Public Act 104-0165
 
HB0871 EnrolledLRB104 04769 SPS 14796 b

    AN ACT concerning State government.
 
    Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
represented in the General Assembly:
 
    Section 5. The Children and Family Services Act is amended
by changing Section 5 as follows:
 
    (20 ILCS 505/5)
    (Text of Section before amendment by P.A. 103-1061)
    Sec. 5. Direct child welfare services; Department of
Children and Family Services. To provide direct child welfare
services when not available through other public or private
child care or program facilities.
    (a) For purposes of this Section:
        (1) "Children" means persons found within the State
    who are under the age of 18 years. The term also includes
    persons under age 21 who:
            (A) were committed to the Department pursuant to
        the Juvenile Court Act or the Juvenile Court Act of
        1987 and who continue under the jurisdiction of the
        court; or
            (B) were accepted for care, service and training
        by the Department prior to the age of 18 and whose best
        interest in the discretion of the Department would be
        served by continuing that care, service and training
        because of severe emotional disturbances, physical
        disability, social adjustment or any combination
        thereof, or because of the need to complete an
        educational or vocational training program.
        (2) "Homeless youth" means persons found within the
    State who are under the age of 19, are not in a safe and
    stable living situation and cannot be reunited with their
    families.
        (3) "Child welfare services" means public social
    services which are directed toward the accomplishment of
    the following purposes:
            (A) protecting and promoting the health, safety
        and welfare of children, including homeless,
        dependent, or neglected children;
            (B) remedying, or assisting in the solution of
        problems which may result in, the neglect, abuse,
        exploitation, or delinquency of children;
            (C) preventing the unnecessary separation of
        children from their families by identifying family
        problems, assisting families in resolving their
        problems, and preventing the breakup of the family
        where the prevention of child removal is desirable and
        possible when the child can be cared for at home
        without endangering the child's health and safety;
            (D) restoring to their families children who have
        been removed, by the provision of services to the
        child and the families when the child can be cared for
        at home without endangering the child's health and
        safety;
            (E) placing children in suitable permanent family
        arrangements, through guardianship or adoption, in
        cases where restoration to the birth family is not
        safe, possible, or appropriate;
            (F) at the time of placement, conducting
        concurrent planning, as described in subsection (l-1)
        of this Section, so that permanency may occur at the
        earliest opportunity. Consideration should be given so
        that if reunification fails or is delayed, the
        placement made is the best available placement to
        provide permanency for the child;
            (G) (blank);
            (H) (blank); and
            (I) placing and maintaining children in facilities
        that provide separate living quarters for children
        under the age of 18 and for children 18 years of age
        and older, unless a child 18 years of age is in the
        last year of high school education or vocational
        training, in an approved individual or group treatment
        program, in a licensed shelter facility, or secure
        child care facility. The Department is not required to
        place or maintain children:
                (i) who are in a foster home, or
                (ii) who are persons with a developmental
            disability, as defined in the Mental Health and
            Developmental Disabilities Code, or
                (iii) who are female children who are
            pregnant, pregnant and parenting, or parenting, or
                (iv) who are siblings, in facilities that
            provide separate living quarters for children 18
            years of age and older and for children under 18
            years of age.
    (b) (Blank).
    (b-5) The Department shall adopt rules to establish a
process for all licensed residential providers in Illinois to
submit data as required by the Department if they contract or
receive reimbursement for children's mental health, substance
use, and developmental disability services from the Department
of Human Services, the Department of Juvenile Justice, or the
Department of Healthcare and Family Services. The requested
data must include, but is not limited to, capacity, staffing,
and occupancy data for the purpose of establishing State need
and placement availability.
    All information collected, shared, or stored pursuant to
this subsection shall be handled in accordance with all State
and federal privacy laws and accompanying regulations and
rules, including without limitation the federal Health
Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 (Public
Law 104-191) and the Mental Health and Developmental
Disabilities Confidentiality Act.
    (c) The Department shall establish and maintain
tax-supported child welfare services and extend and seek to
improve voluntary services throughout the State, to the end
that services and care shall be available on an equal basis
throughout the State to children requiring such services.
    (d) The Director may authorize advance disbursements for
any new program initiative to any agency contracting with the
Department. As a prerequisite for an advance disbursement, the
contractor must post a surety bond in the amount of the advance
disbursement and have a purchase of service contract approved
by the Department. The Department may pay up to 2 months
operational expenses in advance. The amount of the advance
disbursement shall be prorated over the life of the contract
or the remaining months of the fiscal year, whichever is less,
and the installment amount shall then be deducted from future
bills. Advance disbursement authorizations for new initiatives
shall not be made to any agency after that agency has operated
during 2 consecutive fiscal years. The requirements of this
Section concerning advance disbursements shall not apply with
respect to the following: payments to local public agencies
for child day care services as authorized by Section 5a of this
Act; and youth service programs receiving grant funds under
Section 17a-4.
    (e) (Blank).
    (f) (Blank).
    (g) The Department shall establish rules and regulations
concerning its operation of programs designed to meet the
goals of child safety and protection, family preservation,
family reunification, and adoption, including, but not limited
to:
        (1) adoption;
        (2) foster care;
        (3) family counseling;
        (4) protective services;
        (5) (blank);
        (6) homemaker service;
        (7) return of runaway children;
        (8) (blank);
        (9) placement under Section 5-7 of the Juvenile Court
    Act or Section 2-27, 3-28, 4-25, or 5-740 of the Juvenile
    Court Act of 1987 in accordance with the federal Adoption
    Assistance and Child Welfare Act of 1980; and
        (10) interstate services.
    Rules and regulations established by the Department shall
include provisions for training Department staff and the staff
of Department grantees, through contracts with other agencies
or resources, in screening techniques to identify substance
use disorders, as defined in the Substance Use Disorder Act,
approved by the Department of Human Services, as a successor
to the Department of Alcoholism and Substance Abuse, for the
purpose of identifying children and adults who should be
referred for an assessment at an organization appropriately
licensed by the Department of Human Services for substance use
disorder treatment.
    (h) If the Department finds that there is no appropriate
program or facility within or available to the Department for
a youth in care and that no licensed private facility has an
adequate and appropriate program or none agrees to accept the
youth in care, the Department shall create an appropriate
individualized, program-oriented plan for such youth in care.
The plan may be developed within the Department or through
purchase of services by the Department to the extent that it is
within its statutory authority to do.
    (i) Service programs shall be available throughout the
State and shall include but not be limited to the following
services:
        (1) case management;
        (2) homemakers;
        (3) counseling;
        (4) parent education;
        (5) day care; and
        (6) emergency assistance and advocacy.
    In addition, the following services may be made available
to assess and meet the needs of children and families:
        (1) comprehensive family-based services;
        (2) assessments;
        (3) respite care; and
        (4) in-home health services.
    The Department shall provide transportation for any of the
services it makes available to children or families or for
which it refers children or families.
    (j) The Department may provide categories of financial
assistance and education assistance grants, and shall
establish rules and regulations concerning the assistance and
grants, to persons who adopt children with physical or mental
disabilities, children who are older, or other hard-to-place
children who (i) immediately prior to their adoption were
youth in care or (ii) were determined eligible for financial
assistance with respect to a prior adoption and who become
available for adoption because the prior adoption has been
dissolved and the parental rights of the adoptive parents have
been terminated or because the child's adoptive parents have
died. The Department may continue to provide financial
assistance and education assistance grants for a child who was
determined eligible for financial assistance under this
subsection (j) in the interim period beginning when the
child's adoptive parents died and ending with the finalization
of the new adoption of the child by another adoptive parent or
parents. The Department may also provide categories of
financial assistance and education assistance grants, and
shall establish rules and regulations for the assistance and
grants, to persons appointed guardian of the person under
Section 5-7 of the Juvenile Court Act or Section 2-27, 3-28,
4-25, or 5-740 of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987 for children
who were youth in care for 12 months immediately prior to the
appointment of the guardian.
    The amount of assistance may vary, depending upon the
needs of the child and the adoptive parents, as set forth in
the annual assistance agreement. Special purpose grants are
allowed where the child requires special service but such
costs may not exceed the amounts which similar services would
cost the Department if it were to provide or secure them as
guardian of the child.
    Any financial assistance provided under this subsection is
inalienable by assignment, sale, execution, attachment,
garnishment, or any other remedy for recovery or collection of
a judgment or debt.
    (j-5) The Department shall not deny or delay the placement
of a child for adoption if an approved family is available
either outside of the Department region handling the case, or
outside of the State of Illinois.
    (k) The Department shall accept for care and training any
child who has been adjudicated neglected or abused, or
dependent committed to it pursuant to the Juvenile Court Act
or the Juvenile Court Act of 1987.
    (l) The Department shall offer family preservation
services, as defined in Section 8.2 of the Abused and
Neglected Child Reporting Act, to help families, including
adoptive and extended families. Family preservation services
shall be offered (i) to prevent the placement of children in
substitute care when the children can be cared for at home or
in the custody of the person responsible for the children's
welfare, (ii) to reunite children with their families, or
(iii) to maintain an adoptive placement. Family preservation
services shall only be offered when doing so will not endanger
the children's health or safety. With respect to children who
are in substitute care pursuant to the Juvenile Court Act of
1987, family preservation services shall not be offered if a
goal other than those of subdivisions (A), (B), or (B-1) of
subsection (2) of Section 2-28 of that Act has been set, except
that reunification services may be offered as provided in
paragraph (F) of subsection (2) of Section 2-28 of that Act.
Nothing in this paragraph shall be construed to create a
private right of action or claim on the part of any individual
or child welfare agency, except that when a child is the
subject of an action under Article II of the Juvenile Court Act
of 1987 and the child's service plan calls for services to
facilitate achievement of the permanency goal, the court
hearing the action under Article II of the Juvenile Court Act
of 1987 may order the Department to provide the services set
out in the plan, if those services are not provided with
reasonable promptness and if those services are available.
    The Department shall notify the child and the child's
family of the Department's responsibility to offer and provide
family preservation services as identified in the service
plan. The child and the child's family shall be eligible for
services as soon as the report is determined to be
"indicated". The Department may offer services to any child or
family with respect to whom a report of suspected child abuse
or neglect has been filed, prior to concluding its
investigation under Section 7.12 of the Abused and Neglected
Child Reporting Act. However, the child's or family's
willingness to accept services shall not be considered in the
investigation. The Department may also provide services to any
child or family who is the subject of any report of suspected
child abuse or neglect or may refer such child or family to
services available from other agencies in the community, even
if the report is determined to be unfounded, if the conditions
in the child's or family's home are reasonably likely to
subject the child or family to future reports of suspected
child abuse or neglect. Acceptance of such services shall be
voluntary. The Department may also provide services to any
child or family after completion of a family assessment, as an
alternative to an investigation, as provided under the
"differential response program" provided for in subsection
(a-5) of Section 7.4 of the Abused and Neglected Child
Reporting Act.
