State of Illinois
92nd General Assembly
Legislation

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92_HB0088

 
                                               LRB9200835SMdv

 1        AN ACT in relation to debt collection.

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

 4        Section  1.  Short  title.   This Act may be cited as the
 5    State Loan Act.

 6        Section 5.  Definitions.  As used in this Act:
 7        "State loan" means any loan of $50,000 or  more  made  by
 8    the  State  of Illinois or any State agency to any person for
 9    any purpose.
10        "State agencies" has the meaning ascribed to that term in
11    Section 1-7 of the Illinois State Auditing Act,  except  that
12    "State agencies" does not include the Department of Revenue.
13        "Person"  means any individual, corporation, partnership,
14    unincorporated  association,   limited   liability   company,
15    limited liability partnership, or other entity.
16        "Designated individuals" means:
17             (i)  In  the  case of a partnership, all general and
18        limited partners of the partnership.
19             (ii)  In the case of a corporation, all shareholders
20        with 10% or more equity  or  ownership  interest  in  the
21        corporation.
22             (iii)  In  the  case of one or more individuals, all
23        of the individuals.
24             (iv)  In  the  case  of  any   other   entity,   all
25        individuals  with any equity or ownership interest in the
26        entity.

27        Section 10.  Disclosure.  Before any State  loan  may  be
28    made  to  any  person or renewed (and before repayment of any
29    part of a State loan may be forgiven  or  renegotiated),  the
30    names  and  addresses  of  each  designated individual of the
 
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 1    person must be disclosed and made public.

 2        Section 15.  Guarantee.  Before any  State  loan  may  be
 3    made   to   any  person  or  renewed  or  renegotiated,  each
 4    designated individual of the person must personally guarantee
 5    repayment of the loan.  A guarantee remains in  effect  until
 6    the  loan  has  been  repaid in full.  A guarantee may not be
 7    rescinded  or  abrogated  under   any   circumstances.    Any
 8    agreement that purports to rescind or abrogate a guarantee is
 9    null and void.

10        Section  20.  Certain  contracts  prohibited.   No  State
11    agency  may  enter  into  any contract with any person if the
12    person or any designated  individual  of  the  person  is  in
13    default on any State loan.

14        Section  25.  Disclosure of contributions.  No State loan
15    may be made or renewed, nor may repayment of any  part  of  a
16    State   loan   be   forgiven  or  renegotiated,  unless  each
17    designated individual of the  person  with  which  the  State
18    loan,  renewal,  forgiveness, or renegotiation is proposed to
19    be made has publicly disclosed all contributions made by  the
20    designated  individual  in the past 5 years.  As used in this
21    Act, "contribution" includes any contribution as  defined  in
22    Section  9-1.4 of the Election Code and any contribution to a
23    political  committee.   As  used  in  this  Act,   "political
24    committee"  has  the meaning ascribed to that term in Section
25    9-1.9 of the Election Code.

26        Section 30.  Default; Attorney General investigation.  In
27    the case of any default on a State  loan,  the  State  agency
28    making  the  loan  shall  notify  the  Attorney General.  The
29    Attorney General shall investigate the circumstances  of  the
30    default.   Unless  the  Attorney  General determines that the
 
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 1    loan  is  uncollectible,  the  Attorney  General  shall  take
 2    appropriate action to collect any amount owing to  the  State
 3    and enforce the State's rights under the loan agreement.

 4        Section   35.  Uncollected   State   Claims   Act.    Any
 5    renegotiation  or  forgiveness  of  a  State  loan must be in
 6    compliance with  the  provisions  of  the  Uncollected  State
 7    Claims  Act  and  the  Illinois  State Collection Act of 1986
 8    regarding reporting and recording of debt collections and the
 9    writing off of debts.

10        Section 40.  Report.
11        The Attorney General shall report to the General Assembly
12    by February 1 of each year the following:
13        (1)  the total number and dollar amount  of  loans  about
14    which  the  Attorney  General was notified in accordance with
15    this Act in the preceding calendar year;
16        (2)  the total amount actually collected;
17        (3)  the number of cases by agency; and
18        (4)  the  names   and   addresses   of   all   designated
19    individuals  of  any  person  that is a party to a State loan
20    about which the Attorney General was notified  in  accordance
21    with this Act in the preceding calendar year.

22        Section 103.  The Illinois Department of Revenue Sunshine
23    Act is amended by adding Section 2.4 as follows:

24        (20 ILCS 2515/2.4 new)
25        Sec. 2.4.  Public list of delinquent State taxes.
26        (a)  The  Director  may  annually  disclose a list of all
27    taxpayers, including but not limited to individuals,  trusts,
28    partnerships,  corporations, and other taxable entities, that
29    are delinquent in the payment of tax liabilities collected by
30    the Department.  The list shall include only those  taxpayers
 
