Public Act 90-0202 of the 90th General Assembly

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90th General Assembly

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Public Act 90-0202

SB753 Enrolled                                 LRB9003196EGfg

    AN  ACT  in  relation  to  negotiation   of   firefighter
residency requirements, amending a named Act.

    Be  it  enacted  by  the People of the State of Illinois,
represented in the General Assembly:

    Section 5. The Illinois Public  Labor  Relations  Act  is
amended by changing Section 14 as follows:

    (5 ILCS 315/14) (from Ch. 48, par. 1614)
    Sec.  14.  Security  Employee,  Peace  Officer  and  Fire
Fighter Disputes.
    (a)  In  the  case  of  collective  bargaining agreements
involving units of security employees of a  public  employer,
Peace Officer Units, or units of fire fighters or paramedics,
and  in  the  case  of  disputes under Section 18, unless the
parties mutually agree to some other  time  limit,  mediation
shall  commence  30 days prior to the expiration date of such
agreement or at such later time  as  the  mediation  services
chosen  under subsection (b) of Section 12 can be provided to
the parties. In the  case  of  negotiations  for  an  initial
collective  bargaining  agreement,  mediation  shall commence
upon 15 days notice from either party or at such  later  time
as  the  mediation services chosen pursuant to subsection (b)
of Section 12 can be provided to the  parties.  In  mediation
under  this  Section,  if  either  party  requests the use of
mediation   services   from   the   Federal   Mediation   and
Conciliation Service, the other party shall  either  join  in
such  request  or  bear  the  additional  cost  of  mediation
services from another source.  The mediator shall have a duty
to  keep the Board informed on the progress of the mediation.
If any dispute has not been resolved within 15 days after the
first meeting of the parties and the mediator, or within such
other time limit as  may  be  mutually  agreed  upon  by  the
parties,  either the exclusive representative or employer may
request of the other,  in  writing,  arbitration,  and  shall
submit a copy of the request to the Board.
    (b)  Within  10 days after such a request for arbitration
has been made, the employer shall choose a delegate  and  the
employees'  exclusive  representative shall choose a delegate
to a panel of arbitration as provided in this  Section.   The
employer  and  employees shall forthwith advise the other and
the Board of their selections.
    (c)  Within 7 days of the request of  either  party,  the
Board  shall select from the Public Employees Labor Mediation
Roster 7 persons who are on the labor arbitration  panels  of
either  the  American  Arbitration Association or the Federal
Mediation and Conciliation Service, or who are members of the
National Academy of Arbitrators, as  nominees  for  impartial
arbitrator  of the arbitration panel.  The parties may select
an individual on the list provided by the Board or any  other
individual  mutually  agreed  upon  by the parties.  Within 7
days following the receipt of the  list,  the  parties  shall
notify  the  Board  of the person they have selected.  Unless
the parties agree on an alternate selection  procedure,  they
shall alternatively strike one name from the list provided by
the  Board  until  only  one name remains.  A coin toss shall
determine which party shall strike the first  name.   If  the
parties  fail to notify the Board in a timely manner of their
selection for neutral chairman, the  Board  shall  appoint  a
neutral   chairman   from   the   Illinois  Public  Employees
Mediation/Arbitration Roster.
    (d)  The chairman shall call a hearing to begin within 15
days and give reasonable notice of the time and place of  the
hearing.   The  hearing  shall  be held at the offices of the
Board  or  at  such  other  location  as  the   Board   deems
appropriate.  The chairman shall preside over the hearing and
shall  take  testimony.  Any oral or documentary evidence and
other data deemed relevant by the arbitration  panel  may  be
received  in  evidence.   The  proceedings shall be informal.
Technical  rules  of  evidence  shall  not  apply   and   the
competency  of  the  evidence  shall  not  thereby  be deemed
impaired.  A verbatim record of the proceedings shall be made
and the arbitrator shall arrange for the necessary  recording
service.   Transcripts  may  be ordered at the expense of the
party  ordering  them,  but  the  transcripts  shall  not  be
necessary for a  decision  by  the  arbitration  panel.   The
expense of the proceedings, including a fee for the chairman,
established  in  advance by the Board, shall be borne equally
