State of Illinois
90th General Assembly
Legislation

   [ Search ]   [ Legislation ]   [ Bill Summary ]
[ Home ]   [ Back ]   [ Bottom ]


[ Introduced ][ Engrossed ][ Senate Amendment 001 ]
[ Senate Amendment 002 ][ Senate Amendment 003 ][ Senate Amendment 004 ]
[ Senate Amendment 005 ]

90_HB1640enr

      35 ILCS 200/18-185
      105 ILCS 5/34A-501.2 new
      105 ILCS 5/34A-502        from Ch. 122, par. 34A-502
          Amends  the  School  Code  and  the  Property  Tax  Code.
      Authorizes the Chicago  School  Finance  Authority  to  incur
      indebtedness  by  the  issuance of bonds for constructing new
      and rehabilitating existing school buildings in an  aggregate
      additional  principal  amount  outstanding  at  any  time not
      exceeding  $1.2  billion.   Defines  the  Authority's   "debt
      service   extension  base"  (as  used  in  the  Property  Tax
      Extension Limitation Law relative  to  a  source  from  which
      limited bonds may be made payable) to mean an amount equal to
      the  portion  of  the  1994  taxes  that  were  levied by the
      Authority  to  pay  debt  service  on  bonds  issued  by  the
      Authority and that had not yet been abated as a result of the
      refunding  of  those  bonds,  without  regard  to  subsequent
      additional abatements by the  Authority  of  that  tax  levy.
      Effective immediately.
                                                     LRB9004005THpk
HB1640 Enrolled                                LRB9004005THpk
 1        AN ACT concerning education, amending named Acts.
 2        Be  it  enacted  by  the People of the State of Illinois,
 3    represented in the General Assembly:
 4        Section 5.  The General Obligation Bond Act is amended by
 5    changing Section 12 as follows:
 6        (30 ILCS 330/12) (from Ch. 127, par. 662)
 7        Sec. 12.  Allocation of Proceeds from Sale of Bonds.
 8        (a)  Proceeds from  the  sale  of  Bonds,  authorized  by
 9    Section  3  of  this  Act, shall be deposited in the separate
10    fund known as the Capital Development Fund.
11        (b)  Proceeds from  the  sale  of  Bonds,  authorized  by
12    paragraph (a) of Section 4 of this Act, shall be deposited in
13    the  separate fund known as the Transportation Bond, Series A
14    Fund.
15        (c)  Proceeds from  the  sale  of  Bonds,  authorized  by
16    paragraphs  (b)  and  (c)  of Section 4 of this Act, shall be
17    deposited in the separate fund known  as  the  Transportation
18    Bond, Series B Fund.
19        (d)  Proceeds  from  the  sale  of  Bonds,  authorized by
20    Section 5 of this Act, shall be  deposited  in  the  separate
21    fund  known  as  the  School  Construction  Fund, except that
22    proceeds from the sale of the  additional  $1,100,000,000  of
23    bonds  authorized  in subsection (e) of Section 5 pursuant to
24    this amendatory Act of  1997  shall  be  deposited  into  the
25    School Infrastructure Fund.
26        (e)  Proceeds  from  the  sale  of  Bonds,  authorized by
27    Section 6 of this Act, shall be  deposited  in  the  separate
28    fund known as the Anti-Pollution Fund.
29        (f)  Proceeds  from  the  sale  of  Bonds,  authorized by
30    Section 7 of this Act, shall be  deposited  in  the  separate
31    fund known as the Coal Development Fund.
HB1640 Enrolled            -2-                 LRB9004005THpk
 1        (g)  Proceeds  from  the  sale  of  Bonds,  authorized by
 2    Section 8 of this Act, shall  be  deposited  in  the  Capital
 3    Development Fund.
 4        (h)  Subsequent  to  the  issuance  of  any Bonds for the
 5    purposes described in Sections 2 through 8 of this  Act,  the
 6    Governor  and  the  Director  of the Bureau of the Budget may
 7    provide for the reallocation  of  unspent  proceeds  of  such
 8    Bonds to any other purposes authorized under said Sections of
 9    this  Act,  subject to the limitations on aggregate principal
10    amounts  contained therein.  Upon any such reallocation, such
11    unspent proceeds shall  be  transferred  to  the  appropriate
12    funds  as  determined  by reference to paragraphs (a) through
13    (g) of this Section.
14    (Source: P.A. 90-549, eff. 12-8-97.)
15        Section  10.  The School  Code  is  amended  by  changing
16    Sections  1C-2,  1D-1,  17-1.5,  18-8.05,  21-2, 21-2a, 21-4,
17    21-14, 24-11, and 24A-5 as follows:
18        (105 ILCS 5/1C-2)
19        Sec. 1C-2.  Block grants.
20        (a)  For  fiscal  year  1999,  and   each   fiscal   year
21    thereafter,  the  State  Board  of  Education  shall award to
22    school districts block grants as described in subsections (b)
23    and (c). The State Board of Education  may  adopt  rules  and
24    regulations   necessary   to   implement   this  Section.  In
25    accordance with Section 2-3.32, all state  block  grants  are
26    subject  to  an  audit.   Therefore, block grant receipts and
27    block grant expenditures shall be recorded to the appropriate
28    fund code.
29        (b)  A Professional  Development  Block  Grant  shall  be
30    created  by  combining  the existing School Improvement Block
31    Grant  and  the  REI  Initiative.  These   funds   shall   be
32    distributed  to  school  districts  based  on  the  number of
HB1640 Enrolled            -3-                 LRB9004005THpk
 1    full-time  certified  instructional  staff  employed  in  the
 2    district.
 3        (c)  An Early Childhood Education Block  Grant  shall  be
 4    created   by  combining  the  following  programs:  Preschool
 5    Education,  Parental  Training  and  Prevention   Initiative.
 6    These  funds  shall  be  distributed  to school districts and
 7    other entities on a competitive basis.  Eight percent of this
 8    grant shall be used to fund programs for children ages 0-3.
 9    (Source: P.A. 89-397, eff. 8-20-95; 90-548, eff. 1-1-98.)
10        (105 ILCS 5/1D-1)
11        Sec. 1D-1.  Block grant funding.
12        (a)  For  fiscal  year  1996   and   each   fiscal   year
13    thereafter,  the  State  Board  of Education shall award to a
14    school  district  having  a  population   exceeding   500,000
15    inhabitants   a   general   education   block  grant  and  an
16    educational services block grant, determined as  provided  in
17    this  Section,  in  lieu  of  distributing  to  the  district
18    separate   State   funding  for  the  programs  described  in
19    subsections (b) and (c).  The  provisions  of  this  Section,
20    however,  do not apply to any federal funds that the district
21    is entitled to receive.  In accordance with  Section  2-3.32,
22    all  block  grants  are subject to an audit. Therefore, block
23    grant receipts and block grant expenditures shall be recorded
24    to the appropriate fund code for the designated block grant.
25        (b)  The general education block grant shall include  the
26    following  programs:  REI  Initiative, Preschool At Risk, K-6
27    Comprehensive  Arts,  School   Improvement   Support,   Urban
28    Education,  Scientific  Literacy, Substance Abuse Prevention,
29    Second Language Planning,  Staff  Development,  Outcomes  and
30    Assessment,   K-6   Reading  Improvement,  Truants'  Optional
31    Education, Hispanic Programs, Agriculture  Education,  Gifted
32    Education,  Parental Education, Prevention Initiative, Report
33    Cards,    and     Criminal     Background     Investigations.
HB1640 Enrolled            -4-                 LRB9004005THpk
 1    Notwithstanding  any other provision of law, all amounts paid
 2    under  the  general  education   block   grant   from   State
 3    appropriations  to  a  school  district  in  a  city having a
 4    population   exceeding   500,000   inhabitants    shall    be
 5    appropriated  and  expended by the board of that district for
 6    any of the programs included in the block grant or any of the
 7    board's lawful purposes.
 8        (c)  The educational services block grant  shall  include
 9    the  following  programs:  Bilingual,  Regular and Vocational
10    Transportation,  State  Lunch  and  Free  Breakfast  Program,
11    Special Education (Personnel, Extraordinary,  Transportation,
12    Orphanage,   Private  Tuition),  Summer  School,  Educational
13    Service   Centers,   and   Administrator's   Academy.    This
14    subsection  (c)  does  not  relieve  the  district   of   its
15    obligation  to  provide the services required under a program
16    that is included within the educational services block grant.
17    It is the intention of the General Assembly in  enacting  the
18    provisions  of this subsection (c) to relieve the district of
19    the  administrative  burdens  that  impede   efficiency   and
20    accompany   single-program  funding.   The  General  Assembly
21    encourages the board to pursue mandate  waivers  pursuant  to
22    Section 2-3.25g.
23        (d)  For   fiscal   year   1996   and  each  fiscal  year
24    thereafter, the amount of the district's block  grants  shall
25    be  determined  as  follows: (i) with respect to each program
26    that is included within each block grant, the district  shall
27    receive an amount equal to the same percentage of the current
28    fiscal  year  appropriation  made  for  that  program  as the
29    percentage of the appropriation received by the district from
30    the 1995 fiscal year appropriation made for that program, and
31    (ii) the total amount that is  due  the  district  under  the
32    block  grant  shall  be the aggregate of the amounts that the
33    district is entitled to receive  for  the  fiscal  year  with
34    respect  to  each  program  that is included within the block
HB1640 Enrolled            -5-                 LRB9004005THpk
 1    grant that the State  Board  of  Education  shall  award  the
 2    district under this Section for that fiscal year.
 3        (e)  The district is not required to file any application
 4    or  other claim in order to receive the block grants to which
 5    it is entitled under  this  Section.    The  State  Board  of
 6    Education  shall make payments to the district of amounts due
 7    under the district's block grants on a schedule determined by
 8    the State Board of Education.
 9        (f)  A school district  to  which  this  Section  applies
10    shall  report  to  the State Board of Education on its use of
11    the block grants in such form and detail as the  State  Board
12    of Education may specify.
13        (g)  This  paragraph  provides for the treatment of block
14    grants under Article  1C  for  purposes  of  calculating  the
15    amount  of  block  grants  for a district under this Section.
16    Those block grants under Article IC are,  for  this  purpose,
17    treated  as  included  in the amount of appropriation for the
18    various programs set  forth  in  paragraph  (b)  above.   The
19    appropriation  in  each  current  fiscal  year for each block
20    grant under Article 1C shall be treated for these purposes as
21    appropriations for the individual program  included  in  that
22    block grant.  The proportion of each block grant so allocated
23    to  each  such program included in it shall be the proportion
24    which  the  appropriation  for  that  program  was   of   all
25    appropriations  for such purposes now in that block grant, in
26    fiscal 1995.
27    (Source: P.A. 89-15,  eff.  5-30-95;  89-698,  eff.  1-14-97;
28    90-566, eff. 1-2-98.)
29        (105 ILCS 5/17-1.5)
30        Sec. 17-1.5.  Limitation of administrative costs.
31        (a)  It  is  the  purpose  of  this  Section to establish
32    limitations on the growth of administrative  expenditures  in
33    order to maximize the proportion of school district resources
HB1640 Enrolled            -6-                 LRB9004005THpk
 1    available    for    the   instructional   program,   building
 2    maintenance, and safety services for  the  students  of  each
 3    district.
 4        (b)  Definitions.  For the purposes of this Section:
 5        "Administrative    expenditures"    mean    the    annual
 6    expenditures  of  school  districts  properly attributable to
 7    expenditure functions defined by the rules of the State Board
 8    of Education as: 2310 (Board  of  Education  Services);  2320
 9    (Executive   Administration  Services);  2330  (Special  Area
10    Administration Services);  2490  (Other  Support  Services  -
11    School  Administration);  2510 (Direction of Business Support
12    Services); 2520 (Fiscal Services); 2570 (Internal  Services);
13    and  2610  (Direction of Central Support Services); provided,
14    however, that "administrative expenditures" shall not include
15    early retirement or other pension system obligations required
16    by State law 2600 (Total Support Services  -  Central);   and
17    all  expenditures  properly attributable for the Service Area
18    Direction of functions 2540 (Operations  and  Maintenance  of
19    Plant  Services),  2550  (Pupil Transportation Services), and
20    2560 (Food Services).
