99TH GENERAL ASSEMBLY
State of Illinois
2015 and 2016
SB1260

 

Introduced 2/17/2015, by Sen. Michael Noland

 

SYNOPSIS AS INTRODUCED:
 
See Index

    Amends the State Budget Law of the Civil Administration Code of Illinois. Provides that certain amounts shall be transferred from the General Revenue Fund to the Common School Fund. Amends the Illinois Income Tax Act. Provides that the income tax rates on individuals, trusts, estates, and corporations shall be 5%. Increases the residential real property tax credit from to 10%. Increases the limitation on the education expense credit. Increases the percentage of the earned income tax credit. Makes changes concerning distributions to the Local Government Distributive Fund. Amends the Retailers' Occupation Tax Act. Provides that certain services are taxable under the Act. Amends the School Code. Creates the Education Financial Award System Fund, the Digital Learning Technology Grant Fund, and the STEM Education Center Grant Fund. Makes changes concerning the Early Childhood Education Block Grant; financial awards for school improvement and other awards; academic early warning and watch status; an educational improvement plan; the creation of the Digital Learning Technology Grant Program, a best practices clearinghouse, the Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics Education Center Grant Program, and a resource management service; audits; school board member leadership training; a school district's school report card; financial policies and plans; a capital improvement plan; protection from suit; financial accountability; non-referendum bonds; the foundation level of support under the State aid formula; the New Teacher Induction and Mentoring Program; school board associations; and transportation reimbursement. Effective immediately.


LRB099 04267 HLH 24291 b

FISCAL NOTE ACT MAY APPLY

 

 

A BILL FOR

 

SB1260LRB099 04267 HLH 24291 b

1    AN ACT concerning revenue.
 
2    Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
3represented in the General Assembly:
 
4    Section 5. The State Budget Law of the Civil Administrative
5Code of Illinois is amended by changing Section 50-20 as
6follows:
 
7    (15 ILCS 20/50-20)  (was 15 ILCS 20/38.3)
8    Sec. 50-20. Responsible Education Funding Law.
9    (a) The Governor shall submit to the General Assembly a
10proposed budget for elementary and secondary education in which
11total General Revenue Fund appropriations are no less than the
12total General Revenue Fund appropriations of the previous
13fiscal year. In addition, the Governor shall specify the total
14amount of funds to be transferred from the General Revenue Fund
15to the Common School Fund during the budget year, which shall
16be no less than the total amount transferred during the
17previous fiscal year. The Governor may submit a proposed budget
18in which the total appropriated and transferred amounts are
19less than the previous fiscal year if the Governor declares in
20writing to the General Assembly the reason for the lesser
21amounts.
22    (b) The General Assembly shall appropriate amounts for
23elementary and secondary education from the General Revenue

 

 

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1Fund for each fiscal year so that the total General Revenue
2Fund appropriation is no less than the total General Revenue
3Fund appropriation for elementary and secondary education for
4the previous fiscal year. In addition, the General Assembly
5shall legislatively transfer from the General Revenue Fund to
6the Common School Fund for the fiscal year a total amount that
7is no less than the total amount transferred for the previous
8fiscal year. The General Assembly may appropriate or transfer
9lesser amounts if it declares by Joint Resolution the reason
10for the lesser amounts.
11    (b-5) In fiscal year 2016, no appropriation made from
12general funds to the State Board of Education, the Board of
13Higher Education, the Community College Board, the Student
14Assistance Commission, or any public university may be
15decreased from its fiscal year 2015 general appropriation
16level. An exception may be made only if a program's
17appropriation is based on actual cost and that cost has been
18determined by the Board or university to require a lesser
19appropriation; however, the aggregate appropriation to those
20Boards or universities for fiscal year 2016 shall not under any
21circumstances represent a decrease from the fiscal year 2015
22aggregate general fund appropriation level for that Board or
23university.
24    (b-10) Beginning in fiscal year 2017 and in each fiscal
25year thereafter, in addition to the amounts required to be
26transferred under subsection (b), an amount equal to the first

 

 

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133 1/3% of the amount of additional revenue generated through
2the taxes imposed by this amendatory Act of the 99th General
3Assembly in that fiscal year shall be transferred from the
4General Revenue Fund to the Common School Fund. In addition,
5beginning in fiscal year 2017 and in each fiscal year
6thereafter, an amount equal to the next 16 2/3% of the amount
7of additional revenue generated through those taxes shall be
8transferred from the General Revenue Fund to the Higher
9Education Fund.
10    (b-15) The Higher Education Fund is created as a special
11fund in the State treasury. Moneys in this Fund may be used
12only for purposes related to higher education. The Higher
13Education Fund is not subject to administrative charges that
14would in any way transfer any funds from the Higher Education
15Fund into any other fund of the State.
16    (c) This Section may be cited as the Responsible Education
17Funding Law.
18(Source: P.A. 91-239, eff. 1-1-00.)
 
19    Section 10. The State Finance Act is amended by adding
20Sections 5.866, 5.867, 5.868, and 5.869 as follows:
 
21    (30 ILCS 105/5.866 new)
22    Sec. 5.866. The Education Financial Award System Fund.
 
23    (30 ILCS 105/5.867 new)

 

 

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1    Sec. 5.867. The Digital Learning Technology Grant Fund.
 
2    (30 ILCS 105/5.868 new)
3    Sec. 5.868. The STEM Education Center Grant Fund.
 
4    (30 ILCS 105/5.869 new)
5    Sec. 5.869. The Higher Education Fund.
 
6    Section 15. The Illinois Income Tax Act is amended by
7changing Sections 201, 202.5, 204, 208, 212, and 901 as
8follows:
 
9    (35 ILCS 5/201)  (from Ch. 120, par. 2-201)
10    Sec. 201. Tax Imposed.
11    (a) In general. A tax measured by net income is hereby
12imposed on every individual, corporation, trust and estate for
13each taxable year ending after July 31, 1969 on the privilege
14of earning or receiving income in or as a resident of this
15State. Such tax shall be in addition to all other occupation or
16privilege taxes imposed by this State or by any municipal
17corporation or political subdivision thereof.
18    (b) Rates. The tax imposed by subsection (a) of this
19Section shall be determined as follows, except as adjusted by
20subsection (d-1):
21        (1) In the case of an individual, trust or estate, for
22    taxable years ending prior to July 1, 1989, an amount equal

 

 

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1    to 2 1/2% of the taxpayer's net income for the taxable
2    year.
3        (2) In the case of an individual, trust or estate, for
4    taxable years beginning prior to July 1, 1989 and ending
5    after June 30, 1989, an amount equal to the sum of (i) 2
6    1/2% of the taxpayer's net income for the period prior to
7    July 1, 1989, as calculated under Section 202.3, and (ii)
8    3% of the taxpayer's net income for the period after June
9    30, 1989, as calculated under Section 202.3.
10        (3) In the case of an individual, trust or estate, for
11    taxable years beginning after June 30, 1989, and ending
12    prior to January 1, 2011, an amount equal to 3% of the
13    taxpayer's net income for the taxable year.
14        (4) In the case of an individual, trust, or estate, for
15    taxable years beginning prior to January 1, 2011, and
16    ending after December 31, 2010, an amount equal to the sum
17    of (i) 3% of the taxpayer's net income for the period prior
18    to January 1, 2011, as calculated under Section 202.5, and
19    (ii) 5% of the taxpayer's net income for the period after
20    December 31, 2010, as calculated under Section 202.5.
21        (5) In the case of an individual, trust, or estate, for
22    taxable years beginning on or after January 1, 2011, and
23    ending prior to January 1, 2015, an amount equal to 5% of
24    the taxpayer's net income for the taxable year.
25        (5.1) (Blank). In the case of an individual, trust, or
26    estate, for taxable years beginning prior to January 1,

 

 

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1    2015, and ending after December 31, 2014, an amount equal
2    to the sum of (i) 5% of the taxpayer's net income for the
3    period prior to January 1, 2015, as calculated under
4    Section 202.5, and (ii) 3.75% of the taxpayer's net income
5    for the period after December 31, 2014, as calculated under
6    Section 202.5.
7        (5.2) (Blank). In the case of an individual, trust, or
8    estate, for taxable years beginning on or after January 1,
9    2015, and ending prior to January 1, 2025, an amount equal
10    to 3.75% of the taxpayer's net income for the taxable year.
11        (5.3) (Blank). In the case of an individual, trust, or
12    estate, for taxable years beginning prior to January 1,
13    2025, and ending after December 31, 2024, an amount equal
14    to the sum of (i) 3.75% of the taxpayer's net income for
15    the period prior to January 1, 2025, as calculated under
16    Section 202.5, and (ii) 3.25% of the taxpayer's net income
17    for the period after December 31, 2024, as calculated under
18    Section 202.5.
19        (5.4) (Blank). In the case of an individual, trust, or
20    estate, for taxable years beginning on or after January 1,
21    2025, an amount equal to 3.25% of the taxpayer's net income
22    for the taxable year.
23        (6) In the case of a corporation, for taxable years
24    ending prior to July 1, 1989, an amount equal to 4% of the
25    taxpayer's net income for the taxable year.
26        (7) In the case of a corporation, for taxable years

 

 

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1    beginning prior to July 1, 1989 and ending after June 30,
2    1989, an amount equal to the sum of (i) 4% of the
3    taxpayer's net income for the period prior to July 1, 1989,
4    as calculated under Section 202.3, and (ii) 4.8% of the
5    taxpayer's net income for the period after June 30, 1989,
6    as calculated under Section 202.3.
7        (8) In the case of a corporation, for taxable years
8    beginning after June 30, 1989, and ending prior to January
9    1, 2011, an amount equal to 4.8% of the taxpayer's net
10    income for the taxable year.
11        (9) In the case of a corporation, for taxable years
12    beginning prior to January 1, 2011, and ending after
13    December 31, 2010, an amount equal to the sum of (i) 4.8%
14    of the taxpayer's net income for the period prior to
15    January 1, 2011, as calculated under Section 202.5, and
16    (ii) 7% of the taxpayer's net income for the period after
17    December 31, 2010, as calculated under Section 202.5.
18        (10) In the case of a corporation, for taxable years
19    beginning on or after January 1, 2011, and ending prior to
20    January 1, 2015, an amount equal to 7% of the taxpayer's
21    net income for the taxable year.
22        (11) In the case of a corporation, for taxable years
23    beginning prior to January 1, 2015, and ending after
24    December 31, 2014, an amount equal to the sum of (i) 7% of
25    the taxpayer's net income for the period prior to January
26    1, 2015, as calculated under Section 202.5, and (ii) 5%

 

 

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1    5.25% of the taxpayer's net income for the period after
2    December 31, 2014, as calculated under Section 202.5.
3        (12) In the case of a corporation, for taxable years
4    beginning on or after January 1, 2015, and ending prior to
5    January 1, 2025, an amount equal to 5% 5.25% of the
6    taxpayer's net income for the taxable year.
7        (13) (Blank). In the case of a corporation, for taxable
8    years beginning prior to January 1, 2025, and ending after
9    December 31, 2024, an amount equal to the sum of (i) 5.25%
10    of the taxpayer's net income for the period prior to
11    January 1, 2025, as calculated under Section 202.5, and
12    (ii) 4.8% of the taxpayer's net income for the period after
13    December 31, 2024, as calculated under Section 202.5.
14        (14) (Blank). In the case of a corporation, for taxable
15    years beginning on or after January 1, 2025, an amount
16    equal to 4.8% of the taxpayer's net income for the taxable
17    year.
18    The rates under this subsection (b) are subject to the
19provisions of Section 201.5.
20    (c) Personal Property Tax Replacement Income Tax.
21Beginning on July 1, 1979 and thereafter, in addition to such
22income tax, there is also hereby imposed the Personal Property
23Tax Replacement Income Tax measured by net income on every
24corporation (including Subchapter S corporations), partnership
25and trust, for each taxable year ending after June 30, 1979.
26Such taxes are imposed on the privilege of earning or receiving

 

 

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1income in or as a resident of this State. The Personal Property
2Tax Replacement Income Tax shall be in addition to the income
3tax imposed by subsections (a) and (b) of this Section and in
4addition to all other occupation or privilege taxes imposed by
5this State or by any municipal corporation or political
6subdivision thereof.
7    (d) Additional Personal Property Tax Replacement Income
8Tax Rates. The personal property tax replacement income tax
9imposed by this subsection and subsection (c) of this Section
10in the case of a corporation, other than a Subchapter S
11corporation and except as adjusted by subsection (d-1), shall
12be an additional amount equal to 2.85% of such taxpayer's net
13income for the taxable year, except that beginning on January
141, 1981, and thereafter, the rate of 2.85% specified in this
15subsection shall be reduced to 2.5%, and in the case of a
16partnership, trust or a Subchapter S corporation shall be an
17additional amount equal to 1.5% of such taxpayer's net income
18for the taxable year.
19    (d-1) Rate reduction for certain foreign insurers. In the
20case of a foreign insurer, as defined by Section 35A-5 of the
21Illinois Insurance Code, whose state or country of domicile
22imposes on insurers domiciled in Illinois a retaliatory tax
23(excluding any insurer whose premiums from reinsurance assumed
24are 50% or more of its total insurance premiums as determined
25under paragraph (2) of subsection (b) of Section 304, except
26that for purposes of this determination premiums from

 

 

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1reinsurance do not include premiums from inter-affiliate
2reinsurance arrangements), beginning with taxable years ending
3on or after December 31, 1999, the sum of the rates of tax
4imposed by subsections (b) and (d) shall be reduced (but not
5increased) to the rate at which the total amount of tax imposed
6under this Act, net of all credits allowed under this Act,
7shall equal (i) the total amount of tax that would be imposed
8on the foreign insurer's net income allocable to Illinois for
9the taxable year by such foreign insurer's state or country of
10domicile if that net income were subject to all income taxes
11and taxes measured by net income imposed by such foreign
12insurer's state or country of domicile, net of all credits
13allowed or (ii) a rate of zero if no such tax is imposed on such
14income by the foreign insurer's state of domicile. For the
15purposes of this subsection (d-1), an inter-affiliate includes
16a mutual insurer under common management.
17        (1) For the purposes of subsection (d-1), in no event
18    shall the sum of the rates of tax imposed by subsections
19    (b) and (d) be reduced below the rate at which the sum of:
20            (A) the total amount of tax imposed on such foreign
21        insurer under this Act for a taxable year, net of all
22        credits allowed under this Act, plus
23            (B) the privilege tax imposed by Section 409 of the
24        Illinois Insurance Code, the fire insurance company
25        tax imposed by Section 12 of the Fire Investigation
26        Act, and the fire department taxes imposed under

 

 

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1        Section 11-10-1 of the Illinois Municipal Code,
2    equals 1.25% for taxable years ending prior to December 31,
3    2003, or 1.75% for taxable years ending on or after
4    December 31, 2003, of the net taxable premiums written for
5    the taxable year, as described by subsection (1) of Section
6    409 of the Illinois Insurance Code. This paragraph will in
7    no event increase the rates imposed under subsections (b)
8    and (d).
9        (2) Any reduction in the rates of tax imposed by this
10    subsection shall be applied first against the rates imposed
11    by subsection (b) and only after the tax imposed by
12    subsection (a) net of all credits allowed under this
13    Section other than the credit allowed under subsection (i)
14    has been reduced to zero, against the rates imposed by
15    subsection (d).
16    This subsection (d-1) is exempt from the provisions of
17Section 250.
18    (e) Investment credit. A taxpayer shall be allowed a credit
19against the Personal Property Tax Replacement Income Tax for
20investment in qualified property.
21        (1) A taxpayer shall be allowed a credit equal to .5%
22    of the basis of qualified property placed in service during
23    the taxable year, provided such property is placed in
24    service on or after July 1, 1984. There shall be allowed an
25    additional credit equal to .5% of the basis of qualified
26    property placed in service during the taxable year,

 

 

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1    provided such property is placed in service on or after
2    July 1, 1986, and the taxpayer's base employment within
3    Illinois has increased by 1% or more over the preceding
4    year as determined by the taxpayer's employment records
5    filed with the Illinois Department of Employment Security.
6    Taxpayers who are new to Illinois shall be deemed to have
7    met the 1% growth in base employment for the first year in
8    which they file employment records with the Illinois
9    Department of Employment Security. The provisions added to
10    this Section by Public Act 85-1200 (and restored by Public
11    Act 87-895) shall be construed as declaratory of existing
12    law and not as a new enactment. If, in any year, the
13    increase in base employment within Illinois over the
14    preceding year is less than 1%, the additional credit shall
15    be limited to that percentage times a fraction, the
16    numerator of which is .5% and the denominator of which is
17    1%, but shall not exceed .5%. The investment credit shall
18    not be allowed to the extent that it would reduce a
19    taxpayer's liability in any tax year below zero, nor may
20    any credit for qualified property be allowed for any year
21    other than the year in which the property was placed in
22    service in Illinois. For tax years ending on or after
23    December 31, 1987, and on or before December 31, 1988, the
24    credit shall be allowed for the tax year in which the
25    property is placed in service, or, if the amount of the
26    credit exceeds the tax liability for that year, whether it

 

 

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1    exceeds the original liability or the liability as later
2    amended, such excess may be carried forward and applied to
3    the tax liability of the 5 taxable years following the
4    excess credit years if the taxpayer (i) makes investments
5    which cause the creation of a minimum of 2,000 full-time
6    equivalent jobs in Illinois, (ii) is located in an
7    enterprise zone established pursuant to the Illinois
8    Enterprise Zone Act and (iii) is certified by the
9    Department of Commerce and Community Affairs (now
10    Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity) as
11    complying with the requirements specified in clause (i) and
12    (ii) by July 1, 1986. The Department of Commerce and
13    Community Affairs (now Department of Commerce and Economic
14    Opportunity) shall notify the Department of Revenue of all
15    such certifications immediately. For tax years ending
16    after December 31, 1988, the credit shall be allowed for
17    the tax year in which the property is placed in service,
18    or, if the amount of the credit exceeds the tax liability
19    for that year, whether it exceeds the original liability or
20    the liability as later amended, such excess may be carried
21    forward and applied to the tax liability of the 5 taxable
22    years following the excess credit years. The credit shall
23    be applied to the earliest year for which there is a
24    liability. If there is credit from more than one tax year
25    that is available to offset a liability, earlier credit
26    shall be applied first.

 

 

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1        (2) The term "qualified property" means property
2    which:
3            (A) is tangible, whether new or used, including
4        buildings and structural components of buildings and
5        signs that are real property, but not including land or
6        improvements to real property that are not a structural
7        component of a building such as landscaping, sewer
8        lines, local access roads, fencing, parking lots, and
9        other appurtenances;
10            (B) is depreciable pursuant to Section 167 of the
11        Internal Revenue Code, except that "3-year property"
12        as defined in Section 168(c)(2)(A) of that Code is not
13        eligible for the credit provided by this subsection
14        (e);
15            (C) is acquired by purchase as defined in Section
16        179(d) of the Internal Revenue Code;
17            (D) is used in Illinois by a taxpayer who is
18        primarily engaged in manufacturing, or in mining coal
19        or fluorite, or in retailing, or was placed in service
20        on or after July 1, 2006 in a River Edge Redevelopment
21        Zone established pursuant to the River Edge
22        Redevelopment Zone Act; and
23            (E) has not previously been used in Illinois in
24        such a manner and by such a person as would qualify for
25        the credit provided by this subsection (e) or
26        subsection (f).

 

 

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1        (3) For purposes of this subsection (e),
2    "manufacturing" means the material staging and production
3    of tangible personal property by procedures commonly
4    regarded as manufacturing, processing, fabrication, or
5    assembling which changes some existing material into new
6    shapes, new qualities, or new combinations. For purposes of
7    this subsection (e) the term "mining" shall have the same
8    meaning as the term "mining" in Section 613(c) of the
9    Internal Revenue Code. For purposes of this subsection (e),
10    the term "retailing" means the sale of tangible personal
11    property for use or consumption and not for resale, or
12    services rendered in conjunction with the sale of tangible
13    personal property for use or consumption and not for
14    resale. For purposes of this subsection (e), "tangible
15    personal property" has the same meaning as when that term
16    is used in the Retailers' Occupation Tax Act, and, for
17    taxable years ending after December 31, 2008, does not
18    include the generation, transmission, or distribution of
19    electricity.
20        (4) The basis of qualified property shall be the basis
21    used to compute the depreciation deduction for federal
22    income tax purposes.
23        (5) If the basis of the property for federal income tax
24    depreciation purposes is increased after it has been placed
25    in service in Illinois by the taxpayer, the amount of such
26    increase shall be deemed property placed in service on the

 

 

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1    date of such increase in basis.
2        (6) The term "placed in service" shall have the same
3    meaning as under Section 46 of the Internal Revenue Code.
4        (7) If during any taxable year, any property ceases to
5    be qualified property in the hands of the taxpayer within
6    48 months after being placed in service, or the situs of
7    any qualified property is moved outside Illinois within 48
8    months after being placed in service, the Personal Property
9    Tax Replacement Income Tax for such taxable year shall be
10    increased. Such increase shall be determined by (i)
11    recomputing the investment credit which would have been
12    allowed for the year in which credit for such property was
13    originally allowed by eliminating such property from such
14    computation and, (ii) subtracting such recomputed credit
15    from the amount of credit previously allowed. For the
16    purposes of this paragraph (7), a reduction of the basis of
17    qualified property resulting from a redetermination of the
18    purchase price shall be deemed a disposition of qualified
19    property to the extent of such reduction.
20        (8) Unless the investment credit is extended by law,
21    the basis of qualified property shall not include costs
22    incurred after December 31, 2018, except for costs incurred
23    pursuant to a binding contract entered into on or before
24    December 31, 2018.
25        (9) Each taxable year ending before December 31, 2000,
26    a partnership may elect to pass through to its partners the

 

 

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1    credits to which the partnership is entitled under this
2    subsection (e) for the taxable year. A partner may use the
3    credit allocated to him or her under this paragraph only
4    against the tax imposed in subsections (c) and (d) of this
5    Section. If the partnership makes that election, those
6    credits shall be allocated among the partners in the
7    partnership in accordance with the rules set forth in
8    Section 704(b) of the Internal Revenue Code, and the rules
9    promulgated under that Section, and the allocated amount of
10    the credits shall be allowed to the partners for that
11    taxable year. The partnership shall make this election on
12    its Personal Property Tax Replacement Income Tax return for
13    that taxable year. The election to pass through the credits
14    shall be irrevocable.
15        For taxable years ending on or after December 31, 2000,
16    a partner that qualifies its partnership for a subtraction
17    under subparagraph (I) of paragraph (2) of subsection (d)
18    of Section 203 or a shareholder that qualifies a Subchapter
19    S corporation for a subtraction under subparagraph (S) of
20    paragraph (2) of subsection (b) of Section 203 shall be
21    allowed a credit under this subsection (e) equal to its
22    share of the credit earned under this subsection (e) during
23    the taxable year by the partnership or Subchapter S
24    corporation, determined in accordance with the
25    determination of income and distributive share of income
26    under Sections 702 and 704 and Subchapter S of the Internal

 

 

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1    Revenue Code. This paragraph is exempt from the provisions
2    of Section 250.
3    (f) Investment credit; Enterprise Zone; River Edge
4Redevelopment Zone.
5        (1) A taxpayer shall be allowed a credit against the
6    tax imposed by subsections (a) and (b) of this Section for
7    investment in qualified property which is placed in service
8    in an Enterprise Zone created pursuant to the Illinois
9    Enterprise Zone Act or, for property placed in service on
10    or after July 1, 2006, a River Edge Redevelopment Zone
11    established pursuant to the River Edge Redevelopment Zone
12    Act. For partners, shareholders of Subchapter S
13    corporations, and owners of limited liability companies,
14    if the liability company is treated as a partnership for
15    purposes of federal and State income taxation, there shall
16    be allowed a credit under this subsection (f) to be
17    determined in accordance with the determination of income
18    and distributive share of income under Sections 702 and 704
19    and Subchapter S of the Internal Revenue Code. The credit
20    shall be .5% of the basis for such property. The credit
21    shall be available only in the taxable year in which the
22    property is placed in service in the Enterprise Zone or
23    River Edge Redevelopment Zone and shall not be allowed to
24    the extent that it would reduce a taxpayer's liability for
25    the tax imposed by subsections (a) and (b) of this Section
26    to below zero. For tax years ending on or after December

 

 

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1    31, 1985, the credit shall be allowed for the tax year in
2    which the property is placed in service, or, if the amount
3    of the credit exceeds the tax liability for that year,
4    whether it exceeds the original liability or the liability
5    as later amended, such excess may be carried forward and
6    applied to the tax liability of the 5 taxable years
7    following the excess credit year. The credit shall be
8    applied to the earliest year for which there is a
9    liability. If there is credit from more than one tax year
10    that is available to offset a liability, the credit
11    accruing first in time shall be applied first.
12        (2) The term qualified property means property which:
13            (A) is tangible, whether new or used, including
14        buildings and structural components of buildings;
15            (B) is depreciable pursuant to Section 167 of the
16        Internal Revenue Code, except that "3-year property"
17        as defined in Section 168(c)(2)(A) of that Code is not
18        eligible for the credit provided by this subsection
19        (f);
20            (C) is acquired by purchase as defined in Section
21        179(d) of the Internal Revenue Code;
22            (D) is used in the Enterprise Zone or River Edge
23        Redevelopment Zone by the taxpayer; and
24            (E) has not been previously used in Illinois in
25        such a manner and by such a person as would qualify for
26        the credit provided by this subsection (f) or

 

 

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1        subsection (e).
2        (3) The basis of qualified property shall be the basis
3    used to compute the depreciation deduction for federal
4    income tax purposes.
5        (4) If the basis of the property for federal income tax
6    depreciation purposes is increased after it has been placed
7    in service in the Enterprise Zone or River Edge
8    Redevelopment Zone by the taxpayer, the amount of such
9    increase shall be deemed property placed in service on the
10    date of such increase in basis.
11        (5) The term "placed in service" shall have the same
12    meaning as under Section 46 of the Internal Revenue Code.
13        (6) If during any taxable year, any property ceases to
14    be qualified property in the hands of the taxpayer within
15    48 months after being placed in service, or the situs of
16    any qualified property is moved outside the Enterprise Zone
17    or River Edge Redevelopment Zone within 48 months after
18    being placed in service, the tax imposed under subsections
19    (a) and (b) of this Section for such taxable year shall be
20    increased. Such increase shall be determined by (i)
21    recomputing the investment credit which would have been
22    allowed for the year in which credit for such property was
23    originally allowed by eliminating such property from such
24    computation, and (ii) subtracting such recomputed credit
25    from the amount of credit previously allowed. For the
26    purposes of this paragraph (6), a reduction of the basis of

 

 

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1    qualified property resulting from a redetermination of the
2    purchase price shall be deemed a disposition of qualified
3    property to the extent of such reduction.
4        (7) There shall be allowed an additional credit equal
5    to 0.5% of the basis of qualified property placed in
6    service during the taxable year in a River Edge
7    Redevelopment Zone, provided such property is placed in
8    service on or after July 1, 2006, and the taxpayer's base
9    employment within Illinois has increased by 1% or more over
10    the preceding year as determined by the taxpayer's
11    employment records filed with the Illinois Department of
12    Employment Security. Taxpayers who are new to Illinois
13    shall be deemed to have met the 1% growth in base
14    employment for the first year in which they file employment
15    records with the Illinois Department of Employment
16    Security. If, in any year, the increase in base employment
17    within Illinois over the preceding year is less than 1%,
18    the additional credit shall be limited to that percentage
19    times a fraction, the numerator of which is 0.5% and the
20    denominator of which is 1%, but shall not exceed 0.5%.
21    (g) (Blank).
22    (h) Investment credit; High Impact Business.
23        (1) Subject to subsections (b) and (b-5) of Section 5.5
24    of the Illinois Enterprise Zone Act, a taxpayer shall be
25    allowed a credit against the tax imposed by subsections (a)
26    and (b) of this Section for investment in qualified

 

 

