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| 1 |  AN ACT concerning safety.
 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 2 |  Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 3 | represented in the General Assembly:
 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 4 |  Section 5. The Open Meetings Act is amended by changing  | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 5 | Section 2 as follows:
 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 6 |  (5 ILCS 120/2) (from Ch. 102, par. 42)
 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 7 |  Sec. 2. Open meetings. 
 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 8 |  (a) Openness required. All meetings of public
bodies shall  | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 9 | be open to the public unless excepted in subsection (c)
and  | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 10 | closed in accordance with Section 2a.
 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 11 |  (b) Construction of exceptions. The exceptions contained  | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 12 | in subsection
(c) are in derogation of the requirement that  | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 13 | public bodies
meet in the open, and therefore, the exceptions  | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 14 | are to be strictly
construed, extending only to subjects  | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 15 | clearly within their scope.
The exceptions authorize but do  | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 16 | not require the holding of
a closed meeting to discuss a  | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 17 | subject included within an enumerated exception.
 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 18 |  (c) Exceptions. A public body may hold closed meetings to  | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 19 | consider the
following subjects:
 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 20 |   (1) The appointment, employment, compensation,  | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 21 |  discipline, performance,
or dismissal of specific  | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 22 |  employees, specific individuals who serve as independent  | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 23 |  contractors in a park, recreational, or educational  | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
 
  | |||||||
  | |||||||
| 1 |  setting, or specific volunteers of the public body or  | ||||||
| 2 |  legal counsel for
the public body, including hearing
 | ||||||
| 3 |  testimony on a complaint lodged against an employee, a  | ||||||
| 4 |  specific individual who serves as an independent  | ||||||
| 5 |  contractor in a park, recreational, or educational  | ||||||
| 6 |  setting, or a volunteer of the public body or
against  | ||||||
| 7 |  legal counsel for the public body to determine its  | ||||||
| 8 |  validity. However, a meeting to consider an increase in  | ||||||
| 9 |  compensation to a specific employee of a public body that  | ||||||
| 10 |  is subject to the Local Government Wage Increase  | ||||||
| 11 |  Transparency Act may not be closed and shall be open to the  | ||||||
| 12 |  public and posted and held in accordance with this Act.
 | ||||||
| 13 |   (2) Collective negotiating matters between the public  | ||||||
| 14 |  body and its
employees or their representatives, or  | ||||||
| 15 |  deliberations concerning salary
schedules for one or more  | ||||||
| 16 |  classes of employees.
 | ||||||
| 17 |   (3) The selection of a person to fill a public office,
 | ||||||
| 18 |  as defined in this Act, including a vacancy in a public  | ||||||
| 19 |  office, when the public
body is given power to appoint  | ||||||
| 20 |  under law or ordinance, or the discipline,
performance or  | ||||||
| 21 |  removal of the occupant of a public office, when the  | ||||||
| 22 |  public body
is given power to remove the occupant under  | ||||||
| 23 |  law or ordinance. 
 | ||||||
| 24 |   (4) Evidence or testimony presented in open hearing,  | ||||||
| 25 |  or in closed
hearing where specifically authorized by law,  | ||||||
| 26 |  to
a quasi-adjudicative body, as defined in this Act,  | ||||||
 
  | |||||||
  | |||||||
| 1 |  provided that the body
prepares and makes available for  | ||||||
| 2 |  public inspection a written decision
setting forth its  | ||||||
| 3 |  determinative reasoning.
 | ||||||
| 4 |   (5) The purchase or lease of real property for the use  | ||||||
| 5 |  of
the public body, including meetings held for the  | ||||||
| 6 |  purpose of discussing
whether a particular parcel should  | ||||||
| 7 |  be acquired.
 | ||||||
| 8 |   (6) The setting of a price for sale or lease of  | ||||||
| 9 |  property owned
by the public body.
 | ||||||
| 10 |   (7) The sale or purchase of securities, investments,  | ||||||
| 11 |  or investment
contracts. This exception shall not apply to  | ||||||
| 12 |  the investment of assets or income of funds deposited into  | ||||||
| 13 |  the Illinois Prepaid Tuition Trust Fund. 
 | ||||||
| 14 |   (8) Security procedures, school building safety and  | ||||||
| 15 |  security, and the use of personnel and
equipment to  | ||||||
| 16 |  respond to an actual, a threatened, or a reasonably
 | ||||||
| 17 |  potential danger to the safety of employees, students,  | ||||||
| 18 |  staff, the public, or
public
property.
 | ||||||
| 19 |   (9) Student disciplinary cases.
 | ||||||
| 20 |   (10) The placement of individual students in special  | ||||||
| 21 |  education
programs and other matters relating to  | ||||||
| 22 |  individual students.
 | ||||||
| 23 |   (11) Litigation, when an action against, affecting or  | ||||||
| 24 |  on behalf of the
particular public body has been filed and  | ||||||
| 25 |  is pending before a court or
administrative tribunal, or  | ||||||
| 26 |  when the public body finds that an action is
probable or  | ||||||
 
  | |||||||
  | |||||||
| 1 |  imminent, in which case the basis for the finding shall be
 | ||||||
| 2 |  recorded and entered into the minutes of the closed  | ||||||
| 3 |  meeting.
 | ||||||
| 4 |   (12) The establishment of reserves or settlement of  | ||||||
| 5 |  claims as provided
in the Local Governmental and  | ||||||
| 6 |  Governmental Employees Tort Immunity Act, if
otherwise the  | ||||||
| 7 |  disposition of a claim or potential claim might be
 | ||||||
| 8 |  prejudiced, or the review or discussion of claims, loss or  | ||||||
| 9 |  risk management
information, records, data, advice or  | ||||||
| 10 |  communications from or with respect
to any insurer of the  | ||||||
| 11 |  public body or any intergovernmental risk management
 | ||||||
| 12 |  association or self insurance pool of which the public  | ||||||
| 13 |  body is a member.
 | ||||||
| 14 |   (13) Conciliation of complaints of discrimination in  | ||||||
| 15 |  the sale or rental
of housing, when closed meetings are  | ||||||
| 16 |  authorized by the law or ordinance
prescribing fair  | ||||||
| 17 |  housing practices and creating a commission or
 | ||||||
| 18 |  administrative agency for their enforcement.
 | ||||||
| 19 |   (14) Informant sources, the hiring or assignment of  | ||||||
| 20 |  undercover personnel
or equipment, or ongoing, prior or  | ||||||
| 21 |  future criminal investigations, when
discussed by a public  | ||||||
| 22 |  body with criminal investigatory responsibilities.
 | ||||||
| 23 |   (15) Professional ethics or performance when  | ||||||
| 24 |  considered by an advisory
body appointed to advise a  | ||||||
| 25 |  licensing or regulatory agency on matters
germane to the  | ||||||
| 26 |  advisory body's field of competence.
 | ||||||
 
