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Public Act 094-0098 |
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AN ACT concerning government.
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Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois, | ||||
represented in the General Assembly:
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Section 5. The Illinois Public Labor Relations Act is | ||||
amended by changing
Sections 3 and 4 and adding Section 2.5 as | ||||
follows:
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(5 ILCS 315/2.5 new)
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Sec. 2.5. Findings and declarations; court reporters. The | ||||
General Assembly
finds and
declares:
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(1) It is the public policy of the State of Illinois and | ||||
the intent of the
General Assembly that State employees, | ||||
including the Illinois official
certified court reporters, are | ||||
granted collective bargaining rights as provided
in this Act.
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(2) The Illinois Supreme Court in the case of AOIC v. | ||||
Teamsters 726 ruled
that the Illinois Public Labor Relations | ||||
Board could not assert jurisdiction
over the Illinois official | ||||
certified court reporters because the Supreme Court
is their | ||||
co-employer together with the Chief Judges of each judicial | ||||
circuit.
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(3) As a result of the Supreme Court's decision, the | ||||
Illinois official
certified
court
reporters have been denied | ||||
the labor rights afforded all other State employees,
including | ||||
the rights
to organize, to obtain recognition of their chosen | ||||
collective bargaining
representative, and to
negotiate with | ||||
respect to the wages, terms, and conditions of their | ||||
employment.
| ||||
(4) The General Assembly intends to create a statutory | ||||
framework to allow
Illinois
official court reporters to enjoy | ||||
the same collective bargaining and other
labor rights granted | ||||
to other
public employees.
| ||||
(5) Senate Resolution 431 and House Resolution 706, both of | ||||
the 92nd General
Assembly, were adopted, and in enacting this |
amendatory Act of the 94th General
Assembly, the
General | ||
Assembly is implementing the intent of those resolutions.
| ||
(5 ILCS 315/3) (from Ch. 48, par. 1603)
| ||
Sec. 3. Definitions. As used in this Act, unless the | ||
context
otherwise requires:
| ||
(a) "Board" means the Illinois
Labor Relations Board or, | ||
with respect to a matter over which the
jurisdiction of the | ||
Board is assigned to the State Panel or the Local Panel
under | ||
Section 5, the panel having jurisdiction over the matter.
| ||
(b) "Collective bargaining" means bargaining over terms | ||
and conditions
of employment, including hours, wages, and other | ||
conditions of employment,
as detailed in Section 7 and which | ||
are not excluded by Section 4.
| ||
(c) "Confidential employee" means an employee who, in the | ||
regular course
of his or her duties, assists and acts in a | ||
confidential capacity to persons
who formulate, determine, and | ||
effectuate management policies with regard
to labor relations | ||
or who, in the regular course of his or her duties, has
| ||
authorized access to information relating to the effectuation
| ||
or review of the employer's collective bargaining policies.
| ||
(d) "Craft employees" means skilled journeymen, crafts | ||
persons, and their
apprentices and helpers.
| ||
(e) "Essential services employees" means those public | ||
employees
performing functions so essential that the | ||
interruption or termination of
the function will constitute a | ||
clear and present danger to the health and
safety of the | ||
persons in the affected community.
| ||
(f) "Exclusive representative", except with respect to | ||
non-State fire
fighters and paramedics employed by fire | ||
departments and fire protection
districts, non-State peace | ||
officers, and peace officers in the
Department of State Police, | ||
means the labor organization that has
been (i) designated by | ||
the Board as the representative of a majority of public
| ||
employees in an appropriate bargaining unit in accordance with | ||
the procedures
contained in this Act, (ii) historically
|
recognized by the State of Illinois or
any political | ||
subdivision of the State before July 1, 1984
(the effective | ||
date of this
Act) as the exclusive representative of the | ||
employees in an appropriate
bargaining unit, (iii) after July | ||
1, 1984 (the
effective date of this Act) recognized by an
| ||
employer upon evidence, acceptable to the Board, that the labor
| ||
organization has been designated as the exclusive | ||
representative by a
majority of the employees in an appropriate | ||
bargaining unit;
or (iv) recognized as the exclusive | ||
representative of personal care attendants
or personal
| ||
assistants under Executive Order 2003-8 prior to the effective | ||
date of this
amendatory
Act of the 93rd General Assembly, and | ||
the organization shall be considered to
be the
exclusive | ||
representative of the personal care attendants or personal | ||
assistants
as defined
in this Section.
| ||
With respect to non-State fire fighters and paramedics | ||
employed by fire
departments and fire protection districts, | ||
non-State peace officers, and
peace officers in the Department | ||
of State Police,
"exclusive representative" means the labor | ||
organization that has
been (i) designated by the Board as the | ||
representative of a majority of peace
officers or fire fighters | ||
in an appropriate bargaining unit in accordance
with the | ||
procedures contained in this Act, (ii)
historically recognized
| ||
by the State of Illinois or any political subdivision of the | ||
State before
January 1, 1986 (the effective date of this | ||
amendatory Act of 1985) as the exclusive
representative by a | ||
majority of the peace officers or fire fighters in an
| ||
appropriate bargaining unit, or (iii) after January 1,
1986 | ||
(the effective date of this amendatory
Act of 1985) recognized | ||
by an employer upon evidence, acceptable to the
Board, that the | ||
labor organization has been designated as the exclusive
| ||
representative by a majority of the peace officers or fire | ||
fighters in an
appropriate bargaining unit.
