Illinois General Assembly - Full Text of HB0691
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Full Text of HB0691  99th General Assembly

HB0691ham002 99TH GENERAL ASSEMBLY

Rep. John E. Bradley

Filed: 6/9/2015

 

 


 

 


 
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1
AMENDMENT TO HOUSE BILL 691

2    AMENDMENT NO. ______. Amend House Bill 691, AS AMENDED, by
3inserting the following Sections in their proper numeric
4sequence as follows:
 
5    "Section 1. Short title. This Act may be cited as the Local
6Government Taxpayer Protection Act of 2015.
 
7    Section 2. Legislative intent. As of 2015, Illinois
8taxpayers are paying the second highest median property taxes
9in the United States. While property taxes are a critical
10source of revenue for units of local government, school
11districts, and other local governmental entities, the high
12property tax burden hinders economic growth. The General
13Assembly finds that freezing property tax extensions until
14voters, acting by referendum, approve an increase in the tax
15extension will return control of local tax and spending policy
16to voters and, as property values begin to grow, reduce

 

 

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1property tax rates.
2    To ensure that units of local government, school districts,
3and other governmental entities that depend upon property tax
4revenue are able to continue providing critical services to
5their residents notwithstanding this property tax freeze, the
6General Assembly further finds that it is necessary to reduce
7the State-imposed mandates on local governments that have
8increased the cost of providing these services. These mandates
9include the following:
10        (1) According to the United States Census Bureau's 2012
11    report on state and local government finance, employee
12    wages and benefits are the largest operational expense of
13    local governments in Illinois. Although the Illinois
14    Public Labor Relations Act and the Illinois Educational
15    Labor Relations Act are intended to afford local
16    governments with discretion over their budgets, employee
17    costs remain a significant expense. The changes made by
18    this amendatory Act of the 99th General Assembly to the
19    Illinois Public Labor Relations Act and the Illinois
20    Educational Labor Relations Act are intended to empower
21    local governments to contain these costs.
22        (2) Despite critical infrastructure and capital needs,
23    the cost of capital projects is often higher for local
24    governments than for the private sector. In particular,
25    labor costs are higher due to the State's mandated
26    prevailing wage, which often exceeds the wage required for

 

 

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1    federally funded projects and the wage that actually
2    prevails in the market, and the use of project labor
3    agreements.
4    The purpose of this amendatory Act of the 99th General
5Assembly is to alleviate the property tax burden. To offset the
6property tax freeze, it is necessary to reduce labor and
7capital costs incurred by units of local government, school
8districts, and other local governmental entities as a result of
9State mandates.
 
10    Section 3. The Illinois Public Labor Relations Act is
11amended by changing Section 4 and by adding Section 4.5 as
12follows:
 
13    (5 ILCS 315/4)  (from Ch. 48, par. 1604)
14    Sec. 4. Management rights.
15    (a) Employers shall not be required to bargain over matters
16of inherent managerial policy, which shall include such areas
17of discretion or policy as the functions of the employer,
18standards of services, its overall budget, the organizational
19structure and selection of new employees, examination
20techniques and direction of employees. Employers, however,
21shall be required to bargain collectively with regard to policy
22matters directly affecting wages, hours and terms and
23conditions of employment as well as the impact thereon upon
24request by employee representatives, except as provided in this

 

 

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1Section or Section 7.5.
2    To preserve the rights of employers and exclusive
3representatives which have established collective bargaining
4relationships or negotiated collective bargaining agreements
5prior to the effective date of this Act, employers shall be
6required to bargain collectively with regard to any matter
7concerning wages, hours or conditions of employment about which
8they have bargained for and agreed to in a collective
9bargaining agreement prior to the effective date of this Act,
10except as provided in this Section or Section 7.5.
11    The chief judge of the judicial circuit that employs a
12public employee who is a court reporter, as defined in the
13Court Reporters Act, has the authority to hire, appoint,
14promote, evaluate, discipline, and discharge court reporters
15within that judicial circuit.
16    Nothing in this amendatory Act of the 94th General Assembly
17shall be construed to intrude upon the judicial functions of
18any court. This amendatory Act of the 94th General Assembly
19applies only to nonjudicial administrative matters relating to
20the collective bargaining rights of court reporters.
21    (b) In any unit of local government or school district to
22which this subsection applies, as provided in Section 4.5 of
23this Act, public employees or a labor organization may not
24bargain collectively on:
25        (1) the decision of the employer to contract with a
26    third party for any services, the process for bidding on

 

 

