Sen. Celina Villanueva

Filed: 5/13/2026

 

 


 

 


 
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1
AMENDMENT TO SENATE BILL 3391

2    AMENDMENT NO. ______. Amend Senate Bill 3391 by replacing
3everything after the enacting clause with the following:
 
4    "Section 1. This Act may be referred to as the Charter
5School Closure Financial Accountability Law.
 
6    Section 5. Findings. The General Assembly finds and
7declares all of the following:
8        (1) Public funds and public property provided to
9    charter schools must be protected and used for students'
10    education.
11        (2) Charter schools in this State may close during a
12    school year, and when they do there is a risk that
13    students, employees, and public assets will suffer harm
14    while the charter operator faces no meaningful financial
15    accountability.
16        (3) Current law and administrative guidance address

 

 

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1    closure procedures but do not uniformly require a
2    prefunded financial mechanism sufficient to cover
3    transition costs, severance, and the return of publicly
4    funded property.
5        (4) It is, therefore, necessary to require charter
6    operators to maintain closure reserves, require return of
7    public assets purchased with public funds, provide
8    remedies to recover costs incurred by authorizers and
9    students' home districts, and impose penalties for
10    mid-year abandonment that is negligent or in bad faith.
 
11    Section 10. The School Code is amended by changing
12Sections 27A-3 and 27A-9 and by adding Sections 27A-9.5,
1327A-10.15, and 27A-10.20 as follows:
 
14    (105 ILCS 5/27A-3)
15    Sec. 27A-3. Definitions. For purposes of this Article:
16    "At-risk pupil" means a pupil who, because of physical,
17emotional, socioeconomic, or cultural factors, is less likely
18to succeed in a conventional educational environment.
19    "Authorizer" means an entity authorized under this Article
20to review applications, decide whether to approve or reject
21applications, enter into charter contracts with applicants,
22oversee charter schools, and decide whether to renew, not
23renew, or revoke a charter.
24    "Charter operator" means the entity that has entered into

 

 

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1a charter agreement with an authorizer under this Article and
2is legally responsible for the operation of the charter
3school.
4    "Charter school" means a school established under this
5Article and operated under an agreement between an authorizer
6and a charter operator.
7    "Closure event" means any termination, revocation,
8nonrenewal, or voluntary cessation of operations of a charter
9school resulting in the charter school's permanent cessation
10of instruction to enrolled pupils that occurs during the
11school year.
12    "Closure security" means a financial instrument listed
13under subsection (a) of Section 27A-10.15.
14    "District signed-agreement requirements" means any
15standard provisions that are required in any agreement entered
16into by an authorizer.
17    "Financial distress" means one or more of the following
18conditions, as determined by an authorizer based on documented
19evidence:
20        (1) failure to timely meet payroll, benefits, or other
21    operating obligations;
22        (2) material audit findings indicating insolvency,
23    negative cash flow, or substantial doubt as to a charter
24    school's ability to continue as a going concern;
25        (3) default or imminent default on debt or lease
26    obligations;

 

 

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1        (4) failure to maintain required closure security or
2    other financial reserves required under this Article;
3        (5) evidence of misuse or misappropriation of public
4    funds; or
5        (6) any financial condition that poses an imminent
6    risk to the continued operation of a charter school or to
7    the orderly transition of enrolled pupils.
8    "Financial intervention" means a temporary, limited
9assumption of financial oversight authority by an authorizer
10for the purpose of stabilizing a charter school and protecting
11students, employees, and public assets.
12    "Good faith" means the duty to cooperate with an opposing
13party fairly in reaching an agreement.
14    "Local school board" means the duly elected or appointed
15school board or board of education of a public school
16district, including special charter districts and school
17districts located in cities having a population of more than
18500,000, organized under the laws of this State.
19    "Public assets" means equipment, furniture, books,
20instructional technology, real estate, or any other real or
21personal property purchased or leased with public funds or
22purchased with funds subject to public oversight.
23    "State Board" means the State Board of Education.
24    "Union neutrality clause" means a provision whereby a
25charter school agrees: (1) to be neutral regarding the
26unionization of any of its employees, such that the charter

 

 

