Public Act 102-0552
 
SB2357 EnrolledLRB102 13565 CMG 18913 b

    AN ACT concerning education.
 
    Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
represented in the General Assembly:
 
    Section 5. The School Code is amended by changing Sections
10-21.9, 21B-75, 21B-80, 21B-85, 24-11, 24-14, and 34-18.5 as
follows:
 
    (105 ILCS 5/10-21.9)  (from Ch. 122, par. 10-21.9)
    Sec. 10-21.9. Criminal history records checks and checks
of the Statewide Sex Offender Database and Statewide Murderer
and Violent Offender Against Youth Database.
    (a) Licensed and nonlicensed applicants for employment
with a school district, except school bus driver applicants,
are required as a condition of employment to authorize a
fingerprint-based criminal history records check to determine
if such applicants have been convicted of any disqualifying,
enumerated criminal or drug offenses in subsection (c) of this
Section or have been convicted, within 7 years of the
application for employment with the school district, of any
other felony under the laws of this State or of any offense
committed or attempted in any other state or against the laws
of the United States that, if committed or attempted in this
State, would have been punishable as a felony under the laws of
this State. Authorization for the check shall be furnished by
the applicant to the school district, except that if the
applicant is a substitute teacher seeking employment in more
than one school district, a teacher seeking concurrent
part-time employment positions with more than one school
district (as a reading specialist, special education teacher
or otherwise), or an educational support personnel employee
seeking employment positions with more than one district, any
such district may require the applicant to furnish
authorization for the check to the regional superintendent of
the educational service region in which are located the school
districts in which the applicant is seeking employment as a
substitute or concurrent part-time teacher or concurrent
educational support personnel employee. Upon receipt of this
authorization, the school district or the appropriate regional
superintendent, as the case may be, shall submit the
applicant's name, sex, race, date of birth, social security
number, fingerprint images, and other identifiers, as
prescribed by the Department of State Police, to the
Department. The regional superintendent submitting the
requisite information to the Department of State Police shall
promptly notify the school districts in which the applicant is
seeking employment as a substitute or concurrent part-time
teacher or concurrent educational support personnel employee
that the check of the applicant has been requested. The
Department of State Police and the Federal Bureau of
Investigation shall furnish, pursuant to a fingerprint-based
criminal history records check, records of convictions,
forever and hereinafter, until expunged, to the president of
the school board for the school district that requested the
check, or to the regional superintendent who requested the
check. The Department shall charge the school district or the
appropriate regional superintendent a fee for conducting such
check, which fee shall be deposited in the State Police
Services Fund and shall not exceed the cost of the inquiry; and
the applicant shall not be charged a fee for such check by the
school district or by the regional superintendent, except that
those applicants seeking employment as a substitute teacher
with a school district may be charged a fee not to exceed the
cost of the inquiry. Subject to appropriations for these
purposes, the State Superintendent of Education shall
reimburse school districts and regional superintendents for
fees paid to obtain criminal history records checks under this
Section.
    (a-5) The school district or regional superintendent shall
further perform a check of the Statewide Sex Offender
Database, as authorized by the Sex Offender Community
Notification Law, for each applicant. The check of the
Statewide Sex Offender Database must be conducted by the
school district or regional superintendent once for every 5
years that an applicant remains employed by the school
district.
    (a-6) The school district or regional superintendent shall
further perform a check of the Statewide Murderer and Violent
Offender Against Youth Database, as authorized by the Murderer
and Violent Offender Against Youth Community Notification Law,
for each applicant. The check of the Murderer and Violent
Offender Against Youth Database must be conducted by the
school district or regional superintendent once for every 5
years that an applicant remains employed by the school
district.
    (b) Any information concerning the record of convictions
obtained by the president of the school board or the regional
superintendent shall be confidential and may only be
transmitted to the superintendent of the school district or
his designee, the appropriate regional superintendent if the
check was requested by the school district, the presidents of
the appropriate school boards if the check was requested from
the Department of State Police by the regional superintendent,
the State Board of Education and a school district as
authorized under subsection (b-5), the State Superintendent of
Education, the State Educator Preparation and Licensure Board,
any other person necessary to the decision of hiring the
applicant for employment, or for clarification purposes the
Department of State Police or Statewide Sex Offender Database,
or both. A copy of the record of convictions obtained from the
Department of State Police shall be provided to the applicant
for employment. Upon the check of the Statewide Sex Offender
Database or Statewide Murderer and Violent Offender Against
Youth Database, the school district or regional superintendent
shall notify an applicant as to whether or not the applicant
has been identified in the Database. If a check of an applicant
for employment as a substitute or concurrent part-time teacher
or concurrent educational support personnel employee in more
than one school district was requested by the regional
superintendent, and the Department of State Police upon a
check ascertains that the applicant has not been convicted of
any of the enumerated criminal or drug offenses in subsection
(c) of this Section or has not been convicted, within 7 years
of the application for employment with the school district, of
any other felony under the laws of this State or of any offense
committed or attempted in any other state or against the laws
of the United States that, if committed or attempted in this
State, would have been punishable as a felony under the laws of
this State and so notifies the regional superintendent and if
the regional superintendent upon a check ascertains that the
applicant has not been identified in the Sex Offender Database
or Statewide Murderer and Violent Offender Against Youth
Database, then the regional superintendent shall issue to the
applicant a certificate evidencing that as of the date
specified by the Department of State Police the applicant has
not been convicted of any of the enumerated criminal or drug
offenses in subsection (c) of this Section or has not been
convicted, within 7 years of the application for employment
with the school district, of any other felony under the laws of
this State or of any offense committed or attempted in any
other state or against the laws of the United States that, if
committed or attempted in this State, would have been
punishable as a felony under the laws of this State and
evidencing that as of the date that the regional
superintendent conducted a check of the Statewide Sex Offender
Database or Statewide Murderer and Violent Offender Against
Youth Database, the applicant has not been identified in the
Database. The school board of any school district may rely on
the certificate issued by any regional superintendent to that
substitute teacher, concurrent part-time teacher, or
concurrent educational support personnel employee or may
initiate its own criminal history records check of the
applicant through the Department of State Police and its own
check of the Statewide Sex Offender Database or Statewide
Murderer and Violent Offender Against Youth Database as
provided in this Section. Any unauthorized release of
confidential information may be a violation of Section 7 of
the Criminal Identification Act.
    (b-5) If a criminal history records check or check of the
Statewide Sex Offender Database or Statewide Murderer and
Violent Offender Against Youth Database is performed by a
regional superintendent for an applicant seeking employment as
a substitute teacher with a school district, the regional
superintendent may disclose to the State Board of Education
whether the applicant has been issued a certificate under
subsection (b) based on those checks. If the State Board
receives information on an applicant under this subsection,
then it must indicate in the Educator Licensure Information
System for a 90-day period that the applicant has been issued
or has not been issued a certificate.
