Illinois General Assembly - Full Text of SB0837
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Full Text of SB0837  102nd General Assembly

SB0837sam001 102ND GENERAL ASSEMBLY

Sen. Cristina Castro

Filed: 4/9/2021

 

 


 

 


 
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1
AMENDMENT TO SENATE BILL 837

2    AMENDMENT NO. ______. Amend Senate Bill 837 by replacing
3everything after the enacting clause with the following:
 
4    "Section 1. Short title. This Act may be cited as the Fair
5Play in Employment Act.
 
6    Section 5. Findings and intent. The General Assembly finds
7and declares the following:
8        (1) Illinois workers are experiencing dangerous levels
9    of employee misclassification. Companies that misclassify
10    workers as independent contractors deny the workers of
11    Illinois basic labor standards, including wage and hour
12    protections, health and safety standards, workers'
13    compensation, retirement security, and unemployment
14    insurance. Misclassification robs workers of their
15    livelihood and basic protections, while padding the
16    pockets of violators and draining public funds.

 

 

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1        (2) Misclassification also results in workers and
2    their families being excluded from critical paid sick
3    time, paid family and medical leave, and health insurance
4    benefits.
5        (3) The misclassification of workers as independent
6    contractors has been a significant factor in the erosion
7    of the middle class and the rise in income inequality.
8        (4) The misclassification of workers as independent
9    contractors allows unscrupulous employers and hiring
10    entities to gain an unfair advantage over employers that
11    obey the law. It also allows such employers to shift the
12    cost of providing benefits such as a safe workplace,
13    retirement security, and unemployment insurance to
14    governmental bodies and, ultimately, the taxpayers.
15        (5) It is the intent of the General Assembly in
16    enacting this Act to ensure that workers who are currently
17    exploited by being misclassified as independent
18    contractors instead of recognized as employees have the
19    basic rights and protections they deserve under the law,
20    including a minimum wage and overtime pay, workers'
21    compensation if they are injured on the job, unemployment
22    insurance, and any other benefits and protections the
23    General Assembly provides to workers recognized as
24    employees. This Act restores these important protections
25    to workers who have been denied these basic workplace
26    rights that all workers are entitled to under the law. It

 

 

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1    is also the intent of the General Assembly to ensure that
2    companies that rely on Illinois workers to operate their
3    businesses pay their fair share into the Illinois
4    unemployment insurance program so that their workers, and
5    all Illinois workers, can count on a solvent fund during
6    economic downturns.
7        (6) It is further the intent of the General Assembly
8    to establish a clear standard for determining the
9    classification of a worker in order to provide stability
10    and certainty to both workers and Illinois employers.
11        (7) Therefore, the government has an obligation to
12    curb employee misclassification throughout the economy,
13    take proactive measures to enforce long-standing
14    employment laws that establish basic protections for
15    Illinois' workers through the enactment of this Act, to
16    empower workers to assert their rights under the law, and
17    to establish a level playing field for employers who obey
18    the employment laws.
19        (8) Nothing in this Act is intended to diminish the
20    flexibility of employees to work part-time or intermittent
21    schedules or to work for multiple employers.
22        (9) Nothing in this Act shall be construed to wholly
23    eliminate the independent contractor status where the
24    classification is in accordance with this Act.
 
25    Section 10. Definitions. In this Act:

 

 

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1    "Business service provider" means a business entity that
2is not a hiring entity that is formed as a sole proprietorship,
3partnership, limited liability company, limited liability
4partnership, or corporation.
5    "Contracting business" means a hiring entity or business
6service provider that has contracted with another business
7service provider.
8    "Department" means the Department of Labor.
9    "Domestic work" means housekeeping, house cleaning, home
10management, nanny services including childcare and child
11monitoring, caregiving, personal care or home health services
12for elderly persons or persons with an illness, injury, or
13disability who require assistance in caring for themselves,
14laundering, cooking, companion services, chauffeuring, or
15other household services for members of households or their
16guests in or about a private home or residence or any other
17location where domestic work is performed any workweek on a
18regular basis.
19    "Domestic worker" means any individual who performs
20domestic work.
21    "Family member" means a child, spouse, parent, child or
22parent of an employee's spouse, sibling, grandparent,
23grandchild, or any other individual related by blood or whose
24close association with the employee is the equivalent of a
25family relationship as determined by the employee.
26     "Employer" means any individual or entity that employs

