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Sen. Mattie Hunter
Filed: 4/6/2021
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1 | | AMENDMENT TO SENATE BILL 1838
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2 | | AMENDMENT NO. ______. Amend Senate Bill 1838 by replacing |
3 | | everything after the enacting clause with the following:
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4 | | "Section 5. The Illinois Freedom to Work Act is amended by |
5 | | changing Sections 5 and 10 and by adding Sections 7, 15, 20, |
6 | | 25, 30, and 35 as follows: |
7 | | (820 ILCS 90/5)
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8 | | Sec. 5. Definitions. In this Act: |
9 | | "Adequate consideration" means (1) the employee worked for |
10 | | the employer for at least 2 years after the employee signed an |
11 | | agreement containing a covenant not to compete or a covenant |
12 | | not to solicit or (2) the employer otherwise provided |
13 | | consideration adequate to support an agreement to not compete |
14 | | or to not solicit, which could consist of a period of |
15 | | employment plus additional consideration or merely other |
16 | | consideration adequate by itself. |
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1 | | "Covenant not to compete" means an agreement: |
2 | | (1) between an employer and an a low-wage employee |
3 | | that restricts the such low-wage employee from performing: |
4 | | (A) any work for another employer for a specified |
5 | | period of time; |
6 | | (B) any work in a specified geographical area; or |
7 | | (C) work for another employer that is similar to |
8 | | the such low-wage employee's work for the employer |
9 | | included as a party to the agreement; and
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10 | | (2) that is entered into after the effective date of |
11 | | this Act. |
12 | | "Covenant not to compete" also means an agreement between |
13 | | an employer and an employee, entered into after the effective |
14 | | date of this amendatory Act of the 102nd General Assembly, |
15 | | that by its terms imposes adverse financial consequences on a |
16 | | former employee if the employee engages in competitive |
17 | | activities after the termination of the employee's employment |
18 | | with the employer. "Covenant not to compete" does not include |
19 | | (i) a covenant not to solicit, (ii) a confidentiality |
20 | | agreement or covenant, (iii) a covenant or agreement |
21 | | prohibiting use or disclosure of trade secrets or inventions, |
22 | | (iv) invention assignment agreements or covenants, (v) a |
23 | | covenant or agreement entered into by a person purchasing or |
24 | | selling the goodwill of a business or otherwise acquiring or |
25 | | disposing of an ownership interest, (vi) clauses or an |
26 | | agreement between an employer and an employee requiring |
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1 | | advance notice of termination of employment, during which |
2 | | notice period the employee remains employed by the employer |
3 | | and receives compensation, or (vii) agreements by which the |
4 | | employee agrees not to reapply for employment to the same |
5 | | employer after termination of the employee. |
6 | | "Covenant not to solicit" means an agreement that is |
7 | | entered into after the effective date of this amendatory Act |
8 | | of the 102nd General Assembly between an employer and an |
9 | | employee that (i) restricts the employee from soliciting for |
10 | | employment the employer's employees or (ii) restricts the |
11 | | employee from soliciting for the purpose of selling products |
12 | | or services of any kind to, or from interfering with the |
13 | | employer's relationships with, the employer's clients, |
14 | | prospective clients, vendors, prospective vendors, suppliers, |
15 | | prospective suppliers, or other business relationships. |
16 | | "Earnings" means the compensation, including earned |
17 | | salary, earned bonuses, earned commissions, or any other form |
18 | | of taxable compensation, reflected or that is expected to be |
19 | | reflected as wages, tips, and other compensation on the |
20 | | employee's IRS Form W-2 plus any elective deferrals not |
21 | | reflected as wages, tips, and other compensation on the |
22 | | employee's IRS Form W-2, such as, without limitation, employee |
23 | | contributions to a 401(k) plan, a 403(b) plan, a flexible |
24 | | spending account, or a health savings account, or commuter |
25 | | benefit-related deductions. |
26 | | "Employee" has the meaning ascribed to that term in |
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1 | | Section 2 of the Illinois Wage Payment and Collection Act and |
2 | | includes individuals currently or formerly employed by an |
3 | | employer. |
4 | | "Employer" has the meaning given to such term in |
5 | | subsection (c) of Section 3 of the Minimum Wage Law. |
6 | | "Employer" does not include governmental or quasi-governmental |
7 | | bodies. |
8 | | "Low-wage employee" means an employee whose earnings do |
9 | | not exceed the greater of (1) the hourly rate equal to the |
10 | | minimum wage required by the applicable federal, State, or |
11 | | local minimum wage law or (2) $13.00 per hour.