  | |||||||
  | |||||||
| 1 |   (16) Self evaluation, practices and procedures or  | ||||||
| 2 |  professional ethics,
when meeting with a representative of  | ||||||
| 3 |  a statewide association of which the
public body is a  | ||||||
| 4 |  member.
 | ||||||
| 5 |   (17) The recruitment, credentialing, discipline or  | ||||||
| 6 |  formal peer review
of physicians or other
health care  | ||||||
| 7 |  professionals, or for the discussion of matters protected  | ||||||
| 8 |  under the federal Patient Safety and Quality Improvement  | ||||||
| 9 |  Act of 2005, and the regulations promulgated thereunder,  | ||||||
| 10 |  including 42 C.F.R. Part 3 (73 FR 70732), or the federal  | ||||||
| 11 |  Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of  | ||||||
| 12 |  1996, and the regulations promulgated thereunder,  | ||||||
| 13 |  including 45 C.F.R. Parts 160, 162, and 164, by a  | ||||||
| 14 |  hospital, or
other institution providing medical care,  | ||||||
| 15 |  that is operated by the public body.
 | ||||||
| 16 |   (18) Deliberations for decisions of the Prisoner  | ||||||
| 17 |  Review Board.
 | ||||||
| 18 |   (19) Review or discussion of applications received  | ||||||
| 19 |  under the
Experimental Organ Transplantation Procedures  | ||||||
| 20 |  Act.
 | ||||||
| 21 |   (20) The classification and discussion of matters  | ||||||
| 22 |  classified as
confidential or continued confidential by  | ||||||
| 23 |  the State Government Suggestion Award
Board.
 | ||||||
| 24 |   (21) Discussion of minutes of meetings lawfully closed  | ||||||
| 25 |  under this Act,
whether for purposes of approval by the  | ||||||
| 26 |  body of the minutes or semi-annual
review of the minutes  | ||||||
 
  | |||||||
  | |||||||
| 1 |  as mandated by Section 2.06.
 | ||||||
| 2 |   (22) Deliberations for decisions of the State
 | ||||||
| 3 |  Emergency Medical Services Disciplinary
Review Board.
 | ||||||
| 4 |   (23) The operation by a municipality of a municipal  | ||||||
| 5 |  utility or the
operation of a
municipal power agency or  | ||||||
| 6 |  municipal natural gas agency when the
discussion involves  | ||||||
| 7 |  (i) contracts relating to the
purchase, sale, or delivery  | ||||||
| 8 |  of electricity or natural gas or (ii) the results
or  | ||||||
| 9 |  conclusions of load forecast studies.
 | ||||||
| 10 |   (24) Meetings of a residential health care facility  | ||||||
| 11 |  resident sexual
assault and death review
team or
the  | ||||||
| 12 |  Executive
Council under the Abuse Prevention Review
Team  | ||||||
| 13 |  Act.
 | ||||||
| 14 |   (25) Meetings of an independent team of experts under  | ||||||
| 15 |  Brian's Law.  | ||||||
| 16 |   (26) Meetings of a mortality review team appointed  | ||||||
| 17 |  under the Department of Juvenile Justice Mortality Review  | ||||||
| 18 |  Team Act.  | ||||||
| 19 |   (27) (Blank).  | ||||||
| 20 |   (28) Correspondence and records (i) that may not be  | ||||||
| 21 |  disclosed under Section 11-9 of the Illinois Public Aid  | ||||||
| 22 |  Code or (ii) that pertain to appeals under Section 11-8 of  | ||||||
| 23 |  the Illinois Public Aid Code.  | ||||||
| 24 |   (29) Meetings between internal or external auditors  | ||||||
| 25 |  and governmental audit committees, finance committees, and  | ||||||
| 26 |  their equivalents, when the discussion involves internal  | ||||||
 
  | |||||||
  | |||||||
| 1 |  control weaknesses, identification of potential fraud risk  | ||||||
| 2 |  areas, known or suspected frauds, and fraud interviews  | ||||||
| 3 |  conducted in accordance with generally accepted auditing  | ||||||
| 4 |  standards of the United States of America. | ||||||
| 5 |   (30) Those meetings or portions of meetings of a  | ||||||
| 6 |  fatality review team or the Illinois Fatality Review Team  | ||||||
| 7 |  Advisory Council during which a review of the death of an  | ||||||
| 8 |  eligible adult in which abuse or neglect is suspected,  | ||||||
| 9 |  alleged, or substantiated is conducted pursuant to Section  | ||||||
| 10 |  15 of the Adult Protective Services Act.  | ||||||
| 11 |   (31) Meetings and deliberations for decisions of the  | ||||||
| 12 |  Concealed Carry Licensing Review Board under the Firearm  | ||||||
| 13 |  Concealed Carry Act.  | ||||||
| 14 |   (32) Meetings between the Regional Transportation  | ||||||
| 15 |  Authority Board and its Service Boards when the discussion  | ||||||
| 16 |  involves review by the Regional Transportation Authority  | ||||||
| 17 |  Board of employment contracts under Section 28d of the  | ||||||
| 18 |  Metropolitan Transit Authority Act and Sections 3A.18 and  | ||||||
| 19 |  3B.26 of the Regional Transportation Authority Act. | ||||||
| 20 |   (33) Those meetings or portions of meetings of the  | ||||||
| 21 |  advisory committee and peer review subcommittee created  | ||||||
| 22 |  under Section 320 of the Illinois Controlled Substances  | ||||||
| 23 |  Act during which specific controlled substance prescriber,  | ||||||
| 24 |  dispenser, or patient information is discussed. | ||||||
| 25 |   (34) Meetings of the Tax Increment Financing Reform  | ||||||
| 26 |  Task Force under Section 2505-800 of the Department of  | ||||||
 
