State of Illinois
92nd General Assembly
Legislation

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92_HB0848

 
                                               LRB9204126WHcs

 1        AN ACT concerning employment.

 2        Be  it  enacted  by  the People of the State of Illinois,
 3    represented in the General Assembly:

 4        Section 1.  Short title. This Act may  be  cited  as  the
 5    Fair Pay Act of 2001.

 6        Section  5.  Findings.   The  General  Assembly finds the
 7    following:
 8        (a)  Despite   federal    and    state    laws    banning
 9    discrimination in employment and pay, in both the private and
10    public  sector,  wage differentials persist between women and
11    men and between minorities and  non-minorities  in  the  same
12    jobs  and  in  jobs  that  are  dissimilar  but  that require
13    equivalent composites of skill, effort,  responsibility,  and
14    working conditions.
15        (b)  The existence of wage differentials:
16             (1)  depresses   wages   and  living  standards  for
17        employees necessary for their health and efficiency;
18             (2)  reduces family incomes and contributes  to  the
19        higher  poverty  rates  among  female-headed and minority
20        households;
21             (3)  prevents  the  maximum   utilization   of   the
22        available labor resources;
23             (4)  tends   to   cause   labor   disputes,  thereby
24        burdening, affecting, and obstructing commerce;
25             (5)  constitutes an unfair  method  of  competition;
26        and
27             (6)  violates  the  State's  public  policy  against
28        discrimination.
29        (c)  Discrimination  in wage-setting practices has played
30    a  role  in  depressing  wages  for  women   and   minorities
31    generally.
 
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 1        (d)  Many   individuals  work  in  occupations  that  are
 2    dominated by individuals of their same sex, race, or national
 3    origin, and discrimination in  hiring,  job  assignment,  and
 4    promotion  has  played a role in establishing and maintaining
 5    segregated work forces.
 6        (e)  Eliminating discrimination in compensation based  on
 7    sex,  race,  and national origin would have positive effects,
 8    including:
 9             (1)  providing a solution to problems in the economy
10        created by discriminatory wage differentials;
11             (2)  reducing the number of working women and people
12        of  color  earning  low  wages,  thereby  lowering  their
13        incidence of poverty during normal working years  and  in
14        retirement; and
15             (3)  promoting  stable  families  by  raising family
16        incomes.

17        Section 10.  Purpose. It is the purpose of  this  Act  to
18    correct   and   as   rapidly   as  practicable  to  eliminate
19    discriminatory wage practices based on sex, race, or national
20    origin.

21        Section 15.  Definitions.  As used in this Act:
22        "Department" means the Department of Labor.
23        "Employ" means to suffer or permit to work.
24        "Employee" means any person employed by an  employer  and
25    includes  all  of  an employer's permanent employees, whether
26    working full-time or part-time, and  any  temporary  employee
27    employed  by  an  employer for a period of at least 3 months.
28    "Employee" does not include any individual employed by his or
29    her parents, spouse or child.
30        "Employer" means any person who employs 3 or more persons
31    and includes the State and all political subdivisions of  the
32    State.
 
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 1        "Equivalent  jobs"  means  jobs  or  occupations that are
 2    equal within the meaning of the federal Equal Pay Act of 1963
 3    or  jobs  or  occupations  that  are  dissimilar  but   whose
 4    requirements  are  equivalent,  when viewed as a composite of
 5    skills, effort, responsibility, and working conditions.
 6        "Person" means one  or  more  individuals,  partnerships,
 7    associations,   corporations,  limited  liability  companies,
 8    legal representatives, trustees, trustees in bankruptcy,  and
 9    receivers  and  the  State and all political subdivisions and
10    agencies of the State.
11        "Labor organization" means any organization  that  exists
12    for   the  purpose,  in  whole  or  in  part,  of  collective
13    bargaining  or   of   dealing   with   employers   concerning
14    grievances,  terms  of  conditions of employment, or of other
15    mutual aid or protection in connection with employment.
16        "Market rates" means the rates that  employers  within  a
17    prescribed  geographic  area  actually pay or are reported to
18    pay for specific jobs, as determined by  formal  or  informal
19    surveys, wage studies, or other means.
20        "Wages"  and "wage rates" include all compensation in any
21    form that an employer provides to employees  in  payment  for
22    work  done or services rendered, including but not limited to
23    base pay, bonuses,  commissions,  awards,  tips,  or  various
24    forms  of non-monetary compensation if provided in lieu of or
25    in addition to monetary compensation and that  have  economic
26    value to an employee.

