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Governor Rauner Takes Bill Action

Press Release - Friday, August 12, 2016

SPRINGFIELD -Governor Bruce Rauner took action today on the following bills:

Bill No.: HB 335
An Act Concerning Gaming
Action: Signed
Effective: Immediate

Bill No.: HB 940
An Act Concerning Gaming
Action: Signed
Effective: Immediate

Bill No.: HB 1288
An Act Concerning Employment
Action: Signed
Effective: January 1, 2017

Bill No.: HB 2642
An Act Concerning Civil Law
Action: Signed
Effective: Immediate

Bill No.: HB 3333
An Act Concerning Regulation
Action: Vetoed
Note: Veto Message Below

Bill No.: HB 3363
An Act Concerning Business
Action: Signed
Effective: January 1, 2017

Bill No.: HB 3549
An Act Concerning Regulation
Action: Signed
Effective: January 1, 2018

Bill No.: HB 3554
An Act Concerning Employment
Action: Signed
Effective: January 1, 2017

Bill No.: HB 3898
An Act Concerning Civil Law
Action: Signed
Effective: January 1, 2017

Bill No.: HB 3982
An Act Concerning Civil Law
Action: Signed
Effective: July 1, 2017

Bill No.: HB 4264
An Act Concerning Regulation
Action: Signed
Effective: January 1, 2017

Bill No.: HB 4370
An Act Concerning Regulation
Action: Signed
Effective: Immediate

Bill No.: HB 4377
An Act Concerning Business
Action: Signed
Effective: July 1, 2017

Bill No.: HB 4447
An Act Concerning Civil Law
Action: Signed
Effective: January 1, 2017

Bill No.: HB 4477
An Act Concerning Finance
Action: Amendatory Vetoed
Note: Amendatory Veto Message Below

Bill No.: HB 4522
An Act Concerning Local Government
Action: Signed
Effective: Immediate

Bill No.: HB 4536
An Act Concerning Local Government
Action: Signed
Effective: Immediate

Bill No.: HB 4554
An Act Concerning Regulation
Action: Signed
Effective: January 1, 2017

Bill No.: HB 4576
An Act Concerning Health
Action: Signed
Effective: January 1, 2017

Bill No.: HB 4603
An Act Concerning Local Government
Action: Signed
Effective: Immediate

Bill No.: HB 4648
An Act Concerning Digital Assets
Action: Signed
Effective: Immediate

Bill No.: HB 4658
An Act Concerning Civil Law
Action: Signed
Effective: Immediate

Bill No.: HB 4675
An Act Concerning Education
Action: Signed
Effective: Immediate

Bill No.: HB 4683
An Act Concerning Criminal Law
Action: Signed
Effective: January 1, 2017

Bill No.: HB 4966
An Act Concerning Regulation
Action: Signed
Effective: January 1, 2017

Bill No.: HB 4983
An Act Concerning Education
Action: Signed
Effective: Immediate

Bill No.: HB 4996
An Act Concerning Education
Action: Signed
Effective: Immediate

Bill No.: HB 5010
An Act Concerning Animals
Action: Signed
Effective: Immediate

Bill No.: HB 5584
An Act Concerning Local Government
Action: Signed
Effective: Immediate

Bill No.: HB 5603
An Act Concerning Regulation
Action: Signed
Effective: January 1, 2017

Bill No.: HB 5785
An Act Concerning Finance
Action: Amendatory Vetoed
Note: Amendatory Veto Message Below

Bill No.: HB 5912
An Act Concerning Transportation
Action: Signed
Effective: January 1, 2017

Bill No.: HB 6298
An Act Concerning Public Employee Benefits
Action: Signed
Effective: Immediate

Bill No.: HB 6331
An Act Concerning Safety
Action: Signed
Effective: January 1, 2017

Bill No.: SB 250
An Act Concerning Elections
Action: Vetoed
Note: Veto Message Below

Bill No.: SB 345
An Act Concerning Health
Action: Signed
Effective: Immediate

Bill No.: SB 2227
An Act Concerning Local Government
Action: Signed
Effective: Immediate

Bill No.: SB 2300
An Act Concerning Health
Action: Signed
Effective: January 1, 2017

Bill No.: SB 2397
An Act Concerning the Lottery
Action: Signed
Effective: Immediate

Bill No.: SB 2562
An Act Concerning Local Government
Action: Signed
Effective: Immediate

