Rep. Lilian Jiménez

Filed: 3/21/2023

 

 


 

 


 
10300HB3131ham001LRB103 26027 SPS 59568 a

1
AMENDMENT TO HOUSE BILL 3131

2    AMENDMENT NO. ______. Amend House Bill 3131 by replacing
3everything after the enacting clause with the following:
 
4    "Section 1. Short title. This Act may be cited as the
5Workplace Safety Committees Act.
 
6    Section 5. Findings. The General Assembly finds that
7hundreds of thousands of Illinois workers have contracted the
8disease related to the COVID-19 virus in the workplace, and
9that also hundreds are disabled each year from work-related
10injuries and diseases. The General Assembly finds that many
11COVID-19 infections, deaths, and workplace injury and illness
12losses are needless, costly, and could have been prevented.
13The General Assembly concludes that the establishment of joint
14management and worker safety committees will help prevent such
15losses and may reduce workers' compensation costs in this
16State.
 

 

 

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1    Section 10. Purpose. It is the purpose of this Act to bring
2workers and management together in a non-adversarial,
3cooperative effort to promote safety and health in the
4workplace. The workplace safety committees established by this
5Act shall consist of management and employee representatives
6who have an interest in the general promotion of safety and
7health in the workplace.
 
8    Section 15. Establishment of safety committees.
9    (a) Every public and private employer of 30 or more
10employees located in Illinois shall establish and administer a
11safety committee.
12    (b) To determine the employment levels under subsection
13(a), the employer shall count all permanent, contract,
14temporary, and seasonal workers under the employer's direction
15and control and shall base the number on peak employment.
16    (c) Temporary services employers and labor contractors
17shall establish safety committees based upon the total number
18of workers over which the employer or contractor exercises
19direction and control.
20    (d) Employers who hire only seasonal workers shall hold
21crew safety meetings prior to the commencement of the season
22at each job site. The meetings shall promote discussions of
23safety and health issues. All workers shall be informed of
24their right to inspect and report workplace hazards and shall

 

 

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1be encouraged to make those inspections and reports during the
2meetings according to provisions established in the federal
3Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1970.
 
4    Section 20. Location of safety committees.
5    (a) Safety committees shall be established at each of an
6employer's primary places of employment. As used in this Act,
7"primary place of employment" means a major economic unit at a
8single geographic location, comprised of a building or group
9of buildings, and all surrounding facilities, having the
10following characteristics: it has both management and workers
11present; it has control over a portion of a budget; and it has
12the ability to take action on the majority of the
13recommendations made by a safety committee.
14    (b) An employer's auxiliary, mobile, or satellite
15locations, such as those found in construction operations,
16trucking, branch or field offices, sales operations, or highly
17mobile activities, may be combined into a single, centralized
18safety committee. This centralized safety committee shall
19represent the safety and health concerns of all the locations.
 
20    Section 25. Recognition and approval of certain safety
21committees. If a public health emergency is declared, the
22Department of Labor and the Department of Public Health may
23recognize and approve safety committees that are innovative or
24differ in form or function if those safety committees meet the

 

 

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1purpose of this Act.
 
2    Section 30. Safety committee formation and membership.
3    (a) The safety committees required under this Act shall be
4composed of an equal number of employer and employee
5representatives. Employee representatives shall be selected by
6their exclusive representative for collective bargaining
7purposes or, if there is no exclusive representative, employee
8representatives shall be volunteers or shall be elected by
9their peers. Employer representatives shall be selected by
10management. When agreed upon by workers and management, the
11number of employees on the safety committee may be greater
12than the number of employer representatives. Seasonal workers
13shall not be counted for the purpose of determining the number
14of members who will serve on the safety committee.
15    (b) The safety committees shall consist of no fewer than 4
16members and shall have a chairperson elected by the safety
17committee members.
18    (c) Employee representatives attending safety committee
19meetings required by this Act or participating in safety
20committee instruction or training required by this Act shall
21be compensated by the employer at the regular hourly wage.
22    (d) Employee representatives shall serve a continuous term
23of at least one year. Length of membership shall be alternated
24or staggered so that at least one experienced member is always
25serving on the safety committee.

 

 

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1    (e) Reasonable efforts shall be made to ensure that safety
2committee members are representative of the major work
3activities of the firm.
 
4    Section 35. Safety committee meetings.
5    (a) The safety committee shall develop a written agenda
6for conducting safety committee meetings. The agenda shall
7prescribe the order in which safety committee business will be
8addressed during the meeting.
9    (b) The safety committee shall hold regular meetings at
10least once a month.
11    (c) Quarterly safety committee meetings may be substituted
12for monthly meetings when the safety committee's sole area of
13responsibility involves low hazard work environments. A low
14hazard workplace is a work environment that has not had a
15workplace accident, injury, or reportable medical disease
16causing the loss of working days for any worker during a
173-month period.
18    (d) Minutes shall be made of each meeting. The employer
19shall maintain the minutes for 3 years for inspection by the
20Department of Labor and the Department of Public Health.
21Copies of the minutes shall be posted or made available for all
22employees and shall be sent in the manner the employer
23regularly communicates with workers. All reports, evaluations,
24and recommendations of the safety committee shall be made a
25part of the minutes of the safety committee meeting.

