|
employment,
accept the provisions of this Article and of |
Sections 34-83 to 34-85 34-85b ,
inclusive, of "The School |
Code", approved March 18, 1961, as amended,
and thereupon |
become contributors to the Fund in accordance with the
terms |
thereof. The provisions of this Article and of those Sections
|
shall become a part of the contract of employment.
|
(d) A person who (i) was a member before July 1, 1998, (ii) |
retires with
more than 34 years of creditable service, and |
(iii) does not elect to qualify
for the augmented rate under |
Section 17-119.1 shall be entitled, at the time of
retirement, |
to receive a partial refund of contributions made under this
|
Section for service occurring after the later of June 30, 1998 |
or attainment of
34 years of creditable service, in an amount |
equal to 1.00% of the salary upon
which those contributions |
were based.
|
(Source: P.A. 94-1105, eff. 6-1-07 .)
|
Section 5. The School Code is amended by changing Sections |
10-22.4, 21-23, 24-11, 24-12, 24-16, 24A-2.5, 24A-5, 34-84, |
34-85, and 34-85c and by adding Sections 2-3.153, 10-16a, |
24-1.5, and 24-16.5 as follows: |
(105 ILCS 5/2-3.153 new) |
Sec. 2-3.153. Survey of learning conditions. The State |
Board of Education shall select for statewide administration an |
instrument to provide feedback from, at a minimum, students in |
|
grades 6 through 12 and teachers on the instructional |
environment within a school after giving consideration to the |
recommendations of the Performance Evaluation Advisory Council |
made pursuant to subdivision (6) of subsection (a) of Section |
24A-20 of this Code. Subject to appropriation to the State |
Board of Education for the State's cost of development and |
administration and commencing with the 2012-2013 school year, |
each school district shall administer, at least biannually, the |
instrument in every public school attendance center by a date |
specified by the State Superintendent of Education, and data |
resulting from the instrument's administration must be |
provided to the State Board of Education. The survey component |
that requires completion by the teachers must be administered |
during teacher meetings or professional development days or at |
other times that would not interfere with the teachers' regular |
classroom and direct instructional duties. The State |
Superintendent, following consultation with teachers, |
principals, and other appropriate stakeholders, shall publicly |
report on selected indicators of learning conditions resulting |
from administration of the instrument at the individual school, |
district, and State levels and shall identify whether the |
indicators result from an anonymous administration of the |
instrument. If in any year the appropriation to the State Board |
of Education is insufficient for the State's costs associated |
with statewide administration of the instrument, the State |
Board of Education shall give priority to districts with |
|
low-performing schools and a representative sample of other |
districts. |
(105 ILCS 5/10-16a new) |
Sec. 10-16a. School board member's leadership training. |
(a) This Section applies to all school board members |
serving pursuant to Section 10-10 of this Code who have been |
elected after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the |
97th General Assembly or appointed to fill a vacancy of at |
least one year's duration after the effective date of this |
amendatory Act of the 97th General Assembly. |
(b) Every voting member of a school board of a school |
district elected or appointed for a term beginning after the |
effective date of this amendatory Act of the 97th General |
Assembly, within a year after the effective date of this |
amendatory Act of the 97th General Assembly or the first year |
of his or her first term, shall complete a minimum of 4 hours |
of professional development leadership training covering |
topics in education and labor law, financial oversight and |
accountability, and fiduciary responsibilities of a school |
board member. The school district shall maintain on its |
Internet website, if any, the names of all voting members of |
the school board who have successfully completed the training. |
(c) The training on financial oversight, accountability, |
and fiduciary responsibilities may be provided by an |
association established under this Code for the purpose of |
|
training school board members or by other qualified providers |
approved by the State Board of Education, in consultation with |
an association so established.
|
(105 ILCS 5/10-22.4) (from Ch. 122, par. 10-22.4)
|
Sec. 10-22.4. Dismissal of teachers. To dismiss a teacher |
for incompetency, cruelty, negligence, immorality
or other |
sufficient cause, to dismiss any teacher on the basis of |
performance who fails
to complete a 1-year remediation plan |
with a "satisfactory" or
better rating and to dismiss any |
teacher whenever, in its
opinion, he is not qualified to teach, |
or whenever, in its opinion, the
interests of the schools |
require it, subject, however, to the provisions of
Sections |
24-10 to 24-16.5 24-15 , inclusive. Temporary mental or physical
|
incapacity to perform teaching duties, as found by a medical
|
examination, is not a cause for dismissal.
Marriage is not a |
cause of removal.
|
(Source: P.A. 85-248.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/21-23) (from Ch. 122, par. 21-23)
|
Sec. 21-23. Suspension or revocation of certificate.
|
(a) The State Superintendent of Education has the exclusive |
authority, in accordance with this Section and any rules |
adopted by the State Board of Education, to initiate the |
suspension of up to 5 calendar years or revocation of any |
certificate issued pursuant to this Article, including but not
|
|
limited to any administrative certificate or endorsement, for |
abuse or neglect of a child,
immorality, a condition
of health |
detrimental to the welfare of pupils, incompetency,
|
unprofessional conduct (which includes the failure to disclose |
on an employment application any previous conviction for a sex |
offense, as defined in Section 21-23a of this Code, or any |
other offense committed in any other state or against the laws |
of the United States that, if committed in this State, would be |
punishable as a sex offense, as defined in Section 21-23a of |
this Code), the neglect of any professional duty, willful
|
failure to report an instance of suspected child abuse or |
neglect as
required by the Abused and Neglected Child Reporting |
Act, failure to
establish satisfactory repayment on an |
educational loan guaranteed by the
Illinois Student Assistance |
Commission,
or other just cause. Unprofessional conduct shall
|
include refusal to attend or participate in, institutes, |
teachers' meetings,
professional readings, or to meet other |
reasonable requirements of the
regional superintendent or |
State Superintendent of Education. Unprofessional
conduct also |
includes conduct that violates the standards,
ethics, or rules
|
applicable to the security, administration, monitoring, or |
scoring of, or the
reporting of scores from, any assessment |
test or the Prairie State Achievement
Examination administered
|
under Section 2-3.64 or that is known or intended to produce or |
report
manipulated or artificial, rather than actual, |
assessment or achievement
results
or gains from the |
|
administration of those tests or examinations. It shall
also |
include neglect or unnecessary delay in making of statistical |
and
other reports required by school officers. Incompetency |
shall include, without limitation, 2 or more school terms of |
service for which the certificate holder has received an |
unsatisfactory rating on a performance evaluation conducted |
pursuant to Article 24A of this Code within a period of 7 |
school terms of service. In determining whether to initiate |
action against one or more certificates based on incompetency |
and the recommended sanction for such action, the State |
Superintendent shall consider factors that include without |
limitation all of the following: |
(1) Whether the unsatisfactory evaluation ratings |
occurred prior to the effective date of this amendatory Act |
of the 97th General Assembly. |
(2) Whether the unsatisfactory evaluation ratings |
occurred prior to or after the implementation date, as |
defined in Section 24A-2.5 of this Code, of an evaluation |
system for teachers in a school district. |
(3) Whether the evaluator or evaluators who performed |
an unsatisfactory evaluation met the pre-certification and |
training requirements set forth in Section 24A-3 of this |
Code. |
(4) The time between the unsatisfactory evaluation |
ratings. |
(5) The quality of the remediation plans associated |
|
with the unsatisfactory evaluation ratings and whether the |
certificate holder successfully completed the remediation |
plans. |
(6) Whether the unsatisfactory evaluation ratings were |
related to the same or different assignments performed by |
the certificate holder. |
(7) Whether one or more of the unsatisfactory |
evaluation ratings occurred in the first year of a teaching |
or administrative assignment. |
When initiating an action against one or more certificates, the |
State Superintendent may seek required professional |
development as a sanction in lieu of or in addition to |
suspension or revocation. Any such required professional |
development must be at the expense of the certificate holder, |
who may use, if available and applicable to the requirements |
established by administrative or court order, training, |
coursework, or other professional development funds in |
accordance with the terms of an applicable collective |
bargaining agreement entered into after the effective date of |
this amendatory Act of the 97th General Assembly, unless that |
agreement specifically precludes use of funds for such purpose. |
(a-5) The State Superintendent of Education shall, upon |
receipt of evidence of
abuse or neglect of a child, immorality, |
a condition of health detrimental to the welfare of pupils,
|
incompetency (subject to subsection (a) of this Section) , |
unprofessional conduct, the neglect of any professional
duty or |
|
other just cause, further investigate and, if and as |
appropriate, serve written notice to the individual and
afford |
the individual opportunity for a hearing prior to suspension , |
or revocation , or other sanction ; provided that the State |
Superintendent is under no obligation to initiate such an |
investigation if the Department of Children and Family Services |
is investigating the same or substantially similar allegations |
and its child protective service unit has not made its |
determination as required under Section 7.12 of the Abused and |
Neglected Child Reporting Act. If the State Superintendent of |
Education does not receive from an individual a request for a |
hearing within 10 days after the individual receives notice, |
the suspension , or revocation , or other sanction shall |
immediately take effect in accordance with the notice. If
a |
hearing is requested within 10 days of notice of opportunity |
for
hearing, it shall act as a stay of proceedings until the |
State Teacher Certification Board issues a decision. Any |
hearing shall take place in the educational service region |
wherein the educator is or was last employed and in accordance |
with rules adopted by the State Board of Education, in |
consultation with the State Teacher Certification Board, which |
rules shall include without limitation provisions for |
discovery and the sharing of information between parties prior |
to the hearing. The standard of proof for any administrative |
hearing held pursuant to this Section shall be by the |
preponderance of the evidence. The decision of the State |
|
Teacher Certification Board is a final administrative decision |
and is subject to judicial review by appeal of either party.
|
The State Board may refuse to issue or may suspend the
|
certificate of any person who fails to file a return, or to pay |
the tax,
penalty or interest shown in a filed return, or to pay |
any final assessment
of tax, penalty or interest, as required |
by any tax Act administered by the
Illinois Department of |
Revenue, until such time as the requirements of any
such tax |
Act are satisfied.
|
The exclusive authority of the State Superintendent of |
Education to initiate suspension or revocation of a certificate |
pursuant to this Section does not preclude a regional |
superintendent of schools from cooperating with the State |
Superintendent or a State's Attorney with respect to an |
investigation of alleged misconduct. |
(b) (Blank).
|
(b-5) The State Superintendent of Education or his or her |
designee may initiate and conduct such investigations as may be |
reasonably necessary to establish the existence of any alleged |
misconduct. At any stage of the investigation, the State |
Superintendent may issue a subpoena requiring the attendance |
and testimony of a witness, including the certificate holder, |
and the production of any evidence, including files, records, |
correspondence, or documents, relating to any matter in |
question in the investigation. The subpoena shall require a |
witness to appear at the State Board of Education at a |
|
specified date and time and shall specify any evidence to be |
produced. The certificate holder is not entitled to be present, |
but the State Superintendent shall provide the certificate |
holder with a copy of any recorded testimony prior to a hearing |
under this Section. Such recorded testimony must not be used as |
evidence at a hearing, unless the certificate holder has |
adequate notice of the testimony and the opportunity to |
cross-examine the witness. Failure of a certificate holder to |
comply with a duly-issued, investigatory subpoena may be |
grounds for revocation, suspension, or denial of a certificate. |
(b-10) All correspondence, documentation, and other |
information so received by the regional superintendent of |
schools, the State Superintendent of Education, the State Board |
of Education, or the State Teacher Certification Board under |
this Section is confidential and must not be disclosed to third |
parties, except (i) as necessary for the State Superintendent |
of Education or his or her designee to investigate and |
prosecute pursuant to this Article, (ii) pursuant to a court |
order, (iii) for disclosure to the certificate holder or his or |
her representative, or (iv) as otherwise required in this |
Article and provided that any such information admitted into |
evidence in a hearing shall be exempt from this confidentiality |
and non-disclosure requirement. |
(c) The State Superintendent of Education or a person |
designated by him
shall have the power to administer oaths to |
witnesses at any hearing
conducted before the State Teacher |
|
Certification Board pursuant to this
Section. The State |
Superintendent of Education or a person designated by
him is |
authorized to subpoena and bring before the State Teacher
|
Certification Board any person in this State and to take |
testimony either
orally or by deposition or by exhibit, with |
the same fees and mileage and
in the same manner as prescribed |
by law in judicial proceedings in the
civil cases in circuit |
courts of this State.
|
(c-5) Any circuit court, upon the application of the State |
Superintendent of
Education or the certificate holder, may, by |
order duly entered, require the attendance of witnesses
and the |
production of relevant books and papers as part of any |
investigation or at any hearing the State Teacher Certification |
Board is authorized to conduct pursuant to this Section,
and |
the court may compel obedience to its orders by proceedings for |
contempt.
|
(c-10) The State Board of Education shall receive an annual |
line item appropriation to cover fees associated with the |
investigation and prosecution of alleged educator misconduct |
and hearings related thereto. |
(d) As used in this Section, "teacher" means any school |
district employee
regularly required to be certified, as |
provided in this Article, in order to
teach or supervise in the |
public schools.
|
(Source: P.A. 96-431, eff. 8-13-09.)
|
|
(105 ILCS 5/24-1.5 new) |
Sec. 24-1.5. New or vacant teaching positions. A school |
district's selection of a candidate for a new or vacant |
teaching position not otherwise required to be filled pursuant |
to Section 24-12 of this Code must be based upon the |
consideration of factors that include without limitation |
certifications, qualifications, merit and ability (including |
performance evaluations, if available), and relevant |
experience, provided that the length of continuing service with |
the school district must not be considered as a factor, unless |
all other factors are determined by the school district to be |
equal. A school district's decision to select a particular |
candidate to fill a new or vacant position is not subject to |
review under grievance resolution procedures adopted pursuant |
to subsection (c) of Section 10 of the Illinois Educational |
Labor Relations Act, provided that, in making such a decision, |
the district does not fail to adhere to procedural requirements |
in a collective bargaining agreement relating to the filling of |
new or vacant teaching positions. Provisions regarding the |
filling of new and vacant positions in a collective bargaining |
agreement between a school district and the exclusive |
bargaining representative of its teachers in existence on the |
effective date of this amendatory Act of the 97th General |
Assembly shall remain in full force and effect for the term of |
the agreement, unless terminated by mutual agreement. |
Nothing in this amendatory Act of the 97th General Assembly |
|
(i) limits or otherwise impacts school districts' management |
right to hire new employees, (ii) affects what currently is or |
may be a mandatory subject of bargaining under the Illinois |
Educational Labor Relations Act, or (iii) creates a statutory |
cause of action for a candidate or a candidate's representative |
to challenge a school district's selection decision based on |
the school district's failure to adhere to the requirements of |
this Section.
|
(105 ILCS 5/24-11) (from Ch. 122, par. 24-11)
|
Sec. 24-11. Boards of Education - Boards of School |
Inspectors -
Contractual continued service. |
(a) As used in this and the succeeding
Sections of this |
Article:
|
"Teacher" means any or all school district employees |
regularly required to be
certified under laws relating to the |
certification of teachers.
|
"Board" means board of directors, board of education, or |
board of school
inspectors, as the case may be.
|
"School term" means that portion of the school year, July 1 |
to the following
June 30, when school is in actual session.
|
"Program" means a program of a special education joint |
agreement. |
"Program of a special education joint agreement" means |
instructional, consultative, supervisory, administrative, |
diagnostic, and related services that are managed by a special |
|
educational joint agreement designed to service 2 or more |
school districts that are members of the joint agreement. |
"PERA implementation date" means the implementation date |
of an evaluation system for teachers as specified by Section |
24A-2.5 of this Code for all schools within a school district |
or all programs of a special education joint agreement. |
(b) This Section and Sections 24-12 through 24-16 of this |
Article apply only to
school districts having less than 500,000 |
inhabitants.
