SB2339 - 104th General Assembly

Sen. Javier L. Cervantes

Filed: 4/4/2025

 

 


 

 


 
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1
AMENDMENT TO SENATE BILL 2339

2    AMENDMENT NO. ______. Amend Senate Bill 2339, AS AMENDED,
3by replacing everything after the enacting clause with the
4following:
 
5    "Section 5. The Right to Privacy in the Workplace Act is
6amended by changing Sections 12, 13, 15, and 20 and by adding
7Sections 16, 17, 18, 19, and 25 as follows:
 
8    (820 ILCS 55/12)
9    Sec. 12. Use of Employment Eligibility Verification
10Systems.
11    (a) Prior to enrolling in any Electronic Employment
12Verification System, including the E-Verify program and the
13Basic Pilot program, as authorized by 8 U.S.C. 1324a, Notes,
14Pilot Programs for Employment Eligibility Confirmation
15(enacted by P.L. 104-208, div. C, title IV, subtitle A),
16renamed the E-Verify program, employers are urged to consult

 

 

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1the Illinois Department of Labor's website for current
2information on the accuracy of the E-Verify program and to
3review and understand an employer's legal responsibilities
4relating to the use of the E-Verify program. Nothing in this
5Act shall be construed to require an employer to enroll in any
6Electronic Employment Verification System, including the
7E-Verify program and the Basic Pilot program, as authorized by
88 U.S.C. 1324a, Notes, Pilot Programs for Employment
9Eligibility Confirmation (enacted by P.L. 104-208, div. C,
10title IV, subtitle A) beyond those obligations that have been
11imposed upon them by federal law. Nothing in this Act shall be
12construed to prohibit an employer from enrolling in any
13Electronic Employment Verification System, including the
14E-Verify program, whether voluntarily or as required or
15permitted by federal law.
16    (a-1) The Illinois Department of Labor (IDOL) shall post
17on its website information or links to information from the
18United States Government Accountability Office, Westat, or a
19similar reliable source independent of the Department of
20Homeland Security regarding: (1) the accuracy of the E-Verify
21databases; (2) the approximate financial burden and
22expenditure of time that use of E-Verify requires from
23employers; and (3) an overview of an employer's
24responsibilities under federal and state law relating to the
25use of E-Verify.
26    (b) Upon initial enrollment in an Employment Eligibility

 

 

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1Verification System or within 30 days after the effective date
2of this amendatory Act of the 96th General Assembly, an
3employer enrolled in E-Verify or any other Employment
4Eligibility Verification System must attest, under penalty of
5perjury, on a form prescribed by the IDOL available on the IDOL
6website:
7        (1) that the employer has received the Basic Pilot or
8    E-Verify training materials from the Department of
9    Homeland Security (DHS), and that all employees who will
10    administer the program have completed the Basic Pilot or
11    E-Verify Computer Based Tutorial (CBT); and
12        (2) that the employer has posted the notice from DHS
13    indicating that the employer is enrolled in the Basic
14    Pilot or E-Verify program and the anti-discrimination
15    notice issued by the Immigrant and Employee Rights Section
16    (IER) Office of Special Counsel for Immigration-Related
17    Unfair Employment Practices (OSC), Civil Rights Division,
18    U.S. Department of Justice in a prominent place that is
19    clearly visible to both prospective and current employees.
20    The employer must maintain the signed original of the
21    attestation form prescribed by the IDOL, as well as all
22    CBT certificates of completion and make them available for
23    inspection or copying by the IDOL at any reasonable time.
24    (c) It is a violation of this Act for an employer enrolled
25in an Employment Eligibility Verification System, including
26the E-Verify program and the Basic Pilot program:

 

 

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1        (1) to fail to display the notices supplied by DHS and
2    IER OSC in a prominent place that is clearly visible to
3    both prospective and current employees;
4        (2) to allow any employee to use an Employment
5    Eligibility Verification System prior to having completed
6    CBT;
7        (3) to fail to take reasonable steps to prevent an
8    employee from circumventing the requirement to complete
9    the CBT by assuming another employee's E-Verify or Basic
10    Pilot user identification or password;
11        (4) to use the Employment Eligibility Verification
12    System to verify the employment eligibility of job
13    applicants prior to hiring or to otherwise use the
14    Employment Eligibility Verification System to screen
15    individuals prior to hiring and prior to the completion of
16    a Form I-9;
17        (5) to terminate an employee or take any other adverse
18    employment action against an individual prior to receiving
19    a final nonconfirmation notice from the Social Security
20    Administration or the Department of Homeland Security;
21        (6) to fail to notify an individual, in writing, of
22    the employer's receipt of a tentative nonconfirmation
23    notice, of the individual's right to contest the tentative
24    nonconfirmation notice, and of the contact information for
25    the relevant government agency or agencies that the
26    individual must contact to resolve the tentative