 

 

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1individuals, including domestic workers, deemed employees
2under this Act. "Employer" includes any individual or entity
3acting directly or indirectly in the interest of an employer
4with the authority, whether reserved or exercised, over the
5workers' wages, hours, and other terms and conditions of
6employment. "Employer" may include any such entity that
7contracts for services or pays for the services of a worker
8through an oral or written contract or application software
9designed to run on smartphones and other mobile devices or
10software designed to run inside a web browser. "Employer" also
11includes the State of Illinois and all other governmental
12entities. "Employer" excludes employers who are subject to the
13Employee Classification Act and further excludes the federal
14government.
15    "Hiring entity" means any individual, partnership,
16association, corporation, business trust, or any entity,
17person, or group of persons that pays a wage or pays for the
18services of individuals or domestic workers, including
19employers. "Hiring entity" also means any such entity or
20person acting directly or indirectly in the interest of a
21hiring entity in relation to the individual. "Hiring entity"
22also includes the State of Illinois and other governmental
23entities except for the federal government.
24    "Interested party" means a person or organization with an
25interest in compliance with this Act.
26    "Professional services" means any of the following:

 

 

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1        (1) professional services provided by writers;
2        (2) professional services provided by graphic
3    designers;
4        (3) professional services provided by webpage and
5    digital designers;
6        (4) professional services provided by animators,
7    illustrators, industrial product designers, interior
8    designers, or fashion designers;
9        (5) professional services provided by fine artists;
10        (6) professional services provided by photographers;
11        (7) professional services provided by journalists,
12    freelance digital media workers, videographers, and audio
13    or podcast producers;
14        (8) professional services provided by software
15    engineers;
16        (9) professional services provided by a direct seller
17    as described in Section 217(b) of the Unemployment
18    Insurance Act, so long as the conditions of that section
19    are satisfied;
20        (10) professional services provided by a travel
21    promoter under the Travel Promotion Consumer Protection
22    Act; or
23        (11) a profession, trade, or occupation licensed and
24    regulated by the Department of Financial and Professional
25    Regulation, Department of Insurance, or the Illinois
26    Supreme Court Attorney Registration and Disciplinary

 

 

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1    Commission, if employment in such occupation is exempted
2    from Sections 206 and 207 of Title 29 of the United States
3    Code as employment in a bona fide professional capacity.
4    "Retaliate" means to:
5        (1) discharge;
6        (2) demote or decline to promote;
7        (3) deactivate or otherwise prevent an individual from
8    returning to work;
9        (4) reassign;
10        (5) willfully prevent or attempt to prevent an
11    individual from securing other employment or work by word,
12    writing, or other action;
13        (6) harass;
14        (7) reduce worker hours;
15        (8) reduce worker pay;
16        (9) report or threaten to report an employee or hired
17    individual, or former employee or hired individual, for
18    suspected immigration or work authorization status;
19        (10) report or threaten to report the suspected
20    immigration or work authorization status of a family
21    member of an employee or hired individual, or a former
22    employee or hired individual, to a federal, State, or
23    local agency; or
24        (11) take any other action, including threatening to
25    take action against an employee or any other person for
26    exercising or attempting to exercise any right under this

 

 

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1    Act if that action or threat would dissuade a reasonable
2    employee or person from making a complaint, bringing an
3    action or proceeding, cooperating in an investigation for
4    the purposes of enforcing this Act, participating in an
5    action or proceeding concerning the exercise or waiver of
6    any right under this Act, any right of employees, or any
7    right of individuals who experience misclassification, as
8    required under a local, State, or federal law.
9    "Willfully violates" means a hiring entity knew or should
10have known that its conduct was prohibited by this Act.
 