|
(c) Any teacher who is first employed as a full-time |
teacher in a school district or program prior to the PERA |
implementation date and Any teacher who is has been employed in |
that any district or program as a full-time teacher for
a |
probationary period of 4 2 consecutive school terms shall enter |
upon
contractual continued service in the district or in all of |
the programs that the teacher is legally qualified to hold, |
unless the teacher is given written notice of dismissal stating
|
the specific reason therefor, by certified mail, return receipt |
requested , by
the employing board at least 45 days before the |
end of any school term within such
period ; except that for a |
teacher who is first employed as a full-time
teacher by a |
school district
on or after January 1, 1998 and who has not |
before that date already entered
upon
contractual continued |
service in that district, the probationary period shall
be 4 |
consecutive
school terms before the teacher shall enter upon |
contractual continued
service. For the purpose of determining |
|
contractual continued service,
the first probationary year |
shall be any full-time employment
from a date before November 1 |
through
the end of the school year .
|
(d) For any teacher who is first employed as a full-time |
teacher in a school district or program on or after the PERA |
implementation date, the probationary period shall be one of |
the following periods, based upon the teacher's school terms of |
service and performance, before the teacher shall enter upon |
contractual continued service in the district or in all of the |
programs that the teacher is legally qualified to hold, unless |
the teacher is given written notice of dismissal by certified |
mail, return receipt requested, by the employing board at least |
45 days before the end of any school term within such period: |
(1) 4 consecutive school terms of service in which the |
teacher receives overall annual evaluation ratings of at |
least "Proficient" in the last school term and at least |
"Proficient" in either the second or third school term; |
(2) 3 consecutive school terms of service in which the |
teacher receives 3 overall annual evaluations of |
"Excellent"; or |
(3) 2 consecutive school terms of service in which the |
teacher receives 2 overall annual evaluations of |
"Excellent" service, but only if the teacher (i) previously |
attained contractual continued service in a different |
school district or program in this State, (ii) voluntarily |
departed or was honorably dismissed from that school |
|
district or program in the school term immediately prior to |
the teacher's first school term of service applicable to |
the attainment of contractual continued service under this |
subdivision (3), and (iii) received, in his or her 2 most |
recent overall annual or biannual evaluations from the |
prior school district or program, ratings of "Proficient", |
with both such ratings occurring after the school |
district's or program's PERA implementation date. |
If the teacher does not receive overall annual evaluations |
of "Excellent" in the school terms necessary for eligibility to |
achieve accelerated contractual continued service in |
subdivisions (2) and (3) of this subsection (d), the teacher |
shall be eligible for contractual continued service pursuant to |
subdivision (1) of this subsection (d). If, at the conclusion |
of 4 consecutive school terms of service that count toward |
attainment of contractual continued service, the teacher's |
performance does not qualify the teacher for contractual |
continued service under subdivision (1) of this subsection (d), |
then the teacher shall not enter upon contractual continued |
service and shall be dismissed. If a performance evaluation is |
not conducted for any school term when such evaluation is |
required to be conducted under Section 24A-5 of this Code, then |
the teacher's performance evaluation rating for such school |
term for purposes of determining the attainment of contractual |
continued service shall be deemed "Proficient". |
(e) For the purposes of determining contractual continued |
|
service, a school term shall be counted only toward attainment |
of contractual continued service if the teacher actually |
teaches or is otherwise present and participating in the |
district's or program's educational program for 120 days or |
more, provided that the days of leave under the federal Family |
Medical Leave Act that the teacher is required to take until |
the end of the school term shall be considered days of teaching |
or participation in the district's or program's educational |
program. A school term that is not counted toward attainment of |
contractual continued service shall not be considered a break |
in service for purposes of determining whether a teacher has |
been employed for 4 consecutive school terms, provided that the |
teacher actually teaches or is otherwise present and |
participating in the district's or program's educational |
program in the following school term. |
(f) If the employing board determines to dismiss the |
teacher in the last year of the probationary period as provided |
in subsection (c) of this Section or subdivision (1) or (2) of |
subsection (d) of this Section, but not subdivision (3) of |
subsection (d) of this Section, the written notice of dismissal |
provided by the employing board must contain specific reasons |
for dismissal. Any full-time teacher who does not receive |
written notice from the employing board at least 45 days before |
the end of any school term as provided in this Section and |
whose performance does not require dismissal after the fourth |
probationary year pursuant to subsection (d) of this Section |
|
shall be re-employed for the following school term. |
If, however, a teacher who was first employed prior to |
January 1, 1998
has not had one school term of full-time |
teaching experience before the
beginning of a probationary |
period of 2 consecutive school terms, the employing
board may |
at its option extend the probationary period for one additional
|
school term by giving the teacher written notice by certified |
mail, return
receipt requested, at least 45 days before the end |
of the second school term of
the period of 2 consecutive school |
terms referred to above. This notice must
state the reasons for |
the one year extension and must outline the corrective
actions |
that the teacher must take to satisfactorily complete |
probation. The
changes made by this amendatory Act of 1998 are |
declaratory of existing law.
|
Any full-time teacher who is not completing the last year
|
of the probationary
period described in the preceding |
paragraph, or any teacher employed on a
full-time basis not |
later than January 1 of the school term, shall receive
written |
notice from the employing board at least 45 days before the
end |
of any school term whether or not he will be
re-employed for |
the following school term. If the board fails to give
such |
notice, the employee shall be deemed reemployed, and not later |
than
the close of the then current school term the board shall |
issue a
regular contract to the employee as though the board |
had reemployed him
in the usual manner.
|
(g) Contractual continued service shall continue in effect |
|
the terms and
provisions of the contract with the teacher |
during the last school term
of the probationary period, subject |
to this Act and the lawful
regulations of the employing board. |
This Section and succeeding Sections
do not modify any existing |
power of the board except with respect to the
procedure of the |
discharge of a teacher and reductions in salary as
hereinafter |
provided. Contractual continued service status shall not
|
restrict the power of the board to transfer a teacher to a |
position
which the teacher is qualified to fill or to make such |
salary
adjustments as it deems desirable, but unless reductions |
in salary are
uniform or based upon some reasonable |
classification, any teacher whose
salary is reduced shall be |
entitled to a notice and a hearing as
hereinafter provided in |
the case of certain dismissals or removals.
|
(h) If, by reason of any change in the boundaries of school |
districts or by reason of the creation of a new school |
district, the position held by any teacher having a contractual |
continued service status is transferred from one board to the |
control of a new or different board, then the contractual |
continued service status of the teacher is not thereby lost, |
and such new or different board is subject to this Code with |
respect to the teacher in the same manner as if the teacher |
were its employee and had been its employee during the time the |
teacher was actually employed by the board from whose control |
the position was transferred. |
(i) The employment of any teacher in a program of a special |
|
education joint
agreement established under Section 3-15.14, |
10-22.31 or 10-22.31a shall be governed by
under this and |
succeeding Sections of this Article. For purposes of
attaining |
and maintaining contractual continued service and computing
|
length of continuing service as referred to in this Section and |
Section
24-12, employment in a special educational joint |
program shall be deemed a
continuation of all previous |
certificated employment of such teacher for
such joint |
agreement whether the employer of the teacher was the joint
|
agreement, the regional superintendent, or one of the |
participating
districts in the joint agreement.
|
(j) For any teacher employed after July 1, 1987 as a |
full-time teacher in a program of a special education joint |
agreement, whether the program is operated by the joint |
agreement or a member district on behalf of the joint |
agreement, in the event of a reduction in the number of |
programs or positions in the joint agreement in which the |
notice of dismissal is provided on or before the end of the |
2010-2011 school term, the teacher in contractual continued |
service is eligible for employment in the joint agreement |
programs for which the teacher is legally qualified in order of |
greater length of continuing service in the joint agreement, |
unless an alternative method of determining the sequence of |
dismissal is established in a collective bargaining agreement. |
For any teacher employed after July 1, 1987 as a full-time |
teacher in a program of a special education joint agreement, |
|
whether the program is operated by the joint agreement or a |
member district on behalf of the joint agreement, in the event |
of a reduction in the number of programs or positions in the |
joint agreement in which the notice of dismissal is provided |
during the 2011-2012 school term or a subsequent school term, |
the teacher shall be included on the honorable dismissal lists |
of all joint agreement programs for positions for which the |
teacher is qualified and is eligible for employment in such |
programs in accordance with subsections (b) and (c) of Section |
24-12 of this Code and the applicable honorable dismissal |
policies of the joint agreement. |
(k) For any teacher employed after July 1, 1987 as a |
full-time teacher in a program of a special education joint |
agreement, whether the program is operated by the joint |
agreement or a member district on behalf of the joint |
agreement, in the event of the dissolution of a joint |
agreement, in which the notice to teachers of the dissolution |
is provided during the 2010-2011 school term, the teacher in |
contractual continued service who is legally qualified shall be |
assigned to any comparable position in a member district |
currently held by a teacher who has not entered upon |
contractual continued service or held by a teacher who has |
entered upon contractual continued service with a shorter |
length of contractual continued service. Any teacher employed |
after July 1, 1987 as a full-time teacher in a program of a |
special education joint agreement, whether the program is |
|
operated by the joint agreement or a member district on behalf |
of the joint agreement, in the event of the dissolution of a |
joint agreement in which the notice to teachers of the |
dissolution is provided during the 2011-2012 school term or a |
subsequent school term, the teacher who is qualified shall be |
included on the order of honorable dismissal lists of each |
member district and shall be assigned to any comparable |
position in any such district in accordance with subsections |
(b) and (c) of Section 24-12 of this Code and the applicable |
honorable dismissal policies of each member district. |
Any teacher employed after July 1, 1987 as a full-time |
teacher in a
program of a special education joint agreement, |
whether the program is
operated by the joint agreement or a |
member district on behalf of the joint
agreement, for a |
probationary period of two consecutive years shall enter
upon |
contractual continued service in all of the programs conducted |
by such
joint agreement which the teacher is legally qualified |
to hold; except that
for
a teacher who is first employed on or |
after January 1, 1998 in a program of a
special education joint |
agreement and who has not before that date already
entered upon |
contractual continued service in all of the programs conducted |
by
the joint agreement that the teacher is legally qualified to |
hold, the
probationary period shall be 4 consecutive years |
before the teacher enters upon
contractual continued service in |
all of those programs. In the
event of a reduction in the |
number of programs or positions in the joint
agreement, the |
|
teacher on contractual continued service shall be eligible
for |
employment in the joint agreement programs for which the |
teacher is
legally qualified in order of greater length of |
continuing service in the
joint agreement unless an alternative |
method of determining the sequence of
dismissal is established |
in a collective bargaining agreement. In the
event of the |
dissolution of a joint agreement, the teacher on contractual
|
continued service who is legally qualified shall be assigned to |
any
comparable position in a member district currently held by |
a teacher who
has not entered upon contractual continued |
service or held by a teacher who
has entered upon contractual |
continued service with shorter length of
contractual continued |
service.
|
(l) The governing board of the joint agreement, or the |
administrative
district, if so authorized by the articles of |
agreement of the joint
agreement, rather than the board of |
education of a school district, may
carry out employment and |
termination actions including dismissals under
this Section |
and Section 24-12.
|
For purposes of this and succeeding Sections of this |
Article, a program
of a special educational joint agreement |
shall be defined as instructional,
consultative, supervisory, |
administrative, diagnostic, and related services
which are |
managed by the special educational joint agreement designed to
|
service two or more districts which are members of the joint |
agreement.
|
|
Each joint agreement shall be required to post by February |
1, a list of
all its employees in order of length of continuing |
service in the joint
agreement, unless an alternative method of |
determining a sequence of
dismissal is established in an |
applicable collective bargaining agreement.
|
(m) The employment of any teacher in a special education |
program
authorized by Section 14-1.01 through 14-14.01, or a |
joint educational
program established under Section 10-22.31a, |
shall be under this and the
succeeding Sections of this |
Article, and such employment shall be deemed
a continuation of |
the previous employment of such teacher in any of the
|
participating districts, regardless of the participation of |
other
districts in the program. |
(n) Any teacher employed as a full-time teacher in
a |
special education program prior to September 23, 1987 in which |
2 or
more school districts
participate for a probationary |
period of 2 consecutive years shall enter
upon contractual |
continued service in each of the participating
districts, |
subject to this and the succeeding Sections of this Article,
|
and , notwithstanding Section 24-1.5 of this Code, in the event |
of the termination of the program shall be eligible for
any |
vacant position in any of such districts for which such teacher |
is
qualified.
|
(Source: P.A. 90-548, eff. 1-1-98; 90-653, eff. 7-29-98.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/24-12) (from Ch. 122, par. 24-12)
|
|
Sec. 24-12. Removal or dismissal of teachers in contractual
|
continued service. |
(a) This subsection (a) applies only to honorable |
dismissals and recalls in which the notice of dismissal is |
provided on or before the end of the 2010-2011 school term. If |
a teacher in contractual continued service is
removed or |
dismissed as a result of a decision of the board to decrease
|
the number of teachers employed by the board or to discontinue |
some
particular type of teaching service, written notice shall |
be mailed to the
teacher and also given the
teacher either by |
certified mail, return receipt requested or
personal delivery |
with receipt at least 60
days before
the end of the school |
term, together with a statement of honorable
dismissal and the |
reason therefor, and in all such cases the board shall
first |
remove or dismiss all teachers who have not entered upon |
contractual
continued service before removing or dismissing |
any teacher who has entered
upon contractual continued service |
and who is legally qualified to hold a
position currently held |
by a teacher who has not entered upon contractual
continued |
service. |
As between teachers who have entered upon contractual
|
continued service, the teacher or teachers with the shorter |
length of
continuing service with the district shall be |
dismissed first
unless an alternative method of determining the |
sequence of dismissal is
established in a collective bargaining |
agreement or contract between the
board and a professional |
|
faculty members' organization and except that
this provision |
shall not impair the operation of any affirmative action
|
program in the district, regardless of whether it exists by |
operation of
law or is conducted on a voluntary basis by the |
board. Any teacher
dismissed as a result of such decrease or |
discontinuance shall be paid
all earned compensation on or |
before the third business day following
the last day of pupil |
attendance in the regular school term. |
If the
board has any vacancies for the following school |
term or within one
calendar year from the beginning of the |
following school term, the
positions thereby becoming |
available shall be tendered to the teachers
so removed or |
dismissed so far as they are legally qualified to hold
such |
positions; provided, however, that if the number of honorable
|
dismissal notices based on economic necessity exceeds 15% of |
the number of
full time equivalent positions filled by |
certified employees (excluding
principals and administrative |
personnel) during the preceding school year,
then if the board |
has any vacancies for the following school term or within
2 |
calendar years from the beginning of the following
school term, |
the positions so becoming available shall be tendered to the
|
teachers who were so notified and removed or dismissed whenever |
they are
legally qualified to hold such positions. Each board |
shall, in consultation
with any exclusive employee |
representatives, each year establish a list,
categorized by |
positions, showing the length of continuing service of each
|
|
teacher who is qualified to hold any such positions, unless an |
alternative
method of determining a sequence of dismissal is |
established as provided
for in this Section, in which case a |
list shall be made in accordance with
the alternative method. |
Copies of the list shall be distributed to the
exclusive |
employee representative on or before February 1 of each year.
|
Whenever the number of honorable dismissal notices based upon |
economic
necessity exceeds 5, or 150% of the average number of |
teachers honorably
dismissed in the preceding 3 years, |
whichever is more, then the board also
shall hold a public |
hearing on the question of the dismissals. Following
the |
hearing and board review the action to approve any such |
reduction shall
require a majority vote of the board members.
