State of Illinois
91st General Assembly
Legislation

   [ Search ]   [ Legislation ]
[ Home ]   [ Back ]   [ Bottom ]


[ Engrossed ][ Enrolled ][ House Amendment 001 ]
[ Senate Amendment 001 ][ Senate Amendment 002 ]

91_SB0283

 
                                              LRB9101118DHmgA

 1        AN ACT concerning State government.

 2        Be  it  enacted  by  the People of the State of Illinois,
 3    represented in the General Assembly:

 4        Section 5.  The Illinois Act on the Aging is  amended  by
 5    changing Section 8.01 as follows:

 6        (20 ILCS 105/8.01) (from Ch. 23, par. 6108.01)
 7        Sec.   8.01.   Coordinating   Committee;   members.   The
 8    Coordinating  Committee  of  State  Agencies  Serving   Older
 9    Persons  shall  consist  of the Director of the Department on
10    Aging as Chairman, the State Superintendent of Education, the
11    Secretary of Human Services, the Secretary of Transportation,
12    and the Directors of the following Departments  or  agencies:
13    Labor; Veterans' Affairs; Public Health; Public Aid; Children
14    and   Family   Services;   Commerce  and  Community  Affairs;
15    Insurance; Revenue; Illinois Housing  Development  Authority;
16    and Comprehensive State Health Planning; or their designees.
17    (Source:  P.A.  89-249,  eff.  8-4-95;  89-507,  eff. 7-1-97;
18    90-609, eff. 6-30-98.)

19        Section 10.  The Civil Administrative Code of Illinois is
20    amended by changing Section 46.37 as follows:

21        (20 ILCS 605/46.37) (from Ch. 127, par. 46.37)
22        Sec. 46.37.  The Department shall provide for  a  central
23    clearing  house  for  information concerning local government
24    problems and various solutions to those  problems  and  shall
25    assist  and  aid  local  governments  of the State in matters
26    relating to budgets, fiscal procedures and administration. In
27    performing this responsibility the Department shall have  the
28    power and duty to:
29        (a)  Maintain  communication  with  all local governments
 
                            -2-               LRB9101118DHmgA
 1    and  assist  them,  at  their  request,  to   improve   their
 2    administrative  procedures  and  to facilitate improved local
 3    government and development;
 4        (b)  Assemble  and  disseminate  information   concerning
 5    State  and  Federal  programs,  grants,  gifts, and subsidies
 6    available to local governments and  to  provide  counsel  and
 7    technical  services and other assistance in applying for such
 8    programs, grants, gifts and subsidies;
 9        (c)  Assist  in  coordinating  activities  by   obtaining
10    information,  on  forms  provided  by  the  Department  or by
11    receipt of proposals and applications, concerning  State  and
12    Federal  assisted  programs,  grants,  gifts,  and  subsidies
13    applied for and received by all local governments;
14        (d)  Provide   direct   consultative  services  to  local
15    governments  upon  request  and  provide  staff  services  to
16    special commissions, the Governor, the  General  Assembly  or
17    its committees;
18        (e)  Render  advice  and  assistance  with respect to the
19    establishment and maintenance of programs for the training of
20    local government officials  and  other  personnel,  including
21    programs of intergovernmental exchange of personnel;
22        (f)  To  act as the official State agency for the receipt
23    and distribution  of  federal  funds  which  are  or  may  be
24    provided  to the State on a flat grant basis for distribution
25    to local governments or in the event federal law  requires  a
26    State   agency   to   implement   programs   affecting  local
27    governments and for State funds which are or may be  provided
28    for the use of local governments unless otherwise provided by
29    law;
30        (g)  To administer such laws relating to local government
31    affairs as the General Assembly may direct;
32        (h)  Provide  all  advice and assistance to improve local
33    government  administration,  to  insure  the  economical  and
34    efficient provision of local government services, and to make
 
                            -3-               LRB9101118DHmgA
 1    this Act effective;
 2        (i)  Give advice and counsel on fiscal problems of  local
 3    governments of the State to such local governments;
 4        (j)  Prepare uniform budgetary forms for use by the local
 5    governments of the State;
 6        (k)  Assist and advise the local governments of the State
 7    in  matters pertaining to budgets, appropriation requests and
 8    ordinances, the determination  of  property  tax  levies  and
 9    rates, and other matters of a financial nature;
10        (l)  Be a repository for financial reports and statements
11    required by law of local governments of the State and publish
12    financial summaries thereof;
13        (m)  (Blank) At the request of local governments, provide
14    assistance   in   preparing   bond   issues,  review  bonding
15    proposals, and assist in  marketing  bonds,  and  provide  by
16    January  1,  1985,  model  forms  for  the  disclosure of all
17    information of significance to potential purchasers  of  long
18    or  short  term debt of local governments and all information
19    required to be disclosed in connection with the sale of  long
20    or short term debt by local governments;
21        (n)  Prepare  proposals  and  advise on the investment of
22    idle local government funds;
23        (o)  Administer the program of  grants,  loans  and  loan
24    guarantees  under  the  federal  Public  Works  and  Economic
25    Development  Act of 1965, as amended, 42 U.S.C. 3121 et seq.,
26    and to receive and disburse State and federal funds  provided
27    for  that  program and moneys received as repayments of loans
28    made under the program;
29        (p)  After January 1, 1985, upon  the  request  of  local
30    governments, to prepare and provide model financial statement
31    forms   designed   to   communicate   to  taxpayers,  service
32    consumers, voters, government employees and news media, in  a
33    non-technical  manner,  all significant financial information
34    regarding a particular local government, and to  prepare  and
 
                            -4-               LRB9101118DHmgA
 1    provide  to local governments a summary of local governments'
 2    obligations concerning the adoption of  an  annual  operating
 3    budget  which  summary  shall be set forth in a non-technical
 4    manner and shall be designed principally for distribution to,
 5    and  the  use  of,  taxpayers,  service  consumers,   voters,
 6    government employees and news media.
 7    (Source: P.A. 83-1362.)

 8        Section 15.  The Center for Business Ownership Succession
 9    and  Employee  Ownership Act is amended by changing Section 2
10    as follows:

11        (20 ILCS 609/2)
12        Sec. 2.  Center for  Business  Ownership  Succession  and
13    Employee Ownership.
14        (a)  There  is  created within the Department of Commerce
15    and Community  Affairs  the  Center  for  Business  Ownership
16    Succession and Employee Ownership.
17        The  purpose of the Center is to foster greater awareness
18    of the most effective  techniques  that  facilitate  business
19    ownership  succession and employee ownership with an emphasis
20    on the retention and creation of job opportunities.
21        (b)  The Center  shall  have  the  authority  to  do  the
22    following:
23             (1)  Develop  and  disseminate  materials to promote
24        effective  business  ownership  succession  and  employee
25        ownership strategies.
26             (2)  Provide counseling to individual companies  and
27        referral services to provide professional advisors expert
28        in   the  field  of  business  ownership  succession  and
29        employee ownership.
30             (3)  Plan, organize, sponsor, or conduct conferences
31        and  workshops  on  business  ownership  succession   and
32        employee ownership issues.
 
                            -5-               LRB9101118DHmgA
 1             (4)  Network   and   contract  with  local  economic
 2        development   agencies,   business   organizations,   and
 3        professional advisors to  accomplish  the  goals  of  the
 4        Center.
 5             (5)  Raise money from private sources to support the
 6        work of the Center.
 7        (c)  (Blank)  The  work  of the Center shall be supported
 8    and guided by an Advisory Task Force  on  Business  Ownership
 9    Succession  and  Employee  Ownership.   The  Task Force shall
10    consist of individuals from the private and  public  sectors,
11    at least two-thirds of whom shall be from the private sector.
12    The members and the Task Force chairperson shall be chosen by
13    the Governor.
14    (Source: P.A. 89-364, eff. 8-18-95.)

15        Section  20.   The  Illinois  Coal and Energy Development
16    Bond Act is amended by changing Section 6 as follows:

17        (20 ILCS 1110/6) (from Ch. 96 1/2, par. 4106)
18        Sec. 6.  The Department of Commerce and Community Affairs
19    is authorized to use $120,000,000 for the purposes  specified
20    in  this Act.  These funds shall be expended only on projects
21    for which previous approval of the Illinois Energy  Resources
22    Commission  has been granted or for a grant to the owner of a
23    generating station located in Illinois and  having  at  least
24    three  coal-fired  generating  units  with  accredited summer
25    capacity greater than 500 megawatts each at  such  generating
26    station   as   specifically  authorized  by  this  paragraph.
27    Notwithstanding any of the other provisions of this  Act,  in
28    considering  the approval of projects to be funded under this
29    Act, the Department of Commerce and Community Affairs and the
30    Illinois  Energy  Resources  Commission  shall  give  special
31    consideration to projects which are designed to remove sulfur
32    and other pollutants in the preparation  and  utilization  of
 
                            -6-               LRB9101118DHmgA
 1    coal,  and  in  the  use  and  operation  of electric utility
 2    generating plants and  industrial  facilities  which  utilize
 3    Illinois   coal  as  their  primary  source  of  fuel.    The
 4    Department of Commerce and Community Affairs is  directed  to
 5    enter  into a contract with the owner of a generating station
 6    located in Illinois and  having  at  least  three  coal-fired
 7    generating  units  with  accredited summer capability greater
 8    than 500 megawatts each at  such  generating  station  for  a
 9    grant  of  $35,000,000 to be made by the State of Illinois to
10    such owner to be used to pay costs of  designing,  acquiring,
11    constructing,  installing  and  testing  facilities to reduce
12    sulfur dioxide emissions at one such generating unit to allow
13    that unit to meet the requirements of the Federal  Clean  Air
14    Act Amendments of 1990 (P.L. 101-549) while continuing to use
15    coal mined in Illinois as its source of fuel.
16    (Source: P.A. 89-445, eff. 2-7-96.)

17        Section  25.  The  Disabled Persons Rehabilitation Act is
18    amended by changing Section 3 as follows:

19        (20 ILCS 2405/3) (from Ch. 23, par. 3434)
20        Sec. 3.  Powers and duties. The Department shall have the
21    powers and duties enumerated herein:
22        (a)  To co-operate with the  federal  government  in  the
23    administration    of    the   provisions   of   the   federal
24    Rehabilitation Act of 1973, as amended, and  of  the  federal
25    Social  Security Act to the extent and in the manner provided
26    in these Acts.
27        (b)  To  prescribe  and   supervise   such   courses   of
28    vocational training and provide such other services as may be
29    necessary  for the habilitation and rehabilitation of persons
30    with one or more disabilities, including  the  administrative
31    activities  under  subsection  (e)  of  this  Section, and to
32    co-operate with State and local school authorities and  other
 
                            -7-               LRB9101118DHmgA
 1    recognized  agencies  engaged in habilitation, rehabilitation
 2    and comprehensive rehabilitation services; and  to  cooperate
 3    with the Department of Children and Family Services regarding
 4    the   care  and  education  of  children  with  one  or  more
 5    disabilities.
 6        (c)  To make such reports and submit such  plans  to  the
 7    federal  government  as are required by the provisions of the
 8    federal Rehabilitation Act of 1973, as amended,  and  by  the
 9    rules  and  regulations  of  the  federal  agency or agencies
10    administering the federal  Rehabilitation  Act  of  1973,  as
11    amended, and the federal Social Security Act.
12        (d)  To  report  in writing, to the Governor, annually on
13    or before the first day of December, and at such other  times
14    and in such manner and upon such subjects as the Governor may
15    require.   The annual report shall contain (1) a statement of
16    the  existing  condition  of   comprehensive   rehabilitation
17    services, habilitation and rehabilitation in the State; (2) a
18    statement  of  suggestions and recommendations with reference
19    to the development of comprehensive rehabilitation  services,
20    habilitation  and  rehabilitation  in  the  State; and (3) an
21    itemized statement of the  amounts  of  money  received  from
22    federal,  State  and  other  sources,  and of the objects and
23    purposes to which  the  respective  items  of  these  several
24    amounts have been devoted.
25        (e)  To  exercise,  pursuant  to  Section 13 of this Act,
26    executive   and   administrative   supervision    over    all
27    institutions,  divisions,  programs and services now existing
28    or hereafter acquired or created under  the  jurisdiction  of
29    the Department, including, but not limited to, the following:
30        The   Illinois   School  for  the  Visually  Impaired  at
31    Jacksonville, as provided under Section 10 of this Act,
32        The Illinois School for  the  Deaf  at  Jacksonville,  as
33    provided under Section 10 of this Act, and
34        The  Illinois Center for Rehabilitation and Education, as
 
                            -8-               LRB9101118DHmgA
 1    provided under Section 11 of this Act.
 2        (f)  To  establish  a  program  of  services  to  prevent
 3    unnecessary institutionalization of persons with  Alzheimer's
 4    disease and related disorders or persons in need of long term
 5    care  who  are established as blind or disabled as defined by
 6    the Social Security Act, thereby enabling them to  remain  in
 7    their own homes or other living arrangements. Such preventive
 8    services  may  include, but are not limited to, any or all of
 9    the following:
10             (1)  home health services;
11             (2)  home nursing services;
12             (3)  homemaker services;
13             (4)  chore and housekeeping services;
14             (5)  day care services;
15             (6)  home-delivered meals;
16             (7)  education in self-care;
17             (8)  personal care services;
18             (9)  adult day health services;
19             (10)  habilitation services;
20             (11)  respite care; or
21             (12)  other  nonmedical  social  services  that  may
22        enable the person to become self-supporting.
23        The Department shall establish eligibility standards  for
24    such  services  taking into consideration the unique economic
25    and social needs of the population for whom they  are  to  be
26    provided.   Such  eligibility  standards  may be based on the
27    recipient's ability to pay for services;  provided,  however,
28    that  any  portion  of  a person's income that is equal to or
29    less  than  the  "protected  income"  level  shall   not   be
30    considered by the Department in determining eligibility.  The
31    "protected   income"   level   shall  be  determined  by  the
32    Department, shall never be  less  than  the  federal  poverty
33    standard,  and shall be adjusted each year to reflect changes
34    in the Consumer  Price  Index  For  All  Urban  Consumers  as
 
                            -9-               LRB9101118DHmgA
 1    determined   by   the  United  States  Department  of  Labor.
 2    Additionally,  in  determining  the  amount  and  nature   of
 3    services  for which a person may qualify, consideration shall
 4    not be given to the value of cash, property or  other  assets
 5    held in the name of the person's spouse pursuant to a written
 6    agreement  dividing  marital property into equal but separate
 7    shares or pursuant to a transfer of the person's interest  in
 8    a home to his spouse, provided that the spouse's share of the
 9    marital  property is not made available to the person seeking
10    such services.
11        The services shall be provided  to  eligible  persons  to
12    prevent unnecessary or premature institutionalization, to the
13    extent that the cost of the services, together with the other
14    personal  maintenance expenses of the persons, are reasonably
15    related to the standards established  for  care  in  a  group
16    facility    appropriate    to    their    condition.    These
17    non-institutional services, pilot  projects  or  experimental
18    facilities may be provided as part of or in addition to those
19    authorized by federal law or those funded and administered by
20    the Illinois Department on Aging.
21        Personal care attendants shall be paid:
22             (i)  A  $5  per  hour minimum rate beginning July 1,
23        1995.
24             (ii)  A $5.30 per hour minimum rate  beginning  July
25        1, 1997.
26             (iii)  A  $5.40 per hour minimum rate beginning July
27        1, 1998.
28        The Department shall execute,  relative  to  the  nursing
29    home  prescreening  project, as authorized by Section 4.03 of
30    the  Illinois  Act  on  the   Aging,   written   inter-agency
31    agreements with the Department on Aging and the Department of
32    Public  Aid,  to effect the following:  (i) intake procedures
33    and common eligibility criteria for  those  persons  who  are
34    receiving    non-institutional   services;   and   (ii)   the
 