 

 

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1    nonconfirmation notice;
2        (7) to fail to safeguard the information contained in
3    the Employment Eligibility Verification System, and the
4    means of access to the system (such as passwords and other
5    privacy protections). An employer shall ensure that the
6    System is not used for any purpose other than employment
7    verification of newly hired employees and shall ensure
8    that the information contained in the System and the means
9    of access to the System are not disseminated to any person
10    other than employees who need such information and access
11    to perform the employer's employment verification
12    responsibilities.
13    (c-1) Any claim that an employer refused to hire,
14segregated, or acted with respect to recruitment, hiring,
15promotion, renewal or employment, selection for training or
16apprenticeship, discharge, discipline, tenure or terms,
17privileges, or conditions of employment without following the
18procedures of the Employment Eligibility Verification System,
19including the Basic Pilot and the E-Verify program programs,
20may be brought under paragraph (G)(2) of Section 2-102 of the
21Illinois Human Rights Act.
22    (c-2) It is a violation of this Section for an individual
23to falsely pose as an employer in order to enroll in an
24Employment Eligibility Verification System or for an employer
25to use an Employment Eligibility Verification System to access
26information regarding an individual who is not an employee of

 

 

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1the employer.
2    (d) Preemption. Neither the State nor any of its political
3subdivisions, nor any unit of local government, including a
4home rule unit, may require any employer to use an Employment
5Eligibility Verification System, including under the following
6circumstances:
7        (1) as a condition of receiving a government contract;
8        (2) as a condition of receiving a business license; or
9        (3) as penalty for violating licensing or other
10    similar laws.
11    This subsection (d) is a denial and limitation of home
12rule powers and functions under subsection (h) of Section 6 of
13Article VII of the Illinois Constitution.
14(Source: P.A. 103-879, eff. 1-1-25.)
 
15    (820 ILCS 55/13)
16    Sec. 13. Restrictions on the use of Employment Eligibility
17Verification Systems.
18    (a) As used in this Section:
19    "Employee's authorized representative" means an exclusive
20collective bargaining representative, an attorney, or, upon
21written notification to the employer, any other representative
22authorized by the employee.
23    "Inspecting entity" means the U.S. Department of Homeland
24Security, the Immigrant Employee Rights Section, or the U.S.
25Department of Labor, as required under 8 U.S.C. 1324a(b)(3)

 

 

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1Immigration and Customs Enforcement, United States Customs and
2Border Protection, or any other federal entity enforcing civil
3immigration violations of an employer's I-9 Employment
4Eligibility Verification forms.
5    (b) An employer shall not impose work authorization
6verification or re-verification requirements greater than
7those required by federal law or, if enrolled in an Employment
8Eligibility Verification System, including the E-Verify
9program, shall not impose work authorization verification or
10re-verification requirements greater than those required by
11the Employment Eligibility Verification System, including the
12E-Verify program.
13    (c) If an employer contends that there is a discrepancy in
14an employee's employment verification information, the
15employer must provide the employee with:
16        (1) The specific document or documents, if made
17    available to the employer, that the employer deems to be
18    deficient and the reason why the document or documents are
19    deficient. Upon request by the employee or the employee's
20    authorized representative, the employer shall give to the
21    employee the original document forming the basis for the
22    employer's contention of deficiency within 7 business
23    days, unless a shorter timeline is provided for under a
24    collective bargaining agreement.
25        (2) Instructions on how the employee can correct the
26    alleged deficient documents if required to do so by law.

