013

2    AMENDMENT NO. ______. Amend House Bill 4013 by replacing
3everything after the enacting clause with the following:
 
4    "Section 5. The Election Code is amended by changing
5Sections 2A-1.2, 2A-26, 2A-28, 7-4, 7-8, 7-10, 10-3, and
623-6.1 as follows:
 
7    (10 ILCS 5/2A-1.2)  (from Ch. 46, par. 2A-1.2)
8    Sec. 2A-1.2. Consolidated schedule of elections; offices
9elections - offices designated.
10    (a) At the general election in the appropriate
11even-numbered years, the following offices shall be filled or
12shall be on the ballot as otherwise required by this Code:
13        (1) Elector of President and Vice President of the
14    United States;
15        (2) United States Senator and United States
16    Representative;

 

 

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1        (3) State Executive Branch elected officers;
2        (4) State Senator and State Representative;
3        (5) County elected officers, including State's
4    Attorney, County Board member, County Commissioners, and
5    elected President of the County Board or County Chief
6    Executive;
7        (6) Circuit Court Clerk;
8        (7) Regional Superintendent of Schools, except in
9    counties or educational service regions in which that
10    office has been abolished;
11        (8) Judges of the Supreme, Appellate and Circuit
12    Courts, on the question of retention, to fill vacancies
13    and newly created judicial offices;
14        (9) (Blank);
15        (10) Trustee of the Metropolitan Water Reclamation
16    Sanitary District of Greater Chicago, and elected Trustee
17    of other Sanitary Districts;
18        (11) Special District elected officers, not otherwise
19    designated in this Section, where the statute creating or
20    authorizing the creation of the district requires an
21    annual election and permits or requires election of
22    candidates of political parties.
23    (b) At the general primary election:
24        (1) in each even-numbered year candidates of political
25    parties shall be nominated for those offices to be filled
26    at the general election in that year, except where

 

 

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1    pursuant to law nomination of candidates of political
2    parties is made by caucus.
3        (2) in the appropriate even-numbered years the
4    political party offices of State central committeeperson,
5    township committeeperson, ward committeeperson, and
6    precinct committeeperson shall be filled and delegates and
7    alternate delegates to the National nominating conventions
8    shall be elected as may be required pursuant to this Code.
9    In the even-numbered years in which a Presidential
10    election is to be held, candidates in the Presidential
11    preference primary shall also be on the ballot.
12        (3) in each even-numbered year, where the municipality
13    has provided for annual elections to elect municipal
14    officers pursuant to Section 6(f) or Section 7 of Article
15    VII of the Constitution, pursuant to the Illinois
16    Municipal Code or pursuant to the municipal charter, the
17    offices of such municipal officers shall be filled at an
18    election held on the date of the general primary election,
19    provided that the municipal election shall be a
20    nonpartisan election where required by the Illinois
21    Municipal Code. For partisan municipal elections in
22    even-numbered years, a primary to nominate candidates for
23    municipal office to be elected at the general primary
24    election shall be held on the Tuesday 6 weeks preceding
25    that election.
26        (4) in each school district which has adopted the

 

 

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1    provisions of Article 33 of the School Code, successors to
2    the members of the board of education whose terms expire
3    in the year in which the general primary is held shall be
4    elected.
5    (c) At the consolidated election in the appropriate
6odd-numbered years, the following offices shall be filled:
7        (1) Municipal officers, provided that in
8    municipalities in which candidates for alder alderman or
9    other municipal office are not permitted by law to be
10    candidates of political parties, the runoff election where
11    required by law, or the nonpartisan election where
12    required by law, shall be held on the date of the
13    consolidated election; and provided further, in the case
14    of municipal officers provided for by an ordinance
15    providing the form of government of the municipality
16    pursuant to Section 7 of Article VII of the Constitution,
17    such offices shall be filled by election or by runoff
18    election as may be provided by such ordinance;
19        (2) Village and incorporated town library directors;
20        (3) City boards of stadium commissioners;
21        (4) Commissioners of park districts;
22        (5) Trustees of public library districts;
23        (6) Special District elected officers, not otherwise
24    designated in this Section, where the statute creating or
25    authorizing the creation of the district permits or
26    requires election of candidates of political parties;

 

 

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1        (7) Township officers, including township park
2    commissioners, township library directors, and boards of
3    managers of community buildings, and Multi-Township
4    Assessors;
5        (8) Highway commissioners and road district clerks;
6        (9) Members of school boards in school districts which
7    adopt Article 33 of the School Code;
8        (10) The directors and chair of the Chain O Lakes - Fox
9    River Waterway Management Agency;
10        (11) Forest preserve district commissioners elected
11    under Section 3.5 of the Downstate Forest Preserve
12    District Act;
13        (12) Elected members of school boards, school
14    trustees, directors of boards of school directors,
15    trustees of county boards of school trustees (except in
16    counties or educational service regions having a
17    population of 2,000,000 or more inhabitants) and members
18    of boards of school inspectors, except school boards in
19    school districts that adopt Article 33 of the School Code;
20        (13) Members of Community College district boards;
21        (14) Trustees of Fire Protection Districts;
22        (15) Commissioners of the Springfield Metropolitan
23    Exposition and Auditorium Authority;
24        (16) Elected Trustees of Tuberculosis Sanitarium
25    Districts;
26        (17) Elected Officers of special districts not

 

 

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1    otherwise designated in this Section for which the law
2    governing those districts does not permit candidates of
3    political parties.
4    (d) At the consolidated primary election in each
5odd-numbered year, candidates of political parties shall be
6nominated for those offices to be filled at the consolidated
7election in that year, except where pursuant to law nomination
8of candidates of political parties is made by caucus, and
9except those offices listed in paragraphs (12) through (17) of
10subsection (c).
11    At the consolidated primary election in the appropriate
12odd-numbered years, the mayor, clerk, treasurer, and alders
13aldermen shall be elected in municipalities in which
14candidates for mayor, clerk, treasurer, or alder alderman are
15not permitted by law to be candidates of political parties,
16subject to runoff elections to be held at the consolidated
17election as may be required by law, and municipal officers
18shall be nominated in a nonpartisan election in municipalities
19in which pursuant to law candidates for such office are not
20permitted to be candidates of political parties.
21    At the consolidated primary election in the appropriate
22odd-numbered years, municipal officers shall be nominated or
23elected, or elected subject to a runoff, as may be provided by
24an ordinance providing a form of government of the
25municipality pursuant to Section 7 of Article VII of the
26Constitution.

 

 

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1    (e) (Blank).
2    (f) At any election established in Section 2A-1.1, public
3questions may be submitted to voters pursuant to this Code and
4any special election otherwise required or authorized by law
5or by court order may be conducted pursuant to this Code.
6    Notwithstanding the regular dates for election of officers
7established in this Article, whenever a referendum is held for
8the establishment of a political subdivision whose officers
9are to be elected, the initial officers shall be elected at the
10election at which such referendum is held if otherwise so
11provided by law. In such cases, the election of the initial
12officers shall be subject to the referendum.
13    Notwithstanding the regular dates for election of
14officials established in this Article, any community college
15district which becomes effective by operation of law pursuant
16to Section 6-6.1 of the Public Community College Act, as now or
17hereafter amended, shall elect the initial district board
18members at the next regularly scheduled election following the
19effective date of the new district.
20    (g) At any election established in Section 2A-1.1, if in
21any precinct there are no offices or public questions required
22to be on the ballot under this Code then no election shall be
23held in the precinct on that date.
24    (h) There may be conducted a referendum in accordance with
25the provisions of Division 6-4 of the Counties Code.
26(Source: P.A. 100-1027, eff. 1-1-19; revised 12-14-20.)
 

 

 

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1    (10 ILCS 5/2A-26)  (from Ch. 46, par. 2A-26)
2    Sec. 2A-26. Chicago Alders Aldermen. Alders Aldermen of
3the City of Chicago shall be elected at the consolidated
4primary election in 1979 and at the consolidated primary
5election every 4 years thereafter. The runoff election where
6necessary, pursuant to law, for Chicago alders aldermen shall
7be held at the consolidated election in 1979, and every 4 years
8thereafter.
9(Source: P.A. 80-936.)
 
10    (10 ILCS 5/2A-28)  (from Ch. 46, par. 2A-28)
11    Sec. 2A-28. Cities Generally - Alders Aldermen - Time of
12Election. An alder alderman of a city other than the City of
13Chicago shall be elected at the consolidated or general
14primary election in each year to succeed each incumbent alder
15alderman whose term ends before the following consolidated or
16general election.
17(Source: P.A. 81-1433.)
 
18    (10 ILCS 5/7-4)  (from Ch. 46, par. 7-4)
19    Sec. 7-4. The following words and phrases in this Article
207 shall, unless the same be inconsistent with the context, be
21construed as follows:
22    1. The word "primary" the primary elections provided for
23in this Article, which are the general primary, the

 

 

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1consolidated primary, and for those municipalities which have
2annual partisan elections for any officer, the municipal
3primary held 6 weeks prior to the general primary election
4date in even numbered years.
5    2. The definition of terms in Section 1-3 of this Act shall
6apply to this Article.
7    3. The word "precinct" a voting district heretofore or
8hereafter established by law within which all qualified
9electors vote at one polling place.
10    4. The words "state office" or "state officer", an office
11to be filled, or an officer to be voted for, by qualified
12electors of the entire state, including United States Senator
13and Congressman at large.
14    5. The words "congressional office" or "congressional
15officer", representatives in Congress.
16    6. The words "county office" or "county officer," include
17an office to be filled or an officer to be voted for, by the
18qualified electors of the entire county. "County office" or
19"county officer" also include the assessor and board of
20appeals and county commissioners and president of county board
21of Cook County, and county board members and the chair of the
22county board in counties subject to "An Act relating to the
23composition and election of county boards in certain
24counties", enacted by the 76th General Assembly.
25    7. The words "city office" and "village office," and
26"incorporated town office" or "city officer" and "village

 

 

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1officer", and "incorporated town officer" an office to be
2filled or an officer to be voted for by the qualified electors
3of the entire municipality, including alders aldermen.
4    8. The words "town office" or "town officer", an office to
5be filled or an officer to be voted for by the qualified
6electors of an entire town.
7    9. The words "town" and "incorporated town" shall
8respectively be defined as in Section 1-3 of this Act.
9    10. The words "delegates and alternate delegates to
10National nominating conventions" include all delegates and
11alternate delegates to National nominating conventions whether
12they be elected from the state at large or from congressional
13districts or selected by State convention unless contrary and
14non-inclusive language specifically limits the term to one
15class.
16    11. "Judicial office" means a post held by a judge of the
17Supreme, Appellate or Circuit Court.
18(Source: P.A. 100-1027, eff. 1-1-19.)
 
19    (10 ILCS 5/7-8)  (from Ch. 46, par. 7-8)
20    Sec. 7-8. The State central committee shall be composed of
21one or two members from each congressional district in the
22State and shall be elected as follows:
23
State Central Committee
24    (a) Within 30 days after January 1, 1984 (the effective
25date of Public Act 83-33), the State central committee of each

 

 

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1political party shall certify to the State Board of Elections
2which of the following alternatives it wishes to apply to the
3State central committee of that party.
4    Alternative A. At the primary in 1970 and at the general
5primary election held every 4 years thereafter, each primary
6elector may vote for one candidate of his party for member of
7the State central committee for the congressional district in
8which he resides. The candidate receiving the highest number
9of votes shall be declared elected State central
10committeeperson from the district. A political party may, in
11lieu of the foregoing, by a majority vote of delegates at any
12State convention of such party, determine to thereafter elect
13the State central committeepersons in the manner following:
14    At the county convention held by such political party,
15State central committeepersons shall be elected in the same
16manner as provided in this Article for the election of
17officers of the county central committee, and such election
18shall follow the election of officers of the county central
19committee. Each elected ward, township or precinct
20committeeperson shall cast as his vote one vote for each
21ballot voted in his ward, township, part of a township or
22precinct in the last preceding primary election of his
23political party. In the case of a county lying partially
24within one congressional district and partially within another
25congressional district, each ward, township or precinct
26committeeperson shall vote only with respect to the

 

 

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1congressional district in which his ward, township, part of a
2township or precinct is located. In the case of a
3congressional district which encompasses more than one county,
4each ward, township or precinct committeeperson residing
5within the congressional district shall cast as his vote one
6vote for each ballot voted in his ward, township, part of a
7township or precinct in the last preceding primary election of
8his political party for one candidate of his party for member
9of the State central committee for the congressional district
10in which he resides and the Chair of the county central
11committee shall report the results of the election to the
12State Board of Elections. The State Board of Elections shall
13certify the candidate receiving the highest number of votes
14elected State central committeeperson for that congressional
15district.
16    The State central committee shall adopt rules to provide
17for and govern the procedures to be followed in the election of
18members of the State central committee.
19    After August 6, 1999 (the effective date of Public Act
2091-426), whenever a vacancy occurs in the office of Chair of a
21State central committee, or at the end of the term of office of
22Chair, the State central committee of each political party
23that has selected Alternative A shall elect a Chair who shall
24not be required to be a member of the State Central Committee.
25The Chair shall be a registered voter in this State and of the
26same political party as the State central committee.

 

 

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1    Alternative B. Each congressional committee shall, within
230 days after the adoption of this alternative, appoint a
3person who identifies as a gender of the sex opposite that of
4the incumbent member for that congressional district to serve
5as an additional member of the State central committee until
6his or her successor is elected at the general primary
7election in 1986. Each congressional committee shall make this
8appointment by voting on the basis set forth in paragraph (e)
9of this Section. In each congressional district at the general
10primary election held in 1986 and every 4 years thereafter,
11the male candidate receiving the highest number of votes of
12the party's male candidates for State central committeeman,
13and the female candidate receiving the highest number of votes
14of the party's female candidates for State central
15committeewoman, shall be declared elected State central
16committeeman and State central committeewoman from the
17district. At the general primary election held in 1986 and
18every 4 years thereafter, if all a party's candidates for
19State central committeemen or State central committeewomen
20from a congressional district identify as the same gender are
21of the same sex, the candidate receiving the highest number of
22votes shall be declared elected a State central committeeman
23or State central committeewoman from the district, and,
24because of a failure to elect one male and one female to the
25committee, a vacancy shall be declared to exist in the office
26of the second member of the State central committee from the

 

 

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1district. This vacancy shall be filled by appointment by the
2congressional committee of the political party, and the person
3appointed to fill the vacancy shall be a resident of the
4congressional district and identify as the gender of the sex
5opposite that of the committeeman or committeewoman elected at
6the general primary election. Each congressional committee
7shall make this appointment by voting on the basis set forth in
8paragraph (e) of this Section.
9    The Chair of a State central committee composed as
10provided in this Alternative B must be selected from the
11committee's members.
12    Except as provided for in Alternative A with respect to
13the selection of the Chair of the State central committee,
14under both of the foregoing alternatives, the State central
15committee of each political party shall be composed of members
16elected or appointed from the several congressional districts
17of the State, and of no other person or persons whomsoever. The
18members of the State central committee shall, within 41 days
19after each quadrennial election of the full committee, meet in
20the city of Springfield and organize by electing a Chair, and
21may at such time elect such officers from among their own
22number (or otherwise), as they may deem necessary or
23expedient. The outgoing chair of the State central committee
24of the party shall, 10 days before the meeting, notify each
25member of the State central committee elected at the primary
26of the time and place of such meeting. In the organization and

 

 

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1proceedings of the State central committee, each State central
2committeeman and State central committeewoman shall have one
3vote for each ballot voted in his or her congressional
4district by the primary electors of his or her party at the
5primary election immediately preceding the meeting of the
6State central committee. Whenever a vacancy occurs in the
7State central committee of any political party, the vacancy
8shall be filled by appointment of the chairmen of the county
9central committees of the political party of the counties
10located within the congressional district in which the vacancy
11occurs and, if applicable, the ward and township
12committeepersons of the political party in counties of
132,000,000 or more inhabitants located within the congressional
14district. If the congressional district in which the vacancy
15occurs lies wholly within a county of 2,000,000 or more
16inhabitants, the ward and township committeepersons of the
17political party in that congressional district shall vote to
18fill the vacancy. In voting to fill the vacancy, each chair of
19a county central committee and each ward and township
20committeeperson in counties of 2,000,000 or more inhabitants
21shall have one vote for each ballot voted in each precinct of
22the congressional district in which the vacancy exists of his
23or her county, township, or ward cast by the primary electors
24of his or her party at the primary election immediately
25preceding the meeting to fill the vacancy in the State central
26committee. The person appointed to fill the vacancy shall be a

 

 

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1resident of the congressional district in which the vacancy
2occurs, shall be a qualified voter, and, in a committee
3composed as provided in Alternative B, shall identify as the
4same gender be of the same sex as his or her predecessor. A
5political party may, by a majority vote of the delegates of any
6State convention of such party, determine to return to the
7election of State central committeeman and State central
8committeewoman by the vote of primary electors. Any action
9taken by a political party at a State convention in accordance
10with this Section shall be reported to the State Board of
11Elections by the chair and secretary of such convention within
1210 days after such action.
13
Ward, Township and Precinct Committeepersons
14    (b) At the primary in 1972 and at the general primary
15election every 4 years thereafter, each primary elector in
16cities having a population of 200,000 or over may vote for one
17candidate of his party in his ward for ward committeeperson.
18Each candidate for ward committeeperson must be a resident of
19and in the ward where he seeks to be elected ward
20committeeperson. The one having the highest number of votes
21shall be such ward committeeperson of such party for such
22ward. At the primary election in 1970 and at the general
23primary election every 4 years thereafter, each primary
24elector in counties containing a population of 2,000,000 or
25more, outside of cities containing a population of 200,000 or
26more, may vote for one candidate of his party for township

 

 

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1committeeperson. Each candidate for township committeeperson
2must be a resident of and in the township or part of a township
3(which lies outside of a city having a population of 200,000 or
4more, in counties containing a population of 2,000,000 or
5more), and in which township or part of a township he seeks to
6be elected township committeeperson. The one having the
7highest number of votes shall be such township committeeperson
8of such party for such township or part of a township. At the
9primary in 1970 and at the general primary election every 2
10years thereafter, each primary elector, except in counties
11having a population of 2,000,000 or over, may vote for one
12candidate of his party in his precinct for precinct
13committeeperson. Each candidate for precinct committeeperson
14must be a bona fide resident of the precinct where he seeks to
15be elected precinct committeeperson. The one having the
16highest number of votes shall be such precinct committeeperson
17of such party for such precinct. The official returns of the
18primary shall show the name of the committeeperson of each
19political party.
20    Terms of Committeepersons. All precinct committeepersons
21elected under the provisions of this Article shall continue as
22such committeepersons until the date of the primary to be held
23in the second year after their election. Except as otherwise
24provided in this Section for certain State central
25committeepersons who have 2 year terms, all State central
26committeepersons, township committeepersons and ward

 

 

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1committeepersons shall continue as such committeepersons until
2the date of primary to be held in the fourth year after their
3election. However, a vacancy exists in the office of precinct
4committeeperson when a precinct committeeperson ceases to
5reside in the precinct in which he was elected and such
6precinct committeeperson shall thereafter neither have nor
7exercise any rights, powers or duties as committeeperson in
8that precinct, even if a successor has not been elected or
9appointed.
10    (c) The Multi-Township Central Committee shall consist of
11the precinct committeepersons of such party, in the
12multi-township assessing district formed pursuant to Section
132-10 of the Property Tax Code and shall be organized for the
14purposes set forth in Section 45-25 of the Township Code. In
15the organization and proceedings of the Multi-Township Central
16Committee each precinct committeeperson shall have one vote
17for each ballot voted in his precinct by the primary electors
18of his party at the primary at which he was elected.
19
County Central Committee
20    (d) The county central committee of each political party
21in each county shall consist of the various township
22committeepersons, precinct committeepersons and ward
23committeepersons, if any, of such party in the county. In the
24organization and proceedings of the county central committee,
25each precinct committeeperson shall have one vote for each
26ballot voted in his precinct by the primary electors of his

 

 

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1party at the primary at which he was elected; each township
2committeeperson shall have one vote for each ballot voted in
3his township or part of a township as the case may be by the
4primary electors of his party at the primary election for the
5nomination of candidates for election to the General Assembly
6immediately preceding the meeting of the county central
7committee; and in the organization and proceedings of the
8county central committee, each ward committeeperson shall have
9one vote for each ballot voted in his ward by the primary
10electors of his party at the primary election for the
11nomination of candidates for election to the General Assembly
12immediately preceding the meeting of the county central
13committee.
14
Cook County Board of Review Election District Committee
15    (d-1) Each board of review election district committee of
16each political party in Cook County shall consist of the
17various township committeepersons and ward committeepersons,
18if any, of that party in the portions of the county composing
19the board of review election district. In the organization and
20proceedings of each of the 3 election district committees,
21each township committeeperson shall have one vote for each
22ballot voted in his or her township or part of a township, as
23the case may be, by the primary electors of his or her party at
24the primary election immediately preceding the meeting of the
25board of review election district committee; and in the
26organization and proceedings of each of the 3 election

 

 

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1district committees, each ward committeeperson shall have one
2vote for each ballot voted in his or her ward or part of that
3ward, as the case may be, by the primary electors of his or her
4party at the primary election immediately preceding the
5meeting of the board of review election district committee.
6
Congressional Committee
7    (e) The congressional committee of each party in each
8congressional district shall be composed of the chairmen of
9the county central committees of the counties composing the
10congressional district, except that in congressional districts
11wholly within the territorial limits of one county, the
12precinct committeepersons, township committeepersons and ward
13committeepersons, if any, of the party representing the
14precincts within the limits of the congressional district,
15shall compose the congressional committee. A State central
16committeeperson in each district shall be a member and the
17chair or, when a district has 2 State central
18committeepersons, a co-chairperson of the congressional
19committee, but shall not have the right to vote except in case
20of a tie.
21    In the organization and proceedings of congressional
22committees composed of precinct committeepersons or township
23committeepersons or ward committeepersons, or any combination
24thereof, each precinct committeeperson shall have one vote for
25each ballot voted in his precinct by the primary electors of
26his party at the primary at which he was elected, each township

 

 

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1committeeperson shall have one vote for each ballot voted in
2his township or part of a township as the case may be by the
3primary electors of his party at the primary election
4immediately preceding the meeting of the congressional
5committee, and each ward committeeperson shall have one vote
6for each ballot voted in each precinct of his ward located in
7such congressional district by the primary electors of his
8party at the primary election immediately preceding the
9meeting of the congressional committee; and in the
10organization and proceedings of congressional committees
11composed of the chairmen of the county central committees of
12the counties within such district, each chair of such county
13central committee shall have one vote for each ballot voted in
14his county by the primary electors of his party at the primary
15election immediately preceding the meeting of the
16congressional committee.
17
Judicial District Committee
18    (f) The judicial district committee of each political
19party in each judicial district shall be composed of the chair
20of the county central committees of the counties composing the
21judicial district.
22    In the organization and proceedings of judicial district
23committees composed of the chairmen of the county central
24committees of the counties within such district, each chair of
25such county central committee shall have one vote for each
26ballot voted in his county by the primary electors of his party

 

 

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1at the primary election immediately preceding the meeting of
2the judicial district committee.
3
Circuit Court Committee
4    (g) The circuit court committee of each political party in
5each judicial circuit outside Cook County shall be composed of
6the chairmen of the county central committees of the counties
7composing the judicial circuit.
8    In the organization and proceedings of circuit court
9committees, each chair of a county central committee shall
10have one vote for each ballot voted in his county by the
11primary electors of his party at the primary election
12immediately preceding the meeting of the circuit court
13committee.
14
Judicial Subcircuit Committee
15    (g-1) The judicial subcircuit committee of each political
16party in each judicial subcircuit in a judicial circuit
17divided into subcircuits shall be composed of (i) the ward and
18township committeepersons of the townships and wards composing
19the judicial subcircuit in Cook County and (ii) the precinct
20committeepersons of the precincts composing the judicial
21subcircuit in any county other than Cook County.
22    In the organization and proceedings of each judicial
23subcircuit committee, each township committeeperson shall have
24one vote for each ballot voted in his township or part of a
25township, as the case may be, in the judicial subcircuit by the
26primary electors of his party at the primary election

 

 

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1immediately preceding the meeting of the judicial subcircuit
2committee; each precinct committeeperson shall have one vote
3for each ballot voted in his precinct or part of a precinct, as
4the case may be, in the judicial subcircuit by the primary
5electors of his party at the primary election immediately
6preceding the meeting of the judicial subcircuit committee;
7and each ward committeeperson shall have one vote for each
8ballot voted in his ward or part of a ward, as the case may be,
9in the judicial subcircuit by the primary electors of his
10party at the primary election immediately preceding the
11meeting of the judicial subcircuit committee.
12
Municipal Central Committee
13    (h) The municipal central committee of each political
14party shall be composed of the precinct, township or ward
15committeepersons, as the case may be, of such party
16representing the precincts or wards, embraced in such city,
17incorporated town or village. The voting strength of each
18precinct, township or ward committeeperson on the municipal
19central committee shall be the same as his voting strength on
20the county central committee.
21    For political parties, other than a statewide political
22party, established only within a municipality or township, the
23municipal or township managing committee shall be composed of
24the party officers of the local established party. The party
25officers of a local established party shall be as follows: the
26chair and secretary of the caucus for those municipalities and

 

 

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1townships authorized by statute to nominate candidates by
2caucus shall serve as party officers for the purpose of
3filling vacancies in nomination under Section 7-61; for
4municipalities and townships authorized by statute or
5ordinance to nominate candidates by petition and primary
6election, the party officers shall be the party's candidates
7who are nominated at the primary. If no party primary was held
8because of the provisions of Section 7-5, vacancies in
9nomination shall be filled by the party's remaining candidates
10who shall serve as the party's officers.
11
Powers
12    (i) Each committee and its officers shall have the powers
13usually exercised by such committees and by the officers
14thereof, not inconsistent with the provisions of this Article.
15The several committees herein provided for shall not have
16power to delegate any of their powers, or functions to any
17other person, officer or committee, but this shall not be
18construed to prevent a committee from appointing from its own
19membership proper and necessary subcommittees.
20    (j) The State central committee of a political party which
21elects its members by Alternative B under paragraph (a) of
22this Section shall adopt a plan to give effect to the delegate
23selection rules of the national political party and file a
24copy of such plan with the State Board of Elections when
25approved by a national political party.
26    (k) For the purpose of the designation of a proxy by a

 

 

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1Congressional Committee to vote in place of an absent State
2central committeeman or committeewoman at meetings of the
3State central committee of a political party which elects its
4members by Alternative B under paragraph (a) of this Section,
5the proxy shall be appointed by the vote of the ward and
6township committeepersons, if any, of the wards and townships
7which lie entirely or partially within the Congressional
8District from which the absent State central committeeman or
9committeewoman was elected and the vote of the chairmen of the
10county central committees of those counties which lie entirely
11or partially within that Congressional District and in which
12there are no ward or township committeepersons. When voting
13for such proxy, the county chair, ward committeeperson or
14township committeeperson, as the case may be, shall have one
15vote for each ballot voted in his county, ward or township, or
16portion thereof within the Congressional District, by the
17primary electors of his party at the primary at which he was
18elected. However, the absent State central committeeman or
19committeewoman may designate a proxy when permitted by the
20rules of a political party which elects its members by
21Alternative B under paragraph (a) of this Section.
22    Notwithstanding any law to the contrary, a person is
23ineligible to hold the position of committeeperson in any
24committee established pursuant to this Section if he or she is
25statutorily ineligible to vote in a general election because
26of conviction of a felony. When a committeeperson is convicted

 

 

 

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1of a felony, the position occupied by that committeeperson
2shall automatically become vacant.
3(Source: P.A. 100-201, eff. 8-18-17; 100-1027, eff. 1-1-19.)
 
4    (10 ILCS 5/7-10)  (from Ch. 46, par. 7-10)
5    Sec. 7-10. Form of petition for nomination. The name of no
6candidate for nomination, or State central committeeperson, or
7township committeeperson, or precinct committeeperson, or ward
8committeeperson or candidate for delegate or alternate
9delegate to national nominating conventions, shall be printed
10upon the primary ballot unless a petition for nomination has
11been filed in his behalf as provided in this Article in
12substantially the following form:
13    We, the undersigned, members of and affiliated with the
14.... party and qualified primary electors of the .... party,
15in the .... of ...., in the county of .... and State of
16Illinois, do hereby petition that the following named person
17or persons shall be a candidate or candidates of the .... party
18for the nomination for (or in case of committeepersons for
19election to) the office or offices hereinafter specified, to
20be voted for at the primary election to be held on (insert
21date).
22    NameOfficeAddress
23John JonesGovernorBelvidere, Ill.
24Jane James Lieutenant Governor Peoria, Ill.
25Thomas SmithAttorney GeneralOakland, Ill.

 

 

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1Name..................         Address.......................
 
2State of Illinois)
3                 ) ss.
4County of........)
5    I, ...., do hereby certify that I reside at No. ....
6street, in the .... of ...., county of ...., and State of
7....., that I am 18 years of age or older, that I am a citizen
8of the United States, and that the signatures on this sheet
9were signed in my presence, and are genuine, and that to the
10best of my knowledge and belief the persons so signing were at
11the time of signing the petitions qualified voters of the ....
12party, and that their respective residences are correctly
13stated, as above set forth.
14
.........................
15    Subscribed and sworn to before me on (insert date).
16
.........................

 
17    Each sheet of the petition other than the statement of
18candidacy and candidate's statement shall be of uniform size
19and shall contain above the space for signatures an
20appropriate heading giving the information as to name of
21candidate or candidates, in whose behalf such petition is
22signed; the office, the political party represented and place
23of residence; and the heading of each sheet shall be the same.

 

 

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1    Such petition shall be signed by qualified primary
2electors residing in the political division for which the
3nomination is sought in their own proper persons only and
4opposite the signature of each signer, his residence address
5shall be written or printed. The residence address required to
6be written or printed opposite each qualified primary
7elector's name shall include the street address or rural route
8number of the signer, as the case may be, as well as the
9signer's county, and city, village or town, and state. However
10the county or city, village or town, and state of residence of
11the electors may be printed on the petition forms where all of
12the electors signing the petition reside in the same county or
13city, village or town, and state. Standard abbreviations may
14be used in writing the residence address, including street
15number, if any. At the bottom of each sheet of such petition
16shall be added a circulator statement signed by a person 18
17years of age or older who is a citizen of the United States,
18stating the street address or rural route number, as the case
19may be, as well as the county, city, village or town, and
20state; and certifying that the signatures on that sheet of the
21petition were signed in his or her presence and certifying
22that the signatures are genuine; and either (1) indicating the
23dates on which that sheet was circulated, or (2) indicating
24the first and last dates on which the sheet was circulated, or
25(3) certifying that none of the signatures on the sheet were
26signed more than 90 days preceding the last day for the filing

 

 

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1of the petition and certifying that to the best of his or her
2knowledge and belief the persons so signing were at the time of
3signing the petitions qualified voters of the political party
4for which a nomination is sought. Such statement shall be
5sworn to before some officer authorized to administer oaths in
6this State.
7    No petition sheet shall be circulated more than 90 days
8preceding the last day provided in Section 7-12 for the filing
9of such petition.
10    The person circulating the petition, or the candidate on
11whose behalf the petition is circulated, may strike any
12signature from the petition, provided that:
13        (1) the person striking the signature shall initial
14    the petition at the place where the signature is struck;
15    and
16        (2) the person striking the signature shall sign a
17    certification listing the page number and line number of
18    each signature struck from the petition. Such
19    certification shall be filed as a part of the petition.
20    Such sheets before being filed shall be neatly fastened
21together in book form, by placing the sheets in a pile and
22fastening them together at one edge in a secure and suitable
23manner, and the sheets shall then be numbered consecutively.
24The sheets shall not be fastened by pasting them together end
25to end, so as to form a continuous strip or roll. All petition
26sheets which are filed with the proper local election

 

 

 

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1officials, election authorities or the State Board of
2Elections shall be the original sheets which have been signed
3by the voters and by the circulator thereof, and not
4photocopies or duplicates of such sheets. Each petition must
5include as a part thereof, a statement of candidacy for each of
6the candidates filing, or in whose behalf the petition is
7filed. This statement shall set out the address of such
8candidate, the office for which he is a candidate, shall state
9that the candidate is a qualified primary voter of the party to
10which the petition relates and is qualified for the office
11specified (in the case of a candidate for State's Attorney it
12shall state that the candidate is at the time of filing such
13statement a licensed attorney-at-law of this State), shall
14state that he has filed (or will file before the close of the
15petition filing period) a statement of economic interests as
16required by the Illinois Governmental Ethics Act, shall
17request that the candidate's name be placed upon the official
18ballot, and shall be subscribed and sworn to by such candidate
19before some officer authorized to take acknowledgment of deeds
20in the State and shall be in substantially the following form:
21
Statement of Candidacy
22NameAddressOfficeDistrictParty
23John Jones102 Main St.GovernorStatewideRepublican
24Belvidere,
25Illinois

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 31 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1State of Illinois)
2                 ) ss.
3County of .......)
4    I, ...., being first duly sworn, say that I reside at ....
5Street in the city (or village) of ...., in the county of ....,
6State of Illinois; that I am a qualified voter therein and am a
7qualified primary voter of the .... party; that I am a
8candidate for nomination (for election in the case of
9committeeperson and delegates and alternate delegates) to the
10office of .... to be voted upon at the primary election to be
11held on (insert date); that I am legally qualified (including
12being the holder of any license that may be an eligibility
13requirement for the office I seek the nomination for) to hold
14such office and that I have filed (or I will file before the
15close of the petition filing period) a statement of economic
16interests as required by the Illinois Governmental Ethics Act
17and I hereby request that my name be printed upon the official
18primary ballot for nomination for (or election to in the case
19of committeepersons and delegates and alternate delegates)
20such office.
21
Signed ......................
22    Subscribed and sworn to (or affirmed) before me by ....,
23who is to me personally known, on (insert date).
24
Signed ....................
25
(Official Character)
26(Seal, if officer has one.)
 

 

 

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1    The petitions, when filed, shall not be withdrawn or added
2to, and no signatures shall be revoked except by revocation
3filed in writing with the State Board of Elections, election
4authority or local election official with whom the petition is
5required to be filed, and before the filing of such petition.
6Whoever forges the name of a signer upon any petition required
7by this Article is deemed guilty of a forgery and on conviction
8thereof shall be punished accordingly.
9    A candidate for the offices listed in this Section must
10obtain the number of signatures specified in this Section on
11his or her petition for nomination.
12    (a) Statewide office or delegate to a national nominating
13convention. If a candidate seeks to run for statewide office
14or as a delegate or alternate delegate to a national
15nominating convention elected from the State at-large, then
16the candidate's petition for nomination must contain at least
175,000 but not more than 10,000 signatures.
18    (b) Congressional office or congressional delegate to a
19national nominating convention. If a candidate seeks to run
20for United States Congress or as a congressional delegate or
21alternate congressional delegate to a national nominating
22convention elected from a congressional district, then the
23candidate's petition for nomination must contain at least the
24number of signatures equal to 0.5% of the qualified primary
25electors of his or her party in his or her congressional

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 33 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1district. In the first primary election following a
2redistricting of congressional districts, a candidate's
3petition for nomination must contain at least 600 signatures
4of qualified primary electors of the candidate's political
5party in his or her congressional district.
6    (c) County office. If a candidate seeks to run for any
7countywide office, including but not limited to county board
8chairperson or county board member, elected on an at-large
9basis, in a county other than Cook County, then the
10candidate's petition for nomination must contain at least the
11number of signatures equal to 0.5% of the qualified electors
12of his or her party who cast votes at the last preceding
13general election in his or her county. If a candidate seeks to
14run for county board member elected from a county board
15district, then the candidate's petition for nomination must
16contain at least the number of signatures equal to 0.5% of the
17qualified primary electors of his or her party in the county
18board district. In the first primary election following a
19redistricting of county board districts or the initial
20establishment of county board districts, a candidate's
21petition for nomination must contain at least the number of
22signatures equal to 0.5% of the qualified electors of his or
23her party in the entire county who cast votes at the last
24preceding general election divided by the total number of
25county board districts comprising the county board; provided
26that in no event shall the number of signatures be less than

 

 

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125.
2    (d) County office; Cook County only.
3        (1) If a candidate seeks to run for countywide office
4    in Cook County, then the candidate's petition for
5    nomination must contain at least the number of signatures
6    equal to 0.5% of the qualified electors of his or her party
7    who cast votes at the last preceding general election in
8    Cook County.
9        (2) If a candidate seeks to run for Cook County Board
10    Commissioner, then the candidate's petition for nomination
11    must contain at least the number of signatures equal to
12    0.5% of the qualified primary electors of his or her party
13    in his or her county board district. In the first primary
14    election following a redistricting of Cook County Board of
15    Commissioners districts, a candidate's petition for
16    nomination must contain at least the number of signatures
17    equal to 0.5% of the qualified electors of his or her party
18    in the entire county who cast votes at the last preceding
19    general election divided by the total number of county
20    board districts comprising the county board; provided that
21    in no event shall the number of signatures be less than 25.
22        (3) If a candidate seeks to run for Cook County Board
23    of Review Commissioner, which is elected from a district
24    pursuant to subsection (c) of Section 5-5 of the Property
25    Tax Code, then the candidate's petition for nomination
26    must contain at least the number of signatures equal to

 

 

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1    0.5% of the total number of registered voters in his or her
2    board of review district in the last general election at
3    which a commissioner was regularly scheduled to be elected
4    from that board of review district. In no event shall the
5    number of signatures required be greater than the
6    requisite number for a candidate who seeks countywide
7    office in Cook County under subsection (d)(1) of this
8    Section. In the first primary election following a
9    redistricting of Cook County Board of Review districts, a
10    candidate's petition for nomination must contain at least
11    4,000 signatures or at least the number of signatures
12    required for a countywide candidate in Cook County,
13    whichever is less, of the qualified electors of his or her
14    party in the district.
15    (e) Municipal or township office. If a candidate seeks to
16run for municipal or township office, then the candidate's
17petition for nomination must contain at least the number of
18signatures equal to 0.5% of the qualified primary electors of
19his or her party in the municipality or township. If a
20candidate seeks to run for alder alderman of a municipality,
21then the candidate's petition for nomination must contain at
22least the number of signatures equal to 0.5% of the qualified
23primary electors of his or her party of the ward. In the first
24primary election following redistricting of aldermanic wards
25or trustee districts of a municipality or the initial
26establishment of wards or districts, a candidate's petition

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 36 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1for nomination must contain the number of signatures equal to
2at least 0.5% of the total number of votes cast for the
3candidate of that political party who received the highest
4number of votes in the entire municipality at the last regular
5election at which an officer was regularly scheduled to be
6elected from the entire municipality, divided by the number of
7wards or districts. In no event shall the number of signatures
8be less than 25.
9    (f) State central committeeperson. If a candidate seeks to
10run for State central committeeperson, then the candidate's
11petition for nomination must contain at least 100 signatures
12of the primary electors of his or her party of his or her
13congressional district.
14    (g) Sanitary district trustee. If a candidate seeks to run
15for trustee of a sanitary district in which trustees are not
16elected from wards, then the candidate's petition for
17nomination must contain at least the number of signatures
18equal to 0.5% of the primary electors of his or her party from
19the sanitary district. If a candidate seeks to run for trustee
20of a sanitary district in which trustees are elected from
21wards, then the candidate's petition for nomination must
22contain at least the number of signatures equal to 0.5% of the
23primary electors of his or her party in the ward of that
24sanitary district. In the first primary election following
25redistricting of sanitary districts elected from wards, a
26candidate's petition for nomination must contain at least the

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 37 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1signatures of 150 qualified primary electors of his or her
2ward of that sanitary district.
3    (h) Judicial office. If a candidate seeks to run for
4judicial office in a district, then the candidate's petition
5for nomination must contain the number of signatures equal to
60.4% of the number of votes cast in that district for the
7candidate for his or her political party for the office of
8Governor at the last general election at which a Governor was
9elected, but in no event less than 500 signatures. If a
10candidate seeks to run for judicial office in a circuit or
11subcircuit, then the candidate's petition for nomination must
12contain the number of signatures equal to 0.25% of the number
13of votes cast for the judicial candidate of his or her
14political party who received the highest number of votes at
15the last general election at which a judicial officer from the
16same circuit or subcircuit was regularly scheduled to be
17elected, but in no event less than 1,000 signatures in
18circuits and subcircuits located in the First Judicial
19District or 500 signatures in every other Judicial District.
20    (i) Precinct, ward, and township committeeperson. If a
21candidate seeks to run for precinct committeeperson, then the
22candidate's petition for nomination must contain at least 10
23signatures of the primary electors of his or her party for the
24precinct. If a candidate seeks to run for ward
25committeeperson, then the candidate's petition for nomination
26must contain no less than the number of signatures equal to 10%

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 38 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1of the primary electors of his or her party of the ward, but no
2more than 16% of those same electors; provided that the
3maximum number of signatures may be 50 more than the minimum
4number, whichever is greater. If a candidate seeks to run for
5township committeeperson, then the candidate's petition for
6nomination must contain no less than the number of signatures
7equal to 5% of the primary electors of his or her party of the
8township, but no more than 8% of those same electors; provided
9that the maximum number of signatures may be 50 more than the
10minimum number, whichever is greater.
11    (j) State's attorney or regional superintendent of schools
12for multiple counties. If a candidate seeks to run for State's
13attorney or regional Superintendent of Schools who serves more
14than one county, then the candidate's petition for nomination
15must contain at least the number of signatures equal to 0.5% of
16the primary electors of his or her party in the territory
17comprising the counties.
18    (k) Any other office. If a candidate seeks any other
19office, then the candidate's petition for nomination must
20contain at least the number of signatures equal to 0.5% of the
21registered voters of the political subdivision, district, or
22division for which the nomination is made or 25 signatures,
23whichever is greater.
24    For purposes of this Section the number of primary
25electors shall be determined by taking the total vote cast, in
26the applicable district, for the candidate for that political

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 39 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1party who received the highest number of votes, statewide, at
2the last general election in the State at which electors for
3President of the United States were elected. For political
4subdivisions, the number of primary electors shall be
5determined by taking the total vote cast for the candidate for
6that political party who received the highest number of votes
7in the political subdivision at the last regular election at
8which an officer was regularly scheduled to be elected from
9that subdivision. For wards or districts of political
10subdivisions, the number of primary electors shall be
11determined by taking the total vote cast for the candidate for
12that political party who received the highest number of votes
13in the ward or district at the last regular election at which
14an officer was regularly scheduled to be elected from that
15ward or district.
16    A "qualified primary elector" of a party may not sign
17petitions for or be a candidate in the primary of more than one
18party.
19    The changes made to this Section of this amendatory Act of
20the 93rd General Assembly are declarative of existing law,
21except for item (3) of subsection (d).
22    Petitions of candidates for nomination for offices herein
23specified, to be filed with the same officer, may contain the
24names of 2 or more candidates of the same political party for
25the same or different offices. In the case of the offices of
26Governor and Lieutenant Governor, a joint petition including

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 40 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1one candidate for each of those offices must be filed.
2(Source: P.A. 100-1027, eff. 1-1-19.)
 
3    (10 ILCS 5/10-3)  (from Ch. 46, par. 10-3)
4    Sec. 10-3. Nomination of independent candidates (not
5candidates of any political party), for any office to be
6filled by the voters of the State at large may also be made by
7nomination papers signed in the aggregate for each candidate
8by 1% of the number of voters who voted in the next preceding
9Statewide general election or 25,000 qualified voters of the
10State, whichever is less. Nominations of independent
11candidates for public office within any district or political
12subdivision less than the State, may be made by nomination
13papers signed in the aggregate for each candidate by qualified
14voters of such district, or political subdivision, equaling
15not less than 5%, nor more than 8% (or 50 more than the
16minimum, whichever is greater) of the number of persons, who
17voted at the next preceding regular election in such district
18or political subdivision in which such district or political
19subdivision voted as a unit for the election of officers to
20serve its respective territorial area. However, whenever the
21minimum signature requirement for an independent candidate
22petition for a district or political subdivision office shall
23exceed the minimum number of signatures for an independent
24candidate petition for an office to be filled by the voters of
25the State at large at the next preceding State-wide general

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 41 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1election, such State-wide petition signature requirement shall
2be the minimum for an independent candidate petition for such
3district or political subdivision office. For the first
4election following a redistricting of congressional districts,
5nomination papers for an independent candidate for congressman
6shall be signed by at least 5,000 qualified voters of the
7congressional district. For the first election following a
8redistricting of legislative districts, nomination papers for
9an independent candidate for State Senator in the General
10Assembly shall be signed by at least 3,000 qualified voters of
11the legislative district. For the first election following a
12redistricting of representative districts, nomination papers
13for an independent candidate for State Representative in the
14General Assembly shall be signed by at least 1,500 qualified
15voters of the representative district. For the first election
16following redistricting of county board districts, or of
17municipal wards or districts, or for the first election
18following the initial establishment of such districts or wards
19in a county or municipality, nomination papers for an
20independent candidate for county board member, or for alder
21alderman or trustee of such municipality, shall be signed by
22qualified voters of the district or ward equal to not less than
235% nor more than 8% (or 50 more than the minimum, whichever is
24greater) of the total number of votes cast at the preceding
25general or general municipal election, as the case may be, for
26the county or municipal office voted on throughout such county

 

 

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1or municipality for which the greatest total number of votes
2were cast for all candidates, divided by the number of
3districts or wards, but in any event not less than 25 qualified
4voters of the district or ward. Each voter signing a
5nomination paper shall add to his signature his place of
6residence, and each voter may subscribe to one nomination for
7such office to be filled, and no more: Provided that the name
8of any candidate whose name may appear in any other place upon
9the ballot shall not be so added by petition for the same
10office.
11    The person circulating the petition, or the candidate on
12whose behalf the petition is circulated, may strike any
13signature from the petition, provided that;
14        (1) the person striking the signature shall initial
15    the petition at the place where the signature is struck;
16    and
17        (2) the person striking the signature shall sign a
18    certification listing the page number and line number of
19    each signature struck from the petition. Such
20    certification shall be filed as a part of the petition.
21        (3) the persons striking signatures from the petition
22    shall each sign an additional certificate specifying the
23    number of certification pages listing stricken signatures
24    which are attached to the petition and the page numbers
25    indicated on such certifications. The certificate shall be
26    filed as a part of the petition, shall be numbered, and

 

 

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1    shall be attached immediately following the last page of
2    voters' signatures and before the certifications of
3    stricken signatures.
4        (4) all of the foregoing requirements shall be
5    necessary to effect a valid striking of any signature. The
6    provisions of this Section authorizing the striking of
7    signatures shall not impose any criminal liability on any
8    person so authorized for signatures which may be
9    fraudulent.
10    In the case of the offices of Governor and Lieutenant
11Governor a joint petition including one candidate for each of
12those offices must be filed.
13    A candidate for whom a nomination paper has been filed as a
14partisan candidate at a primary election, and who is defeated
15for his or her nomination at the primary election, is
16ineligible to be placed on the ballot as an independent
17candidate for election in that general or consolidated
18election.
19    A candidate seeking election to an office for which
20candidates of political parties are nominated by caucus who is
21a participant in the caucus and who is defeated for his or her
22nomination at such caucus, is ineligible to be listed on the
23ballot at that general or consolidated election as an
24independent candidate.
25(Source: P.A. 95-699, eff. 11-9-07.)
 

