Public Act 104-0373
 
SB1329 EnrolledLRB104 06310 LNS 16345 b

    AN ACT concerning education.
 
    Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
represented in the General Assembly:
 
    Section 5. The School Code is amended by changing Section
21B-75 as follows:
 
    (105 ILCS 5/21B-75)
    Sec. 21B-75. Suspension or revocation of license,
endorsement, or approval.
    (a) As used in this Section, "teacher" means any school
district employee regularly required to be licensed, as
provided in this Article, in order to teach or supervise in the
public schools.
    (b) The State Superintendent of Education has the
exclusive authority, in accordance with this Section and any
rules adopted by the State Board of Education, in consultation
with the State Educator Preparation and Licensure Board, to
initiate the suspension of up to 5 calendar years or
revocation of any license, endorsement, or approval issued
pursuant to this Article for abuse or neglect of a child,
sexual misconduct as defined in subsection (c) of Section
22-85.5 of this Code, immorality, a condition of health
detrimental to the welfare of pupils, incompetency,
unprofessional conduct (which includes the failure to disclose
on an employment application any previous conviction for a sex
offense, as defined in Section 21B-80 of this Code, or any
other offense committed in any other state or against the laws
of the United States that, if committed in this State, would be
punishable as a sex offense, as defined in Section 21B-80 of
this Code), the neglect of any professional duty, willful or
negligent failure to report an instance of suspected child
abuse or neglect as required by the Abused and Neglected Child
Reporting Act, or other just cause. Negligent failure to
report an instance of suspected child abuse or neglect occurs
when a teacher personally observes an instance of suspected
child abuse or neglect and reasonably believes, in his or her
professional or official capacity, that the instance
constitutes an act of child abuse or neglect under the Abused
and Neglected Child Reporting Act, and he or she, without
willful intent, fails to immediately report or cause a report
to be made of the suspected abuse or neglect to the Department
of Children and Family Services, as required by the Abused and
Neglected Child Reporting Act. Unprofessional conduct shall
include the refusal to attend or participate in institutes,
teachers' meetings, or professional readings or to meet other
reasonable requirements of the regional superintendent of
schools or State Superintendent of Education. Unprofessional
conduct also includes conduct that violates the standards,
ethics, or rules applicable to the security, administration,
monitoring, or scoring of or the reporting of scores from any
assessment test or examination administered under Section
2-3.64a-5 of this Code or that is known or intended to produce
or report manipulated or artificial, rather than actual,
assessment or achievement results or gains from the
administration of those tests or examinations. Unprofessional
conduct shall also include neglect or unnecessary delay in the
making of statistical and other reports required by school
officers. Incompetency shall include, without limitation, 2 or
more school terms of service for which the license holder has
received an unsatisfactory rating on a performance evaluation
conducted pursuant to Article 24A of this Code within a period
of 7 school terms of service. In determining whether to
initiate action against one or more licenses based on
incompetency and the recommended sanction for such action, the
State Superintendent shall consider factors that include
without limitation all of the following:
        (1) Whether the unsatisfactory evaluation ratings
    occurred prior to June 13, 2011 (the effective date of
    Public Act 97-8).
        (2) Whether the unsatisfactory evaluation ratings
    occurred prior to or after the implementation date, as
    defined in Section 24A-2.5 of this Code, of an evaluation
    system for teachers in a school district.
        (3) Whether the evaluator or evaluators who performed
    an unsatisfactory evaluation met the pre-licensure and
    training requirements set forth in Section 24A-3 of this
    Code.
        (4) The time between the unsatisfactory evaluation
    ratings.
        (5) The quality of the remediation plans associated
    with the unsatisfactory evaluation ratings and whether the
    license holder successfully completed the remediation
    plans.
        (6) Whether the unsatisfactory evaluation ratings were
    related to the same or different assignments performed by
    the license holder.
        (7) Whether one or more of the unsatisfactory
    evaluation ratings occurred in the first year of a
    teaching or administrative assignment.
When initiating an action against one or more licenses, the
State Superintendent may seek required professional
development as a sanction in lieu of or in addition to
suspension or revocation. Any such required professional
development must be at the expense of the license holder, who
may use, if available and applicable to the requirements
established by administrative or court order, training,
coursework, or other professional development funds in
accordance with the terms of an applicable collective
bargaining agreement entered into after June 13, 2011 (the
effective date of Public Act 97-8), unless that agreement
specifically precludes use of funds for such purpose.
    (c) The State Superintendent of Education shall, upon
receipt of evidence of abuse or neglect of a child,
immorality, a condition of health detrimental to the welfare
of pupils, incompetency (subject to subsection (b) of this
Section), unprofessional conduct, the neglect of any
professional duty, or other just cause, further investigate
and, if and as appropriate, serve written notice to the
individual and afford the individual opportunity for a hearing
prior to suspension, revocation, or other sanction; provided
that the State Superintendent is under no obligation to
