Illinois General Assembly - Full Text of HB3062
Illinois General Assembly

Previous General Assemblies

Full Text of HB3062  100th General Assembly

HB3062 100TH GENERAL ASSEMBLY

  
  

 


 
100TH GENERAL ASSEMBLY
State of Illinois
2017 and 2018
HB3062

 

Introduced , by Rep. Will Guzzardi

 

SYNOPSIS AS INTRODUCED:
 
New Act

    Creates the Wrongful Discharge from Employment Act. Requires an employer to furnish to a discharged employee a statement of reasons for the discharge. Prohibits an employer from preventing or attempting to prevent a discharged employee from obtaining other employment. Prohibits blacklisting. Provides that a discharge is wrongful if the discharge was a constructive discharge, if it was not for good cause, or if the discharge was in violation of the employer's personnel policy. Establishes remedies. Defines terms. Provides that an employer who violates the Act commits a Class A misdemeanor.


LRB100 06952 JLS 17003 b

CORRECTIONAL BUDGET AND IMPACT NOTE ACT MAY APPLY

 

 

A BILL FOR

 

HB3062LRB100 06952 JLS 17003 b

1    AN ACT concerning employment.
 
2    Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
3represented in the General Assembly:
 
4    Section 1. Short title. This Act may be cited as the
5Wrongful Discharge from Employment Act.
 
6    Section 5. Definitions. As used in this Act:
7    "Constructive discharge" means the voluntary termination
8of employment by an employee because of a situation created by
9an act or omission of the employer which an objective,
10reasonable person would find so intolerable that voluntary
11termination is the only reasonable alternative.
12    "Discharge" includes a constructive discharge and any
13other termination of employment, including resignation,
14elimination of the job, layoff for lack of work, failure to
15recall or rehire, and any other cutback in the number of
16employees for a legitimate business reason.
17    "Employee" means any person who works for another for hire.
18The term does not include a person who is an independent
19contractor as defined under Section 212 of the Unemployment
20Insurance Act.
21    "Employer" means anyone who engages another, who is called
22the employee, to do something for the benefit of the employer
23or a third person. The term employer also includes the State

 

 

HB3062- 2 -LRB100 06952 JLS 17003 b

1and any political subdivision, municipality, or other
2governmental unit or agency.
3    "Fringe benefits" means the value of any employer-paid
4vacation leave, sick leave, medical insurance plan, disability
5insurance plan, life insurance plan, annuity, and pension
6benefit plan in effect on the date of termination.
7    "Good cause" means reasonable job-related grounds for
8dismissal based on an employee's failure to satisfactorily
9perform job duties, employee misconduct, or other legitimate
10business reason.
11    "Lost wages" means the gross amount of wages that would
12have been reported to the internal revenue service as gross
13income on Form W-2 and includes additional compensation
14deferred at the option of the employee.
15    "Misconduct" means the following work related
16circumstances:
17        (1) Falsification of an employment application, or any
18    other documentation provided to the employer, to obtain
19    employment through subterfuge.
20        (2) Failure to maintain licenses, registrations, and
21    certifications reasonably required by the employer, or
22    those that the individual is required to possess by law, to
23    perform his or her regular job duties, unless the failure
24    is not within the control of the individual.
25        (3) Knowing, repeated violation of the attendance
26    policies of the employer that are in compliance with State

 

 