                            -10-              LRB9101118DHmgA
 1    establishment and development of  non-institutional  services
 2    in  areas of the State where they are not currently available
 3    or are undeveloped.  On and after July 1, 1996,  all  nursing
 4    home prescreenings for individuals 18 through 59 years of age
 5    shall be conducted by the Department.
 6        The  Department  is  authorized  to establish a system of
 7    recipient  cost-sharing  for  services  provided  under  this
 8    Section.   The  cost-sharing  shall   be   based   upon   the
 9    recipient's ability to pay for services, but in no case shall
10    the  recipient's share exceed the actual cost of the services
11    provided.  Protected income shall not be  considered  by  the
12    Department in its determination of the recipient's ability to
13    pay   a  share  of  the  cost  of  services.   The  level  of
14    cost-sharing shall be adjusted each year to  reflect  changes
15    in the "protected income" level.  The Department shall deduct
16    from  the recipient's share of the cost of services any money
17    expended by the recipient for disability-related expenses.
18        The   Department,   or   the   Department's    authorized
19    representative,  shall  recover the amount of moneys expended
20    for services provided to or in behalf of a person under  this
21    Section by a claim against the person's estate or against the
22    estate  of the person's surviving spouse, but no recovery may
23    be had until after the death of the surviving spouse, if any,
24    and then only at such time when there is no  surviving  child
25    who  is  under  age  21,  blind,  or  permanently and totally
26    disabled.  This paragraph, however, shall not  bar  recovery,
27    at  the  death of the person, of moneys for services provided
28    to the person or in behalf of the person under  this  Section
29    to  which  the  person  was  not entitled; provided that such
30    recovery shall not be enforced against any real estate  while
31    it  is  occupied  as  a  homestead by the surviving spouse or
32    other dependent, if no claims by other  creditors  have  been
33    filed against the estate, or, if such claims have been filed,
34    they  remain dormant for failure of prosecution or failure of
 
                            -11-              LRB9101118DHmgA
 1    the claimant to compel administration of the estate  for  the
 2    purpose  of  payment.   This paragraph shall not bar recovery
 3    from the estate of a spouse, under Sections 1915 and 1924  of
 4    the  Social  Security  Act  and  Section  5-4 of the Illinois
 5    Public Aid Code, who precedes  a  person  receiving  services
 6    under this Section in death.  All moneys for services paid to
 7    or  in  behalf  of  the  person  under  this Section shall be
 8    claimed for  recovery  from  the  deceased  spouse's  estate.
 9    "Homestead",  as  used  in this paragraph, means the dwelling
10    house and contiguous real  estate  occupied  by  a  surviving
11    spouse  or  relative, as defined by the rules and regulations
12    of the Illinois Department of Public Aid, regardless  of  the
13    value of the property.
14        The   Department   and  the  Department  on  Aging  shall
15    cooperate in the development  and  submission  of  an  annual
16    report  on programs and services provided under this Section.
17    Such joint report shall be filed with the  Governor  and  the
18    General Assembly on or before March September 30 each year.
19        The  requirement  for  reporting  to the General Assembly
20    shall be satisfied by filing copies of the  report  with  the
21    Speaker,  the  Minority  Leader and the Clerk of the House of
22    Representatives and the President, the  Minority  Leader  and
23    the  Secretary  of  the  Senate  and the Legislative Research
24    Unit, as required by Section  3.1  of  the  General  Assembly
25    Organization Act, and filing additional copies with the State
26    Government   Report   Distribution  Center  for  the  General
27    Assembly as required under paragraph (t) of Section 7 of  the
28    State Library Act.
29        (g)  To  establish such subdivisions of the Department as
30    shall be desirable and assign to the various subdivisions the
31    responsibilities and duties placed  upon  the  Department  by
32    law.
33        (h)  To cooperate and enter into any necessary agreements
34    with  the Department of Employment Security for the provision
 
                            -12-              LRB9101118DHmgA
 1    of job placement and job referral services to clients of  the
 2    Department,   including  job  service  registration  of  such
 3    clients with Illinois Employment Security offices and  making
 4    job  listings  maintained  by  the  Department  of Employment
 5    Security available to such clients.
 6        (i)  To possess all powers reasonable and  necessary  for
 7    the  exercise  and  administration  of the powers, duties and
 8    responsibilities of the Department which are provided for  by
 9    law.
10        (j)  To  establish  a  procedure whereby new providers of
11    personal care attendant services shall submit vouchers to the
12    State for payment two  times  during  their  first  month  of
13    employment  and  one  time  per month thereafter.  In no case
14    shall the Department pay personal care attendants  an  hourly
15    wage that is less than the federal minimum wage.
16        (k)  To provide adequate notice to providers of chore and
17    housekeeping  services  informing them that they are entitled
18    to an interest payment on bills which are not  promptly  paid
19    pursuant to Section 3 of the State Prompt Payment Act.
20        (l)  To  establish,  operate  and  maintain  a  Statewide
21    Housing Clearinghouse of information on available, government
22    subsidized   housing   accessible  to  disabled  persons  and
23    available privately  owned  housing  accessible  to  disabled
24    persons.  The information shall include but not be limited to
25    the   location,  rental  requirements,  access  features  and
26    proximity to public transportation of available housing.  The
27    Clearinghouse  shall  consist  of  at  least  a  computerized
28    database for the storage and retrieval of information  and  a
29    separate  or  shared  toll  free  telephone number for use by
30    those seeking information from the Clearinghouse.  Department
31    offices and personnel throughout the State shall also  assist
32    in  the  operation  of  the  Statewide Housing Clearinghouse.
33    Cooperation with local, State and  federal  housing  managers
34    shall  be  sought  and  extended  in  order to frequently and
 
                            -13-              LRB9101118DHmgA
 1    promptly update the Clearinghouse's information.
 2    (Source: P.A.  89-21,  eff.  7-1-95;  89-352,  eff.  8-17-95;
 3    89-626, eff. 8-9-96; 90-365, eff. 8-10-97.)

 4        Section 30.  The Civil Administrative Code of Illinois is
 5    amended by changing Sections 55a, 55a-1, 55a-2, 55a-3, 55a-4,
 6    55a-5, 55a-7, and 55a-8 as follows:

 7        (20 ILCS 2605/55a) (from Ch. 127, par. 55a)
 8        (Text of Section before amendment by P.A. 90-590)
 9        Sec. 55a. Powers and duties.
10        (A)  The  Department  of  State  Police  shall  have  the
11    following  powers and duties, and those set forth in Sections
12    55a-1 through 55c:
13        1.  To exercise the rights, powers and duties which  have
14    been  vested  in the Department of Public Safety by the State
15    Police Act.
16        2.  To exercise the rights, powers and duties which  have
17    been  vested  in the Department of Public Safety by the State
18    Police Radio Act.
19        3.  To exercise the rights, powers and duties which  have
20    been  vested  in  the  Department  of  Public  Safety  by the
21    Criminal Identification Act.
22        4.  To (a) investigate the origins, activities, personnel
23    and incidents of crime and the ways and means to redress  the
24    victims   of  crimes,  and  study  the  impact,  if  any,  of
25    legislation relative to the effusion  of  crime  and  growing
26    crime  rates,  and  enforce  the  criminal laws of this State
27    related  thereto,  (b)  enforce  all  laws   regulating   the
28    production,  sale, prescribing, manufacturing, administering,
29    transporting, having in possession,  dispensing,  delivering,
30    distributing,  or  use of controlled substances and cannabis,
31    (c)  employ   skilled   experts,   scientists,   technicians,
32    investigators or otherwise specially qualified persons to aid
 
                            -14-              LRB9101118DHmgA
 1    in  preventing or detecting crime, apprehending criminals, or
 2    preparing  and  presenting  evidence  of  violations  of  the
 3    criminal laws of the State, (d) cooperate with the police  of
 4    cities,  villages and incorporated towns, and with the police
 5    officers of any county, in enforcing the laws  of  the  State
 6    and  in making arrests and recovering property, (e) apprehend
 7    and deliver up any person charged in this State or any  other
 8    State  of  the  United  States with treason, felony, or other
 9    crime, who has fled from justice and is found in this  State,
10    and  (f) conduct such other investigations as may be provided
11    by law. Persons exercising these powers within the Department
12    are conservators of the peace and as such have all the powers
13    possessed by policemen in cities and  sheriffs,  except  that
14    they  may  exercise  such  powers  anywhere  in  the State in
15    cooperation  with  and  after  contact  with  the  local  law
16    enforcement  officials.  Such  persons  may  use   false   or
17    fictitious  names  in  the  performance of their duties under
18    this paragraph, upon approval of the Director, and shall  not
19    be  subject  to  prosecution under the criminal laws for such
20    use.
21        5.  To: (a) be a  central  repository  and  custodian  of
22    criminal   statistics   for  the  State,  (b)  be  a  central
23    repository  for  criminal  history  record  information,  (c)
24    procure and file for record such information as is  necessary
25    and  helpful  to  plan  programs  of  crime  prevention,  law
26    enforcement  and  criminal  justice, (d) procure and file for
27    record such copies of fingerprints, as  may  be  required  by
28    law,  (e) establish general and field crime laboratories, (f)
29    register and file for  record  such  information  as  may  be
30    required   by   law  for  the  issuance  of  firearm  owner's
31    identification  cards,  (g)   employ   polygraph   operators,
32    laboratory  technicians and other specially qualified persons
33    to aid in the identification of criminal  activity,  and  (h)
34    undertake such other identification, information, laboratory,
 
                            -15-              LRB9101118DHmgA
 1    statistical  or registration activities as may be required by
 2    law.
 3        6.  To  (a)  acquire  and  operate  one  or  more   radio
 4    broadcasting  stations  in  the  State  to be used for police
 5    purposes, (b) operate a statewide communications  network  to
 6    gather   and  disseminate  information  for  law  enforcement
 7    agencies, (c)  operate  an  electronic  data  processing  and
 8    computer  center  for  the  storage  and  retrieval  of  data
 9    pertaining to criminal activity, and (d) undertake such other
10    communication activities as may be required by law.
11        7.  To  provide, as may be required by law, assistance to
12    local  law  enforcement  agencies   through   (a)   training,
13    management  and consultant services for local law enforcement
14    agencies, and (b) the pursuit of research and the publication
15    of studies pertaining to local law enforcement activities.
16        8.  To exercise the rights, powers and duties which  have
17    been  vested  in  the  Department  of  State  Police  and the
18    Director of the Department of State Police  by  the  Narcotic
19    Control Division Abolition Act.
20        9.  To  exercise the rights, powers and duties which have
21    been vested  in  the  Department  of  Public  Safety  by  the
22    Illinois Vehicle Code.
23        10.  To exercise the rights, powers and duties which have
24    been vested in the Department of Public Safety by the Firearm
25    Owners Identification Card Act.
26        11.  To   enforce  and  administer  such  other  laws  in
27    relation  to  law  enforcement  as  may  be  vested  in   the
28    Department.
29        12.  To  transfer  jurisdiction  of  any  realty title to
30    which is held by the State of Illinois under the  control  of
31    the   Department   to  any  other  department  of  the  State
32    government or to the State Employees Housing  Commission,  or
33    to  acquire  or  accept  Federal  land,  when  such transfer,
34    acquisition or acceptance is advantageous to the State and is
 
                            -16-              LRB9101118DHmgA
 1    approved in writing by the Governor.
 2        13.  With the written approval of the Governor, to  enter
 3    into  agreements  with other departments created by this Act,
 4    for the furlough of inmates of the penitentiary to such other
 5    departments  for  their  use  in  research   programs   being
 6    conducted by them.
 7        For   the  purpose  of  participating  in  such  research
 8    projects,  the  Department  may  extend  the  limits  of  any
 9    inmate's place of confinement, when there is reasonable cause
10    to believe that the inmate will honor his  or  her  trust  by
11    authorizing the inmate, under prescribed conditions, to leave
12    the  confines of the place unaccompanied by a custodial agent
13    of the Department. The Department shall make rules  governing
14    the transfer of the inmate to the requesting other department
15    having  the approved research project, and the return of such
16    inmate to the unextended confines of the  penitentiary.  Such
17    transfer shall be made only with the consent of the inmate.
18        The  willful  failure  of a prisoner to remain within the
19    extended limits of his or her confinement or to return within
20    the time or manner prescribed to  the  place  of  confinement
21    designated by the Department in granting such extension shall
22    be  deemed  an  escape  from  custody  of  the Department and
23    punishable as provided in Section 3-6-4 of the  Unified  Code
24    of Corrections.
25        14.  To  provide  investigative services, with all of the
26    powers possessed by policemen in cities and sheriffs, in  and
27    around  all  race  tracks  subject to the Horse Racing Act of
28    1975.
29        15.  To expend such sums as the Director deems  necessary
30    from Contractual Services appropriations for the Division of
31    Operations   Criminal   Investigation  for  the  purchase  of
32    evidence  and  for  the  employment  of  persons  to   obtain
33    evidence. Such sums shall be advanced to agents authorized by
34    the  Director  to  expend  funds,  on  vouchers signed by the
 
                            -17-              LRB9101118DHmgA
 1    Director.
 2        16.  To  assist  victims  and  witnesses  in  gang  crime
 3    prosecutions through the administration of funds appropriated
 4    from the Gang Violence Victims  and  Witnesses  Fund  to  the
 5    Department.    Such   funds  shall  be  appropriated  to  the
 6    Department and shall only  be  used  to  assist  victims  and
 7    witnesses  in gang crime prosecutions and such assistance may
 8    include any of the following:
 9             (a)  temporary living costs;
10             (b)  moving expenses;
11             (c)  closing costs on the sale of private residence;
12             (d)  first month's rent;
13             (e)  security deposits;
14             (f)  apartment location assistance;
15             (g)  other expenses which the  Department  considers
16        appropriate; and
17             (h)  compensation  for any loss of or injury to real
18        or personal property resulting from a  gang  crime  to  a
19        maximum of $5,000, subject to the following provisions:
20                  (1)  in  the  case  of  loss  of  property, the
21             amount of compensation  shall  be  measured  by  the
22             replacement  cost  of similar or like property which
23             has been incurred by and which is  substantiated  by
24             the property owner,
25                  (2)  in  the  case  of  injury to property, the
26             amount of compensation shall be measured by the cost
27             of repair incurred and which can be substantiated by
28             the property owner,
29                  (3)  compensation under  this  provision  is  a
30             secondary   source  of  compensation  and  shall  be
31             reduced by any amount the  property  owner  receives
32             from  any  other source as compensation for the loss
33             or injury, including, but not limited  to,  personal
34             insurance coverage,
 
                            -18-              LRB9101118DHmgA
 1                  (4)  no  compensation  may  be  awarded  if the
 2             property owner was an offender or an  accomplice  of
 3             the offender, or if the award would unjustly benefit
 4             the  offender  or offenders, or an accomplice of the
 5             offender or offenders.
 6        No victim or witness may receive such assistance if he or
 7    she is not a part of or  fails  to  fully  cooperate  in  the
 8    prosecution   of   gang  crime  members  by  law  enforcement
 9    authorities.
10        The Department shall promulgate any rules  necessary  for
11    the implementation of this amendatory Act of 1985.
12        17.  To conduct arson investigations.
13        18.  To  develop  a separate statewide statistical police
14    contact record keeping  system  for  the  study  of  juvenile
15    delinquency.  The records of this police contact system shall
16    be  limited  to  statistical  information.   No  individually
17    identifiable information shall be maintained  in  the  police
18    contact statistical record system.
19        19.  To develop a separate statewide central adjudicatory
20    and  dispositional  records system for persons under 19 years
21    of age who have been adjudicated  delinquent  minors  and  to
22    make  information available to local registered participating
23    police youth officers so that police youth officers  will  be
24    able to obtain rapid access to the juvenile's background from
25    other jurisdictions to the end that the police youth officers
26    can  make  appropriate dispositions which will best serve the
27    interest  of  the  child  and  the  community.    Information
28    maintained  in  the  adjudicatory  and  dispositional  record
29    system  shall  be  limited  to  the incidents or offenses for
30    which the minor was adjudicated delinquent by a court, and  a
31    copy  of  the  court's dispositional order.  All individually
32    identifiable records in the  adjudicatory  and  dispositional
33    records  system shall be destroyed when the person reaches 19
34    years of age.
 
