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Illinois Compiled Statutes
Information maintained by the Legislative Reference Bureau Updating the database of the Illinois Compiled Statutes (ILCS) is an ongoing process. Recent laws may not yet be included in the ILCS database, but they are found on this site as Public Acts soon after they become law. For information concerning the relationship between statutes and Public Acts, refer to the Guide. Because the statute database is maintained primarily for legislative drafting purposes, statutory changes are sometimes included in the statute database before they take effect. If the source note at the end of a Section of the statutes includes a Public Act that has not yet taken effect, the version of the law that is currently in effect may have already been removed from the database and you should refer to that Public Act to see the changes made to the current law.
PUBLIC AID (305 ILCS 5/) Illinois Public Aid Code. 305 ILCS 5/12-21.1
(305 ILCS 5/12-21.1) (from Ch. 23, par. 12-21.1)
Sec. 12-21.1.
Supervisors of general assistance in counties not under
township organization - Other staffing. In counties not under township organization,
the presiding officer of
the county board, with the advice and consent of the County Board, shall
designate a Supervisor of General Assistance for the county and appoint
such other employees as may be necessary to provide public aid under
Article VI. The County Board shall prescribe the compensation
and duties of the Supervisor and other employees.
(Source: P.A. 81-1085.)
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305 ILCS 5/12-21.2
(305 ILCS 5/12-21.2) (from Ch. 23, par. 12-21.2)
Sec. 12-21.2.
Supervisors of general assistance in counties under
township organization - Other staffing. In counties under township organization,
the supervisors of the
respective towns therein shall be ex officio Supervisors of General
Assistance of their towns. The Supervisor of General Assistance shall
appoint such other employees as may be necessary to provide public aid
under Article VI and prescribe their compensation and duties.
(Source: P.A. 81-1085.)
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305 ILCS 5/12-21.3
(305 ILCS 5/12-21.3) (from Ch. 23, par. 12-21.3)
Sec. 12-21.3.
(Repealed).
(Source: P.A. 83-333. Repealed by P.A. 92-111, eff. 1-1-02.)
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305 ILCS 5/12-21.4
(305 ILCS 5/12-21.4) (from Ch. 23, par. 12-21.4)
Sec. 12-21.4.
Supervisor of general assistance in incorporated town which has superseded
a civil township-Other staff.
In an incorporated town which has superseded a civil township, the
supervisor of such incorporated town shall be ex officio Supervisor of
General Assistance. The governing body of the incorporated town may by
ordinance provide for the appointment of other employees as may be
necessary to provide public aid under Article VI, and fix their
compensation.
(Source: Laws 1967, p. 122.)
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305 ILCS 5/12-21.5
(305 ILCS 5/12-21.5) (from Ch. 23, par. 12-21.5)
Sec. 12-21.5.
Veterans Assistance Commission as local governmental unit.
In counties having less than 3 million inhabitants in which there is
created a County Veterans Assistance Commission, the Superintendent of
Veterans Assistance shall be selected and other employees appointed as provided
in Section 10 of the Military Veterans Assistance Act and the compensation
of the Superintendent and other employees shall be as therein provided.
(Source: P.A. 87-796.)
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305 ILCS 5/12-21.6
(305 ILCS 5/12-21.6) (from Ch. 23, par. 12-21.6)
Sec. 12-21.6.
Compensation and standards of employees of local
governmental units receiving state funds. In any local governmental unit
receiving State funds for public aid
purposes under Article VI, the number and compensation rates
and standards of competence, performance, and tenure of all employees or
other persons paid from public aid funds, including the compensation
rates of the persons serving as or designated as Supervisor of General
Assistance if such person is paid in whole or in part from public aid
funds, shall be subject to review and approval of the Illinois
Department.
(Source: P.A. 81-1085.)
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305 ILCS 5/12-21.7
(305 ILCS 5/12-21.7) (from Ch. 23, par. 12-21.7)
Sec. 12-21.7.
Limitations on political activities.
In any local governmental unit receiving State funds, each employee
whose duties pertain to determination of eligibility for or the amount
of public aid is prohibited from engaging in at any time, whether during
or outside of regular working hours, any of the following activities:
1. Using or threatening to use the influence or authority of his
position to coerce or to persuade any person to follow any course of
political action.
2. Soliciting money from any person for any political purpose.
3. Selling or distributing tickets for political meetings.
4. Assisting at the polls in behalf of any party or party-designated
candidate on any election day.
5. Initiating or circulating petitions on behalf of a candidate.
6. Distributing campaign literature or material in behalf of any
candidate.
Any employee who engages in the foregoing proscribed political
activities shall be subject to immediate discharge in accordance with
the procedures controlling his position. If an employee engages in such
activities at the request or direction of any officer or officers of the
local governmental unit, or if the governmental unit fails to initiate
procedures for the dismissal of an employee who persists in such
activities, the Illinois Department may withhold the payment of any
further State funds to the local governmental unit until the
governmental unit has established that its actions are in full accord
with the objectives of this Section.
(Source: Laws 1967, p. 122.)
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305 ILCS 5/12-21.8
(305 ILCS 5/12-21.8) (from Ch. 23, par. 12-21.8)
Sec. 12-21.8.
Duties of supervisors of general assistance.
Except for
the Supervisor of General Assistance who is the Director of the County
Department of Public Aid, the Supervisor of General Assistance shall
receive and pay out moneys raised by taxes or allocated by the State for
public aid purposes and shall provide public aid to all persons eligible
therefor under Article VI of this Code. State and municipal funds for
General Assistance purposes in a city, village or incorporated town of
more than 500,000 population shall be received and disbursed as provided
in Section 12-10.
The Supervisor of General Assistance shall keep such records and
submit annually and at such other times as their respective county
boards, city councils, board of trustees, or board of town trustees may
require, reports relating to the administration of such public aid
programs as are the responsibility of the local governmental unit under
this Code, prepared in such form as may be directed by such agencies.
On or before the 15th day of each calendar month, Supervisors of
General Assistance shall submit to the Illinois Department full itemized
reports of all receipts and expenditures of moneys for public aid and
the costs of administration under Article VI of this Code during the
prior calendar month, together with such other reports as the Illinois
Department may require. The Illinois Department may audit the books and
records dealing with such public aid programs at such times as it deems
necessary.
(Source: P.A. 82-783.)
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305 ILCS 5/12-21.9
(305 ILCS 5/12-21.9) (from Ch. 23, par. 12-21.9)
Sec. 12-21.9.
Limitations on indebtedness.
No indebtedness shall be incurred by any Supervisor of General
Assistance in excess of taxes levied for public aid purposes and
uncollected, or for the payment of which funds are not currently available,
without the consent of the city council or board of trustees, board of town
trustees, or county board, as the case may be.
(Source: P.A. 82-783.)
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305 ILCS 5/12-21.10
(305 ILCS 5/12-21.10) (from Ch. 23, par. 12-21.10)
Sec. 12-21.10.
Default and misappropriation of funds; Removal of
supervisor; Conditions requiring appointment of interim supervisor.
If the Supervisor of General Assistance is a defaulter and in arrears
with the governmental unit, or has misused, misappropriated, or
converted to his own use or the use of any other person any of the funds
of the unit, or is guilty of any other misconduct in office, the
governing body of the governmental unit, and in the case of a township,
the board of town trustees, may remove him as Supervisor of General
Assistance and appoint a suitable person to be the supervisor therein;
provided, that for a township containing 4,000 inhabitants or more, upon
written request of the township supervisors, the board of town trustees
may appoint a Supervisor of General Assistance who is a resident of such
township, and fix his compensation and term of office, which shall not
exceed the term of the board.
If, as provided in Section 12-21.18, the Illinois Department has
ordered the withholding of State funds for failure of the governmental
unit to comply with the Department's rules and regulations, the
governing body of the governmental unit, and in the case of a township,
the board of town trustees, upon written order of the Illinois
Department shall appoint an Interim Supervisor of General Assistance,
acceptable to the Illinois Department, to serve as Supervisor of General
Assistance for the governmental unit until such time as the policies and
procedures of the unit are determined by the Department to be in
compliance with its rules. If, after a reasonable time as determined by
the Illinois Department, the governmental unit or agency to which such
order is directed fails to make an appointment, or appoints a person who
is not acceptable to the Illinois Department, the Public Aid Committee,
established under Section 11-8, of the county in which the governmental
unit is located, upon written order of the Illinois Department, shall
appoint an Interim Supervisor, which appointment shall be subject to the
approval of the Illinois Department.
The appointing authority shall fix the compensation of the Interim
Supervisor of General Assistance, subject to approval of the Illinois
Department, which shall be payable from the general assistance fund of
the local governmental unit.
An Interim Supervisor of General Assistance may be removed and
another person appointed in his place in the same manner and for the
same reasons as in the case of an initial appointment of an Interim
Supervisor.
The Illinois Department shall not order the appointment of an Interim
Supervisor of General Assistance if the local governmental unit takes
such action as the Department considers to have established satisfactory
compliance with its rules, and a reasonable time, to be determined by
the Department, shall be allowed the governmental unit to establish such
compliance.
If an Interim Supervisor of General Assistance has been appointed, he
shall exercise all the powers of that office in respect to the
administration of general assistance, and shall have the sole authority
to disburse State and local funds available for this purpose. If the
governmental unit thereafter takes such action to assure the Department
that it will comply with the Department's rules, the service of the
Interim Supervisor shall be terminated.
(Source: P.A. 92-111, eff. 1-1-02.)
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305 ILCS 5/12-21.11
(305 ILCS 5/12-21.11) (from Ch. 23, par. 12-21.11)
Sec. 12-21.11.
Bonds.
Every Supervisor of General Assistance, including an Interim Supervisor
of General Assistance appointed as provided in Section 12-21.10, shall
execute to the governmental unit which he serves an official bond in a
penal sum and with sureties to be fixed and approved by the governing body
thereof, and, in the case of a township, as fixed and approved by the board
of town trustees, conditioned for the faithful discharge of his duties and
the due application of all funds and property which shall come to his hands
as such Supervisor. If the local governmental unit receives State funds in
accordance with the provisions of this Code, the amount and surety of the
bond shall be subject to the further approval of the Illinois Department.
(Source: P.A. 82-783.)
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305 ILCS 5/12-21.12
(305 ILCS 5/12-21.12) (from Ch. 23, par. 12-21.12)
Sec. 12-21.12.
Actions against local governmental units - Intervention
of Attorney General. In any action against a local governmental unit to recover
expenditures alleged to be the responsibility of the governmental unit
under Article VI of this Code, the Supervisor of General
Assistance of such governmental unit shall notify the Illinois
Department of the filing of the action. If the governmental unit was a
recipient of State funds for public aid purposes during all or part of
the period of the expenditures for which the action is brought, or if,
as a result of the action, the governmental unit may qualify for and
request State funds, the Attorney General shall be permitted to
intervene and participate in the action in order to protect the State's
interest therein.
(Source: P.A. 81-1085.)
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305 ILCS 5/12-21.13
(305 ILCS 5/12-21.13) (from Ch. 23, par. 12-21.13)
Sec. 12-21.13.
Local funds required to qualify for state aid.
To qualify
for State funds to supplement local funds for public aid purposes, a local
governmental unit shall, except as hereinafter provided, levy within the
time that such levy is authorized to be made a tax of an amount which, when
added to the unobligated balance available for such purposes at the close
of the fiscal year preceding the fiscal year for which the tax is levied
will equal .10% of the last known total equalized value of all taxable
property in the governmental unit.
In a county of less than 3 million population in which there is
created a County Veterans Assistance Commission, the county shall levy
for assistance to military veterans and their families, within the
time that such levy is authorized to be made, a tax of an amount which,
when added to the unobligated balance available for such purpose at the
close of the preceding fiscal year will equal .02% of the last known
assessed value of the taxable property in the county, or which will
equal .03% of such assessed value if such higher amount is authorized by
the electors of the county, as provided in Section 5-2006 of the Counties
Code.
If, however, at the latest date in the year on which the aforesaid
taxes are authorized to be levied there is in the unobligated balance of
the local governmental unit an amount equal to .10%, or .02% in the case
of Veterans' Assistance, of the last known total equalized value of all
taxable property in the governmental unit, then no tax need be levied in
that year in order for the local governmental unit to qualify for State
funds.
In determining the amount of the unobligated balance which is to be
applied in producing the required levy for receipt of State funds, or
which is to be applied in determining whether a tax levy is required,
there shall be deducted from the gross unobligated balance of funds
available at the close of the preceding fiscal year the total amount of
State funds allocated to the governmental unit during that year and the
total amount of any monies transferred to a township's general town fund
under Section 235-20 of the Township Code
during that year, and
only the remainder shall be considered in determining the amount of the
deficiency needed to produce an amount equal to the qualifying levy for
the current year.
(Source: P.A. 87-796; 88-670, eff. 12-2-94.)
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305 ILCS 5/12-21.14
(305 ILCS 5/12-21.14) (from Ch. 23, par. 12-21.14)
Sec. 12-21.14.
