|   
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  | Public Act 097-0375 
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| | HB1591 Enrolled | LRB097 07036 KTG 47129 b | 
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| 
 
   | 
|     AN ACT concerning health.
  
 | 
|     Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
  | 
| represented in the General Assembly:
  
 
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|     Section 5. The Mental Health and Developmental  | 
| Disabilities Code is amended  by changing Sections 2-107.1,  | 
| 3-101, 3-400, 3-751, 3-800, 3-801, and 3-801.5 and  by adding  | 
| Section 3-401.1 as follows:
 
 | 
|     (405 ILCS 5/2-107.1)  (from Ch. 91 1/2, par. 2-107.1)
 | 
|     Sec. 2-107.1. Administration of psychotropic medication  | 
| and electroconvulsive therapy
upon
application to a court.
 | 
|     (a) (Blank).
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|     (a-5) Notwithstanding the provisions of Section 2-107 of  | 
| this
Code, psychotropic medication and electroconvulsive  | 
| therapy may be administered to an adult recipient of
services  | 
| on an inpatient or outpatient basis without the informed  | 
| consent of the recipient under the following
standards:
 | 
|         (1) Any person 18 years of age or older, including any  | 
| guardian, may
petition the circuit court for an order  | 
| authorizing the administration of psychotropic medication  | 
| and electroconvulsive therapy to a recipient
of services.
 | 
| The petition shall state that the petitioner has made a  | 
| good faith attempt to
determine whether the recipient has  | 
| executed a power of attorney for health
care under the  | 
|  | 
| Powers of Attorney for Health Care Law or a declaration for
 | 
| mental health treatment under the Mental Health Treatment  | 
| Preference
Declaration Act and to obtain copies of these  | 
| instruments if they exist.  If
either of the above-named  | 
| instruments is available to the petitioner, the
instrument  | 
| or a copy of the instrument shall be attached to the  | 
| petition as
an exhibit.
The petitioner shall deliver a copy  | 
| of the petition, and notice of the time
and place of the  | 
| hearing, to the respondent, his or her attorney, any known
 | 
| agent or
attorney-in-fact, if any, and the
guardian, if  | 
| any, no later than 3 days prior to the date of the
hearing.
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| Service of the petition and notice of the time and place of  | 
| the hearing may
be made by transmitting them via facsimile  | 
| machine to the
respondent or other party.  Upon receipt of  | 
| the petition and notice, the party
served, or the person  | 
| delivering the petition and notice to
the party served,  | 
| shall acknowledge service.  If the party sending the  | 
| petition
and notice does not receive acknowledgement of  | 
| service
within 24 hours, service must be made by personal  | 
| service.
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|         The
petition may include a request that the court  | 
| authorize such testing and
procedures as may be essential  | 
| for the safe and effective administration of the  | 
| psychotropic medication or electroconvulsive therapy  | 
| sought to be
administered, but only where the
petition
sets  | 
| forth the specific testing and procedures sought to be  | 
|  | 
| administered.
 | 
|         If a hearing is requested to be held immediately  | 
| following the hearing on
a petition for
involuntary  | 
| admission, then the notice requirement shall be the same as  | 
| that
for the hearing on
the petition for involuntary  | 
| admission, and the petition filed pursuant to this
Section  | 
| shall be filed
with the petition for involuntary admission.
 | 
|         (2) The court shall hold a hearing within 7 days of the  | 
| filing
of the petition.  The People, the petitioner, or the  | 
| respondent shall be
entitled
to a continuance of up to 7  | 
| days as of right.  An additional
continuance of  not more  | 
| than 7 days may be granted to
any party (i)
upon a showing  | 
| that the continuance is needed in order
to adequately
 | 
| prepare for or present evidence in a hearing under this  | 
| Section or
(ii) under exceptional circumstances.  The court  | 
| may
grant an additional continuance
not to exceed 21 days  | 
| when, in its discretion, the court determines that such a
 | 
| continuance is necessary in order to provide the recipient  | 
| with an examination
pursuant to Section 3-803 or 3-804 of  | 
| this Act, to provide the recipient with a
trial by jury as  | 
| provided in Section 3-802 of this Act, or to arrange for  | 
| the
substitution of counsel as provided for by the Illinois  | 
| Supreme Court Rules.
