Rep. Tracy Katz Muhl

Filed: 3/23/2026

 

 


 

 


 
10400HB4708ham001LRB104 20431 RLC 35731 a

1
AMENDMENT TO HOUSE BILL 4708

2    AMENDMENT NO. ______. Amend House Bill 4708 by replacing
3everything after the enacting clause with the following:
 
4    "Section 5. The Unified Code of Corrections is amended by
5changing Section 3-2-2 as follows:
 
6    (730 ILCS 5/3-2-2)
7    Sec. 3-2-2. Powers and duties of the Department.
8    (1) In addition to the powers, duties, and
9responsibilities which are otherwise provided by law, the
10Department shall have the following powers:
11        (a) To accept persons committed to it by the courts of
12    this State for care, custody, treatment, and
13    rehabilitation, and to accept federal prisoners and
14    noncitizens over whom the Office of the Federal Detention
15    Trustee is authorized to exercise the federal detention
16    function for limited purposes and periods of time.

 

 

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1        (b) To develop and maintain reception and evaluation
2    units for purposes of analyzing the custody and
3    rehabilitation needs of persons committed to it and to
4    assign such persons to institutions and programs under its
5    control or transfer them to other appropriate agencies. In
6    consultation with the Department of Alcoholism and
7    Substance Abuse (now the Department of Human Services),
8    the Department of Corrections shall develop a master plan
9    for the screening and evaluation of persons committed to
10    its custody who have alcohol or drug abuse problems, and
11    for making appropriate treatment available to such
12    persons; the Department shall report to the General
13    Assembly on such plan not later than April 1, 1987. The
14    maintenance and implementation of such plan shall be
15    contingent upon the availability of funds.
16        (b-1) To create and implement, on January 1, 2002, a
17    pilot program to establish the effectiveness of
18    pupillometer technology (the measurement of the pupil's
19    reaction to light) as an alternative to a urine test for
20    purposes of screening and evaluating persons committed to
21    its custody who have alcohol or drug problems. The pilot
22    program shall require the pupillometer technology to be
23    used in at least one Department of Corrections facility.
24    The Director may expand the pilot program to include an
25    additional facility or facilities as he or she deems
26    appropriate. A minimum of 4,000 tests shall be included in

 

 

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1    the pilot program. The Department must report to the
2    General Assembly on the effectiveness of the program by
3    January 1, 2003.
4        (b-5) To develop, in consultation with the Illinois
5    State Police, a program for tracking and evaluating each
6    inmate from commitment through release for recording his
7    or her gang affiliations, activities, or ranks.
8        (b-10) To create and implement, on January 1, 2027, a
9    pilot program to establish the effectiveness of
10    long-acting injectable medications for opioid use
11    disorders when clinically appropriate for persons
12    committed to its custody who suffer from opioid use
13    disorders.
14        The pilot program shall provide long-acting injectable
15    medications for opioid use disorder, when clinically
16    appropriate, to not fewer than 3,000 individuals in the
17    custody of the Department and shall be implemented in at
18    least one Department facility. The Director may expand the
19    pilot program to include additional facilities and
20    participants as he or she deems appropriate.
21        The Department shall design and operate the pilot
22    program in accordance with established and nationally
23    recognized clinical guidelines, protocols, and standards
24    for the treatment of opioid use disorder using long-acting
25    injectable medications.
26        The pilot program shall be funded using opioid

 

 

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1    settlement funds allocated to the Department. The
2    Department shall not commence implementation of the pilot
3    program unless and until sufficient opioid settlement
4    funds have been secured to fully implement the program and
5    to ensure that individuals participating in the pilot
6    program may receive the full course of treatment
7    clinically indicated.
8        The Department shall ensure that, prior to the release
9    of a person participating in the pilot program, the person
10    is connected to an appropriate provider or treatment site
11    in the geographic region in which the person will reside
12    after release, that an appointment for continued treatment
13    is scheduled with that provider or site, and that relevant
14    medical and treatment information is shared with the
15    receiving provider to support continuity of care.
16        The Department shall contract with an independent
17    research organization, public university, or other
18    qualified third-party evaluator to conduct an independent
19    evaluation of the pilot program. The evaluation shall
20    assess the effectiveness of the pilot program and shall
21    include, at a minimum, analysis of the following metrics
22    for individuals participating in the program:
23            (1) continuity of treatment for opioid use
24        disorder during incarceration and following release;
25            (2) post-release connection to community-based
26        treatment providers;