initiate such an investigation if the Department of Children
and Family Services is investigating the same or substantially
similar allegations and its child protective service unit has
not made its determination, as required under Section 7.12 of
the Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act. If the State
Superintendent of Education does not receive from an
individual a request for a hearing within 10 days after the
individual receives notice, the suspension, revocation, or
other sanction shall immediately take effect in accordance
with the notice. If a hearing is requested within 10 days after
notice of an opportunity for hearing, it shall act as a stay of
proceedings until the State Educator Preparation and Licensure
Board issues a decision. Any hearing shall take place in the
educational service region where the educator is or was last
employed and in accordance with rules adopted by the State
Board of Education, in consultation with the State Educator
Preparation and Licensure Board, and such rules shall include
without limitation provisions for discovery and the sharing of
information between parties prior to the hearing. The standard
of proof for any administrative hearing held pursuant to this
Section shall be by the preponderance of the evidence. The
decision of the State Educator Preparation and Licensure Board
is a final administrative decision and is subject to judicial
review by appeal of either party.
    The State Board of Education may refuse to issue or may
suspend the license of any person who fails to file a return or
to pay the tax, penalty, or interest shown in a filed return or
to pay any final assessment of tax, penalty, or interest, as
required by any tax Act administered by the Department of
Revenue, until such time as the requirements of any such tax
Act are satisfied.
    The exclusive authority of the State Superintendent of
Education to initiate suspension or revocation of a license
pursuant to this Section does not preclude a regional
superintendent of schools from cooperating with the State
Superintendent or a State's Attorney with respect to an
investigation of alleged misconduct.
    (d) The State Superintendent of Education or his or her
designee may initiate and conduct such investigations as may
be reasonably necessary to establish the existence of any
alleged misconduct. At any stage of the investigation, the
State Superintendent may issue a subpoena requiring the
attendance and testimony of a witness, including the license
holder, and the production of any evidence, including files,
records, correspondence, or documents, relating to any matter
in question in the investigation. The subpoena shall require a
witness to appear at the State Board of Education at a
specified date and time and shall specify any evidence to be
produced. The license holder is not entitled to be present,
but the State Superintendent shall provide the license holder
with a copy of any recorded testimony prior to a hearing under
this Section. Such recorded testimony must not be used as
evidence at a hearing, unless the license holder has adequate
notice of the testimony and the opportunity to cross-examine
the witness. Failure of a license holder to comply with a duly
issued, investigatory subpoena may be grounds for revocation,
suspension, or denial of a license.
    (e) All correspondence, documentation, and other
information so received by the regional superintendent of
schools, the State Superintendent of Education, the State
Board of Education, or the State Educator Preparation and
Licensure Board under this Section is confidential and must
not be disclosed to third parties, except (i) as necessary for
the State Superintendent of Education or his or her designee
to investigate and prosecute pursuant to this Article, (ii)
pursuant to a court order, (iii) for disclosure to the license
holder or his or her representative, or (iv) as otherwise
required in this Article and provided that any such
information admitted into evidence in a hearing is exempt from
this confidentiality and non-disclosure requirement.
    (e-5) The State Superintendent of Education or his or her
designee may notify a license holder's current or most recent
employer, if the employer is a public school or school
district, charter school, special education cooperative,
nonpublic school, nonpublic special education facility, or
public school residential facility, that the license holder is
being investigated for an alleged act of misconduct that
constitutes a threat to the safety of students, including
serious physical injury, sexual misconduct as defined in
subsection (c) of Section 22-85.5 of this Code, or a sex or
other offense as defined in Section 21B-80 of this Code.
    (f) The State Superintendent of Education or a person
designated by him or her shall have the power to administer
oaths to witnesses at any hearing conducted before the State
Educator Preparation and Licensure Board pursuant to this
Section. The State Superintendent of Education or a person
designated by him or her is authorized to subpoena and bring
before the State Educator Preparation and Licensure Board any
person in this State and to take testimony either orally or by
deposition or by exhibit, with the same fees and mileage and in
the same manner as prescribed by law in judicial proceedings
in civil cases in circuit courts of this State.
    (g) Any circuit court, upon the application of the State
Superintendent of Education or the license holder, may, by
order duly entered, require the attendance of witnesses and
the production of relevant books and papers as part of any
investigation or at any hearing the State Educator Preparation
and Licensure Board is authorized to conduct pursuant to this
Section, and the court may compel obedience to its orders by
proceedings for contempt.
    (h) The State Board of Education shall receive an annual
line item appropriation to cover fees associated with the
investigation and prosecution of alleged educator misconduct
and hearings related thereto.
(Source: P.A. 101-531, eff. 8-23-19; 102-552, eff. 1-1-22;
102-702, eff. 7-1-23.)