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It’s a law

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* Lee Enterprises’ Brenden Moore

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* Center Square

A much anticipated measure bringing changes to Illinois Biometric Information Privacy Act is now law. Effective immediately, Senate Bill 2979 expands the definition of written release to include electronic signatures and would make multiple violations of BIPA a single violation if committed against one individual. Business groups sought such changes following several high-profile lawsuits against employers.

State Rep. Abdelnasser Rashid, D-Bridgeview, said Illinoisans biometric data will still be protected.

“But it adds much needed clarity that helps small businesses operate in a more predictable regulatory environment,” said Rashid when the measure passed. “I know that many small business owners will be relieved to see this measure pass.”

* WAND

Gov. JB Pritzker signed a plan into law Friday to make major changes for the state’s name, image and likeness law for college athletes.

The new law will allow athletes to earn NIL compensation directly from their universities. Rep. Kam Buckner (D-Chicago) told WAND News in April that this will give universities a significant advantage for recruiting and retaining players.

This plan also blocks media and the public from requesting how much athletes make from their private NIL deals. […]

The legislation will also allow universities to create athletic department incentives for fans to support student athlete NIL activities. For example, fans could potentially get better parking or seats at an arena if they donate to NIL funds. […]

House Bill 307 will take effect on January 1.

* Sen. Cristina Castro…

Standing strong on the issue of safeguarding women’s health, State Senator Cristina Castro championed the effort to expand access to fertility treatments like in vitro fertilization through a measure signed into law Friday.

“Infertility affects millions of Americans, leaving thousands of hopeful parents in Illinois and across the United States unable to have a child on their own,” said Castro (D-Elgin). “The possibility of starting a family through advanced treatments like IVF represents hope for so many of these individuals – and this law takes steps to protect and expand access for the thousands who rely on it.”

To address cost barriers that limit access to treatments like IVF for families across the state, the new law requires every group health insurance policy to cover the diagnosis and treatment of infertility starting Jan. 1, 2026. It also adds coverage for an annual menopause health visit for those age 45 and older. […]

Senate Bill 773 takes effect immediately.

* Sen. Mary Edly-Allen…

To unify the policies and procedures in jails and prisons in Illinois keeping new and expectant mothers safe. State Senator Mary Edly-Allen worked alongside the Women’s Justice Institute (WJII) to introduce a new law, HB5431, providing comprehensive protections for committed pregnant people, including banning the use of restraints. As the number of incarcerated pregnant women has increased over the years, many of these pregnancies have been left without adequate support. […]

According to the Journal of the American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law, the negative impacts of restraints used during pregnancy are wide-ranging and detrimental. Restraints increase the risk of falls and injuries, can limit mobility, delay medical assessments during emergencies, increase the risk of blood clots, and interfere with labor, delivery and mother-infant bonding.

House Bill 5431 prohibits the use of restraints on pregnant and postpartum individuals in correctional facilities and requires supplemental nutrition for incarcerated individuals who are pregnant and breastfeeding. Further, to better understand the scope of pregnancy and care at jails and prisons, this legislation requires annual reporting on the number of pregnancies, births and miscarriages at each facility. […]

House Bill 5431 was signed into law Friday, Aug. 2, 2024 and goes into effect Jan. 1, 2025.

* SJ-R statehouse reporter Patrick Keck



SB3134 went into effect immediately.

* Sen. Laura Fine…

To protect residents from abuse and neglect at state-run mental health or developmental disability facilities, State Senator Laura Fine championed a law strengthening the ability of the Office of the Inspector General (OIG) to investigate allegations.

“It is the state’s responsibility to protect our most vulnerable residents,” said Fine (D-Glenview). “Through on-site investigations, the OIG is able to confirm and respond to reports of abuse at these facilities, while removing the source of the issue before a pattern of neglect ensues.”

This law expands protections for patients by giving the OIG the ability to conduct targeted site visits to all community agencies in the state, which includes Community Living Arrangements and Community Mental Health Centers.

The law enhances patient safety by further preventing employees from covering up instances of abuse and neglect. If an employee knows another employee is obstructing an investigation into a complaint, that employee is required to report that to the OIG.

“By authorizing the OIG to step in to make unannounced site visits, we can deter both obstructions to the investigative process and increase employee accountability,” said Fine. “I look forward to seeing the state utilize these additional tools to respond to these cases effectively.”

