In line with recently passed legislation in New York and California, the Illinois Legislature rallied to create a bill that would help increase employee protections by combating discrimination and harassment in the workplace.
On June 2, the General Assembly, through bipartisan efforts, passed SB 75, which created three new laws and amended others that relate to sexual harassment and discrimination. On Aug. 9, Gov. J.B. Pritzker signed SB 75, Public Act 101-0221, into law, comprehensively re-shaping the landscape of sexual harassment and discrimination law in Illinois.
The new law not only prohibits unilateral agreements to arbitrate claims involving discrimination, harassment, and retaliation for complaining about discrimination or harassment, but also changes sexual harassment reporting and training requirements and impacts how union representation is handled during the course of proceedings related to claims of sexual harassment.
Workplace Transparency Act
SB 75 creates the Workplace Transparency Act (WTA). This act prohibits any "contract, agreement, clause, covenant, waiver or other document" from restricting an employee from reporting allegations of unlawful conduct to federal, state or local officials for investigation. The WTA does not apply, however to collective bargaining agreements covered by the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA).
In sum, employers may not unilaterally compel an employee to keep silent about alleged unlawful employment practices in the workplace.
Most significant, any contract or the like that requires an employee to waive or arbitrate existing or future claims of unlawful employment practices is "void to the extent that it denies the employee a substantive or procedural right or remedy." The WTA defines an "unlawful employment practice" to cover employment discrimination or harassment based on any protected category or retaliation for complaining of such discrimination or harassment.
Illinois employers will thus need to rethink the language used in their standard arbitration agreements to the extent that such agreements are conditioned on employment or continued employment. As a minor concession to employers with existing arbitration agreements, the WTA does provide for the severability of noncompliant terms from an otherwise enforceable agreement.
As an additional compromise, however costly, employers may negotiate arbitration agreements with individual employees in exchange for consideration. The WTA expressly permits such a practice by stating that any agreement "that is a mutual condition of employment or continued employment" may include provisions "that would otherwise be against public policy," but only if the agreement demonstrates "actual, knowing and bargained-for consideration from both parties" and acknowledges the right of the employee or prospective employee to:
- Report any good-faith allegation of unlawful employment practices to any appropriate federal, state or local government agency enforcing discrimination laws.
- Report any good-faith allegation of criminal conduct to any appropriate federal, state or local official.
- Participate in a proceeding with any appropriate federal, state or local government agency enforcing discrimination laws.
- Make any truthful statements or disclosures required by law, regulation or legal process.
- Request or receive confidential legal advice.
Many practical questions for employers remain. For example, how much consideration is necessary to ensure that an agreement to arbitrate discrimination, harassment or retaliation claims is a "mutual" condition of employment? Must the consideration be purely monetary in nature? The answers to these questions likely will depend on the facts and circumstances surrounding an individual's employment or prospective employment and the extent to which a court could find that the employee is coerced into accepting the terms of an arbitration agreement.
In a similar vein, the WTA continues to permit employers to require confidentiality related to unlawful employment practices in settlement or termination agreements, so long as:
- Confidentiality is the documented preference of the employee.
- The employer notifies the employee in writing of his or her right to have an attorney or representative of his or her choice to review the settlement or termination agreement before it is executed.
- There is valid, bargained-for consideration in exchange for the confidentiality.
- The settlement or termination agreement does not waive any claims of unlawful employment practices that accrue after the date of execution of the settlement or termination agreement.
- The settlement or termination agreement is provided in writing to the parties and the employee is given 21 calendar days to consider the agreement before execution.
- Unless knowingly and voluntarily waived by the employee, he or she has seven calendar days following the execution of the agreement to revoke the agreement and the agreement is not effective or enforceable until the revocation period has expired.
The WTA incentivizes employees to risk contesting the enforceability of any agreements entered into under these exceptional provisions by providing for the award of attorney fees and costs in the event of a favorable, non-appealable ruling.
Employers seeking to challenge the enforceability of the Workplace Transparency Act may have the opportunity to do so. There is a strong argument that the Federal Arbitration Act (FAA) pre-empts the Illinois law on its terms relating to mandatory arbitration agreements.