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1    such a contract, the identity of the provider of such
2    services, or the effect of any such contract on bargaining
3    unit members, provided that this subsection does not limit
4    the ability of employees or a labor organization to bid on
5    any such contract;
6        (2) any pay increase, either through changes to the pay
7    schedule or as a result of accumulated years of service, in
8    excess of the amount specified by ordinance or resolution
9    of the governing authority of the public employer;
10        (3) the provision of any health insurance, including
11    the payment of premiums, the extent of coverage, or the
12    identity of the insurer;
13        (4) the use of employee time for business of the labor
14    organization, other than reasonable time provided to an
15    employee to attend a grievance hearing when his or her
16    rights are substantially affected by the hearing or his or
17    her testimony is needed for the determination of any
18    substantial factual question;
19        (5) required levels of staffing for departments,
20    divisions, shifts, stations, or assignments; or
21        (6) procedures, processes, forms, and criteria for
22    personnel evaluations, or the use of evaluations or
23    seniority in assignments, promotions, layoffs, and
24    reductions-in-force.
25    (c) Any agreement, understanding, or practice, whether
26written or oral, and whether express or implied, between any

 

 

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1labor organization and any public employer made in violation of
2this Section is hereby declared to be unlawful, null and void,
3and of no legal effect.
4(Source: P.A. 98-599, eff. 6-1-14.)
 
5    (5 ILCS 315/4.5 new)
6    Sec. 4.5. Adoption of limitations on subjects of collective
7bargaining.
8    (a) The county board or board of county commissioners of a
9county may by ordinance elect to apply the limitations under
10subsection (b) of Section 4 to bargaining with that county and
11with any other public employer whose boundaries are entirely
12within that county.
13    (b) The corporate authorities of a municipality may by
14ordinance elect to apply the limitations under subsection (b)
15of Section 4 to bargaining with that municipality and with any
16other public employer whose boundaries are entirely within that
17municipality.
18    (c) The governing authority of a unit of local government
19or school district, including a county or municipality, may by
20ordinance or resolution elect to apply the limitations under
21subsection (b) of Section 4 to bargaining with that unit of
22local government or school district.
23    (d) If a petition, signed by a number of registered voters
24equal in number to at least 5% of the total number of
25registered voters in a county or municipality, asking to apply

 

 

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1the limitations under subsection (b) of Section 4 to collective
2bargaining in that county or municipality is presented to the
3clerk of that county or municipality, the clerk shall certify
4the question of whether to apply such limitations in that
5county or municipality to the proper election authority, who
6shall submit the question at the next election in accordance
7with the general election law.
8    The question of whether to apply the limitations under
9subsection (b) of Section 4 shall be presented in substantially
10the following form:
11        Shall each unit of local government and school district
12    located within (legal name of the county or municipality)
13    be free to determine certain matters without negotiating
14    with employee unions, such as the use of service providers,
15    the decision to provide health benefits, caps on total
16    payroll, employees' use of government time for union
17    matters, required staffing levels, evaluation procedures,
18    and, in the case of schools, curriculum?
19    The votes must be recorded as "Yes" or "No". If a majority
20of voters voting on the question are in favor of applying such
21limitations, subsection (b) of Section 4 shall apply to
22bargaining with that county or municipality and with any other
23public employer whose boundaries are entirely within that
24county or municipality.
25    (e) If a petition, signed by a number of registered voters
26equal in number to at least 5% of the total number of

 

 

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1registered voters in a unit of local government or school
2district, asking to apply the limitations under subsection (b)
3of Section 4 to collective bargaining with that unit of local
4government or school district is presented to the clerk of that
5unit of local government or school district, the clerk shall
6certify the question of whether to apply such limitations to
7that unit of local government or school district to the proper
8election authority, who shall submit the question at the next
9election in accordance with the general election law.
10    The question of whether to apply the limitations under
11subsection (b) of Section 4 shall be presented in substantially
12the following form:
13        Shall (the legal name of the unit of local government
14    or school district) be free to determine certain matters
15    without negotiating with employee unions, such as the use
16    of service providers, the decision to provide health
17    benefits, caps on total payroll, employees' use of
18    government time for union matters, required staffing
19    levels, evaluation procedures, and, in the case of schools,
20    curriculum?
21    The votes must be recorded as "Yes" or "No". If a majority
22of voters voting on the question are in favor of applying such
23limitations, subsection (b) of Section 4 shall apply to
24bargaining with that unit of local government or school
25district.
 