 

 

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1        (3) An explanation of the employee's right to have
2    representation present during related meetings,
3    discussions, or proceedings with the employer. If the
4    alleged discrepancy is based on information obtained
5    through the employer's participation in the E-Verify
6    program, the right to representation shall apply unless
7    not , if allowed by a memorandum of understanding
8    concerning the federal E-Verify system.
9        (4) An explanation of any other rights that the
10    employee may have in connection with the employer's
11    contention.
12    (d) (Blank). When an employer receives notification from
13any federal or State agency, including, but not limited to,
14the Social Security Administration or the Internal Revenue
15Service, of a discrepancy as it relates to work authorization,
16the following rights and protections are granted to the
17employee:
18        (1) The employer must not take any adverse action
19    against the employee, including re-verification, based on
20    the receipt of the notification.
21        (2) The employer must provide a notice to the employee
22    and, if allowed by a memorandum of understanding
23    concerning the federal E-Verify system, to the employee's
24    authorized representative, if any, as soon as practicable,
25    but not more than 5 business days after the date of receipt
26    of the notification, unless a shorter timeline is provided

 

 

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1    for under federal law or a collective bargaining
2    agreement. The notice to the employee shall include, but
3    not be limited to: (i) an explanation that the federal or
4    State agency has notified the employer that the employee's
5    work authorization documents presented by the employee do
6    not appear to be valid or reasonably relate to the
7    employee; and (ii) the time period the employee has to
8    contest the federal or State agency's determination. The
9    employer shall notify the employee in person and deliver
10    the notification by hand, if possible. If hand delivery is
11    not possible, then the employer shall notify the employee
12    by mail and email, if the email address of the employee is
13    known, and shall notify the employee's authorized
14    representative. Upon request by the employee or the
15    employee's authorized representative, the employer shall
16    give to the employee the original notice from the federal
17    or State agency, including, but not limited to, the Social
18    Security Administration or the Internal Revenue Service,
19    within 7 business days. This original notice shall be
20    redacted in compliance with State and federal privacy laws
21    and shall relate only to the employee receiving the
22    notification.
23        (3) The employee may have a representative of the
24    employee's choosing in any meetings, discussions, or
25    proceedings with the employer.
26    The procedures described in this subsection do not apply

 

 

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1to inspections of an employer's I-9 Employment Verification
2Forms by an inspecting entity or any relevant procedure
3otherwise described in subsection (g).
4    (d-5) If an employer receives a written notification from
5any federal agency or other outside vendor not responsible for
6the enforcement of immigration law, including, but not limited
7to, the Social Security Administration, the Internal Revenue
8Service, or an insurance company, of a discrepancy as it
9relates to an employee's individual taxpayer identification
10number or other identifying documents, the following rights
11and protections are granted to the employee:
12        (1) The employer shall not take any adverse action
13    against the employee, including requiring an employee to
14    re-verify the employee's authorization to work in the
15    United States solely based on the receipt of the
16    notification.
17        (2) The employer shall provide a notice to the
18    employee and to the employee's authorized representative,
19    if any, as soon as practicable, but not more than 5
20    business days after the date of receipt of the
21    notification or after the employer makes the determination
22    that an employee must respond to the notification in any
23    manner, whichever is longer, unless a shorter timeline is
24    provided for under federal law or a collective bargaining
25    agreement. The employer shall notify the employee in
26    person and deliver the notification by hand, if possible.

 

 

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1    If hand delivery is not possible, then the employer shall
2    notify the employee by mail and email, if the email
3    address of the employee is known, and shall notify the
4    employee's authorized representative. Upon request by the
5    employee or the employee's authorized representative, the
6    employer shall give to the employee the original
7    notification. The notice to the employee shall include,
8    but shall not be limited to: (A) an explanation that the
9    federal agency or outside vendor not responsible for the
10    enforcement of immigration law has notified the employer
11    that the identification documents presented by the
12    employee do not appear to match; (B) the time period the
13    employee has to contest the disputed information, if such
14    a time period is required by federal law; and (C) any
15    action the employer is requiring the employee to take.
16        (3) The employee may have a representative of the
17    employee's choosing in any meetings, discussions, or
18    proceedings with the employer.
19    (e) Except as otherwise required by federal law, an
20employer shall provide a notice to each current employee, by
21posting in English and in any language commonly used in the
22workplace, of any inspections of I-9 Employment Eligibility
23Verification forms or other employment records conducted by
24the inspecting entity within 72 hours after receiving notice
25of the inspection. Written notice shall also be given within
2672 hours to the employee's authorized representative, if any.

