State Codes and Statutes

Statutes > Illinois > Chapter210 > 1217

    (210 ILCS 9/1)
    Sec. 1. Short title. This Act may be cited as the Assisted Living and Shared Housing Act.
(Source: P.A. 91‑656, eff. 1‑1‑01.)

    (210 ILCS 9/5)
    Sec. 5. Legislative purpose. The purpose of this Act is to permit the development and availability of assisted living establishments and shared housing establishments based on a social model that promotes the dignity, individuality, privacy, independence, autonomy, and decision‑making ability and the right to negotiated risk of those persons; to provide for the health, safety, and welfare of those residents residing in assisted living and shared housing establishments in this State; to promote continuous quality improvement in assisted living; and to encourage the development of innovative and affordable assisted living establishments and shared housing with service establishments for elderly persons of all income levels. It is the public policy of this State that assisted living is an important part of the continuum of long term care. In support of the goal of aging in place within the parameters established by this Act, assisted living and shared housing establishments shall be operated as residential environments with supportive services designed to meet the individual resident's changing needs and preferences. The residential environment shall be designed to encourage family and community involvement. The services available to residents, either directly or through contracts or agreements, are intended to help residents remain as independent as possible. Assisted living, which promotes resident choice, autonomy, and decision making, should be based on a contract model designed to result in a negotiated agreement between the resident or the resident's representative and the provider, clearly identifying the services to be provided. This model assumes that residents are able to direct services provided for them and will designate a representative to direct these services if they themselves are unable to do so. This model supports the principle that there is an acceptable balance between consumer protection and resident willingness to accept risk and that most consumers are competent to make their own judgments about the services they are obtaining. Regulation of assisted living establishments and shared housing establishments must be sufficiently flexible to allow residents to age in place within the parameters of this Act. The administration of this Act and services provided must therefore ensure that the residents have the rights and responsibilities to direct the scope of services they receive and to make individual choices based on their needs and preferences. These establishments shall be operated in a manner that provides the least restrictive and most homelike environment and that promotes independence, autonomy, individuality, privacy, dignity, and the right to negotiated risk in residential surroundings. It is not the intent of the State that establishments licensed under this Act be used as halfway houses for alcohol and substance abusers.
(Source: P.A. 91‑656, eff. 1‑1‑01.)

    (210 ILCS 9/10)
    Sec. 10. Definitions. For purposes of this Act:
    "Activities of daily living" means eating, dressing, bathing, toileting, transferring, or personal hygiene.
    "Assisted living establishment" or "establishment" means a home, building, residence, or any other place where sleeping accommodations are provided for at least 3 unrelated adults, at least 80% of whom are 55 years of age or older and where the following are provided consistent with the purposes of this Act:
        (1) services consistent with a social model that is
    based on the premise that the resident's unit in assisted living and shared housing is his or her own home;
        (2) community‑based residential care for persons who
    need assistance with activities of daily living, including personal, supportive, and intermittent health‑related services available 24 hours per day, if needed, to meet the scheduled and unscheduled needs of a resident;
        (3) mandatory services, whether provided directly by
    the establishment or by another entity arranged for by the establishment, with the consent of the resident or resident's representative; and
        (4) a physical environment that is a homelike setting
    that includes the following and such other elements as established by the Department: individual living units each of which shall accommodate small kitchen appliances and contain private bathing, washing, and toilet facilities, or private washing and toilet facilities with a common bathing room readily accessible to each resident. Units shall be maintained for single occupancy except in cases in which 2 residents choose to share a unit. Sufficient common space shall exist to permit individual and group activities.
    "Assisted living establishment" or "establishment" does not mean any of the following:
        (1) A home, institution, or similar place operated
     by the federal government or the State of Illinois.
        (2) A long term care facility licensed under the
    Nursing Home Care Act or a facility licensed under the MR/DD Community Care Act. However, a facility licensed under either of those Acts may convert distinct parts of the facility to assisted living. If the facility elects to do so, the facility shall retain the Certificate of Need for its nursing and sheltered care beds that were converted.
        (3) A hospital, sanitarium, or other institution, the
    principal activity or business of which is the diagnosis, care, and treatment of human illness and that is required to be licensed under the Hospital Licensing Act.
        (4) A facility for child care as defined in the Child
    Care Act of 1969.
        (5) A community living facility as defined in the
    Community Living Facilities Licensing Act.
        (6) A nursing home or sanitarium operated solely by
    and for persons who rely exclusively upon treatment by spiritual means through prayer in accordance with the creed or tenants of a well‑recognized church or religious denomination.
        (7) A facility licensed by the Department of Human
    Services as a community‑integrated living arrangement as defined in the Community‑Integrated Living Arrangements Licensure and Certification Act.
        (8) A supportive residence licensed under the
    Supportive Residences Licensing Act.
        (9) The portion of a life care facility as defined in
    the Life Care Facilities Act not licensed as an assisted living establishment under this Act; a life care facility may apply under this Act to convert sections of the community to assisted living.
        (10) A free‑standing hospice facility licensed under
    the Hospice Program Licensing Act.
        (11) A shared housing establishment.
        (12) A supportive living facility as described in
    Section 5‑5.01a of the Illinois Public Aid Code.
    "Department" means the Department of Public Health.
    "Director" means the Director of Public Health.
    "Emergency situation" means imminent danger of death or serious physical harm to a resident of an establishment.
    "License" means any of the following types of licenses issued to an applicant or licensee by the Department:
        (1) "Probationary license" means a license issued to
    an applicant or licensee that has not held a license under this Act prior to its application or pursuant to a license transfer in accordance with Section 50 of this Act.
        (2) "Regular license" means a license issued by the
    Department to an applicant or licensee that is in substantial compliance with this Act and any rules promulgated under this Act.
    "Licensee" means a person, agency, association, corporation, partnership, or organization that has been issued a license to operate an assisted living or shared housing establishment.
    "Licensed health care professional" means a registered professional nurse, an advanced practice nurse, a physician assistant, and a licensed practical nurse.
    "Mandatory services" include the following:
        (1) 3 meals per day available to the residents
    prepared by the establishment or an outside contractor;
        (2) housekeeping services including, but not limited
    to, vacuuming, dusting, and cleaning the resident's unit;
        (3) personal laundry and linen services available to
    the residents provided or arranged for by the establishment;
        (4) security provided 24 hours each day including,
    but not limited to, locked entrances or building or contract security personnel;
        (5) an emergency communication response system, which
    is a procedure in place 24 hours each day by which a resident can notify building management, an emergency response vendor, or others able to respond to his or her need for assistance; and
        (6) assistance with activities of daily living as
    required by each resident.
    "Negotiated risk" is the process by which a resident, or his or her representative, may formally negotiate with providers what risks each are willing and unwilling to assume in service provision and the resident's living environment. The provider assures that the resident and the resident's representative, if any, are informed of the risks of these decisions and of the potential consequences of assuming these risks.
    "Owner" means the individual, partnership, corporation, association, or other person who owns an assisted living or shared housing establishment. In the event an assisted living or shared housing establishment is operated by a person who leases or manages the physical plant, which is owned by another person, "owner" means the person who operates the assisted living or shared housing establishment, except that if the person who owns the physical plant is an affiliate of the person who operates the assisted living or shared housing establishment and has significant control over the day to day operations of the assisted living or shared housing establishment, the person who owns the physical plant shall incur jointly and severally with the owner all liabilities imposed on an owner under this Act.
    "Physician" means a person licensed under the Medical Practice Act of 1987 to practice medicine in all of its branches.
    "Resident" means a person residing in an assisted living or shared housing establishment.
    "Resident's representative" means a person, other than the owner, agent, or employee of an establishment or of the health care provider unless related to the resident, designated in writing by a resident to be his or her representative. This designation may be accomplished through the Illinois Power of Attorney Act, pursuant to the guardianship process under the Probate Act of 1975, or pursuant to an executed designation of representative form specified by the Department.
    "Self" means the individual or the individual's designated representative.
    "Shared housing establishment" or "establishment" means a publicly or privately operated free‑standing residence for 16 or fewer persons, at least 80% of whom are 55 years of age or older and who are unrelated to the owners and one manager of the residence, where the following are provided:
        (1) services consistent with a social model that is
    based on the premise that the resident's unit is his or her own home;
        (2) community‑based residential care for persons who
    need assistance with activities of daily living, including housing and personal, supportive, and intermittent health‑related services available 24 hours per day, if needed, to meet the scheduled and unscheduled needs of a resident; and
        (3) mandatory services, whether provided directly by
    the establishment or by another entity arranged for by the establishment, with the consent of the resident or the resident's representative.
    "Shared housing establishment" or "establishment" does not mean any of the following:
        (1) A home, institution, or similar place operated by
    the federal government or the State of Illinois.
        (2) A long term care facility licensed under the
    Nursing Home Care Act or a facility licensed under the MR/DD Community Care Act. A facility licensed under either of those Acts may, however, convert sections of the facility to assisted living. If the facility elects to do so, the facility shall retain the Certificate of Need for its nursing beds that were converted.
        (3) A hospital, sanitarium, or other institution, the
    principal activity or business of which is the diagnosis, care, and treatment of human illness and that is required to be licensed under the Hospital Licensing Act.
        (4) A facility for child care as defined in the Child
    Care Act of 1969.
        (5) A community living facility as defined in the
    Community Living Facilities Licensing Act.
        (6) A nursing home or sanitarium operated solely by
    and for persons who rely exclusively upon treatment by spiritual means through prayer in accordance with the creed or tenants of a well‑recognized church or religious denomination.
        (7) A facility licensed by the Department of Human
    Services as a community‑integrated living arrangement as defined in the Community‑Integrated Living Arrangements Licensure and Certification Act.
        (8) A supportive residence licensed under the
    Supportive Residences Licensing Act.
        (9) A life care facility as defined in the Life Care
    Facilities Act; a life care facility may apply under this Act to convert sections of the community to assisted living.
        (10) A free‑standing hospice facility licensed under
    the Hospice Program Licensing Act.
        (11) An assisted living establishment.
        (12) A supportive living facility as described in
    Section 5‑5.01a of the Illinois Public Aid Code.
    "Total assistance" means that staff or another individual performs the entire activity of daily living without participation by the resident.
(Source: P.A. 95‑216, eff. 8‑16‑07; 96‑339, eff. 7‑1‑10; 96‑975, eff. 7‑2‑10.)