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 1    with  total  final liabilities for all taxes collected by the
 2    Department (including penalties and interest)  in  an  amount
 3    greater  than  $10,000 (or such greater amount as established
 4    by the Department by rule) for a period of 6 months (or  such
 5    longer  period as established by the Department by rule) from
 6    the time that the taxes were assessed  or  became  final,  as
 7    provided  in  the  statute  imposing the tax.  The list shall
 8    contain the name, address, types of taxes, month and year  in
 9    which  each  tax  liability was assessed or became final, the
10    amount of each tax outstanding of each  delinquent  taxpayer,
11    and,  in  the  case  of a corporate taxpayer, the name of the
12    current president of record of the corporation.
13        (b)  At least 90 days before the disclosure of  the  name
14    of  any delinquent taxpayer prescribed in subsection (a), the
15    Director shall mail  a  written  notice  to  each  delinquent
16    taxpayer  by  certified  mail  addressed  to  the  delinquent
17    taxpayer  at  his  or  her last or usual place of business or
18    abode detailing the amount and nature of the delinquency  and
19    the   intended   disclosure   of  the  delinquency.   If  the
20    delinquent tax has not been paid 60 days after the notice was
21    delivered or the Department has been notified  that  delivery
22    was refused or unclaimed, and the taxpayer has not, since the
23    mailing   of  the  notice,  either  entered  into  a  written
24    agreement with the Department for payment of the  delinquency
25    or  corrected  a  default  in  an  existing  agreement to the
26    satisfaction of the Director, the Director may  disclose  the
27    tax in the list of delinquent taxpayers.
28        (c)  Unpaid  taxes  shall  not be deemed to be delinquent
29    and subject to disclosure if  (i)  a  written  agreement  for
30    payment  exists  without default between the taxpayer and the
31    Department or (ii) the tax liability is  the  subject  of  an
32    administrative  hearing,  administrative  review, or judicial
33    review.
34        (d)  The list shall be available for public inspection at
 
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 1    the Department or by other means  of  publication,  including
 2    the Internet.
 3        (e)  The  Department shall prescribe reasonable rules for
 4    the administration and implementation of this Section.
 5        (f) Any disclosure made by the Director in a  good  faith
 6    effort  to comply with this Section shall not be considered a
 7    violation of any statute prohibiting disclosure  of  taxpayer
 8    information.

 9        Section  105.  The State Finance Act is amended by adding
10    Section 5.545 as follows:

11        (30 ILCS 105/5.545 new)
12        Sec. 5.545.  The Debt Collection Fund.

13        Section 110. The Uncollected State Claims Act is  amended
14    by changing Section 2 as follows:

15        (30 ILCS 205/2) (from Ch. 15, par. 102)
16        Sec.  2.   Uncollectible  debts;  assignment  of  student
17    loans; annual reports.
18        (a)  When any State agency is unable to collect any claim
19    or  account receivable of $1,000 or more due the agency after
20    having pursued the procedure prescribed by law or  applicable
21    rules  and  regulations  for the collection thereof or, if no
22    procedure is so prescribed, then after having undertaken  all
23    reasonable and appropriate procedures available to the agency
24    to  effectuate collection, the State agency shall request the
25    Attorney General to certify the claim or  account  receivable
26    to be uncollectible.
27        (b)  Each  request  to the Attorney General asking that a
28    claim or account receivable of $1,000  or  more  be  declared
29    uncollectible shall be in a format prescribed by the Attorney
30    General   and  shall  include  at  a  minimum  the  following
 
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 1    information:  debtor's name, debtor's social security  number
 2    or   comparable   identifying  number,  debtor's  last  known
 3    address, nature of the debt, efforts made to collect the debt
 4    and the time period covered by those efforts, the age of  the
 5    debt, the age of the debtor and the specific reason the State
 6    agency  believes  the  debt  to be uncollectible.  Nothing in
 7    this provision should be interpreted as a limitation  on  the
 8    authority  of  the  Attorney  General  to  require additional
 9    information that he may find  to  be  necessary  to  evaluate
10    requests sent him pursuant to this provision.
11        (c)  Claims  or  accounts  receivable of less than $1,000
12    may be certified as uncollectible  by  the  agency  when  the
13    agency  determines that further collection efforts are not in
14    the best economic interest of the State.  Such  determination
15    shall be made in accordance with rules of the Comptroller.
16        (d)  If   any   item  of  information  required  by  this
17    provision or any item of additional information  required  by
18    the Attorney General is not available, the State agency shall
19    specifically  so state in its request to the Attorney General
20    asking that the debt be declared uncollectible.
21        (e)  A State agency participating in  a  federal  student
22    loan  program  may  remove  student loans from its records by
23    assigning or referring such  student  loans  to  the  federal
24    government   for   collection   pursuant  to  the  procedures
25    prescribed by federal laws and regulations.
26        (f)  Claims and receivables due from another State agency
27    may be written off if the agency has pursued  all  reasonable
28    means  of collection and if the amount (1) is payable from an
29    appropriation which has  lapsed;  (2)  may  not  properly  be
30    charged  against  a  current  appropriation;  and (3) was not
31    originally payable  from  federal  funds,  a  trust  fund  or
32    locally  held  funds.  Each agency which writes off claims or
33    receivables pursuant to  this  subparagraph  shall  submit  a
34    listing  of  all such write-offs to the Comptroller within 60
 
