Illinois Administrative Code
Title 44 - GOVERNMENT CONTRACTS, GRANTMAKING, PROCUREMENT AND PROPERTY MANAGEMENT
Part 1400 - PROCUREMENT
Subpart J - ETHICS
Section 1400.5035 - Disclosure of Financial Interests and Potential Conflicts of Interest
Current through Register Vol. 48, No. 38, September 20, 2024
a) All offers from responsive offerors with an annual value of more than the small purchase threshold then in effect pursuant to Section 1400.2020(a) must be accompanied by disclosure of the financial interests of the offeror. The financial disclosure of each successful offeror must be made part of the procurement. Disclosures are not required for sole source and emergency contracts, but shall be obtained in whole or in part when practical and when the annual value exceeds the small purchase threshold then in effect pursuant to Section 1400.2020(a).
b) Disclosure by the offerors must include any ownership or distributive income share that is in excess of 5%, or an amount greater than 60% of the annual salary of the Governor, of the offering entity or its parent entity ("parent entity" meaning an entity that owns 100% of the bidding entity), whichever is less, unless the offeror:
c) The disclosure in subsection (b) is not intended to prohibit or prevent any contract. The disclosure is meant to fully and publicly disclose any potential conflict fully and publicly to the Chief Procurement Officer, Purchasing Officers, their designees, and executive officers so they may adequately discharge their duty to protect the State.
d) When a potential for a conflict of interest is identified, discovered, or reasonably suspected, the Chief of Staff shall review and comment on it in writing. The Chief of Staff shall provide his comment to the Chief Procurement Officer who must determine in writing whether to void or allow the contract, bid, proposal or response weighing the best interest of the State of Illinois. The comment and determination must be part of the procurement file.
e) These thresholds and disclosure do not relieve the Chief Procurement Officer, Purchasing Officers, or their designees from reasonable care and diligence for any contract, bid, proposal or response. The Chief Procurement Officer, Purchasing Officers, or their designees shall use any reasonably known and publicly available information to discover any undisclosed potential conflict of interest and act to protect the best interest of the State of Illinois.
f) Inadvertent or accidental failure to make any disclosure required by this Section will render the contract, bid, proposal, response or relationship voidable by the Chief Procurement Officer if he or she deems it in the best interest of the State of Illinois and, at his or her discretion, may be cause for barring from future contracts, bids, proposals, responses or relationships with the State for a period of up to 2 years.
g) Intentional, willful or material failure to make any disclosure required by this Section will render the contract, bid, proposal, response or relationship voidable by the Chief Procurement Officer if he or she deems it to be in the best interest of the State of Illinois and will result in suspension from future contracts, bids, proposals, responses or relationships for a period of not less than 2 years and not more than 10 years. Reinstatement after 2 years and before 10 years must be reviewed and commented on in writing by the Chief of Staff. The Chief of Staff must provide the review to the Chief Procurement Officer who must rule in writing whether and when to reinstate. The comment and determination must be part of the procurement file.
h) In addition, all disclosures must note any other current or pending contracts, leases, bids, proposals, responses or other ongoing procurement relationships the bidding, proposing, or responding entity has with any other unit of State government and must clearly identify the unit and the contract, lease, bid, proposal, response or other relationship.
i) The contractor or bidder has a continuing obligation to supplement the disclosure required by this Section throughout the bidding process or during the term of any contract. [30 ILCS 500/50-35(i)]
j) If a bid or offer is received from a responsive bidder, offeror, vendor, contractor, or subcontractor with an annual value of more than $100,000 and the bidder, offeror, vendor, contractor, or subcontractor has an active contract with that same entity and already has submitted their financial disclosures and potential conflicts of interest within the last 12 months, the bidder, offeror, vendor, contractor, or subcontractor may submit a signed affidavit attesting that the original submission of its financial disclosures and potential conflicts of interests has not been altered or changed. The form and content of the affidavit shall be prescribed by the applicable chief procurement officer. [30 ILCS 500/50-35(j)]