    The Department may, at its discretion except for those
children also adjudicated neglected or dependent, accept for
care and training any child who has been adjudicated addicted,
as a truant minor in need of supervision or as a minor
requiring authoritative intervention, under the Juvenile Court
Act or the Juvenile Court Act of 1987, but no such child shall
be committed to the Department by any court without the
approval of the Department. On and after January 1, 2015 (the
effective date of Public Act 98-803) and before January 1,
2017, a minor charged with a criminal offense under the
Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012 or
adjudicated delinquent shall not be placed in the custody of
or committed to the Department by any court, except (i) a minor
less than 16 years of age committed to the Department under
Section 5-710 of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987, (ii) a minor
for whom an independent basis of abuse, neglect, or dependency
exists, which must be defined by departmental rule, or (iii) a
minor for whom the court has granted a supplemental petition
to reinstate wardship pursuant to subsection (2) of Section
2-33 of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987. On and after January 1,
2017, a minor charged with a criminal offense under the
Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012 or
adjudicated delinquent shall not be placed in the custody of
or committed to the Department by any court, except (i) a minor
less than 15 years of age committed to the Department under
Section 5-710 of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987, (ii) a minor
for whom an independent basis of abuse, neglect, or dependency
exists, which must be defined by departmental rule, or (iii) a
minor for whom the court has granted a supplemental petition
to reinstate wardship pursuant to subsection (2) of Section
2-33 of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987. An independent basis
exists when the allegations or adjudication of abuse, neglect,
or dependency do not arise from the same facts, incident, or
circumstances which give rise to a charge or adjudication of
delinquency. The Department shall assign a caseworker to
attend any hearing involving a youth in the care and custody of
the Department who is placed on aftercare release, including
hearings involving sanctions for violation of aftercare
release conditions and aftercare release revocation hearings.
    As soon as is possible after August 7, 2009 (the effective
date of Public Act 96-134), the Department shall develop and
implement a special program of family preservation services to
support intact, foster, and adoptive families who are
experiencing extreme hardships due to the difficulty and
stress of caring for a child who has been diagnosed with a
pervasive developmental disorder if the Department determines
that those services are necessary to ensure the health and
safety of the child. The Department may offer services to any
family whether or not a report has been filed under the Abused
and Neglected Child Reporting Act. The Department may refer
the child or family to services available from other agencies
in the community if the conditions in the child's or family's
home are reasonably likely to subject the child or family to
future reports of suspected child abuse or neglect. Acceptance
of these services shall be voluntary. The Department shall
develop and implement a public information campaign to alert
health and social service providers and the general public
about these special family preservation services. The nature
and scope of the services offered and the number of families
served under the special program implemented under this
paragraph shall be determined by the level of funding that the
Department annually allocates for this purpose. The term
"pervasive developmental disorder" under this paragraph means
a neurological condition, including, but not limited to,
Asperger's Syndrome and autism, as defined in the most recent
edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental
Disorders of the American Psychiatric Association.
    (l-1) The General Assembly recognizes that the best
interests of the child require that the child be placed in the
most permanent living arrangement as soon as is practically
possible. To achieve this goal, the General Assembly directs
the Department of Children and Family Services to conduct
concurrent planning so that permanency may occur at the
earliest opportunity. Permanent living arrangements may
include prevention of placement of a child outside the home of
the family when the child can be cared for at home without
endangering the child's health or safety; reunification with
the family, when safe and appropriate, if temporary placement
is necessary; or movement of the child toward the most
permanent living arrangement and permanent legal status.
    When determining reasonable efforts to be made with
respect to a child, as described in this subsection, and in
making such reasonable efforts, the child's health and safety
shall be the paramount concern.
    When a child is placed in foster care, the Department
shall ensure and document that reasonable efforts were made to
prevent or eliminate the need to remove the child from the
child's home. The Department must make reasonable efforts to
reunify the family when temporary placement of the child
occurs unless otherwise required, pursuant to the Juvenile
Court Act of 1987. At any time after the dispositional hearing
where the Department believes that further reunification
services would be ineffective, it may request a finding from
the court that reasonable efforts are no longer appropriate.
The Department is not required to provide further
reunification services after such a finding.
    A decision to place a child in substitute care shall be
made with considerations of the child's health, safety, and
best interests. At the time of placement, consideration should
also be given so that if reunification fails or is delayed, the
placement made is the best available placement to provide
permanency for the child.
    The Department shall adopt rules addressing concurrent
planning for reunification and permanency. The Department
shall consider the following factors when determining
appropriateness of concurrent planning:
        (1) the likelihood of prompt reunification;
        (2) the past history of the family;
        (3) the barriers to reunification being addressed by
    the family;
        (4) the level of cooperation of the family;
        (5) the foster parents' willingness to work with the
    family to reunite;
        (6) the willingness and ability of the foster family
    to provide an adoptive home or long-term placement;
        (7) the age of the child;
        (8) placement of siblings.
    (m) The Department may assume temporary custody of any
child if:
        (1) it has received a written consent to such
    temporary custody signed by the parents of the child or by
    the parent having custody of the child if the parents are
    not living together or by the guardian or custodian of the
    child if the child is not in the custody of either parent,
    or
        (2) the child is found in the State and neither a
    parent, guardian nor custodian of the child can be
    located.
If the child is found in the child's residence without a
parent, guardian, custodian, or responsible caretaker, the
Department may, instead of removing the child and assuming
temporary custody, place an authorized representative of the
Department in that residence until such time as a parent,
guardian, or custodian enters the home and expresses a
willingness and apparent ability to ensure the child's health
and safety and resume permanent charge of the child, or until a
relative enters the home and is willing and able to ensure the
child's health and safety and assume charge of the child until
a parent, guardian, or custodian enters the home and expresses
such willingness and ability to ensure the child's safety and
resume permanent charge. After a caretaker has remained in the
home for a period not to exceed 12 hours, the Department must
follow those procedures outlined in Section 2-9, 3-11, 4-8, or
5-415 of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987.
    The Department shall have the authority, responsibilities
and duties that a legal custodian of the child would have
pursuant to subsection (9) of Section 1-3 of the Juvenile
Court Act of 1987. Whenever a child is taken into temporary
custody pursuant to an investigation under the Abused and
Neglected Child Reporting Act, or pursuant to a referral and
acceptance under the Juvenile Court Act of 1987 of a minor in
limited custody, the Department, during the period of
temporary custody and before the child is brought before a
judicial officer as required by Section 2-9, 3-11, 4-8, or
5-415 of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987, shall have the
authority, responsibilities and duties that a legal custodian
of the child would have under subsection (9) of Section 1-3 of
the Juvenile Court Act of 1987.
    The Department shall ensure that any child taken into
custody is scheduled for an appointment for a medical
examination.
    A parent, guardian, or custodian of a child in the
temporary custody of the Department who would have custody of
the child if the child were not in the temporary custody of the
Department may deliver to the Department a signed request that
the Department surrender the temporary custody of the child.
The Department may retain temporary custody of the child for
10 days after the receipt of the request, during which period
the Department may cause to be filed a petition pursuant to the
Juvenile Court Act of 1987. If a petition is so filed, the
Department shall retain temporary custody of the child until
the court orders otherwise. If a petition is not filed within
the 10-day period, the child shall be surrendered to the
custody of the requesting parent, guardian, or custodian not
later than the expiration of the 10-day period, at which time
the authority and duties of the Department with respect to the
temporary custody of the child shall terminate.
    (m-1) The Department may place children under 18 years of
age in a secure child care facility licensed by the Department
that cares for children who are in need of secure living
arrangements for their health, safety, and well-being after a
determination is made by the facility director and the
Director or the Director's designate prior to admission to the
facility subject to Section 2-27.1 of the Juvenile Court Act
of 1987. This subsection (m-1) does not apply to a child who is
subject to placement in a correctional facility operated
pursuant to Section 3-15-2 of the Unified Code of Corrections,
unless the child is a youth in care who was placed in the care
of the Department before being subject to placement in a
correctional facility and a court of competent jurisdiction
has ordered placement of the child in a secure care facility.
    (n) The Department may place children under 18 years of
age in licensed child care facilities when in the opinion of
the Department, appropriate services aimed at family
preservation have been unsuccessful and cannot ensure the
child's health and safety or are unavailable and such
placement would be for their best interest. Payment for board,
clothing, care, training and supervision of any child placed
in a licensed child care facility may be made by the
Department, by the parents or guardians of the estates of
those children, or by both the Department and the parents or
guardians, except that no payments shall be made by the
Department for any child placed in a licensed child care
facility for board, clothing, care, training, and supervision
of such a child that exceed the average per capita cost of
maintaining and of caring for a child in institutions for
dependent or neglected children operated by the Department.
However, such restriction on payments does not apply in cases
where children require specialized care and treatment for
problems of severe emotional disturbance, physical disability,
social adjustment, or any combination thereof and suitable
facilities for the placement of such children are not
available at payment rates within the limitations set forth in
this Section. All reimbursements for services delivered shall
be absolutely inalienable by assignment, sale, attachment, or
garnishment or otherwise.
    (n-1) The Department shall provide or authorize child
welfare services, aimed at assisting minors to achieve
sustainable self-sufficiency as independent adults, for any
minor eligible for the reinstatement of wardship pursuant to
subsection (2) of Section 2-33 of the Juvenile Court Act of
1987, whether or not such reinstatement is sought or allowed,
provided that the minor consents to such services and has not
yet attained the age of 21. The Department shall have
responsibility for the development and delivery of services
under this Section. An eligible youth may access services
under this Section through the Department of Children and
Family Services or by referral from the Department of Human
Services. Youth participating in services under this Section
shall cooperate with the assigned case manager in developing
an agreement identifying the services to be provided and how
the youth will increase skills to achieve self-sufficiency. A
homeless shelter is not considered appropriate housing for any
youth receiving child welfare services under this Section. The
Department shall continue child welfare services under this
Section to any eligible minor until the minor becomes 21 years
of age, no longer consents to participate, or achieves
self-sufficiency as identified in the minor's service plan.
The Department of Children and Family Services shall create
clear, readable notice of the rights of former foster youth to
child welfare services under this Section and how such
services may be obtained. The Department of Children and
Family Services and the Department of Human Services shall
disseminate this information statewide. The Department shall
adopt regulations describing services intended to assist
minors in achieving sustainable self-sufficiency as
independent adults.
    (o) The Department shall establish an administrative
review and appeal process for children and families who
request or receive child welfare services from the Department.
Youth in care who are placed by private child welfare
agencies, and foster families with whom those youth are
placed, shall be afforded the same procedural and appeal
rights as children and families in the case of placement by the
Department, including the right to an initial review of a
private agency decision by that agency. The Department shall
ensure that any private child welfare agency, which accepts
youth in care for placement, affords those rights to children
and foster families. The Department shall accept for
administrative review and an appeal hearing a complaint made
by (i) a child or foster family concerning a decision
following an initial review by a private child welfare agency
or (ii) a prospective adoptive parent who alleges a violation
of subsection (j-5) of this Section. An appeal of a decision
concerning a change in the placement of a child shall be
conducted in an expedited manner. A court determination that a
current foster home placement is necessary and appropriate
under Section 2-28 of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987 does not
constitute a judicial determination on the merits of an
administrative appeal, filed by a former foster parent,
involving a change of placement decision.
