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| Public Act 102-0685  | 
 | HB0370 Enrolled | LRB102 02739 LNS 12742 b |  
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 AN ACT concerning civil law.  | 
 Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,  | 
represented in the General Assembly:  | 
 Section 1. Short title. This Act may be cited as the Youth  | 
Health and Safety Act.  | 
 Section 5. Findings and declaration of policy. The General  | 
Assembly finds, determines, and declares the following:  | 
 (1) In 2019, the State of Illinois enacted the  | 
 Reproductive Health Act to establish and affirm the  | 
 fundamental right of all individuals in our State to make  | 
 their own decisions about their reproductive health care  | 
 without government interference.  | 
 (2) Illinois' support of reproductive health care  | 
 stood in stark contrast to actions in other states aimed  | 
 at limiting, and even banning, access to reproductive  | 
 health care, including abortion care. The Reproductive  | 
 Health Act further established Illinois as a bulwark in  | 
 the protection of access to reproductive health care in  | 
 the Midwest. The pace of attacks on the fundamental right  | 
 of individuals to make autonomous decisions about their  | 
 lives has accelerated dangerously since 2019.  | 
 (3) So far in calendar year 2021, 47 states considered  | 
 severe abortion restrictions, including 10 bans in direct  | 
 
 conflict with the basic guarantees contained in Roe v.  | 
 Wade and the protections codified under the Reproductive  | 
 Health Act. Additionally, the Supreme Court of the United  | 
 States is being asked to overturn the holding in Roe v.  | 
 Wade in a case concerning an abortion ban in Mississippi,  | 
 a development threatening to leave millions of Americans  | 
 without access to abortion care.  | 
 (4) These attacks reached their zenith with the  | 
 passage of an abortion ban in Texas that deputized  | 
 individuals across the country to act as "bounty hunters"  | 
 allowing for lawsuits against physicians providing  | 
 abortion care to people who are pregnant and others  | 
 helping those seeking that care.  | 
 (5) Illinois again is called to be an example for the  | 
 nation in the protection of reproductive health care while  | 
 also working to establish healthy family communications,  | 
 protecting the health and safety of youth including those  | 
 who are pregnant and parenting, and investing in  | 
 individuals throughout their lives.  | 
 (6) It is in the public policy interest of the State to  | 
 ensure that Illinois residents, and individuals coming to  | 
 the State of Illinois to access reproductive health care,  | 
 are safe and free from barriers to access, including, but  | 
 not limited to, medically unnecessary waiting periods,  | 
 bans on particular reproductive health procedures, and  | 
 restrictions or legal threats when accessing reproductive  | 
  health care. The State of Illinois recognizes it is not  | 
 the role of government to deny access to reproductive  | 
 health care for its residents and those traveling to the  | 
 State to access healthcare, especially those who are  | 
 traveling to the State of Illinois because of the  | 
 implementation of severe abortion restrictions in their  | 
 home states. It is also in the public policy interest of  | 
 the State to protect and support providers of reproductive  | 
 health care and ensure that there are no penalties  | 
 targeting providers, and individuals who support or aide  | 
 those seeking reproductive health care in Illinois. The  | 
 State of Illinois also opposes criminal litigation  | 
 directed at those who provide healthcare or support to  | 
 individuals traveling from states with such laws.  | 
 (7) The Youth Health and Safety Act seeks to restate  | 
 Illinois' commitment to full and equitable access to  | 
 reproductive health care for all persons across the State,  | 
 without barriers based on race or ethnicity, immigration  | 
 status, age, geographic location, economic means,  | 
 education level, or other categories of identity. The Act  | 
 confirms that Illinois will not move backwards and will  | 
 continue to assure that reproductive rights are protected  | 
 and recognized.  | 
 Section 10. The Youth Health and Safety Advisory Working  | 
Group; duties and responsibilities.  | 
  (a) The Youth Health and Safety Advisory Working Group is  | 
created for the purpose of identifying and reviewing laws and  | 
regulations that impact pregnant and parenting youth and youth  | 
that may become pregnant or a parent. The working group shall  | 
identify existing and needed resources for pregnant and  | 
parenting youth, and youth seeking reproductive healthcare. In  | 
this Act, "youth" means an individual under 18 years of age.  | 
 The working group shall prepare and make public a report  | 
that details available information and makes recommendations  | 
as necessary.  | 
 (b) The working group shall identify laws and regulations  | 
that impact pregnant and parenting youth, or that may impact a  | 
pregnant or parenting youth, and provide information and  | 
resources on topics related to healthcare, including, but not  | 
limited to the following:  | 
 (1) consent to medical care, including what healthcare  | 
 and treatments are available, and access to confidential  | 
 treatment and care;  | 
 (2) pregnancy, abortion, adoption, and parenting;  | 
 (3) counseling services, including, but not limited  | 
 to, reproduction and sexual health, pregnancy and  | 
 post-pregnancy, mental health, family, and parenting;  | 
 (4) emancipation; and  | 
 (5) insurance coverage.  | 
 (c) The working group shall identify and provide  | 
information and resources that encourage and support open  | 
 communication and conversation between youth and their  | 
families and other trusted people in their lives, including,  | 
but not limited to, counseling services, classes and  | 
workshops, talk and text-lines, online and social media  | 
options, tools targeted to parents and adults, and tools  | 
targeted to youth.  | 
 (d) The working group shall identify and provide  | 
information and resources for pregnant and parenting youth  | 
related to education, employment, housing, food access, child  | 
care, and human trafficking, including the prevention of  | 
trafficking.  | 
 Section 15. Membership; meetings.  | 
 (a) The members of the working group shall include and  | 
represent the diversity of the people of Illinois, and shall  | 
be composed of the following:  | 
 (1) Four members appointed by the Senate President,  | 
 with at least 2 youth.  | 
 (2) Two members appointed by the Minority Leader of  | 
 the Senate, with at least one youth.  | 
 (3) Four members appointed by the Speaker of the House  | 
 of Representatives, with at least 2 youth.  | 
 (4) Two members appointed by the Minority Leader of  | 
 the Speaker of the House of Representatives, with at least  | 
 one youth.  | 
 (5) One State Representative appointed by the Speaker  | 
  of the House of Representatives. | 
 (6) One State Representative appointed by the Minority  | 
 Leader of the House of Representatives. | 
 (7) One State Senator appointed by the President of  | 
 the Senate. | 
 (8) One State Senator appointed by the Minority Leader  | 
 of the Senate. | 
 (9) Four members appointed by the Governor, with at  | 
 least 2 youth. | 
 (b) Appointments for the working group shall be made on or  | 
before August 31, 2022.  | 
 (c) Members shall serve without compensation.  | 
 (d) The Department of Public Health shall provide  | 
administrative support to the working group.  | 
 Section 20. Report; dissolution. The working group shall  | 
issue a report based upon its findings. The report shall be  | 
submitted to the Governor and General Assembly no later than  | 
July 1, 2023.  | 
 Section 25. Repeal. This Act is repealed on January 1,  | 
2024.  | 
 Section 90. Public Act 89-18, approved June 1, 1995, as  | 
amended, is repealed. 
   
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