(820 ILCS 405/1801.1)
(Text of Section before amendment by P.A. 103-343) Sec. 1801.1. Directory of New Hires.
A. The Director shall establish and operate an automated directory of newly
hired employees which shall be known as the "Illinois Directory of New Hires"
which shall contain the information required to be reported by employers to the
Department under subsection B.
In the administration of the Directory, the Director
shall comply with any requirements concerning the Employer New Hire Reporting
Program established by the
federal Personal Responsibility and Work
Opportunity Reconciliation
Act of 1996. The Director is authorized to use the information contained in
the Directory of New Hires to administer any of the provisions of this Act.
B. Each employer in Illinois, except a department, agency, or
instrumentality of the United States, shall file with the Department a report
in accordance with rules adopted by the Department (but
in any event not later
than 20 days after the date the employer hires the employee or, in the case of
an employer transmitting reports magnetically or electronically, by 2 monthly
transmissions, if necessary, not less than 12 days nor more than 16 days apart)
providing
the following information concerning each newly hired employee: the
employee's name, address, and social security number, the date services for remuneration were first performed by the employee, and the employer's name,
address, Federal Employer Identification Number assigned under Section 6109 of
the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, and such other information
as may be required by federal law or regulation,
provided that each employer may voluntarily file the address to which the employer wants income
withholding orders to be mailed, if it is different from the address given on
the Federal Employer Identification Number. An
employer in Illinois which transmits its reports electronically or
magnetically and which also has employees in another state may report all
newly hired employees to a single designated state in which the employer has
employees if it has so notified the Secretary of the United States Department
of Health and Human Services in writing.
An employer may, at its option, submit information regarding
any rehired employee in the same manner as information is submitted
regarding a newly hired employee.
Each report required under this
subsection shall, to the extent practicable, be made on an Internal Revenue Service Form W-4 or, at the
option of the employer, an equivalent form, and may be transmitted by first
class mail, by telefax, magnetically, or electronically.
C. An employer which knowingly fails to comply with the reporting
requirements established by this Section shall be subject to a civil penalty of
$15 for each individual whom it fails to report. An employer shall be
considered to have knowingly failed to comply with the reporting requirements
established by this Section with respect to an individual if the employer has
been notified by the Department that it has failed to report
an individual, and it fails, without reasonable cause, to supply the
required information to the Department within 21 days after the date of
mailing of the notice.
Any individual who knowingly conspires with the newly hired
employee to cause the employer
to fail to report the information required by this Section or who knowingly
conspires with the newly hired employee to cause the employer to file a false
or incomplete report shall be guilty of a Class B misdemeanor with a fine not
to exceed $500 with respect to each employee with whom the individual so
conspires.
D. As used in this Section,
"newly hired employee" means an
individual who (i) is an employee within the meaning of Chapter 24 of the Internal
Revenue Code of 1986 and (ii) either has not previously been employed by the employer or was previously employed by the employer but has been separated from that prior employment for at least 60 consecutive days; however, "newly hired employee" does not
include
an employee of a federal or State agency performing intelligence or
counterintelligence functions, if the head of that agency has determined that
the filing of the report required by this Section with respect to the employee
could endanger the safety of
the employee
or compromise an ongoing investigation or
intelligence mission.
Notwithstanding Section 205, and for the purposes of this Section only, the
term "employer" has the meaning given by Section 3401(d) of the Internal
Revenue Code of 1986 and includes any governmental entity and labor
organization as defined by Section 2(5) of the National Labor Relations Act,
and includes any entity (also known as a hiring hall) which is used by the
organization and an employer to carry out the requirements described in Section
8(f)(3) of that Act of an agreement between the organization and the
employer.
(Source: P.A. 97-621, eff. 11-18-11; 97-689, eff. 6-14-12; 97-791, eff. 1-1-13; 98-107, eff. 7-23-13; 98-463, eff. 8-16-13.)
(Text of Section after amendment by P.A. 103-343)
Sec. 1801.1. Directory of New Hires.
A. The Director shall establish and operate an automated directory of newly
hired employees which shall be known as the "Illinois Directory of New Hires"
which shall contain the information required to be reported by employers to the
Department under subsection B.
In the administration of the Directory, the Director
shall comply with any requirements concerning the Employer New Hire Reporting
Program established by the
federal Personal Responsibility and Work
Opportunity Reconciliation
Act of 1996. The Director is authorized to use the information contained in
the Directory of New Hires to administer any of the provisions of this Act.
B. Each employer in Illinois, except a department, agency, or
instrumentality of the United States, shall file with the Department a report
in accordance with rules adopted by the Department (but
in any event not later
than 20 days after the date the employer hires the employee or, in the case of
an employer transmitting reports magnetically or electronically, by 2 monthly
transmissions, if necessary, not less than 12 days nor more than 16 days apart)
providing
the following information concerning each newly hired employee: the
employee's name, address, and social security number, the date services for remuneration were first performed by the employee, and the employer's name,
address, Federal Employer Identification Number assigned under Section 6109 of
the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, and such other information
as may be required by federal law or regulation,
provided that each employer may voluntarily file the address to which the employer wants income
withholding orders to be mailed, if it is different from the address given on
the Federal Employer Identification Number. An
employer in Illinois which transmits its reports electronically or
magnetically and which also has employees in another state may report all
newly hired employees to a single designated state in which the employer has
employees if it has so notified the Secretary of the United States Department
of Health and Human Services in writing.
An employer may, at its option, submit information regarding
any rehired employee in the same manner as information is submitted
regarding a newly hired employee.
Each report required under this
subsection shall, to the extent practicable, be made on an Internal Revenue Service Form W-4 or, at the
option of the employer, an equivalent form, and may be transmitted by first
class mail, by telefax, magnetically, or electronically.
C. An employer which knowingly fails to comply with the reporting
requirements established by this Section shall be subject to a civil penalty of
$15 for each individual whom it fails to report. An employer shall be
considered to have knowingly failed to comply with the reporting requirements
established by this Section with respect to an individual if the employer has
been notified by the Department that it has failed to report
an individual, and it fails, without reasonable cause, to supply the
required information to the Department within 21 days after the date of
mailing of the notice.
Any individual who knowingly conspires with the newly hired
employee to cause the employer
to fail to report the information required by this Section or who knowingly
conspires with the newly hired employee to cause the employer to file a false
or incomplete report shall be guilty of a Class B misdemeanor with a fine not
to exceed $500 with respect to each employee with whom the individual so
conspires.
D. As used in this Section,
"newly hired employee" means an
individual who (i) is an employee within the meaning of Chapter 24 of the Internal
Revenue Code of 1986 including an individual under an independent contractor arrangement, and (ii) either has not previously been employed by the employer or was previously employed by the employer but has been separated from that prior employment for at least 60 consecutive days; however, "newly hired employee" does not
include
an employee of a federal or State agency performing intelligence or
counterintelligence functions, if the head of that agency has determined that
the filing of the report required by this Section with respect to the employee
could endanger the safety of
the employee
or compromise an ongoing investigation or
intelligence mission.
Notwithstanding Section 205, and for the purposes of this Section only, the
term "employer" has the meaning given by Section 3401(d) of the Internal
Revenue Code of 1986 and includes any governmental entity and labor
organization as defined by Section 2(5) of the National Labor Relations Act,
and includes any entity (also known as a hiring hall) which is used by the
organization and an employer to carry out the requirements described in Section
8(f)(3) of that Act of an agreement between the organization and the
employer.
(Source: P.A. 103-343, eff. 1-1-24.)
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