                            -19-              LRB9101118DHmgA
 1        20.  To develop rules which guarantee the confidentiality
 2    of   such   individually   identifiable   adjudicatory    and
 3    dispositional records except when used for the following:
 4             (a)  by  authorized  juvenile court personnel or the
 5        State's Attorney in connection with proceedings under the
 6        Juvenile Court Act of 1987; or
 7             (b)  inquiries   from   registered   police    youth
 8        officers.
 9        For the purposes of this Act "police youth officer" means
10    a  member  of  a  duly  organized  State, county or municipal
11    police force who is assigned by his  or  her  Superintendent,
12    Sheriff or chief of police, as the case may be, to specialize
13    in youth problems.
14        21.  To  develop  administrative rules and administrative
15    hearing procedures which allow a minor, his or her  attorney,
16    and  his  or  her  parents or guardian access to individually
17    identifiable adjudicatory and dispositional records  for  the
18    purpose  of  determining  or  challenging the accuracy of the
19    records. Final administrative decisions shall be  subject  to
20    the provisions of the Administrative Review Law.
21        22.  To  charge,  collect,  and  receive  fees  or moneys
22    equivalent to the  cost  of  providing  Department  of  State
23    Police   personnel,   equipment,   and   services   to  local
24    governmental agencies when explicitly requested  by  a  local
25    governmental  agency  and  pursuant  to  an intergovernmental
26    agreement as provided by this Section, other State  agencies,
27    and  federal  agencies,  including but not limited to fees or
28    moneys  equivalent  to  the  cost  of  providing  dispatching
29    services, radio and  radar  repair,  and  training  to  local
30    governmental  agencies on such terms and conditions as in the
31    judgment of the Director are in  the  best  interest  of  the
32    State;  and to establish, charge, collect and receive fees or
33    moneys based on the cost of providing responses  to  requests
34    for  criminal history record information pursuant to positive
 
                            -20-              LRB9101118DHmgA
 1    identification and any Illinois or  federal  law  authorizing
 2    access  to  some  aspect of such information and to prescribe
 3    the form  and  manner  for  requesting  and  furnishing  such
 4    information  to the requestor on such terms and conditions as
 5    in the judgment of the Director are in the best  interest  of
 6    the  State,  provided  fees  for  requesting  and  furnishing
 7    criminal   history  record  information  may  be  waived  for
 8    requests in the due administration of the criminal laws.  The
 9    Department  may  also  charge,  collect  and  receive fees or
10    moneys equivalent to the cost of  providing  electronic  data
11    processing  lines  or  related  telecommunication services to
12    local  governments,  but  only  when  such  services  can  be
13    provided  by  the  Department  at  a  cost  less  than   that
14    experienced  by  said  local governments through other means.
15    All services provided by the Department  shall  be  conducted
16    pursuant    to    contracts    in    accordance    with   the
17    Intergovernmental Cooperation Act, and all  telecommunication
18    services  shall  be  provided  pursuant  to the provisions of
19    Section 67.18 of this Code.
20        All fees received by the Department of State Police under
21    this Act or the Illinois Uniform Conviction  Information  Act
22    shall be deposited in a special fund in the State Treasury to
23    be  known  as  the  State  Police  Services  Fund.  The money
24    deposited  in  the  State  Police  Services  Fund  shall   be
25    appropriated  to  the Department of State Police for expenses
26    of the Department of State Police.
27        Upon the completion of any audit  of  the  Department  of
28    State  Police  as  prescribed  by the Illinois State Auditing
29    Act, which audit  includes  an  audit  of  the  State  Police
30    Services  Fund, the Department of State Police shall make the
31    audit open to inspection by any interested person.
32        23.  To exercise the powers and perform the duties  which
33    have  been  vested  in  the Department of State Police by the
34    Intergovernmental Missing Child Recovery Act of 1984, and  to
 
                            -21-              LRB9101118DHmgA
 1    establish   reasonable  rules  and  regulations  necessitated
 2    thereby.
 3        24. (a)  To  establish  and  maintain  a  statewide   Law
 4    Enforcement  Agencies  Data System (LEADS) for the purpose of
 5    providing  electronic  access  by  authorized   entities   to
 6    criminal justice data repositories and effecting an immediate
 7    law  enforcement  response  to  reports  of  missing persons,
 8    including lost, missing or runaway  minors.   The  Department
 9    shall implement an automatic data exchange system to compile,
10    to  maintain  and  to make available to other law enforcement
11    agencies for immediate dissemination data  which  can  assist
12    appropriate   agencies  in  recovering  missing  persons  and
13    provide  access  by  authorized  entities  to  various   data
14    repositories available through LEADS for criminal justice and
15    related  purposes.   To assist the Department in this effort,
16    funds may be appropriated from the LEADS Maintenance Fund.
17        (b)  In exercising its duties under this subsection,  the
18    Department shall:
19             (1)  provide  a  uniform  reporting  format  for the
20        entry of pertinent information regarding the report of  a
21        missing person into LEADS;
22             (2)  develop   and  implement  a  policy  whereby  a
23        statewide or regional alert would be used  in  situations
24        relating  to  the disappearances of individuals, based on
25        criteria and in a format established by  the  Department.
26        Such  a  format shall include, but not be limited to, the
27        age of the missing person and the suspected  circumstance
28        of the disappearance;
29             (3)  notify   all   law  enforcement  agencies  that
30        reports of missing persons shall be entered  as  soon  as
31        the  minimum level of data specified by the Department is
32        available to the reporting agency, and  that  no  waiting
33        period for the entry of such data exists;
34             (4)  compile  and retain information regarding lost,
 
                            -22-              LRB9101118DHmgA
 1        abducted, missing or runaway minors in  a  separate  data
 2        file, in a manner that allows such information to be used
 3        by  law enforcement and other agencies deemed appropriate
 4        by  the  Director,  for  investigative  purposes.    Such
 5        information shall include the disposition of all reported
 6        lost, abducted, missing or runaway minor cases;
 7             (5)  compile   and   maintain   an   historic   data
 8        repository relating to lost, abducted, missing or runaway
 9        minors  and other missing persons in order to develop and
10        improve techniques utilized by law  enforcement  agencies
11        when responding to reports of missing persons; and
12             (6)  create  a  quality  control  program  regarding
13        confirmation   of  missing  person  data,  timeliness  of
14        entries  of  missing  person  reports  into   LEADS   and
15        performance audits of all entering agencies.
16        25.  On   request   of   a   school   board  or  regional
17    superintendent of schools, to conduct an inquiry pursuant  to
18    Section 10-21.9 or 34-18.5 of the School Code to ascertain if
19    an  applicant  for  employment  in a school district has been
20    convicted of any criminal  or  drug  offenses  enumerated  in
21    Section   10-21.9   or  34-18.5  of  the  School  Code.   The
22    Department shall furnish such conviction information  to  the
23    President  of  the  school board of the school district which
24    has requested the information,  or  if  the  information  was
25    requested  by  the  regional  superintendent to that regional
26    superintendent.
27        26.  To promulgate rules and  regulations  necessary  for
28    the  administration and enforcement of its powers and duties,
29    wherever  granted  and  imposed,  pursuant  to  the  Illinois
30    Administrative Procedure Act.
31        27.  To  (a)   promulgate   rules   pertaining   to   the
32    certification,  revocation  of  certification and training of
33    law enforcement officers as electronic criminal  surveillance
34    officers,  (b)  provide  training and technical assistance to
 
                            -23-              LRB9101118DHmgA
 1    State's  Attorneys  and  local   law   enforcement   agencies
 2    pertaining    to    the    interception   of   private   oral
 3    communications,  (c)  promulgate  rules  necessary  for   the
 4    administration  of  Article  108B  of  the  Code  of Criminal
 5    Procedure of 1963, including but not limited to standards for
 6    recording   and   minimization   of    electronic    criminal
 7    surveillance   intercepts,   documentation   required  to  be
 8    maintained during an intercept,  procedures  in  relation  to
 9    evidence   developed  by  an  intercept,  and  (d)  charge  a
10    reasonable fee to each  law  enforcement  agency  that  sends
11    officers   to   receive   training   as  electronic  criminal
12    surveillance officers.
13        28.  Upon the request of any private  organization  which
14    devotes  a  major  portion  of  its  time to the provision of
15    recreational, social, educational or child safety services to
16    children, to conduct, pursuant  to  positive  identification,
17    criminal   background   investigations   of   all   of   that
18    organization's   current   employees,   current   volunteers,
19    prospective  employees or prospective volunteers charged with
20    the care and custody of children during the provision of  the
21    organization's  services,  and  to  report  to the requesting
22    organization any record  of  convictions  maintained  in  the
23    Department's  files about such persons.  The Department shall
24    charge an application fee, based on  actual  costs,  for  the
25    dissemination  of  conviction  information  pursuant  to this
26    subsection.  The Department is empowered  to  establish  this
27    fee  and  shall  prescribe the form and manner for requesting
28    and  furnishing  conviction  information  pursuant  to   this
29    subsection. Information received by the organization from the
30    Department concerning an individual shall be provided to such
31    individual.    Any   such   information   obtained   by   the
32    organization shall be confidential and may not be transmitted
33    outside the organization and may not be transmitted to anyone
34    within  the  organization except as needed for the purpose of
 
                            -24-              LRB9101118DHmgA
 1    evaluating the individual.  Only  information  and  standards
 2    which   bear  a  reasonable  and  rational  relation  to  the
 3    performance of child care shall be used by the  organization.
 4    Any  employee  of  the  Department or any member, employee or
 5    volunteer  of   the   organization   receiving   confidential
 6    information  under  this subsection who gives or causes to be
 7    given any confidential information  concerning  any  criminal
 8    convictions  of  an  individual  shall be guilty of a Class A
 9    misdemeanor unless release of such information is  authorized
10    by this subsection.
11        29.  Upon  the  request of the Department of Children and
12    Family Services, to investigate reports  of  child  abuse  or
13    neglect.
14        30.  To  obtain registration of a fictitious vital record
15    pursuant to Section 15.1 of the Vital Records Act.
16        31.  To collect and disseminate information  relating  to
17    "hate crimes" as defined under Section 12-7.1 of the Criminal
18    Code  of  1961  contingent  upon the availability of State or
19    Federal funds to revise  and  upgrade  the  Illinois  Uniform
20    Crime  Reporting  System.  All law enforcement agencies shall
21    report monthly to the Department of State  Police  concerning
22    such  offenses  in  such  form  and  in such manner as may be
23    prescribed by rules and regulations adopted by the Department
24    of State Police.  Such information shall be compiled  by  the
25    Department  and be disseminated upon request to any local law
26    enforcement  agency,  unit  of  local  government,  or  state
27    agency.  Dissemination of such information shall  be  subject
28    to all confidentiality requirements otherwise imposed by law.
29    The  Department  of  State  Police shall provide training for
30    State Police officers  in  identifying,  responding  to,  and
31    reporting  all  hate  crimes. The Illinois Local Governmental
32    Law Enforcement  Officer's  Training  Standards  Board  shall
33    develop  and  certify  a  course  of such training to be made
34    available to local law enforcement officers.
 
                            -25-              LRB9101118DHmgA
 1        32.  Upon the request of a private carrier  company  that
 2    provides transportation under Section 28b of the Metropolitan
 3    Transit  Authority  Act,  to  ascertain if an applicant for a
 4    driver position has been convicted of any  criminal  or  drug
 5    offense enumerated in Section 28b of the Metropolitan Transit
 6    Authority  Act.   The Department shall furnish the conviction
 7    information to the private carrier company that requested the
 8    information.
 9        33.  To apply for grants or contracts,  receive,  expend,
10    allocate,  or  disburse  funds  and  moneys made available by
11    public or private entities, including, but  not  limited  to,
12    contracts,  bequests,  grants,  or  receiving  equipment from
13    corporations, foundations, or public or private  institutions
14    of  higher  learning.   All  funds received by the Department
15    from these sources shall be deposited  into  the  appropriate
16    fund  in  the  State  Treasury  to  be  appropriated  to  the
17    Department  for  purposes  as  indicated  by  the  grantor or
18    contractor or, in the case of funds or moneys  bequeathed  or
19    granted  for  no  specific purpose, for any purpose as deemed
20    appropriate   by   the   Director   in   administering    the
21    responsibilities of the Department.
22        34.  Upon  the  request of the Department of Children and
23    Family Services, the Department of State Police shall provide
24    properly designated employees of the Department  of  Children
25    and  Family Services with criminal history record information
26    as defined in the Illinois Uniform Conviction Information Act
27    and  information   maintained   in   the   adjudicatory   and
28    dispositional  record  system as defined in subdivision (A)19
29    of this Section if the  Department  of  Children  and  Family
30    Services  determines  the information is necessary to perform
31    its duties under the Abused  and  Neglected  Child  Reporting
32    Act,  the Child Care Act of 1969, and the Children and Family
33    Services Act.  The request shall be in the  form  and  manner
34    specified by the Department of State Police.
 
                            -26-              LRB9101118DHmgA
 1        35.  The   Illinois   Department  of  Public  Aid  is  an
 2    authorized entity under  this  Section  for  the  purpose  of
 3    obtaining  access  to  various  data  repositories  available
 4    through  LEADS, to facilitate the location of individuals for
 5    establishing  paternity,  and  establishing,  modifying,  and
 6    enforcing child support obligations, pursuant to the Illinois
 7    Public Aid Code and Title IV, Part D of the  Social  Security
 8    Act.   The  Department shall enter into an agreement with the
 9    Illinois Department  of  Public  Aid  consistent  with  these
10    purposes.
11        36.  Upon request of the Department of Human Services, to
12    conduct  an  assessment  and  evaluation  of sexually violent
13    persons  as  mandated  by  the   Sexually   Violent   Persons
14    Commitment Act, the Department shall furnish criminal history
15    information  maintained on the requested person.  The request
16    shall be in the form and manner specified by the Department.
17        (B)  The Department of State  Police  may  establish  and
18    maintain,  within the Department of State Police, a Statewide
19    Organized Criminal Gang Database (SWORD) for the  purpose  of
20    tracking  organized  criminal  gangs  and  their memberships.
21    Information in the database may include, but not  be  limited
22    to,  the  name,  last  known  address,  birth  date, physical
23    descriptions (such as  scars,  marks,  or  tattoos),  officer
24    safety  information, organized gang affiliation, and entering
25    agency  identifier.    The   Department   may   develop,   in
26    consultation with the Criminal Justice Information Authority,
27    and  in  a  form  and manner prescribed by the Department, an
28    automated data exchange system to compile, to  maintain,  and
29    to   make   this   information  electronically  available  to
30    prosecutors and  to  other  law  enforcement  agencies.   The
31    information  may be used by authorized agencies to combat the
32    operations of organized criminal gangs statewide.
33        (C)  The Department of State  Police  may  ascertain  the
34    number  of  bilingual  police  officers  and  other personnel
 
                            -27-              LRB9101118DHmgA
 1    needed to provide services in a language other  than  English
 2    and  may  establish,  under  applicable  personnel  rules and
 3    Department guidelines  or  through  a  collective  bargaining
 4    agreement, a bilingual pay supplement program.
 5    (Source:  P.A.  89-54,  eff.  6-30-95;  90-18,  eff.  7-1-97;
 6    90-130,  eff.  1-1-98;  90-372,  eff.  7-1-98;  90-655,  eff.
 7    7-30-98; 90-793, eff. 8-14-98; revised 10-6-98.)