  | |||||||
  | |||||||
| 1 |  Revenue Law of the Civil Administrative Code of Illinois.  | ||||||
| 2 |   (35) Meetings of the group established to discuss  | ||||||
| 3 |  Medicaid capitation rates under Section 5-30.8 of the  | ||||||
| 4 |  Illinois Public Aid Code.  | ||||||
| 5 |   (36) Those deliberations or portions of deliberations  | ||||||
| 6 |  for decisions of the Illinois Gaming Board in which there  | ||||||
| 7 |  is discussed any of the following: (i) personal,  | ||||||
| 8 |  commercial, financial, or other information obtained from  | ||||||
| 9 |  any source that is privileged, proprietary, confidential,  | ||||||
| 10 |  or a trade secret; or (ii) information specifically  | ||||||
| 11 |  exempted from the disclosure by federal or State law. | ||||||
| 12 |   (37) Deliberations for decisions of the Illinois Law
 | ||||||
| 13 |  Enforcement Training Standards Board, the Certification  | ||||||
| 14 |  Review Panel, and the Illinois State Police Merit Board  | ||||||
| 15 |  regarding certification and decertification.  | ||||||
| 16 |   (38) Meetings of the Ad Hoc Statewide Domestic
 | ||||||
| 17 |  Violence Fatality Review Committee of the Illinois  | ||||||
| 18 |  Criminal
Justice Information Authority Board that occur in  | ||||||
| 19 |  closed executive session under subsection (d) of Section  | ||||||
| 20 |  35 of the Domestic Violence Fatality Review Act.  | ||||||
| 21 |   (39) Meetings of the regional review teams under  | ||||||
| 22 |  subsection (a) of Section 75 of the Domestic Violence  | ||||||
| 23 |  Fatality Review Act.  | ||||||
| 24 |   (40) Meetings of the Firearm Owner's Identification  | ||||||
| 25 |  Card Review Board under Section 10 of the Firearm Owners  | ||||||
| 26 |  Identification Card Act.  | ||||||
 
  | |||||||
  | |||||||
| 1 |   (41) Meetings of local advisory councils held after  | ||||||
| 2 |  the Office of Firearm Violence Prevention receives all  | ||||||
| 3 |  local advisory council recommendations and distributes  | ||||||
| 4 |  funding based on those recommendations, pursuant to  | ||||||
| 5 |  subsection (h) of Section 35-40 of the Reimagine Public  | ||||||
| 6 |  Safety Act.  | ||||||
| 7 |  (d) Definitions. For purposes of this Section:
 | ||||||
| 8 |  "Employee" means a person employed by a public body whose  | ||||||
| 9 | relationship
with the public body constitutes an  | ||||||
| 10 | employer-employee relationship under
the usual common law  | ||||||
| 11 | rules, and who is not an independent contractor.
 | ||||||
| 12 |  "Public office" means a position created by or under the
 | ||||||
| 13 | Constitution or laws of this State, the occupant of which is  | ||||||
| 14 | charged with
the exercise of some portion of the sovereign  | ||||||
| 15 | power of this State. The term
"public office" shall include  | ||||||
| 16 | members of the public body, but it shall not
include  | ||||||
| 17 | organizational positions filled by members thereof, whether
 | ||||||
| 18 | established by law or by a public body itself, that exist to  | ||||||
| 19 | assist the
body in the conduct of its business.
 | ||||||
| 20 |  "Quasi-adjudicative body" means an administrative body  | ||||||
| 21 | charged by law or
ordinance with the responsibility to conduct  | ||||||
| 22 | hearings, receive evidence or
testimony and make  | ||||||
| 23 | determinations based
thereon, but does not include
local  | ||||||
| 24 | electoral boards when such bodies are considering petition  | ||||||
| 25 | challenges.
 | ||||||
| 26 |  (e) Final action. No final action may be taken at a closed  | ||||||
 
  | |||||||
  | |||||||
| 1 | meeting.
Final action shall be preceded by a public recital of  | ||||||
| 2 | the nature of the
matter being considered and other  | ||||||
| 3 | information that will inform the
public of the business being  | ||||||
| 4 | conducted. 
 | ||||||
| 5 | (Source: P.A. 101-31, eff. 6-28-19; 101-459, eff. 8-23-19;  | ||||||
| 6 | 101-652, eff. 1-1-22; 102-237, eff. 1-1-22; 102-520, eff.  | ||||||
| 7 | 8-20-21; 102-558, eff. 8-20-21; 102-813, eff. 5-13-22.)
 | ||||||
| 8 |  Section 10. The Reimagine Public Safety Act is amended by  | ||||||
| 9 | changing Sections 35-15, 35-25, 35-30, 35-35, and 35-40 as  | ||||||
| 10 | follows:
 | ||||||
| 11 |  (430 ILCS 69/35-15)
 | ||||||
| 12 |  Sec. 35-15. Findings. The Illinois General Assembly finds  | ||||||
| 13 | that: | ||||||
| 14 |   (1) Discrete neighborhoods in municipalities across  | ||||||
| 15 |  Illinois are experiencing concentrated and perpetual  | ||||||
| 16 |  firearm violence that is a public health epidemic. | ||||||
| 17 |   (2) Within neighborhoods experiencing this firearm  | ||||||
| 18 |  violence epidemic, violence is concentrated among teens  | ||||||
| 19 |  and young adults that have chronic exposure to the risk of  | ||||||
| 20 |  violence and criminal legal system involvement and related  | ||||||
| 21 |  trauma in small geographic areas where these young people  | ||||||
| 22 |  live or congregate.  | ||||||
| 23 |   (3) Firearm violence victimization and perpetration is  | ||||||
| 24 |  highly concentrated in particular neighborhoods,  | ||||||
 
  | |||||||
  | |||||||
| 1 |  particular blocks within these neighborhoods, and among a  | ||||||
| 2 |  small number of individuals living in these areas. | ||||||
| 3 |   (4) People who are chronically exposed to the risk of  | ||||||
| 4 |  firearm violence victimization are substantially more  | ||||||
| 5 |  likely to be violently injured or violently injure another  | ||||||
| 6 |  person. People who have been violently injured are  | ||||||
| 7 |  substantially more likely to be violently reinjured.  | ||||||
| 8 |  Chronic exposure to violence additionally leads  | ||||||
| 9 |  individuals to engage in behavior, as part of a cycle of  | ||||||
| 10 |  community violence, trauma, and retaliation that  | ||||||
| 11 |  substantially increases their own risk of violent injury  | ||||||
| 12 |  or reinjury. | ||||||
| 13 |   (5) Evidence-based programs that engage individuals at  | ||||||
| 14 |  the highest risk of firearm violence and provide life  | ||||||
| 15 |  stabilization, case management, and culturally competent  | ||||||
| 16 |  group and individual therapy reduce firearm violence  | ||||||
| 17 |  victimization and perpetration and can end Illinois'  | ||||||
| 18 |  firearm violence epidemic. | ||||||
| 19 |   (6) A public health approach to ending Illinois'  | ||||||
| 20 |  firearm violence epidemic requires targeted, integrated  | ||||||
| 21 |  behavioral health services and economic opportunity that  | ||||||
| 22 |  promotes self-sufficiency for victims of firearm violence  | ||||||
| 23 |  and those with chronic exposure to the risk of firearm  | ||||||
| 24 |  violence victimization, including, but not limited to,  | ||||||
| 25 |  services for criminal and juvenile justice-involved  | ||||||
| 26 |  populations, community revitalization initiatives, and  | ||||||
 
