|
Public Act 098-0874 |
SB1103 Enrolled | LRB098 05369 WGH 35403 b |
|
|
AN ACT concerning employment.
|
Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
|
represented in the General Assembly:
|
Section 1. Short title. This Act may be cited as the |
Occupational Safety and Health Act. |
Section 2. References to prior Acts. On and after the |
effective date of this Act, a reference to the Safety |
Inspection and Education Act or the Health and Safety Act in |
any other Act or in any rule contained in the Illinois |
Administrative Code shall be deemed to be a reference to this |
Act. |
Section 5. Definitions. In this Act: |
"Department" means the Department of Labor. |
"Director" means the Director of Labor. |
"Division" means the Division of Occupational Safety and |
Health within the Department of Labor. |
"Employee" means a person in the service of any of the |
following entities, regardless of whether the service is by |
virtue of election, by appointment or contract, or by hire, and |
regardless of whether the relationship is express or implied or |
established orally or in writing:
|
(1) The State. For purposes of this paragraph (1), the |
|
term includes a member of the General Assembly, a member of |
the Illinois Commerce Commission, a member of the Illinois |
Workers' Compensation Commission, and any person in the |
service of a public university or college in Illinois. |
(2) An Illinois county. For purposes of this paragraph |
(2), the term includes a deputy sheriff and an assistant |
State's Attorney.
|
(3) An Illinois township.
|
(4) An Illinois city, village, incorporated town, |
school district, or other municipal corporation or body |
politic.
|
"Public employer" or "employer" means the State of Illinois |
or any political subdivision of the State.
|
Section 10. Administration of Act; Division of |
Occupational Safety and Health. |
(a) The Department shall administer this Act. For the |
purpose of assisting in the administration of this Act, the |
Director may authorize his or her representatives in the |
Department to perform any necessary inspections or |
investigations under this Act. |
(b) The Department shall maintain a division within the |
Department to be known as the Division of Occupational Safety |
and Health. |
Section 15. Application of Act. This Act applies to every |
|
public employer in this State and its employees. Nothing in |
this Act, however, applies to working conditions of employees |
with respect to which federal agencies, and State agencies |
acting under Section 274 of the Atomic Energy Act of 1954 (42 |
U.S.C. 2021), exercise statutory authority to prescribe or |
enforce standards or regulations affecting occupational safety |
and health. Any State regulations more strict than applicable |
federal standards shall, before being promulgated, be the |
subject of hearings as required by this Act. |
Section 20. Duties of employers and employees. |
(a) Every public employer must provide reasonable |
protection to the lives, health, and safety of its employees |
and must furnish to each of its employees employment and a |
workplace which are free from recognized hazards that cause or |
are likely to cause death or serious physical harm to its |
employees. |
(b) Every public employer must comply with the occupational |
safety and health standards promulgated under this Act. |
(c) Every public employer must keep its employees informed |
of their protections and obligations under this Act, including |
the provisions of applicable standards or rules adopted under |
this Act. |
(d) Every public employer must furnish its employees with |
information regarding hazards in the workplace, including |
information about suitable precautions, relevant symptoms, and |
|
emergency treatment. |
(e) Every employee must comply with the rules that are |
promulgated from time to time by the Director under this Act |
and that are applicable to the employee's actions and conduct. |
Section 25. Occupational safety and health standards. |
(a) All federal occupational safety and health standards |
which the United States Secretary of Labor has promulgated or |
modified in accordance with the federal Occupational Safety and |
Health Act of 1970 and which are in effect on the effective |
date of this Act shall be and are hereby made rules of the |
Department unless the Director promulgates an alternate |
standard that is at least as effective in providing safe and |
healthful employment and places of employment as a federal |
standard. Before developing and adopting an alternate standard |
or modifying or revoking an existing standard, the Director |
must consider factual information that includes: |
(1) Expert technical knowledge. |
(2) Input from interested persons, including |
employers, employees, recognized standards-producing |
organizations, and the public. |
(b) All federal occupational safety and health standards |
which the United States Secretary of Labor promulgates or |
modifies in accordance with the federal Occupational Safety and |
Health Act of 1970 on or after the effective date of this Act, |
unless revoked by the Secretary of Labor, shall become rules of |
|
the Department within 6 months after their federal promulgation |
date, unless there has been in effect in this State at the time |
of the promulgation or modification of the federal standard an |
alternate State standard that is at least as effective in |
providing safe and healthful employment and places of |
employment as a federal standard. The alternate State standard |
shall not become effective, however, unless the Department, |
within 45 days after the federal promulgation date, files with |
the office of the Secretary of State in Springfield, Illinois, |
a certified copy of the rule as provided in the Illinois |
Administrative Procedure Act.
|
Section 30. Standards; required features. |
(a) A standard promulgated under this Act shall prescribe |
the use of labels or other appropriate forms of warning as are |
necessary to ensure that employees are apprised of all hazards |
to which they are exposed, relevant symptoms and appropriate |
emergency treatment, and proper conditions and precautions of |
safe use or exposure. |
(b) When appropriate, a standard shall also prescribe |
suitable protective equipment and control or technological |
procedures to be used in connection with such hazards and shall |
provide for monitoring or measuring employee exposure at |
locations and intervals and in a manner as necessary for the |
protection of employees. |
(c) In addition, when appropriate, a standard shall |
|
prescribe the type and frequency of medical examinations or |
other tests which shall be made available, by the employer or |
at the employer's cost, to employees exposed to such hazards in |
order to most effectively determine whether the health of the |
employees is adversely affected by the exposure. The results of |
the examinations or tests shall be furnished by the employer |
only to the Department or, at the direction of the Department, |
to authorized medical personnel and, at the request of the |
employee, to the employee's physician. |
(d) The Director, in promulgating standards dealing with |
toxic materials or harmful physical agents under this Section, |
shall set the standard which most adequately ensures, to the |
extent feasible, on the basis of the best available evidence, |
that no employee will suffer material impairment of health or |
functional capacity even if the employee has regular exposure |
to the hazard dealt with by the standard for the period of the |
employee's working life. |
(e) Development of standards under this Section shall be |
based on research, demonstrations, experiments, and other |
information as appropriate. In addition to the attainment of |
the highest degree of health and safety protection for the |
employee, other considerations shall be the latest available |
scientific data in the field, the feasibility of the standards, |
and experience gained under this and other health and safety |
laws. Whenever practicable, a standard shall be expressed in |
terms of objective criteria and of the performance desired. |
|
Section 35. Emergency temporary standards. |
(a) The Director may promulgate emergency temporary |
standards or rules, or both, to take effect immediately by |
filing the proposed standard with the Secretary of State, |
provided that the Director first expressly determines the |
following:
|
(1) Employees are exposed to grave danger from exposure |
to substances or agents determined to be toxic or |
physically harmful or from new hazards. |
(2) The emergency temporary standard is necessary to |
protect the employees from the danger described in |
paragraph (1).
|
(b) The Director shall adopt emergency temporary standards |
promulgated by the federal Occupational Safety and Health |
Administration within 30 days of the federal notice of proposed |
emergency rulemaking. An emergency temporary standard shall be |
effective until superseded by a permanent standard but in no |
event for more than 6 months from the date of publication of |
the emergency temporary standard. The publication of emergency |
temporary standards shall be deemed to be a petition to the |
Director for the promulgation of a permanent standard and shall |
be deemed to be filed with the Director on the date of |
publication. The proceeding for promulgation of the permanent |
standard shall be pursued in accordance with this Act.
|
|
Section 40. Variance from standards. The Director may grant |
a temporary or permanent variance from a State occupational |
safety and health standard upon application by a public |
employer to the Director. The Director may grant a variance |
from a standard or portion of a standard if the Director |
determines that the variance is necessary to permit an employer |
to participate in an experiment approved by the Director |
designed to demonstrate or validate new and improved techniques |
to safeguard the health or safety of workers. A variance from a |
State occupational safety and health standard may only have |
future effect. |
Section 45. Temporary variance. |
(a) A public employer may apply to the Director for a |
temporary variance from an occupational safety and health |
standard promulgated under this Act. The Director shall issue a |
temporary variance only if the employer first files with the |
Director an application which meets the requirements of this |
Section. |
(b) An application for a temporary variance under this |
Section shall contain all of the following: |
(1) A specification of the standard or portion thereof |
from which the employer seeks a variance.
|
(2) A representation by the employer, supported by |
representations from qualified persons having first-hand |
knowledge of the facts represented, that the employer is |
|
unable to comply with the standard or portion thereof, and |
a detailed statement of the reasons therefor.
|
(3) A statement of the steps the employer has taken and |
will take to protect employees against a hazard covered by |
the standard, including specific dates on which or by which |
the employer has taken or will take those steps.
|
(4) A statement specifying the date by which the |
employer expects to be able to comply with the standard.
|
(5) A certification that the employer has informed its |
employees of the application by giving a copy of the |
application to the employees' authorized representative, |
by posting a statement at the place or places where notices |
to employees are normally posted that summarizes the |
application and specifies where a copy may be examined, and |
by other appropriate means as determined by the employer. |
The information provided to employees shall also inform |
them of their right to petition the Director for a hearing |
on the application. |
(c) An application for a temporary variance under this |
Section shall establish all of the following: |
(1) The employer is unable to comply with a standard by |
its effective date because professional or technical |
personnel or materials and equipment needed to comply with |
the standard are unavailable or because necessary |
construction or alteration of facilities cannot be |
completed by the effective date of the standard.
|
|
(2) The employer is taking all available steps to |
safeguard its employees against the hazards covered by the |
standard.