    (p) (Blank).
    (q) The Department may receive and use, in their entirety,
for the benefit of children any gift, donation, or bequest of
money or other property which is received on behalf of such
children, or any financial benefits to which such children are
or may become entitled while under the jurisdiction or care of
the Department, except that the benefits described in Section
5.46 must be used and conserved consistent with the provisions
under Section 5.46.
    The Department shall set up and administer no-cost,
interest-bearing accounts in appropriate financial
institutions for children for whom the Department is legally
responsible and who have been determined eligible for
Veterans' Benefits, Social Security benefits, assistance
allotments from the armed forces, court ordered payments,
parental voluntary payments, Supplemental Security Income,
Railroad Retirement payments, Black Lung benefits, or other
miscellaneous payments. Interest earned by each account shall
be credited to the account, unless disbursed in accordance
with this subsection.
    In disbursing funds from children's accounts, the
Department shall:
        (1) Establish standards in accordance with State and
    federal laws for disbursing money from children's
    accounts. In all circumstances, the Department's
    Guardianship Administrator or the Guardianship
    Administrator's designee must approve disbursements from
    children's accounts. The Department shall be responsible
    for keeping complete records of all disbursements for each
    account for any purpose.
        (2) Calculate on a monthly basis the amounts paid from
    State funds for the child's board and care, medical care
    not covered under Medicaid, and social services; and
    utilize funds from the child's account, as covered by
    regulation, to reimburse those costs. Monthly,
    disbursements from all children's accounts, up to 1/12 of
    $13,000,000, shall be deposited by the Department into the
    General Revenue Fund and the balance over 1/12 of
    $13,000,000 into the DCFS Children's Services Fund.
        (3) Maintain any balance remaining after reimbursing
    for the child's costs of care, as specified in item (2).
    The balance shall accumulate in accordance with relevant
    State and federal laws and shall be disbursed to the child
    or the child's guardian or to the issuing agency.
    (r) The Department shall promulgate regulations
encouraging all adoption agencies to voluntarily forward to
the Department or its agent names and addresses of all persons
who have applied for and have been approved for adoption of a
hard-to-place child or child with a disability and the names
of such children who have not been placed for adoption. A list
of such names and addresses shall be maintained by the
Department or its agent, and coded lists which maintain the
confidentiality of the person seeking to adopt the child and
of the child shall be made available, without charge, to every
adoption agency in the State to assist the agencies in placing
such children for adoption. The Department may delegate to an
agent its duty to maintain and make available such lists. The
Department shall ensure that such agent maintains the
confidentiality of the person seeking to adopt the child and
of the child.
    (s) The Department of Children and Family Services may
establish and implement a program to reimburse Department and
private child welfare agency foster parents licensed by the
Department of Children and Family Services for damages
sustained by the foster parents as a result of the malicious or
negligent acts of foster children, as well as providing third
party coverage for such foster parents with regard to actions
of foster children to other individuals. Such coverage will be
secondary to the foster parent liability insurance policy, if
applicable. The program shall be funded through appropriations
from the General Revenue Fund, specifically designated for
such purposes.
    (t) The Department shall perform home studies and
investigations and shall exercise supervision over visitation
as ordered by a court pursuant to the Illinois Marriage and
Dissolution of Marriage Act or the Adoption Act only if:
        (1) an order entered by an Illinois court specifically
    directs the Department to perform such services; and
        (2) the court has ordered one or both of the parties to
    the proceeding to reimburse the Department for its
    reasonable costs for providing such services in accordance
    with Department rules, or has determined that neither
    party is financially able to pay.
    The Department shall provide written notification to the
court of the specific arrangements for supervised visitation
and projected monthly costs within 60 days of the court order.
The Department shall send to the court information related to
the costs incurred except in cases where the court has
determined the parties are financially unable to pay. The
court may order additional periodic reports as appropriate.
    (u) In addition to other information that must be
provided, whenever the Department places a child with a
prospective adoptive parent or parents, in a licensed foster
home, group home, or child care institution, or in a relative
home, the Department shall provide to the prospective adoptive
parent or parents or other caretaker:
        (1) available detailed information concerning the
    child's educational and health history, copies of
    immunization records (including insurance and medical card
    information), a history of the child's previous
    placements, if any, and reasons for placement changes
    excluding any information that identifies or reveals the
    location of any previous caretaker;
        (2) a copy of the child's portion of the client
    service plan, including any visitation arrangement, and
    all amendments or revisions to it as related to the child;
    and
        (3) information containing details of the child's
    individualized educational plan when the child is
    receiving special education services.
    The caretaker shall be informed of any known social or
behavioral information (including, but not limited to,
criminal background, fire setting, perpetuation of sexual
abuse, destructive behavior, and substance abuse) necessary to
care for and safeguard the children to be placed or currently
in the home. The Department may prepare a written summary of
the information required by this paragraph, which may be
provided to the foster or prospective adoptive parent in
advance of a placement. The foster or prospective adoptive
parent may review the supporting documents in the child's file
in the presence of casework staff. In the case of an emergency
placement, casework staff shall at least provide known
information verbally, if necessary, and must subsequently
provide the information in writing as required by this
subsection.
    The information described in this subsection shall be
provided in writing. In the case of emergency placements when
time does not allow prior review, preparation, and collection
of written information, the Department shall provide such
information as it becomes available. Within 10 business days
after placement, the Department shall obtain from the
prospective adoptive parent or parents or other caretaker a
signed verification of receipt of the information provided.
Within 10 business days after placement, the Department shall
provide to the child's guardian ad litem a copy of the
information provided to the prospective adoptive parent or
parents or other caretaker. The information provided to the
prospective adoptive parent or parents or other caretaker
shall be reviewed and approved regarding accuracy at the
supervisory level.
    (u-5) Effective July 1, 1995, only foster care placements
licensed as foster family homes pursuant to the Child Care Act
of 1969 shall be eligible to receive foster care payments from
the Department. Relative caregivers who, as of July 1, 1995,
were approved pursuant to approved relative placement rules
previously promulgated by the Department at 89 Ill. Adm. Code
335 and had submitted an application for licensure as a foster
family home may continue to receive foster care payments only
until the Department determines that they may be licensed as a
foster family home or that their application for licensure is
denied or until September 30, 1995, whichever occurs first.
    (v) The Department shall access criminal history record
information as defined in the Illinois Uniform Conviction
Information Act and information maintained in the adjudicatory
and dispositional record system as defined in Section 2605-355
of the Illinois State Police Law if the Department determines
the information is necessary to perform its duties under the
Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act, the Child Care Act
of 1969, and the Children and Family Services Act. The
Department shall provide for interactive computerized
communication and processing equipment that permits direct
on-line communication with the Illinois State Police's central
criminal history data repository. The Department shall comply
with all certification requirements and provide certified
operators who have been trained by personnel from the Illinois
State Police. In addition, one Office of the Inspector General
investigator shall have training in the use of the criminal
history information access system and have access to the
terminal. The Department of Children and Family Services and
its employees shall abide by rules and regulations established
by the Illinois State Police relating to the access and
dissemination of this information.
    (v-1) Prior to final approval for placement of a child,
the Department shall conduct a criminal records background
check of the prospective foster or adoptive parent, including
fingerprint-based checks of national crime information
databases. Final approval for placement shall not be granted
if the record check reveals a felony conviction for child
abuse or neglect, for spousal abuse, for a crime against
children, or for a crime involving violence, including rape,
sexual assault, or homicide, but not including other physical
assault or battery, or if there is a felony conviction for
physical assault, battery, or a drug-related offense committed
within the past 5 years.
    (v-2) Prior to final approval for placement of a child,
the Department shall check its child abuse and neglect
registry for information concerning prospective foster and
adoptive parents, and any adult living in the home. If any
prospective foster or adoptive parent or other adult living in
the home has resided in another state in the preceding 5 years,
the Department shall request a check of that other state's
child abuse and neglect registry.
    (w) Within 120 days of August 20, 1995 (the effective date
of Public Act 89-392), the Department shall prepare and submit
to the Governor and the General Assembly, a written plan for
the development of in-state licensed secure child care
facilities that care for children who are in need of secure
living arrangements for their health, safety, and well-being.
For purposes of this subsection, secure care facility shall
mean a facility that is designed and operated to ensure that
all entrances and exits from the facility, a building or a
distinct part of the building, are under the exclusive control
of the staff of the facility, whether or not the child has the
freedom of movement within the perimeter of the facility,
building, or distinct part of the building. The plan shall
include descriptions of the types of facilities that are
needed in Illinois; the cost of developing these secure care
facilities; the estimated number of placements; the potential
cost savings resulting from the movement of children currently
out-of-state who are projected to be returned to Illinois; the
necessary geographic distribution of these facilities in
Illinois; and a proposed timetable for development of such
facilities.
    (x) The Department shall conduct annual credit history
checks to determine the financial history of children placed
under its guardianship pursuant to the Juvenile Court Act of
1987. The Department shall conduct such credit checks starting
when a youth in care turns 12 years old and each year
thereafter for the duration of the guardianship as terminated
pursuant to the Juvenile Court Act of 1987. The Department
shall determine if financial exploitation of the child's
personal information has occurred. If financial exploitation
appears to have taken place or is presently ongoing, the
Department shall notify the proper law enforcement agency, the
proper State's Attorney, or the Attorney General.
    (y) Beginning on July 22, 2010 (the effective date of
Public Act 96-1189), a child with a disability who receives
residential and educational services from the Department shall
be eligible to receive transition services in accordance with
Article 14 of the School Code from the age of 14.5 through age
21, inclusive, notwithstanding the child's residential
services arrangement. For purposes of this subsection, "child
with a disability" means a child with a disability as defined
by the federal Individuals with Disabilities Education
Improvement Act of 2004.
    (z) The Department shall access criminal history record
information as defined as "background information" in this
subsection and criminal history record information as defined
in the Illinois Uniform Conviction Information Act for each
Department employee or Department applicant. Each Department
employee or Department applicant shall submit the employee's
or applicant's fingerprints to the Illinois State Police in
the form and manner prescribed by the Illinois State Police.
These fingerprints shall be checked against the fingerprint
records now and hereafter filed in the Illinois State Police
and the Federal Bureau of Investigation criminal history
records databases. The Illinois State Police shall charge a
fee for conducting the criminal history record check, which
shall be deposited into the State Police Services Fund and
shall not exceed the actual cost of the record check. The
Illinois State Police shall furnish, pursuant to positive
identification, all Illinois conviction information to the
Department of Children and Family Services.
    For purposes of this subsection:
    "Background information" means all of the following:
        (i) Upon the request of the Department of Children and
    Family Services, conviction information obtained from the
    Illinois State Police as a result of a fingerprint-based
    criminal history records check of the Illinois criminal
    history records database and the Federal Bureau of
    Investigation criminal history records database concerning
    a Department employee or Department applicant.
        (ii) Information obtained by the Department of
    Children and Family Services after performing a check of
    the Illinois State Police's Sex Offender Database, as
    authorized by Section 120 of the Sex Offender Community
    Notification Law, concerning a Department employee or
    Department applicant.
