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Rep. Carol Ammons
Filed: 1/26/2022
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1 | | AMENDMENT TO HOUSE BILL 3530
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2 | | AMENDMENT NO. ______. Amend House Bill 3530 by replacing |
3 | | everything after the enacting clause with the following:
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4 | | "Section 1. Short title. This Act may be cited as the |
5 | | Secure Jobs Act. |
6 | | Section 5. Definitions. In this Act: |
7 | | "Benefits" means the cash value of any employer-paid |
8 | | vacation leave, sick leave, medical insurance plan, disability |
9 | | insurance plan, life insurance plan, annuity, and pension |
10 | | benefit plan in effect on the date of discharge. |
11 | | "Casual employee" refers to work in or around a private |
12 | | home, that is irregular, uncertain, or incidental in nature |
13 | | and duration. |
14 | | "Constructive discharge" means the voluntary termination |
15 | | of employment by an employee because of a situation created by |
16 | | an act or omission of the employer that an objective, |
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1 | | reasonable person would find so intolerable that voluntary |
2 | | termination is the only reasonable alternative. |
3 | | "Day or temporary laborer", "day and temporary labor |
4 | | services agency", and "third party client" have the meaning |
5 | | ascribed to those terms under Section 5 of the Day and |
6 | | Temporary Labor Services Act. |
7 | | "Department" means the Department of Labor. |
8 | | "Discharge" means any cessation of employment, including |
9 | | constructive discharge, indefinite suspension, layoff, or |
10 | | reduction in hours. |
11 | | "Egregious misconduct" means deliberate or grossly |
12 | | negligent conduct that: |
13 | | (1) endangers the safety or well-being of the |
14 | | individual, co-workers, customers, or other persons, |
15 | | including discrimination against, harassment of, or |
16 | | causing physical or emotional harm to co-workers, |
17 | | customers, or other persons; |
18 | | (2) causes serious damage to the employer's or |
19 | | customers' property or business interests, including, but |
20 | | not limited to, theft; or |
21 | | (3) involves grossly inappropriate behavior such as |
22 | | working under the influence of intoxicants or controlled |
23 | | substances. |
24 | | "Electronic monitoring" means the collection of |
25 | | information concerning worker activities, communications, |
26 | | actions, biometric information, as that term is defined in |
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1 | | Section 10 of the Biometric Information Privacy Act, or |
2 | | behaviors by electronic means including, but not limited to, |
3 | | video or audio surveillance, electronic work pace tracking, |
4 | | and other means. |
5 | | "Employ" means to suffer or permit to work. |
6 | | "Employee" has the meaning given that term in Section 2 of |
7 | | the Illinois Wage Payment and Collection Act, and also |
8 | | includes a "day or temporary laborer" but does not include a |
9 | | casual employee who performs work in or around a private home |
10 | | that is irregular in nature. A person may be an employee of 2 |
11 | | or more employers at the same time. "Employee" does not |
12 | | include supervisors or persons who hold elective office. |
13 | | "Employer" has the meaning given that term in Section 2 of |
14 | | the Illinois Wage Payment and Collection Act, and also |
15 | | includes a "third party client" and a "day and temporary labor |
16 | | services agency". More than one entity may be the employer of |
17 | | an employee, including in circumstances where one entity |
18 | | controls, is controlled by, or is under common control with |
19 | | another employer, or where one entity exerts control over the |
20 | | operations of another employer. An employer-employee |
21 | | relationship is presumed to exist when an individual performs |
22 | | labor or services for an employer. The party asserting that an |
23 | | individual is not an employee must establish by a |
24 | | preponderance of the evidence that the individual is an |
25 | | independent contractor. |
26 | | "Just cause" means: |
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1 | | (1) an employee's failure to satisfactorily perform |
2 | | his or her job duties or to comply with employer policies; |
3 | | (2) an employee's egregious misconduct; or |
4 | | (3) bona fide economic reasons. |
5 | | "Progressive discipline" means an employer's disciplinary |
6 | | system that provides a graduated range of reasonable responses |
7 | | to an employee's failure to satisfactorily perform his or her |