|
(3) The employer has an effective program for complying |
with the standard as quickly as practicable. |
(d) The Director may issue a temporary variance only after |
the Department provides notice to the employer's employees and |
an opportunity for a hearing. However, in a case involving only |
documentary evidence in support of the application for a |
temporary variance and in which no objection is made or hearing |
requested by the employees or their representative, the |
Director may issue a temporary variance in accordance with this |
Act without a hearing. |
(e) If a hearing is requested on an application for a |
temporary variance, the application shall be heard and |
determined by the Director. |
(f) A temporary variance issued under this Section shall |
prescribe the practices, means, methods, operations, and |
processes which the employer must adopt and use while the |
temporary variance is in effect and shall state in detail the |
employer's program for achieving compliance with the standard. |
Section 50. Permanent variance. |
(a) A public employer affected by an occupational safety |
and health standard promulgated under this Act may apply to the |
Director for a permanent variance from that standard. The form |
|
and manner of the application shall be as provided in rules. |
(b) Employees affected by a standard from which their |
employer has applied for a variance under this Section shall be |
given notice of the employer's application and an opportunity |
to participate in a hearing on the application. |
(c) The Director shall issue a permanent variance if he or |
she determines on the record, after opportunity for an |
inspection where appropriate as determined by the Department |
and a hearing, that the employer has demonstrated by a |
preponderance of the evidence that the conditions, practices, |
means, methods, operations, or processes used or proposed to be |
used by the employer will provide employment and places of |
employment to its employees which are as safe and healthful as |
those which would prevail if the employer complied with the |
standard. The variance shall prescribe the conditions the |
employer must maintain, and the practices, means, methods, |
operations, and processes which the employer must adopt and |
utilize, to the extent they differ from the standard in |
question. |
(d) A variance issued under this Section may be modified or |
revoked upon application by the employer, by the employees, or |
by the Director on his or her own motion, in the manner |
prescribed for the issuance of a variance under this Section at |
any time after 6 months from the issuance of the variance. |
Section 55. Rules generally. |
|
(a) The Director, from time to time, shall promulgate rules |
that clearly describe the persons to whom those rules apply and |
that clearly describe the conduct that is required of those |
persons. Each such rule shall, by its terms, be uniform and |
general in its application wherever the subject matter of the |
rule exists in any workplace having employees in the service of |
a public employer. The rules may include rules that, when |
applicable to products which are distributed or used in |
interstate commerce, are required by compelling local |
conditions and do not unduly burden interstate commerce. |
(b) Any standards or rules promulgated by the Director |
under the Safety Inspection and Education Act or the Health and |
Safety Act that are in full force on the effective date of this |
Act shall become the rules of the Department under this Act. |
This Act does not affect the legality of any such rules in the |
Illinois Administrative Code. |
(c) Any proposed standards or rules filed with the |
Secretary of State by the Director under the Safety Inspection |
and Education Act or the Health and Safety Act that are pending |
in the rulemaking process on the effective date of this Act |
shall be deemed to have been filed by the Director under this |
Act. |
(d) As soon as practicable after the effective date of this |
Act, the Director shall revise and clarify the standards or |
rules described in subsections (b) and (c) as necessary to |
reflect the provisions of this Act. |
|
Section 60. Employers' records. |
(a) The Director shall adopt rules requiring public |
employers to maintain accurate records of, and to make reports |
on, work-related deaths, injuries, and illnesses, other than |
minor injuries requiring only first aid treatment which do not |
involve medical treatment, loss of consciousness, restriction |
of work or motion, or transfer to another job. The rules shall |
specifically include all of the reporting provisions of Section |
6 of the Workers' Compensation Act and Section 6 of the |
Workers' Occupational Diseases Act. The records shall be |
available to any State agency requiring such information. |
(b) The Director shall adopt rules requiring public |
employers to maintain accurate records of employee exposures to |
potentially toxic materials or harmful physical agents which |
are required to be monitored or measured under this Act. The |
rules shall provide employees or their authorized |
representative with an opportunity to observe the monitoring or |
measuring, and to have access to the records of the monitoring |
or measuring. The rules shall provide appropriate means by |
which each employee or former employee may have access to such |
records as will indicate his or her exposure to toxic materials |
or harmful physical agents. |
(c) A public employer shall promptly notify any employee |
who has been or is being exposed to toxic materials or harmful |
physical agents in concentrations or at levels which exceed |
|
those prescribed by an occupational safety and health standard |
and shall inform the employee who is being thus exposed of the |
action being taken by the employer to correct such exposure. |
Section 65. Periodic inspection of workplaces. |
(a) The Director shall enforce the occupational safety and |
health standards and rules promulgated under this Act and any |
occupational health and safety regulations relating to |
inspection of places of employment, and shall visit and |
inspect, as often as practicable, the places of employment |
covered by this Act.
|
(b) The Director or his or her authorized representative, |
upon presenting appropriate credentials to a public employer's |
agent in charge, has the right to enter and inspect all places |
of employment covered by this Act as follows:
|
(1) An inspector may enter without delay and at |
reasonable times any establishment, construction site, or |
other area, workplace, or environment where work is |
performed by an employee of a public employer in order to |
enforce the occupational safety and health standards |
adopted under this Act.
|
(2) If a public employer refuses entry to an inspector |
upon being presented with proper credentials or allows |
entry but then refuses to permit or hinders the inspection |
in any way, the inspector shall leave the premises and |
immediately report the refusal to authorized management |
|
within the Division. Authorized management shall notify |
the Director to initiate the compulsory legal process to |
obtain entry or obtain a warrant for entry, or both.
|
(3) An inspector may inspect and investigate during |
regular working hours and at other reasonable times, and |
within reasonable limits and in a reasonable manner, any |
workplace described in paragraph (1) and all pertinent |
conditions, structures, machines, apparatus, devices, |
equipment, and materials therein, and to question |
privately the employer or any agent or employee of the |
employer.
|
(4) The owner, operator, manager, or lessee of any |
workplace covered by this Act, and his or her agent or |
employee, and any employer affected by this Act shall, when |
requested by the Division of Occupational Safety and Health |
or any duly authorized agent of that Division: (i) furnish |
any information in his or her possession or under his or |
her control which the Department is authorized to require, |
(ii) answer truthfully all questions required to be put to |
him or her, and (iii) cooperate in the making of a proper |
inspection.
|
Section 70. Inspection of workplace upon complaint. |
(a) An employee or representative of employees who believes |
that a violation of an occupational safety and health standard |
exists in a workplace covered by this Act or that an imminent |
|
danger exists in such a place may request an inspection by |
submitting a written complaint to the Director or his or her |
authorized representative setting forth with reasonable |
particularity the grounds for the complaint. The complaint |
shall be signed by the employee or representative.
|
(b) If the Director or the Director's authorized |
representative determines there are no reasonable grounds to |
believe that a violation or imminent danger exists, he or she |
shall notify the employee or representative of employees of |
that determination in writing.
|
(c) If, upon receipt of the complaint, the Director or his |
or her authorized representative determines there are |
reasonable grounds to believe that a violation or imminent |
danger exists, he or she shall make a special inspection of the |
workplace in accordance with this Act, as soon as practicable, |
to determine whether a violation or imminent danger exists.
|
(d) A copy of the complaint shall be provided to the public |
employer or its agent by the Director or his or her authorized |
representative at the time of the inspection, except that, upon |
the request of the person making the complaint, that person's |
name and the names of individual employees referred to in the |
complaint shall not appear in the copy or on any record |
published, released, or made available by the Director or his |
or her authorized representative.
|
(e) Nonformal safety and health complaints shall be handled |
by an authorized representative of the Director. Based on the |
|
severity and legitimacy of the complaint as determined by the |
Division, the Director's authorized representative shall |
either schedule an inspection of the workplace or issue a |
letter to the employer stating the allegations set forth in the |
complaint.
|
Section 75. Opportunity to accompany inspection. Subject |
to rules adopted by the Director, a representative of the |
employer and a representative authorized by the employer's |
employees shall be given an opportunity to accompany the |
Director or his or her authorized representative during the |
physical inspection of any workplace under this Act for the |
purpose of aiding the inspection. If there is no authorized |
employee representative, the Director or his or her authorized |
representative shall consult with a reasonable number of |
employees concerning matters of occupational safety and health |
in the workplace. |
Section 80. Violation of Act or standard; citation. |
(a) Upon inspection or investigation of a workplace, if the |
Director or his or her authorized representative believes that |
a public employer has violated a requirement of this Act or a |
standard, rule, or regulation promulgated under this Act, he or |
she shall with reasonable promptness issue a citation to the |
employer. A citation shall: (i) be in writing, (ii) describe |
with particularity the nature of the violation and include a |
|
reference to the provision of the Act, standard, rule, or |
regulation alleged to have been violated, and (iii) fix a |
reasonable time for the abatement of the violation. |
(b) Each citation issued under this Section, or a copy or |
copies thereof, shall be prominently posted at or near the |
place at which the violation occurred as prescribed in rules |
adopted by the Director.
|
(c) A citation shall be served on the employer or the |
employer's agent by delivering a copy to the person upon whom |
the service is to be had, or by leaving a copy at his or her |
usual place of business or abode, or by sending a copy by |
certified mail to his or her place of business.
|
(d) A citation may not be issued under this Section after |
the expiration of 6 months following the occurrence of any |
violation.
|
Section 85. Civil penalties. |
(a) After an inspection of a workplace under this Act, if |
the Director issues a citation, he or she shall, within 5 days |
after issuing the citation, notify the employer by certified |
mail of any civil penalty proposed to be assessed for the |
violation set forth in the citation.
|
(b) If the Director has reason to believe that an employer |
has failed to correct a violation for which a citation has been |
issued within the period permitted for its correction, the |
Director shall notify the employer by certified mail of that |
|
failure and of the civil penalty proposed to be assessed for |
that failure.
|
(c) Civil penalties authorized under this Section are as |
follows:
|
(1) A public employer that repeatedly violates this |
Act, the Safety Inspection and Education Act, or the Health |
and Safety Act, or any combination of those Acts, or any |
standard, rule, regulation, or order under any of those |
Acts, may be assessed a civil penalty of not more than |
$10,000 per violation.
|
(2) A public employer that intentionally violates this |
Act, the Safety Inspection and Education Act, or the Health |
and Safety Act, or any standard, rule, regulation, or order |
under any of those Acts, or who demonstrates plain |
indifference to any provision of any of those Acts or any |
such standard, rule, regulation, or order, may be assessed |
a civil penalty of not more than $10,000.
|
(3) A public employer that has received a citation for |
a serious violation of this Act, the Safety Inspection and |
Education Act, or the Health and Safety Act, or any |
standard, rule, regulation, or order under any of those |
Acts, may be assessed a civil penalty up to $1,000 for each |
such violation.
|
(4) A public employer that has received a citation for |
a violation of this Act, the Safety Inspection and |
Education Act, or the Health and Safety Act, or any |
|
standard, rule, regulation, or order under any of those |
Acts, which is not a serious violation, may be assessed a |
civil penalty of up to $1,000 for each such violation.
|
(5) A public employer that violates a posting |
requirement is subject to the following citations and |
proposed penalty structure:
|
(A) Job Safety and Health Poster: an other than |
serious citation and a proposed penalty of $1,000.
|
(B) Annual Summary of Work-Related Injuries and |
Illnesses (OSHA Form 300A): an other than serious |
citation and a proposed penalty of $1,000, even if |
there are no recordable injuries or illnesses.
|
(C) Citation: an other than serious citation and a |
proposed penalty of $1,000.
|
(6) A public employer that fails to correct a violation |
for which a citation has been issued within the period |
permitted may be assessed a civil penalty of up to $1,000 |
for each day the violation continues.
|
(d) For purposes of this Section, a "serious violation" |
shall be deemed to exist in a workplace if there is a |
substantial probability that death or serious physical harm |
could result from (i) a condition which exists or (ii) one or |
more practices, means, methods, operations, or processes which |
have been adopted or are in use in the workplace, unless the |
employer did not know and could not, with the exercise of |
reasonable diligence, have known of the presence of the |
|
violation.
