Public Act 102-0705 Public Act 0705 102ND GENERAL ASSEMBLY |
Public Act 102-0705 | HB4604 Enrolled | LRB102 23341 SPS 32507 b |
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| AN ACT concerning employment.
| Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
| represented in the General Assembly:
| Section 3. The Equal Pay Act of 2003 is amended by changing | Section 11 as follows: | (820 ILCS 112/11) | Sec. 11. Equal pay registration certificate requirements; | application. For the purposes of this Section 11 only, | "business" means any private employer who has 100 or more more | than 100 employees in the State of Illinois and is required to | file an Annual Employer Information Report EEO-1 with the | Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, but does not include | the State of Illinois or any political subdivision, municipal | corporation, or other governmental unit or agency. | (a) A business must obtain an equal pay registration | certificate from the Department. | (b) Any business subject to the requirements of this | Section that is authorized to transact business in this State | on March 23, 2021 shall submit an application to obtain an | equal pay registration certificate, between March 24, 2022 and | March 23, 2024, and must recertify every 2 years thereafter. | Any business subject to the requirements of this Section that | is authorized to transact business in this State after March |
| 23, 2021 must submit an application to obtain an equal pay | registration certificate within 3 years of commencing business | operations, but not before January 1, 2024, and must recertify | every 2 years thereafter. The Department shall collect contact | information from each business subject to this Section. The | Department shall assign each business a date by which it must | submit an application to obtain an equal pay registration | certificate. The business shall recertify every 2 years at a | date to be determined by the Department. When a business | receives a notice from the Department to recertify for its | equal pay registration certificate, if the business has fewer | than 100 employees, the business must certify in writing to | the Department that it is exempt from this Section. Any new | business that is subject to this Section and authorized to | conduct business in this State, after the effective date of | this amendatory Act of the 102nd General Assembly, shall | submit its contact information to the Department by January 1 | of the following year and shall be assigned a date by which it | must submit an application to obtain an equal pay registration | certificate. The Department's failure to assign a business a | registration date does not exempt the business from compliance | with this Section. The failure of the Department to notify a | business of its recertification deadline may be a mitigating | factor when making a determination of a violation of this | Section. | (c) Application. |
| (1) A business shall apply for an equal pay | registration certificate by paying a $150 filing fee and | submitting wage records and an equal pay compliance | statement to the Director as follows: | (A) Wage Records. Any business that is required to | file an annual Employer Information Report EEO-1 with | the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission must also | submit to the Director a copy of the business's most | recently filed Employer Information Report EEO-1. The | business shall also compile a list of all employees | during the past calendar year, separated by gender and | the race and ethnicity categories as reported in the | business's most recently filed Employer Information | Report EEO-1, and the county in which the employee | works, the date the employee started working for the | business, any other information the Department deems | necessary to determine if pay equity exists among | employees, and report the total wages as defined by | Section 2 of the Illinois Wage Payment and Collection | Act paid to each employee during the past calendar | year, rounded to the nearest $100, to the Director. | (B) Equal Pay Compliance Statement. The business | must submit a statement signed by a corporate officer, | legal counsel, or authorized agent of the business | certifying: | (i) that the business is in compliance with |
