Illinois 2023 2023-2024 Regular Session

Illinois Senate Bill SB0291 Introduced / Bill

Filed 02/02/2023

                    103RD GENERAL ASSEMBLY State of Illinois 2023 and 2024 SB0291 Introduced 2/2/2023, by Sen. Celina Villanueva SYNOPSIS AS INTRODUCED:  New Act30 ILCS 105/5.990 new  Creates the Secure Jobs Act. Establishes a framework for employee discipline and discharge. Prohibits the unjust discharge of an employee. Contains provisions concerning factors to be considered when determining whether an employee has been discharged for just cause and the conditions that allow for a discharge based on bona fide economic reasons. Requires employers to use progressive discipline measures. Limits the use of electronic monitoring. Provides for severance pay. Directs the Department of Labor to adopt rules and administer the Act. Provides statutory remedies for wrongfully discharged employees and authorizes the recovery of damages. Creates the Wrongful Discharge Enforcement Fund as a special fund in the State treasury. Effective January 1, 2024.  LRB103 27122 SPS 53490 b   A BILL FOR 103RD GENERAL ASSEMBLY State of Illinois 2023 and 2024 SB0291 Introduced 2/2/2023, by Sen. Celina Villanueva SYNOPSIS AS INTRODUCED:  New Act30 ILCS 105/5.990 new New Act  30 ILCS 105/5.990 new  Creates the Secure Jobs Act. Establishes a framework for employee discipline and discharge. Prohibits the unjust discharge of an employee. Contains provisions concerning factors to be considered when determining whether an employee has been discharged for just cause and the conditions that allow for a discharge based on bona fide economic reasons. Requires employers to use progressive discipline measures. Limits the use of electronic monitoring. Provides for severance pay. Directs the Department of Labor to adopt rules and administer the Act. Provides statutory remedies for wrongfully discharged employees and authorizes the recovery of damages. Creates the Wrongful Discharge Enforcement Fund as a special fund in the State treasury. Effective January 1, 2024.  LRB103 27122 SPS 53490 b     LRB103 27122 SPS 53490 b   A BILL FOR
103RD GENERAL ASSEMBLY State of Illinois 2023 and 2024 SB0291 Introduced 2/2/2023, by Sen. Celina Villanueva SYNOPSIS AS INTRODUCED:
New Act30 ILCS 105/5.990 new New Act  30 ILCS 105/5.990 new
New Act
30 ILCS 105/5.990 new
Creates the Secure Jobs Act. Establishes a framework for employee discipline and discharge. Prohibits the unjust discharge of an employee. Contains provisions concerning factors to be considered when determining whether an employee has been discharged for just cause and the conditions that allow for a discharge based on bona fide economic reasons. Requires employers to use progressive discipline measures. Limits the use of electronic monitoring. Provides for severance pay. Directs the Department of Labor to adopt rules and administer the Act. Provides statutory remedies for wrongfully discharged employees and authorizes the recovery of damages. Creates the Wrongful Discharge Enforcement Fund as a special fund in the State treasury. Effective January 1, 2024.
LRB103 27122 SPS 53490 b     LRB103 27122 SPS 53490 b
    LRB103 27122 SPS 53490 b
A BILL FOR
SB0291LRB103 27122 SPS 53490 b   SB0291  LRB103 27122 SPS 53490 b
  SB0291  LRB103 27122 SPS 53490 b
1  AN ACT concerning employment.
2  Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
3  represented in the General Assembly:
4  Section 1. Short title. This Act may be cited as the Secure
5  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,
17  reasonable person would find so intolerable that voluntary
18  termination is the only reasonable alternative.
19  "Day or temporary laborer", "day and temporary labor
20  services agency", and "third party client" have the meaning
21  ascribed to those terms under Section 5 of the Day and
22  Temporary Labor Services Act.
23  "Department" means the Department of Labor.