8 | | job duties or comply with employer policies, with the |
9 | | disciplinary measures ranging from mild to severe, depending |
10 | | on the frequency and degree of the failure, and the employee |
11 | | being afforded a reasonable period of time to address |
12 | | concerns. |
13 | | "Reduction in hours" means a reduction in an employee's |
14 | | hours of work totaling at least 15% of the employee's average |
15 | | weekly work hours. |
16 | | "Relator" means a current or former employee, contractor, |
17 | | subcontractor, or employee of such a contractor or |
18 | | subcontractor of an alleged violator of this Act, regardless |
19 | | of whether that person has received full or partial relief, |
20 | | who seeks relief through a public enforcement action brought |
21 | | under this Act. |
22 | | "Representative organization" means a nonprofit or labor |
23 | | organization selected by a relator to initiate a public |
24 | | enforcement action on the relator's behalf. |
25 | | "Severance pay" has the meaning of that term as described |
26 | | in Section 50. |
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1 | | "Short-term position" means employment pursuant to a |
2 | | written contract that specifies that the position is to end |
3 | | after a specified period of time, not to exceed 6 months, where |
4 | | the employer can show that the work or need in question is |
5 | | expected to end, such as in the case of a seasonal job or a job |
6 | | to perform a specific project. |
7 | | Section 10. Prohibition against discharge without just |
8 | | cause. |
9 | | (a) An employer shall not discharge an employee without |
10 | | just cause. Just cause may not be based on off-duty conduct |
11 | | unless there is a demonstrable and material nexus between the |
12 | | conduct and the employee's job performance or the employer's |
13 | | legitimate business interests. |
14 | | (b) The employer shall within 3 days provide a written |
15 | | explanation to any discharged employee of the specific reasons |
16 | | for the discharge. In determining whether an employer had just |
17 | | cause for discharge, a fact finder may not consider any |
18 | | reasons not included in such written explanation. Where an |
19 | | employer fails to provide a written explanation to a |
20 | | discharged employee, the discharge shall not be deemed to be |
21 | | based on just cause. All information and judgments that the |
22 | | employer considered in making the determination shall be made |
23 | | available to the employee or his or her representative. |
24 | | (c) The employer shall bear the burden of proving just |
25 | | cause including, if applicable, that the employer followed |
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1 | | progressive discipline, by a preponderance of non-hearsay |
2 | | evidence in any proceeding brought pursuant to this Act. |
3 | | Section 15. Factors to be considered. In determining |
4 | | whether an employee has been discharged for just cause for |
5 | | failure to satisfactorily perform job duties or for failure to |
6 | | comply with employer policies, the fact finder shall consider, |
7 | | in addition to any other relevant factors, whether: |
8 | | (1) the employee knew or should have known of his or |
9 | | her job duties or of the employer's policy; |
10 | | (2) the employer provided relevant and adequate |
11 | | training to the employee; |
12 | | (3) the employer's policy was reasonable and applied |
13 | | consistently; |
14 | | (4) the employer undertook a thorough, fair and |
15 | | objective investigation; and |
16 | | (5) the employer used progressive discipline. |
17 | | Section 20. Discharge for failure to satisfactorily |
18 | | perform job duties. A discharge for failure to satisfactorily |
19 | | perform job duties or comply with employer policies shall not |
20 | | be deemed to be based on just cause unless the employer has |
21 | | used progressive discipline. Provided, further, that the time |
22 | | period between a first warning or discipline and termination |
23 | | shall be not less than 15 days, and the employer may not rely |
24 | | on a warning or discipline issued more than one year in the |
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1 | | past to justify a discharge. |
2 | | Section 25. Progressive discipline. Under progressive |
3 | | discipline, an employer may discharge an employee immediately |
4 | | for egregious misconduct. A finding of misconduct for purposes |
5 | | of unemployment insurance eligibility shall not necessarily |
6 | | constitute serious misconduct for purposes of this Act. An |
7 | | employee discharged for egregious misconduct shall not be |
8 | | entitled to severance pay.