 

 

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1    (10 ILCS 5/23-6.1)  (from Ch. 46, par. 23-6.1)
2    Sec. 23-6.1. Whenever an election contest for a municipal
3trustee or alder alderman is brought involving ballots from
4the same precincts which are subject to the jurisdiction of
5the circuit court by virtue of the pendency of an election
6contest for another office, the municipal council or board of
7trustees having jurisdiction of the municipal election contest
8shall have priority of access and possession of the ballots
9and other election materials for the purpose of conducting a
10recount or other related proceedings for a period of 30 days
11following the commencement of the municipal election contest.
12The election authority shall notify the court and the
13municipal council or board of the pendency of all other
14contests relating to the same precincts.
15(Source: P.A. 90-655, eff. 7-30-98.)
 
16    Section 10. The Illinois Pension Code is amended by
17changing Sections 6-230, 7-109, 8-113, 8-232, 8-243, and
188-243.2 as follows:
 
19    (40 ILCS 5/6-230)
20    Sec. 6-230. Participation by an alder alderman or member
21of city council.
22    (a) A person shall be a member under this Article if he or
23she (1) is or was employed and receiving a salary as a fireman
24under item (a) of Section 6-106, (2) has at least 5 years of

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 45 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1service under this Article, (3) is employed in a position
2covered under Section 8-243, (4) made an election under
3Article 8 to not receive service credit or be a participant
4under that Article, and (5) made an election to participate
5under this Article.
6    (b) For the purposes of determining employee and employer
7contributions under this Article, the employee and employer
8shall be responsible for any and all contributions otherwise
9required if the person was employed and receiving salary as a
10fireman under item (a) of Section 6-106.
11(Source: P.A. 100-1144, eff. 11-28-18.)
 
12    (40 ILCS 5/7-109)  (from Ch. 108 1/2, par. 7-109)
13    Sec. 7-109. Employee.
14    (1) "Employee" means any person who:
15        (a) 1. Receives earnings as payment for the
16    performance of personal services or official duties out of
17    the general fund of a municipality, or out of any special
18    fund or funds controlled by a municipality, or by an
19    instrumentality thereof, or a participating
20    instrumentality, including, in counties, the fees or
21    earnings of any county fee office; and
22        2. Under the usual common law rules applicable in
23    determining the employer-employee relationship, has the
24    status of an employee with a municipality, or any
25    instrumentality thereof, or a participating

 

 

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1    instrumentality, including alders aldermen, county
2    supervisors and other persons (excepting those employed as
3    independent contractors) who are paid compensation, fees,
4    allowances or other emolument for official duties, and, in
5    counties, the several county fee offices.
6        (b) Serves as a township treasurer appointed under the
7    School Code, as heretofore or hereafter amended, and who
8    receives for such services regular compensation as
9    distinguished from per diem compensation, and any regular
10    employee in the office of any township treasurer whether
11    or not his earnings are paid from the income of the
12    permanent township fund or from funds subject to
13    distribution to the several school districts and parts of
14    school districts as provided in the School Code, or from
15    both such sources; or is the chief executive officer,
16    chief educational officer, chief fiscal officer, or other
17    employee of a Financial Oversight Panel established
18    pursuant to Article 1H of the School Code, other than a
19    superintendent or certified school business official,
20    except that such person shall not be treated as an
21    employee under this Section if that person has negotiated
22    with the Financial Oversight Panel, in conjunction with
23    the school district, a contractual agreement for exclusion
24    from this Section.
25        (c) Holds an elective office in a municipality,
26    instrumentality thereof or participating instrumentality.

 

 

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1    (2) "Employee" does not include persons who:
2        (a) Are eligible for inclusion under any of the
3    following laws:
4            1. "An Act in relation to an Illinois State
5        Teachers' Pension and Retirement Fund", approved May
6        27, 1915, as amended;
7            2. Articles 15 and 16 of this Code.
8        However, such persons shall be included as employees
9    to the extent of earnings that are not eligible for
10    inclusion under the foregoing laws for services not of an
11    instructional nature of any kind.
12        However, any member of the armed forces who is
13    employed as a teacher of subjects in the Reserve Officers
14    Training Corps of any school and who is not certified
15    under the law governing the certification of teachers
16    shall be included as an employee.
17        (b) Are designated by the governing body of a
18    municipality in which a pension fund is required by law to
19    be established for policemen or firemen, respectively, as
20    performing police or fire protection duties, except that
21    when such persons are the heads of the police or fire
22    department and are not eligible to be included within any
23    such pension fund, they shall be included within this
24    Article; provided, that such persons shall not be excluded
25    to the extent of concurrent service and earnings not
26    designated as being for police or fire protection duties.

 

 

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1    However, (i) any head of a police department who was a
2    participant under this Article immediately before October
3    1, 1977 and did not elect, under Section 3-109 of this Act,
4    to participate in a police pension fund shall be an
5    "employee", and (ii) any chief of police who became a
6    participating employee under this Article before January
7    1, 2019 and who elects to participate in this Fund under
8    Section 3-109.1 of this Code, regardless of whether such
9    person continues to be employed as chief of police or is
10    employed in some other rank or capacity within the police
11    department, shall be an employee under this Article for so
12    long as such person is employed to perform police duties
13    by a participating municipality and has not lawfully
14    rescinded that election.
15        (b-5) Were not participating employees under this
16    Article before the effective date of this amendatory Act
17    of the 100th General Assembly and participated as a chief
18    of police in a fund under Article 3 and return to work in
19    any capacity with the police department, with any
20    oversight of the police department, or in an advisory
21    capacity for the police department with the same
22    municipality with which that pension was earned,
23    regardless of whether they are considered an employee of
24    the police department or are eligible for inclusion in the
25    municipality's Article 3 fund.
26        (c) Are contributors to or eligible to contribute to a

 

 

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1    Taft-Hartley pension plan to which the participating
2    municipality is required to contribute as the person's
3    employer based on earnings from the municipality. Nothing
4    in this paragraph shall affect service credit or
5    creditable service for any period of service prior to the
6    effective date of this amendatory Act of the 98th General
7    Assembly, and this paragraph shall not apply to
8    individuals who are participating in the Fund prior to the
9    effective date of this amendatory Act of the 98th General
10    Assembly.
11        (d) Become an employee of any of the following
12    participating instrumentalities on or after the effective
13    date of this amendatory Act of the 99th General Assembly:
14    the Illinois Municipal League; the Illinois Association of
15    Park Districts; the Illinois Supervisors, County
16    Commissioners and Superintendents of Highways Association;
17    an association, or not-for-profit corporation, membership
18    in which is authorized under Section 85-15 of the Township
19    Code; the United Counties Council; or the Will County
20    Governmental League.
21    (3) All persons, including, without limitation, public
22defenders and probation officers, who receive earnings from
23general or special funds of a county for performance of
24personal services or official duties within the territorial
25limits of the county, are employees of the county (unless
26excluded by subsection (2) of this Section) notwithstanding

 

 

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1that they may be appointed by and are subject to the direction
2of a person or persons other than a county board or a county
3officer. It is hereby established that an employer-employee
4relationship under the usual common law rules exists between
5such employees and the county paying their salaries by reason
6of the fact that the county boards fix their rates of
7compensation, appropriate funds for payment of their earnings
8and otherwise exercise control over them. This finding and
9this amendatory Act shall apply to all such employees from the
10date of appointment whether such date is prior to or after the
11effective date of this amendatory Act and is intended to
12clarify existing law pertaining to their status as
13participating employees in the Fund.
14(Source: P.A. 99-830, eff. 1-1-17; 100-281, eff. 8-24-17;
15100-1097, eff. 8-26-18.)
 
16    (40 ILCS 5/8-113)  (from Ch. 108 1/2, par. 8-113)
17    Sec. 8-113. Municipal employee, employee, contributor, or
18participant. "Municipal employee", "employee", "contributor",
19or "participant":
20    (a) Any employee of an employer employed in the classified
21civil service thereof other than by temporary appointment or
22in a position excluded or exempt from the classified service
23by the Civil Service Act, or in the case of a city operating
24under a personnel ordinance, any employee of an employer
25employed in the classified or career service under the

 

 

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1provisions of a personnel ordinance, other than in a
2provisional or exempt position as specified in such ordinance
3or in rules and regulations formulated thereunder.
4    (b) Any employee in the service of an employer before the
5Civil Service Act came in effect for the employer.
6    (c) Any person employed by the board.
7    (d) Any person employed after December 31, 1949, but prior
8to January 1, 1984, in the service of the employer by temporary
9appointment or in a position exempt from the classified
10service as set forth in the Civil Service Act, or in a
11provisional or exempt position as specified in the personnel
12ordinance, who meets the following qualifications:
13        (1) has rendered service during not less than 12
14    calendar months to an employer as an employee, officer, or
15    official, 4 months of which must have been consecutive
16    full normal working months of service rendered immediately
17    prior to filing application to be included; and
18        (2) files written application with the board, while in
19    the service, to be included hereunder.
20    (e) After December 31, 1949, any alder alderman or other
21officer or official of the employer, who files, while in
22office, written application with the board to be included
23hereunder.
24    (f) Beginning January 1, 1984, any person employed by an
25employer other than the Chicago Housing Authority or the
26Public Building Commission of the city, whether or not such

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 52 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1person is serving by temporary appointment or in a position
2exempt from the classified service as set forth in the Civil
3Service Act, or in a provisional or exempt position as
4specified in the personnel ordinance, provided that such
5person is neither (1) an alder alderman or other officer or
6official of the employer, nor (2) participating, on the basis
7of such employment, in any other pension fund or retirement
8system established under this Act.
9    (g) After December 31, 1959, any person employed in the
10law department of the city, or municipal court or Board of
11Election Commissioners of the city, who was a contributor and
12participant, on December 31, 1959, in the annuity and benefit
13fund in operation in the city on said date, by virtue of the
14Court and Law Department Employees' Annuity Act or the Board
15of Election Commissioners Employees' Annuity Act.
16    After December 31, 1959, the foregoing definition includes
17any other person employed or to be employed in the law
18department, or municipal court (other than as a judge), or
19Board of Election Commissioners (if his salary is provided by
20appropriation of the city council of the city and his salary
21paid by the city) -- subject, however, in the case of such
22persons not participants on December 31, 1959, to compliance
23with the same qualifications and restrictions otherwise set
24forth in this Section and made generally applicable to
25employees or officers of the city concerning eligibility for
26participation or membership.

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 53 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1    Notwithstanding any other provision in this Section, any
2person who first becomes employed in the law department of the
3city on or after the effective date of this amendatory Act of
4the 100th General Assembly shall be included within the
5foregoing definition, effective upon the date the person first
6becomes so employed, regardless of the nature of the
7appointment the person holds under the provisions of a
8personnel ordinance.
9    (h) After December 31, 1965, any person employed in the
10public library of the city -- and any other person -- who was a
11contributor and participant, on December 31, 1965, in the
12pension fund in operation in the city on said date, by virtue
13of the Public Library Employees' Pension Act.
14    (i) After December 31, 1968, any person employed in the
15house of correction of the city, who was a contributor and
16participant, on December 31, 1968, in the pension fund in
17operation in the city on said date, by virtue of the House of
18Correction Employees' Pension Act.
19    (j) Any person employed full-time on or after the
20effective date of this amendatory Act of the 92nd General
21Assembly by the Chicago Housing Authority who has elected to
22participate in this Fund as provided in subsection (a) of
23Section 8-230.9.
24    (k) Any person employed full-time by the Public Building
25Commission of the city who has elected to participate in this
26Fund as provided in subsection (d) of Section 8-230.7.

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 54 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1(Source: P.A. 100-23, eff. 7-6-17.)
 
2    (40 ILCS 5/8-232)  (from Ch. 108 1/2, par. 8-232)
3    Sec. 8-232. Basis of service credit.
4    (a) In computing the period of service of any employee for
5the minimum annuity under Section 8-138, the following
6provisions shall govern:
7        (1) All periods prior to the effective date shall be
8    computed in accordance with the provisions of Section
9    8-226, except for a re-entrant or future entrant who was
10    not in service on the day before the effective date.
11        (2) Service subsequent to the day before the effective
12    date, shall include: the actual period of time the
13    employee performs the duties of his position and makes
14    required contributions or performs such duties and is
15    given a city contribution for age and service annuity
16    purposes; leaves of absence from duty, or vacation, for
17    which an employee receives all or part of his salary;
18    periods included under item (c) of Section 8-226; periods
19    during which the employee is temporarily assigned to
20    another position in the service and permitted to make
21    contributions to the fund; periods during which the
22    employee has had contributions for annuity purposes made
23    for him in accordance with law while on military leave of
24    absence during World War II; periods during which the
25    employee receives disability benefit under this Article,

 

 

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1    or a temporary total disability benefit under the Workers'
2    Compensation Act if the disability results from a
3    condition commonly termed heart attack or stroke or any
4    other condition falling within the broad field of coronary
5    involvement or heart disease;
6        (3) Service during 6 or more months in any year shall
7    constitute a year of service, and service of less than 6
8    months but at least 1 month in any year shall constitute a
9    half year of service. However the right to have certain
10    periods of time considered as service as stated in
11    paragraph 2 of Section 8-168 or in Section 8-243 relating
12    to service as Alder Alderman shall not apply for minimum
13    annuity purposes under Section 8-138 of this Article.
14    (b) For all other purposes of this Article, the following
15schedule shall govern the computation of service of an
16employee whose salary or wages is on the basis stated, and any
17fractional part of a year of service shall be determined
18according to said schedule:
19    Annual or Monthly basis: Service during 4 months in any 1
20calendar year shall constitute a year of service.
21    Weekly basis: Service during any week shall constitute a
22week of service and service during any 17 weeks in any 1
23calendar year shall constitute a year of service.
24    Daily basis: Service during any day shall constitute a day
25of service and service during 100 days in any 1 calendar year
26shall constitute a year of service.

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 56 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1    Hourly basis: Service during any hour shall constitute an
2hour of service and service during 700 hours in any 1 calendar
3year shall constitute a year of service.
4(Source: P.A. 85-964; 86-1488.)
 
5    (40 ILCS 5/8-243)  (from Ch. 108 1/2, par. 8-243)
6    Sec. 8-243. Service as alder alderman or member of city
7council. Whenever any person has served or hereafter serves as
8a duly elected alder alderman or member of the city council of
9any city of more than 500,000 inhabitants and is or hereafter
10becomes a contributing participant in any pension fund or any
11annuity and benefit fund in existence in such city by
12operation of law, the period of service as such alder alderman
13or member of the city council shall be counted as a period of
14service in computing any annuity or pension which such person
15may become entitled to receive from such fund upon separation
16from the service, except as ruled out for minimum annuity
17purposes in Section 8-232(a)(3).
18(Source: Laws 1963, p. 161.)
 
19    (40 ILCS 5/8-243.2)  (from Ch. 108 1/2, par. 8-243.2)
20    Sec. 8-243.2. Alternative annuity for city officers.
21    (a) For the purposes of this Section and Sections 8-243.1
22and 8-243.3, "city officer" means the city clerk, the city
23treasurer, or an alder alderman of the city elected by vote of
24the people, while serving in that capacity or as provided in

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 57 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1subsection (f), who has elected to participate in the Fund.
2    (b) Any elected city officer, while serving in that
3capacity or as provided in subsection (f), may elect to
4establish alternative credits for an alternative annuity by
5electing in writing to make additional optional contributions
6in accordance with this Section and the procedures established
7by the board. Such elected city officer may discontinue making
8the additional optional contributions by notifying the Fund in
9writing in accordance with this Section and procedures
10established by the board.
11    Additional optional contributions for the alternative
12annuity shall be as follows:
13        (1) For service after the option is elected, an
14    additional contribution of 3% of salary shall be
15    contributed to the Fund on the same basis and under the
16    same conditions as contributions required under Sections
17    8-174 and 8-182.
18        (2) For service before the option is elected, an
19    additional contribution of 3% of the salary for the
20    applicable period of service, plus interest at the
21    effective rate from the date of service to the date of
22    payment. All payments for past service must be paid in
23    full before credit is given. No additional optional
24    contributions may be made for any period of service for
25    which credit has been previously forfeited by acceptance
26    of a refund, unless the refund is repaid in full with

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 58 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1    interest at the effective rate from the date of refund to
2    the date of repayment.
3    (c) In lieu of the retirement annuity otherwise payable
4under this Article, any city officer elected by vote of the
5people who (1) has elected to participate in the Fund and make
6additional optional contributions in accordance with this
7Section, and (2) has attained age 55 with at least 10 years of
8service credit, or has attained age 60 with at least 8 years of
9service credit, may elect to have his retirement annuity
10computed as follows: 3% of the participant's salary at the
11time of termination of service for each of the first 8 years of
12service credit, plus 4% of such salary for each of the next 4
13years of service credit, plus 5% of such salary for each year
14of service credit in excess of 12 years, subject to a maximum
15of 80% of such salary. To the extent such elected city officer
16has made additional optional contributions with respect to
17only a portion of his years of service credit, his retirement
18annuity will first be determined in accordance with this
19Section to the extent such additional optional contributions
20were made, and then in accordance with the remaining Sections
21of this Article to the extent of years of service credit with
22respect to which additional optional contributions were not
23made.
24    (d) In lieu of the disability benefits otherwise payable
25under this Article, any city officer elected by vote of the
26people who (1) has elected to participate in the Fund, and (2)

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 59 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1has become permanently disabled and as a consequence is unable
2to perform the duties of his office, and (3) was making
3optional contributions in accordance with this Section at the
4time the disability was incurred, may elect to receive a
5disability annuity calculated in accordance with the formula
6in subsection (c). For the purposes of this subsection, such
7elected city officer shall be considered permanently disabled
8only if: (i) disability occurs while in service as an elected
9city officer and is of such a nature as to prevent him from
10reasonably performing the duties of his office at the time;
11and (ii) the board has received a written certification by at
12least 2 licensed physicians appointed by it stating that such
13officer is disabled and that the disability is likely to be
14permanent.
15    (e) Refunds of additional optional contributions shall be
16made on the same basis and under the same conditions as
17provided under Sections 8-168, 8-170 and 8-171. Interest shall
18be credited at the effective rate on the same basis and under
19the same conditions as for other contributions. Optional
20contributions shall be accounted for in a separate Elected
21City Officer Optional Contribution Reserve. Optional
22contributions under this Section shall be included in the
23amount of employee contributions used to compute the tax levy
24under Section 8-173.
25    (f) The effective date of this plan of optional
26alternative benefits and contributions shall be July 1, 1990,

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 60 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1or the date upon which approval is received from the U.S.
2Internal Revenue Service, whichever is later.
3    The plan of optional alternative benefits and
4contributions shall not be available to any former city
5officer or employee receiving an annuity from the Fund on the
6effective date of the plan, unless he re-enters service as an
7elected city officer and renders at least 3 years of
8additional service after the date of re-entry. However, a
9person who holds office as a city officer on June 1, 1995 may
10elect to participate in the plan, to transfer credits into the
11Fund from other Articles of this Code, and to make the
12contributions required for prior service, until 30 days after
13the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 92nd General
14Assembly, notwithstanding the ending of his term of office
15prior to that effective date; in the event that the person is
16already receiving an annuity from this Fund or any other
17Article of this Code at the time of making this election, the
18annuity shall be recalculated to include any increase
19resulting from participation in the plan, with such increase
20taking effect on the effective date of the election.
21    (g) Notwithstanding any other provision in this Section or
22in this Code to the contrary, any person who first becomes a
23city officer, as defined in this Section, on or after the
24effective date of this amendatory Act of the 100th General
25Assembly, shall not be eligible for the alternative annuity or
26alternative disability benefits as provided in subsections

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 61 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1(a), (b), (c), and (d) of this Section or for the alternative
2survivor's benefits as provided in Section 8-243.3. Such
3person shall not be eligible, or be required, to make any
4additional contributions beyond those required of other
5participants under Sections 8-137, 8-174, and 8-182. The
6retirement annuity, disability benefits, and survivor's
7benefits for a person who first becomes a city officer on or
8after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 100th
9General Assembly shall be determined pursuant to the
10provisions otherwise provided in this Article.
11(Source: P.A. 100-23, eff. 7-6-17.)
 
12    Section 15. The Public Officer Prohibited Activities Act
13is amended by changing Sections 1.3, 2, and 4 as follows:
 
14    (50 ILCS 105/1.3)
15    Sec. 1.3. Municipal board member; education office. In a
16city, village, or incorporated town with fewer than 2,500
17inhabitants, an alder alderman of the city or a member of the
18board of trustees of a village or incorporated town, during
19the term of office for which he or she is elected, may also
20hold the office of member of the board of education, regional
21board of school trustees, board of school directors, or board
22of school inspectors.
23(Source: P.A. 91-161, eff. 7-16-99.)
 

 

 

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1    (50 ILCS 105/2)  (from Ch. 102, par. 2)
2    Sec. 2. No alder alderman of any city, or member of the
3board of trustees of any village, during the term of office for
4which he or she is elected, may accept, be appointed to, or
5hold any office by the appointment of the mayor or president of
6the board of trustees, unless the alder alderman or board
7member is granted a leave of absence from such office, or
8unless he or she first resigns from the office of alder
9alderman or member of the board of trustees, or unless the
10holding of another office is authorized by law. The alder
11alderman or board member may, however, serve as a volunteer
12fireman and receive compensation for that service. The alder
13alderman may also serve as a commissioner of the Beardstown
14Regional Flood Prevention District board. Any appointment in
15violation of this Section is void. Nothing in this Act shall be
16construed to prohibit an elected municipal official from
17holding elected office in another unit of local government as
18long as there is no contractual relationship between the
19municipality and the other unit of local government. This
20amendatory Act of 1995 is declarative of existing law and is
21not a new enactment.
22(Source: P.A. 97-309, eff. 8-11-11.)
 
23    (50 ILCS 105/4)  (from Ch. 102, par. 4)
24    Sec. 4. Any alder alderman, member of a board of trustees,
25supervisor or county commissioner, or other person holding any

 

 

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1office, either by election or appointment under the laws or
2constitution of this state, who violates any provision of the
3preceding sections, is guilty of a Class 4 felony and in
4addition thereto, any office or official position held by any
5person so convicted shall become vacant, and shall be so
6declared as part of the judgment of court. This Section does
7not apply to a violation of subsection (b) of Section 2a.
8(Source: P.A. 100-868, eff. 1-1-19.)
 
9    Section 20. The Counties Code is amended by changing
10Section 3-14036 as follows:
 
11    (55 ILCS 5/3-14036)  (from Ch. 34, par. 3-14036)
12    Sec. 3-14036. Payments of political contributions to
13public officers prohibited. No officer or employee in the
14classified civil service of said county, or named in Section
153-14022, shall directly or indirectly, give or hand over to
16any officer or employee, or to any senator or representative
17or alder alderman, councilman, or commissioner, any money or
18other valuable thing on account of or to be applied to the
19promotion of any party or political object whatever.
20(Source: P.A. 86-976.)
 
21    Section 25. The Illinois Municipal Code is amended by
22changing Sections 1-1-2, 2-2-9, 3.1-10-5, 3.1-10-30,
233.1-10-50, 3.1-10-51, 3.1-10-60, 3.1-10-65, 3.1-10-75,

 

 

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13.1-15-5, 3.1-15-15, 3.1-15-25, 3.1-15-30, 3.1-15-35,
23.1-15-40, 3.1-20-10, 3.1-20-15, 3.1-20-20, 3.1-20-22,
33.1-20-25, 3.1-20-30, 3.1-20-35, 3.1-20-40, 3.1-20-45,
43.1-25-70, 3.1-25-75, 3.1-35-35, 3.1-40-5, 3.1-40-10,
53.1-40-15, 3.1-40-25, 3.1-40-30, 3.1-40-35, 3.1-40-40,
63.1-40-50, 3.1-40-55, 3.1-45-5, 3.1-45-15, 3.1-55-5, 4-1-2,
74-10-1, 5-1-4, 5-2-1, 5-2-2, 5-2-3, 5-2-3.1, 5-2-4, 5-2-5,
85-2-7, 5-2-8, 5-2-11, 5-2-12, 5-2-17, 5-2-18, 5-2-18.1,
95-2-18.2, 5-2-18.7, 5-2-19, 5-3-1, 5-3-3, 5-3-4, 5-3-5, 5-3-7,
105-3-8, 5-4-1, 5-4-3, 5-5-1, 5-5-5, 6-3-2, 6-3-3, 6-3-4, 6-3-5,
116-3-6, 6-3-7, 6-3-8, 6-3-9, 6-3-10, 6-4-3, 6-4-4, 6-5-1,
127-1-15, 7-1-39, 7-1-42, 7-2-1, 7-2-19, 7-2-28, 8-9-1, 10-1-30,
1310-3-5, 11-13-1.1, 11-13-10, 11-13-14, 11-13-14.1, 11-80-5,
1411-91-1, and 11-101-2 as follows:
 
15    (65 ILCS 5/1-1-2)  (from Ch. 24, par. 1-1-2)
16    Sec. 1-1-2. Definitions. In this Code:
17    (1) "Municipal" or "municipality" means a city, village,
18or incorporated town in the State of Illinois, but, unless the
19context otherwise provides, "municipal" or "municipality" does
20not include a township, town when used as the equivalent of a
21township, incorporated town that has superseded a civil
22township, county, school district, park district, sanitary
23district, or any other similar governmental district. If
24"municipal" or "municipality" is given a different definition
25in any particular Division or Section of this Act, that

 

 

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1definition shall control in that division or Section only.
2    (2) "Corporate authorities" means (a) the mayor and alders
3aldermen or similar body when the reference is to cities, (b)
4the president and trustees or similar body when the reference
5is to villages or incorporated towns, and (c) the council when
6the reference is to municipalities under the commission form
7of municipal government.
8    (3) "Electors" means persons qualified to vote for
9elective officers at municipal elections.
10    (4) "Person" means any individual, partnership,
11corporation, joint stock association, or the State of Illinois
12or any subdivision of the State; and includes any trustee,
13receiver, assignee, or personal representative of any of those
14entities.
15    (5) Except as otherwise provided by ordinance, "fiscal
16year" in all municipalities with fewer than 500,000
17inhabitants, and "municipal year" in all municipalities, means
18the period elapsing (a) between general municipal elections in
19succeeding calendar years, or (b) if general municipal
20elections are held biennially, then between a general
21municipal election and the same day of the same month of the
22following calendar year, and between that day and the next
23succeeding general municipal election, or (c) if general
24municipal elections are held quadrennially, then between a
25general municipal election and the same day of the same month
26of the following calendar year, and between that day and the

 

 

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1same day of the same month of the next following calendar year,
2and between the last mentioned day and the same day of the same
3month of the next following calendar year, and between the
4last mentioned day and the next succeeding general municipal
5election. The fiscal year of each municipality with 500,000 or
6more inhabitants shall commence on January 1.
7    (6) Where reference is made to a county within which a
8municipality, district, area, or territory is situated, the
9reference is to the county within which is situated the major
10part of the area of that municipality, district, area, or
11territory, in case the municipality, district, area, or
12territory is situated in 2 or more counties.
13    (7) Where reference is made for any purpose to any other
14Act, either specifically or generally, the reference shall be
15to that Act and to all amendments to that Act now in force or
16that may be hereafter enacted.
17    (8) Wherever the words "city council", "alders aldermen",
18"commissioners", or "mayor" occur, the provisions containing
19these words shall apply to the board of trustees, trustees,
20and president, respectively, of villages and incorporated
21towns and councilmen in cities, so far as those provisions are
22applicable to them.
23    (9) The terms "special charter" and "special Act" are
24synonymous.
25    (10) "General municipal election" means the biennial
26regularly scheduled election for the election of officers of

 

 

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1cities, villages, and incorporated towns, as prescribed by the
2general election law; in the case of municipalities that elect
3officers annually, "general municipal election" means each
4regularly scheduled election for the election of officers of
5cities, villages, and incorporated towns.
6(Source: P.A. 87-1119.)
 
7    (65 ILCS 5/2-2-9)  (from Ch. 24, par. 2-2-9)
8    Sec. 2-2-9. The election for city officers in any
9incorporated town or village which has voted to incorporate as
10a city shall be held at the time of the next regularly
11scheduled election for officers, in accordance with the
12general election law. The corporate authorities of such
13incorporated town or village shall cause the result to be
14entered upon the records of the city. Alders Aldermen may be
15elected on a general ticket at the election.
16(Source: P.A. 81-1490.)
 
17    (65 ILCS 5/3.1-10-5)  (from Ch. 24, par. 3.1-10-5)
18    Sec. 3.1-10-5. Qualifications; elective office.
19    (a) A person is not eligible for an elective municipal
20office unless that person is a qualified elector of the
21municipality and has resided in the municipality at least one
22year next preceding the election or appointment, except as
23provided in Section 3.1-20-25, subsection (b) of Section
243.1-25-75, Section 5-2-2, or Section 5-2-11.

 

 

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1    (b) A person is not eligible to take the oath of office for
2a municipal office if that person is, at the time required for
3taking the oath of office, in arrears in the payment of a tax
4or other indebtedness due to the municipality or has been
5convicted in any court located in the United States of any
6infamous crime, bribery, perjury, or other felony.
7    (b-5) (Blank).
8    (c) A person is not eligible for the office of alder
9alderman of a ward unless that person has resided in the ward
10that the person seeks to represent, and a person is not
11eligible for the office of trustee of a district unless that
12person has resided in the municipality, at least one year next
13preceding the election or appointment, except as provided in
14Section 3.1-20-25, subsection (b) of Section 3.1-25-75,
15Section 5-2-2, or Section 5-2-11.
16    (d) If a person (i) is a resident of a municipality
17immediately prior to the active duty military service of that
18person or that person's spouse, (ii) resides anywhere outside
19of the municipality during that active duty military service,
20and (iii) immediately upon completion of that active duty
21military service is again a resident of the municipality, then
22the time during which the person resides outside the
23municipality during the active duty military service is deemed
24to be time during which the person is a resident of the
25municipality for purposes of determining the residency
26requirement under subsection (a).

 

 

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1(Source: P.A. 98-115, eff. 7-29-13; 99-449, eff. 8-24-15.)
 
2    (65 ILCS 5/3.1-10-30)  (from Ch. 24, par. 3.1-10-30)
3    Sec. 3.1-10-30. Bond. Before entering upon the duties of
4their respective offices, all municipal officers, except
5alders aldermen and trustees, shall execute a bond with
6security, to be approved by the corporate authorities. The
7bond shall be payable to the municipality in the penal sum
8directed by resolution or ordinance, conditioned upon the
9faithful performance of the duties of the office and the
10payment of all money received by the officer, according to law
11and the ordinances of that municipality. The bond may provide
12that the obligation of the sureties shall not extend to any
13loss sustained by the insolvency, failure, or closing of any
14bank or savings and loan association organized and operating
15either under the laws of the State of Illinois or the United
16States in which the officer has placed funds in the officer's
17custody, if the bank or savings and loan association has been
18approved by the corporate authorities as a depository for
19those funds. In no case, however, shall the mayor's bond be
20fixed at less than $3,000. The treasurer's bond shall be an
21amount of money that is not less than 3 times the latest
22Federal census population or any subsequent census figure used
23for Motor Fuel Tax purposes. Bonds shall be filed with the
24municipal clerk, except the bond of the clerk, which shall be
25filed with the municipal treasurer.

 

 

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1(Source: P.A. 87-1119.)
 
2    (65 ILCS 5/3.1-10-50)
3    Sec. 3.1-10-50. Events upon which an elective office
4becomes vacant in municipality with population under 500,000.
5    (a) Vacancy by resignation. A resignation is not effective
6unless it is in writing, signed by the person holding the
7elective office, and notarized.
8        (1) Unconditional resignation. An unconditional
9    resignation by a person holding the elective office may
10    specify a future date, not later than 60 days after the
11    date the resignation is received by the officer authorized
12    to fill the vacancy, at which time it becomes operative,
13    but the resignation may not be withdrawn after it is
14    received by the officer authorized to fill the vacancy.
15    The effective date of a resignation that does not specify
16    a future date at which it becomes operative is the date the
17    resignation is received by the officer authorized to fill
18    the vacancy. The effective date of a resignation that has
19    a specified future effective date is that specified future
20    date or the date the resignation is received by the
21    officer authorized to fill the vacancy, whichever date
22    occurs later.
23        (2) Conditional resignation. A resignation that does
24    not become effective unless a specified event occurs can
25    be withdrawn at any time prior to the occurrence of the

 

 

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1    specified event, but if not withdrawn, the effective date
2    of the resignation is the date of the occurrence of the
3    specified event or the date the resignation is received by
4    the officer authorized to fill the vacancy, whichever date
5    occurs later.
6        (3) Vacancy upon the effective date. For the purpose
7    of determining the time period that would require an
8    election to fill the vacancy by resignation or the
9    commencement of the 60-day time period referred to in
10    subsection (e), the resignation of an elected officer is
11    deemed to have created a vacancy as of the effective date
12    of the resignation.
13        (4) Duty of the clerk. If a resignation is delivered
14    to the clerk of the municipality, the clerk shall forward
15    a certified copy of the written resignation to the
16    official who is authorized to fill the vacancy within 7
17    business days after receipt of the resignation.
18    (b) Vacancy by death or disability. A vacancy occurs in an
19office by reason of the death of the incumbent. The date of the
20death may be established by the date shown on the death
21certificate. A vacancy occurs in an office by permanent
22physical or mental disability rendering the person incapable
23of performing the duties of the office. The corporate
24authorities have the authority to make the determination
25whether an officer is incapable of performing the duties of
26the office because of a permanent physical or mental

 

 

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1disability. A finding of mental disability shall not be made
2prior to the appointment by a court of a guardian ad litem for
3the officer or until a duly licensed doctor certifies, in
4writing, that the officer is mentally impaired to the extent
5that the officer is unable to effectively perform the duties
6of the office. If the corporate authorities find that an
7officer is incapable of performing the duties of the office
8due to permanent physical or mental disability, that person is
9removed from the office and the vacancy of the office occurs on
10the date of the determination.
11    (c) Vacancy by other causes.
12        (1) Abandonment and other causes. A vacancy occurs in
13    an office by reason of abandonment of office; removal from
14    office; or failure to qualify; or more than temporary
15    removal of residence from the municipality; or in the case
16    of an alder alderman of a ward or councilman or trustee of
17    a district, more than temporary removal of residence from
18    the ward or district, as the case may be. The corporate
19    authorities have the authority to determine whether a
20    vacancy under this subsection has occurred. If the
21    corporate authorities determine that a vacancy exists, the
22    office is deemed vacant as of the date of that
23    determination for all purposes including the calculation
24    under subsections (e), (f), and (g).
25        (2) Guilty of a criminal offense. An admission of
26    guilt of a criminal offense that upon conviction would

 

 

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1    disqualify the municipal officer from holding the office,
2    in the form of a written agreement with State or federal
3    prosecutors to plead guilty to a felony, bribery, perjury,
4    or other infamous crime under State or federal law,
5    constitutes a resignation from that office, effective on
6    the date the plea agreement is made. For purposes of this
7    Section, a conviction for an offense that disqualifies a
8    municipal officer from holding that office occurs on the
9    date of the return of a guilty verdict or, in the case of a
10    trial by the court, on the entry of a finding of guilt.
11        (3) Election declared void. A vacancy occurs on the
12    date of the decision of a competent tribunal declaring the
13    election of the officer void.
14        (4) Owing a debt to the municipality. A vacancy occurs
15    if a municipal official fails to pay a debt to a
16    municipality in which the official has been elected or
17    appointed to an elected position subject to the following:
18            (A) Before a vacancy may occur under this
19        paragraph (4), the municipal clerk shall deliver, by
20        personal service, a written notice to the municipal
21        official that (i) the municipal official is in arrears
22        of a debt to the municipality, (ii) that municipal
23        official must either pay or contest the debt within 30
24        days after receipt of the notice or the municipal
25        official will be disqualified and his or her office
26        vacated, and (iii) if the municipal official chooses

 

 

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1        to contest the debt, the municipal official must
2        provide written notice to the municipal clerk of the
3        contesting of the debt. A copy of the notice, and the
4        notice to contest, shall also be mailed by the
5        municipal clerk to the appointed municipal attorney by
6        certified mail. If the municipal clerk is the
7        municipal official indebted to the municipality, the
8        mayor or president of the municipality shall assume
9        the duties of the municipal clerk required under this
10        paragraph (4).
11            (B) In the event that the municipal official
12        chooses to contest the debt, a hearing shall be held
13        within 30 days of the municipal clerk's receipt of the
14        written notice of contest from the municipal official.
15        An appointed municipal hearing officer shall preside
16        over the hearing, and shall hear testimony and accept
17        evidence relevant to the existence of the debt owed by
18        the municipal officer to the municipality.
19            (C) Upon the conclusion of the hearing, the
20        hearing officer shall make a determination on the
21        basis of the evidence presented as to whether or not
22        the municipal official is in arrears of a debt to the
23        municipality. The determination shall be in writing
24        and shall be designated as findings, decision, and
25        order. The findings, decision, and order shall
26        include: (i) the hearing officer's findings of fact;

 

 

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1        (ii) a decision of whether or not the municipal
2        official is in arrears of a debt to the municipality
3        based upon the findings of fact; and (iii) an order
4        that either directs the municipal official to pay the
5        debt within 30 days or be disqualified and his or her
6        office vacated or dismisses the matter if a debt owed
7        to the municipality is not proved. A copy of the
8        hearing officer's written determination shall be
9        served upon the municipal official in open proceedings
10        before the hearing officer. If the municipal official
11        does not appear for receipt of the written
12        determination, the written determination shall be
13        deemed to have been served on the municipal official
14        on the date when a copy of the written determination is
15        personally served on the municipal official or on the
16        date when a copy of the written determination is
17        deposited in the United States mail, postage prepaid,
18        addressed to the municipal official at the address on
19        record with the municipality.
20            (D) A municipal official aggrieved by the
21        determination of a hearing officer may secure judicial
22        review of such determination in the circuit court of
23        the county in which the hearing was held. The
24        municipal official seeking judicial review must file a
25        petition with the clerk of the court and must serve a
26        copy of the petition upon the municipality by

 

 

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1        registered or certified mail within 5 days after
2        service of the determination of the hearing officer.
3        The petition shall contain a brief statement of the
4        reasons why the determination of the hearing officer
5        should be reversed. The municipal official shall file
6        proof of service with the clerk of the court. No answer
7        to the petition need be filed, but the municipality
8        shall cause the record of proceedings before the
9        hearing officer to be filed with the clerk of the court
10        on or before the date of the hearing on the petition or
11        as ordered by the court. The court shall set the matter
12        for hearing to be held within 30 days after the filing
13        of the petition and shall make its decision promptly
14        after such hearing.
15            (E) If a municipal official chooses to pay the
16        debt, or is ordered to pay the debt after the hearing,
17        the municipal official must present proof of payment
18        to the municipal clerk that the debt was paid in full,
19        and, if applicable, within the required time period as
20        ordered by a hearing officer or circuit court judge.
21            (F) A municipal official will be disqualified and
22        his or her office vacated pursuant to this paragraph
23        (4) on the later of the following times if the
24        municipal official: (i) fails to pay or contest the
25        debt within 30 days of the municipal official's
26        receipt of the notice of the debt; (ii) fails to pay

 

 

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1        the debt within 30 days after being served with a
2        written determination under subparagraph (C) ordering
3        the municipal official to pay the debt; or (iii) fails
4        to pay the debt within 30 days after being served with
5        a decision pursuant to subparagraph (D) upholding a
6        hearing officer's determination that the municipal
7        officer has failed to pay a debt owed to a
8        municipality.
9            (G) For purposes of this paragraph, a "debt" shall
10        mean an arrearage in a definitely ascertainable and
11        quantifiable amount after service of written notice
12        thereof, in the payment of any indebtedness due to the
13        municipality, which has been adjudicated before a
14        tribunal with jurisdiction over the matter. A
15        municipal official is considered in arrears of a debt
16        to a municipality if a debt is more than 30 days
17        overdue from the date the debt was due.
18    (d) Election of an acting mayor or acting president. The
19election of an acting mayor or acting president pursuant to
20subsection (f) or (g) does not create a vacancy in the original
21office of the person on the city council or as a trustee, as
22the case may be, unless the person resigns from the original
23office following election as acting mayor or acting president.
24If the person resigns from the original office following
25election as acting mayor or acting president, then the
26original office must be filled pursuant to the terms of this

 

 

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1Section and the acting mayor or acting president shall
2exercise the powers of the mayor or president and shall vote
3and have veto power in the manner provided by law for a mayor
4or president. If the person does not resign from the original
5office following election as acting mayor or acting president,
6then the acting mayor or acting president shall exercise the
7powers of the mayor or president but shall be entitled to vote
8only in the manner provided for as the holder of the original
9office and shall not have the power to veto. If the person does
10not resign from the original office following election as
11acting mayor or acting president, and if that person's
12original term of office has not expired when a mayor or
13president is elected and has qualified for office, the acting
14mayor or acting-president shall return to the original office
15for the remainder of the term thereof.
16    (e) Appointment to fill alder alderman or trustee vacancy.
17An appointment by the mayor or president or acting mayor or
18acting president, as the case may be, of a qualified person as
19described in Section 3.1-10-5 of this Code to fill a vacancy in
20the office of alder alderman or trustee must be made within 60
21days after the vacancy occurs. Once the appointment of the
22qualified person has been forwarded to the corporate
23authorities, the corporate authorities shall act upon the
24appointment within 30 days. If the appointment fails to
25receive the advice and consent of the corporate authorities
26within 30 days, the mayor or president or acting mayor or

 

 

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1acting president shall appoint and forward to the corporate
2authorities a second qualified person as described in Section
33.1-10-5. Once the appointment of the second qualified person
4has been forwarded to the corporate authorities, the corporate
5authorities shall act upon the appointment within 30 days. If
6the appointment of the second qualified person also fails to
7receive the advice and consent of the corporate authorities,
8then the mayor or president or acting mayor or acting
9president, without the advice and consent of the corporate
10authorities, may make a temporary appointment from those
11persons who were appointed but whose appointments failed to
12receive the advice and consent of the corporate authorities.
13The person receiving the temporary appointment shall serve
14until an appointment has received the advice and consent and
15the appointee has qualified or until a person has been elected
16and has qualified, whichever first occurs.
17    (f) Election to fill vacancies in municipal offices with
184-year terms. If a vacancy occurs in an elective municipal
19office with a 4-year term and there remains an unexpired
20portion of the term of at least 28 months, and the vacancy
21occurs at least 130 days before the general municipal election
22next scheduled under the general election law, then the
23vacancy shall be filled for the remainder of the term at that
24general municipal election. Whenever an election is held for
25this purpose, the municipal clerk shall certify the office to
26be filled and the candidates for the office to the proper

 

 

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1election authorities as provided in the general election law.
2If a vacancy occurs with less than 28 months remaining in the
3unexpired portion of the term or less than 130 days before the
4general municipal election, then:
5        (1) Mayor or president. If the vacancy is in the
6    office of mayor or president, the vacancy must be filled
7    by the corporate authorities electing one of their members
8    as acting mayor or acting president. Except as set forth
9    in subsection (d), the acting mayor or acting president
10    shall perform the duties and possess all the rights and
11    powers of the mayor or president until a mayor or
12    president is elected at the next general municipal
13    election and has qualified. However, in villages with a
14    population of less than 5,000, if each of the trustees
15    either declines the election as acting president or is not
16    elected by a majority vote of the trustees presently
17    holding office, then the trustees may elect, as acting
18    president, any other village resident who is qualified to
19    hold municipal office, and the acting president shall
20    exercise the powers of the president and shall vote and
21    have veto power in the manner provided by law for a
22    president.
23        (2) Alder Alderman or trustee. If the vacancy is in
24    the office of alder alderman or trustee, the vacancy must
25    be filled by the mayor or president or acting mayor or
26    acting president, as the case may be, in accordance with

 

 

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1    subsection (e).
2        (3) Other elective office. If the vacancy is in any
3    elective municipal office other than mayor or president or
4    alder alderman or trustee, the mayor or president or
5    acting mayor or acting president, as the case may be, must
6    appoint a qualified person to hold the office until the
7    office is filled by election, subject to the advice and
8    consent of the city council or the board of trustees, as
9    the case may be.
10    (g) Vacancies in municipal offices with 2-year terms. In
11the case of an elective municipal office with a 2-year term, if
12the vacancy occurs at least 130 days before the general
13municipal election next scheduled under the general election
14law, the vacancy shall be filled for the remainder of the term
15at that general municipal election. If the vacancy occurs less
16than 130 days before the general municipal election, then:
17        (1) Mayor or president. If the vacancy is in the
18    office of mayor or president, the vacancy must be filled
19    by the corporate authorities electing one of their members
20    as acting mayor or acting president. Except as set forth
21    in subsection (d), the acting mayor or acting president
22    shall perform the duties and possess all the rights and
23    powers of the mayor or president until a mayor or
24    president is elected at the next general municipal
25    election and has qualified. However, in villages with a
26    population of less than 5,000, if each of the trustees

 

 

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1    either declines the election as acting president or is not
2    elected by a majority vote of the trustees presently
3    holding office, then the trustees may elect, as acting
4    president, any other village resident who is qualified to
5    hold municipal office, and the acting president shall
6    exercise the powers of the president and shall vote and
7    have veto power in the manner provided by law for a
8    president.
9        (2) Alder Alderman or trustee. If the vacancy is in
10    the office of alder alderman or trustee, the vacancy must
11    be filled by the mayor or president or acting mayor or
12    acting president, as the case may be, in accordance with
13    subsection (e).
14        (3) Other elective office. If the vacancy is in any
15    elective municipal office other than mayor or president or
16    alder alderman or trustee, the mayor or president or
17    acting mayor or acting president, as the case may be, must
18    appoint a qualified person to hold the office until the
19    office is filled by election, subject to the advice and
20    consent of the city council or the board of trustees, as
21    the case may be.
22    (h) In cases of vacancies arising by reason of an election
23being declared void pursuant to paragraph (3) of subsection
24(c), persons holding elective office prior thereto shall hold
25office until their successors are elected and qualified or
26appointed and confirmed by advice and consent, as the case may

 

 

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1be.
2    (i) This Section applies only to municipalities with
3populations under 500,000.
4(Source: P.A. 99-449, eff. 8-24-15.)
 