 

103RD GENERAL ASSEMBLY State of Illinois 2023 and 2024 SB0291 Introduced 2/2/2023, by Sen. Celina Villanueva SYNOPSIS AS INTRODUCED:
New Act30 ILCS 105/5.990 new New Act  30 ILCS 105/5.990 new
New Act
30 ILCS 105/5.990 new
Creates the Secure Jobs Act. Establishes a framework for employee discipline and discharge. Prohibits the unjust discharge of an employee. Contains provisions concerning factors to be considered when determining whether an employee has been discharged for just cause and the conditions that allow for a discharge based on bona fide economic reasons. Requires employers to use progressive discipline measures. Limits the use of electronic monitoring. Provides for severance pay. Directs the Department of Labor to adopt rules and administer the Act. Provides statutory remedies for wrongfully discharged employees and authorizes the recovery of damages. Creates the Wrongful Discharge Enforcement Fund as a special fund in the State treasury. Effective January 1, 2024.
LRB103 27122 SPS 53490 b     LRB103 27122 SPS 53490 b
    LRB103 27122 SPS 53490 b
A BILL FOR

 

 

New Act
30 ILCS 105/5.990 new



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1  "Discharge" means any cessation of employment, including
2  constructive discharge, indefinite suspension, layoff, or
3  reduction in hours.
4  "Egregious misconduct" means deliberate or grossly
5  negligent conduct that:
6  (1) endangers the safety or well-being of the
7  individual, co-workers, customers, or other persons,
8  including discrimination against, harassment of, or
9  causing physical or emotional harm to co-workers,
10  customers, or other persons;
11  (2) causes serious damage to the employer's or
12  customers' property or business interests, including, but
13  not limited to, theft; or
14  (3) involves grossly inappropriate behavior such as
15  working under the influence of intoxicants or controlled
16  substances.
17  "Electronic monitoring" means the collection of
18  information concerning worker activities, communications,
19  actions, biometric information, as that term is defined in
20  Section 10 of the Biometric Information Privacy Act, or
21  behaviors by electronic means including, but not limited to,
22  video or audio surveillance, electronic work pace tracking,
23  and other means.
24  "Employ" means to suffer or permit to work.
25  "Employee" has the meaning given that term in Section 2 of
26  the Illinois Wage Payment and Collection Act, and also

 

 

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1  includes a "day or temporary laborer" but does not include a
2  casual employee who performs work in or around a private home
3  that is irregular in nature. A person may be an employee of 2
4  or more employers at the same time. "Employee" does not
5  include supervisors or persons who hold elective office.
6  "Employer" has the meaning given that term in Section 2 of
7  the Illinois Wage Payment and Collection Act, and also
8  includes a "third party client" and a "day and temporary labor
9  services agency". More than one entity may be the employer of
10  an employee, including in circumstances where one entity
11  controls, is controlled by, or is under common control with
12  another employer, or where one entity exerts control over the
13  operations of another employer. An employer-employee
14  relationship is presumed to exist when an individual performs
15  labor or services for an employer. The party asserting that an
16  individual is not an employee must establish by a
17  preponderance of the evidence that the individual is an
18  independent contractor.
19  "Just cause" means:
20  (1) an employee's failure to satisfactorily perform
21  his or her job duties or to comply with employer policies;
22  (2) an employee's egregious misconduct; or
23  (3) bona fide economic reasons.
24  "Progressive discipline" means an employer's disciplinary
25  system that provides a graduated range of reasonable responses
26  to an employee's failure to satisfactorily perform his or her

 

 

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1  job duties or comply with employer policies, with the
2  disciplinary measures ranging from mild to severe, depending
3  on the frequency and degree of the failure, and the employee
4  being afforded a reasonable period of time to address
5  concerns.
6  "Reduction in hours" means a reduction in an employee's
7  hours of work totaling at least 15% of the employee's average
8  weekly work hours.
9  "Relator" means a current or former employee, contractor,
10  subcontractor, or employee of such a contractor or
11  subcontractor of an alleged violator of this Act, regardless
12  of whether that person has received full or partial relief,
13  who seeks relief through a public enforcement action brought
14  under this Act.
15  "Representative organization" means a nonprofit or labor
16  organization selected by a relator to initiate a public
17  enforcement action on the relator's behalf.
18  "Severance pay" has the meaning of that term as described
19  in Section 50.
20  "Short-term position" means employment pursuant to a
21  written contract that specifies that the position is to end
22  after a specified period of time, not to exceed 6 months, where
23  the employer can show that the work or need in question is
24  expected to end, such as in the case of a seasonal job or a job
25  to perform a specific project.