| ||
(g) "Fair share agreement" means an agreement between the | ||
employer and
an employee organization under which all or any of | ||
the employees in a
collective bargaining unit are required to |
pay their proportionate share of
the costs of the collective | ||
bargaining process, contract administration, and
pursuing | ||
matters affecting wages, hours, and other conditions of | ||
employment,
but not to exceed the amount of dues uniformly | ||
required of members. The
amount certified by the exclusive | ||
representative shall not include any fees
for contributions | ||
related to the election or support of any candidate for
| ||
political office. Nothing in this subsection (g) shall
preclude | ||
an employee from making
voluntary political contributions in | ||
conjunction with his or her fair share
payment.
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(g-1) "Fire fighter" means, for the purposes of this Act | ||
only, any
person who has been or is hereafter appointed to a | ||
fire department or fire
protection district or employed by a | ||
state university and sworn or
commissioned to perform fire | ||
fighter duties or paramedic duties, except that the
following | ||
persons are not included: part-time fire fighters,
auxiliary, | ||
reserve or voluntary fire fighters, including paid on-call fire
| ||
fighters, clerks and dispatchers or other civilian employees of | ||
a fire
department or fire protection district who are not | ||
routinely expected to
perform fire fighter duties, or elected | ||
officials.
| ||
(g-2) "General Assembly of the State of Illinois" means the
| ||
legislative branch of the government of the State of Illinois, | ||
as provided
for under Article IV of the Constitution of the | ||
State of Illinois, and
includes but is not limited to the House | ||
of Representatives, the Senate,
the Speaker of the House of | ||
Representatives, the Minority Leader of the
House of | ||
Representatives, the President of the Senate, the Minority | ||
Leader
of the Senate, the Joint Committee on Legislative | ||
Support Services and any
legislative support services agency | ||
listed in the Legislative Commission
Reorganization Act of | ||
1984.
| ||
(h) "Governing body" means, in the case of the State, the | ||
State Panel of
the Illinois Labor Relations Board, the Director | ||
of the Department of Central
Management Services, and the | ||
Director of the Department of Labor; the county
board in the |
case of a county; the corporate authorities in the case of a
| ||
municipality; and the appropriate body authorized to provide | ||
for expenditures
of its funds in the case of any other unit of | ||
government.
| ||
(i) "Labor organization" means any organization in which | ||
public employees
participate and that exists for the purpose, | ||
in whole or in part, of dealing
with a public employer | ||
concerning wages, hours, and other terms and conditions
of | ||
employment, including the settlement of grievances.
| ||
(j) "Managerial employee" means an individual who is | ||
engaged
predominantly in executive and management functions | ||
and is charged with the
responsibility of directing the | ||
effectuation of management policies
and practices.
| ||
(k) "Peace officer" means, for the purposes of this Act | ||
only, any
persons who have been or are hereafter appointed to a | ||
police force,
department, or agency and sworn or commissioned | ||
to perform police duties,
except that the following persons are | ||
not
included: part-time police
officers, special police | ||
officers, auxiliary police as defined by Section
3.1-30-20 of | ||
the Illinois Municipal Code, night watchmen, "merchant | ||
police",
court security officers as defined by Section 3-6012.1 | ||
of the Counties
Code,
temporary employees, traffic guards or | ||
wardens, civilian parking meter and
parking facilities | ||
personnel or other individuals specially appointed to
aid or | ||
direct traffic at or near schools or public functions or to aid | ||
in
civil defense or disaster, parking enforcement employees who | ||
are not
commissioned as peace officers and who are not armed | ||
and who are not
routinely expected to effect arrests, parking | ||
lot attendants, clerks and
dispatchers or other civilian | ||
employees of a police department who are not
routinely expected | ||
to effect arrests, or elected officials.
| ||
(l) "Person" includes one or more individuals, labor | ||
organizations, public
employees, associations, corporations, | ||
legal representatives, trustees,
trustees in bankruptcy, | ||
receivers, or the State of Illinois or any political
| ||
subdivision of the State or governing body, but does not |
include the General
Assembly of the State of Illinois or any | ||
individual employed by the General
Assembly of the State of | ||
Illinois.
| ||
(m) "Professional employee" means any employee engaged in | ||
work predominantly
intellectual and varied in character rather | ||
than routine mental, manual,
mechanical or physical work; | ||
involving the consistent exercise of discretion
and adjustment | ||
in its performance; of such a character that the output | ||
produced
or the result accomplished cannot be standardized in | ||
relation to a given
period of time; and requiring advanced | ||
knowledge in a field of science or
learning customarily | ||
acquired by a prolonged course of specialized intellectual
| ||
instruction and study in an institution of higher learning or a | ||
hospital,
as distinguished from a general academic education or | ||
from apprenticeship
or from training in the performance of | ||
routine mental, manual, or physical
processes; or any employee | ||
who has completed the courses of specialized
intellectual | ||
instruction and study prescribed in this subsection (m) and is
| ||
performing related
work under the supervision of a professional | ||
person to qualify to become
a professional employee as defined | ||
in this subsection (m).
