Rep. Lindsey LaPointe

Filed: 4/1/2026

 

 


 

 


 
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1
AMENDMENT TO HOUSE BILL 4039

2    AMENDMENT NO. ______. Amend House Bill 4039 by replacing
3everything after the enacting clause with the following:
 
4
"Article 1. General Provisions

 
5    Section 1-1. Short title; references to Act.
6    (a) Short title. This Act may be cited as the Holistic
7Overdose Prevention and Equity Act.
8    (b) References to Act. This Act may be referred to as the
9HOPE Act.
 
10    Section 1-5. Legislative findings and purpose.
11    (a) The General Assembly finds that:
12        (1) The Department of Public Health reported 3,261
13    opioid-related overdose fatalities in 2022, representing
14    an estimated 272 lives lost every month as the State's
15    overdose crisis persists.

 

 

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1        (2) The Cook County Medical Examiner's Office
2    confirmed that 2,000 opioid-related deaths occurred in
3    Cook County during 2022, with Black residents comprising
4    56% of deaths despite only representing 23% of the
5    county's population.
6        (3) The Opioid Data Dashboard provided by the
7    Department of Public Health vividly demonstrates the
8    extensive reach of opioid-related overdose across the
9    State; outside of Cook County, the counties that
10    experience the brunt of fatalities include Will County,
11    Winnebago County, DuPage County, Lake County, Kane County,
12    Madison County, St. Clair County, Sangamon County, McHenry
13    County, and Champaign County.
14        (4) Harm reduction measures have been proven to reduce
15    HIV transmissions, among other benefits, including
16    assisting in the prevention of the acquisition of other
17    bloodborne viruses such as Hepatitis B and C, the
18    prevention of fatal overdoses, decrease in encounters with
19    the criminal justice system, reduction in crime, reduction
20    of social exclusion for people who use drugs, and
21    improvement in access to medical care, mental health
22    support, housing, community support, food, and other basic
23    needs.
24        (5) Extensive research and reports continue to
25    demonstrate that harm reduction strategies not only save
26    lives by preventing overdose deaths but also limit

 

 

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1    expenses in response to hospitalizations, emergency calls,
2    and deaths, promote public safety by diverting hazardous
3    waste from public spaces, and do not lead to an increase in
4    crime rates or substance use.
5        (6) Harm reduction operates on the understanding that
6    recovery is a multifaceted journey and that harm reduction
7    strategies complement traditional recovery approaches.
8        (7) While people who use drugs continue to face social
9    stigma, they still possess the right to receive access to
10    housing, education, economic mobility, mental health care,
11    and a range of services to support a better quality of
12    life.
13        (8) Harm reduction acknowledges the intersecting
14    systems of oppression that marginalize people who use
15    drugs and centers the need for racial, economic, and
16    gender justice within policies and practices.
17        (9) Across the State, harm reductionists tirelessly
18    dedicate themselves toward mitigating the harms of
19    substance use and providing critical support to
20    individuals in need, and it is essential to recognize and
21    appreciate the strain and labor undertaken by these
22    individuals as they endure secondary trauma and navigate
23    complex social, economic, and political landscapes.
24        (10) Recent reports have highlighted funding and other
25    stresses endured by harm reduction providers, including
26    inadequate and inefficient distribution of opioid

 

 

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1    settlement funds, as reported in the Chicago Reader in
2    December 2024.
3    (b) It is the purpose of this Act to enhance harm reduction
4through coordination of programs and policies; establishment
5of a sustainable source of funding for harm reduction
6programs, including potential provision of grants from the
7Illinois Opioid Remediation State Trust Fund as appropriate;
8and establishment of a permanent harm reduction
9infrastructure.
 
10    Section 1-10. Definitions. In this Act:
11    "Department" means the Department of Public Health.
12    "FDA" means the federal Food and Drug Administration.
13    "Harm reduction" means a philosophical framework and set
14of strategies designed to reduce harm and promote dignity and
15well-being among persons and communities who engage in
16substance use.
17    "Harm reduction professional" means a specialist who
18engages directly with people who use drugs to prevent overdose
19and infectious disease transmission; improve physical, mental,
20and social well-being; and offer low-barrier options for
21accessing health care services, including substance use and
22mental health disorder treatment.
23    "Harm reduction provider" means an organization with a
24needle and hypodermic syringe access program registered with
25the Department of Public Health, as described in the Overdose

 

 

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1Prevention and Harm Reduction Act, where traditional harm
2reduction services are the organization's primary focus, harm
3reduction principles guide the organization, and the
4organization has a long-standing, trusting relationship with
5people who use drugs or are at risk of overdose in the
6communities the organization serves.
7    "Medication-assisted treatment" means the use of
8FDA-approved medications, in combination with counseling and
9behavioral therapies, to provide a whole patient approach to
10the treatment of substance use disorders.
11    "Medications for opioid use disorder" means the use of
12FDA-approved medications to treat opioid use disorders.
13    "People with lived or living experience" means individuals
14who currently or in the past have used drugs, been diagnosed
15with a substance use disorder, experienced an overdose, or
16used harm reduction services.
 
17
Article 2. Harm Reduction Advisory Board

 
18    Section 2-5. Purpose. The Harm Reduction Advisory Board is
19created to advance the State's efforts to save lives through
20harm reduction through improved alignment of existing efforts
21across multiple State agencies, sustained and strategic
22investment, and emphasis on input from people with lived or
23living experience.
 