11    Section 15. Presumption of employment.
12    (a) Any person performing any services for a hiring entity
13other than professional services or an individual who is the
14child, parent, sibling, or spouse of the hiring entity or its
15owner, shall be classified as an employee of the hiring
16entity, and the hiring entity shall be deemed an employer
17unless it can be shown by the hiring entity that the person is
18a separate business entity under subsection (b) or all of the
19following criteria are met, in which case the person shall be
20an independent contractor:
21        (1) the individual has been and will continue to be
22    free from control or direction over the performance of
23    such services, both under the individual's contract of
24    service and in fact; and
25        (2) the service is either outside the usual course of

 

 

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1    the business for which such service is performed or that
2    such service is performed outside of all the places of
3    business of the enterprise for which such service is
4    performed; and
5        (3) the individual is engaged in an independently
6    established trade, occupation, profession, or business.
7    (b) If a business service provider contracts to provide
8services to a contracting business, the business services
9provider shall be considered an independent contractor only if
10the contracting business demonstrates that all of the
11following criteria are satisfied:
12        (1) the business service provider is free from the
13    control and direction of the contracting business in
14    connection with the performance of the work, both under
15    the contract for the performance of the work and in fact;
16        (2) the business service provider is providing
17    services directly to the contracting business rather than
18    to customers of the contracting business;
19        (3) the contract with the business service provider is
20    in writing;
21        (4) if the work performed requires the business
22    service provider to have a business license or business
23    tax registration, the business service provider has the
24    required business license or business tax registration;
25        (5) the business service provider holds itself out as
26    a distinct business;

 

 

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1        (6) the business service provider maintains a business
2    location that is separate from the business or work
3    location of the contracting business;
4        (7) the business service provider is customarily
5    engaged in an independently established business of the
6    same nature as that involved in the work performed;
7        (8) the business service provider contracts with other
8    businesses to provide the same or similar services and
9    maintains a clientele without restrictions from the
10    contracting business;
11        (9) the business service provider has a substantial
12    investment of capital in its own business entity beyond
13    ordinary tools and equipment and a vehicle, such as a
14    website or website business listings for the business
15    entity, business cards, dedicated workspace apart from a
16    vehicle, trademarks, general liability insurance for the
17    business entity, or business or professional software, and
18    not including any payments for access to an application
19    through which work is distributed;
20        (10) the business service provider provides its own
21    tools, vehicles, and equipment to perform the services;
22        (11) the business service provider can negotiate its
23    own rates;
24        (12) consistent with the nature of the work, the
25    business service provider can set its own hours and
26    location of work; and

 

 

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1        (13) the business service provider's services are
2    either outside the usual course of the contracting
3    business's business or performed outside all places of the
4    contracting business's business.
5    (c) The failure of a hiring entity to withhold federal or
6State income taxes or to pay unemployment insurance
7contributions or workers' compensation premiums with respect
8to an individual's wages shall not be considered in making a
9determination under this Section.
10    (d) An individual's act of securing workers' compensation
11or liability insurance as a sole proprietor, partnership, or
12otherwise shall not be binding on any determination under this
13Section.
14    (e) When a business service provider meets the definition
15of an independent contractor pursuant to this Section, the
16business service provider shall be considered a hiring entity
17subject to all of the provisions of this Act in regard to
18classification of individuals performing services for it.
19    (f) A professional services provider shall be considered
20an independent contractor only if the hiring entity
21demonstrates that all of the following factors are met:
22        (1) the professional services provider maintains a
23    business location, which may include the individual's
24    residence, that is separate from the hiring entity,
25    however, nothing in this Section prohibits an individual
26    from choosing to perform services at the location of the

 

 

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1    hiring entity;
2        (2) the professional services provider has any license
3    or permit required by law for the individual to practice
4    his or her profession;
5        (3) the professional services provider has the ability
6    to set or negotiate his or her own rates for the services
7    performed;
8        (4) outside of project completion dates, timing that
9    is inherent in the project itself, and reasonable business
10    hours, the professional services provider has the ability
11    to set his or her own hours;
12        (5) the professional services provider is customarily
13    engaged in the same type of work performed under contract
14    with another hiring entity or holds himself or herself out
15    to other potential hiring entities as available to perform
16    the same type of work; and
17        (6) the professional services provider customarily and
18    regularly exercises discretion and independent judgment in
19    the performance of the services.
20    (g) Any individual classified by a hiring entity or
21employer as an employee shall enjoy an irrebuttable
22presumption of employee status under the laws of this State.
 
