EXAMPLE: Student A files his application on February 1, resides in a focus district and is applying for a scholarship for the first time. Student B files her application on February 15, resides in a focus district and received a scholarship the previous school year. Student C files his application on February 17, is a sibling of Student D and is applying for a scholarship for the first time. Student D files her application on March 1 and received a scholarship from an SGO in the previous school year. Students B and D receive priority over Students A and C. When awarding scholarships to Students B and D, the SGO must award scholarships based on the date and time their applications are received. Subsequently, when awarding scholarships to Students A and C, the SGO must award scholarships based on the date and time their applications are received.
EXAMPLE: Student A applies for a scholarship with SGO X. Student A received a scholarship from SGO Y during the previous school year. Student A qualifies as a priority student and will receive first priority for the coming school year.
A scholarship granting organization shall begin granting scholarships no later than February 1 preceding the school year for which the scholarship is sought. Each priority group identified in subsection (d) shall be eligible to receive scholarships on a first-come, first-served basis until April 1 immediately preceding the school year for which the scholarship is sought starting with the priority groups in accordance with subsection (d). Applications for scholarships for eligible students meeting the qualifications of one or more priority groups that are received before April 1 must be either approved or denied within 10 business days after receipt. The date of receipt for purposes of beginning the 10-day period during which the SGO must approve or deny an application shall be the date on which the SGO has sufficient information to determine if the applicant is an eligible student and is in a priority group. Beginning April 1, all eligible students shall be eligible to receive scholarships without regard to the priority groups identified in subsection (d).
EXAMPLE: Applications are received by an SGO in the following order: Student A on March 27. Student B on March 28. Student C on March 29. Student D on March 30. Student E on March 31. Student F on April 1. Student G on April 2. Student H on April 3. Student I on April 4. Students A and C are in the first priority group identified in subsection (d)(2). E and G are in the second priority group identified in subsection (d)(2). The SGO has 10 business days from receipt of application to notify priority Students A, C and E whether their applications are granted or denied. Even though Student G fell within one of the priority groups identified in subsection (d), his application was received after April 1 and thus does not receive priority treatment (see subsection (e)(5)). Scholarships must be granted in the following order: A, C, E, B, D, F, G, H, I.
Except as provided in subsection (f)(2), scholarships shall not exceed the lesser of the statewide average operational expense per student among public schools or the necessary costs and fees for attendance at the qualified school. A qualified school may set a lower maximum scholarship amount for eligible students whose family income falls within subsections (f)(3)(B) and (f)(3)(C); that amount may not exceed the necessary costs and fees for attendance at the qualified school and is subject to the limitations on average scholarship amounts set forth in subsections (f)(3)(B) and (f)(3)(C), as applicable. The qualified school shall notify the scholarship granting organization of its necessary costs and fees as well as any maximum scholarship amount set by the school [35 ILCS 40/40 ]. The necessary costs and fees for attendance at the qualified school shall be determined in the same manner for eligible students as they are for all other students.
EXAMPLE: An eligible student selects School A and is awarded a scholarship by the SGO. The SGO uses funds for the scholarship that were designated by an individual taxpayer for School A. The student decides to transfer to School B mid-year. The SGO does not have any available funds that were designated for School B, nor does it have any undesignated funds available for School B. The student may attend School B but the student will lose the student's scholarship because the SGO does not have any funds that are available for the student to attend School B.
Ill. Admin. Code tit. 86, § 1000.600