 

 

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1    Section 2-10. Membership.
2    (a) Members of the Harm Reduction Advisory Board shall
3represent the diversity of this State and possess the
4expertise needed to perform the responsibilities of the Harm
5Reduction Advisory Board. Members of the Harm Reduction
6Advisory Board shall include the following:
7        (1) one member who is a representative of a statewide
8    coalition addressing harm reduction, appointed by the
9    Governor;
10        (2) one member who is a member of the General
11    Assembly, appointed by the President of the Senate;
12        (3) one member who is a member of the General
13    Assembly, appointed by the Speaker of the House of
14    Representatives;
15        (4) one member who is a member of the General
16    Assembly, appointed by the Minority Leader of the Senate;
17        (5) one member who is a member of the General
18    Assembly, appointed by the Minority Leader of the House of
19    Representatives;
20        (6) the Director of Public Health or the Director's
21    designee, who shall serve as co-chair;
22        (7) the Secretary of Human Services or the Secretary's
23    designee;
24        (8) the Chief Behavioral Health Officer or the Chief
25    Behavioral Health Officer's designee;
26        (9) the Statewide Opioid Settlement Administrator or

 

 

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1    the Statewide Opioid Settlement Administrator's designee;
2        (10) one member who is a person with lived or living
3    experience with drug use, substance use disorder,
4    overdose, or use of harm reduction services, appointed by
5    the President of the Senate;
6        (11) one member who is a person with lived or living
7    experience with drug use, substance use disorder,
8    overdose, or use of harm reduction services, appointed by
9    the Speaker of the House of Representatives, who shall
10    serve as co-chair and serve as the Board's spokesperson,
11    including in communication with the General Assembly and
12    federal and local leaders;
13        (12) one member who is a person with lived or living
14    experience with drug use, substance use disorder,
15    overdose, or use of harm reduction services, appointed by
16    the Minority Leader of the Senate;
17        (13) one member who is a person with lived or living
18    experience with drug use, substance use disorder,
19    overdose, or use of harm reduction services, appointed by
20    the Minority Leader of the House of Representatives;
21        (14) one member who is a person who has lost an
22    immediate family member to a fatal overdose, appointed by
23    the Governor;
24        (15) one member who is a representative of a statewide
25    organization of behavioral health providers, appointed by
26    the Governor;

 

 

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1        (16) one member who is a representative of a statewide
2    organization of addiction medicine specialists, appointed
3    by the Governor;
4        (17) two members who are employees of community-based
5    providers of harm reduction services, appointed by the
6    co-chairs;
7        (18) one member who is a person employed by a research
8    institution who has conducted research on harm reduction,
9    appointed by the co-chairs;
10        (19) seven members who are persons representing local
11    health departments, one from each Department region,
12    appointed by the Director of Public Health; and
13        (20) additional members who are persons with lived or
14    living experience with drug use, substance use disorder,
15    overdose, or use of harm reduction services as needed to
16    ensure that a majority of Harm Reduction Advisory Board
17    members have lived or living experience, appointed by the
18    co-chairs.
19    (b) Members of the Harm Reduction Advisory Board shall
20serve without compensation, except that individuals with lived
21or living experience under subsection (a) may receive stipends
22as compensation for their time. Members of the Harm Reduction
23Advisory Board may be reimbursed for reasonable expenses
24incurred in the performance of their duties from funds
25appropriated for that purpose.
26    (c) The Harm Reduction Advisory Board may take board

 

 

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1action, including holding meetings, upon the appointment of a
2quorum of its members in compliance with the Open Meetings
3Act. The Harm Reduction Advisory Board terms shall end 4 years
4from the date of appointment.
 
5    Section 2-15. Meetings. The Harm Reduction Advisory Board
6shall meet at least quarterly and may do so either in person or
7remotely, in alignment with the Open Meetings Act. The
8Department of Public Health and Department of Human Services
9shall jointly provide administrative support.
 
10    Section 2-20. Responsibilities. Within 12 months after the
11effective date of this Act, the Harm Reduction Advisory Board
12shall:
13        (1) offer input on State agencies' processes to
14    solicit applications to ensure that harm reduction
15    providers are well-represented;
16        (2) provide input on the State's comprehensive,
17    interagency effort to ensure that harm reduction services
18    are available statewide, that the State-supported system
19    respects the dignity of people who use drugs, and that
20    investments in harm reduction services are sustained and
21    strategic;
22        (3) advise State agencies on a process to support
23    ongoing monitoring and evaluation of community-based harm
24    reduction programs;

 

 

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1        (4) coordinate with harm reduction providers and other
2    community-based organizations; and
3        (5) deliver an annual report on successes and
4    challenges with the year's harm reduction funding and
5    recommendations for harm reduction public policy to the
6    General Assembly and to the Governor to be posted on the
7    Department of Public Health website.
 