Requirements; review by Illinois
Department; allocations. The County Board of each county or a duly
appointed committee thereof, or any other county agency designated by
the County Board, shall by the last day of each month submit to
the Illinois Department an itemized statement showing, for all local
governmental units therein except a city, village or incorporated town
of more than 500,000 population, assistance
furnished in the county under Article VI of this Code during the previous
month and the expenses for the administration thereof, and the actual
revenues available through taxation by the
local governmental
units. If the Illinois
Department has reason to believe that the amounts submitted by any
county are excessive, it may require appropriate officials of the county
to appear before it and substantiate the amounts to the satisfaction
of the Department.
The Illinois Department shall review these amounts and shall
determine and allocate to the several counties the amounts necessary to
supplement local funds actually available for public aid purposes. There
shall be a yearly reconciliation of amounts allocated to the local
governmental units by the Illinois Department to supplement local
funds.
If, because of circumstances beyond the local governmental unit's
control, such as a sudden caseload increase or an unexpected increase in
the administrative expenses, a local governmental unit has insufficient
local funds actually available to furnish assistance or pay administrative
expenses, the Illinois Department shall provide a special allocation of
funds to the local governmental unit to meet the need. In calculating the
need for a special allocation, the Illinois Department shall take into
consideration the amount of funds legally available from the taxes levied
by the local governmental unit for public aid purposes and any available
unobligated balances.
If a local governmental unit has not received State funds for public
aid purposes for at least 84 consecutive months immediately prior to its
request for State funds, the Illinois Department shall not consider as a
legally available resource of the governmental unit public aid funds, or
the proceeds of public aid taxes and tax anticipation warrants which may
have been transferred or expended during such period for other purposes.
Except as hereinafter provided, State allocations shall be paid to
the County Treasurer for disbursement to local governmental units as
certified by the Illinois Department. Until January 1, 1974, moneys
allocated by the Illinois Department for General Assistance purposes in
a city, village or incorporated town of more than 500,000 population and
moneys received from the Treasurer of the municipality from taxes levied
for General Assistance purposes in the municipality and other moneys and
funds designated in Section 11-43-2 of the Illinois Municipal Code shall
be paid into the special fund established by the County Treasurer of the
county in which the municipality is located and retained for
disbursement by the Director of the County Department of Public Aid
serving as Supervisor of General Assistance for the municipality.
On January 1, 1974, or as soon thereafter as is feasible but not
later than January 1, 1975, the County Treasurer shall transfer to the
Special Purposes Trust Fund (now known as the DHS Special Purposes Trust Fund) established by Section 12-10 of this Code
all State and municipal moneys remaining in or due to the special fund
of the County Treasury. After December 31, 1973, but not later than June
30, 1979, State allocations and municipal funds for General Assistance
purposes in such a municipality, and other moneys and funds designated
by Section 11-43-2 of the Illinois Municipal Code, shall be paid into
the Special Purposes Trust Fund (now known as the DHS Special Purposes Trust Fund) and disbursed as provided in Section
12-10. State and municipal moneys paid into the Special Purposes Trust
Fund (now known as the DHS Special Purposes Trust Fund) under the foregoing provision shall be used exclusively for (1)
furnishing General Assistance within the municipality; (2) the payment
of administrative costs; and (3) the payment of warrants issued against
and in anticipation of taxes levied by the municipality for General
Assistance purposes, and the accrued interest thereon. After June 30,
1979, moneys and funds designated by Section 11-43-2 of the Illinois
Municipal Code, shall be paid into the General Revenue Fund as
reimbursement for appropriated funds disbursed.
(Source: P.A. 99-933, eff. 1-27-17.)
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305 ILCS 5/12-21.16
(305 ILCS 5/12-21.16) (from Ch. 23, par. 12-21.16)
Sec. 12-21.16.
Administrative costs.
In any local governmental unit receiving State funds, moneys expended
for costs of administration, exclusive of any compensation paid to the
Supervisor of General Assistance from funds other than public aid funds,
shall not exceed amounts which have been submitted to and approved by the
Illinois Department.
If a local governmental unit is a participating municipality in the
Illinois Municipal Retirement Fund created by Article 7 of the "Illinois
Pension Code", its estimate of administrative expenses may include amounts
required as contributions by the governmental unit in behalf of its
employees engaged in the administration of public aid for retirement
annuity purposes for current service rendered by such employees on and
after July 1, 1953, provided the governmental unit has levied a tax at a
rate not less than one-half the maximum rate authorized under Section 7-171
of the aforesaid Article.
Contributions for retirement annuity purposes of
employees of the County Department engaged in administration of General
Assistance for such a municipality shall be met from funds appropriated for
the State contribution to the State Employees Retirement System under
Article 14 of the "Illinois Pension Code".
The contributions of a governmental unit for retirement annuity purposes
which are authorized to be included in estimates of administrative expenses
shall include Social Security contributions for which the unit is obligated
under the Illinois Municipal Retirement Fund created by Article 7 of the
Illinois Pension Code, or if the governmental unit is not a participating
municipality in that Fund, the Social Security contributions for which it
is obligated pursuant to an agreement executed under Article 21 of the
Illinois Pension Code. In like manner, if the retirement fund established
under Article 9 of the Illinois Pension Code becomes obligated for Social
Security employer contributions, the estimated expenses of the County
Department may include the Social Security contributions together with the
regular contributions for which the county is obligated.
A local governmental unit receiving State funds may include in its
estimate of administrative expenses obligations assumed by it for insurance
premiums or charges for group life or health insurance, or both, for
employees of the local governmental unit, for any such employees who retire
or who had retired on or after January 1, 1966, and for dependents
receiving an annuity as survivors of such employees or retired employees if
the governmental unit has so acted under Section 3 of "An Act defining the
powers and duties of local governmental agencies to pay premiums and costs
or portions thereof, and to withhold parts of employee and elected or
appointed official compensation to provide insurance or retirement benefits
for employees and appointed or elected officials", approved August 16,
1963, as amended, or has so acted in exercise of its powers as a home rule
unit. The amount included for this purpose in the estimate of
administrative expenses shall not exceed the comparable insurance premiums
or charges per employee, retiree, or survivor currently paid by the State
of Illinois for State employees under the "State Employees Group Insurance
Act of 1971".
(Source: P.A. 78-1297.)
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305 ILCS 5/12-21.17
(305 ILCS 5/12-21.17) (from Ch. 23, par. 12-21.17)
Sec. 12-21.17.
Supervision by Illinois Department.
If a local governmental
unit receives State funds for public aid
purposes under Article VI its administration, including the use of local
resources, shall be subject to the supervision and the rules and
regulations of the Illinois Department. The Department shall also
supervise the setting of the local uniform budget standard and its
enforcement.
Such units and the officers thereof shall deliver to the Illinois
Department for examination and inspection all books, records, accounts,
and other documents which the Department requires.
(Source: P.A. 81-1085.)
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305 ILCS 5/12-21.18
(305 ILCS 5/12-21.18) (from Ch. 23, par. 12-21.18)
Sec. 12-21.18.
Non-compliance with rules of the Illinois Department.
If a local governmental unit subject to the supervision of the Illinois
Department is, in the determination of the Department, refusing or failing
to comply with the Department's rules and regulations, the Illinois
Department shall give notice promptly by United States registered or
certified mail to the Supervisor of General Assistance or other proper
officer of such unit of the rules which are not being observed and give the
governmental unit or its designated representative an opportunity to appear
before it and substantiate its position in respect to the rule or rules at
issue.
If within 5 days after such notice, the local governmental unit
continues to refuse or fails to comply with the Department's rules, or
fails to avail itself of the opportunity offered for a hearing before the
Department, the Department shall instruct the County Treasurer of the
County in which the governmental unit is located to withhold the payment of
any further State funds until he receives notice from the Department to
release the funds.
The Illinois Department may suspend an order for the withholding of
funds (1) if the governmental unit takes such action as the Department
considers to have established satisfactory compliance with its rules or (2)
upon appointment of an Interim Supervisor of General Assistance, as
directed by the provisions of Section 12-21.10.
The provisions of the Administrative Review Law,
as amended, and the rules adopted pursuant thereto, shall apply to and
govern proceedings for the judicial review of final administrative
decisions of the Illinois Department under this Section. The term
"administrative decision" is defined as in Section 3-101 of the Code of Civil Procedure.
(Source: P.A. 82-783.)
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305 ILCS 5/12-21.20
(305 ILCS 5/12-21.20) (from Ch. 23, par. 12-21.20)
Sec. 12-21.20.
Destruction of Obsolete Records.
Obsolete records, documents,
papers, and memoranda pertaining to
public aid under Article VI may be destroyed or otherwise
disposed of by local governmental units at any time subsequent to the
expiration of 5 years after the matters to which they relate have been
concluded.
(Source: P.A. 92-111, eff. 1-1-02.)
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305 ILCS 5/12-21.21 (305 ILCS 5/12-21.21) Sec. 12-21.21. Federal waiver or State Plan amendment. The Department of Healthcare and Family Services and the Department of Human Services shall jointly submit the necessary application to the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services for a waiver or State Plan amendment to allow remote monitoring and support services as a waiver-reimbursable service for persons with intellectual and developmental disabilities. The application shall be submitted no later than January 1, 2021. No later than July 1, 2021, the Department of Human Services shall adopt rules to allow remote monitoring and support services at community-integrated living arrangements.
(Source: P.A. 101-649, eff. 7-7-20.) |
305 ILCS 5/Art. XIII
(305 ILCS 5/Art. XIII heading)
ARTICLE XIII.
PURPOSE--REPEAL--SAVINGS
PROVISIONS--PARTIAL INVALIDITY--
EFFECTIVE DATE
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305 ILCS 5/13-1
(305 ILCS 5/13-1) (from Ch. 23, par. 13-1)
Sec. 13-1.
Purpose.
It is the purpose of this Code to restate, simplify, eliminate
obsolescences and redundancies and reorganize into a more understandable
and usable form the provisions of the 1949 Code repealed hereby.
It is intended that this Code shall grant no lesser or greater rights or
impose any greater or lesser obligations upon applicants or recipients or
administrative agencies than exercised under such prior Code except as they
may be changed hereafter by specific amendment to this Code. All such
rights and obligations are preserved without change, and without loss or
impairment, precisely as if such Code had not been repealed.
(Source: Laws 1967, p. 122.)
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305 ILCS 5/13-2
(305 ILCS 5/13-2) (from Ch. 23, par. 13-2)
Sec. 13-2.
Repeal.
The "Act to revise the public assistance laws of Illinois, to
consolidate and codify such laws, to prescribe the functions, powers, and
duties of governmental units, agencies, and persons thereunder, to provide
penalties for the violation thereof and to repeal certain Acts herein
named", approved August 4, 1949, as amended, referred to herein as the
1949 Code, is repealed.
(Source: Laws 1967, p. 122.)
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305 ILCS 5/13-3
(305 ILCS 5/13-3) (from Ch. 23, par. 13-3)
Sec. 13-3.
Savings
provisions.
The repeal of the 1949 Code Act shall not affect or impair the
continuity of grants heretofore made to or in behalf of recipients pursuant
to said Code. Nor shall such repeal affect or impair any power or the
performance of any act or duty by any governmental unit, or officer, agency
or employee thereof, validly exercised, performed or done under said Code.
However, after the effective date of this Code all such recipients,
governmental units, agencies, officers and employees shall in all respects
be subject to and governed by the provisions of this Code.
(Source: Laws 1967, p. 122.)
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305 ILCS 5/13-4
(305 ILCS 5/13-4) (from Ch. 23, par. 13-4)
Sec. 13-4.
Partial
invalidity.
Should any Section, subdivision, clause, phrase, or provision of this
Code to be unconstitutional or invalid for any reason whatsoever such
holdings shall not affect the validity of the remaining portions of this
Code.
(Source: Laws 1967, p. 122.)
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305 ILCS 5/13-5
(305 ILCS 5/13-5) (from Ch. 23, par. 13-5)
Sec. 13-5.
Emergency-effective date.
Whereas many members of the General Assembly wish to offer bills
amending the law relating to public assistance at the current session of
the General Assembly and such bills should be drafted as amendments to this
Act and not to the 1949 Act, therefore an emergency exists and this Act
shall take effect upon its becoming a law.
(Source: Laws 1967, p. 122.)
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305 ILCS 5/Art. XIV
(305 ILCS 5/Art. XIV heading)
ARTICLE XIV. HOSPITAL SERVICES TRUST FUND
(Source: P.A. 103-154, eff. 6-30-23.) |
305 ILCS 5/14-1 (305 ILCS 5/14-1) (from Ch. 23, par. 14-1)
Sec. 14-1. Definitions. As used in this Article, unless the
context requires otherwise:
"Hospital" means any institution, place, building, or agency, public
or private, whether organized for profit or not-for-profit, which is
located in the State and is subject to licensure by the Illinois
Department of Public Health under the Hospital Licensing Act or any
institution, place, building, or agency, public or private, whether organized
for profit or not-for-profit, which meets all comparable conditions and
requirements of the Hospital Licensing Act in effect for the state in
which it is located, and is required to submit cost reports to the
Illinois Department under Title 89, Part 148, of the Illinois
Administrative Code, but shall not include the University of Illinois
Hospital as defined in
the University of Illinois Hospital Act or a county hospital in a county
of over 3 million population.