21        "Instructional expenditures" mean the annual expenditures
22    of school  districts  properly  attributable  to  expenditure
23    functions  defined  by  the  rules  of  the  State  Board  of
24    Education   as:   1100   (Regular  Programs);  1200  (Special
25    Education  Programs);  1250  (Educational   Deprived/Remedial
26    Programs);  1300  (Adult/Continuing Education Programs); 1400
27    (Vocational Programs); 1500 (Interscholastic Programs);  1600
28    (Summer  School  Programs);  1650  (Gifted    Programs); 1800
29    (Bilingual Programs);  and  1900  (Truants'  Alternative  and
30    Optional Programs).
31        "School  district"  means  all  school districts having a
32    population of less than 500,000.
33        (c)  For the 1998-99 school year  and  each  school  year
34    thereafter,  each  school  district shall undertake budgetary
HB1640 Enrolled            -7-                 LRB9004005THpk
 1    and expenditure control  actions  so  that  the  increase  in
 2    administrative  expenditures  for  that  school year over the
 3    prior school year does do not exceed the lesser of 5% or  the
 4    percentage  increase  in  instructional expenditures for that
 5    school year over the prior school  year.    School  districts
 6    with  administrative  expenditures  per  pupil  in  the  25th
 7    percentile  and  below for all districts of the same type, as
 8    defined by the  State  Board  of  Education,  may  waive  the
 9    limitation  imposed under this Section for any year following
10    a public hearing and with the affirmative vote  of  at  least
11    two-thirds  of  the  members  of  the  school  board  of  the
12    district.  Any  district  waiving the limitation shall notify
13    the State Board within 45 days of such action.
14        (d)  School districts shall file with the State Board  of
15    Education  by November October 15, 1998 and  by each November
16    October 15th thereafter a one-page report that lists (i)  the
17    actual    administrative    expenditures   and   the   actual
18    instructional  expenditures  for  the  prior  year  from  the
19    district's audited Annual  Financial  Report,  and  (ii)  the
20    projected   administrative  expenditures  and  the  projected
21    instructional expenditures for  the  current  year  from  the
22    budget  adopted  by the school board pursuant to Section 17-1
23    of this Code.
24        If a school district that  is  ineligible  to  waive  the
25    limitation imposed by subsection (c) of this Section by board
26    action exceeds the limitation solely because of circumstances
27    beyond  the  control  of  the  district  and the district has
28    exhausted all available and  reasonable  remedies  to  comply
29    with  the  limitation,  the  district  may  request  a waiver
30    pursuant to Section 2-3.25g.  The  waiver  application  shall
31    specify  the  amount,  nature,  and  reason  for  the  relief
32    requested, as well as all remedies the district has exhausted
33    to  comply  with  the  limitation.    Any emergency relief so
34    requested shall apply only to the specific  school  year  for
HB1640 Enrolled            -8-                 LRB9004005THpk
 1    which  the  request  is  made.   The State Board of Education
 2    shall analyze all such waivers submitted and shall  recommend
 3    that   the   General  Assembly  disapprove  any  such  waiver
 4    requested that is not due solely to circumstances beyond  the
 5    control  of  the  district and for which the district has not
 6    exhausted all available and  reasonable  remedies  to  comply
 7    with  the limitation.  The State Superintendent shall have no
 8    authority to impose any sanctions pursuant  to  this  Section
 9    for  any  expenditures  for which a waiver has been requested
10    until such waiver has been reviewed by the General Assembly.
11        If  the  report  and  information  required  under   this
12    subsection  (d) are is not provided by the school district in
13    a  timely  manner,  or  are  is  initially  or   subsequently
14    determined  by  the  State  Superintendent of Education to be
15    incomplete or  inaccurate,  the  State  Superintendent  shall
16    notify  the  district  in  writing of reporting deficiencies.
17    The school district shall, within  60  days  of  the  notice,
18    address  the reporting deficiencies identified.  If the State
19    Superintendent does not receive a  satisfactory  response  to
20    these  reporting  deficiencies within these 60 days, the next
21    payment of general State aid due the district  under  Section
22    18-8  of  this  Code,  and  all  subsequent  payments, may be
23    withheld until the deficiencies have been addressed.
24        (e)  If the State Superintendent determines that a school
25    district  has  failed  to  comply  with  the   administrative
26    expenditure  limitation  imposed  in  subsection  (c) of this
27    Section by adopting a budget in violation of  the  limitation
28    or by having actual administrative expenditures for the prior
29    year  in  excess  of the limitation, the State Superintendent
30    shall notify the district of the  violation  and  direct  the
31    district   to   undertake  corrective  action  to  bring  the
32    district's budget into  compliance  with  the  administrative
33    expenditure  limitation.   The district shall, within 60 days
34    of the  notice,  provide  adequate  assurance  to  the  State
HB1640 Enrolled            -9-                 LRB9004005THpk
 1    Superintendent  that appropriate corrective actions have been
 2    or will be taken.  If the district fails to provide  adequate
 3    assurance  or  fails  to  undertake  the necessary corrective
 4    actions, the  State  Superintendent  may  impose  progressive
 5    sanctions   against   the  district  that  may  culminate  in
 6    withholding withhold all subsequent payments of general State
 7    aid due the district under Section 18-8.05 18-8 of this  Code
 8    until  the  assurance  is  provided or the corrective actions
 9    taken.
10        (f)  The State Superintendent shall publish a  list  each
11    year  of  the  school  districts  that violate the limitation
12    imposed by subsection (c) of this Section and a list  of  the
13    districts  that  waive  the  limitation  by  board  action as
14    provided in subsection (c) of this Section.  The State  Board
15    of  Education  may  recommend to the General Assembly and the
16    Governor any additional sanctions or  remedial  actions  that
17    they  determine  necessary  to  deter non-compliance with the
18    limitation.
19    (Source: P.A. 90-548, eff. 1-1-98.)
20        (105 ILCS 5/18-8.05)
21        (This Section may contain text from a Public Act  with  a
22    delayed effective date.)
23        Sec.  18-8.05.  Basis  for apportionment of general State
24    financial aid and  supplemental  general  State  aid  to  the
25    common schools for the 1998-1999 and subsequent school years.
26    (A)  General Provisions.
27        (1)  The   provisions   of  this  Section  apply  to  the
28    1998-1999 and subsequent school years.  The system of general
29    State financial aid provided for in this Section is  designed
30    to  assure that, through a combination of State financial aid
31    and required local resources, the financial support  provided
32    each  pupil  in  Average Daily Attendance equals or exceeds a
33    prescribed per pupil Foundation Level.  This formula approach
HB1640 Enrolled            -10-                LRB9004005THpk
 1    imputes a level of per pupil Available  Local  Resources  and
 2    provides  for  the  basis  to  calculate a per pupil level of
 3    general State financial aid that,  when  added  to  Available
 4    Local Resources, equals or exceeds the Foundation Level.  The
 5    amount  of  per  pupil general State financial aid for school
 6    districts,  in  general,  varies  in  inverse   relation   to
 7    Available  Local Resources.  Per pupil amounts are based upon
 8    each school district's Average Daily Attendance as that  term
 9    is defined in this Section.
10        (2)  In  addition  to general State financial aid, school
11    districts with specified levels or concentrations  of  pupils
12    from   low   income   households   are  eligible  to  receive
13    supplemental general State financial aid grants  as  provided
14    pursuant to subsection (H). The supplemental State aid grants
15    provided  for  school districts under subsection (H) shall be
16    appropriated for distribution to school districts as part  of
17    the  same  line item in which the general State financial aid
18    of school districts is appropriated under this Section.
19        (3)  To receive financial assistance under this  Section,
20    school  districts  are required to file claims with the State
21    Board of Education, subject to the following requirements:
22             (a)  Any school district which fails for  any  given
23        school  year to maintain school as required by law, or to
24        maintain a recognized school is not eligible to file  for
25        such  school  year any claim upon the Common School Fund.
26        In case of  nonrecognition  of  one  or  more  attendance
27        centers   in   a   school  district  otherwise  operating
28        recognized schools, the claim of the  district  shall  be
29        reduced   in  the  proportion  which  the  Average  Daily
30        Attendance in the attendance center or  centers  bear  to
31        the  Average  Daily Attendance in the school district.  A
32        "recognized school" means any public school  which  meets
33        the standards as established for recognition by the State
34        Board  of  Education.   A  school  district or attendance
HB1640 Enrolled            -11-                LRB9004005THpk
 1        center not having recognition status  at  the  end  of  a
 2        school term is entitled to receive State aid payments due
 3        upon   a  legal  claim  which  was  filed  while  it  was
 4        recognized.
 5             (b)  School district claims filed under this Section
 6        are subject to Sections 18-9, 18-10, and 18-12, except as
 7        otherwise provided in this Section.
 8             (c)  If a  school  district  operates  a  full  year
 9        school  under  Section  10-19.1, the general State aid to
10        the school district shall  be  determined  by  the  State
11        Board  of  Education  in  accordance with this Section as
12        near as may be applicable.
13             (d) (Blank).  Claims for financial assistance  under
14        this  Section shall not be recomputed except as expressly
15        provided under this Section.
16        (4)  Except as provided in subsections (H) and  (L),  the
17    board  of  any  district receiving any of the grants provided
18    for in this Section may apply those  funds  to  any  fund  so
19    received   for   which  that  board  is  authorized  to  make
20    expenditures by law.
21        School districts are not  required  to  exert  a  minimum
22    Operating  Tax  Rate in order to qualify for assistance under
23    this Section.
24        (5)  As used in this Section the  following  terms,  when
25    capitalized, shall have the meaning ascribed herein:
26             (a)  "Average  Daily  Attendance":  A count of pupil
27        attendance  in  school,  averaged  as  provided  for   in
28        subsection   (C)  and  utilized  in  deriving  per  pupil
29        financial support levels.
30             (b)  "Available Local Resources":  A computation  of
31        local  financial support, calculated on the basis Average
32        Daily Attendance and  derived  as  provided  pursuant  to
33        subsection (D).
34             (c)  "Corporate    Personal   Property   Replacement
HB1640 Enrolled            -12-                LRB9004005THpk
 1        Taxes":  Funds paid to local school districts pursuant to
 2        "An Act in  relation  to  the  abolition  of  ad  valorem
 3        personal  property  tax  and  the replacement of revenues
 4        lost thereby, and amending and repealing certain Acts and
 5        parts of Acts in connection therewith", certified  August
 6        14, 1979, as amended (Public Act 81-1st S.S.-1).
 7             (d)  "Foundation  Level":  A prescribed level of per
 8        pupil financial support as  provided  for  in  subsection
 9        (B).
10             (e)  "Operating  Tax  Rate":   All  school  district
11        property   taxes   extended   for  all  purposes,  except
12        community college educational purposes for the payment of
13        tuition under Section 6-1 of the Public Community College
14        Act, Bond and  Interest,  Summer  School,  Rent,  Capital
15        Improvement, and Vocational Education Building purposes.
16    (B)  Foundation Level.
17        (1)  The  Foundation Level is a figure established by the
18    State representing the minimum level of per  pupil  financial
19    support  that  should  be  available to provide for the basic
20    education of each pupil in Average Daily Attendance.  As  set
21    forth  in  this  Section,  each school district is assumed to
22    exert  a  sufficient  local  taxing  effort  such  that,   in
23    combination with the aggregate of general State financial aid
24    provided  the  district,  an  aggregate  of  State  and local
25    resources are available to meet the basic education needs  of
26    pupils in the district.
27        (2)  For  the 1998-1999 school year, the Foundation Level
28    of support is $4,225.  For the  1999-2000  school  year,  the
29    Foundation  Level  of  support  is $4,325.  For the 2000-2001
30    school year, the Foundation Level of support is $4,425.
31        (3)  For the 2001-2002 school year and each  school  year
32    thereafter, the Foundation Level of support is $4,425 or such
33    greater  amount  as  may be established by law by the General
34    Assembly.
HB1640 Enrolled            -13-                LRB9004005THpk
 1    (C)  Average Daily Attendance.
