Full Text of HB0138 100th General Assembly
HB0138enr 100TH GENERAL ASSEMBLY |
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| 1 | | AN ACT concerning State government.
| 2 | | Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois, | 3 | | represented in the General Assembly:
| 4 | | Section 5. The State Officials and Employees Ethics Act is | 5 | | amended by changing Sections 20-20, 20-50, 20-85, 20-90, 25-5, | 6 | | 25-10, 25-15, 25-20, 25-50, 25-70, 25-85, 25-90, 25-95, and | 7 | | 50-5 and by adding Sections 25-100 and 25-105 as follows: | 8 | | (5 ILCS 430/20-20)
| 9 | | Sec. 20-20. Duties of the Executive Inspectors
General. In | 10 | | addition to duties otherwise assigned by law,
each Executive | 11 | | Inspector General shall have the following duties:
| 12 | | (1) To receive and investigate allegations of | 13 | | violations of this
Act. An investigation may not be | 14 | | initiated
more than one year after the most recent act of | 15 | | the alleged violation or of a
series of alleged violations | 16 | | except where there is reasonable cause to believe
that | 17 | | fraudulent concealment has occurred. To constitute | 18 | | fraudulent concealment
sufficient to toll this limitations | 19 | | period, there must be an affirmative act or
representation | 20 | | calculated to prevent discovery of the fact that a | 21 | | violation has
occurred. The
Executive Inspector General | 22 | | shall have the discretion to determine the
appropriate | 23 | | means of investigation as permitted by law.
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| 1 | | (2) To request information relating to an | 2 | | investigation from any
person when the Executive Inspector | 3 | | General deems that information necessary in
conducting an | 4 | | investigation.
| 5 | | (3) To issue subpoenas
to compel the attendance of | 6 | | witnesses for the
purposes of testimony and production of | 7 | | documents and other items for
inspection and copying and to | 8 | | make service of those subpoenas and subpoenas
issued under | 9 | | item (7) of Section 20-15.
| 10 | | (4) To submit reports as required by this Act.
| 11 | | (5) To file
pleadings in the name of
the Executive | 12 | | Inspector General with the Executive Ethics
Commission, | 13 | | through the Attorney General, as provided in this Article | 14 | | if the
Attorney General finds that reasonable cause exists | 15 | | to believe that a violation
has
occurred.
| 16 | | (6) To assist and coordinate the ethics officers
for | 17 | | State agencies under the jurisdiction of the
Executive | 18 | | Inspector General and to work with those ethics officers.
| 19 | | (7) To participate in or conduct, when appropriate, | 20 | | multi-jurisdictional
investigations.
| 21 | | (8) To request, as the Executive Inspector General | 22 | | deems appropriate, from
ethics officers
of State agencies | 23 | | under his or her jurisdiction, reports or information
on | 24 | | (i) the content of a State agency's ethics
training program | 25 | | and (ii) the percentage of new officers and
employees who | 26 | | have completed ethics training.
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| 1 | | (9) To review hiring and employment files of each State | 2 | | agency within the Executive Inspector General's | 3 | | jurisdiction to ensure compliance with Rutan v. Republican | 4 | | Party of Illinois, 497 U.S. 62 (1990), and with all | 5 | | applicable employment laws. | 6 | | (10) To establish a policy that ensures the appropriate | 7 | | handling and correct recording of all investigations | 8 | | conducted by the Office, and to ensure that the policy is | 9 | | accessible via the Internet in order that those seeking to | 10 | | report those allegations are familiar with the process and | 11 | | that the subjects of those allegations are treated fairly. | 12 | | (11) To post information to the Executive Inspector | 13 | | General's website explaining to complainants and subjects | 14 | | of an investigation the legal limitations on the Executive | 15 | | Inspector General's ability to provide information to them | 16 | | and a general overview of the investigation process. | 17 | | (Source: P.A. 96-555, eff. 8-18-09.) | 18 | | (5 ILCS 430/20-50)
| 19 | | Sec. 20-50. Investigation reports.
| 20 | | (a) If an Executive Inspector General, upon the conclusion | 21 | | of an
investigation, determines that reasonable cause exists to | 22 | | believe that a
violation
has occurred, then
the Executive | 23 | | Inspector General shall issue a summary report of the
| 24 | | investigation. The report shall be delivered to the
appropriate | 25 | | ultimate jurisdictional
authority and to the head of each State
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| 1 | | agency
affected by or involved in the investigation, if | 2 | | appropriate. The appropriate ultimate jurisdictional authority | 3 | | or agency head shall respond to the summary report within 20 | 4 | | days, in writing, to the Executive Inspector General. The | 5 | | response shall include a description of any corrective or | 6 | | disciplinary action to be imposed. If the appropriate ultimate | 7 | | jurisdictional authority does not respond within 20 days, or | 8 | | within an extended time period as agreed to by the Executive | 9 | | Inspector General, an Executive Inspector General may proceed | 10 | | under subsection (c) as if a response had been received.
| 11 | | (b) The summary report of the investigation shall include | 12 | | the following:
| 13 | | (1) A description of any allegations or other | 14 | | information
received by the Executive Inspector General | 15 | | pertinent to the
investigation.
| 16 | | (2) A description of any alleged misconduct discovered | 17 | | in the
course of the investigation.
| 18 | | (3) Recommendations for any corrective or disciplinary
| 19 | | action to be taken in response to any alleged misconduct | 20 | | described in the
report, including but not limited to | 21 | | discharge.
| 22 | | (4) Other information the Executive Inspector General
| 23 | | deems relevant to the investigation or resulting | 24 | | recommendations.
| 25 | | (c) Within 30 days after receiving a response from the | 26 | | appropriate ultimate jurisdictional authority or agency head |
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| 1 | | under subsection (a),
the Executive Inspector General shall | 2 | | notify the Commission and the Attorney General if the Executive | 3 | | Inspector General believes that a complaint should be filed | 4 | | with the Commission. If the Executive Inspector General desires | 5 | | to file a
complaint with the Commission, the Executive | 6 | | Inspector General shall submit the summary report and | 7 | | supporting documents to the
Attorney General. If the Attorney | 8 | | General concludes that there is insufficient evidence that a | 9 | | violation has occurred, the Attorney General shall notify the | 10 | | Executive Inspector General and the Executive Inspector | 11 | | General shall deliver to the Executive Ethics Commission a copy | 12 | | of the summary report and response from the ultimate | 13 | | jurisdictional authority or agency head.
If the Attorney | 14 | | General determines
that reasonable cause exists to believe that | 15 | | a violation has occurred, then the
Executive Inspector
General, | 16 | | represented by the Attorney
General, may file with the | 17 | | Executive Ethics Commission a complaint.
The complaint shall | 18 | | set
forth the alleged violation and the
grounds that exist to | 19 | | support the complaint. The complaint must be filed with the | 20 | | Commission within 18 months
after the most recent act of the
| 21 | | alleged violation or of a series of alleged violations
except | 22 | | where there is reasonable cause to believe
that fraudulent | 23 | | concealment has occurred. To constitute fraudulent concealment
| 24 | | sufficient to toll this limitations period, there must be an | 25 | | affirmative act or
representation calculated to prevent | 26 | | discovery of the fact that a violation has
occurred.
If a |
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| 1 | | complaint is not filed with the Commission
within 6 months | 2 | | after notice by the Inspector General to the Commission and the
| 3 | | Attorney General, then the Commission may set a meeting of the | 4 | | Commission at
which the Attorney General shall appear and | 5 | | provide a status
report to the Commission.
| 6 | | (c-5) Within 30 days after receiving a response from the | 7 | | appropriate ultimate jurisdictional authority or agency head | 8 | | under subsection (a), if the Executive Inspector General does | 9 | | not believe that a complaint should be filed, the Executive | 10 | | Inspector General shall deliver to the Executive Ethics | 11 | | Commission a statement setting forth the basis for the decision | 12 | | not to file a complaint and a copy of the summary report and | 13 | | response from the ultimate jurisdictional authority or agency | 14 | | head. An Inspector General may also submit a redacted version | 15 | | of the summary report and response from the ultimate | 16 | | jurisdictional authority if the Inspector General believes | 17 | | either contains information that, in the opinion of the | 18 | | Inspector General, should be redacted prior to releasing the | 19 | | report, may interfere with an ongoing investigation, or | 20 | | identifies an informant or complainant. | 21 | | (c-10) If, after reviewing the documents, the Commission | 22 | | believes that further investigation is warranted, the | 23 | | Commission may request that the Executive Inspector General | 24 | | provide additional information or conduct further | 25 | | investigation. The Commission may also appoint a Special | 26 | | Executive Inspector General to investigate or refer the summary |
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| 1 | | report and response from the ultimate jurisdictional authority | 2 | | to the Attorney General for further investigation or review. If | 3 | | the Commission requests the Attorney General to investigate or | 4 | | review, the Commission must notify the Attorney General and the | 5 | | Inspector General. The Attorney General may not begin an | 6 | | investigation or review until receipt of notice from the | 7 | | Commission.
If, after review, the Attorney General determines | 8 | | that reasonable cause exists to believe that a violation has | 9 | | occurred, then the Attorney General may file a complaint with | 10 | | the Executive Ethics Commission. If the Attorney General | 11 | | concludes that there is insufficient evidence that a violation | 12 | | has occurred, the Attorney General shall notify the Executive | 13 | | Ethics Commission and the appropriate Executive Inspector | 14 | | General. | 15 | | (d) A copy of the complaint filed with the Executive Ethics | 16 | | Commission must be served on all respondents named in the
| 17 | | complaint and on each respondent's ultimate jurisdictional | 18 | | authority in
the same manner as process is served under the | 19 | | Code of Civil
Procedure.
| 20 | | (e) A respondent may file objections to the complaint | 21 | | within 30 days after notice of the petition has been
served on | 22 | | the respondent.
| 23 | | (f) The Commission shall meet, either in person or by | 24 | | telephone, at least 30 days after the complaint is served on | 25 | | all respondents
in a closed session to review the sufficiency | 26 | | of the complaint.
The Commission shall
issue notice by |
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| 1 | | certified mail, return receipt requested, to the Executive | 2 | | Inspector General, Attorney General, and all respondents of
the | 3 | | Commission's ruling on the sufficiency of the complaint. If the | 4 | | complaint
is deemed to
sufficiently allege a violation of this | 5 | | Act, then the Commission shall
include a hearing date scheduled | 6 | | within 4 weeks after the date of the notice,
unless all of the | 7 | | parties consent to a later date.
If the complaint is deemed not | 8 | | to sufficiently allege a
violation, then
the Commission shall | 9 | | send by certified mail, return receipt requested,
a notice to | 10 | | the Executive Inspector General, Attorney General, and all | 11 | | respondents of the decision to dismiss the complaint.
| 12 | | (g) On the scheduled date
the Commission shall conduct a | 13 | | closed meeting,
either in person or, if the parties consent, by | 14 | | telephone, on the complaint and
allow all
parties the | 15 | | opportunity to present testimony and evidence.
All such | 16 | | proceedings shall be transcribed.
| 17 | | (h) Within an appropriate time limit set by rules of the | 18 | | Executive
Ethics Commission, the Commission shall (i) dismiss | 19 | | the
complaint, (ii) issue a recommendation of discipline to the
| 20 | | respondent and the respondent's ultimate jurisdictional | 21 | | authority, (iii)
impose an administrative fine upon the | 22 | | respondent, (iv) issue injunctive relief as described in | 23 | | Section 50-10, or (v) impose a combination of (ii) through | 24 | | (iv).
| 25 | | (i) The proceedings on any complaint filed with the | 26 | | Commission
shall be conducted pursuant to rules promulgated by |
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| 1 | | the Commission.
| 2 | | (j) The Commission may designate hearing officers
to | 3 | | conduct proceedings as determined by rule of the Commission.
| 4 | | (k) In all proceedings before the Commission, the standard | 5 | | of
proof is by a preponderance of the evidence.
| 6 | | (l) Within 30 days after the issuance of a final | 7 | | administrative decision that concludes that a violation | 8 | | occurred, the Executive Ethics Commission shall make public the | 9 | | entire record of proceedings before the Commission, the | 10 | | decision, any recommendation, any discipline imposed, and the | 11 | | response from the agency head or ultimate jurisdictional | 12 | | authority to the Executive Ethics Commission.
| 13 | | (Source: P.A. 96-555, eff. 8-18-09.) | 14 | | (5 ILCS 430/20-85)
| 15 | | Sec. 20-85. Monthly reports by Executive Inspector | 16 | | General.
Each Executive Inspector General shall submit monthly
| 17 | | reports to the appropriate executive branch constitutional | 18 | | officer, on dates determined by the executive branch | 19 | | constitutional officer, indicating:
| 20 | | (1) the total number of allegations received since the | 21 | | date of the last report and the total number of allegations | 22 | | received since the date of the last report by category of | 23 | | claim ; | 24 | | (2) the total number of investigations initiated since | 25 | | the date of
the last report and the total number of |
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| 1 | | investigations initiated since the date of the last report | 2 | | by category of claim ; | 3 | | (3) the total number of investigations concluded since | 4 | | the date of
the last report and the total number of | 5 | | investigations concluded since the date of the last report | 6 | | by category of claim ;
| 7 | | (4) the total number of investigations pending as of | 8 | | the reporting
date and the total number of investigations | 9 | | pending as of the reporting date by category of claim ;
| 10 | | (5) the total number of complaints forwarded to the | 11 | | Attorney General since the
date of the last report;
| 12 | | (6) the total number of actions filed with the | 13 | | Executive Ethics Commission since
the date of the last | 14 | | report , and the total number of
actions pending before the | 15 | | Executive Ethics Commission as of the reporting
date , the | 16 | | total number of actions filed with the Executive Ethics | 17 | | Commission since the date of the last report by category of | 18 | | claim, and the total number of actions pending before the | 19 | | Executive Ethics Commission as of the reporting date by | 20 | | category of claim ; and | 21 | | (7) the total number of allegations referred to any law | 22 | | enforcement agency since the date of the last report; .
| 23 | | (8) the total number of allegations referred to another | 24 | | investigatory body since the date of the last report; and | 25 | | (9) the cumulative number of each of the foregoing for | 26 | | the current calendar year. |
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| 1 | | For the purposes of this Section, "category of claim" shall | 2 | | include discrimination claims, harassment claims, sexual | 3 | | harassment claims, retaliation claims, gift ban claims, | 4 | | prohibited political activity claims, revolving door | 5 | | prohibition claims, and other, miscellaneous, or | 6 | | uncharacterized claims. | 7 | | The monthly report shall be available on the websites of | 8 | | the Executive Inspector General and the constitutional | 9 | | officer. | 10 | | (Source: P.A. 96-555, eff. 8-18-09.) | 11 | | (5 ILCS 430/20-90)
| 12 | | Sec. 20-90. Confidentiality.
| 13 | | (a) The identity of any individual providing information or | 14 | | reporting any
possible or alleged
misconduct to an Executive | 15 | | Inspector General or the Executive Ethics
Commission
shall be | 16 | | kept confidential and may not be disclosed
without the consent | 17 | | of that individual, unless the individual consents to
| 18 | | disclosure of his or her name or disclosure of the individual's | 19 | | identity is
otherwise required by law. The confidentiality | 20 | | granted by this subsection does
not preclude the disclosure of | 21 | | the identity of a person in any capacity other
than as the | 22 | | source of an allegation.
| 23 | | (b) Subject to the provisions of Section 20-52, | 24 | | commissioners, employees,
and agents of the Executive Ethics | 25 | | Commission,
the Executive Inspectors General, and employees |
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| 1 | | and agents of each Office of
an
Executive Inspector General, | 2 | | the Attorney General, and the employees and agents of the | 3 | | office of the Attorney General shall keep confidential and | 4 | | shall not disclose
information exempted from disclosure under | 5 | | the Freedom of
Information Act or by this Act, provided the | 6 | | identity of any individual providing information or reporting | 7 | | any possible or alleged misconduct to the Executive Inspector | 8 | | General for the Governor may be disclosed to an Inspector | 9 | | General appointed or employed by a Regional Transit Board in | 10 | | accordance with Section 75-10.
| 11 | | (c) In his or her discretion, an Executive Inspector | 12 | | General may notify complainants and subjects of an | 13 | | investigation with an update on the status of the respective | 14 | | investigation, including when the investigation is opened and | 15 | | closed. | 16 | | (Source: P.A. 96-555, eff. 8-18-09; 96-1528, eff. 7-1-11 .) | 17 | | (5 ILCS 430/25-5)
| 18 | | Sec. 25-5. Legislative Ethics Commission.
| 19 | | (a) The Legislative Ethics Commission is created.
| 20 | | (b) The Legislative Ethics Commission shall consist of 8
| 21 | | commissioners appointed 2 each by the
President and Minority | 22 | | Leader of the Senate and the Speaker and Minority Leader
of the | 23 | | House of Representatives.
| 24 | | The terms of the initial commissioners shall commence upon | 25 | | qualification.