  | |||||||
  | |||||||
| 1 |  crisis response services, such as psychological first aid. | ||||||
| 2 |   (7) A public health approach to ending Illinois'  | ||||||
| 3 |  firearm violence epidemic further requires broader  | ||||||
| 4 |  preventive investments in the census tracts and blocks  | ||||||
| 5 |  that reduce risk factors for youth and families living in  | ||||||
| 6 |  areas at the highest risk of firearm violence  | ||||||
| 7 |  victimization. | ||||||
| 8 |   (8) A public health approach to ending Illinois'  | ||||||
| 9 |  firearm violence epidemic requires empowering residents  | ||||||
| 10 |  and community-based organizations within impacted  | ||||||
| 11 |  neighborhoods to provide culturally competent care based  | ||||||
| 12 |  on lived experience in these areas and long-term  | ||||||
| 13 |  relationships of mutual interest that promote safety and  | ||||||
| 14 |  stability.  | ||||||
| 15 |   (9) A public health approach to ending Illinois'  | ||||||
| 16 |  firearm violence epidemic further requires that preventive  | ||||||
| 17 |  youth development services for youth in these  | ||||||
| 18 |  neighborhoods be fully integrated with a team-based model  | ||||||
| 19 |  of mental health care to address trauma recovery for those  | ||||||
| 20 |  young people at the highest risk of firearm violence  | ||||||
| 21 |  victimization.  | ||||||
| 22 |   (10) Community revitalization can be an effective  | ||||||
| 23 |  violence prevention strategy, provided that revitalization  | ||||||
| 24 |  is targeted to the highest risk geographies within  | ||||||
| 25 |  communities and revitalization efforts are designed and  | ||||||
| 26 |  led by individuals living and working in the impacted  | ||||||
 
  | |||||||
  | |||||||
| 1 |  communities. 
 | ||||||
| 2 | (Source: P.A. 102-16, eff. 6-17-21; 102-679, eff. 12-10-21.)
 | ||||||
| 3 |  (430 ILCS 69/35-25)
 | ||||||
| 4 |  Sec. 35-25. Integrated violence prevention and other  | ||||||
| 5 | services.  | ||||||
| 6 |  (a) Subject to appropriation, for municipalities with  | ||||||
| 7 | 1,000,000 or more residents, the Office of Firearm Violence  | ||||||
| 8 | Prevention shall make grants to violence prevention  | ||||||
| 9 | organizations for evidence-based violence prevention services.  | ||||||
| 10 | Approved technical assistance and training providers shall  | ||||||
| 11 | create learning communities for the exchange of information  | ||||||
| 12 | between community-based organizations in the same or similar  | ||||||
| 13 | fields. Firearm violence prevention organizations shall  | ||||||
| 14 | prioritize individuals at the highest risk of firearm violence  | ||||||
| 15 | victimization and provide these individuals with  | ||||||
| 16 | evidence-based comprehensive services that reduce their  | ||||||
| 17 | exposure to chronic firearm violence. | ||||||
| 18 |  (b) In the geographic areas they serve, violence Violence  | ||||||
| 19 | prevention organizations shall develop the following expertise  | ||||||
| 20 | in the geographic areas that they cover: | ||||||
| 21 |   (1) Analyzing and leveraging data to identify the  | ||||||
| 22 |  individuals who will most benefit from evidence-based  | ||||||
| 23 |  violence prevention services in their geographic areas. | ||||||
| 24 |   (2) Identifying the conflicts that are responsible for  | ||||||
| 25 |  recurring violence. | ||||||
 
  | |||||||
  | |||||||
| 1 |   (3) Having relationships with individuals who are most  | ||||||
| 2 |  able to reduce conflicts. | ||||||
| 3 |   (4) Addressing the stabilization and trauma recovery  | ||||||
| 4 |  needs of individuals impacted by violence by providing  | ||||||
| 5 |  direct services for their unmet needs or referring them to  | ||||||
| 6 |  other qualified service providers.
 | ||||||
| 7 |   (5) Having and building relationships with community  | ||||||
| 8 |  members and community organizations that provide  | ||||||
| 9 |  evidence-based violence prevention services and get  | ||||||
| 10 |  referrals of people who will most benefit from  | ||||||
| 11 |  evidence-based violence prevention services in their  | ||||||
| 12 |  geographic areas.
 | ||||||
| 13 |   (6) Providing training and technical assistance to  | ||||||
| 14 |  local law enforcement agencies to improve their  | ||||||
| 15 |  effectiveness without having any role, requirement, or  | ||||||
| 16 |  mandate to participate in the policing, enforcement, or  | ||||||
| 17 |  prosecution of any crime.  | ||||||
| 18 |  (c) Violence prevention organizations receiving grants  | ||||||
| 19 | under this Act shall coordinate services with other violence  | ||||||
| 20 | prevention organizations in their area. | ||||||
| 21 |  (d) The Office of Firearm Violence Prevention shall  | ||||||
| 22 | identify, for each separate eligible service area under this  | ||||||
| 23 | Act, an experienced violence prevention organization to serve  | ||||||
| 24 | as the Lead Violence Prevention Convener for that area and  | ||||||
| 25 | provide each Lead Violence Prevention Convener with a grant of  | ||||||
| 26 | up to $100,000 to these organizations to coordinate monthly  | ||||||
 
  | |||||||
  | |||||||
| 1 | meetings between violence prevention organizations and youth  | ||||||
| 2 | development organizations under this Act. The Lead Violence  | ||||||
| 3 | Prevention Convener may also receive, from the Office of  | ||||||
| 4 | Firearm Violence Prevention, technical assistance or training  | ||||||
| 5 | through approved providers when needs are jointly identified.  | ||||||
| 6 | The Lead Violence Prevention Convener shall: | ||||||
| 7 |   (1) provide the convened organizations with summary  | ||||||
| 8 |  notes recommendations made at the monthly meetings to  | ||||||
| 9 |  improve the effectiveness of evidence-based violence  | ||||||
| 10 |  prevention services based on review of timely data on  | ||||||
| 11 |  shootings and homicides in his or her relevant  | ||||||
| 12 |  neighborhood; | ||||||
| 13 |   (2) attend monthly meetings where the cause of  | ||||||
| 14 |  violence and other neighborhood disputes is discussed and  | ||||||
| 15 |  strategize on how to resolve ongoing conflicts and execute  | ||||||
| 16 |  on agreed plans; | ||||||
| 17 |   (3) (blank); | ||||||
| 18 |   (4) on behalf of the convened organizations, make  | ||||||
| 19 |  consensus recommendations to the Office of Firearm  | ||||||
| 20 |  Violence Prevention and local law enforcement on how to  | ||||||
| 21 |  reduce violent conflict in his or her neighborhood; | ||||||
| 22 |   (5) meet on an emergency basis when conflicts that  | ||||||
| 23 |  need immediate attention and resolution arise; | ||||||
| 24 |   (6) share knowledge and strategies of the community  | ||||||
| 25 |  violence dynamic in monthly meetings with local youth  | ||||||
| 26 |  development specialists receiving grants under this Act;  | ||||||
 