 

 

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1    Section 10. The Local Government Energy Conservation Act is
2amended by changing Section 3 as follows:
 
3    (50 ILCS 515/3)
4    Sec. 3. Applicable laws. Other State laws and related
5administrative requirements apply to this Act, including, but
6not limited to, the following laws and related administrative
7requirements: the Illinois Human Rights Act, the Prevailing
8Wage Act, the Public Construction Bond Act, the Public Works
9Preference Act (repealed on June 16, 2010 by Public Act
1096-929), the Employment of Illinois Workers on Public Works
11Act, the Freedom of Information Act, the Open Meetings Act, the
12Illinois Architecture Practice Act of 1989, the Professional
13Engineering Practice Act of 1989, the Structural Engineering
14Practice Act of 1989, the Local Government Professional
15Services Selection Act, and the Contractor Unified License and
16Permit Bond Act.
17(Source: P.A. 97-333, eff. 8-12-11.)
 
18    Section 15. The Local Government Facility Lease Act is
19amended by changing Section 35 as follows:
 
20    (50 ILCS 615/35)
21    Sec. 35. Wage requirements. In order to protect the wages,
22working conditions, and job opportunities of employees
23employed by the lessee of leased facility property used for

 

 

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1airport purposes to perform work on the site of the leased
2premises previously performed by employees of the lessor on the
3site of the leased premises and who were in recognized
4bargaining units at the time of the lease, the lessee, and any
5subcontractor retained by the lessee to perform such work on
6the site of the leased premises, shall be required to pay to
7those employees an amount not less than the economic equivalent
8of the standard of wages and benefits enjoyed by the lessor's
9employees who previously performed that work. The lessor shall
10certify to the lessee the amount of wages and benefits (or
11their equivalent) as of the time of the lease, and any changes
12to those amounts as they may occur during the term of the
13lease. All projects at the leased facility property used for
14airport purposes shall be considered public works for purposes
15of the Prevailing Wage Act.
16(Source: P.A. 94-750, eff. 5-9-06.)
 
17    Section 20. The Counties Code is amended by changing
18Section 5-1134 as follows:
 
19    (55 ILCS 5/5-1134)
20    Sec. 5-1134. Project labor agreements.
21    (a) Any sports, arts, or entertainment facilities that
22receive revenue from a tax imposed under subsection (b) of
23Section 5-1030 of this Code shall be considered to be public
24works within the meaning of the Prevailing Wage Act. The county

 

 

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1authorities responsible for the construction, renovation,
2modification, or alteration of the sports, arts, or
3entertainment facilities shall enter into project labor
4agreements with labor organizations as defined in the National
5Labor Relations Act to assure that no labor dispute interrupts
6or interferes with the construction, renovation, modification,
7or alteration of the projects.
8    (b) The project labor agreements must include the
9following:
10        (1) provisions establishing the minimum hourly wage
11    for each class of labor organization employees;
12        (2) provisions establishing the benefits and other
13    compensation for such class of labor organization; and
14        (3) provisions establishing that no strike or disputes
15    will be engaged in by the labor organization employees.
16    The county, taxing bodies, municipalities, and the labor
17organizations shall have the authority to include other terms
18and conditions as they deem necessary.
19    (c) The project labor agreement shall be filed with the
20Director of the Illinois Department of Labor in accordance with
21procedures established by the Department. At a minimum, the
22project labor agreement must provide the names, addresses, and
23occupations of the owner of the facilities and the individuals
24representing the labor organization employees participating in
25the project labor agreement. The agreement must also specify
26the terms and conditions required in subsection (b) of this

 

 

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1Section.
2    (d) In any agreement for the construction or rehabilitation
3of a facility using revenue generated under subsection (b) of
4Section 5-1030 of this Code, in connection with the
5prequalification of general contractors for construction or
6rehabilitation of the facility, it shall be required that a
7commitment will be submitted detailing how the general
8contractor will expend 15% or more of the aggregate dollar
9value of the project as a whole with one or more minority-owned
10businesses, female-owned businesses, or businesses owned by a
11person with a disability, as these terms are defined in Section
122 of the Business Enterprise for Minorities, Females, and
13Persons with Disabilities Act.
14(Source: P.A. 98-313, eff. 8-12-13; 98-756, eff. 7-16-14.)
 
15    (60 ILCS 1/100-20 rep.)
16    Section 25. The Township Code is amended by repealing
17Section 100-20.
 