5    (65 ILCS 5/3.1-10-51)
6    Sec. 3.1-10-51. Vacancies in municipalities with a
7population of 500,000 or more.
8    (a) Events upon which an elective office in a municipality
9of 500,000 or more shall become vacant:
10        (1) A municipal officer may resign from office. A
11    vacancy occurs in an office by reason of resignation,
12    failure to elect or qualify (in which case the incumbent
13    shall remain in office until the vacancy is filled),
14    death, permanent physical or mental disability rendering
15    the person incapable of performing the duties of his or
16    her office, conviction of a disqualifying crime,
17    abandonment of office, removal from office, or removal of
18    residence from the municipality or, in the case of an
19    alder alderman of a ward, removal of residence from the
20    ward.
21        (2) An admission of guilt of a criminal offense that
22    would, upon conviction, disqualify the municipal officer
23    from holding that office, in the form of a written
24    agreement with State or federal prosecutors to plead
25    guilty to a felony, bribery, perjury, or other infamous

 

 

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1    crime under State or federal law, shall constitute a
2    resignation from that office, effective at the time the
3    plea agreement is made. For purposes of this Section, a
4    conviction for an offense that disqualifies the municipal
5    officer from holding that office occurs on the date of the
6    return of a guilty verdict or, in the case of a trial by
7    the court, the entry of a finding of guilt.
8        (3) Owing a debt to the municipality. A vacancy occurs
9    if a municipal official fails to pay a debt to a
10    municipality in which the official has been elected or
11    appointed to an elected position subject to the following:
12            (A) Before a vacancy may occur under this
13        paragraph (3), the municipal clerk shall deliver, by
14        personal service, a written notice to the municipal
15        official that (i) the municipal official is in arrears
16        of a debt to the municipality, (ii) that municipal
17        official must either pay or contest the debt within 30
18        days after receipt of the notice or the municipal
19        official will be disqualified and his or her office
20        vacated, and (iii) if the municipal official chooses
21        to contest the debt, the municipal official must
22        provide written notice to the municipal clerk of the
23        contesting of the debt. A copy of the notice, and the
24        notice to contest, shall also be mailed by the
25        municipal clerk to the appointed municipal attorney by
26        certified mail. If the municipal clerk is the

 

 

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1        municipal official indebted to the municipality, the
2        mayor or president of the municipality shall assume
3        the duties of the municipal clerk required under this
4        paragraph (3).
5            (B) In the event that the municipal official
6        chooses to contest the debt, a hearing shall be held
7        within 30 days of the municipal clerk's receipt of the
8        written notice of contest from the municipal official.
9        An appointed municipal hearing officer shall preside
10        over the hearing, and shall hear testimony and accept
11        evidence relevant to the existence of the debt owed by
12        the municipal officer to the municipality.
13            (C) Upon the conclusion of the hearing, the
14        hearing officer shall make a determination on the
15        basis of the evidence presented as to whether or not
16        the municipal official is in arrears of a debt to the
17        municipality. The determination shall be in writing
18        and shall be designated as findings, decision, and
19        order. The findings, decision, and order shall
20        include: (i) the hearing officer's findings of fact;
21        (ii) a decision of whether or not the municipal
22        official is in arrears of a debt to the municipality
23        based upon the findings of fact; and (iii) an order
24        that either directs the municipal official to pay the
25        debt within 30 days or be disqualified and his or her
26        office vacated or dismisses the matter if a debt owed

 

 

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1        to the municipality is not proved. A copy of the
2        hearing officer's written determination shall be
3        served upon the municipal official in open proceedings
4        before the hearing officer. If the municipal official
5        does not appear for receipt of the written
6        determination, the written determination shall be
7        deemed to have been served on the municipal official
8        on the date when a copy of the written determination is
9        personally served on the municipal official or on the
10        date when a copy of the written determination is
11        deposited in the United States mail, postage prepaid,
12        addressed to the municipal official at the address on
13        record in the files of the municipality.
14            (D) A municipal official aggrieved by the
15        determination of a hearing officer may secure judicial
16        review of such determination in the circuit court of
17        the county in which the hearing was held. The
18        municipal official seeking judicial review must file a
19        petition with the clerk of the court and must serve a
20        copy of the petition upon the municipality by
21        registered or certified mail within 5 days after
22        service of the determination of the hearing officer.
23        The petition shall contain a brief statement of the
24        reasons why the determination of the hearing officer
25        should be reversed. The municipal official shall file
26        proof of service with the clerk of the court. No answer

 

 

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1        to the petition need be filed, but the municipality
2        shall cause the record of proceedings before the
3        hearing officer to be filed with the clerk of the court
4        on or before the date of the hearing on the petition or
5        as ordered by the court. The court shall set the matter
6        for hearing to be held within 30 days after the filing
7        of the petition and shall make its decision promptly
8        after such hearing.
9            (E) If a municipal official chooses to pay the
10        debt, or is ordered to pay the debt after the hearing,
11        the municipal official must present proof of payment
12        to the municipal clerk that the debt was paid in full,
13        and, if applicable, within the required time period as
14        ordered by a hearing officer.
15            (F) A municipal official will be disqualified and
16        his or her office vacated pursuant to this paragraph
17        (3) on the later of the following times the municipal
18        official: (i) fails to pay or contest the debt within
19        30 days of the municipal official's receipt of the
20        notice of the debt; (ii) fails to pay the debt within
21        30 days after being served with a written
22        determination under subparagraph (C) ordering the
23        municipal official to pay the debt; or (iii) fails to
24        pay the debt within 30 days after being served with a
25        decision pursuant to subparagraph (D) upholding a
26        hearing officer's determination that the municipal

 

 

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1        officer has failed to pay a debt owed to a
2        municipality.
3            (G) For purposes of this paragraph, a "debt" shall
4        mean an arrearage in a definitely ascertainable and
5        quantifiable amount after service of written notice
6        thereof, in the payment of any indebtedness due to the
7        municipality, which has been adjudicated before a
8        tribunal with jurisdiction over the matter. A
9        municipal official is considered in arrears of a debt
10        to a municipality if a debt is more than 30 days
11        overdue from the date the debt was due.
12    (b) If a vacancy occurs in an elective municipal office
13with a 4-year term and there remains an unexpired portion of
14the term of at least 28 months, and the vacancy occurs at least
15130 days before the general municipal election next scheduled
16under the general election law, then the vacancy shall be
17filled for the remainder of the term at that general municipal
18election. Whenever an election is held for this purpose, the
19municipal clerk shall certify the office to be filled and the
20candidates for the office to the proper election authorities
21as provided in the general election law. If the vacancy is in
22the office of mayor, the city council shall elect one of their
23members acting mayor. The acting mayor shall perform the
24duties and possess all the rights and powers of the mayor until
25a successor to fill the vacancy has been elected and has
26qualified. If the vacancy is in any other elective municipal

 

 

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1office, then until the office is filled by election, the mayor
2shall appoint a qualified person to the office subject to the
3advice and consent of the city council.
4    (c) If a vacancy occurs later than the time provided in
5subsection (b) in a 4-year term, a vacancy in the office of
6mayor shall be filled by the corporate authorities electing
7one of their members acting mayor. The acting mayor shall
8perform the duties and possess all the rights and powers of the
9mayor until a mayor is elected at the next general municipal
10election and has qualified. A vacancy occurring later than the
11time provided in subsection (b) in a 4-year term in any
12elective office other than mayor shall be filled by
13appointment by the mayor, with the advice and consent of the
14corporate authorities.
15    (d) A municipal officer appointed or elected under this
16Section shall hold office until the officer's successor is
17elected and has qualified.
18    (e) An appointment to fill a vacancy in the office of alder
19alderman shall be made within 60 days after the vacancy
20occurs. The requirement that an appointment be made within 60
21days is an exclusive power and function of the State and is a
22denial and limitation under Article VII, Section 6, subsection
23(h) of the Illinois Constitution of the power of a home rule
24municipality to require that an appointment be made within a
25different period after the vacancy occurs.
26    (f) This Section applies only to municipalities with a

 

 

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1population of 500,000 or more.
2(Source: P.A. 99-449, eff. 8-24-15.)
 
3    (65 ILCS 5/3.1-10-60)  (from Ch. 24, par. 3.1-10-60)
4    Sec. 3.1-10-60. Interim appointments to vacancies. If a
5municipality has no mayor or president, no clerk, and no
6alders aldermen or trustees, the circuit court may, upon
7petition signed by at least 100 electors or 10% of the electors
8of the municipality, whichever is less, make interim
9appointments to fill all vacancies in the elective offices of
10the municipality from among persons whose names are submitted
11by the petition or petitions. The interim appointees shall
12serve until the next regularly scheduled election under the
13general election law occurring not less than 120 days after
14all the offices have become vacant.
15(Source: P.A. 87-1119.)
 
16    (65 ILCS 5/3.1-10-65)  (from Ch. 24, par. 3.1-10-65)
17    Sec. 3.1-10-65. Referendum to reduce terms.
18    (a) In any municipality of less than 500,000 inhabitants,
19a proposition to reduce the terms of the elective officers of
20the municipality from 4 years to 2 years may be submitted,
21within the discretion of the corporate authorities, to the
22electors of the municipality. The proposition shall also be
23submitted if a petition requesting that action is signed by
24electors of the municipality numbering not less than 10% of

 

 

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1the total vote cast at the last election for mayor or president
2of the municipality and the petition is filed with the
3municipal clerk and certified in accordance with the general
4election law. The proposition shall be substantially in the
5following form:
6        Shall the term of the elective officers of (name of
7    municipality) be reduced from 4 years to 2 years?
8    (b) If a majority of the electors voting on the
9proposition vote against it, the terms of the officers shall
10remain 4 years. If, however, a majority of those voting on the
11proposition vote in favor of it, the officers elected at the
12next regular election for officers in the municipality shall
13hold their offices for a term of 2 years and until their
14successors are elected and have qualified, except in the case
15of trustees and alders aldermen. In the case of alders
16aldermen and trustees: (i) at the first election of alders
17aldermen or trustees that occurs in an odd numbered year
18following the vote to reduce the length of terms, successors
19to alders aldermen or trustees whose terms expire in that year
20shall be elected for a term of one year and until their
21successors are elected and have qualified and (ii) thereafter,
22one-half of the alders aldermen or trustees shall be elected
23each year for terms of 2 years and until their successors are
24elected and have qualified.
25(Source: P.A. 87-1119.)
 

 

 

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1    (65 ILCS 5/3.1-10-75)  (from Ch. 24, par. 3.1-10-75)
2    Sec. 3.1-10-75. Referendum to lengthen terms.
3    (a) In any municipality of less than 500,000 inhabitants
4that, under Section 3.1-10-65, has voted to shorten the terms
5of elective officers, a proposition to lengthen the terms of
6the elective officers of the municipality from 2 years to 4
7years may be submitted, within the discretion of the corporate
8authorities, to the electors of the municipality. The
9proposition shall be certified by the municipal clerk to the
10appropriate election authorities, who shall submit the
11proposition at an election in accordance with the general
12election law. The proposition shall also be submitted at an
13election if a petition requesting that action is signed by
14electors of the municipality numbering not less than 10% of
15the total vote cast at the last election for mayor or president
16of the municipality and the petition is filed with the
17municipal clerk. The proposition shall be substantially in the
18following form:
19        Shall the term of the elective officers of (name of
20    municipality) be lengthened from 2 years to 4 years?
21    (b) If a majority of the electors voting on the
22proposition vote against it, the terms of the officers shall
23remain 2 years. If, however, a majority of those voting on the
24proposition vote in favor of it, the officers elected at the
25next regular election for officers in the municipality shall
26hold their offices for a term of 4 years and until their

 

 

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1successors are elected and have qualified, except in the case
2of trustees and alders aldermen. In the case of alders
3aldermen and trustees: (i) if the first election for alders
4aldermen or trustees, after approval of the proposition,
5occurs in an even numbered year, the alders aldermen or
6trustees elected in that even numbered year shall serve for
7terms of 3 years and until their successors are elected and
8have qualified, the terms for successors to those elected at
9the first even numbered year election shall be 4 years and
10until successors are elected and have qualified, the alders
11aldermen or trustees elected at the first odd numbered year
12election next following the first even numbered year election
13shall serve for terms of 4 years and until successors are
14elected and have qualified, and successors elected after the
15first odd numbered year shall also serve 4 year terms and until
16their successors are elected and have qualified and (ii) if
17the first election for alders aldermen or trustees, after
18approval of the proposition, occurs in an odd numbered year,
19the alders aldermen or trustees elected in that odd numbered
20year shall serve for terms of 4 years and until their
21successors are elected and have qualified, the terms for
22successors to those elected at the first odd numbered year
23election shall be for 4 years and until successors are elected
24and have qualified, the alders aldermen or trustees elected at
25the first even numbered year election next following the first
26odd numbered year election shall serve for terms of one year

 

 

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1and until their successors are elected and have qualified, and
2the terms for successors to those elected at the first odd
3numbered year election shall be 4 years and until their
4successors are elected and have qualified.
5(Source: P.A. 87-1119.)
 
6    (65 ILCS 5/3.1-15-5)  (from Ch. 24, par. 3.1-15-5)
7    Sec. 3.1-15-5. Officers to be elected. In all cities
8incorporated under this Code there shall be elected a mayor,
9alders aldermen, a city clerk, and a city treasurer (except in
10the case of a city of 10,000 or fewer inhabitants that, by
11ordinance, allows for the appointment of a city treasurer by
12the mayor, subject to the advice and consent of the city
13council). In all villages and incorporated towns, there shall
14be elected a president, trustees, and a clerk, except as
15otherwise provided in this Code.
16(Source: P.A. 87-1119; 88-572, eff. 8-11-94.)
 
17    (65 ILCS 5/3.1-15-15)  (from Ch. 24, par. 3.1-15-15)
18    Sec. 3.1-15-15. Holding other offices. A mayor, president,
19alder alderman, trustee, clerk, or treasurer shall not hold
20any other office under the municipal government during the
21term of that office, except when the officer is granted a leave
22of absence from that office or except as otherwise provided in
23Sections 3.1-10-50, 3.1-35-135, and 8-2-9.1. Moreover, an
24officer may serve as a volunteer fireman and receive

 

 

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1compensation for that service.
2(Source: P.A. 99-386, eff. 8-17-15.)
 
3    (65 ILCS 5/3.1-15-25)  (from Ch. 24, par. 3.1-15-25)
4    Sec. 3.1-15-25. Conservators of the peace; service of
5warrants.
6    (a) After receiving a certificate attesting to the
7successful completion of a training course administered by the
8Illinois Law Enforcement Training Standards Board, the mayor,
9alders aldermen, president, trustees, marshal, deputy
10marshals, and policemen in municipalities shall be
11conservators of the peace. Those persons and others authorized
12by ordinance shall have power (i) to arrest or cause to be
13arrested, with or without process, all persons who break the
14peace or are found violating any municipal ordinance or any
15criminal law of the State, (ii) to commit arrested persons for
16examination, (iii) if necessary, to detain arrested persons in
17custody over night or Sunday in any safe place or until they
18can be brought before the proper court, and (iv) to exercise
19all other powers as conservators of the peace prescribed by
20the corporate authorities.
21    (b) All warrants for the violation of municipal ordinances
22or the State criminal law, directed to any person, may be
23served and executed within the limits of a municipality by any
24policeman or marshal of the municipality. For that purpose,
25policemen and marshals have all the common law and statutory

 

 

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1powers of sheriffs.
2(Source: P.A. 90-540, eff. 12-1-97.)
 
3    (65 ILCS 5/3.1-15-30)  (from Ch. 24, par. 3.1-15-30)
4    Sec. 3.1-15-30. Minority representation.
5    (a) Whenever the question of incorporation as a city under
6this Code is submitted for adoption to the electors of any
7territory, village, incorporated town, or city under special
8charter, there may be submitted at the same time for adoption
9or rejection the question of minority representation in the
10city council. The proposition shall be in the following form:
11        Shall minority representation in the city council be
12    adopted?
13    (b) If a majority of the votes cast on the question at any
14election are for minority representation in the city council,
15the members of the city council, except as otherwise provided,
16thereafter shall be elected as provided in Section 3.1-15-35.
17    (c) The city council, at least 30 days before the first day
18fixed by law for the filing of candidate petitions for the next
19general municipal election, shall apportion the city by
20dividing its population, as ascertained by an official
21publication of any national, state, school, or city census, by
22any number not less than 2 nor more than 6. The quotient shall
23be the ratio of representation in the city council. Districts
24shall be formed of contiguous and compact territory and
25contain, as near as practicable, an equal number of

 

 

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1inhabitants.
2    (d) If a majority of the votes cast on the question at any
3election are against minority representation in the city
4council, the members of the city council shall be elected as
5otherwise provided in this Code.
6    (e) At any time after the incorporation of a city under
7this Code, on petition of electors equal in number to
8one-eighth the number of legal votes cast at the next
9preceding general municipal election, the city clerk shall
10certify the question of the adoption or retention of minority
11representation to the proper election authority for submission
12to the electors of that city. The proposition shall be in the
13same form as provided in this Section, except that the word
14"retained" shall be substituted for the word "adopted" when
15appropriate. A question of minority representation, however,
16shall not be submitted more than once within 32 months.
17    (f) If the city council of any city adopting minority
18representation as provided in this Section has not fixed a
19ratio of representation and formed the districts by the time
20specified in this Section, those acts may be done by any later
21city council. All official acts done and ordinances passed by
22a city council elected at large by the electors of a city that
23has adopted a minority representation plan shall be as valid
24and binding as if the alders aldermen had been elected from
25districts.
26(Source: P.A. 87-1119.)
 

 

 

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1    (65 ILCS 5/3.1-15-35)  (from Ch. 24, par. 3.1-15-35)
2    Sec. 3.1-15-35. Alders Aldermen under minority
3representation plan. Every district under a minority
4representation plan shall be entitled to 3 alders aldermen.
5Alders Aldermen shall hold their offices for 4 years and until
6their successors have been elected and qualified, except in
7cities that have adopted a 2 year term under Section
83.1-10-65. There shall be elected in each district as many
9alders aldermen as the district is entitled to. In all of these
10elections for alders aldermen, each elector may cast as many
11votes as there are alders aldermen to be elected in the
12elector's district, or may distribute his or her votes, or
13equal parts of the votes, among the candidates as the elector
14sees fit. The candidate highest in votes is elected if only one
15alder alderman is elected; the candidates highest and next
16highest in votes are elected if only 2 alders aldermen are
17elected; and the 3 highest candidates in votes are elected
18when 3 alders aldermen are elected. Vacancies shall be filled
19as provided in Sections 3.1-10-50 and 3.1-10-55 by either
20interim election or appointment. An appointment to fill a
21vacancy shall be made within 60 days after the vacancy occurs.
22The requirement that an appointment be made within 60 days is
23an exclusive power and function of the State and is a denial
24and limitation under Article VII, Section 6, subsection (h) of
25the Illinois Constitution of the power of a home rule

 

 

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1municipality to require that an appointment be made within a
2different period after the vacancy occurs.
3(Source: P.A. 87-1052; 87-1119; 88-45.)
 
4    (65 ILCS 5/3.1-15-40)  (from Ch. 24, par. 3.1-15-40)
5    Sec. 3.1-15-40. Staggered elections under minority plans.
6In all cities that adopt or have adopted the minority
7representation plan for the election of alders aldermen and
8have not already staggered the terms of their alders aldermen,
9the city council may provide by ordinance that at any ensuing
10general municipal election for city officers the alders
11aldermen in every alternate district shall be elected for one
12term of 2 years and, at the expiration of that term of 2 years,
13for regular terms of 4 years. This Section does not prohibit a
14city from voting in favor of a 2 year term for city officers as
15provided in Section 3.1-10-65. The provisions of the general
16election law shall govern elections under this Section.
17(Source: P.A. 87-1119.)
 
18    (65 ILCS 5/3.1-20-10)  (from Ch. 24, par. 3.1-20-10)
19    Sec. 3.1-20-10. Alders Aldermen; number.
20    (a) Except as otherwise provided in this Section, Section
213.1-20-20, or as otherwise provided in the case of
22alders-at-large aldermen-at-large, the number of alders
23aldermen, when not elected by the minority representation
24plan, shall be determined using the most recent federal

 

 

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1decennial census results as follows:
2        (1) in cities not exceeding 3,000 inhabitants, 6
3    alders aldermen;
4        (2) in cities exceeding 3,000 but not exceeding
5    15,000, 8 alders aldermen;
6        (3) in cities exceeding 15,000 but not exceeding
7    20,000, 10 alders aldermen;
8        (4) in cities exceeding 20,000 but not exceeding
9    50,000, 14 alders aldermen;
10        (5) in cities exceeding 50,000 but not exceeding
11    70,000, 16 alders aldermen;
12        (6) in cities exceeding 70,000 but not exceeding
13    90,000, 18 alders aldermen; and
14        (7) in cities exceeding 90,000 but not exceeding
15    500,000, 20 alders aldermen.
16    (b) Instead of the number of alders aldermen set forth in
17subsection (a), a municipality with 15,000 or more inhabitants
18may adopt, either by ordinance or by resolution, not more than
19one year after the municipality's receipt of the new federal
20decennial census results, the following number of alders
21aldermen: in cities exceeding 15,000 but not exceeding 20,000,
228 alders aldermen; exceeding 20,000 but not exceeding 50,000,
2310 alders aldermen; exceeding 50,000 but not exceeding 70,000,
2414 alders aldermen; exceeding 70,000 but not exceeding 90,000,
2516 alders aldermen; and exceeding 90,000 but not exceeding
26500,000, 18 alders aldermen.

 

 

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1    (c) Instead of the number of alders aldermen set forth in
2subsection (a), a municipality with 40,000 or more inhabitants
3may adopt, either by ordinance or by resolution, not more than
4one year after the municipality's receipt of the new federal
5decennial census results, the following number of alders
6aldermen: in cities exceeding 40,000 but not exceeding 50,000,
716 alders aldermen.
8    (d) If, according to the most recent federal decennial
9census results, the population of a municipality increases or
10decreases under this Section, then the municipality may adopt
11an ordinance or resolution to retain the number of alders
12aldermen that existed before the most recent federal decennial
13census results. The ordinance or resolution may not be adopted
14more than one year after the municipality's receipt of the
15most recent federal decennial census results.
16(Source: P.A. 96-1156, eff. 7-21-10; 97-301, eff. 8-11-11;
1797-1091, eff. 8-24-12.)
 
18    (65 ILCS 5/3.1-20-15)  (from Ch. 24, par. 3.1-20-15)
19    Sec. 3.1-20-15. Division into wards. Except as otherwise
20provided in Section 3.1-20-20, every city shall have one-half
21as many wards as the total number of alders aldermen to which
22the city is entitled. The city council, from time to time,
23shall divide the city into that number of wards.
24(Source: P.A. 87-1119.)
 

 

 

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1    (65 ILCS 5/3.1-20-20)  (from Ch. 24, par. 3.1-20-20)
2    Sec. 3.1-20-20. Alders Aldermen; restrict or reinstate
3number.
4    (a) In a city of less than 100,000 inhabitants, a
5proposition to restrict the number of alders aldermen to
6one-half of the total authorized by Section 3.1-20-10, with
7one alder alderman representing each ward, shall be certified
8by the city clerk to the proper election authorities, who
9shall submit the proposition at an election in accordance with
10the general election law, if a petition requesting that action
11is signed by electors of the city numbering not less than 10%
12of the total vote cast at the last election for mayor of the
13city and the petition is filed with the city clerk.
14    The proposition shall be substantially in the following
15form:
16        Shall (name of city) restrict the number of alders
17    aldermen to (state number) (one-half of the total
18    authorized by Section 3.1-20-10 of the Illinois Municipal
19    Code), with one alder alderman representing each ward?
20    If a majority of those voting on the proposition vote in
21favor of it, all existing aldermanic terms shall expire as of
22the date of the next regular aldermanic election, at which
23time a full complement of alders aldermen shall be elected for
24the full term.
25    (b) In a city of less than 100,000 inhabitants, a
26proposition to restrict the number of alders aldermen to one

 

 

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1alder alderman per ward, with one alder alderman representing
2each ward, plus an additional number of alders aldermen not to
3exceed the number of wards in the city to be elected at large,
4shall be certified by the city clerk to the proper election
5authorities, who shall submit the proposition at an election
6in accordance with the general election law, if a petition
7requesting that action is signed by electors of the city
8numbering not less than 10% of the total vote cast at the last
9election for mayor of the city and the petition is filed with
10the city clerk.
11    The proposition shall be substantially in the following
12form:
13        Shall (name of city) restrict the number of alders
14    aldermen to (number), with one alder alderman representing
15    each ward, plus an additional (number) alder alderman
16    (alders aldermen) to be elected at large?
17    If a majority of those voting on the proposition vote in
18favor of it, all existing aldermanic terms shall expire as of
19the date of the next regular aldermanic election, at which
20time a full complement of alders aldermen shall be elected for
21the full term.
22    (c) In a city of less than 100,000 inhabitants where a
23proposition under subsection (a) or (b) has been successful, a
24proposition to reinstate the number of alders aldermen in
25accordance with Section 3.1-20-10 shall be certified by the
26city clerk to the proper election authorities, who shall

 

 

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1submit the proposition at an election in accordance with the
2general election law, if a petition requesting that action has
3been signed by electors of the city numbering not less than 10%
4of the total vote cast at the last election for mayor of the
5city and the petition has been filed with the city clerk.
6    The election authority must submit the proposition in
7substantially the following form:
8        Shall (name of city) reinstate the number of alders
9    aldermen to (number of alders aldermen allowed by Section
10    3.1-20-10)?
11The election authority must record the votes as "Yes" or "No".
12    If a majority of the electors voting on the proposition
13vote in the affirmative, then, if the restriction in the
14number of alders aldermen has taken effect, all existing
15aldermanic terms shall expire as of the date of the next
16regular aldermanic election, at which time a full complement
17of alders aldermen shall be elected for the full term and
18thereafter terms shall be determined in accordance with
19Section 3.1-20-35.
20(Source: P.A. 92-727, eff. 7-25-02.)
 
21    (65 ILCS 5/3.1-20-22)  (from Ch. 24, par. 3.1-20-22)
22    Sec. 3.1-20-22. Alders Aldermen; staggered terms. In any
23city of less than 100,000 inhabitants, a proposition to
24stagger the terms of alders aldermen, with as nearly as
25possible one-half of the alders aldermen elected every 2

 

 

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1years, shall be certified by the city clerk to the proper
2election authority, who shall submit the proposition at an
3election in accordance with the general election law, if a
4petition requesting that action is signed by electors of the
5city numbering at least 10% of the total vote cast at the last
6election for mayor of the city and is filed with the city
7clerk.
8    The ballot shall have printed on it, but not as a part of
9the proposition submitted, the following information for
10voters: one alder alderman elected from each even-numbered
11ward shall serve a term of 2 years; one alder alderman elected
12from each odd-numbered ward shall serve a term of 4 years.
13    The proposition shall be substantially in the following
14form:
15        Shall (name of city) adopt a system of staggered terms
16    for alders aldermen?
17    If a majority of those voting on the proposition vote in
18favor of it, then at the next regular election for alders
19aldermen one alder alderman shall be elected from each
20even-numbered ward for a term of 2 years and one alder alderman
21shall be elected from each odd-numbered ward for a term of 4
22years. Thereafter, their successors shall be elected for terms
23of 4 years.
24(Source: P.A. 87-1119.)
 
25    (65 ILCS 5/3.1-20-25)  (from Ch. 24, par. 3.1-20-25)

 

 

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1    Sec. 3.1-20-25. Redistricting a city.
2    (a) In the formation of wards, the number of inhabitants
3of the city immediately preceding the division of the city
4into wards shall be as nearly equal in population, and the
5wards shall be of as compact and contiguous territory, as
6practicable. Wards shall be created in a manner so that, as far
7as practicable, no precinct shall be divided between 2 or more
8wards.
9    (b) Whenever an official decennial census shows that a
10city contains more or fewer wards than it is entitled to, the
11city council of the city, by ordinance, shall redistrict the
12city into as many wards as the city is entitled. This
13redistricting shall be completed not less than 30 days before
14the first day set by the general election law for the filing of
15candidate petitions for the next succeeding election for city
16officers. At this election there shall be elected the number
17of alders aldermen to which the city is entitled, except as
18provided in subsection (c).
19    (c) If it appears from any official decennial census that
20it is necessary to redistrict under subsection (b) or for any
21other reason, the city council shall immediately proceed to
22redistrict the city and shall hold the next city election in
23accordance with the new redistricting. At this election the
24alders aldermen whose terms of office are not expiring shall
25be considered alders aldermen for the new wards respectively
26in which their residences are situated. At this election, in a

 

 

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1municipality that is not a newly incorporated municipality, a
2candidate for alder alderman may be elected from any ward that
3contains a part of the ward in which he or she resided at least
4one year next preceding the election that follows the
5redistricting, and, if elected, that person may be reelected
6from the new ward he or she represents if he or she resides in
7that ward for at least one year next preceding reelection. If
8there are 2 or more alders aldermen with terms of office not
9expiring and residing in the same ward under the new
10redistricting, the alder alderman who holds over for that ward
11shall be determined by lot in the presence of the city council,
12in the manner directed by the council, and all other alders
13aldermen shall fill their unexpired terms as alders-at-large
14aldermen-at-large. The alders-at-large aldermen-at-large, if
15any, shall have the same powers and duties as all other alders
16aldermen, but upon the expiration of their terms the offices
17of alders-at-large aldermen-at-large shall be abolished.
18    (d) If the redistricting results in one or more wards in
19which no alders aldermen reside whose terms of office have not
20expired, 2 alders aldermen shall be elected in accordance with
21Section 3.1-20-35, unless the city elected only one alder
22alderman per ward pursuant to a referendum under subsection
23(a) of Section 3.1-20-20.
24    (e) A redistricting ordinance that has decreased the
25number of wards of a city because of a decrease in population
26of the city shall not be effective if, not less than 60 days

 

 

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1before the time fixed for the next succeeding general
2municipal election, an official census is officially published
3that shows that the city has regained a population that
4entitles it to the number of wards that it had just before the
5passage of the last redistricting ordinance.
6(Source: P.A. 97-1091, eff. 8-24-12.)
 
7    (65 ILCS 5/3.1-20-30)  (from Ch. 24, par. 3.1-20-30)
8    Sec. 3.1-20-30. Validation of actions. After an official
9census is officially published, if a city is divided into a
10greater number of wards and has elected a greater number of
11alders aldermen than the city is entitled to, the division and
12election shall, nevertheless, be valid and all acts,
13resolutions, and ordinances of the city council of that city,
14if in other respects in compliance with law, are valid.
15(Source: P.A. 87-1119.)
 
16    (65 ILCS 5/3.1-20-35)  (from Ch. 24, par. 3.1-20-35)
17    Sec. 3.1-20-35. Determining terms.
18    (a) Alders Aldermen elected at the first election for city
19officers after the election of alders aldermen for the initial
20terms provided for in Section 2-2-11 shall draw lots to
21determine which alders aldermen in each ward shall hold office
22for a 4 year term, and until a successor is elected and has
23qualified, and which alders aldermen in each ward shall hold
24office for a 2 year term, and until a successor is elected and

 

 

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1has qualified. All alders aldermen thereafter elected shall
2hold office for a term of 4 years, and until their successors
3are elected and have qualified, except in cities that adopt a 2
4year term under Section 3.1-10-65 and except as otherwise
5provided in Section 3.1-20-20.
6    (b) If a city that has had the minority representation
7plan has voted not to retain the plan, then at the first
8election for city officers following the vote 2 alders
9aldermen shall be elected from each ward in the city and their
10terms shall be staggered in the manner set forth in subsection
11(a). The tenure of these alders aldermen and their successors
12shall be the same as that stated in subsection (a).
13(Source: P.A. 87-1119.)
 
14    (65 ILCS 5/3.1-20-40)  (from Ch. 24, par. 3.1-20-40)
15    Sec. 3.1-20-40. Other officers; election rather than
16appointment. Instead of providing for the appointment of the
17following officers as provided in Section 3.1-30-5, the city
18council, in its discretion, may provide by ordinance passed by
19a two-thirds vote of all the alders aldermen elected for the
20election by the electors of the city of a city collector, a
21city marshal, a city superintendent of streets, a corporation
22counsel, a city comptroller, or any of them, and any other
23officers which the city council considers necessary or
24expedient. By ordinance or resolution, to take effect at the
25end of the current fiscal year, the city council, by a like

 

 

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1vote, may discontinue any office so created and devolve the
2duties of that office on any other city officer. After
3discontinuance of an office, no officer filling that office
4before its discontinuance shall have any claim against the
5city for salary alleged to accrue after the date of
6discontinuance.
7(Source: P.A. 87-1119.)
 
8    (65 ILCS 5/3.1-20-45)
9    Sec. 3.1-20-45. Nonpartisan primary elections; uncontested
10office. A city incorporated under this Code that elects
11municipal officers at nonpartisan primary and general
12elections shall conduct the elections as provided in the
13Election Code, except that no office for which nomination is
14uncontested shall be included on the primary ballot and no
15primary shall be held for that office. For the purposes of this
16Section, an office is uncontested when not more than 4 persons
17to be nominated for each office have timely filed valid
18nominating papers seeking nomination for the election to that
19office.
20    Notwithstanding the preceding paragraph, when a person (i)
21who has not timely filed valid nomination papers and (ii) who
22intends to become a write-in candidate for nomination for any
23office for which nomination is uncontested files a written
24statement or notice of that intent with the proper election
25official with whom the nomination papers for that office are

 

 

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1filed, if the write-in candidate becomes the fifth candidate
2filed, a primary ballot must be prepared and a primary must be
3held for the office. The statement or notice must be filed on
4or before the 61st day before the consolidated primary
5election. The statement must contain (i) the name and address
6of the person intending to become a write-in candidate, (ii) a
7statement that the person intends to become a write-in
8candidate, and (iii) the office the person is seeking as a
9write-in candidate. An election authority has no duty to
10conduct a primary election or prepare a primary ballot unless
11a statement meeting the requirements of this paragraph is
12filed in a timely manner.
13    If there is a primary election, then candidates shall be
14placed on the ballot for the next succeeding general municipal
15election in the following manner:
16        (1) If one officer is to be elected, then the 2
17    candidates who receive the highest number of votes shall
18    be placed on the ballot for the next succeeding general
19    municipal election.
20        (2) If 2 alders aldermen are to be elected at large,
21    then the 4 candidates who receive the highest number of
22    votes shall be placed on the ballot for the next
23    succeeding general municipal election.
24        (3) If 3 alders aldermen are to be elected at large,
25    then the 6 candidates who receive the highest number of
26    votes shall be placed on the ballot for the next

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 112 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1    succeeding general municipal election.
2    The name of a write-in candidate may not be placed on the
3ballot for the next succeeding general municipal election
4unless he or she receives a number of votes in the primary
5election that equals or exceeds the number of signatures
6required on a petition for nomination for that office or that
7exceeds the number of votes received by at least one of the
8candidates whose names were printed on the primary ballot for
9nomination for or election to the same office.
10(Source: P.A. 97-81, eff. 7-5-11.)
 
11    (65 ILCS 5/3.1-25-70)  (from Ch. 24, par. 3.1-25-70)
12    Sec. 3.1-25-70. Trustees under special Acts.
13    (a) In every village and incorporated town incorporated
14and existing under any special Act that, before June 4, 1909,
15pursuant to any special Act, annually elected members of its
16legislative body, the electors in the village or incorporated
17town, instead of the legislative body now provided for by law,
18shall elect 6 trustees. They shall hold their offices until
19their respective successors are elected and have qualified. At
20the first meeting of this board of 6 trustees, the terms of
21office of the trustees shall be staggered, and thereafter
22shall be for the same length of time as provided for alders
23aldermen in Section 3.1-20-35.
24    (b) The electors of the village or incorporated town may,
25however, adopt a 2 year term for their trustees as provided in

 

 

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1Section 3.1-10-65. If this 2 year term is adopted, then at the
2next general municipal election in the adopting village or
3incorporated town, 3 trustees shall be elected, and they shall
4hold their offices for terms of one year each. In the next
5succeeding year, and in each year thereafter, 3 trustees shall
6be elected in the adopting village or incorporated town, and
7they shall hold their offices for terms of 2 years each.
8    (c) A village or incorporated town that, before January 1,
91942, has adopted a 2 year term for its trustees and is now
10electing 3 trustees each year shall continue to elect 3
11trustees each year for a term of 2 years each. A village or
12incorporated town that, before January 1, 1942, has adopted a
132 year term for its trustees but is not now electing 3 trustees
14each year shall elect 3 trustees at the next general municipal
15election in that municipality, and they shall hold their
16offices for terms of one year each. In the next succeeding
17year, and in each year thereafter, 3 trustees shall be
18elected, and they shall hold their offices for terms of 2 years
19each.
20    (d) This Section shall not apply to or change the method of
21election of the members of the legislative body of
22incorporated towns that have superseded civil townships.
23(Source: P.A. 87-1119.)
 
24    (65 ILCS 5/3.1-25-75)  (from Ch. 24, par. 3.1-25-75)
25    Sec. 3.1-25-75. Districts; election of trustees.

 

 

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1    (a) After a village with a population of 5,000 or more
2adopts the provisions of this Section in the manner prescribed
3in Section 3.1-25-80, the board of trustees by ordinance shall
4divide and, whenever necessary thereafter, shall redistrict
5the village into 6 compact and contiguous districts of
6approximately equal population as required by law. This
7redistricting shall be completed not less than 30 days before
8the first day for the filing of nominating petitions for the
9next succeeding election of village officers held in
10accordance with the general election law.
11    (b) Each of the districts shall be represented by one
12trustee who shall have been an actual resident of the district
13for at least 6 months immediately before his or her election in
14the first election after a redistricting, unless the trustee
15is a resident of a newly incorporated municipality. Only the
16electors of a district shall elect the trustee from that
17district.
18    (c) The provisions of this Code relating to terms of
19office of alders aldermen in cities shall also apply to the
20terms of office of trustees under this Section.
21(Source: P.A. 95-646, eff. 1-1-08.)
 
22    (65 ILCS 5/3.1-35-35)  (from Ch. 24, par. 3.1-35-35)
23    Sec. 3.1-35-35. Mayor or president pro tem; temporary
24chairman.
25    (a) If the mayor or president is temporarily absent

 

 

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1because of an incapacity to perform official duties, but the
2incapacity does not create a vacancy in the office, the
3corporate authorities shall elect one of their members to act
4as mayor or president pro tem. The mayor or president pro tem,
5during this absence or disability, shall perform the duties
6and possess all the rights and powers of the mayor or president
7but shall not be entitled to vote both as mayor or president
8pro tem and as alder alderman or trustee.
9    (b) In the absence of the mayor, president, acting mayor
10or president, or mayor or president pro tem, the corporate
11authorities may elect one of their members to act as a
12temporary chairman. The temporary chairman shall have only the
13powers of a presiding officer and a right to vote only in the
14capacity as alder alderman or trustee on any ordinance,
15resolution, or motion.
16(Source: P.A. 87-1119.)
 
17    (65 ILCS 5/3.1-40-5)  (from Ch. 24, par. 3.1-40-5)
18    Sec. 3.1-40-5. Composition. The city council shall consist
19of the mayor and alders aldermen. It shall meet in accordance
20with the Open Meetings Act. It shall keep a journal of its own
21proceedings.
22(Source: P.A. 87-1119.)
 
23    (65 ILCS 5/3.1-40-10)  (from Ch. 24, par. 3.1-40-10)
24    Sec. 3.1-40-10. Judge of elections. The city council shall

 

 

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1be the sole judge of the election to office of the alders
2aldermen. It shall also be the sole judge whether under
3Section 3.1-10-5 alders aldermen are eligible to hold their
4offices. A court, however, shall not be prohibited from
5hearing and determining a proceeding in quo warranto.
6(Source: P.A. 87-1119.)
 
7    (65 ILCS 5/3.1-40-15)  (from Ch. 24, par. 3.1-40-15)
8    Sec. 3.1-40-15. Rules; expulsion. The city council shall
9determine its own rules of proceeding and punish its members
10for disorderly conduct. With the concurrence of two-thirds of
11the alders aldermen then holding office, it may expel an alder
12alderman from a meeting, but not a second time for the same
13incident.
14(Source: P.A. 87-1119.)
 
15    (65 ILCS 5/3.1-40-25)  (from Ch. 24, par. 3.1-40-25)
16    Sec. 3.1-40-25. Meetings. The city council may prescribe,
17by ordinance, the times and places of the council meetings and
18the manner in which special council meetings may be called.
19The mayor or any 3 alders aldermen may call special meetings of
20the city council. In addition to any notice requirement
21prescribed by the city council, public notice of meetings must
22be given as prescribed in Sections 2.02 and 2.03 of the Open
23Meetings Act.
24(Source: P.A. 87-1119.)
 

 

 

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1    (65 ILCS 5/3.1-40-30)  (from Ch. 24, par. 3.1-40-30)
2    Sec. 3.1-40-30. Mayor presides. The mayor shall preside at
3all meetings of the city council. Except as provided in
4Articles 4 and 5 of this Code, the mayor shall not vote on any
5ordinance, resolution, or motion except the following: (i)
6where the vote of the alders aldermen has resulted in a tie;
7(ii) where one-half of the alders aldermen elected have voted
8in favor of an ordinance, resolution, or motion even though
9there is no tie vote; or (iii) where a vote greater than a
10majority of the corporate authorities is required by this Code
11or an ordinance to adopt an ordinance, resolution, or motion.
12Nothing in this Section shall deprive an acting mayor or mayor
13pro tem from voting in the capacity as alder alderman, but he
14or she shall not be entitled to another vote in the capacity as
15acting mayor or mayor pro tem.
16(Source: P.A. 87-1119.)
 
17    (65 ILCS 5/3.1-40-35)  (from Ch. 24, par. 3.1-40-35)
18    Sec. 3.1-40-35. Deferral of committee reports. Upon the
19request of any 2 alders aldermen present, any report of a
20committee of the council shall be deferred for final action to
21the next regular meeting of the council after the report is
22made.
23(Source: P.A. 87-1119.)
 

 

 

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1    (65 ILCS 5/3.1-40-40)  (from Ch. 24, par. 3.1-40-40)
2    Sec. 3.1-40-40. Vote required. The passage of all
3ordinances for whatever purpose, and of any resolution or
4motion (i) to create any liability against a city or (ii) for
5the expenditure or appropriation of its money shall require
6the concurrence of a majority of all members then holding
7office on the city council, including the mayor, unless
8otherwise expressly provided by this Code or any other Act
9governing the passage of any ordinance, resolution, or motion.
10Where the council consists of an odd number of alders
11aldermen, however, the vote of the majority of the alders
12aldermen shall be sufficient to pass an ordinance. The passage
13of an ordinance, resolution, or motion to sell any school
14property shall require the concurrence of three-fourths of all
15alders aldermen then holding office. The yeas and nays shall
16be taken upon the question of the passage of the designated
17ordinances, resolutions, or motions and recorded in the
18journal of the city council. In addition, the corporate
19authorities at any meeting may by unanimous consent take a
20single vote by yeas and nays on the several questions of the
21passage of any 2 or more of the designated ordinances, orders,
22resolutions, or motions placed together for voting purposes in
23a single group. The single vote shall be entered separately in
24the journal under the designation "omnibus vote", and in that
25event the clerk may enter the words "omnibus vote" or "consent
26agenda" in the journal in each case instead of entering the

 

 

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1names of the members of city council voting "yea" and those
2voting "nay" on the passage of each of the designated
3ordinances, orders, resolutions, and motions included in the
4omnibus group or consent agenda. The taking of a single or
5omnibus vote and the entries of the words "omnibus vote" or
6"consent agenda" in the journal shall be a sufficient
7compliance with the requirements of this Section to all
8intents and purposes and with like effect as if the vote in
9each case had been taken separately by yeas and nays on the
10question of the passage of each ordinance, order, resolution,
11and motion included in the omnibus group and separately
12recorded in the journal. Likewise, the yeas and nays shall be
13taken upon the question of the passage of any other resolution
14or motion at the request of any alder alderman and shall be
15recorded in the journal.
16(Source: P.A. 87-1119.)
 
17    (65 ILCS 5/3.1-40-50)  (from Ch. 24, par. 3.1-40-50)
18    Sec. 3.1-40-50. Reconsideration; passing over veto. Every
19resolution and motion specified in Section 3.1-40-45, and
20every ordinance, that is returned to the city council by the
21mayor shall be reconsidered by the city council at the next
22regular meeting following the regular meeting at which the
23city council receives the mayor's written objection. If, after
24reconsideration, two-thirds of all the alders aldermen then
25holding office on the city council agree at that regular

 

 

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1meeting to pass an ordinance, resolution, or motion,
2notwithstanding the mayor's refusal to approve it, then it
3shall be effective. The vote on the question of passage over
4the mayor's veto shall be by yeas and nays and shall be
5recorded in the journal.
6    This Section does not apply to municipalities with more
7than 500,000 inhabitants.
8(Source: P.A. 91-489, eff. 1-1-00.)
 