    (210 ILCS 9/15)
    Sec. 15. Assessment and service plan requirements. Prior to admission to any establishment covered by this Act, a comprehensive assessment that includes an evaluation of the prospective resident's physical, cognitive, and psychosocial condition shall be completed. At least annually, a comprehensive assessment shall be completed, and upon identification of a significant change in the resident's condition, the resident shall be reassessed. The Department may by rule specify circumstances under which more frequent assessments of skin integrity and nutritional status shall be required. The comprehensive assessment shall be completed by a physician. Based on the assessment, a written service plan shall be developed and mutually agreed upon by the provider and the resident. The service plan, which shall be reviewed annually, or more often as the resident's condition, preferences, or service needs change, shall serve as a basis for the service delivery contract between the provider and the resident. Based on the assessment, the service plan may provide for the disconnection or removal of any appliance.
(Source: P.A. 91‑656, eff. 1‑1‑01.)

    (210 ILCS 9/20)
    Sec. 20. Construction and operating standards. The Department shall prescribe minimum standards for establishments. These standards shall include:
        (1) the location and construction of the
    establishment, including plumbing, heating, lighting, ventilation, and other physical conditions which shall ensure the health, safety, and comfort of residents and their protection from fire hazards; these standards shall include, at a minimum, compliance with the residential board and care occupancies chapter of the National Fire Protection Association's Life Safety Code, local and State building codes for the building type, and accessibility standards of the Americans with Disabilities Act;
        (2) the number and qualifications of all personnel
    having responsibility for any part of the services provided for residents;
        (3) all sanitary conditions within the establishment
    and its surroundings, including water supply, sewage disposal, food handling, infection control, and general hygiene, which shall ensure the health and comfort of residents;
        (4) a program for adequate maintenance of physical
    plant and equipment;
        (5) adequate accommodations, staff, and services for
    the number and types of residents for whom the establishment is licensed;
        (6) the development of evacuation and other
    appropriate safety plans for use during weather, health, fire, physical plant, environmental, and national defense emergencies; and
        (7) the maintenance of minimum financial and other
    resources necessary to meet the standards established under this Section and to operate the establishment in accordance with this Act.
(Source: P.A. 96‑975, eff. 7‑2‑10.)

    (210 ILCS 9/25)
    Sec. 25. License requirement. No person may establish, operate, maintain, or offer an establishment as an assisted living establishment or shared housing establishment as defined by the Act within this State unless and until he or she obtains a valid license, which remains unsuspended, unrevoked, and unexpired. No public official, agent, or employee may place any person in, or recommend that any person be placed in, or directly or indirectly cause any person to be placed in any establishment that meets the definition under this Act that is being operated without a valid license. No public official, agent, or employee may place the name of an unlicensed establishment that is required to be licensed under this Act on a list of programs. An entity that operates as an assisted living or shared housing establishment as defined by this Act without a license shall be subject to the provisions, including penalties, of the Nursing Home Care Act. No entity shall use in its name or advertise "assisted living" unless licensed as an assisted living establishment under this Act or as a shelter care facility under the Nursing Home Care Act that also meets the definition of an assisted living establishment under this Act, except a shared housing establishment licensed under this Act may advertise assisted living services.
(Source: P.A. 93‑141, eff. 7‑10‑03.)