 

 

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1  Section 10. Prohibition against discharge without just
2  cause.
3  (a) An employer shall not discharge an employee without
4  just cause. Just cause may not be based on off-duty conduct
5  unless there is a demonstrable and material nexus between the
6  conduct and the employee's job performance or the employer's
7  legitimate business interests.
8  (b) The employer shall within 3 days provide a written
9  explanation to any discharged employee of the specific reasons
10  for the discharge. In determining whether an employer had just
11  cause for discharge, a fact finder may not consider any
12  reasons not included in such written explanation. Where an
13  employer fails to provide a written explanation to a
14  discharged employee, the discharge shall not be deemed to be
15  based on just cause. All information and judgments that the
16  employer considered in making the determination shall be made
17  available to the employee or his or her representative.
18  (c) The employer shall bear the burden of proving just
19  cause including, if applicable, that the employer followed
20  progressive discipline, by a preponderance of non-hearsay
21  evidence in any proceeding brought pursuant to this Act.
22  Section 15. Factors to be considered. In determining
23  whether an employee has been discharged for just cause for
24  failure to satisfactorily perform job duties or for failure to
25  comply with employer policies, the fact finder shall consider,

 

 

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1  in addition to any other relevant factors, whether:
2  (1) the employee knew or should have known of his or
3  her job duties or of the employer's policy;
4  (2) the employer provided relevant and adequate
5  training to the employee;
6  (3) the employer's policy was reasonable and applied
7  consistently;
8  (4) the employer undertook a thorough, fair and
9  objective investigation; and
10  (5) the employer used progressive discipline.
11  Section 20. Discharge for failure to satisfactorily
12  perform job duties. A discharge for failure to satisfactorily
13  perform job duties or comply with employer policies shall not
14  be deemed to be based on just cause unless the employer has
15  used progressive discipline. Provided, further, that the time
16  period between a first warning or discipline and termination
17  shall be not less than 15 days, and the employer may not rely
18  on a warning or discipline issued more than one year in the
19  past to justify a discharge.
20  Section 25. Progressive discipline. Under progressive
21  discipline, an employer may discharge an employee immediately
22  for egregious misconduct. A finding of misconduct for purposes
23  of unemployment insurance eligibility shall not necessarily
24  constitute serious misconduct for purposes of this Act. An

 

 

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1  employee discharged for egregious misconduct shall not be
2  entitled to severance pay.
3  Section 30. Discharge based on bona fide economic reasons.
4  A discharge shall not be deemed to be based on bona fide
5  economic reasons unless the following conditions are met:
6  (1) the discharge results from a reduction in
7  production, sales, services, profit, or funding of the
8  employer, or technological or organizational changes in
9  the employer's operations that necessitate full or partial
10  reduction of the employer's operations;
11  (2) the employees or groups of employees to be
12  discharged are identified using broadly applicable
13  criteria that do not appear to target individuals; and
14  (3) the bona fide economic reasons justifying the
15  discharge were specified in writing to the employee at the
16  time of the discharge and are supported by the employer's
17  records.
18  A discharge shall be presumed not to be based on bona fide
19  economic reasons where the employer hired or hires another
20  employee to perform substantially the same work within 90 days
21  before or after the discharge. Elimination of staff redundancy
22  created by a merger or acquisition shall not be deemed a bona
23  fide economic reason for discharge of employees.
24  Section 35. Employee actions that do not constitute just

 

 

