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Full Text of SB3798
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SB3798 - 104th General Assembly
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SB3798 Enrolled
LRB104 20700 WRO 34200 b
1
AN ACT concerning government.
2
Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
3
represented in the General Assembly:
4
Section 5.
The Illinois State Police Law of the Civil
5
Administrative Code of Illinois is amended by changing Section
6
2605-51 as follows:
7
(20 ILCS 2605/2605-51)
8
Sec. 2605-51.
Division of the Academy and Training.
9
(a) The Division of the Academy and Training shall
10
exercise, but not be limited to, the following functions:
11
(1) Oversee and operate the Illinois State Police
12
Training Academy.
13
(2) Train and prepare new officers for a career in law
14
enforcement, with innovative, quality training and
15
educational practices.
16
(3) Offer continuing training and educational programs
17
for Illinois State Police employees.
18
(4) Oversee the Illinois State Police's recruitment
19
initiatives.
20
(5) Oversee and operate the Illinois State Police's
21
quartermaster.
22
(6) Duties assigned to the Illinois State Police in
23
Article 5, Chapter 11 of the Illinois Vehicle Code
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1
concerning testing and training officers on the detection
2
of impaired driving.
3
(7) Duties assigned to the Illinois State Police in
4
Article 108B of the Code of Criminal Procedure
of 1963
.
5
(a-5) Successful completion of the Illinois State Police
6
Academy satisfies the minimum standards pursuant to
7
subsections (a), (b), and (d) of Section 7 of the Illinois
8
Police Training Act and exempts Illinois State Police officers
9
from the Illinois Law Enforcement Training Standards Board's
10
State Comprehensive Examination and Equivalency Examination.
11
Satisfactory completion shall be evidenced by a commission or
12
certificate issued to the officer.
13
(b) The Division of the Academy and Training shall
14
exercise the rights, powers, and duties vested in the former
15
Division of State Troopers by Section 17 of the Illinois State
16
Police Act.
17
(c) Specialized training. The Division of the Academy and
18
Training shall provide the following specialized training:
19
(1) Crash reconstruction specialist; training. The
20
Division of the Academy and Training shall cooperate with
21
the Division of Forensic Services to provide specialized
22
training in crash reconstruction for Illinois State Police
23
officers. Only Illinois State Police officers who
24
successfully complete the training may be assigned as
25
crash reconstruction specialists.
26
(2) Death and homicide investigations; training. The
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Division of the Academy and Training shall provide
2
training in death and homicide investigation for Illinois
3
State Police officers. Only Illinois State Police officers
4
who successfully complete the training may be assigned as
5
lead investigators in death and homicide investigations.
6
Satisfactory completion of the training shall be evidenced
7
by a certificate issued to the officer by the Division of
8
the Academy and Training. The Director shall develop a
9
process for waiver applications for officers whose prior
10
training and experience as homicide investigators may
11
qualify them for a waiver. The Director may issue a
12
waiver, at his or her discretion, based solely on the
13
prior training and experience of an officer as a homicide
14
investigator.
15
(A) The Division of the Academy and Training shall
16
require all homicide investigator training to include
17
instruction on victim-centered, trauma-informed
18
investigation. This training must be implemented by
19
July 1, 2023.
20
(B) The Division of the Academy and Training shall
21
cooperate with the Division of Criminal Investigation
22
to develop a model curriculum on victim-centered,
23
trauma-informed investigation. This curriculum must be
24
implemented by July 1, 2023.
25
(3) Investigation of officer-involved criminal sexual
26
assault; training. The Division of the Academy and
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Training shall cooperate with the Division of Criminal
2
Investigation to provide a specialized criminal sexual
3
assault and sexual abuse investigation training program
4
for Illinois State Police officers. Only Illinois State
5
Police officers who successfully complete the training may
6
be assigned as investigators in officer-involved criminal
7
sexual assault investigations under Section 10 of the Law
8
Enforcement Criminal Sexual Assault Investigation Act.
9
(4) Investigation of officer-involved deaths;
10
training. The Division of the Academy and Training shall
11
have a written policy regarding the investigation of
12
officer-involved deaths that involve a law enforcement
13
officer employed by the Illinois State Police as required
14
under Section 1-10 of the Police and Community Relations
15
Improvement Act and shall provide specialized training in
16
that policy for Illinois State Police officers.
17
(5) Juvenile specialist; training. The Division of the
18
Academy and Training shall provide specialized juvenile
19
training for Illinois State Police officers who meet the
20
definition of "juvenile police officer" as defined under
21
paragraph (17) of Section 1-3 of the Juvenile Court Act of
22
1987. Juvenile specialists may complete questioning of
23
juveniles on school grounds as provided under Section
24
22-88 of the School Code.
25
(6) Peer support program; training. The Division of
26
the Academy and Training shall cooperate with the Office
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1
of the Director to provide peer support advisors with
2
appropriate specialized training in counseling to conduct
3
peer support counseling sessions under Section 10 of the
4
First Responders Suicide Prevention Act.
5
(7) Police dog training standards; training. All
6
police dogs used by the Illinois State Police for drug
7
enforcement purposes pursuant to the Cannabis Control Act,
8
the Illinois Controlled Substances Act, and the
9
Methamphetamine Control and Community Protection Act shall
10
be trained by programs that meet the certification
11
requirements set by the Director or the Director's
12
designee. Satisfactory completion of the training shall be
13
evidenced by a certificate issued by the Division of the
14
Academy and Training.
15
(8) Safe2Help; training. The Division of the Academy
16
and Training shall cooperate with the Division of Criminal
17
Investigation to ensure all program personnel or call
18
center staff, or both, are appropriately trained in the
19
areas described in subsection (f) of Section 10 of the
20
Student Confidential Reporting Act.
(10)
21
(c-5) In-service training.
22
(1) At least once, the Division of the Academy and
23
Training shall develop and require the following
24
in-service training opportunities to be completed by
25
Illinois State Police officers:
26
(A) Cell phone medical information; training.
SB3798 Enrolled
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1
Training required under this subparagraph (A) shall
2
provide instruction on accessing and using medical
3
information stored in cell phones. The Division may
4
use the program approved under Section 2310-711 of the
5
Department of Public Health Powers and Duties Law of
6
the Civil Administrative Code of Illinois to develop
7
the Division's program.
8
(B) Autism spectrum disorders; training. Training
9
required under this subparagraph (B) shall instruct
10
Illinois State Police officers on the nature of autism
11
spectrum disorders and in identifying and
12
appropriately responding to individuals with autism
13
spectrum disorders. The Illinois State Police shall
14
review the training curriculum and may consult with
15
the Department of Public Health or the Department of
16
Human Services to update the training curriculum as
17
needed.
18
(2) At least every year, the Division of the Academy
19
and Training shall provide the following in-service
20
training to Illinois State Police officers:
21
(A) Cultural diversity; training.
22
(i) Training required under this subparagraph
23
(A) shall provide training and continuing
24
education to Illinois State Police officers
25
concerning cultural diversity, including topics
26
such as sensitivity toward racial and ethnic
SB3798 Enrolled
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1
differences.
2
(ii) This training and continuing education
3
shall, among other things, emphasize that the
4
primary purpose of enforcement of the Illinois
5
Vehicle Code is safety and equal, uniform, and
6
non-discriminatory enforcement of the law.
7
(B) Minimum annual in-service training
8
requirements. Minimum annual in-service training
9
includes:
10
(i) crisis intervention training;
11
(ii) emergency medical response training and
12
certification;
13
(iii) firearm qualification training;
14
(iv) law updates; and
15
(v) officer wellness and mental health.
16
(C) Firearms restraining orders; training.
17
Training required under this subparagraph (C) shall
18
provide instruction on the processes used to file a
19
firearms restraining order, to identify situations in
20
which a firearms restraining order is appropriate, and
21
to safely promote the usage of the firearms
22
restraining order in different situations.
23
(3) At least every 3 years, the Division of the
24
Academy and Training shall provide the following
25
in-service training to Illinois State Police officers:
26
(A) Arrest and use of force and control tactics;
SB3798 Enrolled
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1
training. Training required under this subparagraph
2
(A) shall provide to Illinois State Police officers
3
training and continuing education concerning knowledge
4
of policies and laws regulating the use of force;
5
shall equip officers with tactics and skills,
6
including de-escalation techniques, to prevent or
7
reduce the need to use force or, when force must be
8
used, to use force that is objectively reasonable,
9
necessary, and proportional under the totality of the
10
circumstances; and shall ensure appropriate
11
supervision and accountability. The training shall
12
consist of at least 30 hours and shall include:
13
(i) at least 12 hours of hands-on,
14
scenario-based role-playing;
15
(ii) at least 6 hours of instruction on use of
16
force techniques, including the use of
17
de-escalation techniques to prevent or reduce the
18
need for force whenever safe and feasible;
19
(iii) specific training on the law concerning
20
stops, searches, and the use of force under the
21
Fourth Amendment to the United States
22
Constitution;
23
(iv) specific training on officer safety
24
techniques, including cover, concealment, and
25
time; and
26
(v) at least 6 hours of training focused on
SB3798 Enrolled
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1
high-risk traffic stops.
2
(B) Minimum triennial in-service training
3
requirements. Minimum triennial in-service training
4
required
this
under
this
subparagraph (B) includes
5
training and continuing education to Illinois State
6
Police officers concerning:
7
(i) constitutional and proper use of law
8
enforcement authority;
9
(ii) civil and human rights;
10
(iii) cultural competency, including implicit
11
bias and racial and ethnic sensitivity; and
12
(iv) procedural justice.
13
(C) Mandated reporter; training. Training required
14
under this subparagraph (C) must be approved by the
15
Department of Children and Family Services as provided
16
under Section 4 of the Abused and Neglected Child
17
Reporting Act and includes training on the reporting
18
of child abuse and neglect.
19
(D) Sexual assault and sexual abuse; training.
20
(i) Training required under this subparagraph
21
(D) shall include in-service training on sexual
22
assault and sexual abuse response and training on
23
report writing requirements, including, but not
24
limited to, the following:
25
(a) recognizing the symptoms of trauma;
26
(b) understanding the role trauma has
SB3798 Enrolled
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1
played in a victim's life;
2
(c) responding to the needs and concerns
3
of a victim;
4
(d) delivering services in a
5
compassionate, sensitive, and nonjudgmental
6
manner;
7
(e) interviewing techniques in accordance
8
with the curriculum standards in subdivision
9
(iii) of this subparagraph;
10
(f) understanding cultural perceptions and
11
common myths of sexual assault and sexual
12
abuse; and
13
(g) report writing techniques in
14
accordance with the curriculum standards in
15
subdivision (iii) of this subparagraph and the
16
Sexual Assault Incident Procedure Act.
17
(ii) Instructors providing training under this
18
subparagraph
(D)
(G)
shall have successfully
19
completed training on evidence-based,
20
trauma-informed, victim-centered responses to
21
cases of sexual assault and sexual abuse and shall
22
have experience responding to sexual assault and
23
sexual abuse cases.