8
Article 3. Grant Funding

 
9    Section 3-5. Grant-making authority.
10    (a) The Department of Public Health and the Department of
11Human Services shall have grant-making, operational, and
12procurement authority to distribute funds to harm reduction
13providers to execute the functions established in this Act.
14This subsection does not limit any existing grant-making,
15operational, or procurement authorities of other State
16agencies to distribute funds for harm reduction activities.
17    (b) The Department may issue grants to harm reduction
18providers. Grants shall be issued on or before July 1 of each
19fiscal year.
20    (c) Beginning in Fiscal Year 2028 and subject to
21appropriation, grants shall be awarded for a project period of
22one year, with 2 one-year renewals, contingent on Department
23requirements for reporting and successful performance.
24    (d) The Department shall ensure that grants awarded under

 

 

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1this Act do not duplicate or supplant grants awarded under any
2other Act. Grants awarded under this Act may be used to expand
3existing services.
4    (e) The Department may make harm reduction grants to harm
5reduction providers addressing opioid remediation in the
6State. Eligible grant recipients shall be harm reduction
7providers that offer services in a manner that supports and
8meets the approved uses of the opioid settlement funds.
9Eligible grant recipients have no entitlement to a grant under
10this Section. The Department of Public Health shall partner
11with the Department of Human Services to adopt rules to
12implement this Section, if necessary, and may create a
13competitive application procedure for grants to be awarded.
14The rules may specify the manner of applying for grants;
15grantee eligibility requirements; project eligibility
16requirements; restrictions on the use of grant moneys; the
17manner in which grantees must account for the use of grant
18moneys; and any other provision that the Department of Public
19Health determines to be necessary or useful for the
20administration of this Section.
 
21    Section 3-10. Grants for harm reduction services.
22    (a) The Department may make grants to harm reduction
23providers.
24    (b) When the Department issues grants, it shall ensure
25that harm reduction services are available in all counties

 

 

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1whenever possible. A harm reduction provider may receive a
2grant to provide harm reduction services in more than one
3county.
4    (c) Harm reduction providers receiving grants under this
5Act shall establish eligibility criteria for services in
6alignment with the Department's requirements outlined in grant
7agreements.
8    (d) An eligible participant shall not be court ordered to
9receive services funded by a grant under this Act.
10    (e) Harm reduction providers receiving grants under this
11Act shall provide the following harm reduction services
12directly or through subgrants to other organizations:
13        (1) provision of harm reduction supplies, including,
14    but not limited to, overdose reversal supplies, including
15    naloxone kits with 3 milligram nasal spray, 4 milligram
16    nasal spray, and 0.4 milligram/milliliter intramuscular
17    formulation variations; condoms; supplies to promote
18    sterile injection and reduce infectious disease
19    transmission through injection drug use; safer smoking
20    kits to reduce infectious disease transmission; written
21    educational materials on safer injection practices and HIV
22    and viral hepatitis and prevention, testing, treatment,
23    and care services;
24        (2) overdose reversal education and training services;
25        (3) navigation services to ensure linkage to HIV and
26    viral hepatitis prevention, testing, treatment, and care

 

 

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1    services, including antiretroviral therapy for HCV and
2    HIV, pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP), post-exposure
3    prophylaxis (PEP), prevention of mother-to-child
4    transmission, and partner services;
5        (4) referral to hepatitis A and hepatitis B
6    vaccinations;
7        (5) provision of education on HIV and viral hepatitis
8    prevention, testing, and referral to treatment services;
9    and
10        (6) provision of information on local resources or
11    referrals for PEP, or both.
12    (f) Harm reduction providers receiving grants under this
13Act may provide the following services directly or through
14subgrants to other organizations:
15        (1) provision of harm reduction supplies, including,
16    but not limited to, equipment, products, or materials to
17    analyze or test for the presence of a drug adulterant
18    within a controlled substance; safer sex kits; sharps
19    disposal and medication disposal kits; wound care
20    supplies; medication lock boxes; sterile water and saline;
21    ascorbic acid (vitamin C); nicotine cessation therapies;
22    food and beverages, including snacks, protein drinks, and
23    water; FDA-approved home testing kits for viral hepatitis,
24    including HBV and HCV, and HIV; distribution mechanisms,
25    such as bags for naloxone or safer sex kits and metal boxes
26    or containers for holding naloxone, for harm reduction

 

 

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1    supplies, including stock as otherwise described and
2    delineated on this list;
3        (2) contingency management services, in which tangible
4    incentives are provided to participants contingent on
5    evidence of change in a specific, incentivized behavior
6    such as abstinence from a particular drug;
7        (3) services to promote hygiene and other basic needs,
8    including, but not limited to, mobile showers and clothing
9    distribution; and
10        (4) other services necessary to promote harm
11    reduction, as determined by the harm reduction provider
12    and approved by the Department.
13    (g) Harm reduction providers receiving grants under this
14Act may utilize funds for the following activities, subject to
15approval by the Department:
16        (1) compensation and fringe benefits for harm
17    reduction staff and supervisors;
18        (2) research and evaluation;
19        (3) community outreach and education; and
20        (4) building capacity in the harm reduction field.
21    (h) Harm reduction providers receiving grants under this
22Act shall ensure that services are accessible to individuals
23with disabilities and to individuals with limited English
24proficiency. Harm reduction providers receiving grants under
25this Act shall not deny services to individuals on the basis of
26immigration status, gender identity, or any other protected

 

 

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1class.
2    (i) Communications that are made between a harm reduction
3provider receiving a grant under this Act and an eligible
4participant and while providing harm reduction services are
5confidential and privileged. Except with the written consent
6of the participant, a harm reduction provider shall not be
7required to disclose such communications or related records in
8any civil, criminal, administrative, or legislative
9proceeding, nor shall the provider be examined regarding such
10communications. Nothing in this subsection shall be construed
11to supersede or conflict with federal confidentiality
12requirements, including the Health Insurance Portability and
13Accountability Act of 1996 and 42 CFR Part 2.
14    (j) The Department shall encourage harm reduction
15providers receiving grants under this Act to employ people
16with lived or living experience.
17    (k) Nothing in this Act shall be construed to supersede
18the requirements of the Grant Accountability and Transparency
19Act.
 
