Illinois 2023 2023-2024 Regular Session

Illinois Senate Bill SB3464 Introduced / Bill

Filed 02/08/2024

                    103RD GENERAL ASSEMBLY State of Illinois 2023 and 2024 SB3464 Introduced 2/8/2024, by Sen. Robert Peters SYNOPSIS AS INTRODUCED: New Act Creates the Work Without Fear Act. Provides that it is unlawful for any person to engage in, or to direct another person to engage in, immigration-related retaliation against any person or his or her family member or household member for the purpose of, or with the effect of, retaliating against any person for exercising any right protected under State employment laws or by any local employment ordinance. Sets forth the duties and powers of the Department of Labor under the Act. Allows the Attorney General to initiate or intervene in a civil action to obtain appropriate relief if the Attorney General has reasonable cause to believe that any person has violated the Act. Provides that nothing in the Act shall be construed to prevent any person from making complaint or prosecuting his or her own claim for damages caused by retaliation. Allows a person who is the subject of retaliation prohibited by the Act to bring a civil action for: (1) back pay, with interest, and front pay, or, in lieu of actual damages, liquidated damages of $30,000; (2) a civil penalty in an amount not to exceed $10,000; (3) reasonable attorney's fees and court costs; and (4) equitable relief as the court may deem appropriate and just. Provides that a person that violates any provision of the Act shall be subject to an additional civil penalty in an amount of $25,000 for each violation, or $50,000 for each repeat violation within a 5-year period. Sets forth license suspension penalties for violations of the Act. Effective January 1, 2025. LRB103 39403 SPS 69584 b   A BILL FOR 103RD GENERAL ASSEMBLY State of Illinois 2023 and 2024 SB3464 Introduced 2/8/2024, by Sen. Robert Peters SYNOPSIS AS INTRODUCED:  New Act New Act  Creates the Work Without Fear Act. Provides that it is unlawful for any person to engage in, or to direct another person to engage in, immigration-related retaliation against any person or his or her family member or household member for the purpose of, or with the effect of, retaliating against any person for exercising any right protected under State employment laws or by any local employment ordinance. Sets forth the duties and powers of the Department of Labor under the Act. Allows the Attorney General to initiate or intervene in a civil action to obtain appropriate relief if the Attorney General has reasonable cause to believe that any person has violated the Act. Provides that nothing in the Act shall be construed to prevent any person from making complaint or prosecuting his or her own claim for damages caused by retaliation. Allows a person who is the subject of retaliation prohibited by the Act to bring a civil action for: (1) back pay, with interest, and front pay, or, in lieu of actual damages, liquidated damages of $30,000; (2) a civil penalty in an amount not to exceed $10,000; (3) reasonable attorney's fees and court costs; and (4) equitable relief as the court may deem appropriate and just. Provides that a person that violates any provision of the Act shall be subject to an additional civil penalty in an amount of $25,000 for each violation, or $50,000 for each repeat violation within a 5-year period. Sets forth license suspension penalties for violations of the Act. Effective January 1, 2025.  LRB103 39403 SPS 69584 b     LRB103 39403 SPS 69584 b   A BILL FOR
103RD GENERAL ASSEMBLY State of Illinois 2023 and 2024 SB3464 Introduced 2/8/2024, by Sen. Robert Peters SYNOPSIS AS INTRODUCED:
New Act New Act
New Act
Creates the Work Without Fear Act. Provides that it is unlawful for any person to engage in, or to direct another person to engage in, immigration-related retaliation against any person or his or her family member or household member for the purpose of, or with the effect of, retaliating against any person for exercising any right protected under State employment laws or by any local employment ordinance. Sets forth the duties and powers of the Department of Labor under the Act. Allows the Attorney General to initiate or intervene in a civil action to obtain appropriate relief if the Attorney General has reasonable cause to believe that any person has violated the Act. Provides that nothing in the Act shall be construed to prevent any person from making complaint or prosecuting his or her own claim for damages caused by retaliation. Allows a person who is the subject of retaliation prohibited by the Act to bring a civil action for: (1) back pay, with interest, and front pay, or, in lieu of actual damages, liquidated damages of $30,000; (2) a civil penalty in an amount not to exceed $10,000; (3) reasonable attorney's fees and court costs; and (4) equitable relief as the court may deem appropriate and just. Provides that a person that violates any provision of the Act shall be subject to an additional civil penalty in an amount of $25,000 for each violation, or $50,000 for each repeat violation within a 5-year period. Sets forth license suspension penalties for violations of the Act. Effective January 1, 2025.
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A BILL FOR
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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 Work
5  Without Fear Act.
6  Section 5. Legislative findings. The General Assembly
7  finds as follows:
8  (1) Wage theft is a serious and widespread problem
9  that causes severe hardship to low-wage workers, their
10  families, and their communities.
11  (2) When a worker is denied wages or is forced to work
12  "off the clock", there is an immediate and irreparable
13  harm to the worker and his or her family.
14  (3) Low-wage, often immigrant, workers are among the
15  most frequent victims of wage theft and are also exposed
16  to the greatest hazards at work.
17  (4) Immigrant workers are among those most frequently
18  injured or killed on the job.
19  (5) Workers who come forward to expose unfair, unsafe,
20  or illegal conditions face retaliation from employers with
21  alarming frequency. When those workers are immigrants,
22  employer retaliation often involves threats or efforts to
23  contact law enforcement agencies, including immigration

