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Bill

Bill

HB 3575

HEALTH-TECH

104th Regular Session Introduced by Lindsey LaPointe

HB 3575, as introduced, contains only the short title and has no substantive provisions, no task force duties, membership, funding, or deadlines yet.

Referred to Rules Committee
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Bill Summary · HB 3575

Summary — HB 3575 (HEALTH-TECH): Specialized Mental Health Rehabilitation Facility Task Force Act

What the bill is

  • Short title: The bill may be cited as the "Specialized Mental Health Rehabilitation Facility Task Force Act."
  • As introduced, HB 3575 contains only a short title provision and does not include substantive provisions (e.g., membership, duties, deadlines, funding, or reporting requirements) establishing an actual task force in the text provided.

Sponsor

  • Primary sponsor: Rep. Lindsey LaPointe

Legislative status and timeline (key dates)

  • First reading / Referred to Rules: February 18, 2025
  • Filed: March 3, 2025 (document history also shows bill activity beginning Feb 18)
  • Passed House (final actions May 14–15, 2025) and Senate (May 21, 2025)
  • Sent to Governor: May 26, 2025
  • Signed by Governor: June 20, 2025
  • Effective date: June 20, 2025 (effective immediately)

Note: Committee activity included subcommittee consideration, substitute language reported favorably, and multiple committee and calendar steps — but the version text provided here contains only the short title.

Key provisions (from available text)

  • The available introduced version contains a single provision: the act's short title ("Specialized Mental Health Rehabilitation Facility Task Force Act").
  • No other statutory language (no operational details of a task force) appears in the provided bill text.

Who would be affected

  • With only a short title present in the introduced text, there are no direct changes to state programs, agencies, funding, or regulated parties in the provided version.
  • If a later/enrolled version (not included here) establishes a task force, typical affected parties could include state health agencies, mental health providers, advocacy organizations, local governments, and individuals receiving specialized mental health rehabilitation services.

Implications and next steps

  • Because the provided text lacks substantive provisions, readers should consult the enrolled bill/final public act to determine whether the final enacted version includes substantive task force language, membership, charge, deadlines, or appropriation.
  • The legislative history indicates substitute language and committee action; the final enacted text (Public Act) may contain additions not present in the introduced version.
  • For authoritative text and implementation details, check the Illinois General Assembly website or the Secretary of State’s published Public Acts for the final version of HB 3575 / the resulting Public Act.

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

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