 8        (Text of Section after amendment by P.A. 90-590)
 9        Sec. 55a. Powers and duties.
10        (A)  The  Department  of  State  Police  shall  have  the
11    following  powers and duties, and those set forth in Sections
12    55a-1 through 55c:
13        1.  To exercise the rights, powers and duties which  have
14    been  vested  in the Department of Public Safety by the State
15    Police Act.
16        2.  To exercise the rights, powers and duties which  have
17    been  vested  in the Department of Public Safety by the State
18    Police Radio Act.
19        3.  To exercise the rights, powers and duties which  have
20    been  vested  in  the  Department  of  Public  Safety  by the
21    Criminal Identification Act.
22        4.  To (a) investigate the origins, activities, personnel
23    and incidents of crime and the ways and means to redress  the
24    victims   of  crimes,  and  study  the  impact,  if  any,  of
25    legislation relative to the effusion  of  crime  and  growing
26    crime  rates,  and  enforce  the  criminal laws of this State
27    related  thereto,  (b)  enforce  all  laws   regulating   the
28    production,  sale, prescribing, manufacturing, administering,
29    transporting, having in possession,  dispensing,  delivering,
30    distributing,  or  use of controlled substances and cannabis,
31    (c)  employ   skilled   experts,   scientists,   technicians,
32    investigators or otherwise specially qualified persons to aid
33    in  preventing or detecting crime, apprehending criminals, or
34    preparing  and  presenting  evidence  of  violations  of  the
 
                            -28-              LRB9101118DHmgA
 1    criminal laws of the State, (d) cooperate with the police  of
 2    cities,  villages and incorporated towns, and with the police
 3    officers of any county, in enforcing the laws  of  the  State
 4    and  in making arrests and recovering property, (e) apprehend
 5    and deliver up any person charged in this State or any  other
 6    State  of  the  United  States with treason, felony, or other
 7    crime, who has fled from justice and is found in this  State,
 8    and  (f) conduct such other investigations as may be provided
 9    by law. Persons exercising these powers within the Department
10    are conservators of the peace and as such have all the powers
11    possessed by policemen in cities and  sheriffs,  except  that
12    they  may  exercise  such  powers  anywhere  in  the State in
13    cooperation  with  and  after  contact  with  the  local  law
14    enforcement  officials.  Such  persons  may  use   false   or
15    fictitious  names  in  the  performance of their duties under
16    this paragraph, upon approval of the Director, and shall  not
17    be  subject  to  prosecution under the criminal laws for such
18    use.
19        5.  To: (a) be a  central  repository  and  custodian  of
20    criminal   statistics   for  the  State,  (b)  be  a  central
21    repository  for  criminal  history  record  information,  (c)
22    procure and file for record such information as is  necessary
23    and  helpful  to  plan  programs  of  crime  prevention,  law
24    enforcement  and  criminal  justice, (d) procure and file for
25    record such copies of fingerprints, as  may  be  required  by
26    law,  (e) establish general and field crime laboratories, (f)
27    register and file for  record  such  information  as  may  be
28    required   by   law  for  the  issuance  of  firearm  owner's
29    identification  cards,  (g)   employ   polygraph   operators,
30    laboratory  technicians and other specially qualified persons
31    to aid in the identification of criminal  activity,  and  (h)
32    undertake such other identification, information, laboratory,
33    statistical  or registration activities as may be required by
34    law.
 
                            -29-              LRB9101118DHmgA
 1        6.  To  (a)  acquire  and  operate  one  or  more   radio
 2    broadcasting  stations  in  the  State  to be used for police
 3    purposes, (b) operate a statewide communications  network  to
 4    gather   and  disseminate  information  for  law  enforcement
 5    agencies, (c)  operate  an  electronic  data  processing  and
 6    computer  center  for  the  storage  and  retrieval  of  data
 7    pertaining to criminal activity, and (d) undertake such other
 8    communication activities as may be required by law.
 9        7.  To  provide, as may be required by law, assistance to
10    local  law  enforcement  agencies   through   (a)   training,
11    management  and consultant services for local law enforcement
12    agencies, and (b) the pursuit of research and the publication
13    of studies pertaining to local law enforcement activities.
14        8.  To exercise the rights, powers and duties which  have
15    been  vested  in  the  Department  of  State  Police  and the
16    Director of the Department of State Police  by  the  Narcotic
17    Control Division Abolition Act.
18        9.  To  exercise the rights, powers and duties which have
19    been vested  in  the  Department  of  Public  Safety  by  the
20    Illinois Vehicle Code.
21        10.  To exercise the rights, powers and duties which have
22    been vested in the Department of Public Safety by the Firearm
23    Owners Identification Card Act.
24        11.  To   enforce  and  administer  such  other  laws  in
25    relation  to  law  enforcement  as  may  be  vested  in   the
26    Department.
27        12.  To  transfer  jurisdiction  of  any  realty title to
28    which is held by the State of Illinois under the  control  of
29    the   Department   to  any  other  department  of  the  State
30    government or to the State Employees Housing  Commission,  or
31    to  acquire  or  accept  Federal  land,  when  such transfer,
32    acquisition or acceptance is advantageous to the State and is
33    approved in writing by the Governor.
34        13.  With the written approval of the Governor, to  enter
 
                            -30-              LRB9101118DHmgA
 1    into  agreements  with other departments created by this Act,
 2    for the furlough of inmates of the penitentiary to such other
 3    departments  for  their  use  in  research   programs   being
 4    conducted by them.
 5        For   the  purpose  of  participating  in  such  research
 6    projects,  the  Department  may  extend  the  limits  of  any
 7    inmate's place of confinement, when there is reasonable cause
 8    to believe that the inmate will honor his  or  her  trust  by
 9    authorizing the inmate, under prescribed conditions, to leave
10    the  confines of the place unaccompanied by a custodial agent
11    of the Department. The Department shall make rules  governing
12    the transfer of the inmate to the requesting other department
13    having  the approved research project, and the return of such
14    inmate to the unextended confines of the  penitentiary.  Such
15    transfer shall be made only with the consent of the inmate.
16        The  willful  failure  of a prisoner to remain within the
17    extended limits of his or her confinement or to return within
18    the time or manner prescribed to  the  place  of  confinement
19    designated by the Department in granting such extension shall
20    be  deemed  an  escape  from  custody  of  the Department and
21    punishable as provided in Section 3-6-4 of the  Unified  Code
22    of Corrections.
23        14.  To  provide  investigative services, with all of the
24    powers possessed by policemen in cities and sheriffs, in  and
25    around  all  race  tracks  subject to the Horse Racing Act of
26    1975.
27        15.  To expend such sums as the Director deems  necessary
28    from Contractual Services appropriations for the Division of
29    Operations   Criminal   Investigation  for  the  purchase  of
30    evidence  and  for  the  employment  of  persons  to   obtain
31    evidence. Such sums shall be advanced to agents authorized by
32    the  Director  to  expend  funds,  on  vouchers signed by the
33    Director.
34        16.  To  assist  victims  and  witnesses  in  gang  crime
 
                            -31-              LRB9101118DHmgA
 1    prosecutions through the administration of funds appropriated
 2    from the Gang Violence Victims  and  Witnesses  Fund  to  the
 3    Department.    Such   funds  shall  be  appropriated  to  the
 4    Department and shall only  be  used  to  assist  victims  and
 5    witnesses  in gang crime prosecutions and such assistance may
 6    include any of the following:
 7             (a)  temporary living costs;
 8             (b)  moving expenses;
 9             (c)  closing costs on the sale of private residence;
10             (d)  first month's rent;
11             (e)  security deposits;
12             (f)  apartment location assistance;
13             (g)  other expenses which the  Department  considers
14        appropriate; and
15             (h)  compensation  for any loss of or injury to real
16        or personal property resulting from a  gang  crime  to  a
17        maximum of $5,000, subject to the following provisions:
18                  (1)  in  the  case  of  loss  of  property, the
19             amount of compensation  shall  be  measured  by  the
20             replacement  cost  of similar or like property which
21             has been incurred by and which is  substantiated  by
22             the property owner,
23                  (2)  in  the  case  of  injury to property, the
24             amount of compensation shall be measured by the cost
25             of repair incurred and which can be substantiated by
26             the property owner,
27                  (3)  compensation under  this  provision  is  a
28             secondary   source  of  compensation  and  shall  be
29             reduced by any amount the  property  owner  receives
30             from  any  other source as compensation for the loss
31             or injury, including, but not limited  to,  personal
32             insurance coverage,
33                  (4)  no  compensation  may  be  awarded  if the
34             property owner was an offender or an  accomplice  of
 
                            -32-              LRB9101118DHmgA
 1             the offender, or if the award would unjustly benefit
 2             the  offender  or offenders, or an accomplice of the
 3             offender or offenders.
 4        No victim or witness may receive such assistance if he or
 5    she is not a part of or  fails  to  fully  cooperate  in  the
 6    prosecution   of   gang  crime  members  by  law  enforcement
 7    authorities.
 8        The Department shall promulgate any rules  necessary  for
 9    the implementation of this amendatory Act of 1985.
10        17.  To conduct arson investigations.
11        18.  To  develop  a separate statewide statistical police
12    contact record keeping  system  for  the  study  of  juvenile
13    delinquency.  The records of this police contact system shall
14    be  limited  to  statistical  information.   No  individually
15    identifiable information shall be maintained  in  the  police
16    contact statistical record system.
17        19.  To  develop  a  separate  statewide central juvenile
18    records system for persons arrested prior to the  age  of  17
19    under  Section  5-401  of  the  Juvenile Court Act of 1987 or
20    adjudicated  delinquent  minors  and  to   make   information
21    available  to  local  law  enforcement  officers  so that law
22    enforcement officers will be able to obtain rapid  access  to
23    the  background  of the minor from other jurisdictions to the
24    end that the juvenile police officers  can  make  appropriate
25    decisions which will best serve the interest of the child and
26    the  community.    The  Department  shall  submit a quarterly
27    report to the  General  Assembly  and  Governor  which  shall
28    contain  the  number  of juvenile records that the Department
29    has received in that quarter and, a  list,  by  category,  of
30    offenses  that  minors  were  arrested for or convicted of by
31    age, race and gender.
32        20.  To develop rules which guarantee the confidentiality
33    of such individually identifiable juvenile records except  to
34    juvenile  authorities  who request information concerning the
 
                            -33-              LRB9101118DHmgA
 1    minor and who certify in writing that  the  information  will
 2    not  be disclosed to any other party except as provided under
 3    law or  order  of  court.   For  purposes  of  this  Section,
 4    "juvenile  authorities"  means:  (i)  a  judge of the circuit
 5    court and members of the staff of the court designated by the
 6    judge; (ii) parties to the  proceedings  under  the  Juvenile
 7    Court  Act  of  1987  and  their  attorneys;  (iii) probation
 8    officers and  court  appointed  advocates  for  the  juvenile
 9    authorized by the judge hearing the case; (iv) any individual
10    or,  public  or of private agency having custody of the child
11    pursuant to court order; (v) any  individual  or,  public  or
12    private  agency providing education, medical or mental health
13    service to the child when the requested information is needed
14    to determine the appropriate service  or  treatment  for  the
15    minor;  (vi)  any  potential  placement  provider  when  such
16    release is authorized by the court for the limited purpose of
17    determining  the  appropriateness of the potential placement;
18    (vii) law enforcement officers and prosecutors; (viii)  adult
19    and juvenile prisoner review boards; (ix) authorized military
20    personnel;  (x)  individuals  authorized  by  court; (xi) the
21    Illinois General Assembly  or  any  committee  or  commission
22    thereof.
23        21.  To  develop  administrative rules and administrative
24    hearing procedures which allow a minor, his or her  attorney,
25    and  his  or  her  parents or guardian access to individually
26    identifiable juvenile records for the purpose of  determining
27    or   challenging   the   accuracy   of  the  records.   Final
28    administrative decisions shall be subject to  the  provisions
29    of the Administrative Review Law.
30        22.  To  charge,  collect,  and  receive  fees  or moneys
31    equivalent to the  cost  of  providing  Department  of  State
32    Police   personnel,   equipment,   and   services   to  local
33    governmental agencies when explicitly requested  by  a  local
34    governmental  agency  and  pursuant  to  an intergovernmental
 
                            -34-              LRB9101118DHmgA
 1    agreement as provided by this Section, other State  agencies,
 2    and  federal  agencies,  including but not limited to fees or
 3    moneys  equivalent  to  the  cost  of  providing  dispatching
 4    services, radio and  radar  repair,  and  training  to  local
 5    governmental  agencies on such terms and conditions as in the
 6    judgment of the Director are in  the  best  interest  of  the
 7    State;  and to establish, charge, collect and receive fees or
 8    moneys based on the cost of providing responses  to  requests
 9    for  criminal history record information pursuant to positive
10    identification and any Illinois or  federal  law  authorizing
11    access  to  some  aspect of such information and to prescribe
12    the form  and  manner  for  requesting  and  furnishing  such
13    information  to the requestor on such terms and conditions as
14    in the judgment of the Director are in the best  interest  of
15    the  State,  provided  fees  for  requesting  and  furnishing
16    criminal   history  record  information  may  be  waived  for
17    requests in the due administration of the criminal laws.  The
18    Department  may  also  charge,  collect  and  receive fees or
19    moneys equivalent to the cost of  providing  electronic  data
20    processing  lines  or  related  telecommunication services to
21    local  governments,  but  only  when  such  services  can  be
22    provided  by  the  Department  at  a  cost  less  than   that
23    experienced  by  said  local governments through other means.
24    All services provided by the Department  shall  be  conducted
25    pursuant    to    contracts    in    accordance    with   the
26    Intergovernmental Cooperation Act, and all  telecommunication
27    services  shall  be  provided  pursuant  to the provisions of
28    Section 67.18 of this Code.
29        All fees received by the Department of State Police under
30    this Act or the Illinois Uniform Conviction  Information  Act
31    shall be deposited in a special fund in the State Treasury to
32    be  known  as  the  State  Police  Services  Fund.  The money
33    deposited  in  the  State  Police  Services  Fund  shall   be
34    appropriated  to  the Department of State Police for expenses
 
                            -35-              LRB9101118DHmgA
 1    of the Department of State Police.
 2        Upon the completion of any audit  of  the  Department  of
 3    State  Police  as  prescribed  by the Illinois State Auditing
 4    Act, which audit  includes  an  audit  of  the  State  Police
 5    Services  Fund, the Department of State Police shall make the
 6    audit open to inspection by any interested person.
 7        23.  To exercise the powers and perform the duties  which
 8    have  been  vested  in  the Department of State Police by the
 9    Intergovernmental Missing Child Recovery Act of 1984, and  to
10    establish   reasonable  rules  and  regulations  necessitated
11    thereby.
12        24. (a)  To  establish  and  maintain  a  statewide   Law
13    Enforcement  Agencies  Data System (LEADS) for the purpose of
14    providing  electronic  access  by  authorized   entities   to
15    criminal justice data repositories and effecting an immediate
16    law  enforcement  response  to  reports  of  missing persons,
17    including lost, missing or runaway  minors.   The  Department
18    shall implement an automatic data exchange system to compile,
19    to  maintain  and  to make available to other law enforcement
20    agencies for immediate dissemination data  which  can  assist
21    appropriate   agencies  in  recovering  missing  persons  and
22    provide  access  by  authorized  entities  to  various   data
23    repositories available through LEADS for criminal justice and
24    related  purposes.   To assist the Department in this effort,
25    funds may be appropriated from the LEADS Maintenance Fund.
26        (b)  In exercising its duties under this subsection,  the
27    Department shall:
28             (1)  provide  a  uniform  reporting  format  for the
29        entry of pertinent information regarding the report of  a
30        missing person into LEADS;
31             (2)  develop   and  implement  a  policy  whereby  a
32        statewide or regional alert would be used  in  situations
33        relating  to  the disappearances of individuals, based on
34        criteria and in a format established by  the  Department.
 
