2005 Illinois Code - Chapter 50 Local Government 50 ILCS 205/ Local Records Act.
(50 ILCS 205/1)(from Ch. 116, par. 43.101) Sec. 1. This Act may be cited as the Local Records Act. (Source: P.A. 86‑1475.)
(50 ILCS 205/2)(from Ch. 116, par. 43.102) Sec. 2. This Act declares that a program for the efficient and economical
management of local records will promote economy and efficiency in the
day‑by‑day recordkeeping activities of local governments and will
facilitate and expedite governmental operations. (Source: Laws 1961, p. 3503.)
(50 ILCS 205/3)(from Ch. 116, par. 43.103) Sec. 3. Except where the context indicates otherwise, the terms used in
this Act are defined as follows: "Agency" means any court, and all parts, boards, departments, bureaus
and commissions of any county, municipal corporation or political
subdivision. "Archivist" means the Secretary of State. "Commission" means a Local Records Commission. "Court" means a court, other than the Supreme Court. "Officer" means any elected or appointed official of a court, county,
municipal corporation or political subdivision. "Public record" means any book, paper, map, photograph, digitized
electronic material, or other official documentary material, regardless of
physical form or
characteristics, made, produced, executed or received by any agency or
officer pursuant to law or in connection with the transaction of public
business and preserved or appropriate for preservation by such agency or
officer, or any successor thereof, as evidence of the organization,
function, policies, decisions, procedures, or other activities thereof, or
because of the informational data contained therein. Library and museum
material made or acquired and preserved solely for reference or exhibition
purposes, extra copies of documents preserved only for convenience of
reference, and stocks of publications and of processed documents are not
included within the definition of public record. (Source: P.A. 89‑272, eff. 8‑10‑95.)
(50 ILCS 205/3a)(from Ch. 116, par. 43.103a) Sec. 3a. Reports and records of the obligation, receipt and use of
public funds
of the units of local government and school districts, including certified
audits, management letters and other audit reports made by the Auditor General,
County Auditors, other officers or by licensed Certified Public Accountants permitted to perform audits under the Illinois Public Accounting Act
and presented to the corporate authorities or boards of the units of local
government, are public records
available for inspection by the public. These records shall be kept at the
official place of business of each unit of local government and school
district or at a designated place of business of the unit or district.
These records shall be available for public inspection during regular
office hours except when in immediate use by persons exercising official
duties which require the use of those records. The person in charge of such
records may require a notice in writing to be submitted 24 hours prior to
inspection and may require that such notice specify which records are to be
inspected. Nothing in this Section shall require units of local
government
and school districts to invade or assist in the invasion of any person's
right to privacy. (Source: P.A. 94‑465, eff. 8‑4‑05.)
(50 ILCS 205/3b) Sec. 3b. Arrest reports. (a) When an individual is arrested, the following information must
be made available to the news media for inspection and copying: (1) Information that identifies the individual,
including the name, age, address, and photograph, when and if available.
(2) Information detailing any charges relating to
the arrest.
(3) The time and location of the arrest. (4) The name of the investigating or arresting law
enforcement agency.
(5) If the individual is incarcerated, the amount of
any bail or bond.
(6) If the individual is incarcerated, the time and
date that the individual was received, discharged, or transferred from the arresting agency's custody.
(b) The information required by this Section must be made available to the
news media for inspection and copying as soon as practicable, but in no event
shall the time period exceed 72 hours from the arrest. The information
described in paragraphs (3), (4), (5), and (6) of subsection (a), however,
may be withheld if it is determined that disclosure would: (1) interfere with pending or actually and
reasonably contemplated law enforcement proceedings conducted by any law enforcement or correctional agency;
(2) endanger the life or physical safety of law
enforcement or correctional personnel or any other person; or
(3) compromise the security of any correctional
facility.
(c) For the purposes of this Section the term "news media" means personnel
of a newspaper or other periodical issued at regular intervals whether in
print or electronic format, a news service whether in print or electronic
format,
a radio station, a television station, a television network, a community
antenna television service,
or a person or corporation engaged in making news reels or other motion picture
news for public showing. (d) Each law enforcement or correctional agency may charge fees for arrest
records, but in no instance may the fee exceed the actual cost of copying and
reproduction. The fees may not include the cost of the labor used to reproduce
the arrest record. (e) The provisions of this Section do not supersede the confidentiality
provisions for arrest records of the Juvenile Court Act of 1987. (Source: P.A. 91‑309, eff. 7‑29‑99; 92‑16, eff. 6‑28‑01; 92‑335, eff.