        (iii) Information obtained by the Department of
    Children and Family Services after performing a check of
    the Child Abuse and Neglect Tracking System (CANTS)
    operated and maintained by the Department.
    "Department employee" means a full-time or temporary
employee coded or certified within the State of Illinois
Personnel System.
    "Department applicant" means an individual who has
conditional Department full-time or part-time work, a
contractor, an individual used to replace or supplement staff,
an academic intern, a volunteer in Department offices or on
Department contracts, a work-study student, an individual or
entity licensed by the Department, or an unlicensed service
provider who works as a condition of a contract or an agreement
and whose work may bring the unlicensed service provider into
contact with Department clients or client records.
(Source: P.A. 102-538, eff. 8-20-21; 102-558, eff. 8-20-21;
102-1014, eff. 5-27-22; 103-22, eff. 8-8-23; 103-50, eff.
1-1-24; 103-546, eff. 8-11-23; 103-605, eff. 7-1-24.)
 
    (Text of Section after amendment by P.A. 103-1061)
    Sec. 5. Direct child welfare services; Department of
Children and Family Services. To provide direct child welfare
services when not available through other public or private
child care or program facilities.
    (a) For purposes of this Section:
        (1) "Children" means persons found within the State
    who are under the age of 18 years. The term also includes
    persons under age 21 who:
            (A) were committed to the Department pursuant to
        the Juvenile Court Act or the Juvenile Court Act of
        1987 and who continue under the jurisdiction of the
        court; or
            (B) were accepted for care, service and training
        by the Department prior to the age of 18 and whose best
        interest in the discretion of the Department would be
        served by continuing that care, service and training
        because of severe emotional disturbances, physical
        disability, social adjustment or any combination
        thereof, or because of the need to complete an
        educational or vocational training program.
        (2) "Homeless youth" means persons found within the
    State who are under the age of 19, are not in a safe and
    stable living situation and cannot be reunited with their
    families.
        (3) "Child welfare services" means public social
    services which are directed toward the accomplishment of
    the following purposes:
            (A) protecting and promoting the health, safety
        and welfare of children, including homeless,
        dependent, or neglected children;
            (B) remedying, or assisting in the solution of
        problems which may result in, the neglect, abuse,
        exploitation, or delinquency of children;
            (C) preventing the unnecessary separation of
        children from their families by identifying family
        problems, assisting families in resolving their
        problems, and preventing the breakup of the family
        where the prevention of child removal is desirable and
        possible when the child can be cared for at home
        without endangering the child's health and safety;
            (D) restoring to their families children who have
        been removed, by the provision of services to the
        child and the families when the child can be cared for
        at home without endangering the child's health and
        safety;
            (E) placing children in suitable permanent family
        arrangements, through guardianship or adoption, in
        cases where restoration to the birth family is not
        safe, possible, or appropriate;
            (F) at the time of placement, conducting
        concurrent planning, as described in subsection (l-1)
        of this Section, so that permanency may occur at the
        earliest opportunity. Consideration should be given so
        that if reunification fails or is delayed, the
        placement made is the best available placement to
        provide permanency for the child;
            (G) (blank);
            (H) (blank); and
            (I) placing and maintaining children in facilities
        that provide separate living quarters for children
        under the age of 18 and for children 18 years of age
        and older, unless a child 18 years of age is in the
        last year of high school education or vocational
        training, in an approved individual or group treatment
        program, in a licensed shelter facility, or secure
        child care facility. The Department is not required to
        place or maintain children:
                (i) who are in a foster home, or
                (ii) who are persons with a developmental
            disability, as defined in the Mental Health and
            Developmental Disabilities Code, or
                (iii) who are female children who are
            pregnant, pregnant and parenting, or parenting, or
                (iv) who are siblings, in facilities that
            provide separate living quarters for children 18
            years of age and older and for children under 18
            years of age.
    (b) (Blank).
    (b-5) The Department shall adopt rules to establish a
process for all licensed residential providers in Illinois to
submit data as required by the Department if they contract or
receive reimbursement for children's mental health, substance
use, and developmental disability services from the Department
of Human Services, the Department of Juvenile Justice, or the
Department of Healthcare and Family Services. The requested
data must include, but is not limited to, capacity, staffing,
and occupancy data for the purpose of establishing State need
and placement availability.
    All information collected, shared, or stored pursuant to
this subsection shall be handled in accordance with all State
and federal privacy laws and accompanying regulations and
rules, including without limitation the federal Health
Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 (Public
Law 104-191) and the Mental Health and Developmental
Disabilities Confidentiality Act.
    (c) The Department shall establish and maintain
tax-supported child welfare services and extend and seek to
improve voluntary services throughout the State, to the end
that services and care shall be available on an equal basis
throughout the State to children requiring such services.
    (d) The Director may authorize advance disbursements for
any new program initiative to any agency contracting with the
Department. As a prerequisite for an advance disbursement, the
contractor must post a surety bond in the amount of the advance
disbursement and have a purchase of service contract approved
by the Department. The Department may pay up to 2 months
operational expenses in advance. The amount of the advance
disbursement shall be prorated over the life of the contract
or the remaining months of the fiscal year, whichever is less,
and the installment amount shall then be deducted from future
bills. Advance disbursement authorizations for new initiatives
shall not be made to any agency after that agency has operated
during 2 consecutive fiscal years. The requirements of this
Section concerning advance disbursements shall not apply with
respect to the following: payments to local public agencies
for child day care services as authorized by Section 5a of this
Act; and youth service programs receiving grant funds under
Section 17a-4.
    (e) (Blank).
    (f) (Blank).
    (g) The Department shall establish rules and regulations
concerning its operation of programs designed to meet the
goals of child safety and protection, family preservation, and
permanency, including, but not limited to:
        (1) reunification, guardianship, and adoption;
        (2) relative and licensed foster care;
        (3) family counseling;
        (4) protective services;
        (5) (blank);
        (6) homemaker service;
        (7) return of runaway children;
        (8) (blank);
        (9) placement under Section 5-7 of the Juvenile Court
    Act or Section 2-27, 3-28, 4-25, or 5-740 of the Juvenile
    Court Act of 1987 in accordance with the federal Adoption
    Assistance and Child Welfare Act of 1980; and
        (10) interstate services.
    Rules and regulations established by the Department shall
include provisions for training Department staff and the staff
of Department grantees, through contracts with other agencies
or resources, in screening techniques to identify substance
use disorders, as defined in the Substance Use Disorder Act,
approved by the Department of Human Services, as a successor
to the Department of Alcoholism and Substance Abuse, for the
purpose of identifying children and adults who should be
referred for an assessment at an organization appropriately
licensed by the Department of Human Services for substance use
disorder treatment.
    (h) If the Department finds that there is no appropriate
program or facility within or available to the Department for
a youth in care and that no licensed private facility has an
adequate and appropriate program or none agrees to accept the
youth in care, the Department shall create an appropriate
individualized, program-oriented plan for such youth in care.
The plan may be developed within the Department or through
purchase of services by the Department to the extent that it is
within its statutory authority to do.
    (i) Service programs shall be available throughout the
State and shall include but not be limited to the following
services:
        (1) case management;
        (2) homemakers;
        (3) counseling;
        (4) parent education;
        (5) day care;
        (6) emergency assistance and advocacy; and
        (7) kinship navigator and relative caregiver supports.
    In addition, the following services may be made available
to assess and meet the needs of children and families:
        (1) comprehensive family-based services;
        (2) assessments;
        (3) respite care; and
        (4) in-home health services.
    The Department shall provide transportation for any of the
services it makes available to children or families or for
which it refers children or families.
    (j) The Department may provide categories of financial
assistance and education assistance grants, and shall
establish rules and regulations concerning the assistance and
grants, to persons who adopt or become subsidized guardians of
children with physical or mental disabilities, children who
are older, or other hard-to-place children who (i) immediately
prior to their adoption or subsidized guardianship were youth
in care or (ii) were determined eligible for financial
assistance with respect to a prior adoption and who become
available for adoption because the prior adoption has been
dissolved and the parental rights of the adoptive parents have
been terminated or because the child's adoptive parents have
died. The Department may continue to provide financial
assistance and education assistance grants for a child who was
determined eligible for financial assistance under this
subsection (j) in the interim period beginning when the
child's adoptive parents died and ending with the finalization
of the new adoption of the child by another adoptive parent or
parents. The Department may also provide categories of
financial assistance and education assistance grants, and
shall establish rules and regulations for the assistance and
grants, to persons appointed guardian of the person under
Section 5-7 of the Juvenile Court Act or Section 2-27, 3-28,
4-25, or 5-740 of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987 for children
who were youth in care for 12 months immediately prior to the
appointment of the guardian.
    The amount of assistance may vary, depending upon the
needs of the child and the adoptive parents or subsidized
guardians, as set forth in the annual assistance agreement.
Special purpose grants are allowed where the child requires
special service but such costs may not exceed the amounts
which similar services would cost the Department if it were to
provide or secure them as guardian of the child.
    Any financial assistance provided under this subsection is
inalienable by assignment, sale, execution, attachment,
garnishment, or any other remedy for recovery or collection of
a judgment or debt.
    (j-5) The Department shall not deny or delay the placement
of a child for adoption if an approved family is available
either outside of the Department region handling the case, or
outside of the State of Illinois.
    (k) The Department shall accept for care and training any
child who has been adjudicated neglected or abused, or
dependent committed to it pursuant to the Juvenile Court Act
or the Juvenile Court Act of 1987.
    (l) The Department shall offer family preservation
services, as defined in Section 8.2 of the Abused and
Neglected Child Reporting Act, to help families, including
adoptive and extended families. Family preservation services
shall be offered (i) to prevent the placement of children in
substitute care when the children can be cared for at home or
in the custody of the person responsible for the children's
welfare, (ii) to reunite children with their families, or
(iii) to maintain an adoption or subsidized guardianship.
Family preservation services shall only be offered when doing
so will not endanger the children's health or safety. With
respect to children who are in substitute care pursuant to the
Juvenile Court Act of 1987, family preservation services shall
not be offered if a goal other than those of subdivisions (A),
(B), or (B-1) of subsection (2.3) of Section 2-28 of that Act
has been set, except that reunification services may be
offered as provided in paragraph (F) of subsection (2.3) of
Section 2-28 of that Act. Nothing in this paragraph shall be
construed to create a private right of action or claim on the
part of any individual or child welfare agency, except that
when a child is the subject of an action under Article II of
the Juvenile Court Act of 1987 and the child's service plan
calls for services to facilitate achievement of the permanency
goal, the court hearing the action under Article II of the
Juvenile Court Act of 1987 may order the Department to provide
the services set out in the plan, if those services are not
provided with reasonable promptness and if those services are
available.
