Public Act 097-0629 Public Act 0629 97TH GENERAL ASSEMBLY |
Public Act 097-0629 | SB1992 Enrolled | LRB097 09282 PJG 49417 b |
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| AN ACT concerning State government.
| Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
| represented in the General Assembly:
| Section 1. Findings; purpose; text and revisory changes; | validation; additional material. | (a) It is the purpose of this Act to reenact the provisions | of subsection (c) of Section 5.4 of the Metropolitan Pier and | Exposition Authority Act, which a federal district court found | to be preempted under federal law on the grounds that it | regulates issues protected by Section 8 of the National Labor | Relations Act. Following the court's ruling, the parties to the | suit resolved their dispute related to the challenged | provisions. The reenactment of subsection (c) of Section 5.4 | implements, in part, settlement agreements made and entered | into between the Authority and the plaintiffs that filed suit, | the Chicago Regional Council of Carpenters and the | International Brotherhood of Teamsters Local 727. The | agreements were filed with the Secretary of State Index | Department and designated as 97-GA-A01 and 97-GA-A02, | respectively. | (b) In this Act, the base text of the reenacted Section is | set forth as it existed at the time of the federal district | court's decision. Striking and underscoring is used only to | show the changes being made to that base text. The changes |
| being made to this Act are consistent with the settlement | agreement or declarative of existing law. | Section 5. The Metropolitan Pier and Exposition Authority | Act is amended by reenacting and changing Section 5.4 as | follows: | (70 ILCS 210/5.4) | Sec. 5.4. Exhibitor rights and work rule reforms. | (a) Legislative findings. | (1) The Authority is a political subdivision of the | State of Illinois subject to the plenary authority of the | General Assembly and was created for the benefit of the | general public to promote business, industry, commerce, | and tourism within the City of Chicago and the State of | Illinois. | (2) The Authority owns and operates McCormick Place and | Navy Pier, which have collectively 2.8 million square feet | of exhibit hall space, 700,000 square feet of meeting room | space. | (3) The Authority is a vital economic engine that | annually generates 65,000 jobs and $8 billion of economic | activity for the State of Illinois through the trade shows, | conventions, and other meetings held and attended at | McCormick Place and Navy Pier. |
| (4) The Authority supports the operation of McCormick | Place and Navy Pier through not only fees on the rental of | exhibit and meeting room space, electrical and utility | service, food and beverage services, and parking, but also | hotel room rates paid by persons staying at the | Authority-owned hotel. | (5) The Authority has a compelling and proprietary | interest in the success, competitiveness, and continued | viability of McCormick Place and Navy Pier as the owner and | operator of the convention facilities and its obligation to | ensure that these facilities produce sufficient operating | revenues. | (6) The Authority's convention facilities were | constructed and renovated through the issuance of public | bonds that are directly repaid by State hotel, auto rental, | food and beverage, and airport and departure taxes paid | principally by persons who attend, work at, exhibit, and | provide goods and services to conventions, shows, | exhibitions, and meetings at McCormick Place and Navy Pier. | (7) State law also dedicates State occupation and use | tax revenues to fulfill debt service obligations on these | bonds should State hotel, auto rental, food and beverage, | and airport and departure taxes fail to generate sufficient | revenue. | (8) Through fiscal year 2010, $55 million in State | occupation and use taxes will have been allocated to make |
| debt service payments on the Authority's bonds due to | shortfalls in State hotel, auto rental, food and beverage, | and airport and departure taxes. These shortfalls are | expected to continue in future fiscal years and would | require the annual dedication of approximately $40 million | in State occupation and use taxes to fulfill debt service | payments. | (9) In 2009, managers of the International Plastics | Showcase announced that 2009 was the last year they would | host their exhibition at McCormick Place, as they had since | 1971, because union labor work rules and electric and food | service costs make it uneconomical for the show managers | and exhibitors to use McCormick Place as a convention venue | as compared to convention facilities in Orlando, Florida | and Las Vegas, Nevada. The exhibition used over 740,000 | square feet of exhibit space, attracted over 43,000 | attendees, generated $4.8 million of revenues to McCormick | Place, and raised over $200,000 in taxes to pay debt | service on convention facility bonds. | (10) After the International Plastics Showcase | exhibition announced its departure, other conventions and | exhibitions managers and exhibitors also stated that they | would not return to McCormick Place and Navy Pier for the | same reasons cited by the International Plastics Showcase | exhibition. In addition, still other managers and | exhibitors stated that they would not select McCormick |