8‑10‑01.)
(50 ILCS 205/4)(from Ch. 116, par. 43.104) Sec. 4. All public records made or received by, or under the
authority of, or coming into the custody, control or possession of any
officer or agency shall not be mutilated, destroyed, transferred,
removed or otherwise damaged or disposed of, in whole or in part, except
as provided by law. Court records filed with the clerks of the Circuit Court shall be
destroyed in accordance with the Supreme
Court's General Administrative Order on Recordkeeping in the Circuit
Courts. The clerks of the Circuit Courts shall notify the Supreme Court,
in writing, specifying case records or other documents which they intend to
destroy. The Supreme Court shall review the schedule of items to be destroyed
and notify the appropriate Local Records Commission of the Court's intent to
destroy such records. The Local Records Commission, within 90 days after
receipt of the Supreme Court's notice, may undertake to photograph,
microphotograph, or digitize electronically any or all such records and
documents, or, in the
alternative, may transport such original records to the State Archives
or other storage location under its supervision. The Archivist may accept for deposit in the State Archives or
regional depositories official papers, drawings, maps, writings and
records of every description of counties, municipal corporations,
political subdivisions and courts of this State, when such materials are
deemed by the Archivist to have sufficient historical or other value to
warrant their continued preservation by the State of Illinois. The officer or clerk depositing such records may, upon request,
obtain from the Archivist, without charge, a certified copy or
reproduction of any specific record, paper or document when such record,
paper or document is required for public use. (Source: P.A. 89‑272, eff. 8‑10‑95.)
(50 ILCS 205/5)(from Ch. 116, par. 43.105) Sec. 5. The Archivist shall be local records advisor and shall appoint such
assistants as necessary to assist local governments in carrying out the
purposes of this Act. (Source: Laws 1961, p. 3503.)
(50 ILCS 205/6)(from Ch. 116, par. 43.106) Sec. 6. For those agencies comprising counties of 3,000,000 or more
inhabitants or located in or co‑terminous with any such county or a
majority of whose inhabitants reside in any such county, this Act shall be
administered by a Local Records Commission consisting of the president of
the county board of the county wherein the records are kept, the mayor of
the most populous city in such county, the State's attorney of such county,
the County comptroller, the State archivist, and the State historian. The
president of the county board shall be the chairman of the Commission. For all other agencies, this Act shall be administered by a Local
Records Commission consisting of a chairman of a county board, who shall be
chairman of the Commission, a mayor or president of a city, village or
incorporated town, a county auditor, and a State's attorney, all of whom
shall be appointed by the Governor, the State archivist, and the State
historian. A member of either Commission may designate a substitute. Either Commission may employ such technical, professional and clerical
assistants as are necessary. Either Commission shall meet upon call of its chairman. (Source: Laws 1961, p. 3503.)
(50 ILCS 205/7)(from Ch. 116, par. 43.107) Sec. 7. Disposition rules. Except as otherwise provided by law, no
public record shall be
disposed of by any officer or agency unless the written approval of the
appropriate Local Records Commission is first obtained. The Commission shall issue regulations which shall be binding on all
such officers. Such regulations shall establish procedures for compiling
and submitting to the Commission lists and schedules of public records
proposed for disposal; procedures for the physical destruction or other
disposition of such public records; and standards for the reproduction of
such public records by photography, microphotographic processes,
or digitized electronic format.
Such
standards shall relate to the quality of the film to be used, preparation
of the public records for filming or electronic conversion, proper
identification matter on such
records so that an individual document or series of documents can be
located on the film or digitized electronic form with reasonable facility,
and that the copies contain
all significant record detail, to the end that the copies will be adequate.