Each appointing authority shall designate one |
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| 1 | | appointee who
shall serve for a 2-year term running through
| 2 | | June 30, 2005.
Each appointing authority shall designate one | 3 | | appointee who
shall serve for a
4-year term running through | 4 | | June 30, 2007.
The initial appointments shall be made within 60 | 5 | | days
after the effective date of this Act.
| 6 | | After the initial terms, commissioners shall serve for | 7 | | 4-year terms
commencing on July 1 of the year of appointment | 8 | | and running
through June 30 of the fourth following year. | 9 | | Commissioners may be
reappointed to one or more subsequent | 10 | | terms.
| 11 | | Vacancies occurring other than at the end of a term shall | 12 | | be filled
by the appointing authority only for the balance of | 13 | | the
term of the commissioner whose office is vacant.
| 14 | | Terms shall run regardless of whether the position is | 15 | | filled.
| 16 | | (c) The appointing authorities shall appoint commissioners | 17 | | who
have experience holding governmental office or employment | 18 | | and may
appoint commissioners who are members of the General | 19 | | Assembly as well as
commissioners from the general public.
A | 20 | | commissioner who is a member of the General Assembly must | 21 | | recuse himself or
herself from participating in any matter | 22 | | relating to any investigation or
proceeding in which he or she | 23 | | is the subject or is a complainant .
A person is not eligible to
| 24 | | serve as a commissioner if that person (i) has been convicted | 25 | | of a
felony or a crime of dishonesty or moral turpitude, (ii) | 26 | | is, or was
within the preceding 12 months, engaged in |
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| 1 | | activities that
require registration under the Lobbyist | 2 | | Registration Act, (iii) is a
relative of the appointing | 3 | | authority, or (iv) is a State officer or employee
other than a | 4 | | member of the General Assembly , or (v) is a candidate for | 5 | | statewide office, federal office, or judicial office .
| 6 | | (c-5) If a commissioner is required to recuse himself or | 7 | | herself from participating in a matter as provided in | 8 | | subsection (c), the recusal shall create a temporary vacancy | 9 | | for the limited purpose of consideration of the matter for | 10 | | which the commissioner recused himself or herself, and the | 11 | | appointing authority for the recusing commissioner shall make a | 12 | | temporary appointment to fill the vacancy for consideration of | 13 | | the matter for which the commissioner recused himself or | 14 | | herself. | 15 | | (d) The Legislative Ethics Commission shall have
| 16 | | jurisdiction over current and former members of the General | 17 | | Assembly regarding events occurring during a member's term of | 18 | | office and
current and former all State
employees regarding | 19 | | events occurring during any period of employment where the | 20 | | State employee's whose ultimate jurisdictional authority is
| 21 | | (i) a legislative leader, (ii) the Senate Operations | 22 | | Commission, or (iii) the
Joint Committee on Legislative Support | 23 | | Services. The jurisdiction of the
Commission is limited to | 24 | | matters arising under this Act.
| 25 | | An officer or executive branch State employee serving on a | 26 | | legislative branch board or commission remains subject to the |
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| 1 | | jurisdiction of the Executive Ethics Commission and is not | 2 | | subject to the jurisdiction of the Legislative Ethics | 3 | | Commission. | 4 | | (e) The Legislative Ethics Commission must meet, either
in | 5 | | person or by other technological means, monthly or as
often as | 6 | | necessary. At the first meeting of the Legislative
Ethics | 7 | | Commission, the commissioners shall choose from their
number a | 8 | | chairperson and other officers that they deem appropriate.
The | 9 | | terms of officers shall be for 2 years commencing July 1 and
| 10 | | running through June 30 of the second following year. Meetings | 11 | | shall be held at
the call
of the chairperson or any 3 | 12 | | commissioners. Official action by the
Commission shall require | 13 | | the affirmative vote of 5 commissioners, and
a quorum shall | 14 | | consist of 5 commissioners. Commissioners shall receive
no | 15 | | compensation but
may be
reimbursed for their reasonable | 16 | | expenses actually incurred in the
performance of their duties.
| 17 | | (f) No commissioner, other than a commissioner who is a | 18 | | member of the
General
Assembly, or employee of the Legislative
| 19 | | Ethics Commission may during his or her term of appointment or | 20 | | employment:
| 21 | | (1) become a candidate for any elective office;
| 22 | | (2) hold any other elected or appointed public office
| 23 | | except for appointments on governmental advisory boards
or | 24 | | study commissions or as otherwise expressly authorized by | 25 | | law;
| 26 | | (3) be actively involved in the affairs of any |
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| 1 | | political party or political
organization; or
| 2 | | (4) advocate for the appointment of another person to | 3 | | an appointed or elected office or position or actively | 4 | | participate in any campaign for any
elective office.
| 5 | | (f-5) No commissioner who is a member of the General | 6 | | Assembly may be a candidate for statewide office, federal | 7 | | office, or judicial office. If a commissioner who is a member | 8 | | of the General Assembly files petitions to be a candidate for a | 9 | | statewide office, federal office, or judicial office, he or she | 10 | | shall be deemed to have resigned from his or her position as a | 11 | | commissioner on the date his or her name is certified for the | 12 | | ballot by the State Board of Elections or local election | 13 | | authority and his or position as a commissioner shall be deemed | 14 | | vacant. Such person may not be reappointed to the Commission | 15 | | during any time he or she is a candidate for statewide office, | 16 | | federal office, or judicial office. | 17 | | (g) An appointing authority may remove a
commissioner only | 18 | | for cause.
| 19 | | (h) The Legislative Ethics Commission shall appoint an
| 20 | | Executive Director subject to the approval of at least 3 of the | 21 | | 4 legislative leaders. The compensation of the Executive | 22 | | Director shall
be as determined by the Commission. The | 23 | | Executive Director of the Legislative
Ethics Commission may | 24 | | employ, subject to the approval of at least 3 of the 4 | 25 | | legislative leaders, and determine the
compensation of staff, | 26 | | as appropriations permit.
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| 1 | | (i) In consultation with the Legislative Inspector | 2 | | General, the Legislative Ethics Commission may develop | 3 | | comprehensive training for members and employees under its | 4 | | jurisdiction that includes, but is not limited to, sexual | 5 | | harassment, employment discrimination, and workplace civility. | 6 | | The training may be recommended to the ultimate jurisdictional | 7 | | authorities and may be approved by the Commission to satisfy | 8 | | the sexual harassment training required under Section 5-10.5 or | 9 | | be provided in addition to the annual sexual harassment | 10 | | training required under Section 5-10.5. The Commission may seek | 11 | | input from governmental agencies or private entities for | 12 | | guidance in developing such training. | 13 | | (Source: P.A. 96-555, eff. 8-18-09.) | 14 | | (5 ILCS 430/25-10)
| 15 | | Sec. 25-10. Office of Legislative Inspector General.
| 16 | | (a) The independent Office of the Legislative Inspector | 17 | | General is created.
The Office shall be under the direction and | 18 | | supervision of the
Legislative Inspector General and shall be a | 19 | | fully independent office with its
own appropriation.
| 20 | | (b) The Legislative Inspector General shall be appointed | 21 | | without regard to
political
affiliation and solely on the basis | 22 | | of integrity and
demonstrated ability.
The Legislative Ethics
| 23 | | Commission shall diligently search out qualified candidates | 24 | | for Legislative
Inspector General
and shall make | 25 | | recommendations to the General Assembly. The Legislative |
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| 1 | | Inspector General may serve in a full-time, part-time, or | 2 | | contractual capacity.
| 3 | | The Legislative Inspector General shall be appointed by a | 4 | | joint resolution of
the
Senate and the House of | 5 | | Representatives, which may specify the date on
which the | 6 | | appointment takes effect.
A joint resolution, or other document | 7 | | as may be specified by the
Joint Rules of the General Assembly, | 8 | | appointing the Legislative Inspector
General must be certified | 9 | | by
the Speaker
of the House of Representatives and the | 10 | | President of the Senate as having been
adopted by the
| 11 | | affirmative vote of three-fifths of the members elected to each | 12 | | house,
respectively,
and be filed with the Secretary of State.
| 13 | | The appointment of the Legislative Inspector General takes | 14 | | effect on the day
the
appointment is completed by the General | 15 | | Assembly, unless the appointment
specifies a later date on | 16 | | which it is to become effective.
| 17 | | The Legislative Inspector General shall have the following | 18 | | qualifications:
| 19 | | (1) has not been convicted of any felony under the laws | 20 | | of this State,
another state, or the United States;
| 21 | | (2) has earned a baccalaureate degree from an | 22 | | institution of higher
education; and
| 23 | | (3) has 5 or more years of cumulative service (A) with | 24 | | a federal,
State, or
local law enforcement agency, at least | 25 | | 2 years of which have been in a
progressive investigatory | 26 | | capacity; (B)
as a
federal, State, or local prosecutor; (C)
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| 1 | | as a
senior manager or executive of a federal, State, or | 2 | | local
agency; (D) as a member, an officer,
or a State
or | 3 | | federal judge; or (E) representing any combination of (A) | 4 | | through (D).
| 5 | | The Legislative Inspector General may not be a relative of | 6 | | a commissioner.
| 7 | | The term of the initial Legislative Inspector General shall
| 8 | | commence upon qualification and shall run through June 30, | 9 | | 2008.
| 10 | | After the initial term, the Legislative Inspector General | 11 | | shall serve
for 5-year terms commencing on July 1 of the year | 12 | | of appointment
and running through June 30 of the fifth | 13 | | following year. The
Legislative Inspector General may be | 14 | | reappointed to one or more
subsequent terms. Terms shall run | 15 | | regardless of whether the position is filled.
| 16 | | (b-5) A vacancy occurring other than at the end of a term | 17 | | shall be filled in the
same manner as an appointment only for | 18 | | the balance of the term of the
Legislative
Inspector General | 19 | | whose office is vacant. Within 7 days of the Office becoming | 20 | | vacant or receipt of a Legislative Inspector General's | 21 | | prospective resignation, the vacancy shall be publicly posted | 22 | | on the Commission's website, along with a description of the | 23 | | requirements for the position and where applicants may apply. | 24 | | Within 45 days of the vacancy, If the Office is vacant, or | 25 | | if a Legislative Inspector General resigns, the Commission | 26 | | shall designate an Acting Legislative Inspector General who |
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| 1 | | shall serve until the vacancy is filled. The Commission shall | 2 | | file the designation in writing with the Secretary of State. | 3 | | Within 60 days prior to the end of the term of the | 4 | | Legislative Inspector General or within 30 days of the | 5 | | occurrence of a vacancy in the Office of the Legislative | 6 | | Inspector General, the Legislative Ethics Commission shall | 7 | | establish a four-member search committee within the Commission | 8 | | for the purpose of conducting a search for qualified candidates | 9 | | to serve as Legislative Inspector General. The Speaker of the | 10 | | House of Representatives, Minority Leader of the House, Senate | 11 | | President, and Minority Leader of the Senate shall each appoint | 12 | | one member to the search committee. A member of the search | 13 | | committee shall be either a retired judge or former prosecutor | 14 | | and may not be a member or employee of the General Assembly or | 15 | | a registered lobbyist. If the Legislative Ethics Commission | 16 | | wishes to recommend that the Legislative Inspector General be | 17 | | re-appointed, a search committee does not need to be appointed. | 18 | | The search committee shall conduct a search for qualified | 19 | | candidates, accept applications, and conduct interviews. The | 20 | | search committee shall recommend up to 3 candidates for | 21 | | Legislative Inspector General to the Legislative Ethics | 22 | | Commission. The search committee shall be disbanded upon an | 23 | | appointment of the Legislative Inspector General. Members of | 24 | | the search committee are not entitled to compensation but shall | 25 | | be entitled to reimbursement of reasonable expenses incurred in | 26 | | connection with the performance of their duties. |
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| 1 | | Within 30 days after the effective date of this amendatory | 2 | | Act of the 100th General Assembly, the Legislative Ethics | 3 | | Commission shall create a search committee in the manner | 4 | | provided for in this subsection to recommend up to 3 candidates | 5 | | for Legislative Inspector General to the Legislative Ethics | 6 | | Commission by October 31, 2018. | 7 | | If a vacancy exists and the Commission has not appointed an | 8 | | Acting Legislative Inspector General, either the staff of the | 9 | | Office of the Legislative Inspector General, or if there is no | 10 | | staff, the Executive Director, shall advise the Commission of | 11 | | all open investigations and any new allegations or complaints | 12 | | received in the Office of the Inspector General. These reports | 13 | | shall not include the name of any person identified in the | 14 | | allegation or complaint, including, but not limited to, the | 15 | | subject of and the person filing the allegation or complaint. | 16 | | Notification shall be made to the Commission on a weekly basis | 17 | | unless the Commission approves of a different reporting | 18 | | schedule.
| 19 | | If the Office of the Inspector General is vacant for 6 | 20 | | months or more beginning on or after January 1, 2019, and the | 21 | | Legislative Ethics Commission has not appointed an Acting | 22 | | Legislative Inspector General, all complaints made to the | 23 | | Legislative Inspector General or the Legislative Ethics | 24 | | Commission shall be directed to the Inspector General for the | 25 | | Auditor General, and he or she shall have the authority to act | 26 | | as provided in subsection (c) of this Section and Section 25-20 |
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| 1 | | of this Act, and shall be subject to all laws and rules | 2 | | governing a Legislative Inspector General or Acting | 3 | | Legislative Inspector General. The authority for the Inspector | 4 | | General of the Auditor General under this paragraph shall | 5 | | terminate upon appointment of a Legislative Inspector General | 6 | | or an Acting Legislative Inspector General. | 7 | | Terms shall run regardless of whether the position is | 8 | | filled.
| 9 | | (c) The Legislative Inspector General
shall have | 10 | | jurisdiction over the current and former members of the General | 11 | | Assembly regarding events occurring during a member's term of | 12 | | office and
current and former all State employees regarding | 13 | | events occurring during any period of employment where the | 14 | | State employee's whose ultimate jurisdictional authority is
| 15 | | (i) a legislative leader, (ii) the Senate Operations | 16 | | Commission, or (iii) the
Joint Committee on Legislative Support | 17 | | Services.
| 18 | | The jurisdiction of each Legislative Inspector General is | 19 | | to investigate
allegations of fraud, waste, abuse, | 20 | | mismanagement, misconduct, nonfeasance,
misfeasance,
| 21 | | malfeasance, or violations of this Act or violations of other | 22 | | related
laws and rules.
| 23 | | (d) The compensation of the Legislative Inspector General | 24 | | shall
be the greater of an amount (i) determined by the | 25 | | Commission or (ii) by joint
resolution of the General Assembly | 26 | | passed by a majority of members elected in
each chamber.