27        Section 20.  Prohibition against discrimination in wages.
28        (a)  It  is  an unlawful employment practice in violation
29    of this Act for an employer to discriminate between employees
30    on the basis of sex, race, or national origin by:
31             (1)  paying wages to employees at a rate  less  than
32        the  rate  paid  to employees of the opposite sex or of a
33        different race or national origin for work in  equivalent
 
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 1        jobs; or
 2             (2)  paying  wages  to  employees  in  a job that is
 3        dominated by employees of  a  particular  sex,  race,  or
 4        national origin at a rate less than the rate at which the
 5        employer  pays employees in another job that is dominated
 6        by employees of the opposite sex or of a  different  race
 7        or national origin for work on equivalent jobs.
 8        (b)  Notwithstanding  subsection  (a) of this Section, it
 9    is not an unlawful employment practice for an employer to pay
10    different wage rates to employees,  where  the  payments  are
11    made pursuant to:
12             (1)  a bonafide seniority or merit system;
13             (2)  a  system that measures earnings by quantity or
14        quality of production; or
15             (3)  any bonafide factor other than  sex,  race,  or
16        national  origin,  provided that wage differentials based
17        on varying  market  rates  for  equivalent  jobs  or  the
18        differing economic benefits to the employer of equivalent
19        jobs  shall  not  be  considered  differentials  based on
20        bonafide  factors  other  than  sex,  race,  or  national
21        origin.
22        (c)  Any employer who is paying  wages  in  violation  of
23    this  Section  may not, in order to comply with this Section,
24    reduce the wage of any employee.
25        (d)  No labor organization  or  its  agents  representing
26    employees  of  an  employer  having  employees subject to any
27    provision of this Act  may  cause  or  attempt  to  cause  an
28    employer  to discriminate against an employee in violation of
29    subsection (a) of this Section.
30        (e)  The Department  shall  adopt  rules  specifying  the
31    criteria  for  determining  whether  a  job  is  dominated by
32    employees of a particular  sex,  race,  or  national  origin.
33    Criteria  shall  include, but not be limited to, factors such
34    as (i) whether the job has ever been formally  classified  as
 
                            -5-                LRB9204126WHcs
 1    or  traditionally  considered  to  be a "male" or "female" or
 2    "white" or "minority"' job; (ii) whether there is  a  history
 3    of  discrimination  against  women  or  people  of color with
 4    regard to wages, assignment or access to jobs, or other terms
 5    and conditions  of  employment;  and  (iii)  the  demographic
 6    composition  of the work force in equivalent jobs.  The rules
 7    may not include a list of jobs.

 8        Section 25.  Other prohibited acts.
 9        (a)  It is an unlawful employment practice  in  violation
10    of this Act for an employer:
11             (1)  to    take   adverse   actions   or   otherwise
12        discriminate   against   any   individual   because   the
13        individual has opposed any act or practice made  unlawful
14        by this Act, has sought to enforce rights protected under
15        this  Act, or has testified, assisted, or participated in
16        any  manner   in  an  investigation,  hearing,  or  other
17        proceeding to enforce this Act; or
18             (2)  to   discharge   or   in   any   other   manner
19        discriminate against, coerce,  intimidate,  threaten,  or
20        interfere  with  any employee or any other person because
21        the employee  inquired  about,  disclosed,  compared,  or
22        otherwise  discussed the employee's wages or the wages of
23        any other employee, or because  the  employee  exercised,
24        enjoyed,   aided,  or  encouraged  any  other  person  to
25        exercise or enjoy any right granted or protected by  this
26        Act.

