Rep. Curtis J. Tarver, II

Filed: 3/20/2026

 

 


 

 


 
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1
AMENDMENT TO HOUSE BILL 5424

2    AMENDMENT NO. ______. Amend House Bill 5424 by replacing
3everything after the enacting clause with the following:
 
4    "Section 5. The Comprehensive Housing Planning Act is
5amended by changing Sections 5, 10, 15, and 20 as follows:
 
6    (310 ILCS 110/5)
7    Sec. 5. Definitions. In this Act:
8    "Area median household income" means the median household
9income adjusted for family size for applicable income limit
10areas as determined annually by the U.S. Department of Housing
11and Urban Development under Section 8 of the United States
12Housing Act of 1937. For purposes of analysis and policy
13development, U.S. Census Bureau median household income data
14may also be referenced to ensure comprehensive and regionally
15relevant benchmarks.
16    "Authority" means the Illinois Housing Development

 

 

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1Authority.
2    "Interagency Committee" means the Interagency Committee of
3the State Housing Task Force, which shall consist of the
4following members or their senior staff designees: the
5Executive Director of the Authority; the Secretaries of Human
6Services and Transportation; the Directors of the State
7Departments of Aging, Children and Family Services,
8Corrections, Commerce and Economic Opportunity, Emergency
9Management, Financial and Professional Regulation, Healthcare
10and Family Services, Human Rights, Juvenile Justice, Natural
11Resources, Public Health, and Veterans' Affairs; the Director
12of the Environmental Protection Agency; a representative of
13the Governor's Office; and a representative of the Governor's
14Office of Management and Budget.
15    "State Housing Task Force" or "Task Force" means a task
16force comprised of the following persons or their designees:
17the Executive Director of the Authority; a representative of
18the Governor's Office; a representative of the Lieutenant
19Governor's Office; the Secretaries of Human Services,
20Transportation, and Financial and Professional Regulation; the
21Directors of Aging, Children and Family Services, Corrections,
22Commerce and Economic Opportunity, Emergency Management,
23Healthcare and Family Services, Human Rights, Juvenile
24Justice, Natural Resources, Public Health, and Veterans
25Affairs; the Director of the Environmental Protection Agency;
26and a representative of the Governor's Office of Management

 

 

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1and Budget. and the Interagency Committee. The Governor may
2also invite and appoint the following to the Task Force:
3representatives of the U. S. Departments of Housing and Urban
4Development (HUD) and Agriculture Rural Development; and up to
518 housing experts, with proportional representation from
6urban, suburban, and rural areas throughout the State. The
7Speaker of the Illinois House of Representatives, the
8President of the Illinois Senate, the Minority Leader of the
9Illinois House of Representatives, and the Minority Leader of
10the Illinois Senate may each appoint one representative to the
11Task Force. The Executive Director of the Authority shall
12serve as Chair of the Task Force. The Governor shall appoint a
13housing expert from the non-governmental sector to serve as
14Vice-Chair.
15(Source: P.A. 99-564, eff. 7-15-16.)
 
16    (310 ILCS 110/10)
17    Sec. 10. Purpose. In order to maintain the economic health
18of its communities, the State must have a comprehensive and
19unified policy for the allocation of resources for affordable
20housing and supportive services for historically underserved
21populations throughout the State. Executive Order 2003-18
22shall be codified into this Act. The purposes of this Act are
23to accomplish the following:
24        (1) address the need to make available quality housing
25    at a variety of price points in communities throughout the

 

 

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1    State;
2        (2) overcome the shortage of affordable housing, which
3    threatens the viability of many communities and has
4    significant social costs, such as homelessness,
5    concentration of poverty, and unnecessary
6    institutionalization;
7        (3) meet the need for safe, sanitary, and accessible
8    affordable and community-based housing and supportive
9    services for elderly persons and people with disabilities
10    and other populations with special needs;
11        (4) promote a full range of quality housing choices
12    near job opportunities, transit options, and related
13    amenities;
14        (5) meet the needs of constituencies that have been
15    historically underserved and segregated due to barriers
16    and trends in the existing housing market or insufficient
17    resources;
18        (6) facilitate the preservation of ownership of
19    existing homes and rental housing in communities;
20        (7) create new housing opportunities and, where
21    appropriate, promote mixed-income communities;
22        (7.5) maximize federal funding opportunities for
23    affordable housing or the services people need to maintain
24    their housing with required State funding, such as,
25    without limitation, for federal Continuum of Care networks
26    and HOME Investment Partnerships Program project sponsors;

 

 

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1    and
2        (8) encourage development of State incentives for
3    communities to create a mix of housing to meet the needs of
4    current and future residents; .
5        (9) facilitate public-private partnerships in
6    affordable housing using the Comprehensive Housing Plan
7    and Progress Report as tools to elevate the visibility of
8    comprehensive, affordable housing resources and services
9    to non-governmental sectors;
10        (10) encourage sustainable and environmentally
11    resilient affordable housing programming and practices;
12        (11) promote principles of diversity, equity, and
13    inclusion in affordable housing development and the built
14    environment;
15        (12) create housing to avoid displacement of existing
16    residents in areas with rapidly escalating housing costs;
17        (13) promote housing investment in communities with
18    vacant and abandoned properties; and
19        (14) support innovative models of homeownership,
20    including, but not limited to, community land trusts and
21    other shared equity models.
22(Source: P.A. 99-564, eff. 7-15-16.)
 