In fact, a federal court in New York recently held in the case Latif v. Morgan Stanley & Co., LLC, that a plaintiff's claims of employment were subject to mandatory arbitration, despite New York's recently-enacted law that limits the extent to which sexual harassment claims are subject to arbitration.
Further, the U.S. Supreme Court has clearly held that the FAA will "pre-empt a state law that "discriminat[es] on its face against arbitration." Therefore, despite all of its fanfare, the WTA may ultimately reveal itself to be lacking in teeth, at least with respect to its mandatory arbitration provisions.
Hotel and Casino Employee Safety Act
Another law SB 75 creates is the Hotel and Casino Employee Safety Act. Employers in affected industries must equip employees who work alone with a notification device, often referred to as a "panic button" that will alert someone for help if the employee is in danger of being sexually assaulted or harassed. The device must be provided to the employee at no cost. Also, hotels and casinos must develop written, anti-sexual-harassment policies that protect employees against sexual assault and harassment by patrons.
Sexual Harassment Victim Representation Act
SB 75 also creates the Sexual Harassment Victim Representation Act. This requires unions and employers to ensure that in a proceeding where a union member has been sexually harassed by another union member, the victim has a different union representative than that of the accused. The act further states, "the union must designate separate union representatives to represent the parties in the proceeding."
Illinois Human Rights Act Amendments
SB 75 also brings about significant changes to the Illinois Human Rights Act (IHRA) and broadens the responsibilities of all employers covered by its terms. Importantly, SB 75 amends the IHRA to include new reporting requirements and mandatory sexual-harassment-prevention training.
Disclosures
Beginning July 1, 2020, and every July 1 thereafter, an employer that has had at least one adverse judgment or ruling against it in the preceding calendar year must disclose to the Illinois Department of Human Rights the total number of final, non-appealable judgments or final, non-appealable administrative rulings entered against the employer in which there was a finding of sexual harassment or unlawful discrimination. At this time, it is unclear whether this applies to all judgments against an employer or only to those that have occurred in Illinois.
When the employer reports the adverse judgment or administrative ruling, the employer must also indicate whether any equitable relief was ordered against the employer in any of those final judgments, and provide a breakdown of the number of final judgments that were entered in cases involving sexual harassment and cases involving discrimination or harassment on the basis of:
- Sex.
- Race, color or national origin.
- Religion.
- Age.
- Disability.
- Military status.
- Sexual orientation or gender identity.
- Any other protected characteristic.
As a concession to employers' privacy concerns, these statistics provided to the Department of Human Rights will remain confidential and are not privy to the public under the Freedom of Information Act.
Training
The bill requires that all employers covered by the IHRA must provide sexual-harassment-prevention training to their employees at least once a year. The department will be tasked with creating a model training program that will be provided to the public at no cost. Employers can base their training program on the department-provided model or create a sexual-harassment training program that equals or exceeds the model program.
Specifically for restaurants and bars operating in Illinois, employers must create a written sexual-harassment policy, in both English and Spanish, and provide it to employees within the first calendar week of their employment. Employers are also required to develop a supplemental training program aimed at preventing sexual harassment and addressing issues that are specific to the restaurant and bar industry. The IHRA has also been tasked with providing a model supplemental training to employers in the restaurant and bar industry.
Employers that fail to follow the new reporting and training requirements will be subject to civil penalties imposed by the Department of Human Rights.
Key Takeaways for Employers
Employers should take time to familiarize themselves with SB 75. Most of the provisions take effect Jan. 1, 2020, while the Hotel and Casino Employee Safety Act takes effect July 1, 2020. Employers can take the following steps:
- Consider negotiating or renegotiating agreements that unilaterally compel mandatory arbitration for employment discrimination, harassment or related retaliation claims.
- Provide employees who work alone in a hotel or casino with a safety device that will summon help if needed or consider implementing a "buddy program."
- Check to see that unions assign different union representatives to the accused and the accuser in a sexual-harassment investigation.
- Report adverse judgments or administrative rulings in discrimination and harassment cases to the Department of Human Rights each year on July 1.
- Provide annual sexual-harassment-prevention training that meets or exceeds the requirements of the department's model training.
Shanthi Gaur, Jennifer Jones and Melissa Logan are attorneys with Littler in Chicago. © 2019 Littler. All rights reserved. Reposted with permission.
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