(Source: P.A. 93-659, eff. 2-3-04.)
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305 ILCS 5/14-2
(305 ILCS 5/14-2) (from Ch. 23, par. 14-2)
Sec. 14-2.
(Repealed).
(Source: P.A. 90-372, eff. 7-1-98. Repealed by P.A. 93-659, eff. 2-3-04.)
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305 ILCS 5/14-3
(305 ILCS 5/14-3) (from Ch. 23, par. 14-3)
Sec. 14-3.
(Repealed).
(Source: P.A. 87-861. Repealed by P.A. 93-659, eff. 2-3-04.)
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305 ILCS 5/14-4
(305 ILCS 5/14-4) (from Ch. 23, par. 14-4)
Sec. 14-4.
(Repealed).
(Source: P.A. 87-13. Repealed by P.A. 93-659, eff. 2-3-04.)
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305 ILCS 5/14-5
(305 ILCS 5/14-5) (from Ch. 23, par. 14-5)
Sec. 14-5.
(Repealed).
(Source: P.A. 87-13. Repealed by P.A. 93-659, eff. 2-3-04.)
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305 ILCS 5/14-6
(305 ILCS 5/14-6) (from Ch. 23, par. 14-6)
Sec. 14-6.
(Repealed).
(Source: P.A. 87-13. Repealed by P.A. 93-659, eff. 2-3-04.)
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305 ILCS 5/14-7
(305 ILCS 5/14-7) (from Ch. 23, par. 14-7)
Sec. 14-7.
(Repealed).
(Source: P.A. 87-13. Repealed by P.A. 93-659, eff. 2-3-04.)
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305 ILCS 5/14-8
(305 ILCS 5/14-8) (from Ch. 23, par. 14-8)
Sec. 14-8. Disbursements to Hospitals.
(a) For inpatient hospital services rendered on and after September 1,
1991, the Illinois Department shall reimburse
hospitals for inpatient services at an inpatient payment rate calculated for
each hospital based upon the Medicare Prospective Payment System as set forth
in Sections 1886(b), (d), (g), and (h) of the federal Social Security Act, and
the regulations, policies, and procedures promulgated thereunder, except as
modified by this Section. Payment rates for inpatient hospital services
rendered on or after September 1, 1991 and on or before September 30, 1992
shall be calculated using the Medicare Prospective Payment rates in effect on
September 1, 1991. Payment rates for inpatient hospital services rendered on
or after October 1, 1992 and on or before March 31, 1994 shall be calculated
using the Medicare Prospective Payment rates in effect on September 1, 1992.
Payment rates for inpatient hospital services rendered on or after April 1,
1994 shall be calculated using the Medicare Prospective Payment rates
(including the Medicare grouping methodology and weighting factors as adjusted
pursuant to paragraph (1) of this subsection) in effect 90 days prior to the
date of admission. For services rendered on or after July 1, 1995, the
reimbursement methodology implemented under this subsection shall not include
those costs referred to in Sections 1886(d)(5)(B) and 1886(h) of the Social
Security Act. The additional payment amounts required under Section
1886(d)(5)(F) of the Social Security Act, for hospitals serving a
disproportionate share of low-income or indigent patients, are not required
under this Section. For hospital inpatient services rendered on or after July
1, 1995 and on or before June 30, 2014, the Illinois Department shall
reimburse hospitals using the relative weighting factors and the base payment
rates calculated for each hospital that were in effect on June 30, 1995, less
the portion of such rates attributed by the Illinois Department to the cost of
medical education.
(1) The weighting factors established under Section | | 1886(d)(4) of the Social Security Act shall not be used in the reimbursement system established under this Section. Rather, the Illinois Department shall establish by rule Medicaid weighting factors to be used in the reimbursement system established under this Section.
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(2) The Illinois Department shall define by rule
| | those hospitals or distinct parts of hospitals that shall be exempt from the reimbursement system established under this Section. In defining such hospitals, the Illinois Department shall take into consideration those hospitals exempt from the Medicare Prospective Payment System as of September 1, 1991. For hospitals defined as exempt under this subsection, the Illinois Department shall by rule establish a reimbursement system for payment of inpatient hospital services rendered on and after September 1, 1991. For all hospitals that are children's hospitals as defined in Section 5-5.02 of this Code, the reimbursement methodology shall, through June 30, 1992, net of all applicable fees, at least equal each children's hospital 1990 ICARE payment rates, indexed to the current year by application of the DRI hospital cost index from 1989 to the year in which payments are made. Excepting county providers as defined in Article XV of this Code, hospitals licensed under the University of Illinois Hospital Act, and facilities operated by the Department of Mental Health and Developmental Disabilities (or its successor, the Department of Human Services) for hospital inpatient services rendered on or after July 1, 1995 and on or before June 30, 2014, the Illinois Department shall reimburse children's hospitals, as defined in 89 Illinois Administrative Code Section 149.50(c)(3), at the rates in effect on June 30, 1995, and shall reimburse all other hospitals at the rates in effect on June 30, 1995, less the portion of such rates attributed by the Illinois Department to the cost of medical education. For inpatient hospital services provided on or after August 1, 1998, the Illinois Department may establish by rule a means of adjusting the rates of children's hospitals, as defined in 89 Illinois Administrative Code Section 149.50(c)(3), that did not meet that definition on June 30, 1995, in order for the inpatient hospital rates of such hospitals to take into account the average inpatient hospital rates of those children's hospitals that did meet the definition of children's hospitals on June 30, 1995.
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(3) (Blank).
(4) Notwithstanding any other provision of this
| | Section, hospitals that on August 31, 1991, have a contract with the Illinois Department under Section 3-4 of the Illinois Health Finance Reform Act may elect to continue to be reimbursed at rates stated in such contracts for general and specialty care.
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(5) In addition to any payments made under this
| | subsection (a), the Illinois Department shall make the adjustment payments required by Section 5-5.02 of this Code; provided, that in the case of any hospital reimbursed under a per case methodology, the Illinois Department shall add an amount equal to the product of the hospital's average length of stay, less one day, multiplied by 20, for inpatient hospital services rendered on or after September 1, 1991 and on or before September 30, 1992.
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(b) (Blank).
(b-5) Excepting county providers as defined in Article XV of this Code,
hospitals licensed under the University of Illinois Hospital Act, and
facilities operated by the Illinois Department of Mental Health and
Developmental Disabilities (or its successor, the Department of Human
Services), for outpatient services rendered on or after July 1, 1995
and before July 1, 1998 the Illinois Department shall reimburse
children's hospitals, as defined in the Illinois Administrative Code
Section 149.50(c)(3), at the rates in effect on June 30, 1995, less that
portion of such rates attributed by the Illinois Department to the outpatient
indigent volume adjustment and shall reimburse all other hospitals at the rates
in effect on June 30, 1995, less the portions of such rates attributed by the
Illinois Department to the cost of medical education and attributed by the
Illinois Department to the outpatient indigent volume adjustment. For
outpatient services provided on or after July 1, 1998 and on or before June 30, 2014, reimbursement rates
shall be established by rule.
(c) In addition to any other payments under this Code, the Illinois
Department shall develop a hospital disproportionate share reimbursement
methodology that, effective July 1, 1991, through September 30, 1992,
shall reimburse hospitals sufficiently to expend the fee monies described
in subsection (b) of Section 14-3 of this Code and the federal matching
funds received by the Illinois Department as a result of expenditures made
by the Illinois Department as required by this subsection (c) and Section
14-2 that are attributable to fee monies deposited in the Fund, less
amounts applied to adjustment payments under Section 5-5.02.
(d) Critical Care Access Payments.
(1) In addition to any other payments made under this
| | Code, the Illinois Department shall develop a reimbursement methodology that shall reimburse Critical Care Access Hospitals for the specialized services that qualify them as Critical Care Access Hospitals. No adjustment payments shall be made under this subsection on or after July 1, 1995.
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(2) "Critical Care Access Hospitals" includes, but is
| | not limited to, hospitals that meet at least one of the following criteria:
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(A) Hospitals located outside of a metropolitan
| | statistical area that are designated as Level II Perinatal Centers and that provide a disproportionate share of perinatal services to recipients; or
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(B) Hospitals that are designated as Level I
| | Trauma Centers (adult or pediatric) and certain Level II Trauma Centers as determined by the Illinois Department; or
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(C) Hospitals located outside of a metropolitan
| | statistical area and that provide a disproportionate share of obstetrical services to recipients.
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(e) Inpatient high volume adjustment. For hospital inpatient services,
effective with rate periods beginning on or after October 1, 1993, in
addition to rates paid for inpatient services by the Illinois Department, the
Illinois Department shall make adjustment payments for inpatient services
furnished by Medicaid high volume hospitals. The Illinois Department shall
establish by rule criteria for qualifying as a Medicaid high volume hospital
and shall establish by rule a reimbursement methodology for calculating these
adjustment payments to Medicaid high volume hospitals. No adjustment payment
shall be made under this subsection for services rendered on or after July 1,
1995.
(f) The Illinois Department shall modify its current rules governing
adjustment payments for targeted access, critical care access, and
uncompensated care to classify those adjustment payments as not being payments
to disproportionate share hospitals under Title XIX of the federal Social
Security Act. Rules adopted under this subsection shall not be effective with
respect to services rendered on or after July 1, 1995. The Illinois Department
has no obligation to adopt or implement any rules or make any payments under
this subsection for services rendered on or after July 1, 1995.
(f-5) The State recognizes that adjustment payments to hospitals providing
certain services or incurring certain costs may be necessary to assure that
recipients of medical assistance have adequate access to necessary medical
services. These adjustments include payments for teaching costs and
uncompensated care, trauma center payments, rehabilitation hospital payments,
perinatal center payments, obstetrical care payments, targeted access payments,
Medicaid high volume payments, and outpatient indigent volume payments. On or
before April 1, 1995, the Illinois Department shall issue recommendations
regarding (i) reimbursement mechanisms or adjustment payments to reflect these
costs and services, including methods by which the payments may be calculated
and the method by which the payments may be financed, and (ii) reimbursement
mechanisms or adjustment payments to reflect costs and services of federally
qualified health centers with respect to recipients of medical assistance.
(g) If one or more hospitals file suit in any court challenging any part of
this Article XIV, payments to hospitals under this Article XIV shall be made
only to the extent that sufficient monies are available in the Fund and only to
the extent that any monies in the Fund are not prohibited from disbursement
under any order of the court.
(h) Payments under the disbursement methodology described in this Section
are subject to approval by the federal government in an appropriate State plan
amendment.
(i) The Illinois Department may by rule establish criteria for and develop
methodologies for adjustment payments to hospitals participating under this
Article.
(j) Hospital Residing Long Term Care Services. In addition to any other
payments made under this Code, the Illinois Department may by rule establish
criteria and develop methodologies for payments to hospitals for Hospital
Residing Long Term Care Services.
(k) Critical Access Hospital outpatient payments. In addition to any other payments authorized under this Code, the Illinois Department shall reimburse critical access hospitals, as designated by the Illinois Department of Public Health in accordance with 42 CFR 485, Subpart F, for outpatient services at an amount that is no less than the cost of providing such services, based on Medicare cost principles. Payments under this subsection shall be subject to appropriation.
(l) On and after July 1, 2012, the Department shall reduce any rate of reimbursement for services or other payments or alter any methodologies authorized by this Code to reduce any rate of reimbursement for services or other payments in accordance with Section 5-5e.
(Source: P.A. 97-689, eff. 6-14-12; 98-463, eff. 8-16-13; 98-651, eff. 6-16-14.)
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305 ILCS 5/14-9
(305 ILCS 5/14-9) (from Ch. 23, par. 14-9)
Sec. 14-9.
(Repealed).
(Source: P.A. 87-13. Repealed by P.A. 93-659, eff. 2-3-04.)
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305 ILCS 5/14-10
(305 ILCS 5/14-10) (from Ch. 23, par. 14-10)
Sec. 14-10.
(Repealed).
(Source: P.A. 87-861. Repealed by P.A. 93-659, eff. 2-3-04.)
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305 ILCS 5/14-11 (305 ILCS 5/14-11) Sec. 14-11. Hospital payment reform. (a) The Department may, by rule, implement the All Patient Refined Diagnosis Related Groups (APR-DRG) payment system for inpatient services provided on or after July 1, 2013, in a manner consistent with the actions authorized in this Section. (b) On or before October 1, 2012 and through June 30, 2013, the Department shall begin testing the APR-DRG system. During the testing period the Department shall process and price inpatient services using the APR-DRG system; however, actual payments for those inpatient services shall be made using the current reimbursement system. During the testing period, the Department, in collaboration with the statewide representative of hospitals, shall provide information and technical assistance to hospitals to encourage and facilitate their transition to the APR-DRG system. (c) The Department may, by rule, implement the Enhanced Ambulatory Procedure Grouping (EAPG) system for outpatient services provided on or after January 1, 2014, in a manner consistent with the actions authorized in this Section. On or before January 1, 2013 and through December 31, 2013, the Department shall begin testing the EAPG system. During the testing period the Department shall process and price outpatient services using the EAPG system; however, actual payments for those outpatient services shall be made using the current reimbursement system. During the testing period, the Department, in collaboration with the statewide representative of hospitals, shall provide information and technical assistance to hospitals to encourage and facilitate their transition to the EAPG system. (d) The Department in consultation with the current hospital technical advisory group shall review the test claims for inpatient and outpatient services at least monthly, including the estimated impact on hospitals, and, in developing the rules, policies, and procedures to implement the new payment systems, shall consider at least the following issues: (1) The use of national relative weights provided by | | the vendor of the APR-DRG system, adjusted to reflect characteristics of the Illinois Medical Assistance population.