| Place as a convention venue unless the union labor work | rules and electrical and food service costs were made | competitive with those in Orlando and Las Vegas. | (11) The General Assembly created the Joint Committee | on the Metropolitan Pier and Exposition Authority to | conduct hearings and obtain facts to determine how union | labor work rules and electrical and food service costs make | McCormick Place and Navy Pier uneconomical as a convention | venue. | (12) Witness testimony and fact-gathering revealed | that while the skilled labor provided by trade unions at | McCormick Place and Navy Pier is second to none and is | actually "exported" to work on conventions and exhibitions | held in Orlando and Las Vegas, restrictive work rules on | the activities show exhibitors may perform present | exhibitors and show managers with an uninviting atmosphere | and result in significantly higher costs than competing | convention facilities. | (13) Witness testimony and fact-gathering also | revealed that the mark-up on electrical and food service | imposed by the Authority to generate operating revenue for | McCormick Place and Navy Pier also substantially increased | exhibitor and show organizer costs to the point of excess | when compared to competing convention facilities. | (14) Witness testimony and fact-gathering further | revealed that the additional departure of conventions, |
| exhibitions, and trade shows from Authority facilities | threatens the continued economic viability of these | facilities and the stability of sufficient tax revenues | necessary to support debt service. | (15) In order to safeguard the Authority's and State of | Illinois' shared compelling and proprietary interests in | McCormick Place and Navy Pier and in response to local | economic needs, the provisions contained in this Section | set forth mandated changes and reforms to restore and | ensure that (i) the Authority's facilities remain | economically competitive with other convention venues and | (ii) conventions, exhibitions, trade shows, and other | meetings are attracted to and retained at Authority | facilities by producing an exhibitor-friendly environment | and by reducing costs for exhibitors and show managers. | (16) The provisions set forth in this Section are | reasonable, necessary, and narrowly tailored to safeguard | the Authority's and State of Illinois' shared and | compelling proprietary interests and respond to local | economic needs as compared to the available alternative set | forth in House Bill 4900 of the 96th General Assembly and | proposals submitted to the Joint Committee on the | Metropolitan Pier and Exposition Authority. Action by the | State offers the only comprehensive means to remedy the | circumstances set forth in these findings, despite the | concerted and laudable voluntary efforts of the Authority, |
| labor unions, show contractors, show managers, and | exhibitors. | (b) Definitions. As used in this Section: | "Booth" means the demarcated exhibit space of an | exhibitor on Authority premises. | "Contractor" or "show contractor" means any person who | contracts with the Authority, an exhibitor, or with the | manager of a show to provide any services related to | drayage, rigging, carpentry, decorating, electrical, | maintenance, mechanical, and food and beverage services or | related trades and duties for shows on Authority premises. | "Exhibitor" or "show exhibitor" means any person who | contracts with the Authority or with a manager or | contractor of a show held or to be held on Authority | premises. | "Exhibitor employee" means any person who has been | employed by the exhibitor as a full-time employee for a | minimum of 6 months before the show's opening date. | "Hand tools" means cordless tools, power tools, and | other tools as determined by the Authority. | "Licensee" means any entity that uses the Authority's | premises. | "Manager" or "show manager" means any person that owns | or manages a show held or to be held on Authority premises. | "Personally owned vehicles" means the vehicles owned |
| by show exhibitors or the show management, excluding | commercially registered trucks, vans, and other vehicles | as determined by the Authority. | "Premises" means grounds, buildings, and facilities of | the Authority. | "Show" means a convention, exposition, trade show, | event, or meeting held on Authority premises by a show | manager or show contractor on behalf of a show manager. | "2011 Settlement Agreement" means the agreement that | the Authority made and entered into with the Chicago | Regional Council of Carpenters, not including any | revisions or amendments, and filed with the Illinois | Secretary of State Index Department and designated as | 97-GA-A01. | "Union employees" means workers represented by a labor | organization, as defined in the National Labor Relations | Act, providing skilled labor services to exhibitors, a show | manager, or a show contractor on Authority premises. | (c) Exhibitor rights. | In order to control costs, increase the | competitiveness, and promote and provide for the economic | stability of Authority premises, all Authority contracts | with exhibitors, contractors, and managers shall include | the following minimum terms and conditions: | (1) Consistent with safety and the skills and training |