| this Act and other relevant laws, including but | not limited to: Title VII of the Civil Rights Act | of 1964, the Equal Pay Act of 1963, the Illinois | Human Rights Act, and the Equal Wage Act; | (ii) that the average compensation for its | female and minority employees is not consistently | below the average compensation, as determined by | rule by the United States Department of Labor, for | its male and non-minority employees within each of | the major job categories in the Employer | Information Report EEO-1 for which an employee is | expected to perform work, taking into account | factors such as length of service, requirements of | specific jobs, experience, skill, effort, | responsibility, working conditions of the job, | education or training, job location, use of a | collective bargaining agreement, or other | mitigating factors; as used in this subparagraph, | "minority" has the meaning ascribed to that term | in paragraph (1) of subsection (A) of Section 2 of | the Business Enterprise for Minorities, Women, and | Persons with Disabilities Act; | (iii) that the business does not restrict | employees of one sex to certain job | classifications, and makes retention and promotion | decisions without regard to sex; |
| (iv) that wage and benefit disparities are | corrected when identified to ensure compliance | with the Acts cited in item (i); | (v) how often wages and benefits are | evaluated; and | (vi) the approach the business takes in | determining what level of wages and benefits to | pay its employees; acceptable approaches include, | but are not limited to, a wage and salary survey. | (C) Filing fee. The business shall pay to the | Department a filing fee of $150. Proceeds from the | fees collected under this Section shall be deposited | into the Equal Pay Registration Fund, a special fund | created in the State treasury. Moneys in the Fund | shall be appropriated to the Department for the | purposes of this Section. | (2) Receipt of the equal pay compliance application | and statement by the Director does not establish | compliance with the Acts set forth in item (i) of | subparagraph (B) of paragraph (1) of this subsection (c). | (3) A business that has employees in multiple | locations or facilities in
Illinois shall submit a single | application to the Department regarding all of its
| operations in Illinois. | (d) Issuance or rejection of registration certificate. | After January 1, 2022, the Director must issue an equal pay |
| registration certificate, or a statement of why the | application was rejected, within 45 calendar days of receipt | of the application. Applicants shall have the opportunity to | cure any deficiencies in its application that led to the | rejection, and re-submit the revised application to the | Department within 30 calendar days of receiving a rejection. | Applicants shall have the ability to appeal rejected | applications. An application may be rejected only if it does | not comply with the requirements of subsection (c), or the | business is otherwise found to be in violation of this Act. The | receipt of an application by the Department, or the issuance | of a registration certificate by the Department, shall not | establish compliance with the Equal Pay Act of 2003 as to all | Sections except Section 11. The issuance of a registration | certificate shall not be a defense against any Equal Pay Act | violation found by the Department, nor a basis for mitigation | of damages. | (e) Revocation of registration certificate. An equal pay | registration certificate for a business may be suspended or | revoked by the Director when the business fails to make a good | faith effort to comply with the Acts identified in item (i) of | subparagraph (B) of paragraph (1) of subsection (c), fails to | make a good faith effort to comply with this Section, or has | multiple violations of this Section or the Acts identified in | item (i) of subparagraph (B) of paragraph (1) of subsection | (c). Prior to suspending or revoking a registration |
| certificate, the Director must first have sought to conciliate | with the business regarding wages and benefits due to | employees. | Consistent with Section 25, prior to or in connection with | the suspension or revocation of an equal pay registration | certificate, the Director, or his or her authorized | representative, may interview workers, administer oaths, take | or cause to be taken the depositions of witnesses, and require | by subpoena the attendance and testimony of witnesses, and the | production of personnel and compensation information relative | to the matter under investigation, hearing or a | department-initiated audit. | Neither the Department nor the Director shall be held | liable for good faith errors in issuing, denying, suspending | or revoking certificates. | (f) Administrative review. A business may obtain an | administrative hearing in accordance with the Illinois | Administrative Procedure Act before the suspension or | revocation of its certificate or imposition of civil penalties | as provided by subsection (i) is effective by filing a written | request for hearing within 20 calendar days after service of | notice by the Director. | (g) Technical assistance. The Director must provide | technical assistance to any business that requests assistance | regarding this Section. | (h) Access to data. |