                            -36-              LRB9101118DHmgA
 1        Such  a  format shall include, but not be limited to, the
 2        age of the missing person and the suspected  circumstance
 3        of the disappearance;
 4             (3)  notify   all   law  enforcement  agencies  that
 5        reports of missing persons shall be entered  as  soon  as
 6        the  minimum level of data specified by the Department is
 7        available to the reporting agency, and  that  no  waiting
 8        period for the entry of such data exists;
 9             (4)  compile  and retain information regarding lost,
10        abducted, missing or runaway minors in  a  separate  data
11        file, in a manner that allows such information to be used
12        by  law enforcement and other agencies deemed appropriate
13        by  the  Director,  for  investigative  purposes.    Such
14        information shall include the disposition of all reported
15        lost, abducted, missing or runaway minor cases;
16             (5)  compile   and   maintain   an   historic   data
17        repository relating to lost, abducted, missing or runaway
18        minors  and other missing persons in order to develop and
19        improve techniques utilized by law  enforcement  agencies
20        when responding to reports of missing persons; and
21             (6)  create  a  quality  control  program  regarding
22        confirmation   of  missing  person  data,  timeliness  of
23        entries  of  missing  person  reports  into   LEADS   and
24        performance audits of all entering agencies.
25        25.  On   request   of   a   school   board  or  regional
26    superintendent of schools, to conduct an inquiry pursuant  to
27    Section 10-21.9 or 34-18.5 of the School Code to ascertain if
28    an  applicant  for  employment  in a school district has been
29    convicted of any criminal  or  drug  offenses  enumerated  in
30    Section   10-21.9   or  34-18.5  of  the  School  Code.   The
31    Department shall furnish such conviction information  to  the
32    President  of  the  school board of the school district which
33    has requested the information,  or  if  the  information  was
34    requested  by  the  regional  superintendent to that regional
 
                            -37-              LRB9101118DHmgA
 1    superintendent.
 2        26.  To promulgate rules and  regulations  necessary  for
 3    the  administration and enforcement of its powers and duties,
 4    wherever  granted  and  imposed,  pursuant  to  the  Illinois
 5    Administrative Procedure Act.
 6        27.  To  (a)   promulgate   rules   pertaining   to   the
 7    certification,  revocation  of  certification and training of
 8    law enforcement officers as electronic criminal  surveillance
 9    officers,  (b)  provide  training and technical assistance to
10    State's  Attorneys  and  local   law   enforcement   agencies
11    pertaining    to    the    interception   of   private   oral
12    communications,  (c)  promulgate  rules  necessary  for   the
13    administration  of  Article  108B  of  the  Code  of Criminal
14    Procedure of 1963, including but not limited to standards for
15    recording   and   minimization   of    electronic    criminal
16    surveillance   intercepts,   documentation   required  to  be
17    maintained during an intercept,  procedures  in  relation  to
18    evidence   developed  by  an  intercept,  and  (d)  charge  a
19    reasonable fee to each  law  enforcement  agency  that  sends
20    officers   to   receive   training   as  electronic  criminal
21    surveillance officers.
22        28.  Upon the request of any private  organization  which
23    devotes  a  major  portion  of  its  time to the provision of
24    recreational, social, educational or child safety services to
25    children, to conduct, pursuant  to  positive  identification,
26    criminal   background   investigations   of   all   of   that
27    organization's   current   employees,   current   volunteers,
28    prospective  employees or prospective volunteers charged with
29    the care and custody of children during the provision of  the
30    organization's  services,  and  to  report  to the requesting
31    organization any record  of  convictions  maintained  in  the
32    Department's  files about such persons.  The Department shall
33    charge an application fee, based on  actual  costs,  for  the
34    dissemination  of  conviction  information  pursuant  to this
 
                            -38-              LRB9101118DHmgA
 1    subsection.  The Department is empowered  to  establish  this
 2    fee  and  shall  prescribe the form and manner for requesting
 3    and  furnishing  conviction  information  pursuant  to   this
 4    subsection. Information received by the organization from the
 5    Department concerning an individual shall be provided to such
 6    individual.    Any   such   information   obtained   by   the
 7    organization shall be confidential and may not be transmitted
 8    outside the organization and may not be transmitted to anyone
 9    within  the  organization except as needed for the purpose of
10    evaluating the individual.  Only  information  and  standards
11    which   bear  a  reasonable  and  rational  relation  to  the
12    performance of child care shall be used by the  organization.
13    Any  employee  of  the  Department or any member, employee or
14    volunteer  of   the   organization   receiving   confidential
15    information  under  this subsection who gives or causes to be
16    given any confidential information  concerning  any  criminal
17    convictions  of  an  individual  shall be guilty of a Class A
18    misdemeanor unless release of such information is  authorized
19    by this subsection.
20        29.  Upon  the  request of the Department of Children and
21    Family Services, to investigate reports  of  child  abuse  or
22    neglect.
23        30.  To  obtain registration of a fictitious vital record
24    pursuant to Section 15.1 of the Vital Records Act.
25        31.  To collect and disseminate information  relating  to
26    "hate crimes" as defined under Section 12-7.1 of the Criminal
27    Code  of  1961  contingent  upon the availability of State or
28    Federal funds to revise  and  upgrade  the  Illinois  Uniform
29    Crime  Reporting  System.  All law enforcement agencies shall
30    report monthly to the Department of State  Police  concerning
31    such  offenses  in  such  form  and  in such manner as may be
32    prescribed by rules and regulations adopted by the Department
33    of State Police.  Such information shall be compiled  by  the
34    Department  and be disseminated upon request to any local law
 
                            -39-              LRB9101118DHmgA
 1    enforcement  agency,  unit  of  local  government,  or  state
 2    agency.  Dissemination of such information shall  be  subject
 3    to all confidentiality requirements otherwise imposed by law.
 4    The  Department  of  State  Police shall provide training for
 5    State Police officers  in  identifying,  responding  to,  and
 6    reporting  all  hate  crimes.  The  Illinois  Law Enforcement
 7    Training Standards Board shall develop and certify  a  course
 8    of   such   training  to  be  made  available  to  local  law
 9    enforcement officers.
10        32.  Upon the request of a private carrier  company  that
11    provides transportation under Section 28b of the Metropolitan
12    Transit  Authority  Act,  to  ascertain if an applicant for a
13    driver position has been convicted of any  criminal  or  drug
14    offense enumerated in Section 28b of the Metropolitan Transit
15    Authority  Act.   The Department shall furnish the conviction
16    information to the private carrier company that requested the
17    information.
18        33.  To apply for grants or contracts,  receive,  expend,
19    allocate,  or  disburse  funds  and  moneys made available by
20    public or private entities, including, but  not  limited  to,
21    contracts,  bequests,  grants,  or  receiving  equipment from
22    corporations, foundations, or public or private  institutions
23    of  higher  learning.   All  funds received by the Department
24    from these sources shall be deposited  into  the  appropriate
25    fund  in  the  State  Treasury  to  be  appropriated  to  the
26    Department  for  purposes  as  indicated  by  the  grantor or
27    contractor or, in the case of funds or moneys  bequeathed  or
28    granted  for  no  specific purpose, for any purpose as deemed
29    appropriate   by   the   Director   in   administering    the
30    responsibilities of the Department.
31        34.  Upon  the  request of the Department of Children and
32    Family Services, the Department of State Police shall provide
33    properly designated employees of the Department  of  Children
34    and  Family Services with criminal history record information
 
                            -40-              LRB9101118DHmgA
 1    as defined in the Illinois Uniform Conviction Information Act
 2    and information maintained in the Statewide Central  Juvenile
 3    record system as defined in subdivision (A)19 of this Section
 4    if  the Department of Children and Family Services determines
 5    the information is necessary to perform its duties under  the
 6    Abused  and Neglected Child Reporting Act, the Child Care Act
 7    of 1969, and the  Children  and  Family  Services  Act.   The
 8    request  shall  be  in  the  form and manner specified by the
 9    Department of State Police.
10        35.  The  Illinois  Department  of  Public  Aid   is   an
11    authorized  entity  under  this  Section  for  the purpose of
12    exchanging information, in the form and  manner  required  by
13    the  Department  of State Police, obtaining access to various
14    data repositories available through LEADS, to facilitate  the
15    location  of  individuals  for  establishing  paternity,  and
16    establishing,   modifying,   and   enforcing   child  support
17    obligations, pursuant to the Illinois  Public  Aid  Code  and
18    Title  IV,  Part  Section  D of the Social Security Act.  The
19    Department shall enter into an agreement  with  the  Illinois
20    Department of Public Aid consistent with these purposes.
21        36.  Upon request of the Department of Human Services, to
22    conduct  an  assessment  and  evaluation  of sexually violent
23    persons  as  mandated  by  the   Sexually   Violent   Persons
24    Commitment Act, the Department shall furnish criminal history
25    information  maintained on the requested person.  The request
26    shall be in the form and manner specified by the Department.
27        37.  The  Illinois  Department  of  Public  Aid   is   an
28    authorized  entity  under  this  Section  for  the purpose of
29    obtaining  access  to  various  data  repositories  available
30    through LEADS, to facilitate the location of individuals  for
31    establishing  paternity,  and  establishing,  modifying,  and
32    enforcing child support obligations, pursuant to the Illinois
33    Public  Aid  Code and Title IV, Part D of the Social Security
34    Act.  The Department shall enter into an agreement  with  the
 
                            -41-              LRB9101118DHmgA
 1    Illinois  Department  of  Public  Aid  consistent  with these
 2    purposes.
 3        (B)  The Department of State  Police  may  establish  and
 4    maintain,  within the Department of State Police, a Statewide
 5    Organized Criminal Gang Database (SWORD) for the  purpose  of
 6    tracking  organized  criminal  gangs  and  their memberships.
 7    Information in the database may include, but not  be  limited
 8    to,  the  name,  last  known  address,  birth  date, physical
 9    descriptions (such as  scars,  marks,  or  tattoos),  officer
10    safety  information, organized gang affiliation, and entering
11    agency  identifier.    The   Department   may   develop,   in
12    consultation with the Criminal Justice Information Authority,
13    and  in  a  form  and manner prescribed by the Department, an
14    automated data exchange system to compile, to  maintain,  and
15    to   make   this   information  electronically  available  to
16    prosecutors and  to  other  law  enforcement  agencies.   The
17    information  may be used by authorized agencies to combat the
18    operations of organized criminal gangs statewide.
19        (C)  The Department of State  Police  may  ascertain  the
20    number  of  bilingual  police  officers  and  other personnel
21    needed to provide services in a language other  than  English
22    and  may  establish,  under  applicable  personnel  rules and
23    Department guidelines  or  through  a  collective  bargaining
24    agreement, a bilingual pay supplement program.
25    (Source:  P.A.  89-54,  eff.  6-30-95;  90-18,  eff.  7-1-97;
26    90-130,  eff.  1-1-98;  90-372,  eff.  7-1-98;  90-590,  eff.
27    1-1-00;  90-655,  eff. 7-30-98; 90-793, eff. 8-14-98; revised
28    10-6-98.)

29        (20 ILCS 2605/55a-1) (from Ch. 127, par. 55a-1)
30        Sec. 55a-1.  The Department of State  Police  is  divided
31    into the Illinois State Police Academy and 4 5 divisions: the
32    Division  of  Operations  State  Troopers,  the  Division  of
33    Criminal  Investigation,  the  Division of Forensic Services,
 
                            -42-              LRB9101118DHmgA
 1    the Division of Administration, and the Division of  Internal
 2    Investigation.
 3    (Source: P.A. 90-130, eff. 1-1-98.)

 4        (20 ILCS 2605/55a-2) (from Ch. 127, par. 55a-2)
 5        Sec.  55a-2.   The  Division of Operations State Troopers
 6    shall exercise the following functions and those  in  Section
 7    55a-3:
 8        1.   to  cooperate  with  federal  and  State authorities
 9    requesting utilization  of  the  Department's  radio  network
10    system  under  the  the  "Illinois Aeronautics Act", approved
11    July 24, 1945, as amended;
12        2.  to exercise the rights,  powers  and  duties  of  the
13    State  Police  under the State Police Act "An Act in relation
14    to the State Police", approved July 20, 1949, as amended;
15        3.  to exercise the rights, powers and duties  vested  by
16    law  in  the Department by the State Police Radio Act "An Act
17    in relation to  the  establishment  and  operation  of  radio
18    broadcasting stations and the acquisition and installation of
19    radio  receiving  sets for police purposes", approved July 7,
20    1931, as amended;
21        4.  to exercise the rights,  powers  and  duties  of  the
22    Department  vested  by law in the Department and the Illinois
23    State Police by by  "the  Illinois  Vehicle  Code",  approved
24    September 29, 1969, as amended;
25        5.  to  exercise  other  duties which have been or may be
26    vested by law in the Illinois State Police; and
27        6.  to exercise other duties which may be assigned by the
28    Director in order to  fulfill  the  responsibilities  and  to
29    achieve the purposes of the Department.
30    (Source: P.A. 84-25.)

31        (20 ILCS 2605/55a-3) (from Ch. 127, par. 55a-3)
32        Sec.  55a-3.  (a)  The  Division  of  Operations Criminal
 
                            -43-              LRB9101118DHmgA
 1    Investigation shall  exercise  the  following  functions  and
 2    those in Section 55a-2:
 3             1.  to exercise the rights, powers and duties vested
 4        by law in the Department by the Illinois Horse Racing Act
 5        of 1975;
 6             2.  to    investigate   the   origins,   activities,
 7        personnel and incidents of crime and enforce the criminal
 8        laws of this State related thereto;
 9             3.  to enforce all laws regulating  the  production,
10        sale,    prescribing,    manufacturing,    administering,
11        transporting,    having    in   possession,   dispensing,
12        delivering, distributing, or use of controlled substances
13        and cannabis;
14             4.  to  cooperate  with  the   police   of   cities,
15        villages,  and  incorporated  towns,  and with the police
16        officers of any county in enforcing the laws of the State
17        and in making arrests and recovering property;
18             5.  to apprehend and deliver up any  person  charged
19        in this State or any other State with treason, felony, or
20        other  crime,  who  has fled from justice and is found in
21        this State;
22             6.  to investigate recipients,   providers  and  any
23        personnel  involved in the administration of the Illinois
24        Public Aid Code who are suspected  of  any  violation  of
25        such  Code  pertaining  to  fraud  in the administration,
26        receipt or provision of assistance and pertaining to  any
27        violation of criminal law, and to exercise the  functions
28        required  under  Section  55a-7  in  the  conduct of such
29        investigations;
30             7.  to conduct such other investigations as  may  be
31        provided by law;
32             8.  to  exercise  the  powers and perform the duties
33        which have been vested in the Department of State  Police
34        by the Sex Offender Registration Act and the Sex Offender
 
                            -44-              LRB9101118DHmgA
 1        and  Child  Murderer  Community  Notification  Law and to
 2        promulgate reasonable rules and regulations  necessitated
 3        thereby; and
 4             9.  to  exercise  other duties which may be assigned
 5        by the Director in order to fulfill the  responsibilities
 6        and achieve the purposes of the Department.
 7        (b)  There  is  hereby  established  in  the  Division of
 8    Operations Criminal Investigation the Office of  Coordination
 9    of Gang Prevention, hereafter referred to as the Office.
10        The  Office  shall consult with units of local government
11    and  school  districts  to  assist  them  in   gang   control
12    activities  and  to administer a system of grants to units of
13    local   government   and   school   districts   which,   upon
14    application, have demonstrated a workable plan to reduce gang
15    activity in  their  area.   Such  grants  shall  not  include
16    reimbursement  for personnel nor shall they exceed 75% of the
17    total request by any applicant, and may be  calculated  on  a
18    proportional  basis,  determined  by  funds  available to the
19    Department for this purpose.  The Department shall  have  the
20    authority  to promulgate appropriate rules and regulations to
21    administer this program.
22        Such office  shall  establish  mobile  units  of  trained
23    personnel to respond to gang activities.
24        Such  office shall also consult with and use the services
25    of religious leaders and other celebrities to assist in  gang
26    control activities.
27        The Office may sponsor seminars, conferences or any other
28    educational  activity  to  assist  communities  in their gang
29    crime control activities.
30    (Source: P.A. 89-8, eff. 1-1-96; 89-428, eff. 6-1-96; 89-462,
31    eff. 6-1-96; 90-193, eff. 7-24-97.)

32        (20 ILCS 2605/55a-4) (from Ch. 127, par. 55a-4)
33        Sec. 55a-4.  The  Division  of  Forensic  Services  shall
 
                            -45-              LRB9101118DHmgA
 1    exercise the following functions:
 2        1.  to  exercise  the rights, powers and duties vested by
 3    law in the Department by the Criminal Identification Act  "An
 4    Act    in    relation    to   criminal   identification   and
 5    investigation", approved July 2, 1931, as amended;
 6        2.  to exercise the rights, powers and duties  vested  by
 7    law  in  the  Department  by subsection (5) of Section 55a of
 8    this Act;
 9        3.  to  provide  assistance  to  local  law   enforcement
10    agencies   through   training,   management   and  consultant
11    services;
12        4.  (Blank);  to exercise the rights, powers  and  duties
13    vested  by  law in the Department  by "An Act relating to the
14    acquisition, possession and transfer of firearms and  firearm
15    ammunition and to provide a penalty for the violation thereof
16    and  to  make  an  appropriation  in  connection  therewith",
17    approved August 3, 1967, as amended;
18        5.  to exercise other duties which may be assigned by the
19    Director in order to fulfill the responsibilities and achieve
20    the purposes of the Department; and
21        6.  to   establish   and   operate   a  forensic  science
22    laboratory  system,  including   a   forensic   toxicological
23    laboratory  service,  for  the  purpose  of testing specimens
24    submitted by coroners and other law enforcement  officers  in
25    their   efforts   to  determine  whether  alcohol,  drugs  or
26    poisonous or other toxic substances  have  been  involved  in
27    deaths,   accidents   or  illness.    Forensic  toxicological
28    laboratories shall be established in Springfield, Chicago and
29    elsewhere in the State as needed.
30    (Source: P.A. 90-130, eff. 1-1-98.)