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9 | | Section 30. Discharge based on bona fide economic reasons. |
10 | | A discharge shall not be deemed to be based on bona fide |
11 | | economic reasons unless the following conditions are met: |
12 | | (1) the discharge results from a reduction in |
13 | | production, sales, services, profit, or funding of the |
14 | | employer, or technological or organizational changes in |
15 | | the employer's operations that necessitate full or partial |
16 | | reduction of the employer's operations; |
17 | | (2) the employees or groups of employees to be |
18 | | discharged are identified using broadly applicable |
19 | | criteria that do not appear to target individuals; and |
20 | | (3) the bona fide economic reasons justifying the |
21 | | discharge were specified in writing to the employee at the |
22 | | time of the discharge and are supported by the employer's |
23 | | records. |
24 | | A discharge shall be presumed not to be based on bona fide |
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1 | | economic reasons where the employer hired or hires another |
2 | | employee to perform substantially the same work within 90 days |
3 | | before or after the discharge. Elimination of staff redundancy |
4 | | created by a merger or acquisition shall not be deemed a bona |
5 | | fide economic reason for discharge of employees. |
6 | | Section 35. Employee actions that do not constitute just |
7 | | cause for termination. In no event shall any of the following |
8 | | actions by an employee constitute just cause for termination: |
9 | | (1) an employee's communication about workplace |
10 | | practices or policies, including, but not limited to, |
11 | | health or safety practices or hazards related to COVID-19, |
12 | | to any person, including to an employer, an employer's |
13 | | agent, other employees, a government agency, or the |
14 | | public, including through print, online, social media, or |
15 | | any other media; or |
16 | | (2) an employee's refusal to work under conditions |
17 | | that the employee reasonably believes would expose him or |
18 | | her, other employees, or the public to an unreasonable |
19 | | health or safety risk, including, but not limited to, risk |
20 | | of illness or exposure to COVID-19. |
21 | | An employer shall not retaliate against any employee or |
22 | | other person for such conduct. Notwithstanding any other |
23 | | provision of law, such conduct shall constitute protected |
24 | | conduct and may not be contractually prohibited, or subject to |
25 | | civil or criminal sanction or liability. |
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1 | | Section 40. Employer assessments. An employer must |
2 | | conduct its own assessment of an employee, and may not rely on |
3 | | data gathered through electronic monitoring in discharging or |
4 | | disciplining an employee. Such employment decisions must be |
5 | | made based on human-provided information sources such as |
6 | | supervisors' assessments and documentation, or consulting |
7 | | co-workers. An employer must disclose in advance to employees |
8 | | any electronic monitoring or data collection at a workplace, |
9 | | disclose the purposes for which the data will be used, and |
10 | | provide employees meaningful opportunities to challenge any |
11 | | electronic monitoring or data systems. However, data gathered |
12 | | through electronic monitoring may be used in the following |
13 | | circumstances: for non-employment-related purposes; for |
14 | | discharging or disciplining an employee in cases of egregious |
15 | | misconduct or involving threats to the health or safety of |
16 | | other persons; or where required by State or federal law. |
17 | | Provided further, information on employee tardiness or |
18 | | absenteeism from electronic time-keeping systems that are used |
19 | | to measure employee work shifts for payroll purposes may be |
20 | | considered for purposes of employee discharge and discipline. |
21 | | Section 45. Discharge; short-term position. Discharge at |
22 | | the end of a short-term position shall not require a showing of |
23 | | just cause and shall not entitle an employee to severance pay. |
24 | | A position shall not be deemed to be a short-term position |
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1 | | where the employer hires another employee, including another |
2 | | employee who is a day or temporary laborer, to perform |
3 | | substantially the same work within 90 days before or after the |
4 | | discharge. However, discharge prior to the end of the term of a |
5 | | short-term position shall require a showing of just cause and |
6 | | shall entitle the employee to severance pay. |
7 | | Section 50. Severance pay. An employee shall accrue an |
8 | | entitlement to one hour of severance pay for every 12.5 hours |
9 | | worked during his or her first 2,080 hours of employment, and |
10 | | for every 50 hours worked thereafter. Within 14 days of |
11 | | discharge, the employer shall pay the employee his or her |