  | |||||||
  | |||||||
| 1 |   (7) select when and where needed an approved Office of  | ||||||
| 2 |  Violence Prevention-funded technical assistance and  | ||||||
| 3 |  training service provider to receive agreed upon services;  | ||||||
| 4 |  and  | ||||||
| 5 |   (8) after meeting with community residents and other  | ||||||
| 6 |  community organizations that have expertise in housing,  | ||||||
| 7 |  mental health, economic development, education, and social  | ||||||
| 8 |  services, make recommendations to the Office of Firearm  | ||||||
| 9 |  Violence Prevention on how to target community  | ||||||
| 10 |  revitalization resources available from federal and State  | ||||||
| 11 |  funding sources.  | ||||||
| 12 |  The Office of Firearm Violence Prevention shall compile  | ||||||
| 13 | recommendations from all Lead Violence Prevention Conveners  | ||||||
| 14 | and report to the General Assembly bi-annually on these  | ||||||
| 15 | funding recommendations. The Lead Violence Prevention Convener  | ||||||
| 16 | may also serve as a violence prevention or youth development  | ||||||
| 17 | provider. | ||||||
| 18 |  (d-5) At the discretion of the Assistant Secretary of  | ||||||
| 19 | Firearm Violence Prevention and taking into consideration  | ||||||
| 20 | funding recommendations provided by Lead Violence Prevention  | ||||||
| 21 | Conveners, community needs and trends, and emerging best  | ||||||
| 22 | practices, the Office of Firearm Violence Prevention may  | ||||||
| 23 | provide grants, in each eligible service area, for activities  | ||||||
| 24 | that include, but are not limited to, interventions for  | ||||||
| 25 | justice-involved or re-entry populations, community  | ||||||
| 26 | revitalization initiatives, trauma-informed behavioral health  | ||||||
 
  | |||||||
  | |||||||
| 1 | services, restorative justice initiatives, and crisis response  | ||||||
| 2 | services, such as psychological first aid.  | ||||||
| 3 |  (e) The Illinois Office of Firearm Violence Prevention  | ||||||
| 4 | shall select, when possible and appropriate, no fewer than 2  | ||||||
| 5 | and no more than 3 approved technical assistance and training  | ||||||
| 6 | providers to deliver technical assistance and training to the  | ||||||
| 7 | violence prevention organizations that request to receive  | ||||||
| 8 | approved technical assistance and training. Violence  | ||||||
| 9 | prevention organizations shall have the opportunity complete  | ||||||
| 10 | authority to select among the approved technical assistance  | ||||||
| 11 | services providers funded by the Office of Firearm Violence  | ||||||
| 12 | Prevention, to the extent that the approved technical  | ||||||
| 13 | assistance services providers can distribute technical  | ||||||
| 14 | assistance and training equitably among violence prevention  | ||||||
| 15 | organizations.  | ||||||
| 16 |  (f) Approved technical assistance and training providers  | ||||||
| 17 | may: | ||||||
| 18 |   (1) provide training and certification to violence  | ||||||
| 19 |  prevention professionals on how to perform violence  | ||||||
| 20 |  prevention services and other professional development to  | ||||||
| 21 |  violence prevention professionals. | ||||||
| 22 |   (2) provide management training on how to manage  | ||||||
| 23 |  violence prevention professionals;
 | ||||||
| 24 |   (3) provide training and assistance on how to develop  | ||||||
| 25 |  memorandum of understanding for referral services or  | ||||||
| 26 |  create approved provider lists for these referral  | ||||||
 
  | |||||||
  | |||||||
| 1 |  services, or both; | ||||||
| 2 |   (4) share lessons learned among violence prevention  | ||||||
| 3 |  professionals and service providers in their network; and | ||||||
| 4 |   (5) provide technical assistance and training on human  | ||||||
| 5 |  resources, grants management, capacity building, and  | ||||||
| 6 |  fiscal management strategies.  | ||||||
| 7 |  (g) Approved technical assistance and training providers  | ||||||
| 8 | shall: | ||||||
| 9 |   (1) provide additional services identified as  | ||||||
| 10 |  necessary by the Office of Firearm Violence Prevention and  | ||||||
| 11 |  service providers in their network; and  | ||||||
| 12 |   (2) receive a base grant of up to $250,000 plus  | ||||||
| 13 |  negotiated service rates to provide group and  | ||||||
| 14 |  individualized services to participating violence  | ||||||
| 15 |  prevention organizations. | ||||||
| 16 |  (h) (Blank).  | ||||||
| 17 |  (i) The Office of Firearm Violence Prevention shall issue  | ||||||
| 18 | grants to , when possible and appropriate, to no fewer than 2  | ||||||
| 19 | violence prevention organizations in each of the eligible  | ||||||
| 20 | service areas and no more than 6 organizations. When possible,  | ||||||
| 21 | the Office of Firearm Violence Prevention shall work to ensure  | ||||||
| 22 | that grant resources are equitably distributed across eligible  | ||||||
| 23 | service areas grants shall be for no less than $300,000 per  | ||||||
| 24 | violence prevention organization. The Office of Firearm  | ||||||
| 25 | Violence Prevention may establish grant award ranges to ensure  | ||||||
| 26 | grants will have the potential to reduce violence in each  | ||||||
 