    The Department shall notify the child and the child's
family of the Department's responsibility to offer and provide
family preservation services as identified in the service
plan. The child and the child's family shall be eligible for
services as soon as the report is determined to be
"indicated". The Department may offer services to any child or
family with respect to whom a report of suspected child abuse
or neglect has been filed, prior to concluding its
investigation under Section 7.12 of the Abused and Neglected
Child Reporting Act. However, the child's or family's
willingness to accept services shall not be considered in the
investigation. The Department may also provide services to any
child or family who is the subject of any report of suspected
child abuse or neglect or may refer such child or family to
services available from other agencies in the community, even
if the report is determined to be unfounded, if the conditions
in the child's or family's home are reasonably likely to
subject the child or family to future reports of suspected
child abuse or neglect. Acceptance of such services shall be
voluntary. The Department may also provide services to any
child or family after completion of a family assessment, as an
alternative to an investigation, as provided under the
"differential response program" provided for in subsection
(a-5) of Section 7.4 of the Abused and Neglected Child
Reporting Act.
    The Department may, at its discretion except for those
children also adjudicated neglected or dependent, accept for
care and training any child who has been adjudicated addicted,
as a truant minor in need of supervision or as a minor
requiring authoritative intervention, under the Juvenile Court
Act or the Juvenile Court Act of 1987, but no such child shall
be committed to the Department by any court without the
approval of the Department. On and after January 1, 2015 (the
effective date of Public Act 98-803) and before January 1,
2017, a minor charged with a criminal offense under the
Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012 or
adjudicated delinquent shall not be placed in the custody of
or committed to the Department by any court, except (i) a minor
less than 16 years of age committed to the Department under
Section 5-710 of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987, (ii) a minor
for whom an independent basis of abuse, neglect, or dependency
exists, which must be defined by departmental rule, or (iii) a
minor for whom the court has granted a supplemental petition
to reinstate wardship pursuant to subsection (2) of Section
2-33 of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987. On and after January 1,
2017, a minor charged with a criminal offense under the
Criminal Code of 1961 or the Criminal Code of 2012 or
adjudicated delinquent shall not be placed in the custody of
or committed to the Department by any court, except (i) a minor
less than 15 years of age committed to the Department under
Section 5-710 of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987, (ii) a minor
for whom an independent basis of abuse, neglect, or dependency
exists, which must be defined by departmental rule, or (iii) a
minor for whom the court has granted a supplemental petition
to reinstate wardship pursuant to subsection (2) of Section
2-33 of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987. An independent basis
exists when the allegations or adjudication of abuse, neglect,
or dependency do not arise from the same facts, incident, or
circumstances which give rise to a charge or adjudication of
delinquency. The Department shall assign a caseworker to
attend any hearing involving a youth in the care and custody of
the Department who is placed on aftercare release, including
hearings involving sanctions for violation of aftercare
release conditions and aftercare release revocation hearings.
    As soon as is possible, the Department shall develop and
implement a special program of family preservation services to
support intact, relative, foster, and adoptive families who
are experiencing extreme hardships due to the difficulty and
stress of caring for a child who has been diagnosed with a
pervasive developmental disorder if the Department determines
that those services are necessary to ensure the health and
safety of the child. The Department may offer services to any
family whether or not a report has been filed under the Abused
and Neglected Child Reporting Act. The Department may refer
the child or family to services available from other agencies
in the community if the conditions in the child's or family's
home are reasonably likely to subject the child or family to
future reports of suspected child abuse or neglect. Acceptance
of these services shall be voluntary. The Department shall
develop and implement a public information campaign to alert
health and social service providers and the general public
about these special family preservation services. The nature
and scope of the services offered and the number of families
served under the special program implemented under this
paragraph shall be determined by the level of funding that the
Department annually allocates for this purpose. The term
"pervasive developmental disorder" under this paragraph means
a neurological condition, including, but not limited to,
Asperger's Syndrome and autism, as defined in the most recent
edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental
Disorders of the American Psychiatric Association.
    (l-1) The General Assembly recognizes that the best
interests of the child require that the child be placed in the
most permanent living arrangement that is an appropriate
option for the child, consistent with the child's best
interest, using the factors set forth in subsection (4.05) of
Section 1-3 of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987 as soon as is
practically possible. To achieve this goal, the General
Assembly directs the Department of Children and Family
Services to conduct concurrent planning so that permanency may
occur at the earliest opportunity. Permanent living
arrangements may include prevention of placement of a child
outside the home of the family when the child can be cared for
at home without endangering the child's health or safety;
reunification with the family, when safe and appropriate, if
temporary placement is necessary; or movement of the child
toward the most appropriate living arrangement and legal
status.
    When determining reasonable efforts to be made with
respect to a child, as described in this subsection, and in
making such reasonable efforts, the child's health and safety
shall be the paramount concern.
    When a child is placed in foster care, the Department
shall ensure and document that reasonable efforts were made to
prevent or eliminate the need to remove the child from the
child's home. The Department must make reasonable efforts to
reunify the family when temporary placement of the child
occurs unless otherwise required, pursuant to the Juvenile
Court Act of 1987. At any time after the dispositional hearing
where the Department believes that further reunification
services would be ineffective, it may request a finding from
the court that reasonable efforts are no longer appropriate.
The Department is not required to provide further
reunification services after such a finding.
    A decision to place a child in substitute care shall be
made with considerations of the child's health, safety, and
best interests. The Department shall make diligent efforts to
place the child with a relative, document those diligent
efforts, and document reasons for any failure or inability to
secure such a relative placement. If the primary issue
preventing an emergency placement of a child with a relative
is a lack of resources, including, but not limited to,
concrete goods, safety modifications, and services, the
Department shall make diligent efforts to assist the relative
in obtaining the necessary resources. No later than July 1,
2025, the Department shall adopt rules defining what is
diligent and necessary in providing supports to potential
relative placements. At the time of placement, consideration
should also be given so that if reunification fails or is
delayed, the placement has the potential to be an appropriate
permanent placement for the child.
    The Department shall adopt rules addressing concurrent
planning for reunification and permanency. The Department
shall consider the following factors when determining
appropriateness of concurrent planning:
        (1) the likelihood of prompt reunification;
        (2) the past history of the family;
        (3) the barriers to reunification being addressed by
    the family;
        (4) the level of cooperation of the family;
        (4.5) the child's wishes;
        (5) the caregivers' willingness to work with the
    family to reunite;
        (6) the willingness and ability of the caregivers' to
    provide a permanent placement;
        (7) the age of the child;
        (8) placement of siblings; and
        (9) the wishes of the parent or parents unless the
    parental preferences are contrary to the best interests of
    the child.
    (m) The Department may assume temporary custody of any
child if:
        (1) it has received a written consent to such
    temporary custody signed by the parents of the child or by
    the parent having custody of the child if the parents are
    not living together or by the guardian or custodian of the
    child if the child is not in the custody of either parent,
    or
        (2) the child is found in the State and neither a
    parent, guardian nor custodian of the child can be
    located.
If the child is found in the child's residence without a
parent, guardian, custodian, or responsible caretaker, the
Department may, instead of removing the child and assuming
temporary custody, place an authorized representative of the
Department in that residence until such time as a parent,
guardian, or custodian enters the home and expresses a
willingness and apparent ability to ensure the child's health
and safety and resume permanent charge of the child, or until a
relative enters the home and is willing and able to ensure the
child's health and safety and assume charge of the child until
a parent, guardian, or custodian enters the home and expresses
such willingness and ability to ensure the child's safety and
resume permanent charge. After a caretaker has remained in the
home for a period not to exceed 12 hours, the Department must
follow those procedures outlined in Section 2-9, 3-11, 4-8, or
5-415 of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987.
    The Department shall have the authority, responsibilities
and duties that a legal custodian of the child would have
pursuant to subsection (9) of Section 1-3 of the Juvenile
Court Act of 1987. Whenever a child is taken into temporary
custody pursuant to an investigation under the Abused and
Neglected Child Reporting Act, or pursuant to a referral and
acceptance under the Juvenile Court Act of 1987 of a minor in
limited custody, the Department, during the period of
temporary custody and before the child is brought before a
judicial officer as required by Section 2-9, 3-11, 4-8, or
5-415 of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987, shall have the
authority, responsibilities and duties that a legal custodian
of the child would have under subsection (9) of Section 1-3 of
the Juvenile Court Act of 1987.
    The Department shall ensure that any child taken into
custody is scheduled for an appointment for a medical
examination.
    A parent, guardian, or custodian of a child in the
temporary custody of the Department who would have custody of
the child if the child were not in the temporary custody of the
Department may deliver to the Department a signed request that
the Department surrender the temporary custody of the child.
The Department may retain temporary custody of the child for
10 days after the receipt of the request, during which period
the Department may cause to be filed a petition pursuant to the
Juvenile Court Act of 1987. If a petition is so filed, the
Department shall retain temporary custody of the child until
the court orders otherwise. If a petition is not filed within
the 10-day period, the child shall be surrendered to the
custody of the requesting parent, guardian, or custodian not
later than the expiration of the 10-day period, at which time
the authority and duties of the Department with respect to the
temporary custody of the child shall terminate.
    (m-1) The Department may place children under 18 years of
age in a secure child care facility licensed by the Department
that cares for children who are in need of secure living
arrangements for their health, safety, and well-being after a
determination is made by the facility director and the
Director or the Director's designate prior to admission to the
facility subject to Section 2-27.1 of the Juvenile Court Act
of 1987. This subsection (m-1) does not apply to a child who is
subject to placement in a correctional facility operated
pursuant to Section 3-15-2 of the Unified Code of Corrections,
unless the child is a youth in care who was placed in the care
of the Department before being subject to placement in a
correctional facility and a court of competent jurisdiction
has ordered placement of the child in a secure care facility.
    (n) The Department may place children under 18 years of
age in licensed child care facilities when in the opinion of
the Department, appropriate services aimed at family
preservation have been unsuccessful and cannot ensure the
child's health and safety or are unavailable and such
placement would be for their best interest. Payment for board,
clothing, care, training and supervision of any child placed
in a licensed child care facility may be made by the
Department, by the parents or guardians of the estates of
those children, or by both the Department and the parents or
guardians, except that no payments shall be made by the
Department for any child placed in a licensed child care
facility for board, clothing, care, training, and supervision
of such a child that exceed the average per capita cost of
maintaining and of caring for a child in institutions for
dependent or neglected children operated by the Department.
However, such restriction on payments does not apply in cases
where children require specialized care and treatment for
problems of severe emotional disturbance, physical disability,
social adjustment, or any combination thereof and suitable
facilities for the placement of such children are not
available at payment rates within the limitations set forth in
this Section. All reimbursements for services delivered shall
be absolutely inalienable by assignment, sale, attachment, or
garnishment or otherwise.
    (n-1) The Department shall provide or authorize child
welfare services, aimed at assisting minors to achieve
sustainable self-sufficiency as independent adults, for any
minor eligible for the reinstatement of wardship pursuant to
subsection (2) of Section 2-33 of the Juvenile Court Act of
1987, whether or not such reinstatement is sought or allowed,
provided that the minor consents to such services and has not
yet attained the age of 21. The Department shall have
responsibility for the development and delivery of services
under this Section. An eligible youth may access services
under this Section through the Department of Children and
Family Services or by referral from the Department of Human
Services. Youth participating in services under this Section
shall cooperate with the assigned case manager in developing
an agreement identifying the services to be provided and how
the youth will increase skills to achieve self-sufficiency. A
homeless shelter is not considered appropriate housing for any
youth receiving child welfare services under this Section. The
Department shall continue child welfare services under this
Section to any eligible minor until the minor becomes 21 years
of age, no longer consents to participate, or achieves
self-sufficiency as identified in the minor's service plan.