12 | | accrued severance pay, calculated based on the number of hours |
13 | | accrued multiplied by the employee's rate of pay upon |
14 | | discharge. However, an employee who is discharged at the end |
15 | | of a short-term position shall not be entitled to severance |
16 | | pay. Severance pay shall be exclusive of final compensation |
17 | | due an employee upon separation, as provided for under Section |
18 | | 2 of the Illinois Wage Payment and Collection Act. For |
19 | | purposes of determining an employee's hours of employment, |
20 | | tenure, or seniority, multiple periods worked for the |
21 | | employer, including through a day and temporary services |
22 | | agency, and any time worked for a predecessor employer shall |
23 | | be aggregated. |
24 | | Section 55. Employment through day and temporary labor |
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1 | | services agencies. |
2 | | (a) Where an employee is a day or temporary laborer who has |
3 | | worked 100 hours or more for a single third party client, the |
4 | | third party client shall be deemed his or her employer, shall |
5 | | become subject to the protections of this Act as regards the |
6 | | employee, and may not discharge the employee without just |
7 | | cause. However, if the employee's employment with the third |
8 | | party client qualifies as a short-term position, then a |
9 | | showing of just cause for discharge at the end of the |
10 | | position's defined term shall not be required, nor shall |
11 | | payment of severance pay at the end of the position's defined |
12 | | term be required. In such a case the third party client must |
13 | | show that all of the criteria and conditions for a short-term |
14 | | position in Section 45 and in the definition of short-term |
15 | | position are satisfied in order for the employment of the day |
16 | | or temporary laborer to qualify as a short-term position. |
17 | | (b) Where an employee is a day or temporary laborer who has |
18 | | not worked 100 hours or more for a single third party client |
19 | | but has worked 100 hours or more for a temporary labor services |
20 | | agency, aggregating all hours worked for multiple third party |
21 | | clients, the employee shall become subject to more limited |
22 | | protection under the Act. Such an employee shall be given |
23 | | priority by the temporary labor services agency for future |
24 | | work assignments over employees who have not worked 100 hours |
25 | | or more for the agency. When such an employee is discharged by |
26 | | the day and temporary labor services agency, the employee |
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1 | | shall be entitled to payment of severance pay, as determined |
2 | | under Section 50. Such an employee shall be deemed discharged |
3 | | if he or she receives no work assignment offers from the |
4 | | temporary labor services agency for a period of 21 days or |
5 | | more. However, if such an employee's employment with the |
6 | | temporary labor services agency ends in order for the employee |
7 | | to commence direct employment with a third party client, then |
8 | | no payment of severance pay shall be required. |
9 | | (c) Employers that are third party clients and employers |
10 | | that are day and temporary labor services agencies shall be |
11 | | jointly and severally responsible with one another for |
12 | | compliance with the Act's requirements. |
13 | | Section 60. Collective bargaining agreement exemption. The |
14 | | requirements of this Act shall not apply to employees who are |
15 | | covered by a valid collective bargaining agreement. |
16 | | Section 65. Retaliation prohibited. No employer or any |
17 | | other person shall threaten, intimidate, discipline, |
18 | | discharge, demote, suspend, or harass an employee, reduce the |
19 | | hours or pay of an employee, inform another employer that an |
20 | | employee has alleged that the employer violated this Act or |
21 | | any other law, discriminate against an employee, or take any |
22 | | other adverse action that penalizes an employee for, or is |
23 | | reasonably likely to deter an employee from, exercising or |
24 | | attempting to exercise any right protected under this Act or |
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1 | | any other law, including informing other employees or persons |
2 | | of their rights under this Act or any other law, assisting in |
3 | | any way with any complaint or investigation involving this |
4 | | Act, including another workers' case, or sharing information |
5 | | about workplace issues with other employees or the public, |
6 | | including on social media. Threats or any other adverse action |
7 | | related to perceived immigration status or work authorization |
8 | | shall constitute threats or adverse actions as those terms are |
9 | | used in this Section. An employee need not explicitly refer to |
10 | | this Act or any other law or the rights enumerated herein to be |
11 | | protected from retaliation. The protections afforded by this |