18    Section 30. The School Code is amended by changing Section
1919b-15 as follows:
 
20    (105 ILCS 5/19b-15)
21    Sec. 19b-15. Applicable laws. Other State laws and related
22administrative requirements apply to this Article, including,
23but not limited to, the following laws and related

 

 

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1administrative requirements: the Illinois Human Rights Act,
2the Prevailing Wage Act, the Public Construction Bond Act, the
3Public Works Preference Act (repealed on June 16, 2010 by
4Public Act 96-929), the Employment of Illinois Workers on
5Public Works Act, the Freedom of Information Act, the Open
6Meetings Act, the Illinois Architecture Practice Act of 1989,
7the Professional Engineering Practice Act of 1989, the
8Structural Engineering Practice Act of 1989, the Local
9Government Professional Services Selection Act, and the
10Contractor Unified License and Permit Bond Act.
11(Source: P.A. 97-333, eff. 8-12-11.)
 
12    Section 35. The Public Community College Act is amended by
13changing Section 1-3 as follows:
 
14    (110 ILCS 805/1-3)
15    Sec. 1-3. Applicable laws. Other State laws and related
16administrative requirements apply to this Act, including, but
17not limited to, the following laws and related administrative
18requirements: the Illinois Human Rights Act, the Prevailing
19Wage Act, the Public Construction Bond Act, the Employment of
20Illinois Workers on Public Works Act, the Freedom of
21Information Act, the Open Meetings Act, the Illinois
22Architecture Practice Act of 1989, the Professional
23Engineering Practice Act of 1989, the Structural Engineering
24Practice Act of 1989, the Local Government Professional

 

 

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1Services Selection Act, and the Contractor Unified License and
2Permit Bond Act. The provisions of the Procurement of Domestic
3Products Act shall apply to this Act to the extent practicable,
4provided that the Procurement of Domestic Products Act must not
5be applied to this Act in a manner that is inconsistent with
6the requirements of this Act.
7(Source: P.A. 97-333, eff. 8-12-11; 97-1105, eff. 8-27-12.)
 
8    Section 40. The Illinois Educational Labor Relations Act is
9amended by changing Sections 4.5 and 7 and by adding Section
104.7 as follows:
 
11    (115 ILCS 5/4.5)
12    Sec. 4.5. Subjects of collective bargaining.
13    (a) Notwithstanding the existence of any other provision in
14this Act or other law, collective bargaining between an
15educational employer whose territorial boundaries are
16coterminous with those of a city having a population in excess
17of 500,000 and an exclusive representative of its employees may
18include any of the following subjects:
19        (1) (Blank).
20        (2) Decisions to contract with a third party for one or
21    more services otherwise performed by employees in a
22    bargaining unit and the procedures for obtaining such
23    contract or the identity of the third party, except as
24    provided in subsection (d).

 

 

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1        (3) Decisions to layoff or reduce in force employees,
2    except as provided in subsection (d) with respect to a
3    layoff or reduction in force resulting from a service
4    contract.
5        (4) Decisions to determine class size, class staffing
6    and assignment, class schedules, academic calendar, length
7    of the work and school day with respect to a public school
8    district organized under Article 34 of the School Code
9    only, length of the work and school year with respect to a
10    public school district organized under Article 34 of the
11    School Code only, hours and places of instruction, or pupil
12    assessment policies.
13        (5) Decisions concerning use and staffing of
14    experimental or pilot programs and decisions concerning
15    use of technology to deliver educational programs and
16    services and staffing to provide the technology.
17    (b) The subject or matters described in subsection (a) are
18permissive subjects of bargaining between an educational
19employer and an exclusive representative of its employees and,
20for the purpose of this Act, are within the sole discretion of
21the educational employer to decide to bargain, provided that
22the educational employer is required to bargain over the impact
23of a decision concerning such subject or matter on the
24bargaining unit upon request by the exclusive representative.
25During this bargaining, the educational employer shall not be
26precluded from implementing its decision. If, after a

 

 

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1reasonable period of bargaining, a dispute or impasse exists
2between the educational employer and the exclusive
3representative, the dispute or impasse shall be resolved
4exclusively as set forth in subsection (b) of Section 12 of
5this Act in lieu of a strike under Section 13 of this Act.
6Neither the Board nor any mediator or fact-finder appointed
7pursuant to subsection (a-10) of Section 12 of this Act shall
8have jurisdiction over such a dispute or impasse.
9    (c) A provision in a collective bargaining agreement that
10was rendered null and void because it involved a prohibited
11subject of collective bargaining under this subsection (c) as
12this subsection (c) existed before the effective date of this
13amendatory Act of the 93rd General Assembly remains null and
14void and shall not otherwise be reinstated in any successor
15agreement unless the educational employer and exclusive
16representative otherwise agree to include an agreement reached
17on a subject or matter described in subsection (a) of this
18Section as subsection (a) existed before this amendatory Act of
19the 93rd General Assembly.
20    (d) In any public school district to which this subsection
21applies, as provided in Section 4.7, public employees or a
22labor organization may not bargain collectively on:
23        (1) the decision of the educational employer to
24    contract with a third party for any services, the process
25    for bidding on such a contract, the identity of the
26    provider of such services, or the effect of any such