20
Article 4. Administrative Oversight

 
21    Section 4-5. Administration of harm reduction programming
22and funding.
23    (a) The Department of Public Health shall administer harm
24reduction programming and funding in coordination with other

 

 

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1State agencies, including the Department of Human Services, to
2ensure that resources are expended effectively.
3    (b) No later than June 30, 2027, the Department of Public
4Health and the Department of Human Services shall enter into
5an interagency agreement outlining their shared and distinct
6responsibilities for harm reduction in Illinois. The Harm
7Reduction Advisory Board must provide advice on the
8interagency agreement.
9    (c) Nothing in this Act shall be construed to require
10existing harm reduction programming or funding to be
11transferred from one State agency to another, for existing
12programming or funding to be terminated or modified, or to
13prevent State agencies from implementing new harm reduction
14programming or funding in the future.
 
15
Article 5. Training, Technical Assistance, and Education

 
16    Section 5-5. Role of harm reduction providers.
17Organizations or agencies that do not meet the definition of
18harm reduction provider must subcontract with a harm reduction
19provider to meet any requirements for harm reduction
20programming, training, education, or technical assistance
21established under this Act.
 
22    Section 5-10. Local government training. The Department
23and the Harm Reduction Advisory Board may establish a program

 

 

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1to provide comprehensive education and training, for local
2government agencies, including law enforcement and court
3stakeholders, concerning this Act and the Overdose Prevention
4and Harm Reduction Act, with a focus on ensuring compliance
5with laws that provide immunity for participants, harm
6reduction providers, and harm reduction staff and volunteers.
 
7
Article 6. Place-Based Approach to Harm Reduction

 
8    Section 6-5. Intent; purpose. This Article creates a
9place-based approach to expand harm reduction education and
10training, community engagement, mobile outreach, and
11medication-assisted treatment in the communities with the
12highest levels of overdoses and greatest unmet need for harm
13reduction services.
 
14    Section 6-10. Pilot.
15    (a) The Department may make grants to one harm reduction
16provider in a community in each Department region to
17coordinate a place-based approach to harm reduction.
18    (b) Harm reduction providers receiving grants under this
19Article shall provide the following services directly, through
20subgrants to other organizations, or in coordination with
21organizations receiving funding from other sources:
22        (1) community education and engagement on harm
23    reduction;

 

 

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1        (2) mobile outreach to the populations at highest risk
2    of overdose; and
3        (3) provision of or referral to medication-assisted
4    treatment.
5    (c) Harm reduction providers receiving grants under this
6Article may provide other services as necessary to expand harm
7reduction and prevent overdose in the community, either
8directly, through subgrants to other organizations, or in
9coordination with organizations receiving funding from other
10sources, as determined by the harm reduction provider and
11approved by the Department.
12    (d) The harm reduction provider shall provide training and
13technical assistance on harm reduction to subgrantees and
14other collaborating organizations.
15    (e) Harm reduction providers receiving grants under this
16Article and collaborating organizations are prohibited from
17sharing information about participants with law enforcement
18and from undertaking activities to increase arrests or
19prosecutions for drug-related offenses or of people who use
20drugs.
 
21    Section 6-15. Community selection. The Department shall
22determine communities for the pilot by considering the
23following factors:
24        (1) community population and poverty level;
25        (2) the geographic size of a community;

 

 

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1        (3) the number of fatal and nonfatal overdoses in the
2    community;
3        (4) recent trends in the number of overdoses in the
4    community;
5        (5) the number of harm reduction providers in the
6    community; and
7        (6) how many people are served by harm reduction
8    providers in the community.
 
9
Article 7. Correctional Facilities

 
10    Section 7-5. Incarceration; naloxone. Naloxone shall be
11made readily available to all correctional staff, health care
12staff, other staff, and incarcerated individuals in all
13prisons and jails, subject to the availability of funding to
14support the prison or jail in obtaining a supply of naloxone.
 
15
Article 8. Health Care Facilities

 
16    Section 8-5. Medication for opioid use disorder. All acute
17care hospitals that provide emergency services in an emergency
18department, all satellite emergency facilities, and all
19inpatient behavioral health treatment providers shall
20maintain, as part of their services, protocols and capacity to
21provide appropriate, evidence-based interventions prior to
22discharge that reduce the risk of subsequent harm and fatality

 

 

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1following an opioid-related overdose, including, but not
2limited to, institutional protocols and capacity to possess,
3dispense, administer, and prescribe all FDA-approved
4medications for opioid use disorder. Such treatment shall be
5offered to all patients who present in an acute care hospital
6emergency department, a satellite emergency facility, or
7inpatient behavioral health treatment provider for care and
8treatment of an opioid-related overdose or opioid use
9disorder; provided, however, that treatment shall only occur
10when it is recommended by the treating health care provider
11and is voluntarily agreed to by the patient. Acute care
12hospitals that provide emergency services in an emergency
13department, satellite emergency facilities, and inpatient
14behavioral health treatment providers shall demonstrate
15compliance with applicable training and waiver requirements
16established by the federal Drug Enforcement Administration and
17the federal Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services
18Administration relative to prescribing medication for opioid
19use disorder. Prior to discharge, any patient who is
20administered or prescribed medication for opioid use disorder
21in an acute care hospital emergency department, satellite
22emergency facility, or inpatient behavioral health treatment
23provider shall be directly connected to an appropriate
24provider or treatment site to voluntarily continue the
25treatment. This requirement can be met through partnership
26with medication on demand available through the Illinois

 

 

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1Helpline operated by the Department of Human Services or a
2provider licensed to provide medication-assisted recovery in
3accordance with 77 Ill. Adm. Code 2060.
 