    (210 ILCS 9/30)
    Sec. 30. Licensing.
    (a) The Department shall establish by rule forms, procedures, and fees for the annual licensing of assisted living and shared housing establishments; shall establish and enforce sanctions and penalties for operating in violation of this Act, as provided in Section 135 of this Act and rules adopted under Section 110 of this Act. The Department shall conduct an annual on‑site review for each establishment covered by this Act, which shall include, but not be limited to, compliance with this Act and rules adopted hereunder, focus on solving resident issues and concerns, and the quality improvement process implemented by the establishment to address resident issues. The quality improvement process implemented by the establishment must benchmark performance, be customer centered, be data driven, and focus on resident satisfaction.
    (b) An establishment shall provide the following information to the Department to be considered for licensure:
        (1) the business name, street address, mailing
    address, and telephone number of the establishment;
        (2) the name and mailing address of the owner or
     owners of the establishment and if the owner or owners are not natural persons, identification of the type of business entity of the owners, and the names and addresses of the officers and members of the governing body, or comparable persons for partnerships, limited liability companies, or other types of business organizations;
        (3) financial information, content and form to be
    determined by rules which may provide different standards for assisted living establishments and shared housing establishments, establishing that the project is financially feasible;
        (4) the name and mailing address of the managing
    agent of the establishment, whether hired under a management agreement or lease agreement, if different from the owner or owners, and the name of the full‑time director;
        (5) verification that the establishment has entered
    or will enter into a service delivery contract as provided in Section 90, as required under this Act, with each resident or resident's representative;
        (6) the name and address of at least one natural
     person who shall be responsible for dealing with the Department on all matters provided for in this Act, on whom personal service of all notices and orders shall be made, and who shall be authorized to accept service on behalf of the owner or owners and the managing agent. Notwithstanding a contrary provision of the Code of Civil Procedure, personal service on the person identified pursuant to this subsection shall be considered service on the owner or owners and the managing agent, and it shall not be a defense to any action that personal service was not made on each individual or entity;
        (7) the signature of the authorized representative of
    the owner or owners;
        (8) proof of an ongoing quality improvement program
    in accordance with rules adopted by the Department;
        (9) information about the number and types of units,
    the maximum census, and the services to be provided at the establishment, proof of compliance with applicable State and local residential standards, and a copy of the standard contract offered to residents;
        (10) documentation of adequate liability insurance;
    and
        (11) other information necessary to determine the
    identity and qualifications of an applicant or licensee to operate an establishment in accordance with this Act as required by the Department by rule.
    (c) The information in the statement of ownership shall be public information and shall be available from the Department.
(Source: P.A. 96‑975, eff. 7‑2‑10.)

    (210 ILCS 9/32)
    Sec. 32. Floating license. An establishment (i) in which 80% of the residents are at least 55 years of age or older, (ii) that is operated as housing for the elderly, and (iii) that meets the construction and operating standards contained in Section 20 of this Act may request a floating license for any number of individual living units within the establishment up to, but not including, total capacity. An establishment requesting a floating license must specify the number of individual living units within the establishment to be licensed. Living units designated by the establishment as a licensed living unit shall, for the purposes of this Section, be referred to as a licensed living unit. An establishment utilizing a floating license must have staff adequate to meet the scheduled and unscheduled needs of the residents residing in licensed living units within the establishment. All staff providing services to licensed living units must meet the requirements of this Act and its rules. A living unit may only be designated as a licensed unit if the living unit and the living unit's resident meet the requirements of this Act and its rules. All mandatory services must be made available to residents of licensed living units, and residents of licensed living units may receive any optional services permitted under the establishment's license. Establishments may only provide services under this Act in the individual living units designated as licensed units. Designation as a licensed unit may be temporary to accommodate a resident's changing needs without requiring the resident to move.
    An establishment with a floating license must keep a current written list of those units designated under the floating license. If a resident elects to receive services in a unit that is not licensed and the unit qualifies for licensure, the establishment must notify the resident that the unit must be licensed and the requirements of this Act must be met before services can be provided to residents in that unit. Upon the initiation of an initial licensing inspection, annual inspection, or complaint investigation, the establishment shall provide to the Department a list of the units designated under the floating license in which residents are receiving services subject to this Act.
(Source: P.A. 93‑141, eff. 7‑10‑03.)

    (210 ILCS 9/35)
    Sec. 35. Issuance of license.
    (a) Upon receipt and review of an application for a license and review of the applicant establishment, the Director may issue a license if he or she finds:
        (1) that the individual applicant, or the
    corporation, partnership, or other entity if the applicant is not an individual, is a person responsible and suitable to operate or to direct or participate in the operation of an establishment by virtue of financial capacity, appropriate business or professional experience, a record of lawful compliance with lawful orders of the Department and lack of revocation of a license issued under this Act, the Nursing Home Care Act, or the MR/DD Community Care Act during the previous 5 years;
        (2) that the establishment is under the supervision
    of a full‑time director who is at least 21 years of age and has a high school diploma or equivalent plus either:
            (A) 2 years of management experience or 2 years
        of experience in positions of progressive responsibility in health care, housing with services, or adult day care or providing similar services to the elderly; or
            (B) 2 years of management experience or 2 years
        of experience in positions of progressive responsibility in hospitality and training in health care and housing with services management as defined by rule;
        (3) that the establishment has staff sufficient in

State Codes and Statutes

Statutes > Illinois > Chapter210 > 1217

    (210 ILCS 9/1)
    Sec. 1. Short title. This Act may be cited as the Assisted Living and Shared Housing Act.
(Source: P.A. 91‑656, eff. 1‑1‑01.)

    (210 ILCS 9/5)
    Sec. 5. Legislative purpose. The purpose of this Act is to permit the development and availability of assisted living establishments and shared housing establishments based on a social model that promotes the dignity, individuality, privacy, independence, autonomy, and decision‑making ability and the right to negotiated risk of those persons; to provide for the health, safety, and welfare of those residents residing in assisted living and shared housing establishments in this State; to promote continuous quality improvement in assisted living; and to encourage the development of innovative and affordable assisted living establishments and shared housing with service establishments for elderly persons of all income levels. It is the public policy of this State that assisted living is an important part of the continuum of long term care. In support of the goal of aging in place within the parameters established by this Act, assisted living and shared housing establishments shall be operated as residential environments with supportive services designed to meet the individual resident's changing needs and preferences. The residential environment shall be designed to encourage family and community involvement. The services available to residents, either directly or through contracts or agreements, are intended to help residents remain as independent as possible. Assisted living, which promotes resident choice, autonomy, and decision making, should be based on a contract model designed to result in a negotiated agreement between the resident or the resident's representative and the provider, clearly identifying the services to be provided. This model assumes that residents are able to direct services provided for them and will designate a representative to direct these services if they themselves are unable to do so. This model supports the principle that there is an acceptable balance between consumer protection and resident willingness to accept risk and that most consumers are competent to make their own judgments about the services they are obtaining. Regulation of assisted living establishments and shared housing establishments must be sufficiently flexible to allow residents to age in place within the parameters of this Act. The administration of this Act and services provided must therefore ensure that the residents have the rights and responsibilities to direct the scope of services they receive and to make individual choices based on their needs and preferences. These establishments shall be operated in a manner that provides the least restrictive and most homelike environment and that promotes independence, autonomy, individuality, privacy, dignity, and the right to negotiated risk in residential surroundings. It is not the intent of the State that establishments licensed under this Act be used as halfway houses for alcohol and substance abusers.
(Source: P.A. 91‑656, eff. 1‑1‑01.)