12 | | Section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good |
13 | | faith alleges violations of this Act. |
14 | | Section 70. Protection of former employees from |
15 | | blacklisting. An employer shall not prevent or attempt to |
16 | | prevent, by word or writing of any kind, a former employee from |
17 | | obtaining employment with any other employer. An employer is |
18 | | not prohibited from providing by word or writing to any other |
19 | | employer to whom the discharged employee has applied for |
20 | | employment a truthful statement of the reason for discharge. |
21 | | Section 75. Notice and posting of rights. |
22 | | (a) The Department shall publish and make available |
23 | | notices informing employees of their rights protected under |
24 | | this Act. Employers shall post such notices in a conspicuous |
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1 | | location in the workplace or at any job site, and shall give a |
2 | | notice to each employee at the time of hiring and on an annual |
3 | | basis. The notices shall be made available in a downloadable |
4 | | format on the Department's website in English, Spanish, |
5 | | Polish, Mandarin, and Cantonese. |
6 | | (b) Every employer shall conspicuously post at any |
7 | | workplace or job site where any employee works the notices |
8 | | described in subsection (a) that apply to the particular |
9 | | workplace or job site. The notices shall be in English and any |
10 | | language spoken as a primary language by at least 5% of the |
11 | | employees at that location if the Department has made the |
12 | | notice available in that language. |
13 | | Section 80. Recordkeeping. |
14 | | (a) Employers shall retain records documenting their |
15 | | compliance with the applicable requirements of this Act. In |
16 | | addition, day and temporary labor services agencies shall |
17 | | maintain records of each individual day or temporary laborer's |
18 | | start date with such day and temporary labor services agency |
19 | | and the dates on which that laborer was placed with a third |
20 | | party client. Employers shall retain such records for a period |
21 | | of 3 years and shall allow the Department access to such |
22 | | records and other information, in accordance with applicable |
23 | | law and with appropriate notice, in furtherance of an |
24 | | investigation conducted in accordance with this Act.
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25 | | (b) In addition, employers shall report annually to the |
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1 | | Department, and any person who requests a copy of: |
2 | | (1) the employer's total employment each year broken |
3 | | down by full-time employment (defined as at least 30 hours |
4 | | per week), part-time employment (defined as less than 30 |
5 | | hours per week), short-term employment, and employment |
6 | | through a temp or staffing agency; and |
7 | | (2) the employer's total number of separations each |
8 | | year broken down by whether the separation was a discharge |
9 | | for cause, a discharge for bona fide economic reasons, a |
10 | | separation as a result of the end of a short-term |
11 | | position, an employee resignation, or an employee |
12 | | retirement.
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13 | | Within 14 days of a request for such records, employers |
14 | | shall make requested records available for review and copying.
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15 | | (c) An employer's failure to maintain, retain, or produce |
16 | | a record or other information required to be maintained by |
17 | | this Section relevant to a material fact alleged by an |
18 | | employee in a complaint brought pursuant to this Section or |
19 | | requested by the Department pursuant to an investigation, |
20 | | creates a rebuttable presumption that such fact is true. |
21 | | Section 85. Administrative implementation and enforcement. |
22 | | (a) The Department shall administer and enforce the |
23 | | provisions of this Act and shall, within 120 days after its |
24 | | effective date, adopt rules necessary to administer and |
25 | | enforce the provisions of this Act. The rules shall include |
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1 | | the procedures for investigations and hearings under this Act. |
2 | | The adoption, amendment, or rescission of rules shall be in |
3 | | conformity with the requirements of the Illinois |
4 | | Administrative Procedure Act. |
5 | | (b) An aggrieved employee or his or her duly authorized
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6 | | representative may file a complaint with the Department
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7 | | regarding violations by an employer of this Act or of any
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8 | | implementing rules. Upon receiving a complaint or on its own
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9 | | initiative, the Department shall investigate potential
