Illinois 2023 2023-2024 Regular Session

Illinois House Bill HB0297 Engrossed / Bill

Filed 03/22/2023

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1  AN ACT concerning education.
2  Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
3  represented in the General Assembly:
4  Section 5. The Illinois Educational Labor Relations Act is
5  amended by changing Section 12 as follows:
6  (115 ILCS 5/12) (from Ch. 48, par. 1712)
7  Sec. 12. Impasse procedures.
8  (a) This subsection (a) applies only to collective
9  bargaining between an educational employer that is not a
10  public school district organized under Article 34 of the
11  School Code and an exclusive representative of its employees.
12  If the parties engaged in collective bargaining have not
13  reached an agreement by 90 days before the scheduled start of
14  the forthcoming school year, the parties shall notify the
15  Illinois Educational Labor Relations Board concerning the
16  status of negotiations. This notice shall include a statement
17  on whether mediation has been used.
18  Upon demand of either party, collective bargaining between
19  the employer and an exclusive bargaining representative must
20  begin within 60 days of the date of certification of the
21  representative by the Board, or in the case of an existing
22  exclusive bargaining representative, within 60 days of the
23  receipt by a party of a demand to bargain issued by the other

 

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1  party. Once commenced, collective bargaining must continue for
2  at least a 60 day period, unless a contract is entered into.
3  Except as otherwise provided in subsection (b) of this
4  Section, if after a reasonable period of negotiation and
5  within 90 days of the scheduled start of the forth-coming
6  school year, the parties engaged in collective bargaining have
7  reached an impasse, either party may petition the Board to
8  initiate mediation. Alternatively, the Board on its own motion
9  may initiate mediation during this period. However, mediation
10  shall be initiated by the Board at any time when jointly
11  requested by the parties and the services of the mediators
12  shall continuously be made available to the employer and to
13  the exclusive bargaining representative for purposes of
14  arbitration of grievances and mediation or arbitration of
15  contract disputes. If requested by the parties, the mediator
16  may perform fact-finding and in so doing conduct hearings and
17  make written findings and recommendations for resolution of
18  the dispute. Such mediation shall be provided by the Board and
19  shall be held before qualified impartial individuals. Nothing
20  prohibits the use of other individuals or organizations such
21  as the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service or the
22  American Arbitration Association selected by both the
23  exclusive bargaining representative and the employer.
24  If the parties engaged in collective bargaining fail to
25  reach an agreement within 45 days of the scheduled start of the
26  forthcoming school year and have not requested mediation, the

 

 

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1  Illinois Educational Labor Relations Board shall invoke
2  mediation.
3  Whenever mediation is initiated or invoked under this
4  subsection (a), the parties may stipulate to defer selection
5  of a mediator in accordance with rules adopted by the Board.
6  (a-5) This subsection (a-5) applies only to collective
7  bargaining between a public school district or a combination
8  of public school districts, including, but not limited to,
9  joint cooperatives, that is not organized under Article 34 of
10  the School Code and an exclusive representative of its
11  employees.
12  (1) Any time 15 days after mediation has commenced,
13  either party may initiate the public posting process. The
14  mediator may initiate the public posting process at any
15  time 15 days after mediation has commenced during the
16  mediation process. Initiation of the public posting
17  process must be filed in writing with the Board, and
18  copies must be submitted to the parties on the same day the
19  initiation is filed with the Board.
20  (2) Within 7 days after the initiation of the public
21  posting process, each party shall submit to the mediator,
22  the Board, and the other party in writing the most recent
23  offer of the party, including a cost summary of the offer.
24  Seven days after receipt of the parties' offers, the Board
25  shall make public the offers and each party's cost summary
26  dealing with those issues on which the parties have failed

 

 