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| (2) An updated outlier payment methodology based on
| | current data and consistent with the APR-DRG system.
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| (3) The use of policy adjusters to enhance payments
| | to hospitals treating a high percentage of individuals covered by the Medical Assistance program and uninsured patients.
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| (4) Reimbursement for inpatient specialty services
| | such as psychiatric, rehabilitation, and long-term acute care using updated per diem rates that account for service acuity.
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| (5) The creation of one or more transition funding
| | pools to preserve access to care and to ensure financial stability as hospitals transition to the new payment system.
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| (6) Whether, beginning July 1, 2014, some of the
| | static adjustment payments financed by General Revenue funds should be used as part of the base payment system, including as policy adjusters to recognize the additional costs of certain services, such as pediatric or neonatal, or providers, such as trauma centers, Critical Access Hospitals, or high Medicaid hospitals, or for services to uninsured patients.
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| (e) The Department shall provide the association representing the majority of hospitals in Illinois, as the statewide representative of the hospital community, with a monthly file of claims adjudicated under the test system for the purpose of review and analysis as part of the collaboration between the State and the hospital community. The file shall consist of a de-identified extract compliant with the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA).
(f) The current hospital technical advisory group shall make recommendations for changes during the testing period and recommendations for changes prior to the effective dates of the new payment systems. The Department shall draft administrative rules to implement the new payment systems and provide them to the technical advisory group at least 90 days prior to the proposed effective dates of the new payment systems.
(g) The payments to hospitals financed by the current hospital assessment, authorized under Article V-A of this Code, are scheduled to sunset on June 30, 2014. The continuation of or revisions to the hospital assessment program shall take into consideration the impact on hospitals and access to care as a result of the changes to the hospital payment system.
(h) Beginning July 1, 2014, the Department may transition current General Revenue funded supplemental payments into the claims based system over a period of no less than 2 years from the implementation date of the new payment systems and no more than 4 years from the implementation date of the new payment systems, provided however that the Department may adopt, by rule, supplemental payments to help ensure access to care in a geographic area or to help ensure access to specialty services. For any supplemental payments that are adopted that are based on historic data, the data shall be no older than 3 years and the supplemental payment shall be effective for no longer than 2 years before requiring the data to be updated.
(i) Any payments authorized under 89 Illinois Administrative Code 148 set to expire in State fiscal year 2012 and that were paid out to hospitals in State fiscal year 2012 shall remain in effect as long as the assessment imposed by Section 5A-2 is in effect.
(j) Subsections (a) and (c) of this Section shall remain operative unless the Auditor General has reported that: (i) the Department has not undertaken the required actions listed in the report required by subsection (a) of Section 2-20 of the Illinois State Auditing Act; or (ii) the Department has failed to comply with the reporting requirements of Section 2-20 of the Illinois State Auditing Act.
(k) Subsections (a) and (c) of this Section shall not be operative until final federal approval by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services and implementation of all of the payments and assessments in Article V-A in its form as of the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 97th General Assembly or as it may be amended.
(Source: P.A. 97-689, eff. 6-14-12.)
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305 ILCS 5/14-12 (305 ILCS 5/14-12) Sec. 14-12. Hospital rate reform payment system. The hospital payment system pursuant to Section 14-11 of this Article shall be as follows: (a) Inpatient hospital services. Effective for discharges on and after July 1, 2014, reimbursement for inpatient general acute care services shall utilize the All Patient Refined Diagnosis Related Grouping (APR-DRG) software, version 30, distributed by 3M TM Health Information System. (1) The Department shall establish Medicaid weighting | | factors to be used in the reimbursement system established under this subsection. Initial weighting factors shall be the weighting factors as published by 3M Health Information System, associated with Version 30.0 adjusted for the Illinois experience.
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| (2) The Department shall establish a
| | statewide-standardized amount to be used in the inpatient reimbursement system. The Department shall publish these amounts on its website no later than 10 calendar days prior to their effective date.
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| (3) In addition to the statewide-standardized amount,
| | the Department shall develop adjusters to adjust the rate of reimbursement for critical Medicaid providers or services for trauma, transplantation services, perinatal care, and Graduate Medical Education (GME).
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| (4) The Department shall develop add-on payments to
| | account for exceptionally costly inpatient stays, consistent with Medicare outlier principles. Outlier fixed loss thresholds may be updated to control for excessive growth in outlier payments no more frequently than on an annual basis, but at least once every 4 years. Upon updating the fixed loss thresholds, the Department shall be required to update base rates within 12 months.
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| (5) The Department shall define those hospitals or
| | distinct parts of hospitals that shall be exempt from the APR-DRG reimbursement system established under this Section. The Department shall publish these hospitals' inpatient rates on its website no later than 10 calendar days prior to their effective date.
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| (6) Beginning July 1, 2014 and ending on December 31,
| | 2023, in addition to the statewide-standardized amount, the Department shall develop an adjustor to adjust the rate of reimbursement for safety-net hospitals defined in Section 5-5e.1 of this Code excluding pediatric hospitals.
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| (7) Beginning July 1, 2014, in addition to the
| | statewide-standardized amount, the Department shall develop an adjustor to adjust the rate of reimbursement for Illinois freestanding inpatient psychiatric hospitals that are not designated as children's hospitals by the Department but are primarily treating patients under the age of 21.
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| (7.5) (Blank).
(8) Beginning July 1, 2018, in addition to the
| | statewide-standardized amount, the Department shall adjust the rate of reimbursement for hospitals designated by the Department of Public Health as a Perinatal Level II or II+ center by applying the same adjustor that is applied to Perinatal and Obstetrical care cases for Perinatal Level III centers, as of December 31, 2017.
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| (9) Beginning July 1, 2018, in addition to the
| | statewide-standardized amount, the Department shall apply the same adjustor that is applied to trauma cases as of December 31, 2017 to inpatient claims to treat patients with burns, including, but not limited to, APR-DRGs 841, 842, 843, and 844.
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| (10) Beginning July 1, 2018, the
| | statewide-standardized amount for inpatient general acute care services shall be uniformly increased so that base claims projected reimbursement is increased by an amount equal to the funds allocated in paragraph (1) of subsection (b) of Section 5A-12.6, less the amount allocated under paragraphs (8) and (9) of this subsection and paragraphs (3) and (4) of subsection (b) multiplied by 40%.
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| (11) Beginning July 1, 2018, the reimbursement for
| | inpatient rehabilitation services shall be increased by the addition of a $96 per day add-on.
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| (b) Outpatient hospital services. Effective for dates of service on and after July 1, 2014, reimbursement for outpatient services shall utilize the Enhanced Ambulatory Procedure Grouping (EAPG) software, version 3.7 distributed by 3M TM Health Information System.
(1) The Department shall establish Medicaid weighting
| | factors to be used in the reimbursement system established under this subsection. The initial weighting factors shall be the weighting factors as published by 3M Health Information System, associated with Version 3.7.
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| (2) The Department shall establish service specific
| | statewide-standardized amounts to be used in the reimbursement system.
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| (A) The initial statewide standardized amounts,
| | with the labor portion adjusted by the Calendar Year 2013 Medicare Outpatient Prospective Payment System wage index with reclassifications, shall be published by the Department on its website no later than 10 calendar days prior to their effective date.
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| (B) The Department shall establish adjustments to
| | the statewide-standardized amounts for each Critical Access Hospital, as designated by the Department of Public Health in accordance with 42 CFR 485, Subpart F. For outpatient services provided on or before June 30, 2018, the EAPG standardized amounts are determined separately for each critical access hospital such that simulated EAPG payments using outpatient base period paid claim data plus payments under Section 5A-12.4 of this Code net of the associated tax costs are equal to the estimated costs of outpatient base period claims data with a rate year cost inflation factor applied.
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| (3) In addition to the statewide-standardized
| | amounts, the Department shall develop adjusters to adjust the rate of reimbursement for critical Medicaid hospital outpatient providers or services, including outpatient high volume or safety-net hospitals. Beginning July 1, 2018, the outpatient high volume adjustor shall be increased to increase annual expenditures associated with this adjustor by $79,200,000, based on the State Fiscal Year 2015 base year data and this adjustor shall apply to public hospitals, except for large public hospitals, as defined under 89 Ill. Adm. Code 148.25(a).
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| (4) Beginning July 1, 2018, in addition to the
| | statewide standardized amounts, the Department shall make an add-on payment for outpatient expensive devices and drugs. This add-on payment shall at least apply to claim lines that: (i) are assigned with one of the following EAPGs: 490, 1001 to 1020, and coded with one of the following revenue codes: 0274 to 0276, 0278; or (ii) are assigned with one of the following EAPGs: 430 to 441, 443, 444, 460 to 465, 495, 496, 1090. The add-on payment shall be calculated as follows: the claim line's covered charges multiplied by the hospital's total acute cost to charge ratio, less the claim line's EAPG payment plus $1,000, multiplied by 0.8.
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| (5) Beginning July 1, 2018, the
| | statewide-standardized amounts for outpatient services shall be increased by a uniform percentage so that base claims projected reimbursement is increased by an amount equal to no less than the funds allocated in paragraph (1) of subsection (b) of Section 5A-12.6, less the amount allocated under paragraphs (8) and (9) of subsection (a) and paragraphs (3) and (4) of this subsection multiplied by 46%.
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| (6) Effective for dates of service on or after July
| | 1, 2018, the Department shall establish adjustments to the statewide-standardized amounts for each Critical Access Hospital, as designated by the Department of Public Health in accordance with 42 CFR 485, Subpart F, such that each Critical Access Hospital's standardized amount for outpatient services shall be increased by the applicable uniform percentage determined pursuant to paragraph (5) of this subsection. It is the intent of the General Assembly that the adjustments required under this paragraph (6) by Public Act 100-1181 shall be applied retroactively to claims for dates of service provided on or after July 1, 2018.
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| (7) Effective for dates of service on or after March
| | 8, 2019 (the effective date of Public Act 100-1181), the Department shall recalculate and implement an updated statewide-standardized amount for outpatient services provided by hospitals that are not Critical Access Hospitals to reflect the applicable uniform percentage determined pursuant to paragraph (5).
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| (1) Any recalculation to the
| | statewide-standardized amounts for outpatient services provided by hospitals that are not Critical Access Hospitals shall be the amount necessary to achieve the increase in the statewide-standardized amounts for outpatient services increased by a uniform percentage, so that base claims projected reimbursement is increased by an amount equal to no less than the funds allocated in paragraph (1) of subsection (b) of Section 5A-12.6, less the amount allocated under paragraphs (8) and (9) of subsection (a) and paragraphs (3) and (4) of this subsection, for all hospitals that are not Critical Access Hospitals, multiplied by 46%.
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| (2) It is the intent of the General Assembly that
| | the recalculations required under this paragraph (7) by Public Act 100-1181 shall be applied prospectively to claims for dates of service provided on or after March 8, 2019 (the effective date of Public Act 100-1181) and that no recoupment or repayment by the Department or an MCO of payments attributable to recalculation under this paragraph (7), issued to the hospital for dates of service on or after July 1, 2018 and before March 8, 2019 (the effective date of Public Act 100-1181), shall be permitted.
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| (8) The Department shall ensure that all necessary
| | adjustments to the managed care organization capitation base rates necessitated by the adjustments under subparagraph (6) or (7) of this subsection are completed and applied retroactively in accordance with Section 5-30.8 of this Code within 90 days of March 8, 2019 (the effective date of Public Act 100-1181).
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| (9) Within 60 days after federal approval of the
| | change made to the assessment in Section 5A-2 by Public Act 101-650, the Department shall incorporate into the EAPG system for outpatient services those services performed by hospitals currently billed through the Non-Institutional Provider billing system.
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| (b-5) Notwithstanding any other provision of this Section, beginning with dates of service on and after January 1, 2023, any general acute care hospital with more than 500 outpatient psychiatric Medicaid services to persons under 19 years of age in any calendar year shall be paid the outpatient add-on payment of no less than $113.
(c) In consultation with the hospital community, the Department is authorized to replace 89 Ill. Adm. Code 152.150 as published in 38 Ill. Reg. 4980 through 4986 within 12 months of June 16, 2014 (the effective date of Public Act 98-651). If the Department does not replace these rules within 12 months of June 16, 2014 (the effective date of Public Act 98-651), the rules in effect for 152.150 as published in 38 Ill. Reg. 4980 through 4986 shall remain in effect until modified by rule by the Department. Nothing in this subsection shall be construed to mandate that the Department file a replacement rule.