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1  cause for termination. In no event shall any of the following
2  actions by an employee constitute just cause for termination:
3  (1) an employee's communication about workplace
4  practices or policies, including, but not limited to,
5  health or safety practices or hazards related to COVID-19,
6  to any person, including to an employer, an employer's
7  agent, other employees, a government agency, or the
8  public, including through print, online, social media, or
9  any other media; or
10  (2) an employee's refusal to work under conditions
11  that the employee reasonably believes would expose him or
12  her, other employees, or the public to an unreasonable
13  health or safety risk, including, but not limited to, risk
14  of illness or exposure to COVID-19.
15  An employer shall not retaliate against any employee or
16  other person for such conduct. Notwithstanding any other
17  provision of law, such conduct shall constitute protected
18  conduct and may not be contractually prohibited, or subject to
19  civil or criminal sanction or liability.
20  Section 40. Employer assessments.  An employer must
21  conduct its own assessment of an employee, and may not rely on
22  data gathered through electronic monitoring in discharging or
23  disciplining an employee. Such employment decisions must be
24  made based on human-provided information sources such as
25  supervisors' assessments and documentation, or consulting

 

 

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1  co-workers. An employer must disclose in advance to employees
2  any electronic monitoring or data collection at a workplace,
3  disclose the purposes for which the data will be used, and
4  provide employees meaningful opportunities to challenge any
5  electronic monitoring or data systems. However, data gathered
6  through electronic monitoring may be used in the following
7  circumstances: for non-employment-related purposes; for
8  discharging or disciplining an employee in cases of egregious
9  misconduct or involving threats to the health or safety of
10  other persons; or where required by State or federal law.
11  Provided further, information on employee tardiness or
12  absenteeism from electronic time-keeping systems that are used
13  to measure employee work shifts for payroll purposes may be
14  considered for purposes of employee discharge and discipline.
15  Section 45. Discharge; short-term position. Discharge at
16  the end of a short-term position shall not require a showing of
17  just cause and shall not entitle an employee to severance pay.
18  A position shall not be deemed to be a short-term position
19  where the employer hires another employee, including another
20  employee who is a day or temporary laborer, to perform
21  substantially the same work within 90 days before or after the
22  discharge. However, discharge prior to the end of the term of a
23  short-term position shall require a showing of just cause and
24  shall entitle the employee to severance pay.

 

 

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1  Section 50. Severance pay. An employee shall accrue an
2  entitlement to one hour of severance pay for every 12.5 hours
3  worked during his or her first 2,080 hours of employment, and
4  for every 50 hours worked thereafter. Within 14 days after
5  discharge, the employer shall pay the employee his or her
6  accrued severance pay, calculated based on the number of hours
7  accrued multiplied by the employee's rate of pay upon
8  discharge. However, an employee who is discharged at the end
9  of a short-term position shall not be entitled to severance
10  pay. Severance pay shall be exclusive of final compensation
11  due an employee upon separation, as provided for under Section
12  2 of the Illinois Wage Payment and Collection Act. For
13  purposes of determining an employee's hours of employment,
14  tenure, or seniority, multiple periods worked for the
15  employer, including through a day and temporary services
16  agency, and any time worked for a predecessor employer shall
17  be aggregated.
18  Section 55. Employment through day and temporary labor
19  services agencies.
20  (a) Where an employee is a day or temporary laborer who has
21  worked 100 hours or more for a single third party client, the
22  third party client shall be deemed his or her employer, shall
23  become subject to the protections of this Act as regards the
24  employee, and may not discharge the employee without just
25  cause. However, if the employee's employment with the third

 

 