|
(b) This subsection (b) applies only to honorable |
dismissals and recalls in which the notice of dismissal is |
provided during the 2011-2012 school term or a subsequent |
school term. If any teacher, whether or not in contractual |
continued service, is removed or dismissed as a result of a |
decision of a school board to decrease the number of teachers |
employed by the board, a decision of a school board to |
discontinue some particular type of teaching service, or a |
reduction in the number of programs or positions in a special |
education joint agreement, then written notice must be mailed |
to the teacher and also given to the teacher either by |
certified mail, return receipt requested, or personal delivery |
with receipt at least 45 days before the end of the school |
|
term, together with a statement of honorable dismissal and the |
reason therefor, and in all such cases the sequence of |
dismissal shall occur in accordance with this subsection (b); |
except that this subsection (b) shall not impair the operation |
of any affirmative action program in the school district, |
regardless of whether it exists by operation of law or is |
conducted on a voluntary basis by the board. |
Each teacher must be categorized into one or more positions |
for which the teacher is qualified to hold, based upon legal |
qualifications and any other qualifications established in a |
district or joint agreement job description, on or before the |
May 10 prior to the school year during which the sequence of |
dismissal is determined. Within each position and subject to |
agreements made by the joint committee on honorable dismissals |
that are authorized by subsection (c) of this Section, the |
school district or joint agreement must establish 4 groupings |
of teachers qualified to hold the position as follows: |
(1) Grouping one shall consist of each teacher not in |
contractual continued service who has not received a |
performance evaluation rating. |
(2) Grouping 2 shall consist of each teacher with a |
Needs Improvement or Unsatisfactory performance evaluation |
rating on either of the teacher's last 2 performance |
evaluation ratings. |
(3) Grouping 3 shall consist of each teacher with a |
performance evaluation rating of at least Satisfactory or |
|
Proficient on both of the teacher's last 2 performance |
evaluation ratings, if 2 ratings are available, or on the |
teacher's last performance evaluation rating, if only one |
rating is available, unless the teacher qualifies for |
placement into grouping 4. |
(4) Grouping 4 shall consist of each teacher whose last |
2 performance evaluation ratings are Excellent and each |
teacher with 2 Excellent performance evaluation ratings |
out of the teacher's last 3 performance evaluation ratings |
with a third rating of Satisfactory or Proficient. |
Among teachers qualified to hold a position, teachers must |
be dismissed in the order of their groupings, with teachers in |
grouping one dismissed first and teachers in grouping 4 |
dismissed last. |
Within grouping one, the sequence of dismissal must be at |
the discretion of the school district or joint agreement. |
Within grouping 2, the sequence of dismissal must be based upon |
average performance evaluation ratings, with the teacher or |
teachers with the lowest average performance evaluation rating |
dismissed first. A teacher's average performance evaluation |
rating must be calculated using the average of the teacher's |
last 2 performance evaluation ratings, if 2 ratings are |
available, or the teacher's last performance evaluation |
rating, if only one rating is available, using the following |
numerical values: 4 for Excellent; 3 for Proficient or |
Satisfactory; 2 for Needs Improvement; and 1 for |
|
Unsatisfactory. As between or among teachers in grouping 2 with |
the same average performance evaluation rating and within each |
of groupings 3 and 4, the teacher or teachers with the shorter |
length of continuing service with the school district or joint |
agreement must be dismissed first unless an alternative method |
of determining the sequence of dismissal is established in a |
collective bargaining agreement or contract between the board |
and a professional faculty members' organization. |
Each board, including the governing board of a joint |
agreement, shall, in consultation with any exclusive employee |
representatives, each year establish a sequence of honorable |
dismissal list categorized by positions and the groupings |
defined in this subsection (b). Copies of the list must be |
distributed to the exclusive bargaining representative at |
least 75 days before the end of the school term, provided that |
the school district or joint agreement may, with notice to any |
exclusive employee representatives, move teachers from |
grouping one into another grouping during the period of time |
from 75 days until 45 days before the end of the school term. |
Any teacher dismissed as a result of such decrease or |
discontinuance must be paid all earned compensation on or |
before the third business day following the last day of pupil |
attendance in the regular school term. |
If the board or joint agreement has any vacancies for the |
following school term or within one calendar year from the |
beginning of the following school term, the positions thereby |
|
becoming available must be tendered to the teachers so removed |
or dismissed who were in groupings 3 or 4 of the sequence of |
dismissal and are qualified to hold the positions, based upon |
legal qualifications and any other qualifications established |
in a district or joint agreement job description, on or before |
the May 10 prior to the date of the positions becoming |
available, provided that if the number of honorable dismissal |
notices based on economic necessity exceeds 15% of the number |
of full-time equivalent positions filled by certified |
employees (excluding principals and administrative personnel) |
during the preceding school year, then the recall period is for |
the following school term or within 2 calendar years from the |
beginning of the following school term. Among teachers eligible |
for recall pursuant to the preceding sentence, the order of |
recall must be in inverse order of dismissal, unless an |
alternative order of recall is established in a collective |
bargaining agreement or contract between the board and a |
professional faculty members' organization. Whenever the |
number of honorable dismissal notices based upon economic |
necessity exceeds 5 notices or 150% of the average number of |
teachers honorably dismissed in the preceding 3 years, |
whichever is more, then the school board or governing board of |
a joint agreement, as applicable, shall also hold a public |
hearing on the question of the dismissals. Following the |
hearing and board review, the action to approve any such |
reduction shall require a majority vote of the board members. |
|
For purposes of this subsection (b), subject to agreement |
on an alternative definition reached by the joint committee |
described in subsection (c) of this Section, a teacher's |
performance evaluation rating means the overall performance |
evaluation rating resulting from an annual or biannual |
performance evaluation conducted pursuant to Article 24A of |
this Code by the school district or joint agreement determining |
the sequence of dismissal, not including any performance |
evaluation conducted during or at the end of a remediation |
period. For performance evaluation ratings determined prior to |
September 1, 2012, any school district or joint agreement with |
a performance evaluation rating system that does not use either |
of the rating category systems specified in subsection (d) of |
Section 24A-5 of this Code for all teachers must establish a |
basis for assigning each teacher a rating that complies with |
subsection (d) of Section 24A-5 of this Code for all of the |
performance evaluation ratings that are to be used to determine |
the sequence of dismissal. A teacher's grouping and ranking on |
a sequence of honorable dismissal shall be deemed a part of the |
teacher's performance evaluation, and that information may be |
disclosed to the exclusive bargaining representative as part of |
a sequence of honorable dismissal list, notwithstanding any |
laws prohibiting disclosure of such information. A performance |
evaluation rating may be used to determine the sequence of |
dismissal, notwithstanding the pendency of any grievance |
resolution or arbitration procedures relating to the |
|
performance evaluation. If a teacher has received at least one |
performance evaluation rating conducted by the school district |
or joint agreement determining the sequence of dismissal and a |
subsequent performance evaluation is not conducted in any |
school year in which such evaluation is required to be |
conducted under Section 24A-5 of this Code, the teacher's |
performance evaluation rating for that school year for purposes |
of determining the sequence of dismissal is deemed Proficient. |
If a performance evaluation rating is nullified as the result |
of an arbitration determination, then the school district or |
joint agreement is deemed to have conducted a performance |
evaluation for that school year, but the performance evaluation |
rating may not be used in determining the sequence of |
dismissal. |
Nothing in this subsection (b) shall be construed as |
limiting the right of a school board or governing board of a |
joint agreement to dismiss a teacher not in contractual |
continued service in accordance with Section 24-11 of this |
Code. |
Any provisions regarding the sequence of honorable |
dismissals and recall of honorably dismissed teachers in a |
collective bargaining agreement entered into on or before |
January 1, 2011 and in effect on the effective date of this |
amendatory Act of the 97th General Assembly that may conflict |
with this amendatory Act of the 97th General Assembly shall |
remain in effect through the expiration of such agreement or |
|
June 30, 2013, whichever is earlier. |
(c) Each school district and special education joint |
agreement must use a joint committee composed of equal |
representation selected by the school board and its teachers |
or, if applicable, the exclusive bargaining representative of |
its teachers, to address the matters described in paragraphs |
(1) through (5) of this subsection (c) pertaining to honorable |
dismissals under subsection (b) of this Section. |
(1) The joint committee must consider and may agree to |
criteria for excluding from grouping 2 and placing into |
grouping 3 a teacher whose last 2 performance evaluations |
include a Needs Improvement and either a Proficient or |
Excellent. |
(2) The joint committee must consider and may agree to |
an alternative definition for grouping 4, which definition |
must take into account prior performance evaluation |
ratings and may take into account other factors that relate |
to the school district's or program's educational |
objectives. An alternative definition for grouping 4 may |
not permit the inclusion of a teacher in the grouping with |
a Needs Improvement or Unsatisfactory performance |
evaluation rating on either of the teacher's last 2 |
performance evaluation ratings. |
(3) The joint committee may agree to including within |
the definition of a performance evaluation rating a |
performance evaluation rating administered by a school |
|
district or joint agreement other than the school district |
or joint agreement determining the sequence of dismissal. |
(4) For each school district or joint agreement that |
administers performance evaluation ratings that are |
inconsistent with either of the rating category systems |
specified in subsection (d) of Section 24A-5 of this Code, |
the school district or joint agreement must consult with |
the joint committee on the basis for assigning a rating |
that complies with subsection (d) of Section 24A-5 of this |
Code to each performance evaluation rating that will be |
used in a sequence of dismissal. |
(5) Upon request by a joint committee member submitted |
to the employing board by no later than 10 days after the |
distribution of the sequence of honorable dismissal list, a |
representative of the employing board shall, within 5 days |
after the request, provide to members of the joint |
committee a list showing the most recent and prior |
performance evaluation ratings of each teacher identified |
only by length of continuing service in the district or |
joint agreement and not by name. If, after review of this |
list, a member of the joint committee has a good faith |
belief that a disproportionate number of teachers with |
greater length of continuing service with the district or |
joint agreement have received a recent performance |
evaluation rating lower than the prior rating, the member |
may request that the joint committee review the list to |
|
assess whether such a trend may exist. Following the joint |
committee's review, but by no later than the end of the |
applicable school term, the joint committee or any member |
or members of the joint committee may submit a report of |
the review to the employing board and exclusive bargaining |
representative, if any. Nothing in this paragraph (5) shall |
impact the order of honorable dismissal or a school |
district's or joint agreement's authority to carry out a |
dismissal in accordance with subsection (b) of this |
Section. |
Agreement by the joint committee as to a matter requires |
the majority vote of all committee members, and if the joint |
committee does not reach agreement on a matter, then the |
otherwise applicable requirements of subsection (b) of this |
Section shall apply. Except as explicitly set forth in this |
subsection (c), a joint committee has no authority to agree to |
any further modifications to the requirements for honorable |
dismissals set forth in subsection (a) of this Section.
The |
joint committee must be established and the first meeting of |
the joint committee must occur on or before December 1, 2011 or |
30 days after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the |
97th General Assembly, whichever is later. |
The joint committee must reach agreement on a matter on or |
before February 1 of a school year in order for the agreement |
of the joint committee to apply to the sequence of dismissal |
determined during that school year. Subject to the February 1 |
|
deadline for agreements, the agreement of a joint committee on |
a matter shall apply to the sequence of dismissal until the |
agreement is amended or terminated by the joint committee. |
(d) Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in this |
subsection (d), the requirements and dismissal procedures of |
Section 24-16.5 of this Code shall apply to any dismissal |
sought under Section 24-16.5 of this Code. |
(1) If a dismissal of a teacher in contractual |
continued service or removal is sought for any other reason |
or cause other than an honorable dismissal under |
subsections (a) or (b) of this Section or a dismissal |
sought under Section 24-16.5 of this Code ,
including those |
under Section 10-22.4, the board must first approve a
|
motion containing specific charges by a majority vote of |
all its
members. Written notice of such charges , including |
a bill of particulars and the teacher's right to request a |
hearing, must be mailed to the teacher and also given to |
the teacher either by certified mail, return receipt |
requested, or personal delivery with receipt shall be |
served upon the teacher
within 5 days of the adoption of |
the motion. Any written notice sent on or after July 1, |
2012 shall inform the teacher of the right to request a |
hearing before a mutually selected hearing officer, with |
the cost of the hearing officer split equally between the |
teacher and the board, or a hearing before a board-selected |
hearing officer, with the cost of the hearing officer paid |
|
by the board. Such notice shall contain a
bill of |
particulars. |
Before setting a hearing on charges stemming from |
causes that are considered remediable, a board must give |
the teacher reasonable warning in writing, stating |
specifically the causes that, if not removed, may result in |
charges; however, no such written warning is required if |
the causes have been the subject of a remediation plan |
pursuant to Article 24A of this Code. |
If, in the opinion of the board, the interests of the |
school require it, the board may suspend the teacher |
without pay, pending the hearing, but if the board's |
dismissal or removal is not sustained, the teacher shall |
not suffer the loss of any salary or benefits by reason of |
the suspension. |
(2) No hearing upon the charges is required unless the
|
teacher within 17 10 days after receiving notice requests |
in writing of the
board that a hearing be scheduled before |
a mutually selected hearing officer or a hearing officer |
selected by the board , in which case the board shall |
schedule a
hearing on those charges before a disinterested |
hearing officer on a date
no less than 15 nor more than 30 |
days after the enactment of the motion .
The secretary of |
the school board shall forward a copy of the notice to the
|
State Board of Education. |
(3) Within 5 business days after receiving a this |
|
notice of
hearing in which either notice to the teacher was |
sent before July 1, 2012 or, if the notice was sent on or |
after July 1, 2012, the teacher has requested a hearing |
before a mutually selected hearing officer , the State Board |
of Education shall provide a list of 5
prospective, |
impartial hearing officers from the master list of |
qualified, impartial hearing officers maintained by the |
State Board of Education . Each person on the master list |
must (i) be
accredited by a national arbitration |
organization and have had a minimum of 5
years of |
experience directly related to labor and employment
|
relations matters between educational employers and |
educational employees or
their exclusive bargaining |
representatives and (ii) beginning September 1, 2012, have |
participated in training provided or approved by the State |
Board of Education for teacher dismissal hearing officers |
so that he or she is familiar with issues generally |
involved in evaluative and non-evaluative dismissals. |
If notice to the teacher was sent before July 1, 2012 |
or, if the notice was sent on or after July 1, 2012, the |
teacher has requested a hearing before a mutually selected |
hearing officer, the board . No one on the list may
be a |
resident of the school district. The Board and the teacher |
or their
legal representatives within 3 business days shall |
alternately strike one name from
the list provided by the |
State Board of Education until only one name remains. |
|
Unless waived by the teacher, the
teacher shall have the |
right to
proceed first with the striking.