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1    property which is placed in service by a Department of
2    Commerce and Economic Opportunity designated High Impact
3    Business. The credit shall be .5% of the basis for such
4    property. The credit shall not be available (i) until the
5    minimum investments in qualified property set forth in
6    subdivision (a)(3)(A) of Section 5.5 of the Illinois
7    Enterprise Zone Act have been satisfied or (ii) until the
8    time authorized in subsection (b-5) of the Illinois
9    Enterprise Zone Act for entities designated as High Impact
10    Businesses under subdivisions (a)(3)(B), (a)(3)(C), and
11    (a)(3)(D) of Section 5.5 of the Illinois Enterprise Zone
12    Act, and shall not be allowed to the extent that it would
13    reduce a taxpayer's liability for the tax imposed by
14    subsections (a) and (b) of this Section to below zero. The
15    credit applicable to such investments shall be taken in the
16    taxable year in which such investments have been completed.
17    The credit for additional investments beyond the minimum
18    investment by a designated high impact business authorized
19    under subdivision (a)(3)(A) of Section 5.5 of the Illinois
20    Enterprise Zone Act shall be available only in the taxable
21    year in which the property is placed in service and shall
22    not be allowed to the extent that it would reduce a
23    taxpayer's liability for the tax imposed by subsections (a)
24    and (b) of this Section to below zero. For tax years ending
25    on or after December 31, 1987, the credit shall be allowed
26    for the tax year in which the property is placed in

 

 

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1    service, or, if the amount of the credit exceeds the tax
2    liability for that year, whether it exceeds the original
3    liability or the liability as later amended, such excess
4    may be carried forward and applied to the tax liability of
5    the 5 taxable years following the excess credit year. The
6    credit shall be applied to the earliest year for which
7    there is a liability. If there is credit from more than one
8    tax year that is available to offset a liability, the
9    credit accruing first in time shall be applied first.
10        Changes made in this subdivision (h)(1) by Public Act
11    88-670 restore changes made by Public Act 85-1182 and
12    reflect existing law.
13        (2) The term qualified property means property which:
14            (A) is tangible, whether new or used, including
15        buildings and structural components of buildings;
16            (B) is depreciable pursuant to Section 167 of the
17        Internal Revenue Code, except that "3-year property"
18        as defined in Section 168(c)(2)(A) of that Code is not
19        eligible for the credit provided by this subsection
20        (h);
21            (C) is acquired by purchase as defined in Section
22        179(d) of the Internal Revenue Code; and
23            (D) is not eligible for the Enterprise Zone
24        Investment Credit provided by subsection (f) of this
25        Section.
26        (3) The basis of qualified property shall be the basis

 

 

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1    used to compute the depreciation deduction for federal
2    income tax purposes.
3        (4) If the basis of the property for federal income tax
4    depreciation purposes is increased after it has been placed
5    in service in a federally designated Foreign Trade Zone or
6    Sub-Zone located in Illinois by the taxpayer, the amount of
7    such increase shall be deemed property placed in service on
8    the date of such increase in basis.
9        (5) The term "placed in service" shall have the same
10    meaning as under Section 46 of the Internal Revenue Code.
11        (6) If during any taxable year ending on or before
12    December 31, 1996, any property ceases to be qualified
13    property in the hands of the taxpayer within 48 months
14    after being placed in service, or the situs of any
15    qualified property is moved outside Illinois within 48
16    months after being placed in service, the tax imposed under
17    subsections (a) and (b) of this Section for such taxable
18    year shall be increased. Such increase shall be determined
19    by (i) recomputing the investment credit which would have
20    been allowed for the year in which credit for such property
21    was originally allowed by eliminating such property from
22    such computation, and (ii) subtracting such recomputed
23    credit from the amount of credit previously allowed. For
24    the purposes of this paragraph (6), a reduction of the
25    basis of qualified property resulting from a
26    redetermination of the purchase price shall be deemed a

 

 

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1    disposition of qualified property to the extent of such
2    reduction.
3        (7) Beginning with tax years ending after December 31,
4    1996, if a taxpayer qualifies for the credit under this
5    subsection (h) and thereby is granted a tax abatement and
6    the taxpayer relocates its entire facility in violation of
7    the explicit terms and length of the contract under Section
8    18-183 of the Property Tax Code, the tax imposed under
9    subsections (a) and (b) of this Section shall be increased
10    for the taxable year in which the taxpayer relocated its
11    facility by an amount equal to the amount of credit
12    received by the taxpayer under this subsection (h).
13    (i) Credit for Personal Property Tax Replacement Income
14Tax. For tax years ending prior to December 31, 2003, a credit
15shall be allowed against the tax imposed by subsections (a) and
16(b) of this Section for the tax imposed by subsections (c) and
17(d) of this Section. This credit shall be computed by
18multiplying the tax imposed by subsections (c) and (d) of this
19Section by a fraction, the numerator of which is base income
20allocable to Illinois and the denominator of which is Illinois
21base income, and further multiplying the product by the tax
22rate imposed by subsections (a) and (b) of this Section.
23    Any credit earned on or after December 31, 1986 under this
24subsection which is unused in the year the credit is computed
25because it exceeds the tax liability imposed by subsections (a)
26and (b) for that year (whether it exceeds the original

 

 

SB1260- 26 -LRB099 04267 HLH 24291 b

1liability or the liability as later amended) may be carried
2forward and applied to the tax liability imposed by subsections
3(a) and (b) of the 5 taxable years following the excess credit
4year, provided that no credit may be carried forward to any
5year ending on or after December 31, 2003. This credit shall be
6applied first to the earliest year for which there is a
7liability. If there is a credit under this subsection from more
8than one tax year that is available to offset a liability the
9earliest credit arising under this subsection shall be applied
10first.
11    If, during any taxable year ending on or after December 31,
121986, the tax imposed by subsections (c) and (d) of this
13Section for which a taxpayer has claimed a credit under this
14subsection (i) is reduced, the amount of credit for such tax
15shall also be reduced. Such reduction shall be determined by
16recomputing the credit to take into account the reduced tax
17imposed by subsections (c) and (d). If any portion of the
18reduced amount of credit has been carried to a different
19taxable year, an amended return shall be filed for such taxable
20year to reduce the amount of credit claimed.
21    (j) Training expense credit. Beginning with tax years
22ending on or after December 31, 1986 and prior to December 31,
232003, a taxpayer shall be allowed a credit against the tax
24imposed by subsections (a) and (b) under this Section for all
25amounts paid or accrued, on behalf of all persons employed by
26the taxpayer in Illinois or Illinois residents employed outside

 

 

SB1260- 27 -LRB099 04267 HLH 24291 b

1of Illinois by a taxpayer, for educational or vocational
2training in semi-technical or technical fields or semi-skilled
3or skilled fields, which were deducted from gross income in the
4computation of taxable income. The credit against the tax
5imposed by subsections (a) and (b) shall be 1.6% of such
6training expenses. For partners, shareholders of subchapter S
7corporations, and owners of limited liability companies, if the
8liability company is treated as a partnership for purposes of
9federal and State income taxation, there shall be allowed a
10credit under this subsection (j) to be determined in accordance
11with the determination of income and distributive share of
12income under Sections 702 and 704 and subchapter S of the
13Internal Revenue Code.
14    Any credit allowed under this subsection which is unused in
15the year the credit is earned may be carried forward to each of
16the 5 taxable years following the year for which the credit is
17first computed until it is used. This credit shall be applied
18first to the earliest year for which there is a liability. If
19there is a credit under this subsection from more than one tax
20year that is available to offset a liability the earliest
21credit arising under this subsection shall be applied first. No
22carryforward credit may be claimed in any tax year ending on or
23after December 31, 2003.
24    (k) Research and development credit. For tax years ending
25after July 1, 1990 and prior to December 31, 2003, and
26beginning again for tax years ending on or after December 31,

 

 

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12004, and ending prior to January 1, 2016, a taxpayer shall be
2allowed a credit against the tax imposed by subsections (a) and
3(b) of this Section for increasing research activities in this
4State. The credit allowed against the tax imposed by
5subsections (a) and (b) shall be equal to 6 1/2% of the
6qualifying expenditures for increasing research activities in
7this State. For partners, shareholders of subchapter S
8corporations, and owners of limited liability companies, if the
9liability company is treated as a partnership for purposes of
10federal and State income taxation, there shall be allowed a
11credit under this subsection to be determined in accordance
12with the determination of income and distributive share of
13income under Sections 702 and 704 and subchapter S of the
14Internal Revenue Code.
15    For purposes of this subsection, "qualifying expenditures"
16means the qualifying expenditures as defined for the federal
17credit for increasing research activities which would be
18allowable under Section 41 of the Internal Revenue Code and
19which are conducted in this State, "qualifying expenditures for
20increasing research activities in this State" means the excess
21of qualifying expenditures for the taxable year in which
22incurred over qualifying expenditures for the base period,
23"qualifying expenditures for the base period" means the average
24of the qualifying expenditures for each year in the base
25period, and "base period" means the 3 taxable years immediately
26preceding the taxable year for which the determination is being

 

 

SB1260- 29 -LRB099 04267 HLH 24291 b

1made.
2    Any credit in excess of the tax liability for the taxable
3year may be carried forward. A taxpayer may elect to have the
4unused credit shown on its final completed return carried over
5as a credit against the tax liability for the following 5
6taxable years or until it has been fully used, whichever occurs
7first; provided that no credit earned in a tax year ending
8prior to December 31, 2003 may be carried forward to any year
9ending on or after December 31, 2003.
10    If an unused credit is carried forward to a given year from
112 or more earlier years, that credit arising in the earliest
12year will be applied first against the tax liability for the
13given year. If a tax liability for the given year still
14remains, the credit from the next earliest year will then be
15applied, and so on, until all credits have been used or no tax
16liability for the given year remains. Any remaining unused
17credit or credits then will be carried forward to the next
18following year in which a tax liability is incurred, except
19that no credit can be carried forward to a year which is more
20than 5 years after the year in which the expense for which the
21credit is given was incurred.
22    No inference shall be drawn from this amendatory Act of the
2391st General Assembly in construing this Section for taxable
24years beginning before January 1, 1999.
25    (l) Environmental Remediation Tax Credit.
26        (i) For tax years ending after December 31, 1997 and on

 

 

SB1260- 30 -LRB099 04267 HLH 24291 b

1    or before December 31, 2001, a taxpayer shall be allowed a
2    credit against the tax imposed by subsections (a) and (b)
3    of this Section for certain amounts paid for unreimbursed
4    eligible remediation costs, as specified in this
5    subsection. For purposes of this Section, "unreimbursed
6    eligible remediation costs" means costs approved by the
7    Illinois Environmental Protection Agency ("Agency") under
8    Section 58.14 of the Environmental Protection Act that were
9    paid in performing environmental remediation at a site for
10    which a No Further Remediation Letter was issued by the
11    Agency and recorded under Section 58.10 of the
12    Environmental Protection Act. The credit must be claimed
13    for the taxable year in which Agency approval of the
14    eligible remediation costs is granted. The credit is not
15    available to any taxpayer if the taxpayer or any related
16    party caused or contributed to, in any material respect, a
17    release of regulated substances on, in, or under the site
18    that was identified and addressed by the remedial action
19    pursuant to the Site Remediation Program of the
20    Environmental Protection Act. After the Pollution Control
21    Board rules are adopted pursuant to the Illinois
22    Administrative Procedure Act for the administration and
23    enforcement of Section 58.9 of the Environmental
24    Protection Act, determinations as to credit availability
25    for purposes of this Section shall be made consistent with
26    those rules. For purposes of this Section, "taxpayer"

 

 

SB1260- 31 -LRB099 04267 HLH 24291 b

1    includes a person whose tax attributes the taxpayer has
2    succeeded to under Section 381 of the Internal Revenue Code
3    and "related party" includes the persons disallowed a
4    deduction for losses by paragraphs (b), (c), and (f)(1) of
5    Section 267 of the Internal Revenue Code by virtue of being
6    a related taxpayer, as well as any of its partners. The
7    credit allowed against the tax imposed by subsections (a)
8    and (b) shall be equal to 25% of the unreimbursed eligible
9    remediation costs in excess of $100,000 per site, except
10    that the $100,000 threshold shall not apply to any site
11    contained in an enterprise zone as determined by the
12    Department of Commerce and Community Affairs (now
13    Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity). The
14    total credit allowed shall not exceed $40,000 per year with
15    a maximum total of $150,000 per site. For partners and
16    shareholders of subchapter S corporations, there shall be
17    allowed a credit under this subsection to be determined in
18    accordance with the determination of income and
19    distributive share of income under Sections 702 and 704 and
20    subchapter S of the Internal Revenue Code.
21        (ii) A credit allowed under this subsection that is
22    unused in the year the credit is earned may be carried
23    forward to each of the 5 taxable years following the year
24    for which the credit is first earned until it is used. The
25    term "unused credit" does not include any amounts of
26    unreimbursed eligible remediation costs in excess of the

 

 

SB1260- 32 -LRB099 04267 HLH 24291 b

1    maximum credit per site authorized under paragraph (i).
2    This credit shall be applied first to the earliest year for
3    which there is a liability. If there is a credit under this
4    subsection from more than one tax year that is available to
5    offset a liability, the earliest credit arising under this
6    subsection shall be applied first. A credit allowed under
7    this subsection may be sold to a buyer as part of a sale of
8    all or part of the remediation site for which the credit
9    was granted. The purchaser of a remediation site and the
10    tax credit shall succeed to the unused credit and remaining
11    carry-forward period of the seller. To perfect the
12    transfer, the assignor shall record the transfer in the
13    chain of title for the site and provide written notice to
14    the Director of the Illinois Department of Revenue of the
15    assignor's intent to sell the remediation site and the
16    amount of the tax credit to be transferred as a portion of
17    the sale. In no event may a credit be transferred to any
18    taxpayer if the taxpayer or a related party would not be
19    eligible under the provisions of subsection (i).
20        (iii) For purposes of this Section, the term "site"
21    shall have the same meaning as under Section 58.2 of the
22    Environmental Protection Act.
23    (m) Education expense credit. Beginning with tax years
24ending after December 31, 1999, a taxpayer who is the custodian
25of one or more qualifying pupils shall be allowed a credit
26against the tax imposed by subsections (a) and (b) of this

 

 

SB1260- 33 -LRB099 04267 HLH 24291 b

1Section for qualified education expenses incurred on behalf of
2the qualifying pupils. The credit shall be equal to 25% of
3qualified education expenses, but in no event may the total
4credit under this subsection claimed by a family that is the
5custodian of qualifying pupils exceed $500 for taxable years
6ending on or before December 31, 2014 and $1,000 for taxable
7years ending on or after January 1, 2015. In no event shall a
8credit under this subsection reduce the taxpayer's liability
9under this Act to less than zero. This subsection is exempt
10from the provisions of Section 250 of this Act.
11    For purposes of this subsection:
12    "Qualifying pupils" means individuals who (i) are
13residents of the State of Illinois, (ii) are under the age of
1421 at the close of the school year for which a credit is
15sought, and (iii) during the school year for which a credit is
16sought were full-time pupils enrolled in a kindergarten through
17twelfth grade education program at any school, as defined in
18this subsection.
19    "Qualified education expense" means the amount incurred on
20behalf of a qualifying pupil in excess of $250 for tuition,
21book fees, and lab fees at the school in which the pupil is
22enrolled during the regular school year.
23    "School" means any public or nonpublic elementary or
24secondary school in Illinois that is in compliance with Title
25VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and attendance at which
26satisfies the requirements of Section 26-1 of the School Code,

 

 

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1except that nothing shall be construed to require a child to
2attend any particular public or nonpublic school to qualify for
3the credit under this Section.
4    "Custodian" means, with respect to qualifying pupils, an
5Illinois resident who is a parent, the parents, a legal
6guardian, or the legal guardians of the qualifying pupils.
7    (n) River Edge Redevelopment Zone site remediation tax
8credit.
9        (i) For tax years ending on or after December 31, 2006,
10    a taxpayer shall be allowed a credit against the tax
11    imposed by subsections (a) and (b) of this Section for
12    certain amounts paid for unreimbursed eligible remediation
13    costs, as specified in this subsection. For purposes of
14    this Section, "unreimbursed eligible remediation costs"
15    means costs approved by the Illinois Environmental
16    Protection Agency ("Agency") under Section 58.14a of the
17    Environmental Protection Act that were paid in performing
18    environmental remediation at a site within a River Edge
19    Redevelopment Zone for which a No Further Remediation
20    Letter was issued by the Agency and recorded under Section
21    58.10 of the Environmental Protection Act. The credit must
22    be claimed for the taxable year in which Agency approval of
23    the eligible remediation costs is granted. The credit is
24    not available to any taxpayer if the taxpayer or any
25    related party caused or contributed to, in any material
26    respect, a release of regulated substances on, in, or under

 

 

SB1260- 35 -LRB099 04267 HLH 24291 b

1    the site that was identified and addressed by the remedial
2    action pursuant to the Site Remediation Program of the
3    Environmental Protection Act. Determinations as to credit
4    availability for purposes of this Section shall be made
5    consistent with rules adopted by the Pollution Control
6    Board pursuant to the Illinois Administrative Procedure
7    Act for the administration and enforcement of Section 58.9
8    of the Environmental Protection Act. For purposes of this
9    Section, "taxpayer" includes a person whose tax attributes
10    the taxpayer has succeeded to under Section 381 of the
11    Internal Revenue Code and "related party" includes the
12    persons disallowed a deduction for losses by paragraphs
13    (b), (c), and (f)(1) of Section 267 of the Internal Revenue
14    Code by virtue of being a related taxpayer, as well as any
15    of its partners. The credit allowed against the tax imposed
16    by subsections (a) and (b) shall be equal to 25% of the
17    unreimbursed eligible remediation costs in excess of
18    $100,000 per site.
19        (ii) A credit allowed under this subsection that is
20    unused in the year the credit is earned may be carried
21    forward to each of the 5 taxable years following the year
22    for which the credit is first earned until it is used. This
23    credit shall be applied first to the earliest year for
24    which there is a liability. If there is a credit under this
25    subsection from more than one tax year that is available to
26    offset a liability, the earliest credit arising under this

 

 

SB1260- 36 -LRB099 04267 HLH 24291 b

1    subsection shall be applied first. A credit allowed under
2    this subsection may be sold to a buyer as part of a sale of
3    all or part of the remediation site for which the credit
4    was granted. The purchaser of a remediation site and the
5    tax credit shall succeed to the unused credit and remaining
6    carry-forward period of the seller. To perfect the
7    transfer, the assignor shall record the transfer in the
8    chain of title for the site and provide written notice to
9    the Director of the Illinois Department of Revenue of the
10    assignor's intent to sell the remediation site and the
11    amount of the tax credit to be transferred as a portion of
12    the sale. In no event may a credit be transferred to any
13    taxpayer if the taxpayer or a related party would not be
14    eligible under the provisions of subsection (i).
15        (iii) For purposes of this Section, the term "site"
16    shall have the same meaning as under Section 58.2 of the
17    Environmental Protection Act.
18    (o) For each of taxable years during the Compassionate Use
19of Medical Cannabis Pilot Program, a surcharge is imposed on
20all taxpayers on income arising from the sale or exchange of
21capital assets, depreciable business property, real property
22used in the trade or business, and Section 197 intangibles of
23an organization registrant under the Compassionate Use of
24Medical Cannabis Pilot Program Act. The amount of the surcharge
25is equal to the amount of federal income tax liability for the
26taxable year attributable to those sales and exchanges. The

 

 

SB1260- 37 -LRB099 04267 HLH 24291 b

1surcharge imposed does not apply if:
2        (1) the medical cannabis cultivation center
3    registration, medical cannabis dispensary registration, or
4    the property of a registration is transferred as a result
5    of any of the following:
6            (A) bankruptcy, a receivership, or a debt
7        adjustment initiated by or against the initial
8        registration or the substantial owners of the initial
9        registration;
10            (B) cancellation, revocation, or termination of
11        any registration by the Illinois Department of Public
12        Health;
13            (C) a determination by the Illinois Department of
14        Public Health that transfer of the registration is in
15        the best interests of Illinois qualifying patients as
16        defined by the Compassionate Use of Medical Cannabis
17        Pilot Program Act;
18            (D) the death of an owner of the equity interest in
19        a registrant;
20            (E) the acquisition of a controlling interest in
21        the stock or substantially all of the assets of a
22        publicly traded company;
23            (F) a transfer by a parent company to a wholly
24        owned subsidiary; or
25            (G) the transfer or sale to or by one person to
26        another person where both persons were initial owners

 

 

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1        of the registration when the registration was issued;
2        or
3        (2) the cannabis cultivation center registration,
4    medical cannabis dispensary registration, or the
5    controlling interest in a registrant's property is
6    transferred in a transaction to lineal descendants in which
7    no gain or loss is recognized or as a result of a
8    transaction in accordance with Section 351 of the Internal
9    Revenue Code in which no gain or loss is recognized.
10(Source: P.A. 97-2, eff. 5-6-11; 97-636, eff. 6-1-12; 97-905,
11eff. 8-7-12; 98-109, eff. 7-25-13; 98-122, eff. 1-1-14; 98-756,
12eff. 7-16-14.)
 
13    (35 ILCS 5/202.5)
14    Sec. 202.5. Net income attributable to the period beginning
15prior to January 1 of any year and ending after December 31 of
16the preceding year.
17    (a) In general. With respect to the taxable year of a
18taxpayer beginning prior to January 1 of any year and ending
19after December 31 of the preceding year, net income for the
20period after December 31 of the preceding year, is that amount
21that bears the same ratio to the taxpayer's net income for the
22entire taxable year as the number of days in that taxable year
23after December 31 bears to the total number of days in that
24taxable year, and the net income for the period prior to
25January 1 is that amount that bears the same ratio to the

 

 

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1taxpayer's net income for the entire taxable year as the number
2of days in that taxable year prior to January 1 bears to the
3total number of days in that taxable year.
4    (b) Election to attribute income and deduction items
5specifically to the respective portions of a taxable year prior
6to January 1 of any year and after December 31 of the preceding
7year. In the case of a taxpayer with a taxable year beginning
8prior to January 1 of any year and ending after December 31 of
9the preceding year, the taxpayer may elect, instead of the
10procedure established in subsection (a) of this Section, to
11determine net income on a specific accounting basis for the 2
12portions of the taxable year:
13        (1) from the beginning of the taxable year through
14    December 31; and
15        (2) from January 1 through the end of the taxable year.
16    The election provided by this subsection must be made in
17form and manner that the Department requires by rule, and must
18be made no later than the due date (including any extensions
19thereof) for the filing of the return for the taxable year, and
20is irrevocable.
21    (c) If the taxpayer elects specific accounting under
22subsection (b):
23        (1) there shall be taken into account in computing base
24    income for each of the 2 portions of the taxable year only
25    those items earned, received, paid, incurred or accrued in
26    each such period;

 

 

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1        (2) for purposes of apportioning business income of the
2    taxpayer, the provisions in Article 3 shall be applied on
3    the basis of the taxpayer's full taxable year, without
4    regard to this Section;
5        (3) the net loss carryforward deduction for the taxable
6    year under Section 207 may not exceed combined net income
7    of both portions of the taxable year, and shall be used
8    against the net income of the portion of the taxable year
9    from the beginning of the taxable year through December 31
10    before any remaining amount is used against the net income
11    of the latter portion of the taxable year.
12    (d) Under subsection (a) or (b):
13        (1) the exemptions and credits allowed under Sections
14    204, 208, and 212, respectively, for the period prior to
15    July 1, 2015, shall be equal to the total exemptions or
16    credits, as applicable, that would be allowed for the
17    taxable year under Sections 204, 208, and 212,
18    respectively, as in effect before the effective date of
19    this amendatory Act of the 99th General Assembly,
20    multiplied by the number of months in the portion of the
21    taxable year ending on or before June 30, 2015 and divided
22    by 12; and
23        (2) the exemptions and credits allowed under Sections
24    204, 208, and 212, respectively, for the period after June
25    30, 2015, through the end of the taxable year shall equal
26    to the total exemptions or credits, as applicable, allowed

 

 

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1    under Sections 204, 208, or 212, as applicable, for the
2    taxable year, multiplied by the number of months in the
3    taxable year for the period beginning on July 1, 2015 and
4    divided by 12.
5(Source: P.A. 96-1496, eff. 1-13-11.)
 
6    (35 ILCS 5/204)  (from Ch. 120, par. 2-204)
7    Sec. 204. Standard Exemption.
8    (a) Allowance of exemption. In computing net income under
9this Act, there shall be allowed as an exemption the sum of the
10amounts determined under subsections (b), (c) and (d),
11multiplied by a fraction the numerator of which is the amount
12of the taxpayer's base income allocable to this State for the
13taxable year and the denominator of which is the taxpayer's
14total base income for the taxable year.
15    (b) Basic amount. For the purpose of subsection (a) of this
16Section, except as provided by subsection (a) of Section 205
17and in this subsection, each taxpayer shall be allowed a basic
18amount of $1000, except that for corporations the basic amount
19shall be zero for tax years ending on or after December 31,
202003, and for individuals the basic amount shall be:
21        (1) for taxable years ending on or after December 31,
22    1998 and prior to December 31, 1999, $1,300;
23        (2) for taxable years ending on or after December 31,
24    1999 and prior to December 31, 2000, $1,650;
25        (3) for taxable years ending on or after December 31,

 

 

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1    2000 and prior to December 31, 2012, $2,000;
2        (4) for taxable years ending on or after December 31,
3    2012 and prior to December 31, 2013, $2,050;
4        (5) for taxable years ending on or after December 31,
5    2013 and prior to July 1, 2015, $2,050 plus the
6    cost-of-living adjustment under subsection (d-5); and .
7        (6) for taxable years ending after June 30, 2015 and
8    prior to December 31, 2016, $3,000, except that, for
9    taxable years beginning before July 1, 2015, and ending
10    after June 30, 2016, the exemption for the taxable year
11    shall be determined under subsection (d) of Section 202.5;
12    and
13        (7) for taxable years ending on or after December 31,
14    2016, $3,000.
15For taxable years ending on or after December 31, 1992, a
16taxpayer whose Illinois base income exceeds the basic amount
17and who is claimed as a dependent on another person's tax
18return under the Internal Revenue Code shall not be allowed any
19basic amount under this subsection.
20    (c) Additional amount for individuals. In the case of an
21individual taxpayer, there shall be allowed for the purpose of
22subsection (a), in addition to the basic amount provided by
23subsection (b), an additional exemption equal to the basic
24amount for each exemption in excess of one allowable to such
25individual taxpayer for the taxable year under Section 151 of
26the Internal Revenue Code.

 

 

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1    (d) Additional exemptions for an individual taxpayer and
2his or her spouse. In the case of an individual taxpayer and
3his or her spouse, he or she shall each be allowed additional
4exemptions as follows:
5        (1) Additional exemption for taxpayer or spouse 65
6    years of age or older.
7            (A) For taxpayer. An additional exemption of
8        $1,000 for the taxpayer if he or she has attained the
9        age of 65 before the end of the taxable year.
10            (B) For spouse when a joint return is not filed. An
11        additional exemption of $1,000 for the spouse of the
12        taxpayer if a joint return is not made by the taxpayer
13        and his spouse, and if the spouse has attained the age
14        of 65 before the end of such taxable year, and, for the
15        calendar year in which the taxable year of the taxpayer
16        begins, has no gross income and is not the dependent of
17        another taxpayer.
18        (2) Additional exemption for blindness of taxpayer or
19    spouse.
20            (A) For taxpayer. An additional exemption of
21        $1,000 for the taxpayer if he or she is blind at the
22        end of the taxable year.
23            (B) For spouse when a joint return is not filed. An
24        additional exemption of $1,000 for the spouse of the
25        taxpayer if a separate return is made by the taxpayer,
26        and if the spouse is blind and, for the calendar year

 

 

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1        in which the taxable year of the taxpayer begins, has
2        no gross income and is not the dependent of another
3        taxpayer. For purposes of this paragraph, the
4        determination of whether the spouse is blind shall be
5        made as of the end of the taxable year of the taxpayer;
6        except that if the spouse dies during such taxable year
7        such determination shall be made as of the time of such
8        death.
9            (C) Blindness defined. For purposes of this
10        subsection, an individual is blind only if his or her
11        central visual acuity does not exceed 20/200 in the
12        better eye with correcting lenses, or if his or her
13        visual acuity is greater than 20/200 but is accompanied
14        by a limitation in the fields of vision such that the
15        widest diameter of the visual fields subtends an angle
16        no greater than 20 degrees.
17    (d-5) Cost-of-living adjustment. For purposes of item (5)
18of subsection (b), the cost-of-living adjustment for any
19calendar year and for taxable years ending prior to the end of
20the subsequent calendar year is equal to $2,050 times the
21percentage (if any) by which:
22        (1) the Consumer Price Index for the preceding calendar
23    year, exceeds
24        (2) the Consumer Price Index for the calendar year
25    2011.
26    The Consumer Price Index for any calendar year is the

 

 

SB1260- 45 -LRB099 04267 HLH 24291 b

1average of the Consumer Price Index as of the close of the
212-month period ending on August 31 of that calendar year.
3    The term "Consumer Price Index" means the last Consumer
4Price Index for All Urban Consumers published by the United
5States Department of Labor or any successor agency.
6    If any cost-of-living adjustment is not a multiple of $25,
7that adjustment shall be rounded to the next lowest multiple of
8$25.
9    (e) Cross reference. See Article 3 for the manner of
10determining base income allocable to this State.
11    (f) Application of Section 250. Section 250 does not apply
12to the amendments to this Section made by Public Act 90-613.
13(Source: P.A. 97-507, eff. 8-23-11; 97-652, eff. 6-1-12.)
 