|
(e) The Director may assess civil penalties as provided in |
this Section, giving due consideration to the appropriateness |
of the penalty. A penalty may be reduced by the Director or the |
Director's authorized representative based on the public |
employer's good faith, size of business, and history of |
previous violations.
|
(f) The Attorney General may bring an action in the circuit |
court to enforce the collection of any civil penalty assessed |
under this Act. |
(g) All civil penalties collected under this Act shall be |
deposited into the General Revenue Fund of the State of |
Illinois.
|
Section 90. Informal review. |
(a) A public employer may submit in writing data relating |
to the abatement of a hazard to be considered by an authorized |
representative of the Director. The authorized representative |
shall notify the interested parties if such data will be used |
to modify an abatement order. |
(b) Within 15 working days after receiving a citation, |
proposed assessment of a civil penalty, or notice of failure to |
correct a violation, a public employer or the employer's agent |
may request that an authorized representative of the Director |
review abatement dates, reclassify violations (such as willful |
to serious, serious to other than serious), or modify or |
|
withdraw a penalty, a citation, or a citation item, or any |
combination of those, if the employer presents evidence during |
the informal conference which convinces the authorized |
representative that the changes are justified. |
Section 95. Request for hearing. |
(a) Within 15 working days after receiving a citation, |
proposed assessment of a civil penalty, or notice of failure to |
correct a violation, a public employer or the employer's agent, |
manager, or superintendent may request in writing a hearing |
before the Director to contest the citation, assessment of a |
civil penalty, or notice of failure to correct a violation. |
(b) If, within 15 working days after receiving a citation |
and notice of penalty or notice of failure to correct a |
violation issued by the Director, the employer fails to notify |
the Director that it intends to contest the citation, |
assessment of a civil penalty, or notice of failure to correct |
a violation, and if no notice requesting a hearing is filed by |
an employee or employee representative under subsection (c) |
within that time, the citation, assessment of a civil penalty, |
or notice of failure to correct a violation shall be deemed a |
final order and not subject to review by any court or agency. |
(c) Within 15 working days after the issuance of a citation |
under Section 80, an employee or representative of an employee |
may file a request in writing for a hearing before the Director |
to contest the citation on the ground that the period of time |
|
fixed in the citation for the abatement of the violation |
identified in the citation is unreasonable.
|
Section 100. Hearing. |
(a) If a public employer or the employer's representative |
notifies the Director that the employer intends to contest a |
citation and notice of penalty or if, within 15 working days |
after the issuance of the citation, an employee or |
representative of employees files a notice with the Director |
alleging that the period of time fixed in the citation for the |
abatement of the violation is unreasonable, the Director shall |
afford an opportunity for a hearing before an Administrative |
Law Judge designated by the Director. |
(b) At the hearing, the employer or employee shall state |
his or her objections to the citation and provide evidence why |
the citation should not stand as issued. The Director or his or |
her representative shall be given the opportunity to state his |
or her reasons for issuing the citation. Affected employees |
shall be provided an opportunity to participate as parties to |
hearings under the rules of procedure prescribed by the |
Director (56 Ill. Admin. Code, Part 120).
|
(c) The Director, or the Administrative Law Judge on behalf |
of the Director, has the power to do the following:
|
(1) Issue subpoenas for and compel the attendance of |
witnesses.
|
(2) Hear testimony and receive evidence.
|
|
(3) Order testimony of a witness residing within or |
without this State to be taken by deposition in the manner |
prescribed by law for depositions in civil cases in the |
circuit court in any proceeding pending before him or her |
at any stage of such proceeding.
|
(d) Subpoenas and commissions to take testimony shall be |
under seal of the Director. Service of subpoenas may be made by |
a sheriff or any other person.
|
(e) The circuit court for the county where any hearing is |
pending may compel the attendance of witnesses, the production |
of pertinent books, papers, records, or documents, and the |
giving of testimony before the Director or an Administrative |
Law Judge by an attachment proceeding, as for contempt, in the |
same manner as the production of evidence may be compelled |
before the court.
|
(f) The Administrative Law Judge on behalf of the Director, |
after considering the evidence presented at the formal hearing, |
in accordance with the Director's rules, shall enter a final |
decision and order within a reasonable time affirming, |
modifying, or vacating the citation or proposed assessment of a |
civil penalty, or directing other appropriate relief.
|
Section 105. Judicial review. |
(a)
Any party adversely affected by a final order or |
determination of the Administrative Law Judge on behalf of the |
Director may obtain judicial review of that order or |
|
determination by filing a complaint for review within 35 days |
after the entry of the order or other final action complained |
of, pursuant to the Administrative Review Law. If no appeal is |
taken within 35 days after the order or determination is |
issued, the order shall become final.
|
(b) A request for judicial review filed under this Section |
shall be heard expeditiously.
|
Section 110. Discrimination against employee prohibited. |
(a) A person may not discharge or in any way discriminate |
against an employee because the employee has: (i) filed a |
complaint or instituted or caused to be instituted any |
proceeding under this Act, (ii) testified or is about to |
testify in any such proceeding, or (iii) exercised, on his or |
her own behalf or on behalf of another person, any right |
afforded by this Act.
|
(b) An employee who believes that he or she has been |
discharged or otherwise discriminated against by an employer in |
violation of this Section may, within 30 calendar days after |
the violation occurs, file a complaint with the Director |
alleging the discrimination.
|
(c) Upon receipt of the complaint, the Director shall cause |
an investigation to be made as the Director deems appropriate. |
After the investigation, if the Director determines that the |
employer has violated this Section, the Director shall bring an |
action in the circuit court for appropriate relief, including |
|
rehiring or reinstatement of the employee to his or her former |
position with back pay, after taking into account any interim |
earnings of the employee.
|
Section 115. Abatement of imminent danger. |
(a) Whenever the Director determines that an imminent |
danger exists in the working conditions of any public employee |
in this State, and that the danger may reasonably be expected |
to cause death or serious physical harm immediately or before |
the imminence of the danger can be eliminated through the |
enforcement procedures otherwise provided by this Act, the |
Director may file a complaint in the circuit court for |
appropriate relief, including an order that may require steps |
to be taken as necessary to abate, avoid, correct, or remove |
the imminent danger and prohibit the employment or presence of |
any individual in locations or under conditions where the |
imminent danger exists, except those individuals whose |
presence is necessary to abate, avoid, correct, or remove the |
imminent danger or to maintain the capacity of a continuous |
process operation to assume normal operations without a |
complete cessation of operations, or, if a cessation of |
operations is necessary, to permit the cessation to be |
accomplished in a safe and orderly manner. |
(b) If an inspector concludes that an imminent danger |
exists in any workplace, the inspector shall promptly inform |
the affected employees or their authorized representative and |
|
the employer of the danger and that the inspector will |
recommend to the Director that relief be sought as provided in |
subsection (a). |
(c) If the Director arbitrarily or capriciously fails to |
seek relief under subsection (a) after receiving an inspector's |
recommendation under subsection (b), an employee who is injured |
by reason of such failure, or the representative of the |
employee, may bring an action against the Director in the |
circuit court for the county in which the imminent danger is |
alleged to exist or in which the employer has his or her |
principal office for relief by mandamus to compel the Director |
to seek relief under subsection (a) and for such further relief |
as may be appropriate. |
Section 120. Criminal penalties. |
(a) Willful violation. A public employer that willfully |
violates any provision of this Act or any standard, rule, |
regulation, or order under this Act commits a Class 4 felony if |
that violation causes the death of any employee. |
(b) Advance notice of inspection. A person who gives |
advance notice to a public employer of any inspection to be |
conducted under this Act, without authority from the Director |
or the Director's authorized representative, commits a Class B |
misdemeanor. |
(c) False statement. A person who knowingly makes a false |
statement, representation, or certification in any |
|
application, record, report, plan, or other document required |
under this Act, or any standard, rule, regulation, or order |
adopted or issued under this Act, commits a Class 4 felony. |
Section 125. Confidentiality of trade secrets. |
(a) All information reported to or otherwise obtained by |
the Director or the Director's authorized representative in |
connection with any inspection or proceeding under this Act or |
any standard, rule, regulation, or order adopted or issued |
under this Act which contains or might reveal a trade secret |
shall be considered confidential, except that such information |
may be disclosed confidentially to other officers or employees |
concerned with carrying out this Act or when relevant to any |
proceeding under this Act. In any such proceeding, the Director |
or the court shall issue such orders as may be appropriate, |
including an order for the impoundment of files or portions of |
files, to protect the confidentiality of trade secrets. |
(b) A person who discloses a trade secret in violation of |
this Section commits a Class B misdemeanor. |
Section 130. Prosecution by Attorney General or State's |
Attorney. The Attorney General or a State's Attorney, upon |
request of the Department, shall prosecute any violation of |
this Act or a standard, rule, regulation, or order adopted or |
issued under this Act. |
|
Section 135. Safety education and other programs. |
(a) The Department shall encourage public employers as well |
as organizations and groups of employees to institute and |
maintain safety education programs for employees and promote |
the observation of safety practices.
|
(b) The Department shall provide and conduct educational |
programs specifically designed to meet the regulatory |
requirements set forth in the occupational safety and health |
standards and to meet the needs of public employers.
|
(c) The Department shall conduct regular public |
information programs to inform public employers of changes or |
updates to the standards and rules adopted under this Act as |
necessary.
|
(d) The Department shall provide support services for any |
public employer that needs assistance with the public |
employer's self-inspection programs.
|
Section 140. Director's reports. |
(a) In the annual report to the Governor required by the |
Civil Administrative Code of Illinois, the Director shall |
report the result of inspections and investigations made of |
establishments under this Act, together with such other |
information and recommendations as he or she deems proper. |
(b) The Director shall make an annual report of his or her |
work under this Act to the Governor on or before the first day |
of February of each year. The Director shall make a biennial |
|
report to the General Assembly on or before the first day of |
February of each odd-numbered year. |
Section 145. Transition provisions. This Act does not |
affect any act done, ratified, or canceled, or any right |
occurring or established, or any action or proceeding had or |
commenced in an administrative, civil, or criminal cause, under |
the Safety Inspection and Education Act or the Health and |
Safety Act, or any standard or rule adopted under either of |
those Acts, before the effective date of this Act. An employee |
or public employer may enforce any such right under this Act. |
The Department, or the Attorney General or a State's Attorney, |
may prosecute or continue any such action or proceeding under |
this Act. |
Section 900. The Civil Administrative Code of Illinois is |
amended by changing Sections 5-145 and 5-365 as follows:
|
(20 ILCS 5/5-145) (was 20 ILCS 5/5.03)
|
Sec. 5-145. In the Department of Labor. Assistant Director |
of Labor;
Chief Safety Factory Inspector; and
Superintendent of |
Occupational Safety and Health Inspection and Education .
|
(Source: P.A. 91-239, eff. 1-1-00.)
