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Bill

SB 1283

Correctional facilities, state and regional; private management prohibited.

2025 Regular Session Introduced by Adam Ebbin

Requires coroners/medical examiners to classify fentanyl deaths as 'fentanyl poisoning' and report to IDPH; IDPH adds a fentanyl poisoning line to monthly overdose reports.

Acts of Assembly Chapter text (CHAP0337)
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Bill Summary · SB 1283

Summary — SB 1283: Coroner Reporting for Fentanyl Deaths

Status: Enacted (Public Act 25-153). Passed by the legislature in May 2025, signed by the Governor June–July 2025, effective September 1, 2025.

NOTE: The source material included text from two different SB 1283 bills (one from Arizona about school safety). This summary addresses the coroner/fentanyl reporting provisions contained in the Illinois SB 1283 (amending the Counties Code).

Purpose / Intent

The bill clarifies how deaths caused by fentanyl are classified and reported by coroners and medical examiners, with the intent of improving the accuracy of public-health surveillance for fentanyl-related fatalities.

Key provisions

  • Statutory change: Amends the Counties Code (55 ILCS 5/3-3013) governing coroner preliminary investigations and reporting.
  • Redefines “overdose”: Modifies the statutory handling of overdose deaths so that deaths caused by fentanyl are no longer categorized under the statute’s definition of “overdose” but are treated as poisoning.
  • Mandatory reporting of fentanyl deaths:
    • Requires the coroner or medical examiner, in every case where fentanyl is determined to be the cause or a contributing factor, to report the death to the Illinois Department of Public Health (IDPH) specifically as “fentanyl poisoning.”
  • Public reporting:
    • Directs IDPH to include fentanyl poisoning deaths in its monthly reporting on overdose deaths (i.e., add a distinct reporting line for fentanyl poisoning deaths in overdose reports).

Who is affected

  • Coroners and medical examiners: new classification and reporting obligation for fentanyl-involved deaths.
  • Illinois Department of Public Health: must receive and incorporate fentanyl poisoning reports into monthly overdose death data and likely update reporting formats and internal procedures.
  • Counties and local public-health authorities: will receive more granular data on fentanyl fatalities that may affect local surveillance, prevention and response efforts.
  • Researchers, policymakers and the public: benefit from more accurate, disaggregated fentanyl fatality data for policymaking and resource allocation.

Procedural / timeline aspects

  • Became law as Public Act 25-153 (per legislative record).
  • Effective date: September 1, 2025.
  • Implementation considerations: coroners/medical examiners and IDPH will need to update reporting forms, data systems, and (potentially) training/protocols to ensure consistent classification and timeliness of reports.

Expected impact

  • Improved public-health surveillance and clearer statistics distinguishing fentanyl poisoning from other drug overdoses.
  • Better-informed prevention and response planning (targeted interventions, resource allocation).
  • Possible operational costs and administrative adjustments at county coroners’ offices and IDPH for systems and training.

Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.

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