24
(iii) The Illinois State Police shall adopt
25
rules, in consultation with the Office of the
26
Attorney General and the Illinois Law Enforcement
SB3798 Enrolled
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LRB104 20700 WRO 34200 b
1
Training Standards Board, to determine the
2
specific training requirements. The rules adopted
3
by the Illinois State Police shall include, at a
4
minimum, both of the following:
5
(a) evidence-based curriculum standards
6
for report writing and immediate response to
7
sexual assault and sexual abuse, including
8
trauma-informed, victim-centered interview
9
techniques, which have been demonstrated to
10
minimize retraumatization, for all Illinois
11
State Police officers; and
12
(b) evidence-based curriculum standards
13
for trauma-informed, victim-centered
14
investigation and interviewing techniques,
15
which have been demonstrated to minimize
16
retraumatization, for cases of sexual assault
17
and sexual abuse for all Illinois State Police
18
officers who conduct sexual assault and sexual
19
abuse investigations.
20
(4) At least every 5 years, the Division of the
21
Academy and Training shall provide the following
22
in-service training to Illinois State Police officers:
23
(A) Psychology of domestic violence; training.
24
Training under this subparagraph (A) shall provide aid
25
in understanding the actions of domestic violence
26
victims and abusers and the actions needed to prevent
SB3798 Enrolled
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1
further victimization of those who have been abused.
2
The training shall focus specifically on looking
3
beyond physical evidence to the psychology of domestic
4
violence situations by studying the dynamics of the
5
aggressor-victim relationship, separately evaluating
6
claims where both parties claim to be the victim, and
7
assessing the long-term effects of domestic violence
8
situations.
9
(c-10) Cadet training. The Division of the Academy and
10
Training shall provide the following basic training to
11
Illinois State Police cadets or ensure the following training
12
was completed prior to an Illinois State Police cadet becoming
13
an Illinois State Police officer:
14
(1) Animal fighting awareness and humane response;
15
training. Training required under this paragraph (1) shall
16
include a training program in animal fighting awareness
17
and humane response for Illinois State Police cadets. The
18
purpose of that training shall be for Illinois State
19
Police officers to identify animal fighting operations and
20
respond appropriately. Training under this paragraph (1)
21
shall include a humane response component that provides
22
guidelines for appropriate law enforcement response to
23
animal abuse, cruelty, and neglect, or similar condition,
24
as well as training on canine behavior and nonlethal ways
25
to subdue a canine.
26
(2) Arrest and use of force and control tactics and
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1
officer safety; training. Training required under this
2
paragraph (2) must include, without limitation, training
3
on officer safety techniques, such as cover, concealment,
4
and time.
5
(3) Arrest of a parent or an immediate family member;
6
training. Training required under this paragraph (3) shall
7
instruct Illinois State Police cadets on trauma-informed
8
responses designed to ensure the physical safety and
9
well-being of a child of an arrested parent or immediate
10
family member, which must include, without limitation: (A)
11
training in understanding the trauma experienced by the
12
child while maintaining the integrity of the arrest and
13
safety of officers, suspects, and other involved
14
individuals; (B) training in de-escalation tactics that
15
would include the use of force when reasonably necessary;
16
and (C) training in understanding and inquiring whether a
17
child will require supervision and care.
18
(4) Autism and other developmental or physical
19
disabilities; training. Training required under this
20
paragraph (4) shall instruct Illinois State Police cadets
21
on identifying and interacting with persons with autism
22
and other developmental or physical disabilities, reducing
23
barriers to reporting crimes against persons with autism,
24
and addressing the unique challenges presented by cases
25
involving victims or witnesses with autism and other
26
developmental disabilities.
SB3798 Enrolled
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1
(5) Cell phone medical information; training. Training
2
required under this paragraph (5) shall instruct Illinois
3
State Police cadets to access and use medical information
4
stored in cell phones. The Division of the Academy and
5
Training may use the program approved under Section
6
2310-711 of the Department of Public Health Powers and
7
Duties Law of the Civil Administrative Code of Illinois to
8
develop the training required under this paragraph (5).
9
(6) Compliance with the Health Care Violence
10
Prevention Act; training. Training required under this
11
paragraph (6) shall provide an appropriate level of
12
training for Illinois State Police cadets concerning the
13
Health Care Violence Prevention Act.
14
(7) Constitutional law; training. Training required
15
under this paragraph (7) shall instruct Illinois State
16
Police cadets on constitutional and proper use of law
17
enforcement authority, procedural justice, civil rights,
18
human rights, and cultural competency, including implicit
19
bias and racial and ethnic sensitivity.
20
(8) Courtroom testimony; training.
21
(9) Crime victims; training. Training required under
22
this paragraph (9) shall provide instruction in techniques
23
designed to promote effective communication at the initial
24
contact with crime victims and to comprehensively explain
25
to victims and witnesses their rights under the Rights of
26
Crime Victims and Witnesses Act and the Crime Victims
SB3798 Enrolled
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LRB104 20700 WRO 34200 b
1
Compensation Act.
2
(10) Criminal law; training.
3
(11) Crisis intervention team and mental health
4
awareness; training. Training required under this
5
paragraph (11) shall include a specialty certification
6
course of at least 40 hours, addressing specialized
7
policing responses to people with mental illnesses. The
8
Division of the Academy and Training shall conduct Crisis
9
Intervention Team training programs that train officers to
10
identify signs and symptoms of mental illness, to
11
de-escalate situations involving individuals who appear to
12
have a mental illness and connect individuals in crisis to
13
treatment.
The training shall also include an overview of
14
the Community Emergency Services and Support Act.
15
(12) Cultural diversity; training.
16
(A) The training required under this paragraph
17
(12) shall provide training to Illinois State Police
18
cadets concerning cultural competency and cultural
19
diversity, including sensitivity toward racial and
20
ethnic differences.
21
(B) This training shall include, but not be
22
limited to, an emphasis on the fact that the primary
23
purpose of enforcement of the Illinois Vehicle Code is
24
safety, equal, and uniform and non-discriminatory
25
enforcement under the law.
26
(13) De-escalation and use of force; training.
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1
Training required under this paragraph (13) must consist
2
of at least 6 hours of instruction on use of force
3
techniques, including the use of de-escalation techniques
4
to prevent or reduce the need for force whenever safe and
5
feasible.
6
(14) Domestic violence; training. Training required
7
under this paragraph (14) shall provide aid in
8
understanding the actions of domestic violence victims and
9
abusers and to prevent further victimization of those who
10
have been abused, focusing specifically on looking beyond
11
the physical evidence to the psychology of domestic
12
violence situations, such as the dynamics of the
13
aggressor-victim relationship, separately evaluating
14
claims where both parties claim to be the victim, and
15
long-term effects.
16
(15) Effective recognition of and responses to stress,
17
trauma, and post-traumatic stress; training. Training
18
required under this paragraph (15) shall instruct Illinois
19
State Police cadets to recognize and respond to stress,
20
trauma, and post-traumatic stress experienced by law
21
enforcement officers. The training must be consistent with
22
Section 25 of the Illinois Mental Health First Aid
23
Training Act in a peer setting, including recognizing
24
signs and symptoms of work-related cumulative stress,
25
issues that may lead to suicide, and solutions for
26
intervention with peer support resources.
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1
(16) Elder abuse; training. Training required under
2
this paragraph (16) shall teach Illinois State Police
3
cadets to recognize neglect and financial exploitation
4
against the elderly and adults with disabilities. The
5
training shall also teach Illinois State Police cadets to
6
recognize self-neglect by the elderly and adults with
7
disabilities. In this subparagraph, "adults with
8
disabilities" has the meaning given to that term in the
9
Adult Protective Services Act.
10
(17) Electronic control devices; training. Training
11
required under this paragraph (17) shall include training
12
in the use of electronic control devices, including the
13
psychological and physiological effects of the use of
14
those devices on humans.
15
(18) Epinephrine auto-injector administration;
16
training. Training required under this paragraph (18)
17
shall instruct Illinois State Police cadets to recognize
18
and respond to anaphylaxis. The training must comply with
19
subsection (c) of Section 40 of the Illinois State Police
20
Act.
21
(19) Evidence collection; training. Training required
22
under this paragraph (19) must include proper procedures
23
for collecting, handling, and preserving evidence, and
24
rules of law.
25
(20) Firearms restraining orders; training. Providing
26
instruction on the process used to file a firearms
SB3798 Enrolled
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LRB104 20700 WRO 34200 b
1
restraining order and how to identify situations in which
2
a firearms restraining order is appropriate and how to
3
safely promote the usage of the firearms restraining order
4
in different situations.
5
(21) Firearms; training. Successful completion of a
6
40-hour course of training in use of a suitable type
7
firearm shall be a condition precedent to the possession
8
and use of that respective firearm in connection with the
9
officer's official duties. To satisfy the requirements of
10
this Act, the training must include the following:
11
(A) Instruction in the dangers of misuse of the
12
firearm, safety rules, and care and cleaning of the
13
firearm.
14
(B) Practice firing on a range and qualification
15
with the firearm in accordance with the standards
16
established by the Board.
17
(C) Instruction in the legal use of firearms under
18
the Criminal Code of 2012 and relevant court
19
decisions.
20
(D) A forceful presentation of the ethical and
21
moral considerations assumed by any person who uses a
22
firearm.
23
(22) First-aid; training. First-aid training must
24
include cardiopulmonary resuscitation.
25
(23) Hate crimes; training. Training required under
26
this paragraph (23) shall instruct Illinois State Police
SB3798 Enrolled
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1
cadets in identifying, responding to, and reporting all
2
hate crimes.
3
(24) High-risk traffic stops; training. Training
4
required under this paragraph (24) must consist of at
5
least 6 hours of training focused on high-risk traffic
6
stops.
7
(25) High-speed vehicle chase; training. Training
8
required under this paragraph (25) shall instruct Illinois
9
State Police cadets on the hazards of high-speed police
10
vehicle chases with an emphasis on alternatives to the
11
high-speed vehicle chase.
12
(26) Human relations; training.
13
(27) Human trafficking; training. Training required
14
under this paragraph (27) shall instruct Illinois State
15
Police cadets in the detection and investigation of all
16
forms of human trafficking, including, but not limited to,
17
involuntary servitude under subsection (b) of Section 10-9
18
of the Criminal Code of 2012, involuntary sexual servitude
19
of a minor under subsection (c) of Section 10-9 of the
20
Criminal Code of 2012, and trafficking in persons under
21
subsection (d) of Section 10-9 of the Criminal Code of
22
2012. This program shall be made available to all cadets
23
and Illinois State Police officers.
24
(28) Juvenile law; training. Training required under
25
this paragraph (28) shall instruct Illinois State Police
26
cadets on juvenile law and the proper processing and
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1
handling of juvenile offenders.
2
(29) Mandated reporter; training. Training required
3
under this paragraph (29) must be approved by the
4
Department of Children and Family Services as provided
5
under Section 4 of the Abused and Neglected Child
6
Reporting Act and includes training on the reporting of
7
child abuse and neglect.
