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Public Act 104-0547

Public Act 0547 104TH GENERAL ASSEMBLY

 


 
Public Act 104-0547
 
HB3811 EnrolledLRB104 10924 BAB 21006 b

    AN ACT concerning regulation.
 
    Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
represented in the General Assembly:
 
    Section 5. The Probate Act of 1975 is amended by changing
Sections 11a-5, 11a-15, and 23-2 and by adding Section 11a-26
as follows:
 
    (755 ILCS 5/11a-5)  (from Ch. 110 1/2, par. 11a-5)
    Sec. 11a-5. Who may act as guardian.
    (a) A person is qualified to act as guardian of the person
and as guardian of the estate of a person with a disability if
the court finds that the proposed guardian is capable of
providing an active and suitable program of guardianship for
the person with a disability and that the proposed guardian:
        (1) has attained the age of 18 years;
        (2) is a resident of the United States;
        (3) is not of unsound mind;
        (4) is not an adjudged person with a disability as
    defined in this Act; and
        (5) has not been convicted of a felony, unless the
    court finds appointment of the person convicted of a
    felony to be in the best interests of the person with a
    disability, and as part of the best interests
    determination, the court has considered the nature of the
    offense, the date of offense, and the evidence of the
    proposed guardian's rehabilitation. No person shall be
    appointed who has been convicted of a felony involving
    harm or threat to a minor or an elderly person or a person
    with a disability, including a felony sexual offense.
    (b) Any public agency, private professional guardian as
defined in Section 11a-26, or not-for-profit corporation found
capable by the court of providing an active and suitable
program of guardianship for the person with a disability,
taking into consideration the nature of such person's
disability and the nature of such organization's services, may
be appointed guardian of the person or of the estate, or both,
of the person with a disability. The court shall not appoint as
guardian an agency or employee of an agency that is directly
providing residential services to the ward. One person or
agency may be appointed guardian of the person and another
person or agency appointed guardian of the estate.
    (b-5)(1) The court may appoint separate individuals or
entities that are qualified to act as guardian under
subsection (b) or (c) to act as the guardian of the person and
the guardian of the estate of a person with a disability if the
court finds it is in the best interests of the person with a
disability that separate guardians be appointed. The court
shall not appoint a separate person or entity to act as
guardian of the person or guardian of the estate with a public
guardian or the Office of State Guardian unless the public
guardian or the Office of State Guardian agrees to such an
appointment.
    (2) The court may appoint co-guardians to act as guardian
of the person, guardian of the estate, or both the guardian of
the person and the guardian of the estate if the court finds it
is in the best interests of the person with a disability. When
considering appointing co-guardians, the court shall consider
the proposed co-guardians' history of cooperating and working
together on behalf of the person with a disability. The court
shall appoint only co-guardians who agree to serve together.
The court shall not appoint a public guardian or the Office of
State Guardian as a co-guardian for a person with a
disability.
    (c) Any corporation qualified to accept and execute trusts
in this State may be appointed guardian or limited guardian of
the estate of a person with a disability.
(Source: P.A. 102-72, eff. 1-1-22.)
 
    (755 ILCS 5/11a-15)  (from Ch. 110 1/2, par. 11a-15)
    Sec. 11a-15. Successor guardian.
    (a) Upon the death, incapacity, resignation, or removal of
a guardian of the estate or person of a living ward, the court
shall appoint a successor guardian or terminate the
adjudication of disability. The powers and duties of the
successor guardian shall be the same as those of the
predecessor guardian unless otherwise modified.
    (b) Notice of the time and place of the hearing on a
petition for the appointment of a successor guardian shall be
given not less than 3 days before the hearing for a successor
to a temporary guardian and not less than 14 days before the
hearing for a successor to a limited or plenary guardian. The
notice shall be by mail or in person to the alleged person with
a disability, to the proposed successor guardian, and to those
persons whose names and addresses are listed in the petition
for adjudication of disability and appointment of a guardian
under Section 11a-8. The court, upon a finding of good cause,
may waive the notice requirement under this Section.
    (c) Notwithstanding the notice requirement in subsection
(b), if a private professional guardian is serving as a
limited or plenary guardian of a person with a disability and
intends to name the Office of State Guardian or public
guardian as successor, notice shall be provided to the court
and the Office of State Guardian or a public guardian not less
than 60 days before the hearing for a successor to a limited or
plenary guardian. If the assets of the person with a
disability at the time of the appointment of the limited or
plenary guardian do not exceed the estimated amount necessary
for funding of the needs of the person with a disability for a
period of 60 days, this subsection does not apply. This
subsection does not apply to temporary guardians or when
guardianship services are paid for by a hospital licensed
under the Hospital Licensing Act or the University of Illinois
Hospital Act.
(Source: P.A. 103-740, eff. 1-1-25; 104-417, eff. 8-15-25.)
 