| (1) Any individually identifiable information | submitted to the Director within or related to an equal | pay registration application or otherwise provided by an | employer in its equal pay compliance statement under | subsection (c) shall be considered confidential | information and not subject to disclosure pursuant to the | Illinois Freedom of Information Act. As used in this | Section, "individually identifiable information" means | data submitted pursuant to this Section that is associated | with a specific person or business. Aggregate data or | reports that are reasonably calculated to prevent the | association of any data with any individual business or | person are not confidential information. Aggregate data | shall include the job category and the average hourly wage | by county for each gender, race, and ethnicity category on | the registration certificate applications. The Department | of Labor may compile aggregate data from registration | certificate applications. | (2) The Director's decision to issue, not issue, | revoke, or suspend an equal pay registration certificate | is public information. | (3) Notwithstanding this subsection (h), a current | employee of a covered business may request anonymized data | regarding their job classification or title and the pay | for that classification. No individually identifiable | information may be provided to an employee making a |
| request under this paragraph. | (4) Notwithstanding this subsection (h), the | Department may share data and identifiable information | with the Department of Human Rights, pursuant to its | enforcement of Article 2 of the Illinois Human Rights Act, | or the Office of the Attorney General, pursuant to its | enforcement of Section 10-104 of the Illinois Human Rights | Act. | (5) Any Department employee who willfully and | knowingly divulges, except in accordance with a proper | judicial order or otherwise provided by law, confidential | information received by the Department from any business | pursuant to this Act shall be deemed to have violated the | State Officials and Employees Ethics Act and be subject to | the penalties established under subsections (e) and (f) of | Section 50-5 of that Act after investigation and | opportunity for hearing before the Executive Ethics | Commission in accordance with Section 20-50 of that Act. | (i) Penalty. Falsification or misrepresentation of | information on an application submitted to the Department | shall constitute a violation of this Act and the Department | may seek to suspend or revoke an equal pay registration | certificate or impose civil penalties as provided under | subsection (c) of Section 30.
| (Source: P.A. 101-656, eff. 3-23-21; 102-36, eff. 6-25-21.) |
| Section 5. The Occupational Safety and Health Act is | amended by changing Sections 25, 60, 65, 80, 85, 90, 100, and | 110 as follows: | (820 ILCS 219/25)
| Sec. 25. Occupational safety and health standards. | (a) All federal occupational safety and health standards | which the United States Secretary of Labor has promulgated or | modified in accordance with the federal Occupational Safety | and Health Act of 1970 and which are in effect on the effective | date of this Act shall be and are hereby made rules of the | Department unless the Director promulgates an alternate | standard that is at least as effective in providing safe and | healthful employment and places of employment as a federal | standard. Before developing and adopting an alternate standard | or modifying or revoking an existing standard, the Director | must consider factual information that includes: | (1) Expert technical knowledge. | (2) Input from interested persons, including | employers, employees, recognized standards-producing | organizations, and the public. | (b) All federal occupational safety and health standards | which the United States Secretary of Labor promulgates or | modifies in accordance with the federal Occupational Safety | and Health Act of 1970 on or after the effective date of this | Act, unless revoked by the Secretary of Labor, shall become |
| rules of the Department within 6 months after their federal | promulgation date, unless there has been in effect in this | State at the time of the promulgation or modification of the | federal standard an alternate State standard that is at least | as effective in providing safe and healthful employment and | places of employment as a federal standard. The alternate | State standard , if not currently contained in the Department's | rules, shall not become effective, however, unless the | Department, within 45 days after the federal promulgation | date, files with the office of the Secretary of State in | Springfield, Illinois, a certified copy of the rule as | provided in the Illinois Administrative Procedure Act.
