Bill Text: IL HB4126 | 2023-2024 | 103rd General Assembly | Introduced


Bill Title: Amends the Illinois Insurance Code. Adds provisions concerning market analysis and market conduct actions. Makes changes to provisions concerning market conduct and non-financial examinations, examination reports, insurance compliance self-evaluative privilege, confidentiality, fees and charges, examination, and fiduciary and bonding requirements. Amends the Network Adequacy and Transparency Act. Adds definitions. Establishes minimum ratios of providers to beneficiaries for network plans issued, delivered, amended, or renewed during 2024. Makes changes to provisions concerning network adequacy, notice of nonrenewal or termination, transition of services, network transparency, administration and enforcement, and provider requirements. Amends the Managed Care Reform and Patient Rights Act. Makes changes to provisions concerning notice of nonrenewal or termination and transition of services. Amends the Illinois Administrative Procedure Act to authorize the Department of Insurance to adopt emergency rules implementing federal standards for provider ratios, time and distance, or appointment wait times when such standards apply to health insurance coverage regulated by the Department of Insurance and are more stringent than the State standards extant at the time the final federal standards are published. Effective immediately.

Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Democrat 1-0)

Status: (Introduced) 2024-04-05 - Rule 19(a) / Re-referred to Rules Committee [HB4126 Detail]

Download: Illinois-2023-HB4126-Introduced.html


103RD GENERAL ASSEMBLY
State of Illinois
2023 and 2024
HB4126

Introduced , by Rep. Sue Scherer

SYNOPSIS AS INTRODUCED:
See Index

Amends the Illinois Insurance Code. Adds provisions concerning market analysis and market conduct actions. Makes changes to provisions concerning market conduct and non-financial examinations, examination reports, insurance compliance self-evaluative privilege, confidentiality, fees and charges, examination, and fiduciary and bonding requirements. Amends the Network Adequacy and Transparency Act. Adds definitions. Establishes minimum ratios of providers to beneficiaries for network plans issued, delivered, amended, or renewed during 2024. Makes changes to provisions concerning network adequacy, notice of nonrenewal or termination, transition of services, network transparency, administration and enforcement, and provider requirements. Amends the Managed Care Reform and Patient Rights Act. Makes changes to provisions concerning notice of nonrenewal or termination and transition of services. Amends the Illinois Administrative Procedure Act to authorize the Department of Insurance to adopt emergency rules implementing federal standards for provider ratios, time and distance, or appointment wait times when such standards apply to health insurance coverage regulated by the Department of Insurance and are more stringent than the State standards extant at the time the final federal standards are published. Effective immediately.
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A BILL FOR

HB4126LRB103 33572 RJT 63384 b
1 AN ACT concerning regulation.
2 Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
3represented in the General Assembly:
4 Section 5. The Illinois Administrative Procedure Act is
5amended by adding Section 5-45.21 as follows:
6 (5 ILCS 100/5-45.21 new)
7 Sec. 5-45.21. Emergency rulemaking; Network Adequacy and
8Transparency Act. To provide for the expeditious and timely
9implementation of the Network Adequacy and Transparency Act,
10emergency rules implementing federal standards for provider
11ratios, travel time and distance, and appointment wait times
12if such standards apply to health insurance coverage regulated
13by the Department of Insurance and are more stringent than the
14State standards extant at the time the final federal standards
15are published may be adopted in accordance with Section 5-45
16by the Department of Insurance. The adoption of emergency
17rules authorized by Section 5-45 and this Section is deemed to
18be necessary for the public interest, safety, and welfare.
19 Section 10. The Illinois Insurance Code is amended by
20changing Sections 132, 132.5, 155.35, 402, 408, 511.109,
21512-3, 512-5, and 513b3 and by adding Section 512-11 as
22follows:

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1 (215 ILCS 5/132) (from Ch. 73, par. 744)
2 Sec. 132. Market conduct and non-financial examinations.
3 (a) Definitions.
4 As used in this Section:
5 "Desk examination" means an examination conducted by
6market conduct surveillance personnel at a location other than
7the regulated person's premises. A "desk examination" is
8usually performed at the Department's offices with the insurer
9providing requested documents by hard copy, microfiche, discs,
10or other electronic media for review without an on-site
11examination.
12 "Market analysis" means a process whereby market conduct
13surveillance personnel collect and analyze information from
14filed schedules, surveys, data calls, required reports, and
15other sources in order to develop a baseline understanding of
16the marketplace and to identify patterns or practices of
17regulated persons that deviate significantly from the norm or
18that may pose a potential risk to the insurance consumer.
19 "Market conduct action" means any of the full range of
20activities that the Director may initiate to assess and
21address the market practices of regulated persons, including,
22but not limited to, market analysis and market conduct
23examinations. "Market conduct action" does not include the
24Department's consumer complaint process outlined in 50 Ill.
25Adm. Code 926; however, the Department may initiate market

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1conduct actions based on information gathered during that
2process. Examples of "market conduct action" include, but are
3not limited to:
4 (1) correspondence with the company or person;
5 (2) interviews with the company or person;
6 (3) information gathering;
7 (4) reviews of policies and procedures;
8 (5) interrogatories;
9 (6) reviews of self-evaluations and voluntary
10 compliance programs of the person or company;
11 (7) self-audits; and
12 (8) market conduct examinations.
13 "Market conduct examination" or "examination" means any
14type of examination described in the NAIC Market Regulation
15Handbook that may be used to assess a regulated person's
16compliance with the laws, rules, and regulations applicable to
17the examinee. "Market conduct examination" includes
18comprehensive examinations, targeted examinations, and
19follow-up examinations. Market conduct examinations may be
20conducted as desk examinations, on-site examinations, or a
21combination of those 2 types of examinations.
22 "Market conduct surveillance" means market analysis or a
23market conduct action.
24 "Market conduct surveillance personnel" means those
25individuals employed or retained by the Department and
26designated by the Director to collect, analyze, review, or act

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1on information in the insurance marketplace that identifies
2patterns or practices of insurers. "Market conduct
3surveillance personnel" includes all persons identified as an
4examiner in the insurance laws or rules of this State if the
5Director has designated those persons to assist the Director
6in ascertaining the non-financial business practices,
7performance, and operations of a company or person subject to
8the Director's jurisdiction.
9 "NAIC" means the National Association of Insurance
10Commissioners.
11 "On-site examination" means an examination conducted at
12the insurer's home office or the location where the records
13under review are stored.
14 (b) Examinations. (1)
15 The Director, for the purposes of ascertaining the
16non-financial business practices, performance, and operations
17of any company, may make examinations of:
18 (1) (a) any company transacting or being organized to
19 transact business in this State;
20 (2) (b) any person engaged in or proposing to be
21 engaged in the organization, promotion, or solicitation of
22 shares or capital contributions to or aiding in the
23 formation of a company;
24 (3) (c) any person having a contract, written or oral,
25 pertaining to the management or control of a company as
26 general agent, managing agent, or attorney-in-fact;

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1 (4) (d) any licensed or registered producer, firm, or
2 administrator, or any person, organization, or corporation
3 making application for any licenses or registration;
4 (5) (e) any person engaged in the business of
5 adjusting losses or financing premiums; or
6 (6) (f) any person, organization, trust, or
7 corporation having custody or control of information
8 reasonably related to the operation, performance, or
9 conduct of a company or person subject to the jurisdiction
10 of the Director.
11 (c) Market analysis and market conduct actions.
12 (1) The Director may perform market analysis by
13 gathering and analyzing information from data currently
14 available to the Director, information from surveys or
15 reports that are submitted regularly to the Director or
16 required in a data call, information collected by the
17 NAIC, and information from a variety of other sources in
18 both the public and private domain in order to develop a
19 baseline understanding of the marketplace and to identify
20 for further review practices that deviate from the norm or
21 that may pose a potential risk to the insurance consumer.
22 The Director shall use the NAIC Market Regulation Handbook
23 as a guide in performing market analysis.
24 (2) If the Director determines that further inquiry
25 into a particular person or practice is needed, the
26 Director may consider one or more market conduct actions.

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1 The Director shall inform the examinee in writing of the
2 type of market conduct action selected and shall use the
3 NAIC Market Regulation Handbook as a guide in performing
4 the market conduct action. The Director may coordinate a
5 market conduct action and findings of this State with
6 market conduct actions and findings of other states.
7 (3) Nothing in this Section requires the Director to
8 conduct market analysis prior to initiating any market
9 conduct action.
10 (4) Nothing in this Section restricts the Director to
11 the type of market conduct action initially selected. The
12 Director shall inform the examinee in writing of any
13 change in the type of market conduct action being
14 conducted.
15 (d) Access to books and records; oaths and examinations.
16 (2) Every examinee company or person being examined and
17its officers, directors, and agents must provide to the
18Director convenient and free access at all reasonable hours at
19its office or location to all books, records, documents,
20including consumer communications, and any or all papers
21relating to the business, performance, operations, and affairs
22of the examinee company. The officers, directors, and agents
23of the examinee company or person must facilitate the market
24conduct action examination and aid in the action examination
25so far as it is in their power to do so.
26 The Director and any authorized market conduct

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1surveillance personnel examiner have the power to administer
2oaths and examine under oath any person relative to the
3business of the examinee company being examined. Any delay of
4more than 5 business days in the transmission of requested
5documents without an extension approved by the Director or
6designated market conduct surveillance personnel is a
7violation of this Section.
8 (e) Examination report.
9 (3) The market conduct surveillance personnel examiners
10designated by the Director under Section 402 must make a full
11and true report of every examination made by them, which
12contains only facts ascertained from the books, papers,
13records, or documents, and other evidence obtained by
14investigation and examined by them or ascertained from the
15testimony of officers or agents or other persons examined
16under oath concerning the business, affairs, conduct, and
17performance of the examinee company or person. The report of
18examination must be verified by the oath of the examiner in
19charge thereof, and when so verified is prima facie evidence
20in any action or proceeding in the name of the State against
21the company, its officers, or agents upon the facts stated
22therein.
23 (f) Examinee acceptance of examination report.
24 The Department and the examinee shall adhere to the
25following timeline, unless a mutual agreement is reached to
26modify the timeline:

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1 (1) The Department shall deliver the draft report to
2 the examinee within 60 days after completion of the
3 examination. "Completion of the examination" means the
4 date the Department confirms in writing that the
5 examination is completed. Nothing in this Section prevents
6 the Department from sharing an earlier draft of the report
7 with the examinee before confirming that the examination
8 is completed.
9 (2) If the examinee chooses to respond with written
10 submissions or rebuttals, the examinee must do so within
11 30 days after receipt of any draft report delivered after
12 the completion of the examination.
13 (3) After receipt of any written submissions or
14 rebuttals, the Department shall issue a final report. At
15 any time, the Department may share draft corrections or
16 changes to the report with the examinee before issuing a
17 final report, and the examinee shall have 30 days to
18 respond to the draft.
19 (4) The examinee shall, within 10 days after the
20 issuance of the final report, accept the final report or
21 request a hearing in writing. Failure to take either
22 action within 10 days shall be deemed an acceptance of the
23 final report. If the examinee accepts the examination
24 report, the Director shall continue to hold the content of
25 the examination report as private and confidential for a
26 period of 30 days, except to the extent provided for in

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1 subsection (h) and in paragraph (10) of subsection (g).
2 Thereafter, the Director shall open the report for public
3 inspection if no court of competent jurisdiction has
4 stayed its publication.
5 (g) Written hearing.
6 Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in this Code or
7Department rules, if the examinee requests a hearing, the
8following procedures apply:
9 (1) The examinee shall request the hearing in writing
10 and shall specify the issues in the final report that the
11 examinee is challenging. The examinee is limited to
12 challenging the issues that were previously challenged in
13 the examinee's written submission and rebuttal or
14 supplemental submission and rebuttal as provided pursuant
15 to paragraphs (2) and (3) of subsection (f).
16 (2) The hearing shall be conducted by written
17 arguments submitted to the Director.
18 (3) Discovery is limited to the market conduct
19 surveillance personnel's work papers that are relevant to
20 the issues the examinee is challenging. The relevant
21 market conduct surveillance personnel's work papers shall
22 be deemed admitted into and included in the record. No
23 other forms of discovery, including depositions and
24 interrogatories, are allowed, except upon written
25 agreement of the examinee and the Department's counsel.
26 (4) Only the examinee and the Department's counsel may

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1 submit written arguments.
2 (5) The examinee shall submit its written argument
3 within 30 days after the Department's counsel serves a
4 formal notice of hearing.
5 (6) The Department's counsel shall submit its written
6 response within 30 days after the examinee submits its
7 written argument.
8 (7) The Director shall issue a decision accompanied by
9 findings and conclusions resulting from the Director's
10 consideration and review of the written arguments, the
11 final report, relevant market conduct surveillance
12 personnel work papers, and any written submissions or
13 rebuttals. The Director's order is a final agency action
14 and shall be served upon the examinee by electronic mail
15 together with a copy of the final report pursuant to
16 Section 10-75 of the Illinois Administrative Procedure
17 Act.
18 (8) Any portion of the final examination report that
19 was not challenged by the examinee is incorporated into
20 the decision of the Director.
21 (9) Findings of fact and conclusions of law in the
22 Director's final agency action are prima facie evidence in
23 any legal or regulatory action.
24 (10) If an examinee has requested a hearing, the
25 Director shall continue to hold the content of any
26 examination report or other final agency action of a

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1 market conduct examination as private and confidential for
2 a period of 49 days after the final agency action. After
3 the 49-day period expires, the Director shall open the
4 final agency action for public inspection if a court of
5 competent jurisdiction has not stayed its publication.
6 (h) Nothing in this Section prevents the Director from
7disclosing at any time the content of an examination report,
8preliminary examination report, or results, or any matter
9relating to a report or results, to the division or to the
10insurance division of any other state or agency or office of
11the federal government at any time if the division, agency, or
12office receiving the report or related matters agrees and has
13the legal authority to hold it confidential in a manner
14consistent with this Section.
15 (i) Confidentiality.
16 (1) The Director and any other person in the course of
17 market conduct surveillance shall keep confidential all
18 documents pertaining to the market conduct surveillance,
19 including working papers, third-party models, or products,
20 complaint logs, and copies of any documents created by,
21 produced by, obtained by, or disclosed to the Director,
22 market conduct surveillance personnel, or any other person
23 in the course of market conduct surveillance conducted
24 pursuant to this Section, and all documents obtained by
25 the NAIC as a result of this Section. The documents shall
26 remain confidential after termination of the market

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1 conduct surveillance, are not subject to subpoena, are not
2 subject to discovery or admissible as evidence in private
3 civil litigation, are not subject to disclosure under the
4 Freedom of Information Act, and shall not be made public
5 at any time or used by the Director or any other person,
6 except as provided in paragraphs (3), (4), and (6) of this
7 subsection and in subsection (l).
8 (2) The Director, the Department, and any other person
9 in the course of market conduct surveillance shall keep
10 confidential any self-evaluation or voluntary compliance
11 program documents disclosed to the Director or other
12 person by an examinee and the data collected via the NAIC
13 market conduct annual statement. The documents are not
14 subject to subpoena, are not subject to discovery or
15 admissible as evidence in private civil litigation, are
16 not subject to disclosure under the Freedom of Information
17 Act, and shall not be made public or used by the Director
18 or any other person, except as provided in paragraphs (3),
19 (4), and (6) of this subsection, in subsection (l), or in
20 Section 155.35 of this Code.
21 (3) Notwithstanding paragraphs (1) and (2), and
22 consistent with paragraph (5), in order to assist in the
23 performance of the Director's duties, the Director may:
24 (A) share documents, materials, communications, or
25 other information, including the confidential and
26 privileged documents, materials, or information

