Public Act 098-0874
 
SB1103 EnrolledLRB098 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.)