Bill Text: IL SB2030 | 2025-2026 | 104th General Assembly | Introduced


Bill Title: Amends the Property Tax Code. Provides that, in counties in which the county board so provides, by ordinance or resolution, owners of income-producing properties in the county shall file physical descriptions of their properties with the chief county assessment officer upon request of the chief county assessment officer. Sets forth the period of time during which those provisions apply. Provides that the request for information shall include an individualized statement specifying all physical description information that the assessor's office has on record or recorded against the property and shall contain a statement that the owner may confirm the information if no changes are required. Imposes certain penalties if the property owner fails to respond to a request for information. Amends the Freedom of Information Act to provide that financial records and data related to real estate income, expenses, and occupancy submitted by or on behalf of a property owner to a chief county assessment officer, except if submitted as part of an assessment appeal, are exempt from disclosure. Effective immediately.

Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Democrat 1-0)

Status: (Introduced) 2025-02-06 - Referred to Assignments [SB2030 Detail]

Download: Illinois-2025-SB2030-Introduced.html

104TH GENERAL ASSEMBLY
State of Illinois
2025 and 2026
SB2030

Introduced 2/6/2025, by Sen. Celina Villanueva

SYNOPSIS AS INTRODUCED:
5 ILCS 140/7
35 ILCS 200/Art. 9 Div. 6 heading new
35 ILCS 200/9-280 new
35 ILCS 200/9-290 new

    Amends the Property Tax Code. Provides that, in counties in which the county board so provides, by ordinance or resolution, owners of income-producing properties in the county shall file physical descriptions of their properties with the chief county assessment officer upon request of the chief county assessment officer. Sets forth the period of time during which those provisions apply. Provides that the request for information shall include an individualized statement specifying all physical description information that the assessor's office has on record or recorded against the property and shall contain a statement that the owner may confirm the information if no changes are required. Imposes certain penalties if the property owner fails to respond to a request for information. Amends the Freedom of Information Act to provide that financial records and data related to real estate income, expenses, and occupancy submitted by or on behalf of a property owner to a chief county assessment officer, except if submitted as part of an assessment appeal, are exempt from disclosure. Effective immediately.
LRB104 09312 HLH 19370 b

A BILL FOR

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1    AN ACT concerning revenue.
2    Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
3represented in the General Assembly:
4    Section 5. The Freedom of Information Act is amended by
5changing Section 7 as follows:
6    (5 ILCS 140/7)
7    Sec. 7. Exemptions.
8    (1) When a request is made to inspect or copy a public
9record that contains information that is exempt from
10disclosure under this Section, but also contains information
11that is not exempt from disclosure, the public body may elect
12to redact the information that is exempt. The public body
13shall make the remaining information available for inspection
14and copying. Subject to this requirement, the following shall
15be exempt from inspection and copying:
16        (a) Information specifically prohibited from
17 disclosure by federal or State law or rules and
18 regulations implementing federal or State law.
19        (b) Private information, unless disclosure is required
20 by another provision of this Act, a State or federal law,
21 or a court order.
22        (b-5) Files, documents, and other data or databases
23 maintained by one or more law enforcement agencies and

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1 specifically designed to provide information to one or
2 more law enforcement agencies regarding the physical or
3 mental status of one or more individual subjects.
4        (c) Personal information contained within public
5 records, the disclosure of which would constitute a
6 clearly unwarranted invasion of personal privacy, unless
7 the disclosure is consented to in writing by the
8 individual subjects of the information. "Unwarranted
9 invasion of personal privacy" means the disclosure of
10 information that is highly personal or objectionable to a
11 reasonable person and in which the subject's right to
12 privacy outweighs any legitimate public interest in
13 obtaining the information. The disclosure of information
14 that bears on the public duties of public employees and
15 officials shall not be considered an invasion of personal
16 privacy.
17        (d) Records in the possession of any public body
18 created in the course of administrative enforcement
19 proceedings, and any law enforcement or correctional
20 agency for law enforcement purposes, but only to the
21 extent that disclosure would:
22            (i) interfere with pending or actually and
23 reasonably contemplated law enforcement proceedings
24 conducted by any law enforcement or correctional
25 agency that is the recipient of the request;
26            (ii) interfere with active administrative