The hearing shall be
separate from a  | 
| judicial proceeding held to determine whether a person is
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| subject to involuntary admission but may be heard  | 
| immediately preceding or
following such a judicial  | 
|  | 
| proceeding and may be heard by the same trier of fact
or  | 
| law as in that judicial proceeding.
 | 
|         (3) Unless otherwise provided herein, the procedures  | 
| set forth in
Article VIII of Chapter 3 of this Act,  | 
| including the provisions regarding
appointment of counsel,  | 
| shall govern hearings held under this subsection
(a-5).
 | 
|         (4) Psychotropic medication and electroconvulsive  | 
| therapy may be administered to the recipient if and only if
 | 
| it has been determined by clear and convincing evidence  | 
| that all of
the following factors are present. In  | 
| determining whether a person meets the criteria specified  | 
| in the following
paragraphs (A) through (G), the court may  | 
| consider evidence of the person's history of
serious  | 
| violence, repeated past pattern of specific behavior,  | 
| actions related to the person's
illness, or past outcomes  | 
| of various treatment options.
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|             (A) That the recipient has a serious mental illness  | 
| or
developmental disability.
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|             (B) That because of said mental illness or  | 
| developmental disability,
the recipient currently  | 
| exhibits any one of the following: (i)
deterioration of  | 
| his
or her ability to function, as compared to the  | 
| recipient's ability to
function prior to the current  | 
| onset of symptoms of the mental illness or
disability  | 
| for which treatment is presently sought, (ii)  | 
| suffering, or (iii)
threatening
behavior.
 | 
|  | 
|             (C) That the illness or disability has existed for  | 
| a period marked by
the continuing presence of the  | 
| symptoms set forth in item (B) of this
subdivision (4)  | 
| or the repeated episodic occurrence of these symptoms.
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|             (D) That the benefits of the treatment
outweigh the  | 
| harm.
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|             (E) That the recipient lacks the capacity to make a
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| reasoned
decision about the treatment.
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|             (F) That other less restrictive services have been  | 
| explored
and found inappropriate.
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|             (G) If the petition seeks authorization for  | 
| testing and other
procedures,
that such testing and  | 
| procedures are essential for the safe and effective
 | 
| administration of the treatment.
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|         (5) In no event shall an order issued under this  | 
| Section be effective
for more than 90 days.
A second 90-day  | 
| period of involuntary treatment may be authorized pursuant  | 
| to
a hearing that
complies
with the standards and  | 
| procedures of this subsection (a-5).
Thereafter,  | 
| additional 180-day periods of involuntary treatment may be
 | 
| authorized pursuant to
the standards and procedures of this  | 
| Section without limit.
If a new petition to authorize the  | 
| administration of psychotropic medication or  | 
| electroconvulsive therapy
is filed at least 15 days prior  | 
| to the
expiration of the prior order, and if
any  | 
| continuance of the hearing is agreed to by the recipient,  | 
|  | 
| the
administration of the treatment may continue in  | 
| accordance
with
the prior order
pending the completion of a  | 
| hearing under this Section.
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|         (6) An order issued under this subsection (a-5) shall
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| designate the persons
authorized to administer the  | 
| treatment under the
standards
and procedures of this  | 
| subsection (a-5).
Those persons shall have complete  | 
| discretion not to administer any
treatment authorized  | 
| under this Section.
The order shall also specify the  | 
| medications and the anticipated range of
dosages that have  | 
| been authorized and may include a list of any alternative
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| medications and range of dosages deemed necessary.
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|     (a-10) The court may, in its discretion, appoint a guardian  | 
| ad litem for a recipient before the court or authorize an  | 
| existing guardian of the person to monitor treatment and  | 
| compliance with court orders under this Section.
 | 
|     (b) A guardian may be authorized to consent to the  | 
| administration
of psychotropic medication or electroconvulsive  | 
| therapy to an
objecting recipient only under the
standards and  | 
| procedures of subsection (a-5).
 | 
|     (c) Notwithstanding any other provision of this Section, a  | 
| guardian may
consent to the administration of psychotropic  | 
| medication or electroconvulsive therapy to a
non-objecting
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| recipient under Article XIa of the Probate Act of 1975.
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|     (d) Nothing in this Section shall prevent the  | 
| administration of psychotropic medication or electroconvulsive  | 
|  | 
| therapy to recipients
in an emergency under Section 2-107 of
 | 
| this Act.
 | 
|     (e) Notwithstanding any of the provisions of this Section,  | 
| psychotropic medication or electroconvulsive therapy may be  | 
| administered pursuant to a power of attorney for
health care  | 
| under the Powers of Attorney for Health Care Law or a  | 
| declaration
for mental health treatment under the Mental Health  | 
| Treatment Preference
Declaration Act.
 | 
|     (f) The Department shall conduct annual trainings for  | 
| physicians and registered nurses working in State-operated  | 
| mental health facilities on the appropriate use of psychotropic  | 
| medication and electroconvulsive therapy, standards for their  | 
| use, and the preparation of court petitions under this Section.
 | 
| (Source: P.A. 94-1066, eff. 8-1-06; 95-172, eff. 8-14-07.)
 
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|     (405 ILCS 5/3-101)  (from Ch. 91 1/2, par. 3-101)
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|     Sec. 3-101. 