 

 

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1The posted notice shall contain the following information:
2        (1) the name of the entity conducting the inspections
3    of I-9 Employment Eligibility Verification forms or other
4    employment records;
5        (2) the date that the employer received notice of the
6    inspection;
7        (3) the nature of the inspection to the extent known
8    by the employer; and
9        (4) a copy of the notice received by the employer.
10    An employer, upon reasonable request, shall provide an
11employee a copy of the Notice of Inspection of I-9 Employment
12Eligibility Verification forms.
13    (f) On or before 6 months after the effective date of this
14amendatory Act of the 103rd General Assembly, the Department
15shall develop a template posting that employers may use to
16comply with the requirements of subsection (e) to inform
17employees of a notice of inspection to be conducted of I-9
18Employment Eligibility Verification forms or other employment
19records conducted by the inspecting entity. The Department
20shall make the template available on its website so that it is
21accessible to any employer.
22    (g) Except as otherwise required by federal law, if during
23an inspection of the employer's I-9 Employment Eligibility
24Verification forms by an inspecting entity, the inspecting
25entity makes a determination that the employee's work
26authorization documents do not establish that the employee is

 

 

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1authorized to work in the United States and provide the
2employer with notice of that determination, the employer shall
3provide a written notice as set forth in this subsection to the
4employee within 5 business days, unless a shorter timeline is
5provided for under federal law or a collective bargaining
6agreement. The employer's notice to the employee shall relate
7to the employee only. The employer shall notify the employee
8in person and deliver the notification by hand, if possible.
9If hand delivery is not possible, then the employer shall
10notify the employee by mail and email, if the email address of
11the employee is known, and shall notify the employee's
12authorized representative. The employer's notice to the
13employee shall contain the following information:
14        (1) an explanation that the inspecting entity has
15    determined that the employee's work authorization
16    documents presented by the employee do not appear to be
17    valid or reasonably relate to the employee;
18        (2) the time period for the employee to notify the
19    employer whether the employee is contesting or not
20    contesting the determination by the inspecting entity, if
21    any time period is required by federal law;
22        (3) if known by the employer, the time and date of any
23    meeting with the employer and employee or with the
24    inspecting entity and employee related to the correction
25    of the inspecting entity's determination that the
26    employee's work authorization documents presented by the

 

 

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1    employee do not appear to be valid or reasonably relate to
2    the employee; and
3        (4) notice that the employee has the right to
4    representation during any meeting scheduled with the
5    employer and the inspecting entity.
6    If the employee contests the inspecting entity's
7determination, the employer will notify the employee within 72
8hours after receipt of any final determination by the
9inspecting entity related to the employee's work authorization
10status. Upon request by the employee or the employee's
11authorized representative, the employer shall give the
12employee the original notice from the inspecting entity within
137 business days. This original notice shall be redacted in
14compliance with State and federal privacy laws and shall
15relate only to the employee receiving the notification.
16    (h) This Section does not require a penalty to be imposed
17upon an employer or person who fails to provide notice to an
18employee at the express and specific direction or request of
19the federal government. In determining the amount of the
20penalty, the appropriateness of the penalty to the size of the
21business of the employer charged and the gravity of the
22violation shall be considered. The penalty may be recovered in
23a civil action brought by the Director in any circuit court.
24Upon request by the employee or the employee's authorized
25representative, the employer shall give the employee the
26original notice from the inspecting entity within 7 business

 

 

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1days.
2    (i) This Section applies to public and private employers.
3    (j) Nothing in this Section shall be interpreted,
4construed, or applied to restrict or limit an employer's
5compliance with a memorandum of understanding concerning the
6use of the federal E-Verify system.
7(Source: P.A. 103-879, eff. 1-1-25.)
 