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1 described in this subsection, with other State,
2 federal, alien, and international regulatory agencies
3 and law enforcement authorities and the NAIC, its
4 affiliates, and subsidiaries, if the recipient agrees
5 to and has the legal authority to maintain the
6 confidentiality and privileged status of the document,
7 material, communication, or other information;
8 (B) receive documents, materials, communications,
9 or information, including otherwise confidential and
10 privileged documents, materials, or information, from
11 the NAIC and its affiliates or subsidiaries, and from
12 regulatory and law enforcement officials of other
13 domestic, alien, or international jurisdictions,
14 authorities, and agencies, and shall maintain as
15 confidential or privileged any document, material,
16 communication, or information received with notice or
17 the understanding that it is confidential or
18 privileged under the laws of the jurisdiction that is
19 the source of the document, material, communication,
20 or information;
21 (C) enter into agreements governing the sharing
22 and use of information consistent with this Section;
23 and
24 (D) when the Director performs any type of market
25 conduct surveillance that does not rise to the level
26 of a market conduct examination, make the final

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1 results of the market conduct surveillance, in an
2 aggregated format, available for public inspection in
3 a manner deemed appropriate by the Director.
4 (4) Nothing in this Section limits:
5 (A) the Director's authority to use, if consistent
6 with subsection (5) of Section 188.1, any final or
7 preliminary examination report, any market conduct
8 surveillance or examinee work papers or other
9 documents, or any other information discovered or
10 developed during the course of any market conduct
11 surveillance, in the furtherance of any legal or
12 regulatory action initiated by the Director that the
13 Director may, in the Director's sole discretion, deem
14 appropriate; or
15 (B) the ability of an examinee to conduct
16 discovery in accordance with paragraph (3) of
17 subsection (g).
18 (5) Disclosure to the Director of documents,
19 materials, communications, or information required as part
20 of any type of market conduct surveillance does not waive
21 any applicable privilege or claim of confidentiality in
22 the documents, materials, communications, or information.
23 (6) If the Director deems fit, the Director may
24 publicly acknowledge the existence of an ongoing
25 examination before filing the examination report but shall
26 not disclose any other information protected under this

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1 subsection.
2 (j) Corrective actions; sanctions.
3 (1) As a result of any market conduct action other
4 than market analysis, the Director may order the examinee
5 to take any action the Director considers necessary or
6 appropriate in accordance with the report of examination
7 or any hearing thereon, including, but not limited to,
8 requiring the regulated person to undertake corrective
9 actions to cease and desist an identified violation or
10 institute processes and practices to comply with
11 applicable standards, requiring reimbursement or
12 restitution to persons harmed by the regulated person's
13 violation, or imposing civil penalties, for acts in
14 violation of any law, rule, or prior lawful order of the
15 Director. Civil penalties imposed as a result of a market
16 conduct action shall be consistent, reasonable, and
17 justifiable.
18 (2) If any other provision of this Code or any other
19 law or rule under the Director's jurisdiction prescribes
20 an amount or range of penalties for a violation of a
21 particular statute, that provision shall apply. If no
22 penalty is already provided by law or rule for a violation
23 and the violation is quantifiable, then the Director may
24 order a penalty of up to $3,000 for every act in violation
25 of any law, rule, or prior lawful order of the Director. If
26 the examination report finds a violation by the examinee

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1 that the report is unable to quantify, such as, an
2 operational policy or procedure that conflicts with
3 applicable law, then the Director may order a penalty of
4 up to $10,000 for that violation. A violation of
5 subsection (d) is punishable by a fine of $2,000 per day up
6 to a maximum of $500,000.
7 (k) Participation in national market conduct databases.
8 The Director shall collect and report market data to the
9NAIC's market information systems, including, but not limited
10to, the Complaint Database System, the Examination Tracking
11System, and the Regulatory Information Retrieval System, or
12other successor NAIC products as determined by the Director.
13Information collected and maintained by the Department for
14inclusion in these NAIC market information systems shall be
15compiled in a manner that meets the requirements of the NAIC.
16 (4) The Director must notify the company or person made
17the subject of any examination hereunder of the contents of
18the verified examination report before filing it and making
19the report public of any matters relating thereto, and must
20afford the company or person an opportunity to demand a
21hearing with reference to the facts and other evidence therein
22contained.
23 The company or person may request a hearing within 10 days
24after receipt of the examination report by giving the Director
25written notice of that request, together with a statement of
26its objections. The Director must then conduct a hearing in

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1accordance with Sections 402 and 403. He must issue a written
2order based upon the examination report and upon the hearing
3within 90 days after the report is filed or within 90 days
4after the hearing.
5 If the examination reveals that the company is operating
6in violation of any law, regulation, or prior order, the
7Director in the written order may require the company or
8person to take any action he considers necessary or
9appropriate in accordance with the report of examination or
10any hearing thereon. The order is subject to judicial review
11under the Administrative Review Law. The Director may withhold
12any report from public inspection for such time as he may deem
13proper and may, after filing the same, publish any part or all
14of the report as he considers to be in the interest of the
15public, in one or more newspapers in this State, without
16expense to the company.
17 (5) Any company which or person who violates or aids and
18abets any violation of a written order issued under this
19Section shall be guilty of a business offense and may be fined
20not more than $5,000. The penalty shall be paid into the
21General Revenue fund of the State of Illinois.
22(Source: P.A. 87-108.)
23 (215 ILCS 5/132.5) (from Ch. 73, par. 744.5)
24 Sec. 132.5. Examination reports.
25 (a) General description. All examination reports shall be

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1comprised of only facts appearing upon the books, records, or
2other documents of the company, its agents, or other persons
3examined or as ascertained from the testimony of its officers,
4agents, or other persons examined concerning its affairs and
5the conclusions and recommendations as the examiners find
6reasonably warranted from those facts.
7 (b) Filing of examination report. No later than 60 days
8following completion of the examination, the examiner in
9charge shall file with the Department a verified written
10report of examination under oath. Upon receipt of the verified
11report, the Department shall transmit the report to the
12company examined, together with a notice that affords the
13company examined a reasonable opportunity of not more than 30
14days to make a written submission or rebuttal with respect to
15any matters contained in the examination report.
16 (c) Adoption of the report on examination. Within 30 days
17of the end of the period allowed for the receipt of written
18submissions or rebuttals, the Director shall fully consider
19and review the report, together with any written submissions
20or rebuttals and any relevant portions of the examiners work
21papers and enter an order:
22 (1) Adopting the examination report as filed or with
23 modification or corrections. If the examination report
24 reveals that the company is operating in violation of any
25 law, regulation, or prior order of the Director, the
26 Director may order the company to take any action the

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1 Director considers necessary and appropriate to cure the
2 violation.
3 (2) Rejecting the examination report with directions
4 to the examiners to reopen the examination for purposes of
5 obtaining additional data, documentation, or information
6 and refiling under subsection (b).
7 (3) Calling for an investigatory hearing with no less
8 than 20 days notice to the company for purposes of
9 obtaining additional documentation, data, information, and
10 testimony.
11 (d) Order and procedures. All orders entered under
12paragraph (1) of subsection (c) shall be accompanied by
13findings and conclusions resulting from the Director's
14consideration and review of the examination report, relevant
15examiner work papers, and any written submissions or
16rebuttals. The order shall be considered a final
17administrative decision and may be appealed in accordance with
18the Administrative Review Law. The order shall be served upon
19the company by certified mail, together with a copy of the
20adopted examination report. Within 30 days of the issuance of
21the adopted report, the company shall file affidavits executed
22by each of its directors stating under oath that they have
23received a copy of the adopted report and related orders.
24 Any hearing conducted under paragraph (3) of subsection
25(c) by the Director or an authorized representative shall be
26conducted as a nonadversarial confidential investigatory

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1proceeding as necessary for the resolution of any
2inconsistencies, discrepancies, or disputed issues apparent
3upon the face of the filed examination report or raised by or
4as a result of the Director's review of relevant work papers or
5by the written submission or rebuttal of the company. Within
620 days of the conclusion of any hearing, the Director shall
7enter an order under paragraph (1) of subsection (c).
8 The Director shall not appoint an examiner as an
9authorized representative to conduct the hearing. The hearing
10shall proceed expeditiously with discovery by the company
11limited to the examiner's work papers that tend to
12substantiate any assertions set forth in any written
13submission or rebuttal. The Director or his representative may
14issue subpoenas for the attendance of any witnesses or the
15production of any documents deemed relevant to the
16investigation, whether under the control of the Department,
17the company, or other persons. The documents produced shall be
18included in the record, and testimony taken by the Director or
19his representative shall be under oath and preserved for the
20record. Nothing contained in this Section shall require the
21Department to disclose any information or records that would
22indicate or show the existence or content of any investigation
23or activity of a criminal justice agency.
24 The hearing shall proceed with the Director or his
25representative posing questions to the persons subpoenaed.
26Thereafter the company and the Department may present

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1testimony relevant to the investigation. Cross-examination
2shall be conducted only by the Director or his representative.
3The company and the Department shall be permitted to make
4closing statements and may be represented by counsel of their
5choice.
6 (e) Publication and use. Upon the adoption of the
7examination report under paragraph (1) of subsection (c), the
8Director shall continue to hold the content of the examination
9report as private and confidential information for a period of
1035 days, except to the extent provided in subsection (b).
11Thereafter, the Director may open the report for public
12inspection so long as no court of competent jurisdiction has
13stayed its publication.
14 Nothing contained in this Code shall prevent or be
15construed as prohibiting the Director from disclosing the
16content of an examination report, preliminary examination
17report or results, or any matter relating thereto, to the
18insurance department of any other state or country or to law
19enforcement officials of this or any other state or agency of
20the federal government at any time, so long as the agency or
21office receiving the report or matters relating thereto agrees
22in writing to hold it confidential and in a manner consistent
23with this Code.
24 In the event the Director determines that regulatory
25action is appropriate as a result of any examination, he may
26initiate any proceedings or actions as provided by law.

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1 (f) Confidentiality of ancillary information. All working
2papers, recorded information, documents, and copies thereof
3produced by, obtained by, or disclosed to the Director or any
4other person in the course of any examination must be given
5confidential treatment, are not subject to subpoena, and may
6not be made public by the Director or any other persons, except
7to the extent provided in subsection (e). Access may also be
8granted to the National Association of Insurance
9Commissioners. Those parties must agree in writing before
10receiving the information to provide to it the same
11confidential treatment as required by this Section, unless the
12prior written consent of the company to which it pertains has
13been obtained.
14 This subsection (f) applies to market conduct examinations
15described in Section 132 of this Code.
16 (g) Disclosure. Nothing contained in this Code shall
17prevent or be construed as prohibiting the Director from
18disclosing the information described in subsections (e) and
19(f) to the Illinois Insurance Guaranty Fund regarding any
20member company defined in Section 534.5 if the member company
21has an authorized control level event as defined in Section
2235A-25. The Director may disclose the information described in
23this subsection so long as the Fund agrees in writing to hold
24that information confidential, in a manner consistent with
25this Code, and uses that information to prepare for the
26possible liquidation of the member company. Access to the

HB4126- 23 -LRB103 33572 RJT 63384 b
1information disclosed by the Director to the Fund shall be
2limited to the Fund's staff and its counsel. The Board of
3Directors of the Fund may have access to the information
4disclosed by the Director to the Fund once the member company
5is subject to a delinquency proceeding under Article XIII
6subject to any terms and conditions established by the
7Director.
8(Source: P.A. 102-929, eff. 5-27-22.)
9 (215 ILCS 5/155.35)
10 Sec. 155.35. Insurance compliance self-evaluative
11privilege.
12 (a) To encourage insurance companies and persons
13conducting activities regulated under this Code, both to
14conduct voluntary internal audits of their compliance programs
15and management systems and to assess and improve compliance
16with State and federal statutes, rules, and orders, an
17insurance compliance self-evaluative privilege is recognized
18to protect the confidentiality of communications relating to
19voluntary internal compliance audits. The General Assembly
20hereby finds and declares that protection of insurance
21consumers is enhanced by companies' voluntary compliance with
22this State's insurance and other laws and that the public will
23benefit from incentives to identify and remedy insurance and
24other compliance issues. It is further declared that limited
25expansion of the protection against disclosure will encourage

HB4126- 24 -LRB103 33572 RJT 63384 b
1voluntary compliance and improve insurance market conduct
2quality and that the voluntary provisions of this Section will
3not inhibit the exercise of the regulatory authority by those
4entrusted with protecting insurance consumers.
5 (b)(1) An insurance compliance self-evaluative audit
6document is privileged information and is not admissible as
7evidence in any legal action in any civil, criminal, or
8administrative proceeding, except as provided in subsections
9(c) and (d) of this Section. Documents, communications, data,
10reports, or other information created as a result of a claim
11involving personal injury or workers' compensation made
12against an insurance policy are not insurance compliance
13self-evaluative audit documents and are admissible as evidence
14in civil proceedings as otherwise provided by applicable rules
15of evidence or civil procedure, subject to any applicable
16statutory or common law privilege, including but not limited
17to the work product doctrine, the attorney-client privilege,
18or the subsequent remedial measures exclusion.
19 (2) If any company, person, or entity performs or directs
20the performance of an insurance compliance audit, an officer
21or employee involved with the insurance compliance audit, or
22any consultant who is hired for the purpose of performing the
23insurance compliance audit, may not be examined in any civil,
24criminal, or administrative proceeding as to the insurance
25compliance audit or any insurance compliance self-evaluative
26audit document, as defined in this Section. This subsection

HB4126- 25 -LRB103 33572 RJT 63384 b
1(b)(2) does not apply if the privilege set forth in subsection
2(b)(1) of this Section is determined under subsection (c) or
3(d) not to apply.
4 (3) A company may voluntarily submit, in connection with
5examinations conducted under this Article, an insurance
6compliance self-evaluative audit document to the Director, or
7his or her designee, as a confidential document under
8subsection (i) of Section 132 or subsection (f) of Section
9132.5 of this Code, as applicable, without waiving the
10privilege set forth in this Section to which the company would
11otherwise be entitled; provided, however, that the provisions
12in Sections 132 and subsection (f) of Section 132.5 permitting
13the Director to make confidential documents public pursuant to
14subsection (e) of Section 132.5 and grant access to the
15National Association of Insurance Commissioners shall not
16apply to the insurance compliance self-evaluative audit
17document so voluntarily submitted. Nothing contained in this
18subsection shall give the Director any authority to compel a
19company to disclose involuntarily or otherwise provide an
20insurance compliance self-evaluative audit document.
21 (c)(1) The privilege set forth in subsection (b) of this
22Section does not apply to the extent that it is expressly
23waived by the company that prepared or caused to be prepared
24the insurance compliance self-evaluative audit document.
25 (2) In a civil or administrative proceeding, a court of
26record may, after an in camera review, require disclosure of