|
(20 ILCS 5/5-365) (was 20 ILCS 5/9.03)
|
Sec. 5-365. In the Department of Labor. The Director of |
|
Labor shall
receive an annual salary as set by the Compensation |
Review Board.
|
The Assistant Director of Labor shall receive
an annual |
salary as set by the Compensation Review Board.
|
The Chief Safety Factory Inspector shall receive $24,700 |
from the third Monday
in January, 1979 to the third Monday in |
January, 1980, and $25,000
thereafter, or as set by the |
Compensation Review Board, whichever is greater.
|
The Superintendent of Occupational Safety and Health |
Inspection and Education shall receive
$27,500, or as set by |
the Compensation Review Board, whichever is greater.
|
The Superintendent of Women's and Children's Employment |
shall receive
$22,000 from the third Monday in January, 1979 to |
the third Monday in January,
1980, and $22,500 thereafter, or |
as set by the
Compensation Review Board, whichever is greater.
|
(Source: P.A. 96-800, eff. 10-30-09.)
|
(820 ILCS 220/Act rep.)
|
Section 910. The Safety Inspection and Education Act is |
repealed.
|
(820 ILCS 225/Act rep.)
|
Section 915. The Health and Safety Act is repealed.
|
Section 920. The Workers' Compensation Act is amended by |
changing Sections 6 and 19 as follows:
|
|
(820 ILCS 305/6) (from Ch. 48, par. 138.6)
|
Sec. 6. (a) Every employer within the provisions of this |
Act, shall,
under the rules and regulations prescribed by the |
Commission, post
printed notices in their respective places of |
employment in such number
and at such places as may be |
determined by the Commission, containing
such information |
relative to this Act as in the judgment of the
Commission may |
be necessary to aid employees to safeguard their rights
under |
this Act in event of injury.
|
In addition thereto, the employer shall post in a |
conspicuous place
on the place of the employment a printed or |
typewritten notice stating
whether he is insured or whether he |
has qualified and is operating as a
self-insured employer. In |
the event the employer is insured, the notice
shall state the |
name and address of his insurance carrier, the number of
the |
insurance policy, its effective date and the date of |
termination. In
the event of the termination of the policy for |
any reason prior to the
termination date stated, the posted |
notice shall promptly be corrected
accordingly. In the event |
the employer is operating as a self-insured
employer the notice |
shall state the name and address of the company, if
any, |
servicing the compensation payments of the employer, and the |
name
and address of the person in charge of making compensation |
payments.
|
(b) Every employer subject to this Act shall maintain |
|
accurate
records of work-related deaths, injuries and illness |
other than minor
injuries requiring only first aid treatment |
and which do not involve
medical treatment, loss of |
consciousness, restriction of work or motion,
or transfer to |
another job and file with the Commission, in writing, a
report |
of all accidental deaths, injuries and illnesses arising out of
|
and in the course of the employment resulting in the loss of |
more than
3 scheduled work days. In the case of death such |
report shall be
made no later than 2 working days following the |
accidental death. In
all other cases such report shall be made |
between the 15th and 25th of
each month unless required to be |
made sooner by rule of the Commission.
In case the injury |
results in permanent disability, a further report
shall be made |
as soon as it is determined that such permanent disability
has |
resulted or will result from the injury. All reports shall |
state
the date of the injury, including the time of day or |
night, the nature
of the employer's business, the name, |
address, age, sex, conjugal
condition of the injured person, |
the specific occupation of the injured
person, the direct cause |
of the injury and the nature of the accident,
the character of |
the injury, the length of disability, and in case of
death the |
length of disability before death, the wages of the injured
|
person, whether compensation has been paid to the injured |
person, or to
his or her legal representative or his heirs or |
next of kin, the amount of
compensation paid, the amount paid |
for physicians', surgeons' and
hospital bills, and by whom |
|
paid, and the amount paid for funeral or
burial expenses if |
known. The reports shall be made on forms and in the
manner as |
prescribed by the Commission and shall contain such further
|
information as the Commission shall deem necessary and require. |
The
making of these reports releases the employer from making |
such reports
to any other officer of the State and shall |
satisfy the reporting
provisions as contained in the Safety |
Inspection and Education Act, the " Health and Safety Act , " and |
the Occupational Safety and Health Act "An Act in
relation to |
safety inspections and education in industrial and
commercial |
establishments and to repeal an Act therein named", approved
|
July 18, 1955, as now or hereafter amended . The reports filed |
with the
Commission pursuant to this Section shall be made |
available by the
Commission to the Director of Labor or his |
representatives and to all
other departments of the State of |
Illinois which shall require such
information for the proper |
discharge of their official duties. Failure
to file with the |
Commission any of the reports required in this Section
is a |
petty offense.
|
Except as provided in this paragraph, all reports filed |
hereunder shall
be confidential and any person
having access to |
such records filed with the Illinois Workers' Compensation |
Commission as
herein required, who shall release any |
information therein contained
including the names or otherwise |
identify any persons sustaining
injuries or disabilities, or |
give access to such information to any
unauthorized person, |
|
shall be subject to discipline or discharge, and in
addition |
shall be guilty of a Class B misdemeanor. The Commission shall
|
compile and distribute to interested persons aggregate |
statistics, taken
from the reports filed hereunder. The |
aggregate statistics shall not give
the names or otherwise |
identify persons sustaining injuries or disabilities
or the |
employer of any injured or disabled person.
|
(c) Notice of the accident shall be given to the employer |
as soon as
practicable, but not later than 45 days after the |
accident. Provided:
|
(1) In case of the legal disability of the employee
or any |
dependent of a
deceased employee who may be entitled to |
compensation under the
provisions of this Act, the limitations |
of time by this Act provided do
not begin to run against such |
person under legal disability
until a
guardian has been |
appointed.
|
(2) In cases of injuries sustained by exposure to |
radiological
materials or equipment, notice shall be given to |
the employer within 90
days subsequent to the time that the |
employee knows or suspects that he
has received an excessive |
dose of radiation.
|
No defect or inaccuracy of such notice shall be a bar to |
the
maintenance of proceedings on arbitration or otherwise by |
the employee
unless the employer proves that he is unduly |
prejudiced in such
proceedings by such defect or inaccuracy.
|
Notice of the accident shall give the approximate date and |
|
place of
the accident, if known, and may be given orally or in |
writing.
|
(d) Every employer shall notify each injured employee who |
has been
granted compensation under the provisions of Section 8 |
of this Act
of his rights to rehabilitation services and advise |
him of the locations
of available public rehabilitation centers |
and any other such services
of which the employer has |
knowledge.
|
In any case, other than one where the injury was caused by |
exposure
to radiological materials or equipment or asbestos |
unless the application for
compensation is filed with the |
Commission within 3 years after the date
of the accident, where |
no compensation has been paid, or within 2 years
after the date |
of the last payment of compensation, where any has been
paid, |
whichever shall be later, the right to file such application |
shall
be barred.
|
In any case of injury caused by exposure to radiological |
materials or
equipment or asbestos, unless application for |
compensation is filed with the
Commission within 25 years after |
the last day that the employee was
employed in an environment |
of hazardous radiological activity or asbestos,
the right to |
file such application shall be barred.
|
If in any case except one where the injury was caused by |
exposure to
radiological materials or equipment or asbestos, |
the accidental injury
results in death application for |
compensation for death may be filed with the
Commission within |
|
3 years after the date of death where no compensation
has been |
paid or within 2 years after the date of the last payment of
|
compensation where any has been paid, whichever shall be later, |
but not
thereafter.
|
If an accidental injury caused by exposure to radiological |
material
or equipment or asbestos results in death within 25 |
years after the last
day that the employee was so exposed |
application for compensation for death may
be filed with the |
Commission within 3 years after the date of death,
where no |
compensation has been paid, or within 2 years after the date of
|
the last payment of compensation where any has been paid, |
whichever
shall be later, but not thereafter.
|
(e) Any contract or agreement made by any employer or his |
agent or
attorney with any employee or any other beneficiary of |
any claim under
the provisions of this Act within 7 days after |
the injury shall be
presumed to be fraudulent.
|
(f) Any condition or impairment of health of an employee |
employed as a
firefighter, emergency medical technician (EMT), |
or paramedic which results
directly or indirectly from any |
bloodborne pathogen, lung or respiratory
disease
or condition, |
heart
or vascular disease or condition, hypertension, |
tuberculosis, or cancer
resulting in any disability |
(temporary, permanent, total, or partial) to the
employee shall |
be rebuttably presumed to arise out of and in the course of
the |
employee's firefighting, EMT, or paramedic employment and, |
further, shall
be
rebuttably presumed to be causally connected |
|
to the hazards or exposures of
the employment. This presumption |
shall also apply to any hernia or hearing
loss suffered by an |
employee employed as a firefighter, EMT, or paramedic.
However, |
this presumption shall not apply to any employee who has been |
employed
as a firefighter, EMT, or paramedic for less than 5 |
years at the time he or she files an Application for Adjustment |
of Claim concerning this condition or impairment with the |
Illinois Workers' Compensation Commission. The rebuttable |
presumption established under this subsection, however, does |
not apply to an emergency medical technician (EMT) or paramedic |
employed by a private employer if the employee spends the |
preponderance of his or her work time for that employer engaged |
in medical transfers between medical care facilities or |
non-emergency medical transfers to or from medical care |
facilities. The changes made to this subsection by this |
amendatory Act of the 98th General Assembly shall be narrowly |
construed. The Finding and Decision of the Illinois Workers' |
Compensation Commission under only the rebuttable presumption |
provision of this subsection shall not be admissible or be |
deemed res judicata in any disability claim under the Illinois |
Pension Code arising out of the same medical condition; |
however, this sentence makes no change to the law set forth in |
Krohe v. City of Bloomington, 204 Ill.2d 392.
|
(Source: P.A. 98-291, eff. 1-1-14.)
|
(820 ILCS 305/19) (from Ch. 48, par. 138.19)
|
|
Sec. 19. Any disputed questions of law or fact shall be |
determined
as herein provided.
|
(a) It shall be the duty of the Commission upon |
notification that
the parties have failed to reach an |
agreement, to designate an Arbitrator.
|
1. Whenever any claimant misconceives his remedy and |
files an
application for adjustment of claim under this Act |
and it is
subsequently discovered, at any time before final |
disposition of such
cause, that the claim for disability or |
death which was the basis for
such application should |
properly have been made under the Workers'
Occupational |
Diseases Act, then the provisions of Section 19, paragraph
|
(a-1) of the Workers' Occupational Diseases Act having |
reference to such
application shall apply.