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1  to reach agreement by immediately posting the offers on
2  its Internet website, unless otherwise notified by the
3  mediator or jointly by the parties that agreement has been
4  reached. On the same day of publication by the Board, at a
5  minimum, the school district shall distribute notice of
6  the availability of the offers on the Board's Internet
7  website to all news media that have filed an annual
8  request for notices from the school district pursuant to
9  Section 2.02 of the Open Meetings Act. The parties' offers
10  shall remain on the Board's Internet website until the
11  parties have reached and ratified an agreement.
12  (a-10) This subsection (a-10) applies only to collective
13  bargaining between a public school district organized under
14  Article 34 of the School Code and an exclusive representative
15  of its employees, other than educational employees who are
16  forbidden from striking under this Act. For educational
17  employees who are forbidden from striking, either the employer
18  or exclusive representative may elect to utilize the
19  fact-finding procedures set forth in this subsection (a-10),
20  except as otherwise specified in paragraph (5) of this
21  subsection (a-10).
22  (1) For collective bargaining agreements between an
23  educational employer to which this subsection (a-10)
24  applies and an exclusive representative of its employees,
25  if the parties fail to reach an agreement after a
26  reasonable period of mediation, the dispute shall be

 

 

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1  submitted to fact-finding in accordance with this
2  subsection (a-10). Either the educational employer or the
3  exclusive representative may initiate fact-finding by
4  submitting a written demand to the other party with a copy
5  of the demand submitted simultaneously to the Board.
6  (2) Within 3 days following a party's demand for
7  fact-finding, each party shall appoint one member of the
8  fact-finding panel, unless the parties agree to proceed
9  without a tri-partite panel. Following these appointments,
10  if any, the parties shall select a qualified impartial
11  individual to serve as the fact-finder and chairperson of
12  the fact-finding panel, if applicable. An individual shall
13  be considered qualified to serve as the fact-finder and
14  chairperson of the fact-finding panel, if applicable, if
15  he or she was not the same individual who was appointed as
16  the mediator and if he or she satisfies the following
17  requirements: membership in good standing with the
18  National Academy of Arbitrators, Federal Mediation and
19  Conciliation Service, or American Arbitration Association
20  for a minimum of 10 years; membership on the mediation
21  roster for the Illinois Labor Relations Board or Illinois
22  Educational Labor Relations Board; issuance of at least 5
23  interest arbitration awards arising under the Illinois
24  Public Labor Relations Act; and participation in impasse
25  resolution processes arising under private or public
26  sector collective bargaining statutes in other states. If

 

 

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1  the parties are unable to agree on a fact-finder, the
2  parties shall request a panel of fact-finders who satisfy
3  the requirements set forth in this paragraph (2) from
4  either the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service or
5  the American Arbitration Association and shall select a
6  fact-finder from such panel in accordance with the
7  procedures established by the organization providing the
8  panel.
9  (3) The fact-finder shall have the following duties
10  and powers:
11  (A) to require the parties to submit a statement
12  of disputed issues and their positions regarding each
13  issue either jointly or separately;
14  (B) to identify disputed issues that are economic
15  in nature;
16  (C) to meet with the parties either separately or
17  in executive sessions;
18  (D) to conduct hearings and regulate the time,
19  place, course, and manner of the hearings;
20  (E) to request the Board to issue subpoenas
21  requiring the attendance and testimony of witnesses or
22  the production of evidence;
23  (F) to administer oaths and affirmations;
24  (G) to examine witnesses and documents;
25  (H) to create a full and complete written record
26  of the hearings;

 

 

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1  (I) to attempt mediation or remand a disputed
2  issue to the parties for further collective
3  bargaining;
4  (J) to require the parties to submit final offers
5  for each disputed issue either individually or as a
6  package or as a combination of both; and
7  (K) to employ any other measures deemed
8  appropriate to resolve the impasse.
9  (4) If the dispute is not settled within 75 days after
10  the appointment of the fact-finding panel, the
11  fact-finding panel shall issue a private report to the
12  parties that contains advisory findings of fact and
13  recommended terms of settlement for all disputed issues
14  and that sets forth a rationale for each recommendation.
15  The fact-finding panel, acting by a majority of its
16  members, shall base its findings and recommendations upon
17  the following criteria as applicable:
18  (A) the lawful authority of the employer;
19  (B) the federal and State statutes or local
20  ordinances and resolutions applicable to the employer;
21  (C) prior collective bargaining agreements and the
22  bargaining history between the parties;
23  (D) stipulations of the parties;
24  (E) the interests and welfare of the public and
25  the students and families served by the employer;
26  (F) the employer's financial ability to fund the