    (210 ILCS 9/10)
    Sec. 10. Definitions. For purposes of this Act:
    "Activities of daily living" means eating, dressing, bathing, toileting, transferring, or personal hygiene.
    "Assisted living establishment" or "establishment" means a home, building, residence, or any other place where sleeping accommodations are provided for at least 3 unrelated adults, at least 80% of whom are 55 years of age or older and where the following are provided consistent with the purposes of this Act:
        (1) services consistent with a social model that is
    based on the premise that the resident's unit in assisted living and shared housing is his or her own home;
        (2) community‑based residential care for persons who
    need assistance with activities of daily living, including personal, supportive, and intermittent health‑related services available 24 hours per day, if needed, to meet the scheduled and unscheduled needs of a resident;
        (3) mandatory services, whether provided directly by
    the establishment or by another entity arranged for by the establishment, with the consent of the resident or resident's representative; and
        (4) a physical environment that is a homelike setting
    that includes the following and such other elements as established by the Department: individual living units each of which shall accommodate small kitchen appliances and contain private bathing, washing, and toilet facilities, or private washing and toilet facilities with a common bathing room readily accessible to each resident. Units shall be maintained for single occupancy except in cases in which 2 residents choose to share a unit. Sufficient common space shall exist to permit individual and group activities.
    "Assisted living establishment" or "establishment" does not mean any of the following:
        (1) A home, institution, or similar place operated
     by the federal government or the State of Illinois.
        (2) A long term care facility licensed under the
    Nursing Home Care Act or a facility licensed under the MR/DD Community Care Act. However, a facility licensed under either of those Acts may convert distinct parts of the facility to assisted living. If the facility elects to do so, the facility shall retain the Certificate of Need for its nursing and sheltered care beds that were converted.
        (3) A hospital, sanitarium, or other institution, the
    principal activity or business of which is the diagnosis, care, and treatment of human illness and that is required to be licensed under the Hospital Licensing Act.
        (4) A facility for child care as defined in the Child
    Care Act of 1969.
        (5) A community living facility as defined in the
    Community Living Facilities Licensing Act.
        (6) A nursing home or sanitarium operated solely by
    and for persons who rely exclusively upon treatment by spiritual means through prayer in accordance with the creed or tenants of a well‑recognized church or religious denomination.
        (7) A facility licensed by the Department of Human
    Services as a community‑integrated living arrangement as defined in the Community‑Integrated Living Arrangements Licensure and Certification Act.
        (8) A supportive residence licensed under the
    Supportive Residences Licensing Act.
        (9) The portion of a life care facility as defined in
    the Life Care Facilities Act not licensed as an assisted living establishment under this Act; a life care facility may apply under this Act to convert sections of the community to assisted living.
        (10) A free‑standing hospice facility licensed under
    the Hospice Program Licensing Act.
        (11) A shared housing establishment.
        (12) A supportive living facility as described in
    Section 5‑5.01a of the Illinois Public Aid Code.
    "Department" means the Department of Public Health.
    "Director" means the Director of Public Health.
    "Emergency situation" means imminent danger of death or serious physical harm to a resident of an establishment.
    "License" means any of the following types of licenses issued to an applicant or licensee by the Department:
        (1) "Probationary license" means a license issued to
    an applicant or licensee that has not held a license under this Act prior to its application or pursuant to a license transfer in accordance with Section 50 of this Act.
        (2) "Regular license" means a license issued by the
    Department to an applicant or licensee that is in substantial compliance with this Act and any rules promulgated under this Act.
    "Licensee" means a person, agency, association, corporation, partnership, or organization that has been issued a license to operate an assisted living or shared housing establishment.
    "Licensed health care professional" means a registered professional nurse, an advanced practice nurse, a physician assistant, and a licensed practical nurse.
    "Mandatory services" include the following:
        (1) 3 meals per day available to the residents
    prepared by the establishment or an outside contractor;
        (2) housekeeping services including, but not limited
    to, vacuuming, dusting, and cleaning the resident's unit;
        (3) personal laundry and linen services available to
    the residents provided or arranged for by the establishment;
        (4) security provided 24 hours each day including,
    but not limited to, locked entrances or building or contract security personnel;
        (5) an emergency communication response system, which
    is a procedure in place 24 hours each day by which a resident can notify building management, an emergency response vendor, or others able to respond to his or her need for assistance; and
        (6) assistance with activities of daily living as
    required by each resident.
    "Negotiated risk" is the process by which a resident, or his or her representative, may formally negotiate with providers what risks each are willing and unwilling to assume in service provision and the resident's living environment. The provider assures that the resident and the resident's representative, if any, are informed of the risks of these decisions and of the potential consequences of assuming these risks.
    "Owner" means the individual, partnership, corporation, association, or other person who owns an assisted living or shared housing establishment. In the event an assisted living or shared housing establishment is operated by a person who leases or manages the physical plant, which is owned by another person, "owner" means the person who operates the assisted living or shared housing establishment, except that if the person who owns the physical plant is an affiliate of the person who operates the assisted living or shared housing establishment and has significant control over the day to day operations of the assisted living or shared housing establishment, the person who owns the physical plant shall incur jointly and severally with the owner all liabilities imposed on an owner under this Act.
    "Physician" means a person licensed under the Medical Practice Act of 1987 to practice medicine in all of its branches.
    "Resident" means a person residing in an assisted living or shared housing establishment.
    "Resident's representative" means a person, other than the owner, agent, or employee of an establishment or of the health care provider unless related to the resident, designated in writing by a resident to be his or her representative. This designation may be accomplished through the Illinois Power of Attorney Act, pursuant to the guardianship process under the Probate Act of 1975, or pursuant to an executed designation of representative form specified by the Department.
    "Self" means the individual or the individual's designated representative.
    "Shared housing establishment" or "establishment" means a publicly or privately operated free‑standing residence for 16 or fewer persons, at least 80% of whom are 55 years of age or older and who are unrelated to the owners and one manager of the residence, where the following are provided:
        (1) services consistent with a social model that is
    based on the premise that the resident's unit is his or her own home;
        (2) community‑based residential care for persons who
    need assistance with activities of daily living, including housing and personal, supportive, and intermittent health‑related services available 24 hours per day, if needed, to meet the scheduled and unscheduled needs of a resident; and
        (3) mandatory services, whether provided directly by
    the establishment or by another entity arranged for by the establishment, with the consent of the resident or the resident's representative.
    "Shared housing establishment" or "establishment" does not mean any of the following:
        (1) A home, institution, or similar place operated by
    the federal government or the State of Illinois.
        (2) A long term care facility licensed under the
    Nursing Home Care Act or a facility licensed under the MR/DD Community Care Act. A facility licensed under either of those Acts may, however, convert sections of the facility to assisted living. If the facility elects to do so, the facility shall retain the Certificate of Need for its nursing beds that were converted.
        (3) A hospital, sanitarium, or other institution, the
    principal activity or business of which is the diagnosis, care, and treatment of human illness and that is required to be licensed under the Hospital Licensing Act.
        (4) A facility for child care as defined in the Child
    Care Act of 1969.
        (5) A community living facility as defined in the
    Community Living Facilities Licensing Act.
        (6) A nursing home or sanitarium operated solely by
    and for persons who rely exclusively upon treatment by spiritual means through prayer in accordance with the creed or tenants of a well‑recognized church or religious denomination.
        (7) A facility licensed by the Department of Human
    Services as a community‑integrated living arrangement as defined in the Community‑Integrated Living Arrangements Licensure and Certification Act.
        (8) A supportive residence licensed under the
    Supportive Residences Licensing Act.
        (9) A life care facility as defined in the Life Care
    Facilities Act; a life care facility may apply under this Act to convert sections of the community to assisted living.
        (10) A free‑standing hospice facility licensed under
    the Hospice Program Licensing Act.
        (11) An assisted living establishment.
        (12) A supportive living facility as described in
    Section 5‑5.01a of the Illinois Public Aid Code.
    "Total assistance" means that staff or another individual performs the entire activity of daily living without participation by the resident.
(Source: P.A. 95‑216, eff. 8‑16‑07; 96‑339, eff. 7‑1‑10; 96‑975, eff. 7‑2‑10.)