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 1    days of taking such action.
 2        (g)  Debts certified as uncollectible may be reopened for
 3    collection by an agency upon the  approval  of  the  Attorney
 4    General.
 5        (h)  Agencies  shall  submit a list of debts certified as
 6    uncollectible to the  Comptroller  in  the  form  and  manner
 7    specified  by  the  Comptroller.   The Comptroller shall take
 8    reasonable steps to accept  information  on  agency  computer
 9    tapes.
10        (i)  After   compliance   with  all  provisions  of  this
11    Section,  an  agency  may  delete  from  its  records   debts
12    certified as uncollectible as follows:
13             (1)  When  the debt is less than $1,000, immediately
14        upon certification by the agency;
15             (2)  For debts of $1,000 or more that are less  than
16        5 years old, when the agency determines pursuant to rules
17        and  regulations promulgated by the Comptroller that such
18        deletion is in the best economic interest of the State;
19             (3)  For debts of $1,000 or more when, the  debt  is
20        more than 5 years old.
21        (j)  The  Attorney  General  shall  report to the General
22    Assembly by February 1 of each year the following:
23             (1)  the total number and  dollar  amount  of  debts
24        referred  to him for collection in the preceding calendar
25        year;
26             (2)  the total amount actually collected;
27             (3)  the number of cases by agency.
28        (k)  Each State agency shall report in its annual  report
29    the  total amount and the number of claims due and payable to
30    the State.  Each agency shall also  describe  in  its  annual
31    report  the  method  used  in  collecting debts, whether by a
32    private collection service or by the Attorney General.
33        (l)  The provisions of Section 2505-250 of the Department
34    of Revenue Law (20 ILCS 2505/2505-250) take  precedence  over
 
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 1    the provisions of this Section.
 2        (m)  Any  renegotiation or forgiveness of a State loan to
 3    which the State Loan Act applies must be in  compliance  with
 4    the  provisions of this Act regarding reporting and recording
 5    of debt collections and the writing off of debts.
 6    (Source: P.A. 91-239, eff. 1-1-00.)

 7        Section 115.  The Illinois State Collection Act  of  1986
 8    is  amended  by  changing  Sections  2, 4, 5, 6, 7, and 8 and
 9    adding Section 10 as follows:

10        (30 ILCS 210/2) (from Ch. 15, par. 152)
11        Sec. 2.  Scope of  the  Act.  This  Act  applies  to  all
12    accounts  or claims owed to "State agencies", as that term is
13    defined in the Illinois State Auditing Act, except  that  the
14    debt  collection  and  write-off provisions of this Act shall
15    not apply to the Illinois State Scholarship Commission in the
16    administration of its student loan programs.  To  the  extent
17    that  some other statute prescribes procedures for collection
18    of particular types of  accounts  or  claims  owed  to  State
19    agencies  in  conflict  with the provisions of this Act, such
20    other statute shall continue in full force and  effect.   The
21    debt  collection  and write-off provisions of this Act may be
22    utilized by the General Assembly, the Supreme Court  and  the
23    several  courts  of  this  State,  and  the  constitutionally
24    elected  State  Officers,  at  their  discretion, except that
25    Section 10 applies to all  State  agencies  unless  otherwise
26    specified  in  that  Section.  However reporting requirements
27    established by the comptroller shall be followed by all State
28    agencies.  The provisions  of this Act shall be  utilized  at
29    all  times  by  all  departments,  agencies,  divisions,  and
30    offices under the jurisdiction of the Governor.
31    (Source: P.A. 85-814.)
 
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 1        (30 ILCS 210/4) (from Ch. 15, par. 154)
 2        Sec. 4.  Comptroller; rules; reports.
 3        (a)  The  Comptroller  shall  provide by rule appropriate
 4    procedures for State agencies to follow in  establishing  and
 5    recording  within  the  State  accounting  system  records of
 6    amounts owed to the State of  Illinois.   The  rules  of  the
 7    Comptroller shall include, but are not limited to:
 8             (1)  the   manner  by  which  State  agencies  shall
 9        recognize debts;
10             (2)  systems to age  accounts  receivable  of  State
11        agencies;
12             (3)  standards  by  which State agencies' claims may
13        be entered and  removed  from  the  Comptroller's  Offset
14        System   authorized   by   Section  10.05  of  the  State
15        Comptroller Act;
16             (4)  accounting procedures for estimating the amount
17        of uncollectible receivables of State agencies; and
18             (5)  accounting procedures for writing off bad debts
19        and uncollectible claims, subject to the  requirement  of
20        Section 10 that debts more than 90 days overdue be turned
21        over to the Debt Collection Unit of the Auditor General's
22        Office.
23        (b)  State  agencies  shall  report  to  the  Comptroller
24    information   concerning   their   accounts   receivable  and
25    uncollectible claims in accordance  with  the  rules  of  the
26    Comptroller, which may provide for summary reporting.
27        (c)  The  rules  of  the  Comptroller  authorized by this
28    Section may specify varying procedures and forms of reporting
29    dependent  upon  the  nature  and  amount  of   the   account
30    receivable  or  uncollectible claim, the age of the debt, the
31    probability of collection and such other  factors  that  will
32    increase  the  net  benefit  to  the  State of the collection
33    effort.
34        (d)  The Comptroller shall report annually by  March  14,
 
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 1    to  the  Governor and the General Assembly, the amount of all
 2    delinquent debt owed to each State agency as of  December  31
 3    of the previous calendar year.
 4        (e)  Any  renegotiation or forgiveness of a State loan to
 5    which the State Loan Act applies must be in  compliance  with
 6    the  provisions of this Act regarding reporting and recording
 7    of debt collections and the writing off of debts.
 8    (Source: P.A. 86-515.)

