Legislative Action

WHEN the General Assembly adjourned on July 1, many people were surprised. Few would have predicted a finish so close to the self-imposed June 30 deadline after the lengthy fight for speaker of the House, the relative inaction until mid-February, and the record 4600-plus bills introduced during the session.

If the legislature had responded to Gov. Dan Walker's June 11 request by cutting 6 per cent from all general revenue fund appropriations, it would have been impossible for work to have been completed when it was. Instead the General Assembly passed the appropriations bills in the approximate amounts requested by the governor and also passed an impoundment bill introduced by House Majority Leader Gerald Shea (D., Berwyn). This was House Bill 3118. It would have placed 8 per cent of appropriations from general revenues into a contingency fund to be used only if certified by the appropriate state officer and approved by a special legislative sub-committee.

On July 14, the governor vetoed H.B. 3118. He asserted it was unconstitutional and that he was opposed to impoundment. Other early vetoes were exercised on bills that would have taken funds from general revenue through minor forms of tax relief. These included three bills that would have increased inheritance tax exemptions: S.B. 506 (Knuppel — D., Virginia), H. B. 182 (Friedrich — R., Centralia), and H. B. 364 (Londrigan — D., Springfield). Much substantive legislation remains to be acted on in the fall session that opens October 22.

But, a number of significant bills have already passed—in addition to those summarized in August Illinois Issues. S.B. 162 (Rock—D., Chicago) creates a Municipal Financing Agency as a means of aiding local units of government to raise funds. This state agency would issue bonds or notes and use the proceeds to purchase general obligation bonds from local governments and school districts.

Local areas would also be aided by H.B. 396 (Younge—D., East St. Louis, and Catania—R., Chicago) which creates a special authority to aid in the development of depressed areas. S.B. 211 (Davidson—R., Springfield) allows the use of surplus town funds for the road and bridge funds.

Two pieces of legislation which passed the 79th General Assembly seem likely to face early court tests. H.B. 1732 (Meyer—R., Chicago) provides for the loan of secular textbooks to students in nonpublic schools. Opponents question the constitutionality of such a grant under the First Amendment to the federal Constitution. H.B. 1851 amends the abortion law to require the consent of the husband in the case of a married woman seeking an abortion and of parents when the woman is a minor. This raises questions as to what limitations can be placed on guidelines for seeking abortions under the U.S. Supreme Court decision which overrode abortion laws of most of the states including Illinois.

One bill in Gov. Walker's "privacy" package was passed (see July, p. 218). H. B. 1884 (J. M. Houlihan — D., Chicago) deals with the right of students and parents to have access to school student records. It is designed to protect individuals by allowing them, on request, to see their records to insure that incorrect, damaging information is not in the record under the cloak of confidentiality.

Among bills dealing with employment and labor that passed are those that prohibit the use of strikebreakers (S.B. 410; Knuppel—D., Virginia) and prohibit discrimination against mentally or physically handicapped people that is unrelated to their ability to perform specific jobs (H.B. 250; Rayson—D., Tinley Park); and declare that discrimination in employment against an individual who has received an other than honorable (excluding dishonorable) discharge from military service is an "unfair labor practice" (H.B. 345; E.M. Barnes—D., Chicago). Gov. Walker signed H.B. 250 on July 14.

In the area of education, H.B. 534 (G. L. Hoffman—R., Elmhurst) is aimed at allowing school districts to get early credit in the computation of the operating tax rate for increases in local school taxes approved by referendum. Currently, there is a lengthy period from the time of local action until its incorporation in the formula utilized by the state for payments to school districts.

The General Assembly also took action to recognize the possible use of solar energy as a means of heating and cooling homes to help ease the energy crisis. S.B. 1066 (Berning—R., Deerfield) establishes "economic productivity to the owner" as a basis for assessing property equipped with solar heating or cooling systems for property taxes.

H.B. 1103 (Holewinski—D., Chicago), which requires financial institutions to publish specific data, is aimed at stopping the practice known as "redlining," whereby specific neighborhoods are reportedly excluded from mortgages.

Additional authority to aid abused and neglected children is provided in the Abused and Neglected Child Reporting Act (S.B. 525; Rock—D., Chicago). Among its provisions is one that protects—from legal action—an individual who reports a possible abuse case but is mistaken—as long as the report was made in good faith. It also permits doctors to retain custody of children in a medical care facility if there is reason to believe that there would be imminent danger to the children if sent home.

Finally, Illinois will join other states in establishing "911" as a statewide emergency phone number. It will be several years before the bill takes full effect, but H.B. 911 (Katz—D., Glencoe) does establish the framework for administering and enforcing the system's operation.

Other legislation passed by the 79th General Assembly is summarized on pages 280 and 282. / L.S.C. 

September 1975 / Illinois Issues / 279


|Home| |Back to Periodicals Available||Table of Contents| |Back to Illinois Issues 1975|