|
2. Whenever any claimant misconceives his remedy and |
files an
application for adjustment of claim under the |
Workers' Occupational
Diseases Act and it is subsequently |
discovered, at any time before final
disposition of such |
cause that the claim for injury or death which was
the |
basis for such application should properly have been made |
under this
Act, then the application so filed under the |
Workers' Occupational
Diseases Act may be amended in form, |
substance or both to assert claim
for such disability or |
death under this Act and it shall be deemed to
have been so |
filed as amended on the date of the original filing
|
thereof, and such compensation may be awarded as is |
|
warranted by the
whole evidence pursuant to this Act. When |
such amendment is submitted,
further or additional |
evidence may be heard by the Arbitrator or
Commission when |
deemed necessary. Nothing in this Section contained
shall |
be construed to be or permit a waiver of any provisions of |
this
Act with reference to notice but notice if given shall |
be deemed to be a
notice under the provisions of this Act |
if given within the time
required herein.
|
(b) The Arbitrator shall make such inquiries and |
investigations as he or
they shall deem necessary and may |
examine and inspect all books, papers,
records, places, or |
premises relating to the questions in dispute and hear
such |
proper evidence as the parties may submit.
|
The hearings before the Arbitrator shall be held in the |
vicinity where
the injury occurred after 10 days' notice of the |
time and place of such
hearing shall have been given to each of |
the parties or their attorneys
of record.
|
The Arbitrator may find that the disabling condition is |
temporary and has
not yet reached a permanent condition and may |
order the payment of
compensation up to the date of the |
hearing, which award shall be reviewable
and enforceable in the |
same manner as other awards, and in no instance be a
bar to a |
further hearing and determination of a further amount of |
temporary
total compensation or of compensation for permanent |
disability, but shall
be conclusive as to all other questions |
except the nature and extent of said
disability.
|
|
The decision of the Arbitrator shall be filed with the |
Commission which
Commission shall immediately send to each |
party or his attorney a copy of
such decision, together with a |
notification of the time when it was filed.
As of the effective |
date of this amendatory Act of the 94th General Assembly, all |
decisions of the Arbitrator shall set forth
in writing findings |
of fact and conclusions of law, separately stated, if requested |
by either party.
Unless a petition for review is filed by |
either party within 30 days after
the receipt by such party of |
the copy of the decision and notification of
time when filed, |
and unless such party petitioning for a review shall
within 35 |
days after the receipt by him of the copy of the decision, file
|
with the Commission either an agreed statement of the facts |
appearing upon
the hearing before the Arbitrator, or if such
|
party shall so elect a correct transcript of evidence of the |
proceedings
at such hearings, then the decision shall become |
the decision of the
Commission and in the absence of fraud |
shall be conclusive.
The Petition for Review shall contain a |
statement of the petitioning party's
specific exceptions to the |
decision of the arbitrator. The jurisdiction
of the Commission |
to review the decision of the arbitrator shall not be
limited |
to the exceptions stated in the Petition for Review.
The |
Commission, or any member thereof, may grant further time not |
exceeding
30 days, in which to file such agreed statement or |
transcript of
evidence. Such agreed statement of facts or |
correct transcript of
evidence, as the case may be, shall be |
|
authenticated by the signatures
of the parties or their |
attorneys, and in the event they do not agree as
to the |
correctness of the transcript of evidence it shall be |
authenticated
by the signature of the Arbitrator designated by |
the Commission.
|
Whether the employee is working or not, if the employee is |
not receiving or has not received medical, surgical, or |
hospital services or other services or compensation as provided |
in paragraph (a) of Section 8, or compensation as provided in |
paragraph (b) of Section 8, the employee may at any time |
petition for an expedited hearing by an Arbitrator on the issue |
of whether or not he or she is entitled to receive payment of |
the services or compensation. Provided the employer continues |
to pay compensation pursuant to paragraph (b) of Section 8, the |
employer may at any time petition for an expedited hearing on |
the issue of whether or not the employee is entitled to receive |
medical, surgical, or hospital services or other services or |
compensation as provided in paragraph (a) of Section 8, or |
compensation as provided in paragraph (b) of Section 8. When an |
employer has petitioned for an expedited hearing, the employer |
shall continue to pay compensation as provided in paragraph (b) |
of Section 8 unless the arbitrator renders a decision that the |
employee is not entitled to the benefits that are the subject |
of the expedited hearing or unless the employee's treating |
physician has released the employee to return to work at his or |
her regular job with the employer or the employee actually |
|
returns to work at any other job. If the arbitrator renders a |
decision that the employee is not entitled to the benefits that |
are the subject of the expedited hearing, a petition for review |
filed by the employee shall receive the same priority as if the |
employee had filed a petition for an expedited hearing by an |
Arbitrator. Neither party shall be entitled to an expedited |
hearing when the employee has returned to work and the sole |
issue in dispute amounts to less than 12 weeks of unpaid |
compensation pursuant to paragraph (b) of Section 8. |
Expedited hearings shall have priority over all other |
petitions and shall be heard by the Arbitrator and Commission |
with all convenient speed. Any party requesting an expedited |
hearing shall give notice of a request for an expedited hearing |
under this paragraph. A copy of the Application for Adjustment |
of Claim shall be attached to the notice. The Commission shall |
adopt rules and procedures under which the final decision of |
the Commission under this paragraph is filed not later than 180 |
days from the date that the Petition for Review is filed with |
the Commission. |
Where 2 or more insurance carriers, private self-insureds, |
or a group workers' compensation pool under Article V 3/4 of |
the Illinois Insurance Code dispute coverage for the same |
injury, any such insurance carrier, private self-insured, or |
group workers' compensation pool may request an expedited |
hearing pursuant to this paragraph to determine the issue of |
coverage, provided coverage is the only issue in dispute and |
|
all other issues are stipulated and agreed to and further |
provided that all compensation benefits including medical |
benefits pursuant to Section 8(a) continue to be paid to or on |
behalf of petitioner. Any insurance carrier, private |
self-insured, or group workers' compensation pool that is |
determined to be liable for coverage for the injury in issue |
shall reimburse any insurance carrier, private self-insured, |
or group workers' compensation pool that has paid benefits to |
or on behalf of petitioner for the injury.
|
(b-1) If the employee is not receiving medical, surgical or |
hospital
services as provided in paragraph (a) of Section 8 or |
compensation as
provided in paragraph (b) of Section 8, the |
employee, in accordance with
Commission Rules, may file a |
petition for an emergency hearing by an
Arbitrator on the issue |
of whether or not he is entitled to receive payment
of such |
compensation or services as provided therein. Such petition |
shall
have priority over all other petitions and shall be heard |
by the Arbitrator
and Commission with all convenient speed.
|
Such petition shall contain the following information and |
shall be served
on the employer at least 15 days before it is |
filed:
|
(i) the date and approximate time of accident;
|
(ii) the approximate location of the accident;
|
(iii) a description of the accident;
|
(iv) the nature of the injury incurred by the employee;
|
(v) the identity of the person, if known, to whom the |
|
accident was
reported and the date on which it was |
reported;
|
(vi) the name and title of the person, if known, |
representing the
employer with whom the employee conferred |
in any effort to obtain
compensation pursuant to paragraph |
(b) of Section 8 of this Act or medical,
surgical or |
hospital services pursuant to paragraph (a) of Section 8 of
|
this Act and the date of such conference;
|
(vii) a statement that the employer has refused to pay |
compensation
pursuant to paragraph (b) of Section 8 of this |
Act or for medical, surgical
or hospital services pursuant |
to paragraph (a) of Section 8 of this Act;
|
(viii) the name and address, if known, of each witness |
to the accident
and of each other person upon whom the |
employee will rely to support his
allegations;
|
(ix) the dates of treatment related to the accident by |
medical
practitioners, and the names and addresses of such |
practitioners, including
the dates of treatment related to |
the accident at any hospitals and the
names and addresses |
of such hospitals, and a signed authorization
permitting |
the employer to examine all medical records of all |
practitioners
and hospitals named pursuant to this |
paragraph;
|
(x) a copy of a signed report by a medical |
practitioner, relating to the
employee's current inability |
to return to work because of the injuries
incurred as a |
|
result of the accident or such other documents or |
affidavits
which show that the employee is entitled to |
receive compensation pursuant
to paragraph (b) of Section 8 |
of this Act or medical, surgical or hospital
services |
pursuant to paragraph (a) of Section 8 of this Act. Such |
reports,
documents or affidavits shall state, if possible, |
the history of the
accident given by the employee, and |
describe the injury and medical
diagnosis, the medical |
services for such injury which the employee has
received |
and is receiving, the physical activities which the |
employee
cannot currently perform as a result of any |
impairment or disability due to
such injury, and the |
prognosis for recovery;
|
(xi) complete copies of any reports, records, |
documents and affidavits
in the possession of the employee |
on which the employee will rely to
support his allegations, |
provided that the employer shall pay the
reasonable cost of |
reproduction thereof;
|
(xii) a list of any reports, records, documents and |
affidavits which
the employee has demanded by subpoena and |
on which he intends to
rely to support his allegations;
|
(xiii) a certification signed by the employee or his |
representative that
the employer has received the petition |
with the required information 15
days before filing.
|
Fifteen days after receipt by the employer of the petition |
with the
required information the employee may file said |
|
petition and required
information and shall serve notice of the |
filing upon the employer. The
employer may file a motion |
addressed to the sufficiency of the petition.
If an objection |
has been filed to the sufficiency of the petition, the
|
arbitrator shall rule on the objection within 2 working days. |
If such an
objection is filed, the time for filing the final |
decision of the
Commission as provided in this paragraph shall |
be tolled until the
arbitrator has determined that the petition |
is sufficient.
|
The employer shall, within 15 days after receipt of the |
notice that such
petition is filed, file with the Commission |
and serve on the employee or
his representative a written |
response to each claim set forth in the
petition, including the |
legal and factual basis for each disputed
allegation and the |
following information: (i) complete copies of any
reports, |
records, documents and affidavits in the possession of the
|
employer on which the employer intends to rely in support of |
his response,
(ii) a list of any reports, records, documents |
and affidavits which the
employer has demanded by subpoena and |
on which the employer intends to rely
in support of his |
response, (iii) the name and address of each witness on
whom |
the employer will rely to support his response, and (iv) the |
names and
addresses of any medical practitioners selected by |
the employer pursuant to
Section 12 of this Act and the time |
and place of any examination scheduled
to be made pursuant to |
such Section.
|
|
Any employer who does not timely file and serve a written |
response
without good cause may not introduce any evidence to |
dispute any claim of
the employee but may cross examine the |
employee or any witness brought by
the employee and otherwise |
be heard.
|
No document or other evidence not previously identified by |
either party
with the petition or written response, or by any |
other means before the
hearing, may be introduced into evidence |
without good cause.