27        Section   30.  Wage   disclosure,   record  keeping,  and
28    reporting requirements.
29        (a)  Upon commencement of an individual's employment  and
30    at  least annually thereafter, every employer subject to this
31    Act shall  provide  to  each  employee  a  written  statement
32    sufficient to inform the employee of his or her job title and
 
                            -6-                LRB9204126WHcs
 1    wage  rate and how the wage is calculated.  This notice shall
 2    be  supplemented  whenever  an  employee   is   promoted   or
 3    reassigned   to  a  different  position  with  the  employer;
 4    however, the employer is not required to  issue  supplemental
 5    notifications  for temporary reassignments that are no longer
 6    than 3 months in duration.
 7        (b)  Every employer subject to this Act  shall  make  and
 8    preserve  records  that  document the wages paid to employees
 9    and  that  document   and   support   the   method,   system,
10    calculations,  and other bases used to establish, adjust, and
11    determine the wage rates paid to  the  employer's  employees.
12    Every employer subject to this Act shall preserve any records
13    for  any  periods of time and shall make any reports from the
14    records as shall be  prescribed  by  rule  or  order  by  the
15    Department.
16        (c)  The  rules  adopted  under  this Act relating to the
17    form of reports required by subsection (b) shall provide  for
18    protection  of  the  confidentiality  of  employees and shall
19    expressly require that reports shall not include the names or
20    other  identifying  information  from  which  readers   could
21    discern  the  identities  of  employees.  The  rules may also
22    identify  circumstances  that  warrant   a   prohibition   on
23    disclosure   of   reports   or  information  identifying  the
24    employer.
25        (d)  The Department may use the information and  data  it
26    collects  under  subsection  (b) for statistical and research
27    purposes, and may  compile  and  publish  studies,  analyses,
28    reports, and surveys based on the information and data, as it
29    may consider appropriate.

30        Section 35.  Remedies and enforcement.
31        (a)  In any action in which a court or jury finds that an
32    employer  has engaged in acts that violate Section 20, 25, or
33    30 of this Act, the court or jury shall award to any affected
 
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 1    employee or employees monetary relief, including back pay  in
 2    an  amount  equal  to  the  difference between the employees'
 3    actual earnings and what the employee would have  earned  but
 4    for  the  employer's  unlawful  practices;  and an additional
 5    amount in compensatory and punitive damages, as appropriate.
 6        (b)  In any action in which a court or jury finds that an
 7    employer has engaged in acts that violate Section 20, 25,  or
 8    30  of  this  Act,  the  court shall enjoin the employer from
 9    continuing to discriminate  against  affected  employees  and
10    shall  direct  the  employer  to comply with this Act and may
11    order the employer to take any additional  affirmative  steps
12    as are necessary, including reinstatement or reclassification
13    of   affected   workers,   to   ensure  an  end  to  unlawful
14    discrimination.
15        (c)  In any action  in  which  an  affected  employee  or
16    employees  prevail  in  their claims against an employer, the
17    court shall, in addition  to  any  judgment  awarded  to  the
18    plaintiffs,  allow  a  reasonable  attorney's fee, reasonable
19    expert witness fees, and other costs of the action to be paid
20    by the employer.
21        (d)  An action to recover the damages or equitable relief
22    prescribed in subsection (a), (b), or (c) of this Section may
23    be maintained against any employer in the  circuit  court  by
24    any  one  or more employees or their representative for or on
25    behalf of the employees or the employees and other  employees
26    similarly situated.
27        (e)  The   Department  shall  receive,  investigate,  and
28    attempt to resolve complaints of violations of  Sections  20,
29    25, and 30.
30        (f)  If  the  Department  is  unable to reach a voluntary
31    resolution of a complaint filed  under  subsection  (e),  the
32    Department  may  bring  an  action  in  the  circuit court to
33    recover  the  equitable  and  monetary  relief  described  in
34    subsection (a), (b), or (c).
 
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 1        (g)  Any  sums  recovered   by   the   Department   under
 2    subsection  (f)  shall  be  paid  directly  to  each employee
 3    affected by the employer's unlawful acts.
 4        (h)  An action may be  brought  under  this  Section  not
 5    later  than  2  years  after  the  date  of  the  last  event
 6    constituting  the  alleged  violation for which the action is
 7    brought.

 8        Section 40.  Rules.  The Department shall adopt any rules
 9    that are necessary to carry out this Act not later  than  120
10    days after this Act takes effect.

11        Section  95.  Severability.    The provisions of this Act
12    are severable under Section 1.31 of the Statute on Statutes.

13        Section 99.  Effective date.  This Act takes effect  upon
14    becoming law.

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