HB4126- 26 -LRB103 33572 RJT 63384 b
1material for which the privilege set forth in subsection (b)
2of this Section is asserted, if the court determines one of the
3following:
4 (A) the privilege is asserted for a fraudulent
5 purpose;
6 (B) the material is not subject to the privilege; or
7 (C) even if subject to the privilege, the material
8 shows evidence of noncompliance with State and federal
9 statutes, rules and orders and the company failed to
10 undertake reasonable corrective action or eliminate the
11 noncompliance within a reasonable time.
12 (3) In a criminal proceeding, a court of record may, after
13an in camera review, require disclosure of material for which
14the privilege described in subsection (b) of this Section is
15asserted, if the court determines one of the following:
16 (A) the privilege is asserted for a fraudulent
17 purpose;
18 (B) the material is not subject to the privilege;
19 (C) even if subject to the privilege, the material
20 shows evidence of noncompliance with State and federal
21 statutes, rules and orders and the company failed to
22 undertake reasonable corrective action or eliminate such
23 noncompliance within a reasonable time; or
24 (D) the material contains evidence relevant to
25 commission of a criminal offense under this Code, and all
26 of the following factors are present:

HB4126- 27 -LRB103 33572 RJT 63384 b
1 (i) the Director, State's Attorney, or Attorney
2 General has a compelling need for the information;
3 (ii) the information is not otherwise available;
4 and
5 (iii) the Director, State's Attorney, or Attorney
6 General is unable to obtain the substantial equivalent
7 of the information by any means without incurring
8 unreasonable cost and delay.
9 (d)(1) Within 30 days after the Director, State's
10Attorney, or Attorney General makes a written request by
11certified mail for disclosure of an insurance compliance
12self-evaluative audit document under this subsection, the
13company that prepared or caused the document to be prepared
14may file with the appropriate court a petition requesting an
15in camera hearing on whether the insurance compliance
16self-evaluative audit document or portions of the document are
17privileged under this Section or subject to disclosure. The
18court has jurisdiction over a petition filed by a company
19under this subsection requesting an in camera hearing on
20whether the insurance compliance self-evaluative audit
21document or portions of the document are privileged or subject
22to disclosure. Failure by the company to file a petition
23waives the privilege.
24 (2) A company asserting the insurance compliance
25self-evaluative privilege in response to a request for
26disclosure under this subsection shall include in its request

HB4126- 28 -LRB103 33572 RJT 63384 b
1for an in camera hearing all of the information set forth in
2subsection (d)(5) of this Section.
3 (3) Upon the filing of a petition under this subsection,
4the court shall issue an order scheduling, within 45 days
5after the filing of the petition, an in camera hearing to
6determine whether the insurance compliance self-evaluative
7audit document or portions of the document are privileged
8under this Section or subject to disclosure.
9 (4) The court, after an in camera review, may require
10disclosure of material for which the privilege in subsection
11(b) of this Section is asserted if the court determines, based
12upon its in camera review, that any one of the conditions set
13forth in subsection (c)(2)(A) through (C) is applicable as to
14a civil or administrative proceeding or that any one of the
15conditions set forth in subsection (c)(3)(A) through (D) is
16applicable as to a criminal proceeding. Upon making such a
17determination, the court may only compel the disclosure of
18those portions of an insurance compliance self-evaluative
19audit document relevant to issues in dispute in the underlying
20proceeding. Any compelled disclosure will not be considered to
21be a public document or be deemed to be a waiver of the
22privilege for any other civil, criminal, or administrative
23proceeding. A party unsuccessfully opposing disclosure may
24apply to the court for an appropriate order protecting the
25document from further disclosure.
26 (5) A company asserting the insurance compliance

HB4126- 29 -LRB103 33572 RJT 63384 b
1self-evaluative privilege in response to a request for
2disclosure under this subsection (d) shall provide to the
3Director, State's Attorney, or Attorney General, as the case
4may be, at the time of filing any objection to the disclosure,
5all of the following information:
6 (A) The date of the insurance compliance
7 self-evaluative audit document.
8 (B) The identity of the entity conducting the audit.
9 (C) The general nature of the activities covered by
10 the insurance compliance audit.
11 (D) An identification of the portions of the insurance
12 compliance self-evaluative audit document for which the
13 privilege is being asserted.
14 (e) (1) A company asserting the insurance compliance
15self-evaluative privilege set forth in subsection (b) of this
16Section has the burden of demonstrating the applicability of
17the privilege. Once a company has established the
18applicability of the privilege, a party seeking disclosure
19under subsections (c)(2)(A) or (C) of this Section has the
20burden of proving that the privilege is asserted for a
21fraudulent purpose or that the company failed to undertake
22reasonable corrective action or eliminate the noncompliance
23with a reasonable time. The Director, State's Attorney, or
24Attorney General seeking disclosure under subsection (c)(3) of
25this Section has the burden of proving the elements set forth
26in subsection (c)(3) of this Section.

HB4126- 30 -LRB103 33572 RJT 63384 b
1 (2) The parties may at any time stipulate in proceedings
2under subsections (c) or (d) of this Section to entry of an
3order directing that specific information contained in an
4insurance compliance self-evaluative audit document is or is
5not subject to the privilege provided under subsection (b) of
6this Section.
7 (f) The privilege set forth in subsection (b) of this
8Section shall not extend to any of the following:
9 (1) documents, communications, data, reports, or other
10 information required to be collected, developed,
11 maintained, reported, or otherwise made available to a
12 regulatory agency pursuant to this Code, or other federal
13 or State law, rule, or order;
14 (2) information obtained by observation or monitoring
15 by any regulatory agency; or
16 (3) information obtained from a source independent of
17 the insurance compliance audit.
18 (g) As used in this Section:
19 (1) "Insurance compliance audit" means a voluntary,
20 internal evaluation, review, assessment, or audit not
21 otherwise expressly required by law of a company or an
22 activity regulated under this Code, or other State or
23 federal law applicable to a company, or of management
24 systems related to the company or activity, that is
25 designed to identify and prevent noncompliance and to
26 improve compliance with those statutes, rules, or orders.

HB4126- 31 -LRB103 33572 RJT 63384 b
1 An insurance compliance audit may be conducted by the
2 company, its employees, or by independent contractors.
3 (2) "Insurance compliance self-evaluative audit
4 document" means documents prepared as a result of or in
5 connection with and not prior to an insurance compliance
6 audit. An insurance compliance self-evaluation audit
7 document may include a written response to the findings of
8 an insurance compliance audit. An insurance compliance
9 self-evaluative audit document may include, but is not
10 limited to, as applicable, field notes and records of
11 observations, findings, opinions, suggestions,
12 conclusions, drafts, memoranda, drawings, photographs,
13 computer-generated or electronically recorded
14 information, phone records, maps, charts, graphs, and
15 surveys, provided this supporting information is collected
16 or developed for the primary purpose and in the course of
17 an insurance compliance audit. An insurance compliance
18 self-evaluative audit document may also include any of the
19 following:
20 (A) an insurance compliance audit report prepared
21 by an auditor, who may be an employee of the company or
22 an independent contractor, which may include the scope
23 of the audit, the information gained in the audit, and
24 conclusions and recommendations, with exhibits and
25 appendices;
26 (B) memoranda and documents analyzing portions or

HB4126- 32 -LRB103 33572 RJT 63384 b
1 all of the insurance compliance audit report and
2 discussing potential implementation issues;
3 (C) an implementation plan that addresses
4 correcting past noncompliance, improving current
5 compliance, and preventing future noncompliance; or
6 (D) analytic data generated in the course of
7 conducting the insurance compliance audit.
8 (3) "Company" has the same meaning as provided in
9 Section 2 of this Code.
10 (h) Nothing in this Section shall limit, waive, or
11abrogate the scope or nature of any statutory or common law
12privilege including, but not limited to, the work product
13doctrine, the attorney-client privilege, or the subsequent
14remedial measures exclusion.
15(Source: P.A. 90-499, eff. 8-19-97; 90-655, eff. 7-30-98.)
16 (215 ILCS 5/402) (from Ch. 73, par. 1014)
17 Sec. 402. Examinations, investigations and hearings. (1)
18All examinations, investigations and hearings provided for by
19this Code may be conducted either by the Director personally,
20or by one or more of the actuaries, technical advisors,
21deputies, supervisors or examiners employed or retained by the
22Department and designated by the Director for such purpose.
23When necessary to supplement its examination procedures, the
24Department may retain independent actuaries deemed competent
25by the Director, independent certified public accountants,

HB4126- 33 -LRB103 33572 RJT 63384 b
1attorneys, or qualified examiners of insurance companies
2deemed competent by the Director, or any combination of the
3foregoing, the cost of which shall be borne by the company or
4person being examined. The Director may compensate independent
5actuaries, certified public accountants and qualified
6examiners retained for supplementing examination procedures in
7amounts not to exceed the reasonable and customary charges for
8such services. The Director may also accept as a part of the
9Department's examination of any company or person (a) a report
10by an independent actuary deemed competent by the Director or
11(b) a report of an audit made by an independent certified
12public accountant. Neither those persons so designated nor any
13members of their immediate families shall be officers of,
14connected with, or financially interested in any company other
15than as policyholders, nor shall they be financially
16interested in any other corporation or person affected by the
17examination, investigation or hearing.
18 (2) All hearings provided for in this Code shall, unless
19otherwise specially provided, be held at such time and place
20as shall be designated in a notice which shall be given by the
21Director in writing to the person or company whose interests
22are affected, at least 10 days before the date designated
23therein. The notice shall state the subject of inquiry and the
24specific charges, if any. The hearings shall be held in the
25City of Springfield, the City of Chicago, or in the county
26where the principal business address of the person or company

HB4126- 34 -LRB103 33572 RJT 63384 b
1affected is located.
2(Source: P.A. 87-757.)
3 (215 ILCS 5/408) (from Ch. 73, par. 1020)
4 Sec. 408. Fees and charges.
5 (1) The Director shall charge, collect and give proper
6acquittances for the payment of the following fees and
7charges:
8 (a) For filing all documents submitted for the
9 incorporation or organization or certification of a
10 domestic company, except for a fraternal benefit society,
11 $2,000.
12 (b) For filing all documents submitted for the
13 incorporation or organization of a fraternal benefit
14 society, $500.
15 (c) For filing amendments to articles of incorporation
16 and amendments to declaration of organization, except for
17 a fraternal benefit society, a mutual benefit association,
18 a burial society or a farm mutual, $200.
19 (d) For filing amendments to articles of incorporation
20 of a fraternal benefit society, a mutual benefit
21 association or a burial society, $100.
22 (e) For filing amendments to articles of incorporation
23 of a farm mutual, $50.
24 (f) For filing bylaws or amendments thereto, $50.
25 (g) For filing agreement of merger or consolidation:

HB4126- 35 -LRB103 33572 RJT 63384 b
1 (i) for a domestic company, except for a fraternal
2 benefit society, a mutual benefit association, a
3 burial society, or a farm mutual, $2,000.
4 (ii) for a foreign or alien company, except for a
5 fraternal benefit society, $600.
6 (iii) for a fraternal benefit society, a mutual
7 benefit association, a burial society, or a farm
8 mutual, $200.
9 (h) For filing agreements of reinsurance by a domestic
10 company, $200.
11 (i) For filing all documents submitted by a foreign or
12 alien company to be admitted to transact business or
13 accredited as a reinsurer in this State, except for a
14 fraternal benefit society, $5,000.
15 (j) For filing all documents submitted by a foreign or
16 alien fraternal benefit society to be admitted to transact
17 business in this State, $500.
18 (k) For filing declaration of withdrawal of a foreign
19 or alien company, $50.
20 (l) For filing annual statement by a domestic company,
21 except a fraternal benefit society, a mutual benefit
22 association, a burial society, or a farm mutual, $200.
23 (m) For filing annual statement by a domestic
24 fraternal benefit society, $100.
25 (n) For filing annual statement by a farm mutual, a
26 mutual benefit association, or a burial society, $50.

HB4126- 36 -LRB103 33572 RJT 63384 b
1 (o) For issuing a certificate of authority or renewal
2 thereof except to a foreign fraternal benefit society,
3 $400.
4 (p) For issuing a certificate of authority or renewal
5 thereof to a foreign fraternal benefit society, $200.
6 (q) For issuing an amended certificate of authority,
7 $50.
8 (r) For each certified copy of certificate of
9 authority, $20.
10 (s) For each certificate of deposit, or valuation, or
11 compliance or surety certificate, $20.
12 (t) For copies of papers or records per page, $1.
13 (u) For each certification to copies of papers or
14 records, $10.
15 (v) For multiple copies of documents or certificates
16 listed in subparagraphs (r), (s), and (u) of paragraph (1)
17 of this Section, $10 for the first copy of a certificate of
18 any type and $5 for each additional copy of the same
19 certificate requested at the same time, unless, pursuant
20 to paragraph (2) of this Section, the Director finds these
21 additional fees excessive.
22 (w) For issuing a permit to sell shares or increase
23 paid-up capital:
24 (i) in connection with a public stock offering,
25 $300;
26 (ii) in any other case, $100.