The Department of Children and Family Services shall create
clear, readable notice of the rights of former foster youth to
child welfare services under this Section and how such
services may be obtained. The Department of Children and
Family Services and the Department of Human Services shall
disseminate this information statewide. The Department shall
adopt regulations describing services intended to assist
minors in achieving sustainable self-sufficiency as
independent adults.
    (o) The Department shall establish an administrative
review and appeal process for children and families who
request or receive child welfare services from the Department.
Youth in care who are placed by private child welfare
agencies, and caregivers with whom those youth are placed,
shall be afforded the same procedural and appeal rights as
children and families in the case of placement by the
Department, including the right to an initial review of a
private agency decision by that agency. The Department shall
ensure that any private child welfare agency, which accepts
youth in care for placement, affords those rights to children
and caregivers with whom those children are placed. The
Department shall accept for administrative review and an
appeal hearing a complaint made by (i) a child or caregiver
with whom the child is placed concerning a decision following
an initial review by a private child welfare agency or (ii) a
prospective adoptive parent who alleges a violation of
subsection (j-5) of this Section. An appeal of a decision
concerning a change in the placement of a child shall be
conducted in an expedited manner. A court determination that a
current placement is necessary and appropriate under Section
2-28 of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987 does not constitute a
judicial determination on the merits of an administrative
appeal, filed by a former caregiver, involving a change of
placement decision. No later than July 1, 2025, the Department
shall adopt rules to develop a reconsideration process to
review: a denial of certification of a relative, a denial of
placement with a relative, and a denial of visitation with an
identified relative. Rules shall include standards and
criteria for reconsideration that incorporate the best
interests of the child under subsection (4.05) of Section 1-3
of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987, address situations where
multiple relatives seek certification, and provide that all
rules regarding placement changes shall be followed. The rules
shall outline the essential elements of each form used in the
implementation and enforcement of the provisions of this
amendatory Act of the 103rd General Assembly.
    (p) (Blank).
    (q) The Department may receive and use, in their entirety,
for the benefit of children any gift, donation, or bequest of
money or other property which is received on behalf of such
children, or any financial benefits to which such children are
or may become entitled while under the jurisdiction or care of
the Department, except that the benefits described in Section
5.46 must be used and conserved consistent with the provisions
under Section 5.46.
    The Department shall set up and administer no-cost,
interest-bearing accounts in appropriate financial
institutions for children for whom the Department is legally
responsible and who have been determined eligible for
Veterans' Benefits, Social Security benefits, assistance
allotments from the armed forces, court ordered payments,
parental voluntary payments, Supplemental Security Income,
Railroad Retirement payments, Black Lung benefits, or other
miscellaneous payments. Interest earned by each account shall
be credited to the account, unless disbursed in accordance
with this subsection.
    In disbursing funds from children's accounts, the
Department shall:
        (1) Establish standards in accordance with State and
    federal laws for disbursing money from children's
    accounts. In all circumstances, the Department's
    Guardianship Administrator or the Guardianship
    Administrator's designee must approve disbursements from
    children's accounts. The Department shall be responsible
    for keeping complete records of all disbursements for each
    account for any purpose.
        (2) Calculate on a monthly basis the amounts paid from
    State funds for the child's board and care, medical care
    not covered under Medicaid, and social services; and
    utilize funds from the child's account, as covered by
    regulation, to reimburse those costs. Monthly,
    disbursements from all children's accounts, up to 1/12 of
    $13,000,000, shall be deposited by the Department into the
    General Revenue Fund and the balance over 1/12 of
    $13,000,000 into the DCFS Children's Services Fund.
        (3) Maintain any balance remaining after reimbursing
    for the child's costs of care, as specified in item (2).
    The balance shall accumulate in accordance with relevant
    State and federal laws and shall be disbursed to the child
    or the child's guardian or to the issuing agency.
    (r) The Department shall promulgate regulations
encouraging all adoption agencies to voluntarily forward to
the Department or its agent names and addresses of all persons
who have applied for and have been approved for adoption of a
hard-to-place child or child with a disability and the names
of such children who have not been placed for adoption. A list
of such names and addresses shall be maintained by the
Department or its agent, and coded lists which maintain the
confidentiality of the person seeking to adopt the child and
of the child shall be made available, without charge, to every
adoption agency in the State to assist the agencies in placing
such children for adoption. The Department may delegate to an
agent its duty to maintain and make available such lists. The
Department shall ensure that such agent maintains the
confidentiality of the person seeking to adopt the child and
of the child.
    (s) The Department of Children and Family Services may
establish and implement a program to reimburse caregivers
licensed, certified, or otherwise approved by the Department
of Children and Family Services for damages sustained by the
caregivers as a result of the malicious or negligent acts of
children placed by the Department, as well as providing third
party coverage for such caregivers with regard to actions of
children placed by the Department to other individuals. Such
coverage will be secondary to the caregiver's liability
insurance policy, if applicable. The program shall be funded
through appropriations from the General Revenue Fund,
specifically designated for such purposes.
    (t) The Department shall perform home studies and
investigations and shall exercise supervision over visitation
as ordered by a court pursuant to the Illinois Marriage and
Dissolution of Marriage Act or the Adoption Act only if:
        (1) an order entered by an Illinois court specifically
    directs the Department to perform such services; and
        (2) the court has ordered one or both of the parties to
    the proceeding to reimburse the Department for its
    reasonable costs for providing such services in accordance
    with Department rules, or has determined that neither
    party is financially able to pay.
    The Department shall provide written notification to the
court of the specific arrangements for supervised visitation
and projected monthly costs within 60 days of the court order.
The Department shall send to the court information related to
the costs incurred except in cases where the court has
determined the parties are financially unable to pay. The
court may order additional periodic reports as appropriate.
    (u) In addition to other information that must be
provided, whenever the Department places a child with a
prospective adoptive parent or parents, in a licensed foster
home, group home, or child care institution, in a relative
home, or in a certified relative caregiver home, the
Department shall provide to the caregiver, appropriate
facility staff, or prospective adoptive parent or parents:
        (1) available detailed information concerning the
    child's educational and health history, copies of
    immunization records (including insurance and medical card
    information), a history of the child's previous
    placements, if any, and reasons for placement changes
    excluding any information that identifies or reveals the
    location of any previous caregiver or adoptive parents;
        (2) a copy of the child's portion of the client
    service plan, including any visitation arrangement, and
    all amendments or revisions to it as related to the child;
    and
        (3) information containing details of the child's
    individualized educational plan when the child is
    receiving special education services.
    The caregiver, appropriate facility staff, or prospective
adoptive parent or parents, shall be informed of any known
social or behavioral information (including, but not limited
to, criminal background, fire setting, perpetuation of sexual
abuse, destructive behavior, and substance abuse) necessary to
care for and safeguard the children to be placed or currently
in the home or setting. The Department may prepare a written
summary of the information required by this paragraph, which
may be provided to the caregiver, appropriate facility staff,
or prospective adoptive parent in advance of a placement. The
caregiver, appropriate facility staff, or prospective adoptive
parent may review the supporting documents in the child's file
in the presence of casework staff. In the case of an emergency
placement, casework staff shall at least provide known
information verbally, if necessary, and must subsequently
provide the information in writing as required by this
subsection.
    The information described in this subsection shall be
provided in writing. In the case of emergency placements when
time does not allow prior review, preparation, and collection
of written information, the Department shall provide such
information as it becomes available. Within 10 business days
after placement, the Department shall obtain from the
caregiver, appropriate facility staff, or prospective adoptive
parent or parents a signed verification of receipt of the
information provided. Within 10 business days after placement,
the Department shall provide to the child's guardian ad litem
a copy of the information provided to the caregiver,
appropriate facility staff, or prospective adoptive parent or
parents. The information provided to the caregiver,
appropriate facility staff, or prospective adoptive parent or
parents shall be reviewed and approved regarding accuracy at
the supervisory level.
    (u-5) Beginning July 1, 2025, certified relative caregiver
homes under Section 3.4 of the Child Care Act of 1969 shall be
eligible to receive foster care maintenance payments from the
Department in an amount no less than payments made to licensed
foster family homes. Beginning July 1, 2025, relative homes
providing care to a child placed by the Department that are not
a certified relative caregiver home under Section 3.4 of the
Child Care Act of 1969 or a licensed foster family home shall
be eligible to receive payments from the Department in an
amount no less 90% of the payments made to licensed foster
family homes and certified relative caregiver homes.
    (u-6) To assist relative and certified relative
caregivers, no later than July 1, 2025, the Department shall
adopt rules to implement a relative support program, as
follows:
        (1) For relative and certified relative caregivers,
    the Department is authorized to reimburse or prepay
    reasonable expenditures to remedy home conditions
    necessary to fulfill the home safety-related requirements
    of relative caregiver homes.
        (2) The Department may provide short-term emergency
    funds to relative and certified relative caregiver homes
    experiencing extreme hardships due to the difficulty and
    stress associated with adding youth in care as new
    household members.
        (3) Consistent with federal law, the Department shall
    include in any State Plan made in accordance with the
    Adoption Assistance and Child Welfare Act of 1980, Titles
    IV-E and XIX of the Social Security Act, and any other
    applicable federal laws the provision of kinship navigator
    program services. The Department shall apply for and
    administer all relevant federal aid in accordance with
    law. Federal funds acquired for the kinship navigator
    program shall be used for the development, implementation,
    and operation of kinship navigator program services. The
    kinship navigator program services may provide
    information, referral services, support, and assistance to
    relative and certified relative caregivers of youth in
    care to address their unique needs and challenges. Until
    the Department is approved to receive federal funds for
    these purposes, the Department shall publicly post on the
    Department's website semi-annual updates regarding the
    Department's progress in pursuing federal funding.
    Whenever the Department publicly posts these updates on
    its website, the Department shall notify the General
    Assembly through the General Assembly's designee.
    (u-7) To support finding permanency for children through
subsidized guardianship and adoption and to prevent disruption
in guardianship and adoptive placements, the Department shall
establish and maintain accessible subsidized guardianship and
adoption support services for all children under 18 years of
age placed in guardianship or adoption who, immediately
preceding the guardianship or adoption, were in the custody or
guardianship of the Department under Article II of the
Juvenile Court Act of 1987.