23    Section 20. Failure to properly designate or classify
24individuals performing services as employees. It is a
25violation of this Act for an employer not to designate an

 

 

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1individual as an employee unless the employer satisfies the
2applicable provisions of Section 15.
 
3    Section 22. Flexibility to work.
4    (a) Any individual reclassified as an employee pursuant to
5this Act has the right to maintain the same schedule and
6scheduling flexibility that the individual possessed at any
7time while performing labor for the employer as an independent
8contractor in the 12-month period prior to the effective date
9of this Act. As used in this Section, "scheduling flexibility"
10includes:
11        (1) the timing of the work throughout an hour, day,
12    week, month or year;
13        (2) the total duration of the work in any given
14    period; and
15        (3) the location where the work is performed.
16    (b) It shall be considered an unlawful employment practice
17under Section 25 to deny a reclassified individual this right
18to scheduling flexibility.
 
19    Section 25. Unlawful employment practices; preservation of
20employment status.
21    (a) No hiring entity, or his or her agent, or person acting
22as or on behalf of a hiring entity shall discharge, threaten,
23penalize, or in any other manner discriminate or retaliate
24against any employee or hired individual because the employee

 

 

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1or hired individual:
2        (1) exercises rights or attempts to exercise rights
3    under this Act;
4        (2) opposes practices which such individual believes
5    to be in violation of this Act; or
6        (3) supports the exercise of rights of another under
7    this Act.
8    (b)Such unlawful employment practices include, but are not
9limited to, any reference to the individual's or any of the
10individual's family members' citizenship or immigration
11status, or any threat to contact or actual contact with any
12local, State, or federal government entities regarding the
13individual's or any of the individual's family members'
14citizenship or immigration status, or sexual harassment.
15    (c) Exercising rights under this Act includes:
16        (1) when such employee or hired individual has made a
17    complaint to his or her hiring entity, or to the
18    Department or its authorized representative, or to the
19    Attorney General or any other person or organization, that
20    the hiring entity or other person has engaged in conduct
21    that the employee or hired individual, in good faith,
22    believes violates any provision of this Act or any rule
23    adopted by the Department to enforce this Act;
24        (2) when such hiring entity or his or her agent, or
25    person acting on behalf of a hiring entity, believes such
26    employee or hired individual has made a complaint to his

 

 

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1    or her hiring entity, to the Department or its authorized
2    representative, or to the Attorney General or any other
3    person or organization, that the hiring entity or other
4    person has engaged in conduct that the employee or hired
5    individual, in good faith, believes violates any provision
6    of this Act, or any rule adopted by the Department to
7    enforce this Act;
8        (3) when such employee or hired individual has caused
9    to be instituted or is about to institute a proceeding
10    under or related to this Act;
11        (4) when such employee or hired individual has
12    provided information to the Department or the Attorney
13    General;
14        (5) when such employee or hired individual has
15    testified or plans to testify in an investigation or
16    proceeding under this Act;
17        (6) when such employee or hired individual has
18    otherwise exercised rights protected under this Act;
19        (7) when the hiring entity or other person has
20    received an adverse determination from the Department
21    involving the employee or hired individual;
22        (8) when such employee or hired individual has refused
23    or declined to waive his or her rights under this Act; or
24        (9) when such employee or hired individual has
25    otherwise exercised or attempted to exercise his or her
26    rights under local or State laws governing the payment of

 

 

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1    wages, the rights of employees, or the rights of
2    individuals who experience misclassification or the hiring
3    entity or other person believes that such employee or
4    hired individual has exercised, attempted to exercise, or
5    plans to exercise such rights.
6    (d) No provision of this Act shall permit an employer to
7reclassify an individual who was an employee on the effective
8date of this Act as an independent contractor or reclassify a
9worker who receives gratuities, as defined under the Minimum
10Wage Law, based solely or in part on this Act.
 