| ||
(n) "Public employee" or "employee", for the purposes of | ||
this Act, means
any individual employed by a public employer, | ||
including interns and residents
at public hospitals
and, as of | ||
the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 93rd General
| ||
Assembly, but not
before, personal care attendants and personal | ||
assistants working under the Home
Services
Program under | ||
Section 3 of the Disabled Persons Rehabilitation Act, subject | ||
to
the
limitations set forth in this Act and in the Disabled | ||
Persons Rehabilitation
Act,
but excluding all of the following: | ||
employees of the
General Assembly of the State of Illinois; | ||
elected officials; executive
heads of a department; members of | ||
boards or commissions; the Executive
Inspectors General; any | ||
special Executive Inspectors General; employees of each
Office | ||
of an Executive Inspector General;
commissioners and employees | ||
of the Executive Ethics Commission; the Auditor
General's |
Inspector General; employees of the Office of the Auditor | ||
General's
Inspector General; the Legislative Inspector | ||
General; any special Legislative
Inspectors General; employees | ||
of the Office
of the Legislative Inspector General;
| ||
commissioners and employees of the Legislative Ethics | ||
Commission;
employees
of any
agency, board or commission | ||
created by this Act; employees appointed to
State positions of | ||
a temporary or emergency nature; all employees of school
| ||
districts and higher education institutions except | ||
firefighters and peace
officers employed
by a state university; | ||
managerial employees; short-term employees;
confidential | ||
employees; independent contractors; and supervisors except as
| ||
provided in this Act.
| ||
Personal care attendants and personal assistants shall not | ||
be considered
public
employees for any purposes not | ||
specifically provided for in this amendatory Act
of the
93rd | ||
General Assembly, including but not limited to, purposes of | ||
vicarious
liability in tort
and purposes of statutory | ||
retirement or health insurance benefits. Personal
care
| ||
attendants and personal assistants shall not be covered by the | ||
State Employees
Group
Insurance Act of 1971 (5 ILCS 375/).
| ||
Notwithstanding Section 9, subsection (c), or any other | ||
provisions of
this Act, all peace officers above the rank of | ||
captain in
municipalities with more than 1,000,000 inhabitants | ||
shall be excluded
from this Act.
| ||
(o) Except as otherwise in subsection (o-5), " public
Public | ||
employer" or "employer" means the State of Illinois; any
| ||
political subdivision of the State, unit of local government or | ||
school
district; authorities including departments, divisions, | ||
bureaus, boards,
commissions, or other agencies of the | ||
foregoing entities; and any person
acting within the scope of | ||
his or her authority, express or implied, on
behalf of those | ||
entities in dealing with its employees.
As of the effective | ||
date of this amendatory Act of the 93rd General Assembly,
but | ||
not
before, the State of Illinois shall be considered the | ||
employer of the personal
care
attendants and personal |
assistants working under the Home Services Program
under
| ||
Section 3 of the Disabled Persons Rehabilitation Act, subject | ||
to the
limitations set forth
in this Act and in the Disabled | ||
Persons Rehabilitation Act. The State shall not
be
considered | ||
to be the employer of personal care attendants and personal
| ||
assistants for any
purposes not specifically provided for in | ||
this amendatory Act of the 93rd
General
Assembly, including but | ||
not limited to, purposes of vicarious liability in tort
and
| ||
purposes of statutory retirement or health insurance benefits. | ||
Personal care
attendants
and personal assistants shall not be | ||
covered by the State Employees Group
Insurance Act of 1971
(5 | ||
ILCS 375/).
"Public employer" or
"employer" as used in this | ||
Act, however, does not
mean and shall not include the General | ||
Assembly of the State of Illinois,
the Executive Ethics | ||
Commission, the Offices of the Executive Inspectors
General, | ||
the Legislative Ethics Commission, the Office of the | ||
Legislative
Inspector General, the Office of the Auditor | ||
General's Inspector General,
and educational employers or | ||
employers as defined in the Illinois
Educational Labor | ||
Relations Act, except with respect to a state university in
its | ||
employment of firefighters and peace officers. County boards | ||
and county
sheriffs shall be
designated as joint or | ||
co-employers of county peace officers appointed
under the | ||
authority of a county sheriff. Nothing in this subsection
(o) | ||
shall be construed
to prevent the State Panel or the Local | ||
Panel
from determining that employers are joint or | ||
co-employers.
| ||
(o-5) With respect to
wages, fringe
benefits, hours, | ||
holidays, vacations, proficiency
examinations, sick leave, and | ||
other conditions of
employment, the public employer of public | ||
employees who are court reporters, as
defined in the Court | ||
Reporters Act, shall be determined as
follows:
| ||
(1) For court reporters employed by the Cook County | ||
Judicial
Circuit, the chief judge of the Cook County | ||
Circuit
Court is the public employer and employer | ||
representative.