Bill No.: SB 2820
An Act Concerning Public Employee Benefits
Action: Signed
Effective: Immediate

Bill No.: SB 2823
An Act Concerning Education
Action: Signed
Effective: January 1, 2017

Bill No.: SB 2824
An Act Concerning Liquor
Action: Signed
Effective: Immediate

Bill No.: SB 2870
An Act Concerning Criminal Law
Action: Signed
Effective: Immediate

Bill No.: SB 2875
An Act Concerning Criminal Law
Action: Signed
Effective: January 1, 2017

Bill No.: SB 2882
An Act Concerning Transportation
Action: Signed
Effective: Immediate

Bill No.: SB 3095
An Act Concerning Liquor
Action: Signed
Effective: Immediate

Veto Message for HB 3333
To the Honorable Members of
The Illinois House of Representatives,
99th General Assembly:

Today I return House Bill 3333.

Current law requires appraisal management companies - which manage real estate appraisers - to be registered with the Department of Financial and Professional Regulation. The law requires appraisal management companies to pay an initial registration fee and an annual renewal fee. The law also requires those companies to post a $25,000 surety bond to ensure payment of fines and fees assessed by the Department.

House Bill 3333 would impose a new $500 fee on appraisal management companies. The fees would be deposited into a new State fund, called the Appraisal Management Company Recovery Fund, administered by the Department of Financial and Professional Regulation. The proceeds of the fund would be used to compensate real estate appraisers for losses they might suffer when an appraisal management company goes bankrupt. The bill would also repeal the current requirement to post a surety bond.

I have several concerns with this bill. First, the bill would add another State-imposed fee to an industry that is already regulated and required to pay annual fees. We must be sensitive to the burdens we are placing on Illinois businesses in this economic climate.

Second, the bill would place the State in the position of managing private-sector risks for a specific industry, while eliminating surety bond protection for the State. Proponents of the bill are seeking to protect real estate appraisers from the potentially adverse consequences of bankruptcy. But that risk is not unique to this industry, and the State should not be in the position of using its regulatory power to effectively insure one part of one industry against this risk.

Therefore, pursuant to Section 9(b) of Article IV of the Illinois Constitution of 1970, I hereby return House Bill 3333 entitled "AN ACT concerning regulation", with the foregoing objections, vetoed in its entirety.

Sincerely,

Bruce Rauner
GOVERNOR

Amendatory Veto Message for HB 4477
To the Honorable Members of
The Illinois House of Representatives,
99th General Assembly:

Today I return House Bill 4477 with specific recommendations for change.

The bill is intended to ensure that Department of Transportation contractors pass along mobilization payments from the Department to their subcontractors. Since its passage, the Department and sponsors were made aware of corrections, specified below, that are needed to ensure compliance with federal regulations that apply to federally-funded Department projects. I thank the sponsors for working with the Department on these changes.

Therefore, pursuant to Section 9(e) of Article IV of the Illinois Constitution of 1970, I hereby return House Bill 4477, entitled "AN ACT concerning finance", with the following specific recommendations for change:

On page 1, by replacing lines 8 through 13 with the following:
"(a) As used in this section, "mobilization payment" means an advance payment for the preparatory work and operations necessary for the movement of personnel, equipment, supplies, and incidentals to a project site and for all other work or operations that must be performed or costs incurred when beginning work on a project."; and
On page 1, by deleting lines 14 through 16; and
On page 1, line 17, by replacing "(c)" with "(b)"; and
On page 1, line 23, by replacing "total" with "initial"; and
On page 2, line 12, by replacing "(d)" with "(c)".

With these changes, House Bill 4477 will have my approval. I respectfully request your concurrence.

Sincerely,

Bruce Rauner
GOVERNOR

Amendatory Veto Message for HB 5785
To the Honorable Members of
The Illinois House of Representatives,
99th General Assembly:

Today I return House Bill 5785, an amendment to the Urban Weatherization Act, with specific recommendations for change. House Bill 5785 is identical to House Bill 3194, which passed last year, and to which I proposed the same changes.

Among other things, House Bill 5785 would require projects funded by weatherization grants to comply with federal prevailing wage rates. The proponents of House Bill 5785 want federal, not Illinois, prevailing wage rates to apply because Illinois rates are significantly higher than the federal rates for this type of work. This demonstrates the deficiencies and potential waste of the Illinois prevailing wage system.