14    (35 ILCS 5/208)  (from Ch. 120, par. 2-208)
15    Sec. 208. Tax credit for residential real property taxes.
16Beginning with tax years ending on or after December 31, 1991
17and ending prior to July 1, 2015, every individual taxpayer
18shall be entitled to a tax credit equal to 5% of real property
19taxes paid by such taxpayer during the taxable year on the
20principal residence of the taxpayer. In the case of multi-unit
21or multi-use structures and farm dwellings, the taxes on the
22taxpayer's principal residence shall be that portion of the
23total taxes which is attributable to such principal residence.
24    For tax years ending after June 30, 2015 and prior to
25December 31, 2016, every individual taxpayer shall be entitled

 

 

SB1260- 46 -LRB099 04267 HLH 24291 b

1to a tax credit equal to 10% of real property taxes paid by the
2taxpayer during the taxable year on the principal residence of
3the taxpayer; except that, for taxable years beginning before
4July 1, 2015, and ending after June 30, 2015, the credit for
5the taxable year shall be determined under subsection (d) of
6Section 202.5. In the case of multi-unit or multi-use
7structures, the taxes on the taxpayer's principal residence
8shall be that portion of the total taxes that is attributable
9to the principal residence.
10    For tax years ending on or after December 31, 2016, every
11individual taxpayer shall be entitled to a tax credit equal to
1210% of real property taxes paid by the taxpayer during the
13taxable year on the principal residence of the taxpayer. In the
14case of multi-unit or multi-use structures, the taxes on the
15taxpayer's principal residence shall be that portion of the
16total taxes that is attributable to the principal residence.
17    For tax years ending after June 30, 2015, the credit under
18this Section shall not exceed $1,500. For tax years thereafter,
19the $1,500 cap shall be increased by a percentage increase
20equal to the percentage increase, if any, in the Consumer Price
21Index for all Urban Consumers for the then most recently
22compiled calendar year.
23    For each taxable year ending on or after December 31, 2015,
24if the amount of the credit exceeds the income tax liability
25for the applicable tax year, then the excess credit shall be
26refunded to the taxpayer. The amount of a refund shall not be

 

 

SB1260- 47 -LRB099 04267 HLH 24291 b

1included in the taxpayer's income or resources for the purposes
2of determining eligibility or benefit level in any means-tested
3benefit program administered by a governmental entity unless
4required by federal law.
5(Source: P.A. 87-17.)
 
6    (35 ILCS 5/212)
7    Sec. 212. Earned income tax credit.
8    (a) With respect to the federal earned income tax credit
9allowed for the taxable year under Section 32 of the federal
10Internal Revenue Code, 26 U.S.C. 32, each individual taxpayer
11is entitled to a credit against the tax imposed by subsections
12(a) and (b) of Section 201 in an amount equal to (i) 5% of the
13federal tax credit for each taxable year beginning on or after
14January 1, 2000 and ending prior to December 31, 2012, (ii)
157.5% of the federal tax credit for each taxable year beginning
16on or after January 1, 2012 and ending prior to December 31,
172013, and (iii) 10% of the federal tax credit for each taxable
18year beginning on or after January 1, 2013 and beginning prior
19to January 1, 2015, and (iv) 15% of the federal tax credit for
20each taxable year beginning on or after January 1, 2015.
21    For a non-resident or part-year resident, the amount of the
22credit under this Section shall be in proportion to the amount
23of income attributable to this State.
24    (b) For taxable years beginning before January 1, 2003, in
25no event shall a credit under this Section reduce the

 

 

SB1260- 48 -LRB099 04267 HLH 24291 b

1taxpayer's liability to less than zero. For each taxable year
2beginning on or after January 1, 2003, if the amount of the
3credit exceeds the income tax liability for the applicable tax
4year, then the excess credit shall be refunded to the taxpayer.
5The amount of a refund shall not be included in the taxpayer's
6income or resources for the purposes of determining eligibility
7or benefit level in any means-tested benefit program
8administered by a governmental entity unless required by
9federal law.
10    (c) This Section is exempt from the provisions of Section
11250.
12(Source: P.A. 97-652, eff. 6-1-12.)
 
13    (35 ILCS 5/901)  (from Ch. 120, par. 9-901)
14    Sec. 901. Collection authority.
15    (a) In general.
16    The Department shall collect the taxes imposed by this Act.
17The Department shall collect certified past due child support
18amounts under Section 2505-650 of the Department of Revenue Law
19(20 ILCS 2505/2505-650). Except as provided in subsections (c),
20(e), (f), (g), and (h) of this Section, money collected
21pursuant to subsections (a) and (b) of Section 201 of this Act
22shall be paid into the General Revenue Fund in the State
23treasury; money collected pursuant to subsections (c) and (d)
24of Section 201 of this Act shall be paid into the Personal
25Property Tax Replacement Fund, a special fund in the State

 

 

SB1260- 49 -LRB099 04267 HLH 24291 b

1Treasury; and money collected under Section 2505-650 of the
2Department of Revenue Law (20 ILCS 2505/2505-650) shall be paid
3into the Child Support Enforcement Trust Fund, a special fund
4outside the State Treasury, or to the State Disbursement Unit
5established under Section 10-26 of the Illinois Public Aid
6Code, as directed by the Department of Healthcare and Family
7Services.
8    (b) Local Government Distributive Fund.
9    Beginning August 1, 1969, and continuing through June 30,
101994, the Treasurer shall transfer each month from the General
11Revenue Fund to a special fund in the State treasury, to be
12known as the "Local Government Distributive Fund", an amount
13equal to 1/12 of the net revenue realized from the tax imposed
14by subsections (a) and (b) of Section 201 of this Act during
15the preceding month. Beginning July 1, 1994, and continuing
16through June 30, 1995, the Treasurer shall transfer each month
17from the General Revenue Fund to the Local Government
18Distributive Fund an amount equal to 1/11 of the net revenue
19realized from the tax imposed by subsections (a) and (b) of
20Section 201 of this Act during the preceding month. Beginning
21July 1, 1995 and continuing through January 31, 2011, the
22Treasurer shall transfer each month from the General Revenue
23Fund to the Local Government Distributive Fund an amount equal
24to the net of (i) 1/10 of the net revenue realized from the tax
25imposed by subsections (a) and (b) of Section 201 of the
26Illinois Income Tax Act during the preceding month (ii) minus,

 

 

SB1260- 50 -LRB099 04267 HLH 24291 b

1beginning July 1, 2003 and ending June 30, 2004, $6,666,666,
2and beginning July 1, 2004, zero. Beginning February 1, 2011,
3and continuing through the first day of the first month to
4occur after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the
599th General Assembly January 31, 2015, the Treasurer shall
6transfer each month from the General Revenue Fund to the Local
7Government Distributive Fund an amount equal to the sum of (i)
86% (10% of the ratio of the 3% individual income tax rate prior
9to 2011 to the 5% individual income tax rate after 2010) of the
10net revenue realized from the tax imposed by subsections (a)
11and (b) of Section 201 of this Act upon individuals, trusts,
12and estates during the preceding month and (ii) 6.86% (10% of
13the ratio of the 4.8% corporate income tax rate prior to 2011
14to the 7% corporate income tax rate after 2010) of the net
15revenue realized from the tax imposed by subsections (a) and
16(b) of Section 201 of this Act upon corporations during the
17preceding month. Beginning on the first day of the first month
18to occur after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the
1999th General Assembly, the Treasurer shall transfer each month
20from the General Revenue Fund to the Local Government
21Distributive Fund an amount equal to the sum of (i) 6% (10% of
22the ratio of the 3% individual income tax rate prior to 2011 to
23the 5% individual income tax rate after 2010) of the net
24revenue realized from the tax imposed by subsections (a) and
25(b) of Section 201 of this Act upon individuals, trusts, and
26estates during the preceding month and (ii) 9.6% (10% of the

 

 

SB1260- 51 -LRB099 04267 HLH 24291 b

1ratio of the 4.8% corporate income tax rate prior to 2011 to
2the 5% corporate income tax rate after 2014) of the net revenue
3realized from the tax imposed by subsections (a) and (b) of
4Section 201 of this Act upon corporations during the preceding
5month. Notwithstanding any other provision of law, beginning on
6August 1, 2015 and ending on August 1, 2016, each monthly
7transfer to the Local Government Distributive Fund shall be
8reduced by $20,800,000; that amount shall instead by
9transferred to the Common School Fund. Beginning February 1,
102015 and continuing through January 31, 2025, the Treasurer
11shall transfer each month from the General Revenue Fund to the
12Local Government Distributive Fund an amount equal to the sum
13of (i) 8% (10% of the ratio of the 3% individual income tax
14rate prior to 2011 to the 3.75% individual income tax rate
15after 2014) of the net revenue realized from the tax imposed by
16subsections (a) and (b) of Section 201 of this Act upon
17individuals, trusts, and estates during the preceding month and
18(ii) 9.14% (10% of the ratio of the 4.8% corporate income tax
19rate prior to 2011 to the 5.25% corporate income tax rate after
202014) of the net revenue realized from the tax imposed by
21subsections (a) and (b) of Section 201 of this Act upon
22corporations during the preceding month. Beginning February 1,
232025, the Treasurer shall transfer each month from the General
24Revenue Fund to the Local Government Distributive Fund an
25amount equal to the sum of (i) 9.23% (10% of the ratio of the 3%
26individual income tax rate prior to 2011 to the 3.25%

 

 

SB1260- 52 -LRB099 04267 HLH 24291 b

1individual income tax rate after 2024) of the net revenue
2realized from the tax imposed by subsections (a) and (b) of
3Section 201 of this Act upon individuals, trusts, and estates
4during the preceding month and (ii) 10% of the net revenue
5realized from the tax imposed by subsections (a) and (b) of
6Section 201 of this Act upon corporations during the preceding
7month. Net revenue realized for a month shall be defined as the
8revenue from the tax imposed by subsections (a) and (b) of
9Section 201 of this Act which is deposited in the General
10Revenue Fund, the Education Assistance Fund, the Income Tax
11Surcharge Local Government Distributive Fund, the Fund for the
12Advancement of Education, and the Commitment to Human Services
13Fund during the month minus the amount paid out of the General
14Revenue Fund in State warrants during that same month as
15refunds to taxpayers for overpayment of liability under the tax
16imposed by subsections (a) and (b) of Section 201 of this Act.
17    Beginning on August 26, 2014 (the effective date of Public
18Act 98-1052) this amendatory Act of the 98th General Assembly,
19the Comptroller shall perform the transfers required by this
20subsection (b) no later than 60 days after he or she receives
21the certification from the Treasurer as provided in Section 1
22of the State Revenue Sharing Act.
23    (c) Deposits Into Income Tax Refund Fund.
24        (1) Beginning on January 1, 1989 and thereafter, the
25    Department shall deposit a percentage of the amounts
26    collected pursuant to subsections (a) and (b)(1), (2), and

 

 

SB1260- 53 -LRB099 04267 HLH 24291 b

1    (3), of Section 201 of this Act into a fund in the State
2    treasury known as the Income Tax Refund Fund. The
3    Department shall deposit 6% of such amounts during the
4    period beginning January 1, 1989 and ending on June 30,
5    1989. Beginning with State fiscal year 1990 and for each
6    fiscal year thereafter, the percentage deposited into the
7    Income Tax Refund Fund during a fiscal year shall be the
8    Annual Percentage. For fiscal years 1999 through 2001, the
9    Annual Percentage shall be 7.1%. For fiscal year 2003, the
10    Annual Percentage shall be 8%. For fiscal year 2004, the
11    Annual Percentage shall be 11.7%. Upon the effective date
12    of this amendatory Act of the 93rd General Assembly, the
13    Annual Percentage shall be 10% for fiscal year 2005. For
14    fiscal year 2006, the Annual Percentage shall be 9.75%. For
15    fiscal year 2007, the Annual Percentage shall be 9.75%. For
16    fiscal year 2008, the Annual Percentage shall be 7.75%. For
17    fiscal year 2009, the Annual Percentage shall be 9.75%. For
18    fiscal year 2010, the Annual Percentage shall be 9.75%. For
19    fiscal year 2011, the Annual Percentage shall be 8.75%. For
20    fiscal year 2012, the Annual Percentage shall be 8.75%. For
21    fiscal year 2013, the Annual Percentage shall be 9.75%. For
22    fiscal year 2014, the Annual Percentage shall be 9.5%. For
23    fiscal year 2015, the Annual Percentage shall be 10%. For
24    all other fiscal years, the Annual Percentage shall be
25    calculated as a fraction, the numerator of which shall be
26    the amount of refunds approved for payment by the

 

 

SB1260- 54 -LRB099 04267 HLH 24291 b

1    Department during the preceding fiscal year as a result of
2    overpayment of tax liability under subsections (a) and
3    (b)(1), (2), and (3) of Section 201 of this Act plus the
4    amount of such refunds remaining approved but unpaid at the
5    end of the preceding fiscal year, minus the amounts
6    transferred into the Income Tax Refund Fund from the
7    Tobacco Settlement Recovery Fund, and the denominator of
8    which shall be the amounts which will be collected pursuant
9    to subsections (a) and (b)(1), (2), and (3) of Section 201
10    of this Act during the preceding fiscal year; except that
11    in State fiscal year 2002, the Annual Percentage shall in
12    no event exceed 7.6%. The Director of Revenue shall certify
13    the Annual Percentage to the Comptroller on the last
14    business day of the fiscal year immediately preceding the
15    fiscal year for which it is to be effective.
16        (2) Beginning on January 1, 1989 and thereafter, the
17    Department shall deposit a percentage of the amounts
18    collected pursuant to subsections (a) and (b)(6), (7), and
19    (8), (c) and (d) of Section 201 of this Act into a fund in
20    the State treasury known as the Income Tax Refund Fund. The
21    Department shall deposit 18% of such amounts during the
22    period beginning January 1, 1989 and ending on June 30,
23    1989. Beginning with State fiscal year 1990 and for each
24    fiscal year thereafter, the percentage deposited into the
25    Income Tax Refund Fund during a fiscal year shall be the
26    Annual Percentage. For fiscal years 1999, 2000, and 2001,

 

 

SB1260- 55 -LRB099 04267 HLH 24291 b

1    the Annual Percentage shall be 19%. For fiscal year 2003,
2    the Annual Percentage shall be 27%. For fiscal year 2004,
3    the Annual Percentage shall be 32%. Upon the effective date
4    of this amendatory Act of the 93rd General Assembly, the
5    Annual Percentage shall be 24% for fiscal year 2005. For
6    fiscal year 2006, the Annual Percentage shall be 20%. For
7    fiscal year 2007, the Annual Percentage shall be 17.5%. For
8    fiscal year 2008, the Annual Percentage shall be 15.5%. For
9    fiscal year 2009, the Annual Percentage shall be 17.5%. For
10    fiscal year 2010, the Annual Percentage shall be 17.5%. For
11    fiscal year 2011, the Annual Percentage shall be 17.5%. For
12    fiscal year 2012, the Annual Percentage shall be 17.5%. For
13    fiscal year 2013, the Annual Percentage shall be 14%. For
14    fiscal year 2014, the Annual Percentage shall be 13.4%. For
15    fiscal year 2015, the Annual Percentage shall be 14%. For
16    all other fiscal years, the Annual Percentage shall be
17    calculated as a fraction, the numerator of which shall be
18    the amount of refunds approved for payment by the
19    Department during the preceding fiscal year as a result of
20    overpayment of tax liability under subsections (a) and
21    (b)(6), (7), and (8), (c) and (d) of Section 201 of this
22    Act plus the amount of such refunds remaining approved but
23    unpaid at the end of the preceding fiscal year, and the
24    denominator of which shall be the amounts which will be
25    collected pursuant to subsections (a) and (b)(6), (7), and
26    (8), (c) and (d) of Section 201 of this Act during the

 

 

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1    preceding fiscal year; except that in State fiscal year
2    2002, the Annual Percentage shall in no event exceed 23%.
3    The Director of Revenue shall certify the Annual Percentage
4    to the Comptroller on the last business day of the fiscal
5    year immediately preceding the fiscal year for which it is
6    to be effective.
7        (3) The Comptroller shall order transferred and the
8    Treasurer shall transfer from the Tobacco Settlement
9    Recovery Fund to the Income Tax Refund Fund (i) $35,000,000
10    in January, 2001, (ii) $35,000,000 in January, 2002, and
11    (iii) $35,000,000 in January, 2003.
12    (d) Expenditures from Income Tax Refund Fund.
13        (1) Beginning January 1, 1989, money in the Income Tax
14    Refund Fund shall be expended exclusively for the purpose
15    of paying refunds resulting from overpayment of tax
16    liability under Section 201 of this Act, for paying rebates
17    under Section 208.1 in the event that the amounts in the
18    Homeowners' Tax Relief Fund are insufficient for that
19    purpose, and for making transfers pursuant to this
20    subsection (d).
21        (2) The Director shall order payment of refunds
22    resulting from overpayment of tax liability under Section
23    201 of this Act from the Income Tax Refund Fund only to the
24    extent that amounts collected pursuant to Section 201 of
25    this Act and transfers pursuant to this subsection (d) and
26    item (3) of subsection (c) have been deposited and retained

 

 

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1    in the Fund.
2        (3) As soon as possible after the end of each fiscal
3    year, the Director shall order transferred and the State
4    Treasurer and State Comptroller shall transfer from the
5    Income Tax Refund Fund to the Personal Property Tax
6    Replacement Fund an amount, certified by the Director to
7    the Comptroller, equal to the excess of the amount
8    collected pursuant to subsections (c) and (d) of Section
9    201 of this Act deposited into the Income Tax Refund Fund
10    during the fiscal year over the amount of refunds resulting
11    from overpayment of tax liability under subsections (c) and
12    (d) of Section 201 of this Act paid from the Income Tax
13    Refund Fund during the fiscal year.
14        (4) As soon as possible after the end of each fiscal
15    year, the Director shall order transferred and the State
16    Treasurer and State Comptroller shall transfer from the
17    Personal Property Tax Replacement Fund to the Income Tax
18    Refund Fund an amount, certified by the Director to the
19    Comptroller, equal to the excess of the amount of refunds
20    resulting from overpayment of tax liability under
21    subsections (c) and (d) of Section 201 of this Act paid
22    from the Income Tax Refund Fund during the fiscal year over
23    the amount collected pursuant to subsections (c) and (d) of
24    Section 201 of this Act deposited into the Income Tax
25    Refund Fund during the fiscal year.
26        (4.5) As soon as possible after the end of fiscal year

 

 

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1    1999 and of each fiscal year thereafter, the Director shall
2    order transferred and the State Treasurer and State
3    Comptroller shall transfer from the Income Tax Refund Fund
4    to the General Revenue Fund any surplus remaining in the
5    Income Tax Refund Fund as of the end of such fiscal year;
6    excluding for fiscal years 2000, 2001, and 2002 amounts
7    attributable to transfers under item (3) of subsection (c)
8    less refunds resulting from the earned income tax credit.
9        (5) This Act shall constitute an irrevocable and
10    continuing appropriation from the Income Tax Refund Fund
11    for the purpose of paying refunds upon the order of the
12    Director in accordance with the provisions of this Section.
13    (e) Deposits into the Education Assistance Fund and the
14Income Tax Surcharge Local Government Distributive Fund.
15    On July 1, 1991, and thereafter, of the amounts collected
16pursuant to subsections (a) and (b) of Section 201 of this Act,
17minus deposits into the Income Tax Refund Fund, the Department
18shall deposit 7.3% into the Education Assistance Fund in the
19State Treasury. Beginning July 1, 1991, and continuing through
20January 31, 1993, of the amounts collected pursuant to
21subsections (a) and (b) of Section 201 of the Illinois Income
22Tax Act, minus deposits into the Income Tax Refund Fund, the
23Department shall deposit 3.0% into the Income Tax Surcharge
24Local Government Distributive Fund in the State Treasury.
25Beginning February 1, 1993 and continuing through June 30,
261993, of the amounts collected pursuant to subsections (a) and

 

 

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1(b) of Section 201 of the Illinois Income Tax Act, minus
2deposits into the Income Tax Refund Fund, the Department shall
3deposit 4.4% into the Income Tax Surcharge Local Government
4Distributive Fund in the State Treasury. Beginning July 1,
51993, and continuing through June 30, 1994, of the amounts
6collected under subsections (a) and (b) of Section 201 of this
7Act, minus deposits into the Income Tax Refund Fund, the
8Department shall deposit 1.475% into the Income Tax Surcharge
9Local Government Distributive Fund in the State Treasury.
10    (f) Deposits into the Fund for the Advancement of
11Education. Beginning February 1, 2015, the Department shall
12deposit the following portions of the revenue realized from the
13tax imposed upon individuals, trusts, and estates by
14subsections (a) and (b) of Section 201 of this Act during the
15preceding month, minus deposits into the Income Tax Refund
16Fund, into the Fund for the Advancement of Education:
17        (1) beginning February 1, 2015, and prior to February
18    1, 2025, 1/30; and
19        (2) beginning February 1, 2025, 1/26.
20    If the rate of tax imposed by subsection (a) and (b) of
21Section 201 is reduced pursuant to Section 201.5 of this Act,
22the Department shall not make the deposits required by this
23subsection (f) on or after the effective date of the reduction.
24    (g) Deposits into the Commitment to Human Services Fund.
25Beginning February 1, 2015, the Department shall deposit the
26following portions of the revenue realized from the tax imposed

 

 

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1upon individuals, trusts, and estates by subsections (a) and
2(b) of Section 201 of this Act during the preceding month,
3minus deposits into the Income Tax Refund Fund, into the
4Commitment to Human Services Fund:
5        (1) beginning February 1, 2015, and prior to February
6    1, 2025, 1/30; and
7        (2) beginning February 1, 2025, 1/26.
8    If the rate of tax imposed by subsection (a) and (b) of
9Section 201 is reduced pursuant to Section 201.5 of this Act,
10the Department shall not make the deposits required by this
11subsection (g) on or after the effective date of the reduction.
12    (h) Deposits into the Tax Compliance and Administration
13Fund. Beginning on the first day of the first calendar month to
14occur on or after August 26, 2014 (the effective date of Public
15Act 98-1098) this amendatory Act of the 98th General Assembly,
16each month the Department shall pay into the Tax Compliance and
17Administration Fund, to be used, subject to appropriation, to
18fund additional auditors and compliance personnel at the
19Department, an amount equal to 1/12 of 5% of the cash receipts
20collected during the preceding fiscal year by the Audit Bureau
21of the Department from the tax imposed by subsections (a), (b),
22(c), and (d) of Section 201 of this Act, net of deposits into
23the Income Tax Refund Fund made from those cash receipts.
24(Source: P.A. 97-72, eff. 7-1-11; 97-732, eff. 6-30-12; 98-24,
25eff. 6-19-13; 98-674, eff. 6-30-14; 98-1052, eff. 8-26-14;
2698-1098, eff. 8-26-14; revised 9-26-14.)
 

 

 

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1    Section 20. The Retailers' Occupation Tax Act is amended by
2changing Sections 1 and 2 as follows:
 
3    (35 ILCS 120/1)  (from Ch. 120, par. 440)
4    Sec. 1. Definitions. "Sale at retail" means any transfer of
5the ownership of or title to tangible personal property to a
6purchaser, for the purpose of use or consumption, and not for
7the purpose of resale in any form as tangible personal property
8to the extent not first subjected to a use for which it was
9purchased, for a valuable consideration: Provided that the
10property purchased is deemed to be purchased for the purpose of
11resale, despite first being used, to the extent to which it is
12resold as an ingredient of an intentionally produced product or
13byproduct of manufacturing. For this purpose, slag produced as
14an incident to manufacturing pig iron or steel and sold is
15considered to be an intentionally produced byproduct of
16manufacturing. Transactions whereby the possession of the
17property is transferred but the seller retains the title as
18security for payment of the selling price shall be deemed to be
19sales.
20    "Sale at retail" shall be construed to include any transfer
21of the ownership of or title to tangible personal property to a
22purchaser, for use or consumption by any other person to whom
23such purchaser may transfer the tangible personal property
24without a valuable consideration, and to include any transfer,

 

 

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1whether made for or without a valuable consideration, for
2resale in any form as tangible personal property unless made in
3compliance with Section 2c of this Act.
4    Sales of tangible personal property, which property, to the
5extent not first subjected to a use for which it was purchased,
6as an ingredient or constituent, goes into and forms a part of
7tangible personal property subsequently the subject of a "Sale
8at retail", are not sales at retail as defined in this Act:
9Provided that the property purchased is deemed to be purchased
10for the purpose of resale, despite first being used, to the
11extent to which it is resold as an ingredient of an
12intentionally produced product or byproduct of manufacturing.
13    "Sale at retail" includes all of the following services, as
14enumerated in the North American Industry Classification
15System Manual (NAICS), 2012, prepared by the United States
16Office of Management and Budget:
17        (1) Other warehousing and storage (household and
18    specialty goods) (493190).
19        (2) Travel agent services (561510).
20        (3) Carpet and upholstery cleaning services (561740).
21        (4) Dating services (812990).
22        (5) Dry cleaning and laundry, except coin-operated
23    (81232).
24        (6) Consumer goods rental (5322).
25        (7) Health clubs, tanning parlors, reducing salons
26    (812191).

 

 

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1        (8) Linen supply (812331).
2        (9) Interior design services (541410).
3        (10) Other business services, including copy shops
4    (561439).
5        (11) Bowling Centers (713950).
6        (12) Coin operated video games and pinball machines
7    (713120).
8        (13) Membership fees in private clubs (713910).
9        (14) Admission to spectator sports (excluding horse
10    tracks) (711211).
11        (15) Admission to cultural events (711110).
12        (16) Billiard Parlors (71399).
13        (17) Scenic and sightseeing transportation (487110).
14        (18) Taxi and Limousine services (485320).
15        (19) Unscheduled chartered passenger air
16    transportation (481211).
17        (20) Motion picture theaters, except drive-in theaters
18    (512131).
19        (21) Pet grooming (812910).
20        (22) Landscaping services (including lawn care)
21    (561730).
22        (23) Income from intrastate transportation of persons
23    (485).
24        (24) Mini-storage (531130).
25        (25) Household goods storage (493110).
26        (26) Cold storage (493120).