|
(2) For court reporters employed by the 12th, 18th, | ||
19th, and, on and after December 4, 2006, the 22nd judicial
| ||
circuits, a group consisting of the chief judges of those | ||
circuits, acting
jointly by majority vote, is the public | ||
employer and employer representative.
| ||
(3) For court reporters employed by all other judicial | ||
circuits,
a group consisting of the chief judges of those | ||
circuits, acting jointly by
majority vote, is the public | ||
employer and employer representative.
| ||
(p) "Security employee" means an employee who is | ||
responsible for the
supervision and control of inmates at | ||
correctional facilities. The term
also includes other | ||
non-security employees in bargaining units having the
majority | ||
of employees being responsible for the supervision and control | ||
of
inmates at correctional facilities.
| ||
(q) "Short-term employee" means an employee who is employed | ||
for less
than 2 consecutive calendar quarters during a calendar | ||
year and who does
not have a reasonable assurance that he or | ||
she will be rehired by the
same employer for the same service | ||
in a subsequent calendar year.
| ||
(r) "Supervisor" is an employee whose principal work is | ||
substantially
different from that of his or her subordinates | ||
and who has authority, in the
interest of the employer, to | ||
hire, transfer, suspend, lay off, recall,
promote, discharge, | ||
direct, reward, or discipline employees, to adjust
their | ||
grievances, or to effectively recommend any of those actions, | ||
if the
exercise
of that authority is not of a merely routine or | ||
clerical nature, but
requires the consistent use of independent | ||
judgment. Except with respect to
police employment, the term | ||
"supervisor" includes only those individuals
who devote a | ||
preponderance of their employment time to exercising that
| ||
authority, State supervisors notwithstanding. In addition, in | ||
determining
supervisory status in police employment, rank | ||
shall not be determinative.
The Board shall consider, as | ||
evidence of bargaining unit inclusion or
exclusion, the common | ||
law enforcement policies and relationships between
police |
officer ranks and certification under applicable civil service | ||
law,
ordinances, personnel codes, or Division 2.1 of Article 10 | ||
of the Illinois
Municipal Code, but these factors shall not
be | ||
the sole or predominant factors considered by the Board in | ||
determining
police supervisory status.
| ||
Notwithstanding the provisions of the preceding paragraph, | ||
in determining
supervisory status in fire fighter employment, | ||
no fire fighter shall be
excluded as a supervisor who has | ||
established representation rights under
Section 9 of this Act. | ||
Further, in new fire fighter units, employees shall
consist of | ||
fire fighters of the rank of company officer and below. If a | ||
company officer otherwise qualifies as a supervisor under the | ||
preceding paragraph, however, he or she shall
not be included | ||
in the fire fighter
unit. If there is no rank between that of | ||
chief and the
highest company officer, the employer may | ||
designate a position on each
shift as a Shift Commander, and | ||
the persons occupying those positions shall
be supervisors. All | ||
other ranks above that of company officer shall be
supervisors.
| ||
(s) (1) "Unit" means a class of jobs or positions that are | ||
held by
employees whose collective interests may suitably | ||
be represented by a labor
organization for collective | ||
bargaining. Except with respect to non-State fire
fighters | ||
and paramedics employed by fire departments and fire | ||
protection
districts, non-State peace officers, and peace | ||
officers in the Department of
State Police, a bargaining | ||
unit determined by the Board shall not include both
| ||
employees and supervisors, or supervisors only, except as | ||
provided in paragraph
(2) of this subsection (s) and except | ||
for bargaining units in existence on July
1, 1984 (the | ||
effective date of this Act). With respect to non-State fire
| ||
fighters and paramedics employed by fire departments and | ||
fire protection
districts, non-State peace officers, and | ||
peace officers in the Department of
State Police, a | ||
bargaining unit determined by the Board shall not include | ||
both
supervisors and nonsupervisors, or supervisors only, | ||
except as provided in
paragraph (2) of this subsection (s) |
and except for bargaining units in
existence on January 1, | ||
1986 (the effective date of this amendatory Act of
1985). A | ||
bargaining unit determined by the Board to contain peace | ||
officers
shall contain no employees other than peace | ||
officers unless otherwise agreed to
by the employer and the | ||
labor organization or labor organizations involved.
| ||
Notwithstanding any other provision of this Act, a | ||
bargaining unit, including a
historical bargaining unit, | ||
containing sworn peace officers of the Department
of | ||
Natural Resources (formerly designated the Department of | ||
Conservation) shall
contain no employees other than such | ||
sworn peace officers upon the effective
date of this | ||
amendatory Act of 1990 or upon the expiration date of any
| ||
collective bargaining agreement in effect upon the | ||
effective date of this
amendatory Act of 1990 covering both | ||
such sworn peace officers and other
employees.
