New year to bring new laws in Illinois
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[December 16, 2022]
By PETER HANCOCK
Capitol News Illinois
phancock@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – By now, almost everyone in Illinois has heard that Jan. 1
will mark the beginning of a significant change in the state’s criminal
justice system – the elimination of cash bail.
It’s an issue that dominated the 2022 campaigns and has been both
praised and criticized on editorial pages in newspapers across the
state. It essentially means that starting Jan. 1, the decision as to
whether a criminal suspect should be held in jail while awaiting trial
will be based on public safety and the likelihood the suspect will flee
rather than their financial ability to post bond.
And while that criminal justice reform has received widespread
attention, it is by no means the only new law that will take effect when
the calendar turns over to 2023.
For most people who work a minimum wage job, the new year will bring a
pay raise to $13 per hour, a $1 increase over the current wage. That’s
the result of a law Gov. JB Pritzker signed in 2019, his first major
legislative victory after being sworn into office a month earlier. The
law will eventually raise the wage to $15 an hour on Jan. 1, 2025.
The new $13 hourly rate does not apply to all minimum wage earners.
People who receive tips at work will see their base wage rise to $7.80
an hour. And people younger than 18 who work fewer than 650 hours per
year will see their wage go up to $10.50 an hour.
The higher wage will probably come as welcome news for those who drive a
car to and from work. That’s because the new year will also bring higher
motor fuel taxes.
The same year Pritzker signed the minimum wage bill, he also signed a
multi-year, $45 billion transportation and capital improvements bill
known as “Rebuild Illinois,” which is funded in part with higher motor
fuel taxes that are scheduled to increase with inflation each year.
The adjustment in the tax rate is supposed to take effect on July 1 of
each year, the first day of the state’s fiscal year. But last spring, in
the face of rising inflation and healthy state revenues, lawmakers
authorized a six-month delay in the scheduled increase, putting it off
until Jan. 1.
As a result, starting Jan. 1, the motor fuel tax people pay at the pump
will go up 3.1 cents per gallon, and then it will increase again when
the next regular adjustment date comes around on July 1, 2023.
Criminal law
Several new criminal laws will go into effect Jan. 1, including three
that deal with sex offenses.
One of those prevents people who solicit sex from a minor or a person
with a severe or profound intellectual disability from asserting a
defense that they simply did not know the person was underage or
intellectually disabled. House Bill 4593, signed into law May 27, puts
the burden of proof on the defendant that they did not know the age or
disability status of the other person, rather than the other way around.
Another new law changes the definition of when a person is “unable to
give knowing consent.” Under current law, a person cannot give knowing
consent when the accused person “administers any intoxicating or
anesthetic substance or any controlled substance” that causes the victim
to lose consciousness of the nature of the act.
House Bill 5441, signed June 16, broadens that definition to include
when the victim has taken any intoxicating or controlled substance
causing them to lose consciousness of the nature of the act, even if the
substances were administered by someone else.
Another bill expands certain employment restrictions that apply to
convicted child sex offenders. Currently, they are prohibited from being
employed by, or even being present at, child day care centers, schools
that provide before- and after-school programs for children or any
facility that provides programs or services exclusively for people under
age 18.
Senate Bill 3019, signed May 27, expands that to prohibit convicted
child sex offenders from working at carnivals, amusement enterprises,
county fairs and the State Fair when people under age 18 are present.
Another new law expands the list of professionals who are required to
report suspicions of child abuse or neglect. Starting Jan. 1, under
Senate Bill 3833, signed May 13, occupational therapists and assistants,
physical therapists and assistants, and athletic trainers will be added
to that list.
Carjacking
Three new laws taking effect Jan. 1 are intended to address a spike in
carjackings around the state. All were signed on May 26.
House Bill 601 expands the crime of possession of burglary tools to
include possession, with the intention to enter and steal a vehicle, of
devices to unlock or start a vehicle without the key to that vehicle, or
devices that capture or duplicate a signal from a key fob to unlock or
start the vehicle.