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10 | | violations, make a determination whether a violation has
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11 | | occurred, and take appropriate action to enforce the
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12 | | provisions of this Act and any implementing rules. |
13 | | (c) If an employer is found by the Department to have
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14 | | violated this Act or any rules adopted under this Act, the
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15 | | Department shall order the following, in addition to any other
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16 | | remedy provided by law: |
17 | | (1) In the case of unlawful discharge, retaliation,
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18 | | blacklisting, or unlawful electronic monitoring, actual |
19 | | and liquidated damages payable to each aggrieved worker |
20 | | equal to, at the aggrieved party's election, $10,000 or 3 |
21 | | times the actual damages including, but not limited to, |
22 | | unpaid wages, benefits, other remuneration owed, and |
23 | | compensation for emotional pain, suffering, inconvenience, |
24 | | and mental anguish, unless an adjudicator finds that |
25 | | mitigating circumstances are present, in which case the |
26 | | adjudicator may order that the preceding liquidated |
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1 | | damages amount be reduced as circumstances make |
2 | | appropriate, as well as reinstatement, restoration of |
3 | | hours, other injunctive relief (including to rectify |
4 | | conditions that led to constructive discharge), punitive |
5 | | damages, and such other remedies as may be appropriate. |
6 | | (2) In the case of discharge where severance pay was |
7 | | not provided, payment of severance pay together with an |
8 | | additional 2 times that amount as liquidated damages, and |
9 | | such other remedies as may be appropriate including |
10 | | punitive damages. |
11 | | (3) In the case of failure to provide a timely written |
12 | | explanation for a discharge, injunctive relief and |
13 | | liquidated damages in an amount equal to $5,000, unless an |
14 | | adjudicator finds that mitigating circumstances are |
15 | | present, in which case the adjudicator may order that the |
16 | | preceding liquidated damage amount be reduced as |
17 | | circumstances make appropriate, and such other remedies as |
18 | | may be appropriate, including punitive damages. |
19 | | (4) Payment of a further sum to the Department as a |
20 | | civil penalty in an amount of $10,000 for unlawful |
21 | | discharge, retaliation, or blacklisting in violation of |
22 | | this Act, or unlawful electronic monitoring, in an amount |
23 | | of $5,000 for or failure to provide a timely written |
24 | | explanation for a discharge, or in an amount of $1,000 for |
25 | | other violations of this Act, including the Act's |
26 | | recordkeeping requirements or failure to produce records |
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1 | | requested in an investigation. However, if an adjudicator |
2 | | finds that mitigating circumstances are present, the |
3 | | adjudicator may order that the preceding civil penalty |
4 | | amounts be reduced as circumstances make appropriate. The |
5 | | civil penalties imposed in accordance with this Section |
6 | | shall be imposed on a per employee and per instance basis |
7 | | for each violation. |
8 | | (5) Payment of the complainant's reasonable attorneys' |
9 | | fees, expert fees, and other costs. For the purposes of |
10 | | this provision, a complainant shall be deemed to have |
11 | | prevailed and entitled to an award of fees and costs if |
12 | | commencement of a complaint has acted as a catalyst to |
13 | | effect policy change on the part of the respondent, |
14 | | regardless of whether that change has been implemented |
15 | | voluntarily, as a result of a settlement, or as a result of |
16 | | a judgment in such party's favor. |
17 | | (6) In assessing an appropriate remedy, due |
18 | | consideration shall be given to the gravity of the |
19 | | violation, the history of previous violations, and the |
20 | | good faith of the employer. |
21 | | (7) All amounts specified in this Act shall be updated |
22 | | annually to keep pace with the rising cost of living by |
23 | | increasing each amount in proportion to the increase over |
24 | | the most recent 12-month period for which data are |
25 | | available in the value of the Consumer Price Index for All |
26 | | Urban Consumers (CPI-U), as calculated by the Bureau of |
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1 | | Labor Statistics of the United States Department of Labor, |
2 | | and rounding the new amounts to the nearest multiple of |
3 | | $5. Such increased amounts shall be announced by October 1 |
4 | | of each year, and shall take effect on January 1. |
5 | | (8) Either party may bring an administrative appeal to |
6 | | enforce, vacate, or modify the order, determination, or |
7 | | other disposition.