| ||
(2) Notwithstanding the exclusion of supervisors from | ||
bargaining units
as provided in paragraph (1) of this | ||
subsection (s), a public
employer may agree to permit its | ||
supervisory employees to form bargaining units
and may | ||
bargain with those units. This Act shall apply if the | ||
public employer
chooses to bargain under this subsection.
| ||
(3) Public employees who are court reporters, as | ||
defined
in the Court Reporters Act,
shall be divided into 3 | ||
units for collective bargaining purposes. One unit
shall be | ||
court reporters employed by the Cook County Judicial | ||
Circuit; one
unit shall be court reporters employed by the | ||
12th, 18th, 19th, and, on and after December 4, 2006, the | ||
22nd judicial
circuits; and one unit shall be court | ||
reporters employed by all other
judicial circuits.
| ||
(Source: P.A. 93-204, eff. 7-16-03; 93-617, eff. 12-9-03.)
| ||
(5 ILCS 315/4) (from Ch. 48, par. 1604)
| ||
Sec. 4. Management Rights. Employers shall not be required | ||
to bargain
over matters of inherent managerial policy, which | ||
shall include such areas
of discretion or policy as the |
functions of the employer, standards of
services,
its overall | ||
budget, the organizational structure and selection of new
| ||
employees, examination techniques
and direction of employees. | ||
Employers, however, shall be required to bargain
collectively | ||
with regard to
policy matters directly affecting wages, hours | ||
and terms and conditions of employment
as well as the impact | ||
thereon upon request by employee representatives.
| ||
To preserve the rights of employers and exclusive | ||
representatives which
have established collective bargaining | ||
relationships or negotiated collective
bargaining agreements | ||
prior to the effective date of this Act, employers
shall be | ||
required to bargain collectively with regard to any matter | ||
concerning
wages, hours or conditions of employment about which | ||
they have bargained
for and agreed to in a collective | ||
bargaining agreement
prior to the effective date of this Act.
| ||
The chief judge of the judicial circuit that employs a | ||
public employee who
is
a court reporter, as defined in the | ||
Court Reporters Act, has the authority to
hire, appoint, | ||
promote, evaluate, discipline, and discharge court reporters
| ||
within that judicial circuit.
| ||
Nothing in this amendatory Act of the 94th General Assembly | ||
shall
be construed to intrude upon the judicial functions of | ||
any court. This
amendatory Act of the 94th General Assembly | ||
applies only to nonjudicial
administrative matters relating to | ||
the collective bargaining rights of court
reporters.
| ||
(Source: P.A. 83-1012.)
| ||
Section 10. The Court Reporters Act is amended by changing
| ||
Sections 1, 3, 4, 4.1, 5, 6, 7, and 8 and adding Section 8.1 as | ||
follows:
| ||
(705 ILCS 70/1) (from Ch. 37, par. 651)
| ||
Sec. 1. Definitions. In this Act:
| ||
"Court reporter" , for the purposes
of this Act, means any | ||
person
appointed by the chief judge of any circuit to perform | ||
the duties
prescribed in Section 5 of this Act.
|
"Employer representative" means, with respect to wages, | ||
fringe
benefits, hours, holidays, vacation, proficiency
| ||
examinations, sick leave, and other conditions of
employment:
| ||
(1) For court reporters employed by the Cook County | ||
Judicial
Circuit, the chief judge of the Cook County | ||
Circuit Court.
| ||
(2) For court reporters employed by the 12th, 18th, | ||
19th, and, on and after December 4, 2006, the 22nd judicial
| ||
circuits, a group consisting of the chief judges of those | ||
circuits, acting
jointly by majority vote.
| ||
(3) For court reporters employed by all other judicial | ||
circuits, the
chief judges of those circuits, acting | ||
jointly by majority vote.
| ||
The chief judge of the judicial circuit that employs a | ||
public employee who
is
a court reporter, as defined in the | ||
Court Reporters Act, has the authority to
hire, appoint, | ||
promote, evaluate, discipline, and discharge court reporters
| ||
within that judicial circuit.
| ||
(Source: Laws 1965, p. 2616.)
| ||
(705 ILCS 70/3) (from Ch. 37, par. 653)
| ||
Sec. 3. Number ; determination and certification by
supreme | ||
court .
The number of full-time and part-time court reporters | ||
that may be
appointed in each circuit shall be determined by | ||
the
employer representative
Supreme Court . In
determining how | ||
many court reporters are needed in each circuit the
employer | ||
representative
Supreme
Court shall consider the following | ||
factors: (1) case loads in the circuit;
(2) the number of | ||
associate judges and circuit judges in the circuit; (3)
the | ||
number and location in the circuit of major federal and state | ||
highways;
(4) the location in the circuit of state police | ||
highway truck weighing
stations; (5) the relationship of urban | ||
population to large metropolitan
centers in the various | ||
counties of the circuit; (6) the location in the
circuit of | ||
state institutions including, but not limited to, | ||
universities,
colleges, mental health facilities, |
penitentiaries; (7) the number of
cities and towns within each | ||
circuit in which regular court sessions are
held and the | ||
distance in road miles between each; and (8) any other factor
| ||
deemed relevant by the
employer representative
Supreme Court .
| ||
The employer representative
The Supreme Court shall | ||
certify in writing
to each chief judge the
number of full-time | ||
and part-time court reporters the chief judge may
appoint in | ||
his circuit and
may, as the need arises, increase or lower the
| ||
number of such court reporters so authorized.
| ||
The Chief Judge of each circuit may designate any number of | ||
Supreme
Court approved full-time court reporter positions as | ||
time share positions.