  | |||||||
  | |||||||
| 1 | neighborhood.  | ||||||
| 2 |  (j) No violence prevention organization can serve more  | ||||||
| 3 | than 3 eligible service areas unless the Office of Firearm  | ||||||
| 4 | Violence Prevention is unable to identify violence prevention  | ||||||
| 5 | organizations to provide adequate coverage. | ||||||
| 6 |  (k) No approved technical assistance and training provider  | ||||||
| 7 | shall provide evidence-based violence prevention services in  | ||||||
| 8 | an eligible service area under this Act unless the Office of  | ||||||
| 9 | Firearm Violence Prevention is unable to identify qualified  | ||||||
| 10 | violence prevention organizations to provide adequate  | ||||||
| 11 | coverage.
 | ||||||
| 12 | (Source: P.A. 102-16, eff. 6-17-21; 102-679, eff. 12-10-21.)
 | ||||||
| 13 |  (430 ILCS 69/35-30)
 | ||||||
| 14 |  Sec. 35-30. Integrated youth services.  | ||||||
| 15 |  (a) Subject to appropriation, for municipalities with  | ||||||
| 16 | 1,000,000 or more residents, the Office of Firearm Violence  | ||||||
| 17 | Prevention shall make grants to youth development  | ||||||
| 18 | organizations for evidence-based youth programming, including,  | ||||||
| 19 | but not limited to, after-school and summer programming.  | ||||||
| 20 | Evidence-based youth development programs shall provide  | ||||||
| 21 | services to teens and young adults that increase their school  | ||||||
| 22 | attendance, and school performance, reduce involvement in the  | ||||||
| 23 | criminal and juvenile justice systems, develop employment and  | ||||||
| 24 | life skills, and develop nonacademic interests that build  | ||||||
| 25 | social emotional persistence and intelligence.  | ||||||
 
  | |||||||
  | |||||||
| 1 |  (b) The Office of Firearm Violence Prevention shall  | ||||||
| 2 | identify municipal blocks where more than 35% of all fatal and  | ||||||
| 3 | nonfatal firearm-shot incidents take place and focus youth  | ||||||
| 4 | development service grants to residents of these identified  | ||||||
| 5 | blocks in the designated eligible service areas. The  | ||||||
| 6 | Department of Human Services shall prioritize funding to youth  | ||||||
| 7 | development service programs that serve the following teens  | ||||||
| 8 | before expanding services to the broader community: | ||||||
| 9 |   (1) criminal and juvenile justice-involved youth; | ||||||
| 10 |   (2) students who are attending or have attended option  | ||||||
| 11 |  schools; | ||||||
| 12 |   (3) family members of individuals working with  | ||||||
| 13 |  violence prevention organizations; and | ||||||
| 14 |   (4) youth living on the blocks where more than 35% of  | ||||||
| 15 |  the violence takes place in a neighborhood. | ||||||
| 16 |  (c) Each program participant enrolled in a youth  | ||||||
| 17 | development program under this Act, when possible and  | ||||||
| 18 | appropriate, shall receive an individualized needs assessment  | ||||||
| 19 | to determine if the participant requires intensive youth  | ||||||
| 20 | services as provided for in Section 35-35 of this Act. The  | ||||||
| 21 | needs assessment should be the best available instrument that  | ||||||
| 22 | considers the physical and mental condition of each youth  | ||||||
| 23 | based on the youth's family ties, financial resources, past  | ||||||
| 24 | substance use, criminal justice involvement, and trauma  | ||||||
| 25 | related to chronic exposure to firearm violence behavioral  | ||||||
| 26 | health assessment to determine the participant's broader  | ||||||
 
  | |||||||
  | |||||||
| 1 | support and mental health needs. The Office of Firearm  | ||||||
| 2 | Violence Prevention shall determine best practices for  | ||||||
| 3 | referring program participants who are at the highest risk of  | ||||||
| 4 | violence and justice involvement to be referred to a high-risk  | ||||||
| 5 | youth intervention program established in Section 35-35. | ||||||
| 6 |  (d) Youth development prevention program participants  | ||||||
| 7 | shall receive services designed to empower participants with  | ||||||
| 8 | the social and emotional skills necessary to forge paths of  | ||||||
| 9 | healthy development and disengagement from high-risk  | ||||||
| 10 | behaviors. Within the context of engaging social, physical,  | ||||||
| 11 | and personal development activities, participants should build  | ||||||
| 12 | resilience and the skills associated with healthy social,  | ||||||
| 13 | emotional, and identity development. | ||||||
| 14 |  (e) Youth development providers shall develop the  | ||||||
| 15 | following expertise in the geographic areas they cover: | ||||||
| 16 |   (1) Knowledge of the teens and their social  | ||||||
| 17 |  organization in the blocks they are designated to serve.  | ||||||
| 18 |   (2) Youth development organizations receiving grants  | ||||||
| 19 |  under this Act shall be required to coordinate services  | ||||||
| 20 |  with other youth development organizations in their  | ||||||
| 21 |  neighborhood by sharing lessons learned in monthly  | ||||||
| 22 |  meetings. | ||||||
| 23 |   (3) (Blank). | ||||||
| 24 |   (4) Meeting on an emergency basis when conflicts  | ||||||
| 25 |  related to program participants that need immediate  | ||||||
| 26 |  attention and resolution arise. | ||||||
 
  | |||||||
  | |||||||
| 1 |   (5) Sharing knowledge and strategies of the  | ||||||
| 2 |  neighborhood violence dynamic in monthly meetings with  | ||||||
| 3 |  local violence prevention organizations receiving grants  | ||||||
| 4 |  under this Act.  | ||||||
| 5 |   (6) Selecting an approved technical assistance and  | ||||||
| 6 |  training service provider to receive agreed upon services.  | ||||||
| 7 |  (f) The Illinois Office of Firearm Violence Prevention  | ||||||
| 8 | shall select, when possible and appropriate, no fewer than 2  | ||||||
| 9 | and no more than 3 approved technical assistance and training  | ||||||
| 10 | providers to deliver technical assistance and training to the  | ||||||
| 11 | youth development organizations that request to receive  | ||||||
| 12 | approved technical assistance and training. Youth development  | ||||||
| 13 | organizations must use an approved technical assistance and  | ||||||
| 14 | training provider but have complete authority to select among  | ||||||
| 15 | the approved technical assistance services providers funded by  | ||||||
| 16 | the Office of Firearm Violence Prevention. Youth development  | ||||||
| 17 | organizations shall have the opportunity to select among the  | ||||||
| 18 | approved technical assistance services providers funded by the  | ||||||
| 19 | Office of Firearm Violence Prevention, to the extent that  | ||||||
| 20 | youth development organizations can be distributed equitably  | ||||||
| 21 | among approved technical assistance services providers.  | ||||||
| 22 |  (g) Approved technical assistance and training providers  | ||||||
| 23 | may: | ||||||
| 24 |   (1) provide training to youth development workers on  | ||||||
| 25 |  how to perform outreach services; | ||||||
| 26 |   (2) provide management training on how to manage youth  | ||||||
 