| necessary to perform the task, as determined by the | Authority, an exhibitor and exhibitor employees are | permitted in a booth of any size with the use of the | exhibitor's ladders and hand tools to: | (i) set-up and dismantle exhibits displayed on | Authority premises; | (ii) assemble and disassemble materials, | machinery, or equipment on Authority premises; and | (iii) install all signs, graphics, props, | balloons, other decorative items, and the exhibitor's | own drapery, including the skirting of exhibitor | tables, on the Authority's premises. | (2) An exhibitor and exhibitor employees are permitted | in a booth of any size to deliver, set-up, plug in, | interconnect, and operate an exhibitor's electrical | equipment, computers, audio-visual devices, and other | equipment. | (3) An exhibitor and exhibitor employees are permitted | in a booth of any size to skid, position, and re-skid all | exhibitor material, machinery, and equipment on Authority | premises. | (4) An exhibitor and exhibitor employees are | prohibited at any time from using scooters, forklifts, | pallet jacks, condors, scissors lifts, motorized dollies, | or similar motorized or hydraulic equipment on Authority | premises. |
| (5) The Authority shall designate areas, in its | discretion, where exhibitors may unload and load exhibitor | materials from privately owned vehicles at Authority | premises with the use of non-motorized hand trucks and | dollies. | (6) On Monday through Friday for any consecutive 8-hour | period during the hours of 6:00 a.m. and 10:00 p.m., union | employees on Authority premises shall be paid | straight-time hourly wages plus fringe benefits. Union | employees shall be paid straight-time and a half hourly | wages plus fringe benefits for labor services provided | after any consecutive 8-hour period; provided, however, | that between the hours of midnight and 6:00 a.m. union | employees shall be paid double straight-time wages plus | fringe benefits for labor services. | (7) On Monday through Friday for any consecutive 8-hour | period during the hours of 6:00 a.m. and 10:00 p.m., a show | manager or contractor shall charge an exhibitor only for | labor services provided by union employees on Authority | premises based on straight-time hourly wages plus fringe | benefits along with a reasonable mark-up. After any | consecutive 8-hour period, a show manager or contractor | shall charge an exhibitor only for labor services provided | by union employees based on straight-time and a half hourly | wages plus fringe benefits along with a reasonable mark-up; | provided, however, that between the hours of midnight and |
| 6:00 a.m. a show manager or contractor shall charge an | exhibitor only for labor services provided by union | employees based on double straight-time wages plus fringe | benefits along with a reasonable mark-up. | (8) (Blank). On Saturdays for any consecutive 8-hour | period, union employees on Authority premises shall be paid | straight-time and a half hourly wages plus fringe benefits. | After any consecutive 8-hour period, union employees on | Authority premises shall be paid double straight-time | hourly wages plus fringe benefits; provided, however, that | between the hours of midnight and 6:00 a.m. union employees | shall be paid double straight-time wages plus fringe | benefits for labor services. | (9) (Blank). On Saturdays for any consecutive 8-hour | period, a show manager or contractor shall charge an | exhibitor only for labor services provided by union | employees on Authority premises based on straight-time and | a half hourly wages plus fringe benefits along with a | reasonable mark-up. After any consecutive 8-hour period, a | show manager or contractor shall charge an exhibitor only | for labor services provided by union employees based on | double straight-time hourly wages plus fringe benefits | along with a reasonable mark-up; provided, however, that | between the hours of midnight and 6:00 a.m. a show manager | or contractor shall charge an exhibitor only for labor | services provided by union employees based on double |
| straight-time wages plus fringe benefits along with a | reasonable mark-up. | (10) (Blank). On Sundays and on State and federal | holidays, union employees on Authority premises shall be | paid double straight-time hourly wages plus fringe | benefits. | (11) (Blank). On Sundays and on State and federal | holidays, a show manager or contractor shall charge an | exhibitor only for labor services provided by union | employees on Authority premises based on double | straight-time hourly wages plus fringe benefits along with | a reasonable mark-up. | (12) The Authority has the power to determine, after | consultation with the Advisory Council, the work | jurisdiction and scope of work of union employees on | Authority premises during the move-in, move-out, and run of | a show, provided that any affected labor organization may | contest the Authority's determination through a binding | decision of an independent, third-party arbitrator. When | making the determination, the Authority or arbitrator, as | the case may be, shall consider the training and skills | required to perform the task, past practices on Authority | premises, safety, and the need for efficiency and exhibitor | satisfaction. These factors shall be considered in their | totality and not in isolation. The Authority's | determination must be made in writing, set forth an |