8
(30) Mental conditions and crises, training. Training
9
required under this paragraph (30) shall include, without
10
limitation, (A) recognizing the disease of addiction, (B)
11
recognizing situations which require immediate assistance,
12
and (C) responding in a manner that safeguards and
13
provides assistance to individuals in need of mental
14
treatment.
15
(31) Officer wellness and suicide prevention;
16
training. The training required under this paragraph (31)
17
shall include instruction on job-related stress management
18
techniques, skills for recognizing signs and symptoms of
19
work-related cumulative stress, recognition of other
20
issues that may lead to officer suicide, solutions for
21
intervention, and a presentation on available peer support
22
resources.
23
(32) Officer-worn body cameras; training.
24
(A) As used in this paragraph (32), "officer-worn
25
body camera" has the meaning given to that term in
26
Article 10 of the Law Enforcement Officer-Worn Body
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1
Camera Act.
2
(B) The training required under this paragraph
3
(32) shall provide training in the use of officer-worn
4
body cameras to cadets who will use officer-worn body
5
cameras.
6
(33) Opioid antagonists; training.
7
(A) As used in this paragraph (33), "opioid
8
antagonist" has the meaning given to that term in
9
subsection (e) of Section 5-23 of the Substance Use
10
Disorder Act.
11
(B) Training required under this paragraph (33)
12
shall instruct Illinois State Police cadets to
13
administer opioid antagonists.
14
(34) Persons arrested while under the influence of
15
alcohol or drugs; training. Training required under this
16
paragraph (34) shall comply with Illinois State Police
17
policy adopted under Section 2605-54. The training shall
18
be consistent with the Substance Use Disorder Act and
19
shall provide guidance for the arrest of persons under the
20
influence of alcohol or drugs, proper medical attention if
21
warranted, and care and release of those persons from
22
custody. The training shall provide guidance concerning
23
the release of persons arrested under the influence of
24
alcohol or drugs who are under the age of 21 years of age,
25
which shall include, but shall not be limited to,
26
instructions requiring the arresting officer to make a
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1
reasonable attempt to contact a responsible adult who is
2
willing to take custody of the person who is under the
3
influence of alcohol or drugs.
4
(35) Physical training.
5
(36) Post-traumatic stress disorder; training.
6
Training required under this paragraph (36) shall equip
7
Illinois State Police cadets to identify the symptoms of
8
post-traumatic stress disorder and to respond
9
appropriately to individuals exhibiting those symptoms.
10
(37) Report writing; training. Training required under
11
this paragraph (37) shall instruct Illinois State Police
12
cadets on writing reports and proper documentation of
13
statements.
14
(38) Scenario training. At least 12 hours of hands-on,
15
scenario-based role-playing.
16
(39) Search and seizure; training. Training required
17
under this paragraph (39) shall instruct Illinois State
18
Police cadets on search and seizure, including temporary
19
questioning.
20
(40) Sexual assault and sexual abuse; training.
21
Training required under this paragraph (40) shall instruct
22
Illinois State Police cadets on sexual assault and sexual
23
abuse response and report writing training requirements,
24
including, but not limited to, the following:
25
(A) recognizing the symptoms of trauma;
26
(B) understanding the role trauma has played in a
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1
victim's life;
2
(C) responding to the needs and concerns of a
3
victim;
4
(D) delivering services in a compassionate,
5
sensitive, and nonjudgmental manner;
6
(E) interviewing techniques in accordance with the
7
curriculum standards in subsection (f) of Section
8
10.19 of the Illinois Police Training Act;
9
(F) understanding cultural perceptions and common
10
myths of sexual assault and sexual abuse; and
11
(G) report-writing techniques in accordance with
12
the curriculum standards in subsection (f) of Section
13
10.19 of the Illinois Police Training Act and the
14
Sexual Assault Incident Procedure Act.
15
(41) Traffic control and crash investigation;
16
training.
17
(d) The Division of the Academy and Training shall
18
administer and conduct a program consistent with 18 U.S.C.
19
926B and 926C for qualified active and retired Illinois State
20
Police officers.
21
(Source: P.A. 103-34, eff. 1-1-24; 103-939, eff. 1-1-25;
22
103-949, eff. 1-1-25; 104-24, eff. 1-1-26; 104-417, eff.
23
8-15-25; revised 1-29-26.)
24
Section 10.
The Illinois Police Training Act is amended by
25
changing Section 10.17 as follows:
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1
(50 ILCS 705/10.17)
2
Sec. 10.17.
Crisis Intervention Team (CIT) training;
3
mental health awareness training; certified therapy dog team
4
training and certification.
5
(a) The Illinois Law Enforcement Training Standards Board
6
shall develop and approve a standard curriculum for certified
7
training programs in crisis intervention, including a
8
specialty certification course of at least 40 hours,
9
addressing specialized policing responses to people with
10
mental illnesses. The Board shall conduct Crisis Intervention
11
Team (CIT) training programs that train officers to identify
12
signs and symptoms of mental illness, to de-escalate
13
situations involving individuals who appear to have a mental
14
illness, and connect that person in crisis to treatment.
15
Crisis Intervention Team (CIT) training programs shall be a
16
collaboration between law enforcement professionals, mental
17
health providers, families, and consumer advocates and must
18
minimally include the following components: (1) basic
19
information about mental illnesses and how to recognize them;
20
(2) information about mental health laws and resources; (3)
21
learning from family members of individuals with mental
22
illness and their experiences;
and
(4) verbal de-escalation
23
training and role-plays
; and (5) community response options,
24
including the community response options under the Community
25
Emergency Services and Support Act
. Officers who have
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successfully completed this program shall be issued a
2
certificate attesting to their attendance of a Crisis
3
Intervention Team (CIT) training program.
4
(b) The Board shall create an introductory course
5
incorporating adult learning models that provides law
6
enforcement officers with an awareness of mental health issues
7
including a history of the mental health system, types of
8
mental health illness including signs and symptoms of mental
9
illness and common treatments and medications, and the
10
potential interactions law enforcement officers may have on a
11
regular basis with these individuals, their families, and
12
service providers including de-escalating a potential crisis
13
situation. This course, in addition to other traditional
14
learning settings, may be made available in an electronic
15
format.
16
(c) The Board shall develop a course and certification
17
program for certified therapy dog teams consisting of officers
18
employing the use of therapy dogs in relation to crisis and
19
emergency response. This program shall aim to ensure that
20
Crisis Intervention Team (CIT) officers and therapy dog teams
21
are available in various regions throughout the State to be
22
dispatched in the event of a crisis.
23
(d) The Board may include model policies regarding
24
community response procedures on its website and may
25
distribute educational and training materials created in
26
consultation with the Department of Human Services to law
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1
enforcement agencies throughout the State.
2
The amendatory changes to this Section made by Public Act
3
101-652 shall take effect January 1, 2022.
4
(Source: P.A. 104-106, eff. 1-1-26
.)
5
Section 15.
The Emergency Telephone System Act is amended
6
by changing Section 2 and by adding Sections 7.2 and 7.3 as
7
follows:
8
(50 ILCS 750/2)
(from Ch. 134, par. 32)
9
(Section scheduled to be repealed on December 31, 2027)
10
Sec. 2.
Definitions.
As used in this Act, unless the
11
context otherwise requires:
12
"9-1-1 network" means the network used for the delivery of
13
9-1-1 calls and messages over dedicated and redundant
14
facilities to a primary or backup 9-1-1 PSAP that meets the
15
appropriate grade of service.
16
"9-1-1 system" means the geographic area that has been
17
granted an order of authority by the Commission or the
18
Statewide 9-1-1 Administrator to use "9-1-1" as the primary
19
emergency telephone number, including, but not limited to, the
20
network, software applications, databases, CPE components and
21
operational and management procedures required to provide
22
9-1-1 service.
23
"9-1-1 Authority" means an Emergency Telephone System
24
Board or Joint Emergency Telephone System Board that provides
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1
for the management and operation of a 9-1-1 system. "9-1-1
2
Authority" includes the Illinois State Police only to the
3
extent it provides 9-1-1 services under this Act.
4
"9-1-1 System Manager" means the manager, director,
5
administrator, or coordinator who at the direction of his or
6
her Emergency Telephone System Board is responsible for the
7
implementation and execution of the order of authority issued
8
by the Commission or the Statewide 9-1-1 Administrator through
9
the programs, policies, procedures, and daily operations of
10
the 9-1-1 system consistent with the provisions of this Act.
11
"Administrator" means the Statewide 9-1-1 Administrator.
12
"Advanced service" means any telecommunications service
13
with or without dynamic bandwidth allocation, including, but
14
not limited to, ISDN Primary Rate Interface (PRI), that,
15
through the use of a DS-1, T-1, or other un-channelized or
16
multi-channel transmission facility, is capable of
17
transporting either the subscriber's inter-premises voice
18
telecommunications services to the public switched network or
19
the subscriber's 9-1-1 calls to the public agency.
20
"Aggregator" means an entity that ingresses 9-1-1 calls of
21
multiple traffic types or 9-1-1 calls from multiple
22
originating service providers and combines them on a trunk
23
group or groups (or equivalent egress connection arrangement
24
to a 9-1-1 system provider's NG9-1-1 network or system), and
25
that uses the routing information provided in the received
26
call setup signaling to select the appropriate trunk group and
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1
proceeds to signal call setup toward the 9-1-1 system
2
provider. "Aggregator" includes an originating service
3
provider that provides aggregation functions for its own 9-1-1
4
calls. "Aggregator" also includes an aggregation network or an
5
aggregation entity that provides aggregator services for other
6
types of system providers, such as cloud-based services or
7
enterprise networks as its client.
8
"ALI" or "automatic location identification" means the
9
automatic display at the public safety answering point of the
10
address or location of the caller's telephone and
11
supplementary emergency services information of the location
12
from which a call originates.
13
"ANI" or "automatic number identification" means the
14
automatic display of the 10-digit telephone number associated
15
with the caller's telephone number.
16
"Automatic alarm" and "automatic alerting device" mean any
17
device that will access the 9-1-1 system for emergency
18
services upon activation and does not provide for two-way
19
communication.
20
"Answering point" means a PSAP, SAP, Backup PSAP, Unmanned
21
Backup Answering Point, or VAP.
22
"Authorized entity" means an answering point or
23
participating agency other than a decommissioned PSAP.
24
"Backup PSAP" means an answering point that meets the
25
appropriate standards of service and serves as an alternate to
26
the PSAP operating independently from the PSAP at a different
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1
location that has the capability to direct dispatch for the
2
PSAP or otherwise transfer emergency calls directly to an
3
authorized entity. A backup PSAP may accept overflow calls
4
from the PSAP or be activated if the primary PSAP is disabled.
5
"Board" means an Emergency Telephone System Board or a
6
Joint Emergency Telephone System Board created pursuant to
7
Section 15.4.
8
"Bylaws" means a set of regulations that ensure consistent
9
and agreed upon voting and decision-making procedures.