    (755 ILCS 5/11a-26 new)
    Sec. 11a-26. Private professional guardian.
    (a) As used in this Act, "private professional guardian"
means:
        (1) a person who receives compensation for services as
    a guardian to 5 or more persons with disabilities who are
    not related to the guardian by blood or marriage; or
        (2) a not-for-profit corporation qualified to act as
    guardian under Section 11a-5, including that corporation's
    officers, directors, employees, and agents.
    "Private professional guardian" does not include a
government agency, the Office of State Guardian, a public
guardian, a corporation qualified to accept and execute trusts
in this State, or a financial institution as defined by
Section 2 of the Illinois Banking Act.
    (b) A petitioner who nominates a private professional
guardian to be appointed as temporary, limited, or plenary
guardian for a person with a disability shall (i) attach an
affidavit to the petition for guardianship stating the
petitioner's efforts to contact the respondent's nearest
relatives as defined in subsection (e) of Section 11a-8, agent
under power of attorney, or other fiduciaries regarding the
respondent's need for a guardian, if known or reasonably
ascertainable, and (ii) provide notice of the petition for
guardianship to the public guardian. This subsection does not
apply if a family member of the respondent nominates a private
professional guardian.
    (c) A private professional guardian may be appointed as
guardian if, in addition to meeting the requirements of
subsection (a) or (b) of Section 11a-5, that guardian complies
with the following requirements:
        (1)(i) The private professional guardian will
    personally meet with and assess the respondent before or
    as soon as feasible after the appointment; (ii) evaluate
    what is the least restrictive form of guardianship that is
    appropriate; and (iii) evaluate options regarding the
    respondent's living arrangements including
    community-based, least restrictive living settings that
    incorporate the respondent's values, preferences, and
    known wishes.
        (2) The president, director, or other corporate
    officer of a not-for-profit corporation qualified to act
    as guardian in accordance with subsection (b) of Section
    11a-5 shall be named in the order appointing that private
    professional guardian as guardian of a person with a
    disability.
        (3) A private professional guardian may not:
            (i) have any direct or indirect beneficial
        interest, financial or otherwise, in entities or
        corporations that transact business with the estate or
        receive benefits, including referral fees, from
        persons, entities, or corporations that transact
        business with the estate or on behalf of the person
        under its guardianship, excluding any fixed salary
        received from its employer;
            (ii) own, acquire, or possess any pecuniary
        interest adverse to the persons or estates under its
        guardianship; or
            (iii) on behalf of a person with a disability
        under its guardianship, directly or indirectly
        purchase, rent, lease, or sell any property or service
        from or to any business entity in which the private
        professional guardian, a spouse, or an immediate
        family or household member is an owner, officer,
        partner, director, shareholder, or retains a financial
        interest.
        (4) Within 2 years of the effective date of the
    amendatory Act of the 104th General Assembly, a person or
    the president, director, or chief executive officer of a
    not-for-profit corporation who serves as a private
    professional guardian shall be certified as a national
    master guardian or a national certified guardian by the
    Center for Guardianship Certification or its successor
    organization. Within 2 years of the effective date of the
    amendatory Act, employees of the private professional
    guardian who are responsible for exercising the guardian's
    powers and duties as guardian of a person with a
    disability shall be certified as national certified
    guardians by the Center for Guardianship Certification or
    its successor organization.
        (5) Use sound fiscal controls and policies in managing
    the estates under its guardianship and, for a private
    professional guardian that manages, in the aggregate, more
    than $1 million of assets as a guardian of persons with a
    disability, arrange for an independent audit by a
    qualified examiner of its financial records on an annual
    basis. This report shall be made available to any court
    presiding over any persons with disabilities for whom the
    private professional guardian serves as guardian.
        (6) File an annual sworn statement affirming continued
    compliance with paragraph (3) of subsection (c) of this
    Section.
        (7) Maintain a current fee schedule that sets forth
    information about its hourly rate, costs for its most
    common and anticipated services such as case management,
    social work, property management, and such other services
    as may be appropriate. The fee schedule shall be provided
    to the court before the appointment of the private
    professional guardian as guardian of a person with a
    disability.
        (8) Upon presentation of its initial inventory and
    with every annual account thereafter, file a budget with
    the court that outlines the annual anticipated estate
    expenses that also includes a statement estimating the
    length of time the estate of the person with a disability
    can afford the services of the private professional
    guardian before the estate is depleted.
        The private professional guardian shall promptly
    notify the court at such time that it estimates the estate
    of the person with a disability can no longer afford the
    services of the private professional guardian or, if the
    sale of respondent's residence would be required for the
    continued services of a private professional guardian,
    within 36 months or less. Upon providing the notification,
    the private professional guardian shall also present a
    transition plan for the guardianship of the person with a
    disability.
    (d) Upon appointment and annually thereafter, a private
professional guardian acting as temporary, limited, or plenary
guardian of a person with a disability shall file an affidavit
with the court stating that all of its officers, directors,
and employees who are responsible for exercising the
guardian's powers and duties as guardian of a person with a
disability have, within 5 years of the affidavit filing date,
undergone an Illinois State Police background check. This
background check shall include a State criminal history, a
national criminal history, and the Child Abuse and Neglect
Tracking System and be found to be in compliance with
paragraph (5) of subsection (a) of Section 11a-5. The private
professional guardian shall pay any fees and costs associated
with the background checks.
    (e) In addition to taking into consideration the
requirements set forth in this Section and in Section 11a-12,
the court may appoint a private professional guardian as
guardian for a person with a disability only upon a finding
that the appointment is in the best interests of the person
with a disability, taking into consideration the respondent's
immediate need for timely medical decision-making including,
but not limited to, discharge planning and costs to the estate
in appointing a private professional guardian as compared to
other available and appropriate options.
 