    (210 ILCS 9/15)
    Sec. 15. Assessment and service plan requirements. Prior to admission to any establishment covered by this Act, a comprehensive assessment that includes an evaluation of the prospective resident's physical, cognitive, and psychosocial condition shall be completed. At least annually, a comprehensive assessment shall be completed, and upon identification of a significant change in the resident's condition, the resident shall be reassessed. The Department may by rule specify circumstances under which more frequent assessments of skin integrity and nutritional status shall be required. The comprehensive assessment shall be completed by a physician. Based on the assessment, a written service plan shall be developed and mutually agreed upon by the provider and the resident. The service plan, which shall be reviewed annually, or more often as the resident's condition, preferences, or service needs change, shall serve as a basis for the service delivery contract between the provider and the resident. Based on the assessment, the service plan may provide for the disconnection or removal of any appliance.
(Source: P.A. 91‑656, eff. 1‑1‑01.)

    (210 ILCS 9/20)
    Sec. 20. Construction and operating standards. The Department shall prescribe minimum standards for establishments. These standards shall include:
        (1) the location and construction of the
    establishment, including plumbing, heating, lighting, ventilation, and other physical conditions which shall ensure the health, safety, and comfort of residents and their protection from fire hazards; these standards shall include, at a minimum, compliance with the residential board and care occupancies chapter of the National Fire Protection Association's Life Safety Code, local and State building codes for the building type, and accessibility standards of the Americans with Disabilities Act;
        (2) the number and qualifications of all personnel
    having responsibility for any part of the services provided for residents;
        (3) all sanitary conditions within the establishment
    and its surroundings, including water supply, sewage disposal, food handling, infection control, and general hygiene, which shall ensure the health and comfort of residents;
        (4) a program for adequate maintenance of physical
    plant and equipment;
        (5) adequate accommodations, staff, and services for
    the number and types of residents for whom the establishment is licensed;
        (6) the development of evacuation and other
    appropriate safety plans for use during weather, health, fire, physical plant, environmental, and national defense emergencies; and
        (7) the maintenance of minimum financial and other
    resources necessary to meet the standards established under this Section and to operate the establishment in accordance with this Act.
(Source: P.A. 96‑975, eff. 7‑2‑10.)

    (210 ILCS 9/25)
    Sec. 25. License requirement. No person may establish, operate, maintain, or offer an establishment as an assisted living establishment or shared housing establishment as defined by the Act within this State unless and until he or she obtains a valid license, which remains unsuspended, unrevoked, and unexpired. No public official, agent, or employee may place any person in, or recommend that any person be placed in, or directly or indirectly cause any person to be placed in any establishment that meets the definition under this Act that is being operated without a valid license. No public official, agent, or employee may place the name of an unlicensed establishment that is required to be licensed under this Act on a list of programs. An entity that operates as an assisted living or shared housing establishment as defined by this Act without a license shall be subject to the provisions, including penalties, of the Nursing Home Care Act. No entity shall use in its name or advertise "assisted living" unless licensed as an assisted living establishment under this Act or as a shelter care facility under the Nursing Home Care Act that also meets the definition of an assisted living establishment under this Act, except a shared housing establishment licensed under this Act may advertise assisted living services.
(Source: P.A. 93‑141, eff. 7‑10‑03.)

    (210 ILCS 9/30)
    Sec. 30. Licensing.
    (a) The Department shall establish by rule forms, procedures, and fees for the annual licensing of assisted living and shared housing establishments; shall establish and enforce sanctions and penalties for operating in violation of this Act, as provided in Section 135 of this Act and rules adopted under Section 110 of this Act. The Department shall conduct an annual on‑site review for each establishment covered by this Act, which shall include, but not be limited to, compliance with this Act and rules adopted hereunder, focus on solving resident issues and concerns, and the quality improvement process implemented by the establishment to address resident issues. The quality improvement process implemented by the establishment must benchmark performance, be customer centered, be data driven, and focus on resident satisfaction.
    (b) An establishment shall provide the following information to the Department to be considered for licensure:
        (1) the business name, street address, mailing
    address, and telephone number of the establishment;
        (2) the name and mailing address of the owner or
     owners of the establishment and if the owner or owners are not natural persons, identification of the type of business entity of the owners, and the names and addresses of the officers and members of the governing body, or comparable persons for partnerships, limited liability companies, or other types of business organizations;
        (3) financial information, content and form to be
    determined by rules which may provide different standards for assisted living establishments and shared housing establishments, establishing that the project is financially feasible;
        (4) the name and mailing address of the managing
    agent of the establishment, whether hired under a management agreement or lease agreement, if different from the owner or owners, and the name of the full‑time director;
        (5) verification that the establishment has entered
    or will enter into a service delivery contract as provided in Section 90, as required under this Act, with each resident or resident's representative;
        (6) the name and address of at least one natural
     person who shall be responsible for dealing with the Department on all matters provided for in this Act, on whom personal service of all notices and orders shall be made, and who shall be authorized to accept service on behalf of the owner or owners and the managing agent. Notwithstanding a contrary provision of the Code of Civil Procedure, personal service on the person identified pursuant to this subsection shall be considered service on the owner or owners and the managing agent, and it shall not be a defense to any action that personal service was not made on each individual or entity;
        (7) the signature of the authorized representative of
    the owner or owners;
        (8) proof of an ongoing quality improvement program
    in accordance with rules adopted by the Department;
        (9) information about the number and types of units,
    the maximum census, and the services to be provided at the establishment, proof of compliance with applicable State and local residential standards, and a copy of the standard contract offered to residents;
        (10) documentation of adequate liability insurance;
    and
        (11) other information necessary to determine the
    identity and qualifications of an applicant or licensee to operate an establishment in accordance with this Act as required by the Department by rule.
    (c) The information in the statement of ownership shall be public information and shall be available from the Department.
(Source: P.A. 96‑975, eff. 7‑2‑10.)