 2        (1)  For  purposes  of  calculating  general  State   aid
 3    pursuant  to  subsection  (E),  an  Average  Daily Attendance
 4    figure shall  be  utilized.   The  Average  Daily  Attendance
 5    figure  for formula calculation purposes shall be the monthly
 6    average of the actual number of pupils in attendance of  each
 7    school district, as further averaged for the best 3 months of
 8    pupil  attendance for each school district.  In compiling the
 9    figures for  the  number  of  pupils  in  attendance,  school
10    districts  and  the  State  Board  of  Education  shall,  for
11    purposes  of  general  State  aid funding, conform attendance
12    figures to the requirements of subsection (F).
13        (2)  The Average Daily  Attendance  figures  utilized  in
14    subsection (E) shall be the requisite attendance data for the
15    school  year  immediately preceding the school year for which
16    general State aid is being calculated.
17    (D)  Available Local Resources.
18        (1)  For  purposes  of  calculating  general  State   aid
19    pursuant  to  subsection  (E),  a representation of Available
20    Local Resources per  pupil,  as  that  term  is  defined  and
21    determined  in this subsection, shall be utilized.  Available
22    Local Resources per pupil shall include a  calculated  dollar
23    amount representing local school district revenues from local
24    property   taxes   and   from   Corporate  Personal  Property
25    Replacement Taxes,  expressed  on  the  basis  of  pupils  in
26    Average Daily Attendance.
27        (2)  In  determining  a  school  district's  revenue from
28    local property taxes, the  State  Board  of  Education  shall
29    utilize  the  equalized  assessed  valuation  of  all taxable
30    property of each school district as of September  30  of  the
31    previous  year.   The  equalized  assessed valuation utilized
32    shall be obtained and determined as  provided  in  subsection
33    (G).
34        (3)  For school districts maintaining grades kindergarten
HB1640 Enrolled            -14-                LRB9004005THpk
 1    through  12,  local  property tax revenues per pupil shall be
 2    calculated  as  the  product  of  the  applicable   equalized
 3    assessed  valuation for the district multiplied by 3.00%, and
 4    divided by the district's Average  Daily  Attendance  figure.
 5    For  school districts maintaining grades kindergarten through
 6    8, local property tax revenues per pupil shall be  calculated
 7    as the product of the applicable equalized assessed valuation
 8    for  the  district  multiplied  by  2.30%, and divided by the
 9    district's  Average  Daily  Attendance  figure.   For  school
10    districts maintaining grades 9 through 12, local property tax
11    revenues per pupil shall be the applicable equalized assessed
12    valuation of the district multiplied by 1.20%, and divided by
13    the district's Average Daily Attendance figure.
14        (4)  The Corporate Personal  Property  Replacement  Taxes
15    paid to each school district during the calendar year 2 years
16    before  the  calendar  year  in  which  a school year begins,
17    divided by the  Average  Daily  Attendance  figure  for  that
18    district,  shall  be added to the local property tax revenues
19    per pupil as derived by the application  of  the  immediately
20    preceding  paragraph (3).  The sum of these per pupil figures
21    for each school district  shall  constitute  Available  Local
22    Resources  as  that term is utilized in subsection (E) in the
23    calculation of general State aid.
24    (E)  Computation of General State Aid.
25        (1)  For each school year, the amount  of  general  State
26    aid  allotted  to  a school district shall be computed by the
27    State Board of Education as provided in this subsection.
28        (2)  For any school district for  which  Available  Local
29    Resources  per  pupil  is less than the product of 0.93 times
30    the Foundation Level, general State  aid  for  that  district
31    shall  be  calculated  as  an  amount equal to the Foundation
32    Level minus Available  Local  Resources,  multiplied  by  the
33    Average Daily Attendance of the school district.
34        (3)  For  any  school  district for which Available Local
HB1640 Enrolled            -15-                LRB9004005THpk
 1    Resources per pupil is equal to or greater than  the  product
 2    of  0.93 times the Foundation Level and less than the product
 3    of 1.75 times the Foundation Level, the general State aid per
 4    pupil shall be a decimal proportion of the  Foundation  Level
 5    derived   using   a  linear  algorithm.   Under  this  linear
 6    algorithm, the calculated general State aid per  pupil  shall
 7    decline   in  direct  linear  fashion  from  0.07  times  the
 8    Foundation Level for a school district with  Available  Local
 9    Resources  equal  to the product of 0.93 times the Foundation
10    Level, to 0.05  times  the  Foundation  Level  for  a  school
11    district  with Available Local Resources equal to the product
12    of 1.75  times  the  Foundation  Level.   The  allocation  of
13    general  State  aid  for  school  districts  subject  to this
14    paragraph 3 shall be the calculated  general  State  aid  per
15    pupil  figure  multiplied  by the Average Daily Attendance of
16    the school district.
17        (4)  For any school district for  which  Available  Local
18    Resources  per  pupil  equals  or exceeds the product of 1.75
19    times the Foundation Level, the general  State  aid  for  the
20    school  district  shall  be calculated as the product of $218
21    multiplied by the Average  Daily  Attendance  of  the  school
22    district.
23    (F)  Compilation of Average Daily Attendance.
24        (1)  Each  school district shall, by July 1 of each year,
25    submit to the State Board of Education, on  forms  prescribed
26    by  the  State Board of Education, attendance figures for the
27    school year that began in the preceding calendar  year.   The
28    attendance  information  so  transmitted  shall  identify the
29    average daily attendance figures for each month of the school
30    year, except that any days of attendance in August  shall  be
31    added to the month of September and any days of attendance in
32    June shall be added to the month of May.
33        Except  as  otherwise  provided  in this Section, days of
34    attendance by pupils shall be counted only  for  sessions  of
HB1640 Enrolled            -16-                LRB9004005THpk
 1    not  less  than  5  clock  hours of school work per day under
 2    direct supervision of: (i)  teachers,  or  (ii)  non-teaching
 3    personnel   or   volunteer   personnel   when   engaging   in
 4    non-teaching   duties  and  supervising  in  those  instances
 5    specified in subsection (a) of Section 10-22.34 and paragraph
 6    10 of Section 34-18, with pupils of legal school age  and  in
 7    kindergarten and grades 1 through 12.
 8        Days  of attendance by tuition pupils shall be accredited
 9    only to the districts that pay the tuition  to  a  recognized
10    school.
11        (2)  Days  of  attendance  by pupils of less than 5 clock
12    hours of school shall be subject to the following  provisions
13    in the compilation of Average Daily Attendance.
14             (a)  Pupils  regularly  enrolled  in a public school
15        for only a part of the school day may be counted  on  the
16        basis  of  1/6 day for every class hour of instruction of
17        40 minutes or more attended pursuant to such enrollment.
18             (b)  Days of attendance may be  less  than  5  clock
19        hours  on the opening and closing of the school term, and
20        upon the first day of pupil attendance, if preceded by  a
21        day  or  days  utilized  as  an  institute  or  teachers'
22        workshop.
23             (c)  A  session  of  4  or  more  clock hours may be
24        counted as a day of attendance upon certification by  the
25        regional   superintendent,  and  approved  by  the  State
26        Superintendent  of  Education  to  the  extent  that  the
27        district has been forced to use daily multiple sessions.
28             (d)  A session of 3  or  more  clock  hours  may  be
29        counted  as a day of attendance (1) when the remainder of
30        the school day or at least 2 hours in the evening of that
31        day is utilized for an in-service  training  program  for
32        teachers,  up  to  a maximum of 5 days per school year of
33        which a maximum of 4 days of such 5 days may be used  for
34        parent-teacher  conferences, provided a district conducts
HB1640 Enrolled            -17-                LRB9004005THpk
 1        an in-service training program  for  teachers  which  has
 2        been  approved  by the State Superintendent of Education;
 3        or, in lieu of 4 such days, 2 full days may be  used,  in
 4        which  event  each  such  day  may be counted as a day of
 5        attendance; and  (2)  when  days  in  addition  to  those
 6        provided  in  item (1) are scheduled by a school pursuant
 7        to its school improvement plan adopted under  Article  34
 8        or its revised or amended school improvement plan adopted
 9        under  Article 2, provided that (i) such sessions of 3 or
10        more clock  hours  are  scheduled  to  occur  at  regular
11        intervals, (ii) the remainder of the school days in which
12        such  sessions occur are utilized for in-service training
13        programs  or  other  staff  development  activities   for
14        teachers,  and  (iii)  a  sufficient number of minutes of
15        school work under the direct supervision of teachers  are
16        added to the school days between such regularly scheduled
17        sessions  to  accumulate  not  less  than  the  number of
18        minutes by which such sessions of 3 or more  clock  hours
19        fall  short  of 5 clock hours. Any full days used for the
20        purposes of this paragraph shall not  be  considered  for
21        computing  average  daily attendance.  Days scheduled for
22        in-service   training   programs,    staff    development
23        activities,   or   parent-teacher   conferences   may  be
24        scheduled  separately  for  different  grade  levels  and
25        different attendance centers of the district.
26             (e)  A session of  not  less  than  one  clock  hour
27        teaching  of  hospitalized or homebound pupils on-site or
28        by telephone to the classroom may be counted as  1/2  day
29        of  attendance,  however  these  pupils must receive 4 or
30        more clock hours of instruction to be counted for a  full
31        day of attendance.
32             (f)  A  session  of  at  least  4 clock hours may be
33        counted as a day of attendance for  first  grade  pupils,
34        and  pupils in full day kindergartens, and a session of 2
HB1640 Enrolled            -18-                LRB9004005THpk
 1        or more hours may be counted as 1/2 day of attendance  by
 2        pupils  in  kindergartens  which  provide only 1/2 day of
 3        attendance.
 4             (g)  For children with disabilities  who  are  below
 5        the  age of 6 years and who cannot attend 2 or more clock
 6        hours  because  of  their  disability  or  immaturity,  a
 7        session of not less than one clock hour may be counted as
 8        1/2 day of attendance; however for  such  children  whose
 9        educational needs so require a session of 4 or more clock
10        hours may be counted as a full day of attendance.
11             (h)  A  recognized  kindergarten  which provides for
12        only 1/2 day of attendance by each pupil shall  not  have
13        more  than  1/2  day  of attendance counted in any 1 day.
14        However, kindergartens may count 2 1/2 days of attendance
15        in any 5 consecutive school days.  When a  pupil  attends
16        such  a  kindergarten  for  2 half days on any one school
17        day, the pupil shall have the  following  day  as  a  day
18        absent  from  school,  unless the school district obtains
19        permission in writing from the  State  Superintendent  of
20        Education.  Attendance at kindergartens which provide for
21        a  full  day of attendance by each pupil shall be counted
22        the same as attendance by first grade pupils.   Only  the
23        first  year  of  attendance  in one kindergarten shall be
24        counted, except in  case  of  children  who  entered  the
25        kindergarten   in  their  fifth  year  whose  educational
26        development requires a second  year  of  kindergarten  as
27        determined  under  the rules and regulations of the State
28        Board of Education.
29    (G)  Equalized Assessed Valuation Data.
30        (1)  For purposes of the calculation of  Available  Local
31    Resources  required  pursuant  to  subsection  (D), the State
32    Board of  Education  shall  secure  from  the  Department  of
33    Revenue  the value as equalized or assessed by the Department
34    of Revenue of all taxable property of every  school  district
HB1640 Enrolled            -19-                LRB9004005THpk
 1    together with the applicable tax rate used in extending taxes
 2    for  the  funds  of  the  district  as of September 30 of the
 3    previous year.
 4        This equalized assessed valuation, as adjusted further by
 5    the requirements of this subsection, shall be utilized in the
 6    calculation of Available Local Resources.