 

 

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1  proposals based on existing available resources,
2  provided that such ability is not predicated on an
3  assumption that lines of credit or reserve funds are
4  available or that the employer may or will receive or
5  develop new sources of revenue or increase existing
6  sources of revenue;
7  (G) the impact of any economic adjustments on the
8  employer's ability to pursue its educational mission;
9  (H) the present and future general economic
10  conditions in the locality and State;
11  (I) a comparison of the wages, hours, and
12  conditions of employment of the employees involved in
13  the dispute with the wages, hours, and conditions of
14  employment of employees performing similar services in
15  public education in the 10 largest U.S. cities, and
16  for educational employees who are forbidden to strike,
17  this comparison shall be based on comparable
18  communities;
19  (J) the average consumer prices in urban areas for
20  goods and services, which is commonly known as the
21  cost of living;
22  (K) the overall compensation presently received by
23  the employees involved in the dispute, including
24  direct wage compensation; vacations, holidays, and
25  other excused time; insurance and pensions; medical
26  and hospitalization benefits; the continuity and

 

 

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1  stability of employment and all other benefits
2  received; and how each party's proposed compensation
3  structure supports the educational goals of the
4  district, and for educational employees who are
5  forbidden from striking, this analysis shall also
6  include all other employees who are employed by the
7  educational employer;
8  (L) changes in any of the circumstances listed in
9  items (A) through (K) of this paragraph (4) during the
10  fact-finding proceedings;
11  (M) the effect that any term the parties are at
12  impasse on has or may have on the overall educational
13  environment, learning conditions, and working
14  conditions with the school district; and
15  (N) the effect that any term the parties are at
16  impasse on has or may have in promoting the public
17  policy of this State.
18  (5) The fact-finding panel's recommended terms of
19  settlement shall be deemed agreed upon by the parties as
20  the final resolution of the disputed issues and
21  incorporated into the collective bargaining agreement
22  executed by the parties, unless either party tenders to
23  the other party and the chairperson of the fact-finding
24  panel a notice of rejection of the recommended terms of
25  settlement with a rationale for the rejection, within 15
26  days after the date of issuance of the fact-finding

 

 

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1  panel's report. With regard to educational employees who
2  are forbidden from striking, if either party submits a
3  notice of rejection, either party may utilize mandatory
4  interest arbitration proceedings established in subsection
5  (e). For all other educational employees subject to this
6  subsection (a-10), if If either party submits a notice of
7  rejection, the chairperson of the fact-finding panel shall
8  publish the fact-finding panel's report and the notice of
9  rejection for public information by delivering a copy to
10  all newspapers of general circulation in the community
11  with simultaneous written notice to the parties.
12  The changes made to this subsection (a-10) by this
13  amendatory Act of the 103rd General Assembly apply only to
14  collective bargaining agreements entered into, modified,
15  extended, or renewed on or after the effective date of this
16  amendatory Act of the 103rd General Assembly.
17  (b) (Blank).
18  (c) The costs of fact finding and mediation shall be
19  shared equally between the employer and the exclusive
20  bargaining agent, provided that, for purposes of mediation
21  under this Act, if either party requests the use of mediation
22  services from the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service,
23  the other party shall either join in such request or bear the
24  additional cost of mediation services from another source. All
25  other costs and expenses of complying with this Section must
26  be borne by the party incurring them.