 

 

SB1260- 64 -LRB099 04267 HLH 24291 b

1        (27) Marina Service (docking, storage, cleaning,
2    repair) (713930).
3        (28) Marine towing service (including tugboats)
4    (488330).
5        (29) Gift and package wrapping service (561916).
6        (30) Laundry and dry cleaning services, coin-operated
7    (812310).
8        (31) Other services to buildings and dwellings
9    (561790).
10        (32) Water softening and conditioning (561990).
11        (33) Internet Service Providers (517).
12        (34) Short term auto rental (532111).
13        (35) Information Services (519190).
14        (36) Amusement park admission and rides (713110).
15        (37) Circuses and fairs -- admission and games (7113).
16        (38) Cable and other program distribution (515210).
17        (39) Rental of video tapes for home viewing (532230).
18    "Sale at retail" shall be construed to include any Illinois
19florist's sales transaction in which the purchase order is
20received in Illinois by a florist and the sale is for use or
21consumption, but the Illinois florist has a florist in another
22state deliver the property to the purchaser or the purchaser's
23donee in such other state.
24    Nonreusable tangible personal property that is used by
25persons engaged in the business of operating a restaurant,
26cafeteria, or drive-in is a sale for resale when it is

 

 

SB1260- 65 -LRB099 04267 HLH 24291 b

1transferred to customers in the ordinary course of business as
2part of the sale of food or beverages and is used to deliver,
3package, or consume food or beverages, regardless of where
4consumption of the food or beverages occurs. Examples of those
5items include, but are not limited to nonreusable, paper and
6plastic cups, plates, baskets, boxes, sleeves, buckets or other
7containers, utensils, straws, placemats, napkins, doggie bags,
8and wrapping or packaging materials that are transferred to
9customers as part of the sale of food or beverages in the
10ordinary course of business.
11    The purchase, employment and transfer of such tangible
12personal property as newsprint and ink for the primary purpose
13of conveying news (with or without other information) is not a
14purchase, use or sale of tangible personal property.
15    A person whose activities are organized and conducted
16primarily as a not-for-profit service enterprise, and who
17engages in selling tangible personal property at retail
18(whether to the public or merely to members and their guests)
19is engaged in the business of selling tangible personal
20property at retail with respect to such transactions, excepting
21only a person organized and operated exclusively for
22charitable, religious or educational purposes either (1), to
23the extent of sales by such person to its members, students,
24patients or inmates of tangible personal property to be used
25primarily for the purposes of such person, or (2), to the
26extent of sales by such person of tangible personal property

 

 

SB1260- 66 -LRB099 04267 HLH 24291 b

1which is not sold or offered for sale by persons organized for
2profit. The selling of school books and school supplies by
3schools at retail to students is not "primarily for the
4purposes of" the school which does such selling. The provisions
5of this paragraph shall not apply to nor subject to taxation
6occasional dinners, socials or similar activities of a person
7organized and operated exclusively for charitable, religious
8or educational purposes, whether or not such activities are
9open to the public.
10    A person who is the recipient of a grant or contract under
11Title VII of the Older Americans Act of 1965 (P.L. 92-258) and
12serves meals to participants in the federal Nutrition Program
13for the Elderly in return for contributions established in
14amount by the individual participant pursuant to a schedule of
15suggested fees as provided for in the federal Act is not
16engaged in the business of selling tangible personal property
17at retail with respect to such transactions.
18    "Purchaser" means anyone who, through a sale at retail,
19acquires the ownership of or title to tangible personal
20property for a valuable consideration.
21    "Reseller of motor fuel" means any person engaged in the
22business of selling or delivering or transferring title of
23motor fuel to another person other than for use or consumption.
24No person shall act as a reseller of motor fuel within this
25State without first being registered as a reseller pursuant to
26Section 2c or a retailer pursuant to Section 2a.

 

 

SB1260- 67 -LRB099 04267 HLH 24291 b

1    "Selling price" or the "amount of sale" means the
2consideration for a sale valued in money whether received in
3money or otherwise, including cash, credits, property, other
4than as hereinafter provided, and services, but not including
5the value of or credit given for traded-in tangible personal
6property where the item that is traded-in is of like kind and
7character as that which is being sold, and shall be determined
8without any deduction on account of the cost of the property
9sold, the cost of materials used, labor or service cost or any
10other expense whatsoever, but does not include charges that are
11added to prices by sellers on account of the seller's tax
12liability under this Act, or on account of the seller's duty to
13collect, from the purchaser, the tax that is imposed by the Use
14Tax Act, or, except as otherwise provided with respect to any
15cigarette tax imposed by a home rule unit, on account of the
16seller's tax liability under any local occupation tax
17administered by the Department, or, except as otherwise
18provided with respect to any cigarette tax imposed by a home
19rule unit on account of the seller's duty to collect, from the
20purchasers, the tax that is imposed under any local use tax
21administered by the Department. Effective December 1, 1985,
22"selling price" shall include charges that are added to prices
23by sellers on account of the seller's tax liability under the
24Cigarette Tax Act, on account of the sellers' duty to collect,
25from the purchaser, the tax imposed under the Cigarette Use Tax
26Act, and on account of the seller's duty to collect, from the

 

 

SB1260- 68 -LRB099 04267 HLH 24291 b

1purchaser, any cigarette tax imposed by a home rule unit.
2    Notwithstanding any law to the contrary, for any motor
3vehicle, as defined in Section 1-146 of the Vehicle Code, that
4is sold on or after January 1, 2015 for the purpose of leasing
5the vehicle for a defined period that is longer than one year
6and (1) is a motor vehicle of the second division that: (A) is
7a self-contained motor vehicle designed or permanently
8converted to provide living quarters for recreational,
9camping, or travel use, with direct walk through access to the
10living quarters from the driver's seat; (B) is of the van
11configuration designed for the transportation of not less than
127 nor more than 16 passengers; or (C) has a gross vehicle
13weight rating of 8,000 pounds or less or (2) is a motor vehicle
14of the first division, "selling price" or "amount of sale"
15means the consideration received by the lessor pursuant to the
16lease contract, including amounts due at lease signing and all
17monthly or other regular payments charged over the term of the
18lease. Also included in the selling price is any amount
19received by the lessor from the lessee for the leased vehicle
20that is not calculated at the time the lease is executed,
21including, but not limited to, excess mileage charges and
22charges for excess wear and tear. For sales that occur in
23Illinois, with respect to any amount received by the lessor
24from the lessee for the leased vehicle that is not calculated
25at the time the lease is executed, the lessor who purchased the
26motor vehicle does not incur the tax imposed by the Use Tax Act

 

 

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1on those amounts, and the retailer who makes the retail sale of
2the motor vehicle to the lessor is not required to collect the
3tax imposed by the Use Tax Act or to pay the tax imposed by this
4Act on those amounts. However, the lessor who purchased the
5motor vehicle assumes the liability for reporting and paying
6the tax on those amounts directly to the Department in the same
7form (Illinois Retailers' Occupation Tax, and local retailers'
8occupation taxes, if applicable) in which the retailer would
9have reported and paid such tax if the retailer had accounted
10for the tax to the Department. For amounts received by the
11lessor from the lessee that are not calculated at the time the
12lease is executed, the lessor must file the return and pay the
13tax to the Department by the due date otherwise required by
14this Act for returns other than transaction returns. If the
15retailer is entitled under this Act to a discount for
16collecting and remitting the tax imposed under this Act to the
17Department with respect to the sale of the motor vehicle to the
18lessor, then the right to the discount provided in this Act
19shall be transferred to the lessor with respect to the tax paid
20by the lessor for any amount received by the lessor from the
21lessee for the leased vehicle that is not calculated at the
22time the lease is executed; provided that the discount is only
23allowed if the return is timely filed and for amounts timely
24paid. The "selling price" of a motor vehicle that is sold on or
25after January 1, 2015 for the purpose of leasing for a defined
26period of longer than one year shall not be reduced by the

 

 

SB1260- 70 -LRB099 04267 HLH 24291 b

1value of or credit given for traded-in tangible personal
2property owned by the lessor, nor shall it be reduced by the
3value of or credit given for traded-in tangible personal
4property owned by the lessee, regardless of whether the
5trade-in value thereof is assigned by the lessee to the lessor.
6In the case of a motor vehicle that is sold for the purpose of
7leasing for a defined period of longer than one year, the sale
8occurs at the time of the delivery of the vehicle, regardless
9of the due date of any lease payments. A lessor who incurs a
10Retailers' Occupation Tax liability on the sale of a motor
11vehicle coming off lease may not take a credit against that
12liability for the Use Tax the lessor paid upon the purchase of
13the motor vehicle (or for any tax the lessor paid with respect
14to any amount received by the lessor from the lessee for the
15leased vehicle that was not calculated at the time the lease
16was executed) if the selling price of the motor vehicle at the
17time of purchase was calculated using the definition of
18"selling price" as defined in this paragraph. Notwithstanding
19any other provision of this Act to the contrary, lessors shall
20file all returns and make all payments required under this
21paragraph to the Department by electronic means in the manner
22and form as required by the Department. This paragraph does not
23apply to leases of motor vehicles for which, at the time the
24lease is entered into, the term of the lease is not a defined
25period, including leases with a defined initial period with the
26option to continue the lease on a month-to-month or other basis

 

 

SB1260- 71 -LRB099 04267 HLH 24291 b

1beyond the initial defined period.
2    The phrase "like kind and character" shall be liberally
3construed (including but not limited to any form of motor
4vehicle for any form of motor vehicle, or any kind of farm or
5agricultural implement for any other kind of farm or
6agricultural implement), while not including a kind of item
7which, if sold at retail by that retailer, would be exempt from
8retailers' occupation tax and use tax as an isolated or
9occasional sale.
10    "Gross receipts" from the sales of tangible personal
11property at retail means the total selling price or the amount
12of such sales, as hereinbefore defined. In the case of charge
13and time sales, the amount thereof shall be included only as
14and when payments are received by the seller. Receipts or other
15consideration derived by a seller from the sale, transfer or
16assignment of accounts receivable to a wholly owned subsidiary
17will not be deemed payments prior to the time the purchaser
18makes payment on such accounts.
19    "Department" means the Department of Revenue.
20    "Person" means any natural individual, firm, partnership,
21association, joint stock company, joint adventure, public or
22private corporation, limited liability company, or a receiver,
23executor, trustee, guardian or other representative appointed
24by order of any court.
25    The isolated or occasional sale of tangible personal
26property at retail by a person who does not hold himself out as

 

 

SB1260- 72 -LRB099 04267 HLH 24291 b

1being engaged (or who does not habitually engage) in selling
2such tangible personal property at retail, or a sale through a
3bulk vending machine, does not constitute engaging in a
4business of selling such tangible personal property at retail
5within the meaning of this Act; provided that any person who is
6engaged in a business which is not subject to the tax imposed
7by this Act because of involving the sale of or a contract to
8sell real estate or a construction contract to improve real
9estate or a construction contract to engineer, install, and
10maintain an integrated system of products, but who, in the
11course of conducting such business, transfers tangible
12personal property to users or consumers in the finished form in
13which it was purchased, and which does not become real estate
14or was not engineered and installed, under any provision of a
15construction contract or real estate sale or real estate sales
16agreement entered into with some other person arising out of or
17because of such nontaxable business, is engaged in the business
18of selling tangible personal property at retail to the extent
19of the value of the tangible personal property so transferred.
20If, in such a transaction, a separate charge is made for the
21tangible personal property so transferred, the value of such
22property, for the purpose of this Act, shall be the amount so
23separately charged, but not less than the cost of such property
24to the transferor; if no separate charge is made, the value of
25such property, for the purposes of this Act, is the cost to the
26transferor of such tangible personal property. Construction

 

 

SB1260- 73 -LRB099 04267 HLH 24291 b

1contracts for the improvement of real estate consisting of
2engineering, installation, and maintenance of voice, data,
3video, security, and all telecommunication systems do not
4constitute engaging in a business of selling tangible personal
5property at retail within the meaning of this Act if they are
6sold at one specified contract price.
7    A person who holds himself or herself out as being engaged
8(or who habitually engages) in selling tangible personal
9property at retail is a person engaged in the business of
10selling tangible personal property at retail hereunder with
11respect to such sales (and not primarily in a service
12occupation) notwithstanding the fact that such person designs
13and produces such tangible personal property on special order
14for the purchaser and in such a way as to render the property
15of value only to such purchaser, if such tangible personal
16property so produced on special order serves substantially the
17same function as stock or standard items of tangible personal
18property that are sold at retail.
19    Persons who engage in the business of transferring tangible
20personal property upon the redemption of trading stamps are
21engaged in the business of selling such property at retail and
22shall be liable for and shall pay the tax imposed by this Act
23on the basis of the retail value of the property transferred
24upon redemption of such stamps.
25    "Bulk vending machine" means a vending machine, containing
26unsorted confections, nuts, toys, or other items designed

 

 

SB1260- 74 -LRB099 04267 HLH 24291 b

1primarily to be used or played with by children which, when a
2coin or coins of a denomination not larger than $0.50 are
3inserted, are dispensed in equal portions, at random and
4without selection by the customer.
5(Source: P.A. 98-628, eff. 1-1-15; 98-1080, eff. 8-26-14.)
 
6    (35 ILCS 120/2)  (from Ch. 120, par. 441)
7    Sec. 2. Tax imposed. A tax is imposed upon persons engaged
8in the business of selling at retail tangible personal
9property, including computer software, and including
10photographs, negatives, and positives that are the product of
11photoprocessing, but not including products of photoprocessing
12produced for use in motion pictures for public commercial
13exhibition, or engaged in the business of providing services as
14set forth in in Section 1 of this Act. Beginning January 1,
152001, prepaid telephone calling arrangements shall be
16considered tangible personal property subject to the tax
17imposed under this Act regardless of the form in which those
18arrangements may be embodied, transmitted, or fixed by any
19method now known or hereafter developed. Sales of (1)
20electricity delivered to customers by wire; (2) natural or
21artificial gas that is delivered to customers through pipes,
22pipelines, or mains; and (3) water that is delivered to
23customers through pipes, pipelines, or mains are not subject to
24tax under this Act. The provisions of this amendatory Act of
25the 98th General Assembly are declaratory of existing law as to

 

 

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1the meaning and scope of this Act.
2(Source: P.A. 98-583, eff. 1-1-14.)
 
3    Section 25. The School Code is amended by changing Sections
41C-2, 2-3.25c, 2-3.25d, 3-7, 10-17a, 10-22.45, 18-8.05, 19-3,
521A-5, 21A-10, 21A-15, 21A-20, 21A-25, 21A-30, 23-3, 23-6, and
629-5 and by adding Sections 2-3.25d-5, 2-3.163, 2-3.164,
72-3.165, 2-3.166, 2-3.167, 10-16.10, 10-17b, 10-17c, 10-17d,
810-20.56, 17-2.11d, 21A-3, and 23-5.5 as follows:
 
9    (105 ILCS 5/1C-2)
10    Sec. 1C-2. Block grants.
11    (a) For fiscal year 1999, and each fiscal year thereafter,
12the State Board of Education shall award to school districts
13block grants as described in subsection (c). The State Board of
14Education may adopt rules and regulations necessary to
15implement this Section. In accordance with Section 2-3.32, all
16state block grants are subject to an audit. Therefore, block
17grant receipts and block grant expenditures shall be recorded
18to the appropriate fund code.
19    (b) (Blank).
20    (c) An Early Childhood Education Block Grant shall be
21created by combining the following programs: Preschool
22Education, Parental Training and Prevention Initiative. These
23funds shall be distributed to school districts and other
24entities on a competitive basis. Not less than 14% of this

 

 

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1grant shall be used to fund programs for children ages 0-3,
2which percentage shall increase to at least 20% by Fiscal Year
32016. However, if, in a given fiscal year, the amount
4appropriated for the Early Childhood Education Block Grant is
5insufficient to increase the percentage of the grant to fund
6programs for children ages 0-3 without reducing the amount of
7the grant for existing providers of preschool education
8programs, then the percentage of the grant to fund programs for
9children ages 0-3 may be held steady instead of increased.
10    (d) For fiscal year 2016, the General Assembly shall
11appropriate no less than $380,261,400 to the Early Childhood
12Education Block Grant for the programs specified in subsection
13(c) of this Section.
14(Source: P.A. 98-645, eff. 7-1-14.)
 
15    (105 ILCS 5/2-3.25c)  (from Ch. 122, par. 2-3.25c)
16    Sec. 2-3.25c. Financial and other awards Rewards and
17acknowledgements.
18    (a) The State Board of Education shall implement a system
19of rewards for school districts, and the schools themselves,
20whose students and schools consistently meet adequate yearly
21progress criteria for 2 or more consecutive years and a system
22to acknowledge schools and districts that meet adequate yearly
23progress criteria in a given year as specified in Section
242-3.25d of this Code.
25    (b) Financial awards shall be provided to the schools that

 

 

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1the State Superintendent of Education determines have
2demonstrated the greatest improvement in achieving the
3education goals of improved student achievement and improved
4school completion, subject to appropriation by the General
5Assembly and any limitation set by the State Superintendent on
6the total amount that may be awarded to a school or school
7district; provided that such financial awards must not be used
8to enhance the compensation of staff in school districts having
9a population not exceeding 500,000.
10    (c) The State Superintendent of Education may present
11proclamations or certificates to schools and school systems
12determined to have met or exceeded the State's education goals
13under Section 2-3.64 of this Code.
14    (d) The Education Financial Award System Fund is created as
15a special fund in the State treasury. All money in the Fund
16shall be used, subject to appropriation, by the State Board of
17Education for the purpose of funding financial awards under
18this Section. The Fund shall consist of all moneys appropriated
19to the fund by the General Assembly and any gifts, grants,
20donations, and other moneys received by the State Board of
21Education for implementation of the awards system.
22    Any unexpended or unencumbered moneys remaining in the
23Education Financial Award System Fund at the end of a fiscal
24year shall remain in the Fund and shall not revert or be
25credited or transferred to the General Revenue Fund nor be
26transferred to any other fund. Any interest derived from the

 

 

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1deposit and investment of moneys in the Education Financial
2Award System Fund shall remain in the Fund and shall not be
3credited to the General Revenue Fund. The Education Financial
4Award System Fund must be appropriated and expended only for
5the awards system. The awards are subject to audit requirements
6established by the State Board of Education.
7    (e) If a school or school district meets adequate yearly
8progress criteria for 2 consecutive school years, that school
9or district shall be exempt from review and approval of its
10improvement plan for the next 2 succeeding school years.
11(Source: P.A. 93-470, eff. 8-8-03.)
 
12    (105 ILCS 5/2-3.25d)  (from Ch. 122, par. 2-3.25d)
13    Sec. 2-3.25d. Academic early warning and watch status.
14    (a) Beginning with the 2005-2006 school year, unless the
15federal government formally disapproves of such policy through
16the submission and review process for the Illinois
17Accountability Workbook, those schools that do not meet
18adequate yearly progress criteria for 2 consecutive annual
19calculations in the same subject or in their participation
20rate, attendance rate, or graduation rate shall be placed on
21academic early warning status for the next school year. Schools
22on academic early warning status that do not meet adequate
23yearly progress criteria for a third annual calculation in the
24same subject or in their participation rate, attendance rate,
25or graduation rate shall remain on academic early warning

 

 

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1status. Schools on academic early warning status that do not
2meet adequate yearly progress criteria for a fourth annual
3calculation in the same subject or in their participation rate,
4attendance rate, or graduation rate shall be placed on initial
5academic watch status. Schools on academic watch status that do
6not meet adequate yearly progress criteria for a fifth or
7subsequent annual calculation in the same subject or in their
8participation rate, attendance rate, or graduation rate shall
9remain on academic watch status. Schools on academic early
10warning or academic watch status that meet adequate yearly
11progress criteria for 2 consecutive calculations shall be
12considered as having met expectations and shall be removed from
13any status designation.
14    The school district of a school placed on either academic
15early warning status or academic watch status may appeal the
16status to the State Board of Education in accordance with
17Section 2-3.25m of this Code.
18    A school district that has one or more schools on academic
19early warning or academic watch status shall prepare a revised
20School Improvement Plan or amendments thereto setting forth the
21district's expectations for removing each school from academic
22early warning or academic watch status and for improving
23student performance in the affected school or schools.
24Districts operating under Article 34 of this Code may prepare
25the School Improvement Plan required under Section 34-2.4 of
26this Code.

 

 

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1    The revised School Improvement Plan for a school that is
2initially placed on academic early warning status or that
3remains on academic early warning status after a third annual
4calculation must be approved by the school board (and by the
5school's local school council in a district operating under
6Article 34 of this Code, unless the school is on probation
7pursuant to subsection (c) of Section 34-8.3 of this Code).
8    The revised School Improvement Plan for a school that is
9initially placed on academic watch status after a fourth annual
10calculation must be approved by the school board (and by the
11school's local school council in a district operating under
12Article 34 of this Code, unless the school is on probation
13pursuant to subsection (c) of Section 34-8.3 of this Code).
14    The revised School Improvement Plan for a school that
15remains on academic watch status after a fifth annual
16calculation must be approved by the school board (and by the
17school's local school council in a district operating under
18Article 34 of this Code, unless the school is on probation
19pursuant to subsection (c) of Section 34-8.3 of this Code). In
20addition, the district must develop a school restructuring plan
21for the school that must be approved by the school board (and
22by the school's local school council in a district operating
23under Article 34 of this Code).
24    A school on academic watch status that does not meet
25adequate yearly progress criteria for a sixth annual
26calculation shall implement its approved school restructuring

 

 

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1plan beginning with the next school year, subject to the State
2interventions specified in Section 2-3.25f of this Code.
3    (b) Beginning with the 2005-2006 school year, unless the
4federal government formally disapproves of such policy through
5the submission and review process for the Illinois
6Accountability Workbook, those school districts that do not
7meet adequate yearly progress criteria for 2 consecutive annual
8calculations in the same subject or in their participation
9rate, attendance rate, or graduation rate shall be placed on
10academic early warning status for the next school year.
11Districts on academic early warning status that do not meet
12adequate yearly progress criteria for a third annual
13calculation in the same subject or in their participation rate,
14attendance rate, or graduation rate shall remain on academic
15early warning status. Districts on academic early warning
16status that do not meet adequate yearly progress criteria for a
17fourth annual calculation in the same subject or in their
18participation rate, attendance rate, or graduation rate shall
19be placed on initial academic watch status. Districts on
20academic watch status that do not meet adequate yearly progress
21criteria for a fifth or subsequent annual calculation in the
22same subject or in their participation rate, attendance rate,
23or graduation rate shall remain on academic watch status.
24Districts on academic early warning or academic watch status
25that meet adequate yearly progress criteria for one annual
26calculation shall be considered as having met expectations and

 

 

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1shall be removed from any status designation.
2    A district placed on either academic early warning status
3or academic watch status may appeal the status to the State
4Board of Education in accordance with Section 2-3.25m of this
5Code.
6    Districts on academic early warning or academic watch
7status shall prepare a District Improvement Plan or amendments
8thereto setting forth the district's expectations for removing
9the district from academic early warning or academic watch
10status and for improving student performance in the district.
11    All District Improvement Plans must be approved by the
12school board.
13    (c) All new and revised School and District Improvement
14Plans shall be developed in collaboration with parents, staff
15in the affected school or school district, and outside experts.
16All revised School and District Improvement Plans shall be
17developed, submitted, and monitored pursuant to rules adopted
18by the State Board of Education. The revised Improvement Plan
19shall address measurable outcomes for improving student
20performance so that such performance meets adequate yearly
21progress criteria as specified by the State Board of Education
22and shall include a staff professional development plan
23developed in cooperation with staff. All school districts
24required to revise a School Improvement Plan in accordance with
25this Section shall establish a peer review process for the
26evaluation of School Improvement Plans.

 

 

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1    (d) All federal requirements apply to schools and school
2districts utilizing federal funds under Title I, Part A of the
3federal Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965.
4    (e) The State Board of Education, from any moneys it may
5have available for this purpose, must implement and administer
6a grant program that provides 2-year grants to school districts
7on the academic watch list and other school districts that have
8the lowest achieving students, as determined by the State Board
9of Education, to be used to improve student achievement. In
10order to receive a grant under this program, a school district
11must establish an accountability program. The accountability
12program must involve the use of statewide testing standards and
13local evaluation measures. A grant shall be automatically
14renewed when achievement goals are met. The Board may adopt any
15rules necessary to implement and administer this grant program.
16    (f) In addition to any moneys available under subsection
17(e) of this Section, a school district required to maintain
18School and District Improvement Plans under this Section,
19including a school district organized under Article 34 of this
20Code, shall annually receive from the State, subject to
21appropriation, an amount equal to $150 times the number of
22full-time certified teachers and administrators it employs for
23developing and implementing its mandatory School and District
24Improvement Plans, including its staff professional
25development plan.
26(Source: P.A. 96-734, eff. 8-25-09.)
 

 

 

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1    (105 ILCS 5/2-3.25d-5 new)
2    Sec. 2-3.25d-5. Educational improvement plan. Except for
3school districts required to develop School and District
4Improvement Plans under Section 2-3.25d of this Code, each
5school district shall develop, in compliance with rules
6promulgated by the State Board of Education, an educational
7improvement plan that must include (i) measures for improving
8school district, school building, and individual student
9performance and (ii) a staff professional development plan
10developed at least in cooperation with staff or, if applicable,
11the exclusive bargaining representatives of the staff. The
12district shall develop the educational improvement plan in
13collaboration with parents, staff, and the staff's exclusive
14bargaining representatives, if any.
 
15    (105 ILCS 5/2-3.163 new)
16    Sec. 2-3.163. The Digital Learning Technology Grant
17Program.
18    (a) As used in this Section, unless the context otherwise
19requires, "information technology education" means education
20in the development, design, use, maintenance, repair, and
21application of information technology systems or equipment,
22including, but not limited to, computers, the Internet,
23telecommunications devices and networks, and multi-media
24techniques.

 

 

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1    (b) There is created the Digital Learning Technology Grant
2Program to provide money to school districts and charter
3schools to use in integrating information technology and
4scientific equipment as tools to measurably improve teaching
5and learning in grades 9 through 12 in this State's public
6schools. The State Board of Education shall administer the
7grant program through the acceptance, review, and
8recommendation of applications submitted pursuant to this
9Section.
10    (c) Grants awarded through the grant program created under
11this Section shall continue for 4 fiscal years and may be
12renewed as provided by rule of the State Board of Education.
13Grants awarded through the program shall be paid out of any
14money appropriated or credited to the Digital Learning
15Technology Grant Fund. A school district or charter school
16shall use any moneys obtained through the grant program to
17integrate information technology education into the 9th grade
18through 12th grade curriculum. In the case of a school
19district, such integration shall be accomplished in one or more
20public schools in the district. The school district or charter
21school may contract with one or more private entities for
22assistance in integrating information technology education
23into the curriculum. In addition, school districts and charter
24schools are encouraged to partner with businesses for
25assistance in integrating information technology education
26into the curriculum.

 

 

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1    (d) The State Board of Education shall adopt rules for the
2administration and implementation of the grant program created
3under this Section. Subject to appropriation, the grants shall
4be awarded through the program for the 2016-2017 school year
5and annually thereafter.
6    (e) Any school district or charter school that seeks to
7participate in the grant program created under this Section
8shall submit an application to the State Board of Education in
9the form and according to the deadlines established by rule of
10the State Board of Education. The application shall include the
11following information:
12        (1) if the applicant is a school district, the names of
13    the schools that will receive the benefits of the grant;
14        (2) the current level of information technology
15    education integration at the recipient schools;
16        (3) the school district's or charter school's plan for
17    integrating information technology education into the 9th
18    grade through 12th grade curriculum, including any
19    specific method or program to be used, and any entities
20    with whom the school district or charter school plans to
21    contract or cooperate in achieving the integration;
22        (4) the specific, measurable goals to be achieved and
23    the actual deliverables to be produced through the
24    integration of information technology education into the
25    curriculum, a deadline for achieving those goals, and a
26    proposed method of measuring whether the goals were

 

 

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1    achieved;
2        (5) any businesses with which the school district or
3    charter school has partnered to improve the availability
4    and integration of information technology education within
5    the curriculum; and
6        (6) any other information that may be specified by rule
7    of the State Board of Education.
8    (f) In recommending and awarding grants through the
9program, the State Board of Education shall consider the
10following criteria:
11        (1) the degree to which information technology
12    education is already integrated into the curriculum of the
13    applying school district or charter school to ensure that
14    those school districts and charter schools with the least
15    degree of integration receive the grants first;
16        (2) the degree to which the applicant's proposed plan
17    for using the grant moneys will result in integration of
18    information technology tools and scientific equipment in a
19    manner that measurably improves teaching and learning;
20        (3) the validity, clarity, and measurability of the
21    goals established by the applicant and the validity of the
22    proposed methods for measuring achievement of the goals;
23        (4) the accountability system of specific measures and
24    deliverables to determine a baseline and annually assess
25    improvements in teaching and learning;
26        (5) any other financial resources available to the

 

 

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1    applicant for integrating information technology education
2    into the curriculum;
3        (6) the degree to which the applicant is cooperating or
4    partnering with businesses to improve the availability and
5    integration of information technology education in the
6    curriculum; the State Board of Education shall apply this
7    criteria with the goal of encouraging such partnerships;
8        (7) the strength and capacity of the applicant to
9    collaborate with the science, technology, engineering and
10    mathematics education center network under Section 4.5 of
11    the Illinois Mathematics and Science Academy Law and to
12    provide open source networking with other public schools in
13    this State; and
14        (8) any other criteria established by rule of the State
15    Board of Education to ensure that grants are awarded to
16    school districts and charter schools that demonstrate the
17    greatest need and the most valid, effective plan for
18    integrating information technology education into the
19    curriculum.
20    (g) In awarding grants through the grant program, the State
21Board of Education shall ensure, to the extent possible, that
22the grants are awarded to school districts and charter schools
23in all areas of this State.
24    (h) Nothing in this Section shall be construed to limit or
25otherwise affect any school district's ability to enter into an
26agreement with or receive funds from any private entity.