4    Section 8-10. Patient discharge and education on naloxone;
5provider referral. Upon discharge of a patient from an acute
6care hospital, satellite emergency facility, or inpatient
7behavioral health treatment provider who has: (i) a history of
8or is actively using opioids or other illicit drugs; (ii) been
9diagnosed with opioid use disorder; or (iii) experienced an
10opioid-related overdose, the acute care hospital, satellite
11emergency facility, or inpatient behavioral health treatment
12provider shall educate the patient on the use of naloxone,
13offer not less than 2 doses of naloxone to the patient or a
14legal guardian of the patient, subject to the availability of
15funding to support the hospital in obtaining a supply of
16naloxone, and provide information about a harm reduction
17provider and offer to directly connect the patient to a harm
18reduction provider.
 
19    Section 8-15. Rulemaking. The Department may adopt rules
20for the implementation of this Article.
 
21
Article 9. Housing

 
22    Section 9-5. Recovery homes. A recovery home licensed in

 

 

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1accordance with 77 Ill. Adm. Code 2060 must comply with the
2following requirements:
3        (1) A resident may not be evicted for a single
4    recurrence of substance use disorder symptoms. Other
5    behaviors while intoxicated that violate the terms of
6    residency may be grounds for rejection of an applicant for
7    housing or eviction of a resident.
8        (2) If an applicant is rejected or a resident is
9    evicted solely based on abstinence-only or sobriety
10    requirements, the recovery home shall identify another
11    housing provider that will accept the individual and
12    directly connect the individual to that housing provider.
13        (3) Discrimination against applicants solely on the
14    basis of criminal records, records of arrests, charges, or
15    convictions on drug-related offenses is prohibited.
 
16    Section 9-10. Housing evictions based on opioid use
17disorder treatment. All operators or owners of housing are
18prohibited from rejecting applicants or evicting residents
19because they are receiving medication for opioid use disorder
20or other forms of medication-assisted treatment.
 
21    Section 9-15. Federal requirements. Nothing in this
22Article shall be construed to prohibit a housing provider from
23complying with federal laws or regulations if housing is
24provided using both federal and State funding.
 

 

 

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1
Article 10. Home Rule Preemption

 
2    Section 10-5. Home rule preemption.
3    (a) A home rule unit may not prohibit the establishment or
4operation of any harm reduction activities as provided in this
5Act.
6    (b) A municipality may not adopt zoning regulations for
7the sole purpose of prohibiting the establishment or operation
8of any harm reduction activities as provided in this Act.
9    (c) This Section is a denial and limitation of home rule
10powers and functions under subsection (g) of Section 6 of
11Article VII of the Illinois Constitution.
 
12
Article 11. Amendatory Provisions

 
13    Section 11-5. The Department of Professional Regulation
14Law of the Civil Administrative Code of Illinois is amended by
15adding Section 2105-372 as follows:
 
16    (20 ILCS 2105/2105-372 new)
17    Sec. 2105-372. Continuing education; harm reduction.
18    (a) As used in this Section:
19    "Harm reduction" means a philosophical framework and set
20of strategies designed to reduce harm and promote dignity and
21well-being among persons and communities who engage in

 

 

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1substance use.
2    "Harm reduction professional" has the meaning given to
3that term in the Holistic Overdose Prevention and Equity Act.
4    "Harm reduction provider" has the meaning given to that
5term in the Holistic Overdose Prevention and Equity Act.
6    "Health care professional" means a person licensed or
7registered by the Department under the following Acts: the
8Medical Practice Act of 1987, the Nurse Practice Act, the
9Clinical Psychologist Licensing Act, the Illinois Optometric
10Practice Act of 1987, the Illinois Physical Therapy Act, the
11Pharmacy Practice Act, the Physician Assistant Practice Act of
121987, the Clinical Social Work and Social Work Practice Act,
13the Nursing Home Administrators Licensing and Disciplinary
14Act, the Illinois Occupational Therapy Practice Act, the
15Podiatric Medical Practice Act of 1987, the Respiratory Care
16Practice Act, the Professional Counselor and Clinical
17Professional Counselor Licensing and Practice Act, the
18Illinois Speech-Language Pathology and Audiology Practice Act,
19the Illinois Dental Practice Act, the Marriage and Family
20Therapy Licensing Act, or the Behavior Analyst Licensing Act.
21    (b) For health care professional license or registration
22renewals occurring on or after January 1, 2027, a health care
23professional who has continuing education requirements must
24complete at least a one-hour course or training on harm
25reduction per renewal period. A health care professional may
26count this one hour for completion of this course toward

 

 

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1meeting the minimum credit hours required for continuing
2education.
3    (c) Any course or training offered to meet the
4requirements of this Section must be designed by or delivered
5by a harm reduction provider or harm reduction professional.
6    (d) The Department may adopt rules for the implementation
7of this Section.
 
8    Section 11-10. The Counties Code is amended by adding
9Section 3-6043 as follows:
 
10    (55 ILCS 5/3-6043 new)
11    Sec. 3-6043. Release; naloxone. Upon the release of a
12prisoner from a correctional institution, the sheriff shall
13provide the prisoner with naloxone, subject to the
14availability of funding, and a referral to a harm reduction
15provider, as well as to the substance use disorder treatment
16provider the prisoner was receiving treatment from prior to
17incarceration or a new provider, if that is the individual's
18preference, if applicable. In counties with more than 3
19million residents that have a county hospital system that
20provides correctional health services, the county hospital
21system shall also have a role, as determined by the sheriff, in
22providing individuals being released from a county
23correctional institution with naloxone and a referral to a
24harm reduction provider.
 