 

 

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1  (c-5) If an educational employer or exclusive bargaining
2  representative refuses to participate in mediation or fact
3  finding when required by this Section, the refusal shall be
4  deemed a refusal to bargain in good faith.
5  (d) Nothing in this Act prevents an employer and an
6  exclusive bargaining representative from mutually submitting
7  to final and binding impartial arbitration unresolved issues
8  concerning the terms of a new collective bargaining agreement.
9  (e) This subsection (e) applies only to collective
10  bargaining between a public school district organized under
11  Article 34 of the School Code and an exclusive representative
12  of educational employees who are forbidden from striking under
13  this Act. Educational employees who are forbidden from
14  striking have the right to submit all negotiation disputes,
15  including, but not limited to, mid-term disputes and impact
16  bargaining disputes, for resolution through the following
17  mandatory arbitration procedures:
18  (1) For collective bargaining agreements between an
19  educational employer and exclusive representative,
20  mediation shall commence upon 15 days' notice from either
21  party or at such later time as the mediation services so
22  chosen can be provided to the parties. If fact-finding
23  procedures under subsection (a-10) were utilized, the
24  parties shall be deemed to have satisfied the requirement
25  to engage in mediation before requesting arbitration. In
26  mediation under this Section, if either party requests the

 

 

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1  use of mediation services from the Federal Mediation and
2  Conciliation Service, the other party shall either join in
3  such request or bear the additional cost of mediation
4  services from another source. The mediator shall have a
5  duty to keep the Board informed on the progress of the
6  mediation. If any dispute has not been resolved within 15
7  days after the first meeting of the parties and the
8  mediator or within such other time limit as may be
9  mutually agreed upon by the parties, either the exclusive
10  representative or employer may request of the other, in
11  writing, arbitration, and shall submit a copy of the
12  request to the Board.
13  (2) Within 10 days after such a request for
14  arbitration has been made, the educational employer shall
15  choose a delegate and the employees' exclusive
16  representative shall choose a delegate to a panel of
17  arbitration as provided in this Section. The employer and
18  employees shall forthwith advise the other and the Board
19  of their selections. The parties may agree to waive the
20  tripartite panel and use a sole arbitrator to resolve the
21  dispute.
22  (3) Within 7 days after the request of either party,
23  the parties shall request a panel of impartial arbitrators
24  from which they shall select the neutral chairperson or
25  sole arbitrator according to the procedures provided in
26  this Section. If the parties have agreed to a contract

 

 

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1  that contains a grievance resolution procedure, the
2  chairperson or sole arbitrator shall be selected using
3  their agreed contract procedure unless they mutually agree
4  to another procedure. In the absence of an agreed contract
5  procedure for selecting an impartial arbitrator, the
6  parties shall submit a request to the Federal Mediation
7  and Conciliation Services for a panel of 7 arbitrators who
8  are members in good standing with the National Academy of
9  Arbitrators and have issued at least 5 interest
10  arbitration awards arising under either the Illinois
11  Public Labor Relations Act or this Act. The parties shall
12  conduct a coin toss to determine who strikes first, and
13  the parties shall alternately strike arbitrators from the
14  list until one remains. The parties shall promptly notify
15  the Board of their selection.
16  (4) The chairperson or sole arbitrator shall call a
17  hearing to begin within 15 days or as otherwise mutually
18  agreed upon by the parties and give reasonable notice of
19  the time and place of the hearing. The hearing shall be
20  held at the offices of the Board or at such other location
21  as mutually agreed upon by the parties. The chairperson or
22  sole arbitrator shall preside over the hearing and shall
23  take testimony. Any oral or documentary evidence and other
24  data deemed relevant by the arbitration panel or sole
25  arbitrator may be received in evidence. The proceedings
26  shall be informal. Technical rules of evidence shall not

 

 