 7        (2)  The equalized assessed valuation  in  paragraph  (1)
 8    shall be adjusted, as applicable, in the following manner:
 9             (a)  For the purposes of calculating State aid under
10        this  Section,  with  respect  to  any  part  of a school
11        district within a redevelopment project area  in  respect
12        to   which  a  municipality  has  adopted  tax  increment
13        allocation  financing  pursuant  to  the  Tax   Increment
14        Allocation  Redevelopment Act, Sections 11-74.4-1 through
15        11-74.4-11  of  the  Illinois  Municipal  Code   or   the
16        Industrial  Jobs Recovery Law, Sections 11-74.6-1 through
17        11-74.6-50 of the Illinois Municipal Code, no part of the
18        current equalized assessed  valuation  of  real  property
19        located in any such project area which is attributable to
20        an  increase  above  the total initial equalized assessed
21        valuation of such property shall be used as part  of  the
22        equalized  assessed valuation of the district, until such
23        time as all redevelopment project costs have  been  paid,
24        as  provided  in  Section  11-74.4-8 of the Tax Increment
25        Allocation Redevelopment Act or in Section 11-74.6-35  of
26        the Industrial Jobs Recovery Law.  For the purpose of the
27        equalized  assessed  valuation of the district, the total
28        initial  equalized  assessed  valuation  or  the  current
29        equalized assessed valuation, whichever is  lower,  shall
30        be  used  until  such  time  as all redevelopment project
31        costs have been paid.
32             (b)  The real property equalized assessed  valuation
33        for  a  school  district shall be adjusted by subtracting
34        from the real property value as equalized or assessed  by
HB1640 Enrolled            -20-                LRB9004005THpk
 1        the  Department  of  Revenue  for  the district an amount
 2        computed by dividing the amount of any abatement of taxes
 3        under Section 18-170 of the Property Tax  Code  by  3.00%
 4        for a district maintaining grades kindergarten through 12
 5        or   by   2.30%   for   a   district  maintaining  grades
 6        kindergarten through  8,  or  by  1.20%  for  a  district
 7        maintaining grades 9 through 12 and adjusted by an amount
 8        computed by dividing the amount of any abatement of taxes
 9        under  subsection  (a)  of Section 18-165 of the Property
10        Tax Code by the same percentage rates for  district  type
11        as specified in this subparagraph (c).
12    (H)  Supplemental General State Aid.
13        (1)  In  addition  to  the  general  State  aid  a school
14    district is allotted pursuant to subsection  (E),  qualifying
15    school  districts  shall receive a grant, paid in conjunction
16    with  a  district's  payments  of  general  State  aid,   for
17    supplemental  general  State aid based upon the concentration
18    level of  children  from  low-income  households  within  the
19    school  district.  Supplemental State aid grants provided for
20    school districts under this subsection shall be  appropriated
21    for distribution to school districts as part of the same line
22    item  in  which  the  general  State  financial aid of school
23    districts is appropriated under this Section. For purposes of
24    this subsection, the term  "Low-Income  Concentration  Level"
25    shall  be  the  low-income eligible pupil count from the most
26    recently available federal  census  divided  by  the  Average
27    Daily Attendance of the school district.
28        (2)  Supplemental  general  State  aid  pursuant  to this
29    subsection shall be provided as follows:
30             (a)  For any  school  district  with  a  Low  Income
31        Concentration  Level  of  at least 20% and less than 35%,
32        the grant for any school year shall be $800 multiplied by
33        the low income eligible pupil count.
34             (b)  For any  school  district  with  a  Low  Income
HB1640 Enrolled            -21-                LRB9004005THpk
 1        Concentration  Level  of  at least 35% and less than 50%,
 2        the grant for the 1998-1999 school year shall  be  $1,100
 3        multiplied by the low income eligible pupil count.
 4             (c)  For  any  school  district  with  a  Low Income
 5        Concentration Level of at least 50% and  less  than  60%,
 6        the  grant  for  the  1998-99 school year shall be $1,500
 7        multiplied by the low income eligible pupil count.
 8             (d)  For any  school  district  with  a  Low  Income
 9        Concentration  Level  of  60%  or more, the grant for the
10        1998-99 school year shall be $1,900 multiplied by the low
11        income eligible pupil count.
12             (e)  For the 1999-2000 school year,  the  per  pupil
13        amount  specified  in  subparagraphs  (b),  (c), and (d),
14        immediately above shall be increased by $100  to  $1,200,
15        $1,600, and $2,000, respectively.
16             (f)  For  the  2000-2001  school year, the per pupil
17        amounts specified  in  subparagraphs  (b),  (c)  and  (d)
18        immediately  above  shall be increased to $1,230, $1,640,
19        and $2,050, respectively.
20        (3)  School districts with an Average Daily Attendance of
21    more than  1,000  and  less  than  50,000  that  qualify  for
22    supplemental  general  State  aid pursuant to this subsection
23    shall submit a plan to the State Board of Education prior  to
24    October  30  of  each year for the use of the funds resulting
25    from this grant of supplemental general  State  aid  for  the
26    improvement  of  instruction  in  which  priority is given to
27    meeting the education needs of disadvantaged children.   Such
28    plan   shall  be  submitted  in  accordance  with  rules  and
29    regulations promulgated by the State Board of Education.
30        (4)  School districts with an Average Daily Attendance of
31    50,000 or more that qualify for  supplemental  general  State
32    aid   pursuant  to  this  subsection  shall  be  required  to
33    distribute from funds available pursuant to this Section,  no
34    less  than  $261,000,000  in  accordance  with  the following
HB1640 Enrolled            -22-                LRB9004005THpk
 1    requirements:
 2             (a)  The required amounts shall  be  distributed  to
 3        the  attendance centers within the district in proportion
 4        to the number  of  pupils  enrolled  at  each  attendance
 5        center  who are eligible to receive free or reduced-price
 6        lunches or breakfasts under the federal  Child  Nutrition
 7        Act  of  1966  and  under  the  National School Lunch Act
 8        during the immediately preceding school year.
 9             (b)  The   distribution   of   these   portions   of
10        supplemental  and  general  State  aid  among  attendance
11        centers according to  these  requirements  shall  not  be
12        compensated  for  or  contravened  by  adjustments of the
13        total of  other  funds  appropriated  to  any  attendance
14        centers, and the Board of Education shall utilize funding
15        from  one  or several sources in order to fully implement
16        this provision annually prior to the opening of school.
17             (c)  Each attendance center shall be provided by the
18        school district a distribution  of  noncategorical  funds
19        and other categorical funds to which an attendance center
20        is entitled under law in order that the general State aid
21        and   supplemental   general   State   aid   provided  by
22        application of this subsection  supplements  rather  than
23        supplants  the noncategorical funds and other categorical
24        funds provided by the school district to  the  attendance
25        centers.
26             (d)  Any  funds made available under this subsection
27        that by reason of the provisions of this  subsection  are
28        not  required  to be allocated and provided to attendance
29        centers may be used and appropriated by the board of  the
30        district for any lawful school purpose.
31             (e)  Funds received by an attendance center pursuant
32        to this subsection shall be used by the attendance center
33        at  the  discretion  of  the  principal  and local school
34        council for programs to improve educational opportunities
HB1640 Enrolled            -23-                LRB9004005THpk
 1        at qualifying schools through the following programs  and
 2        services:  early  childhood education, reduced class size
 3        or improved adult to student classroom ratio,  enrichment
 4        programs, remedial assistance, attendance improvement and
 5        other   educationally   beneficial   expenditures   which
 6        supplement  the  regular and basic programs as determined
 7        by the State Board of Education.   Funds  provided  shall
 8        not be expended for any political or lobbying purposes as
 9        defined by board rule.
10             (f)  Each district subject to the provisions of this
11        subdivision  (H)(4)  shall  submit  an acceptable plan to
12        meet the educational needs of disadvantaged children,  in
13        compliance  with  the  requirements of this paragraph, to
14        the State Board of Education prior to  July  15  of  each
15        year. This plan shall be consistent with the decisions of
16        local  school  councils concerning the school expenditure
17        plans developed in accordance  with  part  4  of  Section
18        34-2.3.  The State Board shall approve or reject the plan
19        within  60  days  after  its  submission.  If the plan is
20        rejected, the  district  shall  give  written  notice  of
21        intent   to  modify  the  plan  within  15  days  of  the
22        notification of rejection and then submit a modified plan
23        within 30 days after the date of the  written  notice  of
24        intent  to  modify.    Districts may amend approved plans
25        pursuant to rules  promulgated  by  the  State  Board  of
26        Education.
27             Upon  notification  by  the State Board of Education
28        that the district has not submitted a plan prior to  July
29        15  or  a  modified plan within the time period specified
30        herein, the State aid funds  affected  by  that  plan  or
31        modified  plan  shall  be  withheld by the State Board of
32        Education until a plan or modified plan is submitted.
33             If the district fails to  distribute  State  aid  to
34        attendance  centers  in accordance with an approved plan,
HB1640 Enrolled            -24-                LRB9004005THpk
 1        the plan for the following year shall allocate funds,  in
 2        addition   to   the  funds  otherwise  required  by  this
 3        subsection,  to  those  attendance  centers  which   were
 4        underfunded  during the previous year in amounts equal to
 5        such underfunding.
 6             For purposes of  determining  compliance  with  this
 7        subsection  in relation to the requirements of attendance
 8        center funding, each district subject to  the  provisions
 9        of this subsection shall submit as a separate document by
10        December  1 of each year a report of expenditure data for
11        the prior year in addition to  any  modification  of  its
12        current  plan.  If it is determined that there has been a
13        failure to comply with the expenditure provisions of this
14        subsection regarding contravention  or  supplanting,  the
15        State  Superintendent  of Education shall, within 60 days
16        of receipt of the report, notify  the  district  and  any
17        affected local school council.  The district shall within
18        45  days of receipt of that notification inform the State
19        Superintendent of Education of the remedial or corrective
20        action to be taken, whether  by amendment of the  current
21        plan,  if  feasible, or by adjustment in the plan for the
22        following  year.   Failure  to  provide  the  expenditure
23        report or the  notification  of  remedial  or  corrective
24        action  in  a timely manner shall result in a withholding
25        of the affected funds.
26             The State Board of Education shall promulgate  rules
27        and  regulations  to  implement  the  provisions  of this
28        subsection.   No  funds  shall  be  released  under  this
29        subdivision (H)(4) to any district that has not submitted
30        a plan that has been  approved  by  the  State  Board  of
31        Education.
32    (I)  General State Aid for Newly Configured School Districts.
33        (1)  For  a  new  school  district  formed  by  combining
34    property   included  totally  within  2  or  more  previously
HB1640 Enrolled            -25-                LRB9004005THpk
 1    existing school districts, for its first  year  of  existence
 2    the  general  State  aid  and  supplemental general State aid
 3    calculated under this Section shall be computed for  the  new
 4    district  and for the previously existing districts for which
 5    property is totally included within the new district.  If the
 6    computation on the basis of the previously existing districts
 7    is greater, a supplementary payment equal to  the  difference
 8    shall  be  made for the first 4 years of existence of the new
 9    district.
10        (2)  For a school  district  which  annexes  all  of  the
11    territory  of  one or more entire other school districts, for
12    the  first  year  during  which  the  change  of   boundaries
13    attributable  to  such  annexation  becomes effective for all
14    purposes as determined under Section 7-9 or 7A-8, the general
15    State aid and supplemental general State aid calculated under
16    this Section shall be computed for the annexing  district  as
17    constituted  after  the  annexation  and for the annexing and
18    each annexed district as constituted prior to the annexation;
19    and if the computation on  the  basis  of  the  annexing  and
20    annexed  districts  as constituted prior to the annexation is
21    greater, a supplementary  payment  equal  to  the  difference
22    shall  be  made  for  the  first  4 years of existence of the
23    annexing school district as constituted upon such annexation.
