Article Summary
- JB Pritzker signed 31 new laws on Friday.
- One includes a controversial measure that allows minors to receive birth control without a parent’s consent.
- Others ban certain ingredients from cosmetics, prohibit school administrators from using AI to evaluate teachers, and expand access to ovarian cancer screenings.
- Pritzker also signed a bill to conform the state’s property tax laws to the 2023 Tyler v. Hennepin County U.S. Supreme Court decision.
This summary was written by the reporters and editors who worked on this story.
SPRINGFIELD — Gov. JB Pritzker signed 31 new laws on Friday as he continues evaluating measures passed in the spring session, including bills banning certain ingredients from cosmetics and correct the state’s property tax laws.
Access to birth control
Senate Bill 3341 allows minors to receive birth control without permission from their parents or another adult. With Illinois’ new law, half of states now allow minors to access birth control on their own.
During debate on the bill in the Senate, Republicans objected and said it cuts parents out of important decisions concerning their children. They also worried minors won’t fully understand complications from birth control.
Cosmetic ingredients
House Bill 3409 bans manufacturing and selling cosmetic products with 11 different ingredients that are considered harmful substances or forever chemicals. The law specifically bans manufacturers from intentionally including those ingredients in their products.
“For too long, the cosmetics industry has operated without the kind of oversight we apply to food, medicine and drinking water,” bill sponsor Sen. Mattie Hunter, D-Chicago, said in a statement.
Many of the ingredients are already banned in cosmetics sold in the European Union. Illinois’ law takes effect in July 2028, but it does not outline penalties for manufacturers and sellers that fail to comply.
Property taxes
House Bill 4537 brings Illinois into compliance with the 2023 Supreme Court decision Tyler v. Hennepin County that regulates property tax debt sales.
Now, if a homeowner has their property seized and sold for failing to pay debt, they will receive any surplus funds left over from the auction.
Illinois is the last state to comply with the 2023 Supreme Court decision, which found that selling a property over unpaid debt without returning surplus to the owner was a violation of the property owner’s rights.
States quickly began complying, but the Illinois bill that ultimately passed in May took years of negotiations. In Cook County, the legislature voted on multiple occasions to postpone tax sales while lawmakers came up with a more permanent solution that Pritzker signed last week.
Teacher evaluations
Senate Bill 2909 prohibits school administrators from using artificial intelligence to evaluate teachers. Likewise, teachers also cannot use AI to meet performance requirements. The bill does not prohibit teachers or school administrators from using AI in other forms of work, however.
“I’m in favor of exploring AI as a tool for basic organization and streamlining simple aspects of modern work, but this technology is not capable of effectively carrying out judgement-based tasks this complex,” bill sponsor Rep. Mary Beth Canty, D-Arlington Heights, said in a statement.
Play-based learning
House Bill 4577 implements a definition of play-based learning into state law for kindergarten classes. The concept was already required for kindergarten classes; the new law just made it more specific.
It describes “teacher-initiated play” as teacher-led activities that are “aligned to learning goals or standards,” and “student-initiated play” as activities chosen by the child to “build, pretend, create, move, or explore in an environment intentionally curated by a teacher to align with learning goals or standards.”
“Play-based learning is essential in helping children develop strong cognitive and social-emotional skills that help prepare them for early learning grades,” bill sponsor Rep. Laura Faver Dias, D-Grayslake, said in a statement. “We want our children to succeed, and that means incorporating the best teaching style possible for their age.”
Cancer screenings
House Bill 4203 expands the definition of someone “at risk” for ovarian cancer to include people who have reached high levels on certain blood tests. It also expands annual screenings to more specifically include ultrasound, MRIs, and other imaging rather than only “surveillance tests” like under previous law. The law takes effect in 2028.
Expulsions
School districts are prohibited from expelling students in kindergarten through second grade under House Bill 3772, unless state law would otherwise require it.
Voter registration
House Bill 4339 requires high schools to provide all eligible graduating students an opportunity to register to vote. The bill is named after the Rev. Jesse Jackson, who died earlier this year and was known for his work registering young people to vote.
Read more: Proposed bill would require Illinois high schools to offer voter registration
Many high schools already provide voter registration opportunities to students. The bill also doesn’t outline how schools should implement the new requirement, which led some Republicans to oppose it over fears schools could make voter registration partisan.
Unlike many other states, Illinois voters do not register with a specific party. The new law takes effect immediately, but it doesn’t create penalties for schools that don’t comply.
Court reminders
House Bill 4428 requires pretrial service agencies to send defendants three text message reminders about their court date. The courts must keep those messages as part of their records. Supporters of the bill say they believe it will help more people show up to their mandatory court dates. The law takes effect immediately.
(Reporting by Ben Szalinski, Capitol News Illinois)
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news service that distributes state government coverage to hundreds of news outlets statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois Press Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation.
This article first appeared on Capitol News Illinois and is republished here under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.

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