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1 enforcement proceedings conducted by the public body
2 that is the recipient of the request;
3            (iii) create a substantial likelihood that a
4 person will be deprived of a fair trial or an impartial
5 hearing;
6            (iv) unavoidably disclose the identity of a
7 confidential source, confidential information
8 furnished only by the confidential source, or persons
9 who file complaints with or provide information to
10 administrative, investigative, law enforcement, or
11 penal agencies; except that the identities of
12 witnesses to traffic crashes, traffic crash reports,
13 and rescue reports shall be provided by agencies of
14 local government, except when disclosure would
15 interfere with an active criminal investigation
16 conducted by the agency that is the recipient of the
17 request;
18            (v) disclose unique or specialized investigative
19 techniques other than those generally used and known
20 or disclose internal documents of correctional
21 agencies related to detection, observation, or
22 investigation of incidents of crime or misconduct, and
23 disclosure would result in demonstrable harm to the
24 agency or public body that is the recipient of the
25 request;
26            (vi) endanger the life or physical safety of law

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1 enforcement personnel or any other person; or
2            (vii) obstruct an ongoing criminal investigation
3 by the agency that is the recipient of the request.
4        (d-5) A law enforcement record created for law
5 enforcement purposes and contained in a shared electronic
6 record management system if the law enforcement agency
7 that is the recipient of the request did not create the
8 record, did not participate in or have a role in any of the
9 events which are the subject of the record, and only has
10 access to the record through the shared electronic record
11 management system.
12        (d-6) Records contained in the Officer Professional
13 Conduct Database under Section 9.2 of the Illinois Police
14 Training Act, except to the extent authorized under that
15 Section. This includes the documents supplied to the
16 Illinois Law Enforcement Training Standards Board from the
17 Illinois State Police and Illinois State Police Merit
18 Board.
19        (d-7) Information gathered or records created from the
20 use of automatic license plate readers in connection with
21 Section 2-130 of the Illinois Vehicle Code.
22        (e) Records that relate to or affect the security of
23 correctional institutions and detention facilities.
24        (e-5) Records requested by persons committed to the
25 Department of Corrections, Department of Human Services
26 Division of Mental Health, or a county jail if those

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1 materials are available in the library of the correctional
2 institution or facility or jail where the inmate is
3 confined.
4        (e-6) Records requested by persons committed to the
5 Department of Corrections, Department of Human Services
6 Division of Mental Health, or a county jail if those
7 materials include records from staff members' personnel
8 files, staff rosters, or other staffing assignment
9 information.
10        (e-7) Records requested by persons committed to the
11 Department of Corrections or Department of Human Services
12 Division of Mental Health if those materials are available
13 through an administrative request to the Department of
14 Corrections or Department of Human Services Division of
15 Mental Health.
16        (e-8) Records requested by a person committed to the
17 Department of Corrections, Department of Human Services
18 Division of Mental Health, or a county jail, the
19 disclosure of which would result in the risk of harm to any
20 person or the risk of an escape from a jail or correctional
21 institution or facility.
22        (e-9) Records requested by a person in a county jail
23 or committed to the Department of Corrections or
24 Department of Human Services Division of Mental Health,
25 containing personal information pertaining to the person's
26 victim or the victim's family, including, but not limited

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1 to, a victim's home address, home telephone number, work
2 or school address, work telephone number, social security
3 number, or any other identifying information, except as
4 may be relevant to a requester's current or potential case
5 or claim.
6        (e-10) Law enforcement records of other persons
7 requested by a person committed to the Department of
8 Corrections, Department of Human Services Division of
9 Mental Health, or a county jail, including, but not
10 limited to, arrest and booking records, mug shots, and
11 crime scene photographs, except as these records may be
12 relevant to the requester's current or potential case or
13 claim.
14        (f) Preliminary drafts, notes, recommendations,
15 memoranda, and other records in which opinions are
16 expressed, or policies or actions are formulated, except
17 that a specific record or relevant portion of a record
18 shall not be exempt when the record is publicly cited and
19 identified by the head of the public body. The exemption
20 provided in this paragraph (f) extends to all those
21 records of officers and agencies of the General Assembly
22 that pertain to the preparation of legislative documents.
23        (g) Trade secrets and commercial or financial
24 information obtained from a person or business where the
25 trade secrets or commercial or financial information are
26 furnished under a claim that they are proprietary,