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1  party client qualifies as a short-term position, then a
2  showing of just cause for discharge at the end of the
3  position's defined term shall not be required, nor shall
4  payment of severance pay at the end of the position's defined
5  term be required. In such a case the third party client must
6  show that all of the criteria and conditions for a short-term
7  position in Section 45 and in the definition of short-term
8  position are satisfied in order for the employment of the day
9  or temporary laborer to qualify as a short-term position.
10  (b) Where an employee is a day or temporary laborer who has
11  not worked 100 hours or more for a single third party client
12  but has worked 100 hours or more for a temporary labor services
13  agency, aggregating all hours worked for multiple third party
14  clients, the employee shall become subject to more limited
15  protection under the Act. Such an employee shall be given
16  priority by the temporary labor services agency for future
17  work assignments over employees who have not worked 100 hours
18  or more for the agency. When such an employee is discharged by
19  the day and temporary labor services agency, the employee
20  shall be entitled to payment of severance pay, as determined
21  under Section 50. Such an employee shall be deemed discharged
22  if he or she receives no work assignment offers from the
23  temporary labor services agency for a period of 21 days or
24  more. However, if such an employee's employment with the
25  temporary labor services agency ends in order for the employee
26  to commence direct employment with a third party client, then

 

 

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1  no payment of severance pay shall be required.
2  (c) Employers that are third party clients and employers
3  that are day and temporary labor services agencies shall be
4  jointly and severally responsible with one another for
5  compliance with the Act's requirements.
6  Section 60. Collective bargaining agreement exemption. The
7  requirements of this Act shall not apply to employees who are
8  covered by a valid collective bargaining agreement.
9  Section 65. Retaliation prohibited. No employer or any
10  other person shall threaten, intimidate, discipline,
11  discharge, demote, suspend, or harass an employee, reduce the
12  hours or pay of an employee, inform another employer that an
13  employee has alleged that the employer violated this Act or
14  any other law, discriminate against an employee, or take any
15  other adverse action that penalizes an employee for, or is
16  reasonably likely to deter an employee from, exercising or
17  attempting to exercise any right protected under this Act or
18  any other law, including informing other employees or persons
19  of their rights under this Act or any other law, assisting in
20  any way with any complaint or investigation involving this
21  Act, including another workers' case, or sharing information
22  about workplace issues with other employees or the public,
23  including on social media. Threats or any other adverse action
24  related to perceived immigration status or work authorization

 

 

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1  shall constitute threats or adverse actions as those terms are
2  used in this Section. An employee need not explicitly refer to
3  this Act or any other law or the rights enumerated herein to be
4  protected from retaliation. The protections afforded by this
5  Section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good
6  faith alleges violations of this Act.
7  Section 70. Protection of former employees from
8  blacklisting. An employer shall not prevent or attempt to
9  prevent, by word or writing of any kind, a former employee from
10  obtaining employment with any other employer. An employer is
11  not prohibited from providing by word or writing to any other
12  employer to whom the discharged employee has applied for
13  employment a truthful statement of the reason for discharge.
14  Section 75. Notice and posting of rights.
15  (a) The Department shall publish and make available
16  notices informing employees of their rights protected under
17  this Act. Employers shall post such notices in a conspicuous
18  location in the workplace or at any job site, and shall give a
19  notice to each employee at the time of hiring and on an annual
20  basis. The notices shall be made available in a downloadable
21  format on the Department's website in English, Spanish,
22  Polish, Mandarin, and Cantonese.
23  (b) Every employer shall conspicuously post at any
24  workplace or job site where any employee works the notices

 

 