If, at the hearing, material information is |
discovered which was
not previously disclosed, the Arbitrator |
may extend the time for closing
proof on the motion of a party |
for a reasonable period of time which may
be more than 30 days. |
No evidence may be introduced pursuant
to this paragraph as to |
permanent disability. No award may be entered for
permanent |
disability pursuant to this paragraph. Either party may |
introduce
into evidence the testimony taken by deposition of |
any medical practitioner.
|
The Commission shall adopt rules, regulations and |
procedures whereby the
final decision of the Commission is |
filed not later than 90 days from the
date the petition for |
review is filed but in no event later than 180 days from
the |
date the petition for an emergency hearing is filed with the |
Illinois Workers' Compensation
Commission.
|
All service required pursuant to this paragraph (b-1) must |
be by personal
service or by certified mail and with evidence |
of receipt. In addition for
the purposes of this paragraph, all |
|
service on the employer must be at the
premises where the |
accident occurred if the premises are owned or operated
by the |
employer. Otherwise service must be at the employee's principal
|
place of employment by the employer. If service on the employer |
is not
possible at either of the above, then service shall be |
at the employer's
principal place of business. After initial |
service in each case, service
shall be made on the employer's |
attorney or designated representative.
|
(c)(1) At a reasonable time in advance of and in connection |
with the
hearing under Section 19(e) or 19(h), the Commission |
may on its own motion
order an impartial physical or mental |
examination of a petitioner whose
mental or physical condition |
is in issue, when in the Commission's
discretion it appears |
that such an examination will materially aid in the
just |
determination of the case. The examination shall be made by a |
member
or members of a panel of physicians chosen for their |
special qualifications
by the Illinois State Medical Society. |
The Commission shall establish
procedures by which a physician |
shall be selected from such list.
|
(2) Should the Commission at any time during the hearing |
find that
compelling considerations make it advisable to have |
an examination and
report at that time, the commission may in |
its discretion so order.
|
(3) A copy of the report of examination shall be given to |
the Commission
and to the attorneys for the parties.
|
(4) Either party or the Commission may call the examining |
|
physician or
physicians to testify. Any physician so called |
shall be subject to
cross-examination.
|
(5) The examination shall be made, and the physician or |
physicians, if
called, shall testify, without cost to the |
parties. The Commission shall
determine the compensation and |
the pay of the physician or physicians. The
compensation for |
this service shall not exceed the usual and customary amount
|
for such service.
|
(6) The fees and payment thereof of all attorneys and |
physicians for
services authorized by the Commission under this |
Act shall, upon request
of either the employer or the employee |
or the beneficiary affected, be
subject to the review and |
decision of the Commission.
|
(d) If any employee shall persist in insanitary or |
injurious
practices which tend to either imperil or retard his |
recovery or shall
refuse to submit to such medical, surgical, |
or hospital treatment as is
reasonably essential to promote his |
recovery, the Commission may, in its
discretion, reduce or |
suspend the compensation of any such injured
employee. However, |
when an employer and employee so agree in writing,
the |
foregoing provision shall not be construed to authorize the
|
reduction or suspension of compensation of an employee who is |
relying in
good faith, on treatment by prayer or spiritual |
means alone, in
accordance with the tenets and practice of a |
recognized church or
religious denomination, by a duly |
accredited practitioner thereof.
|
|
(e) This paragraph shall apply to all hearings before the |
Commission.
Such hearings may be held in its office or |
elsewhere as the Commission
may deem advisable. The taking of |
testimony on such hearings may be had
before any member of the |
Commission. If a petition for review and agreed
statement of |
facts or transcript of evidence is filed, as provided herein,
|
the Commission shall promptly review the decision of the |
Arbitrator and all
questions of law or fact which appear from |
the statement of facts or
transcript of evidence.
|
In all cases in which the hearing before the arbitrator is |
held after
December 18, 1989, no additional evidence shall be |
introduced by the
parties before the Commission on review of |
the decision of the Arbitrator.
In reviewing decisions of an |
arbitrator the Commission shall award such
temporary |
compensation, permanent compensation and other payments as are
|
due under this Act. The Commission shall file in its office its |
decision
thereon, and shall immediately send to each party or |
his attorney a copy of
such decision and a notification of the |
time when it was filed. Decisions
shall be filed within 60 days |
after the Statement of Exceptions and
Supporting Brief and |
Response thereto are required to be filed or oral
argument |
whichever is later.
|
In the event either party requests oral argument, such |
argument shall be
had before a panel of 3 members of the |
Commission (or before all available
members pursuant to the |
determination of 7 members of the Commission that
such argument |
|
be held before all available members of the Commission)
|
pursuant to the rules and regulations of the Commission. A |
panel of 3
members, which shall be comprised of not more than |
one representative
citizen of the employing class and not more |
than one representative citizen
of the employee class, shall |
hear the argument; provided that if all the
issues in dispute |
are solely the nature and extent of the permanent partial
|
disability, if any, a majority of the panel may deny the |
request for such
argument and such argument shall not be held; |
and provided further that 7
members of the Commission may |
determine that the argument be held before
all available |
members of the Commission. A decision of the Commission
shall |
be approved by a majority of Commissioners present at such |
hearing if
any; provided, if no such hearing is held, a |
decision of the Commission
shall be approved by a majority of a |
panel of 3 members of the Commission
as described in this |
Section. The Commission shall give 10 days' notice to
the |
parties or their attorneys of the time and place of such taking |
of
testimony and of such argument.
|
In any case the Commission in its decision may find |
specially
upon any question or questions of law or fact which |
shall be submitted
in writing by either party whether ultimate |
or otherwise;
provided that on issues other than nature and |
extent of the disability,
if any, the Commission in its |
decision shall find specially upon any
question or questions of |
law or fact, whether ultimate or otherwise,
which are submitted |
|
in writing by either party; provided further that
not more than |
5 such questions may be submitted by either party. Any
party |
may, within 20 days after receipt of notice of the Commission's
|
decision, or within such further time, not exceeding 30 days, |
as the
Commission may grant, file with the Commission either an |
agreed
statement of the facts appearing upon the hearing, or, |
if such party
shall so elect, a correct transcript of evidence |
of the additional
proceedings presented before the Commission, |
in which report the party
may embody a correct statement of |
such other proceedings in the case as
such party may desire to |
have reviewed, such statement of facts or
transcript of |
evidence to be authenticated by the signature of the
parties or |
their attorneys, and in the event that they do not agree,
then |
the authentication of such transcript of evidence shall be by |
the
signature of any member of the Commission.
|
If a reporter does not for any reason furnish a transcript |
of the
proceedings before the Arbitrator in any case for use on |
a hearing for
review before the Commission, within the |
limitations of time as fixed in
this Section, the Commission |
may, in its discretion, order a trial de
novo before the |
Commission in such case upon application of either
party. The |
applications for adjustment of claim and other documents in
the |
nature of pleadings filed by either party, together with the
|
decisions of the Arbitrator and of the Commission and the |
statement of
facts or transcript of evidence hereinbefore |
provided for in paragraphs
(b) and (c) shall be the record of |
|
the proceedings of the Commission,
and shall be subject to |
review as hereinafter provided.
|
At the request of either party or on its own motion, the |
Commission shall
set forth in writing the reasons for the |
decision, including findings of
fact and conclusions of law |
separately stated. The Commission shall by rule
adopt a format |
for written decisions for the Commission and arbitrators.
The |
written decisions shall be concise and shall succinctly state |
the facts
and reasons for the decision. The Commission may |
adopt in whole or in part,
the decision of the arbitrator as |
the decision of the Commission. When the
Commission does so |
adopt the decision of the arbitrator, it shall do so by
order. |
Whenever the Commission adopts part of the arbitrator's |
decision,
but not all, it shall include in the order the |
reasons for not adopting all
of the arbitrator's decision. When |
a majority of a panel, after
deliberation, has arrived at its |
decision, the decision shall be filed as
provided in this |
Section without unnecessary delay, and without regard to
the |
fact that a member of the panel has expressed an intention to |
dissent.
Any member of the panel may file a dissent. Any |
dissent shall be filed no
later than 10 days after the decision |
of the majority has been filed.
|
Decisions rendered by the Commission and dissents, if any, |
shall be
published together by the Commission. The conclusions |
of law set out in
such decisions shall be regarded as |
precedents by arbitrators for the purpose
of achieving a more |
|
uniform administration of this Act.
|
(f) The decision of the Commission acting within its |
powers,
according to the provisions of paragraph (e) of this |
Section shall, in
the absence of fraud, be conclusive unless |
reviewed as in this paragraph
hereinafter provided. However, |
the Arbitrator or the Commission may on
his or its own motion, |
or on the motion of either party, correct any
clerical error or |
errors in computation within 15 days after the date of
receipt |
of any award by such Arbitrator or any decision on review of |
the
Commission and shall have the power to recall the original |
award on
arbitration or decision on review, and issue in lieu |
thereof such
corrected award or decision. Where such correction |
is made the time for
review herein specified shall begin to run |
from the date of
the receipt of the corrected award or |
decision.
|
(1) Except in cases of claims against the State of |
Illinois other than those claims under Section 18.1, in
|
which case the decision of the Commission shall not be |
subject to
judicial review, the Circuit Court of the county |
where any of the
parties defendant may be found, or if none |
of the parties defendant can
be found in this State then |
the Circuit Court of the county where the
accident |
occurred, shall by summons to the Commission have
power to |
review all questions of law and fact presented by such |
record.
|
A proceeding for review shall be commenced within 20 |
|
days of
the receipt of notice of the decision of the |
Commission. The summons shall
be issued by the clerk of |
such court upon written request returnable on a
designated |
return day, not less than 10 or more than 60 days from the |
date
of issuance thereof, and the written request shall |
contain the last known
address of other parties in interest |
and their attorneys of record who are
to be served by |
summons. Service upon any member of the Commission or the
|
Secretary or the Assistant Secretary thereof shall be |
service upon the
Commission, and service upon other parties |
in interest and their attorneys
of record shall be by |
summons, and such service shall be made upon the
Commission |
and other parties in interest by mailing notices of the
|
commencement of the proceedings and the return day of the |
summons to the
office of the Commission and to the last |
known place of residence of other
parties in interest or |
their attorney or attorneys of record. The clerk of
the |
court issuing the summons shall on the day of issue mail |
notice of the
commencement of the proceedings which shall |
be done by mailing a copy of
the summons to the office of |
the Commission, and a copy of the summons to
the other |
parties in interest or their attorney or attorneys of |
record and
the clerk of the court shall make certificate |
that he has so sent said
notices in pursuance of this |
Section, which shall be evidence of service on
the |
Commission and other parties in interest.
|
|
The Commission shall not be required to certify the |
record of their
proceedings to the Circuit Court, unless |
the party commencing the
proceedings for review in the |
Circuit Court as above provided, shall file with the |
Commission notice of intent to file for review in Circuit |
Court. It shall be the duty
of the Commission upon such |
filing of notice of intent to file for review in the |
Circuit Court to prepare a true and correct
copy of such |
testimony and a true and correct copy of all other matters
|
contained in such record and certified to by the Secretary |
or Assistant
Secretary thereof. The changes made to this |
subdivision (f)(1) by this amendatory Act of the 98th |
General Assembly apply to any Commission decision entered |
after the effective date of this amendatory Act of the 98th |
General Assembly.