 

 

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1    Section 11-15. The Unified Code of Corrections is amended
2by changing Section 3-14-1 as follows:
 
3    (730 ILCS 5/3-14-1)  (from Ch. 38, par. 1003-14-1)
4    Sec. 3-14-1. Release from the institution.
5    (a) Upon release of a person on parole, mandatory release,
6final discharge, or pardon, the Department shall return all
7property held for him, provide him with suitable clothing and
8procure necessary transportation for him to his designated
9place of residence and employment. It may provide such person
10with a grant of money for travel and expenses which may be paid
11in installments. The amount of the money grant shall be
12determined by the Department.
13    (a-1) The Department shall, before a wrongfully imprisoned
14person, as defined in Section 3-1-2 of this Code, is
15discharged from the Department, provide him or her with any
16documents necessary after discharge.
17    (a-2) The Department of Corrections may establish and
18maintain, in any institution it administers, revolving funds
19to be known as "Travel and Allowances Revolving Funds". These
20revolving funds shall be used for advancing travel and expense
21allowances to committed, paroled, and discharged prisoners.
22The moneys paid into such revolving funds shall be from
23appropriations to the Department for Committed, Paroled, and
24Discharged Prisoners.

 

 

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1    (a-3) Upon release of a person who is eligible to vote on
2parole, mandatory release, final discharge, or pardon, the
3Department shall provide the person with a form that informs
4him or her that his or her voting rights have been restored and
5a voter registration application. The Department shall have
6available voter registration applications in the languages
7provided by the Illinois State Board of Elections. The form
8that informs the person that his or her rights have been
9restored shall include the following information:
10        (1) All voting rights are restored upon release from
11    the Department's custody.
12        (2) A person who is eligible to vote must register in
13    order to be able to vote.
14    The Department of Corrections shall confirm that the
15person received the voter registration application and has
16been informed that his or her voting rights have been
17restored.
18    (a-4) Prior to release of a person on parole, mandatory
19supervised release, final discharge, or pardon, the Department
20shall screen every person for Medicaid eligibility. Officials
21of the correctional institution or facility where the
22committed person is assigned shall assist an eligible person
23to complete a Medicaid application to ensure that the person
24begins receiving benefits as soon as possible after his or her
25release. The application must include the eligible person's
26address associated with his or her residence upon release from

 

 

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1the facility. If the residence is temporary, the eligible
2person must notify the Department of Human Services of his or
3her change in address upon transition to permanent housing.
4    (a-5) Upon release of a person from its custody to parole,
5upon mandatory supervised release, or upon final discharge,
6the Department shall run a LEADS report and shall notify the
7person of all in-effect protective orders issued against the
8person under Article 112A of the Code of Criminal Procedure of
91963 or under the Illinois Domestic Violence Act of 1986, the
10Civil No Contact Order Act, or the Stalking No Contact Order
11Act, that are identified in the LEADS report.
12    (b) (Blank).
13    (c) Except as otherwise provided in this Code, the
14Department shall establish procedures to provide written
15notification of any release of any person who has been
16convicted of a felony to the State's Attorney and sheriff of
17the county from which the offender was committed, and the
18State's Attorney and sheriff of the county into which the
19offender is to be paroled or released. Except as otherwise
20provided in this Code, the Department shall establish
21procedures to provide written notification to the proper law
22enforcement agency for any municipality of any release of any
23person who has been convicted of a felony if the arrest of the
24offender or the commission of the offense took place in the
25municipality, if the offender is to be paroled or released
26into the municipality, or if the offender resided in the

 

 

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1municipality at the time of the commission of the offense. If a
2person convicted of a felony who is in the custody of the
3Department of Corrections or on parole or mandatory supervised
4release informs the Department that he or she has resided,
5resides, or will reside at an address that is a housing
6facility owned, managed, operated, or leased by a public
7housing agency, the Department must send written notification
8of that information to the public housing agency that owns,
9manages, operates, or leases the housing facility. The written
10notification shall, when possible, be given at least 14 days
11before release of the person from custody, or as soon
12thereafter as possible. The written notification shall be
13provided electronically if the State's Attorney, sheriff,
14proper law enforcement agency, or public housing agency has
15provided the Department with an accurate and up to date email
16address.
17    (c-1) (Blank).
18    (c-2) The Department shall establish procedures to provide
19notice to the Illinois State Police of the release or
20discharge of persons convicted of violations of the
21Methamphetamine Control and Community Protection Act or a
22violation of the Methamphetamine Precursor Control Act. The
23Illinois State Police shall make this information available to
24local, State, or federal law enforcement agencies upon
25request.
26    (c-5) If a person on parole or mandatory supervised

 

 

