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The Illinois Department of Financial and Professional Regulation (IDFPR) is the Illinois state government code department [1] [2] that through its operational components, the Division of Banking, Division of Financial Institutions, Division of Professional Regulation, and Division of Real Estate, oversees the regulation and licensure of banks and financial institutions, real estate businesses ...
There are also many boards, commissions and offices, [1] including: Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum; Attorney Registration & Disciplinary Commission of the Supreme Court of Illinois
An Illinois task force warns in a new report that occupational licensing disproportionately harms “poor and disadvantaged communities.” Business owner Samantha Carter saw the effects firsthand ...
Emmis Corporation (Indianapolis) Finish Line, Inc. (Indianapolis) First Internet Bancorp (Indianapolis) First Merchants Corporation ; The Ford Meter Box Company ; Guidant (Indianapolis) Gurney's Seed and Nursery Company ; Haynes International ; Herff Jones (Indianapolis) Hulman & Company (Terre Haute) Indiana Bell (Indianapolis)
Illinois is one of ten states that account for nearly 85% of the total employee-related debt among all 50 states. At the end of 2022, Illinois had $10,915 in pension liabilities per capita ...
The Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) was established by the Energy Reorganization Act of 1974 from the United States Atomic Energy Commission, and opened January 19, 1975. The NRC oversees reactor safety and security, reactor licensing and renewal, radioactive material safety, and spent fuel management (storage, security, recycling, and ...
The Illinois Reform Commission, appointed by Governor Pat Quinn and led by former federal prosecutor Patrick M. Collins, [58] considered recommendations for ethics reforms over a 100-day period that culminated in a final report issued in April 2009. The commission's recommendations included rewriting FOIA and imposing tougher sanctions for ...
A state office, perhaps called the "Division of Corporations" or simply the "Secretary of State", [20] will require the people who wish to incorporate to file "articles of incorporation" (sometimes called a "charter") and pay a fee. The articles of incorporation typically record the corporation's name, if there are any limits to its powers ...