HB4126- 37 -LRB103 33572 RJT 63384 b
1 (x) For issuing any other certificate required or
2 permissible under the law, $50.
3 (y) For filing a plan of exchange of the stock of a
4 domestic stock insurance company, a plan of
5 demutualization of a domestic mutual company, or a plan of
6 reorganization under Article XII, $2,000.
7 (z) For filing a statement of acquisition of a
8 domestic company as defined in Section 131.4 of this Code,
9 $2,000.
10 (aa) For filing an agreement to purchase the business
11 of an organization authorized under the Dental Service
12 Plan Act or the Voluntary Health Services Plans Act or of a
13 health maintenance organization or a limited health
14 service organization, $2,000.
15 (bb) For filing a statement of acquisition of a
16 foreign or alien insurance company as defined in Section
17 131.12a of this Code, $1,000.
18 (cc) For filing a registration statement as required
19 in Sections 131.13 and 131.14, the notification as
20 required by Sections 131.16, 131.20a, or 141.4, or an
21 agreement or transaction required by Sections 124.2(2),
22 141, 141a, or 141.1, $200.
23 (dd) For filing an application for licensing of:
24 (i) a religious or charitable risk pooling trust
25 or a workers' compensation pool, $1,000;
26 (ii) a workers' compensation service company,

HB4126- 38 -LRB103 33572 RJT 63384 b
1 $500;
2 (iii) a self-insured automobile fleet, $200; or
3 (iv) a renewal of or amendment of any license
4 issued pursuant to (i), (ii), or (iii) above, $100.
5 (ee) For filing articles of incorporation for a
6 syndicate to engage in the business of insurance through
7 the Illinois Insurance Exchange, $2,000.
8 (ff) For filing amended articles of incorporation for
9 a syndicate engaged in the business of insurance through
10 the Illinois Insurance Exchange, $100.
11 (gg) For filing articles of incorporation for a
12 limited syndicate to join with other subscribers or
13 limited syndicates to do business through the Illinois
14 Insurance Exchange, $1,000.
15 (hh) For filing amended articles of incorporation for
16 a limited syndicate to do business through the Illinois
17 Insurance Exchange, $100.
18 (ii) For a permit to solicit subscriptions to a
19 syndicate or limited syndicate, $100.
20 (jj) For the filing of each form as required in
21 Section 143 of this Code, $50 per form. The fee for
22 advisory and rating organizations shall be $200 per form.
23 (i) For the purposes of the form filing fee,
24 filings made on insert page basis will be considered
25 one form at the time of its original submission.
26 Changes made to a form subsequent to its approval

HB4126- 39 -LRB103 33572 RJT 63384 b
1 shall be considered a new filing.
2 (ii) Only one fee shall be charged for a form,
3 regardless of the number of other forms or policies
4 with which it will be used.
5 (iii) Fees charged for a policy filed as it will be
6 issued regardless of the number of forms comprising
7 that policy shall not exceed $1,500. For advisory or
8 rating organizations, fees charged for a policy filed
9 as it will be issued regardless of the number of forms
10 comprising that policy shall not exceed $2,500.
11 (iv) The Director may by rule exempt forms from
12 such fees.
13 (kk) For filing an application for licensing of a
14 reinsurance intermediary, $500.
15 (ll) For filing an application for renewal of a
16 license of a reinsurance intermediary, $200.
17 (mm) For a network adequacy filing required under the
18 Network Adequacy and Transparency Act, $500, except that
19 the fee for a filing required based on a material change is
20 $100.
21 (2) When printed copies or numerous copies of the same
22paper or records are furnished or certified, the Director may
23reduce such fees for copies if he finds them excessive. He may,
24when he considers it in the public interest, furnish without
25charge to state insurance departments and persons other than
26companies, copies or certified copies of reports of

HB4126- 40 -LRB103 33572 RJT 63384 b
1examinations and of other papers and records.
2 (3) The expenses incurred in any performance examination
3authorized by law shall be paid by the company or person being
4examined. The charge shall be reasonably related to the cost
5of the examination including but not limited to compensation
6of examiners, electronic data processing costs, supervision
7and preparation of an examination report and lodging and
8travel expenses. All lodging and travel expenses shall be in
9accord with the applicable travel regulations as published by
10the Department of Central Management Services and approved by
11the Governor's Travel Control Board, except that out-of-state
12lodging and travel expenses related to examinations authorized
13under Section 132 shall be in accordance with travel rates
14prescribed under paragraph 301-7.2 of the Federal Travel
15Regulations, 41 C.F.R. 301-7.2, for reimbursement of
16subsistence expenses incurred during official travel. All
17lodging and travel expenses may be reimbursed directly upon
18authorization of the Director. With the exception of the
19direct reimbursements authorized by the Director, all
20performance examination charges collected by the Department
21shall be paid to the Insurance Producer Administration Fund,
22however, the electronic data processing costs incurred by the
23Department in the performance of any examination shall be
24billed directly to the company being examined for payment to
25the Technology Management Revolving Fund.
26 (4) At the time of any service of process on the Director

HB4126- 41 -LRB103 33572 RJT 63384 b
1as attorney for such service, the Director shall charge and
2collect the sum of $20, which may be recovered as taxable costs
3by the party to the suit or action causing such service to be
4made if he prevails in such suit or action.
5 (5) (a) The costs incurred by the Department of Insurance
6in conducting any hearing authorized by law shall be assessed
7against the parties to the hearing in such proportion as the
8Director of Insurance may determine upon consideration of all
9relevant circumstances including: (1) the nature of the
10hearing; (2) whether the hearing was instigated by, or for the
11benefit of a particular party or parties; (3) whether there is
12a successful party on the merits of the proceeding; and (4) the
13relative levels of participation by the parties.
14 (b) For purposes of this subsection (5) costs incurred
15shall mean the hearing officer fees, court reporter fees, and
16travel expenses of Department of Insurance officers and
17employees; provided however, that costs incurred shall not
18include hearing officer fees or court reporter fees unless the
19Department has retained the services of independent
20contractors or outside experts to perform such functions.
21 (c) The Director shall make the assessment of costs
22incurred as part of the final order or decision arising out of
23the proceeding; provided, however, that such order or decision
24shall include findings and conclusions in support of the
25assessment of costs. This subsection (5) shall not be
26construed as permitting the payment of travel expenses unless

HB4126- 42 -LRB103 33572 RJT 63384 b
1calculated in accordance with the applicable travel
2regulations of the Department of Central Management Services,
3as approved by the Governor's Travel Control Board. The
4Director as part of such order or decision shall require all
5assessments for hearing officer fees and court reporter fees,
6if any, to be paid directly to the hearing officer or court
7reporter by the party(s) assessed for such costs. The
8assessments for travel expenses of Department officers and
9employees shall be reimbursable to the Director of Insurance
10for deposit to the fund out of which those expenses had been
11paid.
12 (d) The provisions of this subsection (5) shall apply in
13the case of any hearing conducted by the Director of Insurance
14not otherwise specifically provided for by law.
15 (6) The Director shall charge and collect an annual
16financial regulation fee from every domestic company for
17examination and analysis of its financial condition and to
18fund the internal costs and expenses of the Interstate
19Insurance Receivership Commission as may be allocated to the
20State of Illinois and companies doing an insurance business in
21this State pursuant to Article X of the Interstate Insurance
22Receivership Compact. The fee shall be the greater fixed
23amount based upon the combination of nationwide direct premium
24income and nationwide reinsurance assumed premium income or
25upon admitted assets calculated under this subsection as
26follows:

HB4126- 43 -LRB103 33572 RJT 63384 b
1 (a) Combination of nationwide direct premium income
2 and nationwide reinsurance assumed premium.
3 (i) $150, if the premium is less than $500,000 and
4 there is no reinsurance assumed premium;
5 (ii) $750, if the premium is $500,000 or more, but
6 less than $5,000,000 and there is no reinsurance
7 assumed premium; or if the premium is less than
8 $5,000,000 and the reinsurance assumed premium is less
9 than $10,000,000;
10 (iii) $3,750, if the premium is less than
11 $5,000,000 and the reinsurance assumed premium is
12 $10,000,000 or more;
13 (iv) $7,500, if the premium is $5,000,000 or more,
14 but less than $10,000,000;
15 (v) $18,000, if the premium is $10,000,000 or
16 more, but less than $25,000,000;
17 (vi) $22,500, if the premium is $25,000,000 or
18 more, but less than $50,000,000;
19 (vii) $30,000, if the premium is $50,000,000 or
20 more, but less than $100,000,000;
21 (viii) $37,500, if the premium is $100,000,000 or
22 more.
23 (b) Admitted assets.
24 (i) $150, if admitted assets are less than
25 $1,000,000;
26 (ii) $750, if admitted assets are $1,000,000 or

HB4126- 44 -LRB103 33572 RJT 63384 b
1 more, but less than $5,000,000;
2 (iii) $3,750, if admitted assets are $5,000,000 or
3 more, but less than $25,000,000;
4 (iv) $7,500, if admitted assets are $25,000,000 or
5 more, but less than $50,000,000;
6 (v) $18,000, if admitted assets are $50,000,000 or
7 more, but less than $100,000,000;
8 (vi) $22,500, if admitted assets are $100,000,000
9 or more, but less than $500,000,000;
10 (vii) $30,000, if admitted assets are $500,000,000
11 or more, but less than $1,000,000,000;
12 (viii) $37,500, if admitted assets are
13 $1,000,000,000 or more.
14 (c) The sum of financial regulation fees charged to
15 the domestic companies of the same affiliated group shall
16 not exceed $250,000 in the aggregate in any single year
17 and shall be billed by the Director to the member company
18 designated by the group.
19 (7) The Director shall charge and collect an annual
20financial regulation fee from every foreign or alien company,
21except fraternal benefit societies, for the examination and
22analysis of its financial condition and to fund the internal
23costs and expenses of the Interstate Insurance Receivership
24Commission as may be allocated to the State of Illinois and
25companies doing an insurance business in this State pursuant
26to Article X of the Interstate Insurance Receivership Compact.

HB4126- 45 -LRB103 33572 RJT 63384 b
1The fee shall be a fixed amount based upon Illinois direct
2premium income and nationwide reinsurance assumed premium
3income in accordance with the following schedule:
4 (a) $150, if the premium is less than $500,000 and
5 there is no reinsurance assumed premium;
6 (b) $750, if the premium is $500,000 or more, but less
7 than $5,000,000 and there is no reinsurance assumed
8 premium; or if the premium is less than $5,000,000 and the
9 reinsurance assumed premium is less than $10,000,000;
10 (c) $3,750, if the premium is less than $5,000,000 and
11 the reinsurance assumed premium is $10,000,000 or more;
12 (d) $7,500, if the premium is $5,000,000 or more, but
13 less than $10,000,000;
14 (e) $18,000, if the premium is $10,000,000 or more,
15 but less than $25,000,000;
16 (f) $22,500, if the premium is $25,000,000 or more,
17 but less than $50,000,000;
18 (g) $30,000, if the premium is $50,000,000 or more,
19 but less than $100,000,000;
20 (h) $37,500, if the premium is $100,000,000 or more.
21 The sum of financial regulation fees under this subsection
22(7) charged to the foreign or alien companies within the same
23affiliated group shall not exceed $250,000 in the aggregate in
24any single year and shall be billed by the Director to the
25member company designated by the group.
26 (8) Beginning January 1, 1992, the financial regulation

HB4126- 46 -LRB103 33572 RJT 63384 b
1fees imposed under subsections (6) and (7) of this Section
2shall be paid by each company or domestic affiliated group
3annually. After January 1, 1994, the fee shall be billed by
4Department invoice based upon the company's premium income or
5admitted assets as shown in its annual statement for the
6preceding calendar year. The invoice is due upon receipt and
7must be paid no later than June 30 of each calendar year. All
8financial regulation fees collected by the Department shall be
9paid to the Insurance Financial Regulation Fund. The
10Department may not collect financial examiner per diem charges
11from companies subject to subsections (6) and (7) of this
12Section undergoing financial examination after June 30, 1992.
13 (9) In addition to the financial regulation fee required
14by this Section, a company undergoing any financial
15examination authorized by law shall pay the following costs
16and expenses incurred by the Department: electronic data
17processing costs, the expenses authorized under Section 131.21
18and subsection (d) of Section 132.4 of this Code, and lodging
19and travel expenses.
20 Electronic data processing costs incurred by the
21Department in the performance of any examination shall be
22billed directly to the company undergoing examination for
23payment to the Technology Management Revolving Fund. Except
24for direct reimbursements authorized by the Director or direct
25payments made under Section 131.21 or subsection (d) of
26Section 132.4 of this Code, all financial regulation fees and

HB4126- 47 -LRB103 33572 RJT 63384 b
1all financial examination charges collected by the Department
2shall be paid to the Insurance Financial Regulation Fund.
3 All lodging and travel expenses shall be in accordance
4with applicable travel regulations published by the Department
5of Central Management Services and approved by the Governor's
6Travel Control Board, except that out-of-state lodging and
7travel expenses related to examinations authorized under
8Sections 132.1 through 132.7 shall be in accordance with
9travel rates prescribed under paragraph 301-7.2 of the Federal
10Travel Regulations, 41 C.F.R. 301-7.2, for reimbursement of
11subsistence expenses incurred during official travel. All
12lodging and travel expenses may be reimbursed directly upon
13the authorization of the Director.
14 In the case of an organization or person not subject to the
15financial regulation fee, the expenses incurred in any
16financial examination authorized by law shall be paid by the
17organization or person being examined. The charge shall be
18reasonably related to the cost of the examination including,
19but not limited to, compensation of examiners and other costs
20described in this subsection.
21 (10) Any company, person, or entity failing to make any
22payment of $150 or more as required under this Section shall be
23subject to the penalty and interest provisions provided for in
24subsections (4) and (7) of Section 412.
25 (11) Unless otherwise specified, all of the fees collected
26under this Section shall be paid into the Insurance Financial

HB4126- 48 -LRB103 33572 RJT 63384 b
1Regulation Fund.
2 (12) For purposes of this Section:
3 (a) "Domestic company" means a company as defined in
4 Section 2 of this Code which is incorporated or organized
5 under the laws of this State, and in addition includes a
6 not-for-profit corporation authorized under the Dental
7 Service Plan Act or the Voluntary Health Services Plans
8 Act, a health maintenance organization, and a limited
9 health service organization.
10 (b) "Foreign company" means a company as defined in
11 Section 2 of this Code which is incorporated or organized
12 under the laws of any state of the United States other than
13 this State and in addition includes a health maintenance
14 organization and a limited health service organization
15 which is incorporated or organized under the laws of any
16 state of the United States other than this State.
17 (c) "Alien company" means a company as defined in
18 Section 2 of this Code which is incorporated or organized
19 under the laws of any country other than the United
20 States.
21 (d) "Fraternal benefit society" means a corporation,
22 society, order, lodge or voluntary association as defined
23 in Section 282.1 of this Code.
24 (e) "Mutual benefit association" means a company,
25 association or corporation authorized by the Director to
26 do business in this State under the provisions of Article

HB4126- 49 -LRB103 33572 RJT 63384 b
1 XVIII of this Code.
2 (f) "Burial society" means a person, firm,
3 corporation, society or association of individuals
4 authorized by the Director to do business in this State
5 under the provisions of Article XIX of this Code.
6 (g) "Farm mutual" means a district, county and
7 township mutual insurance company authorized by the
8 Director to do business in this State under the provisions
9 of the Farm Mutual Insurance Company Act of 1986.
10(Source: P.A. 100-23, eff. 7-6-17.)
11 (215 ILCS 5/511.109) (from Ch. 73, par. 1065.58-109)
12 (Section scheduled to be repealed on January 1, 2027)
13 Sec. 511.109. Examination.
14 (a) The Director or the Director's his designee may
15examine any applicant for or holder of an administrator's
16license in accordance with Sections 132 through 132.7 of this
17Code. If the Director or the examiners find that the
18administrator has violated this Article or any other
19insurance-related laws or rules under the Director's
20jurisdiction because of the manner in which the administrator
21has conducted business on behalf of an insurer or plan
22sponsor, then, unless the insurer or plan sponsor is included
23in the examination and has been afforded the same opportunity
24to request or participate in a hearing on the examination
25report, the examination report shall not allege a violation by

HB4126- 50 -LRB103 33572 RJT 63384 b
1the insurer or plan sponsor and the Director's order based on
2the report shall not impose any requirements, prohibitions, or
3penalties on the insurer or plan sponsor. Nothing in this
4Section shall prevent the Director from using any information
5obtained during the examination of an administrator to
6examine, investigate, or take other appropriate regulatory or
7legal action with respect to an insurer or plan sponsor.
8 (b) (Blank). Any administrator being examined shall
9provide to the Director or his designee convenient and free
10access, at all reasonable hours at their offices, to all
11books, records, documents and other papers relating to such
12administrator's business affairs.
13 (c) (Blank). The Director or his designee may administer
14oaths and thereafter examine any individual about the business
15of the administrator.
16 (d) (Blank). The examiners designated by the Director
17pursuant to this Section may make reports to the Director. Any
18report alleging substantive violations of this Article, any
19applicable provisions of the Illinois Insurance Code, or any
20applicable Part of Title 50 of the Illinois Administrative
21Code shall be in writing and be based upon facts obtained by
22the examiners. The report shall be verified by the examiners.
23 (e) (Blank). If a report is made, the Director shall
24either deliver a duplicate thereof to the administrator being
25examined or send such duplicate by certified or registered
26mail to the administrator's address specified in the records