11    Section 30. Notice to individuals receiving pay for hire.
12    (a) Every hiring entity shall post or distribute in a
13prominent and accessible manner a legible statement, provided
14by the Department, that describes the responsibility of
15independent contractors to pay taxes required by State and
16federal law, the rights of employees to workers' compensation,
17unemployment benefits, minimum wage, overtime and other
18federal and State workplace protections, the protections
19against retaliation, and the penalties under this Act if the
20hiring entity fails to properly classify an individual as an
21employee. This notice shall also contain contact information
22for individuals to file complaints or inquire with the
23Department about employment classification status. This
24information shall be provided in English, Spanish, and other
25languages that are spoken as a primary language by a

 

 

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1significant portion of the workers in a place of employment or
2by a significant portion of the State's population, as
3determined by the Department.
4    (b) Within 30 days of the effective date of this Act, the
5Department shall create the notice described in subsection (a)
6and post the notice on the Department's website for
7downloading by hiring entities.
8    (c) Any hiring entity that violates this Section shall be
9subject to a civil penalty of up to $1,500 for a first
10violation and up to $5,000 for a subsequent violation and any
11additional violations thereafter.
 
12    Section 35. Enforcement.
13    (a) Any interested party that believes that a hiring
14entity or employer is in violation of this Act may file a
15complaint with the Department against the hiring entity or
16employer covered under this Act. It is the duty of the
17Department to enforce the provisions of this Act either on the
18basis of a complaint received or a random audit conducted by
19the Department. The Department has the power to conduct random
20audits of entities subject to this Act to determine compliance
21with this Act. The Department has the power to conduct
22investigations in connection with the administration and
23enforcement of this Act and any investigator with the
24Department is authorized to visit and inspect, at all
25reasonable times, any places covered by this Act and is

 

 

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1authorized to inspect, at all reasonable times, documents
2deemed by the Department to be relevant to the determination
3of whether an individual is an employee under this Act. The
4Department may compel, by subpoena, the attendance and
5testimony of witnesses and the production of books, payrolls,
6records, papers, and other evidence in any investigation and
7may administer oaths to witnesses. The Department's
8investigation may exceed the scope of the allegations,
9persons, and entities contained in a complaint.
10    (b) Complaints under this Section must be filed within 5
11years after the final date of performing services to the
12hiring entity.
13    (c) Whenever the Department believes upon investigation
14that there has been a violation of any of the provisions of
15this Act or any rules adopted under this Act, the Department
16may:
17        (1) issue and cause to be served on any party an order
18    to cease and desist from further violation of the Act;
19        (2) take affirmative or other action as deemed
20    reasonable to eliminate the effect of the violation;
21        (3) collect the amount of any wages, salary,
22    employment benefits, or other compensation denied or lost
23    to the individual; and
24        (4) assess any civil penalty allowed by this Act.
25    (d) If, upon investigation, the Department finds cause to
26believe that Section 15 or Section 20 of this Act has been

 

 

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1violated, the Department shall notify the hiring entity, in
2writing, of its finding and any relief due and penalties
3assessed and that the matter will be referred to an
4Administrative Law Judge to schedule a formal hearing in
5accordance with the Illinois Administrative Procedure Act.
6    (e) A final decision by an Administrative Law Judge issued
7in accordance with this Section is subject to the provisions
8of the Administrative Review Law and shall be enforceable in
9an action brought in the name of the people of the State of
10Illinois by the Attorney General or by any other interested
11party.
 