 

 

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1    contract on bargaining unit members, provided that this
2    subsection does not limit the ability of educational
3    employees or a labor organization to bid on any such
4    contract;
5        (2) any pay increase, either through changes to the pay
6    schedule or as a result of accumulated years of service, in
7    excess of the amount specified by resolution of the
8    governing body of the public school district;
9        (3) the provision of any health insurance, including
10    the payment of premiums, the extent of coverage, or the
11    identity of the insurer;
12        (4) the use of educational employee time for business
13    of the labor organization, other than reasonable time
14    provided to an educational employee to attend a grievance
15    hearing when his or her rights are substantially affected
16    by the hearing or his or her testimony is needed for the
17    determination of any substantial factual question;
18        (5) required levels of staffing for departments,
19    divisions, shifts, stations, or assignments;
20        (6) procedures, processes, forms, and criteria for
21    personnel evaluations, or the use of evaluations or
22    seniority in assignments, promotions, layoffs, and
23    reductions-in-force; or
24        (7) curriculum or standards of student academic
25    performance, conduct, and discipline in school.
26    (e) If subsection (b) of Section 4 of the Illinois Public

 

 

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1Labor Relations Act applies to a public school district,
2educational employees or a labor organization may not bargain
3collectively on the matters described in that subsection or on
4the matters described in paragraph (7) of subsection (d) of
5this Section.
6    (f) Any agreement, understanding, or practice, whether
7written or oral, and whether express or implied, between any
8labor organization and any educational employer made in
9violation of this Section is hereby declared to be unlawful,
10null and void, and of no legal effect.
11(Source: P.A. 97-7, eff. 6-13-11; 97-8, eff. 6-13-11.)
 
12    (115 ILCS 5/4.7 new)
13    Sec. 4.7. Adoption of limitations on subjects of collective
14bargaining.
15    (a) The governing body of a public school district may by
16resolution prohibit elect to apply the limitations under
17subsection (d) of Section 4.5 to bargaining with that public
18school district.
19    (b) If a petition, signed by a number of registered voters
20equal in number to at least 5% of the total number of
21registered voters in a public school district, asking to apply
22the limitations under subsection (d) of Section 4.5 to that
23public school district is presented to the clerk of that public
24school district, the clerk shall certify the question of
25whether to apply such limitations to that public school

 

 

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1district to the proper election authority, who shall submit the
2question at the next election in accordance with the general
3election law.
4    The question of whether to apply the limitations under
5subsection (d) of Section 4.5 shall be presented in
6substantially the following form:
7        Shall (the legal name of the public school district) be
8    free to determine certain matters without negotiating with
9    employee unions, such as the use of service providers, the
10    decision to provide health benefits, caps on total payroll,
11    employees' use of government time for union matters,
12    required staffing levels, evaluation procedures, and
13    curriculum?
14    The votes must be recorded as "Yes" or "No". If a majority
15of voters voting on the question are in favor of applying such
16limitations, subsection (d) of Section 4.5 shall apply to
17bargaining with that public school district.
 
18    (115 ILCS 5/7)  (from Ch. 48, par. 1707)
19    Sec. 7. Recognition of exclusive bargaining
20representatives - unit determination. The Board is empowered
21to administer the recognition of bargaining representatives of
22employees of public school districts, including employees of
23districts which have entered into joint agreements, or
24employees of public community college districts, or any State
25college or university, and any State agency whose major

 

 

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1function is providing educational services, making certain
2that each bargaining unit contains employees with an
3identifiable community of interest and that no unit includes
4both professional employees and nonprofessional employees
5unless a majority of employees in each group vote for inclusion
6in the unit.
7    (a) In determining the appropriateness of a unit, the Board
8shall decide in each case, in order to ensure employees the
9fullest freedom in exercising the rights guaranteed by this
10Act, the unit appropriate for the purpose of collective
11bargaining, based upon but not limited to such factors as
12historical pattern of recognition, community of interest,
13including employee skills and functions, degree of functional
14integration, interchangeability and contact among employees,
15common supervision, wages, hours and other working conditions
16of the employees involved, and the desires of the employees.
17Nothing in this Act, except as herein provided, shall interfere
18with or negate the current representation rights or patterns
19and practices of employee organizations which have
20historically represented employees for the purposes of
21collective bargaining, including but not limited to the
22negotiations of wages, hours and working conditions,
23resolutions of employees' grievances, or resolution of
24jurisdictional disputes, or the establishment and maintenance
25of prevailing wage rates, unless a majority of the employees so
26represented expresses a contrary desire under the procedures