31        (20 ILCS 2605/55a-5) (from Ch. 127, par. 55a-5)
32        Sec.  55a-5.   The  Division  of   Administration   shall
33    exercise the following functions:
 
                            -46-              LRB9101118DHmgA
 1        1.   to  exercise the rights, powers and duties vested in
 2    the Department by the Bureau of the Budget  Act  "An  Act  to
 3    create  a  Bureau  of the Budget and to define its powers and
 4    duties and to make  an  appropriation",  approved  April  16,
 5    1969, as amended;
 6        2.   to  pursue  research  and the publication of studies
 7    pertaining to local law enforcement activities;
 8        3.  to exercise the rights, powers and duties  vested  in
 9    the  Department  by  the  "Personnel Code", approved July 18,
10    1955, as amended;
11        4.  to operate an electronic data processing and computer
12    center for the storage and retrieval of  data  pertaining  to
13    criminal activity;
14        5.  to  exercise  the rights, powers and duties vested in
15    the former Division of State Troopers by Section  17  of  the
16    State  Police  Act  "An  Act  in  relation  to State Police",
17    approved July 20, 1949, as amended;
18        6.  to exercise the rights, powers and duties  vested  in
19    the  Department  by  the Fiscal Control and Internal Auditing
20    Act  "An  Act  relating  to  internal   auditing   in   State
21    government", approved August 11, 1967, as amended;
22        7.  to exercise other duties which may be assigned by the
23    Director  to  fulfill  the  responsibilities  and achieve the
24    purposes of the Department;.
25        8.  to exercise the rights, powers, and duties vested  in
26    the Department by the Firearm Owners Identification Card Act.
27    
28    (Source: P.A. 84-25.)

29        (20 ILCS 2605/55a-7) (from Ch. 127, par. 55a-7)
30        Sec.  55a-7.  The Department of State Police, through the
31    Division  of   Operations   Criminal   Investigation,   shall
32    investigate  recipients, providers and any personnel involved
33    in the administration of the Illinois Public Aid Code who are
 
                            -47-              LRB9101118DHmgA
 1    suspected of any violations of such Code pertaining to  fraud
 2    in  the  administration,  receipt  or provision of assistance
 3    and  pertaining  to  any  violation  of  criminal  law.   The
 4    Department   shall,   in   addition  to  functions  otherwise
 5    authorized by State and Federal law, exercise  the  following
 6    functions:
 7        1.   to  initiate  investigations  of  suspected cases of
 8    public aid fraud; and
 9        2.  to investigate cases of public aid fraud.
10    (Source: P.A. 84-25.)

11        (20 ILCS 2605/55a-8) (from Ch. 127, par. 55a-8)
12        Sec. 55a-8.  The Department of State Police shall:
13        (a)  coordinate  operate  a  State  participation  in   a
14    national  central  repository  for  dental records of missing
15    persons and unidentified dead bodies;
16        (b)  receive and file dental records submitted by  county
17    medical  examiners and coroners from unidentified dead bodies
18    and  submitted  by  law  enforcement  agencies  from  persons
19    reported missing for more than 30 days;
20        (c)  provide  information  from  the  file  on   possible
21    identifications  resulting  from  the  comparison  of  dental
22    records  submitted  with  those  records  on  file, to county
23    medical examiners, coroners, and  law  enforcement  agencies;
24    and
25        (d)  expunge  the dental records of those missing persons
26    who are found, and expunge from the file the  dental  records
27    of  missing persons who are positively identified as a result
28    of comparisons made with this file, the files  maintained  by
29    other  states, territories, insular possessions of the United
30    States, or the United States.
31    (Source: P.A. 84-1308.)

32        Section 35. The Civil Administrative Code of Illinois  is
 
                            -48-              LRB9101118DHmgA
 1    amended by changing Section 49.22 as follows:

 2        (20 ILCS 2705/49.22) (from Ch. 127, par. 49.22)
 3        Sec.  49.22.   To  administer,  exercise  and enforce the
 4    rights, powers and duties presently vested in the  Department
 5    of State Police and the Division of Operations State Troopers
 6     under the "Illinois Vehicle Inspection Law," in the Illinois
 7    Commerce  Commission,  in the State Board of Education and in
 8    the Secretary of State under  laws  relating  to  the  safety
 9    inspection  of motor vehicles operated by common carriers, of
10    school buses, and motor vehicles used in  the  transportation
11    of school children and motor vehicles used in driver training
12    schools  for  hire licensed under Article IV of "The Illinois
13    Driver Licensing Law", or  any  other  law  relating  to  the
14    safety inspection of motor vehicles of the second division as
15    defined in "the Illinois Vehicle Code".
16    (Source: P.A. 84-25.)

17        Section 40.  The State Finance Act is amended by changing
18    Section 8.3 as follows:

19        (30 ILCS 105/8.3) (from Ch. 127, par. 144.3)
20        Sec.  8.3.  Money in the road fund shall, if and when the
21    State of Illinois incurs  any  bonded  indebtedness  for  the
22    construction of permanent highways, be set aside and used for
23    the  purpose of paying and discharging annually the principal
24    and  interest  on  that  bonded  indebtedness  then  due  and
25    payable, and for no other purpose. The surplus,  if  any,  in
26    the  road fund after the payment of principal and interest on
27    that bonded indebtedness then annually due shall be  used  as
28    follows:
29             first--to pay the cost of administration of Chapters
30        2  through  10  of  the Illinois Vehicle Code, except the
31        cost of administration of Articles I and II of Chapter  3
 
                            -49-              LRB9101118DHmgA
 1        of that Code; and
 2             secondly--for   expenses   of   the   Department  of
 3        Transportation    for    construction,    reconstruction,
 4        improvement,   repair,   maintenance,   operation,    and
 5        administration   of   highways  in  accordance  with  the
 6        provisions of laws relating thereto, or for  any  purpose
 7        related or incident to and connected therewith, including
 8        the separation of grades of those highways with railroads
 9        and  with  highways  and  including the payment of awards
10        made by the Industrial Commission under the terms of  the
11        Workers'   Compensation   Act  or  Workers'  Occupational
12        Diseases Act for injury or death of an  employee  of  the
13        Division of Highways in the Department of Transportation;
14        or  for  the  acquisition  of  land  and  the erection of
15        buildings for highway purposes, including the acquisition
16        of  highway  right-of-way  or   for   investigations   to
17        determine   the  reasonably  anticipated  future  highway
18        needs; or for making of  surveys,  plans,  specifications
19        and estimates for and in the construction and maintenance
20        of  flight  strips  and  of highways necessary to provide
21        access to military and  naval  reservations,  to  defense
22        industries and defense-industry sites, and to the sources
23        of  raw materials and for replacing existing highways and
24        highway connections shut off from general public  use  at
25        military  and  naval  reservations  and  defense-industry
26        sites,  or  for the purchase of right-of-way, except that
27        the State shall be reimbursed in  full  for  any  expense
28        incurred  in  building  the  flight  strips;  or  for the
29        operating and maintaining  of  highway  garages;  or  for
30        patrolling   and   policing   the   public  highways  and
31        conserving the peace; or for any of those purposes or any
32        other purpose that may be provided by law.
33        Appropriations for any of those purposes are payable from
34    the road fund. Appropriations may also be made from the  road
 
                            -50-              LRB9101118DHmgA
 1    fund for the administrative expenses of any State agency that
 2    are  related to motor vehicles or arise from the use of motor
 3    vehicles.
 4        Beginning with fiscal year 1980 and thereafter,  no  road
 5    fund   monies   shall   be   appropriated  to  the  following
 6    Departments   or   agencies   of   State    government    for
 7    administration, grants, or operations; but this limitation is
 8    not  a  restriction upon appropriating for those purposes any
 9    road fund monies that are eligible for federal reimbursement;
10             1.  Department of Public Health;
11             2.  Department of Transportation, only with  respect
12        to subsidies for one-half fare Student Transportation and
13        Reduced Fare for Elderly;
14             3.  Department   of   Central  Management  Services,
15        except for  expenditures  incurred  for  group  insurance
16        premiums of appropriate personnel;
17             4.  Judicial Systems and Agencies.
18        Beginning  with  fiscal year 1981 and thereafter, no road
19    fund  monies  shall  be   appropriated   to   the   following
20    Departments    or    agencies   of   State   government   for
21    administration, grants, or operations; but this limitation is
22    not a restriction upon appropriating for those  purposes  any
23    road fund monies that are eligible for federal reimbursement:
24             1.  Department   of   State   Police,   except   for
25        expenditures  with  respect to the Division of Operations
26        State Troopers;
27             2.  Department of Transportation, only with  respect
28        to Intercity Rail Subsidies and Rail Freight Services.
29        Beginning  with  fiscal year 1982 and thereafter, no road
30    fund  monies  shall  be   appropriated   to   the   following
31    Departments    or    agencies   of   State   government   for
32    administration, grants, or operations; but this limitation is
33    not a restriction upon appropriating for those  purposes  any
34    road fund monies that are eligible for federal reimbursement:
 
                            -51-              LRB9101118DHmgA
 1    Department  of Central Management Services, except for awards
 2    made by the Industrial Commission  under  the  terms  of  the
 3    Workers'  Compensation  Act or Workers' Occupational Diseases
 4    Act for injury or death of an employee  of  the  Division  of
 5    Highways in the Department of Transportation.
 6        Beginning  with  fiscal year 1984 and thereafter, no road
 7    fund  monies  shall  be   appropriated   to   the   following
 8    Departments    or    agencies   of   State   government   for
 9    administration, grants, or operations; but this limitation is
10    not a restriction upon appropriating for those  purposes  any
11    road fund monies that are eligible for federal reimbursement:
12             1.  Department of State Police, except not more than
13        40%  of  the  funds  appropriated  for  the  Division  of
14        Operations State Troopers;
15             2.  State Officers.
16        Beginning  with  fiscal year 1984 and thereafter, no road
17    fund monies shall be appropriated to any Department or agency
18    of State government for administration, grants, or operations
19    except as provided hereafter; but this limitation  is  not  a
20    restriction  upon  appropriating  for those purposes any road
21    fund monies that are eligible for federal reimbursement.   It
22    shall  not  be  lawful  to circumvent the above appropriation
23    limitations by governmental reorganization or other  methods.
24    Appropriations  shall  be  made  from  the  road fund only in
25    accordance with the provisions of this Section.
26        Money in the road fund shall, if and when  the  State  of
27    Illinois  incurs any bonded indebtedness for the construction
28    of permanent highways, be set aside and used for the  purpose
29    of  paying   and  discharging  during  each  fiscal  year the
30    principal and interest on  that  bonded  indebtedness  as  it
31    becomes  due  and  payable  as provided in the Transportation
32    Bond Act, and for no other purpose.  The surplus, if any,  in
33    the  road fund after the payment of principal and interest on
34    that bonded indebtedness then annually due shall be  used  as
 
                            -52-              LRB9101118DHmgA
 1    follows:
 2             first--to pay the cost of administration of Chapters
 3        2 through 10 of the Illinois Vehicle Code; and
 4             secondly--no  road  fund  monies  derived from fees,
 5        excises,  or  license  taxes  relating  to  registration,
 6        operation and use of vehicles on public  highways  or  to
 7        fuels used for the propulsion of those vehicles, shall be
 8        appropriated   or   expended  other  than  for  costs  of
 9        administering the laws imposing those fees, excises,  and
10        license  taxes, statutory refunds and adjustments allowed
11        thereunder, administrative costs  of  the  Department  of
12        Transportation, payment of debts and liabilities incurred
13        in construction and reconstruction of public highways and
14        bridges, acquisition of rights-of-way for and the cost of
15        construction,  reconstruction,  maintenance,  repair, and
16        operation  of  public  highways  and  bridges  under  the
17        direction  and  supervision  of  the   State,   political
18        subdivision, or municipality collecting those monies, and
19        the costs for patrolling and policing the public highways
20        (by   State,   political   subdivision,  or  municipality
21        collecting that money) for enforcement of  traffic  laws.
22        The  separation of grades of such highways with railroads
23        and costs associated with protection of at-grade  highway
24        and railroad crossing shall also be permissible.
25        Appropriations  for any of such purposes are payable from
26    the road fund  or  the  Grade  Crossing  Protection  Fund  as
27    provided in Section 8 of the Motor Fuel Tax Law.
28        Beginning  with  fiscal year 1991 and thereafter, no Road
29    Fund monies shall be appropriated to the Department of  State
30    Police  for  the  purposes  of  this Section in excess of its
31    total fiscal year 1990 Road  Fund  appropriations  for  those
32    purposes unless otherwise provided in Section 5g of this Act.
33    It  shall  not  be  lawful  to  circumvent this limitation on
34    appropriations  by  governmental  reorganization   or   other
 
                            -53-              LRB9101118DHmgA
 1    methods unless otherwise provided in Section 5g of this Act.
 2        In  fiscal  year  1994,  no  Road  Fund  monies  shall be
 3    appropriated to the Secretary of State for  the  purposes  of
 4    this  Section  in  excess  of the total fiscal year 1991 Road
 5    Fund appropriations to  the  Secretary  of  State  for  those
 6    purposes,  plus  $9,800,000.   It  shall  not  be  lawful  to
 7    circumvent  this limitation on appropriations by governmental
 8    reorganization or other method.
 9        Beginning with fiscal year 1995 and thereafter,  no  Road
10    Fund  monies  shall be appropriated to the Secretary of State
11    for the purposes of this  Section  in  excess  of  the  total
12    fiscal year 1994 Road Fund appropriations to the Secretary of
13    State   for  those  purposes.  It  shall  not  be  lawful  to
14    circumvent this limitation on appropriations by  governmental
15    reorganization or other methods.
16        No  new  program may be initiated in fiscal year 1991 and
17    thereafter  that  is  not  consistent  with  the  limitations
18    imposed by this Section for fiscal year 1984 and  thereafter,
19    insofar as appropriation of road fund monies is concerned.
20        Nothing in this Section prohibits transfers from the Road
21    Fund  to the State Construction Account Fund under Section 5e
22    of this Act.
23    (Source: P.A. 87-774; 87-1228; 88-78.)

24        Section 45.  The Anti-Pollution Bond Act  is  amended  by
25    changing Section 4a as follows:

26        (30 ILCS 405/4a) (from Ch. 127, par. 454a)
27        Sec.  4a.   The  Environmental  Protection  Agency  shall
28    distribute  grants,  subject  to appropriation by the General
29    Assembly, and in accordance with Section 4 of this Act and in
30    accordance with a list of health hazards  formulated  by  the
31    Department  of  Public  Health,  for  planning, financing and
32    construction of municipal sewage  treatment  works  in  areas
 
                            -54-              LRB9101118DHmgA
 1    where  an  actual  or  potential  severe health hazard exists
 2    because of a lack  of  adequate  municipal  sewage  treatment
 3    works.
 4        By October 1 of each year, the Director of the Department
 5    of Public Health shall comprise and submit to the Director of
 6    the  Environmental  Protection Agency a list of areas in this
 7    State where a health  hazard  exists  because  of  inadequate
 8    sewage  treatment  facilities.  The Director of Public Health
 9    shall rank the areas listed according to the  seriousness  of
10    the health hazard.
11    (Source: P.A. 81-1111.)