  | |||||||
  | |||||||
| 1 |  development workers; | ||||||
| 2 |   (3) provide training and assistance on how to develop  | ||||||
| 3 |  memorandum of understanding for referral services or  | ||||||
| 4 |  create approved provider lists for these referral  | ||||||
| 5 |  services, or both; | ||||||
| 6 |   (4) share lessons learned among youth development  | ||||||
| 7 |  service providers in their network; and | ||||||
| 8 |   (5) provide technical assistance and training on human  | ||||||
| 9 |  resources, grants management, capacity building, and  | ||||||
| 10 |  fiscal management strategies.  | ||||||
| 11 |  (h) Approved technical assistance and training providers  | ||||||
| 12 | shall: | ||||||
| 13 |   (1) provide additional services identified as  | ||||||
| 14 |  necessary by the Office of Firearm Violence Prevention and  | ||||||
| 15 |  youth development service providers in their network; and  | ||||||
| 16 |   (2) receive an annual base grant of up to $250,000  | ||||||
| 17 |  plus negotiated service rates to provide group and  | ||||||
| 18 |  individualized services to participating youth development  | ||||||
| 19 |  service organizations. | ||||||
| 20 |  (i) (Blank).  | ||||||
| 21 |  (j) The Office of Firearm Violence Prevention shall issue  | ||||||
| 22 | youth development services grants to , when possible and  | ||||||
| 23 | appropriate, to no fewer than 4 youth services organizations  | ||||||
| 24 | in each of the eligible service areas and no more than 8  | ||||||
| 25 | organizations. When possible, the Office of Firearm Violence  | ||||||
| 26 | Prevention shall work to ensure that grant resources are  | ||||||
 
  | |||||||
  | |||||||
| 1 | equitably distributed across eligible service areas grants  | ||||||
| 2 | shall be for no less than $300,000 per youth development  | ||||||
| 3 | organization. The Office of Firearm Violence Prevention may  | ||||||
| 4 | establish award ranges to ensure grants will have the  | ||||||
| 5 | potential to reduce violence in each neighborhood. | ||||||
| 6 |  (k) No youth development organization can serve more than  | ||||||
| 7 | 3 eligible service areas unless the Office of Firearm Violence  | ||||||
| 8 | Prevention is unable to identify youth development  | ||||||
| 9 | organizations to provide adequate coverage. | ||||||
| 10 |  (l) No approved technical assistance and training provider  | ||||||
| 11 | shall provide youth development services in any neighborhood  | ||||||
| 12 | under this Act. 
 | ||||||
| 13 | (Source: P.A. 102-16, eff. 6-17-21; 102-679, eff. 12-10-21.)
 | ||||||
| 14 |  (430 ILCS 69/35-35)
 | ||||||
| 15 |  Sec. 35-35. Intensive youth intervention services.  | ||||||
| 16 |  (a) Subject to appropriation, for municipalities with  | ||||||
| 17 | 1,000,000 or more residents, the Office of Firearm Violence  | ||||||
| 18 | Prevention shall issue grants to high-risk youth intervention  | ||||||
| 19 | organizations for evidence-based intervention services that  | ||||||
| 20 | reduce involvement in the criminal and juvenile justice  | ||||||
| 21 | system, increase school attendance, and refer high-risk teens  | ||||||
| 22 | into therapeutic programs that address trauma recovery and  | ||||||
| 23 | other mental health improvements. Each program participant  | ||||||
| 24 | enrolled in a high-risk youth intervention program under this  | ||||||
| 25 | Act shall receive a nationally recognized comprehensive mental  | ||||||
 
  | |||||||
  | |||||||
| 1 | health assessment delivered by a qualified mental health  | ||||||
| 2 | professional certified to provide services to Medicaid  | ||||||
| 3 | recipients. | ||||||
| 4 |  (b) High-risk youth intervention program participants  | ||||||
| 5 | shall receive needed services as determined by the  | ||||||
| 6 | individualized assessment which may include, but is not  | ||||||
| 7 | limited to: | ||||||
| 8 |   (1) receive group-based emotional regulation therapy  | ||||||
| 9 |  that helps them control their emotions and understand how  | ||||||
| 10 |  trauma and stress impacts their thinking and behavior; and  | ||||||
| 11 |   (2) have youth advocates that accompany them to their  | ||||||
| 12 |  group therapy sessions, assist them with issues that  | ||||||
| 13 |  prevent them from attending school, and address life  | ||||||
| 14 |  skills development activities through weekly coaching. | ||||||
| 15 |  (b-5) High-risk youth intervention service organizations  | ||||||
| 16 | shall have trained clinical staff managing the youth advocate  | ||||||
| 17 | interface with program participants. | ||||||
| 18 |  (c) Youth development service organizations and providers  | ||||||
| 19 | of evidence-based violence prevention services shall be  | ||||||
| 20 | assigned to the youth intervention service providers for  | ||||||
| 21 | referrals by the Office of Firearm Violence Prevention.  | ||||||
| 22 |  (d) The youth receiving intervention services who are  | ||||||
| 23 | evaluated to need trauma recovery and other behavioral health  | ||||||
| 24 | interventions and who have the greatest risk of firearm  | ||||||
| 25 | violence victimization shall be referred to the family systems  | ||||||
| 26 | intervention services established in Section 35-55. | ||||||
 
  | |||||||
  | |||||||
| 1 |  (e) The Office of Firearm Violence Prevention shall issue  | ||||||
| 2 | high-risk youth intervention grants, when possible and  | ||||||
| 3 | appropriate, to no less than 2 youth intervention  | ||||||
| 4 | organizations and no more than 4 organizations in  | ||||||
| 5 | municipalities with 1,000,000 or more residents. | ||||||
| 6 |  (f) No high-risk youth intervention organization can serve  | ||||||
| 7 | more than 13 eligible service areas.  | ||||||
| 8 |  (g) The approved technical assistance and training  | ||||||
| 9 | providers for youth development programs provided in  | ||||||
| 10 | subsection (d) of Section 35-30 shall also provide technical  | ||||||
| 11 | assistance and training to the affiliated high-risk youth  | ||||||
| 12 | intervention service providers.  | ||||||
| 13 |  (h) (Blank). 
 | ||||||
| 14 | (Source: P.A. 102-16, eff. 6-17-21; 102-679, eff. 12-10-21.)
 | ||||||
| 15 |  (430 ILCS 69/35-40)
 | ||||||
| 16 |  Sec. 35-40. Services for municipalities with less than  | ||||||
| 17 | 1,000,000 residents.  | ||||||
| 18 |  (a) The Office of Firearm Violence Prevention shall  | ||||||
| 19 | identify the 10 municipalities or geographically contiguous  | ||||||
| 20 | areas in Illinois with less than 1,000,000 residents and more  | ||||||
| 21 | than 35,000 residents that have the largest concentration of  | ||||||
| 22 | fatal and nonfatal firearm-shot victims over the 5-year period  | ||||||
| 23 | considered for eligibility. These areas shall qualify for  | ||||||
| 24 | grants under this Act. The Office of Firearm Violence  | ||||||
| 25 | Prevention may identify up to 5 additional municipalities or  | ||||||
 