(a) The State's Attorneys of the several  | 
| counties shall represent
the people of the State of Illinois in  | 
| court proceedings under this Chapter
and in proceedings under  | 
| Section 2-107.1 in their respective counties,
shall attend such  | 
| proceedings either in person or by assistant, and shall
ensure  | 
| that petitions, reports and orders are properly prepared.   | 
| Nothing
herein contained shall prevent any party, including any  | 
| petitioner, from being represented by his own
counsel.
 | 
|     (b) Any community mental health provider or inpatient   | 
| mental health facility, including hospitals operated by the  | 
|  | 
| Department, may be represented by counsel in court proceedings  | 
| under this Chapter if they are providing services or funding  | 
| for services to the respondent, or if an order by the court  | 
| directing said entity to provide services or funding for  | 
| services to the respondent is being sought by any party.  | 
| (Source: P.A. 89-439, eff. 6-1-96.)
 
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|     (405 ILCS 5/3-400)  (from Ch. 91 1/2, par. 3-400)
 | 
|     Sec. 3-400. Voluntary admission to mental health facility.  | 
|     (a) Any person 16 or older, including a person adjudicated  | 
| a disabled person, may be admitted to a mental health
facility  | 
| as a voluntary recipient for treatment of a mental illness upon  | 
| the
filing of an application with the facility director of the  | 
| facility if the
facility director determines and documents in  | 
| the recipient's medical record that the person (1) is  | 
| clinically suitable for admission as a voluntary recipient and  | 
| (2) has the capacity to consent to voluntary admission. | 
|     (b) For purposes of consenting to voluntary admission, a  | 
| person has the capacity to consent to voluntary admission if,  | 
| in the professional judgment of the facility director or his or  | 
| her designee, the person is able to understand that: | 
|         (1) He or she is being admitted to a mental health  | 
| facility. | 
|         (2) He or she may request discharge at any time. The  | 
| request must be in writing, and discharge is not automatic. | 
|         (3) Within 5 business days after receipt of the written  | 
|  | 
| request for discharge, the facility must either discharge  | 
| the person or initiate commitment proceedings.
 | 
|     (c) No mental health facility shall require the completion  | 
| of a petition or certificate as a condition of accepting the  | 
| admission of a recipient who is being transported to that  | 
| facility from any other inpatient or outpatient healthcare  | 
| facility if the recipient has completed an application for  | 
| voluntary admission to the receiving facility pursuant to this  | 
| Section.  | 
| (Source: P.A. 96-612, eff. 1-1-10.)
 | 
|     (405 ILCS 5/3-401.1 new) | 
|     Sec. 3-401.1. Transportation to mental health facility.  | 
| Upon receipt of an application for admission prepared pursuant  | 
| to this Article, any licensed ambulance service may transport a  | 
| recipient to a mental health facility or from one mental health  | 
| facility to another. An ambulance service, acting in good faith  | 
| and without negligence in connection with the transportation of  | 
| recipients shall incur no liability, civil or criminal, by  | 
| reason of such transportation.
 | 
|     (405 ILCS 5/3-751) | 
|     Sec. 3-751. Involuntary admission; petition. | 
|     (a) Any person 18 years of age or older may execute a  | 
| petition asserting that another person is subject to  | 
| involuntary admission on an outpatient basis. The petition  | 
|  | 
| shall be prepared pursuant to paragraph (b) of Section 3-601  | 
| and shall be filed with the court in the county where the  | 
| respondent resides or is present.  | 
|     (b) The court may inquire of the petitioner whether there  | 
| are reasonable grounds to believe that the facts stated in the  | 
| petition are true and whether the respondent is subject to  | 
| involuntary admission on an outpatient basis.  | 
|     (c) A petition for involuntary admission on an outpatient  | 
| basis may be combined with or accompanied by a petition for  | 
| involuntary admission on an inpatient basis under Article VII. 
 | 
|     (d) Notwithstanding any other provision in this Chapter, a  | 
| petition may be filed under this Article prior to the  | 
| expiration of an agreed order for outpatient admission issued  | 
| pursuant to Section 3-801.5 of this Chapter, provided that the  | 
| recipient has refused to agree to an extension of the agreed  | 
| order as provided in subsection (g) of Section 3-801.5. The  | 
| filing of such a petition at least 5 days prior to the  | 
| expiration of such an agreed order shall continue the order in  | 
| effect pending the disposition of the petition. | 
|     (e) A petition for involuntary outpatient commitment may be  | 
| filed pursuant to this Section concerning a person who has been  | 
| admitted to a mental health facility on an informal basis under  | 
| Section 3-300 of this Code or as a voluntary recipient under  | 
| Section 3-400 of this Code provided that such a person has a  | 
| documented history of illness and treatment demonstrating that  | 
| he or she is unlikely to continue to receive needed treatment  | 
|  | 
| following release from informal or voluntary admission and that  | 
| an order for alternative treatment or for care and custody is  | 
| necessary in order to ensure continuity of treatment outside a  | 
| mental health facility. The filing of such a petition shall not  | 
| prevent the recipient from requesting and obtaining a discharge  | 
| pursuant to subsection (b) of Section 3-300 or Section 3-404,  | 
| nor shall it prevent the facility director from discharging the  | 
| recipient pursuant to Section 3-902 of this Code.  | 
| (Source: P.A. 96-1399, eff. 7-29-10; 96-1453, eff. 8-20-10.)