    (c) No school board shall knowingly employ a person who
has been convicted of any offense that would subject him or her
to license suspension or revocation pursuant to Section 21B-80
of this Code, except as provided under subsection (b) of
Section 21B-80. Further, no school board shall knowingly
employ a person who has been found to be the perpetrator of
sexual or physical abuse of any minor under 18 years of age
pursuant to proceedings under Article II of the Juvenile Court
Act of 1987. As a condition of employment, each school board
must consider the status of a person who has been issued an
indicated finding of abuse or neglect of a child by the
Department of Children and Family Services under the Abused
and Neglected Child Reporting Act or by a child welfare agency
of another jurisdiction.
    (d) No school board shall knowingly employ a person for
whom a criminal history records check and a Statewide Sex
Offender Database check have not been initiated.
    (e) Within 10 days after a superintendent, regional office
of education, or entity that provides background checks of
license holders to public schools receives information of a
pending criminal charge against a license holder for an
offense set forth in Section 21B-80 of this Code, the
superintendent, regional office of education, or entity must
notify the State Superintendent of Education of the pending
criminal charge.
    If permissible by federal or State law, no later than 15
business days after receipt of a record of conviction or of
checking the Statewide Murderer and Violent Offender Against
Youth Database or the Statewide Sex Offender Database and
finding a registration, the superintendent of the employing
school board or the applicable regional superintendent shall,
in writing, notify the State Superintendent of Education of
any license holder who has been convicted of a crime set forth
in Section 21B-80 of this Code. Upon receipt of the record of a
conviction of or a finding of child abuse by a holder of any
license issued pursuant to Article 21B or Section 34-8.1 or
34-83 of the School Code, the State Superintendent of
Education may initiate licensure suspension and revocation
proceedings as authorized by law. If the receipt of the record
of conviction or finding of child abuse is received within 6
months after the initial grant of or renewal of a license, the
State Superintendent of Education may rescind the license
holder's license.
    (e-5) The superintendent of the employing school board
shall, in writing, notify the State Superintendent of
Education and the applicable regional superintendent of
schools of any license holder whom he or she has reasonable
cause to believe has committed an intentional act of abuse or
neglect with the result of making a child an abused child or a
neglected child, as defined in Section 3 of the Abused and
Neglected Child Reporting Act, and that act resulted in the
license holder's dismissal or resignation from the school
district. This notification must be submitted within 30 days
after the dismissal or resignation and must include the
Illinois Educator Identification Number (IEIN) of the license
holder and a brief description of the misconduct alleged. The
license holder must also be contemporaneously sent a copy of
the notice by the superintendent. All correspondence,
documentation, and other information so received by the
regional superintendent of schools, the State Superintendent
of Education, the State Board of Education, or the State
Educator Preparation and Licensure Board under this subsection
(e-5) is confidential and must not be disclosed to third
parties, except (i) as necessary for the State Superintendent
of Education or his or her designee to investigate and
prosecute pursuant to Article 21B of this Code, (ii) pursuant
to a court order, (iii) for disclosure to the license holder or
his or her representative, or (iv) as otherwise provided in
this Article and provided that any such information admitted
into evidence in a hearing is exempt from this confidentiality
and non-disclosure requirement. Except for an act of willful
or wanton misconduct, any superintendent who provides
notification as required in this subsection (e-5) shall have
immunity from any liability, whether civil or criminal or that
otherwise might result by reason of such action.
    (f) After January 1, 1990 the provisions of this Section
shall apply to all employees of persons or firms holding
contracts with any school district including, but not limited
to, food service workers, school bus drivers and other
transportation employees, who have direct, daily contact with
the pupils of any school in such district. For purposes of
criminal history records checks and checks of the Statewide
Sex Offender Database on employees of persons or firms holding
contracts with more than one school district and assigned to
more than one school district, the regional superintendent of
the educational service region in which the contracting school
districts are located may, at the request of any such school
district, be responsible for receiving the authorization for a
criminal history records check prepared by each such employee
and submitting the same to the Department of State Police and
for conducting a check of the Statewide Sex Offender Database
for each employee. Any information concerning the record of
conviction and identification as a sex offender of any such
employee obtained by the regional superintendent shall be
promptly reported to the president of the appropriate school
board or school boards.
    (f-5) Upon request of a school or school district, any
information obtained by a school district pursuant to
subsection (f) of this Section within the last year must be
made available to the requesting school or school district.
    (g) Prior to the commencement of any student teaching
experience or required internship (which is referred to as
student teaching in this Section) in the public schools, a
student teacher is required to authorize a fingerprint-based
criminal history records check. Authorization for and payment
of the costs of the check must be furnished by the student
teacher to the school district where the student teaching is
to be completed. Upon receipt of this authorization and
payment, the school district shall submit the student
teacher's name, sex, race, date of birth, social security
number, fingerprint images, and other identifiers, as
prescribed by the Department of State Police, to the
Department of State Police. The Department of State Police and
the Federal Bureau of Investigation shall furnish, pursuant to
a fingerprint-based criminal history records check, records of
convictions, forever and hereinafter, until expunged, to the
president of the school board for the school district that
requested the check. The Department shall charge the school
district a fee for conducting the check, which fee must not
exceed the cost of the inquiry and must be deposited into the
State Police Services Fund. The school district shall further
perform a check of the Statewide Sex Offender Database, as
authorized by the Sex Offender Community Notification Law, and
of the Statewide Murderer and Violent Offender Against Youth
Database, as authorized by the Murderer and Violent Offender
Against Youth Registration Act, for each student teacher. No
school board may knowingly allow a person to student teach for
whom a criminal history records check, a Statewide Sex
Offender Database check, and a Statewide Murderer and Violent
Offender Against Youth Database check have not been completed
and reviewed by the district.
    A copy of the record of convictions obtained from the
Department of State Police must be provided to the student
teacher. Any information concerning the record of convictions
obtained by the president of the school board is confidential
and may only be transmitted to the superintendent of the
school district or his or her designee, the State
Superintendent of Education, the State Educator Preparation
and Licensure Board, or, for clarification purposes, the
Department of State Police or the Statewide Sex Offender
Database or Statewide Murderer and Violent Offender Against
Youth Database. Any unauthorized release of confidential
information may be a violation of Section 7 of the Criminal
Identification Act.
    No school board shall knowingly allow a person to student
teach who has been convicted of any offense that would subject
him or her to license suspension or revocation pursuant to
subsection (c) of Section 21B-80 of this Code, except as
provided under subsection (b) of Section 21B-80. Further, no
school board shall allow a person to student teach if he or she
has been found to be the perpetrator of sexual or physical
abuse of a minor under 18 years of age pursuant to proceedings
under Article II of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987. Each school
board must consider the status of a person to student teach who
has been issued an indicated finding of abuse or neglect of a
child by the Department of Children and Family Services under
the Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act or by a child
welfare agency of another jurisdiction.
    (h) (Blank).
(Source: P.A. 101-72, eff. 7-12-19; 101-531, eff. 8-23-19;
101-643, eff. 6-18-20.)
 
    (105 ILCS 5/21B-75)
    Sec. 21B-75. Suspension or revocation of license,
endorsement, or approval.