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1 privileged, or confidential, and that disclosure of the
2 trade secrets or commercial or financial information would
3 cause competitive harm to the person or business, and only
4 insofar as the claim directly applies to the records
5 requested.
6        The information included under this exemption includes
7 all trade secrets and commercial or financial information
8 obtained by a public body, including a public pension
9 fund, from a private equity fund or a privately held
10 company within the investment portfolio of a private
11 equity fund as a result of either investing or evaluating
12 a potential investment of public funds in a private equity
13 fund. The exemption contained in this item does not apply
14 to the aggregate financial performance information of a
15 private equity fund, nor to the identity of the fund's
16 managers or general partners. The exemption contained in
17 this item does not apply to the identity of a privately
18 held company within the investment portfolio of a private
19 equity fund, unless the disclosure of the identity of a
20 privately held company may cause competitive harm.
21        Nothing contained in this paragraph (g) shall be
22 construed to prevent a person or business from consenting
23 to disclosure.
24        (h) Proposals and bids for any contract, grant, or
25 agreement, including information which if it were
26 disclosed would frustrate procurement or give an advantage

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1 to any person proposing to enter into a contractor
2 agreement with the body, until an award or final selection
3 is made. Information prepared by or for the body in
4 preparation of a bid solicitation shall be exempt until an
5 award or final selection is made.
6        (i) Valuable formulae, computer geographic systems,
7 designs, drawings, and research data obtained or produced
8 by any public body when disclosure could reasonably be
9 expected to produce private gain or public loss. The
10 exemption for "computer geographic systems" provided in
11 this paragraph (i) does not extend to requests made by
12 news media as defined in Section 2 of this Act when the
13 requested information is not otherwise exempt and the only
14 purpose of the request is to access and disseminate
15 information regarding the health, safety, welfare, or
16 legal rights of the general public.
17        (j) The following information pertaining to
18 educational matters:
19            (i) test questions, scoring keys, and other
20 examination data used to administer an academic
21 examination;
22            (ii) information received by a primary or
23 secondary school, college, or university under its
24 procedures for the evaluation of faculty members by
25 their academic peers;
26            (iii) information concerning a school or

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1 university's adjudication of student disciplinary
2 cases, but only to the extent that disclosure would
3 unavoidably reveal the identity of the student; and
4            (iv) course materials or research materials used
5 by faculty members.
6        (k) Architects' plans, engineers' technical
7 submissions, and other construction related technical
8 documents for projects not constructed or developed in
9 whole or in part with public funds and the same for
10 projects constructed or developed with public funds,
11 including, but not limited to, power generating and
12 distribution stations and other transmission and
13 distribution facilities, water treatment facilities,
14 airport facilities, sport stadiums, convention centers,
15 and all government owned, operated, or occupied buildings,
16 but only to the extent that disclosure would compromise
17 security.
18        (l) Minutes of meetings of public bodies closed to the
19 public as provided in the Open Meetings Act until the
20 public body makes the minutes available to the public
21 under Section 2.06 of the Open Meetings Act.
22        (m) Communications between a public body and an
23 attorney or auditor representing the public body that
24 would not be subject to discovery in litigation, and
25 materials prepared or compiled by or for a public body in
26 anticipation of a criminal, civil, or administrative

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1 proceeding upon the request of an attorney advising the
2 public body, and materials prepared or compiled with
3 respect to internal audits of public bodies.
4        (n) Records relating to a public body's adjudication
5 of employee grievances or disciplinary cases; however,
6 this exemption shall not extend to the final outcome of
7 cases in which discipline is imposed.
8        (o) Administrative or technical information associated
9 with automated data processing operations, including, but
10 not limited to, software, operating protocols, computer
11 program abstracts, file layouts, source listings, object
12 modules, load modules, user guides, documentation
13 pertaining to all logical and physical design of
14 computerized systems, employee manuals, and any other
15 information that, if disclosed, would jeopardize the
16 security of the system or its data or the security of
17 materials exempt under this Section.
18        (p) Records relating to collective negotiating matters
19 between public bodies and their employees or
20 representatives, except that any final contract or
21 agreement shall be subject to inspection and copying.
22        (q) Test questions, scoring keys, and other
23 examination data used to determine the qualifications of
24 an applicant for a license or employment.
25        (r) The records, documents, and information relating
26 to real estate purchase negotiations until those