 
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|     (405 ILCS 5/3-800)  (from Ch. 91 1/2, par. 3-800)
 | 
|     Sec. 3-800. 
(a) Unless otherwise indicated, court hearings  | 
| under this
Chapter shall be held pursuant to this Article.   | 
| Hearings shall be held
in such quarters as the court directs.
 | 
| To the extent practical, hearings shall be held in the mental  | 
| health facility
where the respondent is hospitalized.  Any party  | 
| may request a change of
venue or transfer to any other county  | 
| because of the convenience of parties
or witnesses or the  | 
| condition of the respondent.  The respondent may
request to have  | 
| the proceedings transferred to the county of his residence.
 | 
|     (b) If the court grants a continuance on its own motion or  | 
| upon the motion
of one of the parties, the respondent may  | 
| continue to be detained pending
further order of the court.   | 
| Such continuance shall not extend beyond 15
days except to the  | 
| extent that continuances are requested by the respondent.
 | 
|     (c) Court hearings under this Chapter, including hearings  | 
|  | 
| under Section
2-107.1, shall be open to the press and public  | 
| unless the
respondent or some other party requests that they be  | 
| closed.  The court may
also indicate its intention to close a  | 
| hearing, including when it determines
that the respondent may  | 
| be unable to make a reasoned decision to request that
the
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| hearing be closed.  A request that a hearing be closed shall be
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| granted unless there is an objection to closing the hearing by  | 
| a party or any
other person. If
an objection is made, the court  | 
| shall not close the hearing unless, following a
hearing, it  | 
| determines that the patient's interest in having the hearing  | 
| closed
is compelling.  The court shall support its determination  | 
| with written findings
of fact and conclusions of law.  The court  | 
| shall not close the hearing if the
respondent objects to its  | 
| closure.  Whenever a court determines that a hearing
shall be  | 
| closed, access to the records of the hearing, including but not
 | 
| limited to transcripts and pleadings, shall be limited to the  | 
| parties involved
in the hearing, court personnel, and any  | 
| person or agency providing mental
health services that are the  | 
| subject of the hearing.  Access may also
be granted, however,  | 
| pursuant to the provisions of the Mental Health and
 | 
| Developmental
Disabilities Confidentiality Act. | 
|     (d) The provisions of subsection (a-5) of Section 6 of the  | 
| Rights of Crime Victims and Witnesses Act shall apply to the  | 
| initial commitment hearing, as provided under Section 5-2-4 of  | 
| the Unified Code of Corrections, for a respondent found not  | 
| guilty by reason of insanity of a violent crime in a criminal  | 
|  | 
| proceeding and the hearing has been ordered by the court under  | 
| this Code to determine if the defendant is: | 
|         (1) in need of mental health services on an inpatient  | 
| basis; | 
|         (2) in need of mental health services on an outpatient  | 
| basis; or | 
|         (3) not in need of mental health services. | 
|     While the impact statement to the court allowed under this  | 
| subsection (d)  may include the impact that the respondent's  | 
| criminal conduct has had upon the victim, victim's  | 
| representative, or victim's family or household member, the  | 
| court may only consider the impact statement along with all  | 
| other appropriate factors in determining the: | 
|         (i) threat of serious physical harm posed by the  | 
| respondent to himself or herself, or to another person; | 
|         (ii) location of inpatient or outpatient mental health  | 
| services ordered by the court, but only after complying  | 
| with all other applicable administrative requirements,  | 
| rules, and statutory requirements; | 
|         (iii) maximum period of commitment for inpatient  | 
| mental health services; and | 
|         (iv) conditions of release for outpatient mental  | 
| health services ordered by the court. 
 | 
|     (e) Notwithstanding the provisions of Section 2-1009 of the  | 
| Code of Civil Procedure, a respondent may object to a motion  | 
| for voluntary dismissal and the court may refuse to grant such  | 
|  | 
| a dismissal for good cause shown.  | 
| (Source: P.A. 96-117, eff. 1-1-10.)
 | 
|     (405 ILCS 5/3-801)  (from Ch. 91 1/2, par. 3-801) | 
|     Sec. 3-801. A respondent may request admission as an  | 
| informal or voluntary
recipient at any time prior to an  | 
| adjudication that he is subject to
involuntary admission on an  | 
| inpatient or outpatient basis.