    (a) As used in this Section, "teacher" means any school
district employee regularly required to be licensed, as
provided in this Article, in order to teach or supervise in the
public schools.
    (b) The State Superintendent of Education has the
exclusive authority, in accordance with this Section and any
rules adopted by the State Board of Education, in consultation
with the State Educator Preparation and Licensure Board, to
initiate the suspension of up to 5 calendar years or
revocation of any license, endorsement, or approval issued
pursuant to this Article for abuse or neglect of a child,
immorality, a condition of health detrimental to the welfare
of pupils, incompetency, unprofessional conduct (which
includes the failure to disclose on an employment application
any previous conviction for a sex offense, as defined in
Section 21B-80 of this Code, or any other offense committed in
any other state or against the laws of the United States that,
if committed in this State, would be punishable as a sex
offense, as defined in Section 21B-80 of this Code), the
neglect of any professional duty, willful or negligent failure
to report an instance of suspected child abuse or neglect as
required by the Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act, or
other just cause. Negligent failure to report an instance of
suspected child abuse or neglect occurs when a teacher
personally observes an instance of suspected child abuse or
neglect and reasonably believes, in his or her professional or
official capacity, that the instance constitutes an act of
child abuse or neglect under the Abused and Neglected Child
Reporting Act, and he or she, without willful intent, fails to
immediately report or cause a report to be made of the
suspected abuse or neglect to the Department of Children and
Family Services, as required by the Abused and Neglected Child
Reporting Act. Unprofessional conduct shall include the
refusal to attend or participate in institutes, teachers'
meetings, or professional readings or to meet other reasonable
requirements of the regional superintendent of schools or
State Superintendent of Education. Unprofessional conduct also
includes conduct that violates the standards, ethics, or rules
applicable to the security, administration, monitoring, or
scoring of or the reporting of scores from any assessment test
or examination administered under Section 2-3.64a-5 of this
Code or that is known or intended to produce or report
manipulated or artificial, rather than actual, assessment or
achievement results or gains from the administration of those
tests or examinations. Unprofessional conduct shall also
include neglect or unnecessary delay in the making of
statistical and other reports required by school officers.
Incompetency shall include, without limitation, 2 or more
school terms of service for which the license holder has
received an unsatisfactory rating on a performance evaluation
conducted pursuant to Article 24A of this Code within a period
of 7 school terms of service. In determining whether to
initiate action against one or more licenses based on
incompetency and the recommended sanction for such action, the
State Superintendent shall consider factors that include
without limitation all of the following:
        (1) Whether the unsatisfactory evaluation ratings
    occurred prior to June 13, 2011 (the effective date of
    Public Act 97-8).
        (2) Whether the unsatisfactory evaluation ratings
    occurred prior to or after the implementation date, as
    defined in Section 24A-2.5 of this Code, of an evaluation
    system for teachers in a school district.
        (3) Whether the evaluator or evaluators who performed
    an unsatisfactory evaluation met the pre-licensure and
    training requirements set forth in Section 24A-3 of this
    Code.
        (4) The time between the unsatisfactory evaluation
    ratings.
        (5) The quality of the remediation plans associated
    with the unsatisfactory evaluation ratings and whether the
    license holder successfully completed the remediation
    plans.
        (6) Whether the unsatisfactory evaluation ratings were
    related to the same or different assignments performed by
    the license holder.
        (7) Whether one or more of the unsatisfactory
    evaluation ratings occurred in the first year of a
    teaching or administrative assignment.
When initiating an action against one or more licenses, the
State Superintendent may seek required professional
development as a sanction in lieu of or in addition to
suspension or revocation. Any such required professional
development must be at the expense of the license holder, who
may use, if available and applicable to the requirements
established by administrative or court order, training,
coursework, or other professional development funds in
accordance with the terms of an applicable collective
bargaining agreement entered into after June 13, 2011 (the
effective date of Public Act 97-8), unless that agreement
specifically precludes use of funds for such purpose.
    (c) The State Superintendent of Education shall, upon
receipt of evidence of abuse or neglect of a child,
immorality, a condition of health detrimental to the welfare
of pupils, incompetency (subject to subsection (b) of this
Section), unprofessional conduct, the neglect of any
professional duty, or other just cause, further investigate
and, if and as appropriate, serve written notice to the
individual and afford the individual opportunity for a hearing
prior to suspension, revocation, or other sanction; provided
that the State Superintendent is under no obligation to
initiate such an investigation if the Department of Children
and Family Services is investigating the same or substantially
similar allegations and its child protective service unit has
not made its determination, as required under Section 7.12 of
the Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act. If the State
Superintendent of Education does not receive from an
individual a request for a hearing within 10 days after the
individual receives notice, the suspension, revocation, or
other sanction shall immediately take effect in accordance
with the notice. If a hearing is requested within 10 days after
notice of an opportunity for hearing, it shall act as a stay of
proceedings until the State Educator Preparation and Licensure
Board issues a decision. Any hearing shall take place in the
educational service region where the educator is or was last
employed and in accordance with rules adopted by the State
Board of Education, in consultation with the State Educator
Preparation and Licensure Board, and such rules shall include
without limitation provisions for discovery and the sharing of
information between parties prior to the hearing. The standard
of proof for any administrative hearing held pursuant to this
Section shall be by the preponderance of the evidence. The
decision of the State Educator Preparation and Licensure Board
is a final administrative decision and is subject to judicial
review by appeal of either party.
    The State Board of Education may refuse to issue or may
suspend the license of any person who fails to file a return or
to pay the tax, penalty, or interest shown in a filed return or
to pay any final assessment of tax, penalty, or interest, as
required by any tax Act administered by the Department of
Revenue, until such time as the requirements of any such tax
Act are satisfied.
    The exclusive authority of the State Superintendent of
Education to initiate suspension or revocation of a license
pursuant to this Section does not preclude a regional
superintendent of schools from cooperating with the State
Superintendent or a State's Attorney with respect to an
investigation of alleged misconduct.
    (d) The State Superintendent of Education or his or her
designee may initiate and conduct such investigations as may
be reasonably necessary to establish the existence of any
alleged misconduct. At any stage of the investigation, the
State Superintendent may issue a subpoena requiring the
attendance and testimony of a witness, including the license
holder, and the production of any evidence, including files,
records, correspondence, or documents, relating to any matter
in question in the investigation. The subpoena shall require a
witness to appear at the State Board of Education at a
specified date and time and shall specify any evidence to be
produced. The license holder is not entitled to be present,
but the State Superintendent shall provide the license holder
with a copy of any recorded testimony prior to a hearing under
this Section. Such recorded testimony must not be used as
evidence at a hearing, unless the license holder has adequate
notice of the testimony and the opportunity to cross-examine
the witness. Failure of a license holder to comply with a duly
issued, investigatory subpoena may be grounds for revocation,
suspension, or denial of a license.