 

 

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1set forth in this Act. This Section, however, does not prohibit
2multi-unit bargaining. Notwithstanding the above factors,
3where the majority of public employees of a craft so decide,
4the Board shall designate such craft as a unit appropriate for
5the purposes of collective bargaining.
6    The sole appropriate bargaining unit for tenured and
7tenure-track academic faculty at each campus of the University
8of Illinois shall be a unit that is comprised of
9non-supervisory academic faculty employed more than half-time
10and that includes all tenured and tenure-track faculty of that
11University campus employed by the board of trustees in all of
12the campus's undergraduate, graduate, and professional schools
13and degree and non-degree programs (with the exception of the
14college of medicine, the college of pharmacy, the college of
15dentistry, the college of law, and the college of veterinary
16medicine, each of which shall have its own separate unit),
17regardless of current or historical representation rights or
18patterns or the application of any other factors. Any decision,
19rule, or regulation promulgated by the Board to the contrary
20shall be null and void.
21    (b) An educational employer shall voluntarily recognize a
22labor organization for collective bargaining purposes if that
23organization appears to represent a majority of employees in
24the unit. The employer shall post notice of its intent to so
25recognize for a period of at least 20 school days on bulletin
26boards or other places used or reserved for employee notices.

 

 

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1Thereafter, the employer, if satisfied as to the majority
2status of the employee organization, shall send written
3notification of such recognition to the Board for
4certification. Any dispute regarding the majority status of a
5labor organization shall be resolved by the Board which shall
6make the determination of majority status.
7    Within the 20 day notice period, however, any other
8interested employee organization may petition the Board to seek
9recognition as the exclusive representative of the unit in the
10manner specified by rules and regulations prescribed by the
11Board, if such interested employee organization has been
12designated by at least 15% of the employees in an appropriate
13bargaining unit which includes all or some of the employees in
14the unit intended to be recognized by the employer. In such
15event, the Board shall proceed with the petition in the same
16manner as provided in paragraph (c) of this Section.
17    (c) A labor organization may also gain recognition as the
18exclusive representative by an election of the employees in the
19unit. Petitions requesting an election may be filed with the
20Board:
21        (1) by an employee or group of employees or any labor
22    organizations acting on their behalf alleging and
23    presenting evidence that 30% or more of the employees in a
24    bargaining unit wish to be represented for collective
25    bargaining or that the labor organization which has been
26    acting as the exclusive bargaining representative is no

 

 

09900HB0691ham002- 23 -LRB099 04508 HLH 36565 a

1    longer representative of a majority of the employees in the
2    unit; or
3        (2) by an employer alleging that one or more labor
4    organizations have presented a claim to be recognized as an
5    exclusive bargaining representative of a majority of the
6    employees in an appropriate unit and that it doubts the
7    majority status of any of the organizations or that it
8    doubts the majority status of an exclusive bargaining
9    representative.
10    The Board shall investigate the petition and if it has
11reasonable cause to suspect that a question of representation
12exists, it shall give notice and conduct a hearing. If it finds
13upon the record of the hearing that a question of
14representation exists, it shall direct an election, which shall
15be held no later than 90 days after the date the petition was
16filed. Nothing prohibits the waiving of hearings by the parties
17and the conduct of consent elections.
18    (c-5) The Board shall designate an exclusive
19representative for purposes of collective bargaining when the
20representative demonstrates a showing of majority interest by
21employees in the unit. If the parties to a dispute are without
22agreement on the means to ascertain the choice, if any, of
23employee organization as their representative, the Board shall
24ascertain the employees' choice of employee organization, on
25the basis of dues deduction authorization or other evidence,
26or, if necessary, by conducting an election. All evidence

 

 