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| 1 | | Subject to Section 25-45 of this Act, the Legislative Inspector | 2 | | General has
full
authority to organize the Office of the | 3 | | Legislative Inspector General,
including the employment and | 4 | | determination of the compensation of
staff, such as deputies, | 5 | | assistants, and other employees, as
appropriations permit. | 6 | | Employment of staff is subject to the approval of at least 3 of | 7 | | the 4 legislative leaders.
| 8 | | (e) No Legislative Inspector General or employee of the | 9 | | Office of
the Legislative Inspector General may, during his or | 10 | | her term of appointment or
employment:
| 11 | | (1) become a candidate for any elective office;
| 12 | | (2) hold any other elected or appointed public office
| 13 | | except for appointments on governmental advisory boards
or | 14 | | study commissions or as otherwise expressly authorized by | 15 | | law;
| 16 | | (3) be actively involved in the affairs of any | 17 | | political party or
political organization; or
| 18 | | (4) actively participate in any campaign for any
| 19 | | elective office.
| 20 | | A full-time Legislative Inspector General shall not engage | 21 | | in the practice of law or any other business, employment, or | 22 | | vocation. | 23 | | In this subsection an appointed public office means a | 24 | | position authorized by
law that is filled by an appointing | 25 | | authority as provided by law and does not
include employment by | 26 | | hiring in the ordinary course of business.
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| 1 | | (e-1) No Legislative Inspector General or employee of the | 2 | | Office of the
Legislative Inspector General may, for one year | 3 | | after the termination of his or
her appointment or employment:
| 4 | | (1) become a candidate for any elective office;
| 5 | | (2) hold any elected public office; or
| 6 | | (3) hold any appointed State, county, or local judicial | 7 | | office.
| 8 | | (e-2) The requirements of item (3) of subsection (e-1) may | 9 | | be waived by the
Legislative Ethics Commission.
| 10 | | (f) The Commission may remove the Legislative Inspector | 11 | | General only for
cause. At the time of the removal, the | 12 | | Commission must report to the General
Assembly the | 13 | | justification for the removal.
| 14 | | (Source: P.A. 98-631, eff. 5-29-14.) | 15 | | (5 ILCS 430/25-15)
| 16 | | Sec. 25-15. Duties of the Legislative Ethics Commission. | 17 | | In addition to
duties otherwise assigned by law, the | 18 | | Legislative Ethics Commission shall have
the following duties:
| 19 | | (1) To promulgate rules governing the performance of | 20 | | its duties and the
exercise of its powers and governing the | 21 | | investigations of the Legislative
Inspector General. The | 22 | | rules shall be available on the Commission's website and | 23 | | any proposed changes to the rules must be made available to | 24 | | the public on the Commission's website no less than 7 days | 25 | | before the adoption of the changes. Any person shall be |
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| 1 | | given an opportunity to provide written or oral testimony | 2 | | before the Commission in support of or opposition to | 3 | | proposed rules.
| 4 | | (2) To conduct administrative hearings and rule on | 5 | | matters
brought before the Commission only upon the receipt | 6 | | of pleadings
filed by the Legislative Inspector General and | 7 | | not upon its own
prerogative, but may appoint special | 8 | | Legislative Inspectors General as provided
in Section | 9 | | 25-21. Any other allegations of misconduct received by the
| 10 | | Commission from a person other than the Legislative | 11 | | Inspector General
shall be referred to the Office of the | 12 | | Legislative Inspector General.
| 13 | | (3) To prepare and publish manuals and guides and, | 14 | | working with
the Office of the Attorney General, oversee
| 15 | | training of employees under its jurisdiction that explains | 16 | | their duties.
| 17 | | (4) To prepare public information materials to | 18 | | facilitate
compliance, implementation, and enforcement of | 19 | | this Act.
| 20 | | (5) To submit reports as required by this Act.
| 21 | | (6) To the extent authorized by this Act, to make | 22 | | rulings, issue
recommendations, and impose administrative | 23 | | fines,
if appropriate,
in
connection with the | 24 | | implementation and interpretation of this Act.
The powers | 25 | | and duties of the
Commission are limited to matters clearly | 26 | | within the purview of this
Act.
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| 1 | | (7) To issue subpoenas with respect to matters pending | 2 | | before the Commission,
subject to the provisions of this | 3 | | Article and in the
discretion of the Commission,
to compel | 4 | | the attendance of witnesses for purposes of testimony and
| 5 | | the production of documents and other items for inspection | 6 | | and
copying.
| 7 | | (8) To appoint special Legislative Inspectors General | 8 | | as provided in Section
25-21.
| 9 | | (9) To conspicuously display on the Commission's | 10 | | website the procedures for reporting a violation of this | 11 | | Act, including how to report violations via email or | 12 | | online. | 13 | | (10) To conspicuously display on the Commission's | 14 | | website any vacancies within the Office of the Legislative | 15 | | Inspector General. | 16 | | (11) To appoint an Acting Legislative Inspector | 17 | | General in the event of a vacancy in the Office of the | 18 | | Legislative Inspector General. | 19 | | (Source: P.A. 100-554, eff. 11-16-17.) | 20 | | (5 ILCS 430/25-20)
| 21 | | Sec. 25-20. Duties of the Legislative Inspector
General. | 22 | | In addition to duties otherwise assigned by law,
the | 23 | | Legislative Inspector General shall have the following duties:
| 24 | | (1) To receive and investigate allegations of | 25 | | violations of this
Act. Except as otherwise provided in |
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| 1 | | paragraph (1.5), an investigation may not be initiated
more | 2 | | than one year after the most recent act of the alleged | 3 | | violation or of a
series of alleged violations except where | 4 | | there is reasonable cause to believe
that fraudulent | 5 | | concealment has occurred. To constitute fraudulent | 6 | | concealment
sufficient to toll this limitations period, | 7 | | there must be an affirmative act or
representation | 8 | | calculated to prevent discovery of the fact that a | 9 | | violation
has occurred. The
Legislative Inspector General | 10 | | shall have the discretion to determine the
appropriate | 11 | | means of investigation as permitted by law. | 12 | | (1.5) Notwithstanding any provision of law to the | 13 | | contrary, the Legislative Inspector General, whether | 14 | | appointed by the Legislative Ethics Commission or the | 15 | | General Assembly, may initiate an investigation based on | 16 | | information provided to the Office of the Legislative | 17 | | Inspector General or the Legislative Ethics Commission | 18 | | during the period from December 1, 2014 through November 3, | 19 | | 2017. Any investigation initiated under this paragraph | 20 | | (1.5) must be initiated within one year after the effective | 21 | | date of this amendatory Act of the 100th General Assembly.
| 22 | | Notwithstanding any provision of law to the contrary, the | 23 | | Legislative Inspector General, through the Attorney General, | 24 | | shall have the authority to file a complaint related to any | 25 | | founded violations that occurred during the period December 1, | 26 | | 2014 through November 3, 2017 to the Legislative Ethics |
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| 1 | | Commission, and the Commission shall have jurisdiction to | 2 | | conduct administrative hearings related to any pleadings filed | 3 | | by the Legislative Inspector General, provided the complaint is | 4 | | filed with the Commission no later than 6 months after the | 5 | | summary report is provided to the Attorney General in | 6 | | accordance with subsection (c) of Section 25-50. | 7 | | (2) To request information relating to an | 8 | | investigation from any
person when the Legislative | 9 | | Inspector General deems that information necessary
in
| 10 | | conducting an investigation.
| 11 | | (3) To issue subpoenas, with the advance approval of | 12 | | the Commission,
to compel the attendance of witnesses for | 13 | | the
purposes of testimony and production of documents and | 14 | | other items for
inspection and copying and to make service | 15 | | of those subpoenas and subpoenas
issued under item (7) of | 16 | | Section 25-15.
| 17 | | (4) To submit reports as required by this Act.
| 18 | | (5) To file
pleadings in the name of
the Legislative | 19 | | Inspector General with the Legislative Ethics
Commission, | 20 | | through the Attorney General, as provided in this Article | 21 | | if the
Attorney General finds that reasonable cause exists | 22 | | to believe that a violation
has
occurred.
| 23 | | (6) To assist and coordinate the ethics officers
for | 24 | | State agencies under the jurisdiction of the
Legislative | 25 | | Inspector General and to work with those ethics officers.
| 26 | | (7) To participate in or conduct, when appropriate, |
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| 1 | | multi-jurisdictional
investigations.
| 2 | | (8) To request, as the Legislative Inspector General | 3 | | deems appropriate,
from ethics officers
of State agencies | 4 | | under his or her jurisdiction, reports or information
on | 5 | | (i) the content of a State agency's ethics
training program | 6 | | and (ii) the percentage of new officers and
employees who | 7 | | have completed ethics training.
| 8 | | (9) To establish a policy that ensures the appropriate | 9 | | handling and correct recording of all investigations of | 10 | | allegations and to ensure that the policy is accessible via | 11 | | the Internet in order that those seeking to report those | 12 | | allegations are familiar with the process and that the | 13 | | subjects of those allegations are treated fairly. | 14 | | (10) To post information to the Legislative Inspector | 15 | | General's website explaining to complainants and subjects | 16 | | of an investigation the legal limitations on the | 17 | | Legislative Inspector General's ability to provide | 18 | | information to them and a general overview of the | 19 | | investigation process. | 20 | | (Source: P.A. 100-553, eff. 11-16-17.) | 21 | | (5 ILCS 430/25-50)
| 22 | | Sec. 25-50. Investigation reports.
| 23 | | (a) If the Legislative Inspector General, upon the | 24 | | conclusion of an
investigation, determines that reasonable | 25 | | cause exists to believe that a
violation
has occurred, then
the |
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| 1 | | Legislative Inspector General shall issue a summary report of | 2 | | the
investigation. The report shall be delivered to the
| 3 | | appropriate ultimate jurisdictional
authority , and to the head | 4 | | of each State
agency
affected by or involved in the | 5 | | investigation, if appropriate , and the member, if any, that is | 6 | | the subject of the report . The appropriate ultimate | 7 | | jurisdictional authority or agency head and the member, if any, | 8 | | that is the subject of the report shall respond to the summary | 9 | | report within 20 days, in writing, to the Legislative Inspector | 10 | | General. If the ultimate jurisdictional authority is the | 11 | | subject of the report, he or she may only respond to the | 12 | | summary report in his or her capacity as the subject of the | 13 | | report and shall not respond in his or her capacity as the | 14 | | ultimate jurisdictional authority. The response shall include | 15 | | a description of any corrective or disciplinary action to be | 16 | | imposed. If the appropriate ultimate jurisdictional authority | 17 | | or the member that is the subject of the report does not | 18 | | respond within 20 days, or within an extended time as agreed to | 19 | | by the Legislative Inspector General, the Legislative | 20 | | Inspector General may proceed under subsection (c) as if a | 21 | | response had been received. A member receiving and responding | 22 | | to a report under this Section shall be deemed to be acting in | 23 | | his or her official capacity.
| 24 | | (b) The summary report of the investigation shall include | 25 | | the following:
| 26 | | (1) A description of any allegations or other |
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| 1 | | information
received by the Legislative Inspector General | 2 | | pertinent to the
investigation.
| 3 | | (2) A description of any alleged misconduct discovered | 4 | | in the
course of the investigation.
| 5 | | (3) Recommendations for any corrective or disciplinary
| 6 | | action to be taken in response to any alleged misconduct | 7 | | described in the
report, including but not limited to | 8 | | discharge.
| 9 | | (4) Other information the Legislative Inspector | 10 | | General
deems relevant to the investigation or resulting | 11 | | recommendations.
| 12 | | (c) Within 30 days after receiving a response from the | 13 | | appropriate ultimate jurisdictional authority or agency head | 14 | | under subsection (a), the Legislative Inspector General shall | 15 | | notify the Commission and the Attorney General if the | 16 | | Legislative Inspector General believes that a complaint should | 17 | | be filed with the Commission. If
the Legislative Inspector | 18 | | General desires to file a
complaint with the Commission, the | 19 | | Legislative Inspector General shall submit the summary report | 20 | | and supporting documents to
the
Attorney General. If the | 21 | | Attorney General concludes that there is insufficient evidence | 22 | | that a violation has occurred, the Attorney General shall | 23 | | notify the Legislative Inspector General and the Legislative | 24 | | Inspector General shall deliver to the Legislative Ethics | 25 | | Commission a copy of the summary report and response from the | 26 | | ultimate jurisdictional authority or agency head.
If the |
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| 1 | | Attorney General determines
that reasonable cause exists to | 2 | | believe that a violation has occurred, then the
Legislative | 3 | | Inspector
General, represented by the Attorney
General, may | 4 | | file with the Legislative Ethics Commission a complaint.