    (e) All correspondence, documentation, and other
information so received by the regional superintendent of
schools, the State Superintendent of Education, the State
Board of Education, or the State Educator Preparation and
Licensure Board under this Section is confidential and must
not be disclosed to third parties, except (i) as necessary for
the State Superintendent of Education or his or her designee
to investigate and prosecute pursuant to this Article, (ii)
pursuant to a court order, (iii) for disclosure to the license
holder or his or her representative, or (iv) as otherwise
required in this Article and provided that any such
information admitted into evidence in a hearing is exempt from
this confidentiality and non-disclosure requirement.
    (f) The State Superintendent of Education or a person
designated by him or her shall have the power to administer
oaths to witnesses at any hearing conducted before the State
Educator Preparation and Licensure Board pursuant to this
Section. The State Superintendent of Education or a person
designated by him or her is authorized to subpoena and bring
before the State Educator Preparation and Licensure Board any
person in this State and to take testimony either orally or by
deposition or by exhibit, with the same fees and mileage and in
the same manner as prescribed by law in judicial proceedings
in civil cases in circuit courts of this State.
    (g) Any circuit court, upon the application of the State
Superintendent of Education or the license holder, may, by
order duly entered, require the attendance of witnesses and
the production of relevant books and papers as part of any
investigation or at any hearing the State Educator Preparation
and Licensure Board is authorized to conduct pursuant to this
Section, and the court may compel obedience to its orders by
proceedings for contempt.
    (h) The State Board of Education shall receive an annual
line item appropriation to cover fees associated with the
investigation and prosecution of alleged educator misconduct
and hearings related thereto.
(Source: P.A. 100-872, eff. 8-14-18; 101-531, eff. 8-23-19.)
 
    (105 ILCS 5/21B-80)
    Sec. 21B-80. Conviction of certain offenses as grounds for
disqualification for licensure or suspension or revocation of
a license.
    (a) As used in this Section:
    "Drug offense" means any one or more of the following
offenses:
        (1) Any offense defined in the Cannabis Control Act,
    except those defined in subdivisions (a), (b), and (c) of
    Section 4 and subdivisions (a) and (b) of Section 5 of the
    Cannabis Control Act and any offense for which the holder
    of a license is placed on probation under the provisions
    of Section 10 of the Cannabis Control Act, provided that
    if the terms and conditions of probation required by the
    court are not fulfilled, the offense is not eligible for
    this exception.
        (2) Any offense defined in the Illinois Controlled
    Substances Act, except any offense for which the holder of
    a license is placed on probation under the provisions of
    Section 410 of the Illinois Controlled Substances Act,
    provided that if the terms and conditions of probation
    required by the court are not fulfilled, the offense is
    not eligible for this exception.
        (3) Any offense defined in the Methamphetamine Control
    and Community Protection Act, except any offense for which
    the holder of a license is placed on probation under the
    provision of Section 70 of that Act, provided that if the
    terms and conditions of probation required by the court
    are not fulfilled, the offense is not eligible for this
    exception.
        (4) Any attempt to commit any of the offenses listed
    in items (1) through (3) of this definition.
        (5) Any offense committed or attempted in any other
    state or against the laws of the United States that, if
    committed or attempted in this State, would have been
    punishable as one or more of the offenses listed in items
    (1) through (4) of this definition.
The changes made by Public Act 96-431 to this definition are
declaratory of existing law.
    "Sentence" includes any period of supervised release or
probation that was imposed either alone or in combination with
a period of incarceration.
    "Sex or other offense" means any one or more of the
following offenses:
        (A) Any offense defined in Article 9 of the Criminal
    Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012; Sections 11-6,
    11-9 through 11-9.5, inclusive, and 11-30 (if punished as
    a Class 4 felony) of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the
    Criminal Code of 2012; Sections 11-14.1 through 11-21,
    inclusive, of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal
    Code of 2012; Sections 11-23 (if punished as a Class 3
    felony), 11-24, 11-25, and 11-26 of the Criminal Code of
    1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012; Section 10-5.1,
    subsection (c) of Section 10-9, and Sections 11-6.6,
    11-11, 12-3.05, 12-3.3, 12-6.4, 12-7.1, 12-34, 12-34.5,
    and 12-35 of the Criminal Code of 2012; and Sections
    11-1.20, 11-1.30, 11-1.40, 11-1.50, 11-1.60, 12-13, 12-14,
    12-14.1, 12-15, 12-16, 12-32, 12-33, 12C-45, and 26-4 (if
    punished pursuant to subdivision (4) or (5) of subsection
    (d) of Section 26-4) of the Criminal Code of 1961 or the
    Criminal Code of 2012.
        (B) Any attempt to commit any of the offenses listed
    in item (A) of this definition.
        (C) Any offense committed or attempted in any other
    state that, if committed or attempted in this State, would
    have been punishable as one or more of the offenses listed
    in items (A) and (B) of this definition.
    (b) Whenever the holder of any license issued pursuant to
this Article or applicant for a license to be issued pursuant
to this Article has been convicted of any drug offense, other
than as provided in subsection (c) of this Section, the State
Superintendent of Education shall forthwith suspend the
license or deny the application, whichever is applicable,
until 7 years following the end of the sentence for the
criminal offense. If the conviction is reversed and the holder
is acquitted of the offense in a new trial or the charges
against him or her are dismissed, the State Superintendent of
Education shall forthwith terminate the suspension of the
license.
    (b-5) Whenever the holder of a license issued pursuant to
this Article or applicant for a license to be issued pursuant
to this Article has been charged with attempting to commit,
conspiring to commit, soliciting, or committing any sex or
other offense, as enumerated under item (A) of subsection (a),
first degree murder, or a Class X felony or any offense
committed or attempted in any other state or against the laws
of the United States that, if committed or attempted in this
State, would have been punishable as one or more of the
foregoing offenses, the State Superintendent of Education
shall immediately suspend the license or deny the application
until the person's criminal charges are adjudicated through a
court of competent jurisdiction. If the person is acquitted,
his or her license or application shall be immediately
reinstated.
    (c) Whenever the holder of a license issued pursuant to
this Article or applicant for a license to be issued pursuant
to this Article has been convicted of attempting to commit,
conspiring to commit, soliciting, or committing any sex or
other offense, as enumerated under item (A) of subsection (a),
first degree murder, or a Class X felony or any offense
committed or attempted in any other state or against the laws
of the United States that, if committed or attempted in this
State, would have been punishable as one or more of the
foregoing offenses, the State Superintendent of Education
shall forthwith suspend the license or deny the application,
whichever is applicable. If the conviction is reversed and the
holder is acquitted of that offense in a new trial or the
charges that he or she committed that offense are dismissed,
the State Superintendent of Education shall forthwith
terminate the suspension of the license. When the conviction
becomes final, the State Superintendent of Education shall
forthwith revoke the license.
(Source: P.A. 101-531, eff. 8-23-19.)
 
    (105 ILCS 5/21B-85)
    Sec. 21B-85. Conviction of felony.