| (Source: P.A. 98-874, eff. 1-1-15 .) | (820 ILCS 219/60)
| Sec. 60. Employers' records. | (a) The Director shall adopt rules requiring public | employers to maintain accurate records of, and to make reports | on, work-related deaths, injuries, and illnesses, other than | minor injuries requiring only first aid treatment and which do | not involve medical treatment, loss of consciousness, | restriction of work or motion, or transfer to another job. The | rules shall specifically include all of the reporting | provisions of Section 6 of the Workers' Compensation Act and | Section 6 of the Workers' Occupational Diseases Act. The | records shall be available to any State agency requiring such |
| information. | (b) The Director shall adopt rules requiring public | employers to maintain accurate records of employee exposures | to potentially toxic materials or harmful physical agents | which are required to be monitored or measured under this Act. | The rules shall provide employees or their authorized | representative with an opportunity to observe the monitoring | or measuring, and to have access to the records of the | monitoring or measuring. The rules shall provide appropriate | means by which each employee or former employee may have | access to such records as will indicate his or her exposure to | toxic materials or harmful physical agents. | (c) A public employer shall promptly notify any employee | who has been or is being exposed to toxic materials or harmful | physical agents in concentrations or at levels which exceed | those prescribed by an occupational safety and health standard | and shall inform the employee who is being thus exposed of the | action being taken by the employer to correct such exposure.
| (Source: P.A. 98-874, eff. 1-1-15 .) | (820 ILCS 219/65)
| Sec. 65. Periodic inspection of workplaces. | (a) The Director shall enforce the occupational safety and | health standards and rules promulgated under this Act and any | occupational health and safety regulations relating to | inspection of places of employment, and shall visit and |
| inspect, as often as practicable, the places of employment | covered by this Act.
| (b) The Director or his or her authorized representative, | upon presenting appropriate credentials to a public employer's | agent in charge, has the right to enter and inspect all places | of employment covered by this Act as follows:
| (1) An inspector may enter without delay and at | reasonable times any establishment, construction site, or | other area, workplace, or environment where work is | performed by an employee of a public employer in order to | enforce the occupational safety and health standards | adopted under this Act.
| (2) If a public employer refuses entry to an inspector | upon being presented with proper credentials or allows | entry but then refuses to permit or hinders the inspection | in any way, the inspector shall leave the premises and | immediately report the refusal to authorized management | within the Division. Authorized management shall notify | the Director to initiate the compulsory legal process to | obtain entry or obtain a warrant for entry, or both.
| (3) An inspector may inspect and investigate during | regular working hours and at other reasonable times, and | within reasonable limits and in a reasonable manner, any | workplace described in paragraph (1) and all pertinent | conditions, structures, machines, apparatus, devices, | equipment, and materials therein, and to question |
| privately the employer or any agent or employee of the | employer.
| (4) The owner, operator, manager, or lessee of any | workplace covered by this Act, and his or her agent or | employee, and any employer affected by this Act shall, | when requested by the Division of Occupational Safety and | Health or any duly authorized agent of that Division: (i) | furnish any information in his or her possession or under | his or her control which the Department is authorized to | require, (ii) answer truthfully all questions required to | be put to him or her, and (iii) cooperate in the making of | a proper inspection.
| (c) In making his or her inspection and investigations | under this Act, the Director of Labor has the power to require | the attendance and testimony of witnesses and the production | of evidence under oath. | (Source: P.A. 98-874, eff. 1-1-15; 99-336, eff. 8-10-15.) | (820 ILCS 219/80)
| Sec. 80. Violation of Act or standard; citation. | (a) Upon inspection or investigation of a workplace, if | the Director or his or her authorized representative believes | that a public employer has violated a requirement of this Act | or a standard, rule, or regulation promulgated under this Act, | he or she shall with reasonable promptness issue a citation to | the employer. A citation shall: (i) be in writing, (ii) |
| describe with particularity the nature of the violation and | include a reference to the provision of the Act, standard, | rule, or regulation alleged to have been violated, and (iii) | fix a reasonable time for the abatement of the violation. | (b) Each citation issued under this Section, or a copy or | copies thereof, shall be prominently posted at or near the | place at which the violation occurred as prescribed in rules | adopted by the Director.
| (c) A citation shall be served on the employer or the | employer's agent by delivering a copy to the person upon whom | the service is to be had, or by leaving a copy at his or her | usual place of business or abode, or by sending a copy by | certified mail to his or her place of business , or by sending a | copy by email to an email address previously designated by the | employer for purposes of receiving notice under this Act .