 9        (30 ILCS 210/5) (from Ch. 15, par. 155)
10        Sec. 5.  Rules; payment plans; offsets.
11        (a)  State agencies shall adopt rules establishing formal
12    due dates for amounts owing to the State, until July 1, 2002,
13    and for the  referral  of  seriously  past  due  accounts  to
14    private   collection  agencies,  unless  otherwise  expressly
15    provided  by  law  or  rule.   Such   procedures   shall   be
16    established in accord with sound business practices.
17        (b)  Until  July  1,  2002,  agencies  may enter deferred
18    payment plans for debtors of the agency and documentation  of
19    this  fact retained by the agency, where the deferred payment
20    plan is likely to increase the net amount  collected  by  the
21    State.
22        (c)  State  agencies  may  use  the  Comptroller's Offset
23    System provided in Section 10.05 of the State Comptroller Act
24    for the collection of debts owed to the agency.   Until  July
25    1,  2002,  all  debts that exceed $1,000 and are more than 90
26    days past due shall be placed  in  the  Comptroller's  Offset
27    System,  unless  the  State  agency shall have entered into a
28    deferred payment plan or demonstrates  to  the  Comptroller's
29    satisfaction that referral for offset is not cost effective.
30        (d)  State  agencies  shall  develop  internal procedures
31    whereby agency initiated  payments  to  its  debtors  may  be
32    offset without referral to the Comptroller's Offset System.
33        (e)  State  agencies or the Comptroller may remove claims
 
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 1    from the Comptroller's Offset System, where such claims  have
 2    been inactive for more than one year.
 3        (f)  Beginning  July  1,  2002, State agencies other than
 4    universities shall determine that a debt is uncollectible  in
 5    accordance  with  rules  adopted by the Auditor General under
 6    Section 10 and shall turn over to the Debt Collection Unit of
 7    the Auditor General's Office any debt that is  more  than  90
 8    days   overdue   to  the  State.   Beginning  July  1,  2002,
 9    universities may determine that a debt  is  uncollectible  in
10    accordance  with  rules  adopted by the Auditor General under
11    Section 10 and may turn over to the Debt Collection  Unit  of
12    the  Auditor  General's  Office any debt that is more than 90
13    days overdue to the State.   The  Department  of  Revenue  is
14    exempt   from  this  subsection  with  regard  to  debts  the
15    confidentiality  of  which  the  Department  of  Revenue   is
16    required by law to maintain.
17    (Source: P.A. 90-332, eff. 1-1-98.)

18        (30 ILCS 210/6) (from Ch. 15, par. 156)
19        Sec.  6.  Accounts Receivable Funds. The Comptroller with
20    the  approval  of  the  Governor  may  provide  by  rule  and
21    regulation for the creation of a special fund  or  funds  for
22    the  deposit of designated receipts by designated agencies to
23    be known as the Accounts Receivable Fund or Funds.   Deposits
24    shall be segregated by the creditor agency.  No deposit shall
25    be  made  unless  the  collection is of an account receivable
26    more than 120 days past due.
27        Seventy-five  percent  of  the  amounts  deposited   each
28    quarter  into such a special fund shall be transferred to the
29    General Revenue Fund or  such  other  fund  that  would  have
30    originally  received the receipts.  The remaining amounts may
31    be  used  by  the  creditor  agency  for  collecting  overdue
32    accounts pursuant to appropriation by the General Assembly.
33        An agency, with the  approval  of  the  Comptroller,  may
 
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 1    deposit  all  receipts into the General Revenue Fund or other
 2    such fund that would have originally received  the  receipts.
 3    Twenty-five  percent  of  such deposits made each quarter for
 4    accounts receivable more than 120  days  past  due  shall  be
 5    transferred  to  the  Accounts Receivable Fund or Funds.  The
 6    transferred amounts may be used by the  creditor  agency  for
 7    collecting  overdue accounts pursuant to appropriation by the
 8    General Assembly.
 9        In determining the types  of  receipts  to  be  deposited
10    pursuant  to  this  Section  the Comptroller and the Governor
11    shall consider the following factors:
12        (1)  The percentage of  such  receipts  estimated  to  be
13    uncollectible by the creditor agency;
14        (2)  The   percentage   of  such  receipts  certified  as
15    uncollectible by the Attorney General;
16        (3)  The  potential  increase  in  future  receipts,   as
17    estimated by the creditor agency, if 25% of amounts collected
18    are retained for collection efforts;
19        (4)  The  impact  of  the retention of 25% of receipts on
20    the relevant fund balances; and
21        (5)  Such  other  factors  as  the  Comptroller  and  the
22    Governor deem relevant.
23        This Section shall not apply to the Department of Revenue
24    nor the Department of Employment Security.
25        This Section is repealed July 1, 2002.  On that date  any
26    moneys  in  the  Accounts Receivable Funds created under this
27    Section shall be transferred into the General Revenue Fund.
28    (Source: P.A. 86-194.)

29        (30 ILCS 210/7) (from Ch. 15, par. 157)
30        Sec. 7.  Contracts for legal and  collection  assistance.
31    Upon agreement of the Attorney General, agencies may contract
32    for  legal  assistance  in  collecting past due accounts.  In
33    addition, agencies may  contract  for  collection  assistance
 
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 1    where  such  assistance  is determined by the agency to be in
 2    the best economic  interest  of  the  State.    Agencies  may
 3    utilize  monies  in  the  Accounts Receivable Fund to pay for
 4    such legal and collection assistance; provided, however, that
 5    no more than 20% of collections on an  account  may  be  paid
 6    from  the  Accounts Receivable Fund as compensation for legal
 7    and collection assistance on that  account.   If  the  amount
 8    available  for  expenditure from the Accounts Receivable Fund
 9    is insufficient  to  pay  the  cost  of  such  services,  the
10    difference,  up  to 40% of the total collections per account,
11    may be paid from other monies which may be available  to  the
12    Agency.
13        This  Section  is  repealed  July  1, 2002.  Any contract
14    entered into under this Section before that date shall remain
15    valid but may not be renewed.
16    (Source: P.A. 85-814.)