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1  described in subsection (a) that apply to the particular
2  workplace or job site. The notices shall be in English and any
3  language spoken as a primary language by at least 5% of the
4  employees at that location if the Department has made the
5  notice available in that language.
6  Section 80. Recordkeeping.
7  (a) Employers shall retain records documenting their
8  compliance with the applicable requirements of this Act. In
9  addition, day and temporary labor services agencies shall
10  maintain records of each individual day or temporary laborer's
11  start date with such day and temporary labor services agency
12  and the dates on which that laborer was placed with a third
13  party client. Employers shall retain such records for a period
14  of 3 years and shall allow the Department access to such
15  records and other information, in accordance with applicable
16  law and with appropriate notice, in furtherance of an
17  investigation conducted in accordance with this Act.
18  (b) In addition, employers shall report annually to the
19  Department, and any person who requests a copy of:
20  (1) the employer's total employment each year broken
21  down by full-time employment (defined as at least 30 hours
22  per week), part-time employment (defined as less than 30
23  hours per week), short-term employment, and employment
24  through a temp or staffing agency; and
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1  year broken down by whether the separation was a discharge
2  for cause, a discharge for bona fide economic reasons, a
3  separation as a result of the end of a short-term
4  position, an employee resignation, or an employee
5  retirement.
6  Within 14 days after a request for such records, employers
7  shall make requested records available for review and copying.
8  (c) An employer's failure to maintain, retain, or produce
9  a record or other information required to be maintained by
10  this Section relevant to a material fact alleged by an
11  employee in a complaint brought pursuant to this Section or
12  requested by the Department pursuant to an investigation,
13  creates a rebuttable presumption that such fact is true.
14  Section 85. Administrative implementation and enforcement.
15  (a) The Department shall administer and enforce the
16  provisions of this Act and shall, within 120 days after its
17  effective date, adopt rules necessary to administer and
18  enforce the provisions of this Act. The rules shall include
19  the procedures for investigations and hearings under this Act.
20  The adoption, amendment, or rescission of rules shall be in
21  conformity with the requirements of the Illinois
22  Administrative Procedure Act.
23  (b) An aggrieved employee or his or her duly authorized
24  representative may file a complaint with the Department
25  regarding violations by an employer of this Act or of any

 

 

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1  implementing rules. Upon receiving a complaint or on its own
2  initiative, the Department shall investigate potential
3  violations, make a determination whether a violation has
4  occurred, and take appropriate action to enforce the
5  provisions of this Act and any implementing rules.
6  (c) If an employer is found by the Department to have
7  violated this Act or any rules adopted under this Act, the
8  Department shall order the following, in addition to any other
9  remedy provided by law:
10  (1) In the case of unlawful discharge, retaliation,
11  blacklisting, or unlawful electronic monitoring, actual
12  and liquidated damages payable to each aggrieved worker
13  equal to, at the aggrieved party's election, $10,000 or 3
14  times the actual damages including, but not limited to,
15  unpaid wages, benefits, other remuneration owed, and
16  compensation for emotional pain, suffering, inconvenience,
17  and mental anguish, unless an adjudicator finds that
18  mitigating circumstances are present, in which case the
19  adjudicator may order that the preceding liquidated
20  damages amount be reduced as circumstances make
21  appropriate, as well as reinstatement, restoration of
22  hours, other injunctive relief (including to rectify
23  conditions that led to constructive discharge), punitive
24  damages, and such other remedies as may be appropriate.
25  (2) In the case of discharge where severance pay was
26  not provided, payment of severance pay together with an

 

 

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1  additional 2 times that amount as liquidated damages, and
2  such other remedies as may be appropriate including
3  punitive damages.
4  (3) In the case of failure to provide a timely written
5  explanation for a discharge, injunctive relief and
6  liquidated damages in an amount equal to $5,000, unless an
7  adjudicator finds that mitigating circumstances are
8  present, in which case the adjudicator may order that the
9  preceding liquidated damage amount be reduced as
10  circumstances make appropriate, and such other remedies as
11  may be appropriate, including punitive damages.
12  (4) Payment of a further sum to the Department as a
13  civil penalty in an amount of $10,000 for unlawful
14  discharge, retaliation, or blacklisting in violation of
15  this Act, or unlawful electronic monitoring, in an amount
16  of $5,000 for or failure to provide a timely written
17  explanation for a discharge, or in an amount of $1,000 for
18  other violations of this Act, including the Act's
19  recordkeeping requirements or failure to produce records
20  requested in an investigation. However, if an adjudicator
21  finds that mitigating circumstances are present, the
22  adjudicator may order that the preceding civil penalty
23  amounts be reduced as circumstances make appropriate. The
24  civil penalties imposed in accordance with this Section
25  shall be imposed on a per employee and per instance basis
26  for each violation.