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8 | | (9) No procedure or remedy set forth in this Section |
9 | | is exclusive or a prerequisite for asserting a claim for |
10 | | relief to enforce any rights under this Act in a court of |
11 | | law. |
12 | | (10) Any employer who has been ordered by the |
13 | | Department or ordered by a court to pay unpaid backpay, |
14 | | front pay and benefits, severance pay, liquidated or |
15 | | punitive damages, or civil penalties, and who fails to |
16 | | seek timely review of such a demand or order as provided |
17 | | for under this Act and who fails to comply within 15 |
18 | | calendar days after such demand or within 35 days of an |
19 | | administrative or court order is entered shall also be |
20 | | liable to pay a penalty to the Department of 20% of the |
21 | | amount found owing and a penalty to the employee of 1% per |
22 | | calendar day of the amount found owing for each day of |
23 | | delay in paying such wages to the employee. All moneys |
24 | | recovered as fees and civil penalties under this Act, |
25 | | except those owing to the affected employee, shall be |
26 | | deposited into the Wrongful Discharge Enforcement Fund, a |
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1 | | special fund which is hereby created in the State |
2 | | treasury. Moneys in the Fund may be used only for |
3 | | enforcement of this Act.
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4 | | Section 90. Civil action. Except as otherwise provided by |
5 | | law, any person claiming to be aggrieved by an employer's |
6 | | violation of this Act has a cause of action in any court and, |
7 | | upon prevailing, shall be awarded the relief specified in |
8 | | Section 85 and, if the court finds in favor of the plaintiff, |
9 | | it shall award such prevailing party, in addition to other |
10 | | relief, his or her reasonable attorneys' fees, expert fees, |
11 | | and other costs. As used in this Section, "prevailing" party |
12 | | includes a party whose commencement of litigation has acted as |
13 | | a catalyst to effect policy change on the part of the |
14 | | defendant, regardless of whether that change has been |
15 | | implemented voluntarily, as a result of a settlement, or as a |
16 | | result of a judgment in such party's favor. Penalties and fees |
17 | | under this Act may be assessed by the Department and recovered |
18 | | in a civil action brought by the Department in any court or in |
19 | | any administrative adjudicative proceeding under this Act. In |
20 | | any such civil action or administrative adjudicative |
21 | | proceeding under this Act, the Department shall be represented |
22 | | by the Attorney General. |
23 | | Section 95. Public enforcement action. A relator or |
24 | | representative organization may initiate a public enforcement |
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1 | | action in any court to pursue civil penalties, injunctive |
2 | | relief, and declaratory relief, as specified in Section 85, on |
3 | | behalf of the Department, for a violation of the provisions of |
4 | | this Act affecting the relator and other current or former |
5 | | employees, according to the following procedures: |
6 | | (a) The relator or representative organization shall |
7 | | give written notice to the Department of the specific |
8 | | provisions of this Act alleged to have been violated, |
9 | | including the facts and theories to support the alleged |
10 | | violation. The notice shall be given in such a manner as |
11 | | the Department may prescribe by rule. |
12 | | (b) If the Department intends to investigate the |
13 | | alleged violation, it shall notify the relator or |
14 | | representative organization of its decision within 65 |
15 | | calendar days of the postmark date of the notice. Within |
16 | | 60 calendar days of that decision, the Department may |
17 | | investigate the alleged violation and take any enforcement |
18 | | action authorized by law. If the Department determines |
19 | | that additional time is necessary to complete the |
20 | | investigation, it may extend the time by not more than 60 |
21 | | additional calendar days and shall notify the relator or |
22 | | representative organization of the extension. |
23 | | (c) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, a |
24 | | public enforcement action brought under this Act must be |
25 | | commenced within the limitations period specified in |
26 | | Section 100. The statute of limitations for bringing a |
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1 | | public enforcement action under this Act shall be tolled |
2 | | from the date a relator or representative organization |
3 | | files a notice under this Section with the Department, or |
4 | | the Department commences an investigation, whichever is |
5 | | earlier. |
6 | | (d) The relator or representative organization may |