Within 3 business |
days of receipt of the first list provided by the State |
Board of
Education, the board and the teacher or their |
legal representatives shall each
have the right to reject |
all prospective hearing officers named on the first
list |
and notify the State Board of Education of such rejection |
to require the State Board of Education to provide a second |
list of 5
prospective, impartial hearing officers, none of |
whom were named on the first
list . Within 3 business 5 days |
after receiving this notification request for a second |
list , the State
Board of Education shall appoint a |
qualified person from the master list who did not appear on |
the list sent to the parties to serve as the hearing |
officer, unless the parties notify it that they have chosen |
to alternatively select a hearing officer under paragraph |
(4) of this subsection (d) provide the second list of 5 |
prospective, impartial
hearing officers. The procedure for |
selecting a hearing officer from the
second
list shall be |
the same as the procedure for the first list . |
If the teacher has requested a hearing before a hearing |
officer selected by the board, the board shall select one |
name from the master list of qualified impartial hearing |
officers maintained by the State Board of Education within |
3 business days after receipt and shall notify the State |
Board of Education of its selection. |
|
A hearing officer mutually selected by the parties, |
selected by the board, or selected through an alternative |
selection process under paragraph (4) of this subsection |
(d) (A) must not be a resident of the school district, (B) |
must be available to commence the hearing within 75 days |
and conclude the hearing within 120 days after being |
selected as the hearing officer, and (C) must issue a |
decision as to whether the teacher must be dismissed and |
give a copy of that decision to both the teacher and the |
board within 30 days from the conclusion of the hearing or |
closure of the record, whichever is later. |
(4) In the alternative
to selecting a hearing officer |
from the first or second list received from the
State Board |
of Education accepting the appointment of a hearing officer |
by the State Board of Education or if the State Board of |
Education cannot provide a list or appoint a hearing |
officer that meets the foregoing requirements , the board |
and the teacher or their legal
representatives may mutually |
agree to select an impartial hearing officer who
is not on |
the master a list received from the State Board of |
Education either by direct
appointment by the parties or by |
using procedures for the appointment of an
arbitrator |
established by the Federal Mediation and Conciliation |
Service or the
American Arbitration Association. The |
parties shall notify the State Board of
Education of their |
intent to select a hearing officer using an alternative
|
|
procedure within 3 business days of receipt of a list of |
prospective hearing officers
provided by the State Board of |
Education , notice of appointment of a hearing officer by |
the State Board of Education, or receipt of notice from the |
State Board of Education that it cannot provide a list that |
meets the foregoing requirements, whichever is later . |
(5) If the notice of dismissal was sent to the teacher |
before July 1, 2012, the fees and costs for the hearing |
officer must be paid by the State Board of Education. If |
the notice of dismissal was sent to the teacher on or after |
July 1, 2012, the hearing officer's fees and costs must be |
paid as follows in this paragraph (5). The fees and |
permissible costs for the hearing officer must be |
determined by the State Board of Education. If the board |
and the teacher or their legal representatives mutually |
agree to select an impartial hearing officer who is not on |
a list received from the State Board of Education, they may |
agree to supplement the fees determined by the State Board |
to the hearing officer, at a rate consistent with the |
hearing officer's published professional fees. If the |
hearing officer is mutually selected by the parties, then |
the board and the teacher or their legal representatives |
shall each pay 50% of the fees and costs and any |
supplemental allowance to which they agree. If the hearing |
officer is selected by the board, then the board shall pay |
100% of the hearing officer's fees and costs. The fees and |
|
costs must be paid to the hearing officer within 14 days |
after the board and the teacher or their legal |
representatives receive the hearing officer's decision set |
forth in paragraph (7) of this subsection (d). |
(6) The teacher is required to answer the bill of |
particulars and aver affirmative matters in his or her |
defense, and the time for initially doing so and the time |
for updating such answer and defenses after pre-hearing |
discovery must be set by the hearing officer. Any person |
selected by the parties
under this alternative procedure |
for the selection of a hearing officer shall
not be a |
resident of the school district and shall have the same |
qualifications
and authority as a hearing officer selected |
from a list provided by the State
Board of Education.
The |
State Board of Education shall
promulgate uniform |
standards and rules so that each party has a fair |
opportunity to present its case and to ensure that the |
dismissal process proceeds in a fair and expeditious manner |
of procedure for such hearings . These rules shall address, |
without limitation, discovery and hearing scheduling |
conferences; the teacher's initial answer and affirmative |
defenses to the bill of particulars and the updating of |
that information after pre-hearing discovery; provision |
for written interrogatories and requests for production of |
documents; the requirement that each party initially |
disclose to the other party and then update the disclosure |
|
no later than 10 calendar days prior to the commencement of |
the hearing, the As
to prehearing discovery, such rules and |
regulations shall, at a minimum, allow
for: (1) discovery |
of names and addresses of persons who may be called as
|
expert witnesses at the hearing, a summary of the facts or |
opinions each witness will testify to, and all other the |
omission of any such name to result in
a preclusion of the |
testimony of such witness in the absence of a showing
of |
good cause and the express permission of the hearing |
officer; (2) bills
of particulars; (3) written |
interrogatories; and (4) production of relevant
documents |
and materials, including information maintained |
electronically, relevant to its own as well as the other |
party's case (the hearing officer may exclude witnesses and |
exhibits not identified and shared, except those offered in |
rebuttal for which the party could not reasonably have |
anticipated prior to the hearing); pre-hearing discovery |
and preparation, including provision for written |
interrogatories and requests for production of documents, |
provided that discovery depositions are prohibited; the |
conduct of the hearing; the right of each party to be |
represented by counsel, the offer of evidence and witnesses |
and the cross-examination of witnesses; the authority of |
the hearing officer to issue subpoenas and subpoenas duces |
tecum, provided that the hearing officer may limit the |
number of witnesses to be subpoenaed on behalf of each |
|
party to no more than 7; the length of post-hearing briefs; |
and the form, length, and content of hearing officers' |
decisions . The per diem allowance for the hearing officer |
shall be
determined and paid by
the State Board of |
Education. The hearing officer
shall hold a hearing and |
render a final decision for dismissal pursuant to Article |
24A of this Code or shall report to the school board |
findings of fact and a recommendation as to whether or not |
the teacher must be dismissed for conduct. The hearing |
officer shall commence the hearing within 75 days and |
conclude the hearing within 120 days after being selected |
as the hearing officer, provided that the hearing officer |
may modify these timelines upon the showing of good cause |
or mutual agreement of the parties. Good cause for the |
purpose of this subsection (d) shall mean the illness or |
otherwise unavoidable emergency of the teacher, district |
representative, their legal representatives, the hearing |
officer, or an essential witness as indicated in each |
party's pre-hearing submission. In a dismissal hearing |
pursuant to Article 24A of this Code, the hearing officer |
shall consider and give weight to all of the teacher's |
evaluations written pursuant to Article 24A that are |
relevant to the issues in the hearing. |
Each party shall have no more than 3 days to present |
its case, unless extended by the hearing officer to enable |
a party to present adequate evidence and testimony, |
|
including due to the other party's cross-examination of the |
party's witnesses, for good cause or by mutual agreement of |
the parties. The State Board of Education shall define in |
rules the meaning of "day" for such purposes . The teacher |
has
the privilege of being present at the hearing with |
counsel and of
cross-examining witnesses and may offer |
evidence and witnesses and present
defenses to the charges. |
The hearing officer may issue subpoenas and
subpoenas duces |
tecum requiring the attendance of witnesses and, at the
|
request of the teacher against whom a charge is made or the |
board, shall
issue such subpoenas, but the hearing officer |
may limit the number of
witnesses to be subpoenaed in |
behalf of the teacher or the board to not
more than 10. All |
testimony at the hearing shall be taken under oath
|
administered by the hearing officer. The hearing officer |
shall cause a
record of the proceedings to be kept and |
shall employ a competent reporter
to take stenographic or |
stenotype notes of all the testimony. The costs of
the |
reporter's attendance and services at the hearing shall be |
paid by the party or parties who are responsible for paying |
the fees and costs of the hearing officer
State Board of |
Education . Either party desiring a transcript of the |
hearing
shall pay for the cost thereof. Any post-hearing |
briefs must be submitted by the parties by no later than 21 |
days after a party's receipt of the transcript of the |
hearing, unless extended by the hearing officer for good |
|
cause or by mutual agreement of the parties. |
(7) If in the opinion of the board
the interests of the |
school require it, the board may suspend the
teacher |
pending the hearing, but if acquitted the teacher shall not
|
suffer the loss of any salary by reason of the suspension.
|
Before setting a hearing on charges stemming from |
causes that are
considered remediable, a board must give |
the teacher reasonable warning
in writing, stating |
specifically the causes which, if not removed, may
result |
in charges; however, no such written warning shall be |
required if
the causes have been the subject of a |
remediation plan pursuant to Article
24A. The hearing
|
officer shall consider and give weight to
all of the |
teacher's evaluations written pursuant to Article 24A. The |
hearing officer shall, within 30 days from the conclusion |
of the
hearing or closure of the record, whichever is |
later,
make a decision as to whether or not the teacher |
shall be dismissed pursuant to Article 24A of this Code or |
report to the school board findings of fact and a |
recommendation as to whether or not the teacher shall be |
dismissed for cause and
shall give a copy of the decision |
or findings of fact and recommendation to both the teacher |
and the school
board.
If the hearing officer fails to |
render a decision within 30 days, the State
Board of |
Education shall communicate with the hearing officer to |
determine the
date that the parties can reasonably expect |
|
to receive the decision. The State
Board of Education shall |
provide copies of all such communications to the
parties. |
In the event the hearing officer fails without good cause |
to make a
decision within the 30 day period, the name of |
such hearing officer shall be
struck for a period of not |
more than 24 months from the master list of hearing
|
officers maintained by the State Board of Education.
If a |
hearing officer fails
without good cause , specifically |
provided in writing to both parties and the State Board of |
Education, to render a decision or findings of fact and |
recommendation within 30 days 3 months after the hearing is
|
concluded or the
record is closed, whichever is later,
the
|
State Board of Education shall provide the parties with a |
new list of
prospective, impartial hearing officers, with |
the same qualifications provided
herein, one of whom shall |
be selected, as provided in this Section, to review
the |
record and render a decision. The
parties may mutually |
agree to select a hearing officer pursuant to the
|
alternative
procedure, as provided in this Section,
to |
rehear the charges heard by the hearing officer who failed |
to render a
decision or findings of fact and recommendation |
or to review the record and render a decision .
If any the |
hearing
officer fails without good cause , specifically |
provided in writing to both parties and the State Board of |
Education, to render a decision or findings of fact and |
recommendation within 30 days 3 months after the
hearing is |
|
concluded or the record is closed, whichever is later, the |
hearing
officer shall be removed
from the master
list of |
hearing officers maintained by the State Board of Education |
for not more than 24 months. The parties and the State |
Board of Education may also take such other actions as it |
deems appropriate, including recovering, reducing, or |
withholding any fees paid or to be paid to the hearing |
officer. If any hearing officer repeats such failure, he or |
she must be permanently removed from the master list |
maintained by the State Board of Education and may not be |
selected by parties through the alternative selection |
process under this paragraph (7) or paragraph (4) of this |
subsection (d) .
The board shall not lose jurisdiction to |
discharge a teacher if the hearing
officer fails to render |
a decision or findings of fact and recommendation within |
the time specified in this
Section. If the decision of the |
hearing officer for dismissal pursuant to Article 24A of |
this Code or of the school board for dismissal for cause is |
in favor of the teacher, then the hearing officer or school |
board shall order reinstatement to the same or |
substantially equivalent position and shall determine the |
amount for which the school board is liable, including, but |
not limited to, loss of income and benefits. |
(8) The school board, within 45 days after receipt of |
the hearing officer's findings of fact and recommendation |
as to whether (i) the conduct at issue occurred, (ii) the |
|
conduct that did occur was remediable, and (iii) the |
proposed dismissal should be sustained, shall issue a |
written order as to whether the teacher must be retained or |
dismissed for cause from its employ. The school board's |
written order shall incorporate the hearing officer's |
findings of fact, except that the school board may modify |
or supplement the findings of fact if, in its opinion, the |
findings of fact are against the manifest weight of the |
evidence. |
If the school board dismisses the teacher |
notwithstanding the hearing officer's findings of fact and |
recommendation, the school board shall make a conclusion in |
its written order, giving its reasons therefor, and such |
conclusion and reasons must be included in its written |
order. The failure of the school board to strictly adhere |
to the timelines contained in this Section shall not render |
it without jurisdiction to dismiss the teacher. The school |
board shall not lose jurisdiction to discharge the teacher |
for cause if the hearing officer fails to render a |
recommendation within the time specified in this Section. |
The decision of the school board is final, unless reviewed |
as provided in paragraph (9) of this subsection (d). |
If the school board retains the teacher, the school |
board shall enter a written order stating the amount of |
back pay and lost benefits, less mitigation, to be paid to |
the teacher, within 45 days after its retention order. |
|
Should the teacher object to the amount of the back pay and |
lost benefits or amount mitigated, the teacher shall give |
written objections to the amount within 21 days. If the |
parties fail to reach resolution within 7 days, the dispute |
shall be referred to the hearing officer, who shall |
consider the school board's written order and teacher's |
written objection and determine the amount to which the |
school board is liable. The costs of the hearing officer's |
review and determination must be paid by the board. |
(9)
The decision of the hearing officer pursuant to |
Article 24A of this Code or of the school board's decision |
to dismiss for cause is final unless reviewed as
provided |
in Section 24-16 of this Act. If the school board's |
decision to dismiss for cause is contrary to the hearing |
officer's recommendation, the court on review shall give |
consideration to the school board's decision and its |
supplemental findings of fact, if applicable, and the |
hearing officer's findings of fact and recommendation in |
making its decision. In the event such review is
|
instituted, the school board shall be responsible for any |
costs of preparing and filing the record of proceedings , |
and such costs associated therewith must be divided equally |
between the parties
shall be paid by the board .
|
(10) If a decision of the hearing officer for dismissal |
pursuant to Article 24A of this Code or of the school board |
for dismissal for cause is adjudicated upon review or
|
|
appeal in favor of the teacher, then the trial court shall |
order
reinstatement and shall remand the matter to |
determine the amount for which the school board with |
direction for entry of an order setting the amount of back |
pay, lost benefits, and costs, less mitigation. The teacher |
may challenge the school board's order setting the amount |
of back pay, lost benefits, and costs, less mitigation, |
through an expedited arbitration procedure, with the costs |
of the arbitrator borne by the school board is
liable |
including but not limited to loss of income and costs |
incurred
therein .
|
Any teacher who is reinstated by any hearing or |
adjudication brought
under this Section shall be assigned |
by the board to a position
substantially similar to the one |
which that teacher held prior to that
teacher's suspension |
or dismissal.
|
(11) The changes made by this amendatory Act of the |
97th General Assembly shall apply to dismissals instituted |
on or after September 1, 2011 or the effective date of this |
amendatory Act of the 97th General Assembly, whichever is |
later. Any dismissal instituted prior to the effective date |
of these changes must be carried out in accordance with the |
requirements of this Section prior to amendment by this |
amendatory Act of 97th General Assembly. |
If, by reason of any change in the boundaries of school |
districts, or
by reason of the creation of a new school |
|
district, the position held by
any teacher having a |
contractual continued service status is transferred
from |
one board to the control of a new or different board, the
|
contractual continued service status of such teacher is not |
thereby
lost, and such new or different board is subject to |
this Act with
respect to such teacher in the same manner as |
if such teacher were its
employee and had been its employee |
during the time such teacher was
actually employed by the |
board from whose control the position was transferred.
|
(Source: P.A. 89-618, eff. 8-9-96; 90-224, eff. 7-25-97.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/24-16) (from Ch. 122, par. 24-16)
|
Sec. 24-16. Judicial review of administrative decision. |
The provisions
of the Administrative Review Law, and all |
amendments and modifications thereof
and the rules adopted |
pursuant thereto, shall apply to and govern all proceedings
|
instituted for the judicial review of final administrative |
decisions of the
a hearing officer for dismissals pursuant to |
Article 24A of this Code or of a school board for dismissal for |
cause under Section 24-12 of this Article. The term |
"administrative
decision" is defined as in Section 3-101 of the |
Code of Civil Procedure.