 

 

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1  (5) Payment of the complainant's reasonable attorneys'
2  fees, expert fees, and other costs. For the purposes of
3  this provision, a complainant shall be deemed to have
4  prevailed and entitled to an award of fees and costs if
5  commencement of a complaint has acted as a catalyst to
6  effect policy change on the part of the respondent,
7  regardless of whether that change has been implemented
8  voluntarily, as a result of a settlement, or as a result of
9  a judgment in such party's favor.
10  (6) In assessing an appropriate remedy, due
11  consideration shall be given to the gravity of the
12  violation, the history of previous violations, and the
13  good faith of the employer.
14  (7) All amounts specified in this Act shall be updated
15  annually to keep pace with the rising cost of living by
16  increasing each amount in proportion to the increase over
17  the most recent 12-month period for which data are
18  available in the value of the Consumer Price Index for All
19  Urban Consumers (CPI-U), as calculated by the Bureau of
20  Labor Statistics of the United States Department of Labor,
21  and rounding the new amounts to the nearest multiple of
22  $5. Such increased amounts shall be announced by October 1
23  of each year, and shall take effect on January 1.
24  (8) Either party may bring an administrative appeal to
25  enforce, vacate, or modify the order, determination, or
26  other disposition.

 

 

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1  (9) No procedure or remedy set forth in this Section
2  is exclusive or a prerequisite for asserting a claim for
3  relief to enforce any rights under this Act in a court of
4  law.
5  (10) Any employer who has been ordered by the
6  Department or ordered by a court to pay unpaid backpay,
7  front pay and benefits, severance pay, liquidated or
8  punitive damages, or civil penalties, and who fails to
9  seek timely review of such a demand or order as provided
10  for under this Act and who fails to comply within 15
11  calendar days after such demand or within 35 days after an
12  administrative or court order is entered shall also be
13  liable to pay a penalty to the Department of 20% of the
14  amount found owing and a penalty to the employee of 1% per
15  calendar day of the amount found owing for each day of
16  delay in paying such wages to the employee. All moneys
17  recovered as fees and civil penalties under this Act,
18  except those owing to the affected employee, shall be
19  deposited into the Wrongful Discharge Enforcement Fund, a
20  special fund which is hereby created in the State
21  treasury. Moneys in the Fund may be used only for
22  enforcement of this Act.
23  Section 90. Civil action. Except as otherwise provided by
24  law, any person claiming to be aggrieved by an employer's
25  violation of this Act has a cause of action in any court and,

 

 

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1  upon prevailing, shall be awarded the relief specified in
2  Section 85 and, if the court finds in favor of the plaintiff,
3  it shall award such prevailing party, in addition to other
4  relief, his or her reasonable attorneys' fees, expert fees,
5  and other costs. As used in this Section, "prevailing" party
6  includes a party whose commencement of litigation has acted as
7  a catalyst to effect policy change on the part of the
8  defendant, regardless of whether that change has been
9  implemented voluntarily, as a result of a settlement, or as a
10  result of a judgment in such party's favor. Penalties and fees
11  under this Act may be assessed by the Department and recovered
12  in a civil action brought by the Department in any court or in
13  any administrative adjudicative proceeding under this Act. In
14  any such civil action or administrative adjudicative
15  proceeding under this Act, the Department shall be represented
16  by the Attorney General.
17  Section 95. Public enforcement action. A relator or
18  representative organization may initiate a public enforcement
19  action in any court to pursue civil penalties, injunctive
20  relief, and declaratory relief, as specified in Section 85, on
21  behalf of the Department, for a violation of the provisions of
22  this Act affecting the relator and other current or former
23  employees, according to the following procedures:
24  (a) The relator or representative organization shall
25  give written notice to the Department of the specific

 

 