But whether or not federal prevailing wage rates apply should be determined under federal law, not state statute. And if federal rates do apply, Illinois rates should not.

Therefore, pursuant to Section 9(e) of Article IV of the Illinois Constitution of 1970, I hereby return House Bill 5785, entitled "AN ACT concerning finance", with the following specific recommendations for change:

On page 2, by replacing lines 13 through 16 with the following: "subdivision thereof. Works financed or funded in whole or in part with grants awarded under this Article shall not be considered public works for purposes of the Prevailing Wage Act."; and
On page 8, by replacing lines 2 through 8 with the following: "the weatherization program. Works financed or funded in whole or in part with grants awarded under this Article shall not be considered public works for the purposes of the Prevailing Wage Act.".

With these changes, House Bill 5785 will have my approval. I respectfully request your concurrence.

Sincerely,

Bruce Rauner
GOVERNOR

Veto Message for SB 250
To the Honorable Members of
The Illinois Senate,
99th General Assembly:

Our democracy depends upon free and fair elections and is strengthened by increased voter participation. I strongly support efforts to simplify the voter registration process and remove barriers to voting, while still protecting the integrity of our election system.

Earlier this year, I signed Senate Bill 1529, a bipartisan bill to modernize our election system and expand voting opportunities. The bill allows the use of digital voter signatures; expands online voter registration; enables the State to fund its participation in national Electronic Registration Information Center; extends the ability of military voters and others to vote by mail through Election Day; and enhances criminal penalties for fraudulent voting. I look forward to continuing to work with the General Assembly to modernize our election system and promote voter participation.

Senate Bill 250 would transition Illinois to an automatic voter registration system - one of the first states in the nation. I thank the sponsors and proponents for their commitment to increasing voter participation. Today I return the bill, however, to provide the sponsors and proponents with the opportunity to make some important corrections to protect the integrity of our election system and to comply with federal law. We must also ensure that the State Board of Elections is provided with adequate time and resources to implement the bill's provisions.

Background

Current law allows citizens to complete a voter registration application at the Secretary of State's Driver Services Department. The Secretary of State transmits the application to the appropriate local election authority to be processed. This process is subject to both the Illinois Election Code and federal law, including the National Voter Registration Act.

Public Act 98-1171, enacted last year, expanded this system to allow individuals to register to vote whenever they conduct business or interact with the Department of Human Services, Department of Healthcare and Family Services, Department of Employment Security, and Department on Aging. An agency employee notifies the individual whether he or she is registered to vote and offers the individual an opportunity to register or to update his or her registered address. The agency transmits the registration or updated information to the State Board of Elections, which in turn transmits the information to the local election authority. The public act requires the State Board to complete its implementation by July 1, 2016, but that work has not yet been completed.

Senate Bill 250 would change this system by requiring automatic registration. The bill would require each agency to automatically process a voter registration for each individual about whom it has information, whether or not the individual intends to register. The individual is later informed about the automatic registration and given an opportunity to opt-out by contacting the appropriate election authority.

The proponents of the bill intend to remove barriers to voting, which I applaud. But in the haste of amending and passing the bill on the last day of the spring legislative session, they concede that the bill does not plainly and clearly describe the process they envision. For the past several weeks, my Administration has been working closely with the proponents and lawyers for all four legislative caucuses to address the concerns described below. I remain hopeful that these concerns can be addressed and we can together enact a bill that achieves our shared goals.

Voter Integrity and Compliance with Federal Law

We must ensure the integrity of our election system and that it complies with federal law. The National Voter Registration Act imposes certain conditions on voter registrations, including that the applicant must be informed of the voter eligibility requirements, must attest that he or she meets qualifications to vote, and must sign the voter registration application. Federal law provides the individual with an opportunity to decline to register to vote or to transfer his or her information for voter registration purposes without adversely affecting other government services.

Proponents contend that individuals will be informed of the qualifications to vote; that the agencies will check their own records to confirm an individual is a citizen and otherwise eligible to vote before processing the registration; and that the agencies will indicate to the State Board of Elections which identification documents were checked. But that is not how the bill is drafted.

Senate Bill 250 does not require an applicant to attest to meeting the qualifications to vote or to sign the application, as required by federal law. The bill directs the Secretary of State's Drivers Services Department to automatically register the individual "regardless of whether or not the individual attested to his or her eligibility to register to vote." The bill relies on the State Board of Elections to screen out individuals who are not eligible to vote, even though the State Board may not have access to that information. In fact, some of the agencies in possession of citizenship-related information are prohibited by federal law from sharing that information with the State Board.