10
"Call back number" means a number used by a PSAP to
11
recontact a location from which a 9-1-1 call was placed,
12
regardless of whether that number is a direct-dial number for
13
a station used to originate a 9-1-1 call.
14
"Carrier" includes a telecommunications carrier and a
15
wireless carrier.
16
"Commission" means the Illinois Commerce Commission.
17
"Computer aided dispatch" or "CAD" means a computer-based
18
system that aids public safety telecommunicators or
19
telecommunicator supervisors by automating selected
20
dispatching and recordkeeping activities.
21
"Direct dispatch" means a 9-1-1 service wherein upon
22
receipt of an emergency call, a public safety telecommunicator
23
or telecommunicator supervisors transmits, without delay,
24
transfer, relay, or referral, all relevant available
25
information to the appropriate public safety personnel or
26
emergency responders.
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1
"Dispatchable location" means a location delivered to the
2
PSAP with a 9-1-1 call that consists of the validated street
3
address of the calling party, plus additional information,
4
such as a suite or apartment identifier, uncertainty data, or
5
similar information, necessary to accurately identify the
6
location of the calling party.
7
"Decommissioned" means the revocation of a PSAPs authority
8
to handle 9-1-1 calls as an answering point within the 9-1-1
9
network.
10
"Diversion" means the obligation or expenditure of a 9-1-1
11
fee or charge for a purpose or function other than the purposes
12
and functions designated by the Federal Communications
13
Commission as acceptable under 47 CFR 9.23. "Diversion"
14
includes distribution of a 9-1-1 fee or charge to a political
15
subdivision that obligates or expends such fees for a purpose
16
or function other than those designated as acceptable by the
17
Federal Communications Commission under 47 CFR 9.23.
18
"DS-1, T-1, or similar un-channelized or multi-channel
19
transmission facility" means a facility that can transmit and
20
receive a bit rate of at least 1.544 megabits per second
21
(Mbps).
22
"Dynamic bandwidth allocation" means the ability of the
23
facility or customer to drop and add channels, or adjust
24
bandwidth, when needed in real time for voice or data
25
purposes.
26
"Emergency call" means any type of request for emergency
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1
assistance through a 9-1-1 network either to the digits 9-1-1
2
or the emergency 24/7 10-digit telephone number for all
3
answering points. An emergency call is not limited to a voice
4
telephone call. It could be a two-way video call, an
5
interactive text, Teletypewriter (TTY), an SMS, an Instant
6
Message, or any new mechanism for communications available in
7
the future. An emergency call occurs when the request for
8
emergency assistance is received by a public safety
9
telecommunicator.
10
"Emergency Telephone System Board" or "ETSB" means (i) a
11
board appointed by the corporate authorities of any county or
12
municipality to provide for the management and operation of a
13
9-1-1 system within the scope of the duties and powers
14
prescribed by this Act or (ii) a joint Emergency Telephone
15
System Board.
16
"EMS personnel" has the meaning given to that term in
17
Section 3.5 of the Emergency Medical Services (EMS) Systems
18
Act.
19
"First responder" means someone designated by a public
20
safety agency who is charged with responding to emergency
21
service requests, including emergency communications
22
professionals, public safety telecommunicators, public safety
23
telecommunicator supervisors, and police, fire, and EMS
24
personnel who operate in the field.
25
"Grade of service" means the NENA Baseline NG9-1-1 as set
26
forth in the NENA i3 Solution prevailing national standard.
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1
"Hearing-impaired individual" means a person with a
2
permanent hearing loss who can regularly and routinely
3
communicate by telephone only through the aid of devices which
4
can send and receive written messages over the telephone
5
network.
6
"Hosted supplemental 9-1-1 service" means a database
7
service that:
8
(1) electronically provides information for 9-1-1 call
9
takers when a call is placed to 9-1-1;
10
(2) allows telephone subscribers to provide
11
information to 9-1-1 to be used in emergency scenarios;
12
(3) collects a variety of formatted data relevant to
13
9-1-1 and first responder needs, which may include, but is
14
not limited to, photographs of the telephone subscribers,
15
physical descriptions, medical information, household
16
data, and emergency contacts;
17
(4) allows for information to be entered by telephone
18
subscribers through a secure website where they can elect
19
to provide as little or as much information as they
20
choose;
21
(5) automatically displays data provided by telephone
22
subscribers to 9-1-1 call takers for all types of
23
telephones when a call is placed to 9-1-1 from a
24
registered and confirmed phone number;
25
(6) (blank);
26
(7) (blank);
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1
(8) (blank);
2
(9) supports the delivery of telephone subscriber
3
information through a secure internet connection to all
4
emergency telephone system boards;
5
(10) works across all 9-1-1 call-taking equipment and
6
allows for the easy transfer of information into a
7
computer aided dispatch system; and
8
(11) may be used to collect information pursuant to an
9
Illinois Premise Alert Program as defined in the Illinois
10
Premise Alert Program (PAP) Act.
11
"Interconnected voice service" means a telecommunications
12
service that:
13
(1) allows users to make and receive calls to and from
14
the public switched telephone network or other phone
15
lines, including both traditional landline and mobile
16
services;
17
(2) enables users to make or receive voice calls to or
18
from telephone numbers assigned to the public switched
19
telephone network, including calls to and from emergency
20
services;
21
(3) requires a connection to the public switched
22
telephone network (PSTN) either directly or through other
23
interconnected services;
24
(4) supports standard telephone functions, such as
25
making and receiving calls, voicemail, and the ability to
26
connect with other telephone networks;
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(5) complies with various FCC regulations to ensure
2
user safety, including the requirement to support 9-1-1
3
services, allowing emergency responders to locate the
4
caller; and
5
(6) can be provided over various technologies,
6
including traditional telephone lines, broadband Internet
7
connections via VoIP, and mobile networks.
8
"Interconnected voice service" includes voice over
9
Internet protocol (VoIP) services that are integrated into the
10
public telephone system and the availability of other
11
essential services like number portability and accessibility
12
for people with disabilities.
13
"Interconnected voice over Internet protocol provider" or
14
"Interconnected VoIP provider" has the meaning given to that
15
term under Section 13-235 of the Public Utilities Act.
16
"Joint Emergency Telephone System Board" or "Joint ETSB"
17
means a Joint Emergency Telephone System Board established by
18
intergovernmental agreement of two or more municipalities or
19
counties, or a combination thereof, to provide for the
20
management and operation of a 9-1-1 system.
21
"Key telephone system" means a type of MLTS designed to
22
provide shared access to several outside lines through buttons
23
or keys typically offering identified access lines with direct
24
line appearance or termination on a given telephone set.
25
"Local public agency" means any unit of local government
26
or special purpose district located in whole or in part within
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1
this State that provides or has authority to provide
2
firefighting, police, ambulance, medical, or other emergency
3
services.
4
"Mechanical dialer" means any device that accesses the
5
9-1-1 system without human intervention and does not provide
6
for two-way communication.
7
"Master Street Address Guide" or "MSAG" is a database of
8
street names and house ranges within their associated
9
communities defining emergency service zones (ESZs) and their
10
associated emergency service numbers (ESNs) to enable proper
11
routing of 9-1-1 calls.
12
"Mobile telephone number" or "MTN" means the telephone
13
number assigned to a wireless telephone at the time of initial
14
activation.
15
"Multi-line telephone system" or "MLTS" means a system
16
composed of common control units, telephone sets, control
17
hardware and software, and adjunct systems, including network
18
and premises-based systems, such as Centrex and VoIP, as well
19
as PBX, hybrid, and key telephone systems
(
as classified by
20
the Federal Communications Commission under 47 CFR Part 68,
21
which includes systems owned or leased by governmental
22
agencies, nonprofit entities, and for-profit businesses.
23
"Multi-line telephone system" or "MLTS" includes the full
24
range of networked communication systems that serve
25
enterprises, including IP-based and cloud-based systems.
26
"Multi-line telephone system" or "MLTS" also includes
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1
outbound-only MLTS that allow users to make 9-1-1 calls but do
2
not enable PSAPs to place a return call directly to the 9-1-1
3
caller.
4
"Network connections" means the number of voice grade
5
communications channels directly between a subscriber and a
6
telecommunications carrier's public switched network, without
7
the intervention of any other telecommunications carrier's
8
switched network, which would be required to carry the
9
subscriber's inter-premises traffic and which connection
10
either (1) is capable of providing access through the public
11
switched network to a 9-1-1 Emergency Telephone System, if one
12
exists, or (2) if no system exists at the time a surcharge is
13
imposed under Section 15.3 or 20, that would be capable of
14
providing access through the public switched network to the
15
local 9-1-1 Emergency Telephone System if one existed. Where
16
multiple voice grade communications channels are connected to
17
a telecommunications carrier's public switched network through
18
a private branch exchange (PBX) service, there shall be
19
determined to be one network connection for each trunk line
20
capable of transporting either the subscriber's inter-premises
21
traffic to the public switched network or the subscriber's
22
9-1-1 calls to the public agency. Where multiple voice grade
23
communications channels are connected to an OSP's public
24
switched network through Centrex type service, the number of
25
network connections shall be equal to the number of PBX trunk
26
equivalents for the subscriber's service or other multiple
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1
voice grade communication channels facility, as determined by
2
reference to any generally applicable exchange access service
3
tariff filed by the subscriber's telecommunications carrier
4
with the Commission.
5
"Network costs" means those recurring costs that directly
6
relate to the operation of the 9-1-1 network as determined by
7
the Statewide 9-1-1 Administrator with the advice of the
8
Statewide 9-1-1 Advisory Board, which may include, but need
9
not be limited to, some or all of the following: costs for
10
interoffice trunks, selective routing charges, transfer lines
11
and toll charges for 9-1-1 services, Automatic Location
12
Information (ALI) database charges, independent local exchange
13
carrier charges and non-system provider charges, carrier
14
charges for third party database for on-site customer premises
15
equipment,
backup
back-up
PSAP trunks for non-system
16
providers, periodic database updates as provided by carrier
17
(also known as "ALI data dump"), regional ALI storage charges,
18
circuits for call delivery (fiber or circuit connection),
19
NG9-1-1 costs, and all associated fees, taxes, and surcharges
20
on each invoice. "Network costs" shall not include radio
21
circuits or toll charges that are other than for 9-1-1
22
services.
23
"Next generation 9-1-1" or "NG9-1-1" means a secure
24
Internet Protocol-based (IP-based) open-standards system
25
comprised of hardware, software, data, and operational
26
policies and procedures that:
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1
(A) provides standardized interfaces from
2
emergency call and message services to support
3
emergency communications;
4
(B) processes all types of emergency calls,
5
including voice, text, data, and multimedia
6
information;
7
(C) acquires and integrates additional emergency
8
call data useful to call routing and handling;
9
(D) delivers the emergency calls, messages, and
10
data to the appropriate public safety answering point
11
and other appropriate emergency entities based on the
12
location of the caller;
13
(E) supports data, video, and other communications
14
needs for coordinated incident response and
15
management; and
16
(F) interoperates with services and networks used
17
by first responders to facilitate emergency response.