HB4126- 51 -LRB103 33572 RJT 63384 b
1of the Department. The Director shall afford the administrator
2an opportunity to request a hearing to object to the report.
3The administrator may request a hearing within 30 days after
4receipt of the duplicate of the examination report by giving
5the Director written notice of such request together with
6written objections to the report. Any hearing shall be
7conducted in accordance with Sections 402 and 403 of this
8Code. The right to hearing is waived if the delivery of the
9report is refused or the report is otherwise undeliverable or
10the administrator does not timely request a hearing. After the
11hearing or upon expiration of the time period during which an
12administrator may request a hearing, if the examination
13reveals that the administrator is operating in violation of
14any applicable provision of the Illinois Insurance Code, any
15applicable Part of Title 50 of the Illinois Administrative
16Code or prior order, the Director, in the written order, may
17require the administrator to take any action the Director
18considers necessary or appropriate in accordance with the
19report or examination hearing. If the Director issues an
20order, it shall be issued within 90 days after the report is
21filed, or if there is a hearing, within 90 days after the
22conclusion of the hearing. The order is subject to review
23under the Administrative Review Law.
24(Source: P.A. 84-887.)
25 (215 ILCS 5/512-3) (from Ch. 73, par. 1065.59-3)

HB4126- 52 -LRB103 33572 RJT 63384 b
1 Sec. 512-3. Definitions. For the purposes of this Article,
2unless the context otherwise requires, the terms defined in
3this Article have the meanings ascribed to them herein:
4 (a) "Third party prescription program" or "program" means
5any system of providing for the reimbursement of
6pharmaceutical services and prescription drug products offered
7or operated in this State under a contractual arrangement or
8agreement between a provider of such services and another
9party who is not the consumer of those services and products.
10Such programs may include, but need not be limited to,
11employee benefit plans whereby a consumer receives
12prescription drugs or other pharmaceutical services and those
13services are paid for by an agent of the employer or others.
14 (b) "Third party program administrator" or "administrator"
15means any person, partnership or corporation who issues or
16causes to be issued any payment or reimbursement to a provider
17for services rendered pursuant to a third party prescription
18program, but does not include the Director of Healthcare and
19Family Services or any agent authorized by the Director to
20reimburse a provider of services rendered pursuant to a
21program of which the Department of Healthcare and Family
22Services is the third party.
23 (c) "Health care payer" means an insurance company, health
24maintenance organization, limited health service organization,
25health services plan corporation, or dental service plan
26corporation authorized to do business in this State.

HB4126- 53 -LRB103 33572 RJT 63384 b
1(Source: P.A. 95-331, eff. 8-21-07.)
2 (215 ILCS 5/512-5) (from Ch. 73, par. 1065.59-5)
3 Sec. 512-5. Fiduciary and Bonding Requirements. A third
4party prescription program administrator shall (1) establish
5and maintain a fiduciary account, separate and apart from any
6and all other accounts, for the receipt and disbursement of
7funds for reimbursement of providers of services under the
8program, or (2) post, or cause to be posted, a bond of
9indemnity in an amount equal to not less than 10% of the total
10estimated annual reimbursements under the program.
11 The establishment of such fiduciary accounts and bonds
12shall be consistent with applicable State law. If a bond of
13indemnity is posted, it shall be held by the Director of
14Insurance for the benefit and indemnification of the providers
15of services under the third party prescription program.
16 An administrator who operates more than one third party
17prescription program may establish and maintain a separate
18fiduciary account or bond of indemnity for each such program,
19or may operate and maintain a consolidated fiduciary account
20or bond of indemnity for all such programs.
21 The requirements of this Section do not apply to any third
22party prescription program administered by or on behalf of any
23health care payer insurance company, Health Care Service Plan
24Corporation or Pharmaceutical Service Plan Corporation
25authorized to do business in the State of Illinois.

HB4126- 54 -LRB103 33572 RJT 63384 b
1(Source: P.A. 82-1005.)
2 (215 ILCS 5/512-11 new)
3 Sec. 512-11. Examination. The Director or the Director's
4designee may examine any applicant for or holder of an
5administrator's registration in accordance with Sections 132
6through 132.7 of this Code. If the Director or the examiners
7find that the administrator has violated this Article or any
8other insurance-related laws or rules under the Director's
9jurisdiction because of the manner in which the administrator
10has conducted business on behalf of a separately incorporated
11health care payer, then, unless the health care payer is
12included in the examination and has been afforded the same
13opportunity to request or participate in a hearing on the
14examination report, the examination report shall not allege a
15violation by the health care payer and the Director's order
16based on the report shall not impose any requirements,
17prohibitions, or penalties on the health care payer. Nothing
18in this Section shall prevent the Director from using any
19information obtained during the examination of an
20administrator to examine, investigate, or take other
21appropriate regulatory or legal action with respect to a
22health care payer.
23 (215 ILCS 5/513b3)
24 Sec. 513b3. Examination.

HB4126- 55 -LRB103 33572 RJT 63384 b
1 (a) The Director, or the Director's his or her designee,
2may examine a registered pharmacy benefit manager in
3accordance with Sections 132 through 132.7 of this Code. If
4the Director or the examiners find that the pharmacy benefit
5manager has violated this Article or any other
6insurance-related laws or rules under the Director's
7jurisdiction because of the manner in which the pharmacy
8benefit manager has conducted business on behalf of a health
9insurer or plan sponsor, then, unless the health insurer or
10plan sponsor is included in the examination and has been
11afforded the same opportunity to request or participate in a
12hearing on the examination report, the examination report
13shall not allege a violation by the health insurer or plan
14sponsor and the Director's order based on the report shall not
15impose any requirements, prohibitions, or penalties on the
16health insurer or plan sponsor. Nothing in this Section shall
17prevent the Director from using any information obtained
18during the examination of an administrator to examine,
19investigate, or take other appropriate regulatory or legal
20action with respect to a health insurer or plan sponsor.
21 (b) (Blank). Any pharmacy benefit manager being examined
22shall provide to the Director, or his or her designee,
23convenient and free access to all books, records, documents,
24and other papers relating to such pharmacy benefit manager's
25business affairs at all reasonable hours at its offices.
26 (c) (Blank). The Director, or his or her designee, may

HB4126- 56 -LRB103 33572 RJT 63384 b
1administer oaths and thereafter examine the pharmacy benefit
2manager's designee, representative, or any officer or senior
3manager as listed on the license or registration certificate
4about the business of the pharmacy benefit manager.
5 (d) (Blank). The examiners designated by the Director
6under this Section may make reports to the Director. Any
7report alleging substantive violations of this Article, any
8applicable provisions of this Code, or any applicable Part of
9Title 50 of the Illinois Administrative Code shall be in
10writing and be based upon facts obtained by the examiners. The
11report shall be verified by the examiners.
12 (e) (Blank). If a report is made, the Director shall
13either deliver a duplicate report to the pharmacy benefit
14manager being examined or send such duplicate by certified or
15registered mail to the pharmacy benefit manager's address
16specified in the records of the Department. The Director shall
17afford the pharmacy benefit manager an opportunity to request
18a hearing to object to the report. The pharmacy benefit
19manager may request a hearing within 30 days after receipt of
20the duplicate report by giving the Director written notice of
21such request together with written objections to the report.
22Any hearing shall be conducted in accordance with Sections 402
23and 403 of this Code. The right to a hearing is waived if the
24delivery of the report is refused or the report is otherwise
25undeliverable or the pharmacy benefit manager does not timely
26request a hearing. After the hearing or upon expiration of the

HB4126- 57 -LRB103 33572 RJT 63384 b
1time period during which a pharmacy benefit manager may
2request a hearing, if the examination reveals that the
3pharmacy benefit manager is operating in violation of any
4applicable provision of this Code, any applicable Part of
5Title 50 of the Illinois Administrative Code, a provision of
6this Article, or prior order, the Director, in the written
7order, may require the pharmacy benefit manager to take any
8action the Director considers necessary or appropriate in
9accordance with the report or examination hearing. If the
10Director issues an order, it shall be issued within 90 days
11after the report is filed, or if there is a hearing, within 90
12days after the conclusion of the hearing. The order is subject
13to review under the Administrative Review Law.
14(Source: P.A. 101-452, eff. 1-1-20.)
15 Section 15. The Network Adequacy and Transparency Act is
16amended by changing Sections 3, 5, 10, 15, 20, 25, and 30 and
17by adding Sections 35 and 40 as follows:
18 (215 ILCS 124/3)
19 Sec. 3. Applicability of Act. This Act applies to an
20individual or group policy of accident and health insurance
21coverage with a network plan amended, delivered, issued, or
22renewed in this State on or after January 1, 2019. This Act
23does not apply to an individual or group policy for excepted
24benefits or short-term, limited-duration health insurance

HB4126- 58 -LRB103 33572 RJT 63384 b
1coverage dental or vision insurance or a limited health
2service organization with a network plan amended, delivered,
3issued, or renewed in this State on or after January 1, 2019,
4except to the extent that federal law establishes network
5adequacy and transparency standards for stand-alone dental
6plans, which the Department shall enforce.
7(Source: P.A. 100-502, eff. 9-15-17; 100-601, eff. 6-29-18.)
8 (215 ILCS 124/5)
9 Sec. 5. Definitions. In this Act:
10 "Authorized representative" means a person to whom a
11beneficiary has given express written consent to represent the
12beneficiary; a person authorized by law to provide substituted
13consent for a beneficiary; or the beneficiary's treating
14provider only when the beneficiary or his or her family member
15is unable to provide consent.
16 "Beneficiary" means an individual, an enrollee, an
17insured, a participant, or any other person entitled to
18reimbursement for covered expenses of or the discounting of
19provider fees for health care services under a program in
20which the beneficiary has an incentive to utilize the services
21of a provider that has entered into an agreement or
22arrangement with an issuer insurer.
23 "Department" means the Department of Insurance.
24 "Essential community provider" has the meaning ascribed to
25that term in 45 CFR 156.235.

HB4126- 59 -LRB103 33572 RJT 63384 b
1 "Excepted benefits" has the meaning ascribed to that term
2in 42 U.S.C. 300gg-91(c).
3 "Director" means the Director of Insurance.
4 "Family caregiver" means a relative, partner, friend, or
5neighbor who has a significant relationship with the patient
6and administers or assists the patient with activities of
7daily living, instrumental activities of daily living, or
8other medical or nursing tasks for the quality and welfare of
9that patient.
10 "Group health plan" has the meaning ascribed to that term
11in Section 5 of the Illinois Health Insurance Portability and
12Accountability Act.
13 "Health insurance coverage" has the meaning ascribed to
14that term in Section 5 of the Illinois Health Insurance
15Portability and Accountability Act. "Health insurance
16coverage" does not include any coverage or benefits under
17Medicare or under the medical assistance program established
18under Article V of the Illinois Public Aid Code.
19 "Issuer" means a "health insurance issuer" as defined in
20Section 5 of the Illinois Health Insurance Portability and
21Accountability Act.
22 "Insurer" means any entity that offers individual or group
23accident and health insurance, including, but not limited to,
24health maintenance organizations, preferred provider
25organizations, exclusive provider organizations, and other
26plan structures requiring network participation, excluding the

HB4126- 60 -LRB103 33572 RJT 63384 b
1medical assistance program under the Illinois Public Aid Code,
2the State employees group health insurance program, workers
3compensation insurance, and pharmacy benefit managers.
4 "Material change" means a significant reduction in the
5number of providers available in a network plan, including,
6but not limited to, a reduction of 10% or more in a specific
7type of providers within any county, the removal of a major
8health system that causes a network to be significantly
9different within any county from the network when the
10beneficiary purchased the network plan, or any change that
11would cause the network to no longer satisfy the requirements
12of this Act or the Department's rules for network adequacy and
13transparency.
14 "Network" means the group or groups of preferred providers
15providing services to a network plan.
16 "Network plan" means an individual or group policy of
17accident and health insurance coverage that either requires a
18covered person to use or creates incentives, including
19financial incentives, for a covered person to use providers
20managed, owned, under contract with, or employed by the issuer
21or by a third party contracted to arrange, contract for, or
22administer such provider-related incentives for the issuer
23insurer.
24 "Ongoing course of treatment" means (1) treatment for a
25life-threatening condition, which is a disease or condition
26for which likelihood of death is probable unless the course of

HB4126- 61 -LRB103 33572 RJT 63384 b
1the disease or condition is interrupted; (2) treatment for a
2serious acute condition, defined as a disease or condition
3requiring complex ongoing care that the covered person is
4currently receiving, such as chemotherapy, radiation therapy,
5or post-operative visits, or a serious and complex condition
6as defined under 42 U.S.C. 300gg-113(b)(2); (3) a course of
7treatment for a health condition that a treating provider
8attests that discontinuing care by that provider would worsen
9the condition or interfere with anticipated outcomes; or (4)
10the third trimester of pregnancy through the post-partum
11period ; (5) undergoing a course of institutional or inpatient
12care from the provider within the meaning of 42 U.S.C.
13300gg-113(b)(1)(B); (6) being scheduled to undergo nonelective
14surgery from the provider, including receipt of postoperative
15care from such provider with respect to such a surgery; or (7)
16being determined to be terminally ill, as determined under 42
17U.S.C. 1395x(dd)(3)(A), and receiving treatment for such
18illness from such provider.
19 "Preferred provider" means any provider who has entered,
20either directly or indirectly, into an agreement with an
21employer or risk-bearing entity relating to health care
22services that may be rendered to beneficiaries under a network
23plan.
24 "Providers" means physicians licensed to practice medicine
25in all its branches, other health care professionals,
26hospitals, or other health care institutions or facilities

HB4126- 62 -LRB103 33572 RJT 63384 b
1that provide health care services.
2 "Short-term, limited-duration health insurance coverage"
3has the meaning ascribed to that term in Section 5 of the
4Short-Term, Limited-Duration Health Insurance Coverage Act.
5 "Stand-alone dental plan" has the meaning ascribed to that
6term in 45 CFR 156.400.
7 "Telehealth" has the meaning given to that term in Section
8356z.22 of the Illinois Insurance Code.
9 "Telemedicine" has the meaning given to that term in
10Section 49.5 of the Medical Practice Act of 1987.
11 "Tiered network" means a network that identifies and
12groups some or all types of provider and facilities into
13specific groups to which different provider reimbursement,
14covered person cost-sharing or provider access requirements,
15or any combination thereof, apply for the same services.
16 "Woman's principal health care provider" means a physician
17licensed to practice medicine in all of its branches
18specializing in obstetrics, gynecology, or family practice.
19(Source: P.A. 102-92, eff. 7-9-21; 102-813, eff. 5-13-22.)
20 (215 ILCS 124/10)
21 Sec. 10. Network adequacy.
22 (a) Before issuing, delivering, or renewing a network
23plan, an issuer An insurer providing a network plan shall file
24a description of all of the following with the Director:
25 (1) The written policies and procedures for adding