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1  apply and the competency of the evidence shall not thereby
2  be deemed impaired. A verbatim record of the proceedings
3  shall be made and the arbitrator shall arrange for the
4  necessary recording service. Transcripts may be ordered at
5  the expense of the party ordering them, but the
6  transcripts shall not be necessary for a decision by the
7  arbitration panel or sole arbitrator. The expense of the
8  proceedings, including a fee for the chairperson or sole
9  arbitrator, shall be borne equally by each of the parties
10  to the dispute. The delegates, if educational employees,
11  shall continue on the payroll of the educational employer
12  without loss of pay. The hearing conducted by the
13  arbitration panel or sole arbitrator may be adjourned from
14  time to time, but, unless otherwise agreed by the parties,
15  shall be concluded within 30 days after the time of its
16  commencement. Majority actions and rulings shall
17  constitute the actions and rulings of the arbitration
18  panel. Arbitration proceedings under this Section shall
19  not be interrupted or terminated by reason of any unfair
20  labor practice charge filed by either party at any time.
21  (5) The arbitration panel or sole arbitrator may
22  administer oaths, require the attendance of witnesses and
23  the production of such books, papers, contracts,
24  agreements, and documents as may be deemed by it material
25  to a just determination of the issues in dispute, and, for
26  such purpose, may issue subpoenas. If any person refuses

 

 

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1  to obey a subpoena or refuses to be sworn or to testify or
2  if any witness, party, or attorney is guilty of contempt
3  while in attendance at any hearing, the arbitration panel
4  or sole arbitrator may, or the Attorney General if
5  requested shall, invoke the aid of any circuit court
6  within the jurisdiction in which the hearing is being
7  held, which court shall issue an appropriate order. Any
8  failure to obey the order may be punished by the court as
9  contempt.
10  (6) At any time before the rendering of an award, the
11  chairperson of the arbitration panel or sole arbitrator,
12  if he or she is of the opinion that it would be useful or
13  beneficial to do so, may remand the dispute to the parties
14  for further collective bargaining for a period not to
15  exceed 2 weeks. If the dispute is remanded for further
16  collective bargaining, the time provisions of this Act
17  shall be extended for a time period equal to that of the
18  remand. The chairperson of the panel of arbitration or
19  sole arbitrator shall notify the Board of the remand.
20  (7) At or before the conclusion of the hearing held
21  pursuant to paragraph (4), the arbitration panel or sole
22  arbitrator shall identify the economic issues in dispute
23  and direct each of the parties to submit, within such time
24  limit as the panel shall prescribe, to the arbitration
25  panel or sole arbitrator and to each other its last offer
26  of settlement on each economic issue. The determination of

 

 

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1  the arbitration panel or sole arbitrator as to the issues
2  in dispute and as to which of these issues are economic
3  shall be conclusive. The arbitration panel or sole
4  arbitrator, within 30 days after the conclusion of the
5  hearing or such further additional periods to which the
6  parties may agree, shall make written findings of fact and
7  promulgate a written opinion and shall mail or otherwise
8  deliver a true copy thereof to the parties and their
9  representatives and to the Board. As to each economic
10  issue, the arbitration panel or sole arbitrator shall
11  adopt the last offer of settlement that, in the opinion of
12  the arbitration panel or sole arbitrator, more nearly
13  complies with the applicable factors prescribed in
14  paragraph (8). The findings, opinions, and order as to all
15  other issues shall be based upon the applicable factors
16  prescribed in paragraph (8).
17  (8) If there is no agreement between the parties or if
18  there is an agreement but the parties have begun
19  negotiations or discussions looking to a new agreement or
20  amendment of the existing agreement and wage rates or
21  other conditions of employment under the proposed new or
22  amended agreement are in dispute, the arbitration panel or
23  sole arbitrator shall base its findings, opinions, and
24  order upon the following factors, as applicable:
25  (A) the lawful authority of the employer;
26  (B) the federal and State statutes or local

 

 