18
"Next generation 9-1-1 costs" or "NG9-1-1 costs" means
19
those recurring costs that directly relate to the next
20
generation 9-1-1 service as determined by the Statewide 9-1-1
21
Administrator with the advice of the Statewide 9-1-1 Advisory
22
Board, which may include, but need not be limited to, costs for
23
NENA i3 Core Components (Border Control Function (BCF),
24
Emergency Call Routing Function (ECRF), Location Validation
25
Function (LVF), Emergency Services Routing Proxy (ESRP),
26
Policy Store/Policy Routing Functions (PSPRF), Location
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Information Servers (LIS)), Statewide ESInet, and software
2
external to the PSAP (data collection, identity management,
3
aggregation, and GIS functionality).
4
"Next generation 9-1-1 core services" or "NGCS" means a
5
set of services needed to process a 9-1-1 call on an ESInet.
6
"Next generation 9-1-1 core services" or "NGCS" includes, but
7
is not limited to, the ESRP, ECRF, LVF, BCF, bridge, policy
8
store, logging services, and typical IP services, including
9
DNS and DHCP. "Next generation 9-1-1 core services" or "NGCS"
10
does not include the network on which the services operate.
11
"Originating service provider" or "OSP" means the entity
12
that provides services to end users that may be used to
13
originate voice or nonvoice 9-1-1 requests for assistance and
14
who would interconnect, in any of various fashions, to the
15
9-1-1 system provider for purposes of delivering 9-1-1 traffic
16
to the public safety answering points.
17
"Primary place of use" or "PPU" means the residential
18
street address or the primary business street address where a
19
customer primarily uses the mobile telecommunications service.
20
"Primary place of use" or "PPU" does not include a post office
21
box address.
22
"Public agency" means the State, and any unit of local
23
government or special purpose district located in whole or in
24
part within this State, that provides or has authority to
25
provide firefighting, police, ambulance, medical, or other
26
emergency services.
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"Public safety agency" means a functional division of a
2
public agency that provides firefighting, police, medical, or
3
other emergency services to respond to and manage emergency
4
incidents. For the purpose of providing wireless service to
5
users of 9-1-1 emergency services, as expressly provided for
6
in this Act, the Illinois State Police may be considered a
7
public safety agency.
8
"Public safety answering point" or "PSAP" means the
9
primary answering location of an emergency call that meets the
10
appropriate standards of service and is responsible for
11
receiving and processing those calls and events according to a
12
specified operational policy.
13
"PSAP representative" means the manager or supervisor of a
14
public safety answering point
Public Safety Answering Point
15
(PSAP)
who oversees the daily operational functions and is
16
responsible for the overall management and administration of
17
the PSAP.
18
"Public safety telecommunicator" means any person employed
19
in a full-time or part-time capacity at an answering point
20
whose duties or responsibilities include answering, receiving,
21
or transferring an emergency call for dispatch to the
22
appropriate emergency responder.
23
"Public safety telecommunicator supervisor" means any
24
person employed in a full-time or part-time capacity at an
25
answering point or by a 9-1-1 Authority, whose primary duties
26
or responsibilities are to direct, administer, or manage any
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public safety telecommunicator and whose responsibilities
2
include answering, receiving, or transferring an emergency
3
call for dispatch to the appropriate emergency responders.
4
"Referral" means a 9-1-1 service in which the public
5
safety telecommunicator provides the calling party with the
6
telephone number of the appropriate public safety agency or
7
other provider of emergency services.
8
"Regular service" means any telecommunications service,
9
other than advanced service, that is capable of transporting
10
either the subscriber's inter-premises voice
11
telecommunications services to the public switched network or
12
the subscriber's 9-1-1 calls to the public agency.
13
"Relay" means a 9-1-1 service in which the public safety
14
telecommunicator takes the pertinent information from a caller
15
and relays that information to the appropriate public safety
16
agency or other provider of emergency services.
17
"Remit period" means the billing period, one month in
18
duration, for which a wireless carrier remits a surcharge and
19
provides subscriber information by zip code to the Illinois
20
State Police, in accordance with Section 20 of this Act.
21
"Secondary Answering Point" or "SAP" means a location,
22
other than a PSAP, that is able to receive the voice, data, and
23
call back number of NG9-1-1 emergency calls transferred from a
24
PSAP and completes the call taking process by dispatching
25
police, medical, fire, or other emergency responders.
26
"Shared telecommunications services" means the provision
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of telecommunications and information management services and
2
equipment within a user group located in discrete private
3
premises in building complexes, campuses, or high-rise
4
buildings by a commercial shared services provider or by a
5
user association, through privately owned customer premises
6
equipment and associated data processing and information
7
management services. The term "shared telecommunications
8
services" includes the provisioning of connections to the
9
facilities of a local exchange carrier or an interexchange
10
carrier.
11
"Statewide behavioral health crisis system" means the core
12
elements or pillars of the crisis system and includes, but is
13
not limited to, Illinois 9-8-8 Lifeline Contact Centers,
14
community crisis response services, including mobile crisis
15
teams, and crisis receiving and stabilization facilities and
16
programs, including living room programs.
17
"Subscriber" means an individual or entity to whom a
18
wireless, wireline, or VoIP service account or number has been
19
assigned by a carrier, other than an account or number
20
associated with prepaid wireless telecommunication service.
21
"System" means the communications equipment, related
22
software applications, and databases required to produce a
23
response by the appropriate emergency public safety agency or
24
other provider of emergency services as a result of an
25
emergency call being placed to 9-1-1.
26
"System provider" means the contracted entity providing
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9-1-1 network and database services.
2
"Telecommunications carrier" means those entities included
3
within the definition specified in Section 13-202 of the
4
Public Utilities Act, and includes those carriers acting as
5
resellers of telecommunications services. "Telecommunications
6
carrier" includes telephone systems operating as mutual
7
concerns. "Telecommunications carrier" does not include a
8
wireless carrier.
9
"Telecommunications technology" means equipment that can
10
send and receive written messages over the telephone network.
11
"Transfer" means a 9-1-1 service in which the public
12
safety telecommunicator, who receives an emergency call,
13
transmits, redirects, or conferences that call to the
14
appropriate public safety agency or other provider of
15
emergency services. "Transfer" includes calls transferred,
16
within the statewide NG9-1-1 system and to surrounding states
17
NG9-1-1 Systems using a SIP URI. "Transfer" shall not include
18
(1) a relay or referral of the information without
19
transferring the caller or (2) calls transferred to a 10-digit
20
number where a SIP URI is available.
21
"Transmitting messages" shall have the meaning given to
22
that term under Section 8-11-2 of the Illinois Municipal Code.
23
"Trunk line" means a transmission path, or group of
24
transmission paths, connecting a subscriber's PBX to a
25
telecommunications carrier's public switched network. In the
26
case of regular service, each voice grade communications
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channel or equivalent amount of bandwidth capable of
2
transporting either the subscriber's inter-premises voice
3
telecommunications services to the public switched network or
4
the subscriber's 9-1-1 calls to the public agency shall be
5
considered a trunk line, even if it is bundled with other
6
channels or additional bandwidth. In the case of advanced
7
service, each DS-1, T-1, or other un-channelized or
8
multi-channel transmission facility that is capable of
9
transporting either the subscriber's inter-premises voice
10
telecommunications services to the public switched network or
11
the subscriber's 9-1-1 calls to the public agency shall be
12
considered a single trunk line, even if it contains multiple
13
voice grade communications channels or otherwise supports 2 or
14
more voice grade calls at a time; provided, however, that each
15
additional increment of up to 24 voice grade channels of
16
transmission capacity that is capable of transporting either
17
the subscriber's inter-premises voice telecommunications
18
services to the public switched network or the subscriber's
19
9-1-1 calls to the public agency shall be considered an
20
additional trunk line.
21
"Unmanned backup answering point" means an answering point
22
that serves as an alternate to the PSAP at an alternate
23
location and is typically unmanned but can be activated if the
24
primary PSAP is disabled.
25
"Virtual answering point" or "VAP" means a temporary or
26
nonpermanent location that is capable of receiving an
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emergency call, contains a fully functional worksite that is
2
not bound to a specific location, but rather is portable and
3
scalable, connecting public safety telecommunicators to the
4
work process, and is capable of completing the call
5
dispatching process.
6
"
Voice grade
Voice-grade
call" or "VGC" means a
7
telecommunications service that allows for the transmission of
8
voice signals with sufficient quality for effective
9
communication.
10
"Voice-impaired individual" means a person with a
11
permanent speech disability which precludes oral
12
communication, who can regularly and routinely communicate by
13
telephone only through the aid of devices which can send and
14
receive written messages over the telephone network.
15
"Wireless" means the delivery of a wireless 9-1-1 call in
16
accordance with applicable Federal Communications Commission
17
regulations.
18
"Wireless carrier" means a provider of two-way cellular,
19
broadband PCS, geographic area 800 MHZ and 900 MHZ Commercial
20
Mobile Radio Service (CMRS), Wireless Communications Service
21
(WCS), or other Commercial Mobile Radio Service (CMRS), as
22
defined by the Federal Communications Commission, offering
23
radio communications that may provide fixed, mobile, radio
24
location, or satellite communication services to individuals
25
or businesses within its assigned spectrum block and
26
geographical area or that offers real-time, two-way voice
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service that is interconnected with the public switched
2
network, including a reseller of such service.
3
(Source: P.A. 103-366, eff. 1-1-24; 104-204, eff. 8-15-25;
4
revised 12-12-25.)
5
(50 ILCS 750/7.2 new)
6
Sec. 7.2.
Required compliance with the Community Emergency
7
Services and Support Act Protocols.
Beginning July 1, 2027,
8
all public safety answering points shall comply with the
9
protocols established under the Community Emergency Services
10
and Support Act.
11
(50 ILCS 750/7.3 new)
12
Sec. 7.3.
Monitoring PSAP compliance with the Community
13
Emergency Services and Support Act.
14
(a) The Office of the Statewide 9-1-1 Administrator shall
15
ensure that PSAPs comply with the requirements of Section 7.2.
16
To ensure that PSAPs comply with the requirements of Section
17
7.2, the Office of the Statewide 9-1-1 Administrator shall
18
monitor every PSAP.
19
(b) The Office of the Statewide 9-1-1 Administrator shall
20
consult with the Illinois Department of Human Services to
21
support PSAP compliance with the Community Emergency Services
22
and Support Act. In carrying out this responsibility, the
23
Illinois Department of Human Services shall provide
24
consultation, resources, collaboration, and guidance to the
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Statewide 9-1-1 Administrator, as appropriate, to support PSAP
2
compliance with the Community Emergency Services and Support
3
Act. The guidance shall include required data elements,
4
reporting formats, and a mechanism for reporting provider
5
service data to support monitoring, verification, and quality
6
improvement. The Office of the Statewide 9-1-1 Administrator
7
shall, with input from the Statewide 9-1-1 Advisory Board,
8
relevant stakeholders, and subject matter experts, adopt rules
9
to implement this Section and ensure compliance with Section
10
7.2.