The | 5 | | complaint shall set
forth the alleged violation and the
grounds | 6 | | that exist to support the complaint. Except as provided under | 7 | | subsection (1.5) of Section 20, the The complaint must be filed | 8 | | with the Commission within 18 months
after the most recent act | 9 | | of the alleged violation or of a series of alleged
violations
| 10 | | except where there is reasonable cause to believe
that | 11 | | fraudulent concealment has occurred. To constitute fraudulent | 12 | | concealment
sufficient to toll this limitations period, there | 13 | | must be an affirmative act or
representation calculated to | 14 | | prevent discovery of the fact that a violation has
occurred.
If | 15 | | a complaint is not filed with the Commission
within 6 months | 16 | | after notice by the Inspector General to the Commission and the
| 17 | | Attorney General, then the Commission may set a meeting of the | 18 | | Commission at
which the Attorney General shall appear and | 19 | | provide a status
report to the Commission.
| 20 | | (c-5) Within 30 days after receiving a response from the | 21 | | appropriate ultimate jurisdictional authority or agency head | 22 | | under subsection (a), if the Legislative Inspector General does | 23 | | not believe that a complaint should be filed, the Legislative | 24 | | Inspector General shall deliver to the Legislative Ethics | 25 | | Commission a statement setting forth the basis for the decision | 26 | | not to file a complaint and a copy of the summary report and |
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| 1 | | response from the ultimate jurisdictional authority or agency | 2 | | head. The Inspector General may also submit a redacted version | 3 | | of the summary report and response from the ultimate | 4 | | jurisdictional authority if the Inspector General believes | 5 | | either contains information that, in the opinion of the | 6 | | Inspector General, should be redacted prior to releasing the | 7 | | report, may interfere with an ongoing investigation, or | 8 | | identifies an informant or complainant. | 9 | | (c-10) If, after reviewing the documents, the Commission | 10 | | believes that further investigation is warranted, the | 11 | | Commission may request that the Legislative Inspector General | 12 | | provide additional information or conduct further | 13 | | investigation. The Commission may also refer the summary report | 14 | | and response from the ultimate jurisdictional authority to the | 15 | | Attorney General for further investigation or review. If the | 16 | | Commission requests the Attorney General to investigate or | 17 | | review, the Commission must notify the Attorney General and the | 18 | | Legislative Inspector General. The Attorney General may not | 19 | | begin an investigation or review until receipt of notice from | 20 | | the Commission. If, after review, the Attorney General | 21 | | determines that reasonable cause exists to believe that a | 22 | | violation has occurred, then the Attorney General may file a | 23 | | complaint with the Legislative Ethics Commission. If the | 24 | | Attorney General concludes that there is insufficient evidence | 25 | | that a violation has occurred, the Attorney General shall | 26 | | notify the Legislative Ethics Commission and the appropriate |
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| 1 | | Legislative Inspector General. | 2 | | (d) A copy of the complaint filed with the Legislative | 3 | | Ethics Commission must be served on all respondents named in | 4 | | the
complaint and on each respondent's ultimate jurisdictional | 5 | | authority in
the same manner as process is served under the | 6 | | Code of Civil
Procedure.
| 7 | | (e) A respondent may file objections to the complaint | 8 | | within 30 days after notice of the petition has been
served on | 9 | | the respondent.
| 10 | | (f) The Commission shall meet, at least 30 days after the | 11 | | complaint is served on all respondents either in person or by | 12 | | telephone,
in a closed session to review the sufficiency of the | 13 | | complaint.
The Commission shall
issue notice by certified mail, | 14 | | return receipt requested, to the Legislative Inspector | 15 | | General, the Attorney General, and all respondents of
the | 16 | | Commission's ruling on the sufficiency of the complaint. If the | 17 | | complaint
is deemed to
sufficiently allege a violation of this | 18 | | Act, then the Commission shall
include a hearing date scheduled | 19 | | within 4 weeks after the date of the notice,
unless all of the | 20 | | parties consent to a later date.
If the complaint is deemed not | 21 | | to sufficiently allege a
violation, then
the Commission shall | 22 | | send by certified mail, return receipt requested,
a notice to | 23 | | the Legislative Inspector General, the Attorney General, and | 24 | | all respondents the decision to dismiss the complaint.
| 25 | | (g) On the scheduled date
the Commission shall conduct a | 26 | | closed meeting,
either in person or, if the parties consent, by |
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| 1 | | telephone, on the complaint and
allow all
parties the | 2 | | opportunity to present testimony and evidence.
All such | 3 | | proceedings shall be transcribed.
| 4 | | (h) Within an appropriate time limit set by rules of the | 5 | | Legislative
Ethics Commission, the Commission shall (i) | 6 | | dismiss the
complaint, (ii) issue a recommendation of | 7 | | discipline to the
respondent and the respondent's ultimate | 8 | | jurisdictional authority, (iii)
impose an administrative fine | 9 | | upon the respondent, (iv) issue injunctive relief as described | 10 | | in Section 50-10, or (v) impose a combination of (ii) through | 11 | | (iv).
| 12 | | (i) The proceedings on any complaint filed with the | 13 | | Commission
shall be conducted pursuant to rules promulgated by | 14 | | the Commission.
| 15 | | (j) The Commission may designate hearing officers
to | 16 | | conduct proceedings as determined by rule of the Commission.
| 17 | | (k) In all proceedings before the Commission, the standard | 18 | | of
proof is by a preponderance of the evidence.
| 19 | | (l) Within 30 days after the issuance of a final | 20 | | administrative decision that concludes that a violation | 21 | | occurred, the Legislative Ethics Commission shall make public | 22 | | the entire record of proceedings before the Commission, the | 23 | | decision, any recommendation, any discipline imposed, and the | 24 | | response from the agency head or ultimate jurisdictional | 25 | | authority to the Legislative Ethics Commission.
| 26 | | (Source: P.A. 96-555, eff. 8-18-09.) |
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| 1 | | (5 ILCS 430/25-70)
| 2 | | Sec. 25-70. Cooperation in investigations. It is the duty | 3 | | of
every officer and employee under the jurisdiction of the | 4 | | Legislative
Inspector General, including any inspector general | 5 | | serving in any
State agency under the jurisdiction of the | 6 | | Legislative Inspector
General, to cooperate with the | 7 | | Legislative Inspector General and the Attorney General in any
| 8 | | investigation undertaken pursuant to this Act. Failure to | 9 | | cooperate includes, but is not limited to, intentional | 10 | | omissions and knowing false statements. Failure to cooperate
| 11 | | with an investigation of the Legislative Inspector General or | 12 | | the Attorney General is grounds
for disciplinary action, | 13 | | including dismissal. Nothing in this Section limits or
alters a | 14 | | person's existing rights or privileges under State or federal | 15 | | law.
| 16 | | (Source: P.A. 93-617, eff. 12-9-03.) | 17 | | (5 ILCS 430/25-85)
| 18 | | Sec. 25-85. Quarterly reports by the Legislative Inspector | 19 | | General.
The Legislative Inspector General shall submit | 20 | | quarterly
reports of claims within his or her jurisdiction | 21 | | filed with the Office of the Legislative Inspector General to | 22 | | the General Assembly and the
Legislative Ethics Commission, on | 23 | | dates determined by the
Legislative Ethics Commission, | 24 | | indicating:
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| 1 | | (1) the total number of allegations received since the | 2 | | date of the last report and the total number of allegations | 3 | | received since the date of the last report by category of | 4 | | claim ; | 5 | | (2) the total number of investigations initiated since | 6 | | the date of
the last report and the total number of | 7 | | investigations initiated since the date of the last report | 8 | | by category of claim ;
| 9 | | (3) the total number of investigations concluded since | 10 | | the date of
the last report and the total number of | 11 | | investigations concluded since the date of the last report | 12 | | by category of claim ;
| 13 | | (4) the total number of investigations pending as of | 14 | | the reporting
date and the total number of investigations | 15 | | pending as of the reporting date by category of claim ;
| 16 | | (5) the total number of complaints forwarded to the | 17 | | Attorney General since the
date of the last report; and
| 18 | | (6) the total number of actions filed with the | 19 | | Legislative Ethics Commission
since the date of the last | 20 | | report , and the total number of
actions pending before the | 21 | | Legislative Ethics Commission as of the reporting
date , the | 22 | | total number of actions filed with the Legislative Ethics | 23 | | Commission since the date of the last report by category of | 24 | | claim, and the total number of actions pending before the | 25 | | Legislative Ethics Commission as of the reporting date by | 26 | | category of claim; |
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| 1 | | (7) the number of allegations referred to any law | 2 | | enforcement agency since the date of the last report; | 3 | | (8) the total number of allegations referred to another | 4 | | investigatory body since the date of the last report; and | 5 | | (9) the cumulative number of each of the foregoing for | 6 | | the current calendar year . | 7 | | For the purposes of this Section, "category of claim" shall | 8 | | include discrimination claims, harassment claims, sexual | 9 | | harassment claims, retaliation claims, gift ban claims, | 10 | | prohibited political activity claims, revolving door | 11 | | prohibition claims, and other, miscellaneous, or | 12 | | uncharacterized claims. | 13 | | The quarterly report shall be available on the website of | 14 | | the Legislative Inspector General.
| 15 | | (Source: P.A. 93-617, eff. 12-9-03.) | 16 | | (5 ILCS 430/25-90)
| 17 | | Sec. 25-90. Confidentiality.
| 18 | | (a) The identity of any individual providing information or | 19 | | reporting any
possible or alleged
misconduct to the Legislative | 20 | | Inspector General or the Legislative Ethics
Commission
shall be | 21 | | kept confidential and may not be disclosed
without the consent | 22 | | of that individual, unless the individual consents to
| 23 | | disclosure of his or her name or disclosure of the individual's | 24 | | identity is
otherwise required by law. The confidentiality | 25 | | granted by this subsection does
not preclude the disclosure of |
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| 1 | | the identity of a person in any capacity other
than as the | 2 | | source of an allegation.
| 3 | | (b) Subject to the provisions of Section 25-50(c), | 4 | | commissioners, employees,
and agents of the Legislative Ethics
| 5 | | Commission, the Legislative Inspector General, and employees | 6 | | and agents of the
Office of the Legislative Inspector General | 7 | | shall keep confidential and shall
not disclose information | 8 | | exempted from disclosure under the
Freedom of Information Act | 9 | | or by this Act.
| 10 | | (c) In his or her discretion, the Legislative Inspector | 11 | | General may notify complainants and subjects of an | 12 | | investigation with an update on the status of the respective | 13 | | investigation, including when the investigation is opened and | 14 | | closed. | 15 | | (Source: P.A. 93-617, eff. 12-9-03.) | 16 | | (5 ILCS 430/25-95)
| 17 | | Sec. 25-95. Exemptions.
| 18 | | (a) Documents generated by an ethics
officer under this | 19 | | Act, except Section 5-50, are exempt from the provisions of
the | 20 | | Freedom
of Information Act.
| 21 | | (a-5) Requests from ethics officers, members, and State | 22 | | employees to the Office of the Legislative Inspector General, a | 23 | | Special Legislative Inspector General, the Legislative Ethics | 24 | | Commission, an ethics officer, or a person designated by a | 25 | | legislative leader for guidance on matters involving the |
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| 1 | | interpretation or application of this Act or rules promulgated | 2 | | under this Act are exempt from the provisions of the Freedom of | 3 | | Information Act. Guidance provided to an ethics officer, | 4 | | member, or State employee at the request of an ethics officer, | 5 | | member, or State employee by the Office of the Legislative | 6 | | Inspector General, a Special Legislative Inspector General, | 7 | | the Legislative Ethics Commission, an ethics officer, or a | 8 | | person designated by a legislative leader on matters involving | 9 | | the interpretation or application of this Act or rules | 10 | | promulgated under this Act is exempt from the provisions of the | 11 | | Freedom of Information Act.
| 12 | | (b) Summary investigation reports released by the | 13 | | Legislative Ethics Commission as provided in Section 25-52 are | 14 | | public records. Otherwise, any allegations
and related | 15 | | documents
submitted to the Legislative Inspector General and | 16 | | any pleadings and
related documents brought before the | 17 | | Legislative Ethics
Commission are exempt from the provisions of | 18 | | the Freedom of
Information Act so long as the Legislative | 19 | | Ethics Commission
does not make a finding of a violation of | 20 | | this Act.
If the Legislative
Ethics Commission finds that a | 21 | | violation has occurred, the
entire record of proceedings before | 22 | | the Commission, the decision and
recommendation, and the | 23 | | mandatory report from the agency head or
ultimate | 24 | | jurisdictional authority to the Legislative Ethics
Commission | 25 | | are not exempt from the provisions of the Freedom of
| 26 | | Information Act but information contained therein that is |
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| 1 | | exempt from the
Freedom of Information Act must be redacted | 2 | | before disclosure as provided in
Section 8 of the Freedom of | 3 | | Information Act.
| 4 | | (c) Meetings of the Commission are exempt from the | 5 | | provisions of the Open
Meetings Act.
| 6 | | (d) Unless otherwise provided in this Act, all | 7 | | investigatory files and
reports of the Office of the | 8 | | Legislative Inspector General, other than quarterly
monthly
| 9 | | reports under Section 25-85 , are confidential, are exempt from | 10 | | disclosure
under the Freedom of Information Act, and shall not | 11 | | be divulged to
any person or agency, except as necessary (i) to | 12 | | the appropriate law
enforcement
authority if the matter is | 13 | | referred pursuant to this Act, (ii) to the ultimate
| 14 | | jurisdictional authority, or (iii) to the
Legislative Ethics | 15 | | Commission , or (iv) to the Executive Director of the | 16 | | Legislative Ethics Commission to the extent necessary to advise | 17 | | the Commission of all open investigations and any new | 18 | | allegations or complaints received in the Office of the | 19 | | Inspector General when there is a vacancy in the Office of | 20 | | Inspector General pursuant to subparagraph (b-5) of Section | 21 | | 25-10 .