|
(Source: P.A. 82-783.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/24-16.5 new) |
Sec. 24-16.5. Optional alternative evaluative dismissal |
|
process for PERA evaluations. |
(a) As used in this Section: |
"Applicable hearing requirements" means, for any school |
district having less than 500,000 inhabitants or a program of a |
special education joint agreement, those procedures and |
requirements relating to a teacher's request for a hearing, |
selection of a hearing officer, pre-hearing and hearing |
procedures, and post-hearing briefs set forth in paragraphs (1) |
through (6) of subsection (d) of Section 24-12 of this Code. |
"Board" means, for a school district having less than |
500,000 inhabitants or a program of a special education joint |
agreement, the board of directors, board of education, or board |
of school inspectors, as the case may be. For a school district |
having 500,000 inhabitants or more, "board" means the Chicago |
Board of Education. |
"Evaluator" means an evaluator, as defined in Section |
24A-2.5 of this Code, who has successfully completed the |
pre-qualification program described in subsection (b) of |
Section 24A-3 of this Code. |
"Hearing procedures" means, for a school district having |
500,000 inhabitants or more, those procedures and requirements |
relating to a teacher's request for a hearing, selection of a |
hearing officer, pre-hearing and hearing procedures, and |
post-hearing briefs set forth in paragraphs (1) through (5) of |
subsection (a) of Section 34-85 of this Code. |
"PERA-trained board member" means a member of a board that |
|
has completed a training program on PERA evaluations either |
administered or approved by the State Board of Education. |
"PERA evaluation" means a performance evaluation of a |
teacher after the implementation date of an evaluation system |
for teachers, as specified by Section 24A-2.5 of this Code, |
using a performance evaluation instrument and process that |
meets the minimum requirements for teacher evaluation |
instruments and processes set forth in rules adopted by the |
State Board of Education to implement Public Act 96-861. |
"Remediation" means the remediation plan, mid-point and |
final evaluations, and related processes and requirements set |
forth in subdivisions (i), (j), and (k) of Section 24A-5 of |
this Code. |
"School district" means a school district or a program of a |
special education joint agreement. |
"Second evaluator" means an evaluator who either conducts |
the mid-point and final remediation evaluation or conducts an |
independent assessment of whether the teacher completed the |
remediation plan with a rating equal to or better than a |
"Proficient" rating, all in accordance with subdivision (c) of |
this Section. |
"Student growth components" means the components of a |
performance evaluation plan described in subdivision (c) of |
Section 24A-5 of this Code, as may be supplemented by |
administrative rules adopted by the State Board of Education. |
"Teacher practice components" means the components of a |
|
performance evaluation plan described in subdivisions (a) and |
(b) of Section 24A-5 of this Code, as may be supplemented by |
administrative rules adopted by the State Board of Education. |
"Teacher representatives" means the exclusive bargaining |
representative of a school district's teachers or, if no |
exclusive bargaining representatives exists, a representative |
committee selected by teachers. |
(b) This Section applies to all school districts, including |
those having 500,000 or more inhabitants. The optional |
dismissal process set forth in this Section is an alternative |
to those set forth in Sections 24-12 and 34-85 of this Code. |
Nothing in this Section is intended to change the existing |
practices or precedents under Section 24-12 or 34-85 of this |
Code, nor shall this Section be interpreted as implying |
standards and procedures that should or must be used as part of |
a remediation that precedes a dismissal sought under Section |
24-12 or 34-85 of this Code. |
A board may dismiss a teacher who has entered upon |
contractual continued service under this Section if the |
following are met: |
(1) the cause of dismissal is that the teacher has |
failed to complete a remediation plan with a rating equal |
to or better than a "Proficient" rating; |
(2) the "Unsatisfactory" performance evaluation rating |
that preceded remediation resulted from a PERA evaluation; |
and |
|
(3) the school district has complied with subsection |
(c) of this Section. |
A school district may not, through agreement with a teacher |
or its teacher representatives, waive its right to dismiss a |
teacher under this Section. |
(c) Each school district electing to use the dismissal |
process set forth in this Section must comply with the |
pre-remediation and remediation activities and requirements |
set forth in this subsection (c). |
(1) Before a school district's first remediation |
relating to a dismissal under this Section, the school |
district must create and establish a list of at least 2 |
evaluators who will be available to serve as second |
evaluators under this Section. The school district shall |
provide its teacher representatives with an opportunity to |
submit additional names of teacher evaluators who will be |
available to serve as second evaluators and who will be |
added to the list created and established by the school |
district, provided that, unless otherwise agreed to by the |
school district, the teacher representatives may not |
submit more teacher evaluators for inclusion on the list |
than the number of evaluators submitted by the school |
district. Each teacher evaluator must either have (i) |
National Board of Professional Teaching Standards |
certification, with no "Unsatisfactory" or "Needs |
Improvement" performance evaluating ratings in his or her 2 |
|
most recent performance evaluation ratings; or (ii) |
"Excellent" performance evaluation ratings in 2 of his or |
her 3 most recent performance evaluations, with no "Needs |
Improvement" or "Unsatisfactory" performance evaluation |
ratings in his or her last 3 ratings. If the teacher |
representatives do not submit a list of teacher evaluators |
within 21 days after the school district's request, the |
school district may proceed with a remediation using a list |
that includes only the school district's selections. |
Either the school district or the teacher representatives |
may revise or add to their selections for the list at any |
time with notice to the other party, subject to the |
limitations set forth in this paragraph (1). |
(2) Before a school district's first remediation |
relating to a dismissal under this Section, the school |
district shall, in good faith cooperation with its teacher |
representatives, establish a process for the selection of a |
second evaluator from the list created pursuant to |
paragraph (1) of this subsection (c). Such process may be |
amended at any time in good faith cooperation with the |
teacher representatives. If the teacher representatives |
are given an opportunity to cooperate with the school |
district and elect not to do so, the school district may, |
at its discretion, establish or amend the process for |
selection. Before the hearing officer and as part of any |
judicial review of a dismissal under this Section, a |
|
teacher may not challenge a remediation or dismissal on the |
grounds that the process used by the school district to |
select a second evaluator was not established in good faith |
cooperation with its teacher representatives. |
(3) For each remediation preceding a dismissal under |
this Section, the school district shall select a second |
evaluator from the list of second evaluators created |
pursuant to paragraph (1) of this subsection (c), using the |
selection process established pursuant to paragraph (2) of |
this subsection (c). The selected second evaluator may not |
be the same individual who determined the teacher's |
"Unsatisfactory" performance evaluation rating preceding |
remediation, and, if the second evaluator is an |
administrator, may not be a direct report to the individual |
who determined the teacher's "Unsatisfactory" performance |
evaluation rating preceding remediation. The school |
district's authority to select a second evaluator from the |
list of second evaluators must not be delegated or limited |
through any agreement with the teacher representatives, |
provided that nothing shall prohibit a school district and |
its teacher representatives from agreeing to a formal peer |
evaluation process as permitted under Article 24A of this |
Code that could be used to meet the requirements for the |
selection of second evaluators under this subsection (c). |
(4) The second evaluator selected pursuant to |
paragraph (3) of this subsection (c) must either (i) |
|
conduct the mid-point and final evaluation during |
remediation or (ii) conduct an independent assessment of |
whether the teacher completed the remediation plan with a |
rating equal to or better than a "Proficient" rating, which |
independent assessment shall include, but is not limited |
to, personal or video-recorded observations of the teacher |
that relate to the teacher practice components of the |
remediation plan.
Nothing in this subsection (c) shall be |
construed to limit or preclude the participation of the |
evaluator who rated a teacher as "Unsatisfactory" in |
remediation. |
(d) To institute a dismissal proceeding under this Section, |
the board must first provide written notice to the teacher |
within 30 days after the completion of the final remediation |
evaluation. The notice shall comply with the applicable hearing |
requirements and, in addition, must specify that dismissal is |
sought under this Section and include a copy of each |
performance evaluation relating to the scope of the hearing as |
described in this subsection (d). |
The applicable hearing requirements shall apply to the |
teacher's request for a hearing, the selection and |
qualifications of the hearing officer, and pre-hearing and |
hearing procedures, except that all of the following must be |
met: |
(1) The hearing officer must, in addition to meeting |
the qualifications set forth in the applicable hearing |
|
requirements, have successfully completed the |
pre-qualification program described in subsection (b) of |
Section 24A-3 of this Code, unless the State Board of |
Education waives this requirement to provide an adequate |
pool of hearing officers for consideration. |
(2) The scope of the hearing must be limited as |
follows: |
(A) The school district must demonstrate the |
following: |
(i) that the "Unsatisfactory" performance |
evaluation rating that preceded remediation |
applied the teacher practice components and |
student growth components and determined an |
overall evaluation rating of "Unsatisfactory" in |
accordance with the standards and requirements of |
the school district's evaluation plan; |
(ii) that the remediation plan complied with |
the requirements of Section 24A-5 of this Code; |
(iii) that the teacher failed to complete the |
remediation plan with a performance evaluation |
rating equal to or better than a "Proficient" |
rating, based upon a final remediation evaluation |
meeting the applicable standards and requirements |
of the school district's evaluation plan; and |
(iv) that if the second evaluator selected |
pursuant to paragraph (3) of subsection (c) of this |
|
Section does not conduct the mid-point and final |
evaluation and makes an independent assessment |
that the teacher completed the remediation plan |
with a rating equal to or better than a |
"Proficient" rating, the school district must |
demonstrate that the final remediation evaluation |
is a more valid assessment of the teacher's |
performance than the assessment made by the second |
evaluator. |
(B) The teacher may only challenge the substantive |
and procedural aspects of (i) the "Unsatisfactory" |
performance evaluation rating that led to the |
remediation, (ii) the remediation plan, and (iii) the |
final remediation evaluation. To the extent the |
teacher challenges procedural aspects, including any |
in applicable collective bargaining agreement |
provisions, of a relevant performance evaluation |
rating or the remediation plan, the teacher must |
demonstrate how an alleged procedural defect |
materially affected the teacher's ability to |
demonstrate a level of performance necessary to avoid |
remediation or dismissal or successfully complete the |
remediation plan. Without any such material effect, a |
procedural defect shall not impact the assessment by |
the hearing officer, board, or reviewing court of the |
validity of a performance evaluation or a remediation |
|
plan. |
(C) The hearing officer shall only consider and |
give weight to performance evaluations relevant to the |
scope of the hearing as described in clauses (A) and |
(B) of this subdivision (2). |
(3) Each party shall be given only 2 days to present |
evidence and testimony relating to the scope of the |
hearing, unless a longer period is mutually agreed to by |
the parties or deemed necessary by the hearing officer to |
enable a party to present adequate evidence and testimony |
to address the scope of the hearing, including due to the |
other party's cross-examination of the party's witnesses. |
(e) The provisions of Sections 24-12 and 34-85 pertaining |
to the decision or recommendation of the hearing officer do not |
apply to dismissal proceedings under this Section. For any |
dismissal proceedings under this Section, the hearing officer |
shall not issue a decision, and shall issue only findings of |
fact and a recommendation, including the reasons therefor, to |
the board to either retain or dismiss the teacher and shall |
give a copy of the report to both the teacher and the |
superintendent of the school district. The hearing officer's |
findings of fact and recommendation must be issued within 30 |
days from the close of the record of the hearing. |
The State Board of Education shall adopt rules regarding |
the length of the hearing officer's findings of fact and |
recommendation. If a hearing officer fails without good cause, |
|
specifically provided in writing to both parties and the State |
Board of Education, to render a recommendation within 30 days |
after the hearing is concluded or the record is closed, |
whichever is later, the parties may mutually agree to select a |
hearing officer pursuant to the alternative procedure, as |
provided in Section 24-12 or 34-85, to rehear the charges heard |
by the hearing officer who failed to render a recommendation or |
to review the record and render a recommendation. If any |
hearing officer fails without good cause, specifically |
provided in writing to both parties and the State Board of |
Education, to render a recommendation within 30 days after the |
hearing is concluded or the record is closed, whichever is |
later, the hearing officer shall be removed from the master |
list of hearing officers maintained by the State Board of |
Education for not more than 24 months. The parties and the |
State Board of Education may also take such other actions as it |
deems appropriate, including recovering, reducing, or |
withholding any fees paid or to be paid to the hearing officer. |
If any hearing officer repeats such failure, he or she shall be |
permanently removed from the master list of hearing officers |
maintained by the State Board of Education. |
(f) The board, within 45 days after receipt of the hearing |
officer's findings of fact and recommendation, shall decide, |
through adoption of a written order, whether the teacher must |
be dismissed from its employ or retained, provided that only |
PERA-trained board members may participate in the vote with |
|
respect to the decision. |
If the board dismisses the teacher notwithstanding the |
hearing officer's recommendation of retention, the board shall |
make a conclusion, giving its reasons therefor, and such |
conclusion and reasons must be included in its written order. |
The failure of the board to strictly adhere to the timelines |
contained in this Section does not render it without |
jurisdiction to dismiss the teacher. The board shall not lose |
jurisdiction to discharge the teacher if the hearing officer |
fails to render a recommendation within the time specified in |
this Section. The decision of the board is final, unless |
reviewed as provided in subsection (g) of this Section. |
If the board retains the teacher, the board shall enter a |
written order stating the amount of back pay and lost benefits, |
less mitigation, to be paid to the teacher, within 45 days of |
its retention order. |
(g) A teacher dismissed under this Section may apply for |
and obtain judicial review of a decision of the board in |
accordance with the provisions of the Administrative Review |
Law, except as follows: |
(1) for a teacher dismissed by a school district having |
500,000 inhabitants or more, such judicial review must be |
taken directly to the appellate court of the judicial |
district in which the board maintains its primary |
administrative office, and any direct appeal to the |
appellate court must be filed within 35 days from the date |
|
that a copy of the decision sought to be reviewed was |
served upon the teacher; |
(2) for a teacher dismissed by a school district having |
less than 500,000 inhabitants after the hearing officer |
recommended dismissal, such judicial review must be taken |
directly to the appellate court of the judicial district in |
which the board maintains its primary administrative |
office, and any direct appeal to the appellate court must |
be filed within 35 days from the date that a copy of the |
decision sought to be reviewed was served upon the teacher; |
and |
(3) for all school districts, if the hearing officer |
recommended dismissal, the decision of the board may be |
reversed only if it is found to be arbitrary, capricious, |
an abuse of discretion, or not in accordance with law. |
In the event judicial review is instituted by a teacher, |
any costs of preparing and filing the record of proceedings |
must be paid by the teacher. If a decision of the board is |
adjudicated upon judicial review in favor of the teacher, then |
the court shall remand the matter to the board with direction |
for entry of an order setting the amount of back pay, lost |
benefits, and costs, less mitigation. The teacher may challenge |
the board's order setting the amount of back pay, lost |
benefits, and costs, less mitigation, through an expedited |
arbitration procedure with the costs of the arbitrator borne by |
the board. |
|
(105 ILCS 5/24A-2.5) |
Sec. 24A-2.5. Definitions. In this Article: |
"Evaluator" means: |
(1) an administrator qualified under Section 24A-3; or |
(2) other individuals qualified under Section 24A-3, |
provided that, if such other individuals are in the |
bargaining unit of a district's teachers, the district and |
the exclusive bargaining representative of that unit must |
agree to those individuals evaluating other bargaining |
unit members. |
Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in item (2) of |
this definition, a school district operating under Article 34 |
of this Code may require department chairs qualified under |
Section 24A-3 to evaluate teachers in their department or |
departments, provided that the school district shall bargain |
with the bargaining representative of its teachers over the |
impact and effects on department chairs of such a requirement. |
"Implementation date" means, unless otherwise specified |
and provided that the requirements set forth in subsection (d) |
of Section 24A-20 have been met: |
(1) For school districts having 500,000 or more |
inhabitants, in at least 300 schools by September 1, 2012 |
and in the remaining schools by September 1, 2013. |
(2) For school districts having less than 500,000 |
inhabitants and receiving a Race to the Top Grant or School |
|
Improvement Grant after the effective date of this |
amendatory Act of the 96th General Assembly, the date |
specified in those grants for implementing an evaluation |
system for teachers and principals incorporating student |
growth as a significant factor. |
(3) For the lowest performing 20% percent of remaining |
school districts having less than 500,000 inhabitants |
(with the measure of and school year or years used for |
school district performance to be determined by the State |
Superintendent of Education at a time determined by the |
State Superintendent), September 1, 2015. |
(4) For all other school districts having less than |
500,000 inhabitants, September 1, 2016. |
Notwithstanding items (3) and (4) of this definition, a |
school district and the exclusive bargaining representative of |
its teachers may jointly agree in writing to an earlier |
implementation date, provided that such date must not be |
earlier than September 1, 2013. The written agreement of the |
district and the exclusive bargaining representative must be |
transmitted to the State Board of Education. |
"Race to the Top Grant" means a grant made by the Secretary |
of the U.S. Department of Education for the program first |
funded pursuant to paragraph (2) of Section 14006(a) of the |
American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009. |
"School Improvement Grant" means a grant made by the |
Secretary of the U.S. Department of Education pursuant to |
|
Section 1003(g) of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 96-861, eff. 1-15-10.) |
(105 ILCS 5/24A-5) (from Ch. 122, par. 24A-5) |
Sec. 24A-5. Content of evaluation plans. This Section does |
not apply to teachers assigned to schools identified in an |
agreement entered into between the board of a school district |
operating under Article 34 of this Code and the exclusive |
representative of the district's teachers in accordance with |
Section 34-85c of this Code.