17        (30 ILCS 210/8) (from Ch. 15, par. 158)
18        Sec. 8.  Debt Collection Board.   There is created a Debt
19    Collection  Board  consisting  of  the  Director  of  Central
20    Management Services as chairman, the State  Comptroller,  and
21    the  Attorney  General,  or  their respective designees.  The
22    Board shall establish a centralized  collections  service  to
23    undertake  further  collection efforts on delinquent accounts
24    or claims of the State which have not been collected  through
25    the  reasonable  efforts  of  the  respective State agencies.
26    The Board shall promulgate rules and regulations pursuant  to
27    the  Illinois Administrative Procedure Act with regard to the
28    establishment   of   timetables   and   the   assumption   of
29    responsibility for agency accounts receivable that  have  not
30    been  collected  by  the agency, are not subject to a current
31    repayment plan, or have not been certified  as  uncollectible
32    as  of the date specified by the Board.  The Board shall make
33    a final evaluation of those accounts and either (i) direct or
 
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 1    conduct further collection activities when further collection
 2    efforts are in the best economic interest  of  the  State  or
 3    (ii)  in  accordance  with Section 2 of the Uncollected State
 4    Claims Act, certify the receivable as uncollectible or submit
 5    the account to the Attorney General for that certification.
 6        The Board is empowered to  adopt  rules  and  regulations
 7    subject  to  the  provisions  of  the Illinois Administrative
 8    Procedure Act.
 9        The  Board  is  empowered  to  enter  into  one  or  more
10    contracts with outside vendors with demonstrated capabilities
11    in the area of account collection.  The  contracts  shall  be
12    let  on  the  basis  of  competitive  proposals  secured from
13    responsible proposers.  The Board may require that vendors be
14    prequalified.  All contracts shall provide for  a  contingent
15    fee  based  on the age, nature, amount and type of delinquent
16    account.  The Board may  adopt  a  reasonable  classification
17    schedule  for  the various receivables.  The contractor shall
18    remit the amount collected, net of the contingent fee, to the
19    respective State agency which shall deposit  the  net  amount
20    received  into  the fund that would have received the receipt
21    had it been collected by the State agency.  No portion of the
22    collections shall be deposited into  an  Accounts  Receivable
23    Fund  established  under  Section  6 of this Act.   The Board
24    shall act only upon the unanimous vote of its members.
25        This Section is repealed July 1, 2002.
26    (Source: P.A. 89-511, eff. 1-1-97.)

27        (30 ILCS 210/10 new)
28        Sec. 10.  Debt Collection Unit of the  Auditor  General's
29    Office.
30        (a)  The  Auditor  General shall establish and maintain a
31    division within his or her office to be  known  as  the  Debt
32    Collection  Unit.   The  purpose  of  the  Unit  shall be the
33    collection of debts more than 90 days overdue to  the  State.
 
                            -15-               LRB9200835SMdv
 1    The  Auditor General shall adopt rules for the administration
 2    and procedures of the Unit.
 3        (b)  The  Auditor  General  shall  adopt  rules  for  the
 4    certification of debt collection specialists to  be  employed
 5    by the Unit.
 6        (c)  The   Auditor   General   shall   adopt   rules  for
 7    determining   when  a  debt  owed  to  a  State   agency   is
 8    uncollectible.  The  rules  shall  be  used by State agencies
 9    other than universities beginning July 1,  2002  and  may  be
10    used  by  universities beginning July 1, 2002. The Department
11    of Revenue is exempt from those rules with  regard  to  debts
12    the  confidentiality  of  which  the Department of Revenue is
13    required by law to maintain. The Auditor General may contract
14    with private collection  entities  and  attorneys  to  pursue
15    collection of a debt determined to be uncollectible.
16        (d)  Beginning  July 1, 2002, a State agency other than a
17    university shall turn over, and a university may  turn  over,
18    to the Unit for collection any debt that is more than 90 days
19    overdue  to  the  State.  The Department of Revenue is exempt
20    from turning over to the Unit any debt the confidentiality of
21    which the  Department  of  Revenue  is  required  by  law  to
22    maintain.  When  turning  over a debt, the State agency shall
23    also turn over all documents  and  records  relating  to  the
24    debt.  In  collecting  a debt, the Unit may exercise the same
25    rights and powers with regard to debt collection possessed by
26    the State agency that turned over the debt to the Unit.
27        (e)  The Debt Collection Fund is  created  as  a  special
28    fund  in  the  State  treasury.   Ten  percent  of the amount
29    collected on each debt by the Unit shall  be  deposited  into
30    the  Debt  Collection  Fund;  the remaining 90% of the amount
31    collected shall be deposited into the appropriate State  fund
32    or  funds  to  which  the  debt was owed.  Moneys in the Debt
33    Collection  Fund  shall  be   appropriated   only   for   the
34    administrative  costs  of the Unit. At the end of each fiscal
 
                            -16-               LRB9200835SMdv
 1    year, moneys remaining unappropriated in the Debt  Collection
 2    Fund shall be transferred into the General Revenue Fund.
 3        (f)  The  Attorney  General  and  State Comptroller shall
 4    assist  in  the  debt  collection  efforts  of  the  Unit  as
 5    requested by the Unit.
 6        (g)  The Auditor General shall  report  semi-annually  to
 7    the  General  Assembly  and  State  Comptroller upon the debt
 8    collection efforts of the Unit.  Each report shall include an
 9    analysis of the overdue debts owed to the State.