 

103RD GENERAL ASSEMBLY State of Illinois 2023 and 2024 SB3464 Introduced 2/8/2024, by Sen. Robert Peters SYNOPSIS AS INTRODUCED:
New Act New Act
New Act
Creates the Work Without Fear Act. Provides that it is unlawful for any person to engage in, or to direct another person to engage in, immigration-related retaliation against any person or his or her family member or household member for the purpose of, or with the effect of, retaliating against any person for exercising any right protected under State employment laws or by any local employment ordinance. Sets forth the duties and powers of the Department of Labor under the Act. Allows the Attorney General to initiate or intervene in a civil action to obtain appropriate relief if the Attorney General has reasonable cause to believe that any person has violated the Act. Provides that nothing in the Act shall be construed to prevent any person from making complaint or prosecuting his or her own claim for damages caused by retaliation. Allows a person who is the subject of retaliation prohibited by the Act to bring a civil action for: (1) back pay, with interest, and front pay, or, in lieu of actual damages, liquidated damages of $30,000; (2) a civil penalty in an amount not to exceed $10,000; (3) reasonable attorney's fees and court costs; and (4) equitable relief as the court may deem appropriate and just. Provides that a person that violates any provision of the Act shall be subject to an additional civil penalty in an amount of $25,000 for each violation, or $50,000 for each repeat violation within a 5-year period. Sets forth license suspension penalties for violations of the Act. Effective January 1, 2025.
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A BILL FOR

 

 

New Act



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1  enforcement agencies, if a worker engages in protected
2  conduct.
3  (6) No applicant or employee should have to fear
4  adverse action, whether it involves threats to cut hours,
5  move a worker to an undesirable schedule, or contact law
6  enforcement agencies, for exercising employment rights
7  guaranteed by the State of Illinois.
8  (7) It is in the public policy interest of the State of
9  Illinois that workers be able to report concerns to their
10  employers and to Illinois labor enforcement agencies
11  without fear of retaliation or discrimination.
12  (8) It is in the public policy interest of the State of
13  Illinois for workers to be willing to come forward to
14  expose hazardous, unsafe, and unfair conditions at their
15  work sites so that local, State, and federal agencies can
16  effectively enforce the law.
17  (9) It is essential to the enforcement of Illinois'
18  labor laws that broad, clear, and effective protections
19  from all forms of employer retaliation, including
20  prohibiting immigration-related threats, exist for workers
21  engaging in conduct protected by law.
22  Section 10. Definitions. As used in this Act:
23  "Applicable employment laws" means the Wage Payment and
24  Collection Act, the Prevailing Wage Act, the Minimum Wage Law,
25  the Day and Temporary Labor Services Act, the Equal Pay Act of