8    (820 ILCS 55/15)  (from Ch. 48, par. 2865)
9    Sec. 15. Administration and enforcement by the Department.
10    (a) It shall be the duty of the Department to enforce the
11provisions of this Act when, in the Department's judgment,
12there is cause and sufficient resources for investigation. The
13Department shall have the power to conduct investigations in
14connection with the administration and enforcement of this
15Act, and any investigator with the Department shall be
16authorized to visit and inspect, at all reasonable times, any
17places covered by this Act and shall be authorized to inspect,
18at all reasonable times, records of the employer or
19prospective employer related to its employees or prospective
20employees and related to its participation in and compliance
21with the E-Verify program. The Department shall have the
22authority to request the issuance of a search warrant or
23subpoena to inspect the files of the employer or prospective
24employer, if necessary. The Department shall conduct hearings
25in accordance with the Illinois Administrative Procedure Act

 

 

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1upon written complaint by an investigator of the Department.
2After the hearing, if supported by the evidence, the
3Department may (i) issue and cause to be served on any party an
4order to cease and desist from further violation of the Act,
5(ii) take affirmative or other action as deemed reasonable to
6eliminate the effect of the violation, and (iii) determine the
7amount of any civil penalty allowed by the Act. The Director of
8Labor or his or her representative may compel, by subpoena,
9the attendance and testimony of witnesses and the production
10of books, payrolls, records, papers, and other evidence in any
11investigation or hearing and may administer oaths to witnesses
12The Director of Labor or his authorized representative shall
13administer and enforce the provisions of this Act. The
14Director of Labor may issue rules and regulations necessary to
15administer and enforce the provisions of this Act.
16    (b) If an employee or applicant for employment alleges
17that he or she has been denied his or her rights under this
18Act, he or she may file a complaint with the Department of
19Labor. The Department shall investigate the complaint pursuant
20to its authority under subsection (a) and shall have authority
21to request the issuance of a search warrant or subpoena to
22inspect the files of the employer or prospective employer, if
23necessary. The Department shall attempt to resolve the
24complaint by conference, conciliation, or persuasion. If the
25complaint is not so resolved and the Department finds the
26employer or prospective employer has violated the Act, the

 

 

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1Department may commence an action in the circuit court to
2enforce the provisions of this Act including an action to
3compel compliance. The circuit court for the county in which
4the complainant resides or in which the complainant is
5employed shall have jurisdiction in such actions.
6    (c) (Blank). If an employer or prospective employer
7violates this Act, an employee or applicant for employment may
8commence an action in the circuit court to enforce the
9provisions of this Act, including actions to compel
10compliance, where efforts to resolve the employee's or
11applicant for employment's complaint concerning the violation
12by conference, conciliation or persuasion under subsection (b)
13have failed and the Department has not commenced an action in
14circuit court to redress the violation. The circuit court for
15the county in which the complainant resides or in which the
16complainant is employed shall have jurisdiction in such
17actions.
18    (d) (Blank). Failure to comply with an order of the court
19may be punished as contempt. In addition, the court shall
20award an employee or applicant for employment prevailing in an
21action under this Act the following damages:
22        (1) Actual damages plus costs.
23        (2) For a willful and knowing violation of this Act,
24    $200 plus costs, reasonable attorney's fees, and actual
25    damages.
26        (3) For a willful and knowing violation of Section

 

 

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1    12(c) or Section 12(c-2) of this Act, $500 per affected
2    employee plus costs, reasonable attorney's fees, and
3    actual damages.
4        (4) For a willful and knowing violation of Section 13,
5    a civil penalty of a minimum of $2,000 up to a maximum of
6    $5,000 for a first violation and a civil penalty of a
7    minimum of $5,000 up to a maximum of $10,000 for each
8    subsequent violation per affected employee plus costs,
9    reasonable attorney's fees, and actual damages.
10    (e) Any employer or prospective employer or his agent who
11violates the provisions of this Act is guilty of a petty
12offense.
13    (f) Any employer or prospective employer, or the officer
14or agent of any employer or prospective employer, who
15discharges or in any other manner discriminates against any
16employee or applicant for employment because that employee or
17applicant for employment has made a complaint to his employer,
18or to the Director of Labor or his authorized representative,
19or because that employee or applicant for employment has
20caused to be instituted or is about to cause to be instituted
21any proceeding under or related to this Act, or because that
22employee or applicant for employment has testified or is about
23to testify in an investigation or proceeding under this Act,
24is guilty of a petty offense.
25    (g) No employer or prospective employer shall be subject
26to concurrent or duplicative enforcement actions under both

 

 

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1Sections 16 and 17. Upon the initiation of any action under
2either Section 16 or 17, all other rights of action under the
3other Section shall be precluded. The first action commenced
4shall bar any further enforcement based on the same set of
5facts or alleged violation. For the purposes of this Section,
6an action is deemed to be initiated upon the filing of a
7complaint in circuit court.
8(Source: P.A. 103-879, eff. 1-1-25.)
 