    (210 ILCS 9/32)
    Sec. 32. Floating license. An establishment (i) in which 80% of the residents are at least 55 years of age or older, (ii) that is operated as housing for the elderly, and (iii) that meets the construction and operating standards contained in Section 20 of this Act may request a floating license for any number of individual living units within the establishment up to, but not including, total capacity. An establishment requesting a floating license must specify the number of individual living units within the establishment to be licensed. Living units designated by the establishment as a licensed living unit shall, for the purposes of this Section, be referred to as a licensed living unit. An establishment utilizing a floating license must have staff adequate to meet the scheduled and unscheduled needs of the residents residing in licensed living units within the establishment. All staff providing services to licensed living units must meet the requirements of this Act and its rules. A living unit may only be designated as a licensed unit if the living unit and the living unit's resident meet the requirements of this Act and its rules. All mandatory services must be made available to residents of licensed living units, and residents of licensed living units may receive any optional services permitted under the establishment's license. Establishments may only provide services under this Act in the individual living units designated as licensed units. Designation as a licensed unit may be temporary to accommodate a resident's changing needs without requiring the resident to move.
    An establishment with a floating license must keep a current written list of those units designated under the floating license. If a resident elects to receive services in a unit that is not licensed and the unit qualifies for licensure, the establishment must notify the resident that the unit must be licensed and the requirements of this Act must be met before services can be provided to residents in that unit. Upon the initiation of an initial licensing inspection, annual inspection, or complaint investigation, the establishment shall provide to the Department a list of the units designated under the floating license in which residents are receiving services subject to this Act.
(Source: P.A. 93‑141, eff. 7‑10‑03.)

    (210 ILCS 9/35)
    Sec. 35. Issuance of license.
    (a) Upon receipt and review of an application for a license and review of the applicant establishment, the Director may issue a license if he or she finds:
        (1) that the individual applicant, or the
    corporation, partnership, or other entity if the applicant is not an individual, is a person responsible and suitable to operate or to direct or participate in the operation of an establishment by virtue of financial capacity, appropriate business or professional experience, a record of lawful compliance with lawful orders of the Department and lack of revocation of a license issued under this Act, the Nursing Home Care Act, or the MR/DD Community Care Act during the previous 5 years;
        (2) that the establishment is under the supervision
    of a full‑time director who is at least 21 years of age and has a high school diploma or equivalent plus either:
            (A) 2 years of management experience or 2 years
        of experience in positions of progressive responsibility in health care, housing with services, or adult day care or providing similar services to the elderly; or
            (B) 2 years of management experience or 2 years
        of experience in positions of progressive responsibility in hospitality and training in health care and housing with services management as defined by rule;
        (3) that the establishment has staff sufficient in
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State Codes and Statutes

State Codes and Statutes

Statutes > Illinois > Chapter210 > 1217

    (210 ILCS 9/1)
    Sec. 1. Short title. This Act may be cited as the Assisted Living and Shared Housing Act.
(Source: P.A. 91‑656, eff. 1‑1‑01.)

    (210 ILCS 9/5)
    Sec. 5. Legislative purpose. The purpose of this Act is to permit the development and availability of assisted living establishments and shared housing establishments based on a social model that promotes the dignity, individuality, privacy, independence, autonomy, and decision‑making ability and the right to negotiated risk of those persons; to provide for the health, safety, and welfare of those residents residing in assisted living and shared housing establishments in this State; to promote continuous quality improvement in assisted living; and to encourage the development of innovative and affordable assisted living establishments and shared housing with service establishments for elderly persons of all income levels. It is the public policy of this State that assisted living is an important part of the continuum of long term care. In support of the goal of aging in place within the parameters established by this Act, assisted living and shared housing establishments shall be operated as residential environments with supportive services designed to meet the individual resident's changing needs and preferences. The residential environment shall be designed to encourage family and community involvement. The services available to residents, either directly or through contracts or agreements, are intended to help residents remain as independent as possible. Assisted living, which promotes resident choice, autonomy, and decision making, should be based on a contract model designed to result in a negotiated agreement between the resident or the resident's representative and the provider, clearly identifying the services to be provided. This model assumes that residents are able to direct services provided for them and will designate a representative to direct these services if they themselves are unable to do so. This model supports the principle that there is an acceptable balance between consumer protection and resident willingness to accept risk and that most consumers are competent to make their own judgments about the services they are obtaining. Regulation of assisted living establishments and shared housing establishments must be sufficiently flexible to allow residents to age in place within the parameters of this Act. The administration of this Act and services provided must therefore ensure that the residents have the rights and responsibilities to direct the scope of services they receive and to make individual choices based on their needs and preferences. These establishments shall be operated in a manner that provides the least restrictive and most homelike environment and that promotes independence, autonomy, individuality, privacy, dignity, and the right to negotiated risk in residential surroundings. It is not the intent of the State that establishments licensed under this Act be used as halfway houses for alcohol and substance abusers.
(Source: P.A. 91‑656, eff. 1‑1‑01.)