7 | | commence a civil action under this Act if the Department |
8 | | determines that no enforcement action will be taken, or if |
9 | | no enforcement action is taken by the Department within |
10 | | the time limits prescribed. |
11 | | (e) The Department may intervene in an action brought |
12 | | under this Act and proceed with any and all claims in the |
13 | | action as of right within 30 days after the filing of the |
14 | | action, or for good cause, as determined by the court, at |
15 | | any time after the 30-day period after the filing of the |
16 | | action. |
17 | | (f) Civil penalties recovered in a public enforcement |
18 | | action brought under this Act shall be distributed as |
19 | | follows:
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20 | | (1) If the Department does not intervene in the |
21 | | action, 60% to the Department, and 40% to the relator |
22 | | or representative organization, to be distributed to |
23 | | the employees affected by the violation, including a |
24 | | service award that reflects the burdens and risks |
25 | | assumed by the employee or representative organization |
26 | | in prosecuting the action. |
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1 | | (2) If the Department does intervene in the |
2 | | action, 70% to the Department, and 30% to the relator |
3 | | or representative organization, the latter of which |
4 | | shall be distributed to the employees affected by the |
5 | | violation, including a service award that reflects the |
6 | | burdens and risks assumed by the employee or |
7 | | representative organization in prosecuting the action. |
8 | | (3) The share of penalties recovered for the |
9 | | Department under this Act shall be used solely to |
10 | | support the Department's education and enforcement |
11 | | activities relating to this Act, with approximately |
12 | | 25% of these penalties reserved for grants to |
13 | | community organizations for outreach and education |
14 | | about employee rights under this Act. |
15 | | (g) In any public enforcement action commenced under |
16 | | this Act, the court shall allow a prevailing relator or |
17 | | representative organization to recover all reasonable |
18 | | attorneys' fees, expert fees, and other costs. For the |
19 | | purposes of this provision, a "prevailing" relator or |
20 | | representative organization includes a relator or |
21 | | representative organization whose commencement of |
22 | | litigation has acted as a catalyst to effect policy change |
23 | | on the part of the defendant, regardless of whether that |
24 | | change has been implemented voluntarily, as a result of a |
25 | | settlement, or as a result of a judgment in such relator or |
26 | | representative organization's favor. |
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1 | | (h) No public enforcement action brought under this |
2 | | Act shall be required to meet class action certification |
3 | | requirements under Part 8 of Article II of the Code of |
4 | | Civil Procedure or Rule 23(a) of the Federal Rules of |
5 | | Civil Procedure. |
6 | | (i) The relator or representative organization may not |
7 | | recover compensatory damages or back pay, or seek |
8 | | reinstatement, in a public enforcement action. But the |
9 | | filing of a public enforcement action does not preclude an |
10 | | employee from pursuing these remedies in another forum. |
11 | | (j) The right to bring a public enforcement action |
12 | | under this Act shall not be impaired by any private |
13 | | contract.
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14 | | Section 100. Limitation of actions. Notwithstanding any |
15 | | other provision of law, an action under this Act must be filed |
16 | | within 3 years after the complainant knew or should have known |
17 | | of the alleged violation. However, this statute of limitations |
18 | | period shall be tolled for the duration of any state of |
19 | | emergency declared by the State or by any city or county in |
20 | | which the action is commenced. |
21 | | Section 105. Non-preemption. This Act does not preempt, |
22 | | limit, or otherwise affect the authority of any other unit of |
23 | | government to adopt laws, rules, requirements, policies, or |
24 | | standards providing additional employment or workplace |
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1 | | protections. |
2 | | Section 110. Violations. An employer that violates this |
3 | | Act is guilty of a Class A misdemeanor. |
4 | | Section 115. Severability. The provisions of this Act are |
5 | | severable under Section 1.31 of the Statute on Statutes. |
6 | | Section 120. The State Finance Act is amended by adding |
7 | | Section 5.970 as follows: |
8 | | (30 ILCS 105/5.970 new) |
9 | | Sec. 5.970. The Wrongful Discharge Enforcement Fund. |
10 | | Section 999. Effective date. This Act takes effect January |
11 | | 1, 2023.".
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