    The Department shall establish and maintain a toll-free
number to respond to requests from the public about its
subsidized guardianship and adoption support services under
this subsection and shall staff the toll-free number so that
calls are answered on a timely basis, but in no event more than
one business day after the receipt of a request. These
requests from the public may be made anonymously. To meet this
obligation, the Department may utilize the same toll-free
number the Department operates to respond to post-adoption
requests under subsection (b-5) of Section 18.9 of the
Adoption Act. The Department shall publicize information about
the Department's subsidized guardianship support services and
toll-free number as follows:
        (1) it shall post information on the Department's
    website;
        (2) it shall provide the information to every licensed
    child welfare agency and any entity providing subsidized
    guardianship support services in Illinois courts;
        (3) it shall reference such information in the
    materials the Department provides to caregivers pursuing
    subsidized guardianship to inform them of their rights and
    responsibilities under the Child Care Act of 1969 and this
    Act;
        (4) it shall provide the information, including the
    Department's Post Adoption and Guardianship Services
    booklet, to eligible caregivers as part of its
    guardianship training and at the time they are presented
    with the Permanency Commitment form;
        (5) it shall include, in each annual notification
    letter mailed to subsidized guardians, a short, 2-sided
    flier or news bulletin in plain language that describes
    access to post-guardianship services, how to access
    services under the Family Support Program, formerly known
    as the Individual Care Grant Program, the webpage address
    to the Post Adoption and Guardianship Services booklet,
    information on how to request that a copy of the booklet be
    mailed; and
        (6) it shall ensure that kinship navigator programs of
    this State, when established, have this information to
    include in materials the programs provide to caregivers.
    No later than July 1, 2026, the Department shall provide a
mechanism for the public to make information requests by
electronic means.
    The Department shall review and update annually all
information relating to its subsidized guardianship support
services, including its Post Adoption and Guardianship
Services booklet, to include updated information on Family
Support Program services eligibility and subsidized
guardianship support services that are available through the
medical assistance program established under Article V of the
Illinois Public Aid Code or any other State program for mental
health services. The Department and the Department of
Healthcare and Family Services shall coordinate their efforts
in the development of these resources.
    Every licensed child welfare agency and any entity
providing kinship navigator programs funded by the Department
shall provide the Department's website address and link to the
Department's subsidized guardianship support services
information set forth in subsection (d), including the
Department's toll-free number, to every relative who is or
will be providing guardianship placement for a child placed by
the Department.
    (v) The Department shall access criminal history record
information as defined in the Illinois Uniform Conviction
Information Act and information maintained in the adjudicatory
and dispositional record system as defined in Section 2605-355
of the Illinois State Police Law if the Department determines
the information is necessary to perform its duties under the
Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act, the Child Care Act
of 1969, and the Children and Family Services Act. The
Department shall provide for interactive computerized
communication and processing equipment that permits direct
on-line communication with the Illinois State Police's central
criminal history data repository. The Department shall comply
with all certification requirements and provide certified
operators who have been trained by personnel from the Illinois
State Police. In addition, one Office of the Inspector General
investigator shall have training in the use of the criminal
history information access system and have access to the
terminal. The Department of Children and Family Services and
its employees shall abide by rules and regulations established
by the Illinois State Police relating to the access and
dissemination of this information.
    (v-1) Prior to final approval for placement of a child
with a foster or adoptive parent, the Department shall conduct
a criminal records background check of the prospective foster
or adoptive parent, including fingerprint-based checks of
national crime information databases. Final approval for
placement shall not be granted if the record check reveals a
felony conviction for child abuse or neglect, for spousal
abuse, for a crime against children, or for a crime involving
violence, including human trafficking, sex trafficking, rape,
sexual assault, or homicide, but not including other physical
assault or battery, or if there is a felony conviction for
physical assault, battery, or a drug-related offense committed
within the past 5 years.
    (v-2) Prior to final approval for placement of a child
with a foster or adoptive parent, the Department shall check
its child abuse and neglect registry for information
concerning prospective foster and adoptive parents, and any
adult living in the home. If any prospective foster or
adoptive parent or other adult living in the home has resided
in another state in the preceding 5 years, the Department
shall request a check of that other state's child abuse and
neglect registry.
    (v-3) Prior to the final approval of final placement of a
related child in a certified relative caregiver home as
defined in Section 2.37 of the Child Care Act of 1969, the
Department shall ensure that the background screening meets
the standards required under subsection (c) of Section 3.4 of
the Child Care Act of 1969.
    (v-4) Prior to final approval for placement of a child
with a relative, as defined in Section 4d of this Act, who is
not a licensed foster parent, has declined to seek approval to
be a certified relative caregiver, or was denied approval as a
certified relative caregiver, the Department shall:
        (i) check the child abuse and neglect registry for
    information concerning the prospective relative caregiver
    and any other adult living in the home. If any prospective
    relative caregiver or other adult living in the home has
    resided in another state in the preceding 5 years, the
    Department shall request a check of that other state's
    child abuse and neglect registry; and
        (ii) conduct a criminal records background check of
    the prospective relative caregiver and all other adults
    living in the home, including fingerprint-based checks of
    national crime information databases. Final approval for
    placement shall not be granted if the record check reveals
    a felony conviction for child abuse or neglect, for
    spousal abuse, for a crime against children, or for a
    crime involving violence, including human trafficking, sex
    trafficking, rape, sexual assault, or homicide, but not
    including other physical assault or battery, or if there
    is a felony conviction for physical assault, battery, or a
    drug-related offense committed within the past 5 years;
    provided however, that the Department is empowered to
    grant a waiver as the Department may provide by rule, and
    the Department approves the request for the waiver based
    on a comprehensive evaluation of the caregiver and
    household members and the conditions relating to the
    safety of the placement.
    No later than July 1, 2025, the Department shall adopt
rules or revise existing rules to effectuate the changes made
to this subsection (v-4). The rules shall outline the
essential elements of each form used in the implementation and
enforcement of the provisions of this amendatory Act of the
103rd General Assembly.
    (w) (Blank).
    (x) The Department shall conduct annual credit history
checks to determine the financial history of children placed
under its guardianship pursuant to the Juvenile Court Act of
1987. The Department shall conduct such credit checks starting
when a youth in care turns 12 years old and each year
thereafter for the duration of the guardianship as terminated
pursuant to the Juvenile Court Act of 1987. The Department
shall determine if financial exploitation of the child's
personal information has occurred. If financial exploitation
appears to have taken place or is presently ongoing, the
Department shall notify the proper law enforcement agency, the
proper State's Attorney, or the Attorney General.
    (y) Beginning on July 22, 2010 (the effective date of
Public Act 96-1189), a child with a disability who receives
residential and educational services from the Department shall
be eligible to receive transition services in accordance with
Article 14 of the School Code from the age of 14.5 through age
21, inclusive, notwithstanding the child's residential
services arrangement. For purposes of this subsection, "child
with a disability" means a child with a disability as defined
by the federal Individuals with Disabilities Education
Improvement Act of 2004.
    (z) The Department shall access criminal history record
information as defined as "background information" in this
subsection and criminal history record information as defined
in the Illinois Uniform Conviction Information Act for each
Department employee or Department applicant. Each Department
employee or Department applicant shall submit the employee's
or applicant's fingerprints to the Illinois State Police in
the form and manner prescribed by the Illinois State Police.
These fingerprints shall be checked against the fingerprint
records now and hereafter filed in the Illinois State Police
and the Federal Bureau of Investigation criminal history
records databases. The Illinois State Police shall charge a
fee for conducting the criminal history record check, which
shall be deposited into the State Police Services Fund and
shall not exceed the actual cost of the record check. The
Illinois State Police shall furnish, pursuant to positive
identification, all Illinois conviction information to the
Department of Children and Family Services.
    For purposes of this subsection:
    "Background information" means all of the following:
        (i) Upon the request of the Department of Children and
    Family Services, conviction information obtained from the
    Illinois State Police as a result of a fingerprint-based
    criminal history records check of the Illinois criminal
    history records database and the Federal Bureau of
    Investigation criminal history records database concerning
    a Department employee or Department applicant.
        (ii) Information obtained by the Department of
    Children and Family Services after performing a check of
    the Illinois State Police's Sex Offender Database, as
    authorized by Section 120 of the Sex Offender Community
    Notification Law, concerning a Department employee or
    Department applicant.
        (iii) Information obtained by the Department of
    Children and Family Services after performing a check of
    the Child Abuse and Neglect Tracking System (CANTS)
    operated and maintained by the Department.
    "Department employee" means a full-time or temporary
employee coded or certified within the State of Illinois
Personnel System.
    "Department applicant" means an individual who has
conditional Department full-time or part-time work, a
contractor, an individual used to replace or supplement staff,
an academic intern, a volunteer in Department offices or on
Department contracts, a work-study student, an individual or
entity licensed by the Department, or an unlicensed service
provider who works as a condition of a contract or an agreement
and whose work may bring the unlicensed service provider into
contact with Department clients or client records.
    (aa) The changes made to this Section by this amendatory
Act of the 104th General Assembly are declarative of existing
law and are not a new enactment.
(Source: P.A. 102-538, eff. 8-20-21; 102-558, eff. 8-20-21;
102-1014, eff. 5-27-22; 103-22, eff. 8-8-23; 103-50, eff.
1-1-24; 103-546, eff. 8-11-23; 103-605, eff. 7-1-24; 103-1061,
eff. 7-1-25.)
 
    Section 10. The Child Care Act of 1969 is amended by
changing Section 3.4 as follows:
 
    (225 ILCS 10/3.4)
    (This Section may contain text from a Public Act with a
delayed effective date)
    Sec. 3.4. Standards for certified relative caregiver
homes.
    (a) No later than July 1, 2025, the Department shall adopt
rules outlining the standards for certified relative caregiver
homes, which are reasonably in accordance with the national
consortium recommendations and federal law and rules, and
consistent with the requirements of this Act. The standards
for certified relative caregiver homes shall: (i) be different
from licensing standards used for non-relative foster family
homes under Section 4; (ii) align with the recommendation of
the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services'
Administration for Children and Families for implementation of
Section 471(a)(10), 471(a)(11), and 471(a)(20) and Section 474
of Title IV-E of the Social Security Act; (iii) be no more
restrictive than, and reasonably in accordance with, national
consortium recommendations; and (iv) address background
screening for caregivers and other household residents and
assessing home safety and caregiver capacity to meet the
identified child's needs.
    A guiding premise for certified relative caregiver home
standards is that foster care maintenance payments for every
relative, starting upon placement, regardless of federal
reimbursement, are critical to ensure that the basic needs and
well-being of all children in relative care are being met. If
an agency places a child in the care of a relative, the
relative must immediately be provided with adequate support to
care for that child. The Department shall review foster care
maintenance payments to ensure that children receive the same
amount of foster care maintenance payments whether placed in a
certified relative caregiver home or a licensed foster family
home.
    In developing rules, the Department shall solicit and
incorporate feedback from relative caregivers. No later than
60 days after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the
103rd General Assembly, the Department shall begin soliciting
input from relatives who are currently or have recently been
caregivers to youth in care to develop the rules and
procedures to implement the requirements of this Section. The
Department shall solicit this input in a manner convenient for
caregivers to participate, including without limitation,
in-person convenings at after hours and weekend venues,
locations that provide child care, and modalities that are
accessible and welcoming to new and experienced relative
caregivers from all regions of the State. The rules shall
outline the essential elements of each form used in the
implementation and enforcement of the provisions of this
amendatory Act of the 103rd General Assembly.