9    (820 ILCS 55/16 new)
10    Sec. 16. Action for civil penalties brought by an
11interested party.
12    (a) As used in this Section, "interested party" means a
13not-for-profit corporation, as defined by the General Not For
14Profit Corporation Act of 1986, or a labor organization, as
15defined by 29 U.S.C. 152(5), that monitors or is attentive to
16compliance with worker safety and privacy laws, wage and hour
17requirements, or other statutory requirements.
18    (b) Upon a reasonable belief that an employer or
19prospective employer covered by this Act is in violation of
20any part of this Act, an interested party may bring a civil
21action in the county where the alleged offenses occurred or
22where any party to the action resides, in the name of the State
23and for the benefit of any impacted employees or prospective
24employees.
25        (1) No later than 30 days after filing an action, the

 

 

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1    interested party shall serve upon the State through the
2    Attorney General a copy of the complaint and written
3    disclosure of substantially all material evidence and
4    information the interested party possesses.
5        (2) The State may elect to intervene and proceed with
6    the action no later than 60 days after it receives both the
7    complaint and the material evidence and information. The
8    State may, for good cause shown, move the court for an
9    extension of the time to intervene and proceed with the
10    action.
11        (3) Before the expiration of the 60-day period or any
12    extensions under subparagraph (2), the State shall:
13            (i) proceed with the action, in which case the
14        action shall be conducted by the State; or
15            (ii) notify the court that it declines to take the
16        action, in which case the interested party bringing
17        the action shall have the right to conduct the action.
18        (4) When the State conducts the action, the interested
19    party shall have the right to continue as a party to the
20    action subject to the following limitations:
21            (i) the State may dismiss the action
22        notwithstanding the objections of the interested party
23        initiating the action if the interested party has been
24        notified by the State of the filing of the motion and
25        the court has provided the interested party with an
26        opportunity for a hearing on the motion; and

 

 

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1            (ii) the State may settle the action with the
2        defendant notwithstanding the objections of the person
3        initiating the action if the court determines, after a
4        hearing, that the proposed settlement is fair,
5        adequate, and reasonable under all the circumstances.
6        (5) If an interested party brings an action under this
7    Section, no person other than the State may intervene or
8    bring a related action on behalf of the State based on the
9    facts underlying the pending action.
10        (6) An action brought in court by an interested party
11    under this Section may be dismissed if the court and the
12    Attorney General give written consent to the dismissal and
13    their reasons for consenting.
14    (c) Any claim or action filed by an interested party under
15this Section shall be made no later 3 years after the alleged
16conduct resulting in the complaint, plus any period for which
17the limitations period has been tolled.
18    (d) In an action brought by an interested party under this
19Section, an interested party may recover against the covered
20entity any statutory penalties set forth in Section 17,
21injunctive relief, and any other relief available to the
22Department. An interested party who prevails in a civil action
23shall receive 10% of any statutory penalties assessed, plus
24any attorney's fees and costs. The remaining 90% of any
25statutory penalties assessed shall be deposited into a special
26fund of the Department for enforcement of this Act.
 

 

 

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1    (820 ILCS 55/17 new)
2    Sec. 17. Private right of action.
3    (a) A person aggrieved by a violation of this Act or any
4rule adopted under this Act by an employer or prospective
5employer may file suit in circuit court of Illinois, in the
6county where the alleged offense occurred, where the employee
7or prospective employee who is party to the action resides, or
8where the employer or prospective employer which is party to
9the action is located, without regard to exhaustion of any
10alternative administrative remedies provided in this Act.
11Actions may be brought by one or more affected employees or
12prospective employees for and on behalf of themselves and
13employees or prospective employees similarly situated. An
14employee or prospective employee may recover for a violation
15of the Act under this Section or under Section 15 or 16 at the
16employee or prospective employee's option, but not under more
17than one Section. An employee or prospective employee whose
18rights have been violated under this Act by an employer or
19prospective employer is entitled to collect under this
20Section:
21        (1) in the case of a violation of this Act or any rule
22    adopted under this Act as it relates to the employee or
23    prospective employee, a civil penalty of not less than
24    $100 and not more than $1,000 for each violation found by a
25    court;