24        (3)  For 2 or more school districts which  annex  all  of
25    the  territory  of one or more entire other school districts,
26    and for 2 or more community unit districts which result  upon
27    the  division  (pursuant  to petition under Section 11A-2) of
28    one or more other unit school districts into 2 or more  parts
29    and  which  together include all of the parts into which such
30    other unit school district or districts are so  divided,  for
31    the   first  year  during  which  the  change  of  boundaries
32    attributable to such annexation or division becomes effective
33    for all purposes as determined under Section 7-9  or  11A-10,
34    as  the  case  may be, the general State aid and supplemental
HB1640 Enrolled            -26-                LRB9004005THpk
 1    general State aid calculated  under  this  Section  shall  be
 2    computed   for   each   annexing  or  resulting  district  as
 3    constituted after the annexation or  division  and  for  each
 4    annexing  and  annexed  district,  or  for each resulting and
 5    divided district, as constituted prior to the  annexation  or
 6    division;  and  if the aggregate of the general State aid and
 7    supplemental  general  State  aid  as  so  computed  for  the
 8    annexing or resulting  districts  as  constituted  after  the
 9    annexation  or  division  is  less  than the aggregate of the
10    general State aid and supplemental general State  aid  as  so
11    computed  for  the annexing and annexed districts, or for the
12    resulting and divided districts, as constituted prior to  the
13    annexation or division, then a supplementary payment equal to
14    the  difference  shall be made and allocated between or among
15    the annexing or resulting districts, as constituted upon such
16    annexation or division,  for  the  first  4  years  of  their
17    existence.   The  total difference payment shall be allocated
18    between or among the annexing or resulting districts  in  the
19    same  ratio  as the pupil enrollment from that portion of the
20    annexed or divided district or districts which is annexed  to
21    or included in each such annexing or resulting district bears
22    to  the  total  pupil  enrollment  from the entire annexed or
23    divided district or districts, as such  pupil  enrollment  is
24    determined  for the school year last ending prior to the date
25    when the change of boundaries attributable to the  annexation
26    or  division  becomes effective for all purposes.  The amount
27    of the total difference payment and the amount thereof to  be
28    allocated  to  the  annexing  or resulting districts shall be
29    computed by the State Board of  Education  on  the  basis  of
30    pupil  enrollment  and other data which shall be certified to
31    the State Board of Education, on forms which it shall provide
32    for that purpose, by the regional superintendent  of  schools
33    for each educational service region in which the annexing and
34    annexed  districts,  or  resulting  and divided districts are
HB1640 Enrolled            -27-                LRB9004005THpk
 1    located.
 2        (3.5)  Claims  for  financial   assistance   under   this
 3    subsection  (I)  shall  not be recomputed except as expressly
 4    provided under this Section.
 5        (4)  Any supplementary payment made under this subsection
 6    (I) shall be treated as separate from all other payments made
 7    pursuant to this Section.
 8    (J)  Supplementary Grants in Aid.
 9        (1)  Notwithstanding  any  other   provisions   of   this
10    Section,  the  amount  of  the aggregate general State aid in
11    combination with supplemental general State  aid  under  this
12    Section  for  which  each school district is eligible for the
13    1998-1999 school year shall be no less than the amount of the
14    aggregate general State aid entitlement that was received  by
15    the   district  under  Section  18-8  (exclusive  of  amounts
16    received under subsections 5(p) and 5(p-5) of  that  Section)
17    for  the  1997-98  school year, pursuant to the provisions of
18    that Section as it was then in effect. If a  school  district
19    qualifies  to receive a supplementary payment made under this
20    subsection (J) for the 1998-1999 school year, the  amount  of
21    the   aggregate   general   State  aid  in  combination  with
22    supplemental general State aid under this Section  which that
23    district  is  eligible  to  receive  for  each  school   year
24    subsequent to the 1998-1999 school year shall be no less than
25    the  amount  of  the  aggregate general State aid entitlement
26    that  was  received  by  the  district  under  Section   18-8
27    (exclusive  of  amounts  received  under subsections 5(p) and
28    5(p-5) of  that  Section)  for  the  1997-1998  school  year,
29    pursuant  to the provisions of that Section as it was then in
30    effect.
31        (2)  If, as provided in paragraph (1) of this  subsection
32    (J),  a school district is to receive aggregate general State
33    aid in combination with supplemental general State aid  under
34    this  Section for the 1998-99 school year, or for the 1998-99
HB1640 Enrolled            -28-                LRB9004005THpk
 1    school year and any subsequent school year, that in any  such
 2    school  year is less than the amount of the aggregate general
 3    State aid entitlement that  the  district  received  for  the
 4    1997-98  school year, the school district shall also receive,
 5    from a separate  appropriation  made  for  purposes  of  this
 6    subsection  (J), a supplementary payment that is equal to the
 7    amount of the difference in the aggregate State  aid  figures
 8    as described in paragraph (1).
 9        (3)  (Blank).    If    the    amount   appropriated   for
10    supplementary  payments  to  school  districts   under   this
11    subsection   (J)   is  insufficient  for  that  purpose,  the
12    supplementary payments that districts are  to  receive  under
13    this  subsection shall be prorated according to the aggregate
14    amount  of  the  appropriation  made  for  purposes  of  this
15    subsection.
16    (K)  Grants to Laboratory and Alternative Schools.
17        In calculating the amount to be  paid  to  the  governing
18    board  of  a  public  university  that  operates a laboratory
19    school under this Section or to any alternative  school  that
20    is  operated by a regional superintendent, the State Board of
21    Education shall require by rule such  reporting  requirements
22    as it deems necessary.
23        As  used  in  this  Section,  "laboratory school" means a
24    public school which is  created  and  operated  by  a  public
25    university and approved by the State Board of Education.  The
26    governing  board  of a public university which receives funds
27    from the State  Board  under  this  subsection  (K)  may  not
28    increase  the  number  of students enrolled in its laboratory
29    school from a single district, if that  district  is  already
30    sending  50 or more students, except under a mutual agreement
31    between the school board of a student's district of residence
32    and the university which operates the laboratory  school.   A
33    laboratory  school  may  not  have  more than 1,000 students,
34    excluding students with disabilities in a  special  education
HB1640 Enrolled            -29-                LRB9004005THpk
 1    program.
 2        As  used  in  this  Section, "alternative school" means a
 3    public school which is created and  operated  by  a  Regional
 4    Superintendent  of Schools and approved by the State Board of
 5    Education. Such alternative  schools  may  offer  courses  of
 6    instruction  for  which  credit  is  given  in regular school
 7    programs, courses to prepare students  for  the  high  school
 8    equivalency  testing  program  or vocational and occupational
 9    training.  A regional superintendent of schools may  contract
10    with a school district or a public community college district
11    to  operate  an  alternative  school.   An alternative school
12    serving more than  one  educational  service  region  may  be
13    established by the regional superintendents of schools of the
14    affected educational service regions.
15        Each  laboratory  and  alternative  school shall file, on
16    forms provided by the State Superintendent of  Education,  an
17    annual  State  aid  claim  which  states  the  Average  Daily
18    Attendance  of  the  school's  students by month.  The best 3
19    months' Average Daily Attendance shall be computed  for  each
20    school.  The  general State aid entitlement shall be computed
21    by multiplying the applicable Average Daily Attendance by the
22    Foundation Level as determined under this Section.
23    (L)  Payments,   Additional   Grants   in   Aid   and   Other
24    Requirements.
25        (1)  For a school district operating under the  financial
26    supervision  of  an  Authority created under Article 34A, the
27    general State aid otherwise payable to  that  district  under
28    this  Section,  but  not  the supplemental general State aid,
29    shall be reduced by an amount equal to  the  budget  for  the
30    operations  of the Authority as certified by the Authority to
31    the State Board of Education, and an  amount  equal  to  such
32    reduction  shall  be  paid  to the Authority created for such
33    district for its operating expenses in the manner provided in
34    Section 18-11.  The remainder of general State school aid for
HB1640 Enrolled            -30-                LRB9004005THpk
 1    any such district shall be paid in  accordance  with  Article
 2    34A  when  that Article provides for a disposition other than
 3    that provided by this Article.
 4        (2)  Impaction.  Impaction  payments  shall  be  made  as
 5    provided for in Section 18-4.2.
 6        (3)  Summer school.  Summer school payments shall be made
 7    as provided in Section 18-4.3.
 8    (M)  Education Funding Advisory Board.
 9        The Education Funding Advisory Board, hereinafter in this
10    subsection (M) referred to as the "Board", is hereby created.
11    The Board shall consist of 5 members who are appointed by the
12    Governor,  by  and with the advice and consent of the Senate.
13    The  members  appointed  shall  include  representatives   of
14    education,  business,  and  the  general  public.  One of the
15    members so appointed shall be designated by the  Governor  at
16    the  time  the  appointment is made as the chairperson of the
17    Board. The initial members of the Board may be appointed  any
18    time after the effective date of this amendatory Act of 1997.
19    The  regular  term of each member of the Board shall be for 4
20    years from the third Monday of January of the year  in  which
21    the  term  of the member's appointment is to commence, except
22    that of the 5 initial  members  appointed  to  serve  on  the
23    Board,  the  member who is appointed as the chairperson shall
24    serve for a term that commences on the date  of  his  or  her
25    appointment and expires on the third Monday of January, 2002,
26    and  the  remaining  4  members,  by  lots drawn at the first
27    meeting of the Board that is held after  all  5  members  are
28    appointed,  shall  determine  2  of their number to serve for
29    terms  that  commence  on  the  date  of   their   respective
30    appointments and expire on the third Monday of January, 2001,
31    and 2 of their number to serve for terms that commence on the
32    date of their respective appointments and expire on the third
33    Monday  of  January, 2000.  All members appointed to serve on
34    the Board shall serve until their respective  successors  are
HB1640 Enrolled            -31-                LRB9004005THpk
 1    appointed  and  confirmed.   Vacancies shall be filled in the
 2    same manner  as  original  appointments.   If  a  vacancy  in
 3    membership  occurs  at  a  time  when  the  Senate  is not in
 4    session, the Governor  shall  make  a  temporary  appointment
 5    until  the  next  meeting of the Senate, when he or she shall
 6    appoint, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate,  a
 7    person  to  fill  that membership for the unexpired term.  If
 8    the Senate is not in session when  the  initial  appointments
 9    are  made, those appointments shall be made as in the case of
10    vacancies.
11        The Education Funding  Advisory  Board  shall  be  deemed
12    established,   and  the  initial  members  appointed  by  the
13    Governor to serve as members of the Board shall take  office,
14    on the date that the Governor makes his or her appointment of
15    the  fifth initial member of the Board, whether those initial
16    members  are  then  serving  pursuant  to   appointment   and
17    confirmation  or  pursuant to temporary appointments that are
18    made by the Governor as in the case of vacancies.
19        The State Board of Education  shall  provide  such  staff
20    assistance  to  the  Education  Funding  Advisory Board as is
21    reasonably required for the proper performance by  the  Board
22    of its responsibilities.
23        For  school  years  after  the 2000-2001 school year, the
24    Education Funding Advisory Board, in  consultation  with  the
25    State  Board  of  Education,  shall  make  recommendations as
26    provided in this subsection (M) to the General  Assembly  for
27    the foundation level under subdivision (B)(3) of this Section
28    and  for the supplemental general State aid grant level under
29    subsection (H)  of  this  Section  for  districts  with  high
30    concentrations  of  children  from  poverty.  The recommended
31    foundation level shall be determined based on  a  methodology
32    which   incorporates  the  basic  education  expenditures  of
33    low-spending schools exhibiting  high  academic  performance.
34    The   Education   Funding  Advisory  Board  shall  make  such
HB1640 Enrolled            -32-                LRB9004005THpk
 1    recommendations to the General Assembly on January 1  of  odd
 2    numbered years, beginning January 1, 2001.
 3    (N)  General State Aid Adjustment Grant.
 4        (1)  Any   school   district   subject  to  property  tax
 5    extension limitations as imposed under the provisions of  the
 6    Property  Tax  Extension  Limitation Law shall be entitled to
 7    receive, subject to the qualifications  and  requirements  of
 8    this  subsection,  a  general  State  aid  adjustment  grant.
 9    Eligibility  for  this grant shall be determined on an annual
10    basis and claims for grant payments shall be paid subject  to
11    appropriations   made   specific  to  this  subsection.   For
12    purposes of this subsection the following  terms  shall  have
13    the following meanings:
14        "Budget  Year":   The school year for which general State
15    aid is calculated and awarded under subsection (E).
16        "Current Year":  The school  year  immediately  preceding
17    the Budget Year.