(d) Transition period.
There shall be a transition period to the reimbursement systems authorized under this Section that shall begin on the effective date of these systems and continue until June 30, 2018, unless extended by rule by the Department. To help provide an orderly and predictable transition to the new reimbursement systems and to preserve and enhance access to the hospital services during this transition, the Department shall allocate a transitional hospital access pool of at least $290,000,000 annually so that transitional hospital access payments are made to hospitals.
(1) After the transition period, the Department may
| | begin incorporating the transitional hospital access pool into the base rate structure; however, the transitional hospital access payments in effect on June 30, 2018 shall continue to be paid, if continued under Section 5A-16.
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| (2) After the transition period, if the Department
| | reduces payments from the transitional hospital access pool, it shall increase base rates, develop new adjustors, adjust current adjustors, develop new hospital access payments based on updated information, or any combination thereof by an amount equal to the decreases proposed in the transitional hospital access pool payments, ensuring that the entire transitional hospital access pool amount shall continue to be used for hospital payments.
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| (d-5) Hospital and health care transformation program. The Department shall develop a hospital and health care transformation program to provide financial assistance to hospitals in transforming their services and care models to better align with the needs of the communities they serve. The payments authorized in this Section shall be subject to approval by the federal government.
(1) Phase 1. In State fiscal years 2019 through
| | 2020, the Department shall allocate funds from the transitional access hospital pool to create a hospital transformation pool of at least $262,906,870 annually and make hospital transformation payments to hospitals. Subject to Section 5A-16, in State fiscal years 2019 and 2020, an Illinois hospital that received either a transitional hospital access payment under subsection (d) or a supplemental payment under subsection (f) of this Section in State fiscal year 2018, shall receive a hospital transformation payment as follows:
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| (A) If the hospital's Rate Year 2017 Medicaid
| | inpatient utilization rate is equal to or greater than 45%, the hospital transformation payment shall be equal to 100% of the sum of its transitional hospital access payment authorized under subsection (d) and any supplemental payment authorized under subsection (f).
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| (B) If the hospital's Rate Year 2017 Medicaid
| | inpatient utilization rate is equal to or greater than 25% but less than 45%, the hospital transformation payment shall be equal to 75% of the sum of its transitional hospital access payment authorized under subsection (d) and any supplemental payment authorized under subsection (f).
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| (C) If the hospital's Rate Year 2017 Medicaid
| | inpatient utilization rate is less than 25%, the hospital transformation payment shall be equal to 50% of the sum of its transitional hospital access payment authorized under subsection (d) and any supplemental payment authorized under subsection (f).
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| (2) Phase 2.
(A) The funding amount from phase one shall be
| | incorporated into directed payment and pass-through payment methodologies described in Section 5A-12.7.
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| (B) Because there are communities in Illinois
| | that experience significant health care disparities due to systemic racism, as recently emphasized by the COVID-19 pandemic, aggravated by social determinants of health and a lack of sufficiently allocated healthcare resources, particularly community-based services, preventive care, obstetric care, chronic disease management, and specialty care, the Department shall establish a health care transformation program that shall be supported by the transformation funding pool. It is the intention of the General Assembly that innovative partnerships funded by the pool must be designed to establish or improve integrated health care delivery systems that will provide significant access to the Medicaid and uninsured populations in their communities, as well as improve health care equity. It is also the intention of the General Assembly that partnerships recognize and address the disparities revealed by the COVID-19 pandemic, as well as the need for post-COVID care. During State fiscal years 2021 through 2027, the hospital and health care transformation program shall be supported by an annual transformation funding pool of up to $150,000,000, pending federal matching funds, to be allocated during the specified fiscal years for the purpose of facilitating hospital and health care transformation. No disbursement of moneys for transformation projects from the transformation funding pool described under this Section shall be considered an award, a grant, or an expenditure of grant funds. Funding agreements made in accordance with the transformation program shall be considered purchases of care under the Illinois Procurement Code, and funds shall be expended by the Department in a manner that maximizes federal funding to expend the entire allocated amount.
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| The Department shall convene, within 30 days
| | after March 12, 2021 (the effective date of Public Act 101-655), a workgroup that includes subject matter experts on healthcare disparities and stakeholders from distressed communities, which could be a subcommittee of the Medicaid Advisory Committee, to review and provide recommendations on how Department policy, including health care transformation, can improve health disparities and the impact on communities disproportionately affected by COVID-19. The workgroup shall consider and make recommendations on the following issues: a community safety-net designation of certain hospitals, racial equity, and a regional partnership to bring additional specialty services to communities.
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| (C) As provided in paragraph (9) of Section 3 of
| | the Illinois Health Facilities Planning Act, any hospital participating in the transformation program may be excluded from the requirements of the Illinois Health Facilities Planning Act for those projects related to the hospital's transformation. To be eligible, the hospital must submit to the Health Facilities and Services Review Board approval from the Department that the project is a part of the hospital's transformation.
|
| (D) As provided in subsection (a-20) of Section
| | 32.5 of the Emergency Medical Services (EMS) Systems Act, a hospital that received hospital transformation payments under this Section may convert to a freestanding emergency center. To be eligible for such a conversion, the hospital must submit to the Department of Public Health approval from the Department that the project is a part of the hospital's transformation.
|
| (E) Criteria for proposals. To be eligible for
| | funding under this Section, a transformation proposal shall meet all of the following criteria:
|
| (i) the proposal shall be designed based on
| | community needs assessment completed by either a University partner or other qualified entity with significant community input;
|
| (ii) the proposal shall be a collaboration
| | among providers across the care and community spectrum, including preventative care, primary care specialty care, hospital services, mental health and substance abuse services, as well as community-based entities that address the social determinants of health;
|
| (iii) the proposal shall be specifically
| | designed to improve healthcare outcomes and reduce healthcare disparities, and improve the coordination, effectiveness, and efficiency of care delivery;
|
| (iv) the proposal shall have specific
| | measurable metrics related to disparities that will be tracked by the Department and made public by the Department;
|
| (v) the proposal shall include a commitment
| | to include Business Enterprise Program certified vendors or other entities controlled and managed by minorities or women; and
|
| (vi) the proposal shall specifically increase
| | access to primary, preventive, or specialty care.
|
| (F) Entities eligible to be funded.
(i) Proposals for funding should come from
| | collaborations operating in one of the most distressed communities in Illinois as determined by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's Social Vulnerability Index for Illinois and areas disproportionately impacted by COVID-19 or from rural areas of Illinois.
|
| (ii) The Department shall prioritize
| | partnerships from distressed communities, which include Business Enterprise Program certified vendors or other entities controlled and managed by minorities or women and also include one or more of the following: safety-net hospitals, critical access hospitals, the campuses of hospitals that have closed since January 1, 2018, or other healthcare providers designed to address specific healthcare disparities, including the impact of COVID-19 on individuals and the community and the need for post-COVID care. All funded proposals must include specific measurable goals and metrics related to improved outcomes and reduced disparities which shall be tracked by the Department.
|
| (iii) The Department should target the
| | funding in the following ways: $30,000,000 of transformation funds to projects that are a collaboration between a safety-net hospital, particularly community safety-net hospitals, and other providers and designed to address specific healthcare disparities, $20,000,000 of transformation funds to collaborations between safety-net hospitals and a larger hospital partner that increases specialty care in distressed communities, $30,000,000 of transformation funds to projects that are a collaboration between hospitals and other providers in distressed areas of the State designed to address specific healthcare disparities, $15,000,000 to collaborations between critical access hospitals and other providers designed to address specific healthcare disparities, and $15,000,000 to cross-provider collaborations designed to address specific healthcare disparities, and $5,000,000 to collaborations that focus on workforce development.
|
| (iv) The Department may allocate up to
| | $5,000,000 for planning, racial equity analysis, or consulting resources for the Department or entities without the resources to develop a plan to meet the criteria of this Section. Any contract for consulting services issued by the Department under this subparagraph shall comply with the provisions of Section 5-45 of the State Officials and Employees Ethics Act. Based on availability of federal funding, the Department may directly procure consulting services or provide funding to the collaboration. The provision of resources under this subparagraph is not a guarantee that a project will be approved.
|
| (v) The Department shall take steps to ensure
| | that safety-net hospitals operating in under-resourced communities receive priority access to hospital and healthcare transformation funds, including consulting funds, as provided under this Section.
|
| (G) Process for submitting and approving projects
| | for distressed communities. The Department shall issue a template for application. The Department shall post any proposal received on the Department's website for at least 2 weeks for public comment, and any such public comment shall also be considered in the review process. Applicants may request that proprietary financial information be redacted from publicly posted proposals and the Department in its discretion may agree. Proposals for each distressed community must include all of the following:
|
| (i) A detailed description of how the project
| | intends to affect the goals outlined in this subsection, describing new interventions, new technology, new structures, and other changes to the healthcare delivery system planned.
|
| (ii) A detailed description of the racial and
| | ethnic makeup of the entities' board and leadership positions and the salaries of the executive staff of entities in the partnership that is seeking to obtain funding under this Section.
|
| (iii) A complete budget, including an overall
| | timeline and a detailed pathway to sustainability within a 5-year period, specifying other sources of funding, such as in-kind, cost-sharing, or private donations, particularly for capital needs. There is an expectation that parties to the transformation project dedicate resources to the extent they are able and that these expectations are delineated separately for each entity in the proposal.
|
| (iv) A description of any new entities formed
| | or other legal relationships between collaborating entities and how funds will be allocated among participants.
|
| (v) A timeline showing the evolution of sites
| | and specific services of the project over a 5-year period, including services available to the community by site.
|
| (vi) Clear milestones indicating progress
| | toward the proposed goals of the proposal as checkpoints along the way to continue receiving funding. The Department is authorized to refine these milestones in agreements, and is authorized to impose reasonable penalties, including repayment of funds, for substantial lack of progress.
|
| (vii) A clear statement of the level of
| | commitment the project will include for minorities and women in contracting opportunities, including as equity partners where applicable, or as subcontractors and suppliers in all phases of the project.
|
| (viii) If the community study utilized is not
| | the study commissioned and published by the Department, the applicant must define the methodology used, including documentation of clear community participation.
|
| (ix) A description of the process used in
| | collaborating with all levels of government in the community served in the development of the project, including, but not limited to, legislators and officials of other units of local government.
|
| (x) Documentation of a community input
| | process in the community served, including links to proposal materials on public websites.
|
| (xi) Verifiable project milestones and
| | quality metrics that will be impacted by transformation. These project milestones and quality metrics must be identified with improvement targets that must be met.
|
| (xii) Data on the number of existing
| | employees by various job categories and wage levels by the zip code of the employees' residence and benchmarks for the continued maintenance and improvement of these levels. The proposal must also describe any retraining or other workforce development planned for the new project.
|
| (xiii) If a new entity is created by the
| | project, a description of how the board will be reflective of the community served by the proposal.
|
| (xiv) An explanation of how the proposal will
| | address the existing disparities that exacerbated the impact of COVID-19 and the need for post-COVID care in the community, if applicable.
|
| (xv) An explanation of how the proposal is
| | designed to increase access to care, including specialty care based upon the community's needs.
|
| (H) The Department shall evaluate proposals for
| | compliance with the criteria listed under subparagraph (G). Proposals meeting all of the criteria may be eligible for funding with the areas of focus prioritized as described in item (ii) of subparagraph (F). Based on the funds available, the Department may negotiate funding agreements with approved applicants to maximize federal funding. Nothing in this subsection requires that an approved project be funded to the level requested. Agreements shall specify the amount of funding anticipated annually, the methodology of payments, the limit on the number of years such funding may be provided, and the milestones and quality metrics that must be met by the projects in order to continue to receive funding during each year of the program. Agreements shall specify the terms and conditions under which a health care facility that receives funds under a purchase of care agreement and closes in violation of the terms of the agreement must pay an early closure fee no greater than 50% of the funds it received under the agreement, prior to the Health Facilities and Services Review Board considering an application for closure of the facility. Any project that is funded shall be required to provide quarterly written progress reports, in a form prescribed by the Department, and at a minimum shall include the progress made in achieving any milestones or metrics or Business Enterprise Program commitments in its plan. The Department may reduce or end payments, as set forth in transformation plans, if milestones or metrics or Business Enterprise Program commitments are not achieved. The Department shall seek to make payments from the transformation fund in a manner that is eligible for federal matching funds.
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| In reviewing the proposals, the Department shall
| | take into account the needs of the community, data from the study commissioned by the Department from the University of Illinois-Chicago if applicable, feedback from public comment on the Department's website, as well as how the proposal meets the criteria listed under subparagraph (G). Alignment with the Department's overall strategic initiatives shall be an important factor. To the extent that fiscal year funding is not adequate to fund all eligible projects that apply, the Department shall prioritize applications that most comprehensively and effectively address the criteria listed under subparagraph (G).
|
| (3) (Blank).