 

 

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1    (i) Each school district and charter school that receives a
2grant through the grant program created under this Section
3shall, by August 1 of the school year for which the grant was
4awarded, submit to the State Board of Education a report
5specifying the following information:
6        (1) the manner in which the grant moneys were used;
7        (2) the progress made toward achieving the goals
8    specified in the grant recipient's application;
9        (3) any additional entities and businesses with whom
10    the grant recipient has contracted or partnered with the
11    goal of achieving greater integration of information
12    technology education in the 9th grade through 12th grade
13    curriculum;
14        (4) the recipient school district's and charter
15    school's plan for continuing the integration of
16    information technology education into the curriculum,
17    regardless of whether the grant is renewed; and
18        (5) any other information specified by rule of the
19    State Board of Education.
20    (j) Notwithstanding subsection (i) of this Section, a
21recipient school need not submit a report for any academic year
22in which no grants are made through the grant program.
23    (k) The Digital Learning Technology Grant Fund is created
24as a special fund in the State treasury. All money in the Fund
25shall be used, subject to appropriation, by the State Board of
26Education for the purpose of funding grants under this Section.

 

 

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1    (l) The State Board of Education may solicit and accept
2money in the form of gifts, contributions, and grants to be
3deposited into the Digital Learning Technology Grant Fund. The
4acceptance of federal grants for purposes of this Section does
5not commit State funds nor place an obligation upon the General
6Assembly to continue the purposes for which the federal funds
7are made available.
 
8    (105 ILCS 5/2-3.164 new)
9    Sec. 2-3.164. Best practices clearinghouse.
10    (a) Beginning July 1, 2016 and subject to appropriation,
11the State Board of Education shall establish an online
12clearinghouse of information relating to best practices of
13campuses and school districts regarding instruction, public
14school finance, resource allocation, and business practices.
15To the extent practicable, the State Board of Education shall
16ensure that information provided through the online
17clearinghouse is specific, actionable information relating to
18the best practices of high-performing and highly efficient
19school districts rather than general guidelines relating to
20school district operation. The information must be accessible
21by school districts and interested members of the public.
22    (b) The State Board of Education shall solicit and collect
23from exemplary or recognized school districts, charter
24schools, and other institutions determined by the State Board
25of Education examples of best practices relating to

 

 

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1instruction, public school finance, resource allocation, and
2business practices, including best practices relating to
3curriculum, scope and sequence, compensation and incentive
4systems, bilingual education and special language programs,
5compensatory education programs, and the effective use of
6instructional technology, including online courses.
7    (c) The State Board of Education may contract for the
8services of one or more third-party contractors to develop,
9implement, and maintain a system of collecting and evaluating
10the best practices of campuses and school districts as provided
11by this Section. In addition to any other considerations
12required by law, the State Board of Education must consider an
13applicant's demonstrated competence and qualifications in
14analyzing school district practices in awarding a contract
15under this subsection (c).
16    (d) The State Board of Education may purchase from
17available funds curriculum and other instructional tools
18identified under this Section to provide for use by school
19districts.
 
20    (105 ILCS 5/2-3.165 new)
21    Sec. 2-3.165. The Science, Technology, Engineering, and
22Mathematics Education Center Grant Program.
23    (a) As used in this Section, unless the context otherwise
24requires:
25    "Grant program" means the science, technology,

 

 

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1engineering, and mathematics education center grant program
2created in this Section.
3    "Science, technology, engineering, and mathematics
4education" or "STEM" means learning experiences that integrate
5innovative curricular, instructional, and assessment
6strategies and materials, laboratory and mentorship
7experiences, and authentic inquiry-based and problem centered
8instruction to stimulate learning in the areas of science,
9technology, engineering, and mathematics.
10    "Science, technology, engineering, and mathematics
11education innovation center" means a center operated by a
12school district, a charter school, the Illinois Mathematics and
13Science Academy, or a joint collaborative partnership that
14provides STEM teaching and learning experiences, materials,
15laboratory and mentorship experiences, and educational
16seminars, institutes or workshops for students and teachers.
17    (b) Subject to appropriation, the Illinois Mathematics and
18Science Academy, in consultation and partnership with the State
19Board of Education, the Board of Higher Education, the business
20community, the entrepreneurial technology community, and
21professionals, including teachers, in the field of science,
22technology, engineering, and mathematics shall create a
23strategic plan for developing a whole systems approach to
24redesigning prekindergarten through grade 12 STEM education in
25this State, including, but not limited to, designing and
26creating integrative teaching and learning networks among

 

 

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1science, technology, engineering, and mathematics innovation
2education centers, university and corporate research
3facilities, and established STEM laboratories, businesses, and
4the Illinois Mathematics and Science Academy.
5    (c) At a minimum, the plan shall provide direction for
6program design and development, including the following:
7        (1) continuous generation and sharing of curricular,
8    instructional, assessment, and program development
9    materials and information about STEM teaching and learning
10    throughout the network;
11        (2) identification of curricular, instructional, and
12    assessment goals that reflect the research in cognition and
13    the development of creativity in STEM fields and the
14    systemic changes in STEM education, so as to be consistent
15    with inquiry-based and problem-centered instruction in
16    science, technology, engineering, and mathematics. Such
17    goals shall also reflect current frameworks, standards,
18    and guidelines, such as those defined by the National
19    Research Council (National Academy of Science), the
20    American Association for the Advancement of Science, the
21    National Council of Teachers of Mathematics, the National
22    Science Teachers Association, and professional
23    associations in STEM fields;
24        (3) identification of essential teacher competencies
25    and a comprehensive plan for recruiting, mentoring, and
26    retaining STEM teachers, especially those in

 

 

SB1260- 94 -LRB099 04267 HLH 24291 b

1    under-resourced schools and school districts; creation of
2    a community of practice among STEM center educators and
3    other teachers of science, technology, engineering, and
4    mathematics as part of a network of promising practices in
5    teaching; and the establishment of recruitment, mentoring,
6    and retention plans for Golden Apple teachers in STEM
7    fields and Illinois STEM teachers who have received
8    national board certification and are also part of the STEM
9    innovation network;
10        (4) a statement of desired competencies for STEM
11    learning by students;
12        (5) a description of recommended courses of action to
13    improve educational experiences, programs, practices, and
14    service;
15        (6) the improvement of access and availability of STEM
16    courses, especially for rural school districts and
17    particularly to those groups which are traditionally
18    underrepresented through the Illinois Virtual High School;
19    the plan shall include goals for using telecommunications
20    facilities as recommended by a telecommunications advisory
21    commission;
22        (7) expectations and guidelines for designing and
23    developing a dynamic, creative, and engaged teaching
24    network;
25        (8) a description of the laboratory and incubator model
26    for the STEM centers;

 

 

SB1260- 95 -LRB099 04267 HLH 24291 b

1        (9) support for innovation and entrepreneurship in
2    curriculum, instruction, assessment, and professional
3    development; and
4        (10) cost estimates.
5    (d) The plan shall provide a framework that enables the
6teachers, school districts, and institutions of higher
7education to operate as an integrated system. The plan shall
8provide innovative mechanisms and incentives to the following:
9        (1) educational providers, as well as professional
10    associations, business and university partners, and
11    educational receivers (students and teachers) at the
12    prekindergarten through grade 12 and postsecondary levels
13    to design and implement innovative curricula, including
14    experiences, mentorships, institutes, and seminars and to
15    develop new materials and activities for these;
16        (2) course providers and receivers for leveraging
17    distance learning technologies through the Illinois
18    Virtual High School and applying distance learning
19    instructional design techniques, taking into consideration
20    the work of a telecommunications advisory commission;
21        (3) prekindergarten through grade 12 teachers to
22    encourage them to take graduate STEM courses and degree
23    programs; such incentives may include a tuition matching
24    program;
25        (4) appropriate State agencies, federal agencies,
26    professional organizations, public television stations,

 

 

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1    and businesses and industries to involve them in the
2    development of the strategic plan; and
3        (5) businesses, industries, and individuals for
4    volunteering their time and community resources.
5    (e) The plan shall provide a mechanism for incorporating
6the cost for accomplishing these goals into the ongoing
7operating budget beginning in 2016.
8    (f) There is created the Science and Technology Education
9Center Grant Program to provide development and operating
10moneys in the form of matching funds for existing or proposed
11nonprofit STEM education centers. At a minimum, each STEM
12center that receives a grant shall not only provide STEM
13education activities to students enrolled in the school
14district or charter school and materials and educational
15workshops to teachers employed by the school district or
16charter school, but also, as part of generative and innovative
17teaching and learning network, shall share information with all
18STEM centers, the Illinois Mathematics and Science Academy, and
19partner associations or businesses.
20    (g) School districts, charter schools, the Illinois
21Mathematics and Science Academy, and joint collaborative
22partnerships may establish science and technology education
23centers or may contract with regional offices of education,
24intermediate service centers, public community colleges,
254-year institutions of higher education, non-profit or
26for-profit education providers, youth service agencies,

 

 

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1community-based organizations, or other appropriate entities
2to establish science and technology education centers within
3the public school system. Districts and charter schools may
4individually operate alternative learning opportunities
5programs or may collaborate with 2 or more districts or charter
6schools or do both to create and operate science and technology
7education centers.
8    (h) Beginning with the 2016-2017 school year, the State
9Board of Education shall, subject to available appropriations,
10annually award one or more science, technology, engineering,
11and mathematics education center grants for the development and
12operation of STEM centers.
13    A school district, a charter school, the Illinois
14Mathematics and Science Academy, or a joint collaborative
15partnership may apply for a STEM center grant pursuant to
16procedures and time lines specified by rule of the State Board
17of Education.
18    (i) The State Board of Education, in selecting one or more
19school districts, charter schools, or joint collaborative
20partnerships or the Illinois Mathematics and Science Academy
21for receipt of a grant, shall give priority to applicants that
22are geographically located farthest from other STEM centers or
23applicants that have less opportunity for science, technology,
24engineering, and mathematics resource support. The State Board
25shall also consider the following factors:
26        (1) the facility, equipment, and technology that are or

 

 

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1    will be provided and the activities and range of programs
2    that are or will be offered by the STEM education center;
3        (2) the strength and capacity of the school district or
4    charter school to work as a network cooperatively with the
5    Illinois Mathematics and Science Academy, other STEM
6    centers, universities and STEM laboratories, businesses,
7    and industries; and
8        (3) recommendations of the Illinois P-20 Council and
9    the Illinois Mathematics and Science Academy.
10    (j) A STEM center grant shall be payable from moneys
11appropriated to the STEM Education Center Grant Fund.
12    The State Board of Education shall specify the amount to be
13awarded to each school district, charter school, or joint
14collaborative partnership that is selected to receive a grant
15and to the Illinois Mathematics and Science Academy, if
16selected to receive a grant. The amount awarded to a new STEM
17center for start-up costs shall not exceed $1,000,000 for the
18first fiscal year and may not be renewed. The amount awarded to
19an operating STEM center for operating costs shall not exceed
20$500,000 for one fiscal year and shall be renewed annually for
215 consecutive years if the STEM center is meeting its
22accountability goals and its role as an active partner in a
23generative teaching and learning network.
24    (k) Each school district, charter school, or joint
25collaborative partnership that receives a grant pursuant to the
26grant program and the Illinois Mathematics and Science Academy,

 

 

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1if selected to receive a grant, shall demonstrate, prior to
2receiving any actual moneys, that the center has received or
3has a written commitment for matching funds from other public
4or private sources in the amount of a dollar-for-dollar match
5with the amount of the grant. This requirement may be waived
6upon application to and approval by the State Board of
7Education based on a showing of continued need or financial
8hardship.
9    (l) The State Board of Education shall promulgate such
10rules as are required in this Section and such additional rules
11as may be required for implementation of the grant program.
12    (m) Each school district or charter school that receives a
13grant through the grant program shall, by the close of each
14school year for which the grant was awarded, submit to the
15Illinois Mathematics and Science Academy and the State Board of
16Education a report specifying the following information:
17        (1) the manner in which the grant money was used;
18        (2) the progress made toward achieving the goals and
19    producing the deliverables specified in the grant
20    recipient's application;
21        (3) any additional entities and businesses with whom
22    the grant recipient has contracted or partnered with the
23    goal of achieving greater integration of information
24    technology education in prekindergarten through grade 12
25    curriculum;
26        (4) the recipient school district's or charter

 

 

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1    school's plan for continuing the integration of
2    information technology education into the curriculum,
3    regardless of whether the grant is renewed;
4        (5) the documentation demonstrating effective digital
5    collaboration and networking, technological cooperation
6    and sharing, and personal networking via innovative,
7    entrepreneurial networks;
8        (6) a description of innovative instructional methods;
9        (7) evidence of staff training and outreach to teachers
10    beyond those working in the STEM education center; and
11        (8) any other information specified by rule of the
12    State Board of Education.
13    (n) Notwithstanding the other provisions of this Section, a
14recipient school need not submit a report for any academic year
15in which no grants are made through the grant program.
16    (o) The STEM Education Center Grant Fund is created as a
17special fund in the State treasury. All money in the Fund shall
18be used, subject to appropriation, by the State Board of
19Education for the purpose of funding science, technology,
20engineering, and mathematics education center grants awarded
21under this Section.
22    (p) The State Board of Education may solicit and accept
23money in the form of gifts, contributions, and grants to be
24deposited in the STEM Education Center Grant Fund. The
25acceptance of federal grants for purposes of this Section does
26not commit State funds nor place an obligation upon the General

 

 

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1Assembly to continue the purposes for which the federal funds
2are made available.
 
3    (105 ILCS 5/2-3.166 new)
4    Sec. 2-3.166. School Improvement Partnership Pool Fund.
5    (a) The School Improvement Partnership Pool Fund is created
6as a special fund in the State treasury. All interest earned on
7moneys in the Fund shall be deposited into the Fund. The School
8Improvement Partnership Pool Fund shall not be subject to
9sweeps, administrative charges, or charge-backs, such as, but
10not limited to, those authorized under Section 8h of the State
11Finance Act, nor any other fiscal or budgetary maneuver that
12would in any way transfer any funds from the School Improvement
13Partnership Pool Fund into any other fund of the State.
14    (b) Beginning in Fiscal Year 2017, moneys in the School
15Improvement Partnership Pool Fund shall be used, subject to
16appropriation, by the State Board of Education for a
17competitive grant program to provide school districts with
18demonstrated academic and financial need quality, integrated
19support systems, such as training for staff, tutoring programs
20for students, small school initiatives, literacy coaching,
21proven programs such as reduced class size, extended learning
22time, and after school and summer school programs, programs to
23engage parents, and other systems as determined by the State
24Board of Education.
25    (c) School districts eligible to apply to the State Board

 

 

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1of Education for a grant under subsection (b) of this Section
2shall be limited to those (i) with any school that has not met
3adequate yearly progress under the federal No Child Left Behind
4Act of 2001 for at least 2 consecutive years or (ii) that have
5been designated through the State Board of Education's School
6District Financial Profile System as on financial warning or
7financial watch status. The State Board may, by rule, establish
8any additional procedures with respect to this grant program.
 
9    (105 ILCS 5/2-3.167 new)
10    Sec. 2-3.167. Resource management service.
11    (a) Subject to appropriation, the State Board of Education
12shall establish and maintain an Internet web-based resource
13management service for all school districts on or before July
141, 2018. If no State funds are provided to school districts
15specifically for implementation of this Section, school
16districts are relieved from implementing all requirements
17under this Section.
18    (b) The resource management service shall identify
19resource configurations that contribute to improving internal
20resources for instructional programs, provide action-oriented
21analysis and solutions, and give school districts the ability
22to explore different scenarios of resource allocation.
23    (c) Annually, by the first day of October, an Internet
24web-based preliminary resource allocation report must be
25generated for each school district and delivered via the

 

 

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1Internet to each district superintendent for use by the
2management team and the exclusive bargaining agents of the
3school district's employees. This report shall identify
4potential cost savings or resource reallocation opportunities
5for the district in 5 core areas of school district spending.
6These core areas are instruction, operation and maintenance,
7transportation, food service, and central services. This
8analysis shall show district spending in detailed
9subcategories compared to demographically or operationally
10similar peer school districts. The web-based resource
11allocation reports generated under this Section constitute
12preliminary drafts, notes, recommendations, memoranda, and
13other records in which opinions are expressed or policies or
14actions are formulated and therefore exempt from disclosure
15under subdivision (f) of subsection (1) of Section 7 of the
16Freedom of Information Act.
17    (d) Each school district shall have the ability through the
18on-line resource allocation report to test various resource
19allocation scenarios relative to pre-defined peers as well as
20geographic peers and the most efficient peers statewide. Each
21district shall have the ability to choose specific combinations
22of districts for comparison.
23    (e) The resource management service shall contain, based on
24the spending and demographic profile of the school district,
25action-oriented information, such as effective best practices
26in schools districts, diagnostic questions, and other

 

 

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1management or community considerations that may be implemented
2to capture savings identified in the resource allocation
3report.
4    (f) The resource management service may be initiated and
5maintained through a contract between the State Board of
6Education and an independent third party specializing in school
7market research within this State and the United States. Any
8contract with a third party must be awarded through the State
9Board of Education's standard request for proposal procedure.
10Up to 25% of the annual appropriation may be allocated by the
11State Board of Education to hire personnel and facilitate data
12collection. No less than 25% of the annual appropriation shall
13be utilized by the State Board of Education to deliver training
14to school district personnel in the use of the management
15service. Such training shall be delivered by certificated
16school business officials or State Board of Education trained
17personnel and may be provided through administrator academies
18and mentoring programs. The State Board of Education may
19establish contracts with other organizations to provide such
20training and mentoring.
21    In the event that a district does not employ a certificated
22school business official, if State funds are provided
23specifically for this purpose, at least one employee must be
24trained and certified in the use of the resource management
25service. In addition, a representative of the exclusive
26bargaining agents of the school district's employees shall be

 

 

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1invited to be trained and certified.
2    (g) The State Board of Education shall identify the data
3required to implement the resource management service and
4develop annual data reporting instruments designed to collect
5the information from each school district.
6    The State Board of Education may provide grants to school
7districts to permit those school districts to develop and
8implement a plan for a shared services agreement in the
9following areas: operation and maintenance and central
10services.
11    (h) Annually, the certificated school business official or
12resource management service trained employee in each school
13district shall review and certify that the resource allocation
14report has been received and reviewed by the management team
15and the exclusive bargaining agent of the district.
16Subsequently, a report must be filed with the State Board of
17Education identifying the considerations that will be studied
18as a result of such analysis. In addition, any implementation
19of strategies or reallocation of resources associated with the
20resource management service must be annually reported to the
21Board of Education, the exclusive bargaining agents of the
22school district's employees, and, subsequently, the State
23Board of Education. The State Board shall annually prepare a
24cumulative report to be posted electronically containing those
25initiatives studied and implemented on a statewide basis.
 

 

 

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1    (105 ILCS 5/3-7)  (from Ch. 122, par. 3-7)
2    Sec. 3-7. Failure to prepare and forward information. If
3the trustees of schools of any township in Class II county
4school units, or any school district which forms a part of a
5Class II county school unit but which is not subject to the
6jurisdiction of the trustees of schools of any township in
7which such district is located, or any school district in any
8Class I county school units fail to prepare and forward or
9cause to be prepared and forwarded to the regional
10superintendent of schools, reports required by this Act, the
11regional superintendent of schools shall furnish such
12information or he shall employ a person or persons to furnish
13such information, as far as practicable. Such person shall have
14access to the books, records and papers of the school district
15to enable him or them to prepare such reports, and the school
16district shall permit such person or persons to examine such
17books, records and papers at such time and such place as such
18person or persons may desire for the purpose aforesaid. For
19such services the regional superintendent of schools shall bill
20the district an amount to cover the cost of preparation of such
21reports if he employs a person to prepare such reports.
22    Each school district shall, as of June 30 of each year,
23cause an audit of its accounts to be made by a person lawfully
24qualified to practice public accounting as regulated by the
25Illinois Public Accounting Act. Such audit shall include (i)
26development of a risk assessment of district internal controls,

 

 

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1(ii) an annual review and update of the risk assessment, and
2(iii) an annual management letter that analyzes significant
3risk assessment findings, recommends changes for strengthening
4controls and reducing identified risks, and specifies
5timeframes for implementation of these recommendations, as
6well as financial statements of the district applicable to the
7type of records required by other sections of this Act and in
8addition shall set forth the scope of audit and shall include
9the professional opinion signed by the auditor, or if such an
10opinion is denied by the auditor, shall set forth the reasons
11for such denial. Each school district shall on or before
12October 15 of each year, submit an original and one copy of the
13such audit to the regional superintendent of schools in the
14educational service region having jurisdiction in which case
15the regional superintendent of schools shall be relieved of
16responsibility in regard to the accounts of the school
17district. If any school district fails to supply the regional
18superintendent of schools with a copy of such audit report on
19or before October 15, or within such time extended by the
20regional superintendent of schools from that date, not to
21exceed 60 days, then it shall be the responsibility of the
22regional superintendent of schools having jurisdiction to
23cause such audit to be made by employing an accountant licensed
24to practice in the State of Illinois to conduct such audit and
25shall bill the district for such services, or shall with the
26personnel of his office make such audit to his satisfaction and

 

 

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1bill the district for such service. In the latter case, if the
2audit is made by personnel employed in the office of the
3regional superintendent of schools having jurisdiction, then
4the regional superintendent of schools shall not be relieved of
5the responsibility as to the accountability of the school
6district. The copy of the audit shall be forwarded by the
7regional superintendent to the State Board of Education on or
8before November 15 of each year and shall be filed by the State
9Board of Education. Beginning on July 1, 2016, all school
10districts shall utilize a competitive request for proposals
11process at least once every 5 years when contracting for such
12an annual audit, provided that school districts with existing
13contracts of less than 5 years in length that are in effect on
14July 1, 2016 shall utilize a competitive request for proposals
15process when contracting for an annual audit after the
16expiration date of the existing contract.
17    Each school district that is the administrative district
18for several school districts operating under a joint agreement
19as authorized by this Act shall, as of June 30 each year, cause
20an audit of the accounts of the joint agreement to be made by a
21person lawfully qualified to practice public accounting as
22regulated by the Illinois Public Accounting Act. Such audit
23shall include (i) development of a risk assessment of district
24internal controls, (ii) an annual review and update of the risk
25assessment, and (iii) an annual management letter that analyzes
26significant risk assessment findings, recommends changes for

 

 

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1strengthening controls and reducing identified risks, and
2specifies timeframes for implementation of these
3recommendations, as well as financial statements of the
4operation of the joint agreement applicable to the type of
5records required by this Act and, in addition, shall set forth
6the scope of the audit and shall include the professional
7opinion signed by the auditor, or if such an opinion is denied,
8the auditor shall set forth the reason for such denial. Each
9administrative district of a joint agreement shall on or before
10October 15 each year, submit an original and one copy of such
11audit to the regional superintendent of schools in the
12educational service region having jurisdiction in which case
13the regional superintendent of schools shall be relieved of
14responsibility in regard to the accounts of the joint
15agreement. The copy of the audit shall be forwarded by the
16regional superintendent to the State Board of Education on or
17before November 15 of each year and shall be filed by the State
18Board of Education. The cost of such an audit shall be
19apportioned among and paid by the several districts who are
20parties to the joint agreement, in the same manner as other
21costs and expenses accruing to the districts jointly. Beginning
22on July 1, 2015, all school districts operating under a joint
23agreement shall utilize a competitive request for proposals
24process at least once every 5 years when contracting for such
25an annual audit, provided that all school districts operating
26under a joint agreement with existing contracts of less than 5

 

 

SB1260- 110 -LRB099 04267 HLH 24291 b

1years in length that are in effect on July 1, 2015 shall
2utilize a competitive request for proposals process when
3contracting for an annual audit after the expiration date of
4the existing contract.
5    The State Board of Education shall determine the adequacy
6of the audits. All audits shall be kept on file in the office
7of the State Board of Education.
8(Source: P.A. 86-1441; 87-473.)
 
9    (105 ILCS 5/10-16.10 new)
10    Sec. 10-16.10. Board member leadership training.
11    (a) This Section shall apply to all school board members
12serving pursuant to Section 10-10 of this Code who have been
13elected on or after the effective date of this amendatory Act
14of the 99th General Assembly or appointed to fill a vacancy of
15at least one year's duration on or after the effective date of
16this amendatory Act of the 99th General Assembly.
17    (b) It is the policy of this State to encourage every
18voting member of a board of education of a school district
19elected or appointed for a term beginning on or after the
20effective date of this amendatory Act of the 99th General
21Assembly, within a year after the effective date of this
22amendatory Act of the 99th General Assembly or the first year
23of his or her term, to complete a minimum of 4 hours of
24professional development leadership training covering topics
25in education and labor law, financial oversight and

 

 

SB1260- 111 -LRB099 04267 HLH 24291 b

1accountability, and fiduciary responsibilities of a school
2board member.
3    (c) The training on financial oversight, accountability,
4and fiduciary responsibilities may be provided by an
5association established under this Code for the purpose of
6training school board members or by other qualified providers
7approved by the State Board of Education, in conjunction with
8an association so established.
 
9    (105 ILCS 5/10-17a)  (from Ch. 122, par. 10-17a)
10    Sec. 10-17a. State, school district, and school report
11cards.
12    (1) By October 31, 2013 and October 31 of each subsequent
13school year, the State Board of Education, through the State
14Superintendent of Education, shall prepare a State report card,
15school district report cards, and school report cards, and
16shall by the most economic means provide to each school
17district in this State, including special charter districts and
18districts subject to the provisions of Article 34, the report
19cards for the school district and each of its schools.
20    (2) In addition to any information required by federal law,
21the State Superintendent shall determine the indicators and
22presentation of the school report card, which must include, at
23a minimum, the most current data possessed by the State Board
24of Education related to the following:
25        (A) school characteristics and student demographics,

 

 

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1    including average class size, average teaching experience,
2    student racial/ethnic breakdown, and the percentage of
3    students classified as low-income; the percentage of
4    students classified as limited English proficiency; the
5    percentage of students who have individualized education
6    plans or 504 plans that provide for special education
7    services; the percentage of students who annually
8    transferred in or out of the school district; the per-pupil
9    operating expenditure of the school district; and the
10    per-pupil State average operating expenditure for the
11    district type (elementary, high school, or unit);
12        (B) curriculum information, including, where
13    applicable, Advanced Placement, International
14    Baccalaureate or equivalent courses, dual enrollment
15    courses, foreign language classes, school personnel
16    resources (including Career Technical Education teachers),
17    before and after school programs, extracurricular
18    activities, subjects in which elective classes are
19    offered, health and wellness initiatives (including the
20    average number of days of Physical Education per week per
21    student), approved programs of study, awards received,
22    community partnerships, and special programs such as
23    programming for the gifted and talented, students with
24    disabilities, and work-study students;
25        (C) student outcomes, including, where applicable, the
26    percentage of students meeting as well as exceeding State

 

 

SB1260- 113 -LRB099 04267 HLH 24291 b

1    standards on assessments, the percentage of students in the
2    eighth grade who pass Algebra, the percentage of students
3    enrolled in post-secondary institutions (including
4    colleges, universities, community colleges,
5    trade/vocational schools, and training programs leading to
6    career certification within 2 semesters of high school
7    graduation), the percentage of students graduating from
8    high school who are college ready, the percentage of
9    students graduating from high school who are career ready,
10    and the percentage of graduates enrolled in community
11    colleges, colleges, and universities who are in one or more
12    courses that the community college, college, or university
13    identifies as a remedial course;
14        (D) student progress, including, where applicable, the
15    percentage of students in the ninth grade who have earned 5
16    credits or more without failing more than one core class, a
17    measure of students entering kindergarten ready to learn, a
18    measure of growth, and the percentage of students who enter
19    high school on track for college and career readiness; and
20        (E) the school environment, including, where
21    applicable, the percentage of students with less than 10
22    absences in a school year, the percentage of teachers with
23    less than 10 absences in a school year for reasons other
24    than professional development, leaves taken pursuant to
25    the federal Family Medical Leave Act of 1993, long-term
26    disability, or parental leaves, the 3-year average of the

 

 

SB1260- 114 -LRB099 04267 HLH 24291 b

1    percentage of teachers returning to the school from the
2    previous year, the number of different principals at the
3    school in the last 6 years, 2 or more indicators from any
4    school climate survey selected or approved by the State and
5    administered pursuant to Section 2-3.153 of this Code, with
6    the same or similar indicators included on school report
7    cards for all surveys selected or approved by the State
8    pursuant to Section 2-3.153 of this Code, and the combined
9    percentage of teachers rated as proficient or excellent in
10    their most recent evaluation.
11    The school report card shall also provide information that
12allows for comparing the current outcome, progress, and
13environment data to the State average, to the school data from
14the past 5 years, and to the outcomes, progress, and
15environment of similar schools based on the type of school and
16enrollment of low-income, special education, and limited
17English proficiency students.
18    (3) At the discretion of the State Superintendent, the
19school district report card shall include a subset of the
20information identified in paragraphs (A) through (E) of
21subsection (2) of this Section, as well as information relating
22to the operating expense per pupil and other finances of the
23school district, and the State report card shall include a
24subset of the information identified in paragraphs (A) through
25(E) of subsection (2) of this Section.
26    (4) Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in this

 

 

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1Section, in consultation with key education stakeholders, the
2State Superintendent shall at any time have the discretion to
3amend or update any and all metrics on the school, district, or
4State report card.
5    (5) Annually, no more than 30 calendar days after receipt
6of the school district and school report cards from the State
7Superintendent of Education, each school district, including
8special charter districts and districts subject to the
9provisions of Article 34, shall present such report cards at a
10regular school board meeting subject to applicable notice
11requirements, post the report cards on the school district's
12Internet web site, if the district maintains an Internet web
13site, make the report cards available to a newspaper of general
14circulation serving the district, and, upon request, send the
15report cards home to a parent (unless the district does not
16maintain an Internet web site, in which case the report card
17shall be sent home to parents without request). If the district
18posts the report card on its Internet web site, the district
19shall send a written notice home to parents stating (i) that
20the report card is available on the web site, (ii) the address
21of the web site, (iii) that a printed copy of the report card
22will be sent to parents upon request, and (iv) the telephone
23number that parents may call to request a printed copy of the
24report card.
25    (6) Nothing contained in this amendatory Act of the 98th
26General Assembly repeals, supersedes, invalidates, or

 

 

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1nullifies final decisions in lawsuits pending on the effective
2date of this amendatory Act of the 98th General Assembly in
3Illinois courts involving the interpretation of Public Act
497-8.
5    (7) The report card shall include an indicator describing
6whether the school district has improved, declined, or remained
7stable in the aggregate percentage of students making at least
8one-year's academic growth each year, subject to a statewide
9longitudinal data system being established and data being
10available.
11(Source: P.A. 97-671, eff. 1-24-12; 98-463, eff. 8-16-13;
1298-648, eff. 7-1-14.)
 