18        "Base  Tax  Year":   The  property  tax levy year used to
19    calculate the Budget Year allocation of general State aid.
20        "Preceding  Tax  Year":   The  property  tax  levy   year
21    immediately preceding the Base Tax Year.
22        "Extension   Limitation   Ratio":   A   numerical  ratio,
23    certified by a school district's County Clerk, in  which  the
24    numerator  is  the  Base  Tax  Year's  tax  extension  amount
25    resulting  from  the  Limiting  Operating  Tax  Rate  and the
26    denominator is the Preceding Tax Year's tax extension  amount
27    resulting from the Limiting Operating Tax Rate.
28        "Limiting  Rate":   The  limiting  rate as defined in the
29    Property Tax Extension Limitation Law.
30        "Preliminary Tax Rate": The tax  rate  for  all  purposes
31    except  bond and interest that would have been used to extend
32    those  taxes  absent  the  provisions  of  the  Property  Tax
33    Extension  Limitation  Law.     "Operating  Tax  Rate":   The
34    operating tax rate as defined in subsection (A).
HB1640 Enrolled            -33-                LRB9004005THpk
 1        (2)  To qualify for a general State aid adjustment grant,
 2    a school district must meet all of the following  eligibility
 3    criteria for each Budget Year for which a grant is claimed:
 4             (a)  (Blank).  The  Operating Tax Rate of the school
 5        district in the Preceding Tax Year was at least 3.00%  in
 6        the   case   of  a  school  district  maintaining  grades
 7        kindergarten through 12, at least 2.30% in the case of  a
 8        school  district  maintaining grades kindergarten through
 9        8, or at least 1.41% in the case  of  a  school  district
10        maintaining grades 9 through 12.
11             (b)  The  Preliminary  Operating  Tax  Rate  of  the
12        school  district for the Base Tax Year was reduced by the
13        Clerk of the County as a result of  the  requirements  of
14        the Property Tax Extension Limitation Law.
15             (c)  The  Available Local Resources per pupil of the
16        school district as calculated pursuant to subsection  (D)
17        using the Base Tax Year are less than the product of 1.75
18        times the Foundation Level for the Budget Year.
19             (d)  The  school  district  has  filed  a proper and
20        timely claim for a general State aid adjustment grant  as
21        required under this subsection.
22        (3)  A  claim  for grant assistance under this subsection
23    shall be filed with the State Board of Education on or before
24    April January 1 of the Current  Year  for  a  grant  for  the
25    Budget  Year.  The claim shall be made on forms prescribed by
26    the State Board of Education and must  be  accompanied  by  a
27    written statement from the Clerk of the County, certifying:
28             (a)  That   the   school   district   had   has  its
29        Preliminary Tax Rate extension  for  the  Base  Tax  Year
30        reduced  as  a  result  of  the  Property  Tax  Extension
31        Limitation Law.
32             (b)  (Blank).  That  the  Operating  Tax Rate of the
33        school district for the Preceding Tax Year  met  the  tax
34        rate requirements of subdivision (N)(2) of this Section.
HB1640 Enrolled            -34-                LRB9004005THpk
 1             (c)  The  Extension Limitation Ratio as that term is
 2        defined in this subsection.
 3        (4)  On or before August 1 of the Budget Year  the  State
 4    Board  of Education shall calculate, for all school districts
 5    meeting the other requirements of this subsection, the amount
 6    of the general State aid adjustment grant, if any,  that  the
 7    school  districts are eligible to receive in the Budget Year.
 8    The amount of the general State aid adjustment grant shall be
 9    calculated as follows:
10             (a)  Determine the school district's  general  State
11        aid  grant  for the Budget Year as provided in accordance
12        with the provisions of subsection (E).
13             (b)  Determine the school district's adjusted  level
14        of  general  State aid by utilizing in the calculation of
15        Available Local Resources an equalized assessed valuation
16        that is the equalized assessed valuation that was used to
17        calculate the general State aid for the preceding  fiscal
18        year   of  the  Preceding  Tax  Year  multiplied  by  the
19        Extension Limitation Ratio.
20             (c)  Subtract the sum derived  in  subparagraph  (a)
21        from  the sum derived in subparagraph (b).  If the result
22        is a positive number, that amount shall  be  the  general
23        State  aid adjustment grant that the district is eligible
24        to receive.
25        (5)  The State Board of Education shall  in  the  Current
26    Year,  based upon claims filed in the Current Year, recommend
27    to the General  Assembly  an  appropriation  amount  for  the
28    general  State aid adjustment grants to be made in the Budget
29    Year.
30        (6)  Claims for general State aid adjustment grants shall
31    be paid in a lump sum on or before January 1  of  the  Budget
32    Year  only  from  appropriations made by the General Assembly
33    expressly for claims under this subsection.  No  such  claims
34    may  be  paid from amounts appropriated for any other purpose
HB1640 Enrolled            -35-                LRB9004005THpk
 1    provided for under this  Section.   In  the  event  that  the
 2    appropriation   for   claims   under   this   subsection   is
 3    insufficient  to  meet  all  Budget Year claims for a general
 4    State aid adjustment grant, the appropriation available shall
 5    be proportionately prorated by the State Board  of  Education
 6    amongst all districts filing for and entitled to payments.
 7        (7)  The  State  Board  of Education shall promulgate the
 8    required claim forms and rules  necessary  to  implement  the
 9    provisions of this subsection.
10    (O)  References.
11        (1)  References in other laws to the various subdivisions
12    of Section 18-8 as that Section existed before its repeal and
13    replacement  by this Section 18-8.05 shall be deemed to refer
14    to the corresponding provisions of this Section  18-8.05,  to
15    the extent that those references remain applicable.
16        (2)  References  in  other  laws to State Chapter 1 funds
17    shall be deemed to refer to the  supplemental  general  State
18    aid provided under subsection (H) of this Section.
19    (Source: P.A. 90-548, eff. 7-1-98.)
20        (105 ILCS 5/21-2) (from Ch. 122, par. 21-2)
21        Sec. 21-2.  Grades of certificates.
22        (a)  Until January 1, 1999, all certificates issued under
23    this  Article  shall  be  State certificates valid, except as
24    limited in Section 21-1,  in  every  school  district  coming
25    under the provisions of this Act and shall be limited in time
26    and    designated    as   follows:   Provisional   vocational
27    certificate, temporary  provisional  vocational  certificate,
28    early  childhood  certificate, elementary school certificate,
29    special certificate, high school certificate, school  service
30    personnel     certificate,     administrative    certificate,
31    provisional certificate,  and  substitute  certificate.   The
32    requirement  of  student  teaching  under close and competent
33    supervision for  obtaining  a  teaching  certificate  may  be
HB1640 Enrolled            -36-                LRB9004005THpk
 1    waived   by   the  State  Teacher  Certification  Board  upon
 2    presentation to the Board by the teacher  of  evidence  of  5
 3    years  successful  teaching experience on a valid certificate
 4    and  graduation  from  a  recognized  institution  of  higher
 5    learning with a bachelor's degree  with  not  less  than  120
 6    semester  hours  and  a  minimum  of  16  semester  hours  in
 7    professional education.
 8        (b)  Initial  Teaching Certificate.  Beginning January 1,
 9    1999, persons who (1)  have  completed  an  approved  teacher
10    preparation  program,  (2)  are  recommended  by  an approved
11    teacher preparation program, (3) have successfully  completed
12    the  Initial  Teaching Certification examinations required by
13    the State Board of Education, and  (4)  have  met  all  other
14    criteria  established  by  the  State  Board  of Education in
15    consultation with  the  State  Teacher  Certification  Board,
16    shall  be  issued an Initial Teaching Certificate valid for 4
17    years of teaching.  Initial Teaching  Certificates  shall  be
18    issued   for  categories  corresponding  to  Early  Childhood
19    Education, Elementary Education, and Secondary Education, and
20    Special K-12, with  special  certification  designations  for
21    Special  Education, Bilingual Education, fundamental learning
22    areas  (including  Language   Arts,   Reading,   Mathematics,
23    Science,  Social  Science,  Physical  Development and Health,
24    Fine Arts, and Foreign Language), and other areas  designated
25    by  the  State  Board  of Education, in consultation with the
26    State Teacher Certification Board.
27        (c)  Standard Certificate.  Beginning  January  1,  1999,
28    persons  who  (1)  have completed 4 years of teaching with an
29    Initial Certificate, have successfully completed the Standard
30    Teaching Certificate examinations, and  have  met  all  other
31    criteria  established  by  the  State  Board  of Education in
32    consultation with the State Teacher Certification  Board,  or
33    (2)  were  issued  teaching  certificates prior to January 1,
34    1999 and are renewing those  certificates  after  January  1,
HB1640 Enrolled            -37-                LRB9004005THpk
 1    1999,  shall  be  issued  a  Standard Certificate valid for 5
 2    years, which may be renewed thereafter every 5 years  by  the
 3    State   Teacher   Certification   Board  based  on  proof  of
 4    continuing education or  professional  development.  Standard
 5    Certificates  shall be issued for categories corresponding to
 6    Early  Childhood   Education,   Elementary   Education,   and
 7    Secondary   Education,   and   Special   K-12,  with  special
 8    certification designations for Special  Education,  Bilingual
 9    Education,  fundamental  learning  areas  (including Language
10    Arts, Reading, Mathematics, Science, Social Science, Physical
11    Development and Health, Fine Arts, and Foreign Language), and
12    other areas designated by the State Board  of  Education,  in
13    consultation with the State Teacher Certification Board.
14        (d)  Master  Certificate.   Beginning  January  1,  1999,
15    persons   who   have  successfully  achieved  National  Board
16    certification through the  National  Board  for  Professional
17    Teaching  Standards  shall  be  issued  a Master Certificate,
18    valid for 7 years and  renewable  thereafter  every  7  years
19    through  compliance  with requirements set forth by the State
20    Board of Education.
21    (Source: P.A. 90-548, eff. 1-1-98.)
22        (105 ILCS 5/21-2a) (from Ch. 122, par. 21-2a)
23        Sec.  21-2a.  Required  instruction  curriculum  for  all
24    teachers. After September 1, 1981 and until January 1,  1999,
25    in   addition  to  all  other  requirements,  the  successful
26    completion of course work which includes instruction  on  the
27    psychology  of  the  exceptional child, the identification of
28    the exceptional child, including,  but  not  limited  to  the
29    learning   disabled   and  methods  of  instruction  for  the
30    exceptional child, including, but not limited to the learning
31    disabled shall be a prerequisite to a person receiving any of
32    the  following  certificates:  early  childhood,  elementary,
33    special and high school.
HB1640 Enrolled            -38-                LRB9004005THpk
 1        After January 1, 1999, the State Board of Education shall
 2    ensure  that  the  curriculum  for   all   approved   teacher
 3    preparation  programs  includes,  and  that  all  prospective
 4    teachers  pursuing Early Childhood, Elementary, Secondary, or
 5    Special  K-12  certificates  receive,  instruction   on   the
 6    psychology  of,  the  identification  of,  and the methods of
 7    instruction for  the  exceptional  child,  including  without
 8    limitation   the  learning  disabled.   This  instruction  on
 9    exceptional children may  be  provided  in  one  concentrated
10    course  or  may  be integrated among other courses within the
11    teacher preparation program as shall  be  determined  by  the
12    State Board of Education.
13    (Source: P.A. 90-548, eff. 1-1-98.)
14        (105 ILCS 5/21-4) (from Ch. 122, par. 21-4)
15        Sec. 21-4.  Special certificate.
16        (a)  A special certificate shall be valid for 4 years for
17    teaching  the special subjects named therein in all grades of
18    the common schools. Subject  to  the  provisions  of  Section
19    21-1a,  it shall be issued to persons who have graduated from
20    a recognized institution of higher learning with a bachelor's
21    degree and with not fewer than 120 semester hours including a
22    minimum of 16 semester hours in professional education, 5  of
23    which  shall be in student teaching under competent and close
24    supervision. When the holder of such certificate has earned a
25    master's degree, including eight semester hours  of  graduate
26    professional  education  from  a  recognized  institution  of
27    higher  learning  and with two years' teaching experience, it
28    may be endorsed for supervision.