    (a) Whenever the holder of any license issued under this
Article is employed by the school board of a school district,
including a special charter district or a school district
organized under Article 34 of this Code, and is convicted,
either after a bench trial, trial by jury, or plea of guilty,
of any offense for which a sentence to death or a term of
imprisonment in a penitentiary for one year or more is
provided, the school board shall promptly notify the State
Superintendent of Education, in writing, of the name of the
license holder, the fact of the conviction, and the name and
location of the court in which the conviction occurred.
    (b) Whenever the school board of a school district,
including a special charter district or a school district
organized under Article 34 of this Code, State Superintendent
of Education receives notice of a conviction under subsection
(a) of this Section or otherwise learns that any person who is
a teacher, as that term is defined in Section 16-106 of the
Illinois Pension Code, has been convicted, either after a
bench trial, trial by jury, or plea of guilty, of any offense
for which a sentence to death or a term of imprisonment in a
penitentiary for one year or more is provided, the school
board State Superintendent of Education shall promptly notify,
in writing, the board of trustees of the Teachers' Retirement
System of the State of Illinois and the board of trustees of
the Public School Teachers' Pension and Retirement Fund of the
City of Chicago of the name of the license holder, the fact of
the conviction, the name and location of the court in which the
conviction occurred, and the number assigned in that court to
the case in which the conviction occurred.
(Source: P.A. 97-607, eff. 8-26-11.)
 
    (105 ILCS 5/24-11)  (from Ch. 122, par. 24-11)
    Sec. 24-11. Boards of Education - Boards of School
Inspectors - Contractual continued service.
    (a) As used in this and the succeeding Sections of this
Article:
    "Teacher" means any or all school district employees
regularly required to be licensed certified under laws
relating to the licensure certification of teachers.
    "Board" means board of directors, board of education, or
board of school inspectors, as the case may be.
    "School term" means that portion of the school year, July
1 to the following June 30, when school is in actual session.
    "Program" means a program of a special education joint
agreement.
    "Program of a special education joint agreement" means
instructional, consultative, supervisory, administrative,
diagnostic, and related services that are managed by a special
educational joint agreement designed to service 2 or more
school districts that are members of the joint agreement.
    "PERA implementation date" means the implementation date
of an evaluation system for teachers as specified by Section
24A-2.5 of this Code for all schools within a school district
or all programs of a special education joint agreement.
    (b) This Section and Sections 24-12 through 24-16 of this
Article apply only to school districts having less than
500,000 inhabitants.
    (c) Any teacher who is first employed as a full-time
teacher in a school district or program prior to the PERA
implementation date and who is employed in that district or
program for a probationary period of 4 consecutive school
terms shall enter upon contractual continued service in the
district or in all of the programs that the teacher is legally
qualified to hold, unless the teacher is given written notice
of dismissal by certified mail, return receipt requested, by
the employing board at least 45 days before the end of any
school term within such period.
    (d) For any teacher who is first employed as a full-time
teacher in a school district or program on or after the PERA
implementation date, the probationary period shall be one of
the following periods, based upon the teacher's school terms
of service and performance, before the teacher shall enter
upon contractual continued service in the district or in all
of the programs that the teacher is legally qualified to hold,
unless the teacher is given written notice of dismissal by
certified mail, return receipt requested, by the employing
board at least 45 days before the end of any school term within
such period:
        (1) 4 consecutive school terms of service in which the
    teacher receives overall annual evaluation ratings of at
    least "Proficient" in the last school term and at least
    "Proficient" in either the second or third school term;
        (2) 3 consecutive school terms of service in which the
    teacher receives 3 overall annual evaluations of
    "Excellent"; or
        (3) 2 consecutive school terms of service in which the
    teacher receives 2 overall annual evaluations of
    "Excellent" service, but only if the teacher (i)
    previously attained contractual continued service in a
    different school district or program in this State, (ii)
    voluntarily departed or was honorably dismissed from that
    school district or program in the school term immediately
    prior to the teacher's first school term of service
    applicable to the attainment of contractual continued
    service under this subdivision (3), and (iii) received, in
    his or her 2 most recent overall annual or biennial
    evaluations from the prior school district or program,
    ratings of at least "Proficient", with both such ratings
    occurring after the school district's or program's PERA
    implementation date. For a teacher to attain contractual
    continued service under this subdivision (3), the teacher
    shall provide official copies of his or her 2 most recent
    overall annual or biennial evaluations from the prior
    school district or program to the new school district or
    program within 60 days from the teacher's first day of
    service with the new school district or program. The prior
    school district or program must provide the teacher with
    official copies of his or her 2 most recent overall annual
    or biennial evaluations within 14 days after the teacher's
    request. If a teacher has requested such official copies
    prior to 45 days after the teacher's first day of service
    with the new school district or program and the teacher's
    prior school district or program fails to provide the
    teacher with the official copies required under this
    subdivision (3), then the time period for the teacher to
    submit the official copies to his or her new school
    district or program must be extended until 14 days after
    receipt of such copies from the prior school district or
    program. If the prior school district or program fails to
    provide the teacher with the official copies required
    under this subdivision (3) within 90 days from the
    teacher's first day of service with the new school
    district or program, then the new school district or
    program shall rely upon the teacher's own copies of his or
    her evaluations for purposes of this subdivision (3).
    If the teacher does not receive overall annual evaluations
of "Excellent" in the school terms necessary for eligibility
to achieve accelerated contractual continued service in
subdivisions (2) and (3) of this subsection (d), the teacher
shall be eligible for contractual continued service pursuant
to subdivision (1) of this subsection (d). If, at the
conclusion of 4 consecutive school terms of service that count
toward attainment of contractual continued service, the
teacher's performance does not qualify the teacher for
contractual continued service under subdivision (1) of this
subsection (d), then the teacher shall not enter upon
contractual continued service and shall be dismissed. If a
performance evaluation is not conducted for any school term
when such evaluation is required to be conducted under Section
24A-5 of this Code, then the teacher's performance evaluation
rating for such school term for purposes of determining the
attainment of contractual continued service shall be deemed
"Proficient", except that, during any time in which the
Governor has declared a disaster due to a public health
emergency pursuant to Section 7 of the Illinois Emergency
Management Agency Act, this default to "Proficient" does not
apply to any teacher who has entered into contractual
continued service and who was deemed "Excellent" on his or her
most recent evaluation. During any time in which the Governor
has declared a disaster due to a public health emergency
pursuant to Section 7 of the Illinois Emergency Management
Agency Act and unless the school board and any exclusive
bargaining representative have completed the performance
rating for teachers or mutually agreed to an alternate
performance rating, any teacher who has entered into
contractual continued service, whose most recent evaluation
was deemed "Excellent", and whose performance evaluation is
not conducted when the evaluation is required to be conducted
shall receive a teacher's performance rating deemed
"Excellent". A school board and any exclusive bargaining
representative may mutually agree to an alternate performance
rating for teachers not in contractual continued service
during any time in which the Governor has declared a disaster
due to a public health emergency pursuant to Section 7 of the
Illinois Emergency Management Agency Act, as long as the
agreement is in writing.