09900HB0691ham002- 24 -LRB099 04508 HLH 36565 a

1submitted by an employee organization to the Board to ascertain
2an employee's choice of an employee organization is
3confidential and shall not be submitted to the employer for
4review. The Board shall ascertain the employee's choice of
5employee organization within 120 days after the filing of the
6majority interest petition; however, the Board may extend time
7by an additional 60 days, upon its own motion or upon the
8motion of a party to the proceeding. If either party provides
9to the Board, before the designation of a representative, clear
10and convincing evidence that the dues deduction
11authorizations, and other evidence upon which the Board would
12otherwise rely to ascertain the employees' choice of
13representative, are fraudulent or were obtained through
14coercion, the Board shall promptly thereafter conduct an
15election. The Board shall also investigate and consider a
16party's allegations that the dues deduction authorizations and
17other evidence submitted in support of a designation of
18representative without an election were subsequently changed,
19altered, withdrawn, or withheld as a result of employer fraud,
20coercion, or any other unfair labor practice by the employer.
21If the Board determines that a labor organization would have
22had a majority interest but for an employer's fraud, coercion,
23or unfair labor practice, it shall designate the labor
24organization as an exclusive representative without conducting
25an election. If a hearing is necessary to resolve any issues of
26representation under this Section, the Board shall conclude its

 

 

09900HB0691ham002- 25 -LRB099 04508 HLH 36565 a

1hearing process and issue a certification of the entire
2appropriate unit not later than 120 days after the date the
3petition was filed. The 120-day period may be extended one or
4more times by the agreement of all parties to a hearing to a
5date certain.
6    (c-6) A labor organization or an employer may file a unit
7clarification petition seeking to clarify an existing
8bargaining unit. The Board shall conclude its investigation,
9including any hearing process deemed necessary, and issue a
10certification of clarified unit or dismiss the petition not
11later than 120 days after the date the petition was filed. The
12120-day period may be extended one or more times by the
13agreement of all parties to a hearing to a date certain.
14    (d) An order of the Board dismissing a representation
15petition, determining and certifying that a labor organization
16has been fairly and freely chosen by a majority of employees in
17an appropriate bargaining unit, determining and certifying
18that a labor organization has not been fairly and freely chosen
19by a majority of employees in the bargaining unit or certifying
20a labor organization as the exclusive representative of
21employees in an appropriate bargaining unit because of a
22determination by the Board that the labor organization is the
23historical bargaining representative of employees in the
24bargaining unit, is a final order. Any person aggrieved by any
25such order issued on or after the effective date of this
26amendatory Act of 1987 may apply for and obtain judicial review

 

 

09900HB0691ham002- 26 -LRB099 04508 HLH 36565 a

1in accordance with provisions of the Administrative Review Law,
2as now or hereafter amended, except that such review shall be
3afforded directly in the Appellate Court of a judicial district
4in which the Board maintains an office. Any direct appeal to
5the Appellate Court shall be filed within 35 days from the date
6that a copy of the decision sought to be reviewed was served
7upon the party affected by the decision.
8    No election may be conducted in any bargaining unit during
9the term of a collective bargaining agreement covering such
10unit or subdivision thereof, except the Board may direct an
11election after the filing of a petition between January 15 and
12March 1 of the final year of a collective bargaining agreement.
13Nothing in this Section prohibits the negotiation of a
14collective bargaining agreement covering a period not
15exceeding 3 years. A collective bargaining agreement of less
16than 3 years may be extended up to 3 years by the parties if the
17extension is agreed to in writing before the filing of a
18petition under this Section. In such case, the final year of
19the extension is the final year of the collective bargaining
20agreement. No election may be conducted in a bargaining unit,
21or subdivision thereof, in which a valid election has been held
22within the preceding 12 month period.
23(Source: P.A. 95-331, eff. 8-21-07; 96-813, eff. 10-30-09.)
 
24    Section 45. The Prevailing Wage Act is amended by changing
25Section 2 as follows:
 

 

 

09900HB0691ham002- 27 -LRB099 04508 HLH 36565 a

1    (820 ILCS 130/2)  (from Ch. 48, par. 39s-2)
2    Sec. 2. This Act applies to the wages of laborers,
3mechanics and other workers employed in any public works, as
4hereinafter defined, by any public body and to anyone under
5contracts for public works. This includes any maintenance,
6repair, assembly, or disassembly work performed on equipment
7whether owned, leased, or rented.
8    As used in this Act, unless the context indicates
9otherwise:
10    "Public works" means all fixed works constructed or
11demolished by any public body, or paid for wholly or in part
12out of public funds. "Public works" as defined herein includes
13all projects financed in whole or in part with bonds, grants,
14loans, or other funds made available by or through the State or
15any of its political subdivisions, including but not limited
16to: bonds issued under the Industrial Project Revenue Bond Act
17(Article 11, Division 74 of the Illinois Municipal Code), the
18Industrial Building Revenue Bond Act, the Illinois Finance
19Authority Act, the Illinois Sports Facilities Authority Act, or
20the Build Illinois Bond Act; loans or other funds made
21available pursuant to the Build Illinois Act; loans or other
22funds made available pursuant to the Riverfront Development
23Fund under Section 10-15 of the River Edge Redevelopment Zone
24Act; or funds from the Fund for Illinois' Future under Section
256z-47 of the State Finance Act, funds for school construction