    (755 ILCS 5/23-2)  (from Ch. 110 1/2, par. 23-2)
    Sec. 23-2. Removal.
    (a) On petition of any interested person or on the court's
own motion, the court may remove a representative if:
        (1) the representative is acting under letters secured
    by false pretenses;
        (2) the representative is adjudged a person subject to
    involuntary admission under the Mental Health and
    Developmental Disabilities Code or is adjudged a person
    with a disability;
        (3) the representative is convicted of a felony;
        (4) the representative wastes or mismanages the
    estate;
        (5) the representative conducts himself or herself in
    such a manner as to endanger any co-representative or the
    surety on the representative's bond;
        (6) the representative fails to give sufficient bond
    or security, counter security or a new bond, after being
    ordered by the court to do so;
        (7) the representative fails to file an inventory or
    accounting after being ordered by the court to do so;
        (8) the representative conceals himself or herself so
    that process cannot be served upon the representative or
    notice cannot be given to the representative;
        (9) the representative becomes incapable of or
    unsuitable for the discharge of the representative's
    duties; or
        (10) the representative is a private professional
    guardian that fails to comply with the requirements of
    Section 11a-26; or
        (11) (10) there is other good cause.
    (b) If the representative becomes a nonresident of the
United States, the court may remove the representative as such
representative.
(Source: P.A. 99-143, eff. 7-27-15.)
Effective Date: 1/1/2027