HB4126- 63 -LRB103 33572 RJT 63384 b
1 providers to meet patient needs based on increases in the
2 number of beneficiaries, changes in the
3 patient-to-provider ratio, changes in medical and health
4 care capabilities, and increased demand for services.
5 (2) The written policies and procedures for making
6 referrals within and outside the network.
7 (3) The written policies and procedures on how the
8 network plan will provide 24-hour, 7-day per week access
9 to network-affiliated primary care, emergency services,
10 and women's principal health care providers.
11 An issuer insurer shall not prohibit a preferred provider
12from discussing any specific or all treatment options with
13beneficiaries irrespective of the insurer's position on those
14treatment options or from advocating on behalf of
15beneficiaries within the utilization review, grievance, or
16appeals processes established by the issuer insurer in
17accordance with any rights or remedies available under
18applicable State or federal law.
19 (b) Before issuing, delivering, or renewing a network
20plan, an issuer Insurers must file for review a description of
21the services to be offered through a network plan. The
22description shall include all of the following:
23 (1) A geographic map of the area proposed to be served
24 by the plan by county service area and zip code, including
25 marked locations for preferred providers.
26 (2) As deemed necessary by the Department, the names,

HB4126- 64 -LRB103 33572 RJT 63384 b
1 addresses, phone numbers, and specialties of the providers
2 who have entered into preferred provider agreements under
3 the network plan.
4 (3) The number of beneficiaries anticipated to be
5 covered by the network plan.
6 (4) An Internet website and toll-free telephone number
7 for beneficiaries and prospective beneficiaries to access
8 current and accurate lists of preferred providers,
9 additional information about the plan, as well as any
10 other information required by Department rule.
11 (5) A description of how health care services to be
12 rendered under the network plan are reasonably accessible
13 and available to beneficiaries. The description shall
14 address all of the following:
15 (A) the type of health care services to be
16 provided by the network plan;
17 (B) the ratio of physicians and other providers to
18 beneficiaries, by specialty and including primary care
19 physicians and facility-based physicians when
20 applicable under the contract, necessary to meet the
21 health care needs and service demands of the currently
22 enrolled population;
23 (C) the travel and distance standards for plan
24 beneficiaries in county service areas; and
25 (D) a description of how the use of telemedicine,
26 telehealth, or mobile care services may be used to

HB4126- 65 -LRB103 33572 RJT 63384 b
1 partially meet the network adequacy standards, if
2 applicable.
3 (6) A provision ensuring that whenever a beneficiary
4 has made a good faith effort, as evidenced by accessing
5 the provider directory, calling the network plan, and
6 calling the provider, to utilize preferred providers for a
7 covered service and it is determined the insurer does not
8 have the appropriate preferred providers due to
9 insufficient number, type, unreasonable travel distance or
10 delay, or preferred providers refusing to provide a
11 covered service because it is contrary to the conscience
12 of the preferred providers, as protected by the Health
13 Care Right of Conscience Act, the issuer insurer shall
14 ensure, directly or indirectly, by terms contained in the
15 payer contract, that the beneficiary will be provided the
16 covered service at no greater cost to the beneficiary than
17 if the service had been provided by a preferred provider.
18 This paragraph (6) does not apply to: (A) a beneficiary
19 who willfully chooses to access a non-preferred provider
20 for health care services available through the panel of
21 preferred providers, or (B) a beneficiary enrolled in a
22 health maintenance organization. In these circumstances,
23 the contractual requirements for non-preferred provider
24 reimbursements shall apply unless Section 356z.3a of the
25 Illinois Insurance Code requires otherwise. In no event
26 shall a beneficiary who receives care at a participating

HB4126- 66 -LRB103 33572 RJT 63384 b
1 health care facility be required to search for
2 participating providers under the circumstances described
3 in subsection (b) or (b-5) of Section 356z.3a of the
4 Illinois Insurance Code except under the circumstances
5 described in paragraph (2) of subsection (b-5).
6 (7) A provision that the beneficiary shall receive
7 emergency care coverage such that payment for this
8 coverage is not dependent upon whether the emergency
9 services are performed by a preferred or non-preferred
10 provider and the coverage shall be at the same benefit
11 level as if the service or treatment had been rendered by a
12 preferred provider. For purposes of this paragraph (7),
13 "the same benefit level" means that the beneficiary is
14 provided the covered service at no greater cost to the
15 beneficiary than if the service had been provided by a
16 preferred provider. This provision shall be consistent
17 with Section 356z.3a of the Illinois Insurance Code.
18 (8) A limitation that, if the plan provides that the
19 beneficiary will incur a penalty for failing to
20 pre-certify inpatient hospital treatment, the penalty may
21 not exceed $1,000 per occurrence in addition to the plan
22 cost sharing provisions.
23 (9) For a network plan in the individual or small group
24market other than a grandfathered health plan, evidence that
25the network plan:
26 (A) contracts with at least 35% of the essential

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1 community providers in the service area of the network
2 plan that are available to participate in the provider
3 network of the network plan, as calculated using the
4 methodology contained in the most recent Letter to Issuers
5 in the Federally-facilitated Marketplaces issued by the
6 federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. The
7 Director may specify a different percentage by rule.
8 (B) offers contracts in good faith to all available
9 Indian health care providers in the service area of the
10 network plan, including, without limitation, the Indian
11 Health Service, Indian tribes, tribal organizations, and
12 urban Indian organizations, as defined in 25 U.S.C. 1603,
13 which apply the special terms and conditions necessitated
14 by federal statutes and regulations as referenced in the
15 Model Qualified Health Plan Addendum for Indian Health
16 Care Providers issued by the federal Centers for Medicare
17 and Medicaid Services.
18 (C) offers contracts in good faith to at least one
19 essential community provider in each category of essential
20 community provider, as contained in the most recent Letter
21 to Issuers in the Federally-facilitated Marketplaces, in
22 each county in the service area of the network plan, where
23 an essential community provider in that category is
24 available and provides medical or dental services that are
25 covered by the network plan. To offer a contract in good
26 faith, a network plan must offer contract terms comparable

HB4126- 68 -LRB103 33572 RJT 63384 b
1 to the terms that an issuer would offer to a similarly
2 situated provider that is not an essential community
3 provider, except for terms that would not be applicable to
4 an essential community provider, including, without
5 limitation, because of the type of services that an
6 essential community provider provides. A network plan must
7 be able to provide verification of such offers if the
8 Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services of the United
9 States Department of Health and Human Services requests to
10 verify compliance with this policy.
11 (c) The issuer network plan shall demonstrate to the
12Director a minimum ratio of providers to plan beneficiaries as
13required by the Department for each network plan.
14 (1) The minimum ratio of physicians or other providers
15 to plan beneficiaries shall be established annually by the
16 Department in consultation with the Department of Public
17 Health based upon the guidance from the federal Centers
18 for Medicare and Medicaid Services. The Department shall
19 not establish ratios for vision or dental providers who
20 provide services under dental-specific or vision-specific
21 benefits, except to the extent provided under federal law
22 for stand-alone dental plans. The Department shall
23 consider establishing ratios for the following physicians
24 or other providers:
25 (A) Primary Care;
26 (B) Pediatrics;

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1 (C) Cardiology;
2 (D) Gastroenterology;
3 (E) General Surgery;
4 (F) Neurology;
5 (G) OB/GYN;
6 (H) Oncology/Radiation;
7 (I) Ophthalmology;
8 (J) Urology;
9 (K) Behavioral Health;
10 (L) Allergy/Immunology;
11 (M) Chiropractic;
12 (N) Dermatology;
13 (O) Endocrinology;
14 (P) Ears, Nose, and Throat (ENT)/Otolaryngology;
15 (Q) Infectious Disease;
16 (R) Nephrology;
17 (S) Neurosurgery;
18 (T) Orthopedic Surgery;
19 (U) Physiatry/Rehabilitative;
20 (V) Plastic Surgery;
21 (W) Pulmonary;
22 (X) Rheumatology;
23 (Y) Anesthesiology;
24 (Z) Pain Medicine;
25 (AA) Pediatric Specialty Services;
26 (BB) Outpatient Dialysis; and

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1 (CC) HIV.
2 (2) The Director shall establish a process for the
3 review of the adequacy of these standards, along with an
4 assessment of additional specialties to be included in the
5 list under this subsection (c).
6 (3) Notwithstanding any other law or rule, the minimum
7 ratio for each provider type shall be no less than any such
8 ratio established for qualified health plans in
9 Federally-Facilitated Exchanges by federal law or by the
10 federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, even
11 if the network plan is issued in the large group market or
12 is otherwise not issued through an exchange. Federal
13 standards for stand-alone dental plans shall only apply to
14 such network plans. In the absence of an applicable
15 Department rule, the federal standards shall apply for the
16 time period specified in the federal law, regulation, or
17 guidance. If the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid
18 Services establish standards that are more stringent than
19 the standards in effect under any Department rule, the
20 Department may amend its rules to conform to the more
21 stringent federal standards.
22 (4) Prior to the enactment of an applicable Department
23 rule or the promulgation of federal standards for
24 qualified health plans or stand-alone dental plans, the
25 minimum ratios for any network plan issued, delivered,
26 amended, or renewed during 2024 shall be the following,

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1 expressed in terms of providers to beneficiaries for
2 health care professionals and in terms of providers per
3 county for facilities:
4 (A) primary care physician, general practice,
5 family practice, internal medicine, pediatrician,
6 primary care physician assistant, or primary care
7 nurse practitioner - 1:500;
8 (B) allergy/immunology - 1:15,000;
9 (C) cardiology - 1:10,000;
10 (D) chiropractic - 1:10,000;
11 (E) dermatology - 1:10,000;
12 (F) endocrinology - 1:10,000;
13 (G) ENT/otolaryngology - 1:15,000;
14 (H) gastroenterology - 1:10,000;
15 (I) general surgery - 1:5,000;
16 (J) gynecology or OB/GYN - 1:2,500;
17 (K) infectious diseases - 1:15,000;
18 (L) nephrology - 1:10,000;
19 (M) neurology - 1:20,000;
20 (N) oncology/radiation - 1:15,000;
21 (O) ophthalmology - 1:10,000;
22 (P) orthopedic surgery - 1:10,000;
23 (Q) physiatry/rehabilitative medicine - 1:15,000;
24 (R) plastic surgery - 1:20,000;
25 (S) behavioral health - 1:5,000;
26 (T) pulmonology - 1:10,000;

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1 (U) rheumatology - 1:10,000;
2 (V) urology - 1:10,000;
3 (W) acute inpatient hospital with emergency
4 services available 24 hours a day, 7 days a week - one
5 per county; and
6 (X) inpatient or residential behavioral health
7 facility - one per county.
8 (d) The network plan shall demonstrate to the Director
9maximum travel and distance standards and appointment wait
10time standards for plan beneficiaries, which shall be
11established annually by the Department in consultation with
12the Department of Public Health based upon the guidance from
13the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. These
14standards shall consist of the maximum minutes or miles to be
15traveled by a plan beneficiary for each county type, such as
16large counties, metro counties, or rural counties as defined
17by Department rule.
18 The maximum travel time and distance standards must
19include standards for each physician and other provider
20category listed for which ratios have been established.
21 The Director shall establish a process for the review of
22the adequacy of these standards along with an assessment of
23additional specialties to be included in the list under this
24subsection (d).
25 Notwithstanding any other law or Department rule, the
26maximum travel and distance standards and appointment wait

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1time standards shall be no greater than any such standards
2established for qualified health plans in
3Federally-Facilitated Exchanges by federal law or by the
4federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, even if
5the network plan is issued in the large group market or is
6otherwise not issued through an exchange. Federal standards
7for stand-alone dental plans shall only apply to such network
8plans. In the absence of an applicable Department rule, the
9federal standards shall apply for the time period specified in
10the federal law, regulation, or guidance. If the Centers for
11Medicare and Medicaid Services establish standards that are
12more stringent than the standards in effect under any
13Department rule, the Department may amend its rules to conform
14to the more stringent federal standards.
15 If the federal area designations for the maximum time or
16distance or appointment wait time standards required are
17changed by the most recent Letter to Issuers in the
18Federally-facilitated Marketplaces, the Department shall post
19on its website notice of such changes and may amend its rules
20to conform to those designations if the Director deems
21appropriate.
22 (d-5)(1) Every issuer insurer shall ensure that
23beneficiaries have timely and proximate access to treatment
24for mental, emotional, nervous, or substance use disorders or
25conditions in accordance with the provisions of paragraph (4)
26of subsection (a) of Section 370c of the Illinois Insurance

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1Code. Issuers Insurers shall use a comparable process,
2strategy, evidentiary standard, and other factors in the
3development and application of the network adequacy standards
4for timely and proximate access to treatment for mental,
5emotional, nervous, or substance use disorders or conditions
6and those for the access to treatment for medical and surgical
7conditions. As such, the network adequacy standards for timely
8and proximate access shall equally be applied to treatment
9facilities and providers for mental, emotional, nervous, or
10substance use disorders or conditions and specialists
11providing medical or surgical benefits pursuant to the parity
12requirements of Section 370c.1 of the Illinois Insurance Code
13and the federal Paul Wellstone and Pete Domenici Mental Health
14Parity and Addiction Equity Act of 2008. Notwithstanding the
15foregoing, the network adequacy standards for timely and
16proximate access to treatment for mental, emotional, nervous,
17or substance use disorders or conditions shall, at a minimum,
18satisfy the following requirements:
19 (A) For beneficiaries residing in the metropolitan
20 counties of Cook, DuPage, Kane, Lake, McHenry, and Will,
21 network adequacy standards for timely and proximate access
22 to treatment for mental, emotional, nervous, or substance
23 use disorders or conditions means a beneficiary shall not
24 have to travel longer than 30 minutes or 30 miles from the
25 beneficiary's residence to receive outpatient treatment
26 for mental, emotional, nervous, or substance use disorders

HB4126- 75 -LRB103 33572 RJT 63384 b
1 or conditions. Beneficiaries shall not be required to wait
2 longer than 10 business days between requesting an initial
3 appointment and being seen by the facility or provider of
4 mental, emotional, nervous, or substance use disorders or
5 conditions for outpatient treatment or to wait longer than
6 20 business days between requesting a repeat or follow-up
7 appointment and being seen by the facility or provider of
8 mental, emotional, nervous, or substance use disorders or
9 conditions for outpatient treatment; however, subject to
10 the protections of paragraph (3) of this subsection, a
11 network plan shall not be held responsible if the
12 beneficiary or provider voluntarily chooses to schedule an
13 appointment outside of these required time frames.
14 (B) For beneficiaries residing in Illinois counties
15 other than those counties listed in subparagraph (A) of
16 this paragraph, network adequacy standards for timely and
17 proximate access to treatment for mental, emotional,
18 nervous, or substance use disorders or conditions means a
19 beneficiary shall not have to travel longer than 60
20 minutes or 60 miles from the beneficiary's residence to
21 receive outpatient treatment for mental, emotional,
22 nervous, or substance use disorders or conditions.
23 Beneficiaries shall not be required to wait longer than 10
24 business days between requesting an initial appointment
25 and being seen by the facility or provider of mental,
26 emotional, nervous, or substance use disorders or

HB4126- 76 -LRB103 33572 RJT 63384 b
1 conditions for outpatient treatment or to wait longer than
2 20 business days between requesting a repeat or follow-up
3 appointment and being seen by the facility or provider of
4 mental, emotional, nervous, or substance use disorders or
5 conditions for outpatient treatment; however, subject to
6 the protections of paragraph (3) of this subsection, a
7 network plan shall not be held responsible if the
8 beneficiary or provider voluntarily chooses to schedule an
9 appointment outside of these required time frames.
10 (2) For beneficiaries residing in all Illinois counties,
11network adequacy standards for timely and proximate access to
12treatment for mental, emotional, nervous, or substance use
13disorders or conditions means a beneficiary shall not have to
14travel longer than 60 minutes or 60 miles from the
15beneficiary's residence to receive inpatient or residential
16treatment for mental, emotional, nervous, or substance use
17disorders or conditions.
18 (3) If there is no in-network facility or provider
19available for a beneficiary to receive timely and proximate
20access to treatment for mental, emotional, nervous, or
21substance use disorders or conditions in accordance with the
22network adequacy standards outlined in this subsection, the
23issuer insurer shall provide necessary exceptions to its
24network to ensure admission and treatment with a provider or
25at a treatment facility in accordance with the network
26adequacy standards in this subsection.