9    (65 ILCS 5/3.1-40-55)  (from Ch. 24, par. 3.1-40-55)
10    Sec. 3.1-40-55. Reconsideration; requisites. No vote of
11the city council shall be reconsidered or rescinded at a
12special meeting unless there are present at the special
13meeting at least as many alders aldermen as were present when
14the vote was taken.
15(Source: P.A. 87-1119.)
 
16    (65 ILCS 5/3.1-45-5)  (from Ch. 24, par. 3.1-45-5)
17    Sec. 3.1-45-5. Composition; manner of acting. The board of
18trustees shall consist of the president and trustees and,
19except as otherwise provided in this Code, shall exercise the
20same powers and perform the same duties as the city council in
21cities. It shall pass ordinances, resolutions, and motions in
22the same manner as a city council. The president of the board
23of trustees may exercise the same veto power and powers in
24Section 3.1-40-30, and with like effect, as the mayor of a

 

 

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1city. The trustees may pass motions, resolutions, and
2ordinances over the president's veto in like manner as the
3alders aldermen of a city council.
4(Source: P.A. 87-1119.)
 
5    (65 ILCS 5/3.1-45-15)  (from Ch. 24, par. 3.1-45-15)
6    Sec. 3.1-45-15. Powers and duties. The trustees, except as
7otherwise provided in this Code, shall perform the duties and
8exercise the powers conferred upon the alders aldermen of a
9city.
10(Source: P.A. 87-1119.)
 
11    (65 ILCS 5/3.1-55-5)  (from Ch. 24, par. 3.1-55-5)
12    Sec. 3.1-55-5. Certificate of appointment. Whenever a
13person has been appointed or elected to office, the mayor or
14president shall issue a certificate of appointment or
15election, under the corporate seal, to the municipal clerk.
16All officers elected or appointed under this Code, except the
17municipal clerk, alder alderman, mayor, trustees, and
18president, shall be commissioned by warrant, under the
19corporate seal, signed by the municipal clerk and the mayor,
20acting mayor, or mayor pro tem, or presiding officer of the
21corporate authorities.
22(Source: P.A. 87-1119.)
 
23    (65 ILCS 5/4-1-2)  (from Ch. 24, par. 4-1-2)

 

 

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1    Sec. 4-1-2. Definitions. In this Article, unless the
2context otherwise requires:
3    (a) Any office or officer named in Any act referred to in
4this Article, when applied to cities or villages under the
5commission form of municipal government, means the office or
6officer having the same functions or duties under this Article
7or under ordinances passed by authority of this Article.
8    (b) "Commissioner", "alder alderman", or "village trustee"
9means commissioner when applied to duties under this Article.
10    (c) "City council", "board of trustees", or "corporate
11authorities" means "council" when applied to duties under this
12Article.
13    (d) "Franchise" includes every special privilege or right
14in the streets, alleys, highways, bridges, subways, viaducts,
15air, waters, public places, and other public property that
16does not belong to the citizens generally by common right,
17whether granted by the State or the city or village.
18    (e) "City" includes village.
19    (f) "Municipal" or "municipality" means either city or
20village.
21    (g) "Treating" means the entertaining of a person with
22food, drink, tobacco, or drugs.
23    (h) "Treats" means the food, drink, tobacco, or drugs,
24requested, offered, given, or received, in treating or for the
25entertainment of a person.
26(Source: P.A. 87-1119.)
 

 

 

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1    (65 ILCS 5/4-10-1)  (from Ch. 24, par. 4-10-1)
2    Sec. 4-10-1. Any municipality, which has operated for more
3than 2 years under the commission form of municipal
4government, may abandon its operation under this article and
5accept the provisions of the general law of the State then
6applicable to municipalities, by proceedings as follows:
7    When a petition signed by electors of the municipality
8equal in number to at least 25% of the number of votes cast for
9the candidates for mayor at the last preceding general
10quadrennial municipal election is filed with the municipal
11clerk, the clerk shall certify the proposition to the proper
12election authorities for submission to the electors of the
13municipality. The proposition shall be in substantially the
14following form:
15-------------------------------------------------------------
16    Shall the city (or village)       YES
17of.... retain the commission     ----------------------------
18form of municipal government?         NO
19-------------------------------------------------------------
20    In municipalities which have adopted the City Election
21Law, however, this proposition shall be filed with the clerk
22of that board. However, in municipalities with less than
2350,000 inhabitants this proposition shall only be submitted
24within the year preceding the expiration of the terms of
25office of the elective officers of the municipality and shall

 

 

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1not be submitted more often than once in that year. In
2municipalities with 50,000 or more inhabitants this
3proposition shall not be submitted more often than once in 22
4months.
5    If a majority of the votes cast on this proposition are
6against the proposition, the officers elected at the next
7succeeding general municipal election shall be those then
8prescribed in Article 3. Upon the qualification of these
9officers the municipality shall become a city or village under
10this Code, but this change shall not affect in any manner or
11degree the property rights or liabilities of any nature of the
12municipality, but shall merely extend to the change in its
13form of government.
14    The first city council or board of trustees elected after
15the abandonment of the commission form of municipal government
16shall have the same number of alders aldermen or trustees as
17were provided in the municipality at the time of its adoption
18of this article, and the municipality shall have the same ward
19and precinct boundaries.
20(Source: P.A. 81-1489.)
 
21    (65 ILCS 5/5-1-4)  (from Ch. 24, par. 5-1-4)
22    Sec. 5-1-4. Procedure for adopting managerial form of
23government.
24    (a) Cities and villages described in Section 5-1-1, in
25order to vest themselves with the managerial form of municipal

 

 

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1government, shall act in accordance with the procedure
2provided in Sections 5-1-4 through 5-1-11 unless modified
3elsewhere in this Article 5. In cities that are operating
4under Section 3.1-20-10 and villages operating under Section
53.1-25-75 at the time of the adoption of this Article 5, the
6forms of petition and ballot prescribed in Sections 5-1-5 and
75-1-7 may at the option of the petitioners be modified to
8contain the following additional proposition:
9        Shall (name of city or village), if it adopts the
10    managerial form of municipal government, continue to elect
11    alders aldermen (or trustees) from wards (or districts)?
12    (b) In any city operating under Section 3.1-20-10 at the
13time of adoption of this Article 5, at the option of the
14petitioners and in addition to the optional proposition
15provided for in subsection (a), the forms of petition and
16ballot prescribed in Sections 5-1-6 and 5-1-8 may be further
17modified to contain the following additional proposition:
18        Shall only one alder alderman hereafter be elected
19    from each ward if (name of city) adopts the managerial
20    form of municipal government and also elects to continue
21    the aldermanic organization for the city council?
22    (c) If 2 or more forms of petition allowed under this
23Section are presented to the chief judge of the circuit court
24or any judge of that circuit designated by the chief judge, the
25judge shall cause only the question or questions contained in
26the first petition so presented to be submitted to referendum,

 

 

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1if he or she finds that the petition is in proper form and
2legally sufficient.
3    (d) If a majority of the electors voting on the
4proposition vote to adopt the managerial form of municipal
5government, then this Article 5 shall become effective in the
6city or village upon the date of the next general municipal
7election at which any corporate authority is elected. The
8operation of the managerial form of municipal government, for
9purposes of voting on the question to abandon set out in
10Section 5-5-1, however, shall not be deemed to begin until a
11manager is appointed.
12    (e) The city council or board of trustees of a city or
13village that adopts the provisions of this Article 5 under
14this Section may, if it so desires, by the adoption of an
15ordinance immediately after the adoption of this Article 5 has
16been proclaimed, appoint a city or village manager and
17reorganize the administration of the municipality in
18conformance with this Article 5. This Article 5, except as to
19the membership of the council in cities or villages in which
20representation by wards or districts has not been retained,
21shall be in effect upon the proclamation of the results of the
22adopting referendum.
23(Source: P.A. 87-1119.)
 
24    (65 ILCS 5/5-2-1)  (from Ch. 24, par. 5-2-1)
25    Sec. 5-2-1. If a city or village adopts the managerial

 

 

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1form of municipal government and also elects to choose alders
2aldermen or trustees, as the case may be, from wards or
3districts, then the city council shall be constituted as
4provided in Sections 5-2-2 through 5-2-10 and the village
5board shall be constituted as provided in Section 5-2-11 and
6the incumbent alders aldermen, trustees, mayor, president,
7clerk and treasurer shall continue in office until expiration
8of their present terms. If a city has voted to elect only one
9alder alderman from each ward then no election for a successor
10for the alder alderman from each ward whose term next expires
11shall be held, and upon the expiration of the terms of the
12alders aldermen having the longest time to serve at the time of
13adoption of this Article 5 only one successor shall be elected
14from each ward. In case a city votes to elect only one alder
15alderman from each ward, the number of alders aldermen
16prescribed by Section 5-2-2 shall be halved, for the purposes
17of this Article 5 and the provisions of Section 5-2-4
18prescribing the number of wards shall not apply but such city
19shall have an equal number of wards and alders aldermen. The
20mayor of a city and the president of a village board shall be
21elected from the city or village at large.
22(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
 
23    (65 ILCS 5/5-2-2)  (from Ch. 24, par. 5-2-2)
24    Sec. 5-2-2. Except as otherwise provided in Section 5-2-3,
25the number of alders aldermen, when not elected by the

 

 

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1minority representation plan, shall be as follows: In cities
2not exceeding 3,000 inhabitants, 6 alders aldermen; exceeding
33,000, but not exceeding 15,000, 8 alders aldermen; exceeding
415,000 but not exceeding 20,000, 10 alders aldermen; exceeding
520,000 but not exceeding 30,000, 14 alders aldermen; and 2
6additional alders aldermen for every 20,000 inhabitants over
730,000. In all cities of less than 500,000, 20 alders aldermen
8shall be the maximum number permitted except as otherwise
9provided in the case of alders-at-large aldermen-at-large. No
10redistricting shall be required in order to reduce the number
11of alders aldermen heretofore provided for. Two alders
12aldermen shall be elected to represent each ward.
13    If it appears from any census specified in Section 5-2-5
14and taken not earlier than 1940 that any city has the requisite
15number of inhabitants to authorize it to increase the number
16of alders aldermen, the city council shall immediately proceed
17to redistrict the city in accordance with the provisions of
18Section 5-2-5, and it shall hold the next city election in
19accordance with the new redistricting. At this election the
20alders aldermen whose terms of office are not expiring shall
21be considered alders aldermen for the new wards respectively
22in which their residences are situated. At this election a
23candidate for alder alderman may be elected from any ward that
24contains a part of the ward in which he or she resided at least
25one year next preceding the election that follows the
26redistricting, and, if elected, that person may be reelected

 

 

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1from the new ward he or she represents if he or she resides in
2that ward for at least one year next preceding reelection. If
3there are 2 or more alders aldermen with terms of office not
4expiring and residing in the same ward under the new
5redistricting, the alder alderman who holds over for that ward
6shall be determined by lot in the presence of the city council,
7in whatever manner the council shall direct and all other
8alders aldermen shall fill their unexpired terms as
9alders-at-large aldermen-at-large. The alders-at-large
10aldermen-at-large, if any, shall have the same power and
11duties as all other alders aldermen but upon expiration of
12their terms the offices of alders-at-large aldermen-at-large
13shall be abolished.
14    If the re-districting results in one or more wards in
15which no alders aldermen reside whose terms of office have not
16expired, 2 alders aldermen shall be elected in accordance with
17the provisions of Section 5-2-8.
18(Source: P.A. 93-847, eff. 7-30-04.)
 
19    (65 ILCS 5/5-2-3)  (from Ch. 24, par. 5-2-3)
20    Sec. 5-2-3. In any city or village of less than 100,000
21inhabitants, a proposition to restrict the number of alders
22aldermen to one-half of the total authorized by Section 5-2-2,
23with one alder alderman representing each ward, shall be
24certified by the municipal clerk to the proper election
25authority who shall submit the proposition at an election in

 

 

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1accordance with the general election law, if a petition
2requesting such action is signed by electors of the
3municipality numbering not less than 10% of the total vote
4cast at the last election for mayor or president of the board
5of trustees of the municipality, and is filed with the city or
6village clerk in accordance with the general election law.
7    The proposition shall be substantially in the following
8form:
9-------------------------------------------------------------
10    Shall the City (or Village) of
11........ restrict the number of        YES
12 alders aldermen to one-half of the total
13 authorized by Section 5-2-2 of the  ------------------------
14 Illinois Municipal Code, with one       NO
15 alder alderman representing each ward?
16-------------------------------------------------------------
17    If a majority of those voting upon the proposition vote in
18favor of it, all existing aldermanic terms shall expire as of
19the date of the next regular aldermanic election, at which
20time a full complement of alders aldermen shall be elected for
21the full term.
22(Source: P.A. 81-1489.)
 
23    (65 ILCS 5/5-2-3.1)  (from Ch. 24, par. 5-2-3.1)
24    Sec. 5-2-3.1. In any municipality in which only one alder
25alderman is elected from each ward, a proposition to stagger

 

 

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1the terms of alders aldermen, with as nearly as possible
2one-half of the alders aldermen elected every 2 years, shall
3be certified to the proper election authority who shall submit
4the proposition at an election in accordance with the general
5election law, if a petition requesting such action is signed
6by electors of the municipality numbering at least 10% of the
7total vote cast at the last election for mayor or president of
8the board of trustees of the municipality and is filed with the
9municipal clerk.
10    The proposition shall be substantially in the following
11form:
12-------------------------------------------------------------
13    Shall the City (or Village) of        YES
14............ adopt a system of    ---------------------------
15 staggered terms for alders aldermen?            NO
16-------------------------------------------------------------
17    If a majority of those voting on the proposition vote in
18favor of it, at the next regular election for alders aldermen,
19one alder alderman shall be elected from each even-numbered
20ward for a term of 2 years, and one alder alderman shall be
21elected from each odd-numbered ward for a term of 4 years.
22Thereafter, their successors shall be elected for terms of 4
23years.
24(Source: P.A. 81-1489.)
 
25    (65 ILCS 5/5-2-4)  (from Ch. 24, par. 5-2-4)

 

 

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1    Sec. 5-2-4. Except as otherwise provided in Section 5-2-3,
2every city shall have one-half as many wards as the total
3number of alders aldermen to which the city is entitled. The
4city council, from time to time shall divide the city into that
5number of wards. In the formation of wards the population of
6each shall be as nearly equal, and the wards shall be of as
7compact and contiguous territory, as practicable.
8(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
 
9    (65 ILCS 5/5-2-5)  (from Ch. 24, par. 5-2-5)
10    Sec. 5-2-5. Whenever an official publication of any
11national, state, school, or city census shows that any city
12contains more or less wards than it is entitled to, the city
13council of the city, by ordinance, shall redistrict the city
14into as many wards only as the city is entitled. This
15redistricting shall be completed not less than 30 days before
16the first date fixed by law for the filing of candidate
17petitions for the next succeeding election for city officers.
18At this election there shall be elected the number of alders
19aldermen to which the city is entitled.
20(Source: P.A. 81-1489.)
 
21    (65 ILCS 5/5-2-7)  (from Ch. 24, par. 5-2-7)
22    Sec. 5-2-7. If, after a specified census is officially
23published, any city is divided into a greater number of wards
24and has elected a greater number of alders aldermen than the

 

 

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1city is entitled, nevertheless such division and election
2shall be valid and all acts, resolutions, and ordinances of
3the city council of such city, if in other respects in
4compliance with law, are valid.
5(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
 
6    (65 ILCS 5/5-2-8)  (from Ch. 24, par. 5-2-8)
7    Sec. 5-2-8. Staggered terms; tenure.
8    (a) Alders Aldermen elected at the first election for city
9officers after the election of alders aldermen for the initial
10terms provided for in Section 2-2-11 shall draw lots to
11determine (i) which of the alders aldermen in each ward shall
12hold for a 4 year term and until a successor is elected and has
13qualified and (ii) which in each ward shall hold for a 2 year
14term and until a successor is elected and has qualified. All
15alders aldermen elected after that first election shall hold
16office for a term of 4 years and until their successors are
17elected and have qualified, except in cities that adopt a 2
18year term as provided in Section 3.1-10-65 and except as is
19otherwise provided in Section 5-2-3.
20    (b) If a city that has had the minority representation
21plan has voted not to retain the plan, then, at the first
22election for city officers following the vote, 2 alders
23aldermen shall be elected from each ward in the city. Their
24terms shall be staggered by the process specified in this
25Section. The tenure of these alders aldermen and their

 

 

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1successors shall be the same as that stated in subsection (a).
2(Source: P.A. 87-1119.)
 
3    (65 ILCS 5/5-2-11)  (from Ch. 24, par. 5-2-11)
4    Sec. 5-2-11. In any village which adopts this Article 5,
5the board of trustees by ordinance shall divide and, whenever
6necessary thereafter, shall redistrict the village into 6
7compact and contiguous districts of approximately equal
8population.
9    Each of the districts shall be represented by one trustee
10who shall have been an actual resident of the district for at
11least 6 months prior to his election, unless the trustee is a
12resident of a newly incorporated municipality. Only the
13electors of a district shall elect the trustee from that
14district.
15    The provisions of Section 5-2-8 relating to terms of
16office of alders aldermen in cities shall also apply to the
17terms of office of trustees under this section.
18(Source: P.A. 95-646, eff. 1-1-08.)
 
19    (65 ILCS 5/5-2-12)  (from Ch. 24, par. 5-2-12)
20    Sec. 5-2-12. Alders Aldermen or trustees elected at large;
21vacancies; mayor or president to preside.
22    (a) If a city or village adopts the managerial form of
23municipal government but does not elect to choose alders
24aldermen or trustees from wards or districts, then the

 

 

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1following provisions of this Section shall be applicable.
2    (b) The city council shall be elected at large. In cities
3of less than 50,000 population, the council shall consist of
4(i) the mayor and 4 councilmen or (ii) the mayor and 6
5councilmen if the size of the city council is increased under
6subsection (k). In cities of at least 50,000 but less than
7100,000 population, the council shall consist of the mayor and
86 councilmen. In cities of at least 100,000 but not more than
9500,000 population, the council shall consist of the mayor and
108 councilmen.
11    (c) Except in villages that were governed by Article 4
12immediately before the adoption of the managerial form of
13municipal government, the village board shall be elected at
14large and shall consist of a president and the number of
15trustees provided for in Section 5-2-15 or 5-2-17, whichever
16is applicable.
17    (d) The term of office of the mayor and councilmen shall be
184 years, provided that in cities of less than 50,000, the 2
19councilmen receiving the lowest vote at the first election
20shall serve for 2 years only; in cities of at least 50,000 but
21less than 100,000, the 3 councilmen receiving the lowest vote
22at the first election shall serve for 2 years only; and in
23cities of at least 100,000 but not more than 500,000, the 4
24councilmen receiving the lowest vote at the first election
25shall serve for 2 years only.
26    (e) The election of councilmen shall be every 2 years.

 

 

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1After the first election, only 2 councilmen in cities of less
2than 50,000, 3 councilmen in cities of at least 50,000 but less
3than 100,000, or 4 councilmen in cities of at least 100,000 but
4not more than 500,000, shall be voted for by each elector at
5the primary elections, and only 2, 3, or 4 councilmen, as the
6case may be, shall be voted for by each elector at each
7biennial general municipal election, to serve for 4 years.
8    (f) In addition to the requirements of the general
9election law, the ballots shall be in the form set out in
10Section 5-2-13. In cities with less than 50,000, the form of
11ballot prescribed in Section 5-2-13 shall be further modified
12by printing in the place relating to councilmen the words
13"Vote for not more than Two", or "Vote for not more than Three"
14if the size of the city council is increased under subsection
15(k), instead of the words "Vote for not more than Four". In
16cities of at least 50,000 but less than 100,000, the ballot
17shall be modified in that place by printing the words "Vote for
18not more than Three" instead of the words "Vote for not more
19than Four". Sections 4-3-5 through 4-3-18, insofar as they may
20be applicable, shall govern the election of a mayor and
21councilmen under this Section.
22    (g) If a vacancy occurs in the office of mayor or
23councilman, the remaining members of the council, within 60
24days after the vacancy occurs, shall fill the vacancy by
25appointment of some person to the office for the balance of the
26unexpired term or until the vacancy is filled by interim

 

 

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1election under Section 3.1-10-50, and until the successor is
2elected and has qualified.
3    (h) Except in villages that were governed by Article 4
4immediately before the adoption of the managerial form of
5municipal government, in villages that have adopted this
6Article 5 the term of office of the president, the number of
7trustees to be elected, their terms of office, and the manner
8of filling vacancies shall be governed by Sections 5-2-14
9through 5-2-17.
10    (i) Any village that adopts the managerial form of
11municipal government under this Article 5 and that,
12immediately before that adoption, was governed by the
13provisions of Article 4, shall continue to elect a mayor and 4
14commissioners in accordance with Sections 4-3-5 through
154-3-18, insofar as they may be applicable, except that the 2
16commissioners receiving the lowest vote among those elected at
17the first election after this Article 5 becomes effective in
18the village shall serve for 2 years only. After that first
19election, the election of commissioners shall be every 2
20years, and 2 commissioners shall be elected at each election
21to serve for 4 years.
22    (j) The mayor or president shall preside at all meetings
23of the council or board and on all ceremonial occasions.
24    (k) In cities of less than 50,000 population, the city
25council may, by ordinance, provide that the city council
26shall, after the next biennial general municipal election,

 

 

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1consist of 6 instead of 4 councilmen. If the size of the
2council is increased to 6 councilmen, then at the next
3biennial general municipal election, the electors shall vote
4for 4 instead of 2 councilmen. Of the 4 councilmen elected at
5that next election, the one receiving the lowest vote at that
6election shall serve a 2-year term. Thereafter, all terms
7shall be for 4 years.
8(Source: P.A. 95-862, eff. 8-19-08.)
 
9    (65 ILCS 5/5-2-17)  (from Ch. 24, par. 5-2-17)
10    Sec. 5-2-17. Trustees; certain villages incorporated under
11special Acts.
12    (a) In every village specified in Section 5-2-12
13incorporated and existing under any special Act that, before
14June 4, 1909, under any special Act, annually elected members
15of its legislative body, the electors of the village, instead
16of the legislative body now provided for by law, shall elect 6
17trustees. They shall hold their offices until their respective
18successors are elected and have qualified. At the first
19meeting of this board of 6 trustees, the terms of office of the
20trustees shall be staggered. Thereafter, the terms shall be
21for the same length of time as provided for alders aldermen in
22Section 3.1-20-35.
23    (b) The electors of a village or incorporated town
24described in subsection (a) may, however, adopt a 2 year term
25for their trustees as provided in Section 3.1-10-65. If this 2

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 139 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1year term is adopted, then at the next general municipal
2election in the adopting village, 3 trustees shall be elected,
3and they shall hold their offices for terms of one year each.
4In the next succeeding year, and in each year thereafter, 3
5trustees shall be elected in the adopting village, and they
6shall hold their offices for terms of 2 years each.
7    (c) Any village described in subsection (a) that, before
8January 2, 1942, has adopted a 2 year term for its trustees and
9is now electing 3 trustees each year shall continue to elect 3
10trustees each year for a term of 2 years each. Any village
11described in subsection (a) that, before January 2, 1942, has
12adopted a 2 year term for its trustees but is not now electing
133 trustees each year shall elect 3 trustees at the next general
14municipal election in that village, and they shall hold their
15offices for terms of one year each. In the next succeeding
16year, and in each year thereafter, 3 trustees shall be
17elected, and they shall hold their offices for terms of 2 years
18each.
19(Source: P.A. 87-1119.)
 
20    (65 ILCS 5/5-2-18)  (from Ch. 24, par. 5-2-18)
21    Sec. 5-2-18. In any city which has adopted this Article 5
22and which elects a mayor and councilmen as provided in Section
235-2-12, a proposition to elect alders aldermen from wards as
24provided in Article 3 of this Code, except that only one alder
25alderman may be elected from each ward, shall be certified by

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 140 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1the city clerk to the proper election authority who shall
2submit such proposition at the general municipal election in
3accordance with the general election law, if a petition signed
4by electors of the city numbering not less than 10% of the
5total vote cast for mayor at the last preceding election, is
6filed with the city clerk.
7    The proposition shall be substantially in the following
8form:
9-------------------------------------------------------------
10    Shall the city of.... be divided
11into wards with one alder alderman to be          YES
12elected from each ward, but with the   ----------------------
13mayor to be elected from the city           NO
14at large?
15-------------------------------------------------------------
16    If a majority of those voting on the proposition vote
17"yes", then the sitting city council shall proceed to divide
18the city into wards in the manner provided in Article 3 and one
19alder alderman shall be elected from each ward at the next
20general municipal election of any city officer. Upon the
21election and qualification of such alders aldermen the terms
22of office of all sitting councilmen shall expire. After the
23adoption of such proposition the provisions of Article 3 shall
24be applicable to the division of the city into wards and to the
25election of the mayor and alders aldermen of such city, except
26that only one alder alderman shall be elected from each ward.

 

 

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1(Source: P.A. 81-1489.)
 
2    (65 ILCS 5/5-2-18.1)  (from Ch. 24, par. 5-2-18.1)
3    Sec. 5-2-18.1. In any city or village which has adopted
4this Article and also has elected to choose alders aldermen
5from wards or trustees from districts, as the case may be, a
6proposition to elect the city council at large shall be
7submitted to the electors in the manner herein provided.
8    Electors of such city or village, equal to not less than
910% of the total vote cast for all candidates for mayor or
10president in the last preceding municipal election for such
11office, may petition for the submission to a vote of the
12electors of that city or village the proposition whether the
13city council shall be elected at large. The petition shall be
14in the same form as prescribed in Section 5-1-6, except that
15said petition shall be modified as to the wording of the
16proposition to be voted upon to conform to the wording of the
17proposition as hereinafter set forth, and shall be filed with
18the city clerk in accordance with the general election law.
19The clerk shall certify the proposition to the proper election
20authorities who shall submit the proposition at an election in
21accordance with the general election law.
22    However, such proposition shall not be submitted at the
23general primary election for the municipality.
24    The proposition shall be in substantially the following
25form:

 

 

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1-------------------------------------------------------------
2    Shall the city (or village) of
3.... elect the city council at           YES
4large instead of alders aldermen           ------------------
5(or trustees) from wards (or             NO
6districts)?
7-------------------------------------------------------------
8    If a majority of those voting on the proposition vote
9"yes", then the city council shall be elected at large at the
10next general municipal election and the provisions of Section
115-2-12 shall be applicable. Upon the election and
12qualification of such council men or trustees, the terms of
13all sitting alders aldermen shall expire.
14(Source: P.A. 81-1489.)
 
15    (65 ILCS 5/5-2-18.2)  (from Ch. 24, par. 5-2-18.2)
16    Sec. 5-2-18.2. In any city which has adopted this Article,
17and also has elected to choose alders aldermen from wards, a
18proposition to elect part of the city council at large and part
19from districts shall be submitted to the electors upon the
20petition herein provided.
21    Electors of such city, equal in number to not less than 10%
22of the total vote cast for all candidates for mayor in the last
23preceding municipal election for such office, may petition for
24the submission to a vote of the electors of that city the
25proposition whether part of the city council shall be elected

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 143 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1at large and part from districts. The petition shall be in the
2same form as prescribed in Section 5-1-6, except that said
3petition shall be modified as to the wording of the
4proposition to be voted upon, to conform to the wording of the
5proposition as hereinafter set forth, and shall be filed with
6the city clerk in accordance with the general election law.
7The city clerk shall certify the proposition to the proper
8election authorities who shall submit the proposition at an
9election in accordance with the general election law.
10    However, such proposition shall not be submitted at the
11general primary election for the municipality.
12    The proposition shall be substantially in the following
13form:
14-------------------------------------------------------------
15    Shall the city of....
16elect part of the councilmen          YES
17at large and part of             ----------------------------
18the councilmen from                   NO
19districts?
20-------------------------------------------------------------
21    If a majority of those voting on the proposition vote
22"yes", then at the next general municipal election and every 4
23years thereafter, a mayor and part of the councilmen shall be
24elected at large and part of the councilmen shall be elected
25from wards, the total number of councilmen to be elected to
26equal the number of alders aldermen authorized to be elected

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 144 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1prior to adoption of the proposition.
2    The city council shall divide the city, whenever necessary
3thereafter, into districts which shall be of as compact and
4contiguous territory as practicable and of approximately equal
5population. The number of such districts shall be equal to
6half the number of alders aldermen then authorized to be
7elected to office in such city. If there is an odd number of
8such alders aldermen, the number of districts established
9shall be equal to the number which represents a majority of the
10number of such alders aldermen.
11    One councilman, who is an actual resident of the district,
12shall be elected from each district. Only the electors of a
13district shall elect a councilman from that district. The rest
14of the number of councilmen authorized shall be elected at
15large.
16    The mayor and councilmen shall hold their respective
17offices for the term of 4 years and until their successors are
18elected and qualified. Upon the election and qualification of
19the councilmen, the terms of all sitting alders aldermen shall
20expire.
21(Source: P.A. 81-1489.)
 
22    (65 ILCS 5/5-2-18.7)  (from Ch. 24, par. 5-2-18.7)
23    Sec. 5-2-18.7. In any city which has adopted this Article,
24and is electing the city council at large or has elected to
25choose alders aldermen from wards, a proposition to elect part

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 145 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1of the city council at large and part from districts with
2staggered four year terms and biennial elections for
3councilmen shall be submitted to the electors upon initiation
4in the manner herein provided.
5    Electors of such city, equal in number to not less than 10%
6of the total vote cast for all candidates for mayor in the last
7preceding municipal election for such office, may petition for
8submission, or, in the alternative, the city council may by
9ordinance without a petition cause to be submitted, to a vote
10of the electors of that city the proposition whether part of
11the city council shall be elected at large and part from
12districts with staggered four year terms and biennial
13elections for councilmen. The petition shall be in the same
14form as prescribed in Section 5-1-6, except that the petition
15shall be modified as to the wording of the proposition to be
16voted upon, to conform to the wording of the proposition as
17hereinafter set forth, and shall be filed with the city clerk
18in accordance with the general election law. The city clerk
19shall certify the proposition to the proper election
20authorities who shall submit the proposition at an election in
21accordance with the general election law.
22    However, such proposition shall not be submitted at the
23general primary election for the municipality.
24    The proposition shall be substantially in the following
25form:
26-------------------------------------------------------------

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 146 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1    Shall the city of....
2elect part of the councilmen at large      YES
3and part of the councilmen from        ----------------------
4districts with staggered four year         NO
5terms and biennial elections?
6-------------------------------------------------------------
7    If a majority of those voting on the proposition vote
8"yes", then at the next general municipal election at which a
9mayor is to be elected, a mayor and councilmen shall be elected
10as hereinafter provided.
11    In cities of less than 50,000 population, the council
12shall consist of the mayor and 6 councilmen, 2 councilmen
13being elected at large and 4 councilmen being elected from
14districts. In cities of 50,000 and not more than 500,000
15population, the council shall consist of the mayor and 8
16councilmen, 3 councilmen being elected at large and 5
17councilmen being elected from districts.
18    The city council shall divide the city, whenever necessary
19thereafter, into districts which shall be of as compact and
20contiguous territory as practicable and of approximately equal
21population. The number of such districts shall be the same as
22the number of councilmen to be elected from districts.
23    One councilman who is an actual resident of the district,
24shall be elected from each district. Only the electors of a
25district shall elect a councilman from that district. The rest
26of the number of councilmen authorized shall be elected at

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 147 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1large.
2    The term of office of the Mayor and Councilmen shall be 4
3years, provided that at the first election the Councilmen
4elected at large shall serve for 2 years only. Thereafter the
5election of Councilmen shall be biennial, and after the first
6election the Mayor and all Councilmen shall be elected for 4
7year terms to fill expiring terms of incumbents.
8    The Mayor and Councilmen shall hold their respective
9offices for the term of 4 years as herein provided, and until
10their successors are elected and qualified. Upon the election
11and qualification of the Councilmen, the terms of all sitting
12alders aldermen or councilmen elected at large pursuant to the
13provisions of Section 5-2-12 shall expire.
14    For the first primary election a distinct ballot shall be
15printed for each district. At the top of the ballot shall be
16the following: CANDIDATES FOR NOMINATION FOR MAYOR (when Mayor
17is to be elected) AND COUNCILMEN OF THE CITY OF.... AT THE
18PRIMARY ELECTION. Under the subtitle of FOR MAYOR (when
19applicable) shall be placed the following: (VOTE FOR ONE).
20There shall be placed below the names of the candidates for
21Mayor, if any, another subtitle as follows: FOR COUNCILMEN AT
22LARGE. Following this subtitle there shall be an instruction
23in this form, to be altered, however, to conform to the facts:
24(VOTE FOR NOT MORE THAN....) (Insert number of Councilmen
25being elected). Following the names of the candidates for
26councilmen at large, there shall be another subtitle in the

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 148 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1following form: FOR DISTRICT COUNCILMAN. Following this
2subtitle there shall be the following direction: (VOTE FOR
3ONE). In other respects the ballots shall conform to the
4applicable provisions of Sections 4-3-10 and 5-2-13.
5    To determine the number of nominees who shall be placed on
6the ballot under each subtitle at the general municipal
7election, the number of officers who will be chosen under each
8subtitle shall be multiplied by 2. Only those candidates at
9the primary election shall be nominees under each subtitle at
10the general municipal election and, where but one officer is
11to be elected, the 2 candidates receiving the highest number
12of votes shall be placed upon the ballot for the next
13succeeding general municipal election. Where 2 councilmen are
14to be elected, the 4 candidates receiving the highest number
15of votes shall be placed upon the ballot. Where 3 councilmen
16are to be elected, the names of the 6 candidates receiving the
17highest number of votes shall be placed upon the ballot.
18    The ballots for the election of officers at the first
19general municipal election shall be prepared in compliance
20with Section 4-3-16, with the following changes:
21    (1) Following the names of the candidates for Mayor (when
22applicable) there shall be printed a subtitle: FOR COUNCILMAN
23AT LARGE: following this subtitle shall be an instruction in
24this form: (VOTE FOR NOT MORE THAN ....) (Insert number of
25councilmen to be elected). The names of the nominees for
26councilmen at large shall follow the instruction.

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 149 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1    (2) Following the names of the nominees for councilmen at
2large shall be printed another subtitle: FOR DISTRICT
3COUNCILMAN. Following this subtitle shall be an instruction in
4this form: (VOTE FOR ONE) and following this instruction shall
5be printed the names of the 2 nominees.
6    Thereafter, the ballots for the biennial election shall be
7prepared as hereinafter provided.
8    For the primary election at which Councilmen at large are
9to be elected the form of the ballot shall be as follows:
10    At the top of the ballot shall be the following:
11CANDIDATES FOR NOMINATION FOR MAYOR (when Mayor is to be
12elected) AND COUNCILMEN OF THE CITY OF.... AT THE PRIMARY
13ELECTION. Under the subtitle of FOR MAYOR (when applicable)
14shall be placed the following: (VOTE FOR ONE). There shall be
15placed below the names of the candidates for Mayor, if any,
16another subtitle as follows: FOR COUNCILMEN AT LARGE.
17Following this subtitle there shall be an instruction in this
18form, to be altered, however, to conform to the facts: (VOTE
19FOR NOT MORE THAN....) (Insert number of Councilmen being
20elected).
21    For the primary election at which District Councilmen are
22to be elected, a distinct ballot shall be printed for each
23District. There shall be placed below the names of the
24candidates for Mayor (when applicable) another subtitle as
25follows: FOR DISTRICT COUNCILMAN. Following this subtitle
26there shall be an instruction in this form: VOTE FOR ONE. In

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 150 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1all other respects the ballot shall conform to the applicable
2provisions of Sections 4-3-10 and 5-2-13.
3    To determine the number of nominees who shall be placed on
4the ballot under each subtitle at the general municipal
5election, the number of officers who will be chosen under each
6subtitle shall be multiplied by 2. Only those candidates at
7the primary election shall be nominees under each subtitle at
8the general municipal election and, where but one officer is
9to be elected, the 2 candidates receiving the highest number
10of votes shall be placed upon the ballot for the next
11succeeding general municipal election. Where 2 councilmen are
12to be elected, the 4 candidates receiving the highest number
13of votes shall be placed upon the ballot. Where 3 councilmen
14are to be elected, the names of the 6 candidates receiving the
15highest number of votes shall be placed upon the ballot.
16    The ballots for the election of officers at the general
17municipal election shall be prepared in compliance with
18Section 4-3-16, with the following changes:
19    (1) For elections where candidates for Councilmen at large
20are being elected, following the names of candidates for Mayor
21(when applicable) there shall be printed a subtitle as
22follows: FOR COUNCILMEN AT LARGE. Following this subtitle
23there shall be an instruction in this form: (VOTE FOR NOT MORE
24THAN....) (Insert number of Councilmen to be elected). The
25names of the nominees for Councilmen at large shall follow the
26instruction.

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 151 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1    (2) For elections where district Councilmen are to be
2elected, a distinct ballot shall be printed for each district,
3and following the names of the candidates for Mayor (when
4applicable) there shall be printed a subtitle as follows: FOR
5DISTRICT COUNCILMAN. Following this subtitle there shall be an
6instruction in this form: (VOTE FOR ONE) and following this
7instruction shall be printed the names of the 2 nominees for
8district Councilman.
9    Vacancies shall be filled as prescribed in Section 5-2-12,
10provided that a vacancy in the office of a District Councilman
11shall be filled by a person who is an actual resident of the
12district in which the vacancy occurs.
13(Source: P.A. 95-862, eff. 8-19-08.)
 
14    (65 ILCS 5/5-2-19)  (from Ch. 24, par. 5-2-19)
15    Sec. 5-2-19. In any city which was operating under the
16aldermanic form of government as provided in Article 3 at the
17time of adoption of this Article 5 which did not also elect to
18continue to choose alders aldermen from wards, the city clerk
19and city treasurer shall be nominated and elected in the same
20manner as provided in this Article 5 for the nomination and
21election of the mayor and councilmen. To achieve this result:
22wherever the term "mayor or commissioners" appears in Sections
234-3-7 through 4-3-18, it shall be construed to include the
24words "or clerk or treasurer". The names of candidates for
25nomination shall be placed on the primary election ballot

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 152 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1prescribed in Section 5-2-13 and such ballot shall be modified
2to include the heading "For Clerk--Vote for one" immediately
3following the names of candidates for councilmen and to
4include the heading "For Treasurer--Vote for one" immediately
5following the names of candidates for clerk. The names of the 4
6candidates receiving the highest number of votes for each of
7the respective offices shall be placed on the general
8municipal election ballot prescribed in Section 5-2-13 which
9ballot shall be modified to include such offices and names in
10the same manner as is provided in this section for the primary
11ballot. If any candidate nominated for the office of clerk or
12treasurer dies or withdraws before the general municipal
13election the name of the person receiving the fifth highest
14number of votes for nomination to that office shall be placed
15on the ballot for that election.
16    However, in any city not exceeding 100,000 inhabitants
17which adopts this Article 5 and elects a mayor and alders
18aldermen or councilmen as provided in Section 5-2-12, or
19Sections 5-2-18 through 5-2-18.8, the council may, in lieu of
20electing a clerk and treasurer as provided in the above
21paragraph, provide by ordinance that the clerk or treasurer or
22both for such city be appointed by the mayor with the approval
23of the city council. If such officers are appointed their
24terms of office, duties, compensation and amount of bond
25required shall be the same as if they were elected.
26(Source: P.A. 95-699, eff. 11-9-07.)
 

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 153 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1    (65 ILCS 5/5-3-1)  (from Ch. 24, par. 5-3-1)
2    Sec. 5-3-1. In cities which do not elect to choose alders
3aldermen from wards and in cities which elect to choose
4councilmen as provided in Sections 5-2-18.1 through 5-2-18.7,
5the mayor shall have the right to vote on all questions coming
6before the council but shall have no power to veto. The mayor
7and president shall be recognized as the official head of the
8city or village by the courts for the purpose of serving civil
9process and by the Governor for all legal purposes.
10    The mayor or president of any city or village which adopts
11this Article 5, other than one which at the time of adoption
12was operating under or adopted the commission form of
13government as provided in Article 4 or which does not retain
14the election of alders aldermen by wards or trustees by
15districts, shall have veto power as provided in Sections 5-3-2
16through 5-3-4, and ordinances or measures may be passed over
17his veto as therein provided. Such mayor or president shall
18have the power to vote as provided in Section 5-3-5.
19    If any other Acts or any Article of this Code, other than
20Article 3 or Article 4, provides for the appointment of a
21board, commission, or other agency by the mayor or president,
22such appointments shall be made in manner so provided.
23(Source: P.A. 100-863, eff. 8-14-18.)
 
24    (65 ILCS 5/5-3-3)  (from Ch. 24, par. 5-3-3)

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 154 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1    Sec. 5-3-3. Every resolution and motion, specified in
2Section 5-3-2, and every ordinance, which is returned to the
3council or board by the mayor or president shall be
4reconsidered by the council or board. If, after such
5reconsideration, two-thirds of all the alders aldermen then
6holding office on the city council or two-thirds of all the
7trustees then holding office on the village board agree to
8pass an ordinance, resolution, or motion, notwithstanding the
9mayor's or president's refusal to approve it, then it shall be
10effective. The vote on the question of passage over the
11mayor's or president's veto shall be by yeas and nays, and
12shall be recorded in the journal.
13(Source: Laws 1967, p. 3425.)
 
14    (65 ILCS 5/5-3-4)  (from Ch. 24, par. 5-3-4)
15    Sec. 5-3-4. No vote of the city council or village board
16shall be reconsidered or rescinded at a special meeting,
17unless there are present at the special meeting as many alders
18aldermen or trustees as were present when the vote was taken.
19(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
 
20    (65 ILCS 5/5-3-5)  (from Ch. 24, par. 5-3-5)
21    Sec. 5-3-5. The mayor or president of any city or village
22which elects alders aldermen by wards or trustees by districts
23shall not vote on any ordinance, resolution or motion except:
24(1) where the vote of the alders aldermen or trustees has

 

 

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1resulted in a tie; (or) (2) where one-half of the alders
2aldermen or trustees then holding office have voted in favor
3of an ordinance, resolution or motion even though there is no
4tie vote; or (3) where a vote greater than a majority of the
5corporate authorities is required by this Code to adopt an
6ordinance, resolution or motion. In each instance specified,
7the mayor or president shall vote. The following mayors and
8presidents may vote on all questions coming before the council
9or board: (1) mayors and presidents of cities and villages
10operating under this article and Article 4, and (2) mayors and
11presidents of cities and villages which do not elect alders
12aldermen by wards and trustees by districts.
13    Nothing in this section shall deprive an acting mayor or
14president or mayor or president pro tem from voting in his
15capacity as alder alderman or trustee, but he shall not be
16entitled to another vote in his capacity as acting mayor or
17president or mayor or president pro tem.
18(Source: Laws 1967, p. 3425.)
 
19    (65 ILCS 5/5-3-7)  (from Ch. 24, par. 5-3-7)
20    Sec. 5-3-7. The council or board of trustees, as the case
21may be, shall appoint a municipal manager, who shall be the
22administrative head of the municipal government and who shall
23be responsible for the efficient administration of all
24departments. He shall be appointed without regard to his
25political beliefs and need not be a resident of the city or

 

 

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1village when appointed. The manager shall be appointed for an
2indefinite term, and the conditions of the manager's
3employment may be set forth in an agreement. In the case of the
4absence or disability of the manager, the council or village
5board may designate a qualified administrative officer of the
6municipality to perform the duties of the manager during such
7absence or disability. The manager may at any time be removed
8from office by a majority vote of the members of the council or
9the board.
10    The powers and duties of the manager shall be:
11    (1) To enforce the laws and ordinances within the
12municipality;
13    (2) To appoint and remove all directors of departments. No
14appointment shall be made upon any basis other than that of
15merit and fitness except that if the chief of the fire
16department or the chief of the police department or both of
17them are appointed in the manner as provided by ordinance
18under Section 10-2.1-4 of this code, they may be removed or
19discharged by the appointing authority. In such case the
20appointing authority shall file with the corporate authorities
21the reasons for such removal or discharge, which removal or
22discharge shall not become effective unless confirmed by a
23majority vote of the corporate authorities;
24    (3) To exercise control of all departments and divisions
25thereof created in this Article 5, or that may be created by
26the council or board of trustees;

 

 

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1    (4) If the city or village was subject to the aldermanic
2form provisions of Article 3 at the time of adoption of this
3Article 5 to appoint and remove all officers who are not
4required to be elected by Article 3;
5    (5) To have all the powers and exercise all the duties
6granted elsewhere in this Code to municipal clerks and
7comptrollers with respect to the preparation of a report of
8estimated funds necessary to defray the expenses of the city
9or village for the fiscal year for the consideration of the
10corporate authorities prior to the preparation of the annual
11appropriation ordinance;
12    (6) To attend all meetings of the council or board of
13trustees with the right to take part in the discussions, but
14with no right to vote;
15    (7) To recommend to the council or board of trustees for
16adoption such measures as he may deem necessary or expedient;
17    (8) To perform such other duties as may be prescribed by
18this Article 5 or may be required of him by ordinance or
19resolution of the board of trustees or council.
20(Source: P.A. 86-1023; 86-1039.)
 
21    (65 ILCS 5/5-3-8)  (from Ch. 24, par. 5-3-8)
22    Sec. 5-3-8. Under the general supervision and
23administrative control of the manager, there shall be such
24departments as the council or village board may prescribe by
25ordinance.