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1school will not at any time express a position on the matter of
2whether its employees will be unionized and such that the
3charter school will not threaten, intimidate, discriminate
4against, retaliate against, or take any adverse action against
5any employees based on their decision to support or oppose
6union representation; (2) to provide any bona fide labor
7organization access at reasonable times to areas in which the
8charter school's employees work for the purpose of meeting
9with employees to discuss their right to representation,
10employment rights under the law, and terms and conditions of
11employment; and (3) that union recognition shall be through a
12majority card check verified by a neutral third-party
13arbitrator mutually selected by the charter school and the
14bona fide labor organization through alternate striking from a
15panel of arbitrators provided by the Federal Mediation and
16Conciliation Service. As used in this definition, "bona fide
17labor organization" means a labor organization recognized
18under the National Labor Relations Act or the Illinois
19Educational Labor Relations Act. As used in this definition,
20"employees" means non-represented, non-management, and
21non-confidential employees of a charter school.
22(Source: P.A. 103-175, eff. 6-30-23; 103-416, eff. 8-4-23;
23103-605, eff. 7-1-24.)
 
24    (105 ILCS 5/27A-9)
25    Sec. 27A-9. Term of charter; renewal.

 

 

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1    (a) An initial charter shall be granted for a period of 5
2school years. A charter may be renewed in incremental periods
3not to exceed 10 school years. Authorizers shall ensure that
4every charter granted on or after January 1, 2017 includes
5standards and goals for academic, organizational, and
6financial performance. A charter must meet all standards and
7goals for academic, organizational, and financial performance
8set forth by the authorizer in order to be renewed for a term
9in excess of 5 years but not more than 10 years. If an
10authorizer fails to establish standards and goals, a charter
11shall not be renewed for a term in excess of 5 years. Nothing
12contained in this Section shall require an authorizer to grant
13a full 10-year renewal term to any particular charter school,
14but an authorizer may award a full 10-year renewal term to
15charter schools that have a demonstrated track record of
16improving student performance.
17    (b) A charter school renewal proposal submitted to the
18local school board or the State Board, as the chartering
19entity, shall contain:
20        (1) a report on the progress of the charter school in
21    achieving the goals, objectives, pupil performance
22    standards, content standards, and other terms of the
23    initial approved charter proposal; and
24        (2) a financial statement that discloses the costs of
25    administration, instruction, and other spending categories
26    for the charter school that is understandable to the

 

 

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1    general public and that will allow comparison of those
2    costs to other schools or other comparable organizations,
3    in a format required by the State Board.
4    (c) A charter may be revoked or not renewed if the local
5school board or the State Board, as the chartering entity,
6clearly demonstrates that the charter school did any of the
7following, or otherwise failed to comply with the requirements
8of this law:
9        (1) Committed a material violation of any of the
10    conditions, standards, or procedures set forth in the
11    charter.
12        (2) Failed to meet or make reasonable progress toward
13    achievement of the content standards or pupil performance
14    standards identified in the charter.
15        (3) Failed to meet generally accepted standards of
16    fiscal management.
17        (4) Violated any provision of law from which the
18    charter school was not exempted.
19        (5) Failed to execute a charter contract after good
20    faith negotiations in accordance with Section 27A-9.5.
21    In the case of revocation, the local school board or the
22State Board, as the chartering entity, shall notify the
23charter school in writing of the reason why the charter is
24subject to revocation. The charter school shall submit a
25written plan to the local school board or the State Board,
26whichever is applicable, to rectify the problem. The plan

 

 

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1shall include a timeline for implementation, which shall not
2exceed 2 years or the date of the charter's expiration,
3whichever is earlier. If the local school board or the State
4Board, as the chartering entity, finds that the charter school
5has failed to implement the plan of remediation and adhere to
6the timeline, then the chartering entity shall revoke the
7charter. Except in situations of an emergency where the
8health, safety, or education of the charter school's students
9is at risk, the revocation shall take place at the end of a
10school year. Nothing in this Section shall be construed to
11prohibit an implementation timetable that is less than 2 years
12in duration. No local school board may arbitrarily or
13capriciously revoke or not renew a charter. Except for
14extenuating circumstances outlined in this Section, if a local
15school board revokes or does not renew a charter, it must
16ensure that all students currently enrolled in the charter
17school are placed in schools that are higher performing than
18that charter school, as defined in the State's federal Every
19Student Succeeds Act accountability plan. In determining
20whether extenuating circumstances exist, a local school board
21must detail, by clear and convincing evidence, that factors
22unrelated to the charter school's accountability designation
23outweigh the charter school's academic performance.
24    (d) (Blank).
25    (e) Notice of a local school board's decision to deny,
26revoke, or not renew a charter shall be provided to the State