| explanation and statement of the reason or reasons | supporting the determination, and be provided to each | affected labor organization. The changes in this item (12) | by this amendatory Act of the 97th General Assembly are | declarative of existing law and shall not be construed as a | new enactment. Nothing in this item permits the Authority | to eliminate any labor organization representing union | employees that provide labor services on the move-in, | move-out, and run of the show as of the effective date of | this amendatory Act of the 96th General Assembly. | (13) (Blank). During the run of a show, all stewards of | union employees shall be working stewards. Subject to the | discretion of the Authority, no more than one working | steward per labor organization representing union | employees providing labor services on Authority premises | shall be used per building and per show. | (14) An exhibitor or show manager may request by name | specific union employees to provide labor services on | Authority premises consistent with all State and federal | laws. Union employees requested by an exhibitor shall take | priority over union employees requested by a show manager. | (15) A show manager or show contractor on behalf of a | show manager may retain an electrical contractor approved | by the Authority or Authority-provisioned electrical | services to provide electrical services on the premises. If | a show manager or show contractor on behalf of a show |
| manager retains Authority-provisioned electrical services, | then the Authority shall offer these services at a rate not | to exceed the cost of providing those services. | (16) Crew sizes for any task or operation shall not | exceed 2 persons unless, after consultation with the | Advisory Council, the Authority determines otherwise based | on the task, skills, and training required to perform the | task and on safety. | (17) An exhibitor may bring food and beverages on the | premises of the Authority for personal consumption. | (18) Show managers and contractors shall comply with | any audit performed under subsection (e) of this Section. | (19) A show manager or contractor shall charge an | exhibitor only for labor services provided by union | employees on Authority premises on a minimum half-hour | basis. | The Authority has the power to implement, enforce, and | administer the exhibitor rights set forth in this subsection, | including the promulgation of rules. The Authority also has the | power to determine violations of this subsection and implement | appropriate remedies, including, but not limited to, barring | violators from Authority premises. The provisions set forth in | this Section are binding and equally applicable to any show | conducted at Navy Pier, and this statement of the law is | declarative of existing law and shall not be construed as a new | enactment. The Authority may waive the applicability of only |
| item (6) of this subsection (c) to the extent necessary and | required to comply with paragraph 1 of Section F of the 2011 | Settlement Agreement, as set forth on Page 12 of that | Agreement. | (d) Advisory Council. | (1) An Advisory Council is hereby established to ensure | an active and productive dialogue between all affected | stakeholders to ensure exhibitor satisfaction for | conventions, exhibitions, trade shows, and meetings held | on Authority premises. | (2) The composition of the Council shall be determined | by the Authority consistent with its existing practice for | labor-management relations. | (3) The Council shall hold meetings no less than once | every 90 days. | (e) Audit of exhibitor rights. | The Authority shall retain the services of a person to | complete, at least twice per calendar year, a financial | statement audit and compliance attestation examination to | determine and verify that the exhibitor rights set forth in | this Section have produced cost reductions for exhibitors and | those cost reductions have been fairly passed along to | exhibitors. The financial statement audit shall be performed in | accordance with generally accepted auditing standards. The |
| compliance attestation examination shall be (i) performed in | accordance with attestation standards established by the | American Institute of Certified Public Accountants and shall | examine the compliance with the requirements set forth in this | Section and (ii) conducted by a licensed public accounting | firm, selected by the Authority from a list of firms | prequalified to do business with the Illinois Auditor General. | Upon request, a show contractor or manager shall provide the | Authority or person retained to provide auditing services with | any information and other documentation reasonably necessary | to perform the obligations set forth in this subsection. Upon | completion, the report shall be submitted to the Authority and | made publicly available on the Authority's website. | (f) Exhibitor service reforms. The Authority shall make every | effort to substantially reduce exhibitor's costs for | participating in shows. | (1) Any contract to provide food or beverage services | in the buildings and facilities of the Authority, except | Navy Pier, shall be provided at a rate not to exceed the | cost established in the contract. The Board shall | periodically review all food and beverage contracts. | (2) A department or unit of the Authority shall not | serve as the exclusive provider of electrical services. | (3) Exhibitors shall receive a detailed statement of | all costs associated with utility services, including the |
| cost of labor, equipment, and materials. | (g) Severability. If any provision of this Section or its | application to any person or circumstance is held invalid, the | invalidity of that provision or application does not affect | other provisions or applications of this Section that can be | given effect without the invalid provision or application.
| (Source: P.A. 96-898, eff. 5-27-10; 96-899, eff. 5-28-10.)
| Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon | becoming law. |
Effective Date: 11/30/2011
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