13    (105 ILCS 5/10-17b new)
14    Sec. 10-17b. Financial policies. Beginning with the second
15fiscal year after the effective date of this amendatory Act of
16the 99th General Assembly, each school board shall adopt a
17formal, written financial policy. The policy may include
18information in the following areas:
19        (1) debt capacity, issuance, and management.
20        (2) capital asset management;
21        (3) reserve or stabilization fund goals;
22        (4) periodic budget to actual comparison reports;
23        (5) fees and charges;
24        (6) the use of one-time revenue;
25        (7) risk management related to internal controls;

 

 

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1        (8) purchasing; and
2        (9) vehicle acquisition and maintenance.
3The school board shall make the policy publicly available.
 
4    (105 ILCS 5/10-17c new)
5    Sec. 10-17c. Long-term financial plan. Beginning with the
6second fiscal year after the effective date of this amendatory
7Act of the 99th General Assembly, each school board shall
8develop a long-term financial plan that extends over at least a
93-year period and that is updated and approved annually. The
10plan must include multi-year forecasts of revenues,
11expenditures, and debt. The school board may make the plan
12available to the public by publishing it as a separate document
13and submitting it with the annual budget or by posting the plan
14as a document on the school district's Internet website, if
15any. The forecasts that are the foundation of the plan must be
16available to participants in the budget process before
17budgetary decisions are made. The public must be provided
18opportunities for providing dialogue with respect to the
19long-term financial planning process. Public access and review
20shall take place as part of the official budget hearing process
21in accordance with Section 17-1 of this Code, which requires
22the posting of notice and making documents available to the
23general public at least 30 days in advance of the budget
24hearing.
 

 

 

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1    (105 ILCS 5/10-17d new)
2    Sec. 10-17d. Capital improvement plan. Beginning with the
3second fiscal year after the effective date of this amendatory
4Act of the 99th General Assembly, each school board shall
5develop a 5-year capital improvement plan that is updated and
6approved annually. The plan must include a summary list of the
7description of the capital projects to be completed over the
8next 5 years, along with projected expenditures, and revenue
9sources. The school board shall make the plan available to the
10public. The school board shall hold a public hearing on the
11capital improvement plan, which hearing may be held at a
12regularly scheduled meeting of the board. This hearing shall be
13held in the same manner and subject to the same notice and
14other requirements as the public hearing required prior to
15adoption of the budget in conformity with Section 17-1 of this
16Code, which requires the posting of notice and making documents
17available to the general public at least 30 days in advance of
18the budget hearing.
 
19    (105 ILCS 5/10-20.56 new)
20    Sec. 10-20.56. School district financial accountability.
21    (a) A school board shall annually include a user-friendly
22executive summary as part of the district's budget. The
23executive summary shall include all of the following:
24        (1) The district's major goals and objectives.
25        (2) A discussion of the major financial factors and

 

 

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1    trends affecting the budget, such as changes in revenues,
2    enrollment, and debt.
3        (3) A description of the budget process.
4        (4) An overview of revenues and expenditures for all
5    funds, including at least 3 to 5 years of prior and future
6    trends, based on data from the annual financial report.
7        (5) An explanation of significant financial and
8    demographic trends.
9        (6) An explanation of the reasons for a budget deficit
10    and an explanation of how the deficit is being addressed in
11    accordance with Section 17-1 of this Code.
12        (7) A budget forecast for at least 3 to 5 years in the
13    future.
14        (8) Student enrollment trends, including a future
15    forecast.
16        (9) The number of personnel by type.
17        (10) Changes in both the long term and short term debt
18    burden.
19    (b) Beginning with the second fiscal year after the
20effective date of this amendatory Act of the 99th General
21Assembly, a school board shall annually include in the full
22budget document the following items; any or all of the
23following items may be published as separate documents provided
24that they are explicitly referenced in the annual budget and
25attached thereto and provided that they are made publicly
26available at the same time as the tentative budget document:

 

 

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1        (1) An organizational chart.
2        (2) Formal financial policies pursuant to Section
3    10-17b of this Code.
4        (3) The district's long-term financial plan pursuant
5    to Section 10-17c of this Code or a summary of the
6    long-term financial plan.
7        (4) The district's capital improvement plan pursuant
8    to Section 10-17d of this Code or a summary of the capital
9    improvement plan.
 
10    (105 ILCS 5/10-22.45)  (from Ch. 122, par. 10-22.45)
11    Sec. 10-22.45. A school board shall To establish an audit
12committee, which may include and to appoint members of the
13board, or other appropriate officers, or persons who do not
14serve on the board to the committee, to review audit reports
15and any other financial reports and documents, including
16management letters prepared by or on behalf of the board.
17Nothing in this Section prohibits a school district from
18maintaining its own internal audit function.
19(Source: P.A. 82-644.)
 
20    (105 ILCS 5/17-2.11d new)
21    Sec. 17-2.11d. Non-referendum bonds. Upon the
22certification of an architect and subsequent approval by the
23regional superintendent of schools and the State Board of
24Education, a board of education governing a school district

 

 

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1having not more than 500,000 inhabitants may issue
2non-referendum bonds for the purposes described in Section 19-3
3of this Code. Such bonds may be issued in excess of any
4statutory limitation as to debt prescribed in Article 19 of
5this Code.
 
6    (105 ILCS 5/18-8.05)
7    Sec. 18-8.05. Basis for apportionment of general State
8financial aid and supplemental general State aid to the common
9schools for the 1998-1999 and subsequent school years.
 
10(A) General Provisions.
11    (1) The provisions of this Section apply to the 1998-1999
12and subsequent school years. The system of general State
13financial aid provided for in this Section is designed to
14assure that, through a combination of State financial aid and
15required local resources, the financial support provided each
16pupil in Average Daily Attendance equals or exceeds a
17prescribed per pupil Foundation Level. This formula approach
18imputes a level of per pupil Available Local Resources and
19provides for the basis to calculate a per pupil level of
20general State financial aid that, when added to Available Local
21Resources, equals or exceeds the Foundation Level. The amount
22of per pupil general State financial aid for school districts,
23in general, varies in inverse relation to Available Local
24Resources. Per pupil amounts are based upon each school

 

 

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1district's Average Daily Attendance as that term is defined in
2this Section.
3    (2) In addition to general State financial aid, school
4districts with specified levels or concentrations of pupils
5from low income households are eligible to receive supplemental
6general State financial aid grants as provided pursuant to
7subsection (H). The supplemental State aid grants provided for
8school districts under subsection (H) shall be appropriated for
9distribution to school districts as part of the same line item
10in which the general State financial aid of school districts is
11appropriated under this Section.
12    (3) To receive financial assistance under this Section,
13school districts are required to file claims with the State
14Board of Education, subject to the following requirements:
15        (a) Any school district which fails for any given
16    school year to maintain school as required by law, or to
17    maintain a recognized school is not eligible to file for
18    such school year any claim upon the Common School Fund. In
19    case of nonrecognition of one or more attendance centers in
20    a school district otherwise operating recognized schools,
21    the claim of the district shall be reduced in the
22    proportion which the Average Daily Attendance in the
23    attendance center or centers bear to the Average Daily
24    Attendance in the school district. A "recognized school"
25    means any public school which meets the standards as
26    established for recognition by the State Board of

 

 

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1    Education. A school district or attendance center not
2    having recognition status at the end of a school term is
3    entitled to receive State aid payments due upon a legal
4    claim which was filed while it was recognized.
5        (b) School district claims filed under this Section are
6    subject to Sections 18-9 and 18-12, except as otherwise
7    provided in this Section.
8        (c) If a school district operates a full year school
9    under Section 10-19.1, the general State aid to the school
10    district shall be determined by the State Board of
11    Education in accordance with this Section as near as may be
12    applicable.
13        (d) (Blank).
14    (4) Except as provided in subsections (H) and (L), the
15board of any district receiving any of the grants provided for
16in this Section may apply those funds to any fund so received
17for which that board is authorized to make expenditures by law.
18    School districts are not required to exert a minimum
19Operating Tax Rate in order to qualify for assistance under
20this Section.
21    (5) As used in this Section the following terms, when
22capitalized, shall have the meaning ascribed herein:
23        (a) "Average Daily Attendance": A count of pupil
24    attendance in school, averaged as provided for in
25    subsection (C) and utilized in deriving per pupil financial
26    support levels.

 

 

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1        (b) "Available Local Resources": A computation of
2    local financial support, calculated on the basis of Average
3    Daily Attendance and derived as provided pursuant to
4    subsection (D).
5        (c) "Corporate Personal Property Replacement Taxes":
6    Funds paid to local school districts pursuant to "An Act in
7    relation to the abolition of ad valorem personal property
8    tax and the replacement of revenues lost thereby, and
9    amending and repealing certain Acts and parts of Acts in
10    connection therewith", certified August 14, 1979, as
11    amended (Public Act 81-1st S.S.-1).
12        (d) "Foundation Level": A prescribed level of per pupil
13    financial support as provided for in subsection (B).
14        (e) "Operating Tax Rate": All school district property
15    taxes extended for all purposes, except Bond and Interest,
16    Summer School, Rent, Capital Improvement, and Vocational
17    Education Building purposes.
 
18(B) Foundation Level.
19    (1) The Foundation Level is a figure established by the
20State representing the minimum level of per pupil financial
21support that should be available to provide for the basic
22education of each pupil in Average Daily Attendance. As set
23forth in this Section, each school district is assumed to exert
24a sufficient local taxing effort such that, in combination with
25the aggregate of general State financial aid provided the

 

 

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1district, an aggregate of State and local resources are
2available to meet the basic education needs of pupils in the
3district.
4    (2) For the 1998-1999 school year, the Foundation Level of
5support is $4,225. For the 1999-2000 school year, the
6Foundation Level of support is $4,325. For the 2000-2001 school
7year, the Foundation Level of support is $4,425. For the
82001-2002 school year and 2002-2003 school year, the Foundation
9Level of support is $4,560. For the 2003-2004 school year, the
10Foundation Level of support is $4,810. For the 2004-2005 school
11year, the Foundation Level of support is $4,964. For the
122005-2006 school year, the Foundation Level of support is
13$5,164. For the 2006-2007 school year, the Foundation Level of
14support is $5,334. For the 2007-2008 school year, the
15Foundation Level of support is $5,734. For the 2008-2009 school
16year, the Foundation Level of support is $5,959.
17    (3) For the 2009-2010 school year through the 2015-2016 and
18each school year thereafter, the Foundation Level of support is
19$6,119 or such greater amount as may be established by law by
20the General Assembly.
21    (4) For the 2016-2017 school year, the Foundation Level of
22support is $6,190. For each school year thereafter, the
23Foundation Level of support shall be no less than $6,190.
 
24(C) Average Daily Attendance.
25    (1) For purposes of calculating general State aid pursuant

 

 

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1to subsection (E), an Average Daily Attendance figure shall be
2utilized. The Average Daily Attendance figure for formula
3calculation purposes shall be the monthly average of the actual
4number of pupils in attendance of each school district, as
5further averaged for the best 3 months of pupil attendance for
6each school district. In compiling the figures for the number
7of pupils in attendance, school districts and the State Board
8of Education shall, for purposes of general State aid funding,
9conform attendance figures to the requirements of subsection
10(F).
11    (2) The Average Daily Attendance figures utilized in
12subsection (E) shall be the requisite attendance data for the
13school year immediately preceding the school year for which
14general State aid is being calculated or the average of the
15attendance data for the 3 preceding school years, whichever is
16greater. The Average Daily Attendance figures utilized in
17subsection (H) shall be the requisite attendance data for the
18school year immediately preceding the school year for which
19general State aid is being calculated.
 
20(D) Available Local Resources.
21    (1) For purposes of calculating general State aid pursuant
22to subsection (E), a representation of Available Local
23Resources per pupil, as that term is defined and determined in
24this subsection, shall be utilized. Available Local Resources
25per pupil shall include a calculated dollar amount representing

 

 

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1local school district revenues from local property taxes and
2from Corporate Personal Property Replacement Taxes, expressed
3on the basis of pupils in Average Daily Attendance. Calculation
4of Available Local Resources shall exclude any tax amnesty
5funds received as a result of Public Act 93-26.
6    (2) In determining a school district's revenue from local
7property taxes, the State Board of Education shall utilize the
8equalized assessed valuation of all taxable property of each
9school district as of September 30 of the previous year. The
10equalized assessed valuation utilized shall be obtained and
11determined as provided in subsection (G).
12    (3) For school districts maintaining grades kindergarten
13through 12, local property tax revenues per pupil shall be
14calculated as the product of the applicable equalized assessed
15valuation for the district multiplied by 3.00%, and divided by
16the district's Average Daily Attendance figure. For school
17districts maintaining grades kindergarten through 8, local
18property tax revenues per pupil shall be calculated as the
19product of the applicable equalized assessed valuation for the
20district multiplied by 2.30%, and divided by the district's
21Average Daily Attendance figure. For school districts
22maintaining grades 9 through 12, local property tax revenues
23per pupil shall be the applicable equalized assessed valuation
24of the district multiplied by 1.05%, and divided by the
25district's Average Daily Attendance figure.
26    For partial elementary unit districts created pursuant to

 

 

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1Article 11E of this Code, local property tax revenues per pupil
2shall be calculated as the product of the equalized assessed
3valuation for property within the partial elementary unit
4district for elementary purposes, as defined in Article 11E of
5this Code, multiplied by 2.06% and divided by the district's
6Average Daily Attendance figure, plus the product of the
7equalized assessed valuation for property within the partial
8elementary unit district for high school purposes, as defined
9in Article 11E of this Code, multiplied by 0.94% and divided by
10the district's Average Daily Attendance figure.
11    (4) The Corporate Personal Property Replacement Taxes paid
12to each school district during the calendar year one year
13before the calendar year in which a school year begins, divided
14by the Average Daily Attendance figure for that district, shall
15be added to the local property tax revenues per pupil as
16derived by the application of the immediately preceding
17paragraph (3). The sum of these per pupil figures for each
18school district shall constitute Available Local Resources as
19that term is utilized in subsection (E) in the calculation of
20general State aid.
 
21(E) Computation of General State Aid.
22    (1) For each school year, the amount of general State aid
23allotted to a school district shall be computed by the State
24Board of Education as provided in this subsection.
25    (2) For any school district for which Available Local

 

 

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1Resources per pupil is less than the product of 0.93 times the
2Foundation Level, general State aid for that district shall be
3calculated as an amount equal to the Foundation Level minus
4Available Local Resources, multiplied by the Average Daily
5Attendance of the school district.
6    (3) For any school district for which Available Local
7Resources per pupil is equal to or greater than the product of
80.93 times the Foundation Level and less than the product of
91.75 times the Foundation Level, the general State aid per
10pupil shall be a decimal proportion of the Foundation Level
11derived using a linear algorithm. Under this linear algorithm,
12the calculated general State aid per pupil shall decline in
13direct linear fashion from 0.07 times the Foundation Level for
14a school district with Available Local Resources equal to the
15product of 0.93 times the Foundation Level, to 0.05 times the
16Foundation Level for a school district with Available Local
17Resources equal to the product of 1.75 times the Foundation
18Level. The allocation of general State aid for school districts
19subject to this paragraph 3 shall be the calculated general
20State aid per pupil figure multiplied by the Average Daily
21Attendance of the school district.
22    (4) For any school district for which Available Local
23Resources per pupil equals or exceeds the product of 1.75 times
24the Foundation Level, the general State aid for the school
25district shall be calculated as the product of $218 multiplied
26by the Average Daily Attendance of the school district.

 

 

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1    (5) The amount of general State aid allocated to a school
2district for the 1999-2000 school year meeting the requirements
3set forth in paragraph (4) of subsection (G) shall be increased
4by an amount equal to the general State aid that would have
5been received by the district for the 1998-1999 school year by
6utilizing the Extension Limitation Equalized Assessed
7Valuation as calculated in paragraph (4) of subsection (G) less
8the general State aid allotted for the 1998-1999 school year.
9This amount shall be deemed a one time increase, and shall not
10affect any future general State aid allocations.
 
11(F) Compilation of Average Daily Attendance.
12    (1) Each school district shall, by July 1 of each year,
13submit to the State Board of Education, on forms prescribed by
14the State Board of Education, attendance figures for the school
15year that began in the preceding calendar year. The attendance
16information so transmitted shall identify the average daily
17attendance figures for each month of the school year. Beginning
18with the general State aid claim form for the 2002-2003 school
19year, districts shall calculate Average Daily Attendance as
20provided in subdivisions (a), (b), and (c) of this paragraph
21(1).
22        (a) In districts that do not hold year-round classes,
23    days of attendance in August shall be added to the month of
24    September and any days of attendance in June shall be added
25    to the month of May.

 

 

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1        (b) In districts in which all buildings hold year-round
2    classes, days of attendance in July and August shall be
3    added to the month of September and any days of attendance
4    in June shall be added to the month of May.
5        (c) In districts in which some buildings, but not all,
6    hold year-round classes, for the non-year-round buildings,
7    days of attendance in August shall be added to the month of
8    September and any days of attendance in June shall be added
9    to the month of May. The average daily attendance for the
10    year-round buildings shall be computed as provided in
11    subdivision (b) of this paragraph (1). To calculate the
12    Average Daily Attendance for the district, the average
13    daily attendance for the year-round buildings shall be
14    multiplied by the days in session for the non-year-round
15    buildings for each month and added to the monthly
16    attendance of the non-year-round buildings.
17    Except as otherwise provided in this Section, days of
18attendance by pupils shall be counted only for sessions of not
19less than 5 clock hours of school work per day under direct
20supervision of: (i) teachers, or (ii) non-teaching personnel or
21volunteer personnel when engaging in non-teaching duties and
22supervising in those instances specified in subsection (a) of
23Section 10-22.34 and paragraph 10 of Section 34-18, with pupils
24of legal school age and in kindergarten and grades 1 through
2512.
26    Days of attendance by tuition pupils shall be accredited

 

 

SB1260- 132 -LRB099 04267 HLH 24291 b

1only to the districts that pay the tuition to a recognized
2school.
3    (2) Days of attendance by pupils of less than 5 clock hours
4of school shall be subject to the following provisions in the
5compilation of Average Daily Attendance.
6        (a) Pupils regularly enrolled in a public school for
7    only a part of the school day may be counted on the basis
8    of 1/6 day for every class hour of instruction of 40
9    minutes or more attended pursuant to such enrollment,
10    unless a pupil is enrolled in a block-schedule format of 80
11    minutes or more of instruction, in which case the pupil may
12    be counted on the basis of the proportion of minutes of
13    school work completed each day to the minimum number of
14    minutes that school work is required to be held that day.
15        (b) (Blank).
16        (c) A session of 4 or more clock hours may be counted
17    as a day of attendance upon certification by the regional
18    superintendent, and approved by the State Superintendent
19    of Education to the extent that the district has been
20    forced to use daily multiple sessions.
21        (d) A session of 3 or more clock hours may be counted
22    as a day of attendance (1) when the remainder of the school
23    day or at least 2 hours in the evening of that day is
24    utilized for an in-service training program for teachers,
25    up to a maximum of 5 days per school year, provided a
26    district conducts an in-service training program for

 

 

SB1260- 133 -LRB099 04267 HLH 24291 b

1    teachers in accordance with Section 10-22.39 of this Code;
2    or, in lieu of 4 such days, 2 full days may be used, in
3    which event each such day may be counted as a day required
4    for a legal school calendar pursuant to Section 10-19 of
5    this Code; (1.5) when, of the 5 days allowed under item
6    (1), a maximum of 4 days are used for parent-teacher
7    conferences, or, in lieu of 4 such days, 2 full days are
8    used, in which case each such day may be counted as a
9    calendar day required under Section 10-19 of this Code,
10    provided that the full-day, parent-teacher conference
11    consists of (i) a minimum of 5 clock hours of
12    parent-teacher conferences, (ii) both a minimum of 2 clock
13    hours of parent-teacher conferences held in the evening
14    following a full day of student attendance, as specified in
15    subsection (F)(1)(c), and a minimum of 3 clock hours of
16    parent-teacher conferences held on the day immediately
17    following evening parent-teacher conferences, or (iii)
18    multiple parent-teacher conferences held in the evenings
19    following full days of student attendance, as specified in
20    subsection (F)(1)(c), in which the time used for the
21    parent-teacher conferences is equivalent to a minimum of 5
22    clock hours; and (2) when days in addition to those
23    provided in items (1) and (1.5) are scheduled by a school
24    pursuant to its school improvement plan adopted under
25    Article 34 or its revised or amended school improvement
26    plan adopted under Article 2, provided that (i) such

 

 

SB1260- 134 -LRB099 04267 HLH 24291 b

1    sessions of 3 or more clock hours are scheduled to occur at
2    regular intervals, (ii) the remainder of the school days in
3    which such sessions occur are utilized for in-service
4    training programs or other staff development activities
5    for teachers, and (iii) a sufficient number of minutes of
6    school work under the direct supervision of teachers are
7    added to the school days between such regularly scheduled
8    sessions to accumulate not less than the number of minutes
9    by which such sessions of 3 or more clock hours fall short
10    of 5 clock hours. Any full days used for the purposes of
11    this paragraph shall not be considered for computing
12    average daily attendance. Days scheduled for in-service
13    training programs, staff development activities, or
14    parent-teacher conferences may be scheduled separately for
15    different grade levels and different attendance centers of
16    the district.
17        (e) A session of not less than one clock hour of
18    teaching hospitalized or homebound pupils on-site or by
19    telephone to the classroom may be counted as 1/2 day of
20    attendance, however these pupils must receive 4 or more
21    clock hours of instruction to be counted for a full day of
22    attendance.
23        (f) A session of at least 4 clock hours may be counted
24    as a day of attendance for first grade pupils, and pupils
25    in full day kindergartens, and a session of 2 or more hours
26    may be counted as 1/2 day of attendance by pupils in

 

 

SB1260- 135 -LRB099 04267 HLH 24291 b

1    kindergartens which provide only 1/2 day of attendance.
2        (g) For children with disabilities who are below the
3    age of 6 years and who cannot attend 2 or more clock hours
4    because of their disability or immaturity, a session of not
5    less than one clock hour may be counted as 1/2 day of
6    attendance; however for such children whose educational
7    needs so require a session of 4 or more clock hours may be
8    counted as a full day of attendance.
9        (h) A recognized kindergarten which provides for only
10    1/2 day of attendance by each pupil shall not have more
11    than 1/2 day of attendance counted in any one day. However,
12    kindergartens may count 2 1/2 days of attendance in any 5
13    consecutive school days. When a pupil attends such a
14    kindergarten for 2 half days on any one school day, the
15    pupil shall have the following day as a day absent from
16    school, unless the school district obtains permission in
17    writing from the State Superintendent of Education.
18    Attendance at kindergartens which provide for a full day of
19    attendance by each pupil shall be counted the same as
20    attendance by first grade pupils. Only the first year of
21    attendance in one kindergarten shall be counted, except in
22    case of children who entered the kindergarten in their
23    fifth year whose educational development requires a second
24    year of kindergarten as determined under the rules and
25    regulations of the State Board of Education.
26        (i) On the days when the assessment that includes a

 

 

SB1260- 136 -LRB099 04267 HLH 24291 b

1    college and career ready determination is administered
2    under subsection (c) of Section 2-3.64a-5 of this Code, the
3    day of attendance for a pupil whose school day must be
4    shortened to accommodate required testing procedures may
5    be less than 5 clock hours and shall be counted towards the
6    176 days of actual pupil attendance required under Section
7    10-19 of this Code, provided that a sufficient number of
8    minutes of school work in excess of 5 clock hours are first
9    completed on other school days to compensate for the loss
10    of school work on the examination days.
11        (j) Pupils enrolled in a remote educational program
12    established under Section 10-29 of this Code may be counted
13    on the basis of one-fifth day of attendance for every clock
14    hour of instruction attended in the remote educational
15    program, provided that, in any month, the school district
16    may not claim for a student enrolled in a remote
17    educational program more days of attendance than the
18    maximum number of days of attendance the district can claim
19    (i) for students enrolled in a building holding year-round
20    classes if the student is classified as participating in
21    the remote educational program on a year-round schedule or
22    (ii) for students enrolled in a building not holding
23    year-round classes if the student is not classified as
24    participating in the remote educational program on a
25    year-round schedule.
 

 

 

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1(G) Equalized Assessed Valuation Data.
2    (1) For purposes of the calculation of Available Local
3Resources required pursuant to subsection (D), the State Board
4of Education shall secure from the Department of Revenue the
5value as equalized or assessed by the Department of Revenue of
6all taxable property of every school district, together with
7(i) the applicable tax rate used in extending taxes for the
8funds of the district as of September 30 of the previous year
9and (ii) the limiting rate for all school districts subject to
10property tax extension limitations as imposed under the
11Property Tax Extension Limitation Law.
12    The Department of Revenue shall add to the equalized
13assessed value of all taxable property of each school district
14situated entirely or partially within a county that is or was
15subject to the provisions of Section 15-176 or 15-177 of the
16Property Tax Code (a) an amount equal to the total amount by
17which the homestead exemption allowed under Section 15-176 or
1815-177 of the Property Tax Code for real property situated in
19that school district exceeds the total amount that would have
20been allowed in that school district if the maximum reduction
21under Section 15-176 was (i) $4,500 in Cook County or $3,500 in
22all other counties in tax year 2003 or (ii) $5,000 in all
23counties in tax year 2004 and thereafter and (b) an amount
24equal to the aggregate amount for the taxable year of all
25additional exemptions under Section 15-175 of the Property Tax
26Code for owners with a household income of $30,000 or less. The

 

 

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1county clerk of any county that is or was subject to the
2provisions of Section 15-176 or 15-177 of the Property Tax Code
3shall annually calculate and certify to the Department of
4Revenue for each school district all homestead exemption
5amounts under Section 15-176 or 15-177 of the Property Tax Code
6and all amounts of additional exemptions under Section 15-175
7of the Property Tax Code for owners with a household income of
8$30,000 or less. It is the intent of this paragraph that if the
9general homestead exemption for a parcel of property is
10determined under Section 15-176 or 15-177 of the Property Tax
11Code rather than Section 15-175, then the calculation of
12Available Local Resources shall not be affected by the
13difference, if any, between the amount of the general homestead
14exemption allowed for that parcel of property under Section
1515-176 or 15-177 of the Property Tax Code and the amount that
16would have been allowed had the general homestead exemption for
17that parcel of property been determined under Section 15-175 of
18the Property Tax Code. It is further the intent of this
19paragraph that if additional exemptions are allowed under
20Section 15-175 of the Property Tax Code for owners with a
21household income of less than $30,000, then the calculation of
22Available Local Resources shall not be affected by the
23difference, if any, because of those additional exemptions.
24    This equalized assessed valuation, as adjusted further by
25the requirements of this subsection, shall be utilized in the
26calculation of Available Local Resources.