 

 

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1    All officers of any city or village shall take and
2subscribe the oath required by Section 5-3-9. All such
3officers, except the mayor, president, alders aldermen,
4councilmen, and trustees, shall execute bonds in the manner
5provided by Section 5-3-9, which bonds shall be filed with the
6clerk of the council or clerk of the village board.
7(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
 
8    (65 ILCS 5/5-4-1)  (from Ch. 24, par. 5-4-1)
9    Sec. 5-4-1. The mayor and councilmen elected under the
10provisions of Section 5-2-12 shall each receive for the
11performance of their respective duties annual salaries fixed
12by the council or village board. The corporate authorities in
13cities which retain the election of alders aldermen by wards
14and the corporate authorities in villages shall receive
15salaries as allowed in Sections 3-13-4 through 3-13-7,
16whichever is appropriate.
17(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
 
18    (65 ILCS 5/5-4-3)  (from Ch. 24, par. 5-4-3)
19    Sec. 5-4-3. In cities of not less than 100,000 and not more
20than 500,000 population which did not also elect to continue
21to choose alders aldermen from wards, the city clerk shall
22receive a salary of not less than $8,500 per year and the city
23treasurer shall receive a salary of not less than $7,000 per
24year.

 

 

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1(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
 
2    (65 ILCS 5/5-5-1)  (from Ch. 24, par. 5-5-1)
3    Sec. 5-5-1. Petition for abandonment of managerial form;
4referendum; succeeding elections of officers and alders
5aldermen or trustees.
6    (a) A city or village that has operated for 4 years or more
7under the managerial form of municipal government may abandon
8that organization as provided in this Section. For the
9purposes of this Article, the operation of the managerial form
10of municipal government shall be deemed to begin on the date of
11the appointment of the first manager in the city or village.
12When a petition for abandonment signed by electors of the
13municipality equal in number to at least 10% of the number of
14votes cast for candidates for mayor at the preceding general
15quadrennial municipal election is filed with the circuit court
16for the county in which that city or village is located, the
17court shall set a date not less than 10 nor more than 30 days
18thereafter for a hearing on the sufficiency of the petition.
19Notice of the filing of the petition and of the date of the
20hearing shall be given in writing to the city or village clerk
21and to the mayor or village president at least 7 days before
22the date of the hearing. If the petition is found sufficient,
23the court shall enter an order directing that the proposition
24be submitted at an election other than a primary election for
25the municipality. The clerk of the court shall certify the

 

 

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1proposition to the proper election authorities for submission.
2The proposition shall be in substantially the following form:
3        Shall (name of city or village) retain the managerial
4    form of municipal government?
5    (b) If the majority of the votes at the election are "yes",
6then the proposition to abandon is rejected and the
7municipality shall continue operating under this Article 5. If
8the majority of the votes are "no", then the proposition to
9abandon operation under this Article 5 is approved.
10    (c) If the proposition for abandonment is approved, the
11city or village shall become subject to Article 3.1 or Article
124, whichever Article was in force in the city or village
13immediately before the adoption of the plan authorized by this
14Article 5, upon the election and qualification of officers to
15be elected at the next succeeding general municipal election.
16Those officers shall be those prescribed by Article 3.1 or
17Article 4, as the case may be, but the change shall not in any
18manner or degree affect the property rights or liabilities of
19the city or village. The mayor, clerk, and treasurer and all
20other elected officers of a city or village in office at the
21time the proposition for abandonment is approved shall
22continue in office until the expiration of the term for which
23they were elected.
24    (d) If a city or village operating under this Article 5 has
25alders aldermen or trustees elected from wards or districts
26and a proposition to abandon operation under this Article 5 is

 

 

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1approved, then the officers to be elected at the next
2succeeding general municipal election shall be elected from
3the same wards or districts as exist immediately before the
4abandonment.
5    (e) If a city or village operating under this Article 5 has
6a council or village board elected from the municipality at
7large and a proposition to abandon operation under this
8Article 5 is approved, then the first group of alders
9aldermen, board of trustees, or commissioners so elected shall
10be of the same number as was provided for in the municipality
11at the time of the adoption of a plan under this Article 5,
12with the same ward or district boundaries in cities or
13villages that immediately before the adoption of this Article
145 had wards or districts, unless the municipal boundaries have
15been changed. If there has been such a change, the council or
16village board shall so alter the former ward or district
17boundaries so as to conform as nearly as possible to the former
18division. If the plan authorized by this Article 5 is
19abandoned, the next general municipal election for officers
20shall be held at the time specified in Section 3.1-10-75 or
213.1-25-15 for that election. The alders aldermen or trustees
22elected at that election shall, if the city or village was
23operating under Article 3 at the time of adoption of this
24Article 5 and had at that time staggered 4 year terms of office
25for the alders aldermen or trustees, choose by lot which shall
26serve initial 2 year terms as provided by Section 3.1-20-35 or

 

 

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13.1-15-5, whichever may be applicable, in the case of election
2of those officers at the first election after a municipality
3is incorporated.
4    (f) The proposition to abandon the managerial form of
5municipal government shall not be submitted in any city or
6village oftener than once in 46 months.
7(Source: P.A. 93-847, eff. 7-30-04; 94-645, eff. 8-22-05.)
 
8    (65 ILCS 5/5-5-5)  (from Ch. 24, par. 5-5-5)
9    Sec. 5-5-5. Any city or village which has adopted this
10Article 5 and was operating under Article 4 at the time of such
11adoption may upon abandonment of this Article 5 also abandon
12operation under Article 4, as provided in Section 4-10-1, and
13by so doing shall become subject to the aldermanic form
14provisions of Article 3 and shall be subject to the provisions
15of that Article 3 the same as if it had been operating under
16Article 3 at the time this Article 5 was adopted, except for
17any period of time after abandonment of this Article 5
18necessary to make the provisions of Article 3 fully and
19completely applicable.
20    Any city or village which has adopted this Article 5 and
21was operating under Article 3 at the time of such adoption may
22upon abandonment of this Article 5 also abandon operation
23under Article 3 by adopting Article 4, as provided in Sections
244-2-2 through 4-2-9, and by so doing shall become subject to
25the provisions of Article 4 and shall be subject to the

 

 

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1provisions of that Article 4 the same as if it had been
2operating under Article 4 at the time this Article 5 was
3adopted, except for any period of time after abandonment of
4this Article 5 necessary to make the provisions of Article 4
5fully and completely applicable.
6(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
 
7    (65 ILCS 5/6-3-2)  (from Ch. 24, par. 6-3-2)
8    Sec. 6-3-2. Termination of terms of office.
9    The terms of office of all elected municipal officers
10holding office at the time of the issuance of the certificate
11of adoption of the strong mayor form of government by the
12municipality pursuant to Division 2 of this Article 6 shall
13terminate upon the election and qualification for office of
14municipal officers pursuant to this Division 3 of Article 6,
15except that where an existing form of municipal government has
16the same number of wards as would be required hereunder, the
17alders aldermen holding office at the time of the issuance of
18the certificate of adoption shall serve until the expiration
19of the terms for which they were elected.
20(Source: P.A. 76-746.)
 
21    (65 ILCS 5/6-3-3)  (from Ch. 24, par. 6-3-3)
22    Sec. 6-3-3. Municipal officers - Terms.
23    The municipality shall have the following elected
24officers: one mayor, one municipal clerk and one municipal

 

 

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1treasurer, all of whom shall be elected at large, and alders
2aldermen, the number of which shall be as follows: In cities
3not exceeding 25,000 inhabitants, 8 alders aldermen; between
425,001 and 40,000, 10 alders aldermen; between 40,001 and
560,000, 14 alders aldermen; between 60,001 and 80,000, 16
6alders aldermen; and exceeding 80,000, 20 alders aldermen. Two
7alders aldermen shall be elected to represent each ward.
8(Source: P.A. 76-746.)
 
9    (65 ILCS 5/6-3-4)  (from Ch. 24, par. 6-3-4)
10    Sec. 6-3-4. Terms of office.
11    All terms of office of officials elected pursuant to this
12Division 3 of Article 6 shall be for terms of 4 years, except
13that alders aldermen elected at the first election for city
14officers held pursuant to this Article 6 shall draw lots so
15that one-half of the alders aldermen shall hold for a 4 year
16term, and until their successors are elected and qualified,
17and one-half of the alders aldermen shall hold for a 2 year
18term, and until their successors are elected and qualified.
19All alders aldermen thereafter elected shall hold office for a
20term of 4 years, and until their successors are elected and
21have qualified.
22(Source: P.A. 76-746.)
 
23    (65 ILCS 5/6-3-5)  (from Ch. 24, par. 6-3-5)
24    Sec. 6-3-5. Division into wards.

 

 

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1    Every city shall have as many wards as one-half the total
2number of alders aldermen to which the city is entitled. The
3city council, from time to time shall divide the city into that
4number of wards. In the formation of wards the population of
5each ward as determined by the latest city, state or national
6census shall be as nearly equal and the wards shall be of as
7compact and contiguous territory, as practicable.
8(Source: P.A. 76-746.)
 
9    (65 ILCS 5/6-3-6)  (from Ch. 24, par. 6-3-6)
10    Sec. 6-3-6. Redistricting of city. Whenever an official
11publication of any national, state, school, or city census
12shows that any city contains more or less wards than it is
13entitled to, the city council of the city, by ordinance, shall
14redistrict the city into as many wards only as the city is
15entitled. This redistricting shall be completed not less than
1630 days before the first date on which candidate petitions may
17be filed for the next succeeding general municipal election.
18At this election there shall be elected the number of alders
19aldermen to which the city is entitled.
20(Source: P.A. 81-1489.)
 
21    (65 ILCS 5/6-3-7)  (from Ch. 24, par. 6-3-7)
22    Sec. 6-3-7. Ward division and election of alders aldermen -
23 Validation.
24    If, after a census is officially published, any city is

 

 

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1divided into a greater or lesser number of wards and has
2elected a greater or lesser number of alders aldermen than the
3city is entitled, nevertheless such division and election
4shall be valid and all acts, resolutions and ordinances of the
5city council of such city, if in other respects in compliance
6with law, are valid.
7(Source: P.A. 76-746.)
 
8    (65 ILCS 5/6-3-8)  (from Ch. 24, par. 6-3-8)
9    Sec. 6-3-8. Resignation; vacancy. An alder alderman may
10resign from his or her office. A vacancy occurs in the office
11of alder alderman by reason of resignation, failure to elect
12or qualify, death, permanent physical or mental disability,
13conviction of a disqualifying crime, abandonment of office, or
14removal from office. If a vacancy occurs in the office of alder
15alderman in one of these ways or otherwise, the vacancy shall
16be filled as provided in Sections 3.1-10-50 and 3.1-10-55. An
17appointment to fill a vacancy shall be made within 60 days
18after the vacancy occurs. The requirement that an appointment
19be made within 60 days is an exclusive power and function of
20the State and is a denial and limitation under Article VII,
21Section 6, subsection (h) of the Illinois Constitution of the
22power of a home rule municipality to require that an
23appointment be made within a different period after the
24vacancy occurs.
25(Source: P.A. 87-1052; 87-1119; 88-45.)
 

 

 

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1    (65 ILCS 5/6-3-9)  (from Ch. 24, par. 6-3-9)
2    Sec. 6-3-9. Qualifications of mayor, city clerk, city
3treasurer and alders aldermen - Eligibility for other office.
4    No person shall be eligible to the office of mayor, city
5clerk, city treasurer or alder alderman:
6    (1) Unless he is a qualified elector of the municipality
7and has resided therein at least one year next preceding his
8election or appointment; or
9    (2) Unless, in the case of alders aldermen, he resides
10within the ward for which he is elected; or
11    (3) If he is in arrears in the payment of any tax or other
12indebtedness due to the city; or
13    (4) If he has been convicted in Illinois state courts or in
14courts of the United States of malfeasance in office, bribery,
15or other infamous crime.
16    No alder alderman shall be eligible to any office, except
17that of acting mayor or mayor pro tem, the salary of which is
18payable out of the city treasury, if at the time of his
19appointment he is a member of the city council.
20(Source: P.A. 76-746.)
 
21    (65 ILCS 5/6-3-10)  (from Ch. 24, par. 6-3-10)
22    Sec. 6-3-10. General elections - Time for.
23    The first general election pursuant to this Division 3 of
24Article 6 shall be held at the time the next general municipal

 

 

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1election would have been held had the municipality not adopted
2this Article 6. At the first general election so held, one
3mayor, one municipal clerk, one municipal treasurer shall be
4elected at large and two alders aldermen shall be elected from
5each ward.
6(Source: P.A. 76-746.)
 
7    (65 ILCS 5/6-4-3)  (from Ch. 24, par. 6-4-3)
8    Sec. 6-4-3. Reconsideration - Passage over veto.
9    Every ordinance, which is returned to the council by the
10mayor shall be reconsidered by the council. If, after such
11reconsideration, three-fifths of all the alders aldermen then
12holding office on the city council agree to pass an ordinance,
13resolution, or motion, notwithstanding the mayor's refusal to
14approve it, then it shall be effective.
15(Source: P.A. 76-746.)
 
16    (65 ILCS 5/6-4-4)  (from Ch. 24, par. 6-4-4)
17    Sec. 6-4-4. Vote of city council - Reconsideration.
18    No vote of the city council shall be reconsidered or
19rescinded at a special meeting, unless there are present at
20the special meeting as many alders aldermen as were present
21when the vote was taken.
22(Source: P.A. 76-746.)
 
23    (65 ILCS 5/6-5-1)  (from Ch. 24, par. 6-5-1)

 

 

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1    Sec. 6-5-1. Mayor, clerk, treasurer and alders aldermen.
2    The mayor, clerk, treasurer and alders aldermen elected
3under the provisions of this Article 6 shall each receive for
4the performance of their respective duties annual salaries
5fixed by the city council. Such salaries shall not be
6increased or decreased during any term of office. They must be
7established six months prior to general municipal elections at
8which such officials are to be voted on.
9(Source: P.A. 76-746.)
 
10    (65 ILCS 5/7-1-15)  (from Ch. 24, par. 7-1-15)
11    Sec. 7-1-15. Any municipality may be annexed to another
12municipality to which it adjoins, by ordinances passed by a
13majority vote of all the alders aldermen, trustees, or
14commissioners then holding office in each municipality
15desiring annexation. These ordinances shall specify the terms
16of the annexation, and they shall be a binding contract if, but
17only if:
18    (1) the annexation provided in these ordinances is
19certified by the clerk to the proper election authority who
20shall submit the question to a vote of the electors of both
21municipalities at an election in accordance with the general
22election law; and if
23    (2) the annexation is approved in each municipality by a
24majority of all the voters voting on that question in each
25municipality. If the ordinances fail to specify the terms of

 

 

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1annexation or specify only partially the terms of annexation,
2the provisions of this article relating to the annexation of
3one municipality to another shall apply but not as to any terms
4agreed to in the ordinances of annexation.
5    The proposition shall be in substantially the following
6form:
7-------------------------------------------------------------
8    Shall the municipality of              YES
9.... be annexed to the municipality  ------------------------
10of....?                                    NO
11-------------------------------------------------------------
12    Annexation shall neither affect nor impair any rights or
13liabilities either in favor of or against either municipality.
14Actions founded upon any right or liability may be commenced
15despite the annexation and, together with pending actions, may
16be prosecuted to final judgment and the enforcement thereof as
17if annexation had not taken place.
18(Source: P.A. 84-546.)
 
19    (65 ILCS 5/7-1-39)  (from Ch. 24, par. 7-1-39)
20    Sec. 7-1-39. After a part of a municipality is annexed to
21another municipality, any mayor, president, alder alderman,
22trustee, clerk, treasurer, or attorney for the disconnecting
23municipality, who resides in the detached territory, shall
24continue in office as an officer of the disconnecting
25municipality until his successor has been elected at the next

 

 

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1regular municipal election in this municipality and has
2qualified for office, or has been appointed and has qualified
3following this election.
4(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
 
5    (65 ILCS 5/7-1-42)  (from Ch. 24, par. 7-1-42)
6    Sec. 7-1-42. Redistricting after annexation.
7    (a) If the increase in population resulting from the
8annexation of any territory to a city under the aldermanic
9form of government is sufficient to entitle that city to an
10increase in the number of alders aldermen as provided in
11Section 3.1-20-10, the corporate authorities shall redistrict
12the city in accordance with Sections 3.1-20-15 and 3.1-20-25.
13Section 3.1-20-10 shall govern as to the hold-over alders
14aldermen.
15    (b) If the increase in population is not sufficient to
16entitle the city to an increase in the number of alders
17aldermen, the corporate authorities shall make the annexed
18territory a part of the ward or wards that it adjoins.
19    (c) If a village of over 25,000 population is divided into
206 districts as provided in Section 3.1-25-75, the corporate
21authorities shall make any territory annexed to the village a
22part of the districts that the territory adjoins.
23    (d) Nothing contained in this Section 7-1-42 shall prevent
24the corporate authorities of any municipality from
25redistricting the municipality according to law. Whenever the

 

 

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1enlarged annexing municipality is redistricted, the corporate
2authorities are under no duty to treat the annexed territory
3as a unit and they may divide it as if it had always been a
4part of the municipality.
5    (e) The number of inhabitants determined by the last
6national, state, or school census in the annexed territory and
7in the annexing municipality controls in the application of
8this Section.
9(Source: P.A. 87-1119.)
 
10    (65 ILCS 5/7-2-1)  (from Ch. 24, par. 7-2-1)
11    Sec. 7-2-1. Any 2 or more incorporated contiguous
12municipalities wholly or substantially situated in a single
13county may be united into one incorporated city by a
14compliance with Sections 7-1-16 and 7-1-17, with the following
15exceptions:
16    (1) The petition (a) shall be signed by electors of each of
17the municipalities seeking a union, (b) shall state the name
18by which the united municipality is to be known, and (c) shall
19state the form of municipal government under which the united
20municipality is to be governed.
21    (2) The question shall be in substantially the following
22form:
23-------------------------------------------------------------
24    Shall the city, village, or
25incorporated  town  (as  the

 

 

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1case may be) of............
2and the city, village, or
3incorporated town (as the case        YES
4may be) of..........., (and
5in  this  manner  as  far as
6necessary, filling blanks with
7the names of the municipalities
8to be united), be united           --------------------------
9into a  single  municipality
10under the name of..........
11with the........... form of
12municipal government (filling
13the  blank  with  the  word           NO
14"Aldermanic" or "Commission"
15or the words "Managerial With
16Alders Aldermen Chosen From Wards Or
17Districts" as the case may be)?
18-------------------------------------------------------------
19    No other proposition shall appear thereon.
20    If the majority of the votes cast in each municipality
21specified in the petition is in favor of the proposition, the
22municipalities are united.
23(Source: P.A. 87-278.)
 
24    (65 ILCS 5/7-2-19)  (from Ch. 24, par. 7-2-19)
25    Sec. 7-2-19. Whenever a united city is formed by a

 

 

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1compliance with Section 7-2-1 and the decision is in favor of
2an aldermanic form of municipal government, the united city
3shall be governed, after the first election held in compliance
4with Section 7-2-7, by a council composed of a mayor and a
5board of alders aldermen selected by the electors of the
6united city as provided by the provisions of this Code
7relating to the election of city officers, except that all
8elections in a united city are controlled by the City Election
9Law as provided in Section 7-2-6.
10(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
 
11    (65 ILCS 5/7-2-28)  (from Ch. 24, par. 7-2-28)
12    Sec. 7-2-28. Whenever a united city is formed by a
13compliance with Section 7-2-1 of municipal government with
14alders aldermen chosen from wards or districts, the united
15city shall be and the decision is in favor of a managerial form
16governed, after the first election held in compliance with
17Section 7-2-7, by a council composed of a mayor and a board of
18alders aldermen selected by the electors of the united city as
19provided by the provisions of this Code relating to the
20election of city officers, except all elections in a united
21city are controlled by the City Election Law as provided in
22Section 7-2-6, and by a municipal manager appointed by the
23council as provided in Article 5.
24(Source: Laws 1965, p. 1267.)
 

 

 

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1    (65 ILCS 5/8-9-1)  (from Ch. 24, par. 8-9-1)
2    Sec. 8-9-1. In municipalities of less than 500,000 except
3as otherwise provided in Articles 4 and 5 any work or other
4public improvement which is not to be paid for in whole or in
5part by special assessment or special taxation, when the
6expense thereof will exceed $25,000, shall be constructed
7either (1) by a contract let to the lowest responsible bidder
8after advertising for bids, in the manner prescribed by
9ordinance, except that any such contract may be entered into
10by the proper officers without advertising for bids, if
11authorized by a vote of two-thirds of all the alders aldermen
12or trustees then holding office; or (2) in the following
13manner, if authorized by a vote of two-thirds of all the alders
14aldermen or trustees then holding office, to-wit: the
15commissioner of public works or other proper officers to be
16designated by ordinance, shall superintend and cause to be
17carried out the construction of the work or other public
18improvement and shall employ exclusively for the performance
19of all manual labor thereon, laborers and artisans whom the
20municipality shall pay by the day or hour; and all material of
21the value of $25,000 and upward used in the construction of the
22work or other public improvement, shall be purchased by
23contract let to the lowest responsible bidder in the manner to
24be prescribed by ordinance. However, nothing contained in this
25section shall apply to any contract by a city, village or
26incorporated town with the federal government or any agency

 

 

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1thereof.
2    In every city which has adopted Division 1 of Article 10,
3every such laborer or artisan shall be certified by the civil
4service commission to the commissioner of public works or
5other proper officers, in accordance with the requirement of
6that division.
7    In municipalities of 500,000 or more population the
8letting of contracts for work or other public improvements of
9the character described in this section shall be governed by
10the provisions of Division 10 of this Article 8.
11(Source: P.A. 100-338, eff. 8-25-17.)
 
12    (65 ILCS 5/10-1-30)  (from Ch. 24, par. 10-1-30)
13    Sec. 10-1-30. No officer or employee in the service of
14such municipality shall, directly or indirectly, give or hand
15over to any officer or employee in such service, or to any
16senator or representative or alder alderman, councilman,
17trustee or commissioner, any money or other valuable thing, on
18account of or to be applied to the promotion of any party or
19political object whatever.
20(Source: Laws 1961, p. 3252.)
 
21    (65 ILCS 5/10-3-5)  (from Ch. 24, par. 10-3-5)
22    Sec. 10-3-5. Any mayor, president, commissioner, alder
23alderman, or trustee, who violates the provisions of Section
2410-3-3, is guilty of a Class B misdemeanor.

 

 

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1(Source: P.A. 77-2500.)
 
2    (65 ILCS 5/11-13-1.1)  (from Ch. 24, par. 11-13-1.1)
3    Sec. 11-13-1.1. The corporate authorities of any
4municipality may in its ordinances passed under the authority
5of this Division 13 provide for the classification of special
6uses. Such uses may include but are not limited to public and
7quasi-public uses affected with the public interest, uses
8which may have a unique, special or unusual impact upon the use
9or enjoyment of neighboring property, and planned
10developments. A use may be a permitted use in one or more
11zoning districts, and a special use in one or more other zoning
12districts. A special use shall be permitted only after a
13public hearing before some commission or committee designated
14by the corporate authorities, with prior notice thereof given
15in the manner as provided in Section 11-13-6 and 11-13-7. Any
16notice required by this Section need not include a metes and
17bounds legal description of the area classified for special
18uses, provided that the notice includes: (i) the common street
19address or addresses and (ii) the property index number
20("PIN") or numbers of all the parcels of real property
21contained in the area classified for special uses. A special
22use shall be permitted only upon evidence that such use meets
23standards established for such classification in the
24ordinances, and the granting of permission therefor may be
25subject to conditions reasonably necessary to meet such

 

 

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1standards. In addition, any proposed special use which fails
2to receive the approval of the commission or committee
3designated by the corporate authorities to hold the public
4hearing shall not be approved by the corporate authorities
5except by a favorable majority vote of all alders aldermen,
6commissioners or trustees of the municipality then holding
7office; however, the corporate authorities may by ordinance
8increase the vote requirement to two-thirds of all alders
9aldermen, commissioners or trustees of the municipality then
10holding office.
11(Source: P.A. 97-336, eff. 8-12-11.)
 
12    (65 ILCS 5/11-13-10)  (from Ch. 24, par. 11-13-10)
13    Sec. 11-13-10. In municipalities of less than 500,000
14population, where a variation is to be made by ordinance, upon
15the report of the board of appeals, the corporate authorities,
16by ordinance, without further public hearing, may adopt any
17proposed variation or may refer it back to the board for
18further consideration, and any proposed variation which fails
19to receive the approval of the board of appeals shall not be
20passed except by the favorable vote of two-thirds of all
21alders aldermen or trustees of the municipality.
22(Source: Laws 1961, p. 576.)
 
23    (65 ILCS 5/11-13-14)  (from Ch. 24, par. 11-13-14)
24    Sec. 11-13-14. The regulations imposed and the districts

 

 

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1created under the authority of this Division 13 may be amended
2from time to time by ordinance after the ordinance
3establishing them has gone into effect, but no such amendments
4shall be made without a hearing before some commission or
5committee designated by the corporate authorities. Notice
6shall be given of the time and place of the hearing, not more
7than 30 nor less than 15 days before the hearing, by publishing
8a notice thereof at least once in one or more newspapers
9published in the municipality, or, if no newspaper is
10published therein, then in one or more newspapers with a
11general circulation within the municipality. In municipalities
12with less than 500 population in which no newspaper is
13published, publication may be made instead by posting a notice
14in 3 prominent places within municipality. In case of a
15written protest against any proposed amendment of the
16regulations or districts, signed and acknowledged by the
17owners of 20% of the frontage proposed to be altered, or by the
18owners of 20% of the frontage immediately adjoining or across
19an alley therefrom, or by the owners of the 20% of the frontage
20directly opposite the frontage proposed to be altered, is
21filed with the clerk of the municipality, the amendment shall
22not be passed except by a favorable vote of two-thirds of the
23alders aldermen or trustees of the municipality then holding
24office. In such cases, a copy of the written protest shall be
25served by the protestor or protestors on the applicant for the
26proposed amendments and a copy upon the applicant's attorney,

 

 

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1if any, by certified mail at the address of such applicant and
2attorney shown in the application for the proposed amendment.
3Any notice required by this Section need not include a metes
4and bounds legal description, provided that the notice
5includes: (i) the common street address or addresses and (ii)
6the property index number ("PIN") or numbers of all the
7parcels of real property contained in the affected area.
8(Source: P.A. 97-336, eff. 8-12-11.)
 
9    (65 ILCS 5/11-13-14.1)  (from Ch. 24, par. 11-13-14.1)
10    Sec. 11-13-14.1. Notwithstanding any other provision to
11the contrary in this Division 13:
12    (A) The corporate authorities of any municipality may by
13ordinance establish the position of hearing officer and
14delegate to a hearing officer the authority to: (i) conduct
15any public hearing -- other than a public hearing provided for
16in Section 11-13-2 -- required to be held under this Division
1713 in connection with applications for any special use,
18variation, amendment or other change or modification in any
19ordinance of the municipality adopted pursuant to this
20Division 13; and (ii) hear and decide appeals from and review
21any order, requirement, decision or determination made by an
22administrative official charged with the enforcement of any
23ordinance adopted pursuant to this Division 13.
24    (B) When a hearing officer is designated to conduct a
25public hearing in a matter otherwise required to be heard in

 

 

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1accordance with this Division 13 by some commission or
2committee designated by the corporate authorities of the
3municipality: (i) notice of such hearing shall be given in the
4same time and manner as is provided by this Division 13 for the
5giving of notice of hearing when any such matter is to be heard
6by some commission or committee designated by the corporate
7authorities; (ii) the hearing officer shall exercise and
8perform the same powers and duties as such commission or
9committee is required to exercise and perform when conducting
10a public hearing in any such matter; and (iii) the hearing
11officer shall render a written recommendation to the corporate
12authorities within such time and in such manner and form as the
13corporate authorities shall require.
14    (C) When a hearing officer is designated to conduct a
15public hearing in a matter otherwise required to be heard in
16accordance with this Division 13 by the board of appeals, or
17when a hearing officer is designated to hear and decide
18appeals from and review any order, requirement, decision or
19determination made by an administrative official charged with
20the enforcement of any ordinance adopted pursuant to this
21Division 13: (i) notice of hearing shall be given in the same
22time and manner as is provided by this Division 13 for the
23giving of notice of hearing when any such matter is to be heard
24by the board of appeals; (ii) the hearing officer in passing
25upon and determining any matter otherwise within the
26jurisdiction of the board of appeals shall be governed by all

 

 

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1of the standards, rules and conditions imposed by this
2Division 13 to govern the board of appeals when it passes upon
3and determines any such matter; and (iii) the hearing officer
4shall exercise and perform all of the powers and duties of the
5board of appeals in the same manner and to the same effect as
6provided in this Division 13 with respect to the board of
7appeals, provided that:
8    1. When the hearing officer is passing upon an application
9for variation or special use and the power to determine and
10approve such variation or special use is reserved to the
11corporate authorities, then upon report of the hearing officer
12the corporate authorities may by ordinance without further
13public hearing adopt any proposed variation or special use or
14may refer it back to the hearing officer for further
15consideration, and any proposed variation or special use which
16fails to receive the approval of the hearing officer shall not
17be passed except by the favorable vote of 2/3 of all alder
18alderman or trustees of the municipality;
19    2. When the hearing officer is passing upon an application
20for variation or special use and the power to determine and
21approve such variation or special use is not reserved to the
22corporate authorities, or when the hearing officer is hearing
23and deciding appeals from or reviewing any order, requirement,
24decision or determination made by an administrative official
25charged with the enforcement of any ordinance adopted pursuant
26to this Division 13, the determination made by the hearing

 

 

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1officer with respect to any such matter shall constitute a
2final administrative decision which is subject to judicial
3review pursuant to the provisions of the "Administrative
4Review Law", as now or hereafter amended.
5    (D) The corporate authorities of the municipality may
6provide general or specific rules implementing but not
7inconsistent with the provisions of this Section, including
8rules relative to the time and manner in which hearing
9officers are designated to conduct public hearings and rules
10governing the manner in which such hearings are conducted and
11matters heard therein passed upon and determined.
12    (E) Hearing officers shall be appointed on the basis of
13training and experience which qualifies them to conduct
14hearings, make recommendations or findings of fact and
15conclusions on the matters heard and otherwise exercise and
16perform the powers, duties and functions delegated in
17accordance with this Section. Hearing officers shall receive
18such compensation as the corporate authorities of the
19municipality shall provide, and any municipality may establish
20a schedule of fees to defray the costs of providing a hearing
21officer.
22    (F) This Section is intended to furnish an alternative or
23supplemental procedure which a municipality in its discretion
24may provide for hearing, determining, reviewing and deciding
25matters which arise under any ordinance adopted by the
26municipality pursuant to this Division 13, but nothing in this

 

 

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1Section shall be deemed to limit or prevent the use of any
2existing procedure available to a municipality under this
3Division 13 for hearing, approving or denying applications for
4a special use, variation, amendment or other change or
5modification of any such ordinance, or for hearing and
6deciding appeals from and reviewing any order, requirement,
7decision or determination made by an administrative official
8charged with the enforcement of any such ordinance.
9(Source: P.A. 84-960.)
 
10    (65 ILCS 5/11-80-5)  (from Ch. 24, par. 11-80-5)
11    Sec. 11-80-5. The corporate authorities of each
12municipality, with the concurrence of two-thirds of all of the
13alders aldermen, trustees or commissioners elected therein,
14may levy and collect annually, in addition to all other taxes
15now authorized by law, a tax of not to exceed .05% of the
16value, as equalized or assessed by the Department of Revenue,
17of the taxable property in the municipality, to be used
18exclusively for the purpose of lighting streets. The tax
19authorized by this Section is in addition to taxes for general
20corporate purposes authorized by Section 8-3-1.
21    The foregoing tax rate limitation, insofar as it is
22applicable to municipalities of less than 500,000 population,
23may be increased or decreased under the referendum provisions
24of the General Revenue Law of Illinois.
25(Source: P.A. 86-280.)
 

 

 

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1    (65 ILCS 5/11-91-1)  (from Ch. 24, par. 11-91-1)
2    Sec. 11-91-1. Whenever the corporate authorities of any
3municipality, whether incorporated by special act or under any
4general law, determine that the public interest will be
5subserved by vacating any street or alley, or part thereof,
6within their jurisdiction in any incorporated area, they may
7vacate that street or alley, or part thereof, by an ordinance.
8The ordinance shall provide the legal description or permanent
9index number of the particular parcel or parcels of property
10acquiring title to the vacated property. But this ordinance
11shall be passed by the affirmative vote of at least
12three-fourths of the alders aldermen, trustees or
13commissioners then holding office. This vote shall be taken by
14ayes and noes and entered on the records of the corporate
15authorities.
16    No ordinance shall be passed vacating any street or alley
17under a municipality's jurisdiction and within an
18unincorporated area without notice thereof and a hearing
19thereon. At least 15 days prior to such a hearing, notice of
20its time, place and subject matter shall be published in a
21newspaper of general circulation within the unincorporated
22area which the street or alley proposed for vacation serves.
23At the hearing all interested persons shall be heard
24concerning the proposal for vacation.
25    The ordinance may provide that it shall not become

 

 

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1effective until the owners of all property or the owner or
2owners of a particular parcel or parcels of property abutting
3upon the street or alley, or part thereof so vacated, shall pay
4compensation in an amount which, in the judgment of the
5corporate authorities, shall be the fair market value of the
6property acquired or of the benefits which will accrue to them
7by reason of that vacation, and if there are any public service
8facilities in such street or alley, or part thereof, the
9ordinance shall also reserve to the municipality or to the
10public utility, as the case may be, owning such facilities,
11such property, rights of way and easements as, in the judgment
12of the corporate authorities, are necessary or desirable for
13continuing public service by means of those facilities and for
14the maintenance, renewal and reconstruction thereof. If the
15ordinance provides that only the owner or owners of one
16particular parcel of abutting property shall make payment,
17then the owner or owners of the particular parcel shall
18acquire title to the entire vacated street or alley, or the
19part thereof vacated.
20    The determination of the corporate authorities that the
21nature and extent of the public use or public interest to be
22subserved in such as to warrant the vacation of any street or
23alley, or part thereof, is conclusive, and the passage of such
24an ordinance is sufficient evidence of that determination,
25whether so recited in the ordinance or not. The relief to the
26public from further burden and responsibility of maintaining

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 187 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1any street or alley, or part thereof, constitutes a public use
2or public interest authorizing the vacation.
3    When property is damaged by the vacation or closing of any
4street or alley, the damage shall be ascertained and paid as
5provided by law.
6(Source: P.A. 93-383, eff. 7-25-03; 93-703, eff. 7-9-04.)
 
7    (65 ILCS 5/11-101-2)  (from Ch. 24, par. 11-101-2)
8    Sec. 11-101-2. Whenever the corporate authorities of any
9municipality have established an airport outside the corporate
10limits of the municipality and have determined that it is
11essential to the proper and safe construction and maintenance
12of such airport to vacate any roads, highways, streets,
13alleys, or parts thereof in unincorporated territory lying
14within the airport area or any enlargement thereof, and have
15determined that the public interest will be subserved by such
16vacation, they may vacate such roads, highways, streets,
17alleys, or parts thereof, by an ordinance. Provided however,
18that such municipality shall have first acquired the land on
19both sides of such roads, highways, streets, alleys, or parts
20thereof; provided, also, that in the case of a road, highway,
21street or alley or part thereof, under the jurisdiction of the
22Department of Transportation, the consent of the Department
23shall be obtained before the ordinance shall become effective.
24Such ordinance shall be passed by the affirmative vote of at
25least 3/4 of all alders aldermen, trustees or commissioners

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 188 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1authorized by law to be elected. Such vacation shall be
2effective upon passage of the ordinance and recording of a
3certified copy thereof with the recorder of the county within
4which the roads, highways, streets, alleys, or parts thereof
5are situated.
6(Source: P.A. 83-358.)
 
7    Section 30. The Revised Cities and Villages Act of 1941 is
8amended by changing the heading of Article prec. Sec. 21-22
9and Sections 21-5.1, 21-7, 21-14, 21-22, 21-23, 21-24, 21-25,
1021-26, 21-27, 21-28, 21-29, 21-30, 21-32, 21-33, 21-34, 21-38,
1121-39, 21-40, and 21-41 as follows:
 
12    (65 ILCS 20/21-5.1)  (from Ch. 24, par. 21-5.1)
13    Sec. 21-5.1. Vice Mayor - Election - Duties -
14Compensation.) Following election and qualification of alders
15aldermen at a general election as provided by Section 21-22 of
16this Act, the City Council shall elect, from among its
17members, a Vice Mayor, to serve as interim Mayor of Chicago in
18the event that a vacancy occurs in the office of Mayor or in
19the event that the Council determines, by 3/5 vote, that the
20Mayor is under a permanent or protracted disability caused by
21illness or injury which renders the Mayor unable to serve. The
22Vice Mayor shall serve as interim Mayor. He will serve until
23the City Council shall elect one of its members acting Mayor or
24until the mayoral term expires.

 

 

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1    The Vice Mayor shall receive no compensation as such, but
2shall receive compensation as an alder alderman even while
3serving as interim Mayor. While serving as interim Mayor, the
4Vice Mayor shall possess all rights and powers and shall
5perform the duties of Mayor.
6(Source: P.A. 80-308.)
 
7    (65 ILCS 20/21-7)  (from Ch. 24, par. 21-7)
8    Sec. 21-7. Compensation of officers.
9    The compensation of all officers shall be by salary. No
10officer shall be allowed any fees, perquisites or emoluments
11or any reward or compensation aside from his salary, but all
12fees and earnings of his office or department shall be paid by
13him into the city treasury. The city council shall fix the
14salaries of all officers, except those who are elected or
15appointed for a definite term fixed by statute, in the annual
16appropriation ordinance and those salaries shall not be
17altered during the same fiscal year. The city council, by
18ordinance other than the appropriation ordinance, shall fix
19the compensation of each officer who is elected or appointed
20for a definite term fixed by statute and his salary shall not
21be increased or diminished during his term of office. The
22chairman of the finance committee of the city council shall
23receive in addition to his salary as an alder alderman such
24additional compensation, not exceeding $3,500.00 per annum, as
25may be provided in the annual appropriation ordinance for his

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 190 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1services as chairman of said committee.
2(Source: Laws 1947, p. 497.)
 
3    (65 ILCS 20/21-14)  (from Ch. 24, par. 21-14)
4    Sec. 21-14. Member residency before election; member not
5to hold other office.
6    (a) No member may be elected or appointed to the city
7council after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the
893rd General Assembly unless he or she has resided in the ward
9he or she seeks to represent at least one year next preceding
10the date of the election or appointment. In the election
11following redistricting, a candidate for alder alderman may be
12elected from any ward containing a part of the ward in which he
13or she resided for at least one year next preceding the
14election that follows the redistricting, and, if elected, that
15person may be reelected from the new ward he or she represents
16if he or she resides in that ward for at least one year next
17preceding the reelection.
18    (b) No member of the city council shall at the same time
19hold any other civil service office under the federal, state
20or city government, except if such member is granted a leave of
21absence from such civil service office, or except in the
22National Guard, or as a notary public, and except such
23honorary offices as go by appointment without compensation.
24(Source: P.A. 93-847, eff. 7-30-04.)
 

 

 

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1    (65 ILCS 20/prec. Sec. 21-22 heading)
2
ELECTION OF ALDERS ALDERMEN

 
3    (65 ILCS 20/21-22)  (from Ch. 24, par. 21-22)
4    Sec. 21-22. General election for alders aldermen;
5vacancies.
6    (a) A general election for alders aldermen shall be held
7in the year 1943 and every 4 years thereafter, at which one
8alder alderman shall be elected from each of the 50 wards
9provided for by this Article. The alders aldermen elected
10shall serve for a term of 4 years beginning at noon on the
11third Monday in May following the election of city officers,
12and until their successors are elected and have qualified. All
13elections for alders aldermen shall be in accordance with the
14provisions of law in force and operative in the City of Chicago
15for such elections at the time the elections are held.
16    (b) Vacancies occurring in the office of alder alderman
17shall be filled in the manner prescribed for filling vacancies
18in Section 3.1-10-51 of the Illinois Municipal Code. An
19appointment to fill a vacancy shall be made within 60 days
20after the vacancy occurs. The requirement that an appointment
21be made within 60 days is an exclusive power and function of
22the State and is a denial and limitation under Article VII,
23Section 6, subsection (h) of the Illinois Constitution of the
24power of a home rule municipality to require that an
25appointment be made within a different period after the

 

 

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1vacancy occurs.
2(Source: P.A. 95-1041, eff. 3-25-09.)
 
3    (65 ILCS 20/21-23)  (from Ch. 24, par. 21-23)
4    Sec. 21-23. Salaries of alders aldermen.
5    The alders aldermen in office when this article is adopted
6and the alders aldermen elected under the provisions of this
7article may receive for their services such compensation as
8shall be fixed by ordinance, at the rate of not to exceed eight
9thousand dollars per annum for each alder alderman.
10(Source: Laws 1953, p. 1781.)
 
11    (65 ILCS 20/21-24)  (from Ch. 24, par. 21-24)
12    Sec. 21-24. Application - Recall elections. The provisions
13of this Article shall apply to all elections for alders
14aldermen in the city of Chicago. The name of no person shall be
15printed upon the official ballot as a candidate for alder
16alderman, unless the terms of this Article shall have been
17complied with. If recall elections are provided for, to be
18held within the city of Chicago, the provisions of this
19Article shall apply to such elections, except to the extent
20that provisions inconsistent herewith are made by the law
21providing for such recall elections.
22(Source: Laws 1941, vol. 2, p. 19.)
 
23    (65 ILCS 20/21-25)  (from Ch. 24, par. 21-25)

 

 

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1    Sec. 21-25. Times for elections.) General elections for
2alders aldermen shall be held in the year or years fixed by law
3for holding the same, on the last Tuesday of February of such
4year. Any supplementary election for alders aldermen held
5under the provisions of this article shall be held on the first
6Tuesday of April next following the holding of such general
7aldermanic election.
8(Source: P.A. 80-1469.)
 
9    (65 ILCS 20/21-26)  (from Ch. 24, par. 21-26)
10    Sec. 21-26. Candidates receiving majority elected -
11Supplementary elections.
12    The candidate receiving a majority of the votes cast for
13alder alderman in each ward at any general or special election
14shall be declared elected. In the event that no candidate
15receives a majority of such votes in any ward or wards a
16supplementary election shall be held at the time prescribed in
17Section 21-25. At such supplementary election the names of the
18candidates in each of such wards receiving the highest and
19second highest number of votes at the preceding general or
20special election and no others shall be placed on the official
21ballot: Provided, however, that if there be any candidate who,
22under the provisions of this Section would have been entitled
23to a place on the ballot at the supplementary election except
24for the fact that some other candidate received an equal
25number of votes, then all such candidates receiving such equal

 

 

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1number of votes shall have their names printed on the ballot as
2candidates at such succeeding supplementary election. The
3candidate receiving the highest number of votes at such
4supplementary election shall be declared elected. Such
5supplementary election shall be deemed a special election
6under the election and ballot laws in force in the city of
7Chicago and shall be governed thereby except in so far as such
8laws are inconsistent with the provisions of this article.
9(Source: Laws 1941, vol. 2, p. 19.)
 
10    (65 ILCS 20/21-27)  (from Ch. 24, par. 21-27)
11    Sec. 21-27. Election contest-Complaint. Any candidate
12whose name appears on the ballots used in any ward of the city
13at any election for alder alderman, may contest the election
14of the candidate who appears to be elected from such ward on
15the face of the returns, or may contest the right of the
16candidates who appear to have received the highest and second
17highest number of votes to places on the official ballot at any
18supplementary election, by filing within 5 days after such
19election with the Clerk of the Circuit Court of Cook County, a
20complaint in writing, verified by the candidate making the
21contest, setting forth the grounds of the contest. The
22contestant in each contest shall also serve notice on all
23persons who were candidates for alder alderman of such ward at
24the election, within such 5 days, informing them that such
25complaint has been or will be filed. The Circuit Court of Cook

 

 

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1County shall have jurisdiction to hear and determine such
2contest. All proceedings in relation to such contest after the
3filing of such complaint shall be the same, as near as may be,
4as provided for in the case of a contest at a primary election
5in such city. In case the court shall decide that the complaint
6is insufficient in law, or that the candidate who appears to
7have been elected on the face of the return has been duly
8elected, the complaint shall be dismissed. If it shall appear
9to the satisfaction of the court that the face of the returns
10are not correct, and that the candidate who appears thereby to
11have been elected was not in fact elected, then the candidates
12having the highest and second highest number of votes as
13determined by such contest shall be candidates at the
14subsequent supplementary election as provided for in section
1521-26.
16(Source: P.A. 83-334.)
 
17    (65 ILCS 20/21-28)  (from Ch. 24, par. 21-28)
18    Sec. 21-28. Nomination by petition.
19    (a) All nominations for alder alderman of any ward in the
20city shall be by petition. Each petition for nomination of a
21candidate shall be signed by at least 473 legal voters of the
22ward.
23    (b) All nominations for mayor, city clerk, and city
24treasurer in the city shall be by petition. Each petition for
25nomination of a candidate must be signed by at least 12,500

 

 

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1legal voters of the city.
2    (c) All such petitions, and procedure with respect
3thereto, shall conform in other respects to the provisions of
4the election and ballot laws then in force in the city of
5Chicago concerning the nomination of independent candidates
6for public office by petition. The method of nomination herein
7provided is exclusive of and replaces all other methods
8heretofore provided by law.
9(Source: P.A. 98-115, eff. 7-29-13; 98-1171, eff. 6-1-15.)
 
10    (65 ILCS 20/21-29)  (from Ch. 24, par. 21-29)
11    Sec. 21-29. Withdrawals and substitution of candidates.
12    Any candidate for alder alderman under the provisions of
13this article may withdraw his name as a candidate by filing
14with the board of election commissioners of the city of
15Chicago not later than the date of certification of the ballot
16his written request signed by him and duly acknowledged before
17an officer qualified to take acknowledgements of deeds,
18whereupon his name shall not be printed as a candidate upon the
19official ballot.
20    If any candidate at an aldermanic election who was not
21elected as provided for in this article but who shall have
22received sufficient votes to entitle him to a place on the
23official ballot at the ensuing supplementary election shall
24die or withdraw his candidacy before such supplementary
25election, the name of the candidate who shall receive the next

 

 

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1highest number of votes shall be printed on the ballot in lieu
2of the name of the candidate who shall have died or withdrawn
3his candidacy.
4(Source: P.A. 96-1008, eff. 7-6-10.)
 