 

 

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1    (e) For each recommendation made at the safety committee
2meetings, a reasonable time limit shall be established for the
3employer to respond in writing. The response should include
4the action taken to comply with the recommendations, and, in
5case of noncompliance, the reasons why implementing the action
6was not accomplished and a time frame to comply.
 
7    Section 40. Employee involvement. The safety committee
8shall establish a system to allow the members to obtain
9safety-related suggestions, reports of hazards, or other
10information directly from all persons involved in the
11operations of the workplace. The information obtained shall be
12reviewed at the next safety committee meeting and shall be
13recorded in the minutes for review and necessary action by the
14employer.
 
15    Section 45. Hazard assessment and control.
16    (a) The safety committee shall assist the employer in
17evaluating the employer's accident and illness prevention
18program and shall make written recommendations to improve the
19program when applicable. The safety committee shall also:
20        (1) include employer and employee representatives in
21    inspection teams, shall document in writing the location
22    and identity of the hazards, and shall make
23    recommendations to the employer regarding correction of
24    the hazards; and

 

 

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1        (2) conduct quarterly inspections of satellite
2    locations by the safety committee team or by a person
3    designated at the location.
4    (b) The person designated to carry out inspection
5activities at the locations identified in paragraphs (1) and
6(2) of subsection (a) shall be selected by the employer and
7shall receive training in hazard identification in the
8workplace.
 
9    Section 50. Safety and health planning. The safety
10committee shall establish procedures for the review of all
11safety and health inspection reports made by the safety
12committee. Based on the results of the review, the safety
13committee shall make recommendations for improvement of the
14employer's accident and illness prevention program. The safety
15committee shall evaluate the employer's accountability system
16and make recommendations to implement supervisor and employee
17accountability for safety and health.
 
18    Section 55. Accident investigation. The safety committee
19shall establish procedures for investigating all
20safety-related incidents including injury accidents,
21illnesses, and deaths. This Section shall not be construed to
22require the safety committee to conduct the investigations.
 
23    Section 60. Safety and health training and instruction.

 

 

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1    (a) The following items shall be discussed with all safety
2committee members:
3        (1) safety committee purposes and operation;
4        (2) rules adopted by the Department of Labor under
5    this Act; and
6        (3) methods of conducting safety committee meetings.
7    (b) Safety committee members shall have ready access to
8Occupational Safety and Health Codes that apply to the
9particular establishment and verbal instructions regarding
10their use.
11    (c) All safety committee members shall receive training
12based upon the type of business activity. At a minimum,
13members shall receive training regarding:
14        (1) hazard identification in the workplace; and
15        (2) principles regarding effective accident and
16    incident investigations.
17    (d) The safety committee shall assist the employer in
18providing information, instruction, training, and supervision
19as is necessary to ensure, so far as is reasonably
20practicable, the health and safety of employees at work and
21individuals affected by their activities. This may include
22training concerning hazard communication standards, emergency
23action plans, fire safety, emergency exit routes, walking and
24working surfaces, medical emergencies and first aid, blood
25borne pathogens, fall protection, general safety and health,
26lockout/tagout, powered industrial trucks, confined spaces,

 

 

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1and respiratory protection. The training shall be provided in
2the primary languages commonly understood in the workplace.
 
3    Section 65. Special public health emergency provisions.
4During a public health emergency declared by the Governor,
5until the health authorities declare an end to it, the safety
6committee shall have the following special functions:
7        (1) Collect and post in conspicuous places, such as
8    bulletin boards, lunch rooms, and dressing rooms at each
9    location, information issued by the Centers for Disease
10    Control and Prevention, the United States Department of
11    Labor, the federal Occupational Safety and Health
12    Administration, the Department of Public Health, and
13    others concerning prevention and measures concerning the
14    public health emergency declared by the Governor. The
15    postings shall be printed in the primary languages used in
16    the workplace as determined by the Department of Labor by
17    rule.
18        (2) Collect and post in such locations, and deliver to
19    all workers, executive orders concerning the public health
20    emergency declared by the Governor. The postings shall be
21    printed in the primary languages used in the workplace as
22    determined by the Department of Labor by rule.
23        (3) Prepare and implement a response plan to be
24    executed in case an outbreak occurs in the workplace. An
25    outbreak means the existence of 2 or more workers

 

 

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1    presenting symptoms related to the public health emergency
2    declared by the Governor.
3        (4) Make sure all mandated reporting of outbreaks to
4    the Department of Public Health is implemented.
 
5    Section 70. Civil penalty. The Department may conduct
6investigations in connection with the administration and
7enforcement of this Act. Upon determination, after reasonable
8notice and opportunity for a hearing, that an employer has
9violated this Act by not having established a safety committee
10or not convening a meeting over 6 months, the Department of
11Labor may levy a civil penalty as established by rule. The
12Attorney General may bring an action in the circuit court to
13enforce the collection of any monetary penalty.".