| 22 | | (Source: P.A. 96-555, eff. 8-18-09.) | 23 | | (5 ILCS 430/25-100 new) | 24 | | Sec. 25-100. Reports. | 25 | | (a) Within 30 days of the effective date of this amendatory |
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| 1 | | Act of the 100th General Assembly, for the period beginning | 2 | | November 4, 2017 until the date of the report, the Legislative | 3 | | Ethics Commission shall issue a report to the General Assembly | 4 | | containing the following information: (i) the total number of | 5 | | summary reports that the Inspector General requested be | 6 | | published; (ii) the total number of summary reports that the | 7 | | Inspector General closed without a request to be published; | 8 | | (iii) the total number of summary reports that the Commission | 9 | | agreed to publish; (iv) the total number of summary reports | 10 | | that the Commission did not agree to publish; (v) the total | 11 | | number of investigations that the Inspector General requested | 12 | | to open; and (vi) the total number of investigations that the | 13 | | Commission did not allow the Inspector General to open. | 14 | | (b) The Legislative Ethics Commission shall issue a | 15 | | quarterly report to the General Assembly within 30 days after | 16 | | the end of each quarter containing the following information | 17 | | for the preceding quarter: (i) the total number of summary | 18 | | reports that the Inspector General requested be published; (ii) | 19 | | the total number of summary reports that the Inspector General | 20 | | closed without a request to be published; (iii) the total | 21 | | number of summary reports that the Commission agreed to | 22 | | publish; (iv) the total number of summary reports that the | 23 | | Commission did not agree to publish; (v) the total number of | 24 | | investigations that the Inspector General requested to open; | 25 | | and (vi) the total number of investigations that the Commission | 26 | | did not allow the Inspector General to open. |
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| 1 | | (c) The reports to the General Assembly under this Section | 2 | | shall be provided to the Clerk of the House of Representatives | 3 | | and the Secretary of the Senate in electronic form only, in the | 4 | | manner that the Clerk and the Secretary shall direct. | 5 | | (5 ILCS 430/25-105 new) | 6 | | Sec. 25-105. Investigation of sexual harassment. | 7 | | Notwithstanding any provision of law to the contrary, the | 8 | | Legislative Inspector General may investigate any allegation | 9 | | or complaint of sexual harassment without the approval of the | 10 | | Legislative Ethics Commission. At each Legislative Ethics | 11 | | Commission meeting, the Legislative Inspector General shall | 12 | | inform the Commission of each investigation opened under this | 13 | | Section since the last meeting of the Commission. | 14 | | (5 ILCS 430/50-5)
| 15 | | Sec. 50-5. Penalties. | 16 | | (a) A person is guilty of a Class A misdemeanor if that | 17 | | person intentionally
violates any provision of Section 5-15, | 18 | | 5-30, 5-40, or 5-45 or Article 15.
| 19 | | (a-1) An ethics commission may levy an administrative fine | 20 | | for a violation of Section 5-45 of this Act of up to 3 times the | 21 | | total annual compensation that would have been obtained in | 22 | | violation of Section 5-45. | 23 | | (b) A person who intentionally violates any provision
of | 24 | | Section 5-20, 5-35, 5-50, or 5-55 is guilty of a business |
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| 1 | | offense
subject to a fine of at least $1,001 and up to $5,000.
| 2 | | (c) A person who intentionally violates any provision of | 3 | | Article 10 is
guilty of a business
offense and subject to a | 4 | | fine of at least $1,001 and up to $5,000.
| 5 | | (d) Any person who intentionally makes a
false report | 6 | | alleging a violation of any provision of this Act to an ethics
| 7 | | commission,
an inspector general,
the State Police, a State's | 8 | | Attorney, the Attorney General, or any other law
enforcement | 9 | | official is guilty of a Class A misdemeanor.
| 10 | | (e) An ethics commission may levy an administrative fine of | 11 | | up to $5,000
against any person
who violates this Act, who | 12 | | intentionally obstructs or interferes with an
investigation
| 13 | | conducted under this Act by an inspector general, or who
| 14 | | intentionally makes a false, frivolous, or bad faith | 15 | | allegation.
| 16 | | (f) In addition to any other penalty that may apply, | 17 | | whether criminal or
civil, a State employee who intentionally | 18 | | violates
any provision of Section 5-5, 5-15, 5-20, 5-30, 5-35, | 19 | | 5-45, or 5-50, Article 10,
Article 15, or Section 20-90 or | 20 | | 25-90 is subject to discipline or discharge by
the
appropriate | 21 | | ultimate
jurisdictional authority.
| 22 | | (g) Any person who violates Section 5-65 is subject to a | 23 | | fine of up to $5,000 per offense, and is subject to discipline | 24 | | or discharge by the appropriate ultimate jurisdictional | 25 | | authority. Each violation of Section 5-65 is a separate | 26 | | offense. Any penalty imposed by an ethics commission shall be |
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| 1 | | separate and distinct from any fines or penalties imposed by a | 2 | | court of law or a State or federal agency.
| 3 | | (h) Any natural person or lobbying entity who intentionally | 4 | | violates Section 4.7 , or paragraph (d) of Section 5 , or | 5 | | subsection (a-5) of Section 11 of the Lobbyist Registration Act | 6 | | is guilty of a business offense and shall be subject to a fine | 7 | | of up to $5,000. The Executive Ethics Commission, after the | 8 | | adjudication of a violation of Section 4.7 of the Lobbyist | 9 | | Registration Act for which an investigation was initiated by | 10 | | the Inspector General appointed by the Secretary of State under | 11 | | Section 14 of the Secretary of State Act, is authorized to | 12 | | strike or suspend the registration under the Lobbyist | 13 | | Registration Act of any person or lobbying entity for which | 14 | | that person is employed for a period of up to 3 years. In | 15 | | addition to any other fine or penalty which may be imposed, the | 16 | | Executive Ethics Commission may also levy an administrative | 17 | | fine of up to $5,000 for a violation specified under this | 18 | | subsection (h). Any penalty imposed by an ethics commission | 19 | | shall be separate and distinct from any fines or penalties | 20 | | imposed by a court of law or by the Secretary of State under | 21 | | the Lobbyist Registration Act. | 22 | | (Source: P.A. 100-554, eff. 11-16-17.) | 23 | | Section 10. The Election Code is amended by adding Section | 24 | | 7-8.03 as follows: |
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| 1 | | (10 ILCS 5/7-8.03 new) | 2 | | Sec. 7-8.03. State central committees; discrimination and | 3 | | harassment policies. No later than 90 days after the effective | 4 | | date of this amendatory Act of the 100th General Assembly, each | 5 | | State central committee of an established statewide political | 6 | | party shall establish and maintain a policy that includes, at a | 7 | | minimum: (i) a prohibition on discrimination and harassment; | 8 | | (ii) details on how an individual can report an allegation of | 9 | | discrimination or harassment; (iii) a prohibition on | 10 | | retaliation for reporting discrimination or harassment | 11 | | allegations; and (iv) the consequences of a violation of the | 12 | | prohibition on sexual harassment and the consequences for | 13 | | knowingly making a false report. | 14 | | A State central committee, or its appropriate designee, | 15 | | shall notify the Board of the adoption of the required | 16 | | policies. | 17 | | The requirements of this Section shall not prohibit a | 18 | | political committee from considering political affiliation, as | 19 | | permitted by law and the United States Constitution, when | 20 | | hiring or retaining a person as an employee, consultant, | 21 | | independent contractor, or volunteer. | 22 | | Section 15. The Secretary of State Act is amended by | 23 | | changing Section 14 as follows: | 24 | | (15 ILCS 305/14) |
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| 1 | | Sec. 14. Inspector General. | 2 | | (a) The Secretary of State must, with the advice and | 3 | | consent of the Senate,
appoint an Inspector General for the | 4 | | purpose of detection, deterrence, and
prevention of fraud,
| 5 | | corruption, mismanagement, gross or aggravated misconduct, or | 6 | | misconduct
that may be criminal in nature in the Office of the | 7 | | Secretary of State. The
Inspector General shall serve a 5-year | 8 | | term.
If no successor is appointed and qualified upon the
| 9 | | expiration of the Inspector General's term, the Office of | 10 | | Inspector General is
deemed vacant and the powers and duties | 11 | | under this Section may be exercised
only by an appointed and | 12 | | qualified interim Inspector General until a successor
| 13 | | Inspector General is appointed and qualified.
If the General | 14 | | Assembly is not in session when a vacancy in the Office of
| 15 | | Inspector General occurs, the Secretary of State may appoint an | 16 | | interim
Inspector General whose term shall expire 2 weeks after | 17 | | the next
regularly scheduled session day of the Senate. | 18 | | (b) The Inspector General shall have the following | 19 | | qualifications: | 20 | | (1) has not been convicted of any felony under the laws | 21 | | of this State,
another State, or the United States; | 22 | | (2) has earned a baccalaureate degree from an | 23 | | institution of higher
education; and | 24 | | (3) has either (A) 5 or more years of service with a | 25 | | federal, State, or
local law enforcement agency, at least 2 | 26 | | years of which have been in a
progressive investigatory |
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| 1 | | capacity; (B) 5 or more years of service as a
federal, | 2 | | State, or local prosecutor; or (C) 5 or more years of | 3 | | service as a
senior manager or executive of a federal, | 4 | | State, or local
agency. | 5 | | (c) The Inspector General may review, coordinate, and | 6 | | recommend methods and
procedures to increase the integrity of | 7 | | the Office of the Secretary of State.
The duties of the | 8 | | Inspector General shall
supplement and not supplant the duties | 9 | | of the Chief Auditor for the Secretary
of State's Office or any | 10 | | other Inspector General that may be authorized by law.
The | 11 | | Inspector General must report directly to the Secretary
of | 12 | | State. | 13 | | (d) In addition to the authority otherwise provided by this | 14 | | Section, but
only when investigating the Office of the | 15 | | Secretary of State, its employees, or
their actions for
fraud, | 16 | | corruption, mismanagement, gross or aggravated misconduct, or
| 17 | | misconduct that may be criminal in nature, the Inspector | 18 | | General is
authorized: | 19 | | (1) To have access to all records, reports, audits, | 20 | | reviews, documents,
papers, recommendations, or other | 21 | | materials available that relate to programs
and operations | 22 | | with respect to which the Inspector General has | 23 | | responsibilities
under this Section. | 24 | | (2) To make any investigations and reports relating to | 25 | | the administration
of the programs and operations of the | 26 | | Office of the Secretary of State that
are, in the judgment |
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| 1 | | of the Inspector General, necessary or desirable. | 2 | | (3) To request any information or assistance that may | 3 | | be necessary for
carrying out the duties and | 4 | | responsibilities provided by this Section from any
local, | 5 | | State, or federal governmental agency or unit thereof. | 6 | | (4) To require by subpoena the
appearance of witnesses | 7 | | and the production of all information, documents,
reports, | 8 | | answers, records, accounts, papers, and other data and | 9 | | documentary
evidence necessary in the performance of the | 10 | | functions assigned by this
Section, with the exception of | 11 | | subsection (c) and with the exception of records
of a labor
| 12 | | organization authorized and recognized under the Illinois | 13 | | Public Labor
Relations
Act to be the exclusive bargaining | 14 | | representative of employees of the Secretary
of State, | 15 | | including, but not limited to, records of representation of | 16 | | employees
and
the negotiation of collective bargaining | 17 | | agreements. A subpoena may be issued
under
this paragraph | 18 | | (4) only by the
Inspector General and not by members of the | 19 | | Inspector General's staff.
A person duly
subpoenaed for | 20 | | testimony, documents, or other items who neglects or | 21 | | refuses to
testify or produce documents or other items | 22 | | under the requirements of the
subpoena shall be subject to | 23 | | punishment as
may be determined by a court of competent | 24 | | jurisdiction, unless (i) the
testimony, documents, or | 25 | | other items are covered by the attorney-client
privilege or
| 26 | | any other privilege or right recognized by law or (ii) the |
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| 1 | | testimony,
documents, or other items concern the | 2 | | representation of employees and the
negotiation of | 3 | | collective bargaining agreements by a labor
organization | 4 | | authorized and recognized under the Illinois Public
Labor | 5 | | Relations Act to be the exclusive bargaining | 6 | | representative of
employees of the Secretary of State. | 7 | | Nothing in this Section limits a
person's right to | 8 | | protection against self-incrimination under the Fifth
| 9 | | Amendment of the United States Constitution or Article I, | 10 | | Section 10,
of the Constitution of the State of Illinois. | 11 | | (5) To have direct and prompt access to the Secretary | 12 | | of State for any
purpose pertaining to the performance of | 13 | | functions and responsibilities under
this Section. | 14 | | (d-5) In addition to the authority otherwise provided by | 15 | | this Section, the Secretary of State Inspector General shall | 16 | | have jurisdiction to investigate complaints and allegations of | 17 | | wrongdoing by any person or entity related to the Lobbyist | 18 | | Registration Act. When investigating those complaints and | 19 | | allegations, the Inspector General is authorized: | 20 | | (1) To have access to all records, reports, audits, | 21 | | reviews, documents, papers, recommendations, or other | 22 | | materials available that relate to programs and operations | 23 | | with respect to which the Inspector General has | 24 | | responsibilities under this Section. | 25 | | (2) To request any information or assistance that may | 26 | | be necessary for carrying out the duties and |
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| 1 | | responsibilities provided by this Section from any local, | 2 | | State, or federal governmental agency or unit thereof. | 3 | | (3) To require by subpoena the appearance of witnesses | 4 | | and the production of all information, documents, reports, | 5 | | answers, records, accounts, papers, and other data and | 6 | | documentary evidence necessary in the performance of the | 7 | | functions assigned by this Section. A subpoena may be | 8 | | issued under this paragraph (3) only by the Inspector | 9 | | General and not by members of the Inspector General's | 10 | | staff. A person duly subpoenaed for testimony, documents, | 11 | | or other items who neglects or refuses to testify or | 12 | | produce documents or other items under the requirements of | 13 | | the subpoena shall be subject to punishment as may be | 14 | | determined by a court of competent jurisdiction, unless the | 15 | | testimony, documents, or other items are covered by the | 16 | | attorney-client privilege or any other privilege or right | 17 | | recognized by law. Nothing in this Section limits a | 18 | | person's right to protection against self-incrimination | 19 | | under the Fifth Amendment of the United States Constitution | 20 | | or Section 10 of Article I of the Constitution of the State | 21 | | of Illinois. | 22 | | (4) To have direct and prompt access to the Secretary | 23 | | of State for any purpose pertaining to the performance of | 24 | | functions and responsibilities under this Section.
| 25 | | (5) As provided in subsection (d) of Section 5 of the | 26 | | Lobbyist Registration Act, to review allegations that an |
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| 1 | | individual required to be registered under the Lobbyist | 2 | | Registration Act has engaged in one or more acts of sexual | 3 | | harassment. Upon completion of that review, the Inspector | 4 | | General shall submit a summary of the review to the | 5 | | Executive Ethics Commission. The Inspector General is | 6 | | authorized to file pleadings with the Executive Ethics | 7 | | Commission, through the Attorney General, if the Attorney | 8 | | General finds that reasonable cause exists to believe that | 9 | | a violation regarding acts of sexual harassment has | 10 | | occurred. The Secretary shall adopt rules setting forth the | 11 | | procedures for the review of such allegations. | 12 | | (e) The Inspector General may receive and investigate | 13 | | complaints or
information concerning the possible
existence of | 14 | | an activity constituting a violation of law, rules, or
| 15 | | regulations; mismanagement; abuse of authority; or substantial | 16 | | and specific
danger to the public health and safety. Any person
| 17 | | who knowingly files a
false
complaint or files a complaint with | 18 | | reckless disregard for the truth or the
falsity
of the facts | 19 | | underlying the complaint may be subject to discipline as set | 20 | | forth
in the rules of the Department of Personnel of the | 21 | | Secretary of State or the Inspector General may refer the | 22 | | matter to a State's Attorney or the Attorney General. | 23 | | The Inspector General may not, after receipt of a complaint | 24 | | or information, disclose the
identity of the source
without the | 25 | | consent of the source, unless the
Inspector General determines | 26 | | that
disclosure of the identity is reasonable and necessary for |
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| 1 | | the furtherance of
the
investigation. | 2 | | Any employee who has the authority to recommend or
approve | 3 | | any personnel action or to direct others to recommend or | 4 | | approve any
personnel action may not, with respect to that | 5 | | authority, take or threaten to
take any action against any | 6 | | employee as a reprisal for making a
complaint or disclosing | 7 | | information to the Inspector General, unless the
complaint was | 8 | | made or the information disclosed with the knowledge that it | 9 | | was
false or with willful disregard for its truth or falsity. | 10 | | (f) The Inspector General must adopt rules, in accordance | 11 | | with the
provisions of the Illinois Administrative Procedure | 12 | | Act, establishing minimum
requirements for initiating, | 13 | | conducting, and completing investigations. The
rules must | 14 | | establish criteria for determining, based upon the nature of | 15 | | the
allegation, the appropriate method of investigation, which | 16 | | may include, but is
not limited to, site visits, telephone | 17 | | contacts, personal interviews, or
requests for written | 18 | | responses. The rules must also clarify how the Office of
the | 19 | | Inspector General shall interact with other local, State, and | 20 | | federal law
enforcement investigations. | 21 | | Any employee of the Secretary of State subject to | 22 | | investigation or inquiry
by the Inspector General or any agent | 23 | | or representative of the Inspector
General concerning | 24 | | misconduct that is criminal in nature shall have the right
to | 25 | | be notified of the right to remain silent
during the | 26 | | investigation or inquiry and the right to be represented in the
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| 1 | | investigation or inquiry by an attorney or a representative of | 2 | | a labor
organization that is
the exclusive collective | 3 | | bargaining representative of employees of the
Secretary of | 4 | | State.
