Only three new laws take effect Jan. 1
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[December 31, 2020]
By SARAH MANSUR
Capitol News Illinois
smansur@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD — When a new year begins in
Illinois, there typically are dozens if not hundreds of new laws going
into effect.
Not this year. Like so many other things in 2020, the legislative spring
session was stunted by COVID-19. Once the global pandemic reached
Illinois in March, the General Assembly would meet for only four more
days — wrapping up the odd session during masked and socially distanced
gatherings at the Capitol and Bank of Springfield Center. The fall veto
session was scrapped altogether.
As a result, only three new laws will take effect on Jan. 1, 2021.
Here’s a look at them, as well as the next increase in the minimum wage
that will be applied Friday:
Insulin costs cap
Senate Bill 667 (Public Act 101-0625) amends the Illinois Insurance Code
to cap out-of-pocket insulin costs at $100 per month for all patients
using a state regulated insurance plan, regardless of the amount of
insulin or type of covered prescription insulin drug used to fill the
insured patient’s prescription.
Roughly 1.3 million adults in Illinois, or 12.5 percent of the
population, have diabetes, according to the legislation.
SB 667 also provides that the Illinois Department of Insurance, along
with the Department of Human Services and the Department of Healthcare
and Family Services, must create a public insulin pricing report that
includes a summary of insulin pricing practices and public policy
recommendations to control and prevent the overpricing of insulin
prescriptions.
Sen. Andy Manar, D-Bunker Hill, chief sponsor of the Senate bill, said
in a statement that the legislation shows Illinoisans don’t have to
accept costly prescriptions as the status quo.
“We can change the fact that prescription medication costs more in the
United States than any place in the world. This legislation passed
because people spoke up and told their story. This historic legislation
doesn’t become law without them and their effort,” Manar said in the
statement.
Use of DNA in missing person cases
House Bill 2708 (Public Act 101-0266) amends the Missing Persons
Identification Act to allow law enforcement agencies to obtain a DNA
sample of a missing person or a DNA reference sample from family
members’ DNA, once a missing person report is made.
The law also provides that law enforcement cannot retain DNA samples
from family members or the missing person after the person has been
located.
It also adds the National Missing and Unidentified Persons System, a
national information clearinghouse for missing persons, to the list of
laboratories that law enforcement agencies can work with when trying to
find a missing person.
Sen. Tony Munoz, D-Chicago, who was one of the bill’s sponsors, said in
a news release that using the national system will hopefully help law
enforcement find missing people sooner.
“Successfully finding a missing person requires law enforcement to move
fast, and we want to make sure they have every tool available to do
their job,” Munoz said in the release.
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Gov. JB Pritzker signs legislation that caps the
out-of-pocket cost of prescription insulin for many people in
Illinois during a ceremony Jan. 24, 2020, at the Central Counties
Health Centers in Springfield. The law is one of only three that go
into effect Jan. 1. (Capitol News Illinois photo by Peter Hancock)
Keeping victims’ addresses confidential
House Bill 2818 (Public Act 101-0270) amends the Address
Confidentiality for Victims of Domestic Violence Act by including
survivors of sexual assault and stalking in the Illinois Address
Confidentiality Program (ACP), which offers survivors protection
from their abusers by allowing them to acquire and use a substitute
address instead of their real address.
HB 2818 allows survivors of domestic violence, sexual assault and
stalking who fear for their safety to apply to the ACP through the
Attorney General’s Office. The ACP forwards all first-class mail and
provides survivors with a substitute address for public records and
documents, such as driver’s licenses and state-issued identification
cards.
The bill also changes the name of the law, from the Address
Confidentiality for Victims of Domestic Violence Act to the Address
Confidentiality for Victims of Domestic Violence, Sexual Assault or
Stalking Act.
In a written statement, Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul said
ACP is an important added layer of protection and peace of mind for
survivors of domestic violence, sexual assault and stalking.
“I am committed to ensuring that survivors have access to the
resources and support needed to aid their recoveries, and I
encourage survivors to participate in this program that can help
protect them from the individuals who perpetrated crimes against
them,” Raoul said in the statement.
Minimum wage increase
The minimum wage in Illinois will rise from $10 per hour to $11 per
hour on Jan. 1.
The Illinois General Assembly passed increases to the minimum wage
in 2019 with legislation that raises the minimum wage $1 every year
until it reaches $15 per hour in 2025.
In 2020, wage earners saw their hourly wage increase from $8.25 to
$9.25 on Jan. 1, and to $10 on July 1.
“We want to make sure that workers earning minimum wage are aware
that the $1 increase should be reflected in their paychecks for any
time they work after the first of the year,” Michael Kleinik,
director of the Illinois Department of Labor, said in a news
release. “While we fully expect employers will pay the new wage, we
also want workers to be aware of the change.”
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Press Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation. |