|
Each school district to
which this Article applies shall |
establish a teacher evaluation plan
which ensures that each |
teacher in contractual continued service
is evaluated at least |
once in the course of every 2 school years. |
By no later than September 1, 2012, each school district |
shall establish a teacher evaluation plan that ensures that: |
(1) each teacher not in contractual continued service |
is evaluated at least once every school year; and |
(2) each teacher in contractual continued service is |
evaluated at least once in the course of every 2 school |
years. However, any teacher in contractual continued |
service whose performance is rated as either "needs |
improvement" or "unsatisfactory" must be evaluated at |
least once in the school year following the receipt of such |
rating. |
Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in this Section or |
|
any other Section of the School Code, a principal shall not be |
prohibited from evaluating any teachers within a school during |
his or her first year as principal of such school. |
The evaluation plan shall comply with the requirements of |
this Section and
of any rules adopted by the State Board of |
Education pursuant to this Section. |
The plan shall include a description of each teacher's |
duties
and responsibilities and of the standards to which that |
teacher
is expected to conform, and shall include at least the |
following components: |
(a) personal observation of the teacher in the |
classroom by the evaluator, unless
the teacher has no |
classroom duties. |
(b) consideration of the teacher's attendance, |
planning,
instructional methods, classroom management, |
where relevant, and
competency in the subject matter |
taught. |
(c) by no later than the applicable implementation |
date, consideration of student growth as a significant |
factor in the rating of the teacher's performance. |
(d) prior to September 1, 2012, rating of the |
performance of teachers in contractual continued service |
as either: |
(i) "excellent",
"satisfactory" or |
"unsatisfactory"; or |
(ii) "excellent", "proficient", "needs |
|
improvement" or "unsatisfactory". |
(e) on and after September 1, 2012, rating of the |
performance of all teachers in contractual continued |
service as "excellent", "proficient", "needs improvement" |
or "unsatisfactory". |
(f) specification as to the teacher's strengths and |
weaknesses, with
supporting reasons for the comments made. |
(g) inclusion of a copy of the evaluation in the |
teacher's personnel
file and provision of a copy to the |
teacher. |
(h) within 30 school days after the completion of an |
evaluation rating a teacher in contractual continued |
service as "needs improvement", development by the |
evaluator, in consultation with the teacher, and taking |
into account the teacher's on-going professional |
responsibilities including his or her regular teaching |
assignments, of a professional development plan directed |
to the areas that need improvement and any supports that |
the district will provide to address the areas identified |
as needing improvement. |
(i) within 30 school days after completion of an |
evaluation rating a teacher
in contractual continued |
service as "unsatisfactory", development and commencement |
by the district of a remediation plan designed to correct |
deficiencies
cited, provided the deficiencies are deemed |
remediable.
In all school districts the
remediation plan |
|
for unsatisfactory, tenured teachers shall
provide for 90 |
school days of remediation within the
classroom, unless an |
applicable collective bargaining agreement provides for a |
shorter duration. In all school districts evaluations |
issued pursuant
to
this Section shall be
issued within 10 |
days after the conclusion of the respective remediation |
plan.
However, the school board or other governing |
authority of the district
shall not lose
jurisdiction to |
discharge a teacher in the event the evaluation is not |
issued
within 10 days after the conclusion of the |
respective remediation plan. |
(j) participation in the remediation plan by the |
teacher in contractual continued service rated
|
"unsatisfactory", an evaluator and a consulting teacher |
selected by the evaluator of the teacher who was rated |
"unsatisfactory", which
consulting teacher is an |
educational employee as defined in the Educational
Labor |
Relations Act, has at least 5 years' teaching experience, |
and a
reasonable familiarity with the assignment of the |
teacher being evaluated,
and who received an "excellent" |
rating on his or her most
recent evaluation. Where no |
teachers who meet these criteria are available
within the |
district, the district shall request and the applicable |
regional office of education shall supply, to participate |
in the remediation process, an
individual who meets these |
criteria. |
|
In a district having a population of less than 500,000 |
with an
exclusive bargaining agent, the bargaining agent
|
may, if it so chooses, supply a roster of qualified |
teachers from whom the
consulting teacher is to be |
selected. That roster shall, however, contain
the names of |
at least 5 teachers, each of whom meets the criteria for
|
consulting teacher with regard to the teacher being |
evaluated, or the names
of all teachers so qualified if |
that number is less than 5. In the event of
a dispute as to |
qualification, the State Board shall determine |
qualification. |
(k) a mid-point and final evaluation by an evaluator |
during and at the end of the remediation period, |
immediately following receipt of a remediation plan |
provided for under subsections (i) and (j) of this Section. |
Each evaluation shall assess the teacher's performance |
during the time period since the prior evaluation; provided |
that the last evaluation shall also include an overall |
evaluation of the teacher's performance during the |
remediation period. A written copy of the evaluations and |
ratings, in which any deficiencies in performance and |
recommendations for correction are identified, shall be |
provided to and discussed with the teacher within 10 school |
days after the date of the evaluation, unless an applicable |
collective bargaining agreement provides to the contrary. |
These subsequent evaluations
shall be conducted by an |
|
evaluator. The consulting
teacher shall provide advice to |
the teacher rated "unsatisfactory" on how
to improve |
teaching skills and to successfully complete the |
remediation
plan. The consulting teacher shall participate |
in developing the
remediation plan, but the final decision |
as to the evaluation shall be done
solely by the evaluator,
|
unless an applicable collective bargaining agreement |
provides to the contrary.
Evaluations at the
conclusion of |
the remediation process shall be separate and distinct from |
the
required annual evaluations of teachers and shall not |
be subject to the
guidelines and procedures relating to |
those annual evaluations. The evaluator
may but is not |
required to use the forms provided for the annual |
evaluation of
teachers in the district's evaluation plan. |
(l)
reinstatement to the evaluation schedule set forth |
in the district's evaluation plan for any teacher in |
contractual continued service
who achieves a rating equal |
to or better than "satisfactory" or "proficient" in the |
school year following a rating of "needs improvement" or |
"unsatisfactory". |
(m) dismissal in accordance with subsection (d) of |
Section 24-12 or Section 24-16.5 or 34-85 of this the |
School
Code of any teacher who fails to complete any |
applicable remediation plan
with a rating equal to or |
better than a "satisfactory" or "proficient" rating. |
Districts and teachers subject to
dismissal hearings are |
|
precluded from compelling the testimony of
consulting |
teachers at such hearings under subsection (d) of Section |
24-12 or Section 24-16.5 or 34-85 of this Code , either
as |
to the rating process or for opinions of performances by |
teachers under
remediation. |
(n) After the implementation date of an evaluation |
system for teachers in a district as specified in Section |
24A-2.5 of this Code, if a teacher in contractual continued |
service successfully completes a remediation plan |
following a rating of "unsatisfactory" and receives a |
subsequent rating of "unsatisfactory" in any of the |
teacher's annual or biannual overall performance |
evaluation ratings received during the 36-month period |
following the teacher's completion of the remediation |
plan, then the school district may forego remediation and |
seek dismissal in accordance with subsection (d) of Section |
24-12 or Section 34-85 of this Code. |
Nothing in this Section or Section 24A-4 shall be construed |
as preventing immediate
dismissal of a teacher for deficiencies |
which are
deemed irremediable or for actions which are |
injurious to or endanger the
health or person of students in |
the classroom or school, or preventing the dismissal or |
non-renewal of teachers not in contractual continued service |
for any reason not prohibited by applicable employment, labor, |
and civil rights laws. Failure to
strictly comply with the time |
requirements contained in Section 24A-5 shall
not invalidate |
|
the results of the remediation plan. |
(Source: P.A. 95-510, eff. 8-28-07; 96-861, eff. 1-15-10; |
96-1423, eff. 8-3-10.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/34-84) (from Ch. 122, par. 34-84)
|
Sec. 34-84. Appointments and promotions of teachers. |
Appointments and
promotions of teachers shall be made for merit
|
only, and after satisfactory service for a probationary period |
of 3 years
with respect to probationary employees employed as |
full-time teachers in the
public school system of the district |
before January 1, 1998 and 4 years with
respect to probationary |
employees who are first employed as full-time teachers
in the |
public school system of the district on or after January 1, |
1998 ,
( during which period the board may dismiss or discharge |
any
such probationary employee upon the recommendation, |
accompanied by the
written reasons therefor, of the general |
superintendent of schools and after which period )
appointments |
of teachers shall become permanent, subject to removal for |
cause
in the manner provided by Section 34-85.
|
For a probationary-appointed teacher in full-time service |
who is appointed on or after July 1, 2013 and who receives |
ratings of "excellent" during his or her first 3 school terms |
of full-time service, the probationary period shall be 3 school |
terms of full-time service.
For a probationary-appointed |
teacher in full-time service who is appointed on or after July |
1, 2013 and who had previously entered into contractual |
|
continued service in another school district in this State or a |
program of a special education joint agreement in this State, |
as defined in Section 24-11 of this Code, the probationary |
period shall be 2 school terms of full-time service, provided |
that (i) the teacher voluntarily resigned or was honorably |
dismissed from the prior district or program within the 3-month |
period preceding his or her appointment date, (ii) the |
teacher's last 2 ratings in the prior district or program were |
at least "proficient" and were issued after the prior |
district's or program's PERA implementation date, as defined in |
Section 24-11 of this Code, and (iii) the teacher receives |
ratings of "excellent" during his or her first 2 school terms |
of full-time service. |
For a probationary-appointed teacher in full-time service |
who is appointed on or after July 1, 2013 and who has not |
entered into contractual continued service after 2 or 3 school |
terms of full-time service as provided in this Section, the |
probationary period shall be 4 school terms of full-time |
service, provided that the teacher receives a rating of at |
least "proficient" in the last school term and a rating of at |
least "proficient" in either the second or third school term. |
As used in this Section, "school term" means the school |
term established by the board pursuant to Section 10-19 of this |
Code, and "full-time service" means the teacher has actually |
worked at least 150 days during the school term. As used in |
this Article, "teachers" means and includes all members of
the |
|
teaching force excluding the general superintendent and |
principals. |
There shall be no reduction in teachers because of a |
decrease in
student membership or a change in subject |
requirements within the
attendance center organization after |
the 20th day following the first day
of the school year, except |
that: (1) this provision shall not apply to
desegregation |
positions, special education positions, or any other positions
|
funded by State or federal categorical funds, and (2) at |
attendance centers
maintaining any of grades 9 through 12, |
there may be a second reduction in
teachers on the first day of |
the second semester of the regular school
term because of a |
decrease in student membership or a change in subject
|
requirements within the attendance center organization.
|
The school principal shall make the decision
in selecting |
teachers to fill new and vacant positions consistent with
|
Section 34-8.1.
|
(Source: P.A. 89-15, eff. 5-30-95; 90-548, eff. 1-1-98.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/34-85) (from Ch. 122, par. 34-85)
|
Sec. 34-85. Removal for cause; Notice and hearing; |
Suspension. |
(a) No
teacher employed by the board of education shall |
(after serving the
probationary period specified in Section |
34-84) be removed
except for cause. Teachers (who have |
completed the probationary period specified in Section 34-84 of |
|
this Code) shall be removed for cause in accordance with the |
procedures set forth in this Section or, at the board's option, |
the procedures set forth in Section 24-16.5 of this Code or |
such other procedures established in an agreement entered into |
between the board and the exclusive representative of the |
district's teachers under Section 34-85c of this Code for |
teachers (who have completed the probationary period specified |
in Section 34-84 of this Code) assigned to schools identified |
in that agreement. No principal employed by the board of |
education shall be
removed during the term of his or her |
performance contract except for
cause, which may include but is |
not limited to the principal's repeated
failure to implement |
the school improvement plan or to comply with the
provisions of |
the Uniform Performance Contract, including additional
|
criteria established by the Council for inclusion in the |
performance
contract pursuant to Section 34-2.3.
|
Before service of notice of charges on account of causes |
that may be deemed to be remediable, the teacher or principal |
must be given reasonable warning in writing, stating |
specifically the causes that, if not removed, may result in |
charges; however, no such written warning is required if the |
causes have been the subject of a remediation plan pursuant to |
Article 24A of this Code or if the board and the exclusive |
representative of the district's teachers have entered into an |
agreement pursuant to Section 34-85c of this Code, pursuant to |
an alternative system of remediation. No written warning shall |
|
be required for conduct on the part of a teacher or principal |
that is cruel, immoral, negligent, or criminal or that in any |
way causes psychological or physical harm or injury to a |
student, as that conduct is deemed to be irremediable. No |
written warning shall be required for a material breach of the |
uniform principal performance contract, as that conduct is |
deemed to be irremediable; provided that not less than 30 days |
before the vote of the local school council to seek the |
dismissal of a principal for a material breach of a uniform |
principal performance contract, the local school council shall |
specify the nature of the alleged breach in writing and provide |
a copy of it to the principal. |
(1) To initiate dismissal proceedings against a |
teacher or principal, the The general superintendent must |
first approve written charges and specifications against |
the
teacher or
principal. A local school council may direct |
the
general superintendent to approve written charges |
against its principal on behalf of the Council
upon the |
vote of 7 members of the Council. The general |
superintendent must
approve those charges within 45 |
calendar days
or provide a written
reason for not approving |
those charges. A
written notice of those charges , including |
specifications,
shall be served upon the teacher or |
principal within 10 business days of the
approval of the |
charges. Any written notice sent on or after July 1, 2012 |
shall also inform the teacher or principal of the right to |
|
request a hearing before a mutually selected hearing |
officer, with the cost of the hearing officer split equally |
between the teacher or principal and the board, or a |
hearing before a qualified hearing officer chosen by the |
general superintendent, with the cost of the hearing |
officer paid by the board. If the teacher or principal |
cannot be found upon diligent
inquiry, such charges may be |
served upon him by mailing a copy thereof in a
sealed |
envelope by prepaid certified mail, return receipt |
requested, to the
teacher's or principal's last known |
address. A return receipt showing
delivery to such address |
within 20 calendar days after the date of the
approval of |
the charges shall constitute proof of service.
|
(2) No hearing upon the charges is required unless the |
teacher or principal
within 17 calendar 10
days after |
receiving notice requests in writing of the general
|
superintendent that a hearing
be scheduled , in which case |
the general superintendent shall
schedule a hearing on |
those
charges before a disinterested hearing officer on a |
date no less than 15
nor more than 30 days after the |
approval of the charges . Pending the hearing of the |
charges, the general superintendent or his or her designee |
may suspend the teacher or principal charged without pay in |
accordance with rules prescribed by the board, provided |
that if the teacher or principal charged is not dismissed |
based on the charges, he or she must be made whole for lost |
|
earnings, less setoffs for mitigation. |
(3) The board shall maintain a list of at least 9 |
qualified hearing officers who will conduct hearings on |
charges and specifications. The list must be developed in |
good faith consultation with the exclusive representative |
of the board's teachers and professional associations that |
represent the board's principals. The list may be revised |
on July 1st of each year or earlier as needed. To be a |
qualified hearing officer, the person must (i) The general |
superintendent shall forward a copy of the notice to the |
State Board of
Education within 5 days from the date of the |
approval of the charges.