5    (65 ILCS 20/21-30)  (from Ch. 24, par. 21-30)
6    Sec. 21-30. Form of ballot. Ballots to be used at any
7general, supplementary or special election for alders aldermen
8held under the provisions of this Article, in addition to
9other requirements of law, shall conform to the following
10requirements:
11        (1) At the top of the ballots shall be printed in
12    capital letters the words designating the ballot. If a
13    general aldermanic election the words shall be "Official
14    aldermanic election ballot"; if a supplementary election
15    the designating words shall be "Official supplementary
16    aldermanic election ballot"; if a special aldermanic
17    election, the words shall be "Special aldermanic election
18    ballot."
19        (2) Beginning not less than one inch below such
20    designating words and extending across the face of the
21    ballot, the title of each office to be filled shall be
22    printed in capital letters.
23        (3) The names of candidates for different terms of
24    service therein (if any there be), shall be arranged and
25    printed in groups according to the length of such terms.

 

 

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1        (4) Immediately below the title of each office or
2    group heading indicating the term of office, shall be
3    printed in small letters the directions to voters, "Vote
4    for one."
5        (5) Following thereupon shall be printed the names of
6    the candidates for such office according to the title and
7    the term thereof and below the name of each candidate
8    shall be printed his place of residence, stating the
9    street and number (if any). The names of candidates shall
10    be printed in capital letters not less than one-eighth nor
11    more than one-quarter of an inch in height, and
12    immediately at the left of the name of each candidate
13    shall be printed a square, the sides of which shall not be
14    less than one-quarter of an inch in length. The names of
15    all the candidates for each office shall be printed in a
16    column and arranged in the order hereinafter designated;
17    all names of candidates shall be printed in uniform type;
18    the places of residence of such candidates shall be
19    printed in uniform type; and squares upon said ballots
20    shall be of uniform size; and spaces between the names of
21    the candidates for the same office shall be of uniform
22    size.
23        (6) The names of the candidates for alder alderman
24    shall appear upon the ballot in the order in which
25    petitions for nomination have been filed in the office of
26    the board of election commissioners. However, 2 or more

 

 

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1    petitions filed within the last hour of the filing
2    deadline shall be deemed filed simultaneously. Where 2 or
3    more petitions are received simultaneously, the board of
4    election commissioners shall break ties and determine the
5    order of filing by means of a lottery or other fair and
6    impartial method of random selection approved by the board
7    of election commissioners. Such lottery shall be conducted
8    within 9 days following the last day for petition filing
9    and shall be open to the public. Seven days written notice
10    of the time and place of conducting such random selection
11    shall be given, by the board of election commissioners, to
12    the Chairman of each political party and to each
13    organization of citizens within the city which was
14    entitled, under the Election Code, at the next preceding
15    election, to have pollwatchers present on the day of
16    election. The board of election commissioners shall post
17    in a conspicuous, open and public place, at the entrance
18    of the office, notice of the time and place of such
19    lottery. The board of election commissioners shall adopt
20    rules and regulations governing the procedures for the
21    conduct of such lottery.
22(Source: P.A. 98-115, eff. 7-29-13.)
 
23    (65 ILCS 20/21-32)  (from Ch. 24, par. 21-32)
24    Sec. 21-32. Party designations prohibited - Ballot to be
25separate from other ballots. No party name, party initial,

 

 

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1party circle platform, principle, appellation or
2distinguishing mark of any kind shall be printed upon any
3election ballot used at any election for mayor, city clerk,
4city treasurer, or alder alderman held under the provisions of
5this Article.
6(Source: P.A. 98-115, eff. 7-29-13.)
 
7    (65 ILCS 20/21-33)  (from Ch. 24, par. 21-33)
8    Sec. 21-33. Challengers and watchers.
9    Any candidate for alder alderman under the terms of this
10article may appoint in writing over his signature not more
11than one representative for each place of voting, who shall
12have the right to act as challenger and watcher for such
13candidate at any election at which his name is being voted
14upon. Such challenger and watcher shall have the same powers
15and privileges as a challenger and watcher under the election
16laws of this State applicable to Chicago. No political party
17shall have the right to keep any challenger or watcher at any
18polling place at any election held under the provisions of
19this article unless candidates for some office other than
20alder alderman are to be voted for at the same time.
21(Source: Laws 1941, vol. 2, p. 19.)
 
22    (65 ILCS 20/21-34)  (from Ch. 24, par. 21-34)
23    Sec. 21-34. Certificate of election.
24    No certificate of election shall be given to any candidate

 

 

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1who shall be declared elected at any general aldermanic
2election until after the date fixed by this Article for the
3holding of the supplementary election provided for in this
4Article.
5(Source: Laws 1941, vol. 2, p. 19.)
 
6    (65 ILCS 20/21-38)  (from Ch. 24, par. 21-38)
7    Sec. 21-38. Redistricting every ten years.
8    If the city council has not redistricted the city of
9Chicago since the taking of the national census of 1940, then
10within three months after the adoption of this article by the
11voters it shall be the duty of the city council to pass an
12ordinance redistricting the city into fifty wards in
13accordance with the provisions of this article.
14    On or before the first day of December, of the year
15following the year in which the national census is taken, and
16every ten years thereafter, the city council shall by
17ordinance redistrict the city on the basis of the national
18census of the preceding year. All elections of alders aldermen
19shall be held from the existing wards until a redistricting is
20had as provided for in this article.
21(Source: Laws 1941, vol. 2, p. 19.)
 
22    (65 ILCS 20/21-39)  (from Ch. 24, par. 21-39)
23    Sec. 21-39. When redistricting ordinance takes effect -
24Substitute ordinance may be submitted. No such redistricting

 

 

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1ordinance shall take effect until the expiration of 15 days
2after its passage. If within such 15 days 1/5 or more of the
3alders aldermen elected, who did not vote to pass such
4redistricting ordinance, file with the city clerk a proposed
5substitute ordinance redistricting the city in accordance with
6the provisions of this article, together with a petition
7signed by them demanding that the question of the adoption of
8the redistricting ordinance passed by the city council,
9together with the question of the adoption of such substitute
10ordinance, be submitted to the voters, then such redistricting
11ordinance passed by the city council shall not go into effect
12until the question of this adoption shall have been submitted
13to a popular vote: Provided, that no alder alderman shall have
14the right to sign more than one such petition. Upon the
15expiration of such 15 days the city clerk shall promptly
16certify to the board of election commissioners of the city of
17Chicago, the ordinance passed by the city council and such
18substitute ordinance or ordinances and petition or petitions,
19and it shall thereupon be the duty of the board of election
20commissioners to submit the ordinances so certified to a
21popular vote at the next general or municipal election, to be
22held in and for the entire city not less than 40 days after the
23passage of such redistricting ordinance by the city council.
24(Source: P.A. 81-1489.)
 
25    (65 ILCS 20/21-40)  (from Ch. 24, par. 21-40)

 

 

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1    Sec. 21-40. Failure of council to act - One-fifth of the
2alders aldermen may submit redistricting ordinance.
3    If the city council shall fail at any time to pass a
4redistricting ordinance as required in this article, one-fifth
5or more of the alders aldermen elected shall have the right to
6file with the city clerk, not less than 40 days before the date
7of holding any general, municipal, or special election, to be
8held in and for the entire city, an ordinance redistricting
9the city in accordance with the provisions of this article,
10together with a petition signed by them demanding that such
11ordinance be submitted to the legal voters at the next such
12election in and for the entire city to be held not less than 40
13days after the filing of such ordinance and petition:
14Provided, that no alder alderman shall have the right to sign
15more than one such petition. Upon the expiration of the time
16for filing any such ordinance the city clerk shall promptly
17certify to the board of election commissioners of the city of
18Chicago any ordinance or ordinances, together with any
19petition or petitions, so filed and thereupon it shall be the
20duty of the board of election commissioners to submit such
21ordinance or ordinances to a popular vote at the election
22specified in such petition or petitions: Provided, that if,
23after the filing of any such ordinance and petition and not
24less than 40 days prior to such election, the city council
25shall pass an ordinance redistricting the city, then the
26question of the adoption of any ordinance or ordinances filed

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 204 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1with the city clerk in accordance with the provisions of this
2section shall not be submitted to a popular vote. However,
3after such action by the city council, a substitute ordinance
4or ordinances may be proposed in the manner provided in this
5article.
6(Source: Laws 1941, vol. 2, p. 19.)
 
7    (65 ILCS 20/21-41)  (from Ch. 24, par. 21-41)
8    Sec. 21-41. Redistricting ordinance submitted - Form of
9ballot.
10    If the question of the adoption of one of two or more
11redistricting ordinances is submitted to the voters at any
12election, the ballots used for the submission of such
13proposition shall, in addition to the other requirements of
14law, conform substantially to the following requirements:
15    1. Above the propositions submitted the following words
16shall be printed in capital letters:
17    "PROPOSITIONS FOR THE REDISTRICTING OF THE CITY OF
18CHICAGO."
19    2. Immediately below said words shall be printed in small
20letters the direction to voters:
21    "Vote for One."
22    3. Following thereupon shall be printed each proposition
23to be voted upon in substantially the following form:
 
24    -------------------------------------------------------------

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 205 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1        For the adoption of an ordinance for the redistricting
2    of the City of Chicago (here insert "passed by the city
3    council" or "proposed by Alders Aldermen (here insert
4    names of the alders aldermen signing petition)" as the
5    case may require.
6    -------------------------------------------------------------
7        For the adoption of an ordinance for the redistricting
8    of the City of Chicago proposed by Alders Aldermen (here
9    insert names of the alders aldermen signing the petition).
10    -------------------------------------------------------------
 
11    Whenever the question of the adoption of but one
12redistricting ordinance shall be submitted to the voters, the
13form of the ballot shall be substantially as follows:
 
14    -------------------------------------------------------------
15        Shall the ordinance proposed by Alders Aldermen (Here
16    insert the names of the alders aldermen signing the
17    petition) be adopted?
18    ---------------------------------------------------------
19        YES                         NO
20    -------------------------------------------------------------
 
21    4. All the propositions shall be printed in uniform type.
22(Source: Laws 1941, vol. 2, p. 19.)
 

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 206 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1    Section 35. The Civic Center Code is amended by changing
2Sections 210-20, 210-25, 270-20, and 270-25 as follows:
 
3    (70 ILCS 200/210-20)
4    Sec. 210-20. Board members designated. The mayor and
5alders aldermen, ex officio, of the City of Pontiac shall be
6the members of the Board. Before entering upon the duties of
7his office, each member of the Board shall take and subscribe
8the constitutional oath of office and file it in the office of
9the Secretary of State.
10(Source: P.A. 90-328, eff. 1-1-98.)
 
11    (70 ILCS 200/210-25)
12    Sec. 210-25. Board members; terms. Members of the Board
13shall hold office until their respective successors as mayor
14alders aldermen of the City of Pontiac have been appointed and
15qualified.
16(Source: P.A. 90-328, eff. 1-1-98.)
 
17    (70 ILCS 200/270-20)
18    Sec. 270-20. Board members. The mayor and alders aldermen,
19ex officio, of the City of Waukegan shall be the members of the
20Board. Before entering upon the duties of his office, each
21member of the Board shall take and subscribe the
22constitutional oath of office and file it in the office of the
23Secretary of State.

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 207 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1(Source: P.A. 90-328, eff. 1-1-98.)
 
2    (70 ILCS 200/270-25)
3    Sec. 270-25. Board member terms. Members of the Board
4shall hold office until their respective successors as mayor
5or alders aldermen of the City of Waukegan have been appointed
6and qualified.
7(Source: P.A. 90-328, eff. 1-1-98.)
 
8    Section 40. The Metropolitan Pier and Exposition Authority
9Act is amended by changing Section 5.6 as follows:
 
10    (70 ILCS 210/5.6)
11    Sec. 5.6. Marketing agreement.
12    (a) The Authority shall enter into a marketing agreement
13with a not-for-profit organization headquartered in Chicago
14and recognized by the Department of Commerce and Economic
15Opportunity as a certified local tourism and convention bureau
16entitled to receive State tourism grant funds, provided the
17bylaws of the organization establish a board of the
18organization that is comprised of 35 members serving 3-year
19staggered terms, including the following:
20        (1) no less than 8 members appointed by the Mayor of
21    Chicago, to include:
22            (A) a Chair of the board of the organization
23        appointed by the Mayor of the City of Chicago from

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 208 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1        among the business and civic leaders of Chicago who
2        are not engaged in the hospitality business or who
3        have not served as a member of the Board or as chief
4        executive officer of the Authority; and
5            (B) 7 members from among the cultural, economic
6        development, or civic leaders of Chicago;
7        (2) the chairperson of the interim board or Board of
8    the Authority, or his or her designee;
9        (3) a representative from the department in the City
10    of Chicago that is responsible for the operation of
11    Chicago-area airports;
12        (4) a representative from the department in the City
13    of Chicago that is responsible for the regulation of
14    Chicago-area livery vehicles;
15        (5) at least 1, but no more than:
16            (A) 5 members from the hotel industry;
17            (B) 5 members representing Chicago arts and
18        cultural institutions or projects;
19            (C) 2 members from the restaurant industry;
20            (D) 2 members employed by or representing an
21        entity responsible for a trade show;
22            (E) 2 members representing unions;
23            (F) 2 members from the attractions industry; and
24        (6) the Director of the Illinois Department of
25    Commerce and Economic Opportunity, ex officio.
26    The bylaws of the organization may provide for the

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 209 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1appointment of a City of Chicago alder alderman as an ex
2officio member, and may provide for other ex officio members
3who shall serve terms of one year.
4    Persons with a real or apparent conflict of interest shall
5not be appointed to the board. Members of the board of the
6organization shall not serve more than 2 terms. The bylaws
7shall require the following: (i) that the Chair of the
8organization name no less than 5 and no more than 9 members to
9the Executive Committee of the organization, one of whom must
10be the chairperson of the interim board or Board of the
11Authority, and (ii) a provision concerning conflict of
12interest and a requirement that a member abstain from
13participating in board action if there is a threat to the
14independence of judgment created by any conflict of interest
15or if participation is likely to have a negative effect on
16public confidence in the integrity of the board.
17    (b) The Authority shall notify the Department of Revenue
18within 10 days after entering into a contract pursuant to this
19Section.
20(Source: P.A. 96-898, eff. 5-27-10; 96-899, eff. 5-28-10;
2197-1122, eff. 8-27-12.)
 
22    Section 45. The Beardstown Regional Flood Prevention
23District Act is amended by changing Section 10 as follows:
 
24    (70 ILCS 755/10)

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 210 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1    Sec. 10. Commissioners.
2    (a) The affairs of the district shall be managed by a board
3of 7 commissioners: one shall be appointed by the chairperson
4of the county board; one shall be appointed by the Mayor of the
5City of Beardstown; one shall be appointed by the Beardstown
6Sanitary District; one shall be appointed by the South
7Beardstown Levee and Drainage District; one shall be appointed
8by the Valley Levee and Drainage District; one shall be
9appointed by the Lost Creek Levee and Drainage District; and
10one shall be appointed by a majority vote of the other 6
11commissioners. All initial appointments under this Section
12must be made within 60 days after the district is organized.
13    (b) Of the initial appointments, 3 commissioners shall
14serve a 2-year term and 4 commissioners shall serve a 4-year
15term, as determined by lot. Their successors shall be
16appointed for 4-year terms. No commissioner may serve for more
17than 20 years. Vacancies shall be filled in the same manner as
18original appointments.
19    (c) Each commissioner must be a legal voter in Cass
20County, and all commissioners shall reside in and own property
21that is located within the district. Commissioners shall serve
22without compensation, but may be reimbursed for reasonable
23expenses incurred in the performance of their duties.
24    (d) A majority of the commissioners shall constitute a
25quorum of the board for the transaction of business. An
26affirmative vote of a majority of the commissioners shall be

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 211 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1sufficient to approve any action or expenditure.
2    (e) An alder alderman of the City of Beardstown, a member
3of the county board, and a commissioner of each of the
4aforementioned drainage districts and sanitation district may
5be appointed to serve concurrently as commissioners of the
6district, and the appointment shall be deemed lawful and not
7to constitute a violation of the Public Officer Prohibited
8Activities Act, nor to create an impermissible conflict of
9interest or incompatibility of offices.
10(Source: P.A. 97-309, eff. 8-11-11.)
 
11    Section 50. The Park System Civil Service Act is amended
12by changing Section 23 as follows:
 
13    (70 ILCS 1210/23)  (from Ch. 24 1/2, par. 102)
14    Sec. 23. No officer or employee in the service of any such
15park district shall, directly or indirectly, give or hand over
16to any officer or employee in said classified civil service,
17or to any senator or representative or alder alderman,
18councilman or park commissioner, any money or other valuable
19thing on account of or to be applied to the promotion of any
20party or political object whatever.
21(Source: Laws 1911, p. 211.)
 
22    Section 55. The Park Annuity and Benefit Fund Civil
23Service Act is amended by changing Section 25 as follows:
 

 

 

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1    (70 ILCS 1215/25)  (from Ch. 24 1/2, par. 138)
2    Sec. 25. No officer or employee in the service of such Park
3Employees' and Retirement Board Employees' Annuity and Benefit
4Fund shall, directly or indirectly, give or hand over to any
5officer or employee in said classified civil service, or to
6any senator, representative, alder alderman, councilman, park
7commissioner or trustee, any money or other valuable thing on
8account of or to be applied to the promotion of any party or
9political object whatever.
10(Source: Laws 1963, p. 138.)
 
11    Section 60. The Metropolitan Water Reclamation District
12Act is amended by changing Section 4.25 as follows:
 
13    (70 ILCS 2605/4.25)  (from Ch. 42, par. 323.25)
14    Sec. 4.25. Political contributions and campaigns.
15    (a) During a commissioner's or an employee's compensated
16time, other than vacation, personal, holiday, or compensatory
17time off, a commissioner or an employee in the service of the
18sanitary district shall not, directly or indirectly, give or
19hand over to any commissioner or employee, or to any senator,
20representative, alder alderman, councilman, or trustee, any
21money or other valuable thing on account of or to be applied to
22the promotion of any party or political object whatever.
23    (b) During an employee's compensated time, other than

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 213 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1vacation, personal, holiday, or compensatory time off, an
2employee shall not take any part in the management or affairs
3of any political party or in any political campaign, except to
4exercise his or her right as a citizen privately to express his
5or her opinion, and to cast his or her vote, provided, however,
6that an employee shall have the right to hold any public
7office, either by appointment or election, that is not
8incompatible with his or her duties as an employee of the
9District, and provided further that the employee does not
10campaign or otherwise engage in political activity during his
11or her compensated time other than vacation, personal,
12holiday, or compensatory time off.
13    (c) This Section shall not be deemed to authorize conduct
14prohibited by the Federal Hatch Act by employees subject to
15that Act.
16    (d) For the purposes of this Section, "compensated time"
17means any time worked by or credited to an employee that counts
18toward any minimum work time requirement imposed as a
19condition of employment with the sanitary district, but does
20not include any designated holidays or any period when the
21employee is on a leave of absence. With respect to
22commissioners, "compensated time" means any period of time
23when the commissioner is on the premises under the control of
24the sanitary district and any other time when the commissioner
25is executing his or her official duties, regardless of
26location.

 

 

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1    For the purposes of this Section, "compensatory time off"
2means authorized time off earned by or awarded to an employee
3to compensate in whole or in part for time worked in excess of
4the minimum work time required of that employee as a condition
5of employment with the sanitary district.
6(Source: P.A. 97-125, eff. 7-14-11.)
 
7    Section 65. The School Code is amended by changing
8Sections 34-210, 34-230, and 34-235 as follows:
 
9    (105 ILCS 5/34-210)
10    Sec. 34-210. The Educational Facility Master Plan.
11    (a) In accordance with the schedule set forth in this
12Article, the chief executive officer or his or her designee
13shall prepare a 10-year educational facility master plan every
145 years, with updates 2 1/2 years after the approval of the
15initial 10-year plan, with the first such educational facility
16master plan to be approved on or before October 1, 2013.
17    (b) The educational facility master plan shall provide
18community area level plans and individual school master plans
19with options for addressing the facility and space needs for
20each facility operated by the district over a 10-year period.
21    (c) The data, information, and analysis that shall inform
22the educational facility master plan shall be published on the
23district's Internet website and shall include the following:
24        (1) a description of the district's guiding

 

 

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1    educational goals and standards;
2        (2) a brief description of the types of instructional
3    programs and services delivered in each school, including
4    specific plans for special education programs, early
5    childhood education programs, career and technical
6    education programs, and any other programs that are space
7    sensitive to avoid space irregularities;
8        (3) a description of the process, procedure, and
9    timeline for community participation in the development of
10    the plan;
11        (3.5) A description of a communications and community
12    involvement plan for each community in the City of Chicago
13    that includes the engagement of students, school
14    personnel, parents, and key stakeholders throughout the
15    community and all of the following:
16            (A) community action councils;
17            (B) local school councils or, if not present,
18        alternative parent and community governance for that
19        school;
20            (C) the Chicago Teachers Union; and
21            (D) all current principals.
22        (4) the enrollment capacity of each school and its
23    rate of enrollment and historical and projected
24    enrollment, and current and projected demographic
25    information for the neighborhood surrounding the district
26    based on census data;

 

 

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1        (5) a report on the assessment of individual building
2    and site conditions;
3        (6) a data table with historical and projected
4    enrollment data by school by grade;
5        (7) community analysis, including a study of current
6    and projected demographics, land usage, transportation
7    plans, residential housing and commercial development,
8    private schools, plans for water and sewage service
9    expansion or redevelopment, and institutions of higher
10    education;
11        (8) an analysis of the facility needs and requirements
12    and a process to address critical facility capital needs
13    of every school building, which shall be publicly
14    available on the district's Internet website for schools
15    and communities to have access to the information;
16        (9) identification of potential sources of funding for
17    the implementation of the Educational Facility Master
18    Plan, including financial options through tax increment
19    financing, property tax levies for schools, and bonds that
20    address critical facility needs; and
21        (10) any school building disposition, including a plan
22    delineating the process through which citizen involvement
23    is facilitated and establishing the criteria that is
24    utilized in building disposition decisions, one of which
25    shall be consideration of the impact of any proposed new
26    use of a school building on the neighborhood in which the

 

 

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1    school building is located and how it may impact
2    enrollment of schools in that community area.
3    (d) On or before May 1, 2013, the chief executive officer
4or his or her designee shall prepare and distribute for
5comment a preliminary draft of the Educational Facility Master
6Plan. The draft plan shall be distributed to the City of
7Chicago, the County of Cook, the Chicago Park District, the
8Chicago Housing Authority, the Chicago Transit Authority,
9attendance centers operated by the district, and charter
10schools operating within the district. Each attendance center
11shall make the draft plan available to the local school
12council at the annual organizational meeting or to an
13alternative advisory body and to the parents, guardians, and
14staff of the school. The draft plan also shall be distributed
15to each State Senator and State Representative with a district
16in the City of Chicago, to the Mayor of the City of Chicago,
17and to each alder alderman of the City.
18    (e) The chief executive or his or her designee shall
19publish a procedure for conducting regional public hearings
20and submitting public comments on the draft plan and an annual
21capital improvement hearing that shall discuss the district's
22annual capital budget and that is not in conjunction with
23operating budget hearings.
24    (f) After consideration of public input on the draft plan,
25the chief executive officer or his or her designee shall
26prepare and publish a report describing the public input

 

 

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1gathered and the process used to incorporate public input in
2the development of the final plan to be recommended to the
3Board.
4    (g) The chief executive officer shall present the final
5plan and report to the Board for final consideration and
6approval.
7    (h) The final approved Educational Facility Master Plan
8shall be published on the district's website.
9    (i) No later than July 1, 2016, and every 5 years
10thereafter, the chief executive officer or his or her designee
11shall prepare and submit for public comment a draft revised
12Educational Facility Master Plan following the procedures
13required for development of the original plan.
14    (j) This proposed revised plan shall reflect the progress
15achieved during the first 2 1/2 years of the Educational
16Facility Master Plan.
17    (k) On or before December 1, 2018, the Board shall adopt a
18policy to address under-enrolled schools. The policy must
19contain a list of potential interventions to address schools
20with declining enrollment, including, but not limited to,
21action by the district to: (i) create a request for proposals
22for joint use of the school with an intergovernmental rental
23or other outside entity rental, (ii) except for a charter
24school, cease any potential plans for school expansion that
25may negatively impact enrollment at the under-enrolled school,
26(iii) redraft attendance boundaries to maximize enrollment of

 

 

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1additional students, or (iv) work with under-enrolled schools
2to identify opportunities to increase enrollment and lower the
3costs of occupancy through joint use agreements.
4(Source: P.A. 99-531, eff. 7-8-16; 100-965, eff. 8-19-18.)
 
5    (105 ILCS 5/34-230)
6    Sec. 34-230. School action public meetings and hearings.
7    (a) By October 1 of each year, the chief executive officer
8shall prepare and publish guidelines for school actions. The
9guidelines shall outline the academic and non-academic
10criteria for a school action. These guidelines shall be
11created with the involvement of local school councils,
12parents, educators, and community organizations. These
13guidelines, and each subsequent revision, shall be subject to
14a public comment period of at least 21 days before their
15approval.
16    (b) The chief executive officer shall announce all
17proposed school actions to be taken at the close of the current
18academic year consistent with the guidelines by December 1 of
19each year.
20    (c) On or before December 1 of each year, the chief
21executive officer shall publish notice of the proposed school
22actions.
23        (1) Notice of the proposal for a school action shall
24    include a written statement of the basis for the school
25    action, an explanation of how the school action meets the

 

 

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1    criteria set forth in the guidelines, and a draft School
2    Transition Plan identifying the items required in Section
3    34-225 of this Code for all schools affected by the school
4    action. The notice shall state the date, time, and place
5    of the hearing or meeting. For a school closure only, 8
6    months after notice is given, the chief executive officer
7    must publish on the district's website a full financial
8    report on the closure that includes an analysis of the
9    closure's costs and benefits to the district.
10        (2) The chief executive officer or his or her designee
11    shall provide notice to the principal, staff, local school
12    council, and parents or guardians of any school that is
13    subject to the proposed school action.
14        (3) The chief executive officer shall provide written
15    notice of any proposed school action to the State Senator,
16    State Representative, and alder alderman for the school or
17    schools that are subject to the proposed school action.
18        (4) The chief executive officer shall publish notice
19    of proposed school actions on the district's Internet
20    website.
21        (5) The chief executive officer shall provide notice
22    of proposed school actions at least 30 calendar days in
23    advance of a public hearing or meeting. The notice shall
24    state the date, time, and place of the hearing or meeting.
25    No Board decision regarding a proposed school action may
26    take place less than 60 days after the announcement of the

 

 

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1    proposed school action.
2    (d) The chief executive officer shall publish a brief
3summary of the proposed school actions and the date, time, and
4place of the hearings or meetings in a newspaper of general
5circulation.
6    (e) The chief executive officer shall designate at least 3
7opportunities to elicit public comment at a hearing or meeting
8on a proposed school action and shall do the following:
9        (1) Convene at least one public hearing at the
10    centrally located office of the Board.
11        (2) Convene at least 2 additional public hearings or
12    meetings at a location convenient to the school community
13    subject to the proposed school action.
14    (f) Public hearings shall be conducted by a qualified
15independent hearing officer chosen from a list of independent
16hearing officers. The general counsel shall compile and
17publish a list of independent hearing officers by November 1
18of each school year. The independent hearing officer shall
19have the following qualifications:
20        (1) he or she must be a licensed attorney eligible to
21    practice law in Illinois;
22        (2) he or she must not be an employee of the Board; and
23        (3) he or she must not have represented the Board, its
24    employees or any labor organization representing its
25    employees, any local school council, or any charter or
26    contract school in any capacity within the last year.

 

 

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1    The independent hearing officer shall issue a written
2report that summarizes the hearing and determines whether the
3chief executive officer complied with the requirements of this
4Section and the guidelines.
5    The chief executive officer shall publish the report on
6the district's Internet website within 5 calendar days after
7receiving the report and at least 15 days prior to any Board
8action being taken.
9    (g) Public meetings shall be conducted by a representative
10of the chief executive officer. A summary of the public
11meeting shall be published on the district's Internet website
12within 5 calendar days after the meeting.
13    (h) If the chief executive officer proposes a school
14action without following the mandates set forth in this
15Section, the proposed school action shall not be approved by
16the Board during the school year in which the school action was
17proposed.
18(Source: P.A. 101-133, eff. 7-26-19.)
 
19    (105 ILCS 5/34-235)
20    (Text of Section from P.A. 97-473)
21    Sec. 34-235. Emergencies. Nothing in Sections 34-200
22through 34-235 of this Code prevents the district from taking
23emergency action to protect the health and safety of students
24and staff in an attendance center. In the event of an emergency
25that requires the district to close all or part of a school

 

 

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1facility, including compliance with a directive of a duly
2authorized public safety agency, the chief executive officer
3or his or her designees are authorized to take all steps
4necessary to protect the safety of students and staff,
5including relocation of the attendance center to another
6location or closing the attendance center. In such cases, the
7chief executive officer shall provide written notice of the
8basis for the emergency action within 3 days after declaring
9the emergency and shall publish the steps that have been taken
10or will be taken to address the emergency within 10 days after
11declaring the emergency. The notice shall be posted on the
12district's website and provided to the principal, the local
13school council, and the State Senator, the State
14Representative, and the Alder Alderman of the school that is
15the subject of the emergency action. The notice shall explain
16why the district could not comply with the provisions in
17Sections 34-200 through 34-235 of this Code.
18(Source: P.A. 97-473, eff. 1-1-12.)
 
19    (Text of Section from P.A. 97-474)
20    Sec. 34-235. Emergencies. Nothing in Sections 34-200
21through 34-235 of this Code prevents the district from taking
22emergency action to protect the health and safety of students
23and staff in an attendance center. In the event of an emergency
24that requires the district to close all or part of a school
25facility, including compliance with a directive of a duly

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 224 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1authorized public safety agency, the chief executive officer
2or his or her designees are authorized to take all steps
3necessary to protect the safety of students and staff,
4including relocation of the attendance center to another
5location or closing the attendance center. In such cases, the
6chief executive officer shall provide written notice of the
7basis for the emergency action within 3 days after declaring
8the emergency and shall publish the steps that have been taken
9or will be taken to address the emergency within 10 days after
10declaring the emergency. The notice shall be posted on the
11district's website and provided to the principal, the local
12school council, and the State Senator, the State
13Representative, and the alder alderman of the school that is
14the subject of the emergency action. The notice shall explain
15why the district could not comply with the provisions in
16Sections 34-200 through 34-235 of this Code.
17(Source: P.A. 97-474, eff. 8-22-11.)
 
18    Section 70. The Liquor Control Act of 1934 is amended by
19changing Sections 4-1, 6-2, and 6-11 as follows:
 
20    (235 ILCS 5/4-1)  (from Ch. 43, par. 110)
21    Sec. 4-1. In every city, village or incorporated town, the
22city council or president and board of trustees, and in
23counties in respect of territory outside the limits of any
24such city, village or incorporated town the county board shall

 

 

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1have the power by general ordinance or resolution to determine
2the number, kind and classification of licenses, for sale at
3retail of alcoholic liquor not inconsistent with this Act and
4the amount of the local licensee fees to be paid for the
5various kinds of licenses to be issued in their political
6subdivision, except those issued to the specific non-beverage
7users exempt from payment of license fees under Section 5-3
8which shall be issued without payment of any local license
9fees, and the manner of distribution of such fees after their
10collection; to regulate or prohibit the presence of persons
11under the age of 21 on the premises of licensed retail
12establishments of various kinds and classifications where
13alcoholic liquor is drawn, poured, mixed or otherwise served
14for consumption on the premises; to prohibit any minor from
15drawing, pouring, or mixing any alcoholic liquor as an
16employee of any retail licensee; and to prohibit any minor
17from at any time attending any bar and from drawing, pouring or
18mixing any alcoholic liquor in any licensed retail premises;
19and to establish such further regulations and restrictions
20upon the issuance of and operations under local licenses not
21inconsistent with law as the public good and convenience may
22require; and to provide penalties for the violation of
23regulations and restrictions, including those made by county
24boards, relative to operation under local licenses; provided,
25however, that in the exercise of any of the powers granted in
26this section, the issuance of such licenses shall not be

 

 

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1prohibited except for reasons specifically enumerated in
2Sections 6-2, 6-11, 6-12 and 6-25 of this Act.
3    However, in any municipality with a population exceeding
41,000,000 that has adopted the form of government authorized
5under "An Act concerning cities, villages, and incorporated
6towns, and to repeal certain Acts herein named", approved
7August 15, 1941, as amended, no person shall be granted any
8license or privilege to sell alcoholic liquors between the
9hours of two o'clock a.m. and seven o'clock a.m. on week days
10unless such person has given at least 14 days prior written
11notice to the alder alderman of the ward in which such person's
12licensed premises are located stating his intention to make
13application for such license or privilege and unless evidence
14confirming service of such written notice is included in such
15application. Any license or privilege granted in violation of
16this paragraph shall be null and void.
17(Source: P.A. 99-46, eff. 7-15-15.)
 
18    (235 ILCS 5/6-2)  (from Ch. 43, par. 120)
19    Sec. 6-2. Issuance of licenses to certain persons
20prohibited.
21    (a) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (b) of this
22Section and in paragraph (1) of subsection (a) of Section
233-12, no license of any kind issued by the State Commission or
24any local commission shall be issued to:
25        (1) A person who is not a resident of any city, village

 

 

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1    or county in which the premises covered by the license are
2    located; except in case of railroad or boat licenses.
3        (2) A person who is not of good character and
4    reputation in the community in which he resides.
5        (3) (Blank).
6        (4) A person who has been convicted of a felony under
7    any Federal or State law, unless the Commission determines
8    that such person will not be impaired by the conviction in
9    engaging in the licensed practice after considering
10    matters set forth in such person's application in
11    accordance with Section 6-2.5 of this Act and the
12    Commission's investigation.
13        (5) A person who has been convicted of keeping a place
14    of prostitution or keeping a place of juvenile
15    prostitution, promoting prostitution that involves keeping
16    a place of prostitution, or promoting juvenile
17    prostitution that involves keeping a place of juvenile
18    prostitution.
19        (6) A person who has been convicted of pandering.
20        (7) A person whose license issued under this Act has
21    been revoked for cause.
22        (8) A person who at the time of application for
23    renewal of any license issued hereunder would not be
24    eligible for such license upon a first application.
25        (9) A copartnership, if any general partnership
26    thereof, or any limited partnership thereof, owning more

 

 

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1    than 5% of the aggregate limited partner interest in such
2    copartnership would not be eligible to receive a license
3    hereunder for any reason other than residence within the
4    political subdivision, unless residency is required by
5    local ordinance.
6        (10) A corporation or limited liability company, if
7    any member, officer, manager or director thereof, or any
8    stockholder or stockholders owning in the aggregate more
9    than 5% of the stock of such corporation, would not be
10    eligible to receive a license hereunder for any reason
11    other than residence within the political subdivision.
12        (10a) A corporation or limited liability company
13    unless it is incorporated or organized in Illinois, or
14    unless it is a foreign corporation or foreign limited
15    liability company which is qualified under the Business
16    Corporation Act of 1983 or the Limited Liability Company
17    Act to transact business in Illinois. The Commission shall
18    permit and accept from an applicant for a license under
19    this Act proof prepared from the Secretary of State's
20    website that the corporation or limited liability company
21    is in good standing and is qualified under the Business
22    Corporation Act of 1983 or the Limited Liability Company
23    Act to transact business in Illinois.
24        (11) A person whose place of business is conducted by
25    a manager or agent unless the manager or agent possesses
26    the same qualifications required by the licensee.

 

 

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1        (12) A person who has been convicted of a violation of
2    any Federal or State law concerning the manufacture,
3    possession or sale of alcoholic liquor, subsequent to the
4    passage of this Act or has forfeited his bond to appear in
5    court to answer charges for any such violation, unless the
6    Commission determines, in accordance with Section 6-2.5 of
7    this Act, that the person will not be impaired by the
8    conviction in engaging in the licensed practice.
9        (13) A person who does not beneficially own the
10    premises for which a license is sought, or does not have a
11    lease thereon for the full period for which the license is
12    to be issued.
13        (14) Any law enforcing public official, including
14    members of local liquor control commissions, any mayor,
15    alder alderman, or member of the city council or
16    commission, any president of the village board of
17    trustees, any member of a village board of trustees, or
18    any president or member of a county board; and no such
19    official shall have a direct interest in the manufacture,
20    sale, or distribution of alcoholic liquor, except that a
21    license may be granted to such official in relation to
22    premises that are not located within the territory subject
23    to the jurisdiction of that official if the issuance of
24    such license is approved by the State Liquor Control
25    Commission and except that a license may be granted, in a
26    city or village with a population of 55,000 or less, to any

 

 

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1    alder alderman, member of a city council, or member of a
2    village board of trustees in relation to premises that are
3    located within the territory subject to the jurisdiction
4    of that official if (i) the sale of alcoholic liquor
5    pursuant to the license is incidental to the selling of
6    food, (ii) the issuance of the license is approved by the
7    State Commission, (iii) the issuance of the license is in
8    accordance with all applicable local ordinances in effect
9    where the premises are located, and (iv) the official
10    granted a license does not vote on alcoholic liquor issues
11    pending before the board or council to which the license
12    holder is elected. Notwithstanding any provision of this
13    paragraph (14) to the contrary, an alder alderman or
14    member of a city council or commission, a member of a
15    village board of trustees other than the president of the
16    village board of trustees, or a member of a county board
17    other than the president of a county board may have a
18    direct interest in the manufacture, sale, or distribution
19    of alcoholic liquor as long as he or she is not a law
20    enforcing public official, a mayor, a village board
21    president, or president of a county board. To prevent any
22    conflict of interest, the elected official with the direct
23    interest in the manufacture, sale, or distribution of
24    alcoholic liquor shall not participate in any meetings,
25    hearings, or decisions on matters impacting the
26    manufacture, sale, or distribution of alcoholic liquor.

 

 

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1    Furthermore, the mayor of a city with a population of
2    55,000 or less or the president of a village with a
3    population of 55,000 or less may have an interest in the
4    manufacture, sale, or distribution of alcoholic liquor as
5    long as the council or board over which he or she presides
6    has made a local liquor control commissioner appointment
7    that complies with the requirements of Section 4-2 of this
8    Act.
9        (15) A person who is not a beneficial owner of the
10    business to be operated by the licensee.
11        (16) A person who has been convicted of a gambling
12    offense as proscribed by any of subsections (a) (3)
13    through (a) (11) of Section 28-1 of, or as proscribed by
14    Section 28-1.1 or 28-3 of, the Criminal Code of 1961 or the
15    Criminal Code of 2012, or as proscribed by a statute
16    replaced by any of the aforesaid statutory provisions.
17        (17) A person or entity to whom a federal wagering
18    stamp has been issued by the federal government, unless
19    the person or entity is eligible to be issued a license
20    under the Raffles and Poker Runs Act or the Illinois Pull
21    Tabs and Jar Games Act.
22        (18) A person who intends to sell alcoholic liquors
23    for use or consumption on his or her licensed retail
24    premises who does not have liquor liability insurance
25    coverage for that premises in an amount that is at least
26    equal to the maximum liability amounts set out in

 

 

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1    subsection (a) of Section 6-21.
2        (19) A person who is licensed by any licensing
3    authority as a manufacturer of beer, or any partnership,
4    corporation, limited liability company, or trust or any
5    subsidiary, affiliate, or agent thereof, or any other form
6    of business enterprise licensed as a manufacturer of beer,
7    having any legal, equitable, or beneficial interest,
8    directly or indirectly, in a person licensed in this State
9    as a distributor or importing distributor. For purposes of
10    this paragraph (19), a person who is licensed by any
11    licensing authority as a "manufacturer of beer" shall also
12    mean a brewer and a non-resident dealer who is also a
13    manufacturer of beer, including a partnership,
14    corporation, limited liability company, or trust or any
15    subsidiary, affiliate, or agent thereof, or any other form
16    of business enterprise licensed as a manufacturer of beer.
17        (20) A person who is licensed in this State as a
18    distributor or importing distributor, or any partnership,
19    corporation, limited liability company, or trust or any
20    subsidiary, affiliate, or agent thereof, or any other form
21    of business enterprise licensed in this State as a
22    distributor or importing distributor having any legal,
23    equitable, or beneficial interest, directly or indirectly,
24    in a person licensed as a manufacturer of beer by any
25    licensing authority, or any partnership, corporation,
26    limited liability company, or trust or any subsidiary,

 

 

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1    affiliate, or agent thereof, or any other form of business
2    enterprise, except for a person who owns, on or after the
3    effective date of this amendatory Act of the 98th General
4    Assembly, no more than 5% of the outstanding shares of a
5    manufacturer of beer whose shares are publicly traded on
6    an exchange within the meaning of the Securities Exchange
7    Act of 1934. For the purposes of this paragraph (20), a
8    person who is licensed by any licensing authority as a
9    "manufacturer of beer" shall also mean a brewer and a
10    non-resident dealer who is also a manufacturer of beer,
11    including a partnership, corporation, limited liability
12    company, or trust or any subsidiary, affiliate, or agent
13    thereof, or any other form of business enterprise licensed
14    as a manufacturer of beer.
15    (b) A criminal conviction of a corporation is not grounds
16for the denial, suspension, or revocation of a license applied
17for or held by the corporation if the criminal conviction was
18not the result of a violation of any federal or State law
19concerning the manufacture, possession or sale of alcoholic
20liquor, the offense that led to the conviction did not result
21in any financial gain to the corporation and the corporation
22has terminated its relationship with each director, officer,
23employee, or controlling shareholder whose actions directly
24contributed to the conviction of the corporation. The
25Commission shall determine if all provisions of this
26subsection (b) have been met before any action on the

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 234 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1corporation's license is initiated.
2(Source: P.A. 100-286, eff. 1-1-18; 101-541, eff. 8-23-19.)
 