 

 

09900HB0691ham002- 28 -LRB099 04508 HLH 36565 a

1under Section 5 of the General Obligation Bond Act, funds
2authorized under Section 3 of the School Construction Bond Act,
3funds for school infrastructure under Section 6z-45 of the
4State Finance Act, and funds for transportation purposes under
5Section 4 of the General Obligation Bond Act. "Public works"
6also includes (i) all projects financed in whole or in part
7with funds from the Department of Commerce and Economic
8Opportunity under the Illinois Renewable Fuels Development
9Program Act for which there is no project labor agreement; (ii)
10all work performed pursuant to a public private agreement under
11the Public Private Agreements for the Illiana Expressway Act or
12the Public-Private Agreements for the South Suburban Airport
13Act; and (iii) all projects undertaken under a public-private
14agreement under the Public-Private Partnerships for
15Transportation Act. "Public works" also includes all projects
16at leased facility property used for airport purposes under
17Section 35 of the Local Government Facility Lease Act. "Public
18works" also includes the construction of a new wind power
19facility by a business designated as a High Impact Business
20under Section 5.5(a)(3)(E) of the Illinois Enterprise Zone Act.
21"Public works" does not include work done directly by any
22public utility company, whether or not done under public
23supervision or direction, or paid for wholly or in part out of
24public funds. "Public works" also includes any corrective
25action performed pursuant to Title XVI of the Environmental
26Protection Act for which payment from the Underground Storage

 

 

09900HB0691ham002- 29 -LRB099 04508 HLH 36565 a

1Tank Fund is requested. "Public works" does not include
2projects undertaken by the owner at an owner-occupied
3single-family residence or at an owner-occupied unit of a
4multi-family residence. "Public works" does not include work
5performed for soil and water conservation purposes on
6agricultural lands, whether or not done under public
7supervision or paid for wholly or in part out of public funds,
8done directly by an owner or person who has legal control of
9those lands.
10    "Public works" does not include work done or projects
11performed by or on behalf of a unit of local government or
12school district whether or not done under public supervision or
13paid for wholly or in part with public funds and whether or not
14owned by a unit of local government or a school district.
15    "Construction" means all work on public works involving
16laborers, workers or mechanics. This includes any maintenance,
17repair, assembly, or disassembly work performed on equipment
18whether owned, leased, or rented.
19    "Locality" means the county where the physical work upon
20public works is performed, except (1) that if there is not
21available in the county a sufficient number of competent
22skilled laborers, workers and mechanics to construct the public
23works efficiently and properly, "locality" includes any other
24county nearest the one in which the work or construction is to
25be performed and from which such persons may be obtained in
26sufficient numbers to perform the work and (2) that, with

 

 

09900HB0691ham002- 30 -LRB099 04508 HLH 36565 a

1respect to contracts for highway work with the Department of
2Transportation of this State, "locality" may at the discretion
3of the Secretary of the Department of Transportation be
4construed to include two or more adjacent counties from which
5workers may be accessible for work on such construction.
6    "Public body" means the State or any officer, board or
7commission of the State or any political subdivision or
8department thereof, or any institution supported in whole or in
9part by public funds; "public body" does not, however, include
10a unit of local government or a school district , and includes
11every county, city, town, village, township, school district,
12irrigation, utility, reclamation improvement or other district
13and every other political subdivision, district or
14municipality of the state whether such political subdivision,
15municipality or district operates under a special charter or
16not.
17    The terms "general prevailing rate of hourly wages",
18"general prevailing rate of wages" or "prevailing rate of
19wages" when used in this Act mean the hourly cash wages plus
20annualized fringe benefits for training and apprenticeship
21programs approved by the U.S. Department of Labor, Bureau of
22Apprenticeship and Training, health and welfare, insurance,
23vacations and pensions paid generally, in the locality in which
24the work is being performed, to employees engaged in work of a
25similar character on public works.
26(Source: P.A. 97-502, eff. 8-23-11; 98-109, eff. 7-25-13;

 

 

09900HB0691ham002- 31 -LRB099 04508 HLH 36565 a

198-482, eff. 1-1-14; 98-740, eff. 7-16-14; 98-756, eff.
27-16-14.)".