by each of the parties to the dispute.    The  delegates,  if
public  officers  or employees, shall continue on the payroll
of the public employer without  loss  of  pay.   The  hearing
conducted by the arbitration panel may be adjourned from time
to time, but unless otherwise agreed by the parties, shall be
concluded  within  30  days  of the time of its commencement.
Majority actions and rulings shall constitute the actions and
rulings of the arbitration  panel.   Arbitration  proceedings
under  this Section shall not be interrupted or terminated by
reason of any unfair labor practice charge  filed  by  either
party at any time.
    (e)  The  arbitration panel may administer oaths, require
the attendance of  witnesses,  and  the  production  of  such
books,  papers, contracts, agreements and documents as may be
deemed by it material to a just determination of  the  issues
in dispute, and for such purpose may issue subpoenas.  If any
person  refuses to obey a subpoena, or refuses to be sworn or
to testify, or if any witness, party or attorney is guilty of
any  contempt  while  in  attendance  at  any  hearing,   the
arbitration  panel  may, or the attorney general if requested
shall, invoke  the  aid  of  any  circuit  court  within  the
jurisdiction  in which the hearing is being held, which court
shall issue an appropriate order.  Any failure  to  obey  the
order may be punished by the court as contempt.
    (f)  At  any  time  before the rendering of an award, the
chairman of the arbitration panel, if he is  of  the  opinion
that  it  would  be useful or beneficial to do so, may remand
the dispute to the parties for further collective  bargaining
for  a  period  not  to  exceed  2  weeks.  If the dispute is
remanded  for  further   collective   bargaining   the   time
provisions  of  this  Act shall be extended for a time period
equal to that of the remand.  The chairman of  the  panel  of
arbitration shall notify the Board of the remand.
    (g)  At  or  before  the  conclusion  of the hearing held
pursuant to  subsection  (d),  the  arbitration  panel  shall
identify  the  economic issues in dispute, and direct each of
the parties to submit, within such time limit  as  the  panel
shall  prescribe,  to the arbitration panel and to each other
its last offer of settlement on  each  economic  issue.   The
determination  of  the  arbitration panel as to the issues in
dispute and as to which of these issues are economic shall be
conclusive.  The arbitration panel, within 30 days after  the
conclusion of the hearing, or such further additional periods
to  which  the parties may agree, shall make written findings
of fact and promulgate a written opinion and  shall  mail  or
otherwise  deliver  a  true  copy  thereof to the parties and
their representatives and to the Board.  As to each  economic
issue,  the  arbitration  panel shall adopt the last offer of
settlement which, in the opinion of  the  arbitration  panel,
more  nearly  complies with the applicable factors prescribed
in subsection (h).  The findings, opinions and  order  as  to
all  other  issues shall be based upon the applicable factors
prescribed in subsection (h).
    (h)  Where there is no agreement between the parties,  or
where  there  is  an  agreement  but  the  parties have begun
negotiations or discussions looking to  a  new  agreement  or
amendment  of the existing agreement, and wage rates or other
conditions of employment under the proposed  new  or  amended
agreement  are  in  dispute, the arbitration panel shall base
its findings, opinions and order upon the following  factors,
as applicable:
         (1)  The lawful authority of the employer.
         (2)  Stipulations of the parties.
         (3)  The interests and welfare of the public and the
    financial ability of the unit of government to meet those
    costs.
         (4)  Comparison  of  the wages, hours and conditions
    of  employment  of  the   employees   involved   in   the
    arbitration   proceeding   with   the  wages,  hours  and
    conditions of employment of  other  employees  performing
    similar services and with other employees generally:
              (A)  In   public   employment   in   comparable
         communities.
              (B)  In   private   employment   in  comparable
         communities.
         (5)  The  average  consumer  prices  for  goods  and
    services, commonly known as the cost of living.
         (6)  The overall compensation presently received  by
    the   employees,   including  direct  wage  compensation,
    vacations, holidays and other excused time, insurance and
    pensions,  medical  and  hospitalization  benefits,   the
    continuity  and  stability  of  employment  and all other
    benefits received.