For the purposes of this Act, "time share | ||
position" means a full-time
court reporter position that is | ||
divided among 2 or more court reporters
with the full-time | ||
salary and benefits being apportioned among the court
reporters | ||
in the same percentage as the duties of the full-time position
| ||
are apportioned.
| ||
(Source: P.A. 86-827.)
| ||
(705 ILCS 70/4) (from Ch. 37, par. 654)
| ||
Sec. 4. Appointment; oath. The chief judge may appoint all | ||
or any of the
number of court
reporters authorized by Section 3 | ||
of this Act
certification of the
Supreme Court . The court
| ||
reporters so appointed shall serve at the direction
pleasure of | ||
the
chief judge and
may be removed by the chief judge.
| ||
Each court reporter appointed shall, before entering upon | ||
the duties of
his office, take the official oath to faithfully | ||
discharge the duties of
his office to the best of his knowledge | ||
and ability.
| ||
The appointments shall be in writing and shall be filed | ||
with the
Clerk of the Circuit Court of the circuit in which the | ||
court reporters are
employed
Supreme Court and shall continue | ||
in force until revoked by the
chief judge
of the circuit in | ||
which the court reporter is appointed.
| ||
(Source: P.A. 84-1395.)
|
(705 ILCS 70/4.1) (from Ch. 37, par. 654.1)
| ||
Sec. 4.1. Appointment and salary of administrative | ||
personnel.
| ||
(a) The
employer representative
Supreme Court may | ||
authorize the chief judge of
any single county circuit
in which | ||
official court reporting services are centrally administered,
| ||
(1) to appoint from among the court reporters appointed in the | ||
circuit
an Administrator of Court Reporters, a Deputy | ||
Administrator of Court
Reporters and 2 Assistant | ||
Administrators of Court Reporters, (2) to
designate from among | ||
the court reporters appointed in the circuit one
Reporter | ||
Supervisor and one Assistant Reporter Supervisor for each
| ||
Department and Division of the circuit court, and (3) to | ||
appoint
secretarial and other support staff to assist the | ||
Administrator. Each
Administrator, Deputy Administrator, | ||
Assistant Administrator, Reporter
Supervisor, and Assistant | ||
Reporter Supervisor shall have an "A" proficiency
rating, by | ||
examination, as provided in Section 7.
| ||
(b) Administrative personnel appointed under this Section | ||
shall be
paid by the State.
| ||
(1) In addition to their regular salary as official court | ||
reporters,
the administrative personnel appointed under this | ||
Section shall be paid
such additional sums as the employer | ||
representative
Supreme Court
specifies. Such
sums shall be | ||
included in the pay schedule adopted pursuant to Section
8. The | ||
additional amounts paid shall reflect the burden of
| ||
administrative responsibility borne by the administrative | ||
personnel and
the consequent lack of opportunity to produce | ||
transcripts of testimony.
The additional amounts paid to such | ||
personnel shall not exceed the
following:
| ||
(A) Administrator of Court Reporters: $20,000 per | ||
year;
| ||
(B) Deputy Administrator of Court Reporters: $15,000 | ||
per year;
| ||
(C) Assistant Administrators of Court Reporters: | ||
$13,000 per year;
|
(D) Reporter Supervisors: $10,000 per year.
| ||
(E) Assistant Reporter Supervisors: $5,000 per year.
| ||
(2) Each of the secretarial and other support staff
| ||
authorized under this Section shall be paid a salary as | ||
determined per
year by the employer representative
Supreme | ||
Court .
| ||
(Source: P.A. 86-1378.)
| ||
(705 ILCS 70/5) (from Ch. 37, par. 655)
| ||
Sec. 5. Means of reporting ; transcripts.
The court reporter | ||
shall make a full reporting by means of stenographic
hand or | ||
machine notes, or a combination thereof, of the evidence and | ||
such
other proceedings in trials and judicial proceedings to | ||
which he is
assigned by the chief judge, and the court reporter | ||
may use an electronic
instrument as a supplementary device. In | ||
the event that the court
utilizes an audio or video recording | ||
system to record the proceedings, a
court reporter shall be in | ||
charge of such system; however, the appointment
of a court | ||
reporter to be in charge of an audio or video recording system
| ||
shall not be required where such system is the judge's personal | ||
property or
has been supplied by a party or such party's | ||
attorney. To the extent that
it does not substantially | ||
interfere with the court reporter's other official duties,
the | ||
judge to whom, or a judge of the division to which, a reporter | ||
is
assigned may assign a reporter to secretarial or clerical | ||
duties arising
out of official court operations.
| ||
Unless and until otherwise provided in a Uniform Schedule
| ||
of Charges which may hereafter be provided by rule or order of | ||
the employer
representative
Supreme
Court , a court reporter may | ||
charge not to exceed 25ยข per 100 words for
making transcripts | ||
of his notes. The fees for making transcripts shall be
paid in | ||
the first instance by the party in whose behalf such transcript | ||
is
ordered and shall be taxed in the suit.
| ||
The transcripts shall be filed and remain with the papers | ||
of the case.