3    (235 ILCS 5/6-11)
4    Sec. 6-11. Sale near churches, schools, and hospitals.
5    (a) No license shall be issued for the sale at retail of
6any alcoholic liquor within 100 feet of any church, school
7other than an institution of higher learning, hospital, home
8for aged or indigent persons or for veterans, their spouses or
9children or any military or naval station, provided, that this
10prohibition shall not apply to hotels offering restaurant
11service, regularly organized clubs, or to restaurants, food
12shops or other places where sale of alcoholic liquors is not
13the principal business carried on if the place of business so
14exempted is not located in a municipality of more than 500,000
15persons, unless required by local ordinance; nor to the
16renewal of a license for the sale at retail of alcoholic liquor
17on premises within 100 feet of any church or school where the
18church or school has been established within such 100 feet
19since the issuance of the original license. In the case of a
20church, the distance of 100 feet shall be measured to the
21nearest part of any building used for worship services or
22educational programs and not to property boundaries.
23    (a-5) Notwithstanding any provision of this Section to the
24contrary, a local liquor control commissioner may grant an
25exemption to the prohibition in subsection (a) of this Section

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 235 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1if a local rule or ordinance authorizes the local liquor
2control commissioner to grant that exemption.
3    (b) Nothing in this Section shall prohibit the issuance of
4a retail license authorizing the sale of alcoholic liquor to a
5restaurant, the primary business of which is the sale of goods
6baked on the premises if (i) the restaurant is newly
7constructed and located on a lot of not less than 10,000 square
8feet, (ii) the restaurant costs at least $1,000,000 to
9construct, (iii) the licensee is the titleholder to the
10premises and resides on the premises, and (iv) the
11construction of the restaurant is completed within 18 months
12of July 10, 1998 (the effective date of Public Act 90-617).
13    (c) Nothing in this Section shall prohibit the issuance of
14a retail license authorizing the sale of alcoholic liquor
15incidental to a restaurant if (1) the primary business of the
16restaurant consists of the sale of food where the sale of
17liquor is incidental to the sale of food and the applicant is a
18completely new owner of the restaurant, (2) the immediately
19prior owner or operator of the premises where the restaurant
20is located operated the premises as a restaurant and held a
21valid retail license authorizing the sale of alcoholic liquor
22at the restaurant for at least part of the 24 months before the
23change of ownership, and (3) the restaurant is located 75 or
24more feet from a school.
25    (d) In the interest of further developing Illinois'
26economy in the area of commerce, tourism, convention, and

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 236 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1banquet business, nothing in this Section shall prohibit
2issuance of a retail license authorizing the sale of alcoholic
3beverages to a restaurant, banquet facility, grocery store, or
4hotel having not fewer than 150 guest room accommodations
5located in a municipality of more than 500,000 persons,
6notwithstanding the proximity of such hotel, restaurant,
7banquet facility, or grocery store to any church or school, if
8the licensed premises described on the license are located
9within an enclosed mall or building of a height of at least 6
10stories, or 60 feet in the case of a building that has been
11registered as a national landmark, or in a grocery store
12having a minimum of 56,010 square feet of floor space in a
13single story building in an open mall of at least 3.96 acres
14that is adjacent to a public school that opened as a boys
15technical high school in 1934, or in a grocery store having a
16minimum of 31,000 square feet of floor space in a single story
17building located a distance of more than 90 feet but less than
18100 feet from a high school that opened in 1928 as a junior
19high school and became a senior high school in 1933, and in
20each of these cases if the sale of alcoholic liquors is not the
21principal business carried on by the licensee.
22    For purposes of this Section, a "banquet facility" is any
23part of a building that caters to private parties and where the
24sale of alcoholic liquors is not the principal business.
25    (e) Nothing in this Section shall prohibit the issuance of
26a license to a church or private school to sell at retail

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 237 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1alcoholic liquor if any such sales are limited to periods when
2groups are assembled on the premises solely for the promotion
3of some common object other than the sale or consumption of
4alcoholic liquors.
5    (f) Nothing in this Section shall prohibit a church or
6church affiliated school located in a home rule municipality
7or in a municipality with 75,000 or more inhabitants from
8locating within 100 feet of a property for which there is a
9preexisting license to sell alcoholic liquor at retail. In
10these instances, the local zoning authority may, by ordinance
11adopted simultaneously with the granting of an initial special
12use zoning permit for the church or church affiliated school,
13provide that the 100-foot restriction in this Section shall
14not apply to that church or church affiliated school and
15future retail liquor licenses.
16    (g) Nothing in this Section shall prohibit the issuance of
17a retail license authorizing the sale of alcoholic liquor at
18premises within 100 feet, but not less than 90 feet, of a
19public school if (1) the premises have been continuously
20licensed to sell alcoholic liquor for a period of at least 50
21years, (2) the premises are located in a municipality having a
22population of over 500,000 inhabitants, (3) the licensee is an
23individual who is a member of a family that has held the
24previous 3 licenses for that location for more than 25 years,
25(4) the principal of the school and the alder alderman of the
26ward in which the school is located have delivered a written

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 238 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1statement to the local liquor control commissioner stating
2that they do not object to the issuance of a license under this
3subsection (g), and (5) the local liquor control commissioner
4has received the written consent of a majority of the
5registered voters who live within 200 feet of the premises.
6    (h) Notwithstanding any provision of this Section to the
7contrary, nothing in this Section shall prohibit the issuance
8or renewal of a license authorizing the sale of alcoholic
9liquor within premises and at an outdoor patio area attached
10to premises that are located in a municipality with a
11population in excess of 300,000 inhabitants and that are
12within 100 feet of a church if:
13        (1) the sale of alcoholic liquor at the premises is
14    incidental to the sale of food,
15        (2) the sale of liquor is not the principal business
16    carried on by the licensee at the premises,
17        (3) the premises are less than 1,000 square feet,
18        (4) the premises are owned by the University of
19    Illinois,
20        (5) the premises are immediately adjacent to property
21    owned by a church and are not less than 20 nor more than 40
22    feet from the church space used for worship services, and
23        (6) the principal religious leader at the place of
24    worship has indicated his or her support for the issuance
25    of the license in writing.
26    (i) Notwithstanding any provision in this Section to the

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 239 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1contrary, nothing in this Section shall prohibit the issuance
2or renewal of a license to sell alcoholic liquor at a premises
3that is located within a municipality with a population in
4excess of 300,000 inhabitants and is within 100 feet of a
5church, synagogue, or other place of worship if:
6        (1) the primary entrance of the premises and the
7    primary entrance of the church, synagogue, or other place
8    of worship are at least 100 feet apart, on parallel
9    streets, and separated by an alley; and
10        (2) the principal religious leader at the place of
11    worship has not indicated his or her opposition to the
12    issuance or renewal of the license in writing.
13    (j) Notwithstanding any provision in this Section to the
14contrary, nothing in this Section shall prohibit the issuance
15of a retail license authorizing the sale of alcoholic liquor
16at a theater that is within 100 feet of a church if (1) the
17church owns the theater, (2) the church leases the theater to
18one or more entities, and (3) the theater is used by at least 5
19different not-for-profit theater groups.
20    (k) Notwithstanding any provision in this Section to the
21contrary, nothing in this Section shall prohibit the issuance
22or renewal of a license authorizing the sale of alcoholic
23liquor at a premises that is located within a municipality
24with a population in excess of 1,000,000 inhabitants and is
25within 100 feet of a school if:
26        (1) the primary entrance of the premises and the

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 240 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1    primary entrance of the school are parallel, on different
2    streets, and separated by an alley;
3        (2) the southeast corner of the premises are at least
4    350 feet from the southwest corner of the school;
5        (3) the school was built in 1978;
6        (4) the sale of alcoholic liquor at the premises is
7    incidental to the sale of food;
8        (5) the sale of alcoholic liquor is not the principal
9    business carried on by the licensee at the premises;
10        (6) the applicant is the owner of the restaurant and
11    has held a valid license authorizing the sale of alcoholic
12    liquor for the business to be conducted on the premises at
13    a different location for more than 7 years; and
14        (7) the premises is at least 2,300 square feet and
15    sits on a lot that is between 6,100 and 6,150 square feet.
16    (l) Notwithstanding any provision in this Section to the
17contrary, nothing in this Section shall prohibit the issuance
18or renewal of a license authorizing the sale of alcoholic
19liquor at a premises that is located within a municipality
20with a population in excess of 1,000,000 inhabitants and is
21within 100 feet of a church or school if:
22        (1) the primary entrance of the premises and the
23    closest entrance of the church or school is at least 90
24    feet apart and no greater than 95 feet apart;
25        (2) the shortest distance between the premises and the
26    church or school is at least 80 feet apart and no greater

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 241 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1    than 85 feet apart;
2        (3) the applicant is the owner of the restaurant and
3    on November 15, 2006 held a valid license authorizing the
4    sale of alcoholic liquor for the business to be conducted
5    on the premises for at least 14 different locations;
6        (4) the sale of alcoholic liquor at the premises is
7    incidental to the sale of food;
8        (5) the sale of alcoholic liquor is not the principal
9    business carried on by the licensee at the premises;
10        (6) the premises is at least 3,200 square feet and
11    sits on a lot that is between 7,150 and 7,200 square feet;
12    and
13        (7) the principal religious leader at the place of
14    worship has not indicated his or her opposition to the
15    issuance or renewal of the license in writing.
16    (m) Notwithstanding any provision in this Section to the
17contrary, nothing in this Section shall prohibit the issuance
18or renewal of a license authorizing the sale of alcoholic
19liquor at a premises that is located within a municipality
20with a population in excess of 1,000,000 inhabitants and is
21within 100 feet of a church if:
22        (1) the premises and the church are perpendicular, and
23    the primary entrance of the premises faces South while the
24    primary entrance of the church faces West and the distance
25    between the two entrances is more than 100 feet;
26        (2) the shortest distance between the premises lot

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 242 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1    line and the exterior wall of the church is at least 80
2    feet;
3        (3) the church was established at the current location
4    in 1916 and the present structure was erected in 1925;
5        (4) the premises is a single story, single use
6    building with at least 1,750 square feet and no more than
7    2,000 square feet;
8        (5) the sale of alcoholic liquor at the premises is
9    incidental to the sale of food;
10        (6) the sale of alcoholic liquor is not the principal
11    business carried on by the licensee at the premises; and
12        (7) the principal religious leader at the place of
13    worship has not indicated his or her opposition to the
14    issuance or renewal of the license in writing.
15    (n) Notwithstanding any provision in this Section to the
16contrary, nothing in this Section shall prohibit the issuance
17or renewal of a license authorizing the sale of alcoholic
18liquor at a premises that is located within a municipality
19with a population in excess of 1,000,000 inhabitants and is
20within 100 feet of a school if:
21        (1) the school is a City of Chicago School District
22    299 school;
23        (2) the school is located within subarea E of City of
24    Chicago Residential Business Planned Development Number
25    70;
26        (3) the sale of alcoholic liquor is not the principal

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 243 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1    business carried on by the licensee on the premises;
2        (4) the sale of alcoholic liquor at the premises is
3    incidental to the sale of food; and
4        (5) the administration of City of Chicago School
5    District 299 has expressed, in writing, its support for
6    the issuance of the license.
7    (o) Notwithstanding any provision of this Section to the
8contrary, nothing in this Section shall prohibit the issuance
9or renewal of a retail license authorizing the sale of
10alcoholic liquor at a premises that is located within a
11municipality in excess of 1,000,000 inhabitants and within 100
12feet of a church if:
13        (1) the sale of alcoholic liquor at the premises is
14    incidental to the sale of food;
15        (2) the sale of alcoholic liquor is not the principal
16    business carried on by the licensee at the premises;
17        (3) the premises is located on a street that runs
18    perpendicular to the street on which the church is
19    located;
20        (4) the primary entrance of the premises is at least
21    100 feet from the primary entrance of the church;
22        (5) the shortest distance between any part of the
23    premises and any part of the church is at least 60 feet;
24        (6) the premises is between 3,600 and 4,000 square
25    feet and sits on a lot that is between 3,600 and 4,000
26    square feet; and

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 244 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1        (7) the premises was built in the year 1909.
2    For purposes of this subsection (o), "premises" means a
3place of business together with a privately owned outdoor
4location that is adjacent to the place of business.
5    (p) Notwithstanding any provision in this Section to the
6contrary, nothing in this Section shall prohibit the issuance
7or renewal of a license authorizing the sale of alcoholic
8liquor at a premises that is located within a municipality
9with a population in excess of 1,000,000 inhabitants and
10within 100 feet of a church if:
11        (1) the shortest distance between the backdoor of the
12    premises, which is used as an emergency exit, and the
13    church is at least 80 feet;
14        (2) the church was established at the current location
15    in 1889; and
16        (3) liquor has been sold on the premises since at
17    least 1985.
18    (q) Notwithstanding any provision of this Section to the
19contrary, nothing in this Section shall prohibit the issuance
20or renewal of a license authorizing the sale of alcoholic
21liquor within a premises that is located in a municipality
22with a population in excess of 1,000,000 inhabitants and
23within 100 feet of a church-owned property if:
24        (1) the premises is located within a larger building
25    operated as a grocery store;
26        (2) the area of the premises does not exceed 720

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 245 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1    square feet and the area of the larger building exceeds
2    18,000 square feet;
3        (3) the larger building containing the premises is
4    within 100 feet of the nearest property line of a
5    church-owned property on which a church-affiliated school
6    is located;
7        (4) the sale of liquor is not the principal business
8    carried on within the larger building;
9        (5) the primary entrance of the larger building and
10    the premises and the primary entrance of the
11    church-affiliated school are on different, parallel
12    streets, and the distance between the 2 primary entrances
13    is more than 100 feet;
14        (6) the larger building is separated from the
15    church-owned property and church-affiliated school by an
16    alley;
17        (7) the larger building containing the premises and
18    the church building front are on perpendicular streets and
19    are separated by a street; and
20        (8) (Blank).
21    (r) Notwithstanding any provision of this Section to the
22contrary, nothing in this Section shall prohibit the issuance,
23renewal, or maintenance of a license authorizing the sale of
24alcoholic liquor incidental to the sale of food within a
25restaurant established in a premises that is located in a
26municipality with a population in excess of 1,000,000

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 246 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1inhabitants and within 100 feet of a church if:
2        (1) the primary entrance of the church and the primary
3    entrance of the restaurant are at least 100 feet apart;
4        (2) the restaurant has operated on the ground floor
5    and lower level of a multi-story, multi-use building for
6    more than 40 years;
7        (3) the primary business of the restaurant consists of
8    the sale of food where the sale of liquor is incidental to
9    the sale of food;
10        (4) the sale of alcoholic liquor is conducted
11    primarily in the below-grade level of the restaurant to
12    which the only public access is by a staircase located
13    inside the restaurant; and
14        (5) the restaurant has held a license authorizing the
15    sale of alcoholic liquor on the premises for more than 40
16    years.
17    (s) Notwithstanding any provision of this Section to the
18contrary, nothing in this Section shall prohibit renewal of a
19license authorizing the sale of alcoholic liquor at a premises
20that is located within a municipality with a population more
21than 5,000 and less than 10,000 and is within 100 feet of a
22church if:
23        (1) the church was established at the location within
24    100 feet of the premises after a license for the sale of
25    alcoholic liquor at the premises was first issued;
26        (2) a license for sale of alcoholic liquor at the

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 247 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1    premises was first issued before January 1, 2007; and
2        (3) a license for the sale of alcoholic liquor on the
3    premises has been continuously in effect since January 1,
4    2007, except for interruptions between licenses of no more
5    than 90 days.
6    (t) Notwithstanding any provision of this Section to the
7contrary, nothing in this Section shall prohibit the issuance
8or renewal of a license authorizing the sale of alcoholic
9liquor incidental to the sale of food within a restaurant that
10is established in a premises that is located in a municipality
11with a population in excess of 1,000,000 inhabitants and
12within 100 feet of a school and a church if:
13        (1) the restaurant is located inside a five-story
14    building with over 16,800 square feet of commercial space;
15        (2) the area of the premises does not exceed 31,050
16    square feet;
17        (3) the area of the restaurant does not exceed 5,800
18    square feet;
19        (4) the building has no less than 78 condominium
20    units;
21        (5) the construction of the building in which the
22    restaurant is located was completed in 2006;
23        (6) the building has 10 storefront properties, 3 of
24    which are used for the restaurant;
25        (7) the restaurant will open for business in 2010;
26        (8) the building is north of the school and separated

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 248 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1    by an alley; and
2        (9) the principal religious leader of the church and
3    either the alder alderman of the ward in which the school
4    is located or the principal of the school have delivered a
5    written statement to the local liquor control commissioner
6    stating that he or she does not object to the issuance of a
7    license under this subsection (t).
8    (u) Notwithstanding any provision in this Section to the
9contrary, nothing in this Section shall prohibit the issuance
10or renewal of a license to sell alcoholic liquor at a premises
11that is located within a municipality with a population in
12excess of 1,000,000 inhabitants and within 100 feet of a
13school if:
14        (1) the premises operates as a restaurant and has been
15    in operation since February 2008;
16        (2) the applicant is the owner of the premises;
17        (3) the sale of alcoholic liquor is incidental to the
18    sale of food;
19        (4) the sale of alcoholic liquor is not the principal
20    business carried on by the licensee on the premises;
21        (5) the premises occupy the first floor of a 3-story
22    building that is at least 90 years old;
23        (6) the rear lot of the school and the rear corner of
24    the building that the premises occupy are separated by an
25    alley;
26        (7) the distance from the southwest corner of the

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 249 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1    property line of the school and the northeast corner of
2    the building that the premises occupy is at least 16 feet,
3    5 inches;
4        (8) the distance from the rear door of the premises to
5    the southwest corner of the property line of the school is
6    at least 93 feet;
7        (9) the school is a City of Chicago School District
8    299 school;
9        (10) the school's main structure was erected in 1902
10    and an addition was built to the main structure in 1959;
11    and
12        (11) the principal of the school and the alder
13    alderman in whose district the premises are located have
14    expressed, in writing, their support for the issuance of
15    the license.
16    (v) Notwithstanding any provision in this Section to the
17contrary, nothing in this Section shall prohibit the issuance
18or renewal of a license authorizing the sale of alcoholic
19liquor at a premises that is located within a municipality
20with a population in excess of 1,000,000 inhabitants and is
21within 100 feet of a school if:
22        (1) the total land area of the premises for which the
23    license or renewal is sought is more than 600,000 square
24    feet;
25        (2) the premises for which the license or renewal is
26    sought has more than 600 parking stalls;

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 250 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1        (3) the total area of all buildings on the premises
2    for which the license or renewal is sought exceeds 140,000
3    square feet;
4        (4) the property line of the premises for which the
5    license or renewal is sought is separated from the
6    property line of the school by a street;
7        (5) the distance from the school's property line to
8    the property line of the premises for which the license or
9    renewal is sought is at least 60 feet;
10        (6) as of June 14, 2011 (the effective date of Public
11    Act 97-9), the premises for which the license or renewal
12    is sought is located in the Illinois Medical District.
13    (w) Notwithstanding any provision in this Section to the
14contrary, nothing in this Section shall prohibit the issuance
15or renewal of a license to sell alcoholic liquor at a premises
16that is located within a municipality with a population in
17excess of 1,000,000 inhabitants and within 100 feet of a
18church if:
19        (1) the sale of alcoholic liquor at the premises is
20    incidental to the sale of food;
21        (2) the sale of alcoholic liquor is not the principal
22    business carried on by the licensee at the premises;
23        (3) the premises occupy the first floor and basement
24    of a 2-story building that is 106 years old;
25        (4) the premises is at least 7,000 square feet and
26    located on a lot that is at least 11,000 square feet;

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 251 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1        (5) the premises is located directly west of the
2    church, on perpendicular streets, and separated by an
3    alley;
4        (6) the distance between the property line of the
5    premises and the property line of the church is at least 20
6    feet;
7        (7) the distance between the primary entrance of the
8    premises and the primary entrance of the church is at
9    least 130 feet; and
10        (8) the church has been at its location for at least 40
11    years.
12    (x) Notwithstanding any provision of this Section to the
13contrary, nothing in this Section shall prohibit the issuance
14or renewal of a license authorizing the sale of alcoholic
15liquor at a premises that is located within a municipality
16with a population in excess of 1,000,000 inhabitants and
17within 100 feet of a church if:
18        (1) the sale of alcoholic liquor is not the principal
19    business carried on by the licensee at the premises;
20        (2) the church has been operating in its current
21    location since 1973;
22        (3) the premises has been operating in its current
23    location since 1988;
24        (4) the church and the premises are owned by the same
25    parish;
26        (5) the premises is used for cultural and educational

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 252 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1    purposes;
2        (6) the primary entrance to the premises and the
3    primary entrance to the church are located on the same
4    street;
5        (7) the principal religious leader of the church has
6    indicated his support of the issuance of the license;
7        (8) the premises is a 2-story building of
8    approximately 23,000 square feet; and
9        (9) the premises houses a ballroom on its ground floor
10    of approximately 5,000 square feet.
11    (y) Notwithstanding any provision of this Section to the
12contrary, nothing in this Section shall prohibit the issuance
13or renewal of a license authorizing the sale of alcoholic
14liquor at a premises that is located within a municipality
15with a population in excess of 1,000,000 inhabitants and
16within 100 feet of a school if:
17        (1) the sale of alcoholic liquor is not the principal
18    business carried on by the licensee at the premises;
19        (2) the sale of alcoholic liquor at the premises is
20    incidental to the sale of food;
21        (3) according to the municipality, the distance
22    between the east property line of the premises and the
23    west property line of the school is 97.8 feet;
24        (4) the school is a City of Chicago School District
25    299 school;
26        (5) the school has been operating since 1959;

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 253 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1        (6) the primary entrance to the premises and the
2    primary entrance to the school are located on the same
3    street;
4        (7) the street on which the entrances of the premises
5    and the school are located is a major diagonal
6    thoroughfare;
7        (8) the premises is a single-story building of
8    approximately 2,900 square feet; and
9        (9) the premises is used for commercial purposes only.
10    (z) Notwithstanding any provision of this Section to the
11contrary, nothing in this Section shall prohibit the issuance
12or renewal of a license authorizing the sale of alcoholic
13liquor at a premises that is located within a municipality
14with a population in excess of 1,000,000 inhabitants and
15within 100 feet of a mosque if:
16        (1) the sale of alcoholic liquor is not the principal
17    business carried on by the licensee at the premises;
18        (2) the licensee shall only sell packaged liquors at
19    the premises;
20        (3) the licensee is a national retail chain having
21    over 100 locations within the municipality;
22        (4) the licensee has over 8,000 locations nationwide;
23        (5) the licensee has locations in all 50 states;
24        (6) the premises is located in the North-East quadrant
25    of the municipality;
26        (7) the premises is a free-standing building that has

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 254 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1    "drive-through" pharmacy service;
2        (8) the premises has approximately 14,490 square feet
3    of retail space;
4        (9) the premises has approximately 799 square feet of
5    pharmacy space;
6        (10) the premises is located on a major arterial
7    street that runs east-west and accepts truck traffic; and
8        (11) the alder alderman of the ward in which the
9    premises is located has expressed, in writing, his or her
10    support for the issuance of the license.
11    (aa) Notwithstanding any provision of this Section to the
12contrary, nothing in this Section shall prohibit the issuance
13or renewal of a license authorizing the sale of alcoholic
14liquor at a premises that is located within a municipality
15with a population in excess of 1,000,000 inhabitants and
16within 100 feet of a church if:
17        (1) the sale of alcoholic liquor is not the principal
18    business carried on by the licensee at the premises;
19        (2) the licensee shall only sell packaged liquors at
20    the premises;
21        (3) the licensee is a national retail chain having
22    over 100 locations within the municipality;
23        (4) the licensee has over 8,000 locations nationwide;
24        (5) the licensee has locations in all 50 states;
25        (6) the premises is located in the North-East quadrant
26    of the municipality;

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 255 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1        (7) the premises is located across the street from a
2    national grocery chain outlet;
3        (8) the premises has approximately 16,148 square feet
4    of retail space;
5        (9) the premises has approximately 992 square feet of
6    pharmacy space;
7        (10) the premises is located on a major arterial
8    street that runs north-south and accepts truck traffic;
9    and
10        (11) the alder alderman of the ward in which the
11    premises is located has expressed, in writing, his or her
12    support for the issuance of the license.
13    (bb) Notwithstanding any provision of this Section to the
14contrary, nothing in this Section shall prohibit the issuance
15or renewal of a license authorizing the sale of alcoholic
16liquor at a premises that is located within a municipality
17with a population in excess of 1,000,000 inhabitants and
18within 100 feet of a church if:
19        (1) the sale of alcoholic liquor is not the principal
20    business carried on by the licensee at the premises;
21        (2) the sale of alcoholic liquor at the premises is
22    incidental to the sale of food;
23        (3) the primary entrance to the premises and the
24    primary entrance to the church are located on the same
25    street;
26        (4) the premises is across the street from the church;

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 256 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1        (5) the street on which the premises and the church
2    are located is a major arterial street that runs
3    east-west;
4        (6) the church is an elder-led and Bible-based
5    Assyrian church;
6        (7) the premises and the church are both single-story
7    buildings;
8        (8) the storefront directly west of the church is
9    being used as a restaurant; and
10        (9) the distance between the northern-most property
11    line of the premises and the southern-most property line
12    of the church is 65 feet.
13    (cc) Notwithstanding any provision of this Section to the
14contrary, nothing in this Section shall prohibit the issuance
15or renewal of a license authorizing the sale of alcoholic
16liquor at a premises that is located within a municipality
17with a population in excess of 1,000,000 inhabitants and
18within 100 feet of a school if:
19        (1) the sale of alcoholic liquor is not the principal
20    business carried on by the licensee at the premises;
21        (2) the licensee shall only sell packaged liquors at
22    the premises;
23        (3) the licensee is a national retail chain;
24        (4) as of October 25, 2011, the licensee has 1,767
25    stores operating nationwide, 87 stores operating in the
26    State, and 10 stores operating within the municipality;

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 257 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1        (5) the licensee shall occupy approximately 124,000
2    square feet of space in the basement and first and second
3    floors of a building located across the street from a
4    school;
5        (6) the school opened in August of 2009 and occupies
6    approximately 67,000 square feet of space; and
7        (7) the building in which the premises shall be
8    located has been listed on the National Register of
9    Historic Places since April 17, 1970.
10    (dd) Notwithstanding any provision in this Section to the
11contrary, nothing in this Section shall prohibit the issuance
12or renewal of a license authorizing the sale of alcoholic
13liquor within a full-service grocery store at a premises that
14is located within a municipality with a population in excess
15of 1,000,000 inhabitants and is within 100 feet of a school if:
16        (1) the premises is constructed on land that was
17    purchased from the municipality at a fair market price;
18        (2) the premises is constructed on land that was
19    previously used as a parking facility for public safety
20    employees;
21        (3) the sale of alcoholic liquor is not the principal
22    business carried on by the licensee at the premises;
23        (4) the main entrance to the store is more than 100
24    feet from the main entrance to the school;
25        (5) the premises is to be new construction;
26        (6) the school is a private school;

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 258 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1        (7) the principal of the school has given written
2    approval for the license;
3        (8) the alder alderman of the ward where the premises
4    is located has given written approval of the issuance of
5    the license;
6        (9) the grocery store level of the premises is between
7    60,000 and 70,000 square feet; and
8        (10) the owner and operator of the grocery store
9    operates 2 other grocery stores that have alcoholic liquor
10    licenses within the same municipality.
11    (ee) Notwithstanding any provision in this Section to the
12contrary, nothing in this Section shall prohibit the issuance
13or renewal of a license authorizing the sale of alcoholic
14liquor within a full-service grocery store at a premises that
15is located within a municipality with a population in excess
16of 1,000,000 inhabitants and is within 100 feet of a school if:
17        (1) the premises is constructed on land that once
18    contained an industrial steel facility;
19        (2) the premises is located on land that has undergone
20    environmental remediation;
21        (3) the premises is located within a retail complex
22    containing retail stores where some of the stores sell
23    alcoholic beverages;
24        (4) the principal activity of any restaurant in the
25    retail complex is the sale of food, and the sale of
26    alcoholic liquor is incidental to the sale of food;

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 259 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1        (5) the sale of alcoholic liquor is not the principal
2    business carried on by the grocery store;
3        (6) the entrance to any business that sells alcoholic
4    liquor is more than 100 feet from the entrance to the
5    school;
6        (7) the alder alderman of the ward where the premises
7    is located has given written approval of the issuance of
8    the license; and
9        (8) the principal of the school has given written
10    consent to the issuance of the license.
11    (ff) Notwithstanding any provision of this Section to the
12contrary, nothing in this Section shall prohibit the issuance
13or renewal of a license authorizing the sale of alcoholic
14liquor at a premises that is located within a municipality
15with a population in excess of 1,000,000 inhabitants and
16within 100 feet of a school if:
17        (1) the sale of alcoholic liquor is not the principal
18    business carried on at the premises;
19        (2) the sale of alcoholic liquor at the premises is
20    incidental to the operation of a theater;
21        (3) the premises is a one and one-half-story building
22    of approximately 10,000 square feet;
23        (4) the school is a City of Chicago School District
24    299 school;
25        (5) the primary entrance of the premises and the
26    primary entrance of the school are at least 300 feet apart

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 260 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1    and no more than 400 feet apart;
2        (6) the alder alderman of the ward in which the
3    premises is located has expressed, in writing, his support
4    for the issuance of the license; and
5        (7) the principal of the school has expressed, in
6    writing, that there is no objection to the issuance of a
7    license under this subsection (ff).
8    (gg) Notwithstanding any provision of this Section to the
9contrary, nothing in this Section shall prohibit the issuance
10or renewal of a license authorizing the sale of alcoholic
11liquor incidental to the sale of food within a restaurant or
12banquet facility established in a premises that is located in
13a municipality with a population in excess of 1,000,000
14inhabitants and within 100 feet of a church if:
15        (1) the sale of alcoholic liquor is not the principal
16    business carried on by the licensee at the premises;
17        (2) the property on which the church is located and
18    the property on which the premises are located are both
19    within a district originally listed on the National
20    Register of Historic Places on February 14, 1979;
21        (3) the property on which the premises are located
22    contains one or more multi-story buildings that are at
23    least 95 years old and have no more than three stories;
24        (4) the building in which the church is located is at
25    least 120 years old;
26        (5) the property on which the church is located is

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 261 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1    immediately adjacent to and west of the property on which
2    the premises are located;
3        (6) the western boundary of the property on which the
4    premises are located is no less than 118 feet in length and
5    no more than 122 feet in length;
6        (7) as of December 31, 2012, both the church property
7    and the property on which the premises are located are
8    within 250 feet of City of Chicago Business-Residential
9    Planned Development Number 38;
10        (8) the principal religious leader at the place of
11    worship has indicated his or her support for the issuance
12    of the license in writing; and
13        (9) the alder alderman in whose district the premises
14    are located has expressed his or her support for the
15    issuance of the license in writing.
16    For the purposes of this subsection, "banquet facility"
17means the part of the building that is located on the floor
18above a restaurant and caters to private parties and where the
19sale of alcoholic liquors is not the principal business.
20    (hh) Notwithstanding any provision of this Section to the
21contrary, nothing in this Section shall prohibit the issuance
22or renewal of a license authorizing the sale of alcoholic
23liquor within a hotel and at an outdoor patio area attached to
24the hotel that are located in a municipality with a population
25in excess of 1,000,000 inhabitants and that are within 100
26feet of a hospital if:

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 262 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1        (1) the sale of alcoholic liquor is not the principal
2    business carried on by the licensee at the hotel;
3        (2) the hotel is located within the City of Chicago
4    Business Planned Development Number 468; and
5        (3) the hospital is located within the City of Chicago
6    Institutional Planned Development Number 3.
7    (ii) Notwithstanding any provision of this Section to the
8contrary, nothing in this Section shall prohibit the issuance
9or renewal of a license authorizing the sale of alcoholic
10liquor within a restaurant and at an outdoor patio area
11attached to the restaurant that are located in a municipality
12with a population in excess of 1,000,000 inhabitants and that
13are within 100 feet of a church if:
14        (1) the sale of alcoholic liquor at the premises is
15    not the principal business carried on by the licensee and
16    is incidental to the sale of food;
17        (2) the restaurant has been operated on the street
18    level of a 2-story building located on a corner lot since
19    2008;
20        (3) the restaurant is between 3,700 and 4,000 square
21    feet and sits on a lot that is no more than 6,200 square
22    feet;
23        (4) the primary entrance to the restaurant and the
24    primary entrance to the church are located on the same
25    street;
26        (5) the street on which the restaurant and the church

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 263 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1    are located is a major east-west street;
2        (6) the restaurant and the church are separated by a
3    one-way northbound street;
4        (7) the church is located to the west of and no more
5    than 65 feet from the restaurant; and
6        (8) the principal religious leader at the place of
7    worship has indicated his or her consent to the issuance
8    of the license in writing.
9    (jj) Notwithstanding any provision of this Section to the
10contrary, nothing in this Section shall prohibit the issuance
11or renewal of a license authorizing the sale of alcoholic
12liquor at premises located within a municipality with a
13population in excess of 1,000,000 inhabitants and within 100
14feet of a church if:
15        (1) the sale of alcoholic liquor is not the principal
16    business carried on by the licensee at the premises;
17        (2) the sale of alcoholic liquor is incidental to the
18    sale of food;
19        (3) the premises are located east of the church, on
20    perpendicular streets, and separated by an alley;
21        (4) the distance between the primary entrance of the
22    premises and the primary entrance of the church is at
23    least 175 feet;
24        (5) the distance between the property line of the
25    premises and the property line of the church is at least 40
26    feet;

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 264 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1        (6) the licensee has been operating at the premises
2    since 2012;
3        (7) the church was constructed in 1904;
4        (8) the alder alderman of the ward in which the
5    premises is located has expressed, in writing, his or her
6    support for the issuance of the license; and
7        (9) the principal religious leader of the church has
8    delivered a written statement that he or she does not
9    object to the issuance of a license under this subsection
10    (jj).
11    (kk) Notwithstanding any provision of this Section to the
12contrary, nothing in this Section shall prohibit the issuance
13or renewal of a license authorizing the sale of alcoholic
14liquor at a premises that is located within a municipality
15with a population in excess of 1,000,000 inhabitants and
16within 100 feet of a school if:
17        (1) the sale of alcoholic liquor is not the principal
18    business carried on by the licensee at the premises;
19        (2) the licensee shall only sell packaged liquors on
20    the premises;
21        (3) the licensee is a national retail chain;
22        (4) as of February 27, 2013, the licensee had 1,778
23    stores operating nationwide, 89 operating in this State,
24    and 11 stores operating within the municipality;
25        (5) the licensee shall occupy approximately 169,048
26    square feet of space within a building that is located

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 265 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1    across the street from a tuition-based preschool; and
2        (6) the alder alderman of the ward in which the
3    premises is located has expressed, in writing, his or her
4    support for the issuance of the license.
5    (ll) Notwithstanding any provision of this Section to the
6contrary, nothing in this Section shall prohibit the issuance
7or renewal of a license authorizing the sale of alcoholic
8liquor at a premises that is located within a municipality
9with a population in excess of 1,000,000 inhabitants and
10within 100 feet of a school if:
11        (1) the sale of alcoholic liquor is not the principal
12    business carried on by the licensee at the premises;
13        (2) the licensee shall only sell packaged liquors on
14    the premises;
15        (3) the licensee is a national retail chain;
16        (4) as of February 27, 2013, the licensee had 1,778
17    stores operating nationwide, 89 operating in this State,
18    and 11 stores operating within the municipality;
19        (5) the licensee shall occupy approximately 191,535
20    square feet of space within a building that is located
21    across the street from an elementary school; and
22        (6) the alder alderman of the ward in which the
23    premises is located has expressed, in writing, his or her
24    support for the issuance of the license.
25    (mm) Notwithstanding any provision of this Section to the
26contrary, nothing in this Section shall prohibit the issuance

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 266 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1or renewal of a license authorizing the sale of alcoholic
2liquor within premises and at an outdoor patio or sidewalk
3cafe, or both, attached to premises that are located in a
4municipality with a population in excess of 1,000,000
5inhabitants and that are within 100 feet of a hospital if:
6        (1) the primary business of the restaurant consists of
7    the sale of food where the sale of liquor is incidental to
8    the sale of food;
9        (2) as a restaurant, the premises may or may not offer
10    catering as an incidental part of food service;
11        (3) the primary business of the restaurant is
12    conducted in space owned by a hospital or an entity owned
13    or controlled by, under common control with, or that
14    controls a hospital, and the chief hospital administrator
15    has expressed his or her support for the issuance of the
16    license in writing; and
17        (4) the hospital is an adult acute care facility
18    primarily located within the City of Chicago Institutional
19    Planned Development Number 3.
20    (nn) Notwithstanding any provision of this Section to the
21contrary, nothing in this Section shall prohibit the issuance
22or renewal of a license authorizing the sale of alcoholic
23liquor at a premises that is located within a municipality
24with a population in excess of 1,000,000 inhabitants and
25within 100 feet of a church if:
26        (1) the sale of alcoholic liquor is not the principal

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 267 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1    business carried out on the premises;
2        (2) the sale of alcoholic liquor at the premises is
3    incidental to the operation of a theater;
4        (3) the premises are a building that was constructed
5    in 1913 and opened on May 24, 1915 as a vaudeville theater,
6    and the premises were converted to a motion picture
7    theater in 1935;
8        (4) the church was constructed in 1889 with a stone
9    exterior;
10        (5) the primary entrance of the premises and the
11    primary entrance of the church are at least 100 feet
12    apart;
13        (6) the principal religious leader at the place of
14    worship has indicated his or her consent to the issuance
15    of the license in writing; and
16        (7) the alder alderman in whose ward the premises are
17    located has expressed his or her support for the issuance
18    of the license in writing.
19    (oo) Notwithstanding any provision of this Section to the
20contrary, nothing in this Section shall prohibit the issuance
21or renewal of a license authorizing the sale of alcoholic
22liquor at a premises that is located within a municipality
23with a population in excess of 1,000,000 inhabitants and
24within 100 feet of a mosque, church, or other place of worship
25if:
26        (1) the primary entrance of the premises and the

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 268 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1    primary entrance of the mosque, church, or other place of
2    worship are perpendicular and are on different streets;
3        (2) the primary entrance to the premises faces West
4    and the primary entrance to the mosque, church, or other
5    place of worship faces South;
6        (3) the distance between the 2 primary entrances is at
7    least 100 feet;
8        (4) the mosque, church, or other place of worship was
9    established in a location within 100 feet of the premises
10    after a license for the sale of alcohol at the premises was
11    first issued;
12        (5) the mosque, church, or other place of worship was
13    established on or around January 1, 2011;
14        (6) a license for the sale of alcohol at the premises
15    was first issued on or before January 1, 1985;
16        (7) a license for the sale of alcohol at the premises
17    has been continuously in effect since January 1, 1985,
18    except for interruptions between licenses of no more than
19    90 days; and
20        (8) the premises are a single-story, single-use
21    building of at least 3,000 square feet and no more than
22    3,380 square feet.
23    (pp) Notwithstanding any provision of this Section to the
24contrary, nothing in this Section shall prohibit the issuance
25or renewal of a license authorizing the sale of alcoholic
26liquor incidental to the sale of food within a restaurant or

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 269 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1banquet facility established on premises that are located in a
2municipality with a population in excess of 1,000,000
3inhabitants and within 100 feet of at least one church if:
4        (1) the sale of liquor shall not be the principal
5    business carried on by the licensee at the premises;
6        (2) the premises are at least 2,000 square feet and no
7    more than 10,000 square feet and is located in a
8    single-story building;
9        (3) the property on which the premises are located is
10    within an area that, as of 2009, was designated as a
11    Renewal Community by the United States Department of
12    Housing and Urban Development;
13        (4) the property on which the premises are located and
14    the properties on which the churches are located are on
15    the same street;
16        (5) the property on which the premises are located is
17    immediately adjacent to and east of the property on which
18    at least one of the churches is located;
19        (6) the property on which the premises are located is
20    across the street and southwest of the property on which
21    another church is located;
22        (7) the principal religious leaders of the churches
23    have indicated their support for the issuance of the
24    license in writing; and
25        (8) the alder alderman in whose ward the premises are
26    located has expressed his or her support for the issuance

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 270 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1    of the license in writing.
2    For purposes of this subsection (pp), "banquet facility"
3means the part of the building that caters to private parties
4and where the sale of alcoholic liquors is not the principal
5business.
6    (qq) Notwithstanding any provision of this Section to the
7contrary, nothing in this Section shall prohibit the issuance
8or renewal of a license authorizing the sale of alcoholic
9liquor on premises that are located within a municipality with
10a population in excess of 1,000,000 inhabitants and within 100
11feet of a church or school if:
12        (1) the primary entrance of the premises and the
13    closest entrance of the church or school are at least 200
14    feet apart and no greater than 300 feet apart;
15        (2) the shortest distance between the premises and the
16    church or school is at least 66 feet apart and no greater
17    than 81 feet apart;
18        (3) the premises are a single-story, steel-framed
19    commercial building with at least 18,042 square feet, and
20    was constructed in 1925 and 1997;
21        (4) the owner of the business operated within the
22    premises has been the general manager of a similar
23    supermarket within one mile from the premises, which has
24    had a valid license authorizing the sale of alcoholic
25    liquor since 2002, and is in good standing with the City of
26    Chicago;

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 271 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1        (5) the principal religious leader at the place of
2    worship has indicated his or her support to the issuance
3    or renewal of the license in writing;
4        (6) the alder alderman of the ward has indicated his
5    or her support to the issuance or renewal of the license in
6    writing; and
7        (7) the principal of the school has indicated his or
8    her support to the issuance or renewal of the license in
9    writing.
10    (rr) Notwithstanding any provision of this Section to the
11contrary, nothing in this Section shall prohibit the issuance
12or renewal of a license authorizing the sale of alcoholic
13liquor at premises located within a municipality with a
14population in excess of 1,000,000 inhabitants and within 100
15feet of a club that leases space to a school if:
16        (1) the sale of alcoholic liquor is not the principal
17    business carried out on the premises;
18        (2) the sale of alcoholic liquor at the premises is
19    incidental to the operation of a grocery store;
20        (3) the premises are a building of approximately 1,750
21    square feet and is rented by the owners of the grocery
22    store from a family member;
23        (4) the property line of the premises is approximately
24    68 feet from the property line of the club;
25        (5) the primary entrance of the premises and the
26    primary entrance of the club where the school leases space

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 272 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1    are at least 100 feet apart;
2        (6) the director of the club renting space to the
3    school has indicated his or her consent to the issuance of
4    the license in writing; and
5        (7) the alder alderman in whose district the premises
6    are located has expressed his or her support for the
7    issuance of the license in writing.
8    (ss) Notwithstanding any provision of this Section to the
9contrary, nothing in this Section shall prohibit the issuance
10or renewal of a license authorizing the sale of alcoholic
11liquor at premises located within a municipality with a
12population in excess of 1,000,000 inhabitants and within 100
13feet of a church if:
14        (1) the premises are located within a 15 unit building
15    with 13 residential apartments and 2 commercial spaces,
16    and the licensee will occupy both commercial spaces;
17        (2) a restaurant has been operated on the premises
18    since June 2011;
19        (3) the restaurant currently occupies 1,075 square
20    feet, but will be expanding to include 975 additional
21    square feet;
22        (4) the sale of alcoholic liquor is not the principal
23    business carried on by the licensee at the premises;
24        (5) the premises are located south of the church and
25    on the same street and are separated by a one-way
26    westbound street;

 

 

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1        (6) the primary entrance of the premises is at least
2    93 feet from the primary entrance of the church;
3        (7) the shortest distance between any part of the
4    premises and any part of the church is at least 72 feet;
5        (8) the building in which the restaurant is located
6    was built in 1910;
7        (9) the alder alderman of the ward in which the
8    premises are located has expressed, in writing, his or her
9    support for the issuance of the license; and
10        (10) the principal religious leader of the church has
11    delivered a written statement that he or she does not
12    object to the issuance of a license under this subsection
13    (ss).
14    (tt) Notwithstanding any provision of this Section to the
15contrary, nothing in this Section shall prohibit the issuance
16or renewal of a license authorizing the sale of alcoholic
17liquor at premises located within a municipality with a
18population in excess of 1,000,000 inhabitants and within 100
19feet of a church if:
20        (1) the sale of alcoholic liquor is not the principal
21    business carried on by the licensee at the premises;
22        (2) the sale of alcoholic liquor is incidental to the
23    sale of food;
24        (3) the sale of alcoholic liquor at the premises was
25    previously authorized by a package goods liquor license;
26        (4) the premises are at least 40,000 square feet with

 

 

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1    25 parking spaces in the contiguous surface lot to the
2    north of the store and 93 parking spaces on the roof;
3        (5) the shortest distance between the lot line of the
4    parking lot of the premises and the exterior wall of the
5    church is at least 80 feet;
6        (6) the distance between the building in which the
7    church is located and the building in which the premises
8    are located is at least 180 feet;
9        (7) the main entrance to the church faces west and is
10    at least 257 feet from the main entrance of the premises;
11    and
12        (8) the applicant is the owner of 10 similar grocery
13    stores within the City of Chicago and the surrounding area
14    and has been in business for more than 30 years.
15    (uu) Notwithstanding any provision of this Section to the
16contrary, nothing in this Section shall prohibit the issuance
17or renewal of a license authorizing the sale of alcoholic
18liquor at premises located within a municipality with a
19population in excess of 1,000,000 inhabitants and within 100
20feet of a church if:
21        (1) the sale of alcoholic liquor is not the principal
22    business carried on by the licensee at the premises;
23        (2) the sale of alcoholic liquor is incidental to the
24    operation of a grocery store;
25        (3) the premises are located in a building that is
26    approximately 68,000 square feet with 157 parking spaces

 

 

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1    on property that was previously vacant land;
2        (4) the main entrance to the church faces west and is
3    at least 500 feet from the entrance of the premises, which
4    faces north;
5        (5) the church and the premises are separated by an
6    alley;
7        (6) the applicant is the owner of 9 similar grocery
8    stores in the City of Chicago and the surrounding area and
9    has been in business for more than 40 years; and
10        (7) the alder alderman of the ward in which the
11    premises are located has expressed, in writing, his or her
12    support for the issuance of the license.
13    (vv) Notwithstanding any provision of this Section to the
14contrary, nothing in this Section shall prohibit the issuance
15or renewal of a license authorizing the sale of alcoholic
16liquor at premises located within a municipality with a
17population in excess of 1,000,000 inhabitants and within 100
18feet of a church if:
19        (1) the sale of alcoholic liquor is the principal
20    business carried on by the licensee at the premises;
21        (2) the sale of alcoholic liquor is primary to the
22    sale of food;
23        (3) the premises are located south of the church and
24    on perpendicular streets and are separated by a driveway;
25        (4) the primary entrance of the premises is at least
26    100 feet from the primary entrance of the church;

 

 

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1        (5) the shortest distance between any part of the
2    premises and any part of the church is at least 15 feet;
3        (6) the premises are less than 100 feet from the
4    church center, but greater than 100 feet from the area
5    within the building where church services are held;
6        (7) the premises are 25,830 square feet and sit on a
7    lot that is 0.48 acres;
8        (8) the premises were once designated as a Korean
9    American Presbyterian Church and were once used as a
10    Masonic Temple;
11        (9) the premises were built in 1910;
12        (10) the alder alderman of the ward in which the
13    premises are located has expressed, in writing, his or her
14    support for the issuance of the license; and
15        (11) the principal religious leader of the church has
16    delivered a written statement that he or she does not
17    object to the issuance of a license under this subsection
18    (vv).
19    For the purposes of this subsection (vv), "premises" means
20a place of business together with a privately owned outdoor
21location that is adjacent to the place of business.
22    (ww) Notwithstanding any provision of this Section to the
23contrary, nothing in this Section shall prohibit the issuance
24or renewal of a license authorizing the sale of alcoholic
25liquor at premises located within a municipality with a
26population in excess of 1,000,000 inhabitants and within 100

 

 

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1feet of a school if:
2        (1) the school is located within Sub Area III of City
3    of Chicago Residential-Business Planned Development Number
4    523, as amended; and
5        (2) the premises are located within Sub Area I, Sub
6    Area II, or Sub Area IV of City of Chicago
7    Residential-Business Planned Development Number 523, as
8    amended.
9    (xx) Notwithstanding any provision of this Section to the
10contrary, nothing in this Section shall prohibit the issuance
11or renewal of a license authorizing the sale of alcoholic
12liquor at premises located within a municipality with a
13population in excess of 1,000,000 inhabitants and within 100
14feet of a church if:
15        (1) the sale of wine or wine-related products is the
16    exclusive business carried on by the licensee at the
17    premises;
18        (2) the primary entrance of the premises and the
19    primary entrance of the church are at least 100 feet apart
20    and are located on different streets;
21        (3) the building in which the premises are located and
22    the building in which the church is located are separated
23    by an alley;
24        (4) the premises consists of less than 2,000 square
25    feet of floor area dedicated to the sale of wine or
26    wine-related products;

 

 

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1        (5) the premises are located on the first floor of a
2    2-story building that is at least 99 years old and has a
3    residential unit on the second floor; and
4        (6) the principal religious leader at the church has
5    indicated his or her support for the issuance or renewal
6    of the license in writing.
7    (yy) Notwithstanding any provision of this Section to the
8contrary, nothing in this Section shall prohibit the issuance
9or renewal of a license authorizing the sale of alcoholic
10liquor at premises located within a municipality with a
11population in excess of 1,000,000 inhabitants and within 100
12feet of a church if:
13        (1) the premises are a 27-story hotel containing 191
14    guest rooms;
15        (2) the sale of alcoholic liquor is not the principal
16    business carried on by the licensee at the premises and is
17    limited to a restaurant located on the first floor of the
18    hotel;
19        (3) the hotel is adjacent to the church;
20        (4) the site is zoned as DX-16;
21        (5) the principal religious leader of the church has
22    delivered a written statement that he or she does not
23    object to the issuance of a license under this subsection
24    (yy); and
25        (6) the alder alderman of the ward in which the
26    premises are located has expressed, in writing, his or her