 

 

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1            (3) rates of overdose, including fatal and
2        nonfatal overdose, following release;
3            (4) rates of re-arrest, re-incarceration, or other
4        recidivism outcomes;
5            (5) participant engagement with treatment and
6        recovery services following release;
7            (6) institutional safety indicators within
8        participating facilities; and
9            (7) the costs and cost-effectiveness of the pilot
10        program.
11        The Department shall provide the evaluator with access
12    to relevant program and administrative data necessary to
13    complete the evaluation, subject to applicable privacy
14    protections. The independent evaluator shall prepare a
15    report summarizing the findings of the evaluation and
16    shall submit the report to the Department and the General
17    Assembly no later than January 1, 2029.
18        (c) To maintain and administer all State correctional
19    institutions and facilities under its control and to
20    establish new ones as needed. Pursuant to its power to
21    establish new institutions and facilities, the Department
22    may, with the written approval of the Governor, authorize
23    the Department of Central Management Services to enter
24    into an agreement of the type described in subsection (d)
25    of Section 405-300 of the Department of Central Management
26    Services Law. The Department shall designate those

 

 

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1    institutions which shall constitute the State Penitentiary
2    System. The Department of Juvenile Justice shall maintain
3    and administer all State youth centers pursuant to
4    subsection (d) of Section 3-2.5-20.
5        Pursuant to its power to establish new institutions
6    and facilities, the Department may authorize the
7    Department of Central Management Services to accept bids
8    from counties and municipalities for the construction,
9    remodeling, or conversion of a structure to be leased to
10    the Department of Corrections for the purposes of its
11    serving as a correctional institution or facility. Such
12    construction, remodeling, or conversion may be financed
13    with revenue bonds issued pursuant to the Industrial
14    Building Revenue Bond Act by the municipality or county.
15    The lease specified in a bid shall be for a term of not
16    less than the time needed to retire any revenue bonds used
17    to finance the project, but not to exceed 40 years. The
18    lease may grant to the State the option to purchase the
19    structure outright.
20        Upon receipt of the bids, the Department may certify
21    one or more of the bids and shall submit any such bids to
22    the General Assembly for approval. Upon approval of a bid
23    by a constitutional majority of both houses of the General
24    Assembly, pursuant to joint resolution, the Department of
25    Central Management Services may enter into an agreement
26    with the county or municipality pursuant to such bid.

 

 

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1        (c-5) To build and maintain regional juvenile
2    detention centers and to charge a per diem to the counties
3    as established by the Department to defray the costs of
4    housing each minor in a center. In this subsection (c-5),
5    "juvenile detention center" means a facility to house
6    minors during pendency of trial who have been transferred
7    from proceedings under the Juvenile Court Act of 1987 to
8    prosecutions under the criminal laws of this State in
9    accordance with Section 5-805 of the Juvenile Court Act of
10    1987, whether the transfer was by operation of law or
11    permissive under that Section. The Department shall
12    designate the counties to be served by each regional
13    juvenile detention center.
14        (d) To develop and maintain programs of control,
15    rehabilitation, and employment of committed persons within
16    its institutions.
17        (d-5) To provide a pre-release job preparation program
18    for inmates at Illinois adult correctional centers.
19        (d-10) To provide educational and visitation
20    opportunities to committed persons within its institutions
21    through temporary access to content-controlled tablets
22    that may be provided as a privilege to committed persons
23    to induce or reward compliance.
24        (e) To establish a system of supervision and guidance
25    of committed persons in the community.
26        (f) To establish in cooperation with the Department of

 

 

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1    Transportation to supply a sufficient number of prisoners
2    for use by the Department of Transportation to clean up
3    the trash and garbage along State, county, township, or
4    municipal highways as designated by the Department of
5    Transportation. The Department of Corrections, at the
6    request of the Department of Transportation, shall furnish
7    such prisoners at least annually for a period to be agreed
8    upon between the Director of Corrections and the Secretary
9    of Transportation. The prisoners used on this program
10    shall be selected by the Director of Corrections on
11    whatever basis he deems proper in consideration of their
12    term, behavior and earned eligibility to participate in
13    such program - where they will be outside of the prison
14    facility but still in the custody of the Department of
15    Corrections. Prisoners convicted of first degree murder,
16    or a Class X felony, or armed violence, or aggravated
17    kidnapping, or criminal sexual assault, aggravated
18    criminal sexual abuse or a subsequent conviction for
19    criminal sexual abuse, or forcible detention, or arson, or
20    a prisoner adjudged a Habitual Criminal shall not be
21    eligible for selection to participate in such program. The
22    prisoners shall remain as prisoners in the custody of the
23    Department of Corrections and such Department shall
24    furnish whatever security is necessary. The Department of
25    Transportation shall furnish trucks and equipment for the
26    highway cleanup program and personnel to supervise and