    (210 ILCS 9/10)
    Sec. 10. Definitions. For purposes of this Act:
    "Activities of daily living" means eating, dressing, bathing, toileting, transferring, or personal hygiene.
    "Assisted living establishment" or "establishment" means a home, building, residence, or any other place where sleeping accommodations are provided for at least 3 unrelated adults, at least 80% of whom are 55 years of age or older and where the following are provided consistent with the purposes of this Act:
        (1) services consistent with a social model that is
    based on the premise that the resident's unit in assisted living and shared housing is his or her own home;
        (2) community‑based residential care for persons who
    need assistance with activities of daily living, including personal, supportive, and intermittent health‑related services available 24 hours per day, if needed, to meet the scheduled and unscheduled needs of a resident;
        (3) mandatory services, whether provided directly by
    the establishment or by another entity arranged for by the establishment, with the consent of the resident or resident's representative; and
        (4) a physical environment that is a homelike setting
    that includes the following and such other elements as established by the Department: individual living units each of which shall accommodate small kitchen appliances and contain private bathing, washing, and toilet facilities, or private washing and toilet facilities with a common bathing room readily accessible to each resident. Units shall be maintained for single occupancy except in cases in which 2 residents choose to share a unit. Sufficient common space shall exist to permit individual and group activities.
    "Assisted living establishment" or "establishment" does not mean any of the following:
        (1) A home, institution, or similar place operated
     by the federal government or the State of Illinois.
        (2) A long term care facility licensed under the
    Nursing Home Care Act or a facility licensed under the MR/DD Community Care Act. However, a facility licensed under either of those Acts may convert distinct parts of the facility to assisted living. If the facility elects to do so, the facility shall retain the Certificate of Need for its nursing and sheltered care beds that were converted.
        (3) A hospital, sanitarium, or other institution, the
    principal activity or business of which is the diagnosis, care, and treatment of human illness and that is required to be licensed under the Hospital Licensing Act.
        (4) A facility for child care as defined in the Child
    Care Act of 1969.
        (5) A community living facility as defined in the
    Community Living Facilities Licensing Act.
        (6) A nursing home or sanitarium operated solely by
    and for persons who rely exclusively upon treatment by spiritual means through prayer in accordance with the creed or tenants of a well‑recognized church or religious denomination.
        (7) A facility licensed by the Department of Human
    Services as a community‑integrated living arrangement as defined in the Community‑Integrated Living Arrangements Licensure and Certification Act.
        (8) A supportive residence licensed under the
    Supportive Residences Licensing Act.
        (9) The portion of a life care facility as defined in
    the Life Care Facilities Act not licensed as an assisted living establishment under this Act; a life care facility may apply under this Act to convert sections of the community to assisted living.
        (10) A free‑standing hospice facility licensed under
    the Hospice Program Licensing Act.
        (11) A shared housing establishment.
        (12) A supportive living facility as described in
    Section 5‑5.01a of the Illinois Public Aid Code.
    "Department" means the Department of Public Health.
    "Director" means the Director of Public Health.
    "Emergency situation" means imminent danger of death or serious physical harm to a resident of an establishment.
    "License" means any of the following types of licenses issued to an applicant or licensee by the Department:
        (1) "Probationary license" means a license issued to
    an applicant or licensee that has not held a license under this Act prior to its application or pursuant to a license transfer in accordance with Section 50 of this Act.
        (2) "Regular license" means a license issued by the
    Department to an applicant or licensee that is in substantial compliance with this Act and any rules promulgated under this Act.
    "Licensee" means a person, agency, association, corporation, partnership, or organization that has been issued a license to operate an assisted living or shared housing establishment.
    "Licensed health care professional" means a registered professional nurse, an advanced practice nurse, a physician assistant, and a licensed practical nurse.
    "Mandatory services" include the following:
        (1) 3 meals per day available to the residents
    prepared by the establishment or an outside contractor;
        (2) housekeeping services including, but not limited
    to, vacuuming, dusting, and cleaning the resident's unit;
        (3) personal laundry and linen services available to
    the residents provided or arranged for by the establishment;
        (4) security provided 24 hours each day including,
    but not limited to, locked entrances or building or contract security personnel;
        (5) an emergency communication response system, which
    is a procedure in place 24 hours each day by which a resident can notify building management, an emergency response vendor, or others able to respond to his or her need for assistance; and
        (6) assistance with activities of daily living as
    required by each resident.
    "Negotiated risk" is the process by which a resident, or his or her representative, may formally negotiate with providers what risks each are willing and unwilling to assume in service provision and the resident's living environment. The provider assures that the resident and the resident's representative, if any, are informed of the risks of these decisions and of the potential consequences of assuming these risks.
    "Owner" means the individual, partnership, corporation, association, or other person who owns an assisted living or shared housing establishment. In the event an assisted living or shared housing establishment is operated by a person who leases or manages the physical plant, which is owned by another person, "owner" means the person who operates the assisted living or shared housing establishment, except that if the person who owns the physical plant is an affiliate of the person who operates the assisted living or shared housing establishment and has significant control over the day to day operations of the assisted living or shared housing establishment, the person who owns the physical plant shall incur jointly and severally with the owner all liabilities imposed on an owner under this Act.
    "Physician" means a person licensed under the Medical Practice Act of 1987 to practice medicine in all of its branches.
    "Resident" means a person residing in an assisted living or shared housing establishment.
    "Resident's representative" means a person, other than the owner, agent, or employee of an establishment or of the health care provider unless related to the resident, designated in writing by a resident to be his or her representative. This designation may be accomplished through the Illinois Power of Attorney Act, pursuant to the guardianship process under the Probate Act of 1975, or pursuant to an executed designation of representative form specified by the Department.
    "Self" means the individual or the individual's designated representative.
    "Shared housing establishment" or "establishment" means a publicly or privately operated free‑standing residence for 16 or fewer persons, at least 80% of whom are 55 years of age or older and who are unrelated to the owners and one manager of the residence, where the following are provided:
        (1) services consistent with a social model that is
    based on the premise that the resident's unit is his or her own home;
        (2) community‑based residential care for persons who
    need assistance with activities of daily living, including housing and personal, supportive, and intermittent health‑related services available 24 hours per day, if needed, to meet the scheduled and unscheduled needs of a resident; and
        (3) mandatory services, whether provided directly by
    the establishment or by another entity arranged for by the establishment, with the consent of the resident or the resident's representative.
    "Shared housing establishment" or "establishment" does not mean any of the following:
        (1) A home, institution, or similar place operated by
    the federal government or the State of Illinois.
        (2) A long term care facility licensed under the
    Nursing Home Care Act or a facility licensed under the MR/DD Community Care Act. A facility licensed under either of those Acts may, however, convert sections of the facility to assisted living. If the facility elects to do so, the facility shall retain the Certificate of Need for its nursing beds that were converted.
        (3) A hospital, sanitarium, or other institution, the
    principal activity or business of which is the diagnosis, care, and treatment of human illness and that is required to be licensed under the Hospital Licensing Act.
        (4) A facility for child care as defined in the Child
    Care Act of 1969.
        (5) A community living facility as defined in the
    Community Living Facilities Licensing Act.
        (6) A nursing home or sanitarium operated solely by
    and for persons who rely exclusively upon treatment by spiritual means through prayer in accordance with the creed or tenants of a well‑recognized church or religious denomination.
        (7) A facility licensed by the Department of Human
    Services as a community‑integrated living arrangement as defined in the Community‑Integrated Living Arrangements Licensure and Certification Act.
        (8) A supportive residence licensed under the
    Supportive Residences Licensing Act.
        (9) A life care facility as defined in the Life Care
    Facilities Act; a life care facility may apply under this Act to convert sections of the community to assisted living.
        (10) A free‑standing hospice facility licensed under
    the Hospice Program Licensing Act.
        (11) An assisted living establishment.
        (12) A supportive living facility as described in
    Section 5‑5.01a of the Illinois Public Aid Code.
    "Total assistance" means that staff or another individual performs the entire activity of daily living without participation by the resident.
(Source: P.A. 95‑216, eff. 8‑16‑07; 96‑339, eff. 7‑1‑10; 96‑975, eff. 7‑2‑10.)

    (210 ILCS 9/15)
    Sec. 15. Assessment and service plan requirements. Prior to admission to any establishment covered by this Act, a comprehensive assessment that includes an evaluation of the prospective resident's physical, cognitive, and psychosocial condition shall be completed. At least annually, a comprehensive assessment shall be completed, and upon identification of a significant change in the resident's condition, the resident shall be reassessed. The Department may by rule specify circumstances under which more frequent assessments of skin integrity and nutritional status shall be required. The comprehensive assessment shall be completed by a physician. Based on the assessment, a written service plan shall be developed and mutually agreed upon by the provider and the resident. The service plan, which shall be reviewed annually, or more often as the resident's condition, preferences, or service needs change, shall serve as a basis for the service delivery contract between the provider and the resident. Based on the assessment, the service plan may provide for the disconnection or removal of any appliance.
(Source: P.A. 91‑656, eff. 1‑1‑01.)