12        Section  50.   The  Illinois  Pension  Code is amended by
13    changing Sections 14-110 and 15-181 as follows:

14        (40 ILCS 5/14-110) (from Ch. 108 1/2, par. 14-110)
15        Sec. 14-110.  Alternative retirement annuity.
16        (a)  Any member who has withdrawn from service  with  not
17    less  than  20  years  of eligible creditable service and has
18    attained age 55,  and  any  member  who  has  withdrawn  from
19    service  with  not  less than 25 years of eligible creditable
20    service and has attained age 50, regardless  of  whether  the
21    attainment  of  either of the specified ages occurs while the
22    member is still in service, shall be entitled to  receive  at
23    the  option  of the member, in lieu of the regular or minimum
24    retirement  annuity,  a  retirement   annuity   computed   as
25    follows:
26             (i)  for   periods   of   service  as  a  noncovered
27        employee, 2 1/4% of final average compensation  for  each
28        of  the  first 10 years of creditable service, 2 1/2% for
29        each year above 10 years to and  including  20  years  of
30        creditable   service,   and  2  3/4%  for  each  year  of
31        creditable service above 20 years; and
32             (ii)  for periods of eligible creditable service  as
 
                            -55-              LRB9101118DHmgA
 1        a  covered  employee, 1.67% of final average compensation
 2        for each of the first 10 years of such service, 1.90% for
 3        each of the next 10 years of such service, 2.10% for each
 4        year of such service in excess of 20  but  not  exceeding
 5        30, and 2.30% for each year in excess of 30.
 6        Such  annuity  shall  be  subject  to a maximum of 75% of
 7    final  average  compensation.   These  rates  shall  not   be
 8    applicable  to any service performed by a member as a covered
 9    employee which is not eligible creditable service.    Service
10    as  a  covered  employee  which  is  not  eligible creditable
11    service shall be subject  to  the  rates  and  provisions  of
12    Section 14-108.
13        (b)  For   the   purpose   of   this  Section,  "eligible
14    creditable service" means creditable service  resulting  from
15    service in one or more of the following positions:
16             (1)  State policeman;
17             (2)  fire  fighter in the fire protection service of
18        a department;
19             (3)  air pilot;
20             (4)  special agent;
21             (5)  investigator for the Secretary of State;
22             (6)  conservation police officer;
23             (7)  investigator for the Department of Revenue;
24             (8)  security employee of the  Department  of  Human
25        Services;
26             (9)  Central  Management  Services  security  police
27        officer;
28             (10)  security   employee   of   the  Department  of
29        Corrections;
30             (11)  dangerous drugs investigator;
31             (12)  investigator  for  the  Department  of   State
32        Police;
33             (13)  investigator  for  the  Office of the Attorney
34        General;



 
                            -56-              LRB9101118DHmgA
 1             (14)  controlled substance inspector;
 2             (15)  investigator for the  Office  of  the  State's
 3        Attorneys Appellate Prosecutor;
 4             (16)  Commerce Commission police officer;
 5             (17)  arson investigator.
 6        A  person  employed  in one of the positions specified in
 7    this subsection is entitled to  eligible  creditable  service
 8    for service credit earned under this Article while undergoing
 9    the  basic  police  training  course approved by the Illinois
10    Local  Governmental   Law   Enforcement   Officers   Training
11    Standards  Board,  if completion of that training is required
12    of persons serving in that position.   For  the  purposes  of
13    this  Code, service during the required basic police training
14    course shall be deemed  performance  of  the  duties  of  the
15    specified  position,  even  though  the person is not a sworn
16    peace officer at the time of the training.
17        (c)  For the purposes of this Section:
18             (1)  The term "state policeman" includes  any  title
19        or  position  in  the  Department of State Police that is
20        held by an individual employed  under  the  State  Police
21        Act.
22             (2)  The  term  "fire fighter in the fire protection
23        service of a department" includes all  officers  in  such
24        fire   protection   service  including  fire  chiefs  and
25        assistant fire chiefs.
26             (3)  The term  "air  pilot"  includes  any  employee
27        whose  official job description on file in the Department
28        of Central Management Services, or in the  department  by
29        which he is employed if that department is not covered by
30        the Personnel Code, states that his principal duty is the
31        operation  of  aircraft,  and  who  possesses  a  pilot's
32        license;  however,  the change in this definition made by
33        this amendatory Act of 1983 shall not operate to  exclude
34        any  noncovered  employee  who was an "air pilot" for the
 
                            -57-              LRB9101118DHmgA
 1        purposes of this Section on January 1, 1984.
 2             (4)  The term "special agent" means any  person  who
 3        by  reason  of  employment  by  the  Division of Narcotic
 4        Control, the Bureau of Investigation or,  after  July  1,
 5        1977,   the   Division  of  Criminal  Investigation,  the
 6        Division  of  Internal  Investigation,  the  Division  of
 7        Operation, or any other Division or organizational entity
 8        in the Department of State Police is vested by  law  with
 9        duties  to  maintain public order, investigate violations
10        of the criminal law of this State, enforce  the  laws  of
11        this  State, make arrests and recover property.  The term
12        "special agent" includes any title  or  position  in  the
13        Department  of State Police that is held by an individual
14        employed under the State Police Act.
15             (5)  The term "investigator  for  the  Secretary  of
16        State"  means  any  person  employed by the Office of the
17        Secretary of State and  vested  with  such  investigative
18        duties  as  render  him ineligible for coverage under the
19        Social Security Act by reason of  Sections  218(d)(5)(A),
20        218(d)(8)(D) and 218(l)(1) of that Act.
21             A  person who became employed as an investigator for
22        the Secretary  of  State  between  January  1,  1967  and
23        December  31,  1975,  and  who  has  served as such until
24        attainment of age  60,  either  continuously  or  with  a
25        single  break  in  service  of  not  more  than  3  years
26        duration,  which break terminated before January 1, 1976,
27        shall  be  entitled  to  have  his   retirement   annuity
28        calculated     in   accordance   with   subsection   (a),
29        notwithstanding that he has less than 20 years of  credit
30        for such service.
31             (6)  The  term  "Conservation  Police Officer" means
32        any person employed by the Division of Law Enforcement of
33        the Department of Natural Resources and vested with  such
34        law  enforcement  duties  as  render  him  ineligible for
 
                            -58-              LRB9101118DHmgA
 1        coverage under the  Social  Security  Act  by  reason  of
 2        Sections  218(d)(5)(A),  218(d)(8)(D),  and  218(l)(1) of
 3        that  Act.   The  term  "Conservation   Police   Officer"
 4        includes  the  positions  of  Chief  Conservation  Police
 5        Administrator    and    Assistant   Conservation   Police
 6        Administrator.
 7             (7)  The term "investigator for  the  Department  of
 8        Revenue"  means  any person employed by the Department of
 9        Revenue and vested  with  such  investigative  duties  as
10        render  him  ineligible  for  coverage  under  the Social
11        Security  Act  by  reason   of   Sections   218(d)(5)(A),
12        218(d)(8)(D) and 218(l)(1) of that Act.
13             (8)  The  term  "security employee of the Department
14        of Human Services"  means  any  person  employed  by  the
15        Department  of  Human  Services  who  is  employed at the
16        Chester Mental Health Center and has daily  contact  with
17        the  residents  thereof, or who is a mental health police
18        officer.  "Mental health police officer" means any person
19        employed  by  the  Department  of  Human  Services  in  a
20        position pertaining to the Department's mental health and
21        developmental disabilities functions who is  vested  with
22        such   law   enforcement  duties  as  render  the  person
23        ineligible for coverage under the Social Security Act  by
24        reason   of   Sections   218(d)(5)(A),  218(d)(8)(D)  and
25        218(l)(1) of that Act.
26             (9)  "Central Management  Services  security  police
27        officer"  means  any person employed by the Department of
28        Central Management Services who is vested with  such  law
29        enforcement  duties as render him ineligible for coverage
30        under the Social  Security  Act  by  reason  of  Sections
31        218(d)(5)(A), 218(d)(8)(D) and 218(l)(1) of that Act.
32             (10)  The  term "security employee of the Department
33        of Corrections" means any employee of the  Department  of
34        Corrections  or  the  former Department of Personnel, and
 
                            -59-              LRB9101118DHmgA
 1        any member or employee of the Prisoner Review Board,  who
 2        has  daily  contact  with  inmates  by  working  within a
 3        correctional facility or who is a parole  officer  or  an
 4        employee who has direct contact with committed persons in
 5        the performance of his or her job duties.
 6             (11)  The  term "dangerous drugs investigator" means
 7        any person who is employed as such by the  Department  of
 8        Human Services.
 9             (12)  The  term  "investigator for the Department of
10        State Police" means a person employed by  the  Department
11        of  State  Police  who  is  vested under Section 4 of the
12        Narcotic Control Division Abolition  Act  with  such  law
13        enforcement  powers as render him ineligible for coverage
14        under the Social  Security  Act  by  reason  of  Sections
15        218(d)(5)(A), 218(d)(8)(D) and 218(l)(1) of that Act.
16             (13)  "Investigator  for  the Office of the Attorney
17        General" means any person who is employed as such by  the
18        Office  of  the  Attorney General and is vested with such
19        investigative  duties  as  render  him   ineligible   for
20        coverage  under  the  Social  Security  Act  by reason of
21        Sections 218(d)(5)(A), 218(d)(8)(D) and 218(l)(1) of that
22        Act.  For the period before January  1,  1989,  the  term
23        includes  all  persons who were employed as investigators
24        by the Office of the Attorney General, without regard  to
25        social security status.
26             (14)  "Controlled  substance  inspector"  means  any
27        person  who  is  employed  as  such  by the Department of
28        Professional Regulation  and  is  vested  with  such  law
29        enforcement  duties as render him ineligible for coverage
30        under the Social  Security  Act  by  reason  of  Sections
31        218(d)(5)(A),  218(d)(8)(D)  and  218(l)(1)  of that Act.
32        The term "controlled substance  inspector"  includes  the
33        Program   Executive  of  Enforcement  and  the  Assistant
34        Program Executive of Enforcement.
 
                            -60-              LRB9101118DHmgA
 1             (15)  The term "investigator for the Office  of  the
 2        State's  Attorneys  Appellate  Prosecutor" means a person
 3        employed in that capacity on a full time basis under  the
 4        authority  of  Section  7.06  of  the  State's  Attorneys
 5        Appellate Prosecutor's Act.
 6             (16)  "Commerce Commission police officer" means any
 7        person  employed  by the Illinois Commerce Commission who
 8        is vested with such law enforcement duties as render  him
 9        ineligible  for coverage under the Social Security Act by
10        reason  of  Sections  218(d)(5)(A),   218(d)(8)(D),   and
11        218(l)(1) of that Act.
12             (17)  "Arson  investigator"  means any person who is
13        employed as such by the Office of the State Fire  Marshal
14        and  is vested with such law enforcement duties as render
15        the person  ineligible  for  coverage  under  the  Social
16        Security   Act   by   reason  of  Sections  218(d)(5)(A),
17        218(d)(8)(D), and 218(l)(1) of that Act.   A  person  who
18        was  employed as an arson investigator on January 1, 1995
19        and is no longer in  service  but  not  yet  receiving  a
20        retirement  annuity  may  convert  his  or her creditable
21        service for employment  as  an  arson  investigator  into
22        eligible  creditable  service by paying to the System the
23        difference between the  employee  contributions  actually
24        paid  for  that  service  and the amounts that would have
25        been contributed if the applicant  were  contributing  at
26        the  rate  applicable  to  persons  with  the same social
27        security status earning eligible  creditable  service  on
28        the date of application.
29        (d)  A   security   employee   of   the   Department   of
30    Corrections,  and  a  security  employee of the Department of
31    Human Services who is not a  mental  health  police  officer,
32    shall  not be eligible for the alternative retirement annuity
33    provided by this Section unless he or she meets the following
34    minimum  age  and  service  requirements  at  the   time   of
 
                            -61-              LRB9101118DHmgA
 1    retirement:
 2             (i)  25 years of eligible creditable service and age
 3        55; or
 4             (ii)  beginning   January   1,  1987,  25  years  of
 5        eligible creditable service and age 54, or  24  years  of
 6        eligible creditable service and age 55; or
 7             (iii)  beginning   January  1,  1988,  25  years  of
 8        eligible creditable service and age 53, or  23  years  of
 9        eligible creditable service and age 55; or
10             (iv)  beginning   January   1,  1989,  25  years  of
11        eligible creditable service and age 52, or  22  years  of
12        eligible creditable service and age 55; or
13             (v)  beginning January 1, 1990, 25 years of eligible
14        creditable  service  and  age 51, or 21 years of eligible
15        creditable service and age 55; or
16             (vi)  beginning  January  1,  1991,  25   years   of
17        eligible  creditable  service  and age 50, or 20 years of
18        eligible creditable service and age 55.
19        Persons who have service credit under Article 16 of  this
20    Code  for service as a security employee of the Department of
21    Corrections  in  a  position  requiring  certification  as  a
22    teacher may count  such  service  toward  establishing  their
23    eligibility  under  the service requirements of this Section;
24    but such service may  be  used  only  for  establishing  such
25    eligibility,  and  not  for  the  purpose  of  increasing  or
26    calculating any benefit.
27        (e)  If a member enters military service while working in
28    a  position  in  which  eligible  creditable  service  may be
29    earned, and returns to State service in the same  or  another
30    such  position,  and  fulfills  in  all  other  respects  the
31    conditions prescribed in this Article for credit for military
32    service,  such military service shall be credited as eligible
33    creditable service for the purposes of the retirement annuity
34    prescribed in this Section.
 
                            -62-              LRB9101118DHmgA
 1        (f)  For purposes  of  calculating  retirement  annuities
 2    under   this  Section,  periods  of  service  rendered  after
 3    December 31, 1968 and before October 1,  1975  as  a  covered
 4    employee  in  the  position  of  special  agent, conservation
 5    police officer, mental health police officer, or investigator
 6    for the Secretary of State, shall  be  deemed  to  have  been
 7    service  as a noncovered employee, provided that the employee
 8    pays to the System prior to retirement an amount equal to (1)
 9    the difference between the employee contributions that  would
10    have been required for such service as a noncovered employee,
11    and  the amount of employee contributions actually paid, plus
12    (2) if payment is made after July 31, 1987, regular  interest
13    on  the amount specified in item (1) from the date of service
14    to the date of payment.
15        For purposes of calculating  retirement  annuities  under
16    this  Section, periods of service rendered after December 31,
17    1968 and before January 1, 1982 as a covered employee in  the
18    position  of investigator for the Department of Revenue shall
19    be deemed to have been  service  as  a  noncovered  employee,
20    provided  that  the  employee  pays  to  the  System prior to
21    retirement an amount equal to (1) the difference between  the
22    employee contributions that would have been required for such
23    service  as a noncovered employee, and the amount of employee
24    contributions actually paid, plus  (2)  if  payment  is  made
25    after  January  1,  1990,  regular  interest  on  the  amount
26    specified in item (1) from the date of service to the date of
27    payment.
28        (g)  A  State policeman may elect, not later than January
29    1, 1990, to establish eligible creditable service for  up  to
30    10  years  of  his service as a policeman under Article 3, by
31    filing a written election  with  the  Board,  accompanied  by
32    payment  of an amount to be determined by the Board, equal to
33    (i)  the  difference  between  the  amount  of  employee  and
34    employer  contributions  transferred  to  the  System   under
 