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1 negotiations have been completed or otherwise terminated.
2 With regard to a parcel involved in a pending or actually
3 and reasonably contemplated eminent domain proceeding
4 under the Eminent Domain Act, records, documents, and
5 information relating to that parcel shall be exempt except
6 as may be allowed under discovery rules adopted by the
7 Illinois Supreme Court. The records, documents, and
8 information relating to a real estate sale shall be exempt
9 until a sale is consummated.
10        (s) Any and all proprietary information and records
11 related to the operation of an intergovernmental risk
12 management association or self-insurance pool or jointly
13 self-administered health and accident cooperative or pool.
14 Insurance or self-insurance (including any
15 intergovernmental risk management association or
16 self-insurance pool) claims, loss or risk management
17 information, records, data, advice, or communications.
18        (t) Information contained in or related to
19 examination, operating, or condition reports prepared by,
20 on behalf of, or for the use of a public body responsible
21 for the regulation or supervision of financial
22 institutions, insurance companies, or pharmacy benefit
23 managers, unless disclosure is otherwise required by State
24 law.
25        (u) Information that would disclose or might lead to
26 the disclosure of secret or confidential information,

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1 codes, algorithms, programs, or private keys intended to
2 be used to create electronic signatures under the Uniform
3 Electronic Transactions Act.
4        (v) Vulnerability assessments, security measures, and
5 response policies or plans that are designed to identify,
6 prevent, or respond to potential attacks upon a
7 community's population or systems, facilities, or
8 installations, but only to the extent that disclosure
9 could reasonably be expected to expose the vulnerability
10 or jeopardize the effectiveness of the measures, policies,
11 or plans, or the safety of the personnel who implement
12 them or the public. Information exempt under this item may
13 include such things as details pertaining to the
14 mobilization or deployment of personnel or equipment, to
15 the operation of communication systems or protocols, to
16 cybersecurity vulnerabilities, or to tactical operations.
17        (w) (Blank).
18        (x) Maps and other records regarding the location or
19 security of generation, transmission, distribution,
20 storage, gathering, treatment, or switching facilities
21 owned by a utility, by a power generator, or by the
22 Illinois Power Agency.
23        (y) Information contained in or related to proposals,
24 bids, or negotiations related to electric power
25 procurement under Section 1-75 of the Illinois Power
26 Agency Act and Section 16-111.5 of the Public Utilities

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1 Act that is determined to be confidential and proprietary
2 by the Illinois Power Agency or by the Illinois Commerce
3 Commission.
4        (z) Information about students exempted from
5 disclosure under Section 10-20.38 or 34-18.29 of the
6 School Code, and information about undergraduate students
7 enrolled at an institution of higher education exempted
8 from disclosure under Section 25 of the Illinois Credit
9 Card Marketing Act of 2009.
10        (aa) Information the disclosure of which is exempted
11 under the Viatical Settlements Act of 2009.
12        (bb) Records and information provided to a mortality
13 review team and records maintained by a mortality review
14 team appointed under the Department of Juvenile Justice
15 Mortality Review Team Act.
16        (cc) Information regarding interments, entombments, or
17 inurnments of human remains that are submitted to the
18 Cemetery Oversight Database under the Cemetery Care Act or
19 the Cemetery Oversight Act, whichever is applicable.
20        (dd) Correspondence and records (i) that may not be
21 disclosed under Section 11-9 of the Illinois Public Aid
22 Code or (ii) that pertain to appeals under Section 11-8 of
23 the Illinois Public Aid Code.
24        (ee) The names, addresses, or other personal
25 information of persons who are minors and are also
26 participants and registrants in programs of park

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1 districts, forest preserve districts, conservation
2 districts, recreation agencies, and special recreation
3 associations.
4        (ff) The names, addresses, or other personal
5 information of participants and registrants in programs of
6 park districts, forest preserve districts, conservation
7 districts, recreation agencies, and special recreation
8 associations where such programs are targeted primarily to
9 minors.
10        (gg) Confidential information described in Section
11 1-100 of the Illinois Independent Tax Tribunal Act of
12 2012.
13        (hh) The report submitted to the State Board of
14 Education by the School Security and Standards Task Force
15 under item (8) of subsection (d) of Section 2-3.160 of the
16 School Code and any information contained in that report.
17        (ii) Records requested by persons committed to or
18 detained by the Department of Human Services under the
19 Sexually Violent Persons Commitment Act or committed to
20 the Department of Corrections under the Sexually Dangerous
21 Persons Act if those materials: (i) are available in the
22 library of the facility where the individual is confined;
23 (ii) include records from staff members' personnel files,
24 staff rosters, or other staffing assignment information;
25 or (iii) are available through an administrative request
26 to the Department of Human Services or the Department of