Within 10 days after receiving the |
notice of hearing, the State Board
of
Education shall |
provide the teacher or principal and the general
|
superintendent with a list
of 5 prospective, impartial |
hearing officers. Each person on the list must
be |
accredited by a national arbitration organization and have |
had a minimum
of 5 years of experience as an arbitrator in |
cases involving labor and
employment
relations matters |
between educational employers and educational employees or
|
their exclusive bargaining representatives and (ii) |
beginning September 1, 2012, have participated in training |
provided or approved by the State Board of Education for |
teacher dismissal hearing officers so that he or she is |
familiar with issues generally involved in evaluative and |
non-evaluative dismissals .
|
|
(3) Within 5 business days after receiving the notice |
of request for a hearing, the The general superintendent |
and the teacher or principal or
their legal representatives
|
within 3 days from receipt of the list shall alternately |
strike one name
from the list until only one name remains. |
Unless waived by the teacher,
the teacher or principal |
shall
have the right to proceed first with the striking. If |
the teacher or principal fails to participate in the |
striking process, the general superintendent shall either |
select the hearing officer from the list developed pursuant |
to this paragraph (3) or select another qualified hearing |
officer from the master list maintained by the State Board |
of Education pursuant to subsection (c) of Section 24-12 of |
this Code. Within 3 days of receipt
of the first list |
provided by the State Board of Education, the general
|
superintendent and the teacher or principal or their legal |
representatives
shall
each have the right to reject all |
prospective hearing officers named on the
first list and to |
require the State Board of Education to provide a second |
list
of 5 prospective, impartial hearing officers, none of |
whom were named on the
first list. Within 5 days after |
receiving this request for a second list, the
State Board |
of Education shall provide the second list of 5 |
prospective,
impartial hearing officers. The procedure for |
selecting a hearing officer from
the second list shall be |
the same as the procedure for the first list. Each
party
|
|
shall promptly
serve written notice on the other of any |
name stricken from the list. If
the teacher or principal |
fails to do so, the general superintendent may select the |
hearing
officer from any name remaining on the list. The |
teacher or principal
may waive the hearing at any time |
prior to the appointment of the hearing
officer. Notice of |
the selection of the hearing officer shall be given
to the |
State Board of Education. The hearing officer shall be |
notified
of his selection by the State Board of Education. |
A signed acceptance
shall be filed with the State Board of |
Education within 5 days of receipt
of notice of the |
selection. The State Board of Education shall notify the
|
teacher or principal and the board of its appointment of |
the hearing officer.
In the alternative to selecting a |
hearing officer from the first or second
list received from |
the State Board of Education, the general superintendent |
and
the teacher or principal or their legal representatives |
may mutually agree to
select an impartial hearing officer |
who is not on a list received from the
State Board of |
Education, either by direct appointment by the parties or |
by
using procedures for the appointment of an arbitrator |
established by the
Federal Mediation and Conciliation |
Service or the American Arbitration
Association. The |
parties shall notify the State Board of Education of their
|
intent to select a hearing officer using an alternative |
procedure within 3 days
of receipt of a list of prospective |
|
hearing officers provided by the State
Board of Education. |
Any person selected by the parties under this alternative
|
procedure for the selection of a hearing officer shall have |
the same
qualifications and authority as a hearing officer |
selected from a list provided
by the State Board of |
Education. The teacher or principal may waive the
hearing |
at any time prior to the appointment of the hearing |
officer. The
State Board of
Education shall
promulgate
|
uniform
standards and rules
of procedure for such hearings, |
including reasonable rules of discovery.
|
(4) If the notice of dismissal was sent to the teacher |
or principal before July 1, 2012, the fees and costs The |
per diem allowance for the hearing officer shall be paid by |
the State
Board of Education. If the notice of dismissal |
was sent to the teacher or principal on or after July 1, |
2012, the hearing officer's fees and costs must be paid as |
follows in this paragraph (4). The fees and permissible |
costs for the hearing officer shall be determined by the |
State Board of Education. If the hearing officer is |
mutually selected by the parties through alternate |
striking in accordance with paragraph (3) of this |
subsection (a), then the board and the teacher or their |
legal representative shall each pay 50% of the fees and |
costs and any supplemental allowance to which they agree. |
If the hearing officer is selected by The hearing officer |
shall hold a hearing and render
findings of fact and a |
|
recommendation to the general superintendent without the |
participation of the teacher or principal, then the board |
shall pay 100% of the hearing officer fees and costs. The |
hearing officer shall submit for payment a billing |
statement to the parties that itemizes the charges and |
expenses and divides them in accordance with this Section . |
(5) The teacher or the principal charged is required to |
answer the charges and specifications and aver affirmative |
matters in his or her defense, and the time for doing so |
must be set by the hearing officer. The State Board of |
Education shall adopt rules so that each party has a fair |
opportunity to present its case and to ensure that the |
dismissal proceeding is concluded in an expeditious |
manner. The rules shall address, without limitation, the |
teacher or principal's answer and affirmative defenses to |
the charges and specifications; a requirement that each |
party make mandatory disclosures without request to the |
other party and then update the disclosure no later than 10 |
calendar days prior to the commencement of the hearing, |
including a list of the names and addresses of persons who |
may be called as witnesses at the hearing, a summary of the |
facts or opinions each witness will testify to, and all |
other documents and materials, including information |
maintained electronically, relevant to its own as well as |
the other party's case (the hearing officer may exclude |
witnesses and exhibits not identified and shared, except |
|
those offered in rebuttal for which the party could not |
reasonably have anticipated prior to the hearing); |
pre-hearing discovery and preparation, including provision |
for written interrogatories and requests for production of |
documents, provided that discovery depositions are |
prohibited; the conduct of the hearing; the right of each |
party to be represented by counsel, the offer of evidence |
and witnesses and the cross-examination of witnesses; the |
authority of the hearing officer to issue subpoenas and |
subpoenas duces tecum, provided that the hearing officer |
may limit the number of witnesses to be subpoenaed in |
behalf of each party to no more than 7; the length of |
post-hearing briefs; and the form, length, and content of |
hearing officers' reports and recommendations to the |
general superintendent. |
The hearing officer shall commence the hearing within |
75 calendar days and conclude the hearing within 120 |
calendar days after being selected by the parties as the |
hearing officer, provided that these timelines may be |
modified upon the showing of good cause or mutual agreement |
of the parties. Good cause for the purposes of this |
paragraph (5) shall mean the illness or otherwise |
unavoidable emergency of the teacher, district |
representative, their legal representatives, the hearing |
officer, or an essential witness as indicated in each |
party's pre-hearing submission. In a dismissal hearing, |
|
the hearing officer shall consider and give weight to all |
of the teacher's evaluations written pursuant to Article |
24A that are relevant to the issues in the hearing. The |
teacher or principal has the
privilege of being present at |
the hearing with counsel and of
cross-examining witnesses |
and may offer evidence and witnesses and present
defenses |
to the charges. Each party shall have no more than 3 days |
to present its case, unless extended by the hearing officer |
to enable a party to present adequate evidence and |
testimony, including due to the other party's |
cross-examination of the party's witnesses, for good cause |
or by mutual agreement of the parties. The State Board of |
Education shall define in rules the meaning of "day" for |
such purposes. The hearing officer may issue subpoenas |
requiring
the attendance of witnesses and, at the request |
of the teacher or principal
against whom a charge is made |
or the general superintendent,
shall issue such subpoenas, |
but
the hearing officer may limit the number of witnesses |
to be subpoenaed in
behalf of the teacher or principal or |
the general superintendent
to not more than 10 each.
All |
testimony at the hearing shall be taken under oath |
administered by the
hearing officer. The hearing officer |
shall cause a record of the
proceedings to be kept and |
shall employ a competent reporter to take
stenographic or |
stenotype notes of all the testimony. The costs of the
|
reporter's attendance and services at the hearing shall be |
|
paid by the party or parties who are paying the fees and |
costs of the hearing officer
State Board of Education . |
Either party desiring a transcript of the
hearing shall pay |
for the cost thereof. At the close of the hearing, the |
hearing officer shall direct the parties to submit |
post-hearing briefs no later than 21 calendar days after |
receipt of the transcript. Either or both parties may waive |
submission of briefs.
|
Pending the hearing of the charges, the person charged |
may be suspended
in accordance with rules prescribed by the |
board but such person, if
acquitted, shall not suffer any |
loss of salary by reason of the suspension.
|
Before service of notice of charges on account of |
causes that may be
deemed to be remediable, the teacher or |
principal shall be given reasonable
warning in writing, |
stating specifically the causes which, if not removed,
may |
result in charges; however, no such written warning shall |
be required
if the causes have been the subject of a |
remediation plan pursuant to
Article 24A or where the board |
of education and the exclusive representative of the |
district's teachers have entered into an agreement |
pursuant to Section 34-85c of this Code, pursuant to an |
alternative system of remediation. No written warning |
shall be required for conduct on the part of
a teacher or |
principal which is cruel, immoral, negligent, or criminal |
or which
in any way causes psychological or physical harm |
|
or injury to a student as that
conduct is deemed to be |
irremediable. No written warning shall be required for
a |
material breach of the uniform principal performance |
contract as that conduct
is deemed to be irremediable; |
provided however, that not less than 30 days
before the |
vote of the local school council to seek the dismissal of a
|
principal for a material breach of a uniform principal |
performance contract,
the local school council shall |
specify the nature of the alleged breach in
writing and |
provide a copy of it to the principal.
|
The hearing officer shall consider and give weight to |
all of the
teacher's evaluations written pursuant to |
Article 24A.
|
(6) The hearing officer shall within 30 calendar 45 |
days from the conclusion of the hearing
report to the |
general superintendent findings of fact and a |
recommendation as to whether or not the teacher or |
principal shall
be dismissed and shall give a copy of the |
report to both the
teacher or
principal and the general |
superintendent. The State Board of Education shall provide |
by rule the form of the hearing officer's report and |
recommendation. |
(7) The board, within 45
days of receipt of the hearing |
officer's findings of fact and recommendation,
shall make a |
decision as to whether the teacher or principal shall be |
dismissed
from its employ. The failure of the board to |
|
strictly adhere to the timeliness
contained herein shall |
not render it without jurisdiction to dismiss the
teacher
|
or principal. In the event that the board declines to |
dismiss the teacher or principal after review of a hearing |
officer's recommendation, the board shall set the amount of |
back pay and benefits to award the teacher or principal, |
which shall include offsets for interim earnings and |
failure to mitigate losses. The board shall establish |
procedures for the teacher's or principal's submission of |
evidence to it regarding lost earnings, lost benefits, |
mitigation, and offsets. If the hearing
officer fails to |
render a decision within 45 days, the State Board of
|
Education shall communicate with the hearing officer to |
determine the date that
the parties can reasonably expect |
to receive the decision. The State Board of
Education shall |
provide copies of all such communications to the parties. |
In
the event the hearing officer fails without good cause
|
to make a decision within the 45 day period, the name of |
such hearing
officer
shall be struck for a period not less |
than 24 months from the master
list
of hearing officers |
maintained by the State Board of Education. The board
shall |
not lose jurisdiction to discharge the teacher or principal |
if the
hearing officer fails to render a decision within |
the time specified in this
Section. If a hearing officer |
fails to render a decision within 3 months after
the |
hearing is declared closed, the State Board of Education |
|
shall provide the
parties with a new list of prospective, |
impartial hearing officers, with the
same qualifications |
provided herein, one of whom shall be selected, as provided
|
in this Section, to rehear the charges heard by the hearing |
officer who failed
to render a decision. The parties may |
also select a hearing officer pursuant
to the alternative |
procedure, as provided in this Section, to rehear the
|
charges heard by the hearing officer who failed to render a |
decision. A
violation of the professional standards set |
forth in "The Code of
Professional Responsibility for |
Arbitrators of Labor-Management Disputes",
of the National |
Academy of Arbitrators, the American Arbitration
|
Association, and the Federal Mediation and Conciliation |
Service, or the
failure of a hearing officer to render a |
decision within 3 months after the
hearing is declared |
closed shall be grounds for removal of the hearing
officer |
from the master list of
hearing officers maintained by the |
State Board of Education. The decision
of the board is |
final unless reviewed in accordance with paragraph (8) of |
this subsection (a) as provided in
Section
34-85b of this |
Act .
|
(8) The teacher may seek judicial review of the board's |
decision in accordance with the Administrative Review Law, |
which is specifically incorporated in this Section, except |
that the review must be initiated in the Illinois Appellate |
Court for the First District. In the event judicial review |
|
is instituted, any costs of preparing and
filing the record |
of proceedings shall be paid by the party instituting
the |
review. In the event the appellate court reverses a board |
decision to dismiss a teacher or principal and directs the |
board to pay the teacher or the principal back pay and |
benefits, the appellate court shall remand the matter to |
the board to issue an administrative decision as to the |
amount of back pay and benefits, which shall include a |
calculation of the lost earnings, lost benefits, |
mitigation, and offsets based on evidence submitted to the |
board in accordance with procedures established by the |
board. If a decision of the board is adjudicated upon |
review
or appeal in favor of the teacher or principal, then |
the trial court shall
order reinstatement and shall |
determine the amount for which the board is
liable |
including but not limited to loss of income and costs |
incurred therein.
|
(b) Nothing in this Section affects the validity of removal |
for cause hearings
commenced prior to the effective date of |
this amendatory Act of the 97th General Assembly 1978 .
|
The changes made by this amendatory Act of the 97th General |
Assembly shall apply to dismissals instituted on or after |
September 1, 2011 or the effective date of this amendatory Act |
of the 97th General Assembly, whichever is later. Any dismissal |
instituted prior to the effective date of these changes must be |
carried out in accordance with the requirements of this Section |
|
prior to amendment by this amendatory Act of 97th General |
Assembly. |
(Source: P.A. 95-510, eff. 8-28-07.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/34-85c) |
Sec. 34-85c. Alternative procedures for teacher |
evaluation, remediation, and removal for cause after |
remediation. |
(a) Notwithstanding any law to the contrary, the board and |
the exclusive representative of the district's teachers are |
hereby authorized to enter into an agreement to establish |
alternative procedures for teacher evaluation, remediation, |
and removal for cause after remediation, including an |
alternative system for peer evaluation and recommendations; |
provided, however, that no later than September 1, 2012: (i) |
any alternative procedures must include provisions whereby |
student performance data is a significant factor in teacher |
evaluation and (ii) teachers are rated as "excellent", |
"proficient", "needs improvement" or "unsatisfactory". |
Pursuant exclusively to that agreement, teachers assigned to |
schools identified in that agreement shall be subject to an |
alternative performance evaluation plan and remediation |
procedures in lieu of the plan and procedures set forth in |
Article 24A of this Code and alternative removal for cause |
standards and procedures in lieu of the removal standards and |
procedures set forth in Section Sections 34-85 and 34-85b of |
|
this Code. To the extent that the agreement provides a teacher |
with an opportunity for a hearing on removal for cause before |
an independent hearing officer in accordance with Section |
Sections 34-85 and 34-85b or otherwise, the hearing officer |
shall be governed by the alternative performance evaluation |
plan, remediation procedures, and removal standards and |
procedures set forth in the agreement in making findings of |
fact and a recommendation. |
(b) The board and the exclusive representative of the |
district's teachers shall submit a certified copy of an |
agreement as provided under subsection (a) of this Section to |
the State Board of Education. |
(Source: P.A. 95-510, eff. 8-28-07; 96-861, eff. 1-15-10.) |
Section 10. The Illinois Educational Labor Relations Act is |
amended by changing Sections 4.5, 12, and 13 as follows:
|
(115 ILCS 5/4.5)
|
Sec. 4.5. Subjects of collective bargaining.
|
(a) Notwithstanding the existence of any other provision in |
this Act or
other law, collective bargaining between an |
educational employer whose
territorial boundaries are |
coterminous with those of a city having a population
in
excess |
of 500,000 and an exclusive representative of its employees may
|
include any of the following
subjects:
|
(1) (Blank).