When the judge trying the case shall, of his own | ||
motion, order a transcript
of the court reporter's notes, the |
judge may direct the payment of the
charges therefor, and the | ||
taxation of the charges as costs in such manner
as to him may | ||
seem just. Provided, that the charges for making but one
| ||
transcript shall be taxed as costs and the party first ordering | ||
the
transcript shall have preference unless it shall be | ||
otherwise ordered by
the court.
| ||
The change made to this Section by this amendatory Act of | ||
1987 is
intended to apply retroactively from and after January | ||
1, 1987.
| ||
(Source: P.A. 85-981.)
| ||
(705 ILCS 70/6) (from Ch. 37, par. 656)
| ||
Sec. 6. Assignment to serve outside of county of | ||
appointment ; Travel
expenses.
| ||
The chief judge may assign a court reporter to serve | ||
anywhere within the
circuit in which the court reporter is | ||
appointed. A court reporter shall be
paid travel expenses | ||
incurred in connection with his official duties in his
circuit | ||
of appointment outside the county wherein he resides. Subject | ||
to
regulations which may be adopted by the Supreme Court, court | ||
reporters
shall be allowed travel expenses when traveling | ||
within their county of
residence in connection with their | ||
official duties.
| ||
The employer representative
Supreme Court may assign a | ||
court reporter
to temporary service
outside his own circuit , | ||
but within the jurisdiction of the employer
representative, | ||
with the consent of the chief judge of his circuit.
A court | ||
reporter shall be paid travel expenses incurred in connection | ||
with
his official duties during such periods of temporary | ||
assignment.
| ||
Expense vouchers shall be submitted to the employer | ||
representative
Supreme Court for approval.
The expense | ||
vouchers or claims submitted to the employer representative
| ||
Supreme Court shall have
endorsed thereon the signed approval | ||
of the chief judge of the circuit in
which the court reporter | ||
incurred the expense for which claim is made.
|
(Source: P.A. 77-1685.)
| ||
(705 ILCS 70/7) (from Ch. 37, par. 657)
| ||
Sec. 7. Proficiency tests.
Except as otherwise provided in | ||
this Section, each court reporter in
office on January 1, 1966 | ||
or appointed on or after that date shall have
taken or shall | ||
thereafter take a test to rate his proficiency. The test
shall | ||
be prepared and administered by the employer representative in
| ||
consultation with each of the other employer representatives
| ||
Supreme
Court . The test shall
consist of three parts
designated | ||
Part A, Part B and Part C. If the court reporter in office on
| ||
January 1, 1966, or appointed on or after that date, | ||
successfully passes
any Part he shall be given a certificate | ||
designating him as an official
court reporter. If such court | ||
reporter fails to pass any part, the
employer representative
| ||
Supreme Court shall so inform the
chief judge of the circuit in | ||
which the court reporter serves. Upon receipt
of note that a | ||
court reporter has failed to pass any part of the test, the
| ||
chief judge may discharge the court reporter or may allow him | ||
to continue
until the test is next administered. If, when the | ||
test is next
administered, the court reporter fails to pass any | ||
part of the test, he
shall be discharged by the chief judge.
| ||
The test shall be administered at least every six months if | ||
there are
candidates or applicants for the test. Any court | ||
reporter who has passed
Part C of the test may apply to take | ||
the Part B or the Part A section of
the test at the regular time | ||
such tests are given. If the court reporter
successfully | ||
completes Part B or Part A of the test, his proficiency rating
| ||
shall be adjusted to reflect passage of the more difficult | ||
Part.
| ||
Any court reporter who served as a court reporter in a | ||
circuit court for
5 years immediately preceding January 1, 1966 | ||
shall be certified as an
official court reporter without | ||
examination, and shall be credited with an
"A" proficiency | ||
rating, without examination.
| ||
(Source: P.A. 84-1395.)
|
(705 ILCS 70/8) (from Ch. 37, par. 658)
| ||
Sec. 8. Salaries.
| ||
(a) The salaries of all court reporters shall be
paid by | ||
the State. Full-time court reporters shall be paid not less | ||
than
$6,000 nor more than $29,500 per year through June 30, | ||
1984.