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1 Corrections.
2        (jj) Confidential information described in Section
3 5-535 of the Civil Administrative Code of Illinois.
4        (kk) The public body's credit card numbers, debit card
5 numbers, bank account numbers, Federal Employer
6 Identification Number, security code numbers, passwords,
7 and similar account information, the disclosure of which
8 could result in identity theft or impression or defrauding
9 of a governmental entity or a person.
10        (ll) Records concerning the work of the threat
11 assessment team of a school district, including, but not
12 limited to, any threat assessment procedure under the
13 School Safety Drill Act and any information contained in
14 the procedure.
15        (mm) Information prohibited from being disclosed under
16 subsections (a) and (b) of Section 15 of the Student
17 Confidential Reporting Act.
18        (nn) Proprietary information submitted to the
19 Environmental Protection Agency under the Drug Take-Back
20 Act.
21        (oo) Records described in subsection (f) of Section
22 3-5-1 of the Unified Code of Corrections.
23        (pp) Any and all information regarding burials,
24 interments, or entombments of human remains as required to
25 be reported to the Department of Natural Resources
26 pursuant either to the Archaeological and Paleontological

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1 Resources Protection Act or the Human Remains Protection
2 Act.
3        (qq) Reports described in subsection (e) of Section
4 16-15 of the Abortion Care Clinical Training Program Act.
5        (rr) Information obtained by a certified local health
6 department under the Access to Public Health Data Act.
7        (ss) For a request directed to a public body that is
8 also a HIPAA-covered entity, all information that is
9 protected health information, including demographic
10 information, that may be contained within or extracted
11 from any record held by the public body in compliance with
12 State and federal medical privacy laws and regulations,
13 including, but not limited to, the Health Insurance
14 Portability and Accountability Act and its regulations, 45
15 CFR Parts 160 and 164. As used in this paragraph,
16 "HIPAA-covered entity" has the meaning given to the term
17 "covered entity" in 45 CFR 160.103 and "protected health
18 information" has the meaning given to that term in 45 CFR
19 160.103.
20        (tt) Proposals or bids submitted by engineering
21 consultants in response to requests for proposal or other
22 competitive bidding requests by the Department of
23 Transportation or the Illinois Toll Highway Authority.
24        (uu) Financial records and data related to real estate
25 income, expenses, and occupancy submitted by or on behalf
26 of a property owner to a chief county assessment officer,

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1 except if submitted as part of an assessment appeal.
2 However, nothing in this paragraph (uu) prohibits a chief
3 county assessment officer from disclosing compiled and
4 anonymized data, and nothing in this paragraph (uu) shall
5 be construed to permit the chief county assessment officer
6 to withhold from public disclosure methodologies and
7 compiled and anonymized data used by any assessing
8 official in the valuation of property for assessment
9 purposes.    
10    (1.5) Any information exempt from disclosure under the
11Judicial Privacy Act shall be redacted from public records
12prior to disclosure under this Act.
13    (2) A public record that is not in the possession of a
14public body but is in the possession of a party with whom the
15agency has contracted to perform a governmental function on
16behalf of the public body, and that directly relates to the
17governmental function and is not otherwise exempt under this
18Act, shall be considered a public record of the public body,
19for purposes of this Act.
20    (3) This Section does not authorize withholding of
21information or limit the availability of records to the
22public, except as stated in this Section or otherwise provided
23in this Act.
24(Source: P.A. 102-38, eff. 6-25-21; 102-558, eff. 8-20-21;
25102-694, eff. 1-7-22; 102-752, eff. 5-6-22; 102-753, eff.
261-1-23; 102-776, eff. 1-1-23; 102-791, eff. 5-13-22; 102-982,