|
|
(2) Decisions to contract with a third party for one or |
more services
otherwise performed by employees in a |
bargaining unit and the
procedures for
obtaining such |
contract or the identity of the third party.
|
(3) Decisions to layoff or reduce in force employees.
|
(4) Decisions to determine class size, class staffing |
and assignment,
class
schedules, academic calendar, length |
of the work and school day, length of the work and school |
year, hours and places of instruction, or pupil
assessment |
policies.
|
(5) Decisions concerning use and staffing of |
experimental or pilot
programs and
decisions concerning |
use of technology to deliver educational programs and
|
services and staffing to provide the technology.
|
(b) The subject or matters described in subsection (a) are |
permissive
subjects of bargaining between an educational |
employer and an exclusive
representative of its employees and, |
for the purpose of this Act, are within
the sole
discretion of |
the educational employer to decide
to bargain, provided that |
the educational employer is required to bargain
over the impact |
of a decision concerning such subject or matter on the
|
bargaining unit upon request by the exclusive representative. |
During
this bargaining, the educational employer shall not be |
precluded from
implementing its decision. If, after a |
reasonable period of bargaining, a
dispute or impasse exists |
between the educational employer and the
exclusive |
|
representative, the dispute or impasse shall be resolved |
exclusively
as set
forth in subsection (b) of Section 12 of |
this Act in lieu of a strike under
Section 13 of this Act.
|
(c) A provision in a collective bargaining agreement that |
was rendered
null
and void
because it involved a
prohibited |
subject of collective bargaining
under this subsection (c) as |
this subsection (c) existed before the effective
date of
this |
amendatory Act of the 93rd General Assembly
remains null and |
void and
shall not otherwise be reinstated in any successor |
agreement unless the
educational employer and exclusive |
representative otherwise agree to
include an agreement reached |
on a subject or matter described in
subsection (a) of this |
Section as subsection (a) existed before this amendatory
Act of
|
the 93rd General Assembly.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-3, eff. 4-16-03.)
|
(115 ILCS 5/12) (from Ch. 48, par. 1712)
|
Sec. 12. Impasse procedures.
|
(a) This subsection (a) applies only to collective |
bargaining between an educational employer that is not a public |
school district organized under Article 34 of the School Code |
and an exclusive representative of its employees. |
If the parties engaged in collective
bargaining have not |
reached an agreement by 90 days before the scheduled
start of |
the forthcoming school year, the parties shall notify the |
Illinois
Educational Labor Relations Board concerning the |
|
status of negotiations. This notice shall include a statement |
on whether mediation has been used.
|
Upon demand of either party, collective bargaining between |
the employer
and an exclusive bargaining representative must |
begin within 60 days of
the date of certification of the |
representative by the Board, or in the case
of an existing |
exclusive bargaining representative, within 60 days of the
|
receipt by a party of a demand to bargain issued by the other |
party. Once
commenced, collective bargaining must continue for |
at least a 60 day
period, unless a contract is entered into.
|
Except as otherwise provided in subsection (b) of this |
Section, if after
a reasonable period of negotiation and within |
90 45 days of the
scheduled start of the forth-coming school |
year, the parties engaged in
collective bargaining have reached |
an impasse, either party may petition
the Board to initiate |
mediation. Alternatively, the Board on its own
motion may |
initiate mediation during this period. However, mediation |
shall
be initiated by the Board at any time when jointly |
requested by the parties
and the services of the mediators |
shall continuously be made available to
the employer and to the |
exclusive bargaining representative for purposes of
|
arbitration of grievances and mediation or arbitration of |
contract
disputes. If requested by the parties, the mediator |
may perform
fact-finding and in so doing conduct hearings and |
make written findings and
recommendations for resolution of the |
dispute. Such mediation shall be
provided by the Board and |
|
shall be held before qualified impartial
individuals. Nothing |
prohibits the use of other individuals or
organizations such as |
the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service or the
American |
Arbitration Association selected by both the exclusive |
bargaining
representative and the employer.
|
If the parties engaged in collective bargaining fail to |
reach an agreement
within 45 15 days of the scheduled start of |
the forthcoming school year and
have not requested mediation, |
the Illinois Educational Labor Relations Board
shall invoke |
mediation.
|
Whenever mediation is initiated or invoked under this |
subsection (a), the
parties may stipulate to defer selection of |
a mediator in accordance with
rules adopted by the Board.
|
(a-5) This subsection (a-5) applies only to collective |
bargaining between a public school district or a combination of |
public school districts, including, but not limited to, joint |
cooperatives, that is not organized under Article 34 of the |
School Code and an exclusive representative of its employees. |
(1) Any time after 15 days of mediation, either party |
may declare an impasse. The mediator may declare an impasse |
at any time during the mediation process. Notification of |
an impasse must be filed in writing with the Board, and |
copies of the notification must be submitted to the parties |
on the same day the notification is filed with the Board. |
(2) Within 7 days after the declaration of impasse, |
each party shall submit to the mediator and the other party |
|
in writing the final offer of the party, including a cost |
summary of the offer. Seven days after receipt of the |
parties' final offers, the mediator shall make public the |
final offers and each party's cost summary dealing with |
those issues on which the parties have failed to reach |
agreement. The mediator shall make the final offers public |
by filing them with the Board, which shall immediately post |
the offers on its Internet website. On the same day of |
publication by the mediator, at a minimum, the school |
district shall distribute notice of the availability of the |
offers on the Board's Internet website to all news media |
that have filed an annual request for notices from the |
school district pursuant to Section 2.02 of the Open |
Meetings Act. |
(a-10) This subsection (a-10) applies only to collective |
bargaining between a public school district organized under |
Article 34 of the School Code and an exclusive representative |
of its employees. |
(1) For collective bargaining agreements between an |
educational employer whose territorial boundaries are |
coterminous with those of a city having a population in |
excess of 500,000 and an exclusive representative of its |
employees, if the parties fail to reach an agreement after |
a reasonable period of mediation, the dispute shall be |
submitted to fact-finding in accordance with this |
subsection (a-10). Either the educational employer or the |
|
exclusive representative may initiate fact-finding by |
submitting a written demand to the other party with a copy |
of the demand submitted simultaneously to the Board. |
(2) Within 3 days following a party's demand for |
fact-finding, each party shall appoint one member of the |
fact-finding panel, unless the parties agree to proceed |
without a tri-partite panel. Following these appointments, |
if any, the parties shall select a qualified impartial |
individual to serve as the fact-finder and chairperson of |
the fact-finding panel, if applicable. An individual shall |
be considered qualified to serve as the fact-finder and |
chairperson of the fact-finding panel, if applicable, if he |
or she was not the same individual who was appointed as the |
mediator and if he or she satisfies the following |
requirements: membership in good standing with the |
National Academy of Arbitrators, Federal Mediation and |
Conciliation Service, or American Arbitration Association |
for a minimum of 10 years; membership on the mediation |
roster for the Illinois Labor Relations Board or Illinois |
Educational Labor Relations Board; issuance of at least 5 |
interest arbitration awards arising under the Illinois |
Public Labor Relations Act; and participation in impasse |
resolution processes arising under private or public |
sector collective bargaining statutes in other states. If |
the parties are unable to agree on a fact-finder, the |
parties shall request a panel of fact-finders who satisfy |
|
the requirements set forth in this paragraph (2) from |
either the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service or |
the American Arbitration Association and shall select a |
fact-finder from such panel in accordance with the |
procedures established by the organization providing the |
panel. |
(3) The fact-finder shall have the following duties and |
powers: |
(A) to require the parties to submit a statement of |
disputed issues and their positions regarding each |
issue either jointly or separately; |
(B) to identify disputed issues that are economic |
in nature; |
(C) to meet with the parties either separately or |
in executive sessions; |
(D) to conduct hearings and regulate the time, |
place, course, and manner of the hearings; |
(E) to request the Board to issue subpoenas |
requiring the attendance and testimony of witnesses or |
the production of evidence; |
(F) to administer oaths and affirmations; |
(G) to examine witnesses and documents; |
(H) to create a full and complete written record of |
the hearings; |
(I) to attempt mediation or remand a disputed issue |
to the parties for further collective bargaining; |
|
(J) to require the parties to submit final offers |
for each disputed issue either individually or as a |
package or as a combination of both; and |
(K) to employ any other measures deemed |
appropriate to resolve the impasse. |
(4) If the dispute is not settled within 75 days after |
the appointment of the fact-finding panel, the |
fact-finding panel shall issue a private report to the |
parties that contains advisory findings of fact and |
recommended terms of settlement for all disputed issues and |
that sets forth a rationale for each recommendation. The |
fact-finding panel, acting by a majority of its members, |
shall base its findings and recommendations upon the |
following criteria as applicable: |
(A) the lawful authority of the employer; |
(B) the federal and State statutes or local |
ordinances and resolutions applicable to the employer; |
(C) prior collective bargaining agreements and the |
bargaining history between the parties; |
(D) stipulations of the parties; |
(E) the interests and welfare of the public and the |
students and families served by the employer; |
(F) the employer's financial ability to fund the |
proposals based on existing available resources, |
provided that such ability is not predicated on an |
assumption that lines of credit or reserve funds are |
|
available or that the employer may or will receive or |
develop new sources of revenue or increase existing |
sources of revenue; |
(G) the impact of any economic adjustments on the |
employer's ability to pursue its educational mission; |
(H) the present and future general economic |
conditions in the locality and State; |
(I) a comparison of the wages, hours, and |
conditions of employment of the employees involved in |
the dispute with the wages, hours, and conditions of |
employment of employees performing similar services in |
public education in the 10 largest U.S. cities; |
(J) the average consumer prices in urban areas for |
goods and services, which is commonly known as the cost |
of living; |
(K) the overall compensation presently received by |
the employees involved in the dispute, including |
direct wage compensation; vacations, holidays, and |
other excused time; insurance and pensions; medical |
and hospitalization benefits; the continuity and |
stability of employment and all other benefits |
received; and how each party's proposed compensation |
structure supports the educational goals of the |
district; |
(L) changes in any of the circumstances listed in |
items (A) through (K) of this paragraph (4) during the |
|
fact-finding proceedings; |
(M) the effect that any term the parties are at |
impasse on has or may have on the overall educational |
environment, learning conditions, and working |
conditions with the school district; and |
(N) the effect that any term the parties are at |
impasse on has or may have in promoting the public |
policy of this State. |
(5) The fact-finding panel's recommended terms of |
settlement shall be deemed agreed upon by the parties as |
the final resolution of the disputed issues and |
incorporated into the collective bargaining agreement |
executed by the parties, unless either party tenders to the |
other party and the chairperson of the fact-finding panel a |
notice of rejection of the recommended terms of settlement |
with a rationale for the rejection, within 15 days after |
the date of issuance of the fact-finding panel's report. If |
either party submits a notice of rejection, the chairperson |
of the fact-finding panel shall publish the fact-finding |
panel's report and the notice of rejection for public |
information by delivering a copy to all newspapers of |
general circulation in the community with simultaneous |
written notice to the parties. |
(b) If, after a period of bargaining of at least 60 days, a
|
dispute or impasse exists between an educational employer whose |
territorial
boundaries are coterminous with those of a city |
|
having a population in
excess of 500,000 and the exclusive |
bargaining representative over
a subject or matter set forth in |
Section 4.5 of this Act, the parties shall
submit the dispute |
or impasse to the dispute resolution procedure
agreed to |
between the parties. The procedure shall provide for mediation
|
of disputes by a rotating mediation panel and may, at the |
request of
either party, include the issuance of advisory |
findings of fact and
recommendations. A dispute or impasse over |
any Section 4.5 subject shall not be resolved through the |
procedures set forth in this Act, and the Board, mediator, or |
fact-finder has no jurisdiction over any Section 4.5 subject. |
The changes made to this subsection (b) by this amendatory Act |
of the 97th General Assembly are declarative of existing law.
|
(c) The costs of fact finding and mediation shall be shared |
equally
between
the employer and the exclusive bargaining |
agent, provided that, for
purposes of mediation under this Act, |
if either party requests the use of
mediation services from the |
Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service, the
other party |
shall either join in such request or bear the additional cost
|
of mediation services from another source. All other costs and |
expenses of complying with this Section must be borne by the |
party incurring them.
|
(c-5) If an educational employer or exclusive bargaining |
representative refuses to participate in mediation or fact |
finding when required by this Section, the refusal shall be |
deemed a refusal to bargain in good faith. |
|
(d) Nothing in this Act prevents an employer and an |
exclusive bargaining
representative from mutually submitting |
to final and binding impartial
arbitration unresolved issues |
concerning the terms of a new collective
bargaining agreement.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-3, eff. 4-16-03.)
|
(115 ILCS 5/13) (from Ch. 48, par. 1713)
|
Sec. 13. Strikes.
|
(a) Notwithstanding the existence of any other
provision in |
this Act or other law, educational employees employed in school
|
districts organized under Article 34 of the School Code shall |
not engage in
a strike at any time during the 18 month period |
that commences on the
effective date of this amendatory Act of |
1995. An educational employee
employed in a school district |
organized
under Article 34 of the School Code who participates |
in a strike in violation
of this Section is subject to |
discipline by the employer. In addition, no
educational |
employer organized under Article 34 of the School Code may pay |
or
cause to be paid to an educational employee who
participates |
in a strike in violation of this subsection any wages or other
|
compensation for any period during
which an educational |
employee participates in the strike, except for wages or
|
compensation earned before participation in the strike.
|
Notwithstanding the existence of any other
provision in this |
Act or other law, during the 18-month period that strikes are
|
prohibited under this subsection nothing in this subsection |
|
shall be construed
to require an educational employer to submit |
to a binding dispute resolution
process.
|
(b) Notwithstanding the existence of any other provision in |
this Act or any
other law, educational employees other than |
those employed in a school district
organized under Article 34 |
of the School Code and, after the expiration of the
18 month |
period that commences on the effective date of this amendatory |
Act of
1995, educational employees in a school district |
organized under Article 34 of
the School Code shall not engage |
in a strike except under the following
conditions:
|
(1) they are represented by an exclusive bargaining
|
representative;
|
(2) mediation has been used without success and, if |
an impasse has been declared under subsection (a-5) of |
Section 12 of this Act, at least 14 days have elapsed after |
the mediator has made public the final offers ;
|
(2.5) if fact-finding was invoked pursuant to |
subsection (a-10) of Section 12 of this Act, at least 30 |
days have elapsed after a fact-finding report has been |
released for public information; |
(2.10) for educational employees employed in a school |
district organized under Article 34 of the School Code, at |
least three-fourths of all bargaining unit members of the |
exclusive bargaining representative have affirmatively |
voted to authorize the strike;
|
(3) at least 10 days have elapsed after a notice of |
|
intent
to strike has been given by the exclusive bargaining |
representative to the
educational employer, the regional |
superintendent and the Illinois Educational
Labor |
Relations Board;
|
(4) the collective bargaining agreement between the |
educational employer
and educational employees, if any, |
has expired or been terminated ; and
|
(5) the employer and the exclusive bargaining |
representative have not
mutually submitted the unresolved |
issues to arbitration.
|
If, however, in the opinion of an employer the strike is or |
has become a
clear and present danger to the health or safety |
of the public, the employer
may initiate
in the circuit court |
of the county in which such danger exists an action for
relief |
which may include, but is not limited to, injunction. The court |
may
grant appropriate relief upon the finding that such clear |
and present danger
exists.
An unfair practice or other evidence |
of lack of clean hands by the educational
employer is a defense |
to such action. Except as provided for in this
paragraph, the |
jurisdiction of the court under this Section is limited by the
|
Labor Dispute Act.
|
(Source: P.A. 89-15, eff. 5-30-95; 90-548, eff. 1-1-98.)
|
(105 ILCS 5/34-85b rep.) |
Section 15. The School Code is amended by repealing Section |
34-85b.
|