The facility director shall  | 
| approve such a request unless the facility
director
determines
 | 
| that the respondent lacks the capacity to consent to informal  | 
| or voluntary
admission or
that informal or voluntary admission  | 
| is clinically inappropriate. The director
shall not
find that  | 
| voluntary admission is clinically inappropriate in the absence  | 
| of a
documented
history of the respondent's illness and  | 
| treatment demonstrating that the
respondent is
unlikely to  | 
| continue to receive needed treatment following release from
 | 
| informal or
voluntary admission and that an order for  | 
| involuntary admission on an outpatient basis is
necessary in  | 
| order to ensure continuity of
treatment outside a mental health  | 
| facility.
 | 
|     If the facility director approves such a request, the
 | 
| petitioner shall be notified of the request and of his or her  | 
| right to object thereto, if the petitioner has requested such  | 
| notification on that individual recipient. The court may  | 
| dismiss the pending proceedings, but shall consider any  | 
| objection made by either the petitioner, the respondent, or the  | 
|  | 
| State's Attorney and may require proof that such
dismissal is  | 
| in the best interest of the respondent and of the public.
If  | 
| voluntary admission is accepted and the petition is dismissed  | 
| by the court, notice shall be provided to the petitioner,  | 
| orally and in writing, of his or her right to receive notice of  | 
| the recipient's discharge pursuant to Section 3-902(d). | 
| (Source: P.A. 96-570, eff. 1-1-10; 96-1399, eff. 7-29-10;  | 
| 96-1453, eff. 8-20-10.)
 | 
|     (405 ILCS 5/3-801.5) | 
|     Sec. 3-801.5. Agreed order for admission on an outpatient  | 
| basis. | 
|     (a) At any time before the conclusion of the hearing and  | 
| the entry of the
court's
findings, a respondent may enter into  | 
| an agreement to be subject to an order
for
admission on an  | 
| outpatient basis as provided for in Sections 3-811,
3-812, and  | 
| 3-813,
and 3-815 of this Code, provided that: | 
|         (1) The court and the parties have been presented with  | 
| a written report
pursuant to Section 3-810 of this Code  | 
| containing a recommendation for
court-ordered admission on  | 
| an outpatient basis and setting forth in detail the
 | 
| conditions
for such an order, and the court is satisfied  | 
| that the proposal for admission on an outpatient basis is  | 
| in the best interest of the respondent and of
the
public. | 
|         (2) The court advises the respondent of the conditions  | 
| of the proposed
order in open court and is satisfied that  | 
|  | 
| the respondent understands and agrees
to
the conditions of  | 
| the proposed order for admission on an outpatient basis. | 
|         (3) The proposed custodian is advised of the  | 
| recommendation for care and
custody and agrees to abide by  | 
| the terms of the proposed order. | 
|         (4) No such order may require the respondent to be  | 
| hospitalized except as
provided in subsection (b) of this  | 
| Section. | 
|         (5) No order may include as one of its conditions the  | 
| administration of
psychotropic medication, unless the  | 
| court determines, based on the documented
history of the  | 
| respondent's treatment and illness, that the respondent is
 | 
| unlikely to
continue to receive needed psychotropic  | 
| medication in the absence of such an
order. | 
|     (b) An agreed order of care and custody entered pursuant to  | 
| this Section may
grant the custodian the authority to admit a  | 
| respondent to a hospital if the
respondent fails
to comply with  | 
| the conditions of the agreed order. If necessary in order to
 | 
| obtain the
hospitalization of the respondent, the custodian may  | 
| apply to the court for an
order
authorizing an officer of the  | 
| peace to take the respondent into custody and
transport the
 | 
| respondent to the hospital specified in the agreed order. The  | 
| provisions of
Section 3-605
of this Code shall govern the  | 
| transportation of the respondent to a mental
health facility,
 | 
| except to the extent that those provisions are inconsistent  | 
| with this Section.