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1eff. 7-1-23; 102-1055, eff. 6-10-22; 103-154, eff. 6-30-23;
2103-423, eff. 1-1-24; 103-446, eff. 8-4-23; 103-462, eff.
38-4-23; 103-540, eff. 1-1-24; 103-554, eff. 1-1-24; 103-605,
4eff. 7-1-24; 103-865, eff. 1-1-25.)
5    Section 10. The Property Tax Code is amended by adding
6Division 6 to Article 9 as follows:
7    (35 ILCS 200/Art. 9 Div. 6 heading new)
8
Division 6. Physical Descriptions of Income-Producing Property
9    (35 ILCS 200/9-280 new)
10    Sec. 9-280. Definitions. As used in this Division:
11    "Income" means revenue generated by the real property and
12directed to or received by the property owner in the form of
13rent from unrelated persons or entities and ancillary revenue
14payable to the owner from unrelated persons or entities and
15generated exclusively from the operation of the real property.
16"Income" includes revenue from parking or other amenities
17provided to or for the benefit of the property's tenants.
18"Income" does not include revenue generated from personal
19property, including, but not limited to, revenue from a
20business enterprise that is operated on the real property or
21improvements made to the property by a tenant.    
22    "Income-producing property" means property that is not
23owner-occupied property, as defined in this Section, and that

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1is owned for the purpose of generating income from the
2property itself, regardless of whether the property actually
3generates income in a particular year. "Income-producing
4property" does not include:
5        (1) property with a market value of $500,000 or less
6 in the most recent assessment year for which an assessment
7 is certified;
8        (2) residential property containing fewer than 7
9 residential units;
10        (3) property assessed under Article 10 of this Code
11 and stadiums that are not qualified property under Section
12 10-215 that have a seating capacity of 20,000 or more and
13 host major professional sporting events;
14        (4) property assessed by the Department under Article
15 11 of this Code;
16        (5) property that is owned or leased by a hospital
17 licensed under the Hospital Licensing Act or operated
18 under the University of Illinois Hospital Act, including
19 any hospital affiliate that directly or indirectly
20 controls, is controlled by, or is under common control
21 with a hospital; and
22        (6) property that is owned or leased by a facility
23 licensed under the Nursing Home Care Act that is an
24 intermediate or skilled facility.    
25    "Owner-occupied property" means real property that is used
26or occupied by its owner or by a related person or entity as

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1described in subsection (b) of Section 267 of the Internal
2Revenue Code.    
3    "Physical description" means the land size and information
4about the construction type, year built, total development
5size, number of buildings, number of stories in each building,
6and the capacity of structured parking garages, measured in
7the number of parking spaces. "Physical description" also
8includes the following:    
9        (1) for residential property of 7 or more units:
10            (A) whether any rented area is below grade;
11            (B) the number of studio, 1-bedroom, 2-bedroom,
12 3-bedroom, and larger units;
13            (C) whether or not the property offers tenants
14 access to a pool area;
15            (D) whether or not the property offers tenants
16 access to an exercise area; and
17            (E) whether any units in the building are enrolled
18 in any government-administered affordable housing
19 program.    
20        (2) for office properties, a description of the net
21 rentable area of the property and a statement indicating
22 whether the owner represents to actual or prospective
23 tenants that the office space can accommodate x-ray or
24 magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) equipment or surgical
25 procedures;    
26        (3) for retail properties, a description of the net

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1 rentable area;    
2        (4) for industrial properties:
3            (A) the size and location of any office area or
4 areas on the property;
5            (B) the number of loading bay doors;
6            (C) whether the clear ceiling height on the first
7 floor is at least 18 feet but less than 24 feet, at
8 least 24 feet but less than 30 feet, or at least 30
9 feet;
10            (D) whether the property provides refrigerated
11 storage; and
12            (E) if the property is a data center, whether the
13 total electrical capacity in the property is: (i) less
14 than 250 megawatts; (ii) at least 250 megawatts but
15 less than 500 megawatts; (iii) at least 500 megawatts
16 but less than one gigawatt; (iv) at least one gigawatt
17 but less than 5 gigawatts; or (v) 5 or more gigawatts;
18 and    
19        (5) for hospitality properties, a statement indicating
20 whether the property has more than 10,000 square feet of
21 conference area and the room count.    
22    "Property" has the meaning set forth in Section 1-130 of
23this Code and includes contiguous parcels or property index
24numbers that comprise one functional property location.    
25    (35 ILCS 200/9-290 new)