    (e) For the purposes of determining contractual continued
service, a school term shall be counted only toward attainment
of contractual continued service if the teacher actually
teaches or is otherwise present and participating in the
district's or program's educational program for 120 days or
more, provided that the days of leave under the federal Family
Medical Leave Act that the teacher is required to take until
the end of the school term shall be considered days of teaching
or participation in the district's or program's educational
program. A school term that is not counted toward attainment
of contractual continued service shall not be considered a
break in service for purposes of determining whether a teacher
has been employed for 4 consecutive school terms, provided
that the teacher actually teaches or is otherwise present and
participating in the district's or program's educational
program in the following school term.
    (f) If the employing board determines to dismiss the
teacher in the last year of the probationary period as
provided in subsection (c) of this Section or subdivision (1)
or (2) of subsection (d) of this Section, but not subdivision
(3) of subsection (d) of this Section, the written notice of
dismissal provided by the employing board must contain
specific reasons for dismissal. Any full-time teacher who does
not receive written notice from the employing board at least
45 days before the end of any school term as provided in this
Section and whose performance does not require dismissal after
the fourth probationary year pursuant to subsection (d) of
this Section shall be re-employed for the following school
term.
    (g) Contractual continued service shall continue in effect
the terms and provisions of the contract with the teacher
during the last school term of the probationary period,
subject to this Act and the lawful regulations of the
employing board. This Section and succeeding Sections do not
modify any existing power of the board except with respect to
the procedure of the discharge of a teacher and reductions in
salary as hereinafter provided. Contractual continued service
status shall not restrict the power of the board to transfer a
teacher to a position which the teacher is qualified to fill or
to make such salary adjustments as it deems desirable, but
unless reductions in salary are uniform or based upon some
reasonable classification, any teacher whose salary is reduced
shall be entitled to a notice and a hearing as hereinafter
provided in the case of certain dismissals or removals.
    (h) If, by reason of any change in the boundaries of school
districts or by reason of the creation of a new school
district, the position held by any teacher having a
contractual continued service status is transferred from one
board to the control of a new or different board, then the
contractual continued service status of the teacher is not
thereby lost, and such new or different board is subject to
this Code with respect to the teacher in the same manner as if
the teacher were its employee and had been its employee during
the time the teacher was actually employed by the board from
whose control the position was transferred.
    (i) The employment of any teacher in a program of a special
education joint agreement established under Section 3-15.14,
10-22.31 or 10-22.31a shall be governed by this and succeeding
Sections of this Article. For purposes of attaining and
maintaining contractual continued service and computing length
of continuing service as referred to in this Section and
Section 24-12, employment in a special educational joint
program shall be deemed a continuation of all previous
licensed certificated employment of such teacher for such
joint agreement whether the employer of the teacher was the
joint agreement, the regional superintendent, or one of the
participating districts in the joint agreement.
    (j) For any teacher employed after July 1, 1987 as a
full-time teacher in a program of a special education joint
agreement, whether the program is operated by the joint
agreement or a member district on behalf of the joint
agreement, in the event of a reduction in the number of
programs or positions in the joint agreement in which the
notice of dismissal is provided on or before the end of the
2010-2011 school term, the teacher in contractual continued
service is eligible for employment in the joint agreement
programs for which the teacher is legally qualified in order
of greater length of continuing service in the joint
agreement, unless an alternative method of determining the
sequence of dismissal is established in a collective
bargaining agreement. For any teacher employed after July 1,
1987 as a full-time teacher in a program of a special education
joint agreement, whether the program is operated by the joint
agreement or a member district on behalf of the joint
agreement, in the event of a reduction in the number of
programs or positions in the joint agreement in which the
notice of dismissal is provided during the 2011-2012 school
term or a subsequent school term, the teacher shall be
included on the honorable dismissal lists of all joint
agreement programs for positions for which the teacher is
qualified and is eligible for employment in such programs in
accordance with subsections (b) and (c) of Section 24-12 of
this Code and the applicable honorable dismissal policies of
the joint agreement.
    (k) For any teacher employed after July 1, 1987 as a
full-time teacher in a program of a special education joint
agreement, whether the program is operated by the joint
agreement or a member district on behalf of the joint
agreement, in the event of the dissolution of a joint
agreement, in which the notice to teachers of the dissolution
is provided during the 2010-2011 school term, the teacher in
contractual continued service who is legally qualified shall
be assigned to any comparable position in a member district
currently held by a teacher who has not entered upon
contractual continued service or held by a teacher who has
entered upon contractual continued service with a shorter
length of contractual continued service. Any teacher employed
after July 1, 1987 as a full-time teacher in a program of a
special education joint agreement, whether the program is
operated by the joint agreement or a member district on behalf
of the joint agreement, in the event of the dissolution of a
joint agreement in which the notice to teachers of the
dissolution is provided during the 2011-2012 school term or a
subsequent school term, the teacher who is qualified shall be
included on the order of honorable dismissal lists of each
member district and shall be assigned to any comparable
position in any such district in accordance with subsections
(b) and (c) of Section 24-12 of this Code and the applicable
honorable dismissal policies of each member district.
    (l) The governing board of the joint agreement, or the
administrative district, if so authorized by the articles of
agreement of the joint agreement, rather than the board of
education of a school district, may carry out employment and
termination actions including dismissals under this Section
and Section 24-12.
    (m) The employment of any teacher in a special education
program authorized by Section 14-1.01 through 14-14.01, or a
joint educational program established under Section 10-22.31a,
shall be under this and the succeeding Sections of this
Article, and such employment shall be deemed a continuation of
the previous employment of such teacher in any of the
participating districts, regardless of the participation of
other districts in the program.
    (n) Any teacher employed as a full-time teacher in a
special education program prior to September 23, 1987 in which
2 or more school districts participate for a probationary
period of 2 consecutive years shall enter upon contractual
continued service in each of the participating districts,
subject to this and the succeeding Sections of this Article,
and, notwithstanding Section 24-1.5 of this Code, in the event
of the termination of the program shall be eligible for any
vacant position in any of such districts for which such
teacher is qualified.
(Source: P.A. 101-643, eff. 6-18-20.)
 
    (105 ILCS 5/24-14)  (from Ch. 122, par. 24-14)
    Sec. 24-14. Termination of contractual continued service
by teacher. A teacher, as defined in Section 24-11 of this
Code, who has entered into contractual continued service may
resign at any time by obtaining concurrence of the board or by
serving at least 30 days' written notice upon the secretary of
the board. However, no teacher may resign during the school
term, without the concurrence of the board, in order to accept
another teaching assignment. Any teacher terminating said
service not in accordance with this Section may be referred by
the board to the State Superintendent of Education. A referral
to the State Superintendent for an alleged violation of this
Section must include (i) a dated copy of the teacher's
resignation letter, (ii) a copy of the reporting district's
current school year calendar, (iii) proof of employment for
the school year at issue, (iv) documentation showing that the
district's board did not accept the teacher's resignation, and
(v) evidence that the teacher left the district in order to
accept another teaching assignment. The State Superintendent
or his or her designee shall convene an informal evidentiary
hearing no later than 90 days after receipt of a resolution by
the board. If the State Superintendent or his or her designee
finds that the teacher resigned during the school term without
the concurrence of the board to accept another teaching
assignment, the State Superintendent must suspend the
teacher's license for one calendar year. In lieu of a hearing
and finding, the teacher may agree to a lesser licensure
sanction at the discretion of the State Superintendent.