12    Section 40. Penalties.
13    (a) Whenever the Department believes upon investigation
14that there has been a violation of this Act or any rules
15adopted in accordance with this Act, the Department may:
16        (1) issue and cause to be served on any party an order
17    to cease and desist from further violation of the Act;
18        (2) take affirmative or other action as deemed
19    reasonable to eliminate the effect of the violation;
20        (3) collect the amount of any wages, salary,
21    employment benefits, or other compensation denied or lost
22    to the individual; and
23        (4) assess any civil penalty allowed by this Act.
24    (b) The civil penalties set forth in this Section shall be
25imposed as follows: by the Department when such penalty is

 

 

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1based on a violation of this Act; by the chair of the Illinois
2Workers' Compensation Commission when such penalty is based on
3a violation of workers' compensation law; and by the Director
4of the Department of Revenue when such penalty is based on a
5violation of tax law, provided that no more than one civil
6penalty under this Section may be imposed per employee per
7incident of misclassification.
8    (c) Any hiring entity who fails to properly classify an
9individual as an employee as provided under this Act shall be
10subject to a civil penalty of up to $2,500 for the first
11violation per misclassified employee and to a civil penalty of
12up to $5,000 for each subsequent violation per misclassified
13employee. In determining the amount of the penalty, the
14Department shall consider the appropriateness of the penalty
15to the hiring entity charged and the gravity of the violation.
16    (d) Any hiring entity that willfully fails to properly
17classify an individual as provided under this Act shall be
18subject to a civil penalty of an additional $2,500 for the
19first violation per misclassified employee and to an
20additional civil penalty of up to $5,000 for each subsequent
21violation per misclassified employee within a 5-year period.
22    (e) If the hiring entity is a corporation, any officer of
23such corporation or shareholder who owns or controls at least
2410% of the outstanding stock of such corporation who knowingly
25permits the corporation to violate the provisions of this Act
26shall also be in violation of this Act and the civil penalties

 

 

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1herein shall attach to such officer.
2    (f) Any hiring entity subject to civil penalties under
3this Act shall also be subject to any other applicable
4penalties or remedies provided by law for failure to pay any
5other statutory payment or coverage obligations, including,
6but not limited to, unemployment insurance, workers'
7compensation insurance, and corporate or personal income tax.
8    (g) Any hiring entity or any officer or shareholder who
9owns or controls at least 10% of the outstanding stock of such
10corporation that has been convicted of a misdemeanor shall be
11subject to debarment and be ineligible to submit a bid on or be
12awarded any public works contract under the Illinois
13Procurement Code with the State, any municipal corporation,
14public benefit corporation, public authority, or public body
15for a period of up to one year from the date of a first such
16conviction or final determination and up to 5 years from the
17date of any subsequent violation.
18    (h) In addition to any other remedies available, an action
19for injunctive relief to prevent the continued
20misclassification of employees as independent contractors may
21be prosecuted against the putative employer in court by the
22Attorney General or by a State's Attorney upon his or her own
23complaint or upon the complaint of an interested party.
24    (i) Nothing in this Section limits the availability of
25other remedies at law or in equity for a violation of this Act.
26    (j) Penalties imposed shall be collected by the Department

 

 

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1and deposited into the Day and Temporary Labor Services
2Enforcement Fund.
 
3    Section 45. Private right of action.
4    (a) An interested party or person aggrieved by a violation
5of this Act or any rule adopted under this Act by a hiring
6entity that is not the State of Illinois or its officers,
7agencies, or political subdivisions may file suit in circuit
8court in the county where the alleged offense occurred or
9where any person who is party to the action resides without
10regard to exhaustion of any administrative remedies. If a
11complaint filed against the State of Illinois or its officers,
12agencies, or political subdivisions with the Department
13pursuant to Section 45 of this Act has been pending for more
14than 75 days with the Department, that interested party or
15person aggrieved may file suit in circuit court in the county
16where the alleged offense occurred or where any person who is
17party to the action resides without regard to exhaustion of
18administrative remedies. Actions may be brought by one or more
19persons for and on behalf of themselves and other persons
20similarly situated. A person whose rights have been violated
21under this Act by a hiring entity is entitled to collect:
22        (1) the amount of any wages, salary, employment
23    benefits, or other compensation denied or lost to the
24    person by reason of the violation, plus an equal amount in
25    liquidated damages;

 

 