(4) Hospital Transformation Review Committee. There
| | is created the Hospital Transformation Review Committee. The Committee shall consist of 14 members. No later than 30 days after March 12, 2018 (the effective date of Public Act 100-581), the 4 legislative leaders shall each appoint 3 members; the Governor shall appoint the Director of Healthcare and Family Services, or his or her designee, as a member; and the Director of Healthcare and Family Services shall appoint one member. Any vacancy shall be filled by the applicable appointing authority within 15 calendar days. The members of the Committee shall select a Chair and a Vice-Chair from among its members, provided that the Chair and Vice-Chair cannot be appointed by the same appointing authority and must be from different political parties. The Chair shall have the authority to establish a meeting schedule and convene meetings of the Committee, and the Vice-Chair shall have the authority to convene meetings in the absence of the Chair. The Committee may establish its own rules with respect to meeting schedule, notice of meetings, and the disclosure of documents; however, the Committee shall not have the power to subpoena individuals or documents and any rules must be approved by 9 of the 14 members. The Committee shall perform the functions described in this Section and advise and consult with the Director in the administration of this Section. In addition to reviewing and approving the policies, procedures, and rules for the hospital and health care transformation program, the Committee shall consider and make recommendations related to qualifying criteria and payment methodologies related to safety-net hospitals and children's hospitals. Members of the Committee appointed by the legislative leaders shall be subject to the jurisdiction of the Legislative Ethics Commission, not the Executive Ethics Commission, and all requests under the Freedom of Information Act shall be directed to the applicable Freedom of Information officer for the General Assembly. The Department shall provide operational support to the Committee as necessary. The Committee is dissolved on April 1, 2019.
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| (e) Beginning 36 months after initial implementation, the Department shall update the reimbursement components in subsections (a) and (b), including standardized amounts and weighting factors, and at least once every 4 years and no more frequently than annually thereafter. The Department shall publish these updates on its website no later than 30 calendar days prior to their effective date.
(f) Continuation of supplemental payments. Any supplemental payments authorized under Illinois Administrative Code 148 effective January 1, 2014 and that continue during the period of July 1, 2014 through December 31, 2014 shall remain in effect as long as the assessment imposed by Section 5A-2 that is in effect on December 31, 2017 remains in effect.
(g) Notwithstanding subsections (a) through (f) of this Section and notwithstanding the changes authorized under Section 5-5b.1, any updates to the system shall not result in any diminishment of the overall effective rates of reimbursement as of the implementation date of the new system (July 1, 2014). These updates shall not preclude variations in any individual component of the system or hospital rate variations. Nothing in this Section shall prohibit the Department from increasing the rates of reimbursement or developing payments to ensure access to hospital services. Nothing in this Section shall be construed to guarantee a minimum amount of spending in the aggregate or per hospital as spending may be impacted by factors, including, but not limited to, the number of individuals in the medical assistance program and the severity of illness of the individuals.
(h) The Department shall have the authority to modify by rulemaking any changes to the rates or methodologies in this Section as required by the federal government to obtain federal financial participation for expenditures made under this Section.
(i) Except for subsections (g) and (h) of this Section, the Department shall, pursuant to subsection (c) of Section 5-40 of the Illinois Administrative Procedure Act, provide for presentation at the June 2014 hearing of the Joint Committee on Administrative Rules (JCAR) additional written notice to JCAR of the following rules in order to commence the second notice period for the following rules: rules published in the Illinois Register, rule dated February 21, 2014 at 38 Ill. Reg. 4559 (Medical Payment), 4628 (Specialized Health Care Delivery Systems), 4640 (Hospital Services), 4932 (Diagnostic Related Grouping (DRG) Prospective Payment System (PPS)), and 4977 (Hospital Reimbursement Changes), and published in the Illinois Register dated March 21, 2014 at 38 Ill. Reg. 6499 (Specialized Health Care Delivery Systems) and 6505 (Hospital Services).
(j) Out-of-state hospitals. Beginning July 1, 2018, for purposes of determining for State fiscal years 2019 and 2020 and subsequent fiscal years the hospitals eligible for the payments authorized under subsections (a) and (b) of this Section, the Department shall include out-of-state hospitals that are designated a Level I pediatric trauma center or a Level I trauma center by the Department of Public Health as of December 1, 2017.
(k) The Department shall notify each hospital and managed care organization, in writing, of the impact of the updates under this Section at least 30 calendar days prior to their effective date.
(l) This Section is subject to Section 14-12.5.
(Source: P.A. 102-682, eff. 12-10-21; 102-1037, eff. 6-2-22; 103-102, eff. 6-16-23; 103-154, eff. 6-30-23.)
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305 ILCS 5/14-12.5 (305 ILCS 5/14-12.5) Sec. 14-12.5. Hospital rate updates. (a) Notwithstanding any other provision of this Code, the hospital rates of reimbursement authorized under Sections 5-5.05, 14-12, and 14-13 of this Code shall be adjusted in accordance with the provisions of this Section. (b) Notwithstanding any other provision of this Code, effective for dates of service on and after January 1, 2024, subject to federal approval, hospital reimbursement rates shall be revised as follows: (1) For inpatient general acute care services, the | | statewide-standardized amount and the per diem rates for hospitals exempt from the APR-DRG reimbursement system, in effect January 1, 2023, shall be increased by 10%.
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| (2) For inpatient psychiatric services:
(A) For safety-net hospitals, the hospital
| | specific per diem rate in effect January 1, 2023 and the minimum per diem rate of $630, authorized in subsection (b-5) of Section 5-5.05 of this Code, shall be increased by 10%.
|
| (B) For all general acute care hospitals that are
| | not safety-net hospitals, the inpatient psychiatric care per diem rates in effect January 1, 2023 shall be increased by 10%, except that all rates shall be at least 90% of the minimum inpatient psychiatric care per diem rate for safety-net hospitals as authorized in subsection (b-5) of Section 5-5.05 of this Code including the adjustments authorized in this Section. The statewide default per diem rate for a hospital opening a new psychiatric distinct part unit, shall be set at 90% of the minimum inpatient psychiatric care per diem rate for safety-net hospitals as authorized in subsection (b-5) of Section 5-5.05 of this Code, including the adjustment authorized in this Section.
|
| (C) For all psychiatric specialty hospitals, the
| | per diem rates in effect January 1, 2023, shall be increased by 10%, except that all rates shall be at least 90% of the minimum inpatient per diem rate for safety-net hospitals as authorized in subsection (b-5) of Section 5-5.05 of this Code, including the adjustments authorized in this Section. The statewide default per diem rate for a new psychiatric specialty hospital shall be set at 90% of the minimum inpatient psychiatric care per diem rate for safety-net hospitals as authorized in subsection (b-5) of Section 5-5.05 of this Code, including the adjustment authorized in this Section.
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| (3) For inpatient rehabilitative services, all
| | hospital specific per diem rates in effect January 1, 2023, shall be increased by 10%. The statewide default inpatient rehabilitative services per diem rates, for general acute care hospitals and for rehabilitation specialty hospitals respectively, shall be increased by 10%.
|
| (4) The statewide-standardized amount for outpatient
| | general acute care services in effect January 1, 2023, shall be increased by 10%.
|
| (5) The statewide-standardized amount for outpatient
| | psychiatric care services in effect January 1, 2023, shall be increased by 10%.
|
| (6) The statewide-standardized amount for outpatient
| | rehabilitative care services in effect January 1, 2023, shall be increased by 10%.
|
| (7) The per diem rate in effect January 1, 2023, as
| | authorized in subsection (a) of Section 14-13 of this Article shall be increased by 10%.
|
| (8) For services provided on and after January 1,
| | 2024 through June 30, 2024, and on and after January 1, 2027, subject to federal approval, in addition to the statewide standardized amount, an add-on payment of at least $210 shall be paid for each inpatient General Acute and Psychiatric day of care, excluding Medicare-Medicaid dual eligible crossover days, for all safety-net hospitals defined in Section 5-5e.1 of this Code.
|
| (A) For Psychiatric days of care, the Department
| | may implement payment of this add-on by increasing the hospital specific psychiatric per diem rate, adjusted in accordance with subparagraph (A) of paragraph (2) of subsection (b) by $210, or by a separate add-on payment.
|
| (B) If the add-on adjustment is added to the
| | hospital specific psychiatric per diem rate to operationalize payment, the Department shall provide a rate sheet to each safety-net hospital, which identifies the hospital psychiatric per diem rate before and after the adjustment.
|
| (C) The add-on adjustment shall not be considered
| | when setting the 90% minimum rate identified in paragraph (2) of subsection (b).
|
| (9) For services provided on and after July 1, 2024,
| | and on or before December 31, 2026, subject to federal approval, in addition to the statewide standardized amount and any other payments authorized under this Code, a safety-net hospital health care equity add-on payment shall be paid for each inpatient General Acute and Psychiatric day of care, excluding Medicare-Medicaid dual eligible crossover days, for safety-net hospitals defined in Section 5-5e.1 of this Code, as follows:
|
| (A) if the safety-net hospital's Medicaid
| | inpatient utilization rate, as calculated under Section 5-5e.1 of this Code, is equal to or greater than 70%, the add-on payment shall be $425;
|
| (B) if the safety-net hospital's Medicaid
| | inpatient utilization rate, as calculated under Section 5-5e.1 of this Code, is equal to or greater than 50% and less than 70%, the add-on payment shall be $300;
|
| (C) if the safety-net hospital's Medicaid
| | inpatient utilization rate, as calculated under Section 5-5e.1 of this Code, is equal to or greater than 40% and less than 50%, the add-on payment shall be $225; and
|
| (D) if the safety-net hospital's Medicaid
| | inpatient utilization rate, as calculated under Section 5-5e.1 of this Code, is less than 40%, the add-on payment shall be $210.
|
| Qualification for the safety-net hospital health care
| | equity add-on payment shall be updated January 1, 2026, based on the MIUR determination effective 3 months prior to the start of the January 1, 2026 calendar year.
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| Rates described in subparagraphs (A) through (C)
| | shall be adjusted annually beginning January 1, 2026 by applying a uniform factor to each rate to spend an approximate amount of $50,000,000 annually per year using State fiscal year 2024 days as a basis for calendar year 2026 rates.
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| The add-on adjustment under this paragraph shall not
| | be considered when setting the 90% minimum rate identified in subparagraph (B) of paragraph (2).
|
| (10) For services provided on and after July 1, 2024,
| | and on or before December 31, 2026, subject to federal approval, in addition to the statewide standardized amount and any other payments authorized under this Code, a safety-net hospital low volume add-on payment of $200 shall be paid for each inpatient General Acute and Psychiatric day of care, excluding Medicare-Medicaid dual eligible crossover days, for any safety-net hospital as defined in Section 5-5e.1 that provided less than 11,000 Medicaid inpatient days of care, excluding Medicare-Medicaid dual eligible crossover days, in the base period. As used in this paragraph, "base period" means State fiscal year 2022 admissions received by the Department prior to October 1, 2023 for the payment period July 1, 2024 through December 31, 2025, and beginning in calendar year 2026, the State fiscal year that ends 30 months before the applicable calendar year, such as State fiscal year 2023 admissions received by the Department prior to October 1, 2024, for calendar year 2026.
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| (c) The Department shall take all actions necessary to ensure the changes authorized in Public Act 103-102 and this amendatory Act of the 103rd General Assembly are in effect for dates of service on and after the effective date of the changes made to this Section by this amendatory Act of the 103rd General Assembly, including publishing all appropriate public notices, applying for federal approval of amendments to the Illinois Title XIX State Plan, and adopting administrative rules if necessary.
(d) The Department of Healthcare and Family Services may adopt rules necessary to implement the changes made by Public Act 103-102 and this amendatory Act of the 103rd General Assembly through the use of emergency rulemaking in accordance with Section 5-45 of the Illinois Administrative Procedure Act. The 24-month limitation on the adoption of emergency rules does not apply to rules adopted under this Section. The General Assembly finds that the adoption of rules to implement the changes made by Public Act 103-102 and this amendatory Act of the 103rd General Assembly is deemed an emergency and necessary for the public interest, safety, and welfare.
(e) The Department shall ensure that all necessary adjustments to the managed care organization capitation base rates necessitated by the adjustments in this Section are completed, published, and applied in accordance with Section 5-30.8 of this Code 90 days prior to the implementation date of the changes required under Public Act 103-102 and this amendatory Act of the 103rd General Assembly.
(f) The Department shall publish updated rate sheets or add-on payment amounts, as applicable, for all hospitals 30 days prior to the effective date of the rate increase, or within 30 days after federal approval by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, whichever is later.
(Source: P.A. 103-102, eff. 6-16-23; 103-593, eff. 6-7-24.)
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305 ILCS 5/14-12.7 (305 ILCS 5/14-12.7) Sec. 14-12.7. Public critical access hospital stabilization program. (a) In order to address the growing challenges of providing stable access to healthcare in rural Illinois, by October 1, 2023, the Department shall adopt rules to implement for dates of service on and after January 1, 2024, subject to federal approval, a program to provide at least $3,500,000 in annual financial support to public, critical access hospitals in Illinois, for the delivery of perinatal and obstetrical or gynecological services, behavioral healthcare services, including substance use disorder services, telehealth services, and other specialty services. (b) The funding allocation methodology shall provide added consideration to the services provided by qualifying hospitals designated by the Department of Public Health as a perinatal center. (c) Public critical access hospitals qualifying under this Section shall not be eligible for payment under subsection (o) of Section 5A-12.7 of this Code. (d) As used in this Section, "public critical access hospital" means a hospital designated by the Department of Public Health as a critical access hospital and that is owned or operated by an Illinois Government body or municipality.