Beginning July 1, 1984, full-time court reporters shall | ||
be paid not less
than $6,000 nor more than $31,250 annually. | ||
Beginning July 1, 1985,
full-time court reporters shall be paid | ||
not less than $6,000 nor more than
$33,250 annually. Beginning | ||
July 1, 1986, full-time court reporters shall
be paid not less | ||
than $6,000 nor more than $35,250 annually. Beginning
July 1, | ||
1987, full-time court reporters shall be paid not less than | ||
$6,000
nor more than $37,250 annually. Part-time court | ||
reporters shall be paid
not less than $12 nor more than $60 per | ||
half-day. The salary of each
individual court reporter shall be | ||
computed from a schedule adopted by the
employer representative
| ||
Supreme Court . The salary schedule shall
reflect the following | ||
relevant
factors: (1) proficiency rating; (2) experience; (3) | ||
population of the
area to which a reporter is normally | ||
assigned; (3-1) court reporters shall
receive the same annual | ||
percentage salary increase as provided to other
State-paid | ||
non-judicial employees of the Judicial Branch with equivalent
| ||
salaries, except that notwithstanding any other provision of | ||
law, salaries of
full time court reporters shall be increased | ||
by at least a percentage increase
equivalent to that of the | ||
"Employment Cost Index, Wages and Salaries, by
Occupation and | ||
Industry Groups, State and Local Government Workers Public
| ||
Administration", as published by the Bureau of Labor Statistics | ||
of the U.S.
Department of Labor for the calendar year | ||
immediately preceding the year of the
respective July 1st | ||
increase date. The increase shall be added to the then
current | ||
annual salary and the adjusted salary so determined shall be | ||
the annual
salary beginning July 1 of the increase year until | ||
July 1 of the next year; (4)
other factors considered relevant | ||
by the Director.
|
(b) (Blank).
Not less than 60 days before the effective | ||
date of this
Act, the
chief judge of each circuit shall submit | ||
to the Supreme Court,
on forms to be provided by the Supreme | ||
Court, such information as may be
necessary to implement the | ||
Provisions of this Act.
| ||
(c) A court reporter who has previously passed, or who | ||
hereafter passes,
Part A or Part B of a proficiency test | ||
prepared and administered by the
employer representative
| ||
Supreme Court shall be credited with an "A" or
"B" proficiency | ||
rating, as
appropriate.
| ||
(d) A court reporter who has been credited with an "A" | ||
proficiency
rating, without examination, as provided in | ||
Section 7 of this Act, shall
receive a salary of $10,000 per | ||
annum. Any increase in the maximum salary
payable to reporters | ||
shall not result in any increase for such reporter
unless and | ||
until he has passed the proficiency test.
| ||
(e) The salaries of all official court reporters employed | ||
by the State
shall be paid monthly , from moneys appropriated to | ||
the Comptroller for that
purpose, on the voucher of the chief | ||
judge of the circuit employing the
court reporters
Supreme | ||
Court . The Comptroller
Supreme
Court may require all salary | ||
claims by part-time reporters to be
substantiated by | ||
certificates signed by the reporter and approved by the
chief | ||
judge of the circuit.
| ||
(f) The salaries of time share court reporter positions may | ||
be
apportioned in the manner provided in Section 3 of this Act.
| ||
(Source: P.A. 88-475.)
| ||
(705 ILCS 70/8.1 new)
| ||
Sec. 8.1. Appropriation request. Each employer | ||
representative shall
make an annual appropriation request in | ||
January to the General
Assembly to fund court reporters. When
| ||
necessary, an employer representative may request supplemental | ||
appropriations
to fund court reporters.
| ||
Section 15. The Court Reporter Transcript Act is amended by |
changing
Section 4 as follows:
| ||
(705 ILCS 75/4) (from Ch. 37, par. 664)
| ||
Sec. 4. The reporter, in full for all his services in | ||
connection with the
transcribing and filing or furnishing the | ||
transcripts referred to in
this Act, shall be paid a fee as | ||
provided in Section 5 of the Court
Reporters Act , approved | ||
August 5, 1965, as amended . All such fees shall
be paid out of | ||
the State Treasury on the warrant of the chief judge of the
| ||
circuit employing the court reporter
Supreme Court ,
from | ||
appropriations made to the Comptroller for such purpose, upon
| ||
presentation of a
certificate signed by the presiding judge | ||
setting the amount due said
reporter. Such certificate shall as | ||
to each original transcript (and
a copy or copies where fee for | ||
a copy or copies is authorized
by statute or Illinois Supreme | ||
Court Rule)
set forth the title and number of
the cause in | ||
which the transcript was required to be furnished, the
nature | ||
of the proceedings transcribed (whether an arraignment,
| ||
proceedings at criminal trial or proceedings at | ||
post-conviction hearing)
and the fee approved therefor. The | ||
employer representative, as defined in the
Court Reporters Act,
| ||
Supreme Court may prescribe the form
of the certificate and | ||
furnish same.
| ||
(Source: P.A. 90-505, eff. 8-19-97.)
| ||
Section 95. Liberal construction. This Act shall be | ||
liberally construed to
effectuate its purpose of facilitating | ||
the equitable resolution of labor
relations concerning court | ||
reporters.
| ||
Section 97. Severability. The provisions of this Act are | ||
severable
under Section 1.31 of the Statute on Statutes.
| ||
Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon | ||
becoming law. |