However, a
person admitted to a hospital  | 
|  | 
| pursuant to powers granted under an agreed order
for care
and  | 
| custody shall be treated as a voluntary recipient pursuant to  | 
| Article IV of
this Chapter
and shall be advised immediately of  | 
| his or her right to request a discharge
pursuant to
Section  | 
| 3-403 of this Code. | 
|     (c) If the court has appointed counsel for the respondent  | 
| pursuant to
Section 3-805
of this Code, that appointment shall  | 
| continue for the duration of any order
entered under
this  | 
| Section, and the respondent shall be represented by counsel in  | 
| any
proceeding held
pursuant to this Section. | 
|     (d) An order entered under this Section shall not  | 
| constitute a finding that
the
respondent is subject to  | 
| involuntary admission on an inpatient or outpatient basis. | 
|     (e) Nothing in this Section shall be deemed to create an  | 
| agency relationship
between the respondent and any custodian  | 
| appointed pursuant to this Section. | 
|     (f) Notwithstanding any other provision of Illinois law, no  | 
| respondent may
be
cited for contempt for violating the terms  | 
| and conditions of his or her agreed
order of care
and custody.
 | 
|     (g) An order entered under this Section may be extended  | 
| with the agreement of the parties for additional 180-day  | 
| periods.  | 
| (Source: P.A. 96-1399, eff. 7-29-10; 96-1453, eff. 8-20-10.)
 | 
|     Section 10. The Mental Health and Developmental  | 
| Disabilities Confidentiality Act is amended  by changing  | 
|  | 
| Section 11 as follows:
 
 | 
|     (740 ILCS 110/11)  (from Ch. 91 1/2, par. 811)
 | 
|     Sec. 11. Disclosure of records and communications. Records   | 
| and
communications may be disclosed:
 | 
|         (i) in accordance with the provisions of the
Abused and  | 
| Neglected Child Reporting Act, subsection (u) of Section 5  | 
| of the Children and Family Services Act, or Section 7.4 of  | 
| the Child Care Act of 1969;
 | 
|         (ii) when, and to the extent, a
therapist, in his or  | 
| her sole discretion, determines that disclosure is
 | 
| necessary to initiate or continue civil commitment or  | 
| involuntary treatment proceedings under the laws
of this  | 
| State or to otherwise protect the recipient or other person  | 
| against a
clear, imminent risk of serious physical or  | 
| mental injury or disease or death
being inflicted upon the  | 
| recipient or by the recipient on himself or another;
 | 
|         (iii) when, and to the extent disclosure is, in the  | 
| sole discretion of the
therapist, necessary to the  | 
| provision of emergency medical care to a recipient
who is  | 
| unable to assert or waive his or her rights hereunder;
 | 
|         (iv) when
disclosure is necessary to collect sums or  | 
| receive third
party payment representing charges for  | 
| mental health or developmental
disabilities services  | 
| provided by a therapist or agency to a recipient
under  | 
| Chapter V of the Mental Health and Developmental  | 
|  | 
| Disabilities Code or to
transfer debts under the  | 
| Uncollected State Claims Act; however, disclosure
shall be  | 
| limited to information needed to pursue collection, and the
 | 
| information so disclosed shall not be used for any other  | 
| purposes nor shall it
be redisclosed except in connection  | 
| with collection activities;
 | 
|         (v) when
requested by a family member, the Department  | 
| of Human Services may assist in
the location of the  | 
| interment site of a deceased recipient who is interred in a
 | 
| cemetery established under Section 26 100-26 of the Mental  | 
| Health and
Developmental Disabilities Administrative Act;
 | 
|         (vi) in judicial proceedings
under Article VIII of  | 
| Chapter III and Article V of Chapter IV of the Mental
 | 
| Health and Developmental Disabilities Code and proceedings  | 
| and investigations
preliminary thereto, to the State's  | 
| Attorney for the county or residence of a
person who is the  | 
| subject of such proceedings, or in which the person is  | 
| found,
or in which the facility is located, to the attorney  | 
| representing the petitioner in the judicial proceedings,  | 
| to the attorney representing the recipient
in the judicial  | 
| proceedings, to any person or agency providing mental  | 
| health
services that are the subject of the proceedings and  | 
| to that person's or
agency's attorney, to any court  | 
| personnel, including but not limited to judges
and circuit  | 
| court clerks, and to a guardian ad litem if one has been  | 
| appointed
by the court.  Information, provided that the  | 
|  | 
| information so disclosed under this subsection shall not be  | 
| utilized
for any other purpose nor be redisclosed except in  | 
| connection with the
proceedings or investigations.; Copies  | 
| of any records provided to counsel for a petitioner shall  | 
| be deleted or destroyed at the end of the proceedings and  | 
| counsel for petitioner shall certify to the court in  | 
| writing that he or she has done so. At the request of a  | 
| recipient or his or her counsel, the court shall issue a  | 
| protective order insuring the confidentiality of any  | 
| records or communications provided to counsel for a  | 
| petitioner; 
 | 
|         (vii) when, and to the extent disclosure is
necessary  | 
| to comply with the requirements of the Census Bureau in  | 
| taking the
federal Decennial Census;
 | 
|         (viii) when, and to the extent, in the
therapist's sole  | 
| discretion, disclosure is necessary to warn or protect a
 | 
| specific individual against whom a recipient has made a  | 
| specific threat of
violence where there exists a  | 
| therapist-recipient relationship or a special
 | 
| recipient-individual relationship;
 | 
|         (ix) in accordance with the Sex Offender
Registration  | 
| Act;
 | 
|         (x) in accordance with the Rights of Crime Victims and
 | 
| Witnesses Act; | 
|         (xi) in accordance with Section 6 of the Abused and  | 
| Neglected Long Term Care Facility Residents Reporting Act;  | 
|  | 
| and | 
|         (xii) in accordance with Section 55 of the Abuse of  | 
| Adults with Disabilities Intervention Act.