29        Such  persons  shall  be  recommended  for  the   special
30    certificate  by  a recognized institution as having completed
31    an approved program of preparation  which  includes  academic
32    and professional courses approved by the State Superintendent
33    of   Education   in   consultation  with  the  State  Teacher
HB1640 Enrolled            -39-                LRB9004005THpk
 1    Certification Board.
 2        (b)  Those  persons  holding  special   certificates   on
 3    January 1, 1999 shall be eligible for one of the following:
 4             (1)  The   issuance   of   Standard  Elementary  and
 5        Standard Secondary Certificates with appropriate  special
 6        certification  designations  as  determined  by the State
 7        Board  of  Education,  in  consultation  with  the  State
 8        Teacher Certification Board, and  consistent  with  rules
 9        adopted   by   the   State  Board  of  Education.   These
10        certificates shall be renewed as provided  in  subsection
11        (c) of Section 21-2.
12             (2)  The   issuance   of   Standard   Special   K-12
13        Certificates   with   appropriate  special  certification
14        designations, which  shall  be  renewed  as  provided  in
15        subsection (c) of Section 21-2.  These certificates shall
16        not be eligible for additional certification designations
17        except  as  approved  by the State Board of Education, in
18        consultation with the State Teacher Certification Board.
19        (c)  Those persons eligible to receive K-12 certification
20    after January 1, 1999 shall be issued Initial Elementary  and
21    Initial   Secondary  Certificates  with  appropriate  special
22    certification  designations  pursuant  to  this  Section   or
23    Initial  Special  K-12  Certificates with appropriate special
24    certification designations pursuant to this  Section.   These
25    Initial  K-12  Special Certificates shall not be eligible for
26    additional certification designations except as  approved  by
27    the  State Board of Education, in consultation with the State
28    Teacher Certification Board.
29    Beginning January 1, 1999, special certification designations
30    shall be issued for Special Education,  Bilingual  Education,
31    fundamental   learning   areas   (Language   Arts,   Reading,
32    Mathematics,  Science,  Social  Science, Physical Development
33    and Health, Fine Arts, and Foreign Language), and other areas
34    designated by the State Board of Education,  to  persons  who
HB1640 Enrolled            -40-                LRB9004005THpk
 1    meet  all  of  the criteria established by the State Board of
 2    Education,   in   consultation   with   the   State   Teacher
 3    Certification Board.
 4    (Source: P.A. 90-548, eff. 1-1-98.)
 5        (105 ILCS 5/21-14) (from Ch. 122, par. 21-14)
 6        Sec. 21-14. Registration and renewal of certificates.
 7        (a)  A limited four-year  certificate  or  a  certificate
 8    issued  after  July  1,  1955,  shall  be  renewable  at  its
 9    expiration  or  within  60  days  thereafter  by  the  county
10    superintendent of schools having supervision and control over
11    the  school  where  the  teacher  is  teaching upon certified
12    evidence of meeting the requirements for renewal as  required
13    by this Act and prescribed by the State Board of Education in
14    consultation  with the State Teacher Certification Board.  An
15    elementary supervisory certificate shall not  be  renewed  at
16    the  end  of  the  first  four-year  period  covered  by  the
17    certificate  unless  the  holder  thereof has filed certified
18    evidence with the State Teacher Certification Board  that  he
19    has  a master's degree or that he has earned 8 semester hours
20    of credit in the  field  of  educational  administration  and
21    supervision  in  a recognized institution of higher learning.
22    The holder shall continue to earn 8 semester hours of  credit
23    each  four-year  period  until  such  time as he has earned a
24    master's degree.
25        All certificates not  renewed  or  registered  as  herein
26    provided  shall  lapse  after  a  period  of 4 years from the
27    expiration  of  the  last   year   of   registration.    Such
28    certificates  may  be  reinstated  for a one year period upon
29    payment  of  all   accumulated   registration   fees.    Such
30    reinstated certificates shall only be renewed: (1) by earning
31    5  semester  hours  of  credit in a recognized institution of
32    higher learning in the field of professional education or  in
33    courses  related to the holder's contractual teaching duties;
HB1640 Enrolled            -41-                LRB9004005THpk
 1    or (2) by presenting evidence  of  holding  a  valid  regular
 2    certificate  of  some  other  type.   Any  certificate may be
 3    voluntarily  surrendered  by  the  certificate   holder.    A
 4    voluntarily  surrendered  certificate  shall  be treated as a
 5    revoked certificate.
 6        (b)  When  those  teaching  certificates  issued   before
 7    January  1, 1999 are renewed for the first time after January
 8    1, 1999, all such teaching certificates  shall  be  exchanged
 9    for  Standard Teaching Certificates as provided in subsection
10    (c) of Section  21-2.   All  Initial  and  Standard  Teaching
11    Certificates,   including   those   issued   to  persons  who
12    previously held teaching certificates issued  before  January
13    1, 1999, shall be renewable under the conditions set forth in
14    this subsection (b).
15        Initial  Teaching  Certificates are valid for 4 years and
16    are nonrenewable and are  valid  for  4  years  of  teaching.
17    Standard Teaching Certificates are renewable every 5 years as
18    provided in subsection (c) of Section 21-2.
19    (Source: P.A. 90-548, eff. 1-1-98.)
20        (105 ILCS 5/24-11) (from Ch. 122, par. 24-11)
21        Sec.  24-11.   Boards  of  Education  -  Boards of School
22    Inspectors - Contractual continued service.  As used in  this
23    and the succeeding Sections of this Article:
24        "Teacher"  means  any  or  all  school district employees
25    regularly required to be certified under laws relating to the
26    certification of teachers.
27        "Board" means board of directors, board of education,  or
28    board of school inspectors, as the case may be.
29        "School term" means that portion of the school year, July
30    1 to the following June 30, when school is in actual session.
31        This  Section  and  Sections  24-12 through 24-16 of this
32    Article apply only  to  school  districts  having  less  than
33    500,000 inhabitants.
HB1640 Enrolled            -42-                LRB9004005THpk
 1        Any  teacher  who  has been employed in any district as a
 2    full-time teacher for a probationary period of 2  consecutive
 3    school  terms  shall enter upon contractual continued service
 4    unless given written notice of dismissal stating the specific
 5    reason therefor, by certified mail, return receipt  requested
 6    by  the  employing  board  at least 45 days before the end of
 7    such period; except that for a teacher who is first  employed
 8    as  a  full-time  teacher  by  a  school district on or after
 9    January 1, 1998 and who has  not  before  that  date  already
10    entered  upon contractual continued service in that district,
11    the probationary period shall be 4 consecutive  school  terms
12    before  the  teacher  shall  enter upon contractual continued
13    service.   For  the  purpose   of   determining   contractual
14    continued  service,  the first probationary year shall be any
15    full-time employment from a date before  November  1  through
16    the  end  of the school year.  If, however, a teacher who was
17    first employed prior to January  1,  1998  has  not  had  one
18    school  term  of  full-time  teaching  experience  before the
19    beginning of a probationary period of  2  consecutive  school
20    terms,  the  employing  board  may  at  its option extend the
21    probationary period for one additional school term by  giving
22    the  teacher written notice by certified mail, return receipt
23    requested, at least 45 days before  the  end  of  the  second
24    school  term  of  the  period  of  2 consecutive school terms
25    referred to above.  This notice must state  the  reasons  for
26    the  one  year  extension  and  must  outline  the corrective
27    actions that the teacher must take to satisfactorily complete
28    probation.  The changes made by this amendatory Act  of  1998
29    are declaratory of existing law.
30        Any full-time teacher who is not completing the last year
31    of   the  probationary  period  described  in  the  preceding
32    paragraph, or any teacher employed on a full-time  basis  not
33    later  than  January  1  of  the  school  term, shall receive
34    written notice from the employing  board  at  least  45  days
HB1640 Enrolled            -43-                LRB9004005THpk
 1    before  the  end of any school term whether or not he will be
 2    re-employed for the following school term. If the board fails
 3    to give such notice, the employee shall be deemed reemployed,
 4    and not later than the close of the then current school  term
 5    the  board  shall issue a regular contract to the employee as
 6    though the board had reemployed him in the usual manner.
 7        Contractual continued service shall  continue  in  effect
 8    the  terms  and  provisions  of the contract with the teacher
 9    during the last  school  term  of  the  probationary  period,
10    subject  to  this  Act  and  the  lawful  regulations  of the
11    employing board. This Section and succeeding Sections do  not
12    modify any existing power of the board except with respect to
13    the procedure of the discharge of a teacher and reductions in
14    salary as hereinafter provided. Contractual continued service
15    status  shall not restrict the power of the board to transfer
16    a teacher to a position which the  teacher  is  qualified  to
17    fill   or  to  make  such  salary  adjustments  as  it  deems
18    desirable, but unless reductions in  salary  are  uniform  or
19    based  upon some reasonable classification, any teacher whose
20    salary is reduced shall be entitled to a notice and a hearing
21    as hereinafter provided in the case of certain dismissals  or
22    removals.
23        The  employment  of any teacher in a program of a special
24    education joint agreement established under Section  3-15.14,
25    10-22.31  or  10-22.31a  shall  be  under this and succeeding
26    Sections of this Article.   For  purposes  of  attaining  and
27    maintaining   contractual  continued  service  and  computing
28    length of continuing service as referred to in  this  Section
29    and  Section 24-12, employment in a special educational joint
30    program shall  be  deemed  a  continuation  of  all  previous
31    certificated  employment  of  such  teacher  for  such  joint
32    agreement  whether  the employer of the teacher was the joint
33    agreement,  the  regional  superintendent,  or  one  of   the
34    participating districts in the joint agreement.
HB1640 Enrolled            -44-                LRB9004005THpk
 1        Any  teacher  employed  after July 1, 1987 as a full-time
 2    teacher in a program of a special education joint  agreement,
 3    whether  the  program is operated by the joint agreement or a
 4    member district on behalf  of  the  joint  agreement,  for  a
 5    probationary period of two consecutive years shall enter upon
 6    contractual   continued   service  in  all  of  the  programs
 7    conducted by  such  joint  agreement  which  the  teacher  is
 8    legally  qualified  to hold; except that for a teacher who is
 9    first employed on or after January 1, 1998 in a program of  a
10    special education joint agreement and who has not before that
11    date  already  entered  upon contractual continued service in
12    all of the programs conducted by the joint agreement that the
13    teacher is legally qualified to hold, the probationary period
14    shall be 4 consecutive years before the teacher  enters  upon
15    contractual  continued  service in all of those programs.  In
16    the event of  a  reduction  in  the  number  of  programs  or
17    positions  in the joint agreement, the teacher on contractual
18    continued service shall be eligible  for  employment  in  the
19    joint  agreement  programs  for  which the teacher is legally
20    qualified in order of greater length of continuing service in
21    the  joint  agreement  unless  an   alternative   method   of
22    determining  the  sequence  of  dismissal is established in a
23    collective  bargaining  agreement.   In  the  event  of   the
24    dissolution  of a joint agreement, the teacher on contractual
25    continued service who is legally qualified shall be  assigned
26    to  any  comparable  position  in a member district currently
27    held by a  teacher  who  has  not  entered  upon  contractual
28    continued  service  or held by a teacher who has entered upon
29    contractual  continued  service  with   shorter   length   of
30    contractual continued service.
31        The  governing  board  of  the  joint  agreement,  or the
32    administrative district, if so authorized by the articles  of
33    agreement  of  the  joint agreement, rather than the board of
34    education of a school district, may carry out employment  and
HB1640 Enrolled            -45-                LRB9004005THpk
 1    termination  actions  including dismissals under this Section
 2    and Section 24-12.
 3        For purposes of this  and  succeeding  Sections  of  this
 4    Article,  a  program of a special educational joint agreement
 5    shall be defined as instructional, consultative, supervisory,
 6    administrative, diagnostic, and related  services  which  are
 7    managed  by  the special educational joint agreement designed
 8    to service two or more districts which  are  members  of  the
 9    joint agreement.