HB3062- 3 -LRB100 06952 JLS 17003 b

1    and federal law following written warning for an attendance
2    violation, unless the individual demonstrates that he or
3    she has made a reasonable effort to remedy the reason or
4    reasons for the violations or that the reason or reasons
5    for the violations were out of the individual's control.
6    Attendance policies of the employer shall be reasonable and
7    provided to the individual in writing, electronically, or
8    via a posting in the workplace.
9        (4) Damaging the employer's property through conduct
10    that is grossly negligent.
11        (5) Refusal to obey an employer's reasonable and lawful
12    instruction, unless refusal is due to the lack of ability,
13    skills, or training for the individual required to obey the
14    instruction or the instruction would result in an unsafe
15    act.
16        (6) Knowingly consuming alcohol or illegal or
17    non-prescribed prescription drugs, or using an impairing
18    substance in an off-label manner, on the employer's
19    premises during working hours in violation of the
20    employer's policies.
21        (7) Reporting to work under the influence of alcohol,
22    illegal or non-prescribed prescription drugs, or an
23    impairing substance used in an off-label manner in
24    violation of the employer's policies, unless the
25    individual is compelled to report to work by the employer
26    outside of scheduled and on-call working hours and informs

 

 

HB3062- 4 -LRB100 06952 JLS 17003 b

1    the employer that he or she is under the influence of
2    alcohol, illegal or non-prescribed prescription drugs, or
3    an impairing substance used in an off-label manner in
4    violation of the employer's policies.
5        (8) Grossly negligent conduct endangering the safety
6    of the individual or co-workers.
7    For the purposes of paragraphs (4) and (8), conduct is
8"grossly negligent" if the individual is, or reasonably should
9be, aware of a substantial risk that the conduct will result in
10the harm sought to be prevented and the conduct constitutes a
11substantial deviation from the standard of care a reasonable
12person would exercise in the situation.
13    Nothing in paragraph (6) or (7) prohibits the lawful use of
14over-the-counter drug products as defined in Section 206 of the
15Illinois Controlled Substances Act if the medication does not
16affect the safe performances of the employee's work duties.
17    "Public policy" means a policy in effect at the time of
18discharge established by constitutional provision, law, or
19administrative rule.
 
20    Section 10. Employee to be furnished on demand with reason
21for discharge.
22    (a) It is the duty of the employer, after having discharged
23an employee from service, upon demand by the discharged
24employee, to furnish the discharged employee in writing a
25statement of reasons for the discharge. If the employer fails

 

 

HB3062- 5 -LRB100 06952 JLS 17003 b

1to furnish the statement of the reasons for discharge within a
2reasonable time after the demand, the employer shall be subject
3to the penalties and damages prescribed in this Act.
4    (b) A response to the demand may be modified at any time
5and does not limit an employer's ability to present a full
6defense in any action brought by the discharged employee.
7Failure to provide a response as required under this Section
8does not limit an employer's ability to present a full defense
9in any action brought by the discharged employee.
 
10    Section 15. Protection of discharged employees. If an
11employer, after having discharged an employee from service,
12prevents or attempts to prevent, by word or writing of any
13kind, the discharged employee from obtaining employment with
14any other employer, the discharging employer may be punished as
15provided in Section 30 and is liable for punitive damages to
16the discharged person, to be recovered in a civil action. An
17employer is not prohibited from informing by word or writing
18any other employer to whom the discharged employee has applied
19for employment a truthful statement of the reason for
20discharge. Notwithstanding the foregoing an employer is
21prohibited from furnishing any statement of the reasons for
22discharge to another employer if the discharging employer has
23not furnished a written statement of the reasons for discharge
24to the discharged employee as provided in Section 10.
 

 

 

HB3062- 6 -LRB100 06952 JLS 17003 b

1    Section 20. Blacklisting prohibited. If an employer
2authorizes or allows any of its agents to blacklist a
3discharged employee or if an employer blacklists a discharged
4employee or attempts by word or writing or any other means to
5prevent any discharged employee or any employee who has
6voluntarily left the company's service from obtaining
7employment with another employer, except as provided in Section
815, the employer is liable for punitive damages to the employee
9prevented from obtaining employment, to be recovered in a civil
10action, and is also punishable as provided in Section 30.
 