The consequences could be injurious to our election system. We know that non-citizens have registered to vote in Illinois after obtaining a driver's license and voted in recent elections. Among other documented cases, a citizen of Kenya registered to vote and voted in the 2004 election, and citizens of Peru and the Philippines registered to vote and voted in the 2006 election. Each of these cases of voter fraud was caught by immigration officials, not the State of Illinois.

The bill should be conformed to the system that the proponents describe. Agencies with access to citizenship information should use that information to verify a person's eligibility before processing the voter registration. That responsibility should not - and legally cannot - fall to the State Board of Elections, as the bill currently provides.

Reliability of State Agency Information

Senate Bill 250 intends for agencies to automatically update voter information based on the agency's records. This assumes that agency records are accurate, consistent, and reliable.

While we are working to update and consolidate State information systems through the new Department of Innovation and Technology, the State does not have a single dataset for each individual that can be reliably used to verify current information. In fact, the agencies charged with updating voter records could have different name or address information about the same individual, due to no fault of the individual. Residency for unemployment benefits or human services may be different than residency for election purposes. An agency should not automatically change an address without providing the individual with an opportunity to verify that the address is accurate for the purposes of voter registration.

Senate Bill 250 tacitly acknowledges this problem. The bill provides that if a voter's registered address is mistakenly changed, and the voter appears at the voter precinct for his prior registered address, the voter should have the opportunity to vote at that prior address with a regular (as opposed to provisional) ballot. The bill also provides that the voter should not be disqualified from voting "due to an error relating to an update of registration." The law should avoid errors in the first place.

Implementation Timeline and Resources

The State Board of Elections has said that the timeline for implementation is aggressive and, to date, no funding has been provided to carry out the work needed. Despite diligent efforts, the State Board is already past-due in implementing the changes required by Public Act 98-1171, which underlie the changes that would be required by Senate Bill 250. We should provide the State Board with the time and resources needed to properly complete the implementation.

Recommended Changes

Senate Bill 250 seeks a worthy but ambitious goal. After the State Board of Elections, Secretary of State, and others raised concerns about how it would be implemented, the sponsors and proponents introduced a series of amendments at the end of May. There remain some unaddressed problems, but for which there are workable solutions. Specifically:

  • The Secretary of State should only transit voter registrations for which it has been able to verify citizenship and should indicate which identification documents were checked. As part of REAL ID compliance, this information will be available to the Secretary of State for any person seeking to obtain a REAL ID-compliant license. Proponents indicated that the bill intends for this screening; the bill should make this a clear requirement.
  • Other State agencies, other than the Secretary of State, should check voter registrations against their available citizenship records when possible before submitting those registrations to the State Board of Elections. Each of the four State agencies identified in the bill has access to that information. If the agency does not have citizenship-related information for a particular person, the applicant must attest by signature to meeting the qualifications to vote.
  • The Secretary of State and each other State agency should notify a potential applicant whether or not he or she is currently registered to vote, based on information provided from a State master voter file, and if so at what address. If the person is already registered to vote at another address, the agency should confirm that the person desires to update his or her address, before automatically processing an errant address change. If the person is not registered to vote, and requests not to be, the State agency should honor that request.
  • The bill should define "reliable State government source", which is a source of information that may be used for completing a voter registration. The bill should set out a process for how other information sources are added to the list of reliable sources, as currently contemplated by the bill.
  • The bill should set out a realistic implementation deadline, and we should provide the State Board of Elections and other implementing agencies with adequate resources. We must also recognize that county clerks and other local election authorities will incur costs in implementing this bill. The bill allows e-mail notices to be used for certain purposes; we should examine expanding e-mail use to reduce costs for the State and local election authorities.

Proponents have expressed willingness to make some of these changes, while others remain in discussion. I thank the proponents, sponsors, and legislative staff for continuing to work with my Administration to address these concerns. I hope we can complete this work and pass a bipartisan election bill in the near future.

Until then, I cannot approve Senate Bill 250 in its current form. Therefore, pursuant to Section 9(b) of Article IV of the Illinois Constitution of 1970, I hereby return Senate Bill 250 entitled "AN ACT concerning elections", with the foregoing objections, vetoed in its entirety.

Sincerely,

Bruce Rauner
GOVERNOR

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