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1release becomes a resident of a facility licensed or regulated
2by the Department of Public Health, the Illinois Department of
3Public Aid, or the Illinois Department of Human Services, the
4Department of Corrections shall provide copies of the
5following information to the appropriate licensing or
6regulating Department and the licensed or regulated facility
7where the person becomes a resident:
8        (1) The mittimus and any pre-sentence investigation
9    reports.
10        (2) The social evaluation prepared pursuant to Section
11    3-8-2.
12        (3) Any pre-release evaluation conducted pursuant to
13    subsection (j) of Section 3-6-2.
14        (4) Reports of disciplinary infractions and
15    dispositions.
16        (5) Any parole plan, including orders issued by the
17    Prisoner Review Board, and any violation reports and
18    dispositions.
19        (6) The name and contact information for the assigned
20    parole agent and parole supervisor.
21    This information shall be provided within 3 days of the
22person becoming a resident of the facility.
23    (c-10) If a person on parole or mandatory supervised
24release becomes a resident of a facility licensed or regulated
25by the Department of Public Health, the Illinois Department of
26Public Aid, or the Illinois Department of Human Services, the

 

 

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1Department of Corrections shall provide written notification
2of such residence to the following:
3        (1) The Prisoner Review Board.
4        (2) The chief of police and sheriff in the
5    municipality and county in which the licensed facility is
6    located.
7    The notification shall be provided within 3 days of the
8person becoming a resident of the facility.
9    (d) Upon the release of a committed person on parole,
10mandatory supervised release, final discharge, or pardon, the
11Department shall provide such person with information
12concerning programs and services of the Illinois Department of
13Public Health to ascertain whether such person has been
14exposed to the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) or any
15identified causative agent of Acquired Immunodeficiency
16Syndrome (AIDS).
17    (d-5) Upon the release of a committed person from a
18correctional institution or facility, the Department shall
19provide the committed person with naloxone and a referral to a
20harm reduction provider, as that term is defined in the
21Holistic Overdose Prevention and Equity Act, as well as to the
22substance use disorder treatment provider the prisoner was
23receiving treatment from prior to incarceration or a new
24provider, if that is the individual's preference, if
25applicable.
26    (e) Upon the release of a committed person on parole,

 

 

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1mandatory supervised release, final discharge, pardon, or who
2has been wrongfully imprisoned, the Department shall verify
3the released person's full name, date of birth, and social
4security number. If verification is made by the Department by
5obtaining a certified copy of the released person's birth
6certificate and the released person's social security card or
7other documents authorized by the Secretary, the Department
8shall provide the birth certificate and social security card
9or other documents authorized by the Secretary to the released
10person. If verification by the Department is done by means
11other than obtaining a certified copy of the released person's
12birth certificate and the released person's social security
13card or other documents authorized by the Secretary, the
14Department shall complete a verification form, prescribed by
15the Secretary of State, and shall provide that verification
16form to the released person.
17    (f) Forty-five days prior to the scheduled discharge of a
18person committed to the custody of the Department of
19Corrections, the Department shall give the person:
20        (1) who is otherwise uninsured an opportunity to apply
21    for health care coverage including medical assistance
22    under Article V of the Illinois Public Aid Code in
23    accordance with subsection (b) of Section 1-8.5 of the
24    Illinois Public Aid Code, and the Department of
25    Corrections shall provide assistance with completion of
26    the application for health care coverage including medical

 

 

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1    assistance;
2        (2) information about obtaining a standard Illinois
3    Identification Card or a limited-term Illinois
4    Identification Card under Section 4 of the Illinois
5    Identification Card Act if the person has not been issued
6    an Illinois Identification Card under subsection (a-20) of
7    Section 4 of the Illinois Identification Card Act;
8        (3) information about voter registration and may
9    distribute information prepared by the State Board of
10    Elections. The Department of Corrections may enter into an
11    interagency contract with the State Board of Elections to
12    participate in the automatic voter registration program
13    and be a designated automatic voter registration agency
14    under Section 1A-16.2 of the Election Code;
15        (4) information about job listings upon discharge from
16    the correctional institution or facility;
17        (5) information about available housing upon discharge
18    from the correctional institution or facility;
19        (6) a directory of elected State officials and of
20    officials elected in the county and municipality, if any,
21    in which the committed person intends to reside upon
22    discharge from the correctional institution or facility;
23    and
24        (7) any other information that the Department of
25    Corrections deems necessary to provide the committed
26    person in order for the committed person to reenter the

 

 

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1    community and avoid recidivism.
2    (g) Sixty days before the scheduled discharge of a person
3committed to the custody of the Department or upon receipt of
4the person's certified birth certificate and social security
5card as set forth in subsection (d) of Section 3-8-1 of this
6Act, whichever occurs later, the Department shall transmit an
7application for an Identification Card to the Secretary of
8State, in accordance with subsection (a-20) of Section 4 of
9the Illinois Identification Card Act.
10    The Department may adopt rules to implement this Section.
11(Source: P.A. 103-345, eff. 1-1-24; 104-11, eff. 6-20-25.)
 
12    Section 11-20. The County Jail Act is amended by adding
13Sections 19.7 and 19.9 as follows:
 
14    (730 ILCS 125/19.7 new)
15    Sec. 19.7. Release; naloxone. Upon the release of a
16prisoner from a jail, the warden shall provide the prisoner
17with naloxone, subject to the availability of funding to
18support the jail in obtaining a supply of naloxone, and a
19referral to a harm reduction provider, as that term is defined
20in the Holistic Overdose Prevention and Equity Act, as well as
21to the substance use disorder treatment provider the prisoner
22was receiving treatment from prior to incarceration or a new
23provider, if that is the individual's preference, if
24applicable. In counties with more than 3 million residents

 

 

10400HB4039ham001- 35 -LRB104 13076 BDA 35911 a

1that have a county hospital system that provides correctional
2health services, the county hospital system shall also have a
3role, as determined by the warden, in providing individuals
4being released from a county correctional institution with
5naloxone and a referral to a harm reduction provider.
 