11
Section 20.
The Community Emergency Services and Support
12
Act is amended by changing Sections 5, 15, 20, 25, 30, 35, 40,
13
45, 50, 65, and 70 and by adding Section 75 as follows:
14
(50 ILCS 754/5)
15
Sec. 5.
Findings.
The General Assembly recognizes that the
16
Illinois
Department of Human Services
Division of Behavioral
17
Health and Recovery
Division of Mental Health
is preparing to
18
provide mobile mental and behavioral health services to all
19
Illinoisans as part of the federally mandated adoption of the
20
9-8-8 phone number. The General Assembly also recognizes that
21
many cities and some states have successfully established
22
mobile emergency mental and behavioral health services as part
23
of their emergency response system to support people who need
24
such support and do not present a threat of physical violence
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1
to the mobile mental health relief providers. In light of that
2
experience, the General Assembly finds that in order to
3
promote and protect the health, safety, and welfare of the
4
public, it is necessary and in the public interest to provide
5
emergency response, with or without medical transportation, to
6
individuals requiring mental health or behavioral health
7
services in a manner that is substantially equivalent to the
8
response already provided to individuals who require emergency
9
physical health care.
10
The General Assembly also recognizes the history of
11
vulnerable populations being subject to unwarranted
12
involuntary commitment or other human rights violations
13
instead of receiving necessary care during acute crises which
14
may contribute to an understandable apprehension of behavioral
15
health services among individuals who have historically been
16
subject to these practices. The General Assembly intends for
17
the Mobile Mental Health Relief Providers regulated by this
18
Act to assist with crises that do not rise to the level of
19
involuntary commitment. However, the General Assembly also
20
recognizes that Mobile Mental Health Relief Providers may,
21
during the course of assisting with a crisis, encounter
22
individuals who present an imminent threat of injury to
23
themselves or others unless they receive assistance through
24
the involuntary commitment process. This Act intends to
25
balance concerns about misuse of the involuntary commitment
26
process with the need for emergency care for individuals whose
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crisis presents an imminent threat of injury.
2
(Source: P.A. 103-105, eff. 6-27-23; 104-155, eff. 8-1-25.)
3
(50 ILCS 754/15)
4
Sec. 15.
Definitions.
As used in this Act:
5
"Chemical restraint" means any drug used for discipline or
6
convenience and not required to treat medical symptoms.
7
"Community services" and "community-based mental or
8
behavioral health services" include both public and private
9
settings.
10
"Department" means the Department of Human Services.
11
"Division of Mental Health" means the Division of Mental
12
Health of the Department of Human Services.
13
"Emergency" means an emergent circumstance caused by a
14
health condition, regardless of whether it is perceived as
15
physical, mental, or behavioral in nature, for which an
16
individual may require prompt care, support, or assessment at
17
the individual's location.
18
"Emergency dispatch protocol" means a nationally
19
recognized protocol established under the Emergency Medical
20
Services (EMS) Systems Act approved by the local medical
21
director in coordination with the local PSAP and appropriate
22
local responders.
23
"Mental or behavioral health" means any health condition
24
involving changes in thinking, emotion, or behavior, and that
25
the medical community treats as distinct from physical health
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1
care.
2
"Mobile mental health relief provider" means a
mobile
3
crisis response team or a mental health professional who
4
engages with individuals
person engaging with a member of the
5
public
to provide
the
mobile mental and behavioral
health
6
services
service
established in conjunction with the
7
Department
Division of Mental Health establishing the 9-8-8
8
emergency number
. "Mobile mental health relief provider"
may
9
include paramedics (EMT-Ps), emergency medical technicians
10
(EMTs), or other medical personnel; individuals with lived
11
experience; or community responders who are trained to provide
12
mobile behavioral health crisis services and who have agreed
13
to meet the requirements set forth by the Department
does not
14
include a Paramedic (EMT-P) or EMT, as those terms are defined
15
in the Emergency Medical Services (EMS) Systems Act, unless
16
that responding agency has agreed to provide a specialized
17
response in accordance with the Division of Mental Health's
18
services offered through its 9-8-8 number and has met all the
19
requirements to offer that service through that system
.
20
"Physical health" means a health condition that the
21
medical community treats as distinct from mental or behavioral
22
health care.
23
"Physical restraint" means any manual method or physical
24
or mechanical device, material, or equipment attached or
25
adjacent to an individual's body that the individual cannot
26
easily remove and restricts freedom of movement or normal
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access to one's body. "Physical restraint" does not include a
2
seat belt if it is used during transportation of an individual
3
and the individual has access to the mechanism that releases
4
the seat belt.
5
"Public safety answering point" or "PSAP" means the
6
primary answering location of an emergency call that meets the
7
appropriate standards of service and is responsible for
8
receiving and processing those calls and events according to a
9
specified operational policy.
10
"Treatment relationship" means an active association with
11
a mental or behavioral care provider able to respond in an
12
appropriate amount of time to requests for care.
13
(Source: P.A. 103-105, eff. 6-27-23; 104-155, eff. 8-1-25.)
14
(50 ILCS 754/20)
15
Sec. 20.
Coordination with
the Department
Division of
16
Mental Health
.
Each 9-1-1 PSAP and provider of emergency
17
services dispatched through a 9-1-1 system must coordinate
18
with the mobile mental and behavioral health services
19
established by the
Department
Division of Mental Health
so
20
that the following State goals and State prohibitions are met
21
whenever a person interacts with one of these entities for the
22
purpose of seeking emergency mental and behavioral health care
23
or when one of these entities recognizes the appropriateness
24
of providing mobile mental or behavioral health care to an
25
individual with whom they have engaged. The
Department
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1
Division of Mental Health
is also directed to provide guidance
2
regarding whether and how these entities should coordinate
3
with mobile mental and behavioral health services when
4
responding to individuals who appear to be in a mental or
5
behavioral health emergency while engaged in conduct alleged
6
to constitute a non-violent misdemeanor.
7
(Source: P.A. 102-580, eff. 1-1-22; 103-105, eff. 6-27-23.)
8
(50 ILCS 754/25)
9
Sec. 25.
State goals.
10
(a) 9-1-1 PSAPs, emergency services dispatched through
11
9-1-1 PSAPs, and the mobile mental and behavioral health
12
service established by the
Department
Division of Mental
13
Health
must coordinate their services so that the State goals
14
listed in this Section are achieved.
This coordination may be,
15
but is not required to be, accomplished through the use of
16
Memoranda of Understanding (MOUs) or other similar agreements
17
with the intent of ensuring best practices of interoperability
18
and facilitating interagency cooperation.
Appropriate mobile
19
response service for mental and behavioral health emergencies
20
shall be available regardless of whether the initial contact
21
was with 9-8-8,
with
9-1-1
,
or directly with an emergency
22
service dispatched through 9-1-1. Appropriate mobile response
23
services must:
24
(1) whenever possible, ensure that individuals
25
experiencing mental or behavioral health crises are
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1
diverted from hospitalization or incarceration and are
2
instead linked with available appropriate community
3
services;
4
(2) include the option of on-site care if that type of
5
care is appropriate and does not override the care
6
decisions of the individual receiving care. Providing care
7
in the community, through methods like mobile crisis
8
units, is encouraged. If effective care is provided on
9
site, and if it is consistent with the care decisions of
10
the individual receiving the care, further transportation
11
to other medical providers is not required by this Act;
12
(3) recommend appropriate referrals for available
13
community services if the individual receiving on-site
14
care is not already in a treatment relationship with a
15
service provider or is unsatisfied with their current
16
service providers. The referrals shall take into
17
consideration waiting lists and copayments, which may
18
present barriers to access; and
19
(4) subject to the care decisions of the individual
20
receiving care, coordinate transportation for any
21
individual experiencing a mental or behavioral health
22
emergency to the most integrated and least restrictive
23
setting feasible. A mobile crisis response team may
24
provide transportation if the mobile crisis response team
25
is appropriately equipped and staffed to do so.
26
(b) Prioritize requests for emergency assistance. 9-1-1
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1
PSAPs, emergency services dispatched through 9-1-1 PSAPs, and
2
the mobile mental and behavioral health service established by
3
the
Department
Division of Mental Health
must provide guidance
4
for prioritizing calls for assistance and maximum response
5
time in relation to the type of emergency reported.
6
(c) Provide appropriate response times. From the time of
7
first notification, 9-1-1 PSAPs, emergency services dispatched
8
through 9-1-1 PSAPs, and the mobile mental and behavioral
9
health service established by the
Department
Division of
10
Mental Health
must provide the response within
a
response time
11
appropriate to the care requirements of the individual with an
12
emergency.
13
(d) Require appropriate mobile mental health relief
14
provider training. Mobile mental health relief providers must
15
have adequate training to address the needs of individuals
16
experiencing a mental or behavioral health emergency. Adequate
17
training at least includes:
18
(1) training in de-escalation techniques;
19
(2) knowledge of local community services and
20
supports;
21
(3) training in respectful interaction with people
22
experiencing mental or behavioral health crises, including
23
the concepts of stigma and respectful language;
24
(4) training in recognizing and working with people
25
with neurodivergent and developmental disability diagnoses
26
and in the techniques available to help stabilize and
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1
connect them to further services; and
2
(5) training in the involuntary commitment process, in
3
identification of situations that meet the standards for
4
involuntary commitment, and in cultural competencies and
5
social biases to guard against any group being
6
disproportionately subjected to the involuntary commitment
7
process or the use of the process not warranted under the
8
legal standard for involuntary commitment.
9
(e) Require minimum team staffing. The
Department
Division
10
of Mental Health
, in consultation with the Regional Advisory
11
Committees created in Section 40, shall determine the
12
appropriate credentials for the mental health providers
13
responding to calls, including to what extent the mobile
14
mental health relief providers must have certain credentials
15
and licensing, and to what extent the mobile mental health
16
relief providers can be peer support professionals.
17
(f) Require training from individuals with lived
18
experience. Training shall be provided by individuals with
19
lived experience to the extent available.
20
(g) Adopt guidelines directing referral to restrictive
21
care settings. Mobile mental health relief providers must have
22
guidelines to follow when considering whether to refer an
23
individual to more restrictive forms of care, like emergency
24
room or hospital settings.
25
(h) Specify regional best practices. Mobile mental health
26
relief providers providing these services must do so
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1
consistently with best practices, which include respecting the
2
care choices of the individuals receiving assistance. Regional
3
best practices may be broken down into sub-regions, as
4
appropriate to reflect local resources and conditions. With
5
the agreement of the impacted EMS Regions, providers of
6
emergency response to physical emergencies may participate in
7
another EMS Region for mental and behavioral response, if that
8
participation shall provide a better service to individuals
9
experiencing a mental or behavioral health emergency.