 

 

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1    direct the program. Neither the Department of Corrections
2    nor the Department of Transportation shall replace any
3    regular employee with a prisoner.
4        (g) To maintain records of persons committed to it and
5    to establish programs of research, statistics, and
6    planning.
7        (h) To investigate the grievances of any person
8    committed to the Department and to inquire into any
9    alleged misconduct by employees or committed persons; and
10    for these purposes it may issue subpoenas and compel the
11    attendance of witnesses and the production of writings and
12    papers, and may examine under oath any witnesses who may
13    appear before it; to also investigate alleged violations
14    of a parolee's or releasee's conditions of parole or
15    release; and for this purpose it may issue subpoenas and
16    compel the attendance of witnesses and the production of
17    documents only if there is reason to believe that such
18    procedures would provide evidence that such violations
19    have occurred.
20        If any person fails to obey a subpoena issued under
21    this subsection, the Director may apply to any circuit
22    court to secure compliance with the subpoena. The failure
23    to comply with the order of the court issued in response
24    thereto shall be punishable as contempt of court.
25        (i) To appoint and remove the chief administrative
26    officers, and administer programs of training and

 

 

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1    development of personnel of the Department. Personnel
2    assigned by the Department to be responsible for the
3    custody and control of committed persons or to investigate
4    the alleged misconduct of committed persons or employees
5    or alleged violations of a parolee's or releasee's
6    conditions of parole shall be conservators of the peace
7    for those purposes, and shall have the full power of peace
8    officers outside of the facilities of the Department in
9    the protection, arrest, retaking, and reconfining of
10    committed persons or where the exercise of such power is
11    necessary to the investigation of such misconduct or
12    violations. This subsection shall not apply to persons
13    committed to the Department of Juvenile Justice under the
14    Juvenile Court Act of 1987 on aftercare release.
15        (j) To cooperate with other departments and agencies
16    and with local communities for the development of
17    standards and programs for better correctional services in
18    this State.
19        (k) To administer all moneys and properties of the
20    Department.
21        (l) To report annually to the Governor on the
22    committed persons, institutions, and programs of the
23    Department.
24        (l-5) (Blank).
25        (m) To make all rules and regulations and exercise all
26    powers and duties vested by law in the Department.

 

 

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1        (n) To establish rules and regulations for
2    administering a system of sentence credits, established in
3    accordance with Section 3-6-3, subject to review by the
4    Prisoner Review Board.
5        (o) To administer the distribution of funds from the
6    State Treasury to reimburse counties where State penal
7    institutions are located for the payment of assistant
8    state's attorneys' salaries under Section 4-2001 of the
9    Counties Code.
10        (p) To exchange information with the Department of
11    Human Services and the Department of Healthcare and Family
12    Services for the purpose of verifying living arrangements
13    and for other purposes directly connected with the
14    administration of this Code and the Illinois Public Aid
15    Code.
16        (q) To establish a diversion program.
17        The program shall provide a structured environment for
18    selected technical parole or mandatory supervised release
19    violators and committed persons who have violated the
20    rules governing their conduct while in work release. This
21    program shall not apply to those persons who have
22    committed a new offense while serving on parole or
23    mandatory supervised release or while committed to work
24    release.
25        Elements of the program shall include, but shall not
26    be limited to, the following:

 

 