Any investigation or inquiry by the Inspector General or | 5 | | any agent or
representative of the Inspector General must be | 6 | | conducted with an awareness of
the provisions of a collective | 7 | | bargaining agreement that applies to the
employees
of the | 8 | | Secretary of State and with an awareness of the rights of the | 9 | | employees
as set forth in State and federal law and applicable | 10 | | judicial decisions. Any
recommendations for discipline or any | 11 | | action taken
against any employee by the
Inspector General or | 12 | | any representative or agent of the Inspector General must
| 13 | | comply with the provisions of the collective bargaining | 14 | | agreement that applies
to the employee. | 15 | | (g) On or before January 1 of each year, the Inspector | 16 | | General shall report
to the President of the Senate, the | 17 | | Minority Leader of the Senate, the Speaker
of the House of | 18 | | Representatives, and the Minority Leader of the House of
| 19 | | Representatives on the types of investigations and the | 20 | | activities undertaken by
the Office of the Inspector General | 21 | | during the previous calendar year. | 22 | | (Source: P.A. 100-554, eff. 11-16-17.) | 23 | | Section 20. The Legislative Information System Act is | 24 | | amended by adding Section 9 as follows: |
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| 1 | | (25 ILCS 145/9 new) | 2 | | Sec. 9. Information regarding discrimination and | 3 | | harassment. The System shall establish a page for electronic | 4 | | public access on the General Assembly's website that provides | 5 | | information regarding discrimination and harassment, | 6 | | including, but not limited to: | 7 | | (1) the name and contact information for the ethics officer | 8 | | for each caucus; | 9 | | (2) the name and contact information for the Legislative | 10 | | Inspector General and information on how to file a complaint; | 11 | | (3) a direct link to the website of the Department of Human | 12 | | Rights for harassment and discrimination and the Department's | 13 | | hotline phone number; and | 14 | | (4) the name and contact information for the chief of staff | 15 | | for each legislative caucus leader. | 16 | | A direct link to the page required by this Section shall be | 17 | | included on the front page of the General Assembly's website. | 18 | | Section 25. The Lobbyist Registration Act is amended by | 19 | | changing Section 11 as follows:
| 20 | | (25 ILCS 170/11) (from Ch. 63, par. 181)
| 21 | | Sec. 11. Enforcement.
| 22 | | (a) The Secretary of State Inspector General appointed | 23 | | under Section 14 of the Secretary of State Act shall initiate | 24 | | investigations of violations of this Act upon receipt of |
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| 1 | | credible evidence of a violation. If, upon conclusion of an | 2 | | investigation, the Inspector General reasonably believes a | 3 | | violation of this Act has occurred, the Inspector General shall | 4 | | provide the alleged violator with written notification of the | 5 | | alleged violation. Within 30 calendar days after receipt of the | 6 | | notification, the alleged violator shall submit a written | 7 | | response to the Inspector General. The response shall indicate | 8 | | whether the alleged violator (i) disputes the alleged | 9 | | violation, including any facts that reasonably prove the | 10 | | alleged violation did not violate the Act, or (ii) agrees to | 11 | | take action to correct the alleged violation within 30 calendar | 12 | | days, including a description of the action the alleged | 13 | | violator has taken or will take to correct the alleged | 14 | | violation. If the alleged violator disputes the alleged | 15 | | violation or fails to respond to the notification of the | 16 | | alleged violation, the Inspector General shall transmit the | 17 | | evidence to the appropriate State's Attorney or Attorney | 18 | | General. If the alleged violator agrees to take action to | 19 | | correct the alleged violation, the Inspector General shall make | 20 | | available to the public the notification from the Inspector | 21 | | General and the response from the alleged violator and shall | 22 | | not transmit the evidence to the appropriate State's Attorney | 23 | | or Attorney General. Nothing in this Act requires the Inspector | 24 | | General to notify an alleged violator of an ongoing | 25 | | investigation or to notify the alleged violator of a referral | 26 | | of any evidence to a law enforcement agency, a State's |
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| 1 | | Attorney, or the Attorney General pursuant to subsection (c). | 2 | | (a-5) Failure to cooperate in an investigation initiated by | 3 | | the Secretary of State Inspector General appointed under | 4 | | Section 14 of the Secretary of State Act is a separate and | 5 | | punishable offense for which the Secretary of State Inspector | 6 | | General, through the Attorney General, shall file pleadings | 7 | | with the Executive Ethics Commission, which has the discretion | 8 | | to strike or suspend the registration of any person, or | 9 | | lobbying entity for which that person is employed, registered | 10 | | under this Act. Nothing in this Section limits or alters a | 11 | | person's existing rights or protections under State or federal | 12 | | law. | 13 | | (b) Any violation of this Act may be prosecuted in the | 14 | | county where the offense is committed or in Sangamon County. In | 15 | | addition to the State's Attorney of the appropriate county, the | 16 | | Attorney General of Illinois also is authorized to prosecute | 17 | | any violation of this Act. | 18 | | (c) Notwithstanding any other provision of this Act, the | 19 | | Inspector General may at any time refer evidence of a violation | 20 | | of State or federal law, in addition to a violation of this | 21 | | Act, to the appropriate law enforcement agency, State's | 22 | | Attorney, or Attorney General.
| 23 | | (Source: P.A. 96-555, eff. 1-1-10; 96-1358, eff. 7-28-10.)
| 24 | | Section 30. The Illinois Human Rights Act is amended by | 25 | | changing Sections 2-102, 2-107, and 7A-102 as follows:
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| 1 | | (775 ILCS 5/2-102) (from Ch. 68, par. 2-102)
| 2 | | Sec. 2-102. Civil Rights Violations - Employment. It is a | 3 | | civil
rights violation:
| 4 | | (A) Employers. For any employer to refuse to hire, to | 5 | | segregate, or
to act with respect to recruitment, hiring, | 6 | | promotion, renewal of employment,
selection for training or | 7 | | apprenticeship, discharge, discipline, tenure or
terms, | 8 | | privileges or conditions of employment on the basis of unlawful
| 9 | | discrimination or citizenship status.
| 10 | | (A-5) Language. For an employer to impose a restriction | 11 | | that has the
effect of prohibiting a language from being spoken | 12 | | by an employee in
communications that are unrelated to the | 13 | | employee's duties.
| 14 | | For the purposes of this subdivision (A-5), "language" | 15 | | means a person's
native tongue, such as Polish, Spanish, or
| 16 | | Chinese.
"Language" does not include such things as slang, | 17 | | jargon, profanity, or
vulgarity.
| 18 | | (B) Employment Agency. For any employment agency to fail or | 19 | | refuse
to classify properly, accept applications and register | 20 | | for employment
referral or apprenticeship referral, refer for | 21 | | employment, or refer for
apprenticeship on the basis of | 22 | | unlawful discrimination or citizenship
status or to accept from | 23 | | any person any job order, requisition or request
for referral | 24 | | of applicants for employment or apprenticeship which makes or
| 25 | | has the effect of making unlawful discrimination or |
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| 1 | | discrimination on the
basis of citizenship status a condition | 2 | | of referral.
| 3 | | (C) Labor Organization. For any labor organization to | 4 | | limit,
segregate or classify its membership, or to limit | 5 | | employment
opportunities, selection and training for | 6 | | apprenticeship in any trade or
craft, or otherwise to take, or | 7 | | fail to take, any action which affects
adversely any person's | 8 | | status as an employee or as an applicant for
employment or as | 9 | | an apprentice, or as an applicant for apprenticeships,
or | 10 | | wages, tenure, hours of employment or apprenticeship | 11 | | conditions on the
basis of unlawful discrimination or | 12 | | citizenship status.
| 13 | | (D) Sexual Harassment. For any employer, employee, agent of | 14 | | any employer,
employment agency or labor organization to engage | 15 | | in sexual harassment;
provided, that an employer shall be | 16 | | responsible for sexual harassment
of the employer's employees | 17 | | by nonemployees or nonmanagerial and nonsupervisory
employees | 18 | | only if the employer becomes aware of the conduct and fails to
| 19 | | take reasonable corrective measures.
| 20 | | (E) Public Employers. For any public employer to refuse to | 21 | | permit a
public employee under its jurisdiction who takes time | 22 | | off from work in
order to practice his or her religious beliefs | 23 | | to engage in work, during hours
other than such employee's | 24 | | regular working hours, consistent with the
operational needs of | 25 | | the employer and in order to compensate for work time
lost for | 26 | | such religious reasons. Any employee who elects such deferred
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| 1 | | work shall be compensated at the wage rate which he or she | 2 | | would have
earned during the originally scheduled work period. | 3 | | The employer may
require that an employee who plans to take | 4 | | time off from work in order to
practice his or her religious | 5 | | beliefs provide the employer with a notice of
his or her | 6 | | intention to be absent from work not exceeding 5 days prior to
| 7 | | the date of absence.
| 8 | | (E-5) Religious discrimination. For any employer to impose | 9 | | upon a person as a condition of obtaining or retaining | 10 | | employment, including opportunities for promotion, | 11 | | advancement, or transfer, any terms or conditions that would | 12 | | require such person to violate or forgo a sincerely held | 13 | | practice of his or her religion including, but not limited to, | 14 | | the wearing of any attire, clothing, or facial hair in | 15 | | accordance with the requirements of his or her religion, | 16 | | unless, after engaging in a bona fide effort, the employer | 17 | | demonstrates that it is unable to reasonably accommodate the | 18 | | employee's or prospective employee's sincerely held religious | 19 | | belief, practice, or observance without undue hardship on the | 20 | | conduct of the employer's business. | 21 | | Nothing in this Section prohibits an employer from enacting | 22 | | a dress code or grooming policy that may include restrictions | 23 | | on attire, clothing, or facial hair to maintain workplace | 24 | | safety or food sanitation. | 25 | | (F) Training and Apprenticeship Programs. For any | 26 | | employer,
employment agency or labor organization to |
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| 1 | | discriminate against a person on
the basis of age in the | 2 | | selection, referral for or conduct of apprenticeship
or | 3 | | training programs.
| 4 | | (G) Immigration-Related Practices. | 5 | | (1) for an employer to request for
purposes of | 6 | | satisfying the requirements of Section 1324a(b) of Title 8 | 7 | | of
the United States Code, as now or hereafter amended, | 8 | | more or different
documents than are required under such | 9 | | Section or to refuse to honor
documents tendered that on | 10 | | their face reasonably appear to be genuine; or
| 11 | | (2) for an employer participating in the E-Verify | 12 | | Program, as authorized by 8 U.S.C. 1324a, Notes, Pilot | 13 | | Programs for Employment Eligibility Confirmation (enacted | 14 | | by PL 104-208, div. C title IV, subtitle A) to refuse to | 15 | | hire, to segregate, or to act with respect to recruitment, | 16 | | hiring, promotion, renewal of employment, selection for | 17 | | training or apprenticeship, discharge, discipline, tenure | 18 | | or terms, privileges or conditions of employment without | 19 | | following the procedures under the E-Verify Program. | 20 | | (H) (Blank).