 

 

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1Board.
2    The State Board may reverse a local board's decision to
3revoke or not renew a charter if the State Board finds that the
4charter school or charter school proposal (i) is in compliance
5with this Article and (ii) is in the best interests of the
6students it is designed to serve. The State Board may
7condition the granting of an appeal on the acceptance by the
8charter school of funding in an amount less than that
9requested in the proposal submitted to the local school board.
10The State Board must appoint and utilize a hearing officer for
11any appeals conducted under this subsection. Final decisions
12of the State Board are subject to judicial review under the
13Administrative Review Law.
14    (f) Notwithstanding other provisions of this Article, if
15the State Board on appeal reverses a local board's decision or
16if a charter school is approved by referendum, the State Board
17shall act as the authorized chartering entity for the charter
18school and shall perform all functions under this Article
19otherwise performed by the local school board. The State Board
20shall report the aggregate number of charter school pupils
21resident in a school district to that district and shall
22notify the district of the amount of funding to be paid by the
23State Board to the charter school enrolling such students. The
24charter school shall maintain accurate records of daily
25attendance and student enrollment and shall enter data on the
26students served, their characteristics, their particular

 

 

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1needs, the programs in which they participate, and their
2academic achievement into the statewide student information
3system established by the State Board. The State Board shall
4withhold from funds otherwise due the district the funds
5authorized by this Article to be paid to the charter school and
6shall pay such amounts to the charter school in quarterly
7installments, calculated as follows:
8        (1) The amount of the first quarterly payment shall be
9    based on the projected number of students who will be
10    enrolled in the charter school in the upcoming school
11    year, multiplied by one-fourth of the resident district's
12    per capita tuition amount. Each charter school shall
13    submit its projected enrollment by no later than August 1
14    of each year on a form provided by the State Board for this
15    purpose.
16        (2) The amount of the second quarterly payment shall
17    be calculated such that the aggregate amount of the first
18    and second quarterly installments is equal to the number
19    of students reported as enrolled at the charter school on
20    October 1 in the State Board's student information system,
21    multiplied by one-half of the resident district's per
22    capita tuition amount.
23        (3) The amount of the third quarterly payment shall be
24    based on the number of students enrolled in the charter
25    school on January 1, multiplied by one-fourth of the
26    resident district's per capita tuition amount. Each

 

 

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1    charter school shall submit its January 1 enrollment by no
2    later than January 5 of each year on a form provided by the
3    State Board for this purpose.
4        (4) The amount of the fourth quarterly payment shall
5    be calculated such that the aggregate amount of the third
6    and fourth installments is equal to the number of students
7    reported as enrolled at the charter school on March 1 in
8    the State Board's student information system, multiplied
9    by one-half of the resident district's per capita tuition
10    amount.
11    (g) (Blank).
12    (h) The State Board shall pay directly to a charter school
13it authorizes any federal or State funding attributable to a
14student with a disability attending the school.
15(Source: P.A. 103-175, eff. 6-30-23.)
 
16    (105 ILCS 5/27A-9.5 new)
17    Sec. 27A-9.5. Charter renewal; timely execution; funding
18consequences.
19    (a) This Section applies to all charter renewals approved
20on or after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the
21104th General Assembly.
22    (b) For an initial agreement, no public funds may be
23disbursed to a charter operator unless and until a charter
24agreement has been fully executed by both the charter operator
25and the authorizer.