10        Each  joint  agreement  shall  be  required  to  post  by
11    February 1, a list of all its employees in order of length of
12    continuing   service   in  the  joint  agreement,  unless  an
13    alternative method of determining a sequence of dismissal  is
14    established in an applicable collective bargaining agreement.
15        The  employment  of  any  teacher  in a special education
16    program authorized by Section 14-1.01 through 14-14.01, or  a
17    joint   educational   program   established   under   Section
18    10-22.31a, shall be under this and the succeeding Sections of
19    this   Article,   and  such  employment  shall  be  deemed  a
20    continuation of the previous employment of  such  teacher  in
21    any   of  the  participating  districts,  regardless  of  the
22    participation of other districts in the program. Any  teacher
23    employed  as  a  full-time  teacher  in  a  special education
24    program prior to September 23, 1987 in which 2 or more school
25    districts  participate  for  a  probationary  period   of   2
26    consecutive  years  shall  enter  upon  contractual continued
27    service in each of the participating  districts,  subject  to
28    this  and the succeeding Sections of this Article, and in the
29    event of the termination of the program shall be eligible for
30    any vacant position in any of such districts for  which  such
31    teacher is qualified.
32    (Source: P.A. 90-548, eff. 1-1-98.)
33        (105 ILCS 5/24A-5) (from Ch. 122, par. 24A-5)
HB1640 Enrolled            -46-                LRB9004005THpk
 1        Sec.  24A-5.   Content  of evaluation plans.  Each school
 2    district to which this  Article  applies  shall  establish  a
 3    teacher  evaluation  plan  which ensures that each teacher in
 4    contractual continued service is evaluated at least  once  in
 5    the  course  of  every  2  school  years,  beginning with the
 6    1986-87 school year.
 7        The evaluation plan shall comply with the requirements of
 8    this Section and of any rules adopted by the State  Board  of
 9    Education pursuant to this Section.
10        The  plan  shall  include a description of each teacher's
11    duties and responsibilities and of  the  standards  to  which
12    that teacher is expected to conform.
13        The  plan  may  provide for evaluation of personnel whose
14    positions require administrative certification by independent
15    evaluators not employed by  or  affiliated  with  the  school
16    district.  The results of the school district administrators'
17    evaluations  shall be reported to the employing school board,
18    together with such recommendations  for  remediation  as  the
19    evaluator or evaluators may deem appropriate.
20        Evaluation  of  teachers  whose  positions do not require
21    administrative  certification  shall  be  conducted   by   an
22    administrator  qualified under Section 24A-3, or -- in school
23    districts having a population exceeding 500,000 -- by  either
24    an   administrator   qualified  under  Section  24A-3  or  an
25    assistant principal under the supervision of an administrator
26    qualified under Section 24A-3, and shall include at least the
27    following components:
28             (a)  personal observation  of  the  teacher  in  the
29        classroom  (on at least 2 different school days in school
30        districts having a population  exceeding  500,000)  by  a
31        district  administrator qualified under Section 24A-3, or
32        -- in school  districts  having  a  population  exceeding
33        500,000  --  by  either  an administrator qualified under
34        Section  24A-3  or  an  assistant  principal  under   the
HB1640 Enrolled            -47-                LRB9004005THpk
 1        supervision  of  an administrator qualified under Section
 2        24A-3, unless the teacher has no classroom duties.
 3             (b)  consideration  of  the  teacher's   attendance,
 4        planning,    and    instructional    methods,   classroom
 5        management, where relevant, and competency in the subject
 6        matter taught, where relevant.
 7             (c)  rating  of   the   teacher's   performance   as
 8        "excellent", "satisfactory" or "unsatisfactory".
 9             (d)  specification as to the teacher's strengths and
10        weaknesses,  with  supporting  reasons  for  the comments
11        made.
12             (e)  inclusion of a copy of the  evaluation  in  the
13        teacher's  personnel  file and provision of a copy to the
14        teacher.
15             (f)  within  30  days   after   completion   of   an
16        evaluation   rating   a   teacher   as  "unsatisfactory",
17        development and commencement by the district,  or  by  an
18        administrator   qualified   under  Section  24A-3  or  an
19        assistant  principal  under   the   supervision   of   an
20        administrator  qualified  under  Section  24A-3 in school
21        districts having a population  exceeding  500,000,  of  a
22        remediation  plan designed to correct deficiencies cited,
23        provided the deficiencies are deemed remediable.  In  all
24        school districts the remediation plan for unsatisfactory,
25        tenured  teachers  shall  provide  for  90 school days of
26        remediation  within  the  classroom.    In   all   school
27        districts  evaluations  issued  pursuant  to this Section
28        shall be issued within 10 days after  the  conclusion  of
29        the  respective  remediation  plan.   However, the school
30        board or other governing authority of the district  shall
31        not lose jurisdiction to discharge a teacher in the event
32        the  evaluation  is  not  issued within 10 days after the
33        conclusion of the respective remediation plan.
34             (g)  participation in the remediation  plan  by  the
HB1640 Enrolled            -48-                LRB9004005THpk
 1        teacher  rated "unsatisfactory", a district administrator
 2        qualified under Section 24A-3 (or -- in a school district
 3        having a population exceeding 500,000 -- an administrator
 4        qualified under Section 24A-3 or an  assistant  principal
 5        under the supervision of an administrator qualified under
 6        Section 24A-3), and a consulting teacher, selected by the
 7        participating administrator or by the principal, or -- in
 8        school districts having a population exceeding 500,000 --
 9        by  an  administrator qualified under Section 24A-3 or by
10        an  assistant  principal  under  the  supervision  of  an
11        administrator  qualified  under  Section  24A-3,  of  the
12        teacher who was rated "unsatisfactory", which  consulting
13        teacher  is  an  educational  employee  as defined in the
14        Educational Labor Relations Act, has at  least  5  years'
15        teaching experience and a reasonable familiarity with the
16        assignment  of  the  teacher  being  evaluated,  and  who
17        received  an "excellent" rating on his or her most recent
18        evaluation.  Where no teachers who  meet  these  criteria
19        are  available  within  the  district, the district shall
20        request and the State Board of Education shall supply, to
21        participate in the remediation process, an individual who
22        meets these criteria.
23             In a district  having  a  population  of  less  than
24        500,000   with   an   exclusive   bargaining  agent,  the
25        bargaining agent may, if it so chooses, supply  a  roster
26        of qualified teachers from whom the consulting teacher is
27        to  be selected.  That roster shall, however, contain the
28        names of at least 5 teachers,  each  of  whom  meets  the
29        criteria  for  consulting  teacher  with  regard  to  the
30        teacher  being evaluated, or the names of all teachers so
31        qualified if that number is less than 5.  In the event of
32        a dispute as to  qualification,  the  State  Board  shall
33        determine qualification.
34             (h)  quarterly evaluations and ratings once every 30
HB1640 Enrolled            -49-                LRB9004005THpk
 1        school  days for the 90 school day remediation period one
 2        year immediately following receipt of an "unsatisfactory"
 3        rating of a teacher for whom a remediation plan  provided
 4        for  under  subsections  (f)  and (g) of this Section has
 5        been developed; provided that in school districts  having
 6        a  population  exceeding  500,000  there shall be monthly
 7        evaluations and  ratings  for  the  first  6  months  and
 8        quarterly  evaluations  and ratings for the next 6 months
 9        immediately  following  completion  of  the   remediation
10        program of a teacher for whom a remediation plan has been
11        developed.   These   subsequent   evaluations   shall  be
12        conducted by the participating administrator,  or  --  in
13        school districts having a population exceeding 500,000 --
14        by  either  the  principal  or  by an assistant principal
15        under the supervision of an administrator qualified under
16        Section 24A-3.   The  consulting  teacher  shall  provide
17        advice  to  the  teacher rated "unsatisfactory" on how to
18        improve teaching skills and to successfully complete  the
19        remediation   plan.    The   consulting   teacher   shall
20        participate  in  developing the remediation plan, but the
21        final decision as to the evaluation shall be done  solely
22        by  the administrator, or -- in school districts having a
23        population exceeding 500,000 -- by either  the  principal
24        or  by an assistant principal under the supervision of an
25        administrator qualified under Section  24A-3,  unless  an
26        applicable  collective  bargaining  agreement provides to
27        the contrary.  Teachers in the remediation process  in  a
28        school district having a population exceeding 500,000 are
29        not  subject  to  the  annual  evaluations  described  in
30        paragraphs  (a) through (e) of this Section.  Evaluations
31        at the conclusion of the  remediation  process  shall  be
32        separate   and   distinct   from   the   required  annual
33        evaluations of teachers and shall not be subject  to  the
34        guidelines   and  procedures  relating  to  those  annual
HB1640 Enrolled            -50-                LRB9004005THpk
 1        evaluations.  The evaluator may but is  not  required  to
 2        use  the  forms  provided  for  the  annual evaluation of
 3        teachers in the district's evaluation plan.
 4             (i)  in school districts having a population of less
 5        than 500,000, reinstatement to  a  schedule  of  biennial
 6        evaluation  for  any  teacher who completes the 90 school
 7        day 1-year remediation  plan  with  a  "satisfactory"  or
 8        better  rating,  unless  the  district's  plan  regularly
 9        requires   more   frequent  evaluations;  and  in  school
10        districts  having   a   population   exceeding   500,000,
11        reinstatement  to  a  schedule of biennial evaluation for
12        any teacher who completes the 90 school  day  remediation
13        plan  with  a "satisfactory" or better rating and the one
14        year intensive review schedule as provided  in  paragraph
15        (h)  of  this  Section  with  a  "satisfactory" or better
16        rating, unless such district's  plan  regularly  requires
17        more frequent evaluations.
18             (j)  dismissal  in  accordance with Section 24-12 or
19        34-85 of The School Code  of any  teacher  who  fails  to
20        complete   any   applicable   remediation   plan  with  a
21        "satisfactory" or better rating.  Districts and  teachers
22        subject   to   dismissal   hearings  are  precluded  from
23        compelling the testimony of consulting teachers  at  such
24        hearings  under  Section 24-12 or 34-85, either as to the
25        rating  process  or  for  opinions  of  performances   by
26        teachers under remediation.
27        In   a   district  subject  to  a  collective  bargaining
28    agreement as of the effective date of this amendatory Act  of
29    1997,  any  changes  made  by  this  amendatory  Act  to  the
30    provisions  of  this Section that are contrary to the express
31    terms and provisions of that agreement shall go  into  effect
32    in  that  district  only  upon  expiration of that agreement.
33    Thereafter, collectively bargained evaluation plans shall  at
34    a  minimum  meet  the  standards  of  this Article. If such a
HB1640 Enrolled            -51-                LRB9004005THpk
 1    district has an evaluation plan, however, whether pursuant to
 2    the collective bargaining agreement or otherwise, a  copy  of
 3    that  plan shall be submitted to the State Board of Education
 4    for review and comment, in accordance with Section 24A-4.
 5        Nothing in this Section shall be construed as  preventing
 6    immediate  dismissal  of a teacher for deficiencies which are
 7    deemed irremediable or for actions which are injurious to  or
 8    endanger the health or person of students in the classroom or
 9    school. Failure to strictly comply with the time requirements
10    contained  in  Section 24A-5 shall not invalidate the results
11    of the remediation plan.
12    (Source: P.A. 89-15, eff. 5-30-95; 90-548, eff. 1-1-98.)
13        Section 15. The School Construction  Law  is  amended  by
14    adding Section 5-37 as follows:
15        (105 ILCS 230/5-37 new)
16        Sec.  5-37. Carry over projects. If a school district has
17    been issued a grant entitlement  for  a  school  construction
18    project,  has  arranged and approved all local financing, and
19    is eligible to receive a school  construction  project  grant
20    award  in any fiscal year, but does not receive such award in
21    that year due to lack of adequate appropriations, such school
22    construction projects shall be placed ahead of any new school
23    construction projects within the same  priority  category  as
24    defined  in  Section  5-30 that are approved for grant awards
25    for the following year.
26        Section 99. This Act  takes  effect  upon  becoming  law,
27    except  the  changes to Sec. 18-8.05 of the School Code which
28    shall take effect July 1, 1998.

[ Top ]