         (7)  Changes in any of the  foregoing  circumstances
    during the pendency of the arbitration proceedings.
         (8)  Such   other   factors,  not  confined  to  the
    foregoing, which are normally or traditionally taken into
    consideration in the determination of  wages,  hours  and
    conditions  of  employment  through  voluntary collective
    bargaining,  mediation,  fact-finding,   arbitration   or
    otherwise  between  the parties, in the public service or
    in private employment.
    (i)  In the  case  of  peace  officers,  the  arbitration
decision  shall  be limited to wages, hours and conditions of
employment and shall not include the following: i)  residency
requirements; ii) the type of equipment, other than uniforms,
issued  or  used;  iii)  manning;  iv)  the  total  number of
employees employed by  the  department;  v)  mutual  aid  and
assistance  agreements  to other units of government; and vi)
the criterion  pursuant  to  which  force,  including  deadly
force,  can  be used; provided, nothing herein shall preclude
an arbitration decision regarding equipment or manning levels
if such decision is based on a finding that the equipment  or
manning  considerations in a specific work assignment involve
a serious risk to the safety of a peace officer  beyond  that
which is inherent in the normal performance of police duties.
Limitation  of the terms of the arbitration decision pursuant
to this subsection  shall  not  be  construed  to  limit  the
factors upon which the decision may be based, as set forth in
subsection (h).
    In  the case of fire fighter, and fire department or fire
district paramedic matters, the arbitration decision shall be
limited to wages, hours, and conditions of employment  (which
may  include  residency requirements in municipalities with a
population under  1,000,000, but those residency requirements
shall not allow residency outside of Illinois) and shall  not
include  the  following matters: i) residency requirements in
municipalities with a population of at least  1,000,000;  ii)
the  type  of equipment (other than uniforms and fire fighter
turnout gear) issued  or  used;  iii)  the  total  number  of
employees  employed  by  the  department;  iv) mutual aid and
assistance agreements to other units of  government;  and  v)
the  criterion  pursuant  to  which  force,  including deadly
force, can be used; provided, however, nothing  herein  shall
preclude  an  arbitration decision regarding equipment levels
if such decision is based on a  finding  that  the  equipment
considerations  in  a  specific  work  assignment  involve  a
serious  risk  to  the  safety  of a fire fighter beyond that
which is inherent in the normal performance of  fire  fighter
duties.   Limitation of the terms of the arbitration decision
pursuant to this subsection shall not be construed  to  limit
the  facts upon which the decision may be based, as set forth
in subsection (h).
    For the purposes of this subsection (i), persons who  are
employed  by  a combined department that performs both police
and  fire  fighting  services  shall  be  governed   by   the
provisions   relating  to  peace  officers  rather  than  the
provisions relating to fire fighters.
    To preserve historical bargaining rights, this subsection
shall not apply to any provision of a fire fighter collective
bargaining  agreement  in  effect  and  applicable   on   the
effective date of this Act; provided, however, nothing herein
shall   preclude   arbitration   with  respect  to  any  such
provision.
    (j)  Arbitration  procedures  shall  be  deemed   to   be
initiated  by  the filing of a letter requesting mediation as
required  under  subsection  (a)  of   this   Section.    The
commencement  of  a  new  municipal  fiscal  year  after  the
initiation  of  arbitration  procedures  under  this Act, but
before the arbitration decision, or  its  enforcement,  shall
not  be  deemed  to  render  a  dispute moot, or to otherwise
impair the jurisdiction or authority of the arbitration panel
or its decision.  Increases in rates of compensation  awarded
by  the  arbitration panel may be effective only at the start
of the fiscal year next commencing  after  the  date  of  the
arbitration award.  If a new fiscal year has commenced either
since the initiation of arbitration procedures under this Act
or  since  any  mutually  agreed extension of the statutorily
required period of mediation under this Act by the parties to
the labor dispute  causing  a  delay  in  the  initiation  of
arbitration, the foregoing limitations shall be inapplicable,
and   such  awarded  increases  may  be  retroactive  to  the
commencement of the fiscal year, any other statute or charter