 

 

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1    (2) The equalized assessed valuation in paragraph (1) shall
2be adjusted, as applicable, in the following manner:
3        (a) For the purposes of calculating State aid under
4    this Section, with respect to any part of a school district
5    within a redevelopment project area in respect to which a
6    municipality has adopted tax increment allocation
7    financing pursuant to the Tax Increment Allocation
8    Redevelopment Act, Sections 11-74.4-1 through 11-74.4-11
9    of the Illinois Municipal Code or the Industrial Jobs
10    Recovery Law, Sections 11-74.6-1 through 11-74.6-50 of the
11    Illinois Municipal Code, no part of the current equalized
12    assessed valuation of real property located in any such
13    project area which is attributable to an increase above the
14    total initial equalized assessed valuation of such
15    property shall be used as part of the equalized assessed
16    valuation of the district, until such time as all
17    redevelopment project costs have been paid, as provided in
18    Section 11-74.4-8 of the Tax Increment Allocation
19    Redevelopment Act or in Section 11-74.6-35 of the
20    Industrial Jobs Recovery Law. For the purpose of the
21    equalized assessed valuation of the district, the total
22    initial equalized assessed valuation or the current
23    equalized assessed valuation, whichever is lower, shall be
24    used until such time as all redevelopment project costs
25    have been paid.
26        (b) The real property equalized assessed valuation for

 

 

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1    a school district shall be adjusted by subtracting from the
2    real property value as equalized or assessed by the
3    Department of Revenue for the district an amount computed
4    by dividing the amount of any abatement of taxes under
5    Section 18-170 of the Property Tax Code by 3.00% for a
6    district maintaining grades kindergarten through 12, by
7    2.30% for a district maintaining grades kindergarten
8    through 8, or by 1.05% for a district maintaining grades 9
9    through 12 and adjusted by an amount computed by dividing
10    the amount of any abatement of taxes under subsection (a)
11    of Section 18-165 of the Property Tax Code by the same
12    percentage rates for district type as specified in this
13    subparagraph (b).
14    (3) For the 1999-2000 school year and each school year
15thereafter, if a school district meets all of the criteria of
16this subsection (G)(3), the school district's Available Local
17Resources shall be calculated under subsection (D) using the
18district's Extension Limitation Equalized Assessed Valuation
19as calculated under this subsection (G)(3).
20    For purposes of this subsection (G)(3) the following terms
21shall have the following meanings:
22        "Budget Year": The school year for which general State
23    aid is calculated and awarded under subsection (E).
24        "Base Tax Year": The property tax levy year used to
25    calculate the Budget Year allocation of general State aid.
26        "Preceding Tax Year": The property tax levy year

 

 

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1    immediately preceding the Base Tax Year.
2        "Base Tax Year's Tax Extension": The product of the
3    equalized assessed valuation utilized by the County Clerk
4    in the Base Tax Year multiplied by the limiting rate as
5    calculated by the County Clerk and defined in the Property
6    Tax Extension Limitation Law.
7        "Preceding Tax Year's Tax Extension": The product of
8    the equalized assessed valuation utilized by the County
9    Clerk in the Preceding Tax Year multiplied by the Operating
10    Tax Rate as defined in subsection (A).
11        "Extension Limitation Ratio": A numerical ratio,
12    certified by the County Clerk, in which the numerator is
13    the Base Tax Year's Tax Extension and the denominator is
14    the Preceding Tax Year's Tax Extension.
15        "Operating Tax Rate": The operating tax rate as defined
16    in subsection (A).
17    If a school district is subject to property tax extension
18limitations as imposed under the Property Tax Extension
19Limitation Law, the State Board of Education shall calculate
20the Extension Limitation Equalized Assessed Valuation of that
21district. For the 1999-2000 school year, the Extension
22Limitation Equalized Assessed Valuation of a school district as
23calculated by the State Board of Education shall be equal to
24the product of the district's 1996 Equalized Assessed Valuation
25and the district's Extension Limitation Ratio. Except as
26otherwise provided in this paragraph for a school district that

 

 

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1has approved or does approve an increase in its limiting rate,
2for the 2000-2001 school year and each school year thereafter,
3the Extension Limitation Equalized Assessed Valuation of a
4school district as calculated by the State Board of Education
5shall be equal to the product of the Equalized Assessed
6Valuation last used in the calculation of general State aid and
7the district's Extension Limitation Ratio. If the Extension
8Limitation Equalized Assessed Valuation of a school district as
9calculated under this subsection (G)(3) is less than the
10district's equalized assessed valuation as calculated pursuant
11to subsections (G)(1) and (G)(2), then for purposes of
12calculating the district's general State aid for the Budget
13Year pursuant to subsection (E), that Extension Limitation
14Equalized Assessed Valuation shall be utilized to calculate the
15district's Available Local Resources under subsection (D). For
16the 2009-2010 school year and each school year thereafter, if a
17school district has approved or does approve an increase in its
18limiting rate, pursuant to Section 18-190 of the Property Tax
19Code, affecting the Base Tax Year, the Extension Limitation
20Equalized Assessed Valuation of the school district, as
21calculated by the State Board of Education, shall be equal to
22the product of the Equalized Assessed Valuation last used in
23the calculation of general State aid times an amount equal to
24one plus the percentage increase, if any, in the Consumer Price
25Index for all Urban Consumers for all items published by the
26United States Department of Labor for the 12-month calendar

 

 

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1year preceding the Base Tax Year, plus the Equalized Assessed
2Valuation of new property, annexed property, and recovered tax
3increment value and minus the Equalized Assessed Valuation of
4disconnected property. New property and recovered tax
5increment value shall have the meanings set forth in the
6Property Tax Extension Limitation Law.
7    Partial elementary unit districts created in accordance
8with Article 11E of this Code shall not be eligible for the
9adjustment in this subsection (G)(3) until the fifth year
10following the effective date of the reorganization.
11    (3.5) For the 2010-2011 school year and each school year
12thereafter, if a school district's boundaries span multiple
13counties, then the Department of Revenue shall send to the
14State Board of Education, for the purpose of calculating
15general State aid, the limiting rate and individual rates by
16purpose for the county that contains the majority of the school
17district's Equalized Assessed Valuation.
18    (4) For the purposes of calculating general State aid for
19the 1999-2000 school year only, if a school district
20experienced a triennial reassessment on the equalized assessed
21valuation used in calculating its general State financial aid
22apportionment for the 1998-1999 school year, the State Board of
23Education shall calculate the Extension Limitation Equalized
24Assessed Valuation that would have been used to calculate the
25district's 1998-1999 general State aid. This amount shall equal
26the product of the equalized assessed valuation used to

 

 

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1calculate general State aid for the 1997-1998 school year and
2the district's Extension Limitation Ratio. If the Extension
3Limitation Equalized Assessed Valuation of the school district
4as calculated under this paragraph (4) is less than the
5district's equalized assessed valuation utilized in
6calculating the district's 1998-1999 general State aid
7allocation, then for purposes of calculating the district's
8general State aid pursuant to paragraph (5) of subsection (E),
9that Extension Limitation Equalized Assessed Valuation shall
10be utilized to calculate the district's Available Local
11Resources.
12    (5) For school districts having a majority of their
13equalized assessed valuation in any county except Cook, DuPage,
14Kane, Lake, McHenry, or Will, if the amount of general State
15aid allocated to the school district for the 1999-2000 school
16year under the provisions of subsection (E), (H), and (J) of
17this Section is less than the amount of general State aid
18allocated to the district for the 1998-1999 school year under
19these subsections, then the general State aid of the district
20for the 1999-2000 school year only shall be increased by the
21difference between these amounts. The total payments made under
22this paragraph (5) shall not exceed $14,000,000. Claims shall
23be prorated if they exceed $14,000,000.
 
24(H) Supplemental General State Aid.
25    (1) In addition to the general State aid a school district

 

 

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1is allotted pursuant to subsection (E), qualifying school
2districts shall receive a grant, paid in conjunction with a
3district's payments of general State aid, for supplemental
4general State aid based upon the concentration level of
5children from low-income households within the school
6district. Supplemental State aid grants provided for school
7districts under this subsection shall be appropriated for
8distribution to school districts as part of the same line item
9in which the general State financial aid of school districts is
10appropriated under this Section.
11    (1.5) This paragraph (1.5) applies only to those school
12years preceding the 2003-2004 school year. For purposes of this
13subsection (H), the term "Low-Income Concentration Level"
14shall be the low-income eligible pupil count from the most
15recently available federal census divided by the Average Daily
16Attendance of the school district. If, however, (i) the
17percentage decrease from the 2 most recent federal censuses in
18the low-income eligible pupil count of a high school district
19with fewer than 400 students exceeds by 75% or more the
20percentage change in the total low-income eligible pupil count
21of contiguous elementary school districts, whose boundaries
22are coterminous with the high school district, or (ii) a high
23school district within 2 counties and serving 5 elementary
24school districts, whose boundaries are coterminous with the
25high school district, has a percentage decrease from the 2 most
26recent federal censuses in the low-income eligible pupil count

 

 

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1and there is a percentage increase in the total low-income
2eligible pupil count of a majority of the elementary school
3districts in excess of 50% from the 2 most recent federal
4censuses, then the high school district's low-income eligible
5pupil count from the earlier federal census shall be the number
6used as the low-income eligible pupil count for the high school
7district, for purposes of this subsection (H). The changes made
8to this paragraph (1) by Public Act 92-28 shall apply to
9supplemental general State aid grants for school years
10preceding the 2003-2004 school year that are paid in fiscal
11year 1999 or thereafter and to any State aid payments made in
12fiscal year 1994 through fiscal year 1998 pursuant to
13subsection 1(n) of Section 18-8 of this Code (which was
14repealed on July 1, 1998), and any high school district that is
15affected by Public Act 92-28 is entitled to a recomputation of
16its supplemental general State aid grant or State aid paid in
17any of those fiscal years. This recomputation shall not be
18affected by any other funding.
19    (1.10) This paragraph (1.10) applies to the 2003-2004
20school year and each school year thereafter. For purposes of
21this subsection (H), the term "Low-Income Concentration Level"
22shall, for each fiscal year, be the low-income eligible pupil
23count as of July 1 of the immediately preceding fiscal year (as
24determined by the Department of Human Services based on the
25number of pupils who are eligible for at least one of the
26following low income programs: Medicaid, the Children's Health

 

 

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1Insurance Program, TANF, or Food Stamps, excluding pupils who
2are eligible for services provided by the Department of
3Children and Family Services, averaged over the 2 immediately
4preceding fiscal years for fiscal year 2004 and over the 3
5immediately preceding fiscal years for each fiscal year
6thereafter) divided by the Average Daily Attendance of the
7school district.
8    (2) Supplemental general State aid pursuant to this
9subsection (H) shall be provided as follows for the 1998-1999,
101999-2000, and 2000-2001 school years only:
11        (a) For any school district with a Low Income
12    Concentration Level of at least 20% and less than 35%, the
13    grant for any school year shall be $800 multiplied by the
14    low income eligible pupil count.
15        (b) For any school district with a Low Income
16    Concentration Level of at least 35% and less than 50%, the
17    grant for the 1998-1999 school year shall be $1,100
18    multiplied by the low income eligible pupil count.
19        (c) For any school district with a Low Income
20    Concentration Level of at least 50% and less than 60%, the
21    grant for the 1998-99 school year shall be $1,500
22    multiplied by the low income eligible pupil count.
23        (d) For any school district with a Low Income
24    Concentration Level of 60% or more, the grant for the
25    1998-99 school year shall be $1,900 multiplied by the low
26    income eligible pupil count.

 

 

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1        (e) For the 1999-2000 school year, the per pupil amount
2    specified in subparagraphs (b), (c), and (d) immediately
3    above shall be increased to $1,243, $1,600, and $2,000,
4    respectively.
5        (f) For the 2000-2001 school year, the per pupil
6    amounts specified in subparagraphs (b), (c), and (d)
7    immediately above shall be $1,273, $1,640, and $2,050,
8    respectively.
9    (2.5) Supplemental general State aid pursuant to this
10subsection (H) shall be provided as follows for the 2002-2003
11school year:
12        (a) For any school district with a Low Income
13    Concentration Level of less than 10%, the grant for each
14    school year shall be $355 multiplied by the low income
15    eligible pupil count.
16        (b) For any school district with a Low Income
17    Concentration Level of at least 10% and less than 20%, the
18    grant for each school year shall be $675 multiplied by the
19    low income eligible pupil count.
20        (c) For any school district with a Low Income
21    Concentration Level of at least 20% and less than 35%, the
22    grant for each school year shall be $1,330 multiplied by
23    the low income eligible pupil count.
24        (d) For any school district with a Low Income
25    Concentration Level of at least 35% and less than 50%, the
26    grant for each school year shall be $1,362 multiplied by

 

 

SB1260- 149 -LRB099 04267 HLH 24291 b

1    the low income eligible pupil count.
2        (e) For any school district with a Low Income
3    Concentration Level of at least 50% and less than 60%, the
4    grant for each school year shall be $1,680 multiplied by
5    the low income eligible pupil count.
6        (f) For any school district with a Low Income
7    Concentration Level of 60% or more, the grant for each
8    school year shall be $2,080 multiplied by the low income
9    eligible pupil count.
10    (2.10) Except as otherwise provided, supplemental general
11State aid pursuant to this subsection (H) shall be provided as
12follows for the 2003-2004 school year and each school year
13thereafter:
14        (a) For any school district with a Low Income
15    Concentration Level of 15% or less, the grant for each
16    school year shall be $355 multiplied by the low income
17    eligible pupil count.
18        (b) For any school district with a Low Income
19    Concentration Level greater than 15%, the grant for each
20    school year shall be $294.25 added to the product of $2,700
21    and the square of the Low Income Concentration Level, all
22    multiplied by the low income eligible pupil count.
23    For the 2003-2004 school year and each school year
24thereafter through the 2008-2009 school year only, the grant
25shall be no less than the grant for the 2002-2003 school year.
26For the 2009-2010 school year only, the grant shall be no less

 

 

SB1260- 150 -LRB099 04267 HLH 24291 b

1than the grant for the 2002-2003 school year multiplied by
20.66. For the 2010-2011 school year only, the grant shall be no
3less than the grant for the 2002-2003 school year multiplied by
40.33. Notwithstanding the provisions of this paragraph to the
5contrary, if for any school year supplemental general State aid
6grants are prorated as provided in paragraph (1) of this
7subsection (H), then the grants under this paragraph shall be
8prorated.
9    For the 2003-2004 school year only, the grant shall be no
10greater than the grant received during the 2002-2003 school
11year added to the product of 0.25 multiplied by the difference
12between the grant amount calculated under subsection (a) or (b)
13of this paragraph (2.10), whichever is applicable, and the
14grant received during the 2002-2003 school year. For the
152004-2005 school year only, the grant shall be no greater than
16the grant received during the 2002-2003 school year added to
17the product of 0.50 multiplied by the difference between the
18grant amount calculated under subsection (a) or (b) of this
19paragraph (2.10), whichever is applicable, and the grant
20received during the 2002-2003 school year. For the 2005-2006
21school year only, the grant shall be no greater than the grant
22received during the 2002-2003 school year added to the product
23of 0.75 multiplied by the difference between the grant amount
24calculated under subsection (a) or (b) of this paragraph
25(2.10), whichever is applicable, and the grant received during
26the 2002-2003 school year.

 

 

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1    (3) School districts with an Average Daily Attendance of
2more than 1,000 and less than 50,000 that qualify for
3supplemental general State aid pursuant to this subsection
4shall submit a plan to the State Board of Education prior to
5October 30 of each year for the use of the funds resulting from
6this grant of supplemental general State aid for the
7improvement of instruction in which priority is given to
8meeting the education needs of disadvantaged children. Such
9plan shall be submitted in accordance with rules and
10regulations promulgated by the State Board of Education.
11    (4) School districts with an Average Daily Attendance of
1250,000 or more that qualify for supplemental general State aid
13pursuant to this subsection shall be required to distribute
14from funds available pursuant to this Section, no less than
15$261,000,000 in accordance with the following requirements:
16        (a) The required amounts shall be distributed to the
17    attendance centers within the district in proportion to the
18    number of pupils enrolled at each attendance center who are
19    eligible to receive free or reduced-price lunches or
20    breakfasts under the federal Child Nutrition Act of 1966
21    and under the National School Lunch Act during the
22    immediately preceding school year.
23        (b) The distribution of these portions of supplemental
24    and general State aid among attendance centers according to
25    these requirements shall not be compensated for or
26    contravened by adjustments of the total of other funds

 

 

SB1260- 152 -LRB099 04267 HLH 24291 b

1    appropriated to any attendance centers, and the Board of
2    Education shall utilize funding from one or several sources
3    in order to fully implement this provision annually prior
4    to the opening of school.
5        (c) Each attendance center shall be provided by the
6    school district a distribution of noncategorical funds and
7    other categorical funds to which an attendance center is
8    entitled under law in order that the general State aid and
9    supplemental general State aid provided by application of
10    this subsection supplements rather than supplants the
11    noncategorical funds and other categorical funds provided
12    by the school district to the attendance centers.
13        (d) Any funds made available under this subsection that
14    by reason of the provisions of this subsection are not
15    required to be allocated and provided to attendance centers
16    may be used and appropriated by the board of the district
17    for any lawful school purpose.
18        (e) Funds received by an attendance center pursuant to
19    this subsection shall be used by the attendance center at
20    the discretion of the principal and local school council
21    for programs to improve educational opportunities at
22    qualifying schools through the following programs and
23    services: early childhood education, reduced class size or
24    improved adult to student classroom ratio, enrichment
25    programs, remedial assistance, attendance improvement, and
26    other educationally beneficial expenditures which

 

 

SB1260- 153 -LRB099 04267 HLH 24291 b

1    supplement the regular and basic programs as determined by
2    the State Board of Education. Funds provided shall not be
3    expended for any political or lobbying purposes as defined
4    by board rule.
5        (f) Each district subject to the provisions of this
6    subdivision (H)(4) shall submit an acceptable plan to meet
7    the educational needs of disadvantaged children, in
8    compliance with the requirements of this paragraph, to the
9    State Board of Education prior to July 15 of each year.
10    This plan shall be consistent with the decisions of local
11    school councils concerning the school expenditure plans
12    developed in accordance with part 4 of Section 34-2.3. The
13    State Board shall approve or reject the plan within 60 days
14    after its submission. If the plan is rejected, the district
15    shall give written notice of intent to modify the plan
16    within 15 days of the notification of rejection and then
17    submit a modified plan within 30 days after the date of the
18    written notice of intent to modify. Districts may amend
19    approved plans pursuant to rules promulgated by the State
20    Board of Education.
21        Upon notification by the State Board of Education that
22    the district has not submitted a plan prior to July 15 or a
23    modified plan within the time period specified herein, the
24    State aid funds affected by that plan or modified plan
25    shall be withheld by the State Board of Education until a
26    plan or modified plan is submitted.

 

 

SB1260- 154 -LRB099 04267 HLH 24291 b

1        If the district fails to distribute State aid to
2    attendance centers in accordance with an approved plan, the
3    plan for the following year shall allocate funds, in
4    addition to the funds otherwise required by this
5    subsection, to those attendance centers which were
6    underfunded during the previous year in amounts equal to
7    such underfunding.
8        For purposes of determining compliance with this
9    subsection in relation to the requirements of attendance
10    center funding, each district subject to the provisions of
11    this subsection shall submit as a separate document by
12    December 1 of each year a report of expenditure data for
13    the prior year in addition to any modification of its
14    current plan. If it is determined that there has been a
15    failure to comply with the expenditure provisions of this
16    subsection regarding contravention or supplanting, the
17    State Superintendent of Education shall, within 60 days of
18    receipt of the report, notify the district and any affected
19    local school council. The district shall within 45 days of
20    receipt of that notification inform the State
21    Superintendent of Education of the remedial or corrective
22    action to be taken, whether by amendment of the current
23    plan, if feasible, or by adjustment in the plan for the
24    following year. Failure to provide the expenditure report
25    or the notification of remedial or corrective action in a
26    timely manner shall result in a withholding of the affected

 

 

SB1260- 155 -LRB099 04267 HLH 24291 b

1    funds.
2        The State Board of Education shall promulgate rules and
3    regulations to implement the provisions of this
4    subsection. No funds shall be released under this
5    subdivision (H)(4) to any district that has not submitted a
6    plan that has been approved by the State Board of
7    Education.
 
8(I) (Blank).
 
9(J) (Blank).
 
10(K) Grants to Laboratory and Alternative Schools.
11    In calculating the amount to be paid to the governing board
12of a public university that operates a laboratory school under
13this Section or to any alternative school that is operated by a
14regional superintendent of schools, the State Board of
15Education shall require by rule such reporting requirements as
16it deems necessary.
17    As used in this Section, "laboratory school" means a public
18school which is created and operated by a public university and
19approved by the State Board of Education. The governing board
20of a public university which receives funds from the State
21Board under this subsection (K) may not increase the number of
22students enrolled in its laboratory school from a single
23district, if that district is already sending 50 or more

 

 

SB1260- 156 -LRB099 04267 HLH 24291 b

1students, except under a mutual agreement between the school
2board of a student's district of residence and the university
3which operates the laboratory school. A laboratory school may
4not have more than 1,000 students, excluding students with
5disabilities in a special education program.
6    As used in this Section, "alternative school" means a
7public school which is created and operated by a Regional
8Superintendent of Schools and approved by the State Board of
9Education. Such alternative schools may offer courses of
10instruction for which credit is given in regular school
11programs, courses to prepare students for the high school
12equivalency testing program or vocational and occupational
13training. A regional superintendent of schools may contract
14with a school district or a public community college district
15to operate an alternative school. An alternative school serving
16more than one educational service region may be established by
17the regional superintendents of schools of the affected
18educational service regions. An alternative school serving
19more than one educational service region may be operated under
20such terms as the regional superintendents of schools of those
21educational service regions may agree.
22    Each laboratory and alternative school shall file, on forms
23provided by the State Superintendent of Education, an annual
24State aid claim which states the Average Daily Attendance of
25the school's students by month. The best 3 months' Average
26Daily Attendance shall be computed for each school. The general

 

 

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1State aid entitlement shall be computed by multiplying the
2applicable Average Daily Attendance by the Foundation Level as
3determined under this Section.
 
4(L) Payments, Additional Grants in Aid and Other Requirements.
5    (1) For a school district operating under the financial
6supervision of an Authority created under Article 34A, the
7general State aid otherwise payable to that district under this
8Section, but not the supplemental general State aid, shall be
9reduced by an amount equal to the budget for the operations of
10the Authority as certified by the Authority to the State Board
11of Education, and an amount equal to such reduction shall be
12paid to the Authority created for such district for its
13operating expenses in the manner provided in Section 18-11. The
14remainder of general State school aid for any such district
15shall be paid in accordance with Article 34A when that Article
16provides for a disposition other than that provided by this
17Article.
18    (2) (Blank).
19    (3) Summer school. Summer school payments shall be made as
20provided in Section 18-4.3.
 
21(M) Education Funding Advisory Board.
22    The Education Funding Advisory Board, hereinafter in this
23subsection (M) referred to as the "Board", is hereby created.
24The Board shall consist of 5 members who are appointed by the

 

 

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1Governor, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate. The
2members appointed shall include representatives of education,
3business, and the general public. One of the members so
4appointed shall be designated by the Governor at the time the
5appointment is made as the chairperson of the Board. The
6initial members of the Board may be appointed any time after
7the effective date of this amendatory Act of 1997. The regular
8term of each member of the Board shall be for 4 years from the
9third Monday of January of the year in which the term of the
10member's appointment is to commence, except that of the 5
11initial members appointed to serve on the Board, the member who
12is appointed as the chairperson shall serve for a term that
13commences on the date of his or her appointment and expires on
14the third Monday of January, 2002, and the remaining 4 members,
15by lots drawn at the first meeting of the Board that is held
16after all 5 members are appointed, shall determine 2 of their
17number to serve for terms that commence on the date of their
18respective appointments and expire on the third Monday of
19January, 2001, and 2 of their number to serve for terms that
20commence on the date of their respective appointments and
21expire on the third Monday of January, 2000. All members
22appointed to serve on the Board shall serve until their
23respective successors are appointed and confirmed. Vacancies
24shall be filled in the same manner as original appointments. If
25a vacancy in membership occurs at a time when the Senate is not
26in session, the Governor shall make a temporary appointment

 

 

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1until the next meeting of the Senate, when he or she shall
2appoint, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate, a
3person to fill that membership for the unexpired term. If the
4Senate is not in session when the initial appointments are
5made, those appointments shall be made as in the case of
6vacancies.
7    The Education Funding Advisory Board shall be deemed
8established, and the initial members appointed by the Governor
9to serve as members of the Board shall take office, on the date
10that the Governor makes his or her appointment of the fifth
11initial member of the Board, whether those initial members are
12then serving pursuant to appointment and confirmation or
13pursuant to temporary appointments that are made by the
14Governor as in the case of vacancies.
15    The State Board of Education shall provide such staff
16assistance to the Education Funding Advisory Board as is
17reasonably required for the proper performance by the Board of
18its responsibilities.
19    For school years after the 2000-2001 school year, the
20Education Funding Advisory Board, in consultation with the
21State Board of Education, shall make recommendations as
22provided in this subsection (M) to the General Assembly for the
23foundation level under subdivision (B)(3) of this Section and
24for the supplemental general State aid grant level under
25subsection (H) of this Section for districts with high
26concentrations of children from poverty. The recommended

 

 

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1foundation level shall be determined based on a methodology
2which incorporates the basic education expenditures of
3low-spending schools exhibiting high academic performance. The
4Education Funding Advisory Board shall make such
5recommendations to the General Assembly on January 1 of odd
6numbered years, beginning January 1, 2001.
 
7(N) (Blank).
 
8(O) References.
9    (1) References in other laws to the various subdivisions of
10Section 18-8 as that Section existed before its repeal and
11replacement by this Section 18-8.05 shall be deemed to refer to
12the corresponding provisions of this Section 18-8.05, to the
13extent that those references remain applicable.
14    (2) References in other laws to State Chapter 1 funds shall
15be deemed to refer to the supplemental general State aid
16provided under subsection (H) of this Section.
 
17(P) Public Act 93-838 and Public Act 93-808 make inconsistent
18changes to this Section. Under Section 6 of the Statute on
19Statutes there is an irreconcilable conflict between Public Act
2093-808 and Public Act 93-838. Public Act 93-838, being the last
21acted upon, is controlling. The text of Public Act 93-838 is
22the law regardless of the text of Public Act 93-808.
23(Source: P.A. 97-339, eff. 8-12-11; 97-351, eff. 8-12-11;

 

 

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197-742, eff. 6-30-13; 97-813, eff. 7-13-12; 98-972, eff.
28-15-14.)
 