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1            (1) The staff of a diversion facility shall
2        provide supervision in accordance with required
3        objectives set by the facility.
4            (2) Participants shall be required to maintain
5        employment.
6            (3) Each participant shall pay for room and board
7        at the facility on a sliding-scale basis according to
8        the participant's income.
9            (4) Each participant shall:
10                (A) provide restitution to victims in
11            accordance with any court order;
12                (B) provide financial support to his
13            dependents; and
14                (C) make appropriate payments toward any other
15            court-ordered obligations.
16            (5) Each participant shall complete community
17        service in addition to employment.
18            (6) Participants shall take part in such
19        counseling, educational, and other programs as the
20        Department may deem appropriate.
21            (7) Participants shall submit to drug and alcohol
22        screening.
23            (8) The Department shall promulgate rules
24        governing the administration of the program.
25        (r) To enter into intergovernmental cooperation
26    agreements under which persons in the custody of the

 

 

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1    Department may participate in a county impact
2    incarceration program established under Section 3-6038 or
3    3-15003.5 of the Counties Code.
4        (r-5) (Blank).
5        (r-10) To systematically and routinely identify with
6    respect to each streetgang active within the correctional
7    system: (1) each active gang; (2) every existing
8    inter-gang affiliation or alliance; and (3) the current
9    leaders in each gang. The Department shall promptly
10    segregate leaders from inmates who belong to their gangs
11    and allied gangs. "Segregate" means no physical contact
12    and, to the extent possible under the conditions and space
13    available at the correctional facility, prohibition of
14    visual and sound communication. For the purposes of this
15    paragraph (r-10), "leaders" means persons who:
16            (i) are members of a criminal streetgang;
17            (ii) with respect to other individuals within the
18        streetgang, occupy a position of organizer,
19        supervisor, or other position of management or
20        leadership; and
21            (iii) are actively and personally engaged in
22        directing, ordering, authorizing, or requesting
23        commission of criminal acts by others, which are
24        punishable as a felony, in furtherance of streetgang
25        related activity both within and outside of the
26        Department of Corrections.

 

 

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1    "Streetgang", "gang", and "streetgang related" have the
2    meanings ascribed to them in Section 10 of the Illinois
3    Streetgang Terrorism Omnibus Prevention Act.
4        (s) To operate a super-maximum security institution,
5    in order to manage and supervise inmates who are
6    disruptive or dangerous and provide for the safety and
7    security of the staff and the other inmates.
8        (t) To monitor any unprivileged conversation or any
9    unprivileged communication, whether in person or by mail,
10    telephone, or other means, between an inmate who, before
11    commitment to the Department, was a member of an organized
12    gang and any other person without the need to show cause or
13    satisfy any other requirement of law before beginning the
14    monitoring, except as constitutionally required. The
15    monitoring may be by video, voice, or other method of
16    recording or by any other means. As used in this
17    subdivision (1)(t), "organized gang" has the meaning
18    ascribed to it in Section 10 of the Illinois Streetgang
19    Terrorism Omnibus Prevention Act.
20        As used in this subdivision (1)(t), "unprivileged
21    conversation" or "unprivileged communication" means a
22    conversation or communication that is not protected by any
23    privilege recognized by law or by decision, rule, or order
24    of the Illinois Supreme Court.
25        (u) To establish a Women's and Children's Pre-release
26    Community Supervision Program for the purpose of providing

 

 

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1    housing and services to eligible female inmates, as
2    determined by the Department, and their newborn and young
3    children.
4        (u-5) To issue an order, whenever a person committed
5    to the Department absconds or absents himself or herself,
6    without authority to do so, from any facility or program
7    to which he or she is assigned. The order shall be
8    certified by the Director, the Supervisor of the
9    Apprehension Unit, or any person duly designated by the
10    Director, with the seal of the Department affixed. The
11    order shall be directed to all sheriffs, coroners, and
12    police officers, or to any particular person named in the
13    order. Any order issued pursuant to this subdivision
14    (1)(u-5) shall be sufficient warrant for the officer or
15    person named in the order to arrest and deliver the
16    committed person to the proper correctional officials and
17    shall be executed the same as criminal process.
18        (u-6) To appoint a point of contact person who shall
19    receive suggestions, complaints, or other requests to the
20    Department from visitors to Department institutions or
21    facilities and from other members of the public.
22        (u-7) To collaborate with the Department of Human
23    Services and other State agencies to develop and implement
24    screening and follow-up protocols for intake and reentry
25    personnel and contractors on identification and response
26    to Department-involved individuals who demonstrate

 

 