| 21 | | (I) Pregnancy. For an employer to refuse to hire, to | 22 | | segregate, or to act with respect to recruitment, hiring, | 23 | | promotion, renewal of employment, selection for training or | 24 | | apprenticeship, discharge, discipline, tenure or terms, | 25 | | privileges or conditions of employment on the basis of | 26 | | pregnancy, childbirth, or medical or common conditions related |
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| 1 | | to pregnancy or childbirth. Women affected by pregnancy, | 2 | | childbirth, or medical or common conditions related to | 3 | | pregnancy or childbirth shall be treated the same for all | 4 | | employment-related purposes, including receipt of benefits | 5 | | under fringe benefit programs, as other persons not so affected | 6 | | but similar in their ability or inability to work, regardless | 7 | | of the source of the inability to work or employment | 8 | | classification or status. | 9 | | (J) Pregnancy; reasonable accommodations. | 10 | | (1) If after a job applicant or employee, including a | 11 | | part-time, full-time, or probationary employee, requests a | 12 | | reasonable accommodation, for an employer to not make | 13 | | reasonable accommodations for any medical or common | 14 | | condition of a job applicant or employee related to | 15 | | pregnancy or childbirth, unless the employer can | 16 | | demonstrate that the accommodation would impose an undue | 17 | | hardship on the ordinary operation of the business of the | 18 | | employer. The employer may request documentation from the | 19 | | employee's health care provider concerning the need for the | 20 | | requested reasonable accommodation or accommodations to | 21 | | the same extent documentation is requested for conditions | 22 | | related to disability if the employer's request for | 23 | | documentation is job-related and consistent with business | 24 | | necessity. The employer may require only the medical | 25 | | justification for the requested accommodation or | 26 | | accommodations, a description of the reasonable |
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| 1 | | accommodation or accommodations medically advisable, the | 2 | | date the reasonable accommodation or accommodations became | 3 | | medically advisable, and the probable duration of the | 4 | | reasonable accommodation or accommodations. It is the duty | 5 | | of the individual seeking a reasonable accommodation or | 6 | | accommodations to submit to the employer any documentation | 7 | | that is requested in accordance with this paragraph. | 8 | | Notwithstanding the provisions of this paragraph, the | 9 | | employer may require documentation by the employee's | 10 | | health care provider to determine compliance with other | 11 | | laws. The employee and employer shall engage in a timely, | 12 | | good faith, and meaningful exchange to determine effective | 13 | | reasonable accommodations. | 14 | | (2) For an employer to deny employment opportunities or | 15 | | benefits to or take adverse action against an otherwise | 16 | | qualified job applicant or employee, including a | 17 | | part-time, full-time, or probationary employee, if the | 18 | | denial or adverse action is based on the need of the | 19 | | employer to make reasonable accommodations to the known | 20 | | medical or common conditions related to the pregnancy or | 21 | | childbirth of the applicant or employee. | 22 | | (3) For an employer to require a job applicant or | 23 | | employee, including a part-time, full-time, or | 24 | | probationary employee, affected by pregnancy, childbirth, | 25 | | or medical or common conditions related to pregnancy or | 26 | | childbirth to accept an accommodation when the applicant or |
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| 1 | | employee did not request an accommodation and the applicant | 2 | | or employee chooses not to accept the employer's | 3 | | accommodation. | 4 | | (4) For an employer to require an employee, including a | 5 | | part-time, full-time, or probationary employee, to take | 6 | | leave under any leave law or policy of the employer if | 7 | | another reasonable accommodation can be provided to the | 8 | | known medical or common conditions related to the pregnancy | 9 | | or childbirth of an employee. No employer shall fail or | 10 | | refuse to reinstate the employee affected by pregnancy, | 11 | | childbirth, or medical or common conditions related to | 12 | | pregnancy or childbirth to her original job or to an | 13 | | equivalent position with equivalent pay and accumulated | 14 | | seniority, retirement, fringe benefits, and other | 15 | | applicable service credits upon her signifying her intent | 16 | | to return or when her need for reasonable accommodation | 17 | | ceases, unless the employer can demonstrate that the | 18 | | accommodation would impose an undue hardship on the | 19 | | ordinary operation of the business of the employer. | 20 | | For the purposes of this subdivision (J), "reasonable | 21 | | accommodations" means reasonable modifications or adjustments | 22 | | to the job application process or work environment, or to the | 23 | | manner or circumstances under which the position desired or | 24 | | held is customarily performed, that enable an applicant or | 25 | | employee affected by pregnancy, childbirth, or medical or | 26 | | common conditions related to pregnancy or childbirth to be |
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| 1 | | considered for the position the applicant desires or to perform | 2 | | the essential functions of that position, and may include, but | 3 | | is not limited to: more frequent or longer bathroom breaks, | 4 | | breaks for increased water intake, and breaks for periodic | 5 | | rest; private non-bathroom space for expressing breast milk and | 6 | | breastfeeding; seating; assistance with manual labor; light | 7 | | duty; temporary transfer to a less strenuous or hazardous | 8 | | position; the provision of an accessible worksite; acquisition | 9 | | or modification of equipment; job restructuring; a part-time or | 10 | | modified work schedule; appropriate adjustment or | 11 | | modifications of examinations, training materials, or | 12 | | policies; reassignment to a vacant position; time off to | 13 | | recover from conditions related to childbirth; and leave | 14 | | necessitated by pregnancy, childbirth, or medical or common | 15 | | conditions resulting from pregnancy or childbirth. | 16 | | For the purposes of this subdivision (J), "undue hardship" | 17 | | means an action that is prohibitively expensive or disruptive | 18 | | when considered in light of the following factors: (i) the | 19 | | nature and cost of the accommodation needed; (ii) the overall | 20 | | financial resources of the facility or facilities involved in | 21 | | the provision of the reasonable accommodation, the number of | 22 | | persons employed at the facility, the effect on expenses and | 23 | | resources, or the impact otherwise of the accommodation upon | 24 | | the operation of the facility; (iii) the overall financial | 25 | | resources of the employer, the overall size of the business of | 26 | | the employer with respect to the number of its employees, and |
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| 1 | | the number, type, and location of its facilities; and (iv) the | 2 | | type of operation or operations of the employer, including the | 3 | | composition, structure, and functions of the workforce of the | 4 | | employer, the geographic separateness, administrative, or | 5 | | fiscal relationship of the facility or facilities in question | 6 | | to the employer. The employer has the burden of proving undue | 7 | | hardship. The fact that the employer provides or would be | 8 | | required to provide a similar accommodation to similarly | 9 | | situated employees creates a rebuttable presumption that the | 10 | | accommodation does not impose an undue hardship on the | 11 | | employer. | 12 | | No employer is required by this subdivision (J) to create | 13 | | additional employment that the employer would not otherwise | 14 | | have created, unless the employer does so or would do so for | 15 | | other classes of employees who need accommodation. The employer | 16 | | is not required to discharge any employee, transfer any | 17 | | employee with more seniority, or promote any employee who is | 18 | | not qualified to perform the job, unless the employer does so | 19 | | or would do so to accommodate other classes of employees who | 20 | | need it. | 21 | | (K) Notice. | 22 | | (1) For an employer to fail to post or keep posted in a | 23 | | conspicuous location on the premises of the employer where | 24 | | notices to employees are customarily posted, or fail to | 25 | | include in any employee handbook information concerning an | 26 | | employee's rights under this Article, a notice, to be |
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| 1 | | prepared or approved by the Department, summarizing the | 2 | | requirements of this Article and information pertaining to | 3 | | the filing of a charge, including the right to be free from | 4 | | unlawful discrimination , the right to be free from sexual | 5 | | harassment, and the right to certain reasonable | 6 | | accommodations. The Department shall make the documents | 7 | | required under this paragraph available for retrieval from | 8 | | the Department's website. | 9 | | (2) Upon notification of a violation of paragraph (1) | 10 | | of this subdivision (K), the Department may launch a | 11 | | preliminary investigation. If the Department finds a | 12 | | violation, the Department may issue a notice to show cause | 13 | | giving the employer 30 days to correct the violation. If | 14 | | the violation is not corrected, the Department may initiate | 15 | | a charge of a civil rights violation. | 16 | | (Source: P.A. 100-100, eff. 8-11-17.)
| 17 | | (775 ILCS 5/2-107) | 18 | | Sec. 2-107. Helpline Hotline to Report Sexual Harassment | 19 | | and Discrimination . | 20 | | (a) The Department shall, no later than 3 months after the | 21 | | effective date of this amendatory Act of the 100th General | 22 | | Assembly, establish and maintain a sexual harassment and | 23 | | discrimination helpline hotline . The Department shall help | 24 | | persons who contact the Department through the helpline hotline | 25 | | find necessary resources, including counseling services, and |
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| 1 | | assist in the filing of sexual harassment and discrimination | 2 | | complaints with the Department or other applicable agencies. | 3 | | The Department may recommend individual seek private counsel, | 4 | | but shall not make recommendations for legal representation. | 5 | | The helpline hotline shall provide the means through which | 6 | | persons may anonymously report sexual harassment and | 7 | | discrimination in both private and public places of employment. | 8 | | In the case of a report of sexual harassment and discrimination | 9 | | by a person subject to Article 20 or 25 of the State Officials | 10 | | and Employees Ethics Act, the Department shall, with the | 11 | | permission of the reporting individual, report the allegations | 12 | | to the Executive Inspector General or Legislative Inspector | 13 | | General for further investigation. | 14 | | (b) The Department shall advertise the helpline hotline on | 15 | | its website and in materials related to sexual harassment and | 16 | | discrimination , including posters made available to the | 17 | | public, and encourage reporting by both those who are subject | 18 | | to sexual harassment and discrimination and those who have | 19 | | witnessed it. | 20 | | (c) All communications received by the Department via the | 21 | | helpline hotline or Internet communication shall remain | 22 | | confidential and shall be exempt from disclosure under the | 23 | | Freedom of Information Act. | 24 | | (d) As used in this Section, "helpline" "hotline" means a | 25 | | toll-free telephone with voicemail capabilities and an | 26 | | Internet website through which persons may report instances of |
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| 1 | | sexual harassment and discrimination . | 2 | | (e) The Department shall annually evaluate the helpline and | 3 | | report to the Clerk of the House of Representatives and the | 4 | | Secretary of the Senate in electronic form only, in the manner | 5 | | that the Clerk and the Secretary shall direct, the following | 6 | | information:
(i) the total number of calls received, including | 7 | | messages left during non-business hours;
(ii) the number of | 8 | | calls reporting sexual discrimination claims;
(iii) the number | 9 | | of calls reporting harassment claims;
(iv) the number of calls | 10 | | reporting sexual harassment claims;
(v) the number of calls | 11 | | that were referred to each Executive Inspector General; and
| 12 | | (vi) the number of calls that were referred to the Legislative | 13 | | Inspector General.
| 14 | | (Source: P.A. 100-554, eff. 11-16-17.)
| 15 | | (775 ILCS 5/7A-102) (from Ch. 68, par. 7A-102)
| 16 | | Sec. 7A-102. Procedures.
| 17 | | (A) Charge.
| 18 | | (1) Within 300 calendar 180 days after the
date that a | 19 | | civil rights violation allegedly has been committed, a
| 20 | | charge in writing under oath or affirmation may be filed | 21 | | with the
Department by an aggrieved party or issued by the | 22 | | Department itself
under the signature of the Director.
| 23 | | (2) The charge shall be in such detail as to | 24 | | substantially apprise
any party properly concerned as to | 25 | | the time, place, and facts
surrounding the alleged civil |
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| 1 | | rights violation.
| 2 | | (3) Charges deemed filed with the Department pursuant | 3 | | to subsection (A-1) of this Section shall be deemed to be | 4 | | in compliance with this subsection. | 5 | | (A-1) Equal Employment Opportunity Commission Charges. | 6 | | (1) If a charge is filed with the Equal Employment | 7 | | Opportunity Commission (EEOC) within 300 calendar 180 days | 8 | | after the date of the alleged civil rights violation, the | 9 | | charge shall be deemed filed with the Department on the | 10 | | date filed with the EEOC. If the EEOC is the governmental | 11 | | agency designated to investigate the charge first, the | 12 | | Department shall take no action until the EEOC makes a | 13 | | determination on the charge and after the complainant | 14 | | notifies the Department of the EEOC's determination. In | 15 | | such cases, after receiving notice from the EEOC that a | 16 | | charge was filed, the Department shall notify the parties | 17 | | that (i) a charge has been received by the EEOC and has | 18 | | been sent to the Department for dual filing purposes; (ii) | 19 | | the EEOC is the governmental agency responsible for | 20 | | investigating the charge and that the investigation shall | 21 | | be conducted pursuant to the rules and procedures adopted | 22 | | by the EEOC; (iii) it will take no action on the charge | 23 | | until the EEOC issues its determination; (iv) the | 24 | | complainant must submit a copy of the EEOC's determination | 25 | | within 30 days after service of the determination by the | 26 | | EEOC on complainant; and (v) that the time period to |
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| 1 | | investigate the charge contained in subsection (G) of this | 2 | | Section is tolled from the date on which the charge is | 3 | | filed with the EEOC until the EEOC issues its | 4 | | determination. | 5 | | (2) If the EEOC finds reasonable cause to believe that | 6 | | there has been a violation of federal law and if the | 7 | | Department is timely notified of the EEOC's findings by | 8 | | complainant, the Department shall notify complainant that | 9 | | the Department has adopted the EEOC's determination of | 10 | | reasonable cause and that complainant has the right, within | 11 | | 90 days after receipt of the Department's notice, to either | 12 | | file his or her own complaint with the Illinois Human | 13 | | Rights Commission or commence a civil action in the | 14 | | appropriate circuit court or other appropriate court of | 15 | | competent jurisdiction. The Department's notice to | 16 | | complainant that the Department has adopted the EEOC's | 17 | | determination of reasonable cause shall constitute the | 18 | | Department's Report for purposes of subparagraph (D) of | 19 | | this Section. | 20 | | (3) For those charges alleging violations within the | 21 | | jurisdiction of both the EEOC and the Department and for | 22 | | which the EEOC either (i) does not issue a determination, | 23 | | but does issue the complainant a notice of a right to sue, | 24 | | including when the right to sue is issued at the request of | 25 | | the complainant, or (ii) determines that it is unable to | 26 | | establish that illegal discrimination has occurred and |
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| 1 | | issues the complainant a right to sue notice, and if the | 2 | | Department is timely notified of the EEOC's determination | 3 | | by complainant, the Department shall notify the parties | 4 | | that the Department will adopt the EEOC's determination as | 5 | | a dismissal for lack of substantial evidence unless the | 6 | | complainant requests in writing within 35 days after | 7 | | receipt of the Department's notice that the Department | 8 | | review the EEOC's determination. | 9 | | (a) If the complainant does not file a written | 10 | | request with the Department to review the EEOC's | 11 | | determination within 35 days after receipt of the | 12 | | Department's notice, the Department shall notify | 13 | | complainant that the decision of the EEOC has been | 14 | | adopted by the Department as a dismissal for lack of | 15 | | substantial evidence and that the complainant has the | 16 | | right, within 90 days after receipt of the Department's | 17 | | notice, to commence a civil action in the appropriate | 18 | | circuit court or other appropriate court of competent | 19 | | jurisdiction. The Department's notice to complainant | 20 | | that the Department has adopted the EEOC's | 21 | | determination shall constitute the Department's report | 22 | | for purposes of subparagraph (D) of this Section. | 23 | | (b) If the complainant does file a written request | 24 | | with the Department to review the EEOC's | 25 | | determination, the Department shall review the EEOC's | 26 | | determination and any evidence obtained by the EEOC |
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| 1 | | during its investigation. If, after reviewing the | 2 | | EEOC's determination and any evidence obtained by the | 3 | | EEOC, the Department determines there is no need for | 4 | | further investigation of the charge, the Department | 5 | | shall issue a report and the Director shall determine | 6 | | whether there is substantial evidence that the alleged | 7 | | civil rights violation has been committed pursuant to | 8 | | subsection (D) of Section 7A-102. If, after reviewing | 9 | | the EEOC's determination and any evidence obtained by | 10 | | the EEOC, the Department determines there is a need for | 11 | | further investigation of the charge, the Department | 12 | | may conduct any further investigation it deems | 13 | | necessary. After reviewing the EEOC's determination, | 14 | | the evidence obtained by the EEOC, and any additional | 15 | | investigation conducted by the Department, the | 16 | | Department shall issue a report and the Director shall | 17 | | determine whether there is substantial evidence that | 18 | | the alleged civil rights violation has been committed | 19 | | pursuant to subsection (D) of Section 7A-102 of this | 20 | | Act. | 21 | | (4) Pursuant to this Section, if the EEOC dismisses the | 22 | | charge or a portion of the charge of discrimination | 23 | | because, under federal law, the EEOC lacks jurisdiction | 24 | | over the charge, and if, under this Act, the Department has | 25 | | jurisdiction over the charge of discrimination, the | 26 | | Department shall investigate the charge or portion of the |
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| 1 | | charge dismissed by the EEOC for lack of jurisdiction | 2 | | pursuant to subsections (A), (A-1), (B), (B-1), (C), (D), | 3 | | (E), (F), (G), (H), (I), (J), and (K) of Section 7A-102 of | 4 | | this Act. | 5 | | (5) The time limit set out in subsection (G) of this | 6 | | Section is tolled from the date on which the charge is | 7 | | filed with the EEOC to the date on which the EEOC issues | 8 | | its determination.
| 9 | | (B) Notice and Response to Charge.
