Bills expanding access to mental health care are among several signed
into law
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[July 27, 2021]
By PETER HANCOCK
Capitol News Illinois
phancock@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – Illinois residents will soon
have greater access to mental health services under measures Gov. JB
Pritzker signed into law Friday.
Starting Jan. 1, most insurance companies doing business in Illinois
will be required to provide their beneficiaries with timely and
proximate access to treatment for mental, emotional, nervous or
substance abuse disorders.
That means beneficiaries will not have to wait more than 10 business
days to see a provider after requesting an initial appointment or 20
business days after requesting a repeat or follow-up appointment.
In addition, insurers will be required to maintain an adequate network
of mental health care providers so that beneficiaries in Cook County and
the surrounding collar counties will not have to travel more than 30
miles or 30 minutes from their home to see a provider. That limit
expands to 60 miles or 60 minutes in other areas of Illinois.
Insurers will also have to make exceptions to out-of-network copay
requirements if no in-network providers are available within those time
and distance limits.
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Those new requirements are contained in Senate Bill 471, which was
sponsored by Sen. Laura Fine, D-Glenview, and Rep. Lindsey LaPointe,
D-Chicago. The new law applies to health policies that are subject to
state regulation, including Medicaid plans. It does not apply to large
group health plans that are regulated under the federal Employee
Retirement Income Security Act, or ERISA.
“Oftentimes individuals can’t afford to wait days or weeks for mental
health or substance use disorder treatment,” Fine said in a statement
Friday. “It’s imperative that Illinoisans have easy access to timely and
reliable mental health care.”
Also signed into law Friday was House Bill 212, which calls on the
state’s Children’s Mental Health Partnership to develop recommendations
for ensuring that all youth in Illinois have access to mental health
education and mental health care in a school setting.
“As our schools recover from numerous pandemic-related challenges, our
state must prioritize our students’ well-being,” state Sen. Suzy Glowiak
Hilton, D-Western Springs, a chief sponsor of the bill, said in a
statement. “To ensure children are receiving the best mental health
services at school, this proposal allows key state agencies to work
together to improve prevention and treatment resources.”
The Children’s Mental Health Partnership was established in 2003 to
advocate for children’s mental health. It is made up of the secretary of
human services, the state superintendent of education, and the directors
of the Department of Children and Family Services, Healthcare and Family
Services, Public Health and Juvenile Justice as well as the head of the
Illinois Violence Prevention Authority, the attorney general and
representatives of various stakeholder groups.
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Pritzker also signed House Bill 33, prohibiting life insurance companies
from denying coverage or raising premiums for people solely because they
have undergone substance abuse treatment. It also prohibits them from
discriminating based on whether an applicant has been prescribed an
opioid antagonist drug such as Narcan, also known as Naloxone.
“Overcoming an addiction means putting your future first,” Sen. Adriane
Johnson, D-Buffalo Grove, the lead Senate sponsor of the bill, said in a
statement. “I’m excited to see insurance companies will no longer be
able to punish individuals for changing their lives for the better.”
That bill takes effect Jan. 1.
Meanwhile, another bill signed Friday requires school districts,
starting immediately, to provide contact information for the National
Suicide Prevention Lifeline and for the Crisis Text Line on the back of
student identification cards issued by the school district.
House Bill 597, by Rep. Michael Marron, R-Fithian, and Sen. Scott
Bennett, D-Champaign, was an initiative of the Illinois Education
Association. It also requires school districts that don’t issue ID cards
to their students, or to all of their students, to publish the
information on their websites.
TIF districts
Another new law will provide taxpayers with more information about how
well tax increment financing districts, or TIFs, are performing.
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Gov. JB Pritzker signs a bill last week, one of 160
he has signed into law from the 102nd General Assembly. (Credit:
Blueroomstream.com)
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TIFs are an economic development tool aimed at
clearing up blighted areas by allowing local governments to dedicate
the new sales tax and property tax revenues generated by a
redevelopment project to pay for improvements within the district.
Those can include costs associated with redeveloping
substandard, obsolete or vacant buildings, financing public
infrastructure, cleaning up polluted areas, improving the viability
of downtown business districts, rehabilitating historic properties
and providing infrastructure needed to develop a site for new
industrial or commercial use.
As of 2015, there were 1,238 active TIF districts in the state,
according to TIF Illinois. According to Illinois Comptroller Susana
Mendoza, who pushed for the bill, municipalities have been required
to report certain financial information about the districts to the
comptroller’s office, but there has been little information
available about how effective they have been in meeting their goals.
House Bill 571, by Rep. Jonathan Carroll, D-Northbrook, and Sen. Ann
Gillespie, D-Arlington Heights, begin reporting additional
information including the number of jobs originally projected to be
created in each district along with the number of jobs actually
created; the actual amount of new revenue created compared to the
amount originally forecast; and the stated rate of return for the
project, which must be independently verified by a third party
chosen by the municipality.
“This is a sensible plan to ensure taxpayers are presented with a
more complete picture of whether promises made are promises kept
when it comes to TIF districts in their communities,” Mendoza said
in a statement about the bill.
Those were among 56 bills Pritzker signed into law Friday. So far,
he has signed 160 bills from the 2021 spring session while 505 bills
are still awaiting action.
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Other bills signed into law Friday included:
Senate Bill 107, by Sen. Sara Feigenholtz and Rep. Ann Williams,
both Chicago Democrats, streamlines adoption processes by allowing
state courts in Illinois to exercise jurisdiction in complex
adoption cases in which one of more of the birth parents resides out
of state. It also removes the residency requirement in cases
involving the adoption of an adult by a former stepparent.
House Bill 279, by Carroll and Sen. Julie Morrison, D-Lake Forest,
requires oral medications to carry warning labels if they contain
gluten.
House Bill 122, by Rep. Dan Didech, D-Buffalo Grove, and Sen. Meg
Loughran Cappel, D-Shorewood, prohibits utility companies –
including telephone, cellular telephone, television, internet,
energy, medical alert systems and water services – from charging
early termination fees for customers who die before the end of a
contract.
House Bill 3783, by Rep. Carol Ammons and Sen. Scott Bennett, both
Champaign Democrats, provides that only trained employees are
allowed to work on coal ash cleanup projects.
House Bill 58, by Didech and Johnson, limits to $10 the fee that
county recorders can charge property owners for removing illegal
restrictive covenants from recorded property deeds.
And Senate Bill 605, by Sen. Jacqueline Collins, D-Chicago, and Rep.
Barbara Hernandez, D-Aurora, requires schools to develop policies on
truancy and chronic absences each year and report them to families,
including information on chronic truancy. That law takes effect July
1, 2022.
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