6    (730 ILCS 125/19.9 new)
7    Sec. 19.9. Medication for opioid use disorder.
8    (a) In this Section:
9    "Clinically indicated" means a medical procedure or
10treatment is based upon the treatment provider's medical
11judgment in accordance with the current generally accepted
12standards of care.
13    "Medication-assisted treatment" means the use of
14FDA-approved medications, in combination with counseling and
15behavioral therapies, to provide a whole patient approach to
16the treatment of substance use disorders.
17    "Medications for opioid use disorder" means the use of
18FDA-approved medications to treat substance use disorders.
19    (b) Within 24 hours of admission to a jail, each detained
20person shall be screened for substance use disorders as part
21of an initial and ongoing substance use screening and
22assessment process. This process includes screening and
23assessment for opioid use disorders.
24    (c) A detained person who is admitted to a jail while under
25the medical care of a physician licensed to practice medicine

 

 

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1in all of its branches, a licensed physician assistant, or a
2licensed advanced practice registered nurse and who is taking
3medication at the time of admission in accordance with a valid
4prescription, as verified by the individual's pharmacy of
5record, primary care provider, other licensed care provider,
6or a prescription monitoring or information system, shall have
7that medication continued and provided by the jail pending an
8evaluation by a physician licensed to practice medicine in all
9of its branches, a licensed physician assistant, or a licensed
10advanced practice registered nurse and subject to the
11treatment provider's medical judgment. The jail may defer
12provision of a validly prescribed medication in accordance
13with this subsection if, in the judgment of a physician
14licensed to practice medicine in all of its branches, a
15licensed physician assistant, or a licensed advanced practice
16registered nurse, continuation of the medication is no longer
17clinically indicated.
18    A detained person who is admitted to a jail while under the
19medical care of a physician licensed to practice medicine in
20all of its branches, a licensed physician assistant, or a
21licensed advanced practice registered nurse and who is taking
22medication for an opioid use disorder or participating in
23medication-assisted treatment at the time of admission in
24accordance with a valid prescription, as verified by the
25individual's pharmacy of record, primary care provider, other
26licensed care provider, or a prescription monitoring or

 

 

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1information system, shall have the detained person's
2medication continued and provided by the jail pending an
3evaluation by a physician licensed to practice medicine in all
4of its branches, a licensed physician assistant, or a licensed
5advanced practice registered nurse and subject to the
6treatment provider's medical judgment. The jail may defer
7provision of a validly prescribed medication in accordance
8with this subsection if, in the judgment of a physician
9licensed to practice medicine in all of its branches, a
10licensed physician assistant, or a licensed advanced practice
11registered nurse, continuation of the medication is no longer
12clinically indicated. An individual participating in a
13medication-assisted treatment program may have counseling and
14behavioral therapies continued to the extent possible.
15    If at any time a detained person screens positive as
16having or being at risk for an opioid use disorder, is
17diagnosed with an opioid use disorder, or is exhibiting
18symptoms of withdrawal from an opioid use disorder and if
19medication-assisted treatment is clinically indicated by a
20physician licensed to practice medicine in all of its
21branches, a licensed physician assistant, or a licensed
22advanced practice registered nurse, then the individual may
23consent to commence medications for opioid use disorder, which
24shall be provided by the jail. The detained person shall be
25authorized to receive the medication without delay and for as
26long as clinically indicated.

 

 

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1    (d) The licensed practitioner who makes the clinical
2judgment to discontinue the use of medication shall enter the
3reason for the discontinuance into the detained person's
4medical record, specifically stating the reason for
5discontinuance. The individual shall be provided, both orally
6and in writing, with a specific explanation of the decision to
7discontinue the medication.
8    (e) As part of the reentry planning, the jail shall
9commence medications for opioid use disorder prior to an
10individual's release if:
11        (1) the individual screens positive as having an
12    opioid use disorder, being at risk for an opioid use
13    disorder, or exhibiting symptoms of withdrawal from an
14    opioid use disorder;
15        (2) medication-assisted treatment is clinically
16    indicated by a physician licensed to practice medicine in
17    all of its branches, a licensed physician assistant, or a
18    licensed advanced practice registered nurse; and
19        (3) the individual consents to commence medications
20    for opioid use disorder.
21    Upon reentry, the jail shall provide an individual
22participating in medication-assisted treatment with a referral
23to a provider in the community who may assist the individual
24with continued medications for opioid use disorder and
25medication-assisted treatment care.
26    (f) The jail shall offer, or facilitate access to, all

 

 

10400HB4039ham001- 39 -LRB104 13076 BDA 35911 a

1medication-assisted treatment options deemed appropriate for
2an individual by an authorized health care professional. The
3jail shall not impose limitations on the types of
4medication-assisted treatment that may be recommended by an
5authorized health care professional as part of an individual's
6treatment plan.
7    (g) This Section shall not apply to an individual jail
8until the jail has been approved by the Department of
9Healthcare and Family Services for provision of reentry
10services under federal Medicaid waiver authorities, including
11Section 1115 of the Social Security Act.
 
12    Section 11-25. The Overdose Prevention and Harm Reduction
13Act is amended by adding Section 20 as follows:
 
14    (410 ILCS 710/20 new)
15    Sec. 20. Home rule preemption. A home rule unit may not
16prohibit the establishment or operation of a needle and
17hypodermic syringe access program as provided in this Act.
18This Section is a denial and limitation of home rule powers and
19functions under subsection (g) of Section 6 of Article VII of
20the Illinois Constitution.".