| (d) A citation may not be issued under this Section after | the expiration of 6 months following the occurrence of any | violation.
| (Source: P.A. 98-874, eff. 1-1-15 .) | (820 ILCS 219/85)
| Sec. 85. Civil penalties. | (a) After an inspection of a workplace under this Act, if | the Director issues a citation, he or she shall, within 5 days | after issuing the citation, notify the employer by certified | mail , or by email to an email address previously designated by |
| the employer for purposes of receiving notice under this Act, | of any civil penalty proposed to be assessed for the violation | set forth in the citation.
| (b) If the Director has reason to believe that an employer | has failed to correct a violation for which a citation has been | issued within the period permitted for its correction, the | Director shall notify the employer by certified mail , or by | email to an email address previously designated by the | employer for purposes of receiving notice under this Act, of | that failure and of the civil penalty proposed to be assessed | for that failure.
| (c) Civil penalties authorized under this Section are as | follows:
| (1) A public employer that repeatedly violates this | Act, the Safety Inspection and Education Act, or the | Health and Safety Act, or any combination of those Acts, | or any standard, rule, regulation, or order under any of | those Acts, may be assessed a civil penalty of not more | than $10,000 per violation.
| (2) A public employer that intentionally violates this | Act, the Safety Inspection and Education Act, or the | Health and Safety Act, or any standard, rule, regulation, | or order under any of those Acts, or who demonstrates | plain indifference to any provision of any of those Acts | or any such standard, rule, regulation, or order, may be | assessed a civil penalty of not more than $10,000 per |
| violation .
| (3) A public employer that has received a citation for | a serious violation of this Act, the Safety Inspection and | Education Act, or the Health and Safety Act, or any | standard, rule, regulation, or order under any of those | Acts, may be assessed a civil penalty up to $1,000 for each | such violation.
| (4) A public employer that has received a citation for | a violation of this Act, the Safety Inspection and | Education Act, or the Health and Safety Act, or any | standard, rule, regulation, or order under any of those | Acts, which is not a serious violation, may be assessed a | civil penalty of up to $1,000 for each such violation.
| (5) A public employer that violates a posting | requirement is subject to the following citations and | proposed penalty structure:
| (A) Job Safety and Health Poster: an other than | serious citation and a proposed penalty of $1,000.
| (B) Annual Summary of Work-Related Injuries and | Illnesses (OSHA Form 300A): an other than serious | citation and a proposed penalty of $1,000, even if | there are no recordable injuries or illnesses.
| (C) Citation: an other than serious citation and a | proposed penalty of $1,000.
| (6) A public employer that fails to correct a | violation for which a citation has been issued within the |
| time period permitted may be assessed a civil penalty of | up to $1,000 for each day the violation continues.
| (d) For purposes of this Section, a "serious violation" | shall be deemed to exist in a workplace if there is a | substantial probability that death or serious physical harm | could result from (i) a condition which exists or (ii) one or | more practices, means, methods, operations, or processes which | have been adopted or are in use in the workplace, unless the | employer did not know and could not, with the exercise of | reasonable diligence, have known of the presence of the | violation.
| (e) The Director may assess civil penalties as provided in | this Section, giving due consideration to the appropriateness | of the penalty. A penalty may be reduced by the Director or the | Director's authorized representative based on the public | employer's good faith, size of business, and history of | previous violations.
| (f) The Attorney General may bring an action in the | circuit court to enforce the collection of any civil penalty | assessed under this Act. | (g) All civil penalties collected under this Act shall be | deposited into the General Revenue Fund of the State of | Illinois.