 

 

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1    support for the issuance of the license.
2    (zz) Notwithstanding any provision of this Section to the
3contrary, nothing in this Section shall prohibit the issuance
4or renewal of a license authorizing the sale of alcoholic
5liquor at premises located within a municipality with a
6population in excess of 1,000,000 inhabitants and within 100
7feet of a church if:
8        (1) the premises are a 15-story hotel containing 143
9    guest rooms;
10        (2) the premises are approximately 85,691 square feet;
11        (3) a restaurant is operated on the premises;
12        (4) the restaurant is located in the first floor lobby
13    of the hotel;
14        (5) the sale of alcoholic liquor is not the principal
15    business carried on by the licensee at the premises;
16        (6) the hotel is located approximately 50 feet from
17    the church and is separated from the church by a public
18    street on the ground level and by air space on the upper
19    level, which is where the public entrances are located;
20        (7) the site is zoned as DX-16;
21        (8) the principal religious leader of the church has
22    delivered a written statement that he or she does not
23    object to the issuance of a license under this subsection
24    (zz); and
25        (9) the alder alderman of the ward in which the
26    premises are located has expressed, in writing, his or her

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 280 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1    support for the issuance of the license.
2    (aaa) Notwithstanding any provision in this Section to the
3contrary, nothing in this Section shall prohibit the issuance
4or renewal of a license authorizing the sale of alcoholic
5liquor within a full-service grocery store at premises located
6within a municipality with a population in excess of 1,000,000
7inhabitants and within 100 feet of a school if:
8        (1) the sale of alcoholic liquor is not the primary
9    business activity of the grocery store;
10        (2) the premises are newly constructed on land that
11    was formerly used by the Young Men's Christian
12    Association;
13        (3) the grocery store is located within a planned
14    development that was approved by the municipality in 2007;
15        (4) the premises are located in a multi-building,
16    mixed-use complex;
17        (5) the entrance to the grocery store is located more
18    than 200 feet from the entrance to the school;
19        (6) the entrance to the grocery store is located
20    across the street from the back of the school building,
21    which is not used for student or public access;
22        (7) the grocery store executed a binding lease for the
23    property in 2008;
24        (8) the premises consist of 2 levels and occupy more
25    than 80,000 square feet;
26        (9) the owner and operator of the grocery store

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 281 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1    operates at least 10 other grocery stores that have
2    alcoholic liquor licenses within the same municipality;
3    and
4        (10) the director of the school has expressed, in
5    writing, his or her support for the issuance of the
6    license.
7    (bbb) Notwithstanding any provision of this Section to the
8contrary, nothing in this Section shall prohibit the issuance
9or renewal of a license authorizing the sale of alcoholic
10liquor at premises located within a municipality with a
11population in excess of 1,000,000 inhabitants and within 100
12feet of a church if:
13        (1) the sale of alcoholic liquor at the premises is
14    incidental to the sale of food;
15        (2) the premises are located in a single-story
16    building of primarily brick construction containing at
17    least 6 commercial units constructed before 1940;
18        (3) the premises are located in a B3-2 zoning
19    district;
20        (4) the premises are less than 4,000 square feet;
21        (5) the church established its congregation in 1891
22    and completed construction of the church building in 1990;
23        (6) the premises are located south of the church;
24        (7) the premises and church are located on the same
25    street and are separated by a one-way westbound street;
26    and

 

 

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1        (8) the principal religious leader of the church has
2    not indicated his or her opposition to the issuance or
3    renewal of the license in writing.
4    (ccc) Notwithstanding any provision of this Section to the
5contrary, nothing in this Section shall prohibit the issuance
6or renewal of a license authorizing the sale of alcoholic
7liquor within a full-service grocery store at premises located
8within a municipality with a population in excess of 1,000,000
9inhabitants and within 100 feet of a church and school if:
10        (1) as of March 14, 2007, the premises are located in a
11    City of Chicago Residential-Business Planned Development
12    No. 1052;
13        (2) the sale of alcoholic liquor is not the principal
14    business carried on by the licensee at the premises;
15        (3) the sale of alcoholic liquor is incidental to the
16    operation of a grocery store and comprises no more than
17    10% of the total in-store sales;
18        (4) the owner and operator of the grocery store
19    operates at least 10 other grocery stores that have
20    alcoholic liquor licenses within the same municipality;
21        (5) the premises are new construction when the license
22    is first issued;
23        (6) the constructed premises are to be no less than
24    50,000 square feet;
25        (7) the school is a private church-affiliated school;
26        (8) the premises and the property containing the

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 283 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1    church and church-affiliated school are located on
2    perpendicular streets and the school and church are
3    adjacent to one another;
4        (9) the pastor of the church and school has expressed,
5    in writing, support for the issuance of the license; and
6        (10) the alder alderman of the ward in which the
7    premises are located has expressed, in writing, his or her
8    support for the issuance of the license.
9    (ddd) Notwithstanding any provision of this Section to the
10contrary, nothing in this Section shall prohibit the issuance
11or renewal of a license authorizing the sale of alcoholic
12liquor at premises located within a municipality with a
13population in excess of 1,000,000 inhabitants and within 100
14feet of a church or school if:
15        (1) the business has been issued a license from the
16    municipality to allow the business to operate a theater on
17    the premises;
18        (2) the theater has less than 200 seats;
19        (3) the premises are approximately 2,700 to 3,100
20    square feet of space;
21        (4) the premises are located to the north of the
22    church;
23        (5) the primary entrance of the premises and the
24    primary entrance of any church within 100 feet of the
25    premises are located either on a different street or
26    across a right-of-way from the premises;

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 284 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1        (6) the primary entrance of the premises and the
2    primary entrance of any school within 100 feet of the
3    premises are located either on a different street or
4    across a right-of-way from the premises;
5        (7) the premises are located in a building that is at
6    least 100 years old; and
7        (8) any church or school located within 100 feet of
8    the premises has indicated its support for the issuance or
9    renewal of the license to the premises in writing.
10    (eee) Notwithstanding any provision of this Section to the
11contrary, nothing in this Section shall prohibit the issuance
12or renewal of a license authorizing the sale of alcoholic
13liquor at premises located within a municipality with a
14population in excess of 1,000,000 inhabitants and within 100
15feet of a church and school if:
16        (1) the sale of alcoholic liquor is incidental to the
17    sale of food;
18        (2) the sale of alcoholic liquor is not the principal
19    business carried on by the applicant on the premises;
20        (3) a family-owned restaurant has operated on the
21    premises since 1957;
22        (4) the premises occupy the first floor of a 3-story
23    building that is at least 90 years old;
24        (5) the distance between the property line of the
25    premises and the property line of the church is at least 20
26    feet;

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 285 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1        (6) the church was established at its current location
2    and the present structure was erected before 1900;
3        (7) the primary entrance of the premises is at least
4    75 feet from the primary entrance of the church;
5        (8) the school is affiliated with the church;
6        (9) the principal religious leader at the place of
7    worship has indicated his or her support for the issuance
8    of the license in writing;
9        (10) the principal of the school has indicated in
10    writing that he or she is not opposed to the issuance of
11    the license; and
12        (11) the alder alderman of the ward in which the
13    premises are located has expressed, in writing, his or her
14    lack of an objection to the issuance of the license.
15    (fff) Notwithstanding any provision of this Section to the
16contrary, nothing in this Section shall prohibit the issuance
17or renewal of a license authorizing the sale of alcoholic
18liquor at premises located within a municipality with a
19population in excess of 1,000,000 inhabitants and within 100
20feet of a church if:
21        (1) the sale of alcoholic liquor is not the principal
22    business carried on by the licensee at the premises;
23        (2) the sale of alcoholic liquor at the premises is
24    incidental to the operation of a grocery store;
25        (3) the premises are a one-story building containing
26    approximately 10,000 square feet and are rented by the

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 286 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1    owners of the grocery store;
2        (4) the sale of alcoholic liquor at the premises
3    occurs in a retail area of the grocery store that is
4    approximately 3,500 square feet;
5        (5) the grocery store has operated at the location
6    since 1984;
7        (6) the grocery store is closed on Sundays;
8        (7) the property on which the premises are located is
9    a corner lot that is bound by 3 streets and an alley, where
10    one street is a one-way street that runs north-south, one
11    street runs east-west, and one street runs
12    northwest-southeast;
13        (8) the property line of the premises is approximately
14    16 feet from the property line of the building where the
15    church is located;
16        (9) the premises are separated from the building
17    containing the church by a public alley;
18        (10) the primary entrance of the premises and the
19    primary entrance of the church are at least 100 feet
20    apart;
21        (11) representatives of the church have delivered a
22    written statement that the church does not object to the
23    issuance of a license under this subsection (fff); and
24        (12) the alder alderman of the ward in which the
25    grocery store is located has expressed, in writing, his or
26    her support for the issuance of the license.

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 287 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1    (ggg) Notwithstanding any provision of this Section to the
2contrary, nothing in this Section shall prohibit the issuance
3or renewal of licenses authorizing the sale of alcoholic
4liquor within a restaurant or lobby coffee house at premises
5located within a municipality with a population in excess of
61,000,000 inhabitants and within 100 feet of a church and
7school if:
8        (1) a residential retirement home formerly operated on
9    the premises and the premises are being converted into a
10    new apartment living complex containing studio and
11    one-bedroom apartments with ground floor retail space;
12        (2) the restaurant and lobby coffee house are located
13    within a Community Shopping District within the
14    municipality;
15        (3) the premises are located in a single-building,
16    mixed-use complex that, in addition to the restaurant and
17    lobby coffee house, contains apartment residences, a
18    fitness center for the residents of the apartment
19    building, a lobby designed as a social center for the
20    residents, a rooftop deck, and a patio with a dog run for
21    the exclusive use of the residents;
22        (4) the sale of alcoholic liquor is not the primary
23    business activity of the apartment complex, restaurant, or
24    lobby coffee house;
25        (5) the entrance to the apartment residence is more
26    than 310 feet from the entrance to the school and church;

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 288 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1        (6) the entrance to the apartment residence is located
2    at the end of the block around the corner from the south
3    side of the school building;
4        (7) the school is affiliated with the church;
5        (8) the pastor of the parish, principal of the school,
6    and the titleholder to the church and school have given
7    written consent to the issuance of the license;
8        (9) the alder alderman of the ward in which the
9    premises are located has given written consent to the
10    issuance of the license; and
11        (10) the neighborhood block club has given written
12    consent to the issuance of the license.
13    (hhh) Notwithstanding any provision of this Section to the
14contrary, nothing in this Section shall prohibit the issuance
15or renewal of a license to sell alcoholic liquor at premises
16located within a municipality with a population in excess of
171,000,000 inhabitants and within 100 feet of a home for
18indigent persons or a church if:
19        (1) a restaurant operates on the premises and has been
20    in operation since January of 2014;
21        (2) the sale of alcoholic liquor is incidental to the
22    sale of food;
23        (3) the sale of alcoholic liquor is not the principal
24    business carried on by the licensee on the premises;
25        (4) the premises occupy the first floor of a 3-story
26    building that is at least 100 years old;

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 289 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1        (5) the primary entrance to the premises is more than
2    100 feet from the primary entrance to the home for
3    indigent persons, which opened in 1989 and is operated to
4    address homelessness and provide shelter;
5        (6) the primary entrance to the premises and the
6    primary entrance to the home for indigent persons are
7    located on different streets;
8        (7) the executive director of the home for indigent
9    persons has given written consent to the issuance of the
10    license;
11        (8) the entrance to the premises is located within 100
12    feet of a Buddhist temple;
13        (9) the entrance to the premises is more than 100 feet
14    from where any worship or educational programming is
15    conducted by the Buddhist temple and is located in an area
16    used only for other purposes; and
17        (10) the president and the board of directors of the
18    Buddhist temple have given written consent to the issuance
19    of the license.
20    (iii) Notwithstanding any provision of this Section to the
21contrary, nothing in this Section shall prohibit the issuance
22or renewal of a license authorizing the sale of alcoholic
23liquor at premises located within a municipality in excess of
241,000,000 inhabitants and within 100 feet of a home for the
25aged if:
26        (1) the sale of alcoholic liquor is not the principal

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 290 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1    business carried on by the licensee on the premises;
2        (2) the sale of alcoholic liquor at the premises is
3    incidental to the operation of a restaurant;
4        (3) the premises are on the ground floor of a
5    multi-floor, university-affiliated housing facility;
6        (4) the premises occupy 1,916 square feet of space,
7    with the total square footage from which liquor will be
8    sold, served, and consumed to be 900 square feet;
9        (5) the premises are separated from the home for the
10    aged by an alley;
11        (6) the primary entrance to the premises and the
12    primary entrance to the home for the aged are at least 500
13    feet apart and located on different streets;
14        (7) representatives of the home for the aged have
15    expressed, in writing, that the home does not object to
16    the issuance of a license under this subsection; and
17        (8) the alder alderman of the ward in which the
18    restaurant is located has expressed, in writing, his or
19    her support for the issuance of the license.
20    (jjj) Notwithstanding any provision of this Section to the
21contrary, nothing in this Section shall prohibit the issuance
22or renewal of a license authorizing the sale of alcoholic
23liquor at premises located within a municipality with a
24population in excess of 1,000,000 inhabitants and within 100
25feet of a school if:
26        (1) as of January 1, 2016, the premises were used for

 

 

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1    the sale of alcoholic liquor for consumption on the
2    premises and were authorized to do so pursuant to a retail
3    tavern license held by an individual as the sole
4    proprietor of the premises;
5        (2) the primary entrance to the school and the primary
6    entrance to the premises are on the same street;
7        (3) the school was founded in 1949;
8        (4) the building in which the premises are situated
9    was constructed before 1930;
10        (5) the building in which the premises are situated is
11    immediately across the street from the school; and
12        (6) the school has not indicated its opposition to the
13    issuance or renewal of the license in writing.
14    (kkk) (Blank).
15    (lll) Notwithstanding any provision of this Section to the
16contrary, nothing in this Section shall prohibit the issuance
17or renewal of a license authorizing the sale of alcoholic
18liquor at premises located within a municipality with a
19population in excess of 1,000,000 inhabitants and within 100
20feet of a synagogue or school if:
21        (1) the sale of alcoholic liquor at the premises is
22    incidental to the sale of food;
23        (2) the sale of alcoholic liquor is not the principal
24    business carried on by the licensee at the premises;
25        (3) the premises are located on the same street on
26    which the synagogue or school is located;

 

 

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1        (4) the primary entrance to the premises and the
2    closest entrance to the synagogue or school is at least
3    100 feet apart;
4        (5) the shortest distance between the premises and the
5    synagogue or school is at least 65 feet apart and no
6    greater than 70 feet apart;
7        (6) the premises are between 1,800 and 2,000 square
8    feet;
9        (7) the synagogue was founded in 1861; and
10        (8) the leader of the synagogue has indicated, in
11    writing, the synagogue's support for the issuance or
12    renewal of the license.
13    (mmm) Notwithstanding any provision of this Section to the
14contrary, nothing in this Section shall prohibit the issuance
15or renewal of licenses authorizing the sale of alcoholic
16liquor within a restaurant or lobby coffee house at premises
17located within a municipality with a population in excess of
181,000,000 inhabitants and within 100 feet of a church if:
19        (1) the sale of alcoholic liquor is not the principal
20    business carried on by the licensee at the premises;
21        (2) the sale of alcoholic liquor at the premises is
22    incidental to the sale of food in a restaurant;
23        (3) the restaurant has been run by the same family for
24    at least 19 consecutive years;
25        (4) the premises are located in a 3-story building in
26    the most easterly part of the first floor;

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 293 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1        (5) the building in which the premises are located has
2    residential housing on the second and third floors;
3        (6) the primary entrance to the premises is on a
4    north-south street around the corner and across an alley
5    from the primary entrance to the church, which is on an
6    east-west street;
7        (7) the primary entrance to the church and the primary
8    entrance to the premises are more than 160 feet apart; and
9        (8) the church has expressed, in writing, its support
10    for the issuance of a license under this subsection.
11    (nnn) Notwithstanding any provision of this Section to the
12contrary, nothing in this Section shall prohibit the issuance
13or renewal of licenses authorizing the sale of alcoholic
14liquor within a restaurant or lobby coffee house at premises
15located within a municipality with a population in excess of
161,000,000 inhabitants and within 100 feet of a school and
17church or synagogue if:
18        (1) the sale of alcoholic liquor is not the principal
19    business carried on by the licensee at the premises;
20        (2) the sale of alcoholic liquor at the premises is
21    incidental to the sale of food in a restaurant;
22        (3) the front door of the synagogue faces east on the
23    next north-south street east of and parallel to the
24    north-south street on which the restaurant is located
25    where the restaurant's front door faces west;
26        (4) the closest exterior pedestrian entrance that

 

 

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1    leads to the school or the synagogue is across an
2    east-west street and at least 300 feet from the primary
3    entrance to the restaurant;
4        (5) the nearest church-related or school-related
5    building is a community center building;
6        (6) the restaurant is on the ground floor of a 3-story
7    building constructed in 1896 with a brick facade;
8        (7) the restaurant shares the ground floor with a
9    theater, and the second and third floors of the building
10    in which the restaurant is located consists of residential
11    housing;
12        (8) the leader of the synagogue and school has
13    expressed, in writing, that the synagogue does not object
14    to the issuance of a license under this subsection; and
15        (9) the alder alderman of the ward in which the
16    premises is located has expressed, in writing, his or her
17    support for the issuance of the license.
18    (ooo) Notwithstanding any provision of this Section to the
19contrary, nothing in this Section shall prohibit the issuance
20or renewal of a license authorizing the sale of alcoholic
21liquor at premises located within a municipality with a
22population in excess of 2,000 but less than 5,000 inhabitants
23in a county with a population in excess of 3,000,000 and within
24100 feet of a home for the aged if:
25        (1) as of March 1, 2016, the premises were used to sell
26    alcohol pursuant to a retail tavern and packaged goods

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 295 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1    license issued by the municipality and held by a limited
2    liability company as the proprietor of the premises;
3        (2) the home for the aged was completed in 2015;
4        (3) the home for the aged is a 5-story structure;
5        (4) the building in which the premises are situated is
6    directly adjacent to the home for the aged;
7        (5) the building in which the premises are situated
8    was constructed before 1950;
9        (6) the home for the aged has not indicated its
10    opposition to the issuance or renewal of the license; and
11        (7) the president of the municipality has expressed in
12    writing that he or she does not object to the issuance or
13    renewal of the license.
14    (ppp) Notwithstanding any provision of this Section to the
15contrary, nothing in this Section shall prohibit the issuance
16or renewal of a license authorizing the sale of alcoholic
17liquor at premises located within a municipality with a
18population in excess of 1,000,000 inhabitants and within 100
19feet of a church or churches if:
20        (1) the shortest distance between the premises and a
21    church is at least 78 feet apart and no greater than 95
22    feet apart;
23        (2) the premises are a single-story, brick commercial
24    building and between 3,600 to 4,000 square feet and the
25    original building was built before 1922;
26        (3) the premises are located in a B3-2 zoning

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 296 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1    district;
2        (4) the premises are separated from the buildings
3    containing the churches by a street;
4        (5) the previous owners of the business located on the
5    premises held a liquor license for at least 10 years;
6        (6) the new owner of the business located on the
7    premises has managed 2 other food and liquor stores since
8    1997;
9        (7) the principal religious leaders at the places of
10    worship have indicated their support for the issuance or
11    renewal of the license in writing; and
12        (8) the alder alderman of the ward in which the
13    premises are located has indicated his or her support for
14    the issuance or renewal of the license in writing.
15    (qqq) Notwithstanding any provision of this Section to the
16contrary, nothing in this Section shall prohibit the issuance
17or renewal of a license authorizing the sale of alcoholic
18liquor at premises located within a municipality with a
19population in excess of 1,000,000 inhabitants and within 100
20feet of a church if:
21        (1) the sale of alcoholic liquor at the premises is
22    incidental to the sale of food;
23        (2) the sale of alcoholic liquor is not the principal
24    business carried on by the licensee at the premises;
25        (3) the premises are located on the opposite side of
26    the same street on which the church is located;

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 297 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1        (4) the church is located on a corner lot;
2        (5) the shortest distance between the premises and the
3    church is at least 90 feet apart and no greater than 95
4    feet apart;
5        (6) the premises are at least 3,000 but no more than
6    5,000 square feet;
7        (7) the church's original chapel was built in 1858;
8        (8) the church's first congregation was organized in
9    1860; and
10        (9) the leaders of the church and the alder alderman
11    of the ward in which the premises are located has
12    expressed, in writing, their support for the issuance of
13    the license.
14    (rrr) Notwithstanding any provision of this Section to the
15contrary, nothing in this Section shall prohibit the issuance
16or renewal of a license authorizing the sale of alcoholic
17liquor at a restaurant or banquet facility established within
18premises located within a municipality with a population in
19excess of 1,000,000 inhabitants and within 100 feet of a
20church or school if:
21        (1) the sale of alcoholic liquor at the premises is
22    incidental to the sale of food;
23        (2) the sale of alcoholic liquor is not the principal
24    business carried on by the licensee at the premises;
25        (3) the immediately prior owner or the operator of the
26    restaurant or banquet facility held a valid retail license

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 298 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1    authorizing the sale of alcoholic liquor at the premises
2    for at least part of the 24 months before a change of
3    ownership;
4        (4) the premises are located immediately east and
5    across the street from an elementary school;
6        (5) the premises and elementary school are part of an
7    approximately 100-acre campus owned by the church;
8        (6) the school opened in 1999 and was named after the
9    founder of the church; and
10        (7) the alder alderman of the ward in which the
11    premises are located has expressed, in writing, his or her
12    support for the issuance of the license.
13    (sss) Notwithstanding any provision of this Section to the
14contrary, nothing in this Section shall prohibit the issuance
15or renewal of a license authorizing the sale of alcoholic
16liquor at premises located within a municipality with a
17population in excess of 1,000,000 inhabitants and within 100
18feet of a church or school if:
19        (1) the premises are at least 5,300 square feet and
20    located in a building that was built prior to 1940;
21        (2) the shortest distance between the property line of
22    the premises and the exterior wall of the building in
23    which the church is located is at least 109 feet;
24        (3) the distance between the building in which the
25    church is located and the building in which the premises
26    are located is at least 118 feet;

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 299 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1        (4) the main entrance to the church faces west and is
2    at least 602 feet from the main entrance of the premises;
3        (5) the shortest distance between the property line of
4    the premises and the property line of the school is at
5    least 177 feet;
6        (6) the applicant has been in business for more than
7    10 years;
8        (7) the principal religious leader of the church has
9    indicated his or her support for the issuance or renewal
10    of the license in writing;
11        (8) the principal of the school has indicated in
12    writing that he or she is not opposed to the issuance of
13    the license; and
14        (9) the alder alderman of the ward in which the
15    premises are located has expressed, in writing, his or her
16    support for the issuance of the license.
17    (ttt) Notwithstanding any provision of this Section to the
18contrary, nothing in this Section shall prohibit the issuance
19or renewal of a license authorizing the sale of alcoholic
20liquor at premises located within a municipality with a
21population in excess of 1,000,000 inhabitants and within 100
22feet of a church or school if:
23        (1) the premises are at least 59,000 square feet and
24    located in a building that was built prior to 1940;
25        (2) the shortest distance between the west property
26    line of the premises and the exterior wall of the church is

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 300 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1    at least 99 feet;
2        (3) the distance between the building in which the
3    church is located and the building in which the premises
4    are located is at least 102 feet;
5        (4) the main entrance to the church faces west and is
6    at least 457 feet from the main entrance of the premises;
7        (5) the shortest distance between the property line of
8    the premises and the property line of the school is at
9    least 66 feet;
10        (6) the applicant has been in business for more than
11    10 years;
12        (7) the principal religious leader of the church has
13    indicated his or her support for the issuance or renewal
14    of the license in writing;
15        (8) the principal of the school has indicated in
16    writing that he or she is not opposed to the issuance of
17    the license; and
18        (9) the alder alderman of the ward in which the
19    premises are located has expressed, in writing, his or her
20    support for the issuance of the license.
21    (uuu) Notwithstanding any provision of this Section to the
22contrary, nothing in this Section shall prohibit the issuance
23or renewal of a license authorizing the sale of alcoholic
24liquor at premises located within a municipality with a
25population in excess of 1,000,000 inhabitants and within 100
26feet of a place of worship if:

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 301 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1        (1) the sale of liquor is incidental to the sale of
2    food;
3        (2) the premises are at least 7,100 square feet;
4        (3) the shortest distance between the north property
5    line of the premises and the nearest exterior wall of the
6    place of worship is at least 86 feet;
7        (4) the main entrance to the place of worship faces
8    north and is more than 150 feet from the main entrance of
9    the premises;
10        (5) the applicant has been in business for more than
11    20 years at the location;
12        (6) the principal religious leader of the place of
13    worship has indicated his or her support for the issuance
14    or renewal of the license in writing; and
15        (7) the alder alderman of the ward in which the
16    premises are located has expressed, in writing, his or her
17    support for the issuance of the license.
18    (vvv) Notwithstanding any provision of this Section to the
19contrary, nothing in this Section shall prohibit the issuance
20or renewal of a license authorizing the sale of alcoholic
21liquor at premises located within a municipality with a
22population in excess of 1,000,000 inhabitants and within 100
23feet of 2 churches if:
24        (1) as of January 1, 2015, the premises were used for
25    the sale of alcoholic liquor for consumption on the
26    premises and the sale was authorized pursuant to a retail

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 302 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1    tavern license held by an individual as the sole
2    proprietor of the premises;
3        (2) a primary entrance of the church situated to the
4    south of the premises is located on a street running
5    perpendicular to the street upon which a primary entrance
6    of the premises is situated;
7        (3) the church located to the south of the premises is
8    a 3-story structure that was constructed in 2006;
9        (4) a parking lot separates the premises from the
10    church located to the south of the premises;
11        (5) the building in which the premises are situated
12    was constructed before 1930;
13        (6) the building in which the premises are situated is
14    a 2-story, mixed-use commercial and residential structure
15    containing more than 20,000 total square feet and
16    containing at least 7 residential units on the second
17    floor and 3 commercial units on the first floor;
18        (7) the building in which the premises are situated is
19    immediately adjacent to the church located to the north of
20    the premises;
21        (8) the primary entrance of the church located to the
22    north of the premises and the primary entrance of the
23    premises are located on the same street;
24        (9) the churches have not indicated their opposition
25    to the issuance or renewal of the license in writing; and
26        (10) the alder alderman of the ward in which the

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 303 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1    premises are located has expressed, in writing, his or her
2    support for the issuance of the license.
3    (www) Notwithstanding any provision of this Section to the
4contrary, nothing in this Section shall prohibit the issuance
5or renewal of licenses authorizing the sale of alcoholic
6liquor within a restaurant at premises located within a
7municipality with a population in excess of 1,000,000
8inhabitants and within 100 feet of a school if:
9        (1) the sale of alcoholic liquor is incidental to the
10    sale of food and is not the principal business of the
11    restaurant;
12        (2) the building in which the restaurant is located
13    was constructed in 1909 and is a 2-story structure;
14        (3) the restaurant has been operating continuously
15    since 1962, has been located at the existing premises
16    since 1989, and has been owned and operated by the same
17    family, which also operates a deli in a building located
18    immediately to the east and adjacent and connected to the
19    restaurant;
20        (4) the entrance to the restaurant is more than 200
21    feet from the entrance to the school;
22        (5) the building in which the restaurant is located
23    and the building in which the school is located are
24    separated by a traffic-congested major street;
25        (6) the building in which the restaurant is located
26    faces a public park located to the east of the school,

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 304 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1    cannot be seen from the windows of the school, and is not
2    directly across the street from the school;
3        (7) the school building is located 2 blocks from a
4    major private university;
5        (8) the school is a public school that has
6    pre-kindergarten through eighth grade classes, is an open
7    enrollment school, and has a preschool program that has
8    earned a Gold Circle of Quality award;
9        (9) the local school council has given written consent
10    for the issuance of the liquor license; and
11        (10) the alder alderman of the ward in which the
12    premises are located has given written consent for the
13    issuance of the liquor license.
14    (xxx) (Blank).
15    (yyy) Notwithstanding any provision in this Section to the
16contrary, nothing in this Section shall prohibit the issuance
17or renewal of a license authorizing the sale of alcoholic
18liquor at a store that is located within a municipality with a
19population in excess of 1,000,000 inhabitants and within 100
20feet of a church if:
21        (1) the premises are primarily used for the sale of
22    alcoholic liquor;
23        (2) on January 1, 2017, the store was authorized to
24    sell alcoholic liquor pursuant to a package goods liquor
25    license;
26        (3) on January 1, 2017, the store occupied

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 305 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1    approximately 5,560 square feet and will be expanded to
2    include 440 additional square feet for the purpose of
3    storage;
4        (4) the store was in existence before the church;
5        (5) the building in which the store is located was
6    built in 1956 and is immediately south of the church;
7        (6) the store and church are separated by an east-west
8    street;
9        (7) the owner of the store received his first liquor
10    license in 1986;
11        (8) the church has not indicated its opposition to the
12    issuance or renewal of the license in writing; and
13        (9) the alder alderman of the ward in which the store
14    is located has expressed his or her support for the
15    issuance or renewal of the license.
16    (zzz) Notwithstanding any provision of this Section to the
17contrary, nothing in this Section shall prohibit the issuance
18or renewal of a license authorizing the sale of alcoholic
19liquor at premises located within a municipality with a
20population in excess of 1,000,000 inhabitants and within 100
21feet of a church if:
22        (1) the premises are approximately 2,800 square feet
23    with east frontage on South Allport Street and north
24    frontage on West 18th Street in the City of Chicago;
25        (2) the shortest distance between the north property
26    line of the premises and the nearest exterior wall of the

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 306 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1    church is 95 feet;
2        (3) the main entrance to the church is on West 18th
3    Street, faces south, and is more than 100 feet from the
4    main entrance to the premises;
5        (4) the sale of alcoholic liquor is incidental to the
6    sale of food in a restaurant;
7        (5) the principal religious leader of the church has
8    not indicated his or her opposition to the issuance or
9    renewal of the license in writing; and
10        (6) the alder alderman of the ward in which the
11    premises are located has indicated his or her support for
12    the issuance or renewal of the license in writing.
13    (aaaa) Notwithstanding any provision of this Section to
14the contrary, nothing in this Section shall prohibit the
15issuance or renewal of a license authorizing the sale of
16alcoholic liquor at premises located within a municipality
17with a population in excess of 1,000,000 inhabitants and
18within 100 feet of a church if:
19        (1) the shortest distance between the premises and the
20    church is at least 65 feet apart and no greater than 70
21    feet apart;
22        (2) the premises are located on the ground floor of a
23    freestanding, 3-story building of brick construction with
24    2 stories of residential apartments above the premises;
25        (3) the premises are approximately 2,557 square feet;
26        (4) the premises and the church are located on

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 307 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1    opposite corners and are separated by sidewalks and a
2    street;
3        (5) the sale of alcohol is not the principal business
4    carried on by the licensee at the premises;
5        (6) the pastor of the church has not indicated his or
6    her opposition to the issuance or renewal of the license
7    in writing; and
8        (7) the alder alderman of the ward in which the
9    premises are located has not indicated his or her
10    opposition to the issuance or renewal of the license in
11    writing.
12    (bbbb) Notwithstanding any other provision of this Section
13to the contrary, nothing in this Section shall prohibit the
14issuance or renewal of a license authorizing the sale of
15alcoholic liquor at premises or an outdoor location at the
16premises located within a municipality with a population in
17excess of 1,000,000 inhabitants and that are within 100 feet
18of a church or school if:
19        (1) the church was a Catholic cathedral on January 1,
20    2018;
21        (2) the church has been in existence for at least 150
22    years;
23        (3) the school is affiliated with the church;
24        (4) the premises are bordered by State Street on the
25    east, Superior Street on the south, Dearborn Street on the
26    west, and Chicago Avenue on the north;

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 308 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1        (5) the premises are located within 2 miles of Lake
2    Michigan and the Chicago River;
3        (6) the premises are located in and adjacent to a
4    building for which construction commenced after January 1,
5    2018;
6        (7) the alder alderman who represents the district in
7    which the premises are located has written a letter of
8    support for the issuance of a license; and
9        (8) the principal religious leader of the church and
10    the principal of the school have both signed a letter of
11    support for the issuance of a license.
12    (cccc) Notwithstanding any other provision of this Section
13to the contrary, nothing in this Section shall prohibit the
14issuance or renewal of a license authorizing the sale of
15alcoholic liquor within a restaurant at premises located
16within a municipality with a population in excess of 1,000,000
17inhabitants and within 100 feet of a school if:
18        (1) the sale of alcoholic liquor is incidental to the
19    sale of food and is not the principal business of the
20    restaurant;
21        (2) the building in which the restaurant is located
22    was constructed in 1912 and is a 3-story structure;
23        (3) the restaurant has been in operation since 2015
24    and its entrance faces North Western Avenue;
25        (4) the entrance to the school faces West Augusta
26    Boulevard;

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 309 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1        (5) the entrance to the restaurant is more than 100
2    feet from the entrance to the school;
3        (6) the school is a Catholic school affiliated with
4    the nearby Catholic Parish church;
5        (7) the building in which the restaurant is located
6    and the building in which the school is located are
7    separated by an alley;
8        (8) the principal of the school has not indicated his
9    or her opposition to the issuance or renewal of the
10    license in writing; and
11        (9) the alder alderman of the ward in which the
12    restaurant is located has expressed his or her support for
13    the issuance or renewal of the license.
14    (dddd) Notwithstanding any provision of this Section to
15the contrary, nothing in this Section shall prohibit the
16issuance or renewal of a license authorizing the sale of
17alcoholic liquor at premises located within a municipality
18with a population in excess of 1,000,000 inhabitants and
19within 100 feet of a school if:
20        (1) the premises are approximately 6,250 square feet
21    with south frontage on Bryn Mawr Avenue and north frontage
22    on the alley 125 feet north of Bryn Mawr Avenue in the City
23    of Chicago;
24        (2) the shortest distance between the south property
25    line of the premises and the nearest exterior wall of the
26    school is 248 feet;

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 310 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1        (3) the main entrance to the school is on Christiana
2    Avenue, faces east, and is more than 100 feet from the main
3    entrance to the premises;
4        (4) the sale of alcoholic liquor is incidental to the
5    sale of food in a restaurant;
6        (5) the principal of the school has not indicated his
7    or her opposition to the issuance or renewal of the
8    license in writing; and
9        (6) the alder alderman of the ward in which the
10    premises are located has indicated his or her support for
11    the issuance or renewal of the license in writing.
12    (eeee) Notwithstanding any provision of this Section to
13the contrary, nothing in this Section shall prohibit the
14issuance or renewal of a license authorizing the sale of
15alcoholic liquor at premises located within a municipality
16with a population in excess of 1,000,000 inhabitants and
17within 100 feet of a school if:
18        (1) the premises are approximately 2,300 square feet
19    with south frontage on 53rd Street in the City of Chicago
20    and the eastern property line of the premises abuts a
21    private alleyway;
22        (2) the shortest distance between the south property
23    line of the premises and the nearest exterior wall of the
24    school is approximately 187 feet;
25        (3) the main entrance to the school is on Cornell
26    Avenue, faces west, and is more than 100 feet from the main

 

 

10200HB4013ham001- 311 -LRB102 17478 SMS 23753 a

1    entrance to the premises;
2        (4) the sale of alcoholic liquor is incidental to the
3    sale of food in a restaurant;
4        (5) the principal of the school has not indicated his
5    or her opposition to the issuance or renewal of the
6    license in writing; and
7        (6) the alder alderman of the ward in which the
8    premises are located has indicated his or her support for
9    the issuance or renewal of the license in writing.
10(Source: P.A. 100-36, eff. 8-4-17; 100-38, eff. 8-4-17;
11100-201, eff. 8-18-17; 100-579, eff. 2-13-18; 100-663, eff.
128-2-18; 100-863, eff. 8-14-18; 100-1036, eff. 8-22-18; 101-81,
13eff. 7-12-19.)
 
14    Section 75. The Cannabis Regulation and Tax Act is amended
15by changing Section 55-28 as follows:
 
16    (410 ILCS 705/55-28)
17    Sec. 55-28. Restricted cannabis zones.
18    (a) As used in this Section:
19    "Legal voter" means a person:
20        (1) who is duly registered to vote in a municipality
21    with a population of over 500,000;
22        (2) whose name appears on a poll list compiled by the
23    city board of election commissioners since the last
24    preceding election, regardless of whether the election was

 

 

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1    a primary, general, or special election;
2        (3) who, at the relevant time, is a resident of the
3    address at which he or she is registered to vote; and
4        (4) whose address, at the relevant time, is located in
5    the precinct where such person seeks to file a notice of
6    intent to initiate a petition process, circulate a
7    petition, or sign a petition under this Section.
8    As used in the definition of "legal voter", "relevant
9time" means any time that:
10        (i) a notice of intent is filed, pursuant to
11    subsection (c) of this Section, to initiate the petition
12    process under this Section;
13        (ii) the petition is circulated for signature in the
14    applicable precinct; or
15        (iii) the petition is signed by registered voters in
16    the applicable precinct.
17    "Petition" means the petition described in this Section.
18    "Precinct" means the smallest constituent territory within
19a municipality with a population of over 500,000 in which
20electors vote as a unit at the same polling place in any
21election governed by the Election Code.
22    "Restricted cannabis zone" means a precinct within which
23home cultivation, one or more types of cannabis business
24establishments, or both has been prohibited pursuant to an
25ordinance initiated by a petition under this Section.
26    (b) The legal voters of any precinct within a municipality

 

 

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1with a population of over 500,000 may petition their local
2alder alderman, using a petition form made available online by
3the city clerk, to introduce an ordinance establishing the
4precinct as a restricted zone. Such petition shall specify
5whether it seeks an ordinance to prohibit, within the
6precinct: (i) home cultivation; (ii) one or more types of
7cannabis business establishments; or (iii) home cultivation
8and one or more types of cannabis business establishments.
9    Upon receiving a petition containing the signatures of at
10least 25% of the registered voters of the precinct, and
11concluding that the petition is legally sufficient following
12the posting and review process in subsection (c) of this
13Section, the city clerk shall notify the local alder alderman
14of the ward in which the precinct is located. Upon being
15notified, that alder alderman, following an assessment of
16relevant factors within the precinct, including but not
17limited to, its geography, density and character, the
18prevalence of residentially zoned property, current licensed
19cannabis business establishments in the precinct, the current
20amount of home cultivation in the precinct, and the prevailing
21viewpoint with regard to the issue raised in the petition, may
22introduce an ordinance to the municipality's governing body
23creating a restricted cannabis zone in that precinct.
24    (c) A person seeking to initiate the petition process
25described in this Section shall first submit to the city clerk
26notice of intent to do so, on a form made available online by

 

 

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1the city clerk. That notice shall include a description of the
2potentially affected area and the scope of the restriction
3sought. The city clerk shall publicly post the submitted
4notice online.
5    To be legally sufficient, a petition must contain the
6requisite number of valid signatures and all such signatures
7must be obtained within 90 days of the date that the city clerk
8publicly posts the notice of intent. Upon receipt, the city
9clerk shall post the petition on the municipality's website
10for a 30-day comment period. The city clerk is authorized to
11take all necessary and appropriate steps to verify the legal
12sufficiency of a submitted petition. Following the petition
13review and comment period, the city clerk shall publicly post
14online the status of the petition as accepted or rejected, and
15if rejected, the reasons therefor. If the city clerk rejects a
16petition as legally insufficient, a minimum of 12 months must
17elapse from the time the city clerk posts the rejection notice
18before a new notice of intent for that same precinct may be
19submitted.
20    (c-5) Within 3 days after receiving an application for
21zoning approval to locate a cannabis business establishment
22within a municipality with a population of over 500,000, the
23municipality shall post a public notice of the filing on its
24website and notify the alder alderman of the ward in which the
25proposed cannabis business establishment is to be located of
26the filing. No action shall be taken on the zoning application

 

 

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1for 7 business days following the notice of the filing for
2zoning approval.
3    If a notice of intent to initiate the petition process to
4prohibit the type of cannabis business establishment proposed
5in the precinct of the proposed cannabis business
6establishment is filed prior to the filing of the application
7or within the 7-day period after the filing of the
8application, the municipality shall not approve the
9application for at least 90 days after the city clerk publicly
10posts the notice of intent to initiate the petition process.
11If a petition is filed within the 90-day petition-gathering
12period described in subsection (c), the municipality shall not
13approve the application for an additional 90 days after the
14city clerk's receipt of the petition; provided that if the
15city clerk rejects a petition as legally insufficient, the
16municipality may approve the application prior to the end of
17the 90 days. If a petition is not submitted within the 90-day
18petition-gathering period described in subsection (c), the
19municipality may approve the application unless the approval
20is otherwise stayed pursuant to this subsection by a separate
21notice of intent to initiate the petition process filed timely
22within the 7-day period.
23    If no legally sufficient petition is timely filed, a
24minimum of 12 months must elapse before a new notice of intent
25for that same precinct may be submitted.
26    (d) Notwithstanding any law to the contrary, the

 

 

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1municipality may enact an ordinance creating a restricted
2cannabis zone. The ordinance shall:
3        (1) identify the applicable precinct boundaries as of
4    the date of the petition;
5        (2) state whether the ordinance prohibits within the
6    defined boundaries of the precinct, and in what
7    combination: (A) one or more types of cannabis business
8    establishments; or (B) home cultivation;
9        (3) be in effect for 4 years, unless repealed earlier;
10    and
11        (4) once in effect, be subject to renewal by ordinance
12    at the expiration of the 4-year period without the need
13    for another supporting petition.
14(Source: P.A. 101-27, eff. 6-25-19; 101-593, eff. 12-4-19.)
 
15    Section 80. The Code of Civil Procedure is amended by
16changing Section 15-1503 as follows:
 
17    (735 ILCS 5/15-1503)  (from Ch. 110, par. 15-1503)
18    Sec. 15-1503. Notice of foreclosure.
19    (a) A notice of foreclosure, whether the foreclosure is
20initiated by complaint or counterclaim, made in accordance
21with this Section and recorded in the county in which the
22mortgaged real estate is located shall be constructive notice
23of the pendency of the foreclosure to every person claiming an
24interest in or lien on the mortgaged real estate, whose

 

 

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1interest or lien has not been recorded prior to the recording
2of such notice of foreclosure. Such notice of foreclosure must
3be executed by any party or any party's attorney and shall
4include (i) the names of all plaintiffs and the case number,
5(ii) the court in which the action was brought, (iii) the names
6of title holders of record, (iv) a legal description of the
7real estate sufficient to identify it with reasonable
8certainty, (v) a common address or description of the location
9of the real estate and (vi) identification of the mortgage
10sought to be foreclosed. An incorrect common address or
11description of the location, or an immaterial error in the
12identification of a plaintiff or title holder of record, shall
13not invalidate the lis pendens effect of the notice under this
14Section. A notice which complies with this Section shall be
15deemed to comply with Section 2-1901 of the Code of Civil
16Procedure and shall have the same effect as a notice filed
17pursuant to that Section; however, a notice which complies
18with Section 2-1901 shall not be constructive notice unless it
19also complies with the requirements of this Section.
20    (b) With respect to residential real estate, a copy of the
21notice of foreclosure described in subsection (a) of Section
2215-1503 shall be sent by first class mail, postage prepaid, to
23the municipality within the boundary of which the mortgaged
24real estate is located, or to the county within the boundary of
25which the mortgaged real estate is located if the mortgaged
26real estate is located in an unincorporated territory. A

 

 

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1municipality or county must clearly publish on its website a
2single address to which such notice shall be sent. If a
3municipality or county does not maintain a website, then the
4municipality or county must publicly post in its main office a
5single address to which such notice shall be sent. In the event
6that a municipality or county has not complied with the
7publication requirement in this subsection (b), then the copy
8of the notice to the municipality or county shall be sent by
9first class mail, postage prepaid, to the chairperson of the
10county board or county clerk in the case of a county, to the
11mayor or city clerk in the case of a city, to the president of
12the board of trustees or village clerk in the case of a
13village, or to the president or town clerk in the case of a
14town. Additionally, if the real estate is located in a city
15with a population of more than 2,000,000, regardless of
16whether that city has complied with the publication
17requirement in this subsection (b), the party must, within 10
18days after filing the complaint or counterclaim: (i) send by
19first class mail, postage prepaid, a copy of the notice of
20foreclosure to the alder alderman for the ward in which the
21real estate is located and (ii) file an affidavit with the
22court attesting to the fact that the notice was sent to the
23alder alderman for the ward in which the real estate is
24located. The failure to send a copy of the notice to the alder
25alderman or to file an affidavit as required shall result in a
26stay of the foreclosure action on a motion of a party or the

 

 

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1court. If the foreclosure action has been stayed by an order of
2the court, the plaintiff or the plaintiff's representative
3shall send the notice by certified mail, return receipt
4requested, or by private carrier that provides proof of
5delivery, and tender the return receipt or the proof of
6delivery to the court. After proof of delivery is tendered to
7the court, the court shall lift the stay of the foreclosure
8action.
9(Source: P.A. 101-399, eff. 8-16-19.)
 
10    Section 85. The City Sale or Lease of Land for Cemeteries
11Act is amended by changing the title of the Act and Section 1
12as follows:
 
13    (765 ILCS 825/Act title)
14An Act to enable the mayor and alders aldermen of certain
15cities to lease or convey real estate.
 
16    (765 ILCS 825/1)  (from Ch. 21, par. 7)
17    Sec. 1. That in all cities of which the mayor and alders
18aldermen have heretofore been incorporated by any special act,
19as a cemetery association or body politic, it shall be lawful,
20a majority of their number assenting thereto, for such
21association or body politic to demise for a term of years, or
22to convey in perpetuity any real estate which it may have
23acquired by purchase or otherwise; and the real estate so

 

 

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1conveyed shall be devoted exclusively for burial or cemetery
2purposes by the grantee or lessee thereof.
3(Source: Laws 1875, p. 40.)".