|
No request for a summons
may be filed and no summons |
shall issue unless the party seeking to review
the decision |
of the Commission shall exhibit to the clerk of the Circuit
|
Court proof of filing with the Commission of the notice of |
the intent to file for review in the Circuit Court or an |
affidavit
of the attorney setting forth that notice of |
intent to file for review in the Circuit Court has been |
given in writing to the Secretary or Assistant Secretary of |
the Commission.
|
(2) No such summons shall issue unless the one against |
whom the
Commission shall have rendered an award for the |
|
payment of money shall upon
the filing of his written |
request for such summons file with the clerk of
the court a |
bond conditioned that if he shall not successfully
|
prosecute the review, he will pay the award and the costs |
of the
proceedings in the courts. The amount of the bond |
shall be fixed by any
member of the Commission and the |
surety or sureties of the bond shall be
approved by the |
clerk of the court. The acceptance of the bond by the
clerk |
of the court shall constitute evidence of his approval of |
the bond.
|
Every county, city, town, township, incorporated |
village, school
district, body politic or municipal |
corporation against whom the
Commission shall have |
rendered an award for the payment of money shall
not be |
required to file a bond to secure the payment of the award |
and
the costs of the proceedings in the court to authorize |
the court to
issue such summons.
|
The court may confirm or set aside the decision of the |
Commission. If
the decision is set aside and the facts |
found in the proceedings before
the Commission are |
sufficient, the court may enter such decision as is
|
justified by law, or may remand the cause to the Commission |
for further
proceedings and may state the questions |
requiring further hearing, and
give such other |
instructions as may be proper. Appeals shall be taken
to |
the Appellate Court in accordance
with Supreme Court Rules |
|
22(g) and 303. Appeals
shall be taken from the Appellate
|
Court to the Supreme Court in accordance with Supreme Court |
Rule 315.
|
It shall be the duty of the clerk of any court |
rendering a decision
affecting or affirming an award of the |
Commission to promptly furnish
the Commission with a copy |
of such decision, without charge.
|
The decision of a majority of the members of the panel |
of the Commission,
shall be considered the decision of the |
Commission.
|
(g) Except in the case of a claim against the State of |
Illinois,
either party may present a certified copy of the |
award of the
Arbitrator, or a certified copy of the decision of |
the Commission when
the same has become final, when no |
proceedings for review are pending,
providing for the payment |
of compensation according to this Act, to the
Circuit Court of |
the county in which such accident occurred or either of
the |
parties are residents, whereupon the court shall enter a |
judgment
in accordance therewith. In a case where the employer |
refuses to pay
compensation according to such final award or |
such final decision upon
which such judgment is entered the |
court shall in entering judgment
thereon, tax as costs against |
him the reasonable costs and attorney fees
in the arbitration |
proceedings and in the court entering the judgment
for the |
person in whose favor the judgment is entered, which judgment
|
and costs taxed as therein provided shall, until and unless set |
|
aside,
have the same effect as though duly entered in an action |
duly tried and
determined by the court, and shall with like |
effect, be entered and
docketed. The Circuit Court shall have |
power at any time upon
application to make any such judgment |
conform to any modification
required by any subsequent decision |
of the Supreme Court upon appeal, or
as the result of any |
subsequent proceedings for review, as provided in
this Act.
|
Judgment shall not be entered until 15 days' notice of the |
time and
place of the application for the entry of judgment |
shall be served upon
the employer by filing such notice with |
the Commission, which Commission
shall, in case it has on file |
the address of the employer or the name
and address of its |
agent upon whom notices may be served, immediately
send a copy |
of the notice to the employer or such designated agent.
|
(h) An agreement or award under this Act providing for |
compensation
in installments, may at any time within 18 months |
after such agreement
or award be reviewed by the Commission at |
the request of either the
employer or the employee, on the |
ground that the disability of the
employee has subsequently |
recurred, increased, diminished or ended.
|
However, as to accidents occurring subsequent to July 1, |
1955, which
are covered by any agreement or award under this |
Act providing for
compensation in installments made as a result |
of such accident, such
agreement or award may at any time |
within 30 months, or 60 months in the case of an award under |
Section 8(d)1, after such agreement
or award be reviewed by the |
|
Commission at the request of either the
employer or the |
employee on the ground that the disability of the
employee has |
subsequently recurred, increased, diminished or ended.
|
On such review, compensation payments may be |
re-established,
increased, diminished or ended. The Commission |
shall give 15 days'
notice to the parties of the hearing for |
review. Any employee, upon any
petition for such review being |
filed by the employer, shall be entitled
to one day's notice |
for each 100 miles necessary to be traveled by him in
attending |
the hearing of the Commission upon the petition, and 3 days in
|
addition thereto. Such employee shall, at the discretion of the
|
Commission, also be entitled to 5 cents per mile necessarily |
traveled by
him within the State of Illinois in attending such |
hearing, not to
exceed a distance of 300 miles, to be taxed by |
the Commission as costs
and deposited with the petition of the |
employer.
|
When compensation which is payable in accordance with an |
award or
settlement contract approved by the Commission, is |
ordered paid in a
lump sum by the Commission, no review shall |
be had as in this paragraph
mentioned.
|
(i) Each party, upon taking any proceedings or steps |
whatsoever
before any Arbitrator, Commission or court, shall |
file with the Commission
his address, or the name and address |
of any agent upon whom all notices to
be given to such party |
shall be served, either personally or by registered
mail, |
addressed to such party or agent at the last address so filed |
|
with
the Commission. In the event such party has not filed his |
address, or the
name and address of an agent as above provided, |
service of any notice may
be had by filing such notice with the |
Commission.
|
(j) Whenever in any proceeding testimony has been taken or |
a final
decision has been rendered and after the taking of such |
testimony or
after such decision has become final, the injured |
employee dies, then in
any subsequent proceedings brought by |
the personal representative or
beneficiaries of the deceased |
employee, such testimony in the former
proceeding may be |
introduced with the same force and effect as though
the witness |
having so testified were present in person in such
subsequent |
proceedings and such final decision, if any, shall be taken
as |
final adjudication of any of the issues which are the same in |
both
proceedings.
|
(k) In case where there has been any unreasonable or |
vexatious delay
of payment or intentional underpayment of |
compensation, or proceedings
have been instituted or carried on |
by the one liable to pay the
compensation, which do not present |
a real controversy, but are merely
frivolous or for delay, then |
the Commission may award compensation
additional to that |
otherwise payable under this Act equal to 50% of the
amount |
payable at the time of such award. Failure to pay compensation
|
in accordance with the provisions of Section 8, paragraph (b) |
of this
Act, shall be considered unreasonable delay.
|
When determining whether this subsection (k) shall apply, |
|
the
Commission shall consider whether an Arbitrator has |
determined
that the claim is not compensable or whether the |
employer has
made payments under Section 8(j). |
(l) If the employee has made written demand for payment of
|
benefits under Section 8(a) or Section 8(b), the employer shall
|
have 14 days after receipt of the demand to set forth in
|
writing the reason for the delay. In the case of demand for
|
payment of medical benefits under Section 8(a), the time for
|
the employer to respond shall not commence until the expiration
|
of the allotted 30 days specified under Section 8.2(d). In case
|
the employer or his or her insurance carrier shall without good |
and
just cause fail, neglect, refuse, or unreasonably delay the
|
payment of benefits under Section 8(a) or Section 8(b), the
|
Arbitrator or the Commission shall allow to the employee
|
additional compensation in the sum of $30 per day for each day
|
that the benefits under Section 8(a) or Section 8(b) have been
|
so withheld or refused, not to exceed $10,000.
A delay in |
payment of 14 days or more
shall create a rebuttable |
presumption of unreasonable delay.
|
(m) If the commission finds that an accidental injury was |
directly
and proximately caused by the employer's wilful |
violation of a health
and safety standard under the Health and |
Safety Act or the Occupational Safety and Health Act in force |
at the time of the
accident, the arbitrator or the Commission |
shall allow to the injured
employee or his dependents, as the |
case may be, additional compensation
equal to 25% of the amount |
|
which otherwise would be payable under the
provisions of this |
Act exclusive of this paragraph. The additional
compensation |
herein provided shall be allowed by an appropriate increase
in |
the applicable weekly compensation rate.
|
(n) After June 30, 1984, decisions of the Illinois Workers' |
Compensation Commission
reviewing an award of an arbitrator of |
the Commission shall draw interest
at a rate equal to the yield |
on indebtedness issued by the United States
Government with a |
26-week maturity next previously auctioned on the day on
which |
the decision is filed. Said rate of interest shall be set forth |
in
the Arbitrator's Decision. Interest shall be drawn from the |
date of the
arbitrator's award on all accrued compensation due |
the employee through the
day prior to the date of payments. |
However, when an employee appeals an
award of an Arbitrator or |
the Commission, and the appeal results in no
change or a |
decrease in the award, interest shall not further accrue from
|
the date of such appeal.
|
The employer or his insurance carrier may tender the |
payments due under
the award to stop the further accrual of |
interest on such award
notwithstanding the prosecution by |
either party of review, certiorari,
appeal to the Supreme Court |
or other steps to reverse, vacate or modify
the award.
|
(o) By the 15th day of each month each insurer providing |
coverage for
losses under this Act shall notify each insured |
employer of any compensable
claim incurred during the preceding |
month and the amounts paid or reserved
on the claim including a |
|
summary of the claim and a brief statement of the
reasons for |
compensability. A cumulative report of all claims incurred
|
during a calendar year or continued from the previous year |
shall be
furnished to the insured employer by the insurer |
within 30 days after the
end of that calendar year.
|
The insured employer may challenge, in proceeding before |
the Commission,
payments made by the insurer without |
arbitration and payments
made after a case is determined to be |
noncompensable. If the Commission
finds that the case was not |
compensable, the insurer shall purge its records
as to that |
employer of any loss or expense associated with the claim, |
reimburse
the employer for attorneys' fees arising from the |
challenge and for any
payment required of the employer to the |
Rate Adjustment Fund or the
Second Injury Fund, and may not |
reflect the loss or expense for rate making
purposes. The |
employee shall not be required to refund the challenged
|
payment. The decision of the Commission may be reviewed in the |
same manner
as in arbitrated cases. No challenge may be |
initiated under this paragraph
more than 3 years after the |
payment is made. An employer may waive the
right of challenge |
under this paragraph on a case by case basis.
|
(p) After filing an application for adjustment of claim but |
prior to
the hearing on arbitration the parties may voluntarily |
agree to submit such
application for adjustment of claim for |
decision by an arbitrator under
this subsection (p) where such |
application for adjustment of claim raises
only a dispute over |
|
temporary total disability, permanent partial
disability or |
medical expenses. Such agreement shall be in writing in such
|
form as provided by the Commission. Applications for adjustment |
of claim
submitted for decision by an arbitrator under this |
subsection (p) shall
proceed according to rule as established |
by the Commission. The Commission
shall promulgate rules |
including, but not limited to, rules to ensure that
the parties |
are adequately informed of their rights under this subsection
|
(p) and of the voluntary nature of proceedings under this |
subsection (p).