Any public record may be reproduced in a microfilm or digitized
electronic format. The agency may dispose of the original of any
reproduced record
providing: (i) the reproduction process forms a durable medium that accurately
and legibly reproduces the original record in
all details, that does not permit additions, deletions, or changes
to the
original document images, and, if electronic, that
are
retained in a trustworthy manner so that the records, and the information
contained in the
records, are accessible and usable for subsequent reference at all times while
the
information must be retained,
(ii) the reproduction is retained for the prescribed
retention period, and (iii) the Commission is notified when the original
record is disposed of and also when the reproduced record is
disposed of. Such regulations shall also provide that the State archivist may retain
any records which the Commission has authorized to be destroyed, where they
have a historical value, and that the State archivist may deposit them in
the State Archives, State Historical Library, or a
university library, or with a historical society,
museum, or library. (Source: P.A. 90‑701, eff. 1‑1‑99; 91‑886, eff. 1‑1‑01.)
(50 ILCS 205/8)(from Ch. 116, par. 43.108) Sec. 8. Any such reproduction shall be deemed to be an original public
record for all purposes including introduction in evidence in all courts or
before administrative agencies. A transcript, exemplification or certified
copy of such reproduction shall, for all purposes recited herein, be deemed
to be a transcript, exemplification, or certified copy of the original
public record. (Source: Laws 1961, p. 3503.)
(50 ILCS 205/9)(from Ch. 116, par. 43.109) Sec. 9. Nonrecord materials or materials not included within the definition
of records as contained in this Act may be destroyed at any time by the
agency in possession of such materials without the prior approval of the
Commission. The Commission may formulate advisory procedures and
interpretations to guide in the disposition of nonrecord materials. (Source: Laws 1961, p. 3503.)
(50 ILCS 205/10)(from Ch. 116, par. 43.110) Sec. 10. The head of each agency shall submit to the appropriate
Commission, in accordance with the regulations of the Commission, lists or
schedules of public records in his custody that are not needed in the
transaction of current business and that do not have sufficient
administrative, legal or fiscal value to warrant their further
preservation. The head of each agency shall also submit lists or schedules
proposing the length of time each records series warrants retention for
administrative, legal or fiscal purposes after it has been received by the
agency. The Commission shall determine what public records have no
administrative, legal, research or historical value and should be destroyed
or otherwise disposed of and shall authorize destruction or other disposal
thereof. No public record shall be destroyed or otherwise disposed of by
any Local Records Commission on its own initiative, nor contrary to law.
This Section shall not apply to court records as governed by Section 4 of
this Act. (Source: P.A. 85‑1278.)
(50 ILCS 205/11)(from Ch. 116, par. 43.111) Sec. 11. Both Commissions with the assistance of the Secretary of State and
State Archivist, shall establish a system for the protection and
preservation of essential local records necessary for the continuity of
governmental functions in the event of emergency arising from enemy action
or natural disaster and for the reestablishment of local government
thereafter. (Source: Laws 1961, p. 3503.)
(50 ILCS 205/12)(from Ch. 116, par. 43.112) Sec. 12. Both Commissions shall with the assistance of the Secretary of
State and State Archivist determine what records are essential for
emergency government operation through consultation with all branches of
government, state agencies, and with the State Civilian Defense agency, to
determine what records are essential for post‑emergency government
operation and provide for their protection and preservation and provide for
the security storage or relocation of essential local records in the event
of an emergency arising from enemy attack or natural disaster. (Source: Laws 1961, p. 3503.)
(50 ILCS 205/13)(from Ch. 116, par. 43.113) Sec. 13. In any case where public records have been reproduced by
photography, microphotography or other reproductions on film, in accordance
with the provisions of this Act, any person or organization shall be
supplied with copies of such photographs, microphotographs, or other
reproductions on film upon payment of the required fee to the officer
having custody thereof. The fee required to be paid shall be the actual
cost of such copies, plus a service charge of 15% of such cost. (Source: Laws 1961, p. 3503.)
(50 ILCS 205/14)(from Ch. 116, par. 43.114) Sec. 14. Part 5 of Article 9 of the Uniform Commercial Code is subject to
the provisions of this Act. (Source: P.A. 91‑893, eff. 7‑1‑01.)
(50 ILCS 205/15)(from Ch. 116, par. 43.115) Sec. 15. Beginning July 1, 1984, the provisions of Section 3a of
this Act, as it relates to inspection of records, shall apply only as to
records and reports prepared or received prior to this date. Records and reports
prepared or received on or after July 1, 1984, shall be covered under
the provisions of "The Freedom of Information Act", approved by the 83rd
General Assembly. (Source: P.A. 83‑1013.)
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