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Gov. JB Pritzker is pictured signing a
bill in a file photo. (Capitol News Illinois file photo)
House Bill 3699 expands an existing state council charged with providing
grants and financial support to law enforcement agencies to aid in
identifying, apprehending and prosecuting carjackers and recover stolen
vehicles.
And House Bill 3772 ensures that victims of carjackings are not liable
for costs and fines associated with impounding a vehicle that was stolen
or hijacked, provided the owner files a police report in a timely
manner.
Education
To address a shortage of substitute teachers throughout the state, House
Bill 4798, signed April 27, allows students enrolled in approved teacher
training programs who have earned at least 90 credit hours to obtain a
substitute teaching license. Before, applicants had to hold a bachelor’s
degree or higher from an accredited institution of higher education.
House Bill 4716, signed May 27, calls on the Illinois State Board of
Education to adopt “rigorous learning standards” for classroom and
laboratory phases of driver education programs for novice teen drivers.
Those will include, at a minimum, the Novice Teen Driver Education and
Training Administrative Standards developed by the Association of
National Stakeholders in Traffic Safety Education in association with
the National Highway Transportation Safety Administration.
Higher education
In an effort to get more people to pursue careers in human services,
Senate Bill 3925, signed June 10, establishes a student loan repayment
program. Subject to appropriations, the Illinois Student Assistance
Commission will award loan repayment grants to qualified individuals
with an associate degree or higher who works for a human services agency
that contracts with or is grant-funded by a state agency that provides
“direct or indirect services that ensure that individuals have essential
elements to build and maintain physical, emotional, and economic
well-being at every phase of life.”
Awards can be made for a maximum of four years. Maximum amounts are
$3,000 per year for someone with an associate degree, $15,000 per year
for a person with a bachelor’s degree and $25,000 per year for a person
with a master’s degree or higher, with a $5,000 per-year add-on if the
applicant holds certain professional licenses.
Meanwhile, students currently enrolled in any program at a public
university or community college will have access to trained individuals
who can help them apply for federal, state or local assistance based on
their financial need. House Bill 4201, signed June 7, requires those
institutions to designate a “benefits navigator” to help students
identify and determine their eligibility for various benefit programs.
Alzheimer’s care
Senate Bill 3707, signed May 27, requires all employees and people who
work for agencies that contract with the Illinois Department on Aging
who provide direct services to individuals participating in its
Community Care Program to receive at least two hours of training in
Alzheimer’s disease and dementia, as well as safety risks, communication
and behavior associated with the disease.
Hunting
Starting Jan. 1, deer hunters in Illinois will have a new option for the
type of firearm they use. House Bill 4386, signed May 27, authorizes the
use of single-shot centerfire rifles – guns that can fire only a single
round of ammunition that contains primer in the center of the cartridge
and not in the rim of the cartridge. Before, only shotguns, handguns and
muzzleloading rifles were allowed.
State symbols
Illinois will have two new official state symbols effective Jan. 1.
House Bill 4821 establishes the eastern milksnake as the official state
snake. That was an initiative of Gentry Heiple, a snake enthusiast and
Carterville Junior High School seventh grader. And House Bill 4261
establishes dolostone as the official state rock. That was an initiative
of a group of students from Pleasantdale Middle School and Maplebrook
Elementary School.
Vehicles
People who own vehicles that were manufactured in Illinois will be able
to apply for a slight break on their registration fees starting Jan. 1.
Senate Bill 3609 allows those drivers to apply for a one-time $25
rebate, “if the vehicle is manufactured in this state and the
application for title is made no more than one year after the month in
which the vehicle was manufactured.”
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news
service covering state government. It is distributed to more than 400
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is funded primarily by the Illinois Press Foundation and the Robert R.
McCormick Foundation. |