10
(i) Adopt
a
system for directing care in advance of an
11
emergency. The
Department
Division of Mental Health
shall
12
select and publicly identify a system that allows individuals
13
who voluntarily chose to do so to provide confidential
14
advanced care directions to individuals providing services
15
under this Act. No system for providing advanced care
16
direction may be implemented unless the
Department
Division of
17
Mental Health
approves it as confidential, available to
18
individuals at all economic levels, and non-stigmatizing. The
19
Department
Division of Mental Health
may defer this
20
requirement for providing a system for advanced care direction
21
if it determines that no existing systems can currently meet
22
these requirements.
23
(j) Train dispatching staff. The personnel staffing 9-1-1,
24
3-1-1, or other emergency response intake systems must be
25
provided with
and complete
adequate training to assess whether
26
coordinating with 9-8-8 is appropriate
that is tailored to
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1
their roles
.
2
(k) Establish protocol for emergency responder
3
coordination. The
Department
Division of Mental Health
shall
4
establish a protocol for mobile mental health relief
5
providers, law enforcement, and fire and ambulance services to
6
request assistance from each other, and train these groups on
7
the protocol.
8
(l) Integrate law enforcement. The
Department
Division of
9
Mental Health
shall provide for law enforcement to request
10
mobile mental health relief provider assistance whenever law
11
enforcement engages an individual appropriate for services
12
under this Act. If law enforcement would typically request EMS
13
assistance when it encounters an individual with a physical
14
health emergency, law enforcement shall similarly dispatch
15
mental or behavioral health personnel or medical
16
transportation when it encounters an individual in a mental or
17
behavioral health emergency.
18
(m) Mobile Crisis Response and 9-8-8 are both
19
around-the-clock crisis services that must be considered
20
alongside other crisis resources when initially screening an
21
individual contacting a 9-1-1 PSAP. Accordingly, when
22
indicated, 9-1-1 PSAPs shall open and use the relevant
23
emergency dispatch protocol to ensure all individuals
24
contacting a 9-1-1 PSAP when a behavioral health crisis is
25
indicated have access to a non-law enforcement, behavioral
26
health response and shall follow approved protocols and
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1
processes under this Act.
2
(n) PSAP telecommunicators, 9-8-8 crisis counselors, and
3
mobile mental health relief providers shall be provided with
4
and complete training necessary to support the implementation
5
of this Act that is tailored to their roles, as approved by the
6
Department or the Department's designee.
7
(o) 9-1-1 PSAPs, 9-8-8 providers, and mobile mental health
8
relief providers shall provide required data using the format
9
and data definitions specified by the Department. The
10
information may be used to evaluate implementation, monitor
11
compliance with this Act, and support improvement efforts.
12
(Source: P.A. 103-105, eff. 6-27-23; 104-155, eff. 8-1-25;
13
revised 12-12-25.)
14
(50 ILCS 754/30)
15
Sec. 30.
State prohibitions.
9-1-1 PSAPs, emergency
16
services dispatched through 9-1-1 PSAPs, and the mobile mental
17
and behavioral health service established by the
Department
18
Division of Mental Health
must coordinate their services so
19
that, based on the information provided to them, the following
20
State prohibitions are avoided:
21
(a) Law enforcement responsibility for providing mental
22
and behavioral health care. In any area where mobile mental
23
health relief providers are available for dispatch, law
24
enforcement shall not be dispatched to respond to an
25
individual requiring mental or behavioral health care unless
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1
that individual is (i) involved in a suspected violation of
2
the criminal laws of this State, or (ii) presents a threat of
3
physical injury to self or others. Mobile mental health relief
4
providers are not considered available for dispatch under this
5
Section if 9-8-8 reports that it cannot dispatch appropriate
6
service within the maximum response times established by each
7
Regional Advisory Committee under Section 45.
8
(1) Standing on its own or in combination with each
9
other, the fact that an individual is experiencing a
10
mental or behavioral health emergency, or has a mental
11
health, behavioral health, or other diagnosis, is not
12
sufficient to justify an assessment that the individual is
13
a threat of physical injury to self or others, or requires
14
a law enforcement response to a request for emergency
15
response or medical transportation.
16
(2) If, based on its assessment of the threat to
17
public safety, law enforcement would not accompany medical
18
transportation responding to a physical health emergency,
19
unless requested by mobile mental health relief providers,
20
law enforcement may not accompany emergency response or
21
medical transportation personnel responding to a mental or
22
behavioral health emergency that presents an equivalent
23
level of threat to self or public safety.
24
(3) Without regard to an assessment of threat to self
25
or threat to public safety, law enforcement may station
26
personnel so that they can rapidly respond to requests for
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1
assistance from mobile mental health relief providers if
2
law enforcement does not interfere with the provision of
3
emergency response or transportation services. To the
4
extent practical, not interfering with services includes
5
remaining sufficiently distant from or out of sight of the
6
individual receiving care so that law enforcement presence
7
is unlikely to escalate the emergency.
8
(b) Mobile mental health relief provider involvement in
9
involuntary commitment. Mobile mental health relief providers
10
may participate in the involuntary commitment process only to
11
the extent permitted under the Mental Health and Developmental
12
Disabilities Code. The
Department
Division of Behavioral
13
Health
shall, in consultation with each Regional Advisory
14
Committee, as appropriate, monitor the use of involuntary
15
commitment under this Act and provide systemic recommendations
16
to improve outcomes for those subject to commitment.
17
(c) Use of law enforcement for transportation. In any area
18
where mobile mental health relief providers are available for
19
dispatch, unless requested by mobile mental health relief
20
providers, law enforcement shall not be used to provide
21
transportation to access mental or behavioral health care, or
22
travel between mental or behavioral health care providers,
23
except where (i) no alternative is available; (ii) the
24
individual requests transportation from law enforcement and
25
law enforcement mutually agrees to provide transportation; or
26
(iii) the Mental Health and Developmental Disabilities Code
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1
requires or permits law enforcement to provide transportation.
2
(d) Reduction of educational institution obligations. The
3
services coordinated under this Act may not be used to replace
4
any service an educational institution is required to provide
5
to a student. It shall not substitute for appropriate special
6
education and related services that schools are required to
7
provide by any law.
8
(e) This Section is operative beginning on the date the 3
9
conditions in Section 65 are met or July 1, 2025, whichever is
10
earlier.
11
(Source: P.A. 103-105, eff. 6-27-23; 103-645, eff. 7-1-24;
12
104-155, eff. 8-1-25.)
13
(50 ILCS 754/35)
14
Sec. 35.
Non-violent misdemeanors.
The
Department's
15
Division of Mental Health's
Guidance for 9-1-1 PSAPs and
16
emergency services dispatched through 9-1-1 PSAPs for
17
coordinating the response to individuals who appear to be in a
18
mental or behavioral health emergency while engaging in
19
conduct alleged to constitute a non-violent misdemeanor shall
20
promote the following:
21
(a) Prioritization of Health Care. To the greatest
22
extent practicable, community-based mental or behavioral
23
health services should be provided before addressing law
24
enforcement objectives.
25
(b) Diversion from Further Criminal Justice
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1
Involvement. To the greatest extent practicable,
2
individuals should be referred to health care services
3
with the potential to reduce the likelihood of further law
4
enforcement engagement and referral to a pre-arrest or
5
pre-booking case management unit should be prioritized in
6
any areas served by pre-arrest or pre-booking case
7
management.
8
(Source: P.A. 102-580, eff. 1-1-22; 103-105, eff. 6-27-23.)
9
(50 ILCS 754/40)
10
Sec. 40.
Statewide Advisory Committee.
11
(a) The
Department
Division of Mental Health
shall
12
establish a Statewide Advisory Committee to review and make
13
recommendations for aspects of coordinating 9-1-1 and the
14
9-8-8 mobile mental health response system most appropriately
15
addressed on a State level.
16
(b) Issues to be addressed by the Statewide Advisory
17
Committee include, but are not limited to, addressing changes
18
necessary in 9-1-1 call taking protocols and scripts used in
19
9-1-1 PSAPs where those protocols and scripts are based on or
20
otherwise dependent on national providers for their operation.
21
(c) The Statewide Advisory Committee shall recommend a
22
system for gathering data related to the coordination of the
23
9-1-1 and 9-8-8 systems for purposes of allowing the parties
24
to make ongoing improvements in that system. As practical, the
25
system shall attempt to determine issues, which may include,
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1
but are not limited to:
2
(1) the volume of calls coordinated between 9-1-1 and
3
9-8-8;
4
(2) the volume of referrals from other first
5
responders to 9-8-8;
6
(3) the volume and type of calls deemed appropriate
7
for referral to 9-8-8 but could not be served by 9-8-8
8
because of capacity restrictions or other reasons;
9
(4) the appropriate information to improve
10
coordination between 9-1-1 and 9-8-8;
11
(5) the appropriate information to improve the 9-8-8
12
system, if the information is most appropriately gathered
13
at the 9-1-1 PSAPs; and
14
(6) the number of instances of mobile mental health
15
relief providers initiating petitions for involuntary
16
commitment, broken down by county and contracting entity
17
employing the petitioning mobile mental health relief
18
providers and the aggregate demographic data of the
19
individuals subject to those petitions.
20
(d) The Statewide Advisory Committee shall consist of:
21
(1) the Statewide 9-1-1 Administrator, ex officio;
22
(2) one representative designated by the Illinois
23
Chapter of National Emergency Number Association (NENA);
24
(3) one representative designated by the Illinois
25
Chapter of Association of Public Safety Communications
26
Officials (APCO);
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1
(4) one representative of the Division of
Behavioral
2
Health and Recovery of the Department of Human Services
3
Mental Health
;
4
(5) one representative of the Illinois Department of
5
Public Health;
6
(6) one representative of a statewide organization of
7
EMS responders;
8
(7) one representative of a statewide organization of
9
fire chiefs;
10
(8) two representatives of statewide organizations of
11
law enforcement;
12
(9) two representatives of mental health, behavioral
13
health, or substance abuse providers;
and
14
(10)
six
four
representatives of advocacy
15
organizations either led by or consisting primarily of
16
individuals with intellectual or developmental
17
disabilities, individuals with behavioral disabilities, or
18
individuals with lived experience
; and
.
19
(11) one representative of the Division of
20
Developmental Disabilities of the Department of Human
21
Services.
22
(e) The members of the Statewide Advisory Committee, other
23
than the Statewide 9-1-1 Administrator, shall be appointed by
24
the Secretary of Human Services.
25
(f) The Statewide Advisory Committee shall continue to
26
meet until this Act has been fully implemented, as determined
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1
by the
Department
Division of Mental Health
, and mobile mental
2
health relief providers are available in all parts of
3
Illinois. The
Department
Division of Mental Health
may
4
reconvene the Statewide Advisory Committee at its discretion
5
after full implementation of this Act.
6
(Source: P.A. 103-105, eff. 6-27-23; 104-155, eff. 8-1-25.)
7
(50 ILCS 754/45)
8
Sec. 45.
Regional Advisory Committees.