10        Section 180.  The Illinois Public Aid Code is amended  by
11    adding Section 10-10.6 as follows:

12        (305 ILCS 5/10-10.6 new)
13        Sec. 10-10.6. Tracking income and assets of obligors.
14        (a)  A transfer made by an obligor is fraudulent as to an
15    obligee if the obligor made the transfer:
16             (1)  with actual intent to hinder, delay, or defraud
17        any obligee of the obligor; or
18             (2)  without receiving a reasonably equivalent value
19        in exchange for the transfer.
20        (b)  In  determining actual intent under paragraph (1) of
21    subsection (a),  consideration  may  be  given,  among  other
22    factors, to whether:
23             (1)  the transfer was to an insider;
24             (2)  the  obligor  retained possession or control of
25        the property transferred after the transfer;
26             (3)  the transfer was disclosed or concealed;
27             (4)  before the transfer was made, the  obligor  had
28        been sued or threatened with suit;
29             (5)  the  transfer  was  of  substantially  all  the
30        obligor's assets;
31             (6)  the obligor absconded;
32             (7)  the obligor removed or concealed assets;

 
                            -17-               LRB9200835SMdv
 1             (8)  the  value of the consideration received by the
 2        obligor was reasonably equivalent to  the  value  of  the
 3        asset transferred;
 4             (9)  the  obligor  was insolvent or became insolvent
 5        shortly after the transfer was made;
 6             (10)  the  transfer  occurred  shortly   before   or
 7        shortly after a substantial debt was incurred; and
 8             (11)  the  obligor  transferred the essential assets
 9        of a business to a lienor who transferred the  assets  to
10        an insider of the obligor.
11        (c)  In  an  action  for  relief  against a transfer by a
12    child support obligor under this Act, the  State's  Attorney,
13    on behalf of a child support obligee, may obtain:
14             (1)  avoidance   of   the  transfer  to  the  extent
15        necessary to satisfy the obligee's claim;
16             (2)  an  attachment  or  other  provisional   remedy
17        against  the  asset  transferred or other property of the
18        transferee in accordance with the procedure prescribed by
19        the Code of Civil Procedure;
20             (3)  subject to applicable principles of equity  and
21        in accordance with applicable rules of civil procedure:
22                  (A)  an  injunction against further disposition
23             by the obligor or a  transferee,  or  both,  of  the
24             asset transferred or of other property;
25                  (B)  appointment  of  a receiver to take charge
26             of the asset transferred or of other property of the
27             transferee; or
28                  (C)  any other  relief  the  circumstances  may
29             require.
30        (d)  If  an  obligee  has  obtained a judgment on a claim
31    against the obligor, the State's Attorney, if  the  court  so
32    orders,  may  levy  execution on the asset transferred or its
33    proceeds.
 
                            -18-               LRB9200835SMdv
 1        Section 185.  The Illinois Marriage  and  Dissolution  of
 2    Marriage  Act  is  amended by adding Sections 505.4, 714, and
 3    715 as follows:

 4        (750 ILCS 5/505.4 new)
 5        Sec. 505.4. Tracking income and assets of obligors.
 6        (a)  A transfer made by an obligor is fraudulent as to an
 7    obligee if the obligor made the transfer:
 8             (1)  with actual intent to hinder, delay, or defraud
 9        any obligee of the obligor; or
10             (2)  without receiving a reasonably equivalent value
11        in exchange for the transfer.
12        (b)  In determining actual intent under paragraph (1)  of
13    subsection  (a),  consideration  may  be  given,  among other
14    factors, to whether:
15             (1)  the transfer was to an insider;
16             (2)  the obligor retained possession or  control  of
17        the property transferred after the transfer;
18             (3)  the transfer was disclosed or concealed;
19             (4)  before  the  transfer was made, the obligor had
20        been sued or threatened with suit;
21             (5)  the  transfer  was  of  substantially  all  the
22        obligor's assets;
23             (6)  the obligor absconded;
24             (7)  the obligor removed or concealed assets;
25             (8)  the value of the consideration received by  the
26        obligor  was  reasonably  equivalent  to the value of the
27        asset transferred;
28             (9)  the obligor was insolvent or  became  insolvent
29        shortly after the transfer was made;
30             (10)  the   transfer   occurred  shortly  before  or
31        shortly after a substantial debt was incurred; and
32             (11)  the obligor transferred the  essential  assets
33        of  a  business to a lienor who transferred the assets to
 
                            -19-               LRB9200835SMdv
 1        an insider of the obligor.
 2        (c)  In an action for relief  against  a  transfer  by  a
 3    child  support  obligor under this Act, the State's Attorney,
 4    on behalf of a child support obligee, may obtain:
 5             (1)  avoidance  of  the  transfer  to   the   extent
 6        necessary to satisfy the obligee's claim;
 7             (2)  an   attachment  or  other  provisional  remedy
 8        against the asset transferred or other  property  of  the
 9        transferee in accordance with the procedure prescribed by
10        the Code of Civil Procedure;
11             (3)  subject  to applicable principles of equity and
12        in accordance with applicable rules of civil procedure:
13                  (A)  an injunction against further  disposition
14             by  the  obligor  or  a  transferee, or both, of the
15             asset transferred or of other property;
16                  (B)  appointment of a receiver to  take  charge
17             of the asset transferred or of other property of the
18             transferee; or
19                  (C)  any  other  relief  the  circumstances may
20             require.
21        (d)  If an obligee has obtained a  judgment  on  a  claim
22    against  the  obligor,  the State's Attorney, if the court so
23    orders, may levy execution on the asset  transferred  or  its
24    proceeds.

