37 resultados para administrative act
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Superseded by the Civil and Professional Engineers' Act, the Land Surveyors' Act and Administrative Rules
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Title varies slightly
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"To ensure economy and efficiency of federal government opertions by establishing a moratorium on regulatory rulemaking actions, and for other purposes"
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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The Supplemental Low Income Energy Assistance Fund is the depository for energy assistance charges collected by utilities and participating municipal utilities and electric cooperatives authorized by the Electric Customer Choice and Rate Relief Act of 1997 (220 ILCS 5). The energy assistance charges provided a nonfederal funding stream to the Department for use in providing energy related assistance to low-income households under the Illinois Low Income Home Energy Assistance and Illinois Home Weatherization (LIHEAP) Programs. Since the changes were imposed in January of 1998, $406,683,769 has been deposited into the Fund through December 2003. Of this amount, the Department has spent $326,137,510 to provide energy assistance to 802,091 households; $33,845,784 to weatherize 6,584 homes; and $32,570,739 to cover administrative expenses.
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Title varies; Vol. for 1934 does not include rules of the Supreme Court; vols. for 1949-1975 include Administrative Review Act.
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Cover title.
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"Including selected sections of the Civil Administrative Code."
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Includes index.
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"LPU Order 38511"--Colophon.
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Includes Title 77: Public Health, Chapter I: Department of Public Health, Subchapter f: Emergency Services and Highway Safety of the Illinois Administrative Code.
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At head of title: Administrative order.
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On August 25, 2011, Governor Pat Quinn signed House Bill 1488 into law, now Public Act 97-0558 (The Act). The Act specifically directs a Management Improvement Initiative Committee (The Committee) to implement recommendations outlined in the January 2011 report to the General Assembly as required under Public Act 96-1141. The Act directs the group, formed under the auspices of Public Act 96-1141, to continue their work based on categories of recommendations. Each recommendation area has the common goal of reviewing providers from redundant monitoring, auditing, and reporting requirements. Implementing the recommendations of the Act will result in efficiency in business process for our providers, reinvestment of dollars saved from inefficient or unrealized administrative costs, and ultimately foster a network of sustainable human services providers in Illinois while increasing the level of direct service by the State agencies, contracted providers, and communities, who are all facing current economic pressures in the fiscal crisis.