(Source: P.A. 101-531, eff. 8-23-19.)
 
    (105 ILCS 5/34-18.5)  (from Ch. 122, par. 34-18.5)
    Sec. 34-18.5. Criminal history records checks and checks
of the Statewide Sex Offender Database and Statewide Murderer
and Violent Offender Against Youth Database.
    (a) Licensed and nonlicensed applicants for employment
with the school district are required as a condition of
employment to authorize a fingerprint-based criminal history
records check to determine if such applicants have been
convicted of any disqualifying, enumerated criminal or drug
offense in subsection (c) of this Section or have been
convicted, within 7 years of the application for employment
with the school district, of any other felony under the laws of
this State or of any offense committed or attempted in any
other state or against the laws of the United States that, if
committed or attempted in this State, would have been
punishable as a felony under the laws of this State.
Authorization for the check shall be furnished by the
applicant to the school district, except that if the applicant
is a substitute teacher seeking employment in more than one
school district, or a teacher seeking concurrent part-time
employment positions with more than one school district (as a
reading specialist, special education teacher or otherwise),
or an educational support personnel employee seeking
employment positions with more than one district, any such
district may require the applicant to furnish authorization
for the check to the regional superintendent of the
educational service region in which are located the school
districts in which the applicant is seeking employment as a
substitute or concurrent part-time teacher or concurrent
educational support personnel employee. Upon receipt of this
authorization, the school district or the appropriate regional
superintendent, as the case may be, shall submit the
applicant's name, sex, race, date of birth, social security
number, fingerprint images, and other identifiers, as
prescribed by the Department of State Police, to the
Department. The regional superintendent submitting the
requisite information to the Department of State Police shall
promptly notify the school districts in which the applicant is
seeking employment as a substitute or concurrent part-time
teacher or concurrent educational support personnel employee
that the check of the applicant has been requested. The
Department of State Police and the Federal Bureau of
Investigation shall furnish, pursuant to a fingerprint-based
criminal history records check, records of convictions,
forever and hereinafter, until expunged, to the president of
the school board for the school district that requested the
check, or to the regional superintendent who requested the
check. The Department shall charge the school district or the
appropriate regional superintendent a fee for conducting such
check, which fee shall be deposited in the State Police
Services Fund and shall not exceed the cost of the inquiry; and
the applicant shall not be charged a fee for such check by the
school district or by the regional superintendent. Subject to
appropriations for these purposes, the State Superintendent of
Education shall reimburse the school district and regional
superintendent for fees paid to obtain criminal history
records checks under this Section.
    (a-5) The school district or regional superintendent shall
further perform a check of the Statewide Sex Offender
Database, as authorized by the Sex Offender Community
Notification Law, for each applicant. The check of the
Statewide Sex Offender Database must be conducted by the
school district or regional superintendent once for every 5
years that an applicant remains employed by the school
district.
    (a-6) The school district or regional superintendent shall
further perform a check of the Statewide Murderer and Violent
Offender Against Youth Database, as authorized by the Murderer
and Violent Offender Against Youth Community Notification Law,
for each applicant. The check of the Murderer and Violent
Offender Against Youth Database must be conducted by the
school district or regional superintendent once for every 5
years that an applicant remains employed by the school
district.
    (b) Any information concerning the record of convictions
obtained by the president of the board of education or the
regional superintendent shall be confidential and may only be
transmitted to the general superintendent of the school
district or his designee, the appropriate regional
superintendent if the check was requested by the board of
education for the school district, the presidents of the
appropriate board of education or school boards if the check
was requested from the Department of State Police by the
regional superintendent, the State Board of Education and the
school district as authorized under subsection (b-5), the
State Superintendent of Education, the State Educator
Preparation and Licensure Board or any other person necessary
to the decision of hiring the applicant for employment. A copy
of the record of convictions obtained from the Department of
State Police shall be provided to the applicant for
employment. Upon the check of the Statewide Sex Offender
Database or Statewide Murderer and Violent Offender Against
Youth Database, the school district or regional superintendent
shall notify an applicant as to whether or not the applicant
has been identified in the Database. If a check of an applicant
for employment as a substitute or concurrent part-time teacher
or concurrent educational support personnel employee in more
than one school district was requested by the regional
superintendent, and the Department of State Police upon a
check ascertains that the applicant has not been convicted of
any of the enumerated criminal or drug offenses in subsection
(c) of this Section or has not been convicted, within 7 years
of the application for employment with the school district, of
any other felony under the laws of this State or of any offense
committed or attempted in any other state or against the laws
of the United States that, if committed or attempted in this
State, would have been punishable as a felony under the laws of
this State and so notifies the regional superintendent and if
the regional superintendent upon a check ascertains that the
applicant has not been identified in the Sex Offender Database
or Statewide Murderer and Violent Offender Against Youth
Database, then the regional superintendent shall issue to the
applicant a certificate evidencing that as of the date
specified by the Department of State Police the applicant has
not been convicted of any of the enumerated criminal or drug
offenses in subsection (c) of this Section or has not been
convicted, within 7 years of the application for employment
with the school district, of any other felony under the laws of
this State or of any offense committed or attempted in any
other state or against the laws of the United States that, if
committed or attempted in this State, would have been
punishable as a felony under the laws of this State and
evidencing that as of the date that the regional
superintendent conducted a check of the Statewide Sex Offender
Database or Statewide Murderer and Violent Offender Against
Youth Database, the applicant has not been identified in the
Database. The school board of any school district may rely on
the certificate issued by any regional superintendent to that
substitute teacher, concurrent part-time teacher, or
concurrent educational support personnel employee or may
initiate its own criminal history records check of the
applicant through the Department of State Police and its own
check of the Statewide Sex Offender Database or Statewide
Murderer and Violent Offender Against Youth Database as
provided in this Section. Any unauthorized release of
confidential information may be a violation of Section 7 of
the Criminal Identification Act.
    (b-5) If a criminal history records check or check of the
Statewide Sex Offender Database or Statewide Murderer and
Violent Offender Against Youth Database is performed by a
regional superintendent for an applicant seeking employment as
a substitute teacher with the school district, the regional
superintendent may disclose to the State Board of Education
whether the applicant has been issued a certificate under
subsection (b) based on those checks. If the State Board
receives information on an applicant under this subsection,
then it must indicate in the Educator Licensure Information
System for a 90-day period that the applicant has been issued
or has not been issued a certificate.