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1    Sec. 9-290. Real property descriptions.
2    (a) This Section applies to all counties in which the
3county board provides, by ordinance or resolution, that owners
4of income-producing properties must comply with this Section.
5Any ordinance or resolution providing that owners of
6income-producing properties must comply with this Section
7shall be adopted no later than December 31, 2029.    
8    (b) In counties with 3,000,000 or more inhabitants, the
9provisions of this Section apply as follows:    
10        (1) if the general assessment year for the property is
11 2027, this Section applies from the effective date of the
12 ordinance or resolution adopted by the county board under
13 subsection (a) until December 31, 2029;    
14        (2) if the general assessment year for the property is
15 2028, this Section applies from the effective date of the
16 ordinance or resolution adopted by the county board under
17 subsection (a) until December 31, 2030; and    
18        (3) if the general assessment year for the property is
19 2029, this Section applies from the effective date of the
20 ordinance or resolution adopted by the county board under
21 subsection (a) until December 31, 2031.    
22    In counties with fewer than 3,000,000 inhabitants, the
23provisions of this Section apply on and after the effective
24date of the ordinance or resolution adopted by the county
25board under subsection (a) and until December 31 of the fourth
26year following the adoption of the ordinance or resolution.    

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1    (c) For the applicable period set forth in subsection (b),
2owners of income-producing properties in the county shall file
3physical descriptions of their properties with the chief
4county assessment officer in the form and manner determined by
5the chief county assessment officer. Such a filing by the
6owner is required only after the chief county assessment
7officer notifies the owner of the property of the request for
8information. That notice shall include an individualized
9statement specifying all physical description information that
10the assessor's office has on record or recorded against the
11property and shall contain a statement that the owner may
12confirm the information if no changes are required. A filing
13by the owner that no changes are required is compliance with
14the request for information. The notice shall include
15description records or a link to an Internet resource of
16description records for that property.    
17    (d) A request for information under subsection (c) may be
18issued with respect to a property only once during one general
19reassessment cycle for the property. A response to the request
20for information shall be submitted to the chief county
21assessment officer within 90 days after the chief county
22assessment officer mails the notice to the property owner
23under subsection (c).    
24    (e) If, upon receiving a request for information under
25this Section, the owner of a property fails to submit the
26required physical description within 90 days after the chief

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1county assessment officer mails the notice to the property
2owner and fails to adequately explain why no submission is
3required, the owner shall pay a penalty to the chief county
4assessment officer as determined by the chief county
5assessment officer of up to 0.025% of the prior year's market
6value for the property at issue, as indicated by the most
7recent certified assessed value, but in no case shall the
8owner be required to pay more than a maximum penalty of $1,000
9per property. All penalties under this Section shall be
10deposited into the county's general fund or as otherwise
11allocated by the county board. The penalty under this Section
12shall be waived if, upon notice of failure to file and the
13imposition of the penalty, the owner provides the requested
14physical descriptions within 30 days after the postmark date
15of the notice of failure to file and the imposition of the
16penalty. An owner who responds to a request for information
17received under this Section with good faith efforts based on
18reasonable information and belief, or who, upon diligent
19investigation, is unable to provide specific requested
20information and provides an answer to this effect, shall be
21determined to be in substantial compliance with this Section
22and shall not be subject to a penalty. Responses to requests
23for information under this Section consistent with documents
24from the sale or transfer of the property to the current owner
25or with published advertisements made by the owner to current
26or prospective tenants, unless the owner has modified those

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1particular aspects of the property since the sale, transfer,
2lease, or lease proffer, shall be deemed to be made in good
3faith. The owner may explain the reasons for any
4inconsistencies and be deemed to have responded in good faith,
5and any inconsistencies related to documents from the sale or
6transfer of the property prepared by a prior owner shall not be
7attributable to the current owner. The chief county assessment
8officer shall review all submissions and determine whether the
9owner provided sufficient evidence that the owner was not
10required to report a property description or that the
11submission complies based on available documentation.    
12    (f) If a party is dissatisfied with a decision of the chief
13county assessment officer, the party may request review of
14that decision. Upon such a request, at least 30 days' notice
15shall be provided to the party of a hearing to be conducted by
16a hearing officer designated by the chief county assessment
17officer. If a party is dissatisfied with a hearing officer's
18decision, the party may appeal that decision to the circuit
19court of the county in which the property is located as a final
20administrative decision under the Administrative Review Law.
21If a party is unsuccessful at hearing, the penalty imposed
22under this Section shall bear interest at 0.05% per month
23thereafter, beginning 21 days after the date of the decision
24or 21 days after the date of the issuance of a final decision
25on administrative review, as applicable.    
26    Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon

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1becoming law.
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