Senate Bill 857 was signed into law Friday and is effective immediately.

* WAND

Gov. JB Pritzker signed a proposal into law Friday to help families put leftover college savings funds into retirement plans.

Treasurer Michael Frerichs and state lawmakers told reporters in March that families who don’t use all of the money in their college savings accounts could put them into a Roth IRA. Frerichs noted that Congress approved a bill in late 2022 to allow tax and penalty free rollovers from college savings plans to retirement plans.

“People are going to be saving their own money into these accounts,” Frerichs said. “But if we don’t make it easier for people to save, if we don’t give them more incentives to save and they’re unable to retire, for young people entering the workforce, those are positions that won’t be available.” […]

The 2022 federal law states rollovers must be made by the 529 college savings account beneficiary and not the owner. Congress also noted that rollovers can only be made from 529 accounts that have been active for 15 years.

Senate Bill 3133 took effect immediately.

* Sen. Rachel Ventura…

With anxiety and stress increasing in schools, State Senator Rachel Ventura championed a new law aimed at easing the growing stress that students face in classrooms, prioritizing their physical and emotional well-being to enhance focus and reduce anxiety during school hours.

“Just as adults have a multitude of stressors, students also have the pressure to constantly and consistently perform above average. Our children deserve just a few minutes for themselves. Purposeful relaxation time will empower students to develop effective stress and anxiety management strategies,” said Ventura (D-Joliet). “As both a parent and mental health advocate, I believe that allocating at least 20 minutes per week for students to unwind and prioritize their mental health will alleviate the constant pressure to engage in mental tasks, leading to improved academic performance.”

Senate Bill 2872 provides instruction for school districts on relaxation activities, such as mindful-based movements, yoga, stretching, meditation, breathing exercises, guided relaxation techniques, quiet time, walking, in-person conversation, and other stress-relieving activities, once a week for 20 minutes, in addition to recess, to enhance physical and emotional health.

The law allows a school district to partner with a local community-based organization to provide the activities. Additionally, if a school district wishes, the activities could take place in a physical education class, social-emotional learning class, student-support or advisory class, or as part of another class, including a new class, providing ample opportunities and flexibility for schools to adopt.

Statistics from the American Psychological Association show that 4.1 million children in the U.S. between the ages of 3 and 17 years old have been diagnosed with anxiety. In Illinois alone, 145,000 children between the ages of 12-17 have depression. […]

Senate Bill 2872 was signed into law Friday and is effective Jan. 1, 2025.

* Sen. Bill Cunningham…

State Senator Bill Cunningham’s measure to protect vehicle owners by updating towing regulations often abused by rogue towing companies was signed into law.

“We have residents getting a surprise $1,500 bill when all they’re trying to do is pick up a vehicle that was stolen from outside their residence,” said Cunningham, a Democrat who represents portions of Chicago and the Southwest Suburbs. “This measure will stop towing companies from charging any storage fees on stolen vehicles and makes sure that a proper notification process is set up.”

The legislation was brought to Cunningham from a constituent of the 18th District. The constituent’s vehicle was stolen from outside their residence in Chicago and was eventually located by law enforcement and towed in Alsip. The constituent did not find out where their vehicle was located until a week after it was recovered, receiving a letter in the mail from a suburban towing company that was holding the vehicle. When the constituent went to recover the vehicle, they were told they would have to pay a fee of $1,500 and were not allowed to recover a hearing aid from the vehicle until the fee was paid.

Cunningham’s law adds medical devices and other items to the list of property that can be recovered from a towed vehicle without payment. Cunningham also discovered that there was an issue with the notification process when a vehicle is stolen and later towed. To address that issue, the measure requires towing companies to provide written notice to the vehicle’s owner within two days of towing. Additionally, if the owner recovers the vehicle within seven days, the towing company is prohibited from charging any storage fees. To streamline the notification process, the measure also requires law enforcement to give towing companies the name and mailing address of the vehicle owner when a tow is authorized. […]

Senate Bill 2654 was signed into law on Friday and takes effect Jan. 1, 2025.

posted by Isabel Miller
Monday, Aug 5, 24 @ 9:52 am

Comments

  1. Whoa, wait a second, why can’t the payment details regarding NIL be requested by the public? I understand the privacy argument for a private school, but wouldn’t this also impact public universities? I feel like locking out public oversight is not the right foot forward, plus it smells a little of the common practice in many workplaces where wage discussion between co-workers is discouraged. I’m hoping I’m misunderstanding something there, otherwise I feel like there were some backward steps added to NIL.