provisions to the contrary, notwithstanding. At any time  the
parties,  by  stipulation,  may  amend  or modify an award of
arbitration.
    (k)  Orders of the arbitration panel shall be reviewable,
upon appropriate petition by either the  public  employer  or
the exclusive bargaining representative, by the circuit court
for  the  county  in  which  the  dispute arose or in which a
majority of the  affected  employees  reside,  but  only  for
reasons  that  the  arbitration panel was without or exceeded
its  statutory  authority;  the  order   is   arbitrary,   or
capricious;  or the order was procured by fraud, collusion or
other similar and unlawful means.  Such petitions for  review
must  be  filed  with the appropriate circuit court within 90
days following the issuance of the  arbitration  order.   The
pendency   of   such   proceeding   for   review   shall  not
automatically stay the order of the arbitration  panel.   The
party against whom the final decision of any such court shall
be adverse, if such court finds such appeal or petition to be
frivolous,  shall pay reasonable attorneys' fees and costs to
the successful party as  determined  by  said  court  in  its
discretion.  If  said  court's  decision affirms the award of
money, such award, if retroactive, shall bear interest at the
rate of 12 percent per annum from the  effective  retroactive
date.
    (l)  During   the  pendency  of  proceedings  before  the
arbitration  panel,  existing   wages,   hours,   and   other
conditions  of  employment  shall not be changed by action of
either party without the consent of the other but a party may
so consent without prejudice to his rights or position  under
this  Act.   The  proceedings are deemed to be pending before
the arbitration panel  upon  the  initiation  of  arbitration
procedures under this Act.
    (m)  Security  officers  of  public  employers, and Peace
Officers,  Fire  Fighters  and  fire  department   and   fire
protection  district  paramedics, covered by this Section may
not withhold services, nor may public employers lock  out  or
prevent such employees from performing services at any time.
    (n)  All  of  the  terms  decided upon by the arbitration
panel shall be included in an agreement to  be  submitted  to
the  public  employer's  governing  body for ratification and
adoption by law,  ordinance  or  the  equivalent  appropriate
means.
    The  governing body shall review each term decided by the
arbitration panel.  If the governing body fails to reject one
or more  terms of the arbitration panel's decision by  a  3/5
vote  of  those  duly  elected  and  qualified members of the
governing body, within 20 days of issuance, or in the case of
firefighters employed by a  state  university,  at  the  next
regularly  scheduled  meeting  of  the  governing  body after
issuance, such term or terms  shall  become  a  part  of  the
collective  bargaining  agreement  of  the  parties.   If the
governing body affirmatively rejects one or more terms of the
arbitration panel's decision, it  must  provide  reasons  for
such  rejection with respect to each term so rejected, within
20 days of such rejection and the parties shall return to the
arbitration panel for further proceedings and issuance  of  a
supplemental  decision  with  respect  to the rejected terms.
Any supplemental decision by an arbitration  panel  or  other
decision maker agreed to by the parties shall be submitted to
the   governing   body   for  ratification  and  adoption  in
accordance with the procedures and  voting  requirements  set
forth  in  this  Section.  The  voting  requirements  of this
subsection  shall  apply  to  all   disputes   submitted   to
arbitration  pursuant  to  this  Section  notwithstanding any
contrary  voting  requirements  contained  in  any   existing
collective bargaining agreement between the parties.
    (o)  If  the  governing  body  of  the  employer votes to
reject the panel's decision, the parties shall return to  the
panel  within  30  days  from the issuance of the reasons for
rejection  for  further  proceedings  and   issuance   of   a
supplemental   decision.    All   reasonable  costs  of  such
supplemental    proceeding    including     the     exclusive
representative's  reasonable  attorney's fees, as established
by the Board, shall be paid by the employer.
    (p)  Notwithstanding the provisions of this  Section  the
employer  and  exclusive  representative  may agree to submit
unresolved  disputes  concerning  wages,  hours,  terms   and
conditions  of  employment  to an alternative form of impasse
resolution.
(Source: P.A. 89-195, eff. 7-21-95.)

    Section 99. Effective date.  This Act takes  effect  upon
becoming law.

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