 

 

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1  2003, the Workers Compensation Act, the One Day Rest in Seven
2  Act, the Victims' Economic Security and Safety Act, the
3  Employee Sick Leave Act, the Child Labor Law, the Collective
4  Bargaining Freedom Act, the Employee Classification Act, the
5  Domestic Workers Bill of Rights, the Right to Privacy in the
6  Workplace Act, the Illinois Worker Adjustment and Retraining
7  Notification Act, the Family Bereavement Act, the Job
8  Opportunities for Qualified Applicants Act, the Paid Leave for
9  All Workers Act, the Personnel Record Review Act, and any new
10  Act concerning employment rights.
11  "Applicant" means any person pursuing employment with an
12  employer or with or through an employment agency or a day and
13  temporary labor service agency.
14  "Department" means the Department of Labor.
15  "Director" means the Director of Labor.
16  "Employer" means an individual, sole proprietorship,
17  partnership, firm, association, corporation, limited liability
18  company, business trust, and any other entity that has one or
19  more employees in this State or any person or group of persons
20  acting directly or indirectly in the interest of an employer
21  in relation to an employee.
22  "Employee" means any individual permitted to work by an
23  employer in an occupation, but shall not include any
24  individual:
25  (1) who has been and will continue to be free from
26  control and direction over the performance of his or her

 

 

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1  work, both under a contract of service with the employer
2  and in fact;
3  (2) who performs a service that is outside the usual
4  course of services performed by the employer; and
5  (3) who is in an independently established trade,
6  occupation, profession, or business.
7  "Family or household member" means a spouse or party to a
8  civil union, parent, grandparent, child, grandchild, sibling,
9  or any other person related by blood or by present or prior
10  marriage or civil union, any other person who shares a
11  relationship through a child, or any other individual whose
12  close association with the applicant, employee, or independent
13  contractor is the equivalent of a family relationship as
14  determined by the applicant, employee, independent contractor,
15  or persons jointly residing in the same household.
16  "Immigration-related retaliation" means any of the
17  following practices, when undertaken for a retaliatory
18  purpose:
19  (1) contacting or threatening to contact United States
20  immigration authorities, or otherwise reporting or
21  threatening to report a person's or employee's suspected
22  citizenship or immigration status or the suspected
23  citizenship or immigration status of a family or household
24  member of the person or employee to a federal, State, or
25  local agency;
26  (2) using the federal E-Verify system to check the

 

 

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1  employment authorization status of a person at a time or
2  in a manner not required under 8 U.S.C. 1324a(b) or not
3  authorized under any memorandum of understanding governing
4  the use of the federal E-Verify system;
5  (3) engaging in unfair documentary practices by
6  demanding more or different documents than necessary,
7  requesting specific documents, or rejecting reasonably
8  genuine-looking documents while verifying a worker's
9  citizenship, immigration status, or national origin, as
10  described in 8 U.S.C. 1324b(a)(6); and
11  (4) filing or threatening to file a false police
12  report.
13  "Immigration-related retaliation" does not include conduct
14  undertaken at the express and specific direction or request of
15  the federal government.
16  "License" means any agency permit, certificate, approval,
17  registration, or charter that is required by law and that is
18  issued by any agency for the purposes of operating a business
19  in this State. "License" does not include a professional
20  license.
21  "Person" means every natural person, firm, partnership,
22  copartnership, limited liability company, corporation,
23  association, business trust, or other legal entity, or its
24  legal representatives, agents, or assignees.
25  "Violation" means each incident when an act of
26  immigration-related retaliation was committed, without

 

 