(Source: P.A. 103-102, eff. 6-16-23.) |
305 ILCS 5/14-13 (305 ILCS 5/14-13) Sec. 14-13. Reimbursement for inpatient stays extended beyond medical necessity. (a) By October 1, 2019, the Department shall by rule implement a methodology effective for dates of service July 1, 2019 and later to reimburse hospitals for inpatient stays extended beyond medical necessity due to the inability of the Department or the managed care organization in which a recipient is enrolled or the hospital discharge planner to find an appropriate placement after discharge from the hospital. The Department shall evaluate the effectiveness of the current reimbursement rate for inpatient hospital stays beyond medical necessity. (b) The methodology shall provide reasonable compensation for the services provided attributable to the days of the extended stay for which the prevailing rate methodology provides no reimbursement. The Department may use a day outlier program to satisfy this requirement. The reimbursement rate shall be set at a level so as not to act as an incentive to avoid transfer to the appropriate level of care needed or placement, after discharge. (c) The Department shall require managed care organizations to adopt this methodology or an alternative methodology that pays at least as much as the Department's adopted methodology unless otherwise mutually agreed upon contractual language is developed by the provider and the managed care organization for a risk-based or innovative payment methodology. (d) Days beyond medical necessity shall not be eligible for per diem add-on payments under the Medicaid High Volume Adjustment (MHVA) or the Medicaid Percentage Adjustment (MPA) programs. (e) For services covered by the fee-for-service program, reimbursement under this Section shall only be made for days beyond medical necessity that occur after the hospital has notified the Department of the need for post-discharge placement. For services covered by a managed care organization, hospitals shall notify the appropriate managed care organization of an admission within 24 hours of admission. For every 24-hour period beyond the initial 24 hours after admission that the hospital fails to notify the managed care organization of the admission, reimbursement under this subsection shall be reduced by one day. (f) The Department of Children and Family Services shall pay for all inpatient stays beginning on the 3rd day a child is in the hospital beyond medical necessity, and the parent or caregiver has denied the child access to the home and has refused or failed to make provisions for another living arrangement for the child or the child's discharge is being delayed due to a pending inquiry or investigation by the Department of Children and Family Services. (Source: P.A. 102-4, eff. 4-27-21; 103-593, eff. 6-7-24.) |
305 ILCS 5/14-14 (305 ILCS 5/14-14) Sec. 14-14. Increasing access to primary care in hospitals. The Department of Healthcare and Family Services shall develop a program to facilitate coordination between Federally Qualified Health Centers (FQHCs) and safety net hospitals, with the goal of increasing care coordination, managing chronic diseases, and addressing the social determinants of health on or before December 31, 2021. Coordination between FQHCs and safety hospitals may include, but is not limited to, embedding FQHC staff in hospitals, utilizing health information technology for care coordination, and enabling FQHCs to connect hospital patients to community-based resources when needed to provide whole-person care. In addition, the Department shall develop a payment methodology to allow FQHCs to provide care coordination services, including, but not limited to, chronic disease management and behavioral health services. The Department of Healthcare and Family Services shall develop a payment methodology to allow for FQHC care coordination services by no later than December 31, 2021.
(Source: P.A. 102-4, eff. 4-27-21.) |
305 ILCS 5/Art. XV
(305 ILCS 5/Art. XV heading)
ARTICLE XV.
COUNTY PROVIDER TRUST FUND
(Source: P.A. 103-154, eff. 6-30-23.) |
305 ILCS 5/15-1
(305 ILCS 5/15-1) (from Ch. 23, par. 15-1)
Sec. 15-1. Definitions. As used in this Article, unless the context
requires otherwise:
(a) (Blank).
(a-5) "County provider" means a health care provider that is, or is
operated by, a county with a population greater than 3,000,000.
(b) "Fund" means the County Provider Trust Fund.
(c) "Hospital" or "County hospital" means a hospital, as defined in Section
14-1 of this Code, which is a county hospital located in a county of over
3,000,000 population.
(Source: P.A. 97-687, eff. 6-14-12; 97-689, eff. 6-14-12.)
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305 ILCS 5/15-2
(305 ILCS 5/15-2) (from Ch. 23, par. 15-2)
Sec. 15-2. County Provider Trust Fund.
(a) There is created in the State Treasury the County Provider
Trust Fund. Interest earned by the Fund shall be credited to the Fund.
The Fund shall not be used to replace any funds appropriated to the
Medicaid program by the General Assembly.
(b) The Fund is created solely for the purposes of receiving, investing,
and distributing monies in accordance with this Article XV. The Fund shall
consist of:
(1) All monies collected or received by the Illinois | | Department under Section 15-3 of this Code;
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(2) All federal financial participation monies
| | received by the Illinois Department pursuant to Title XIX of the Social Security Act, 42 U.S.C. 1396b, attributable to eligible expenditures made by the Illinois Department pursuant to Section 15-5 of this Code;
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(3) All federal moneys received by the Illinois
| | Department pursuant to Title XXI of the Social Security Act attributable to eligible expenditures made by the Illinois Department pursuant to Section 15-5 of this Code; and
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(4) All other monies received by the Fund from any
| | source, including interest thereon.
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(c) Disbursements from the Fund shall be by warrants drawn by the State
Comptroller upon receipt of vouchers duly executed and certified by the
Illinois Department and shall be made only:
(1) For hospital inpatient care, hospital outpatient
| | care, care provided by other outpatient facilities operated by a county, and disproportionate share hospital adjustment payments made under Title XIX of the Social Security Act and Article V of this Code as required by Section 15-5 of this Code;
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|
(1.5) For services provided or purchased by county
| | providers pursuant to Section 5-11 of this Code;
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(2) For the reimbursement of administrative expenses
| | incurred by county providers on behalf of the Illinois Department as permitted by Section 15-4 of this Code;
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|
(3) For the reimbursement of monies received by the
| | Fund through error or mistake;
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(4) For the payment of administrative expenses
| | necessarily incurred by the Illinois Department or its agent in performing the activities required by this Article XV;
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(5) For the payment of any amounts that are
| | reimbursable to the federal government, attributable solely to the Fund, and required to be paid by State warrant;
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(6) For hospital inpatient care, hospital outpatient
| | care, care provided by other outpatient facilities operated by a county, and disproportionate share hospital adjustment payments made under Title XXI of the Social Security Act, pursuant to Section 15-5 of this Code; and
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(7) For medical care and related services provided
| | pursuant to a contract with a county.
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| (Source: P.A. 97-687, eff. 6-14-12.)
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305 ILCS 5/15-3
(305 ILCS 5/15-3) (from Ch. 23, par. 15-3)
Sec. 15-3. Intergovernmental Transfers.
(a) Each qualifying county shall make an annual intergovernmental transfer
to the Illinois Department in an amount equal to the difference
between the total payments made by the Illinois Department pursuant to subsection (a) of Section 15-5 of this Code
and the total federal financial participation monies received by the fund in
each fiscal year ending June 30.
(b) The payment schedule for the intergovernmental transfer made
hereunder shall be established by intergovernmental agreement between the
Illinois Department and the applicable county, which agreement shall at
a minimum provide:
(1) For periodic payments no less frequently than | | monthly to the county provider for inpatient and outpatient approved or adjudicated claims and for disproportionate share adjustment payments as may be specified in the Illinois Title XIX State plan.
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(2) (Blank.)
(3) For calculation of the intergovernmental transfer
| | payment to be made by the county equal to the difference between the amount of the periodic payments to county providers and any amount of federal financial participation due the Illinois Department under Titles XIX and XXI of the Social Security Act as a result of such payments to county providers.
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(4) For an intergovernmental transfer methodology
| | which obligates the Illinois Department to notify the county in writing of each impending periodic payment and the intergovernmental transfer payment attributable thereto and which obligates the Comptroller to release the periodic payment to the county provider within one working day of receipt of the intergovernmental transfer payment from the county.
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(Source: P.A. 95-859, eff. 8-19-08.)
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305 ILCS 5/15-4
(305 ILCS 5/15-4) (from Ch. 23, par. 15-4)
Sec. 15-4.
Contractual assumption of certain expenses.
Hospitals may,
at their election, by written agreement between the counties owning and
operating the hospitals and the Illinois Department, assume specified
expenses of the operation of the Illinois Department associated with the
determination of eligibility, direct payment of which expenses by the
Illinois Department would qualify as public funds expended by the Illinois
Department for the Illinois Medical Assistance Program or other health
care programs administered by the Illinois Department. The Illinois
Department shall open an adequately staffed special on-site office or
offices at facilities designated by the county for the purpose of assisting
the county in ensuring that all eligible individuals are enrolled in the
Illinois Medical Assistance Program. Each such agreement, executed in
accordance with Section 3 of the Intergovernmental Cooperation Act, shall
describe the operational expenses to be assumed in sufficient detail to
permit the Illinois Department to certify upon such written obligation or
performance thereunder that the hospital's compliance with the terms of the
agreement will amount to the commitment of public funds eligible for the
federal financial participation or other federal funding called for in
Title XIX or Title XXI of the Social Security Act.
(Source: P.A. 91-24, eff. 7-1-99; 92-370, eff. 8-15-01.)
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305 ILCS 5/15-5
(305 ILCS 5/15-5) (from Ch. 23, par. 15-5)
Sec. 15-5. Disbursements from the Fund.
(a) The monies in the Fund shall be disbursed only as provided in
Section 15-2 of this Code and as follows:
(1) To the extent that such costs are reimbursable | | under federal law, to pay the county hospitals' inpatient reimbursement rates based on actual costs incurred, trended forward annually by an inflation index.
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(2) To the extent that such costs are reimbursable
| | under federal law, to pay county hospitals and county operated outpatient facilities for outpatient services based on a federally approved methodology to cover the maximum allowable costs.
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(3) To pay the county hospitals disproportionate
| | share hospital adjustment payments as may be specified in the Illinois Title XIX State plan.
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(3.5) To pay county providers for services provided
| | or purchased pursuant to Section 5-11 of this Code.
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(4) To reimburse the county providers for expenses
| | contractually assumed pursuant to Section 15-4 of this Code.
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(5) To pay the Illinois Department its necessary
| | administrative expenses relative to the Fund and other amounts agreed to, if any, by the county providers in the agreement provided for in subsection (c).
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(6) To pay the county providers any other amount due
| | according to a federally approved State plan, including but not limited to payments made under the provisions of Section 701(d)(3)(B) of the federal Medicare, Medicaid, and SCHIP Benefits Improvement and Protection Act of 2000. Intergovernmental transfers supporting payments under this paragraph (6) shall not be subject to the computation described in subsection (a) of Section 15-3 of this Code, but shall be computed as the difference between the total of such payments made by the Illinois Department to county providers less any amount of federal financial participation due the Illinois Department under Titles XIX and XXI of the Social Security Act as a result of such payments to county providers.
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(b) The Illinois Department shall promptly seek all appropriate
amendments to the Illinois Title XIX State Plan to maximize reimbursement, including disproportionate share hospital adjustment payments, to the county providers.
(c) (Blank).
(d) The payments provided for herein are intended to cover services
rendered on and after July 1, 1991, and any agreement executed between a
qualifying county and the Illinois Department pursuant to this Section may
relate back to that date, provided the Illinois Department obtains federal
approval. Any changes in payment rates resulting from the provisions of
Article 3 of this amendatory Act of 1992 are intended to apply to services
rendered on or after October 1, 1992, and any agreement executed between a
qualifying county and the Illinois Department pursuant to this Section may
be effective as of that date.
(e) If one or more hospitals file suit in any court challenging any part
of this Article XV, payments to hospitals from the Fund under this Article
XV shall be made only to the extent that sufficient monies are available in
the Fund and only to the extent that any monies in the Fund are not
prohibited from disbursement and may be disbursed under any order of the court.
(f) All payments under this Section are contingent upon federal
approval of changes to the Title XIX State plan, if that approval is required.
(Source: P.A. 97-687, eff. 6-14-12.)
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305 ILCS 5/15-6
(305 ILCS 5/15-6) (from Ch. 23, par. 15-6)
Sec. 15-6.
Annual audit.
(a) Within 120 days after the end of each fiscal year of each county
hospital, the Illinois Department shall conduct an annual audit of the Fund
to determine that amounts received from or paid to county providers were correct.
If such an audit identifies amounts that a county provider
should not have been
required to pay but did pay, a county provider should have
been required to pay
but did not pay, a county provider should not have received
but did receive, or a
county provider should have received but did not receive, the
Illinois Department
shall:
(1) Make required payments to any such county | |
(2) Take action to recover required amounts from any
| | such county provider, including recoupment from future payments.