 | 
|     Any person, institution, or agency, under
this Act,  | 
| participating in good faith in the making of a report under the
 | 
| Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act or in the disclosure  | 
| of records and
communications under this Section, shall have  | 
| immunity from any liability,
civil, criminal or otherwise, that  | 
| might result by reason of such action. For
the purpose of any  | 
| proceeding, civil or criminal, arising out of a report or
 | 
| disclosure under this Section, the good faith of any person,  | 
| institution, or
agency so reporting or disclosing shall be  | 
| presumed.
 | 
| (Source: P.A. 95-331, eff. 8-21-07; 96-466, eff. 8-14-09;  | 
| revised 9-16-10.)
 | 
|     Section 15. The Probate Act of 1975 is amended  by changing  | 
| Section 11a-10 as follows:
 
 | 
|     (755 ILCS 5/11a-10)  (from Ch. 110 1/2, par. 11a-10)
 | 
|     Sec. 11a-10. Procedures preliminary to hearing. 
 | 
|     (a) Upon the filing of a petition pursuant to Section  | 
| 11a-8, the court shall
set a date and place for hearing to take  | 
| place within 30 days.  The court
shall appoint a guardian ad  | 
| litem to report to the court concerning the
respondent's best  | 
| interests consistent with the provisions of this Section,
 | 
|  | 
| except that
the appointment of a guardian ad litem shall not be  | 
| required when
the court determines that such appointment is not  | 
| necessary for the protection
of the respondent or a reasonably  | 
| informed decision on the petition.
If the guardian ad litem is  | 
| not a licensed attorney, he or she shall be
qualified,
by
 | 
| training or experience, to work with or advocate for the  | 
| developmentally
disabled, mentally ill, physically disabled,  | 
| the elderly, or persons disabled
because of mental  | 
| deterioration, depending on the type of disability that is
 | 
| alleged in the petition.
The court may allow the guardian ad  | 
| litem reasonable compensation.  The
guardian ad litem may  | 
| consult with a person who by training or experience is
 | 
| qualified to work with persons with a developmental disability,  | 
| persons with
mental illness, or physically disabled persons, or  | 
| persons disabled because of
mental deterioration, depending on  | 
| the type of disability that is alleged.
The guardian ad litem  | 
| shall personally observe the respondent prior to the
hearing  | 
| and shall inform
him orally and in writing of the contents of  | 
| the petition and of his rights
under Section 11a-11.
The  | 
| guardian ad litem shall also attempt to elicit the respondent's  | 
| position
concerning the adjudication of disability, the  | 
| proposed guardian, a proposed
change in residential placement,  | 
| changes in care that might result from the
guardianship, and  | 
| other areas of inquiry deemed appropriate by the court.
 | 
| Notwithstanding any provision in the Mental Health and  | 
| Developmental Disabilities Confidentiality Act or any other  | 
|  | 
| law, a guardian ad litem shall have the right to inspect and  | 
| copy any medical or mental health record of the respondent  | 
| which the guardian ad litem deems necessary, provided that the  | 
| information so disclosed shall not be utilized for any other  | 
| purpose nor be redisclosed except in connection with the  | 
| proceedings. At or before the hearing, the guardian ad litem  | 
| shall file a written report
detailing his or her observations  | 
| of the respondent, the responses of the
respondent to any of  | 
| the inquires detailed in this Section, the opinion of the
 | 
| guardian
ad litem or other professionals with whom the guardian  | 
| ad litem consulted
concerning the appropriateness of  | 
| guardianship, and any other material issue
discovered by the  | 
| guardian ad litem.  The guardian ad litem shall appear at the
 | 
| hearing and testify as to any issues presented in his or her  | 
| report.
 | 
|     (b) The court (1) may appoint counsel for the respondent,  | 
| if the court finds
that the interests of the respondent will be  | 
| best served by the appointment,
and (2) shall appoint counsel  | 
| upon respondent's request or if the respondent
takes a position  | 
| adverse to that of the guardian ad litem.  The respondent
shall  | 
| be permitted to obtain the appointment of counsel either at the  | 
| hearing
or by any written or oral request communicated to the  | 
| court prior to the
hearing.  The summons shall inform the  | 
| respondent of this right to obtain
appointed counsel. The court  | 
| may allow counsel for the respondent reasonable
compensation.
 | 
|     (c) If the respondent is unable to pay the fee of the  | 
|  | 
| guardian ad litem or
appointed counsel, or both, the court may  | 
| enter an order for
the petitioner to
pay all
such
fees or such  | 
| amounts as the respondent or the respondent's estate may be  | 
| unable
to pay.