 

 

10400SB2339sam002- 23 -LRB104 09425 SPS 24987 a

1        (2) in the event a violation of this Act or any rule
2    adopted under this Act as it relates to denial or loss of
3    employment for the employee or prospective employee, all
4    relief necessary to make the employee whole, including,
5    but not limited to, the following:
6            (i) reinstatement with the same seniority status
7        that the employee would have had but for the
8        violation, as appropriate;
9            (ii) back pay, with interest, as appropriate; and
10            (iii) a civil penalty of $10,000; and
11        (3) compensation for any damages sustained as a result
12    of the violation, including litigation costs, expert
13    witness fees, and reasonable attorney's fees.
14    (b) The right of an aggrieved person to bring an action
15under this Section terminates upon the passing of 3 years
16after the date of the violation. This limitations period is
17tolled if an employer or prospective employer has failed to
18provide an employee or prospective employee information
19required under this Act or has deterred an employee or
20prospective employee from the exercise of rights under this
21Act.
 
22    (820 ILCS 55/18 new)
23    Sec. 18. Penalties.
24    (a) An employer or prospective employer that violates any
25of the provisions of this Act or any rule adopted under this

 

 

10400SB2339sam002- 24 -LRB104 09425 SPS 24987 a

1Act shall be subject to a civil penalty of not less than $100
2and not more than $1,000 for each violation of his Act found by
3the Department or determined by a court in a civil action
4brought by the Department or by an interested party, as
5defined in subsection (a) of Section 16, or determined by a
6court in a civil action brought by the Attorney General
7pursuant to its authority under Section 6.3 of the Attorney
8General Act. An employer or prospective employer that commits
9a second or subsequent violation of the same provisions or
10this Act or any rule adopted under this Act within a 3-year
11period shall be subject to a civil penalty of not less than
12$1,000 and not more than $5,000 for each violation of this Act
13found by the Department or determined by a court in a civil
14action brought by the Department or by an interested party, as
15defined in subsection (a) of Section 16, or determined by a
16court in a civil action brought by the Attorney General
17pursuant to its authority under Section 6.3 of the Attorney
18General Act. For purposes of this subsection, each violation
19of this Act or any rule adopted under this Act shall constitute
20a separate and distinct violation.
21    (b) In determining the amount of a penalty, the Director
22or circuit court shall consider (i) the appropriateness of the
23penalty to the size of the business of the employer charged and
24(ii) the gravity of the violation.
25    (c) The Department shall adopt rules for violation
26hearings and penalties for violations of this Act or the

 

 

10400SB2339sam002- 25 -LRB104 09425 SPS 24987 a

1Department's rules in conjunction with the penalties set forth
2in this Act. Any administrative determination by the
3Department as to the amount of each penalty shall be final
4unless reviewed as provided in Section 17.
 
5    (820 ILCS 55/19 new)
6    Sec. 19. Review under the Administrative Review Law. Any
7party to a proceeding under this Act may apply for and obtain
8judicial review of an order of the Department entered under
9this Act in accordance with the provisions of the
10Administrative Review Law, and the Department, in proceedings
11under this Act, may obtain an order from the court for the
12enforcement of its order.
 
13    (820 ILCS 55/20)
14    Sec. 20. Dismissal of complaint. The Director or any court
15of competent jurisdiction shall summarily dismiss any
16complaint alleging a violation of Section 5 of this Act which
17states as the sole cause of the complaint that the employer
18offered a health, disability, or life insurance policy that
19makes a distinction between employees for the type of coverage
20or the price of coverage based upon the employees' use of
21lawful products.
22(Source: P.A. 87-807.)
 
23    (820 ILCS 55/25 new)

 

 

10400SB2339sam002- 26 -LRB104 09425 SPS 24987 a

1    Sec. 25. Voluntary compliance and safe harbor. No
2penalties shall be imposed under this Act if the employer or
3prospective employer:
4        (1) acts in good faith reliance on guidance issued by
5    the Illinois Department of Labor or the federal Department
6    of Homeland Security; or
7        (2) makes a bona fide administrative error that does
8    not affect an employee or prospective employee's
9    employment or pay.".