The findings of fact made by an arbitrator |
acting within his or her powers
under this subsection (p) in |
the absence of fraud shall be conclusive.
However, the |
arbitrator may on his own motion, or the motion of either
|
party, correct any clerical errors or errors in computation |
within 15 days
after the date of receipt of such award of the |
arbitrator
and shall have the power to recall the original |
award on arbitration, and
issue in lieu thereof such corrected |
award.
The decision of the arbitrator under this subsection (p) |
shall be
considered the decision of the Commission and |
proceedings for review of
questions of law arising from the |
decision may be commenced by either party
pursuant to |
subsection (f) of Section 19. The Advisory Board established
|
under Section 13.1 shall compile a list of certified Commission
|
arbitrators, each of whom shall be approved by at least 7 |
members of the
Advisory Board. The chairman shall select 5 |
persons from such list to
serve as arbitrators under this |
|
subsection (p). By agreement, the parties
shall select one |
arbitrator from among the 5 persons selected by the
chairman |
except that if the parties do not agree on an arbitrator from
|
among the 5 persons, the parties may, by agreement, select an |
arbitrator of
the American Arbitration Association, whose fee |
shall be paid by the State
in accordance with rules promulgated |
by the Commission. Arbitration under
this subsection (p) shall |
be voluntary.
|
(Source: P.A. 97-18, eff. 6-28-11; 98-40, eff. 6-28-13.)
|
Section 925. The Workers' Occupational Diseases Act is |
amended by changing Sections 3 and 6 as follows:
|
(820 ILCS 310/3) (from Ch. 48, par. 172.38)
|
Sec. 3. Where an employee in this State sustains injury to |
health or death
by reason of a disease contracted or sustained |
in the course of the
employment and proximately caused by the |
negligence of the employer, unless
such employer shall be |
subject to this Act under the provisions of
paragraph (a) of |
Section 2 of this Act or shall have elected to provide
and pay |
compensation as provided in Section 2 of this Act, a right of
|
action shall accrue to the employee whose health has been so |
injured for
any damages sustained thereby; and in case of |
death, a right of action
shall accrue to the widow or widower |
of such deceased person, his
or her lineal heirs or
adopted |
children, or to any person or persons who were, before such |
|
loss of
life, dependent for support upon such deceased person, |
for a like recovery
of damages for the injury sustained by |
reason of such death not to exceed
the sum of $10,000. |
Violation by any employer of any effective rule or
rules made |
by the Illinois Workers' Compensation Commission pursuant to |
the " Health and Safety
Act or the Occupational Safety and |
Health Act ", approved March 16, 1936, as amended , or violation |
by the employer
of any statute of this State, intended for the |
protection of the health of
employees shall be and constitute |
negligence of the employer within the
meaning of this Section. |
Every such action for damage for injury to the
health shall be |
commenced within 3 years after the last day of the last
|
exposure to the hazards of the disease and every such action |
for damages in
case of death shall be commenced within one year |
after the death of such
employee and within 5 years after the |
last day of the last exposure to the
hazards of the disease |
except where the disease is caused by atomic
radiation, in |
which case, every action for damages for injury to health
shall |
be commenced within 15 years after the last day of last |
exposure to
the hazard of such disease and every action for |
damages in case of death
shall be commenced within one year |
after the death of such employee and
within 15 years after last |
exposure to the hazards of the disease. In any
action to |
recover damages under this Section, it shall not be a defense
|
that the employee either expressly or impliedly assumed the |
risk of the
employment, or that the contraction or sustaining |
|
of the disease or death
was caused in whole or in part by the |
negligence of a fellow servant or
fellow servants, or that the |
contraction or sustaining of the disease or
death resulting was |
caused in whole or in part by the contributory
negligence of |
the employee, where such contributory negligence was not
|
wilful.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-721, eff. 1-1-05.)
|
(820 ILCS 310/6) (from Ch. 48, par. 172.41)
|
Sec. 6. (a) Every employer operating under the compensation
|
provisions of this Act, shall post printed notices in their |
respective
places of employment in conspicuous places and in |
such number and at
such places as may be determined by the |
Commission, containing such
information relative to this Act as |
in the judgment of the Commission
may be necessary to aid |
employees to safeguard their rights under this Act.
|
In addition thereto, the employer shall post in a |
conspicuous place
on the premises of the employment a printed |
or typewritten notice
stating whether he is insured or whether |
he has qualified and is
operating as a self-insured employer. |
In the event the employer is
insured, the notice shall state |
the name and address of his or her insurance
carrier, the |
number of the insurance policy, its effective date and the
date |
of termination. In the event of the termination of the policy |
for
any reason prior to the termination date stated, the posted |
notice shall
promptly be corrected accordingly. In the event |
|
the employer is
operating as a self-insured employer the notice |
shall state the name and
address of the company, if any, |
servicing the compensation payments of
the employer, and the |
name and address of the person in charge of making
compensation |
payments.
|
(b) Every employer subject to this Act shall maintain |
accurate
records of work-related deaths, injuries and |
illnesses other than minor
injuries requiring only first aid |
treatment and which do not involve
medical treatment, loss of |
consciousness, restriction of work or motion
or transfer to |
another job and file with the Illinois Workers' Compensation |
Commission, in
writing, a report of all occupational diseases |
arising out of and in the
course of the employment and |
resulting in death, or disablement or
illness resulting in the |
loss of more than 3 scheduled work
days. In the case
of death |
such report shall be made no later than 2 working days
|
following the occupational death. In all other cases such |
report shall
be made between the 15th and 25th of each month |
unless required to be
made sooner by rule of the Illinois |
Workers' Compensation Commission. In case the
occupational |
disease results in permanent disability, a further report
shall |
be made as soon as it is determined that such permanent |
disability
has resulted or will result therefrom. All reports |
shall state the date
of the disablement, the nature of the |
employer's business, the name,
address, the age, sex, conjugal |
condition of the disabled person, the
specific occupation of |
|
the person, the nature and character of the
occupational |
disease, the length of disability, and, in case of death,
the |
length of disability before death, the wages of the employee,
|
whether compensation has been paid to the employee, or to his |
legal
representative or his heirs or next of kin, the amount of |
compensation
paid, the amount paid for physicians', surgeons' |
and hospital bills, and
by whom paid, and the amount paid for |
funeral or burial expenses, if
known. The reports shall be made |
on forms and in the manner as
prescribed by the Illinois |
Workers' Compensation
Commission and shall contain such |
further
information as the Commission shall deem necessary and |
require. The
making of such reports releases the employer from |
making such reports to
any other officer of the State and shall |
satisfy the reporting
provisions as contained in the Safety |
Inspection and Education Act, the " Health And Safety Act , " and |
the Occupational Safety and Health Act "An Act in
relation to |
safety inspections and education in industrial and
commercial |
establishments and to repeal an Act therein named", approved
|
July 18, 1955, as amended . The report filed with the Illinois |
Workers' Compensation
Commission pursuant to the provisions of |
this Section shall be made
available by the Illinois Workers' |
Compensation Commission to the Director of Labor or his
|
representatives, to the Department of Public Health pursuant to |
the
Illinois Health and Hazardous Substances Registry Act, and |
to all other
departments of the State of Illinois which shall |
require such information
for the proper discharge of their |
|
official duties. Failure to file with
the Commission any of the |
reports required in this Section is a petty offense.
|
Except as provided in this paragraph, all reports filed |
hereunder shall
be confidential and any person
having access to |
such records filed with the Illinois Workers' Compensation |
Commission as
herein required, who shall release the names or |
otherwise identify any
persons sustaining injuries or |
disabilities, or gives access to such
information to any |
unauthorized person, shall be subject to discipline
or |
discharge, and in addition shall be guilty of a Class B |
misdemeanor.
The Commission shall compile and distribute to |
interested persons aggregate
statistics, taken from the |
reports filed hereunder. The aggregate statistics
shall not |
give the names or otherwise identify persons sustaining |
injuries
or disabilities or the employer of any injured or |
disabled person.
|
(c) There shall be given notice to the employer of |
disablement
arising from an occupational disease as soon as |
practicable after the
date of the disablement. If the |
Commission shall find that the failure
to give such notice |
substantially prejudices the rights of the employer
the |
Commission in its discretion may order that the right of the
|
employee to proceed under this Act shall be barred.
|
In case of legal disability of the employee or any |
dependent of a
deceased employee who may be entitled to |
compensation, under the
provisions of this Act, the limitations |
|
of time in this Section of this
Act provided shall not begin to |
run against such person who is under legal
disability until a |
conservator or guardian has been appointed. No defect or
|
inaccuracy of such notice shall be a bar to the maintenance of |
proceedings on
arbitration or otherwise by the employee unless |
the employer proves that
he or she is unduly prejudiced in such |
proceedings by such defect or
inaccuracy. Notice of the |
disabling disease may be given orally or in writing.
In any |
case, other than injury or death caused by exposure to |
radiological
materials or equipment or asbestos, unless |
application for compensation
is filed with the Commission |
within 3 years after the date of the
disablement, where no |
compensation has been paid, or within 2 years
after the date of |
the last payment of compensation, where any has been
paid, |
whichever shall be later, the right to file such application
|
shall be barred. If the occupational disease results in death,
|
application for compensation for death may be filed with the |
Commission
within 3 years after the date of death where no |
compensation has been
paid, or within 3 years after the last |
payment of compensation, where
any has been paid, whichever is |
later, but not thereafter.
|
Effective July 1, 1973 in cases of disability caused by |
coal miners
pneumoconiosis unless application for compensation |
is filed with the
Commission within 5 years after the employee |
was last exposed where no
compensation has been paid, or within |
5 years after the last payment of
compensation where any has |
|
been paid, the right to file such application
shall be barred.
|
In cases of disability caused by exposure to radiological |
materials
or equipment or asbestos, unless application for |
compensation is filed with the
Commission within 25 years after |
the employee was so exposed, the right
to file such application |
shall be barred.
|
In cases of death occurring within 25 years from the last |
exposure to
radiological material or equipment or asbestos, |
application for compensation
must be filed within 3 years of |
death where no compensation has been paid, or
within 3 years, |
after the date of the last payment where any has been
paid, but |
not thereafter.
|
(d) Any contract or agreement made by any employer or his |
agent or
attorney with any employee or any other beneficiary of |
any claim under
the provisions of this Act within 7 days after |
the disablement shall be
presumed to be fraudulent.
|
(Source: P.A. 93-721, eff. 1-1-05.)
|