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1  ordinances and resolutions applicable to the employer
2  or employees;
3  (C) prior collective bargaining agreements and the
4  bargaining history between the parties;
5  (D) stipulations of the parties;
6  (E) the interests and welfare of the public and
7  the students and families served by the employer;
8  (F) the employer's financial ability to fund the
9  proposals based on existing available resources,
10  provided that such ability is not predicated on an
11  assumption that lines of credit or reserve funds are
12  available or that the employer may or will receive or
13  develop new sources of revenue or increase existing
14  sources of revenue;
15  (G) the impact of any economic adjustments on the
16  employer's ability to pursue its educational mission;
17  (H) the present and future general economic
18  conditions in the locality and State;
19  (I) a comparison of the wages, hours, and
20  conditions of employment of the employees involved in
21  the dispute with the wages, hours, and conditions of
22  employment of employees performing similar services in
23  public education in comparable communities;
24  (J) the average consumer prices in urban areas for
25  goods and services, which is commonly known as the
26  cost of living;

 

 

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1  (K) the overall compensation presently received by
2  the employees involved in the dispute and by all other
3  employees who are employed by the educational
4  employer, including direct wage compensation;
5  vacations, holidays, and other excused time; insurance
6  and pensions; medical and hospitalization benefits;
7  the continuity and stability of employment and all
8  other benefits received; and how each party's proposed
9  compensation structure supports the educational goals
10  of the district;
11  (L) changes in any of the circumstances listed in
12  items (A) through (K) of this paragraph (8) during the
13  arbitration proceedings;
14  (M) the effect that any term the parties are at
15  impasse on has or may have on the overall educational
16  environment, learning conditions, and working
17  conditions with the school district;
18  (N) the effect that any term the parties are at
19  impasse on has or may have in promoting the public
20  policy of this State; and
21  (O) such other factors, not confined to the
22  foregoing, that are normally or traditionally taken in
23  consideration in the determination of wages, hours,
24  and conditions of employment through voluntary
25  collective bargaining, mediation, fact-finding, or
26  arbitration or otherwise between the parties in the

 

 

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1  public service or private employment.
2  (9) Arbitration procedures shall be deemed to be
3  initiated by the filing of a letter requesting mediation
4  as required under paragraph (1). The commencement of a new
5  fiscal year after the initiation of arbitration procedures
6  under this Act but before the arbitration decision or its
7  enforcement shall not be deemed to render a dispute moot
8  or to otherwise impair the jurisdiction or authority of
9  the arbitration panel or sole arbitrator or its decision.
10  Increases in rates of compensation awarded by the
11  arbitration panel or sole arbitrator may be effective only
12  at the start of the fiscal year next commencing after the
13  date of the arbitration award. If a new fiscal year has
14  commenced either since the initiation of arbitration
15  procedures under this Act or since any mutually agreed
16  extension of the statutorily required period of mediation
17  under this Act by the parties to the labor dispute causing
18  a delay in the initiation of arbitration, the foregoing
19  limitations shall be inapplicable, and such awarded
20  increases may be retroactive to the commencement of the
21  fiscal year, any other statute or charter provisions to
22  the contrary, notwithstanding. At any time the parties, by
23  stipulation, may amend or modify an award of arbitration.
24  (10) Orders of the arbitration panel or sole
25  arbitrator shall be reviewable, upon appropriate petition
26  by either the educational employer or the exclusive

 

 

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1  bargaining representative, by the circuit court for the
2  county in which the dispute arose or in which a majority of
3  the affected employees reside but only for reasons that
4  the arbitration panel or sole arbitrator was without or
5  exceeded its statutory authority; the order is arbitrary
6  or capricious; or the order was procured by fraud,
7  collusion, or other similar and unlawful means. Such
8  petitions for review must be filed with the appropriate
9  circuit court within 90 days following the issuance of the
10  arbitration order. The pendency of such proceeding for
11  review shall not automatically stay the order of the
12  arbitration panel or sole arbitrator. The party against
13  whom the final decision of any such court shall be
14  adverse, if such court finds such appeal or petition to be
15  frivolous, shall pay reasonable attorney's fees and costs
16  to the successful party, as determined by the court in its
17  discretion. If the court's decision affirms the award of
18  money, such award, if retroactive, shall bear interest at
19  the rate of 12% per annum from the effective retroactive
20  date.
21  (11) During the pendency of proceedings before the
22  arbitration panel or sole arbitrator, existing wages,
23  hours, and other conditions of employment shall not be
24  changed by action of either party without the consent of
25  the other, but a party may so consent without prejudice to
26  his or her rights or position under this Act. The

