News from Senator Peter Roskam Senate Republican Whip
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For Immediate Release

Date:  Aug. 26, 2005/ls

SENATE WEEK IN REVIEW: Aug. 22-26, 2005

Springfield, IL – Long-awaited medical malpractice reforms, financial protections for military personnel and their families and tougher graduation requirements for high school students are among the bills signed into law this week, according to Senator Peter Roskam (R-Wheaton).

Senator Jones says Senate Republicans have been fighting for more than two years to protect citizens’ access to quality health care, and the new medical malpractice reform should help keep doctors from leaving the state.

Signed into law Aug. 25, Senate Bill 475 takes effect immediately and implements a number of medical, insurance and legal reforms, and caps non-economic damages in medical malpractice lawsuits at $500,000 for doctors and $1 million for hospitals.

Other provisions of the agreement will:

In other news, Illinois residents serving on active military duty overseas, and their families back home, will have fewer day-to-day financial worries thanks to a new law signed into law Aug. 22.

A Senate Republican initiative known as the Illinois Patriot Plan, Senate Bill 2060 provides financial protections for members of the United States armed services or reserve forces, Illinois National Guard members who are deployed on active duty, or spouses. The protections address cell phone contracts, life insurance policies, gas/electric assistance, rent assistance, credit interest and finance charges, and motor vehicle leases. Senate Bill 2060 has an immediate effective date.

Finally, high school students will now have to take more core education classes, under legislation signed Aug. 24. Senate Bill 575 raises High School graduation requirements beginning in the 2005-2006 school year, specifically requiring more math and writing courses. The high school reform package requires students to take four years of English instead of three; three years of math instead of two; two years of science instead of one; and two writing-intensive classes.

Other legislation signed during the week of Aug. 22-26 includes:

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