I feel the need to say this every time I comment on this subject, but again, I am not a lawyer If you have expertise in this area that I don't, I'll gladly defer to you on this.To be fair, there is a law in Illinois that governs the counting of days, and it does give an extension due to the weekend in this case. Leave it to the lawyers to think of everything. (5 ILCS 70/1.11 in case you were curious.)
No friend, it's the exact same law. Feel free to search the full text of Public Act 100-1114 and you'll the text I quoted right in there. Bottom line: there's no provisional access without the rulemaking, and the rulemaking hasn't happened yet. It's just that simple and I can't explain it further without using a bunch of legalese.
Having said that, I have read this particular law pretty closely. The language I quoted from the law (and I do recognize that it is the same law, but a different section) doesn't seem to me to allow for exceptions or exemptions or conditions. It actually looks to me like it was written specifically to head off any possible exceptions or exemptions.
"(b) Notwithstanding any other provision of this Act..." means 'in spite of...', right? So this section would seem to specifically overrule any provision found anywhere else in the law that could be perceived as conflicting with it.
Also, the word "shall" is critical. According to U.S. Legal Definitions (https://definitions.uslegal.com/s/shall/), "shall" is legally defined as "An imperative command". That seems definitive. If the language was "can receive", or "is eligible to receive", or "may receive" or "will qualify to receive", that would seem to subject it to other conditions that may or may not be outlined elsewhere in the statute. But there are no other conditions that must be met that are mentioned in this section that would delay the implementation of this part of the law.
Am I misinterpreting this? If so, how? Not for the sake of argument - I'm genuinely curious.