    Comment by Blitz Monday, Aug 5, 24 @ 10:57 am

  2. Re the law on schools providing yoga instruction, the new Beavis and Butt-Head show on Comedy Central did a riff on this where they took yoga in lieu of detention, which, of course, led to the usual madcap and hijinks.

    Comment by ThePAMan Monday, Aug 5, 24 @ 11:19 am

  3. =The law allows a school district to partner with a local community-based organization to provide the activities.=

    We have always been able to do that.

    =Statistics from the American Psychological Association show that 4.1 million children in the U.S. between the ages of 3 and 17 years old have been diagnosed with anxiety. In Illinois alone, 145,000 children between the ages of 12-17 have depression. […]=

    It isn’t because of math and reading. Try looking at data pertaining to the advent of smartphones and social media. Maybe step up and do something about the real problem. We are, and we are taking a beating for it since our political leaders have done little to nothing in my opinion.

    Comment by JS Mill Monday, Aug 5, 24 @ 11:26 am

  4. We must have a commentator on vacation as we have seen a comment about unfounded mandates on schools. So, I’ll point out they need to quit making schools do more and more with less.

    @ThePAMan, I think I’d rather have detention. lol

    Comment by Lurker Monday, Aug 5, 24 @ 11:36 am

  5. Darn it! I did a refresh before I commented and @JSMill comment did not appear. Oh well, I’m always a step behind.

    Comment by Lurker Monday, Aug 5, 24 @ 11:38 am

  6. Pregnant people? Also waiting till one of the inmates attack the staff. It’s not if it’s when.

    Comment by I can’t even Monday, Aug 5, 24 @ 11:56 am

  7. === Also waiting till one of the inmates attack the staff===

    So does this mean you favor putting pregnant inmates in restraints?

    Comment by Rich Miller Monday, Aug 5, 24 @ 12:10 pm

  8. ===Whoa, wait a second, why can’t the payment details regarding NIL be requested by the public? I understand the privacy argument for a private school, but wouldn’t this also impact public universities?===

    If I understand NIL correctly, no public money is being spent to compensate athletes for use of their name, etc. And they are not considered employees of the university, so I’m not sure what the basis is for your wanting to know how much these athletes are making for endorsement deals.

    Comment by 47th Ward Monday, Aug 5, 24 @ 12:11 pm

  9. @47th - thanks, you hit what my concern was right on the head, I was thinking that university’s were using public money for those payments. If not, then no issue on my end.

    Comment by Blitz Monday, Aug 5, 24 @ 12:23 pm

  10. @47th Ward and @Blitz
    You appear to be incorrect.

    From the story: “The new law will allow athletes to earn NIL compensation directly from their universities”. That sounds to me like universities are paying athletes NIL money directly.

    From the Bill: Page 26 and 27 of the enrolled bill provides: “(e) If allowed by a court order, a settlement agreement, an athletic association, conference, or other group or organization with authority over intercollegiate athletics programs, or a policy of a postsecondary educational institution, the A postsecondary educational institution, athletic association, conference, or other group or organization with authority over intercollegiate athletics programs, including, but not limited to, the National Collegiate Athletic Association, the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics, and the National Junior College Athletic Association, may directly or indirectly:(1) enter into, or offer to enter into, a publicity rights agreement with a prospective or current student-athlete; or (2) provide a prospective or current student-athlete or the student-athlete’s family compensation in relation to the use of the student-athlete’s name, image, likeness, or voice.

    Further down, it guts the restriction on boosters giving athletes valuable consideration, allows universities to act as intermediaries bringing NIL deals to students.

    Comment by Just Another Anon Monday, Aug 5, 24 @ 1:07 pm

  11. @Just Another Anon, they are both correct. The key sentence is “This plan also blocks media and the public from requesting how much athletes make from their private NIL deals.”

    Thus, they now can receive Public money, which is disclosed. But, as @47thWard correctly stated, they can receive Private money which is not disclosed. Nor should it be.

    Comment by Lurker Monday, Aug 5, 24 @ 1:56 pm

  12. The Senate Dem comms folks are on point. No House reactions? Or House and Senate GOP hits on how these signed bills are ruining the State?

    Comment by Frida's boss Monday, Aug 5, 24 @ 4:57 pm

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