 

 

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1    After the initial agreement, the charter operator and the
2authorizer shall negotiate the terms of the charter renewal
3agreement within 90 days after the authorizer's passage of a
4renewal resolution consistent with applicable State law and
5district policy. In no circumstance may the charter operator
6operate under an expired agreement at the start of a school
7year that begins more than 90 days after the authorizer's
8passage of the renewal resolution. No public funds may be
9distributed after 90 days until an agreement is reached.
10    A charter operator's refusal to execute or negotiate, in
11good faith, a charter renewal agreement that incorporates the
12requirements of State law or district signed-agreement
13requirements constitutes grounds for nonrenewal.
 
14    (105 ILCS 5/27A-10.15 new)
15    Sec. 27A-10.15. Closure financial accountability.
16    (a) Every charter operator shall maintain, while its
17charter is in effect, one or more of the following financial
18instruments to secure closure obligations:
19        (1) an escrow account held in a financial institution
20    in this State in the name of the charter school, funded in
21    cash;
22        (2) a surety bond or irrevocable letter of credit
23    issued by a financial institution authorized to do
24    business in this State; or
25        (3) a segregated reserve fund reflected on the charter

 

 

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1    school's audited financial statements and held in a manner
2    acceptable to the authorizer.
3    A charter operator in operation on the effective date of
4this amendatory Act of the 104th General Assembly must comply
5with this Section within 2 fiscal years after the effective
6date of this amendatory Act of the 104th General Assembly.
7    (b) The closure security under subsection (a) for a
8charter school in operation for at least one fiscal year must
9equal 3 months of the charter school's average operating
10expenditures based on its last audited fiscal year. If the
11closure security is below the required amount, the authorizer
12may require a remediation plan to reach compliance within 2
13fiscal years. Failure to timely comply is grounds for
14suspension of enrollment growth and may be considered in a
15charter renewal determination.
16    For a charter operator in operation for less than one
17fiscal year, the closure security must equal 3 months of the
18charter school's projected annual budget, as approved by the
19charter's authorizer. The closure security for such a charter
20operator must be established and funded to at least 50% of the
21required amount, based on the charter operator's projected
22budget, at the time the charter is granted or, for a charter
23granted before the effective date of this amendatory Act of
24the 104th General Assembly, within 30 days after the effective
25date of this amendatory Act of the 104th General Assembly and
26must reach the full required amount by the end of the charter's

 

 

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1second full fiscal year.
2    (c) Closure security shall be used, in priority order, to
3pay:
4        (1) the direct costs of transitioning students, such
5    as transportation, records transfer, and student placement
6    assistance, incurred by the authorizer or receiving school
7    district;
8        (2) any outstanding payroll for employees for time
9    worked through the closure date, including legally
10    required benefits, and severance if contractually required
11    under the charter operator's collective bargaining
12    agreements or employment contracts;
13        (3) any costs reasonably incurred for the storage or
14    transfer of student records and special education
15    documents required to ensure continuity of services;
16        (4) any costs to return public assets to the
17    authorizer or otherwise account for disposition of public
18    assets purchased with public funds;
19        (5) any reasonable administrative costs incurred by
20    the authorizer or the State Board to supervise and execute
21    the closure and student transition; and
22        (6) any costs related to emergency expenditures not
23    created by the negligence or mismanagement of the charter
24    operator and agreed to by the authorizer.
25    Closure security may not be used to pay any preexisting,
26unrelated debt of the charter operator that is not connected

 

 

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1to the operating obligations to students, employees, or public
2property, except as permitted under this subsection.
3    Any remaining closure security funds after satisfaction of
4the obligations described in this subsection shall be returned
5to the authorizer and shall remain public funds in accordance
6with State and federal law.
7    (d) A charter operator must provide the authorizer and the
8State Board written notice of the charter operator's intent to
9close a charter school no fewer than 90 days before the planned
10closure and must provide immediate notice upon any involuntary
11closure action, insolvency event, or cessation of operations.
12    Within 30 days after a closure event, the authorizer shall
13publish a closure action statement that lists amounts from the
14closure security disbursed and the uses.
15    (e) Failure to maintain closure security as required under
16this Section is a basis for:
17        (1) the authorizer to withhold a portion of per-pupil
18    payments until compliance is achieved; and
19        (2) consideration in denying a charter renewal or
20    revoking the charter or ineligibility to operate
21    additional charter campuses.
22    For purposes of this Section, the State Board may act in
23its regulatory oversight capacity for all authorizers and in
24its capacity as an authorizer for charter schools it directly
25authorizes under this Article.
26    If the closure security is insufficient to cover the costs