HB4126- 77 -LRB103 33572 RJT 63384 b
1 (4) If the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid
2Services establish or law requires more stringent standards
3for qualified health plans in the Federally-Facilitated
4Exchanges, the federal standards shall control for the time
5period specified in the federal law, regulation, or guidance,
6even if the network plan is issued in the large group market or
7is otherwise not issued through an exchange.
8 (e) Except for network plans solely offered as a group
9health plan, these ratio and time and distance standards apply
10to the lowest cost-sharing tier of any tiered network.
11 (f) The network plan may consider use of other health care
12service delivery options, such as telemedicine or telehealth,
13mobile clinics, and centers of excellence, or other ways of
14delivering care to partially meet the requirements set under
15this Section.
16 (g) Except for the requirements set forth in subsection
17(d-5), issuers insurers who are not able to comply with the
18provider ratios and time and distance or appointment wait time
19standards established under this Act by the Department may
20request an exception to these requirements from the
21Department. The Department may grant an exception in the
22following circumstances:
23 (1) if no providers or facilities meet the specific
24 time and distance standard in a specific service area and
25 the issuer insurer (i) discloses information on the
26 distance and travel time points that beneficiaries would

HB4126- 78 -LRB103 33572 RJT 63384 b
1 have to travel beyond the required criterion to reach the
2 next closest contracted provider outside of the service
3 area and (ii) provides contact information, including
4 names, addresses, and phone numbers for the next closest
5 contracted provider or facility;
6 (2) if patterns of care in the service area do not
7 support the need for the requested number of provider or
8 facility type and the issuer insurer provides data on
9 local patterns of care, such as claims data, referral
10 patterns, or local provider interviews, indicating where
11 the beneficiaries currently seek this type of care or
12 where the physicians currently refer beneficiaries, or
13 both; or
14 (3) other circumstances deemed appropriate by the
15 Department consistent with the requirements of this Act.
16 (h) Issuers Insurers are required to report to the
17Director any material change to an approved network plan
18within 15 days after the change occurs and any change that
19would result in failure to meet the requirements of this Act.
20The issuer shall submit a revised version of the complete
21network adequacy filing based on the material change, and the
22issuer shall attach versions with the changes indicated for
23each document that was revised from the previous version of
24the filing. Upon notice from the issuer insurer, the Director
25shall reevaluate the network plan's compliance with the
26network adequacy and transparency standards of this Act. For

HB4126- 79 -LRB103 33572 RJT 63384 b
1every day past 15 days that the issuer fails to submit a
2revised network adequacy filing to the Director, the Director
3shall order a fine of $1,000 per day.
4 (i) If a network plan is inadequate under this Act with
5respect to a provider type in a county, and if the network plan
6does not have an approved exception for that provider type in
7that county pursuant to subsection (g), an issuer shall
8process out-of-network claims for covered health care services
9received from that provider type within that county at the
10in-network benefit level and shall retroactively adjudicate
11and reimburse beneficiaries to achieve that objective if their
12claims were processed at the out-of-network level contrary to
13this subsection.
14 (j) If the Director determines that a network is
15inadequate in any county and no exception has been granted
16under subsection (g) and the issuer does not have a process in
17place to comply with subsection (d-5), the Director may
18prohibit the network plan from being issued or renewed within
19that county until the Director determines that the network is
20adequate apart from processes and exceptions described in
21subsections (d-5) and (g). Nothing in this subsection shall be
22construed to terminate any beneficiary's health insurance
23coverage under a network plan before the expiration of the
24beneficiary's policy period if the Director makes a
25determination under this subsection after the issuance or
26renewal of the beneficiary's policy or certificate because of

HB4126- 80 -LRB103 33572 RJT 63384 b
1a material change. Policies or certificates issued or renewed
2in violation of this subsection shall subject the issuer to a
3civil penalty of $1,000 per policy.
4(Source: P.A. 102-144, eff. 1-1-22; 102-901, eff. 7-1-22;
5102-1117, eff. 1-13-23.)
6 (215 ILCS 124/15)
7 Sec. 15. Notice of nonrenewal or termination.
8 (a) A network plan must give at least 60 days' notice of
9nonrenewal or termination of a provider to the provider and to
10the beneficiaries served by the provider. The notice shall
11include a name and address to which a beneficiary or provider
12may direct comments and concerns regarding the nonrenewal or
13termination and the telephone number maintained by the
14Department for consumer complaints. Immediate written notice
15may be provided without 60 days' notice when a provider's
16license has been disciplined by a State licensing board or
17when the network plan reasonably believes direct imminent
18physical harm to patients under the provider's providers care
19may occur. The notice to the beneficiary shall provide the
20individual with an opportunity to notify the issuer of the
21individual's need for transitional care.
22 (b) Primary care providers must notify active affected
23patients of nonrenewal or termination of the provider from the
24network plan, except in the case of incapacitation.
25(Source: P.A. 100-502, eff. 9-15-17.)

HB4126- 81 -LRB103 33572 RJT 63384 b
1 (215 ILCS 124/20)
2 Sec. 20. Transition of services.
3 (a) A network plan shall provide for continuity of care
4for its beneficiaries as follows:
5 (1) If a beneficiary's physician or hospital provider
6 leaves the network plan's network of providers for reasons
7 other than termination of a contract in situations
8 involving imminent harm to a patient or a final
9 disciplinary action by a State licensing board and the
10 provider remains within the network plan's service area,
11 if benefits provided under such network plan with respect
12 to such provider or facility are terminated because of a
13 change in the terms of the participation of such provider
14 or facility in such plan, or if a contract between a group
15 health plan and a health insurance issuer offering a
16 network plan in connection with the group health plan is
17 terminated and results in a loss of benefits provided
18 under such plan with respect to such provider, then the
19 network plan shall permit the beneficiary to continue an
20 ongoing course of treatment with that provider during a
21 transitional period for the following duration:
22 (A) 90 days from the date of the notice to the
23 beneficiary of the provider's disaffiliation from the
24 network plan if the beneficiary has an ongoing course
25 of treatment; or

HB4126- 82 -LRB103 33572 RJT 63384 b
1 (B) if the beneficiary has entered the third
2 trimester of pregnancy at the time of the provider's
3 disaffiliation, a period that includes the provision
4 of post-partum care directly related to the delivery.
5 (2) Notwithstanding the provisions of paragraph (1) of
6 this subsection (a), such care shall be authorized by the
7 network plan during the transitional period in accordance
8 with the following:
9 (A) the provider receives continued reimbursement
10 from the network plan at the rates and terms and
11 conditions applicable under the terminated contract
12 prior to the start of the transitional period;
13 (B) the provider adheres to the network plan's
14 quality assurance requirements, including provision to
15 the network plan of necessary medical information
16 related to such care; and
17 (C) the provider otherwise adheres to the network
18 plan's policies and procedures, including, but not
19 limited to, procedures regarding referrals and
20 obtaining preauthorizations for treatment.
21 (3) The provisions of this Section governing health
22 care provided during the transition period do not apply if
23 the beneficiary has successfully transitioned to another
24 provider participating in the network plan, if the
25 beneficiary has already met or exceeded the benefit
26 limitations of the plan, or if the care provided is not

HB4126- 83 -LRB103 33572 RJT 63384 b
1 medically necessary.
2 (b) A network plan shall provide for continuity of care
3for new beneficiaries as follows:
4 (1) If a new beneficiary whose provider is not a
5 member of the network plan's provider network, but is
6 within the network plan's service area, enrolls in the
7 network plan, the network plan shall permit the
8 beneficiary to continue an ongoing course of treatment
9 with the beneficiary's current physician during a
10 transitional period:
11 (A) of 90 days from the effective date of
12 enrollment if the beneficiary has an ongoing course of
13 treatment; or
14 (B) if the beneficiary has entered the third
15 trimester of pregnancy at the effective date of
16 enrollment, that includes the provision of post-partum
17 care directly related to the delivery.
18 (2) If a beneficiary, or a beneficiary's authorized
19 representative, elects in writing to continue to receive
20 care from such provider pursuant to paragraph (1) of this
21 subsection (b), such care shall be authorized by the
22 network plan for the transitional period in accordance
23 with the following:
24 (A) the provider receives reimbursement from the
25 network plan at rates established by the network plan;
26 (B) the provider adheres to the network plan's

HB4126- 84 -LRB103 33572 RJT 63384 b
1 quality assurance requirements, including provision to
2 the network plan of necessary medical information
3 related to such care; and
4 (C) the provider otherwise adheres to the network
5 plan's policies and procedures, including, but not
6 limited to, procedures regarding referrals and
7 obtaining preauthorization for treatment.
8 (3) The provisions of this Section governing health
9 care provided during the transition period do not apply if
10 the beneficiary has successfully transitioned to another
11 provider participating in the network plan, if the
12 beneficiary has already met or exceeded the benefit
13 limitations of the plan, or if the care provided is not
14 medically necessary.
15 (c) In no event shall this Section be construed to require
16a network plan to provide coverage for benefits not otherwise
17covered or to diminish or impair preexisting condition
18limitations contained in the beneficiary's contract.
19 (d) A provider shall comply with the requirements of 42
20U.S.C. 300gg-138.
21(Source: P.A. 100-502, eff. 9-15-17.)
22 (215 ILCS 124/25)
23 Sec. 25. Network transparency.
24 (a) A network plan shall post electronically an
25up-to-date, accurate, and complete provider directory for each

HB4126- 85 -LRB103 33572 RJT 63384 b
1of its network plans, with the information and search
2functions, as described in this Section.
3 (1) In making the directory available electronically,
4 the network plans shall ensure that the general public is
5 able to view all of the current providers for a plan
6 through a clearly identifiable link or tab and without
7 creating or accessing an account or entering a policy or
8 contract number.
9 (2) The network plan shall update the online provider
10 directory at least monthly. An issuer's failure to update
11 a network plan's directory shall subject the issuer to a
12 civil penalty of $5,000 per month. Providers shall notify
13 the network plan electronically or in writing of any
14 changes to their information as listed in the provider
15 directory, including the information required in
16 subparagraph (K) of paragraph (1) of subsection (b). If a
17 provider is no longer accepting new patients, the provider
18 must give notice to the issuer within 5 business days
19 after deciding to cease accepting new patients, or within
20 5 business days after the effective date of this
21 amendatory Act of the 103rd General Assembly, whichever is
22 later. The network plan shall update its online provider
23 directory in a manner consistent with the information
24 provided by the provider within 2 10 business days after
25 being notified of the change by the provider. Nothing in
26 this paragraph (2) shall void any contractual relationship

HB4126- 86 -LRB103 33572 RJT 63384 b
1 between the provider and the plan.
2 (3) At least once every 90 days, the The network plan
3 shall audit each periodically at least 25% of its print
4 and online provider directories for accuracy, make any
5 corrections necessary, and retain documentation of the
6 audit. The network plan shall submit the audit to the
7 Director upon request. As part of these audits, the
8 network plan shall contact any provider in its network
9 that has not submitted a claim to the plan or otherwise
10 communicated his or her intent to continue participation
11 in the plan's network. The audits shall comply with 42
12 U.S.C. 300gg-115(a)(2), except that "provider directory
13 information" shall include all information required to be
14 included in a provider directory pursuant to this Act.
15 (4) A network plan shall provide a print copy of a
16 current provider directory or a print copy of the
17 requested directory information upon request of a
18 beneficiary or a prospective beneficiary. Print copies
19 must be updated quarterly and an errata that reflects
20 changes in the provider network must be updated quarterly.
21 (5) For each network plan, a network plan shall
22 include, in plain language in both the electronic and
23 print directory, the following general information:
24 (A) in plain language, a description of the
25 criteria the plan has used to build its provider
26 network;

HB4126- 87 -LRB103 33572 RJT 63384 b
1 (B) if applicable, in plain language, a
2 description of the criteria the issuer insurer or
3 network plan has used to create tiered networks;
4 (C) if applicable, in plain language, how the
5 network plan designates the different provider tiers
6 or levels in the network and identifies for each
7 specific provider, hospital, or other type of facility
8 in the network which tier each is placed, for example,
9 by name, symbols, or grouping, in order for a
10 beneficiary-covered person or a prospective
11 beneficiary-covered person to be able to identify the
12 provider tier; and
13 (D) if applicable, a notation that authorization
14 or referral may be required to access some providers.
15 (6) A network plan shall make it clear for both its
16 electronic and print directories what provider directory
17 applies to which network plan, such as including the
18 specific name of the network plan as marketed and issued
19 in this State. The network plan shall include in both its
20 electronic and print directories a customer service email
21 address and telephone number or electronic link that
22 beneficiaries or the general public may use to notify the
23 network plan of inaccurate provider directory information
24 and contact information for the Department's Office of
25 Consumer Health Insurance.
26 (7) A provider directory, whether in electronic or

HB4126- 88 -LRB103 33572 RJT 63384 b
1 print format, shall accommodate the communication needs of
2 individuals with disabilities, and include a link to or
3 information regarding available assistance for persons
4 with limited English proficiency.
5 (b) For each network plan, a network plan shall make
6available through an electronic provider directory the
7following information in a searchable format:
8 (1) for health care professionals:
9 (A) name;
10 (B) gender;
11 (C) participating office locations;
12 (D) specialty, if applicable;
13 (E) medical group affiliations, if applicable;
14 (F) facility affiliations, if applicable;
15 (G) participating facility affiliations, if
16 applicable;
17 (H) languages spoken other than English, if
18 applicable;
19 (I) whether accepting new patients;
20 (J) board certifications, if applicable; and
21 (K) use of telehealth or telemedicine, including,
22 but not limited to:
23 (i) whether the provider offers the use of
24 telehealth or telemedicine to deliver services to
25 patients for whom it would be clinically
26 appropriate;