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1        (2) civil penalties pursuant to subsection (d);
2        (3) in the case of unlawful retaliation, all legal or
3    equitable relief as may be appropriate, including, but not
4    limited to, reinstatement to the worker's former position
5    or its equivalent, an award of lost compensation or front
6    pay, and restitution and liquidated damages equal to the
7    economic compensation lost due to the retaliation; and
8        (4) the costs and reasonable attorney's fees of
9    pursuing the cause of action.
10    (b) The Court may order appropriate injunctive relief.
11    (c) The right of an interested party or aggrieved person
12to bring an action under this Section terminates upon the
13passing of 5 years from the final date of performing services
14to the hiring entity. This limitations period is tolled if the
15hiring entity has deterred a person's exercise of rights under
16this Act or during the time a complaint is pending before the
17Department.
18    (d) An employee or hired individual may seek the civil
19penalties provided under Section 35 of this Act if, at the
20commencement of the action, a copy of the complaint is served
21on the Department and the Department has declined or failed to
22initiate an investigation. The commencement of an action under
23this Section shall terminate the administrative proceeding
24before the Department. The Department shall be granted
25intervenor status as of right if sought by the Department
26within 30 days of the service of the complaint for the purpose

 

 

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1of collecting civil penalties under Section 35 of this Act.
2Any award of civil penalties obtained as a result of an action
3brought under this Section by an aggrieved employee or hired
4individual, on behalf of themselves or others similarly
5situated shall be awarded in the name of the State, of which
6the plaintiff shall be entitled to a 25% allotment, in
7addition to the other relief that may be recovered under this
8Section.
 
9    Section 55. Contempt. Whenever it appears that any hiring
10entity has violated a valid order or any final determination
11from the Department issued under this Act, the Department
12shall refer the matter to the Attorney General who shall
13commence an action and obtain from the court an order
14commanding the hiring entity to obey the order of the
15Department or be adjudged guilty of contempt of court and
16punished accordingly.
 
17    Section 60. Rulemaking. The Department may adopt
18reasonable rules to implement and administer this Act. For
19purposes of this Act, the General Assembly finds that the
20adoption of rules to implement this Act is deemed an emergency
21and necessary for the public interest and welfare.
 
22    Section 65. No waivers. There shall be no waiver of any
23provision of this Act. Any such waiver shall be considered an

 

 

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1unlawful employment practice under Section 25.
 
2    Section 67. Conflict of law. To the extent that any
3provision of this Act conflicts with any Act that seeks to
4define employee, the provisions of this Act shall control,
5except for the Unemployment Insurance Act which shall control
6for the purposes of administering unemployment insurance
7benefits only.
 
8    Section 70. Cooperation. The Department, the Department of
9Employment Security, the Department of Revenue, and the
10Illinois Workers' Compensation Commission shall cooperate
11under this Act by sharing information concerning any suspected
12misclassification by a hiring entity of one or more of its
13employees as independent contractors. Upon determining that a
14hiring entity has misclassified employees as independent
15contractors in violation of this Act, the Department shall
16notify the Department of Employment Security, the Department
17of Revenue, the Office of the State Comptroller, and the
18Illinois Workers' Compensation Commission each of which shall
19be obliged to check such hiring entity's compliance with laws
20it administers, utilizing its own definitions, standards, and
21procedures.
 
22    Section 75. Waiver of sovereign immunity. For the purposes
23of this Act, the State of Illinois waives sovereign immunity.
 

 

 

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1    Section 90. The Illinois Administrative Procedure Act is
2amended by adding Section 5-45.8 as follows:
 
3    (5 ILCS 100/5-45.8 new)
4    Sec. 5-45.8. Emergency rulemaking; Fair Play in Employment
5Act. To provide for the expeditious and timely implementation
6of the Fair Play in Employment Act, emergency rules
7implementing that Act may be adopted in accordance with
8Section 5-45 by the Department of Labor. The adoption of
9emergency rules authorized by Section 5-45 and this Section is
10deemed to be necessary for the public interest, safety, and
11welfare.
12    This Section is repealed on January 1, 2027.".