                            -63-              LRB9101118DHmgA
 1    Section  3-110.5,  and  the  amounts  that  would  have  been
 2    contributed  had  such  contributions  been made at the rates
 3    applicable to State policemen, plus (ii) interest thereon  at
 4    the  effective  rate for each year, compounded annually, from
 5    the date of service to the date of payment.
 6        Subject to the limitation  in  subsection  (i),  a  State
 7    policeman  may  elect,  not  later  than  July  1,  1993,  to
 8    establish  eligible  creditable service for up to 10 years of
 9    his service as a member of the County Police Department under
10    Article 9, by filing  a  written  election  with  the  Board,
11    accompanied  by  payment of an amount to be determined by the
12    Board, equal to (i) the  difference  between  the  amount  of
13    employee and employer contributions transferred to the System
14    under  Section  9-121.10 and the amounts that would have been
15    contributed had those contributions been made  at  the  rates
16    applicable  to State policemen, plus (ii) interest thereon at
17    the effective rate for each year, compounded  annually,  from
18    the date of service to the date of payment.
19        (h)  Subject to the limitation in subsection (i), a State
20    policeman  or  investigator  for  the  Secretary of State may
21    elect to establish eligible creditable service for up  to  12
22    years  of  his  service  as  a  policeman under Article 5, by
23    filing a written election with the Board on or before January
24    31, 1992, and paying to the System by  January  31,  1994  an
25    amount  to  be  determined  by  the  Board,  equal to (i) the
26    difference  between  the  amount  of  employee  and  employer
27    contributions transferred to the System under Section  5-236,
28    and  the  amounts  that  would have been contributed had such
29    contributions been made at  the  rates  applicable  to  State
30    policemen,  plus  (ii) interest thereon at the effective rate
31    for each year, compounded annually, from the date of  service
32    to the date of payment.
33        Subject  to  the  limitation  in  subsection (i), a State
34    policeman, conservation police officer, or  investigator  for
 
                            -64-              LRB9101118DHmgA
 1    the  Secretary  of  State  may  elect  to  establish eligible
 2    creditable service for  up  to  10  years  of  service  as  a
 3    sheriff's law enforcement employee under Article 7, by filing
 4    a  written  election  with the Board on or before January 31,
 5    1993, and paying to the System by January 31, 1994 an  amount
 6    to  be  determined  by the Board, equal to (i) the difference
 7    between the amount of  employee  and  employer  contributions
 8    transferred  to  the  System  under  Section 7-139.7, and the
 9    amounts  that  would   have   been   contributed   had   such
10    contributions  been  made  at  the  rates applicable to State
11    policemen, plus (ii) interest thereon at the  effective  rate
12    for  each year, compounded annually, from the date of service
13    to the date of payment.
14        (i)  The total  amount  of  eligible  creditable  service
15    established  by  any  person under subsections (g), (h), (j),
16    (k), and (l) of this Section shall not exceed 12 years.
17        (j)  Subject to the  limitation  in  subsection  (i),  an
18    investigator   for   the  Office  of  the  State's  Attorneys
19    Appellate Prosecutor or a controlled substance inspector  may
20    elect  to  establish eligible creditable service for up to 10
21    years of his service as a policeman  under  Article  3  or  a
22    sheriff's law enforcement employee under Article 7, by filing
23    a  written election with the Board, accompanied by payment of
24    an amount to be determined by the Board,  equal  to  (1)  the
25    difference  between  the  amount  of  employee  and  employer
26    contributions transferred to the System under Section 3-110.6
27    or  7-139.8, and the amounts that would have been contributed
28    had such contributions been made at the rates  applicable  to
29    State  policemen,  plus (2) interest thereon at the effective
30    rate for each year, compounded annually,  from  the  date  of
31    service to the date of payment.
32        (k)  Subject  to the limitation in subsection (i) of this
33    Section,  an  alternative  formula  employee  may  elect   to
34    establish  eligible creditable service for periods spent as a
 
                            -65-              LRB9101118DHmgA
 1    full-time law enforcement officer  or  full-time  corrections
 2    officer  employed  by the federal government or by a state or
 3    local government  located  outside  of  Illinois,  for  which
 4    credit  is not held in any other public employee pension fund
 5    or retirement system.  To obtain this credit,  the  applicant
 6    must  file  a written application with the Board by March 31,
 7    1998, accompanied by evidence of  eligibility  acceptable  to
 8    the  Board  and  payment of an amount to be determined by the
 9    Board, equal to (1) employee  contributions  for  the  credit
10    being  established,  based upon the applicant's salary on the
11    first day  as  an  alternative  formula  employee  after  the
12    employment  for  which  credit  is  being established and the
13    rates then applicable to alternative formula employees,  plus
14    (2)  an  amount  determined by the Board to be the employer's
15    normal cost of the benefits  accrued  for  the  credit  being
16    established,  plus  (3)  regular  interest  on the amounts in
17    items (1) and (2)  from  the  first  day  as  an  alternative
18    formula  employee  after  the  employment for which credit is
19    being established to the date of payment.
20        (l)  Subject to  the  limitation  in  subsection  (i),  a
21    security employee of the Department of Corrections may elect,
22    not later than July 1, 1998, to establish eligible creditable
23    service  for  up  to  10  years  of  his  or her service as a
24    policeman under Article 3, by filing a written election  with
25    the  Board,  accompanied  by  payment  of  an  amount  to  be
26    determined  by the Board, equal to (i) the difference between
27    the amount of employee and employer contributions transferred
28    to the System under Section 3-110.5,  and  the  amounts  that
29    would  have been contributed had such contributions been made
30    at  the  rates  applicable  to  security  employees  of   the
31    Department  of Corrections, plus (ii) interest thereon at the
32    effective rate for each year, compounded annually,  from  the
33    date of service to the date of payment.
34    (Source: P.A.  89-136,  eff.  7-14-95;  89-445,  eff. 2-7-96;
 
                            -66-              LRB9101118DHmgA
 1    89-507, eff. 7-1-97; 90-32, eff. 6-27-97; revised 7-10-98.)

 2        (40 ILCS 5/15-181) (from Ch. 108 1/2, par. 15-181)
 3        Sec. 15-181. Duties of employers.
 4        (a)  Each employer, in  preparing  payroll  vouchers  for
 5    participating employees, shall indicate, in addition to other
 6    information:  (1)  the  amount  of employee contributions and
 7    survivors  insurance  contributions  required  under  Section
 8    15-157, (2) the gross earnings payable to each employee,  and
 9    (3)  the  total  of  all contributions required under Section
10    15-157.   An  additional  certified  copy  of  each   payroll
11    certified  by each employer shall be forwarded along with the
12    original  payroll  to  the  Director  of  Central  Management
13    Services, State Comptroller, and other officer receiving  the
14    original certified payroll for transmittal to the board.
15        (b)  Each employer, in drawing warrants or checks against
16    trust  or  federal  funds  for  items  of  salary  on payroll
17    vouchers certified by employers, shall draw such warrants  or
18    checks  to  participating  employees  for  the amount of cash
19    salary or wages specified for the period, and  shall  draw  a
20    warrant  or  check  to  this  system  for  the  total  of the
21    contributions required under Section 15-157.  The warrant  or
22    check drawn to this system, together with the additional copy
23    of the payroll supplied by the employer, shall be transmitted
24    immediately to the board.
25        (c)  The  City  of  Champaign  and the City of Urbana, as
26    employers of persons who participate in this System  pursuant
27    to  subsection  (h) of Section 15-107, shall each collect and
28    transmit  to  the  System  from  each  payroll  the  employee
29    contributions required under Section  15-157,  together  with
30    such  payroll  documentation as the Board may require, at the
31    time that the payroll is paid.
32    (Source: P.A. 90-576, eff. 3-31-98.)
 
                            -67-              LRB9101118DHmgA
 1        Section 55.  The  School  Code  is  amended  by  changing
 2    Section 27-9 as follows:

 3        (105 ILCS 5/27-9) (from Ch. 122, par. 27-9)
 4        Sec. 27-9. Training teachers to teach physical education.
 5        The  curriculum  in  all State universities shall contain
 6    courses in methods and materials of  physical  education  and
 7    training  for  teachers.  No  student  or  elementary  school
 8    teacher shall be graduated from such a university who has not
 9    had  a  minimum  of  1 course in methods and materials in the
10    teaching of physical education and training.
11    (Source: Laws 1961, p. 31.)

12        Section 60.  The Higher Education Student Assistance  Act
13    is amended by adding Section 73 as follows:

14        (110 ILCS 947/73 new)
15        Sec.  73.  Search  service  fees.  The  Illinois  Student
16    Assistance   Commission  may  charge  a  reasonable  fee  not
17    exceeding $10 for  any  student  for  administration  of  its
18    scholarship  and  grant search service.  All fees received by
19    the Commission for the  performance  of  those  services  and
20    activities  shall be deposited upon receipt into the Illinois
21    Student Assistance Commission Higher EdNet Fund in the  State
22    Treasury.

23        Section 65.  The Recycled Newsprint Use Act is amended by
24    changing Section 2004 as follows:

25        (415 ILCS 110/2004) (from Ch. 96 1/2, par. 9754)
26        Sec.  2004.  Consumer usage certification.  Each consumer
27    of newsprint within the State shall, on or before March 1  of
28    each  year,  certify  to the Department the amount in tons of
29    every type of newsprint used by the consumer of newsprint the
 
                            -68-              LRB9101118DHmgA
 1    previous year and the percentage of recycled  fibers  present
 2    in  each  type  of  newsprint,  so  that  the  Department can
 3    calculate the recycled  fiber  usage  for  that  consumer  of
 4    newsprint.   All Illinois consumers of newsprint shall submit
 5    the first consumer usage certificate by March  1,  1992,  for
 6    the  calendar  year  1991. The Department shall submit to the
 7    General Assembly a report compiling the data contained in the
 8    consumer usage certificates no later than May 1 of each year.
 9      Only  consumers  of  newsprint  who  provide  timely  usage
10    certificates shall receive credit for recycled fiber usage.
11    (Source: P.A. 86-1443.)

12        Section  70.  The  Illinois  Fertilizer  Act  of  1961 is
13    amended by changing Section 6b as follows:

14        (505 ILCS 80/6b) (from Ch. 5, par. 55.6b)
15        Sec. 6b. The amount annually deposited in the  Fertilizer
16    Control  Fund  shall be appropriated for the operation of the
17    Fertilizer Research and Education Program. These  moneys  The
18    monies  appropriated  to  the  Department  shall  be used for
19    expenses consistent with carrying out the purpose and  intent
20    of  the program, which include council expenses, peer review,
21    and contracts grants to persons  for  research  or  education
22    projects   and   costs   associated  with  general  operating
23    expenses,   such   as   administrative    support,    travel,
24    commodities,  and  printing.  The Department shall receive be
25    entitled to apply up to 3% of the annual amount deposited  in
26    the Fertilizer Control Fund for operating expenses.
27    (Source: P.A. 86-232; 87-14.)

28        Section  75.  The Whistleblower Reward and Protection Act
29    is amended by changing Section 2 as follows:

30        (740 ILCS 175/2) (from Ch. 127, par. 4102)
 
                            -69-              LRB9101118DHmgA
 1        Sec. 2.  Definitions.  As used in this Act:
 2        (a)  "State" means the State of Illinois; any  agency  of
 3    State government; and any of the following entities which may
 4    elect  to  adopt  the  provisions of this Act by ordinance or
 5    resolution, a copy of which shall be filed with the  Attorney
 6    General  within 30 days of its adoption:  the system of State
 7    colleges and universities, any school  district,  any  public
 8    community   college  district,  any  municipality,  municipal
 9    corporations, units of local government, and any  combination
10    of  the  above  under  an  intergovernmental  agreement  that
11    includes  provisions  for  a  governing  body  of  the agency
12    created by the agreement.
13        (b)  "Guard" means the Illinois National Guard.
14        (c)  "Investigation" means any inquiry conducted  by  any
15    investigator  for  the  purpose  of  ascertaining whether any
16    person is or has been engaged in any violation of this Act.
17        (d)  "Investigator" means a person who is charged by  the
18    Department  of  State  Police with the duty of conducting any
19    investigation under this Act, or any officer or  employee  of
20    the  State  acting under the direction and supervision of the
21    Department  of  State  Police,  through   the   Division   of
22    Operations Criminal Investigation or the Division of Internal
23    Investigation, in the course of with an investigation.
24        (e)  "Documentary  material" includes the original or any
25    copy  of  any  book,  record,  report,   memorandum,   paper,
26    communication,  tabulation, chart, or other document, or data
27    compilations stored in  or  accessible  through  computer  or
28    other    information   retrieval   systems,   together   with
29    instructions and all other  materials  necessary  to  use  or
30    interpret   such   data  compilations,  and  any  product  of
31    discovery.
32        (f)  "Custodian"  means  the  custodian,  or  any  deputy
33    custodian,  designated  by   the   Attorney   General   under
34    subsection (i)(1) of Section 6.
 
                            -70-              LRB9101118DHmgA
 1        (g)  "Product of discovery" includes:
 2             (1)  the  original  or  duplicate of any deposition,
 3        interrogatory, document, thing, result of the  inspection
 4        of  land  or  other  property, examination, or admission,
 5        which is obtained by  any  method  of  discovery  in  any
 6        judicial  or  administrative proceeding of an adversarial
 7        nature;
 8             (2)  any digest, analysis,  selection,  compilation,
 9        or derivation of any item listed in paragraph (1); and
10             (3)  any index or other manner of access to any item
11        listed in paragraph (1).
12    (Source: P.A. 89-260, eff. 1-1-96.)

13        (20 ILCS 2310/55.20 rep.)
14        (20 ILCS 2310/55.36 rep.)
15        (20 ILCS 2310/55.73 rep.)
16        Section 80.  The Civil Administrative Code of Illinois is
17    amended by repealing Sections 55.20, 55.36, and 55.73.

18        (110 ILCS 915/9 rep.)
19        Section   85.    The  Baccalaureate  Assistance  Law  for
20    Registered Nurses is amended by repealing Section 9.

21        (110 ILCS 925/4.03b rep.)
22        Section 90.  The Dental Student Grant Act is  amended  by
23    repealing Section 4.03b.

24        (210 ILCS 85/6.05 rep.)
25        (210 ILCS 85/9.1 rep.)
26        Section  95.   The  Hospital  Licensing Act is amended by
27    repealing Sections 6.05 and 9.1.

28        Section 995.  No acceleration or delay.  Where  this  Act
29    makes changes in a statute that is represented in this Act by
 
                            -71-              LRB9101118DHmgA
 1    text  that  is not yet or no longer in effect (for example, a
 2    Section represented by multiple versions), the  use  of  that
 3    text  does  not  accelerate or delay the taking effect of (i)
 4    the changes made by this Act or (ii) provisions derived  from
 5    any other Public Act.

 6        Section  999.   Effective  date.   This  Act takes effect
 7    January 1, 2000.
 
                            -72-              LRB9101118DHmgA
 1                                INDEX
 2               Statutes amended in order of appearance
 3    20 ILCS 105/8.01          from Ch. 23, par. 6108.01
 4    20 ILCS 605/46.37         from Ch. 127, par. 46.37
 5    20 ILCS 609/2
 6    20 ILCS 1110/6            from Ch. 96 1/2, par. 4106
 7    20 ILCS 2405/3            from Ch. 23, par. 3434
 8    20 ILCS 2605/55a          from Ch. 127, par. 55a
 9    20 ILCS 2605/55a-1        from Ch. 127, par. 55a-1
10    20 ILCS 2605/55a-2        from Ch. 127, par. 55a-2
11    20 ILCS 2605/55a-3        from Ch. 127, par. 55a-3
12    20 ILCS 2605/55a-4        from Ch. 127, par. 55a-4
13    20 ILCS 2605/55a-5        from Ch. 127, par. 55a-5
14    20 ILCS 2605/55a-7        from Ch. 127, par. 55a-7
15    20 ILCS 2605/55a-8        from Ch. 127, par. 55a-8
16    20 ILCS 2705/49.22        from Ch. 127, par. 49.22
17    30 ILCS 105/8.3           from Ch. 127, par. 144.3
18    30 ILCS 405/4a            from Ch. 127, par. 454a
19    40 ILCS 5/14-110          from Ch. 108 1/2, par. 14-110
20    40 ILCS 5/15-181          from Ch. 108 1/2, par. 15-181
21    105 ILCS 5/27-9           from Ch. 122, par. 27-9
22    110 ILCS 947/73 new
23    415 ILCS 110/2004         from Ch. 96 1/2, par. 9754
24    505 ILCS 80/6b            from Ch. 5, par. 55.6b
25    740 ILCS 175/2            from Ch. 127, par. 4102
26    20 ILCS 2310/55.20 rep.
27    20 ILCS 2310/55.36 rep.
28    20 ILCS 2310/55.73 rep.
29    110 ILCS 915/9 rep.
30    110 ILCS 925/4.03b rep.
31    210 ILCS 85/6.05 rep.
32    210 ILCS 85/9.1 rep.

[ Top ]