    (c) The board of education shall not knowingly employ a
person who has been convicted of any offense that would
subject him or her to license suspension or revocation
pursuant to Section 21B-80 of this Code, except as provided
under subsection (b) of 21B-80. Further, the board of
education shall not knowingly employ a person who has been
found to be the perpetrator of sexual or physical abuse of any
minor under 18 years of age pursuant to proceedings under
Article II of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987. As a condition of
employment, the board of education must consider the status of
a person who has been issued an indicated finding of abuse or
neglect of a child by the Department of Children and Family
Services under the Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act or
by a child welfare agency of another jurisdiction.
    (d) The board of education shall not knowingly employ a
person for whom a criminal history records check and a
Statewide Sex Offender Database check have not been initiated.
    (e) Within 10 days after the general superintendent of
schools, a regional office of education, or an entity that
provides background checks of license holders to public
schools receives information of a pending criminal charge
against a license holder for an offense set forth in Section
21B-80 of this Code, the superintendent, regional office of
education, or entity must notify the State Superintendent of
Education of the pending criminal charge.
    No later than 15 business days after receipt of a record of
conviction or of checking the Statewide Murderer and Violent
Offender Against Youth Database or the Statewide Sex Offender
Database and finding a registration, the general
superintendent of schools or the applicable regional
superintendent shall, in writing, notify the State
Superintendent of Education of any license holder who has been
convicted of a crime set forth in Section 21B-80 of this Code.
Upon receipt of the record of a conviction of or a finding of
child abuse by a holder of any license issued pursuant to
Article 21B or Section 34-8.1 or 34-83 of this Code, the State
Superintendent of Education may initiate licensure suspension
and revocation proceedings as authorized by law. If the
receipt of the record of conviction or finding of child abuse
is received within 6 months after the initial grant of or
renewal of a license, the State Superintendent of Education
may rescind the license holder's license.
    (e-5) The general superintendent of schools shall, in
writing, notify the State Superintendent of Education of any
license holder whom he or she has reasonable cause to believe
has committed an intentional act of abuse or neglect with the
result of making a child an abused child or a neglected child,
as defined in Section 3 of the Abused and Neglected Child
Reporting Act, and that act resulted in the license holder's
dismissal or resignation from the school district and must
include the Illinois Educator Identification Number (IEIN) of
the license holder and a brief description of the misconduct
alleged. This notification must be submitted within 30 days
after the dismissal or resignation. The license holder must
also be contemporaneously sent a copy of the notice by the
superintendent. All correspondence, documentation, and other
information so received by the State Superintendent of
Education, the State Board of Education, or the State Educator
Preparation and Licensure Board under this subsection (e-5) is
confidential and must not be disclosed to third parties,
except (i) as necessary for the State Superintendent of
Education or his or her designee to investigate and prosecute
pursuant to Article 21B of this Code, (ii) pursuant to a court
order, (iii) for disclosure to the license holder or his or her
representative, or (iv) as otherwise provided in this Article
and provided that any such information admitted into evidence
in a hearing is exempt from this confidentiality and
non-disclosure requirement. Except for an act of willful or
wanton misconduct, any superintendent who provides
notification as required in this subsection (e-5) shall have
immunity from any liability, whether civil or criminal or that
otherwise might result by reason of such action.
    (f) After March 19, 1990, the provisions of this Section
shall apply to all employees of persons or firms holding
contracts with any school district including, but not limited
to, food service workers, school bus drivers and other
transportation employees, who have direct, daily contact with
the pupils of any school in such district. For purposes of
criminal history records checks and checks of the Statewide
Sex Offender Database on employees of persons or firms holding
contracts with more than one school district and assigned to
more than one school district, the regional superintendent of
the educational service region in which the contracting school
districts are located may, at the request of any such school
district, be responsible for receiving the authorization for a
criminal history records check prepared by each such employee
and submitting the same to the Department of State Police and
for conducting a check of the Statewide Sex Offender Database
for each employee. Any information concerning the record of
conviction and identification as a sex offender of any such
employee obtained by the regional superintendent shall be
promptly reported to the president of the appropriate school
board or school boards.
    (f-5) Upon request of a school or school district, any
information obtained by the school district pursuant to
subsection (f) of this Section within the last year must be
made available to the requesting school or school district.
    (g) Prior to the commencement of any student teaching
experience or required internship (which is referred to as
student teaching in this Section) in the public schools, a
student teacher is required to authorize a fingerprint-based
criminal history records check. Authorization for and payment
of the costs of the check must be furnished by the student
teacher to the school district. Upon receipt of this
authorization and payment, the school district shall submit
the student teacher's name, sex, race, date of birth, social
security number, fingerprint images, and other identifiers, as
prescribed by the Department of State Police, to the
Department of State Police. The Department of State Police and
the Federal Bureau of Investigation shall furnish, pursuant to
a fingerprint-based criminal history records check, records of
convictions, forever and hereinafter, until expunged, to the
president of the board. The Department shall charge the school
district a fee for conducting the check, which fee must not
exceed the cost of the inquiry and must be deposited into the
State Police Services Fund. The school district shall further
perform a check of the Statewide Sex Offender Database, as
authorized by the Sex Offender Community Notification Law, and
of the Statewide Murderer and Violent Offender Against Youth
Database, as authorized by the Murderer and Violent Offender
Against Youth Registration Act, for each student teacher. The
board may not knowingly allow a person to student teach for
whom a criminal history records check, a Statewide Sex
Offender Database check, and a Statewide Murderer and Violent
Offender Against Youth Database check have not been completed
and reviewed by the district.
    A copy of the record of convictions obtained from the
Department of State Police must be provided to the student
teacher. Any information concerning the record of convictions
obtained by the president of the board is confidential and may
only be transmitted to the general superintendent of schools
or his or her designee, the State Superintendent of Education,
the State Educator Preparation and Licensure Board, or, for
clarification purposes, the Department of State Police or the
Statewide Sex Offender Database or Statewide Murderer and
Violent Offender Against Youth Database. Any unauthorized
release of confidential information may be a violation of
Section 7 of the Criminal Identification Act.
    The board may not knowingly allow a person to student
teach who has been convicted of any offense that would subject
him or her to license suspension or revocation pursuant to
subsection (c) of Section 21B-80 of this Code, except as
provided under subsection (b) of Section 21B-80. Further, the
board may not allow a person to student teach if he or she has
been found to be the perpetrator of sexual or physical abuse of
a minor under 18 years of age pursuant to proceedings under
Article II of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987. The board must
consider the status of a person to student teach who has been
issued an indicated finding of abuse or neglect of a child by
the Department of Children and Family Services under the
Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act or by a child welfare
agency of another jurisdiction.
    (h) (Blank).
(Source: P.A. 101-72, eff. 7-12-19; 101-531, eff. 8-23-19;
101-643, eff. 6-18-20.)
 
    Section 90. The State Mandates Act is amended by adding
Section 8.45 as follows:
 
    (30 ILCS 805/8.45 new)
    Sec. 8.45. Exempt mandate. Notwithstanding Sections 6 and
8 of this Act, no reimbursement by the State is required for
the implementation of any mandate created by this amendatory
Act of the 102nd General Assembly.