11    Section 25. Wrongful discharge.
12    (a) A discharge is wrongful if: it was a constructive
13discharge; it was in retaliation for the employee's refusal to
14violate public policy or for reporting a violation of public
15policy; it was not for good cause and the employee had
16completed the employer's probationary period for employment;
17or the employer violated the express provisions of its written
18personnel policy. During a probationary period of employment
19not to exceed 90 days, the employment may be terminated at the
20will of either the employer or the employee on notice to the
21other for any reason or for no reason. If an employer does not
22establish a specific probationary period or provide that there
23is no probationary period prior to or at the time of hire,
24there is a probationary period of 90 days from the date of
25hire.

 

 

HB3062- 7 -LRB100 06952 JLS 17003 b

1    (b) A discharged employee may bring a civil action against
2the employer for all relief necessary to make the discharged
3employee whole, including but not limited to the following, as
4appropriate:
5        (1) reinstatement with the same seniority status that
6    the discharged employee would have had but for the
7    violation;
8        (2) lost wages with interest and fringe benefits; and
9        (3) compensation for any damages sustained as a result
10    of the violation, including litigation costs, expert
11    witness fees, and reasonable attorney's fees.
12    (c) An action under this Act must be filed within one year
13after the date of discharge.
14    If an employer maintains written internal procedures,
15other than those specified in this subsection, under which a
16discharged employee may appeal a discharge within the
17organizational structure of the employer, the discharged
18employee shall first exhaust those procedures prior to filing
19an action under this Act. The discharged employee's failure to
20initiate or exhaust available internal procedures is a defense
21to an action brought under this Act. If the employer's internal
22procedures are not completed within 90 days after the date the
23discharged employee initiates the internal procedures, the
24discharged employee may file an action under this Act and, for
25the purposes of this Section, the employer's internal
26procedures are considered exhausted. The limitation period in

 

 

HB3062- 8 -LRB100 06952 JLS 17003 b

1this subsection shall not commence until the procedures are
2exhausted. In no case may the provisions of the employer's
3internal procedures extend the limitation period in this
4subsection by more than 120 days.
5    If the employer maintains written internal procedures
6under which a discharged employee may appeal a discharge within
7the organizational structure of the employer, the employer
8shall, within 7 days of the date of discharge, notify the
9discharged employee of the existence of such procedures and
10shall supply the discharged employee with a copy of them. If
11the employer fails to notify the employ and provide a copy of
12the procedures, the discharged employee need not exhaust the
13appeal procedures.
14    (d) This Act does not apply to a discharge that is subject
15to any other State or federal law that provides a procedure or
16remedy for contesting the dispute. The laws include those that
17prohibit discharge for filing complaints, charges, or claims
18with administrative bodies or that prohibit unlawful
19discrimination based on race, national, origin, sex, age,
20disability, creed, religion, color, and other similar grounds.
21This Act does not apply to a discharge of an employee covered
22by a written collective bargaining agreement or a written
23contract of employment for a specific term.
24    (e) A party may make a written offer to arbitrate a dispute
25that otherwise could be adjudicated under this Act. If a
26complaint is filed under this Act, the offer to arbitrate must

 

 

HB3062- 9 -LRB100 06952 JLS 17003 b

1be made within 60 days after service of the complaint and must
2be accepted in writing within 30 days after the date the offer
3is made. A discharged employee who makes a valid offer to
4arbitrate that is accepted by the employer and who prevails in
5such arbitration is entitled to have the arbitrator's fee and
6all costs of arbitration paid by the employer. If a valid offer
7to arbitrate is made and accepted, the arbitration is the
8exclusive remedy for the wrongful discharge dispute and there
9is no right to bring or continue a lawsuit under this Act. The
10arbitrator's award is final and binding. A party who makes a
11valid offer to arbitrate that is not accepted by the other
12party and who prevails in an action under this Act is entitled
13as an element of costs to reasonable attorney fees incurred
14subsequent to the date of the offer.
 
15    Section 30. Violations. An employer who violates any of
16the provisions of this Act relating to the protection of
17discharged employees, the prevention of blacklisting, or
18wrongful discharge is guilty of a Class A misdemeanor.