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1    indications of past labor or sex trafficking
2    victimization, criminal sexual exploitation or a history
3    of involvement in the sex trade that may put them at risk
4    of human trafficking. Protocols should include assessment
5    and provision of pre-release and post-release housing,
6    legal, medical, mental health and substance-use disorder
7    treatment services and recognize the specialized needs of
8    victims of human trafficking.
9        (u-8) To provide statewide training for Department of
10    Corrections intake and reentry personnel and contractors
11    on identification and response to Department-involved
12    individuals who demonstrate indications of past
13    trafficking victimization or child sexual exploitation
14    that put them at risk of human trafficking.
15        (u-9) To offer access to specialized services for
16    Department-involved individuals within the care that
17    demonstrate indications of past trafficking victimization
18    or child sexual exploitation that put them at risk of
19    trafficking. As used in this subsection, "specialized
20    services" means substance use substance-use disorder,
21    mental health, medical, case-management, housing, and
22    other support services by Department employees or
23    contractors who have completed victim-centered,
24    trauma-informed training specifically designed to address
25    the complex psychological and or physical needs of victims
26    of human trafficking, sexual exploitation, or a history of

 

 

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1    involvement with the sex trade.
2        (v) To do all other acts necessary to carry out the
3    provisions of this Chapter.
4    (2) The Department of Corrections shall by January 1,
51998, consider building and operating a correctional facility
6within 100 miles of a county of over 2,000,000 inhabitants,
7especially a facility designed to house juvenile participants
8in the impact incarceration program.
9    (3) When the Department lets bids for contracts for
10medical services to be provided to persons committed to
11Department facilities by a health maintenance organization,
12medical service corporation, or other health care provider,
13the bid may only be let to a health care provider that has
14obtained an irrevocable letter of credit or performance bond
15issued by a company whose bonds have an investment grade or
16higher rating by a bond rating organization.
17    (3.5) If the Department has a contract with a pharmacy
18benefit manager or a contract with an insurance company,
19health maintenance organization, limited health service
20organization, administrative services organization, or any
21other managed care entity or health insurance issuer where a
22pharmacy benefit manager administers the provider's coverage
23of, payment for, or formulary design for drugs necessary to
24safeguard the minor's life or health, the contract with the
25pharmacy benefit manager and the pharmacy benefit manager's
26activities shall be subject to Article XXXIIB of the Illinois

 

 

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1Insurance Code and the authority of the Director of Insurance
2to enforce those provisions. The provider shall have all the
3rights of a plan sponsor under those provisions.
4    (4) When the Department lets bids for contracts for food
5or commissary services to be provided to Department
6facilities, the bid may only be let to a food or commissary
7services provider that has obtained an irrevocable letter of
8credit or performance bond issued by a company whose bonds
9have an investment grade or higher rating by a bond rating
10organization.
11    (5) On and after the date 6 months after August 16, 2013
12(the effective date of Public Act 98-488), as provided in the
13Executive Order 1 (2012) Implementation Act, all of the
14powers, duties, rights, and responsibilities related to State
15healthcare purchasing under this Code that were transferred
16from the Department of Corrections to the Department of
17Healthcare and Family Services by Executive Order 3 (2005) are
18transferred back to the Department of Corrections; however,
19powers, duties, rights, and responsibilities related to State
20healthcare purchasing under this Code that were exercised by
21the Department of Corrections before the effective date of
22Executive Order 3 (2005) but that pertain to individuals
23resident in facilities operated by the Department of Juvenile
24Justice are transferred to the Department of Juvenile Justice.
25    (6) The Department of Corrections shall provide lactation
26or nursing mothers rooms for personnel of the Department. The

 

 

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1rooms shall be provided in each facility of the Department
2that employs nursing mothers. Each individual lactation room
3must:
4        (i) contain doors that lock;
5        (ii) have an "Occupied" sign for each door;
6        (iii) contain electrical outlets for plugging in
7    breast pumps;
8        (iv) have sufficient lighting and ventilation;
9        (v) contain comfortable chairs;
10        (vi) contain a countertop or table for all necessary
11    supplies for lactation;
12        (vii) contain a wastebasket and chemical cleaners to
13    wash one's hands and to clean the surfaces of the
14    countertop or table;
15        (viii) have a functional sink;
16        (ix) have a minimum of one refrigerator for storage of
17    the breast milk; and
18        (x) receive routine daily maintenance.
19(Source: P.A. 103-834, eff. 1-1-25; 104-27, eff. 1-1-26;
20104-159, eff. 1-1-26; revised 11-21-25.)".