9
(a) The
Department
Division of Mental Health
shall
10
establish Regional Advisory Committees in each EMS Region to
11
advise on regional issues related to emergency response
12
systems for mental and behavioral health. The Secretary of
13
Human Services shall appoint the members of the Regional
14
Advisory Committees. Each Regional Advisory Committee shall
15
consist of:
16
(1) representatives of the 9-1-1 PSAPs in the region;
17
(2) representatives of the EMS Medical Directors
18
Committee, as constituted under the Emergency Medical
19
Services (EMS) Systems Act, or other similar committee
20
serving the medical needs of the jurisdiction;
21
(3) representatives of law enforcement officials with
22
jurisdiction in the Emergency Medical Services (EMS)
23
Regions;
24
(4) representatives of both the EMS providers and the
25
unions representing EMS or emergency mental and behavioral
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1
health responders, or both; and
2
(5) advocates from the mental health, behavioral
3
health, intellectual disability, and developmental
4
disability communities.
5
If no person is willing or available to fill a member's
6
seat for one of the required areas of representation on a
7
Regional Advisory Committee under paragraphs (1) through (5),
8
the Secretary of Human Services shall adopt procedures to
9
ensure that a missing area of representation is filled once a
10
person becomes willing and available to fill that seat.
11
(b) The majority of advocates on the Regional Advisory
12
Committee must either be individuals with a lived experience
13
of a condition commonly regarded as a mental health or
14
behavioral health disability, developmental disability, or
15
intellectual disability or be from organizations primarily
16
composed of such individuals. The members of the Committee
17
shall also reflect the racial demographics of the jurisdiction
18
served. To achieve the requirements of this subsection, the
19
Department
Division of Mental Health
must establish a clear
20
plan and regular course of action to engage, recruit, and
21
sustain areas of established participation. The plan and
22
actions taken must be shared with the general public.
23
(c) Subject to the oversight of the Department
of Human
24
Services Division of Mental Health
, the EMS Medical Directors
25
Committee or a chair appointed in agreement of the
Department
26
Division of Mental Health
and the EMS Medical Directors
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1
Committee is responsible for convening the meetings of the
2
committee. Qualifications for appointment as chair under this
3
subsection include a demonstrated understanding of the tasks
4
of the Regional Advisory Committee as well as standing within
5
the region as a leader capable of building consensus for the
6
purpose of achieving the tasks assigned to the committee.
7
Impacted units of local government may also have
8
representatives on the committee subject to approval by the
9
Department
Division of Mental Health
, if this participation is
10
structured in such a way that it does not give undue weight to
11
any of the groups represented.
12
(Source: P.A. 102-580, eff. 1-1-22; 103-105, eff. 6-27-23;
13
103-645, eff. 7-1-24.)
14
(50 ILCS 754/50)
15
Sec. 50.
Regional Advisory Committee responsibilities.
16
(a)
Each Regional Advisory Committee and subregional
17
committee established by the Regional Advisory Committee are
18
responsible for designing the local protocols to allow its
19
region's or subregion's 9-1-1 call centers and emergency
20
responders to coordinate their activities with 9-8-8 as
21
required by this Act and monitoring current operation to
22
advise on ongoing adjustments to the local protocols.
23
(b)
A subregional committee, which may be convened by a
24
majority vote of a Regional Advisory Committee, must include
25
members that are representative of all required categories of
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1
the full Regional Advisory Committee and must provide guidance
2
to the Regional Advisory Committees on adjustments that need
3
to be made for local level operationalization of protocols.
4
(1) Any subregional committee formed shall be
5
comprised of at least 25% of individuals with lived
6
experience of a condition commonly regarded as a mental
7
health or behavioral health disability, developmental
8
disability, or intellectual disability; guardians of such
9
individuals; or individuals from mental or behavioral
10
health providers, groups, or networks.
11
(2) Each member of a subregional committee must be
12
approved by a majority of Regional Advisory Committee
13
members, but is not required to be a member of the Regional
14
Advisory Committee.
15
(3) Meetings of subregional committees shall be
16
accessible to all members of the Regional Advisory
17
Committee and interested stakeholders.
18
(4) Subregional committees shall also provide a list
19
of their members to their Regional Advisory Committee,
20
share meeting dates and locations with Regional Advisory
21
Committee members and the public, and make meeting minutes
22
available to the Regional Advisory Committee following
23
each meeting.
24
(5) No subregional committee shall be formed or meet
25
without the approval of a majority of Regional Advisory
26
Committee members.
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1
(6) Subregional committees may not develop policies
2
that are in conflict with this Act or policies of the
3
Regional Advisory Committee.
4
(c)
Included in this responsibility, each Regional
5
Advisory Committee or subregional committee must:
6
(1) negotiate the appropriate amendment of each 9-1-1
7
PSAP emergency dispatch protocols, in consultation with
8
each 9-1-1 PSAP in the EMS Region and consistent with
9
national certification requirements;
10
(2) set maximum response times for 9-8-8 to provide
11
service when an in-person response is required, based on
12
type of mental or behavioral health emergency, which, if
13
exceeded, constitute grounds for sending other emergency
14
responders through the 9-1-1 system;
15
(3) report, geographically by police district if
16
practical, the data collected through the direction
17
provided by the Statewide Advisory Committee in
18
aggregated, non-individualized monthly reports. These
19
reports shall be available to the Regional Advisory
20
Committee members, subregional committee members, the
21
Department
of Human Service Division of Mental Health
, the
22
Administrator of the 9-1-1 Authority, and to the public
23
upon request;
24
(4) convene, after the initial regional policies are
25
established, at least every 2 years to consider amendment
26
of the regional policies, if any, and also convene
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1
whenever a member of the Committee requests that the
2
Committee or subregional committee consider an amendment;
3
and
4
(5) identify regional resources and supports for use
5
by the mobile mental health relief providers as they
6
respond to the requests for services
;
.
7
(6) review regional and subregional crisis response
8
system capacities and resources to inform planning and
9
implementation and to foster collaboration across all
10
sectors of the system; and
11
(7) determine community needs and make a plan to
12
support local communities that wish to explore potential
13
resources that may be used to create additional mobile
14
mental health relief provider services to provide more
15
immediate service coverage where needed. These additional
16
mobile mental health relief provider services may be
17
dispatched from 9-1-1, 9-8-8, or successor dispatch
18
systems and shall be subject to the same standards and
19
requirements as mobile mental health relief providers
20
funded by the State.
21
Nothing in this Section shall be construed to require any
22
locality or municipality to fund crisis services that are not
23
currently available, or to prohibit any such locality or
24
municipality from funding such services.
25
(d) Sections 40, 45, and 50 place the Statewide Advisory
26
Committee in an advisory role to the Regional Advisory
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1
Committees that are responsible for developing protocols for
2
their regions. Nothing outside of this Act shall be construed
3
to erode or compromise the autonomy and authority of the
4
Regional Advisory Committees or to grant any authority to the
5
Statewide Advisory Committee that is assigned to the Regional
6
Advisory Committees.
7
(Source: P.A. 102-580, eff. 1-1-22; 103-105, eff. 6-27-23;
8
103-645, eff. 7-1-24.)
9
(50 ILCS 754/65)
10
Sec. 65.
PSAP and emergency service dispatched through a
11
9-1-1 PSAP; coordination of activities with mobile and
12
behavioral health services.
13
(a) Each 9-1-1 PSAP and emergency service dispatched
14
through a 9-1-1 PSAP must begin coordinating its activities
15
with the mobile mental and behavioral health services
16
established by the
Department
Division of Mental Health
once
17
all 3 of the following conditions are met, but not later than
18
July 1, 2027:
19
(1) the Statewide Committee has negotiated useful
20
protocol and 9-1-1 operator script adjustments with the
21
contracted services providing these tools to 9-1-1 PSAPs
22
operating in Illinois;
23
(2) the appropriate Regional Advisory Committee has
24
completed design of the specific 9-1-1 PSAP's process for
25
coordinating activities with the mobile mental and
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1
behavioral health service; and
2
(3) the mobile mental and behavioral health service is
3
available in their jurisdiction.
4
(b) To achieve the conditions of subsection (a) by July 1,
5
2027, the following activities shall be completed:
6
(1) No later than June 30, 2025, pilot testing of the
7
revised protocols;
8
(2) No later than June 30, 2026:
9
(A) assessment and evaluation of the pilots;
10
(B) revisions, as needed, of protocols and
11
operations based on assessment and evaluation of the
12
pilots;
13
(C) implementation of revised protocols at pilot
14
sites; and
15
(D) implementation of revised protocols by PSAPs
16
who are ready to implement, otherwise known as early
17
adopters; and
18
(3) No later than June 30, 2027, implementation of
19
revised protocols by all remaining PSAPs, including any
20
PSAPs that previously cited financial barriers to updating
21
systems.
22
(Source: P.A. 103-105, eff. 6-27-23; 103-645, eff. 7-1-24;
23
104-155, eff. 8-1-25.)
24
(50 ILCS 754/70)
25
Sec. 70.
Report.
On or before July 1,
2026 and twice every
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1
year
2023 and on a quarterly basis
thereafter, the
Department
2
Division of Mental Health
shall submit a report to the General
3
Assembly on its progress in implementing this Act
until full
4
implementation has been achieved statewide. The report
, which
5
shall include, but not be limited to, a strategic assessment
6
that evaluates the success toward current strategy,
7
identification of future targets for implementation that help
8
estimate the potential for success and provides a basis for
9
assessing future performance, and key benchmarks to provide a
10
comparison to set in context and help stakeholders understand
11
their positions.
12
(Source: P.A. 103-105, eff. 6-27-23.)
13
(50 ILCS 754/75 new)
14
Sec. 75.
Oversight of PSAP compliance.
15
(a) The Office of the Statewide 9-1-1 Administrator shall
16
monitor and require public safety answering points to comply
17
with the requirements of this Act in accordance with Sections
18
7.2 and 7.3 of the Emergency Telephone System Act. The
19
Department shall provide consultation and collaboration to the
20
Statewide 9-1-1 Administrator to support PSAP compliance with
21
this Act.
22
(b) The Office of the Statewide 9-1-1 Administrator shall
23
consult with the Department to support PSAP compliance under
24
this Act. In carrying out the responsibility under subsection
25
(a), the Department shall provide consultation, resources,
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1
collaboration, and guidance to the Statewide 9-1-1
2
Administrator, as appropriate, to support PSAP compliance with
3
the Community Emergency Services and Support Act. The guidance
4
shall include required data elements, reporting formats, and a
5
mechanism for reporting provider service data to support
6
monitoring, verification, and quality improvement.
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1
INDEX
2
Statutes amended in order of appearance
3
20 ILCS 2605/2605-51
4
50 ILCS 705/10.17
5
50 ILCS 750/2
from Ch. 134, par. 32
6
50 ILCS 750/7.2 new
7
50 ILCS 750/7.3 new
8
50 ILCS 754/5
9
50 ILCS 754/15
10
50 ILCS 754/20
11
50 ILCS 754/25
12
50 ILCS 754/30
13
50 ILCS 754/35
14
50 ILCS 754/40
15
50 ILCS 754/45
16
50 ILCS 754/50
17
50 ILCS 754/65
18
50 ILCS 754/70
19
50 ILCS 754/75 new
20
50 ILCS 754/80 new
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