    (210 ILCS 9/20)
    Sec. 20. Construction and operating standards. The Department shall prescribe minimum standards for establishments. These standards shall include:
        (1) the location and construction of the
    establishment, including plumbing, heating, lighting, ventilation, and other physical conditions which shall ensure the health, safety, and comfort of residents and their protection from fire hazards; these standards shall include, at a minimum, compliance with the residential board and care occupancies chapter of the National Fire Protection Association's Life Safety Code, local and State building codes for the building type, and accessibility standards of the Americans with Disabilities Act;
        (2) the number and qualifications of all personnel
    having responsibility for any part of the services provided for residents;
        (3) all sanitary conditions within the establishment
    and its surroundings, including water supply, sewage disposal, food handling, infection control, and general hygiene, which shall ensure the health and comfort of residents;
        (4) a program for adequate maintenance of physical
    plant and equipment;
        (5) adequate accommodations, staff, and services for
    the number and types of residents for whom the establishment is licensed;
        (6) the development of evacuation and other
    appropriate safety plans for use during weather, health, fire, physical plant, environmental, and national defense emergencies; and
        (7) the maintenance of minimum financial and other
    resources necessary to meet the standards established under this Section and to operate the establishment in accordance with this Act.
(Source: P.A. 96‑975, eff. 7‑2‑10.)

    (210 ILCS 9/25)
    Sec. 25. License requirement. No person may establish, operate, maintain, or offer an establishment as an assisted living establishment or shared housing establishment as defined by the Act within this State unless and until he or she obtains a valid license, which remains unsuspended, unrevoked, and unexpired. No public official, agent, or employee may place any person in, or recommend that any person be placed in, or directly or indirectly cause any person to be placed in any establishment that meets the definition under this Act that is being operated without a valid license. No public official, agent, or employee may place the name of an unlicensed establishment that is required to be licensed under this Act on a list of programs. An entity that operates as an assisted living or shared housing establishment as defined by this Act without a license shall be subject to the provisions, including penalties, of the Nursing Home Care Act. No entity shall use in its name or advertise "assisted living" unless licensed as an assisted living establishment under this Act or as a shelter care facility under the Nursing Home Care Act that also meets the definition of an assisted living establishment under this Act, except a shared housing establishment licensed under this Act may advertise assisted living services.
(Source: P.A. 93‑141, eff. 7‑10‑03.)

    (210 ILCS 9/30)
    Sec. 30. Licensing.
    (a) The Department shall establish by rule forms, procedures, and fees for the annual licensing of assisted living and shared housing establishments; shall establish and enforce sanctions and penalties for operating in violation of this Act, as provided in Section 135 of this Act and rules adopted under Section 110 of this Act. The Department shall conduct an annual on‑site review for each establishment covered by this Act, which shall include, but not be limited to, compliance with this Act and rules adopted hereunder, focus on solving resident issues and concerns, and the quality improvement process implemented by the establishment to address resident issues. The quality improvement process implemented by the establishment must benchmark performance, be customer centered, be data driven, and focus on resident satisfaction.
    (b) An establishment shall provide the following information to the Department to be considered for licensure:
        (1) the business name, street address, mailing
    address, and telephone number of the establishment;
        (2) the name and mailing address of the owner or
     owners of the establishment and if the owner or owners are not natural persons, identification of the type of business entity of the owners, and the names and addresses of the officers and members of the governing body, or comparable persons for partnerships, limited liability companies, or other types of business organizations;
        (3) financial information, content and form to be
    determined by rules which may provide different standards for assisted living establishments and shared housing establishments, establishing that the project is financially feasible;
        (4) the name and mailing address of the managing
    agent of the establishment, whether hired under a management agreement or lease agreement, if different from the owner or owners, and the name of the full‑time director;
        (5) verification that the establishment has entered
    or will enter into a service delivery contract as provided in Section 90, as required under this Act, with each resident or resident's representative;
        (6) the name and address of at least one natural
     person who shall be responsible for dealing with the Department on all matters provided for in this Act, on whom personal service of all notices and orders shall be made, and who shall be authorized to accept service on behalf of the owner or owners and the managing agent. Notwithstanding a contrary provision of the Code of Civil Procedure, personal service on the person identified pursuant to this subsection shall be considered service on the owner or owners and the managing agent, and it shall not be a defense to any action that personal service was not made on each individual or entity;
        (7) the signature of the authorized representative of
    the owner or owners;
        (8) proof of an ongoing quality improvement program
    in accordance with rules adopted by the Department;
        (9) information about the number and types of units,
    the maximum census, and the services to be provided at the establishment, proof of compliance with applicable State and local residential standards, and a copy of the standard contract offered to residents;
        (10) documentation of adequate liability insurance;
    and
        (11) other information necessary to determine the
    identity and qualifications of an applicant or licensee to operate an establishment in accordance with this Act as required by the Department by rule.
    (c) The information in the statement of ownership shall be public information and shall be available from the Department.
(Source: P.A. 96‑975, eff. 7‑2‑10.)

    (210 ILCS 9/32)
    Sec. 32. Floating license. An establishment (i) in which 80% of the residents are at least 55 years of age or older, (ii) that is operated as housing for the elderly, and (iii) that meets the construction and operating standards contained in Section 20 of this Act may request a floating license for any number of individual living units within the establishment up to, but not including, total capacity. An establishment requesting a floating license must specify the number of individual living units within the establishment to be licensed. Living units designated by the establishment as a licensed living unit shall, for the purposes of this Section, be referred to as a licensed living unit. An establishment utilizing a floating license must have staff adequate to meet the scheduled and unscheduled needs of the residents residing in licensed living units within the establishment. All staff providing services to licensed living units must meet the requirements of this Act and its rules. A living unit may only be designated as a licensed unit if the living unit and the living unit's resident meet the requirements of this Act and its rules. All mandatory services must be made available to residents of licensed living units, and residents of licensed living units may receive any optional services permitted under the establishment's license. Establishments may only provide services under this Act in the individual living units designated as licensed units. Designation as a licensed unit may be temporary to accommodate a resident's changing needs without requiring the resident to move.
    An establishment with a floating license must keep a current written list of those units designated under the floating license. If a resident elects to receive services in a unit that is not licensed and the unit qualifies for licensure, the establishment must notify the resident that the unit must be licensed and the requirements of this Act must be met before services can be provided to residents in that unit. Upon the initiation of an initial licensing inspection, annual inspection, or complaint investigation, the establishment shall provide to the Department a list of the units designated under the floating license in which residents are receiving services subject to this Act.
(Source: P.A. 93‑141, eff. 7‑10‑03.)

    (210 ILCS 9/35)
    Sec. 35. Issuance of license.
    (a) Upon receipt and review of an application for a license and review of the applicant establishment, the Director may issue a license if he or she finds:
        (1) that the individual applicant, or the
    corporation, partnership, or other entity if the applicant is not an individual, is a person responsible and suitable to operate or to direct or participate in the operation of an establishment by virtue of financial capacity, appropriate business or professional experience, a record of lawful compliance with lawful orders of the Department and lack of revocation of a license issued under this Act, the Nursing Home Care Act, or the MR/DD Community Care Act during the previous 5 years;
        (2) that the establishment is under the supervision
    of a full‑time director who is at least 21 years of age and has a high school diploma or equivalent plus either:
            (A) 2 years of management experience or 2 years
        of experience in positions of progressive responsibility in health care, housing with services, or adult day care or providing similar services to the elderly; or
            (B) 2 years of management experience or 2 years
        of experience in positions of progressive responsibility in hospitality and training in health care and housing with services management as defined by rule;
        (3) that the establishment has staff sufficient in