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1  provisions of this Act alleged to have been violated,
2  including the facts and theories to support the alleged
3  violation. The notice shall be given in such a manner as
4  the Department may prescribe by rule.
5  (b) If the Department intends to investigate the
6  alleged violation, it shall notify the relator or
7  representative organization of its decision within 65
8  calendar days after the postmark date of the notice.
9  Within 60 calendar days after that decision, the
10  Department may investigate the alleged violation and take
11  any enforcement action authorized by law. If the
12  Department determines that additional time is necessary to
13  complete the investigation, it may extend the time by not
14  more than 60 additional calendar days and shall notify the
15  relator or representative organization of the extension.
16  (c) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, a
17  public enforcement action brought under this Act must be
18  commenced within the limitations period specified in
19  Section 100. The statute of limitations for bringing a
20  public enforcement action under this Act shall be tolled
21  from the date a relator or representative organization
22  files a notice under this Section with the Department, or
23  the Department commences an investigation, whichever is
24  earlier.
25  (d) The relator or representative organization may
26  commence a civil action under this Act if the Department

 

 

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1  determines that no enforcement action will be taken, or if
2  no enforcement action is taken by the Department within
3  the time limits prescribed.
4  (e) The Department may intervene in an action brought
5  under this Act and proceed with any and all claims in the
6  action as of right within 30 days after the filing of the
7  action, or for good cause, as determined by the court, at
8  any time after the 30-day period after the filing of the
9  action.
10  (f) Civil penalties recovered in a public enforcement
11  action brought under this Act shall be distributed as
12  follows:
13  (1) If the Department does not intervene in the
14  action, 60% to the Department, and 40% to the relator
15  or representative organization, to be distributed to
16  the employees affected by the violation, including a
17  service award that reflects the burdens and risks
18  assumed by the employee or representative organization
19  in prosecuting the action.
20  (2) If the Department does intervene in the
21  action, 70% to the Department, and 30% to the relator
22  or representative organization, the latter of which
23  shall be distributed to the employees affected by the
24  violation, including a service award that reflects the
25  burdens and risks assumed by the employee or
26  representative organization in prosecuting the action.

 

 

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1  (3) The share of penalties recovered for the
2  Department under this Act shall be used solely to
3  support the Department's education and enforcement
4  activities relating to this Act, with approximately
5  25% of these penalties reserved for grants to
6  community organizations for outreach and education
7  about employee rights under this Act.
8  (g) In any public enforcement action commenced under
9  this Act, the court shall allow a prevailing relator or
10  representative organization to recover all reasonable
11  attorneys' fees, expert fees, and other costs. For the
12  purposes of this provision, a "prevailing" relator or
13  representative organization includes a relator or
14  representative organization whose commencement of
15  litigation has acted as a catalyst to effect policy change
16  on the part of the defendant, regardless of whether that
17  change has been implemented voluntarily, as a result of a
18  settlement, or as a result of a judgment in such relator or
19  representative organization's favor.
20  (h) No public enforcement action brought under this
21  Act shall be required to meet class action certification
22  requirements under Part 8 of Article II of the Code of
23  Civil Procedure or Rule 23(a) of the Federal Rules of
24  Civil Procedure.
25  (i) The relator or representative organization may not
26  recover compensatory damages or back pay, or seek

 

 

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1  reinstatement, in a public enforcement action. But the
2  filing of a public enforcement action does not preclude an
3  employee from pursuing these remedies in another forum.
4  (j) The right to bring a public enforcement action
5  under this Act shall not be impaired by any private
6  contract.
7  Section 100. Limitation of actions. Notwithstanding any
8  other provision of law, an action under this Act must be filed
9  within 3 years after the complainant knew or should have known
10  of the alleged violation. However, this statute of limitations
11  period shall be tolled for the duration of any state of
12  emergency declared by the State or by any city or county in
13  which the action is commenced.
14  Section 105. Non-preemption. This Act does not preempt,
15  limit, or otherwise affect the authority of any other unit of
16  government to adopt laws, rules, requirements, policies, or
17  standards providing additional employment or workplace
18  protections.
19  Section 110. Violations. An employer that violates this
20  Act is guilty of a Class A misdemeanor.
21  Section 115. Severability. The provisions of this Act are
22  severable under Section 1.31 of the Statute on Statutes.

 

 

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1  Section 120. The State Finance Act is amended by adding
2  Section 5.990 as follows:
3  (30 ILCS 105/5.990 new)
4  Sec. 5.990. The Wrongful Discharge Enforcement Fund.

 

 

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