3    (105 ILCS 5/19-3)  (from Ch. 122, par. 19-3)
4    Sec. 19-3. Boards of education. Any school district
5governed by a board of education and having a population of not
6more than 500,000 inhabitants, and not governed by a special
7Act may borrow money for the purpose of building, equipping,
8altering or repairing school buildings or purchasing or
9improving school sites, or acquiring and equipping
10playgrounds, recreation grounds, athletic fields, and other
11buildings or land used or useful for school purposes or for the
12purpose of purchasing a site, with or without a building or
13buildings thereon, or for the building of a house or houses on
14such site, or for the building of a house or houses on the
15school site of the school district, for residential purposes of
16the superintendent, principal, or teachers of the school
17district, and issue its negotiable coupon bonds therefor signed
18by the president and secretary of the board, in denominations
19of not less than $100 nor more than $5,000, payable at such
20place and at such time or times, not exceeding 20 years, with
21the exception of Lockport High School not exceeding 25 years,
22from date of issuance, as the board of education may prescribe,
23and bearing interest at a rate not to exceed the maximum rate
24authorized by the Bond Authorization Act, as amended at the
25time of the making of the contract, payable annually,

 

 

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1semiannually or quarterly, but, with the exception of those
2bonds described in Section 17-2.11d of this Code, no such bonds
3shall be issued unless the proposition to issue them is
4submitted to the voters of the district at a referendum held at
5a regularly scheduled election after the board has certified
6the proposition to the proper election authorities in
7accordance with the general election law, a majority of all the
8votes cast on the proposition is in favor of the proposition,
9and notice of such bond referendum has been given either (i) in
10accordance with the second paragraph of Section 12-1 of the
11Election Code irrespective of whether such notice included any
12reference to the public question as it appeared on the ballot,
13or (ii) for an election held on or after November 1, 1998, in
14accordance with Section 12-5 of the Election Code, or (iii) by
15publication of a true and legible copy of the specimen ballot
16label containing the proposition in the form in which it
17appeared or will appear on the official ballot label on the day
18of the election at least 5 days before the day of the election
19in at least one newspaper published in and having a general
20circulation in the district, irrespective of any other
21requirements of Article 12 or Section 24A-18 of the Election
22Code, nor shall any residential site be acquired unless such
23proposition to acquire a site is submitted to the voters of the
24district at a referendum held at a regularly scheduled election
25after the board has certified the proposition to the proper
26election authorities in accordance with the general election

 

 

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1law and a majority of all the votes cast on the proposition is
2in favor of the proposition. Nothing in this Act or in any
3other law shall be construed to require the notice of the bond
4referendum to be published over the name or title of the
5election authority or the listing of maturity dates of any
6bonds either in the notice of bond election or ballot used in
7the bond election. The provisions of this Section concerning
8notice of the bond referendum apply only to (i) consolidated
9primary elections held prior to January 1, 2002 and the
10consolidated election held on April 17, 2007 at which not less
11than 60% of the voters voting on the bond proposition voted in
12favor of the bond proposition, and (ii) other elections held
13before July 1, 1999; otherwise, notices required in connection
14with the submission of public questions shall be as set forth
15in Section 12-5 of the Election Code. Such proposition may be
16initiated by resolution of the school board.
17    With respect to instruments for the payment of money issued
18under this Section either before, on, or after the effective
19date of this amendatory Act of 1989, it is and always has been
20the intention of the General Assembly (i) that the Omnibus Bond
21Acts are and always have been supplementary grants of power to
22issue instruments in accordance with the Omnibus Bond Acts,
23regardless of any provision of this Act that may appear to be
24or to have been more restrictive than those Acts, (ii) that the
25provisions of this Section are not a limitation on the
26supplementary authority granted by the Omnibus Bond Acts, and

 

 

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1(iii) that instruments issued under this Section within the
2supplementary authority granted by the Omnibus Bond Acts are
3not invalid because of any provision of this Act that may
4appear to be or to have been more restrictive than those Acts.
5    The proceeds of any bonds issued under authority of this
6Section shall be deposited and accounted for separately within
7the Site and Construction/Capital Improvements Fund.
8(Source: P.A. 95-30, eff. 8-7-07; 96-787, eff. 8-28-09.)
 
9    (105 ILCS 5/21A-3 new)
10    Sec. 21A-3. Goals. The New Teacher Induction and Mentoring
11Program under this Article shall accomplish the following
12goals:
13        (1) provide an effective transition into the teaching
14    career for first year and second-year teachers in Illinois;
15        (2) improve the educational performance of pupils
16    through improved training, information, and assistance for
17    new teachers;
18        (3) ensure professional success and retention of new
19    teachers;
20        (4) ensure that mentors provide intensive
21    individualized support and assistance to each
22    participating beginning teacher;
23        (5) ensure that an individual induction plan is in
24    place for each beginning teacher and is based on an ongoing
25    assessment of the development of the beginning teacher; and

 

 

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1        (6) ensure continuous program improvement through
2    ongoing research, development and evaluation.
 
3    (105 ILCS 5/21A-5)
4    Sec. 21A-5. Definitions. In this Article:
5    "New teacher" or "beginning teacher" means the holder of an
6Initial Teaching Certificate, as set forth in Section 21-2 of
7this Code, an Alternative Teaching Certificate, or a
8Transitional Bilingual Teaching Certificate, who is employed
9by a public school and who has not previously participated in a
10new teacher induction and mentoring program required by this
11Article, except as provided in Section 21A-25 of this Code.
12    "Public school" means any school operating pursuant to the
13authority of this Code, including without limitation a school
14district, a charter school, a cooperative or joint agreement
15with a governing body or board of control, and a school
16operated by a regional office of education or State agency.
17(Source: P.A. 93-355, eff. 1-1-04.)
 
18    (105 ILCS 5/21A-10)
19    Sec. 21A-10. Development of program required. Prior to the
202016-2017 During the 2003-2004 school year, each public school
21or 2 or more public schools acting jointly shall develop, in
22conjunction with its exclusive representative or their
23exclusive representatives, if any, a new teacher induction and
24mentoring program that meets the requirements set forth in

 

 

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1Section 21A-20 of this Code to assist new teachers in
2developing the skills and strategies necessary for
3instructional excellence, provided that funding is made
4available by the State Board of Education from an appropriation
5made for this purpose. A public school that has an existing
6induction and mentoring program that does not meet the
7requirements set forth in Section 21A-20 of this Code may have
8school years 2003-2004 and 2004-2005 to develop a program that
9does meet those requirements and may receive funding as
10described in Section 21A-25 of this Code, provided that the
11funding is made available by the State Board of Education from
12an appropriation made for this purpose. A public school with
13such an existing induction and mentoring program may receive
14funding for the 2005-2006 school year for each new teacher in
15the second year of a 2-year program that does not meet the
16requirements set forth in Section 21A-20, as long as the public
17school has established the required new program by the
18beginning of that school year as described in Section 21A-15
19and provided that funding is made available by the State Board
20of Education from an appropriation made for this purpose as
21described in Section 21A-25.
22(Source: P.A. 93-355, eff. 1-1-04.)
 
23    (105 ILCS 5/21A-15)
24    Sec. 21A-15. When program is to be established and
25implemented. Notwithstanding any other provisions of this

 

 

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1Code, by the beginning of the 2016-2017 2004-2005 school year
2(or by the beginning of the 2005-2006 school year for a public
3school that has been given an extension of time to develop a
4program under Section 21A-10 of this Code), each public school
5or 2 or more public schools acting jointly shall establish and
6implement, in conjunction with its exclusive representative or
7their exclusive representatives, if any, the new teacher
8induction and mentoring program required to be developed under
9Section 21A-10 of this Code, provided that funding is made
10available by the State Board of Education, from an
11appropriation made for this purpose, as described in Section
1221A-25 of this Code. A public school may contract with an
13institution of higher education or other independent party to
14assist in implementing the program.
15(Source: P.A. 93-355, eff. 1-1-04.)
 
16    (105 ILCS 5/21A-20)
17    Sec. 21A-20. Program requirements. Each new teacher
18induction and mentoring program must be based on a plan that at
19least does all of the following:
20        (1) Assigns a mentor teacher to each new teacher to
21    provide structured and intensive mentoring, as defined by
22    the State Board of Education, for a period of at least 2
23    school years.
24        (1.5) Ensures mentors are:
25            (A) carefully selected from experienced, exemplary

 

 

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1        teachers using a clearly articulated, well-defined,
2        explicit criteria and open processes that may involve
3        key school partners;
4            (B) rigorously trained using best practices in the
5        field to ensure they are well prepared to assume their
6        responsibilities and are consistently supported in
7        their efforts to assist beginning teachers;
8            (C) provided with sufficient release time from
9        teaching to allow them to meet their responsibilities
10        as mentors, including regular contacts with their
11        beginning teachers and frequent observations of their
12        teaching practice; and
13            (D) equipped and selected to provide
14        classroom-focused and content-focused support whenever
15        possible.
16        (2) Aligns with the Illinois Professional Teaching
17    Standards, content area standards, and applicable local
18    school improvement and professional development plans, if
19    any.
20        (3) (Blank). Addresses all of the following elements
21    and how they will be provided:
22            (A) Mentoring and support of the new teacher.
23            (B) Professional development specifically designed
24        to ensure the growth of the new teacher's knowledge and
25        skills.
26            (C) Formative assessment designed to ensure

 

 

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1        feedback and reflection, which must not be used in any
2        evaluation of the new teacher.
3        (4) Describes the role of mentor teachers, the criteria
4    and process for their selection, and how they will be
5    trained, provided that each mentor teacher shall
6    demonstrate the best practices in teaching his or her
7    respective field of practice. A mentor teacher may not
8    directly or indirectly participate in the evaluation of a
9    new teacher pursuant to Article 24A of this Code or the
10    evaluation procedure of the public school, unless the
11    school district and exclusive bargaining representative of
12    its teachers negotiate and agree to it as part of an
13    alternative evaluation plan under Section 24A-5 or 24A-8 of
14    this Code.
15        (5) Provides ongoing professional development for both
16    beginning teachers and mentors.
17            (A) Beginning teachers shall participate in an
18        ongoing, formal network of novice colleagues for the
19        purpose of professional learning, problem-solving, and
20        mutual support. These regular learning opportunities
21        shall begin with an orientation to the induction and
22        mentoring program prior to the start of the school year
23        and continue throughout the academic year. The group
24        shall address issues of pedagogy, classroom management
25        and content knowledge, beginning teachers' assessed
26        needs, and local instructional needs or priorities.

 

 

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1            (B) Mentors shall participate in an ongoing
2        professional learning community that supports their
3        practice and their use of mentoring tools, protocols,
4        and formative assessment in order to tailor and deepen
5        mentoring skills and advance induction practices,
6        support program implementation, provide for mentor
7        accountability in a supportive environment, and
8        provide support to each mentor's emerging leadership.
9        (6) Provides for ongoing assessment of beginning
10    teacher practice. Beginning teachers shall be subject to a
11    system of formative assessment in which the novice and
12    mentor collaboratively collect and analyze multiple
13    sources of data and reflect upon classroom practice in an
14    ongoing process. This assessment system shall be based on
15    the Illinois Professional Teaching Standards (IPTS), the
16    IPTS Continuum of Teacher Development, or a nationally
17    recognized teaching framework, as well as evidence of
18    teacher practice, including student work. The assessment
19    information shall be used to determine the scope, focus,
20    and content of professional development activities that
21    are the basis of the beginning teacher's individual
22    learning plan. The program shall provide time to ensure
23    that the quality of the process (such as observations, data
24    collection, and reflective conversations) is not
25    compromised.
26        (7) Identifies clear roles and responsibilities for

 

 

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1    both administrators and site mentor leaders who are to work
2    collectively to ensure induction practices are integrated
3    into existing professional development initiatives and to
4    secure assignments and establish working conditions for
5    beginning teachers that maximize their chances for
6    success. Administrators and site mentor leaders must have
7    sufficient knowledge and experience to understand the
8    needs of beginning teachers and the role of principals in
9    supporting each component of the program. Site
10    administrators must take time to meet and communicate
11    concerns with beginning teachers and their mentors.
12        (8) Provides for ongoing evaluation of the New Teacher
13    Induction and Mentoring Program pursuant to Section 21A-30
14    of this Code.
15(Source: P.A. 93-355, eff. 1-1-04.)
 
16    (105 ILCS 5/21A-25)
17    Sec. 21A-25. Funding. From a separate appropriation made
18for the purposes of this Article, for each new teacher
19participating in a new teacher induction and mentoring program
20that meets the requirements set forth in Section 21A-20 of this
21Code or in an existing program that is in the process of
22transition to a program that meets those requirements, the
23State Board of Education shall pay the public school $6,000
24$1,200 annually for each of 2 school years for the purpose of
25providing one or more of the following:

 

 

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1        (1) Mentor teacher compensation.
2        (2) Mentor teacher training and other resources, or new
3    teacher training and other resources, or both.
4        (3) Release time, including costs associated with
5    replacing a mentor teacher or new teacher in his or her
6    regular classroom.
7        (4) Site-based program administration, not to exceed
8    10% of the total program cost.
9However, if a new teacher, after participating in the new
10teacher induction and mentoring program for one school year,
11becomes employed by another public school, the State Board of
12Education shall pay the teacher's new school $6,000 $1,200 for
13the second school year and the teacher shall continue to be a
14new teacher as defined in this Article. Each public school
15shall determine, in conjunction with its exclusive
16representative, if any, how the $6,000 $1,200 per school year
17for each new teacher shall be used, provided that if a mentor
18teacher receives additional release time to support a new
19teacher, the total workload of other teachers regularly
20employed by the public school shall not increase in any
21substantial manner. If the appropriation is insufficient to
22cover the $6,000 $1,200 per school year for each new teacher,
23public schools are not required to develop or implement the
24program established by this Article. In the event of an
25insufficient appropriation, a public school or 2 or more
26schools acting jointly may submit an application for a grant

 

 

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1administered by the State Board of Education and awarded on a
2competitive basis to establish a new teacher induction and
3mentoring program that meets the criteria set forth in Section
421A-20 of this Code. The State Board of Education may retain up
5to $1,000,000 of the appropriation for new teacher induction
6and mentoring programs to train mentor teachers,
7administrators, and other personnel, to provide best practices
8information, and to conduct an evaluation of these programs'
9impact and effectiveness.
10(Source: P.A. 93-355, eff. 1-1-04.)
 
11    (105 ILCS 5/21A-30)
12    Sec. 21A-30. Evaluation of programs. The State Board of
13Education and the State Teacher Certification Board shall
14jointly contract with an independent party to conduct a
15comprehensive evaluation of new teacher induction and
16mentoring programs established pursuant to this Article. The
17first report of this evaluation shall be presented to the
18General Assembly on or before January 1, 2018 2009. Subsequent
19evaluations shall be conducted and reports presented to the
20General Assembly on or before January 1 of every third year
21thereafter. Additionally, the State Board of Education shall
22prepare an annual program report for the General Assembly on or
23before December 31 each year. It shall summarize local program
24design, indicate the number of teachers served, and document
25rates of new teacher attrition and retention.

 

 

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1(Source: P.A. 93-355, eff. 1-1-04.)
 
2    (105 ILCS 5/23-3)  (from Ch. 122, par. 23-3)
3    Sec. 23-3. Filing copy of constitution, by-laws and
4amendments. Within 30 days after the adoption by any such
5association of its constitution or by-laws or any amendment
6thereto, it shall file a copy thereof, certified by its
7president and executive director, with the Governor, the State
8Superintendent of Education, Public Instruction and the
9regional county superintendent of schools of each region county
10in which it has any membership.
11(Source: Laws 1961, p. 31.)
 
12    (105 ILCS 5/23-5.5 new)
13    Sec. 23-5.5. Professional development and training. Any
14such association shall offer professional development and
15training to school board members on topics that include, but
16are not limited to, basics of school finance, financial
17oversight and accountability, labor law and collective
18bargaining, ethics, duties and responsibilities of a school
19board member, and board governance principles. Every school
20board member is expected to receive at least 4 hours of
21professional development and training per year.
 
22    (105 ILCS 5/23-6)  (from Ch. 122, par. 23-6)
23    Sec. 23-6. Annual report. Each association shall make an

 

 

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1annual report within 60 days after the close of its fiscal year
2to the Governor, the State Board of Education and the regional
3superintendent of schools of each region in which it has
4members, setting forth the activities of the association for
5the preceding fiscal year, the institutes held, the subjects
6discussed, and the attendance, and shall furnish the Governor,
7the State Board of Education and such regional superintendents
8with copies of all publications sent to its members. The
9association shall include the board training topics offered and
10the number of school board members that availed themselves of
11professional development and training.
12(Source: P.A. 81-1508.)
 
13    (105 ILCS 5/29-5)  (from Ch. 122, par. 29-5)
14    Sec. 29-5. Reimbursement by State for transportation. Any
15school district, maintaining a school, transporting resident
16pupils to another school district's vocational program,
17offered through a joint agreement approved by the State Board
18of Education, as provided in Section 10-22.22 or transporting
19its resident pupils to a school which meets the standards for
20recognition as established by the State Board of Education
21which provides transportation meeting the standards of safety,
22comfort, convenience, efficiency and operation prescribed by
23the State Board of Education for resident pupils in
24pre-kindergarten, kindergarten, or any of grades 1 through 12
25who: (a) reside at least 1 1/2 miles as measured by the

 

 

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1customary route of travel, from the school attended; or (b)
2reside in areas where conditions are such that walking
3constitutes a hazard to the safety of the child when determined
4under Section 29-3; and (c) are transported to the school
5attended from pick-up points at the beginning of the school day
6and back again at the close of the school day or transported to
7and from their assigned attendance centers during the school
8day, shall be reimbursed by the State as hereinafter provided
9in this Section.
10    The State will pay the cost of transporting eligible pupils
11less the assessed valuation in a dual school district
12maintaining secondary grades 9 to 12 inclusive times a
13qualifying rate of .05%; in elementary school districts
14maintaining grades pre-K K to 8 times a qualifying rate of
15.06%; and in unit districts maintaining any of grades pre-K K
16to 12, including optional elementary unit districts and
17combined high school - unit districts, times a qualifying rate
18of .07%; provided that for optional elementary unit districts
19and combined high school - unit districts, assessed valuation
20for high school purposes, as defined in Article 11E of this
21Code, must be used. To be eligible to receive reimbursement in
22excess of 4/5 of the cost to transport eligible pupils, a
23school district shall have a Transportation Fund tax rate of at
24least .12%. If a school district does not have a .12%
25Transportation Fund tax rate, the amount of its claim in excess
26of 4/5 of the cost of transporting pupils shall be reduced by

 

 

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1the sum arrived at by subtracting the Transportation Fund tax
2rate from .12% and multiplying that amount by the districts
3equalized or assessed valuation, provided, that in no case
4shall said reduction result in reimbursement of less than 4/5
5of the cost to transport eligible pupils.
6    The minimum amount to be received by a district is $16
7times the number of eligible pupils transported.
8    When calculating the reimbursement for transportation
9costs, the State Board of Education may not deduct the number
10of pupils enrolled in early education programs from the number
11of pupils eligible for reimbursement if the pupils enrolled in
12the early education programs are transported at the same time
13as other eligible pupils.
14    Any such district transporting resident pupils during the
15school day to an area vocational school or another school
16district's vocational program more than 1 1/2 miles from the
17school attended, as provided in Sections 10-22.20a and
1810-22.22, shall be reimbursed by the State for 4/5 of the cost
19of transporting eligible pupils.
20    School day means that period of time which the pupil is
21required to be in attendance for instructional purposes.
22    If a pupil is at a location within the school district
23other than his residence for child care purposes at the time
24for transportation to school, that location may be considered
25for purposes of determining the 1 1/2 miles from the school
26attended.

 

 

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1    Claims for reimbursement that include children who attend
2any school other than a public school shall show the number of
3such children transported.
4    Claims for reimbursement under this Section shall not be
5paid for the transportation of pupils for whom transportation
6costs are claimed for payment under other Sections of this Act.
7    The allowable direct cost of transporting pupils for
8regular, vocational, and special education pupil
9transportation shall be limited to the sum of the cost of
10physical examinations required for employment as a school bus
11driver; the salaries of full or part-time drivers and school
12bus maintenance personnel; employee benefits excluding
13Illinois municipal retirement payments, social security
14payments, unemployment insurance payments and workers'
15compensation insurance premiums; expenditures to independent
16carriers who operate school buses; payments to other school
17districts for pupil transportation services; pre-approved
18contractual expenditures for computerized bus scheduling; the
19cost of gasoline, oil, tires, and other supplies necessary for
20the operation of school buses; the cost of converting buses'
21gasoline engines to more fuel efficient engines or to engines
22which use alternative energy sources; the cost of travel to
23meetings and workshops conducted by the regional
24superintendent or the State Superintendent of Education
25pursuant to the standards established by the Secretary of State
26under Section 6-106 of the Illinois Vehicle Code to improve the

 

 

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1driving skills of school bus drivers; the cost of maintenance
2of school buses including parts and materials used;
3expenditures for leasing transportation vehicles, except
4interest and service charges; the cost of insurance and
5licenses for transportation vehicles; expenditures for the
6rental of transportation equipment; plus a depreciation
7allowance of 20% for 5 years for school buses and vehicles
8approved for transporting pupils to and from school and a
9depreciation allowance of 10% for 10 years for other
10transportation equipment so used. Each school year, if a school
11district has made expenditures to the Regional Transportation
12Authority or any of its service boards, a mass transit
13district, or an urban transportation district under an
14intergovernmental agreement with the district to provide for
15the transportation of pupils and if the public transit carrier
16received direct payment for services or passes from a school
17district within its service area during the 2000-2001 school
18year, then the allowable direct cost of transporting pupils for
19regular, vocational, and special education pupil
20transportation shall also include the expenditures that the
21district has made to the public transit carrier. In addition to
22the above allowable costs school districts shall also claim all
23transportation supervisory salary costs, including Illinois
24municipal retirement payments, and all transportation related
25building and building maintenance costs without limitation.
26    Special education allowable costs shall also include

 

 

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1expenditures for the salaries of attendants or aides for that
2portion of the time they assist special education pupils while
3in transit and expenditures for parents and public carriers for
4transporting special education pupils when pre-approved by the
5State Superintendent of Education.
6    Indirect costs shall be included in the reimbursement claim
7for districts which own and operate their own school buses.
8Such indirect costs shall include administrative costs, or any
9costs attributable to transporting pupils from their
10attendance centers to another school building for
11instructional purposes. No school district which owns and
12operates its own school buses may claim reimbursement for
13indirect costs which exceed 5% of the total allowable direct
14costs for pupil transportation.
15    The State Board of Education shall prescribe uniform
16regulations for determining the above standards and shall
17prescribe forms of cost accounting and standards of determining
18reasonable depreciation. Such depreciation shall include the
19cost of equipping school buses with the safety features
20required by law or by the rules, regulations and standards
21promulgated by the State Board of Education, and the Department
22of Transportation for the safety and construction of school
23buses provided, however, any equipment cost reimbursed by the
24Department of Transportation for equipping school buses with
25such safety equipment shall be deducted from the allowable cost
26in the computation of reimbursement under this Section in the

 

 

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1same percentage as the cost of the equipment is depreciated.
2    On or before August 15, annually, the chief school
3administrator for the district shall certify to the State
4Superintendent of Education the district's claim for
5reimbursement for the school year ending on June 30 next
6preceding. The State Superintendent of Education shall check
7and approve the claims and prepare the vouchers showing the
8amounts due for district reimbursement claims. Each fiscal
9year, the State Superintendent of Education shall prepare and
10transmit the first 3 vouchers to the Comptroller on the 30th
11day of September, December and March, respectively, and the
12final voucher, no later than June 20.
13    If the amount appropriated for transportation
14reimbursement is insufficient to fund total claims for any
15fiscal year, the State Board of Education shall reduce each
16school district's allowable costs and flat grant amount
17proportionately to make total adjusted claims equal the total
18amount appropriated.
19    For purposes of calculating claims for reimbursement under
20this Section for any school year beginning July 1, 1998, or
21thereafter, the equalized assessed valuation for a school
22district used to compute reimbursement shall be computed in the
23same manner as it is computed under paragraph (2) of subsection
24(G) of Section 18-8.05.
25    All reimbursements received from the State shall be
26deposited into the district's transportation fund or into the

 

 

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1fund from which the allowable expenditures were made.
2    Notwithstanding any other provision of law, any school
3district receiving a payment under this Section or under
4Section 14-7.02, 14-7.02b, or 14-13.01 of this Code may
5classify all or a portion of the funds that it receives in a
6particular fiscal year or from general State aid pursuant to
7Section 18-8.05 of this Code as funds received in connection
8with any funding program for which it is entitled to receive
9funds from the State in that fiscal year (including, without
10limitation, any funding program referenced in this Section),
11regardless of the source or timing of the receipt. The district
12may not classify more funds as funds received in connection
13with the funding program than the district is entitled to
14receive in that fiscal year for that program. Any
15classification by a district must be made by a resolution of
16its board of education. The resolution must identify the amount
17of any payments or general State aid to be classified under
18this paragraph and must specify the funding program to which
19the funds are to be treated as received in connection
20therewith. This resolution is controlling as to the
21classification of funds referenced therein. A certified copy of
22the resolution must be sent to the State Superintendent of
23Education. The resolution shall still take effect even though a
24copy of the resolution has not been sent to the State
25Superintendent of Education in a timely manner. No
26classification under this paragraph by a district shall affect

 

 

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1the total amount or timing of money the district is entitled to
2receive under this Code. No classification under this paragraph
3by a district shall in any way relieve the district from or
4affect any requirements that otherwise would apply with respect
5to that funding program, including any accounting of funds by
6source, reporting expenditures by original source and purpose,
7reporting requirements, or requirements of providing services.
8    Any school district with a population of not more than
9500,000 must deposit all funds received under this Article into
10the transportation fund and use those funds for the provision
11of transportation services.
12(Source: P.A. 95-903, eff. 8-25-08; 96-1264, eff. 1-1-11.)
 
13    (105 ILCS 5/3-6 rep.)
14    (105 ILCS 5/3-6.1 rep.)
15    Section 90. The School Code is amended by repealing
16Sections 3-6 and 3-6.1.
 
17    Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon
18becoming law.

 

 

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1 INDEX
2 Statutes amended in order of appearance
3    15 ILCS 20/50-20was 15 ILCS 20/38.3
4    30 ILCS 105/5.866 new
5    30 ILCS 105/5.867 new
6    30 ILCS 105/5.868 new
7    30 ILCS 105/5.869 new
8    35 ILCS 5/201from Ch. 120, par. 2-201
9    35 ILCS 5/202.5
10    35 ILCS 5/204from Ch. 120, par. 2-204
11    35 ILCS 5/208from Ch. 120, par. 2-208
12    35 ILCS 5/212
13    35 ILCS 5/901from Ch. 120, par. 9-901
14    35 ILCS 120/1from Ch. 120, par. 440
15    35 ILCS 120/2from Ch. 120, par. 441
16    105 ILCS 5/1C-2
17    105 ILCS 5/2-3.25cfrom Ch. 122, par. 2-3.25c
18    105 ILCS 5/2-3.25dfrom Ch. 122, par. 2-3.25d
19    105 ILCS 5/2-3.25d-5 new
20    105 ILCS 5/2-3.163 new
21    105 ILCS 5/2-3.164 new
22    105 ILCS 5/2-3.165 new
23    105 ILCS 5/2-3.166 new
24    105 ILCS 5/2-3.167 new
25    105 ILCS 5/3-7from Ch. 122, par. 3-7

 

 

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1    105 ILCS 5/10-16.10 new
2    105 ILCS 5/10-17afrom Ch. 122, par. 10-17a
3    105 ILCS 5/10-17b new
4    105 ILCS 5/10-17c new
5    105 ILCS 5/10-17d new
6    105 ILCS 5/10-20.56 new
7    105 ILCS 5/10-22.45from Ch. 122, par. 10-22.45
8    105 ILCS 5/17-2.11d new
9    105 ILCS 5/18-8.05
10    105 ILCS 5/19-3from Ch. 122, par. 19-3
11    105 ILCS 5/21A-3 new
12    105 ILCS 5/21A-5
13    105 ILCS 5/21A-10
14    105 ILCS 5/21A-15
15    105 ILCS 5/21A-20
16    105 ILCS 5/21A-25
17    105 ILCS 5/21A-30
18    105 ILCS 5/23-3from Ch. 122, par. 23-3
19    105 ILCS 5/23-5.5 new
20    105 ILCS 5/23-6from Ch. 122, par. 23-6
21    105 ILCS 5/29-5from Ch. 122, par. 29-5
22    105 ILCS 5/3-6 rep.
23    105 ILCS 5/3-6.1 rep.