25        (750 ILCS 5/714 new)
26        Sec.  714.  Willful  default  on  support;  penalties.  A
27    person  who  willfully defaults on an order for child support
28    issued by an  Illinois  court  or  authorized  administrative
29    proceeding  may  be  subject  to  summary  criminal  contempt
30    proceedings.
31        In  addition  to other remedies provided by law regarding
32    the suspension of  professional  and  occupational  licenses,
33    recreational  licenses,  and  driver's  licenses,  the  State
 
                            -20-               LRB9200835SMdv
 1    licensing  agency  shall  have  the  authority to withhold or
 2    suspend,  or  to  restrict  the  use  of  driver's  licenses,
 3    professional and occupational licenses or  certificates,  and
 4    recreational licenses of individuals owing overdue support or
 5    failing,  after  receiving appropriate notice, to comply with
 6    subpoenas or warrants relating to paternity or child  support
 7    proceedings.  The suspension shall remain in effect until all
 8    defaults on an order for child support are satisfied.
 9        This Section applies to an order for child support issued
10    under the Illinois Public Aid Code, the Illinois Marriage and
11    Dissolution of Marriage Act, the Illinois  Parentage  Act  of
12    1984,  the  Revised Uniform Reciprocal Enforcement of Support
13    Act, and the Uniform Interstate Family Support Act.

14        (750 ILCS 5/715 new)
15        Sec. 715.  Information to  locate  support  obligors  and
16    putative  fathers.  The  Illinois  Department of Public Aid's
17    Child and Spouse Support Unit, the State's Attorney,  or  any
18    other  appropriate  State  official  may  request  and  shall
19    receive  from  employers,  labor unions, telephone companies,
20    and  utility  companies   location   information   concerning
21    putative  fathers and noncustodial parents for the purpose of
22    establishing a child's paternity or establishing,  enforcing,
23    or  modifying  a  child support obligation.  In this Section,
24    "location  information"  means  information  about  (i)   the
25    physical  whereabouts  of  a  putative father or noncustodial
26    parent, (ii) the putative  father  or  noncustodial  parent's
27    employer,  or (iii) the salary, wages, and other compensation
28    paid and  the  health  insurance  coverage  provided  to  the
29    putative father or noncustodial parent by an employer or by a
30    labor  union  of  which  the  putative father or noncustodial
31    parent is a member.

32        Section 190.  The Non-Support Punishment Act  is  amended
 
                            -21-               LRB9200835SMdv
 1    by adding Section 67 as follows:

 2        (750 ILCS 16/67 new)
 3        Sec. 67. Tracking income and assets of obligors.
 4        (a)  A transfer made by an obligor is fraudulent as to an
 5    obligee if the obligor made the transfer:
 6             (1)  with actual intent to hinder, delay, or defraud
 7        any obligee of the obligor; or
 8             (2)  without receiving a reasonably equivalent value
 9        in exchange for the transfer.
10        (b)  In  determining actual intent under paragraph (1) of
11    subsection (a),  consideration  may  be  given,  among  other
12    factors, to whether:
13             (1)  the transfer was to an insider;
14             (2)  the  obligor  retained possession or control of
15        the property transferred after the transfer;
16             (3)  the transfer was disclosed or concealed;
17             (4)  before the transfer was made, the  obligor  had
18        been sued or threatened with suit;
19             (5)  the  transfer  was  of  substantially  all  the
20        obligor's assets;
21             (6)  the obligor absconded;
22             (7)  the obligor removed or concealed assets;
23             (8)  the  value of the consideration received by the
24        obligor was reasonably equivalent to  the  value  of  the
25        asset transferred;
26             (9)  the  obligor  was insolvent or became insolvent
27        shortly after the transfer was made;
28             (10)  the  transfer  occurred  shortly   before   or
29        shortly after a substantial debt was incurred; and
30             (11)  the  obligor  transferred the essential assets
31        of a business to a lienor who transferred the  assets  to
32        an insider of the obligor.
33        (c)  In  an  action  for  relief  against a transfer by a
 
                            -22-               LRB9200835SMdv
 1    child support obligor under this Act, the  State's  Attorney,
 2    on behalf of a child support obligee, may obtain:
 3             (1)  avoidance   of   the  transfer  to  the  extent
 4        necessary to satisfy the obligee's claim;
 5             (2)  an  attachment  or  other  provisional   remedy
 6        against  the  asset  transferred or other property of the
 7        transferee in accordance with the procedure prescribed by
 8        the Code of Civil Procedure;
 9             (3)  subject to applicable principles of equity  and
10        in accordance with applicable rules of civil procedure:
11                  (A)  an  injunction against further disposition
12             by the obligor or a  transferee,  or  both,  of  the
13             asset transferred or of other property;
14                  (B)  appointment  of  a receiver to take charge
15             of the asset transferred or of other property of the
16             transferee; or
17                  (C)  any other  relief  the  circumstances  may
18             require.
19        (d)  If  an  obligee  has  obtained a judgment on a claim
20    against the obligor, the State's Attorney, if  the  court  so
21    orders,  may  levy  execution on the asset transferred or its
22    proceeds.

23        Section 200.  The Uniform Interstate Family  Support  Act
24    is amended by changing Section 318 as follows:

25        (750 ILCS 22/318)
26        Sec. 318.  Assistance with discovery.  A tribunal of this
27    State may:
28        (1)  request  a  tribunal  of  another state to assist in
29    obtaining discovery; and
30        (2)  upon request, compel  a  person  over  whom  it  has
31    jurisdiction  to  respond  to  a  discovery order issued by a
32    tribunal of another state;.