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12 | | (Source: P.A. 99-860, eff. 1-1-17; 100-225, eff. 8-18-17.) |
13 | | (820 ILCS 90/7 new) |
14 | | Sec. 7. Legitimate business interest of the employer. In |
15 | | determining the legitimate business interest of the employer |
16 | | (consistent with the decision of the Supreme Court of Illinois |
17 | | in Reliable Fire Equipment Company v. Arredondo, 2011 IL |
18 | | 111871), the totality of the facts and circumstances of the |
19 | | individual case shall be considered. Factors that may be |
20 | | considered in this analysis include, but are not limited to, |
21 | | the employee's exposure to the employer's customer |
22 | | relationships or other employees, the near-permanence of |
23 | | customer relationships, the employee's acquisition, use, or |
24 | | knowledge of confidential information through the employee's |
25 | | employment, the time restrictions, the place restrictions, and |
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1 | | the scope of the activity restrictions. No factor carries any |
2 | | more weight than any other, but rather its importance will |
3 | | depend on the specific facts and circumstances of the |
4 | | individual case. Such factors are only nonconclusive aids in |
5 | | determining the employer's legitimate business interest, which |
6 | | in turn is but one component in the three-prong rule of reason, |
7 | | grounded in the totality of the circumstances. Each situation |
8 | | must be determined on its own particular facts. Reasonableness |
9 | | is gauged not just by some but by all of the circumstances. The |
10 | | same identical contract and restraint may be reasonable and |
11 | | valid under one set of circumstances and unreasonable and |
12 | | invalid under another set of circumstances. |
13 | | (820 ILCS 90/10)
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14 | | Sec. 10. Prohibiting covenants not to compete for low-wage |
15 | | employees. |
16 | | (a) A covenant not to compete shall not be valid or |
17 | | enforceable unless the employee's actual or expected |
18 | | annualized rate of earnings exceeds $75,000 per year. This |
19 | | figure shall increase to $80,000 per year beginning on January |
20 | | 1, 2027, $85,000 per year beginning on January 1, 2032, and |
21 | | $90,000 per year beginning on January 1, 2037. No employer |
22 | | shall enter into a covenant not to compete with any low-wage |
23 | | employee of the employer. |
24 | | (b) A covenant not to solicit shall not be valid or |
25 | | enforceable unless the employee's actual or expected |
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1 | | annualized rate of earnings exceeds $45,000 per year. This |
2 | | figure shall increase to $47,500 per year beginning on January |
3 | | 1, 2027, $50,000 per year beginning on January 1, 2032, and |
4 | | $52,500 per year beginning on January 1, 2037. A covenant not |
5 | | to compete entered into between an employer and a low-wage |
6 | | employee is illegal and void.
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7 | | (c) A covenant not to compete is void and illegal for any |
8 | | employee who an employer terminates or furloughs or lays off |
9 | | as the result of business circumstances or governmental orders |
10 | | related to the COVID-19 pandemic, or under circumstances that |
11 | | are similar to the COVID-19 pandemic, unless enforcement of |
12 | | the covenant not to compete includes compensation equivalent |
13 | | to the employee's base salary at the time of termination for |
14 | | the period of enforcement minus compensation earned through |
15 | | subsequent employment during the period of enforcement. |
16 | | (d) A covenant not to compete is void and illegal for |
17 | | individuals covered by a collective bargaining agreement under |
18 | | the Illinois Public Labor Relations Act or the Illinois |
19 | | Educational Labor Relations Act. |
20 | | (Source: P.A. 99-860, eff. 1-1-17 .) |
21 | | (820 ILCS 90/15 new) |
22 | | Sec. 15. Enforceability of a covenant not to compete or a |
23 | | covenant not to solicit. A covenant not to compete or a |
24 | | covenant not to solicit is illegal and void unless (i) the |
25 | | employee receives adequate consideration, (ii) the covenant is |
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1 | | ancillary to a valid employment relationship, (iii) the |
2 | | covenant is no greater than is required for the protection of a |
3 | | legitimate business interest of the employer, (iv) the |
4 | | covenant does not impose undue hardship on the employee, and |
5 | | (v) the covenant is not injurious to the public. |
6 | | (820 ILCS 90/20 new) |
7 | | Sec. 20. Ensuring employees are informed about their |
8 | | obligations. A covenant not to compete or a covenant not to |
9 | | solicit is illegal and void unless (i) the employer advises |
10 | | the employee in writing to consult with an attorney before |
11 | | entering into the covenant and (ii) the employer provides the |
12 | | employee with a copy of the covenant at least 14 calendar days |
13 | | before the commencement of the employee's employment or the |
14 | | employer provides the employee with at least 14 calendar days |
15 | | to review the covenant. An employer is in compliance with this |
16 | | Section even if the employee voluntarily elects to sign the |
17 | | covenant before the expiration of the 14-day period. |
18 | | (820 ILCS 90/25 new) |
19 | | Sec. 25. Remedies. In addition to any remedies available |
20 | | under any agreement between an employer and an employee or |
21 | | under any other statute, in a civil action or arbitration |
22 | | filed by an employer (including, but not limited to, a |
23 | | complaint or counterclaim), if an employee prevails on a claim |
24 | | to enforce a covenant not to compete or a covenant not to |
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1 | | solicit, the employee shall recover from the employer all |
2 | | costs and all reasonable attorney's fees regarding such claim |
3 | | to enforce a covenant not to compete or a covenant not to |
4 | | solicit. |
5 | | (820 ILCS 90/30 new) |
6 | | Sec. 30. Reformation. |
7 | | (a) Extensive judicial reformation of a covenant not to |
8 | | compete or a covenant not to solicit may be against the public |
9 | | policy of this State and a court may refrain from wholly |
10 | | rewriting contracts. |
11 | | (b) In some circumstances, a court may, in its discretion, |
12 | | choose to reform or sever provisions of a covenant not to |
13 | | compete or a covenant not to solicit rather than hold such |
14 | | covenant unenforceable. Factors which may be considered when |
15 | | deciding whether such reformation is appropriate include the |
16 | | fairness of the restraints as originally written, whether the |
17 | | original restriction reflects a good-faith effort to protect a |
18 | | legitimate business interest of the employer, the extent of |
19 | | such reformation, and whether the parties included a clause |
20 | | authorizing such modifications in their agreement. |
21 | | (820 ILCS 90/35 new) |
22 | | Sec. 35. Severability. The provisions of this Act are |
23 | | severable under Section 1.31 of the Statute on Statutes.
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