23    (310 ILCS 110/15)
24    Sec. 15. Annual Comprehensive Housing Plan.
25    (a) During the period from the effective date of this Act

 

 

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1through July 1, 2038 December 31, 2026, the State of Illinois
2shall prepare and be guided by a 3-year an annual
3comprehensive housing plan ("Annual Comprehensive Housing
4Plan"), which may be amended by the Task Force on an annual
5basis, that is consistent with the affirmative fair housing
6provisions of the Illinois Human Rights Act and specifically
7addresses the following priority underserved populations:
8        (1) very low-income households, individuals, and older
9    adults earning below 50% of the area median household
10    income, with particular emphasis on households earning
11    below 30% of the area median household income;
12        (2) low-income households, individuals, and older
13    adults in need of permanent supportive housing senior
14    citizens;
15        (3) low-income households, individuals, and older
16    adults with a population-specific need, including, but not
17    limited to, justice-involved individuals; persons
18    experiencing homelessness; persons with a any form of
19    disability, including persons with a , but not limited to,
20    physical disability, a developmental disability, an
21    intellectual disability, a mental illness, a co-occurring
22    mental health condition illness and substance abuse
23    disorder, or and HIV/AIDS; survivors of gender-based
24    violence; unnecessarily institutionalized persons;
25    veterans; and youth, including those aging out of the
26    foster care system; and

 

 

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1        (4) any other high need population, as determined by
2    the Task Force, to be defined in the Comprehensive Housing
3    Plan, and revisited each planning cycle, as needed.
4    homeless persons and persons determined to be at risk of
5    homelessness;
6    For the purposes of this Section, "homelessness" shall be
7aligned with definitions guiding current statewide initiatives
8aimed at serving this population.
9        (5) low-income and moderate-income persons unable to
10    afford housing that has access to work opportunities or
11    transportation options;
12        (6) low-income persons residing in communities with
13    existing affordable housing that is in danger of becoming
14    unaffordable or being lost;
15        (7) low-income people residing in communities with
16    ongoing community revitalization efforts; and
17        (8) other special needs populations, including people
18    with criminal records and veterans experiencing or at risk
19    of homelessness.
20    (a-5) The Comprehensive Housing Plan shall reflect the
21State's commitment to an affordable housing approach for
22priority populations that promotes access to opportunity and
23resources for low-income households through the following
24priority initiatives:
25        (1) Affordable housing programs or investments that
26    enable individuals to have access to employment, including

 

 

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1    housing programs that incentivize employer partnerships or
2    contributions in affordable housing; reserves a share of
3    units for employees of local companies or employers; is a
4    public-private partnership with an area employer; or
5    incentivizes housing investment proximate to fixed route
6    transit, such as rail or bus service.
7        (2) Preservation of existing affordable housing,
8    including rental and owner-occupied units, which includes
9    any program or investment in Illinois' existing housing
10    such as, repair or rehabilitation programs; accessibility
11    programs; weatherization or energy upgrade programs; or
12    other homeowner assistance programs.
13        (3) Planning and development initiatives in
14    communities with unmet housing needs, including
15    communities with low concentrations of affordable housing
16    and communities in need of revitalization and investment.
17    This may be accomplished through technical assistance,
18    physical planning, or capacity building programs that
19    address a pre-existing community need.
20        (4) Any other high need initiative, as determined by
21    the Task Force, to be defined in the Comprehensive Housing
22    Plan, and revisited each planning cycle, as needed.
23    (b) The Annual Comprehensive Housing Plan shall include,
24but need not be limited to, the following:
25        (1) The identification of all funding sources for
26    which the State has administrative control that are

 

 