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(b) Amounts recovered from a county provider shall be
credited to the Fund. A
county provider is entitled to recover amounts paid to the
Illinois Department
into the Fund and to receive refunds and payment from the Illinois
Department for payments that should have been paid from the Fund only to
the extent that monies are available in the Fund.
(Source: P.A. 87-13; 88-554, eff. 7-26-94.)
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305 ILCS 5/15-7
(305 ILCS 5/15-7) (from Ch. 23, par. 15-7)
Sec. 15-7.
Applicability.
The requirements of this Article XV shall
apply only as long as federal funds under Title XIX of the Social Security
Act are available to match the intergovernmental transfer payments made and
disbursed under this Article and only as long as reimbursable expenditures
are matched by the federal government at a rate of at least 50%. Whenever
the Illinois Department is informed that federal funds are not available
for these purposes, or shall be available at a lower percentage, this
Article XV shall no longer apply and the Illinois Department shall promptly
refund to each county provider the amount of money currently
in the Fund that has
been paid by the county provider, plus any investment earnings
on that amount.
(Source: P.A. 87-13; 87-861; 88-554, eff. 7-26-94.)
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305 ILCS 5/15-8
(305 ILCS 5/15-8) (from Ch. 23, par. 15-8)
Sec. 15-8. Federal disallowances. In the event of any federal deferral
or disallowance of any federal matching funds obtained through this Article
which have been disbursed by the Illinois Department under this Article
based upon challenges to reimbursement methodologies, the full faith and credit of the county is pledged for
repayment by the county of those amounts deferred or disallowed to the
Illinois Department.
(Source: P.A. 95-859, eff. 8-19-08.)
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305 ILCS 5/15-9
(305 ILCS 5/15-9) (from Ch. 23, par. 15-9)
Sec. 15-9.
Waiver of appropriation procedures.
Notwithstanding the
provisions of Sections 6-24001 and 6-24008 of the Counties Code, or any
comparable provision relating to appropriations, the board of commissioners
of qualifying counties may, during each fiscal year, adopt a supplemental
appropriation bill or resolution for expenditures by qualifying counties on
behalf of or by qualifying county hospitals of any funds received hereunder
and the payment of fees to be collected under this Article in an amount
not in excess of any such additional revenue available to that county, or
estimated to be received by that county, subsequent to the adoption of the
annual appropriation bill or resolution for that fiscal year. The
supplemental appropriation bill or resolution shall only affect revenue
that was not available for appropriation when the annual appropriation bill
or resolution was adopted, and the provisions of Section 6-24004 of the
Counties Code or any other comparable provision relating to publication,
notice, and public hearing shall not be applicable to such supplemental
appropriation bill or resolution or to the budget document forming the
basis thereof.
(Source: P.A. 87-13.)
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305 ILCS 5/15-10 (305 ILCS 5/15-10) Sec. 15-10. Disproportionate share hospital adjustment payments. (a) The provisions of this Section become operative if: (1) The federal government approves State Plan | | Amendment transmittal number 08-06 or a State Plan Amendment that permits disproportionate share hospital adjustment payments to be made to county hospitals.
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| (2) Proposed federal regulations, or other
| | regulations or limitations driven by the federal government, negatively impact the net revenues realized by county providers from the Fund during a State fiscal year by more than 15%, as measured by the aggregate average net monthly payment received by the county providers from the Fund from July 2007 through May 2008.
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| (3) The county providers have in good faith submitted
| | timely, complete, and accurate cost reports and supplemental documents as required by the Illinois Department.
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| (4) the county providers maintain and bill for
| | service volumes to individuals eligible for medical assistance under this Code that are no lower than 85% of the volumes provided by and billed to the Illinois Department by the county providers associated with payments received by the county providers from July 2007 through May 2008. Given the substantial financial burdens of the county associated with uncompensated care, the Illinois Department shall make good faith efforts to work with the county to maintain Medicaid volumes to the extent that the county has the adequate capacity to meet the obligations of patient volumes.
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| The Illinois Department and the county shall include in an intergovernmental agreement the process by which these conditions are assessed. The parties may, if necessary, contract with a large, nationally recognized public accounting firm to carry out this function.
(b) If the conditions of subsection (a) are met, and subject to appropriation or other available funding for such purpose, the Illinois Department shall make a payment or otherwise make funds available to the county hospitals, during the lapse period, that provides for total payments to be at least at a level that is equivalent to the total fee-for-service payments received by the county providers that are enrolled with the Illinois Department to provide services during the fiscal year of the payment from the Fund from July 2007 through May 2008 multiplied by twelve-elevenths.
(c) In addition, notwithstanding any provision in subsection (a), the Illinois Department shall maximize disproportionate share hospital adjustment payments to the county hospitals that, at a minimum, are 42% of the State's federal fiscal year 2007 disproportionate share allocation.
(d) For the purposes of this Section, "net revenues" means the difference between the total fee-for-service payments made by the Illinois Department to county providers less the intergovernmental transfer made by the county in support of those payments.
(e) If (i) the disproportionate share hospital adjustment State Plan Amendment referenced in subdivision (a)(1) is not approved, or (ii) any reconciliation of payments to costs incurred would require repayment to the federal government of at least $2,500,000, or (iii) there is no funding available for the Illinois Department's obligations under subsection (b), the Illinois Department, the county, and the leadership of the General Assembly shall designate individuals to convene, within 30 days, to discuss how mutual funding goals for the county providers are to be achieved.
(Source: P.A. 95-859, eff. 8-19-08.)
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305 ILCS 5/15-11 (305 ILCS 5/15-11) Sec. 15-11. Uses of State funds. (a) At any point, if State revenues referenced in subsection (b) or (c) of Section 15-10 or additional State grants are disbursed to the Cook County Health and Hospitals System, all funds may be used only for the following: (1) medical services provided at hospitals or clinics | | owned and operated by the Cook County Health and Hospitals System;
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| (2) information technology to enhance billing
| | capabilities for medical claiming and reimbursement; or
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| (3) services purchased by county providers pursuant
| | to Section 5-11 of this Code.
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| (b) State funds may not be used for the following:
(1) non-clinical services, except services that may
| | be required by accreditation bodies or State or federal regulatory or licensing authorities;
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| (2) non-clinical support staff, except as pursuant to
| | paragraph (1) of this subsection; or
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| (3) capital improvements, other than investments in
| | medical technology, except for capital improvements that may be required by accreditation bodies or State or federal regulatory or licensing authorities.
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(Source: P.A. 97-687, eff. 6-14-12.)
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305 ILCS 5/Art. XVI
(305 ILCS 5/Art. XVI heading)
ARTICLE XVI. SURVIVOR SUPPORT AND TRAFFICKING PREVENTION
(Source: P.A. 99-870, eff. 8-22-16.) |
305 ILCS 5/16-1 (305 ILCS 5/16-1) Sec. 16-1. Benefits for foreign-born victims of trafficking, torture, or other serious crimes. In order to protect persons who are foreign-born victims of trafficking, torture, or other serious crimes and to reduce the risk of further harm, exploitation, and re-trafficking, beginning January 1, 2018, cash assistance provided under the Temporary Assistance for Needy Families program established under Article IV of this Code and benefits provided under the federal Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) shall be provided to such persons and their derivative family members to the same extent cash assistance and SNAP benefits are provided to individuals who are admitted to the United States as refugees under Section 1157 of Title 8 of the United States Code. To the extent that federal funding is not available, any cash assistance or SNAP benefits provided under this Article shall be paid from State funds. If changes made in
this Section require federal approval, they shall not take
effect until such approval has been received.
(Source: P.A. 99-870, eff. 8-22-16.) |
305 ILCS 5/16-2 (305 ILCS 5/16-2) Sec. 16-2. Eligibility. Subject to available funding, a foreign-born victim of trafficking, torture, or other serious crimes and the individual's derivative family members, but not a single adult without derivative family members, are eligible for cash assistance or SNAP benefits under this Article if the individual: (a) has filed: (1) an application for T Nonimmigrant status with | | the appropriate federal agency pursuant to Section 1101(a)(15)(T) of Title 8 of the United States Code, or is otherwise taking steps to meet the conditions for federal benefits eligibility under Section 7105 of Title 22 of the United States Code;
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| (2) a formal application with the appropriate
| | federal agency for status pursuant to Section 1101(a)(15)(U) of Title 8 of the United States Code; or
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| (3) a formal application with the appropriate
| | federal agency for status under Section 1158 of Title 8 of the United States Code; and
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| (b) is otherwise eligible for cash assistance or SNAP
| | An individual residing in an institution or other setting that provides the majority of the individual's daily meals is not eligible for SNAP benefits.
(Source: P.A. 103-588, eff. 6-5-24.)
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305 ILCS 5/16-3 (305 ILCS 5/16-3) Sec. 16-3. Determination of eligibility. (a) The Department shall determine that an applicant for cash assistance or SNAP benefits provided under this Article is eligible for such benefits if the applicant meets the income guidelines and is otherwise eligible and either: (1) the applicant has filed: (A) an application for T Nonimmigrant status with | | the appropriate federal agency pursuant to Section 1101(a)(15)(T) of Title 8 of the United States Code, or is otherwise taking steps to meet the conditions for federal benefits eligibility under Section 7105 of Title 22 of the United States Code;
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| (B) a formal application with the appropriate
| | federal agency for status pursuant to Section 1101(a)(15)(U) of Title 8 of the United States Code; or
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| (C) a formal application with the appropriate
| | federal agency for status under Section 1158 of Title 8 of the United States Code; or
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| (2) the applicant, or a representative of the
| | applicant if the applicant is not competent, has provided to the Department:
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| (A) a sworn statement that he or she is a
| | foreign-born victim of trafficking, torture, or other serious crimes; and
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| (B) at least one item of additional credible
| | evidence, including, but not limited to, any of the following:
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| (i) police, government agency, or court
| | (ii) news articles;
(iii) documentation from a social services,
| | trafficking, domestic violence program or rape crisis center, or a legal, clinical, medical, or other professional from whom the applicant or recipient has sought assistance in dealing with the crime;
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| (iv) a statement from any other individual
| | with knowledge of the circumstances that provided the basis for the claim;
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| (v) physical evidence;
(vi) a copy of a completed visa application;
| | (vii) written notice from the federal agency
| | of receipt of the visa application.
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| (b) The Department may, in its discretion, provide cash assistance or SNAP benefits pursuant to this Article to an applicant who cannot provide additional evidence as set forth in subparagraph (B) of paragraph (2) of subsection (a) if:
(1) the applicant, or a representative of the
| | applicant if the applicant is not competent, has provided a sworn statement that he or she is a foreign-born victim of trafficking, torture, or other serious crimes; and
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| (2) the Department determines that the applicant is
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(Source: P.A. 99-870, eff. 8-22-16.)
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305 ILCS 5/16-4 (305 ILCS 5/16-4) Sec. 16-4. Work requirements and exemptions. (a) Persons who are foreign-born victims of trafficking, torture, or other serious crimes and who are receiving cash assistance or SNAP benefits under this Article shall be subject to the same work requirements and work requirement exemptions as other recipients of cash assistance or SNAP benefits, provided that compliance with these requirements is authorized by law. (b) A person who is a foreign-born victim of trafficking, torture, or other serious crimes shall be exempted from any work requirements if physical or psychological trauma related to or arising from the trafficking, torture, or other serious crimes impedes his or her ability to comply.
(Source: P.A. 99-870, eff. 8-22-16.) |
305 ILCS 5/16-5 (305 ILCS 5/16-5) Sec. 16-5. Termination of benefits. (a) Any cash assistance or SNAP benefits provided under this Article to a person who is a foreign-born victim of trafficking, torture, or other serious crimes and his or her derivative family members shall be terminated if there is a final denial of that person's visa or asylum application under Section 1101(a)(15)(T), 1101(a)(15)(U), or 1158 of Title 8 of the United States Code. (b) A person who is a foreign-born victim of trafficking, torture, or other serious crimes and his or her derivative family members shall be ineligible for continued State-funded cash assistance or SNAP benefits provided under this Article if that person has not filed a formal application for status pursuant to Section 1101(a)(15)(T), 1101(a)(15)(U), or 1158 of Title 8 of the United States Code within one year after the date of his or her application for cash assistance or SNAP benefits provided under this Article. The Department of Human Services may extend the person's and his or her derivative family members' eligibility for medical assistance, cash assistance, or SNAP benefits beyond one year if the Department determines that the person, during the year of initial eligibility (i) experienced a health crisis, (ii) has been unable, after reasonable attempts, to obtain necessary information from a third party, or (iii) has other extenuating circumstances that prevented the person from completing his or her application for status.
(Source: P.A. 99-870, eff. 8-22-16; 100-201, eff. 8-18-17.) |
305 ILCS 5/16-6 (305 ILCS 5/16-6) Sec. 16-6. Rulemaking authority. The Department of Human Services shall adopt any rules necessary to implement the provisions of this Article on or before January 1, 2018.
(Source: P.A. 99-870, eff. 8-22-16.) |
305 ILCS 5/16-7
(305 ILCS 5/16-7)
Sec. 16-7. (Repealed).
(Source: P.A. 101-246, eff. 8-9-19. Repealed by P.A. 102-31, eff. 6-25-21.)
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