| (Source: P.A. 98-874, eff. 1-1-15 .) | (820 ILCS 219/90)
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| Sec. 90. Informal review. | (a) A public employer may submit in writing data relating | to the abatement of a hazard to be considered by an authorized | representative of the Director. The authorized representative | shall notify the interested parties if such data will be used | to modify an abatement order. | (b) Within 15 business working days after receiving a | citation, proposed assessment of a civil penalty, or notice of | failure to correct a violation, a public employer or the | employer's agent may request that an authorized representative | of the Director review abatement dates, reclassify violations | (such as willful to serious, serious to other than serious), | or modify or withdraw a penalty, a citation, or a citation | item, or any combination of those, if the employer presents | evidence during the informal conference which convinces the | authorized representative that the changes are justified.
| (Source: P.A. 98-874, eff. 1-1-15 .) | (820 ILCS 219/100)
| Sec. 100. Hearing. | (a) If a public employer or the employer's representative | notifies the Director that the employer intends to contest a | citation and notice of penalty or if, within 15 business | working days after the issuance of the citation, an employee | or representative of employees files a notice with the | Director alleging that the period of time fixed in the |
| citation for the abatement of the violation is unreasonable, | the Director shall afford an opportunity for a hearing before | an Administrative Law Judge designated by the Director. | (b) At the hearing, the employer or employee shall state | his or her objections to the citation and provide evidence why | the citation should not stand as issued. The Director or his or | her representative shall be given the opportunity to state his | or her reasons for issuing the citation. Affected employees | shall be provided an opportunity to participate as parties to | hearings under the rules of procedure prescribed by the | Director (56 Ill. Admin. Code, Part 120).
| (c) The Director, or the Administrative Law Judge on | behalf of the Director, has the power to do the following:
| (1) Issue subpoenas for and compel the attendance of | witnesses.
| (2) Hear testimony and receive evidence.
| (3) Order testimony of a witness residing within or | without this State to be taken by deposition in the manner | prescribed by law for depositions in civil cases in the | circuit court in any proceeding pending before him or her | at any stage of such proceeding.
| (d) Subpoenas and commissions to take testimony shall be | issued by under seal of the Director. Service of subpoenas may | be made by a sheriff or any other person.
| (e) The circuit court for the county where any hearing is | pending may compel the attendance of witnesses, the production |
| of pertinent books, papers, records, or documents, and the | giving of testimony before the Director or an Administrative | Law Judge by an attachment proceeding, as for contempt, in the | same manner as the production of evidence may be compelled | before the court.
| (f) The Administrative Law Judge on behalf of the | Director, after considering the evidence presented at the | formal hearing, in accordance with the Director's rules, shall | enter a final decision and order within a reasonable time | affirming, modifying, or vacating the citation or proposed | assessment of a civil penalty, or directing other appropriate | relief.
| (Source: P.A. 98-874, eff. 1-1-15 .) | (820 ILCS 219/110)
| Sec. 110. Discrimination against employee prohibited. | (a) A person may not discharge or in any way discriminate | against an employee because the employee has: (i) filed a | complaint or instituted or caused to be instituted any | proceeding under this Act, (ii) testified or is about to | testify in any such proceeding, or (iii) exercised, on his or | her own behalf or on behalf of another person, any right | afforded by this Act , including reporting potential violations | of this Act to a member of management with authority to address | the concerns .
| (b) An employee who believes that he or she has been |
| discharged or otherwise discriminated against by an employer | in violation of this Section may, within 30 calendar days | after the violation occurs, file a complaint with the Director | alleging the discrimination.
| (c) Upon receipt of the complaint, the Director shall | cause an investigation to be made as the Director deems | appropriate. After the investigation, if the Director | determines that the employer has violated this Section, the | Director shall bring an action in the circuit court for | appropriate relief, including rehiring or reinstatement of the | employee to his or her former position with back pay, after | taking into account any interim earnings of the employee. In | such matters the Director shall be represented by the Attorney | General.
| (Source: P.A. 98-874, eff. 1-1-15 .)
| Section 99. Effective date. This Section and Section 3 | takes effect immediately. |
Effective Date: 4/22/2022
|