The Department shall, | 10 | | within 10
days of the date on which the charge
was filed, serve | 11 | | a copy of the charge on the respondent. This period shall
not | 12 | | be construed to be jurisdictional. The charging party and the | 13 | | respondent
may each file a position statement and other | 14 | | materials with the Department
regarding the charge of alleged | 15 | | discrimination within 60 days of receipt of the
notice of the | 16 | | charge. The position statements and other materials filed shall
| 17 | | remain confidential unless otherwise agreed to by the party | 18 | | providing the
information and shall not be served on or made | 19 | | available to the other
party during pendency
of a charge with | 20 | | the Department. The Department may
require the respondent to | 21 | | file a response to
the allegations contained in the charge. | 22 | | Upon the Department's request, the respondent shall
file a | 23 | | response to the charge within 60 days and shall serve a copy
of | 24 | | its response on the
complainant or his or her representative. | 25 | | Notwithstanding any request from the Department,
the | 26 | | respondent may elect to file a response to the charge
within 60 |
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| 1 | | days of receipt of notice of the charge, provided the | 2 | | respondent serves a copy of its response on the complainant or | 3 | | his or her representative. All allegations contained in the | 4 | | charge
not denied by the respondent within 60 days of the | 5 | | Department's request for a response may be deemed admitted, | 6 | | unless the
respondent states that it is without sufficient | 7 | | information to
form a belief with respect to such allegation. | 8 | | The Department may issue
a notice of default directed to any | 9 | | respondent who fails to file a
response to a charge within 60 | 10 | | days of receipt of the Department's request,
unless the | 11 | | respondent can
demonstrate good cause as
to why such notice | 12 | | should not issue. The term "good cause" shall be defined by | 13 | | rule promulgated by the Department. Within 30 days of receipt
| 14 | | of the respondent's response, the complainant may file a
reply | 15 | | to
said response and
shall serve
a copy of said reply on the | 16 | | respondent or his or her representative. A party
shall have the | 17 | | right to supplement his or her response or reply at any time | 18 | | that
the investigation of the charge is pending. The Department | 19 | | shall,
within 10 days of the date on which the charge was | 20 | | filed,
and again no later than 335 days thereafter,
send by | 21 | | certified or registered mail written notice to the complainant
| 22 | | and to the respondent
informing the complainant
of the | 23 | | complainant's right to either file a complaint with the Human
| 24 | | Rights Commission or commence a civil action in the appropriate | 25 | | circuit court
under subparagraph (2) of paragraph (G), | 26 | | including in such notice the dates
within which the complainant |
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| 1 | | may exercise this right.
In the notice the Department shall | 2 | | notify the complainant that the
charge of civil rights | 3 | | violation will be dismissed with prejudice and with no
right to | 4 | | further proceed if a written complaint is not timely filed with
| 5 | | the Commission or with the appropriate circuit court by the | 6 | | complainant pursuant to subparagraph (2) of paragraph (G)
or by | 7 | | the Department pursuant to subparagraph (1) of paragraph (G).
| 8 | | (B-1) Mediation. The complainant and respondent may agree | 9 | | to voluntarily
submit the charge
to mediation without waiving | 10 | | any rights that are otherwise available to
either party | 11 | | pursuant to this Act and without incurring any obligation to
| 12 | | accept the result of the mediation process. Nothing occurring | 13 | | in mediation
shall
be disclosed by the Department or admissible | 14 | | in evidence in any subsequent
proceeding unless the complainant | 15 | | and the respondent agree in writing that such
disclosure be | 16 | | made.
| 17 | | (C) Investigation.
| 18 | | (1) The
Department shall conduct an investigation | 19 | | sufficient to determine whether the allegations set
forth | 20 | | in the charge are supported by substantial evidence.
| 21 | | (2) The Director or his or her designated | 22 | | representatives shall have
authority to request any member | 23 | | of the Commission to issue subpoenas to
compel the | 24 | | attendance of a witness or the production for
examination | 25 | | of any books, records or documents whatsoever.
| 26 | | (3) If any witness whose testimony is required for any |
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| 1 | | investigation
resides outside the State, or through | 2 | | illness or any other good cause as
determined by the | 3 | | Director is unable to be interviewed by the investigator
or | 4 | | appear at a fact finding conference, his or her testimony | 5 | | or deposition
may be taken, within or without the State, in | 6 | | the same manner as is
provided for in the taking of | 7 | | depositions in civil cases in circuit courts.
| 8 | | (4) Upon reasonable notice to the complainant and the | 9 | | respondent,
the Department shall conduct a fact finding | 10 | | conference, unless prior to
365 days after the date on | 11 | | which the charge was filed the Director has determined | 12 | | whether there is substantial evidence
that the alleged | 13 | | civil rights violation has been committed, the charge has
| 14 | | been dismissed for lack of jurisdiction, or the parties | 15 | | voluntarily and in writing agree to waive the fact finding | 16 | | conference. Any party's failure to attend the conference | 17 | | without good cause
shall result in dismissal or default. | 18 | | The term "good cause"
shall
be defined by rule promulgated | 19 | | by the Department. A notice of dismissal or
default shall | 20 | | be issued by the Director. The notice of default issued by | 21 | | the Director shall notify the respondent that a request for | 22 | | review may be filed in writing with the Commission
within | 23 | | 30 days of receipt of notice of default. The notice of | 24 | | dismissal issued by the Director shall give
the complainant | 25 | | notice of his or her right to seek review of the dismissal
| 26 | | before the Human Rights Commission or commence a civil |
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| 1 | | action in the
appropriate circuit court. If the complainant | 2 | | chooses to have the Human Rights Commission review the | 3 | | dismissal order, he or she shall file a request for review | 4 | | with the Commission within 90 days after receipt of the | 5 | | Director's notice. If the complainant chooses to file a | 6 | | request for review with the Commission, he or she may not | 7 | | later commence a civil action in a circuit court. If the | 8 | | complainant chooses to commence a civil action in a circuit | 9 | | court, he or she must do so within 90 days after receipt of | 10 | | the Director's notice.
| 11 | | (D) Report.
| 12 | | (1) Each charge shall be the
subject of a
report to the | 13 | | Director. The report shall be a confidential document
| 14 | | subject to review by the Director, authorized Department | 15 | | employees, the
parties, and, where indicated by this Act, | 16 | | members of the Commission or
their designated hearing | 17 | | officers.
| 18 | | (2) Upon review of the report, the Director shall | 19 | | determine whether
there is substantial evidence that the | 20 | | alleged civil rights violation
has been committed.
The | 21 | | determination of substantial evidence is limited to | 22 | | determining the need
for further consideration of the | 23 | | charge pursuant to this Act
and includes, but is not | 24 | | limited to, findings of fact and conclusions, as well
as | 25 | | the reasons for the determinations on all material issues. | 26 | | Substantial evidence is evidence which a reasonable mind |
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| 1 | | accepts
as sufficient to support a particular conclusion | 2 | | and which consists of more
than a mere scintilla but may be | 3 | | somewhat less than a preponderance.
| 4 | | (3) If the Director determines
that there is no | 5 | | substantial
evidence, the charge shall be dismissed by | 6 | | order of the
Director and the Director shall give the
| 7 | | complainant notice of his or her right to seek review of | 8 | | the dismissal order before the
Commission or commence a | 9 | | civil action in the appropriate circuit court. If the | 10 | | complainant chooses to have the Human Rights Commission | 11 | | review the dismissal order, he or she shall file a request | 12 | | for review with the Commission within 90 days after receipt | 13 | | of the Director's notice. If the complainant chooses to | 14 | | file a request for review with the Commission, he or she | 15 | | may not later commence a civil action in a circuit court. | 16 | | If the complainant chooses to commence a civil action in a | 17 | | circuit court, he or she must do so within 90 days after | 18 | | receipt of the Director's notice.
| 19 | | (4) If the Director determines that there is | 20 | | substantial evidence, he or she shall notify the | 21 | | complainant and respondent of that determination. The | 22 | | Director shall also notify the parties that the complainant | 23 | | has the right to either commence a civil action in the | 24 | | appropriate circuit court or request that the Department of | 25 | | Human Rights file a complaint with the Human Rights | 26 | | Commission on his or her behalf. Any such complaint shall |
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| 1 | | be filed within 90 days after receipt of the Director's | 2 | | notice. If the complainant chooses to have the Department | 3 | | file a complaint with the Human Rights Commission on his or | 4 | | her behalf, the complainant must, within 30 days after | 5 | | receipt of the Director's notice, request in writing that | 6 | | the Department file the complaint. If the complainant | 7 | | timely requests that the Department file the complaint, the | 8 | | Department shall file the complaint on his or her behalf. | 9 | | If the complainant fails to timely request that the | 10 | | Department file the complaint, the complainant may file his | 11 | | or her complaint with the Commission or commence a civil | 12 | | action in the appropriate circuit court.
If the complainant | 13 | | files a complaint with
the Human Rights Commission, the | 14 | | complainant shall give notice to the
Department of the | 15 | | filing of the complaint with the Human Rights Commission. | 16 | | (E) Conciliation.
| 17 | |
(1) When there is a finding of substantial evidence, | 18 | | the Department may designate a Department employee who is | 19 | | an attorney
licensed to practice in Illinois to endeavor to | 20 | | eliminate the effect of
the alleged civil rights violation | 21 | | and to prevent its repetition by
means of conference and | 22 | | conciliation.
| 23 | | (2) When the Department determines that a formal
| 24 | | conciliation conference is necessary, the complainant and | 25 | | respondent
shall be notified of the time and place of the | 26 | | conference by registered
or certified mail at least 10 days |
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| 1 | | prior thereto and either or both
parties shall appear at | 2 | | the conference in person or by attorney.
| 3 | | (3) The place fixed for the conference shall be within | 4 | | 35 miles of
the place where the civil rights violation is | 5 | | alleged to have been
committed.
| 6 | | (4) Nothing occurring at the conference shall be | 7 | | disclosed by the
Department unless
the complainant and | 8 | | respondent agree in writing that
such disclosure be made.
| 9 | | (5) The Department's efforts to conciliate the matter | 10 | | shall not stay or extend the time for filing the complaint | 11 | | with the Commission or the circuit court.
| 12 | | (F) Complaint.
| 13 | | (1) When the complainant requests that the Department | 14 | | file a complaint with the Commission on his or her behalf, | 15 | | the Department shall prepare a
written complaint, under | 16 | | oath or affirmation, stating the nature of the
civil rights | 17 | | violation substantially as alleged in the charge | 18 | | previously
filed and the relief sought on behalf of the | 19 | | aggrieved party. The Department shall file the complaint | 20 | | with the Commission.
| 21 | | (2) If the complainant chooses to commence a civil | 22 | | action in a circuit court, he or she must do so in the | 23 | | circuit court in the county wherein the civil rights | 24 | | violation was allegedly committed. The form of the | 25 | | complaint in any such civil action shall be in accordance | 26 | | with the Illinois Code of Civil Procedure.
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| 1 | | (G) Time Limit.
| 2 | | (1) When a charge of a civil rights violation has been
| 3 | | properly filed, the Department, within 365
days thereof or | 4 | | within any
extension of that period agreed to in writing by | 5 | | all parties, shall issue its report as required by | 6 | | subparagraph (D). Any such report
shall be duly served upon | 7 | | both the complainant and the respondent.
| 8 | | (2) If the Department has not issued its report within | 9 | | 365 days after the charge is filed, or any such longer | 10 | | period agreed to in writing by all the parties, the | 11 | | complainant shall have 90 days to either file his or her | 12 | | own complaint with the Human Rights Commission or commence | 13 | | a civil action in the appropriate circuit court. If the | 14 | | complainant files a complaint with the Commission, the form | 15 | | of the complaint shall be in accordance with the provisions | 16 | | of
paragraph (F)(1). If the complainant commences a civil | 17 | | action in a circuit court, the form of the complaint shall | 18 | | be in accordance with the Illinois Code of Civil Procedure. | 19 | | The aggrieved party shall notify the Department that a
| 20 | | complaint
has been filed and shall serve a copy of the | 21 | | complaint on the Department
on the same date that the | 22 | | complaint is filed with the Commission or in circuit court. | 23 | | If the complainant files a complaint with the Commission, | 24 | | he or she may not later commence a civil action in circuit | 25 | | court.
| 26 | | (3) If an aggrieved party files a complaint
with the
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| 1 | | Human Rights Commission or commences a civil action in | 2 | | circuit court pursuant to paragraph (2) of this subsection, | 3 | | or if
the time period for filing a complaint has expired, | 4 | | the
Department shall immediately cease its investigation | 5 | | and
dismiss the charge of civil rights violation.
Any final | 6 | | order entered by the Commission under this Section is
| 7 | | appealable in accordance with paragraph (B)(1) of Section | 8 | | 8-111.
Failure to immediately cease an investigation and | 9 | | dismiss the charge of civil
rights violation as provided in | 10 | | this paragraph
(3) constitutes grounds for entry of an | 11 | | order by the circuit court permanently
enjoining the
| 12 | | investigation. The Department may also be liable for any
| 13 | | costs and other damages incurred by the respondent as a | 14 | | result of the action of
the Department.
| 15 | | (4) The Department shall stay any administrative | 16 | | proceedings
under this Section after the filing of a civil | 17 | | action by or on behalf of the
aggrieved party under any | 18 | | federal or State law seeking relief with respect to
the
| 19 | | alleged civil rights violation.
| 20 | | (H) This amendatory Act of 1995 applies to causes of action | 21 | | filed on or
after January 1, 1996.
| 22 | | (I) This amendatory Act of 1996 applies to causes of action | 23 | | filed on or
after January 1, 1996.
| 24 | | (J) The changes made to this Section by Public Act 95-243 | 25 | | apply to charges filed on or
after the effective date of those | 26 | | changes.
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| 1 | | (K) The changes made to this Section by this amendatory Act | 2 | | of the 96th General Assembly apply to charges filed on or
after | 3 | | the effective date of those changes. | 4 | | (Source: P.A. 100-492, eff. 9-8-17.)
| 5 | | Section 99. Effective date. This Act takes effect upon | 6 | | becoming law.
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