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1    available for housing construction, rehabilitation,
2    preservation, operating or rental subsidies, and
3    supportive services.
4        (2) Goals for the number, affordability for different
5    income levels, and types of housing units to be
6    constructed, preserved, or rehabilitated each year for the
7    priority underserved populations identified in subsection
8    (a) of Section 15, based on available housing resources.
9        (3) Funding recommendations for types of programs for
10    housing construction, preservation, rehabilitation, and
11    supportive services, where necessary, related to the
12    priority underserved populations identified in subsection
13    (a) and the priority initiatives identified in subsection
14    (a-5) of Section 15, based on the Annual Comprehensive
15    Housing Plan.
16        (4) Specific actions needed to ensure the coordination
17    of State government resources that can be used to build or
18    preserve affordable housing, provide services to accompany
19    the creation of affordable housing, and prevent
20    homelessness.
21        (5) Recommended State actions that promote the
22    construction, preservation, and rehabilitation of
23    affordable housing by private-sector, not-for-profit, and
24    government entities and address those practices that
25    impede such promotion.
26        (6) Specific suggestions for incentives for counties

 

 

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1    and municipalities to develop and implement local
2    comprehensive housing plans that would encourage a mix of
3    housing to meet the needs of current and future residents.
4        (7) Identification of options that counties,
5    municipalities, and other local jurisdictions, including
6    public housing authorities, can take to construct,
7    rehabilitate, or preserve housing in their own communities
8    for the priority underserved populations identified in
9    Section 10 of this Act.
10    (c) The Task Force Interagency Committee, with staff
11support and coordination assistance from the Authority, shall
12develop the Annual Comprehensive Housing Plan. Beginning July
131, 2028, the The State Housing Task Force shall provide advice
14and guidance to the Interagency Committee in developing the
15Plan. The Interagency Committee shall deliver the Annual
16Comprehensive Housing Plan to the Governor and the General
17Assembly by July January 15 of each year or the first business
18day thereafter, and every 3 years thereafter. The Authority,
19on behalf of the Task Force Interagency Committee, shall
20prepare a an Annual Progress Report by January 30 of each April
211 of the following year to the Governor and the General
22Assembly, reporting on the activities of the prior fiscal
23year. on the progress made toward achieving the projected
24goals, as defined in paragraph (2) of subsection (b), of the
25Annual Comprehensive Housing Plan during the previous calendar
26year. These reports shall include estimates of revenues,

 

 

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1expenditures, obligations, bond allocations, and fund balances
2for all programs or funds addressed in the Annual
3Comprehensive Housing Plan.
4    (d) The Authority shall provide staffing to the
5Interagency Committee and the Task Force. It shall also
6provide the staff support needed to help coordinate the
7implementation of the Annual Comprehensive Housing Plan during
8the course of the year. The Authority shall be eligible for
9reimbursement of up to $300,000 per year for such staff
10support costs from a designated funding source, if available,
11or from the Illinois Affordable Housing Trust Fund.
12(Source: P.A. 99-564, eff. 7-15-16.)
 
13    (310 ILCS 110/20)
14    Sec. 20. State Housing Task Force.
15    (a) The State Housing Task Force shall:
16        (1) (Blank).
17        (1.5) Adopt a mission statement no later than June 30,
18    2027. The mission statement may be updated during each
19    Comprehensive Housing Plan 3-year cycle, as needed.
20        (2) Create necessary subcommittees and appoint
21    subcommittee members and outside experts, with the advice
22    of the Task Force and the Interagency Committee.
23        (3) Ensure adequate public input into the Annual
24    Comprehensive Housing Plan.
25        (4) Involve, to the extent possible, appropriate

 

 

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1    representatives of the federal government, local
2    governments and municipalities, public housing
3    authorities, local continuum-of-care, for-profit, and
4    not-for-profit developers, supportive housing providers,
5    business, labor, lenders, advocates for the priority
6    underserved populations named in this Act, and fair
7    housing agencies.
8        (4.5) Be responsible for providing the information
9    needed to develop the Comprehensive Housing Plan as well
10    as the Progress Report.
11        (5) Develop the Have input into the development of the
12    Annual Comprehensive Housing Plan and the Annual Progress
13    Report prepared by the Authority.
14        (6) Oversee the implementation of the Comprehensive
15    Housing Plan by coordinating, streamlining, and
16    prioritizing the allocation of available production,
17    rehabilitation, preservation, financial, and service
18    resources.
19        (7) Vote on research questions and affordable housing
20    topics, which shall serve as a framework for meetings and
21    activities, and on definitions to ensure they are aligned
22    with State initiatives.
23        (8) Contribute to public engagement activities, as
24    necessary, in support of the Housing Task Force's mission.
25    (b) Task Force members who are housing experts shall be
26limited to 2 terms of 4 years. A housing expert may serve a

 

 

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1third 4-year term following a break of at least 4 years.
2    (c) Task Force members who are housing experts shall:
3        (1) provide research, as needed, on topics to advance
4    affordable housing statewide;
5        (2) share and present expertise and research relevant
6    to discussions, as needed; and
7        (3) staff specialized workgroups, as needed.
8(Source: P.A. 99-564, eff. 7-15-16.)
 
9    (310 ILCS 110/25 rep.)
10    Section 10. The Comprehensive Housing Planning Act is
11amended by repealing Section 25.".