 

 

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1of a closure event as set forth in subsection (c), the
2authorizer or the State Board may:
3        (1) bring a civil action against the charter operator
4    to recover the unpaid amounts; and
5        (2) seek to impose a lien on any property owned by the
6    charter operator that is located in this State to secure
7    recovery.
8    In cases in which a closure results from gross negligence,
9willful misconduct, or intentional misappropriation of public
10funds by the charter operator or its officers or directors,
11the authorizer or State Board may seek recovery from
12individual officers, directors, or persons who knowingly
13caused the gross negligence, willful misconduct, or
14intentional misappropriation, including civil penalties not to
15exceed $50,000 per violation and reasonable attorney's fees.
16    (f) Upon closure, any public assets purchased with public
17funds shall be returned to the authorizer or otherwise
18disposed of in accordance with applicable State and federal
19law governing property acquired with public funds. Proceeds
20from any sale of such assets shall be applied first to
21outstanding obligations to students and employees, and then to
22the reimbursement of public funds.
23    (g) The State Board shall adopt rules to implement this
24Section within one year after the effective date of this
25amendatory Act of the 104th General Assembly, including
26acceptable forms of closure security, procedures for claims on

 

 

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1closure security, and documentation standards for authorizers
2to approve closure security.
 
3    (105 ILCS 5/27A-10.20 new)
4    Sec. 27A-10.20. Financial distress; charter school
5financial intervention.
6    (a) If an authorizer determines that a charter school is
7in financial distress, the authorizer may require the charter
8operator to submit a financial remediation plan for approval
9within 30 days after that determination. The remediation plan
10shall include, at a minimum:
11        (1) current cash-flow projections;
12        (2) corrective actions to address identified
13    deficiencies;
14        (3) a timeline for achieving fiscal stability; and
15        (4) enhanced financial-reporting requirements as
16    specified by the authorizer.
17    Failure to timely submit a remediation plan or implement
18an approved remediation plan constitutes grounds for financial
19intervention under subsection (b).
20    (b) If the authorizer determines that (i) the charter
21school has failed to implement an approved remediation plan or
22(ii) the financial distress presents an immediate risk to
23students, employees, or public funds, the authorizer may
24initiate financial intervention.
25    (c) The authorizer may exercise authority, limited to

 

 

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1financial matters, over the charter school, including:
2        (1) approval and oversight of expenditures and
3    disbursements;
4        (2) oversight of payroll, benefits, and required
5    employee payments;
6        (3) reviewing, modifying, or terminating any vendor
7    contracts necessary to ensure fiscal stability;
8        (4) protection, inventory, and preservation of public
9    assets; and
10        (5) ensuring compliance with financial reporting and
11    audit requirements.
12    (d) Financial intervention under this Section is temporary
13and may not exceed 180 days, except that the authorizer may
14extend the intervention once for good cause. The intervention
15shall terminate upon a determination by the authorizer that
16fiscal stability has been restored or upon charter revocation,
17surrender, nonrenewal, or closure.
18    (e) Prior to initiating financial intervention, the
19authorizer shall provide written notice to the charter
20operator describing the basis for the intervention and provide
21an opportunity to respond, except in cases in which immediate
22action is required to protect students or public funds.
23    (f) An authorizer's exercise of authority under this
24Section:
25        (1) does not constitute operation or management of the
26    charter school;

 

 

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1        (2) does not create financial or legal liability for
2    the authorizer or its members; and
3        (3) shall be deemed an oversight and regulatory
4    function for purposes of immunity under Section 27A-7.10.
5    (g) Financial intervention under this Section does not
6preclude charter revocation, nonrenewal, or closure and may be
7used to stabilize operations pending an orderly closure
8pursuant to this Article, consistent with paragraph (2) of
9subsection (c) of Section 27A-9.
 
10    Section 97. Severability. The provisions of this Act are
11severable under Section 1.31 of the Statute on Statutes.
 
12    Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon
13becoming law.".