HB4126- 89 -LRB103 33572 RJT 63384 b
1 (ii) what modalities are used and what types
2 of services may be provided via telehealth or
3 telemedicine; and
4 (iii) whether the provider has the ability and
5 willingness to include in a telehealth or
6 telemedicine encounter a family caregiver who is
7 in a separate location than the patient if the
8 patient wishes and provides his or her consent;
9 (2) for hospitals:
10 (A) hospital name;
11 (B) hospital type (such as acute, rehabilitation,
12 children's, or cancer);
13 (C) participating hospital location; and
14 (D) hospital accreditation status; and
15 (3) for facilities, other than hospitals, by type:
16 (A) facility name;
17 (B) facility type;
18 (C) types of services performed; and
19 (D) participating facility location or locations,
20 including for each location where the health care
21 professional is at the location at least 3 days per
22 week.
23 (c) For the electronic provider directories, for each
24network plan, a network plan shall make available all of the
25following information in addition to the searchable
26information required in this Section:

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1 (1) for health care professionals:
2 (A) contact information, including both a
3 telephone number and digital contact information if
4 the provider has supplied digital contact information;
5 and
6 (B) languages spoken other than English by
7 clinical staff, if applicable;
8 (2) for hospitals, telephone number and digital
9 contact information; and
10 (3) for facilities other than hospitals, telephone
11 number.
12 (d) The issuer insurer or network plan shall make
13available in print, upon request, the following provider
14directory information for the applicable network plan:
15 (1) for health care professionals:
16 (A) name;
17 (B) contact information, including telephone
18 number and digital contact information if the provider
19 has supplied digital contact information;
20 (C) participating office location or locations,
21 including for each location where the health care
22 professional is at the location at least 3 days per
23 week;
24 (D) specialty, if applicable;
25 (E) languages spoken other than English, if
26 applicable;

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1 (F) whether accepting new patients; and
2 (G) use of telehealth or telemedicine, including,
3 but not limited to:
4 (i) whether the provider offers the use of
5 telehealth or telemedicine to deliver services to
6 patients for whom it would be clinically
7 appropriate;
8 (ii) what modalities are used and what types
9 of services may be provided via telehealth or
10 telemedicine; and
11 (iii) whether the provider has the ability and
12 willingness to include in a telehealth or
13 telemedicine encounter a family caregiver who is
14 in a separate location than the patient if the
15 patient wishes and provides his or her consent;
16 (2) for hospitals:
17 (A) hospital name;
18 (B) hospital type (such as acute, rehabilitation,
19 children's, or cancer); and
20 (C) participating hospital location, and telephone
21 number, and digital contact information; and
22 (3) for facilities, other than hospitals, by type:
23 (A) facility name;
24 (B) facility type;
25 (C) types of services performed; and
26 (D) participating facility location or locations,

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1 and telephone numbers, and digital contact information
2 for each location.
3 (e) The network plan shall include a disclosure in the
4print format provider directory that the information included
5in the directory is accurate as of the date of printing and
6that beneficiaries or prospective beneficiaries should consult
7the issuer's insurer's electronic provider directory on its
8website and contact the provider. The network plan shall also
9include a telephone number in the print format provider
10directory for a customer service representative where the
11beneficiary can obtain current provider directory information.
12 (f) The Director may conduct periodic audits of the
13accuracy of provider directories. A network plan shall not be
14subject to any fines or penalties for information required in
15this Section that a provider submits that is inaccurate or
16incomplete.
17 (g) To the extent not otherwise provided in this Act, an
18issuer shall comply with the requirements of 42 U.S.C.
19300gg-115, except that "provider directory information" shall
20include all information required to be included in a provider
21directory pursuant to this Section.
22(Source: P.A. 102-92, eff. 7-9-21.)
23 (215 ILCS 124/30)
24 Sec. 30. Administration and enforcement.
25 (a) Issuers Insurers, as defined in this Act, have a

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1continuing obligation to comply with the requirements of this
2Act. Other than the duties specifically created in this Act,
3nothing in this Act is intended to preclude, prevent, or
4require the adoption, modification, or termination of any
5utilization management, quality management, or claims
6processing methodologies of an issuer insurer.
7 (b) Nothing in this Act precludes, prevents, or requires
8the adoption, modification, or termination of any network plan
9term, benefit, coverage or eligibility provision, or payment
10methodology.
11 (c) The Director shall enforce the provisions of this Act
12pursuant to the enforcement powers granted to it by law.
13 (d) The Department shall adopt rules to enforce compliance
14with this Act to the extent necessary.
15 (e) In accordance with Section 5-45.21 of the Illinois
16Administrative Procedure Act, the Department may adopt
17emergency rules to implement federal standards for provider
18ratios, travel time and distance, and appointment wait times
19if such standards apply to health insurance coverage regulated
20by the Department and are more stringent than the State
21standards extant at the time the final federal standards are
22published.
23(Source: P.A. 100-502, eff. 9-15-17.)
24 (215 ILCS 124/35 new)
25 Sec. 35. Provider requirements. Providers shall comply

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1with 42 U.S.C. 300gg-138 and 300gg-139 and the regulations
2promulgated thereunder, as well as Section 20 and paragraph
3(2) of subsection (a) of Section 25 of this Act, except that
4"provider directory information" includes all information
5required to be included in a provider directory pursuant to
6Section 25 of this Act. To the extent a provider is licensed by
7the Department of Financial and Professional Regulation or by
8the Department of Public Health, that agency shall have the
9authority to investigate, examine, process complaints, issue
10subpoenas, examine witnesses under oath, issue a fine, or take
11disciplinary action against the provider's license for
12violations of these requirements in accordance with the
13provider's applicable licensing statute.
14 (215 ILCS 124/40 new)
15 Sec. 40. Confidentiality.
16 (a) All records in the custody or possession of the
17Department are presumed to be open to public inspection or
18copying unless exempt from disclosure by Section 7 or 7.5 of
19the Freedom of Information Act. Except as otherwise provided
20in this Section or other applicable law, the filings required
21under this Act shall be open to public inspection or copying.
22 (b) The following information shall not be deemed
23confidential:
24 (1) actual or projected ratios of providers to
25 beneficiaries;

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1 (2) actual or projected time and distance between
2 network providers and beneficiaries or actual or projected
3 waiting times for a beneficiary to see a network provider;
4 (3) geographic maps of network providers;
5 (4) requests for exceptions under subsection (g) of
6 Section 10, except with respect to any discussion of
7 ongoing or planned contractual negotiations with providers
8 that the issuer requests to be treated as confidential;
9 and
10 (5) provider directories.
11 (c) An issuer's work papers and reports on the results of a
12self-audit of its provider directories shall remain
13confidential unless expressly waived by the insurer or unless
14deemed public information under federal law.
15 (d) The filings required under Section 10 of this Act
16shall be confidential while they remain under the Department's
17review but shall become open to public inspection and copying
18upon completion of the review, except as provided in this
19Section or under other applicable law.
20 (e) Nothing in this Section shall supersede the statutory
21requirement that work papers obtained during a market conduct
22examination be deemed confidential.
23 Section 20. The Managed Care Reform and Patient Rights Act
24is amended by changing Sections 20 and 25 as follows:

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1 (215 ILCS 134/20)
2 Sec. 20. Notice of nonrenewal or termination. A health
3care plan must give at least 60 days notice of nonrenewal or
4termination of a health care provider to the health care
5provider and to the enrollees served by the health care
6provider. The notice shall include a name and address to which
7an enrollee or health care provider may direct comments and
8concerns regarding the nonrenewal or termination. Immediate
9written notice may be provided without 60 days notice when a
10health care provider's license has been disciplined by a State
11licensing board. The notice to the enrollee shall provide the
12individual with an opportunity to notify the health care plan
13of the individual's need for transitional care.
14(Source: P.A. 91-617, eff. 1-1-00.)
15 (215 ILCS 134/25)
16 Sec. 25. Transition of services.
17 (a) A health care plan shall provide for continuity of
18care for its enrollees as follows:
19 (1) If an enrollee's health care provider physician
20 leaves the health care plan's network of health care
21 providers for reasons other than termination of a contract
22 in situations involving imminent harm to a patient or a
23 final disciplinary action by a State licensing board and
24 the provider physician remains within the health care
25 plan's service area, or if benefits provided under such

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1 health care plan with respect to such provider are
2 terminated because of a change in the terms of the
3 participation of such provider in such plan, or if a
4 contract between a group health plan, as defined in
5 Section 5 of the Illinois Health Insurance Portability and
6 Accountability Act, and a health care plan offered
7 connection with the group health plan is terminated and
8 results in a loss of benefits provided under such plan
9 with respect to such provider, the health care plan shall
10 permit the enrollee to continue an ongoing course of
11 treatment with that provider physician during a
12 transitional period:
13 (A) of 90 days from the date of the notice of
14 provider's physician's termination from the health
15 care plan to the enrollee of the provider's
16 physician's disaffiliation from the health care plan
17 if the enrollee has an ongoing course of treatment; or
18 (B) if the enrollee has entered the third
19 trimester of pregnancy at the time of the provider's
20 physician's disaffiliation, that includes the
21 provision of post-partum care directly related to the
22 delivery.
23 (2) Notwithstanding the provisions in item (1) of this
24 subsection, such care shall be authorized by the health
25 care plan during the transitional period only if the
26 provider physician agrees:

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1 (A) to continue to accept reimbursement from the
2 health care plan at the rates applicable prior to the
3 start of the transitional period;
4 (B) to adhere to the health care plan's quality
5 assurance requirements and to provide to the health
6 care plan necessary medical information related to
7 such care; and
8 (C) to otherwise adhere to the health care plan's
9 policies and procedures, including but not limited to
10 procedures regarding referrals and obtaining
11 preauthorizations for treatment.
12 (3) During an enrollee's plan year, a health care plan
13 shall not remove a drug from its formulary or negatively
14 change its preferred or cost-tier sharing unless, at least
15 60 days before making the formulary change, the health
16 care plan:
17 (A) provides general notification of the change in
18 its formulary to current and prospective enrollees;
19 (B) directly notifies enrollees currently
20 receiving coverage for the drug, including information
21 on the specific drugs involved and the steps they may
22 take to request coverage determinations and
23 exceptions, including a statement that a certification
24 of medical necessity by the enrollee's prescribing
25 provider will result in continuation of coverage at
26 the existing level; and

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1 (C) directly notifies by first class mail and
2 through an electronic transmission, if available, the
3 prescribing provider of all health care plan enrollees
4 currently prescribed the drug affected by the proposed
5 change; the notice shall include a one-page form by
6 which the prescribing provider can notify the health
7 care plan by first class mail that coverage of the drug
8 for the enrollee is medically necessary.
9 The notification in paragraph (C) may direct the
10 prescribing provider to an electronic portal through which
11 the prescribing provider may electronically file a
12 certification to the health care plan that coverage of the
13 drug for the enrollee is medically necessary. The
14 prescribing provider may make a secure electronic
15 signature beside the words "certification of medical
16 necessity", and this certification shall authorize
17 continuation of coverage for the drug.
18 If the prescribing provider certifies to the health
19 care plan either in writing or electronically that the
20 drug is medically necessary for the enrollee as provided
21 in paragraph (C), a health care plan shall authorize
22 coverage for the drug prescribed based solely on the
23 prescribing provider's assertion that coverage is
24 medically necessary, and the health care plan is
25 prohibited from making modifications to the coverage
26 related to the covered drug, including, but not limited

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1 to:
2 (i) increasing the out-of-pocket costs for the
3 covered drug;
4 (ii) moving the covered drug to a more restrictive
5 tier; or
6 (iii) denying an enrollee coverage of the drug for
7 which the enrollee has been previously approved for
8 coverage by the health care plan.
9 Nothing in this item (3) prevents a health care plan
10 from removing a drug from its formulary or denying an
11 enrollee coverage if the United States Food and Drug
12 Administration has issued a statement about the drug that
13 calls into question the clinical safety of the drug, the
14 drug manufacturer has notified the United States Food and
15 Drug Administration of a manufacturing discontinuance or
16 potential discontinuance of the drug as required by
17 Section 506C of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act,
18 as codified in 21 U.S.C. 356c, or the drug manufacturer
19 has removed the drug from the market.
20 Nothing in this item (3) prohibits a health care plan,
21 by contract, written policy or procedure, or any other
22 agreement or course of conduct, from requiring a
23 pharmacist to effect substitutions of prescription drugs
24 consistent with Section 19.5 of the Pharmacy Practice Act,
25 under which a pharmacist may substitute an interchangeable
26 biologic for a prescribed biologic product, and Section 25

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1 of the Pharmacy Practice Act, under which a pharmacist may
2 select a generic drug determined to be therapeutically
3 equivalent by the United States Food and Drug
4 Administration and in accordance with the Illinois Food,
5 Drug and Cosmetic Act.
6 This item (3) applies to a policy or contract that is
7 amended, delivered, issued, or renewed on or after January
8 1, 2019. This item (3) does not apply to a health plan as
9 defined in the State Employees Group Insurance Act of 1971
10 or medical assistance under Article V of the Illinois
11 Public Aid Code.
12 (b) A health care plan shall provide for continuity of
13care for new enrollees as follows:
14 (1) If a new enrollee whose physician is not a member
15 of the health care plan's provider network, but is within
16 the health care plan's service area, enrolls in the health
17 care plan, the health care plan shall permit the enrollee
18 to continue an ongoing course of treatment with the
19 enrollee's current physician during a transitional period:
20 (A) of 90 days from the effective date of
21 enrollment if the enrollee has an ongoing course of
22 treatment; or
23 (B) if the enrollee has entered the third
24 trimester of pregnancy at the effective date of
25 enrollment, that includes the provision of post-partum
26 care directly related to the delivery.

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1 (2) If an enrollee elects to continue to receive care
2 from such physician pursuant to item (1) of this
3 subsection, such care shall be authorized by the health
4 care plan for the transitional period only if the
5 physician agrees:
6 (A) to accept reimbursement from the health care
7 plan at rates established by the health care plan;
8 such rates shall be the level of reimbursement
9 applicable to similar physicians within the health
10 care plan for such services;
11 (B) to adhere to the health care plan's quality
12 assurance requirements and to provide to the health
13 care plan necessary medical information related to
14 such care; and
15 (C) to otherwise adhere to the health care plan's
16 policies and procedures including, but not limited to
17 procedures regarding referrals and obtaining
18 preauthorization for treatment.
19 (c) In no event shall this Section be construed to require
20a health care plan to provide coverage for benefits not
21otherwise covered or to diminish or impair preexisting
22condition limitations contained in the enrollee's contract. In
23no event shall this Section be construed to prohibit the
24addition of prescription drugs to a health care plan's list of
25covered drugs during the coverage year.
26 (d) In this Section, "ongoing course of treatment" has the

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1meaning ascribed to that term in Section 5 of the Network
2Adequacy and Transparency Act.
3(Source: P.A. 100-1052, eff. 8-24-18.)
4 Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon
5becoming law.

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1 INDEX
2 Statutes amended in order of appearance