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1  reference to the number of applicants, employees, or
2  independent contractors involved in the incident.
3  Section 15. Prohibited immigration-related retaliation.
4  (a) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, it shall
5  be unlawful for an employer or any other person or entity to
6  engage in, or to direct another person or entity to engage in,
7  immigration-related retaliation against any applicant,
8  employee, independent contractor, or his or her family member
9  or household member for the purpose of, or with the effect of,
10  retaliating against any applicant, employee, or independent
11  contractor who in good faith:
12  (1) files a complaint or informs any person of an
13  employer's or other party's alleged violation of an
14  applicable employment law;
15  (2) seeks information regarding whether an employer or
16  other party is in compliance with an applicable employment
17  law;
18  (3) informs a person of his or her potential rights
19  and remedies under an applicable employment law or assists
20  them in asserting those rights;
21  (4) files a complaint, seeks information, or informs a
22  person of his or her rights concerning conduct prohibited
23  by Section 2-101 of the Illinois Human Rights Act;
24  (5) has exercised his or her rights protected by an
25  applicable employment law or local ordinance in any former

 

 

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1  employment; or
2  (6) discloses or threatens to disclose that an
3  activity, policy, or practice of the employer poses a
4  substantial and specific danger to public health or
5  safety.
6  (b) Engaging in immigration-related retaliation against a
7  person within 90 days after the person's exercise of rights
8  protected under this Act shall raise a rebuttable presumption
9  of having done so in retaliation for the exercise of those
10  rights. The presumption of an unfair immigration-related
11  action taken by an employer or other entity may be rebutted by
12  clear and convincing evidence that the action was taken for a
13  permissible purpose.
14  Section 20. Enforcement by Department.
15  (a) It shall be the duty of the Department to inquire
16  diligently into any alleged violations of this Act, to
17  institute the actions for the penalties provided in this
18  Section, and to enforce the provisions of this Act.
19  (1) An applicant, employee, or independent contractor
20  may file a complaint with the Department alleging
21  violations of this Act by submitting a signed, completed
22  complaint on the form provided by the Department alleging
23  immigration-related retaliation and by submitting copies
24  of all supporting documentation. Complaints shall be filed
25  within one year after the date of the retaliation.

 

 

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1  (2) Complaints shall be reviewed by the Department to
2  determine whether there is cause for investigation.
3  (b) The Department shall have the following powers to
4  enforce this Act:
5  (1) Investigate and attempt equitably to adjust
6  controversies between applicants, employees, or
7  independent contractors and employers regarding claims of
8  immigration-related retaliation under this Act, including
9  administering oaths, subpoenaing and examining witnesses,
10  issuing subpoenas duces tecum requiring the production of
11  books, papers, records, and documents as may be evidence
12  of any matter under inquiry, and examining and inspecting
13  the books, papers, records, and documents as may relate to
14  the question in dispute. Service of subpoenas shall be
15  made by any sheriff or any person. Any court in this State,
16  upon the application of the Department, may compel
17  attendance of witnesses, the production of books and
18  papers, and the giving of testimony before the Department
19  by attachment for contempt or in any other way as the
20  production of evidence may be compelled before the court.
21  (2) Take complaints of immigration-related retaliation
22  in the name of the Director and his or her successors in
23  office and prosecute actions for the collection of
24  remedies and penalties for immigration-related retaliation
25  for persons financially unable to prosecute the claims
26  when in the judgment of the Department the claims are

 

 