However, in cases where the Office of State  | 
| Guardian is the petitioner,
consistent with Section 30 of the  | 
| Guardianship and Advocacy Act,
 where an elder abuse provider  | 
| agency is the petitioner, pursuant to
Section 9 of the Elder  | 
| Abuse and Neglect Act,
or where the Department of Human  | 
| Services Office of Inspector General is the petitioner,  | 
| consistent with Section 45 of the Abuse of Adults with  | 
| Disabilities Intervention Act, no guardian ad litem or legal  | 
| fees shall be assessed against the Office of
State Guardian,  | 
| the elder abuse provider agency, or the Department of Human  | 
| Services Office of Inspector General.
 | 
|     (d) The hearing may be held at such convenient place as the  | 
| court directs,
including at a facility in which the respondent  | 
| resides.
 | 
|     (e) Unless he is the petitioner, the respondent shall be  | 
| personally
served with a copy of the petition and a summons not  | 
| less than 14 days
before the hearing.
The summons shall be  | 
| printed in large, bold type and shall include the
following  | 
| notice:
 | 
| NOTICE OF RIGHTS OF RESPONDENT
 | 
|     You have been named as a respondent in a guardianship  | 
| petition asking that
you be declared a disabled person.  If the  | 
| court grants the petition, a
guardian will be appointed for  | 
|  | 
| you.  A copy of the guardianship petition is
attached for your  | 
| convenience.
 | 
| The date and time of the hearing are:
 | 
| The place where the hearing will occur is:
 | 
| The Judge's name and phone number is:
 | 
|     If a guardian is appointed for you, the guardian may be  | 
| given the right to
make all
important personal decisions for  | 
| you, such as where you may live, what medical
treatment you may  | 
| receive, what places you may visit, and who may visit you.  A
 | 
| guardian may also be given the right to control and manage your  | 
| money and other
property, including your home, if you own one.   | 
| You may lose the right to make
these decisions for yourself.
 | 
|     You have the following legal rights:
 | 
|         (1) You have the right to be present at the court  | 
| hearing.
 | 
|         (2) You have the right to be represented by a lawyer,  | 
| either one that you
retain, or one appointed by the Judge.
 | 
|         (3) You have the right to ask for a jury of six persons  | 
| to hear your case.
 | 
|         (4) You have the right to present evidence to the court  | 
| and to confront
and
cross-examine witnesses.
 | 
|         (5) You have the right to ask the Judge to appoint an  | 
| independent expert
to examine you and give an opinion about  | 
| your need for a guardian.
 | 
|         (6) You have the right to ask that the court hearing be  | 
| closed to the
public.
 | 
|  | 
|         (7) You have the right to tell the court whom you  | 
| prefer to have for your
guardian.
 | 
|     You do not have to attend the court hearing if you do not  | 
| want to be there.
If you do not attend, the Judge may appoint a  | 
| guardian if the Judge finds that
a guardian would be of benefit  | 
| to you.  The hearing will not be postponed or
canceled if you do  | 
| not attend.
 | 
|     IT IS VERY IMPORTANT THAT YOU ATTEND THE HEARING IF YOU DO  | 
| NOT WANT A
GUARDIAN OR IF YOU WANT SOMEONE OTHER THAN THE  | 
| PERSON NAMED IN THE GUARDIANSHIP
PETITION TO BE YOUR GUARDIAN.   | 
| IF YOU DO NOT WANT A GUARDIAN OF IF YOU HAVE ANY
OTHER  | 
| PROBLEMS, YOU SHOULD CONTACT AN ATTORNEY OR COME TO COURT AND  | 
| TELL THE
JUDGE.
 | 
|     Service of summons and the petition may be made by a  | 
| private person 18
years
of
age or over who is not a party to the  | 
| action.
 | 
|     (f) Notice of the time and place of the hearing shall be  | 
| given by the
petitioner by mail or in person to those persons,  | 
| including the proposed
guardian, whose names and addresses
 | 
| appear in the petition and who do not waive notice, not less  | 
| than 14 days
before the hearing. 
 | 
| (Source: P.A. 95-373, eff. 8-23-07; 96-1052, eff. 7-14-10.)
 
  | 
|     Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon  | 
| becoming law. 
  
 |