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HB 2881

Relating to appointments to the Board of Commissioners of the Port of Portland.

2025 Regular Session Introduced by Paul Evans

Illinois HB 2881 defines 'commercial purpose' in FOIA to guide fees/denials; broad scope could apply to many private requests, with carve-outs for news, nonprofits, and research.

In committee upon adjournment.
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Bill Summary · HB 2881

Summary — HB 2881

Note: the provided document contains two different bills that share the number HB 2881 in different states. This summary treats them separately.

1) Illinois — HB 2881 (FOIA: “Commercial purpose” definition)

Primary subject: Amendment to the Illinois Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) to define the term “commercial purpose.”

Key provisions
- Adds a new definition of “commercial purpose” to 5 ILCS 140/2:
- “Commercial purpose” includes use of any part of a public record, or information derived from public records, in any form for:
- sale, resale, or solicitation/advertisement for sales or services; or
- any use or purpose that furthers the commercial, trade, or profit interests of the requester or the person on whose behalf the request is made.
- Explicitly excludes requests made by news media and nonprofit, scientific, or academic organizations from being treated as “commercial” when the principal purpose is:
- accessing and disseminating news/current events;
- producing opinion/features of public interest; or
- academic, scientific, or public research/education.

Who is affected
- Requesters of public records in Illinois (businesses, commercial data brokers, consultants).
- Public bodies and agencies that respond to FOIA requests (may treat certain requests as commercial).
- News organizations, nonprofits, academic and scientific researchers (explicitly protected from being classified as commercial when principal purpose is news/research/education).

Potential impacts
- Clarifies the scope of “commercial purpose,” which can influence how agencies apply fee schedules, impose surcharges, or deny requests under FOIA provisions that treat commercial requests differently.
- The broad language (“any use…that furthers commercial, trade, or profit interests”) may capture a wide range of private-sector requesters and uses; how agencies implement it will determine practical effects.
- The carve-outs for news media and nonprofits narrow application where the principal purpose is public-interest journalism or bona fide research/education.

Procedural status and timeline (as provided)
- Introduced in Illinois General Assembly: 02/06/2025 by Rep. Terra Costa Howard.
- Early actions: First Reading 02/06/2025; referred to Rules Committee.
- Filed with Clerk: 02/05/2025.
(Additional calendar/committee movement in the provided log appears to mix with other items — check the Illinois legislative website for current status and amendments.)

2) Arizona — HB 2881 (High School Success Grant Program)

Note: separate Arizona bill text (same HB number) appears in the document; this bill is unrelated to the Illinois FOIA amendment.

Purpose
- Establishes a “High School Success Grant Program” in the Arizona Department of Education to fund ninth-grade “on-track” programs and services in public schools.

Key provisions
- Department to administer multi-year grants; may adopt implementing rules.
- Grants: $150 per enrolled 9th-grade student (adjusted for inflation after FY 2025–26), with prioritization rules if funds are insufficient (continuation grantees in good standing; schools with higher percentages of students eligible for free/reduced lunch).
- Eligible uses: wide list of activities to improve 9th-grade credit attainment and on-track status (data systems, teacher collaboration time, interventions, transition supports, partnerships with experienced organizations, instructional practices, etc.).
- Reporting and record-keeping requirements; schools must get governing board approval before applying.
- Establishes a continuously appropriated High School Success Grant Program Fund (legislative appropriations, gifts, grants, donations).
- Legislature required to annually appropriate at least $150 per 9th-grade student (inflation-adjusted); placeholder appropriation amount in text.

Who is affected
- Arizona public schools, districts, charter schools, 9th-grade students (particularly schools serving higher-poverty students).
- Arizona Department of Education for administration and oversight.

Procedural note
- Introduced in Arizona House: 02/14/2025 (sponsors listed). The appropriation amount is left blank in the introduced version.

If you want, I can:
- Pull the current live legislative status for the Illinois FOIA bill from the Illinois General Assembly site, or
- Produce a short briefing on likely fiscal or legal effects of the FOIA definition change (e.g., fee/denial practices, litigation risk).

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

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