 
                            -23-               LRB9200835SMdv
 1        (3)  upon request by a tribunal of another state, issue a
 2    subpoena or a   subpoena  duces  tecum  (in  the  case  of  a
 3    tribunal  authorized to issue  subpoenas) or direct the clerk
 4    of the circuit court to issue a subpoena or a  subpoena duces
 5    tecum (in the case of the circuit court) requiring  a  person
 6    in  this State to appear at a deposition or before a tribunal
 7    and  answer questions  or produce documents or other tangible
 8    things for the purpose of obtaining    information  regarding
 9    the  person's  assets,  income, and ability to pay a  support
10    order or judgment entered in the other state; and
11        (4)  request a tribunal of  another  state  to  issue  or
12    cause  to  be  issued  a   subpoena or a subpoena duces tecum
13    requiring a person in  the  other  state  to    appear  at  a
14    deposition  or  before  a  tribunal  in that state and answer
15    questions  or produce documents or other tangible things  for
16    the  purpose of obtaining  information regarding the person's
17    assets, income, and ability  to  pay  a    support  order  or
18    judgment entered in this State.
19        The  clerk of the circuit court shall issue a subpoena or
20    a subpoena  duces tecum when directed to do so by the circuit
21    court in accordance with  this Section.
22    (Source: P.A. 88-550, eff. date changed from 1-1-95 to 1-1-96
23    by P.A. 88-691.)

24        Section 205.  The  Illinois  Parentage  Act  of  1984  is
25    amended by adding Section 15.3 as follows:

26        (750 ILCS 45/15.3 new)
27        Sec. 15.3. Tracking income and assets of obligors.
28        (a)  A transfer made by an obligor is fraudulent as to an
29    obligee if the obligor made the transfer:
30             (1)  with actual intent to hinder, delay, or defraud
31        any obligee of the obligor; or
32             (2)  without receiving a reasonably equivalent value
 
                            -24-               LRB9200835SMdv
 1        in exchange for the transfer.
 2        (b)  In  determining actual intent under paragraph (1) of
 3    subsection (a),  consideration  may  be  given,  among  other
 4    factors, to whether:
 5             (1)  the transfer was to an insider;
 6             (2)  the  obligor  retained possession or control of
 7        the property transferred after the transfer;
 8             (3)  the transfer was disclosed or concealed;
 9             (4)  before the transfer was made, the  obligor  had
10        been sued or threatened with suit;
11             (5)  the  transfer  was  of  substantially  all  the
12        obligor's assets;
13             (6)  the obligor absconded;
14             (7)  the obligor removed or concealed assets;
15             (8)  the  value of the consideration received by the
16        obligor was reasonably equivalent to  the  value  of  the
17        asset transferred;
18             (9)  the  obligor  was insolvent or became insolvent
19        shortly after the transfer was made;
20             (10)  the  transfer  occurred  shortly   before   or
21        shortly after a substantial debt was incurred; and
22             (11)  the  obligor  transferred the essential assets
23        of a business to a lienor who transferred the  assets  to
24        an insider of the obligor.
25        (c)  In  an  action  for  relief  against a transfer by a
26    child support obligor under this Act, the  State's  Attorney,
27    on behalf of a child support obligee, may obtain:
28             (1)  avoidance   of   the  transfer  to  the  extent
29        necessary to satisfy the obligee's claim;
30             (2)  an  attachment  or  other  provisional   remedy
31        against  the  asset  transferred or other property of the
32        transferee in accordance with the procedure prescribed by
33        the Code of Civil Procedure;
34             (3)  subject to applicable principles of equity  and
 
                            -25-               LRB9200835SMdv
 1        in accordance with applicable rules of civil procedure:
 2                  (A)  an  injunction against further disposition
 3             by the obligor or a  transferee,  or  both,  of  the
 4             asset transferred or of other property;
 5                  (B)  appointment  of  a receiver to take charge
 6             of the asset transferred or of other property of the
 7             transferee; or
 8                  (C)  any other  relief  the  circumstances  may
 9             require.
10        (d)  If  an  obligee  has  obtained a judgment on a claim
11    against the obligor, the State's Attorney, if  the  court  so
12    orders,  may  levy  execution on the asset transferred or its
13    proceeds.

14        Section 999.  Effective date.  This Act takes effect upon
15    becoming law.
 
                            -26-               LRB9200835SMdv
 1                                INDEX
 2               Statutes amended in order of appearance
 3    20 ILCS 2515/2.4 new
 4    30 ILCS 105/5.545 new
 5    30 ILCS 205/2             from Ch. 15, par. 102
 6    30 ILCS 210/2             from Ch. 15, par. 152
 7    30 ILCS 210/4             from Ch. 15, par. 154
 8    30 ILCS 210/5             from Ch. 15, par. 155
 9    30 ILCS 210/6             from Ch. 15, par. 156
10    30 ILCS 210/7             from Ch. 15, par. 157
11    30 ILCS 210/8             from Ch. 15, par. 158
12    30 ILCS 210/10 new
13    305 ILCS 5/10-10.6 new
14    750 ILCS 5/505.4 new
15    750 ILCS 5/714 new
16    750 ILCS 5/715 new
17    750 ILCS 16/67 new
18    750 ILCS 22/318
19    750 ILCS 45/15.3 new

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