Lawmakers pass bill aimed at modernizing professional licensing in
Illinois
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[November 14, 2023]
By HANNAH MEISEL
Capitol News Illinois
hmeisel@capitolnewsillinois.com
As Illinois faces shortages of health care practitioners and mental
health professionals, the state agency in charge of licensing for those
and more than 100 other industries has struggled to keep up.
The Illinois Department of Financial and Professional Regulation has
failed to meet its goals to speed up both initial licensing and renewals
in key industries as applications to the agency grew by 15 percent
between 2019 and 2022. IDFPR’s director called the situation a “crisis”
earlier this fall when testifying before lawmakers at a committee
hearing on the issues facing the agency.
Last week, the General Assembly approved a measure to help IDFPR move
beyond its antiquated systems and – at least temporarily – assist those
awaiting license renewal. The measure cleared the General Assembly
unanimously and needs only a signature from the governor to become law.
State Rep. Bob Morgan, D-Deerfield, who sponsored the bill in the House,
said with legislative approval, IDFPR would be able to batch-renew
licenses for those who’ve been waiting “not days, not weeks, but months
– up to six to eight months.”
House Bill 2394 also calls for IDFPR to contract with a technology
vendor to build a new computer software system within three months of
Gov. JB Pritzker’s signature on the bill, and to have that system up and
running three months after that.
In a September hearing, IDFPR Secretary Mario Treto Jr. told lawmakers
his agency is hamstrung by 1990s-era technology that doesn’t allow the
agency to add new types of licenses to its online system, even as more
types of professional licensure have come under the agency’s purview.
As a result, IDFPR has seen “an onslaught of paper applications,” Treto
said, contributing to “historic wait times.” A sizeable number of the
104,000 total applications the agency received last year were submitted
on paper via snail mail.
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State Rep. Bob Morgan, D-Deerfield, is pictured in Springfield.
(Capitol News Illinois file photo by Jerry Nowicki)
Earlier this year, the agency had been in talks with an existing state
vendor that’s already under a “master contract,” which would have sped
up the often-slow process of contracting with a new company. But in the
September hearing, Treto revealed the agency had walked away from those
talks once IDFPR leaders realized the vendor wouldn’t have been able to
meet the agency’s specific needs.
“And candidly we were quite disappointed with the news,” Treto said.
In that same hearing, leaders of industry groups aired their
frustrations with IDFPR’s licensing delays.
Daniel Stasi, a consultant with the Illinois Mental Health Counselors
Association, noted he’s been the point person for licensing-related
issues for 24 years.
“Very little has changed,” Stasi said in September. “The wait is
actually longer.”
Illinois State Medical Society executive senior vice president David
Porter told lawmakers that the most concerning aspect of IDFPR’s current
licensing system is the “lack of transparency” from the agency.
“Applicants tell us that there’s no real way for them to obtain status
updates on their applications or renewals, and there’s virtually no
chance to be able to connect with someone at the department by phone or
email who can provide such updates,” Porter said. “Most frustrating to
new applicants is that they are rarely notified when their applicants
are deemed to be insufficient or incomplete, which adds days or weeks to
when they can expect to obtain a license.”
Treto assured lawmakers he’s been speaking with his counterparts in
other states to get ideas about how to improve IDFPR’s systems – and
said Illinois isn’t alone in facing licensure issues. But, he said, some
states seem to have figured it out. Oklahoma, for example, has reduced
its call volume by 95 percent.
Dilpreet Raju contributed.
Capitol News Illinois is
a nonprofit, nonpartisan news service covering state government. It
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and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation, along with major
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Illinois Editorial Association. |