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1  valid and enforceable in the courts. No court costs or any
2  fees for necessary process and proceedings shall be
3  payable in advance by the Department for prosecuting the
4  actions. If there is a judgment rendered against the
5  defendant, the court shall assess as part of the judgment
6  the costs of the proceeding. Upon collection of the
7  judgment, the Department shall pay from the proceeds of
8  the judgment the costs to the person who is by law entitled
9  to compensation. The Department may join in a single
10  proceeding any number of immigration-related retaliation
11  claims against the same employer, but the court shall have
12  discretionary power to order a severance or separate trial
13  for hearings.
14  (3) Make complaint in any court of competent
15  jurisdiction of violations of this Act.
16  (4) Order the appropriate government agency to suspend
17  licenses held by violating parties.
18  In addition to these powers, the Department may establish
19  an administrative procedure to adjudicate claims and to issue
20  final and binding administrative decisions on claims subject
21  to the Administrative Review Law. To establish the procedure,
22  the Director or the Director's authorized representative may
23  adopt rules. The adoption, amendment, or rescission of rules
24  for the procedure shall be in conformity with the requirements
25  of the Illinois Administrative Procedure Act. If a final and
26  binding administrative decision issued by the Department

 

 

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1  requires an employer or other party to pay wages, penalties,
2  or other amounts in connection with an immigration-related
3  retaliation claim, and the employer or other party has
4  neither: (i) made the required payment within 35 days after
5  the issuance of the final and binding administrative decision;
6  nor (ii) timely filed a complaint seeking review of the final
7  and binding administrative decision pursuant to the
8  Administrative Review Law in a court of competent
9  jurisdiction, the Department may file a verified petition
10  against the employer or other party to enforce the final
11  administrative decision and to collect any amounts due in
12  connection therewith in the circuit court of any county where
13  an official office of the Department is located.
14  Section 25. Enforcement by Attorney General.
15  (a) Whenever the Attorney General has reasonable cause to
16  believe that any employer, putative employer, or person acting
17  on behalf of an employer has violated this Act, the Attorney
18  General may, pursuant to the authority in Section 6.3 of the
19  Attorney General Act, initiate or intervene in a civil action
20  in the name of the People of the State in any circuit court to
21  obtain appropriate relief.
22  (b) Before initiating or intervening in an action, the
23  Attorney General may, pursuant to the authority in Section 6.3
24  of the Attorney General Act, conduct an investigation and may:
25  (1) require any individual to file a statement or

 

 

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1  report in writing under oath or otherwise as to all
2  information the Attorney General may consider necessary;
3  (2) examine under oath any individual alleged to have
4  participated in or with knowledge of the alleged
5  violation; or
6  (3) issue subpoenas or conduct hearings in aid of any
7  investigation.
8  (c) Whenever a party refuses to produce a document, answer
9  an interrogatory, or provide testimony under oath in response
10  to a subpoena from the Attorney General, the Attorney General,
11  pursuant to the authority in Section 6.3 of the Attorney
12  General Act, may petition the circuit court for an order
13  compelling compliance.
14  Section 30. Private right of action. Nothing in this Act
15  shall be construed to prevent any applicant, employee,
16  putative employee, or independent contractor from making
17  complaint or prosecuting his or her own claim for damages
18  caused by immigration-related retaliation. Any applicant,
19  employee, putative employee, or independent contractor
20  aggrieved by an actual or suspected violation of this Act or
21  any rule adopted under this Act may, within 2 years after the
22  date of the retaliation, file suit in circuit court, in the
23  county where the alleged violation occurred or where any
24  person who is party to the action resides, without regard to
25  exhaustion of any alternative administrative remedies provided

 

 

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1  in this Act. Actions may be brought by one or more applicants,
2  employees, or independent contractors for and on behalf of
3  themselves and other persons similarly situated.
4  Section 35. Remedies and penalties.
5  (a) An applicant, employee, or other person who is the
6  subject of an immigration-related retaliation prohibited by
7  this Act, or a representative of that applicant, employee, or
8  person, may bring a civil action for any one or more of the
9  following remedies:
10  (1) back pay, with interest, and front pay, or, in
11  lieu of actual damages, at the employee's election,
12  liquidated damages of $30,000;
13  (2) a civil penalty in an amount not to exceed
14  $10,000, payable to the applicant, employee, or
15  independent contractor;
16  (3) reasonable attorney's fees and court costs,
17  including any expert witness costs; and
18  (4) equitable relief as the court may deem appropriate
19  and just.
20  An action under this Act shall not limit or otherwise
21  affect the applicability of other rights and remedies under an
22  applicable employment law or under the Whistleblower Act.
23  (b) An employer that violates any provision of this Act
24  shall be subject to an additional civil penalty in an amount of
25  $25,000 for each violation of Section 10 and $50,000 for each