 

 

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1  proceedings are deemed to be pending before the
2  arbitration panel or sole arbitrator upon the initiation
3  of arbitration procedures under this Act. The educational
4  employees covered by this subsection (e) may not withhold
5  services, nor may educational employers lock out or
6  prevent such employees from performing services at any
7  time.
8  (12) All of the terms decided upon by the arbitration
9  panel or sole arbitrator shall be included in an agreement
10  to be submitted to the educational employer's governing
11  body for ratification and adoption by law, ordinance, or
12  the equivalent appropriate means.
13  The governing body shall review each term decided by
14  the arbitration panel or sole arbitrator. If the governing
15  body fails to reject one or more terms of the arbitration
16  panel's or sole arbitrator's decision by a three-fifths
17  vote of those duly elected and qualified members of the
18  governing body at the next regularly scheduled meeting of
19  the governing body after issuance, such term or terms
20  shall become a part of the collective bargaining agreement
21  of the parties. If the governing body affirmatively
22  rejects one or more terms of the arbitration panel's or
23  sole arbitrator's decision, it must provide written
24  reasons for such rejection with respect to each term so
25  rejected, within 20 days after such rejection and the
26  parties shall return to the arbitration panel or sole

 

 

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1  arbitrator for further proceedings and issuance of a
2  supplemental decision with respect to the rejected terms.
3  Any supplemental decision by an arbitration panel, sole
4  arbitrator, or other decision maker agreed to by the
5  parties shall be final and binding on the parties. The
6  voting requirements of this subsection (e) shall apply to
7  all disputes submitted to arbitration pursuant to this
8  Section, notwithstanding any contrary voting requirements
9  contained in any existing collective bargaining agreement
10  between the parties.
11  (13) If the governing body of the employer votes to
12  reject the panel's or sole arbitrator's decision, the
13  parties shall return to the panel or sole arbitrator
14  within 30 days from the issuance of the reasons for
15  rejection for further proceedings and issuance of a final
16  and binding supplemental decision. All reasonable costs of
17  such supplemental proceeding, including the exclusive
18  representative's reasonable attorney's fees, as
19  established by the Board, shall be paid by the educational
20  employer.
21  (14) Notwithstanding the other provisions of this
22  subsection (e), the educational employer and exclusive
23  representative may agree to submit unresolved disputes
24  concerning wages, hours, terms, and conditions of
25  employment to an alternative form of impasse resolution.
26  (15) The costs of mediation and arbitration shall be

 

 

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1  shared equally between the educational employer and the
2  exclusive bargaining agent, provided that, for purposes of
3  mediation under this Act, if either party requests the use
4  of mediation services from the Federal Mediation and
5  Conciliation Service, the other party shall either join in
6  such request or bear the additional cost of mediation
7  services from another source. All other costs and expenses
8  of complying with this Section must be borne by the party
9  incurring them, except as otherwise expressly provided in
10  this subsection (e).
11  If an educational employer or exclusive bargaining
12  representative refuses to participate in mediation or
13  arbitration when required by this Section, the refusal shall
14  be deemed a refusal to bargain in good faith.
15  Nothing in this Act prevents an employer and an exclusive
16  bargaining representative who are not subject to mandatory
17  arbitration under this subsection (e) from mutually submitting
18  to final and binding impartial arbitration unresolved issues
19  concerning the terms of a new collective bargaining agreement.
20  This subsection (e) applies only to collective bargaining
21  agreements entered into, modified, extended, or renewed on or
22  after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 103rd
23  General Assembly.
24  (Source: P.A. 101-664, eff. 4-2-21.)

 

 

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