    (b) In order to assess whether standards are met for a
certified relative caregiver home under this Section, the
Department or a licensed child welfare agency shall:
        (1) complete the home safety and needs assessment and
    identify and provide any necessary concrete goods or
    safety modifications to assist the prospective certified
    relative caregiver in meeting the needs of the specific
    child or children being placed by the Department, in a
    manner consistent with Department rule;
        (2) assess the ability of the prospective certified
    relative caregiver to care for the physical, emotional,
    medical, and educational needs of the specific child or
    children being placed by the Department using the protocol
    and form provided through national consortium
    recommendations; and
        (3) using the standard background check form
    established by rule, complete a background check for each
    person seeking certified relative caregiver approval and
    any other adults living in the home as required under this
    Section.
    (c) The Department or a licensed child welfare agency
shall conduct the following background screening investigation
for every prospective certified relative caregiver and adult
resident living in the home:
        (1) a name-based State, local, or tribal criminal
    background check, and as soon as reasonably possible,
    initiate a fingerprint-based background check;
        (2) a review of this State's Central Registry and
    registries of any state in which an adult household member
    has resided in the last 5 years, if applicable to
    determine if the person has been determined to be a
    perpetrator in an indicated report of child abuse or
    neglect; and
        (3) a review of the sex offender registry.
    No home may be a certified relative caregiver home if any
prospective caregivers or adult residents in the home refuse
to authorize a background screening investigation as required
by this Section. Only information and standards that bear a
reasonable and rational relation to the caregiving capacity of
the certified relative caregiver and adult member of the
household and overall safety provided by residents of that
home shall be used by the Department or licensed child welfare
agency.
    In approving a certified relative caregiver home in
accordance with this Section, if an adult has a criminal
record, the Department or licensed child welfare agency shall
thoroughly investigate and evaluate the criminal history of
the adult and, in so doing, include an assessment of the
adult's character and, in the case of the prospective
certified relative caregiver, the impact that the criminal
history has on the prospective certified relative caregiver's
ability to parent the child; the investigation should consider
the type of crime, the number of crimes, the nature of the
offense, the age of the person at the time of the crime, the
length of time that has elapsed since the last conviction, the
relationship of the crime to the ability to care for children,
the role that adult will have with the child, and any evidence
of rehabilitation. In accordance with federal law, a home
shall not be approved if the record of the prospective
certified relative caregiver's background screening reveals:
(i) a felony conviction for child abuse or neglect, for
spousal abuse, for a crime against children crimes against a
child, including child pornography, or for a crime involving
violence, including human trafficking, sex trafficking, of
rape, sexual assault, or homicide, but not including other
physical assault or battery; or (ii) a felony conviction in
the last 5 years for physical assault, battery, or a
drug-related offense.
    If the Department is contemplating denying approval of a
certified relative caregiver home, the Department shall
provide a written notice in the prospective certified relative
caregiver's primary language to each prospective certified
relative caregiver before the Department takes final action to
deny approval of the home. This written notice shall include
the specific reason or reasons the Department is considering
denial, list actions prospective certified relative caregivers
can take, if any, to remedy such conditions and the timeframes
in which such actions would need to be completed, explain
reasonable supports that the Department can provide to assist
the prospective certified relative caregivers in taking
remedial actions and how the prospective certified relative
caregivers can request such assistance, and provide the
recourse prospective certified relative caregivers can seek to
resolve disputes about the Department's findings. The
Department shall provide prospective certified relative
caregivers reasonable opportunity pursuant to rulemaking to
cure any remediable deficiencies that the Department
identified before taking final action to deny approval of a
certified relative caregiver home.
    If conditions have not been remedied after a reasonable
opportunity and assistance to cure identified deficiencies has
been provided, the Department shall provide a final written
notice explaining the reasons for denying the certified
relative caregiver home approval and the reconsideration
process to review the decision to deny certification. The
Department shall not prohibit a prospective certified relative
caregiver from being reconsidered for approval if the
prospective certified relative caregivers are able to
demonstrate a change in circumstances that improves deficient
conditions.
    Documentation that a certified relative caregiver home
meets the required standards may be filed on behalf of such
homes by a licensed child welfare agency, by a State agency
authorized to place children in foster care, or by
out-of-state agencies approved by the Department to place
children in this State. For documentation on behalf of a home
in which specific children are placed by and remain under
supervision of the applicant agency, such agency shall
document that the certified relative caregiver home,
responsible for the care of related specific children therein,
was found to be in reasonable compliance with standards
prescribed by the Department for certified relative caregiver
homes under this Section. Certification is applicable to one
or more related children and documentation for certification
shall indicate the specific child or children who would be
eligible for placement in this certified relative caregiver
home.
    Information concerning criminal convictions of prospective
certified relative caregivers and adult residents of a
prospective certified relative caregiver home investigated
under this Section, including the source of the information,
State conviction information provided by the Illinois State
Police, and any conclusions or recommendations derived from
the information, shall be offered to the prospective certified
relative caregivers and adult residents of a prospective
certified relative caregiver home, and provided, upon request,
to such persons prior to final action by the Department in the
certified relative caregiver home approval process.
    Any information concerning criminal charges or the
disposition of such criminal charges obtained by the
Department shall be confidential and may not be transmitted
outside the Department, except as required or permitted by
State or federal law, and may not be transmitted to anyone
within the Department except as needed for the purpose of
evaluating standards for a certified relative caregiver home
or for evaluating the placement of a specific child in the
home. Information concerning a prospective certified relative
caregiver or an adult resident of a prospective certified
relative caregiver home obtained by the Department for the
purposes of this Section shall be confidential and exempt from
public inspection and copying as provided under Section 7 of
the Freedom of Information Act, and such information shall not
be transmitted outside the Department, except as required or
authorized by State or federal law, including applicable
provisions in the Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act,
and shall not be transmitted to anyone within the Department
except as provided in the Abused and Neglected Child Reporting
Act, and shall not be transmitted to anyone within the
Department except as needed for the purposes of evaluating
homes. Any employee of the Department, the Illinois State
Police, or a licensed child welfare agency receiving
confidential information under this Section who gives or
causes to be given any confidential information concerning any
criminal convictions or child abuse or neglect reports
involving a prospective certified relative caregiver or an
adult resident of a prospective certified relative caregiver
home shall be guilty of a Class A misdemeanor unless release of
such information is authorized by this Section or Section 11.1
of the Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act.
    The Department shall permit, but shall not require, a
prospective certified relative caregiver who does not yet have
eligible children placed by the Department in the relative's
home to commence the process to become a certified relative
caregiver home for a particular identified child under this
Section before a child is placed by the Department if the
prospective certified relative caregiver prefers to begin this
process in advance of the identified child being placed. No
later than July 1, 2025, the Department shall adopt rules
delineating the process for re-assessing a certified relative
caregiver home if the identified child is not placed in that
home within 6 months of the home becoming certified.
    (d) The Department shall ensure that prospective certified
relative caregivers are provided with assistance in completing
the steps required for approval as a certified relative
caregiver home, including, but not limited to, the following
types of assistance:
        (1) completing forms together with the relative or for
    the relative, if possible;
        (2) obtaining court records or dispositions related to
    background checks;
        (3) accessing translation services;
        (4) using mobile fingerprinting devices in the home,
    and if mobile devices are unavailable, providing
    assistance scheduling appointments that are accessible and
    available at times that fit the household members'
    schedules, providing transportation and child care to
    allow the household members to complete fingerprinting
    appointments, and contracting with community-based
    fingerprinting locations that offer evening and weekend
    appointments;
        (5) reimbursement or advance payment for the
    prospective certified relative caregiver to help with
    reasonable home maintenance to resolve critical safety
    issues in accordance with Department rulemaking; and
        (6) purchasing required safety or comfort items such
    as a car seat or mattress.
    (e) Orientation provided to certified relative caregivers
shall include information regarding:
        (1) caregivers' right to be heard in juvenile court
    proceedings;
        (2) the availability of the advocacy hotline and
    Office of the Inspector General that caregivers may use to
    report incidents of misconduct or violation of rules by
    Department employees, service providers, or contractors;
        (3) the Department's expectations for caregiving
    obligations including, but not limited to, specific
    requirements of court orders, critical incident
    notifications and timeframes, supervision for the child's
    age and needs, out-of-state travel, and consent
    procedures;
        (4) assistance available to the certified relative
    caregivers, including child care, respite care,
    transportation assistance, case management, training and
    support groups, kinship navigator services, financial
    assistance, and after hours and weekend 24 hours, 7 days a
    week emergency supports, and how to access such
    assistance;
        (5) reasonable and prudent parenting standards; and
        (6) permanency options.
    Orientation shall be provided in a setting and modality
convenient for the residents of the certified relative
caregiver home, which shall include the option for one-on-one
sessions at the residence, after business hours, and in the
primary language of the caregivers. Training opportunities
shall be offered to the residents of the certified relative
caregiver home, but shall not be a requirement that delays the
certified relative caregiver home approval process from being
completed.
    The Department or licensed child welfare agency may
provide support groups and development opportunities for
certified relative caregivers, and take other steps to support
permanency, such as offering voluntary training, or concurrent
assessments of multiple prospective certified relative
caregivers to determine which may be best suited to provide
long-term permanency for a particular child. However, these
support groups and development opportunities shall not be
requirements for prospective certified relative caregiver
homes or delay immediate placement and support to a relative
who satisfies the standards set forth in this Section.
    (f) All child welfare agencies serving relative and
certified relative caregiver homes shall be required by the
Department to have complaint policies and procedures that
shall be provided in writing to prospective and current
certified relative caregivers and residents of prospective and
current certified relative caregiver homes, at the earliest
time possible. The complaint procedure shall allow residents
of prospective and current certified relative caregiver homes
to submit complaints 7 days a week and complaints shall be
reviewed by the Department within 30 days of receipt. These
complaint procedures must be filed with the Department within
6 months after the effective date of this amendatory of the
103rd General Assembly.
    No later than July 1, 2025, the Department shall revise
any rules and procedures pertaining to eligibility of
certified relative caregivers to qualify for State and federal
subsidies and services under the guardianship and adoption
assistance program and remove any requirements that exceed the
federal requirements for participation in these programs or
supports to ensure that certified relative caregiver homes are
deemed eligible for permanency options, such as adoption or
subsidized guardianship, if the child is unable to safely
return to the child's parents. The rules shall outline the
essential elements of each form used in the implementation and
enforcement of the provisions of this amendatory Act of the
103rd General Assembly.
    The Department shall submit any necessary State plan
amendments necessary to comply with this Section and to ensure
Title IV-E reimbursement eligibility under Section
671(a)(20)(A-B) of the Social Security Act can be achieved
expediently. The Department shall differentiate expenditures
related to certified relative caregivers from licensed care
placements to provide clarity in expenditures of State and
federal monies for certified relative caregiver supports.
(Source: P.A. 103-1061, eff. 7-1-25.)
 
    Section 95. No acceleration or delay. Where this Act makes
changes in a statute that is represented in this Act by text
that is not yet or no longer in effect (for example, a Section
represented by multiple versions), the use of that text does
not accelerate or delay the taking effect of (i) the changes
made by this Act or (ii) provisions derived from any other
Public Act.
 
    Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect July 1,
2025.