 

 

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1  repeat violation of Section 10 within a 5-year period.
2  The penalty amount may be recovered in any administrative
3  proceeding by the Department or a civil action filed in any
4  circuit court by the Director or the Attorney General. All
5  moneys received by the Department as fees and civil penalties
6  under this Act shall be deposited into the Child Labor and Day
7  and Temporary Labor Services Enforcement Fund and shall be
8  used by the Department for administration, investigation, and
9  other expenses incurred in carrying out its powers and duties
10  under this Act.
11  In any civil action brought by the Attorney General, the
12  penalty amount shall be deposited into the Attorney General
13  Court Ordered and Voluntary Compliance Payment Projects Fund.
14  Moneys in the Fund shall be used for the performance of any
15  function pertaining to the exercise of the duties of the
16  Attorney General, including, but not limited to, enforcement
17  of any law of this State and conducting public education
18  programs. However, any moneys in the Fund that are required by
19  the court or by an agreement to be used for a particular
20  purpose shall be used for that purpose. Any uncollected
21  penalty amount shall be subject to the provisions of the
22  Illinois State Collection Act of 1986.
23  (c) Upon a finding by a court of applicable jurisdiction
24  of a violation of this Act:
25  (1) For a first violation, the court may order the
26  appropriate government agencies to suspend all licenses

 

 

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1  subject to this Act that are held by the violating party
2  for a period of up to 14 days. On receipt of the court's
3  order and notwithstanding any other law, the appropriate
4  agencies shall immediately suspend the licenses.
5  (2) For a second violation, the court may order the
6  appropriate government agencies to suspend all licenses
7  subject to this Act that are held by the violating party
8  for a period of up to 30 days. On receipt of the court's
9  order and notwithstanding any other law, the appropriate
10  agencies shall immediately suspend the licenses.
11  (3) For a third violation and any violation
12  thereafter, the court may order the appropriate government
13  agencies to suspend all licenses subject to this Act that
14  are held by the violating party for a period of up to 90
15  days. On receipt of the court's order and notwithstanding
16  any other law, the appropriate agencies shall immediately
17  suspend the licenses.
18  For the purposes of this subsection, the licenses that are
19  subject to suspension are all licenses held by the violating
20  party specific to the business location or locations where the
21  immigration-related retaliation occurred. In determining
22  whether a suspension of all licenses is appropriate, the court
23  shall consider whether the employer knowingly committed
24  immigration-related retaliation, the good faith efforts of the
25  employer to resolve any alleged immigration-related
26  retaliation after receiving notice of the violations, and the

 

 

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1  harm other applicants, employees, or independent contractors
2  of the employer, or applicants, employees, or independent
3  contractors of other employers on a multi-employer job site,
4  will suffer as a result of the suspension of all licenses.
5  (d) An applicant, employee, or other person who is the
6  subject of immigration-related retaliation prohibited by this
7  Section, and who prevails in an action authorized by this
8  Section, shall recover its reasonable attorney's fees and
9  costs, including any expert witness costs.
10  Section 40. Administration. The Director or the Director's
11  authorized representatives shall administer and enforce the
12  provisions of this Act. In order to accomplish the objectives
13  of this Act and to carry out the duties prescribed by this Act,
14  the Director or the Director's authorized representatives
15  shall, within one year after the effective date of this Act,
16  adopt rules necessary to administer and enforce the provisions
17  of this Act, including the procedures that shall be followed
18  for investigations and hearings under Section 20, in
19  accordance with the Illinois Administrative Procedure Act.

 

 

  SB3464 - 15 - LRB103 39403 SPS 69584 b