  | |||||||
  | |||||||
| 1 | geographically contiguous areas with less than 1,000,000  | ||||||
| 2 | residents that would benefit from evidence-based violence  | ||||||
| 3 | prevention services. In identifying the additional  | ||||||
| 4 | municipalities that qualify for funding under Section 35-40,  | ||||||
| 5 | the Office of Firearm Violence Prevention shall consider the  | ||||||
| 6 | following factors when possible: | ||||||
| 7 |   (1) the total number of fatal and nonfatal firearms  | ||||||
| 8 |  victims, excluding self-inflicted incidents, in a  | ||||||
| 9 |  potential municipality over the 5-year period considered  | ||||||
| 10 |  for eligibility;
 | ||||||
| 11 |   (2) the per capita rate of fatal and nonfatal firearms  | ||||||
| 12 |  victims, excluding self-inflicted incidents, in a  | ||||||
| 13 |  potential municipality over the 5-year period considered  | ||||||
| 14 |  for eligibility;
and  | ||||||
| 15 |   (3) the total potential firearms violence reduction  | ||||||
| 16 |  benefit for the entire State of Illinois by serving the  | ||||||
| 17 |  additional municipalities compared to the total benefit of  | ||||||
| 18 |  investing in all other municipalities identified for  | ||||||
| 19 |  grants to municipalities with more than 35,000 residents  | ||||||
| 20 |  and less than 1,000,000 residents.
 | ||||||
| 21 |  (b) Resources for each of these areas shall be distributed  | ||||||
| 22 | based on a formula to be developed by the Office of Firearm  | ||||||
| 23 | Violence Prevention that will maximize the total potential  | ||||||
| 24 | reduction in firearms victimization for all municipalities  | ||||||
| 25 | receiving grants under this Act. | ||||||
| 26 |  (c) The Office of Firearm Violence Prevention shall create  | ||||||
 
  | |||||||
  | |||||||
| 1 | local advisory councils for each of the designated service  | ||||||
| 2 | areas for the purpose of obtaining recommendations on how to  | ||||||
| 3 | distribute funds in these areas to reduce firearm violence  | ||||||
| 4 | incidents. Local advisory councils shall have a minimum of 5  | ||||||
| 5 | members with the following expertise or experience: | ||||||
| 6 |   (1) a representative of a nonelected official in local  | ||||||
| 7 |  government from the designated area; | ||||||
| 8 |   (2) a representative of an elected official at the  | ||||||
| 9 |  local or state level for the area; | ||||||
| 10 |   (3) a representative with public health experience in  | ||||||
| 11 |  firearm violence prevention or youth development; | ||||||
| 12 |   (4) two residents of the subsection of each area with  | ||||||
| 13 |  the most concentrated firearm violence incidents; and  | ||||||
| 14 |   (5) additional members as determined by the individual  | ||||||
| 15 |  local advisory council.  | ||||||
| 16 |  (d) The Office of Firearm Violence Prevention shall  | ||||||
| 17 | provide data to each local council on the characteristics of  | ||||||
| 18 | firearm violence in the designated area and other relevant  | ||||||
| 19 | information on the physical and demographic characteristics of  | ||||||
| 20 | the designated area. The Office of Firearm Violence Prevention  | ||||||
| 21 | shall also provide best available evidence on how to address  | ||||||
| 22 | the social determinants of health in the designated area in  | ||||||
| 23 | order to reduce firearm violence. | ||||||
| 24 |  (e) Each local advisory council shall make recommendations  | ||||||
| 25 | on how to allocate distributed resources for its area based on  | ||||||
| 26 | information provided to them by the Office of Firearm Violence  | ||||||
 
  | |||||||
  | |||||||
| 1 | Prevention, local law enforcement data, and other locally  | ||||||
| 2 | available data. | ||||||
| 3 |  (f) The Office of Firearm Violence Prevention shall  | ||||||
| 4 | consider the recommendations and determine how to distribute  | ||||||
| 5 | funds through grants to community-based organizations and  | ||||||
| 6 | local governments. To the extent the Office of Firearm  | ||||||
| 7 | Violence Prevention does not follow a local advisory council's  | ||||||
| 8 | recommendation on allocation of funds, the Office of Firearm  | ||||||
| 9 | Violence Prevention shall explain in writing why a different  | ||||||
| 10 | allocation of resources is more likely to reduce firearm  | ||||||
| 11 | violence in the designated area. | ||||||
| 12 |  (g) Subject to appropriation, the Department of Human  | ||||||
| 13 | Services and the Office of Firearm Violence Prevention shall  | ||||||
| 14 | issue grants to local governmental agencies or community-based  | ||||||
| 15 | organizations, or both, to maximize firearm violence reduction  | ||||||
| 16 | each year. When possible, initial grants shall be named no  | ||||||
| 17 | later than April 1, 2022 and renewed or competitively bid as  | ||||||
| 18 | appropriate in subsequent fiscal years.  | ||||||
| 19 |  (h) Sixty days after the Office of Firearm Violence  | ||||||
| 20 | Prevention receives all local advisory council recommendations  | ||||||
| 21 | under subsection (f) and distributes funding based on those  | ||||||
| 22 | recommendations: | ||||||
| 23 |   (1) the Office of Firearm Violence Prevention shall  | ||||||
| 24 |  have no responsibility to manage, oversee, or exercise  | ||||||
| 25 |  administrative authority over any local advisory council; | ||||||
| 26 |   (2) each local advisory council shall operate under  | ||||||
 
  | |||||||
  | |||||||
| 1 |  the governing body of its designated service area; | ||||||
| 2 |   (3) each local advisory council meeting shall be  | ||||||
| 3 |  exempt from the requirements of the Open Meetings Act in  | ||||||
| 4 |  accordance with paragraph (41) of subsection (c) of  | ||||||
| 5 |  Section 2 of that Act; and | ||||||
| 6 |   (4) each local advisory council meeting shall be  | ||||||
| 7 |  exempt from any other State requirement under this Act. 
 | ||||||
| 8 | (Source: P.A. 102-16, eff. 6-17-21; 102-679, eff. 12-10-21.)
 | ||||||