Family Matters: Expanding Horizons in the Illinois Human Rights ActBy Nicholas CorrellGovernment Lawyers, August 2024House Bill 2161 amends the Illinois Human Rights Act, making it a civil rights violation for any employer to engage in discrimination based on family responsibilities in employment.
Understanding the Illinois Freelance Worker Protection ActBy Cathy A. PilkingtonLaw Office Management and Economics, Standing Committee on, March 2024Illinois is the first state to enact a worker protection law for income earned by independent contractors. The Freelance Worker Protection Act addresses long-standing pay issues for gig workers and independent contractors.
Symptoms of the Great Resignation: Best Practices for Claims and Litigation With Key Trial Witnesses Who Are Former EmployeesBy Bill Toliopoulos & Mark NothConstruction Law, August 2023Construction stakeholders and their lawyers must overcome significant hurdles when their key witnesses are former employees. However, by understanding the applicable rules and maintaining well-crafted employee handbooks, employee agreements, and litigation consulting agreements, they can overcome these hurdles and put themselves in the best position to tell a winning story.
Illinois Passes Paid Leave ActBy Rachel Bossard & Alex MarksCorporate Law Departments, February 2023On January 10, 2023, the Illinois legislature passed the Paid Leave for All Workers Act, which will go into effect on Jan. 1, 2024.
Illinois Department of Labor Clarifies Amendments to Illinois Equal Pay ActBy Alex Weinstein & Allison E. CzerniakCorporate Law Departments, May 2022In March and June of 2021, the Illinois Equal Pay Act was substantively amended to require Illinois employers with 100 or more employees in Illinois to obtain an equal pay registration certificate from the Illinois Department of Labor every two years.
Illinois Employers Face New Health Coverage Reporting RequirementBy Carrie E. Byrnes & Jorge M. LeonLabor and Employment Law, January 2022Governor Pritzker signed the Consumer Coverage Disclosure Act into law earlier this year, which creates disclosure requirements for Illinois employers that provide group health insurance coverage to any employee(s) in Illinois.
Illinois Limits Conscience-Based Vaccine Objections, While Other States Allow ThemBy Jill Vorobiev & Amy HarwathLabor and Employment Law, January 2022On November 8, 2021, Governor J.B. Pritzker signed into law an amendment to the Illinois Health Care Right of Conscience Act, which will prevent employees from relying on the Act to avoid employer COVID-19 vaccine mandates.
COVID Considerations: Long COVID Now a DisabilityBy Barbara E. Hoey & Sebastian ClarkinLabor and Employment Law, September 2021On July 26, 2021, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Office for Civil Rights and the U.S. Department of Justice Civil Rights Division jointly published guidance on whether long COVID may qualify as a disability subject to the nondiscrimination requirements of the Americans with Disabilities Act, the Rehabilitation Act, and the Affordable Care Act.
Criminal Convictions No Longer an Automatic Disqualifier for EmploymentBy Carl R. DraperLabor and Employment Law, September 2021Public Act 101-656 made two significant changes to the Illinois Human Rights Act, including limiting the ability of employers to rely on conviction records in making employment decisions.
Illinois Governor Signs Restrictive Covenant Bill Into LawBy Steven J. Pearlman, Edward Young, & Dakota D. TreeceLabor and Employment Law, September 2021On August 13, 2021, Illinois Governor J.B. Pritzker signed into law an amendment to the Illinois Freedom to Work Act, which imposes restrictions on the use of non-competition and non-solicitation restrictive covenants for Illinois employees.
Court Will Not Aggregate Employees of Separate Companies to Reach Title VII ThresholdBy Michael R. LiedLabor and Employment Law, December 2020InPrince v. Appleton Auto, LLC, the plaintiff's attempt to try to combine the employees of several related companies to reach or exceed the necessary number of employees for the company to be subject to specific employment laws was rejected.
Conducting a Human Resources Audit: A PrimerBy Mark A. SpognardiEmployee Benefits, June 2018This primer should prove helpful to all employers that are committed to having solid and lawful employment and labor relations policies and practices.
Back-pay claim has 10-year statute of limitationsBy Phillip B. LenziniGovernment Lawyers, March 2018As a result of Prorok v. Winnebago County, back-pay claims from public employees could be brought as long as 10 years after the claim arises under the Wage Payment and Collection Act.
Non-disparagement clauses in the digital ageBy Cathy A. PilkingtonLabor and Employment Law, January 2018Because contractual non-disparagement clauses restrict free speech (and quite possibly competition), their ever-expanding usage has come under increasing legal attacks from governmental agencies charged with regulating the workforce.
PTSD is a disability under the ADABy Shari Rhode & Martin D. ParsonsLabor and Employment Law, January 2018Although PTSD is not exclusive to the military, the focus of this article is on veteran/employees with PTSD and some recommendations for how they can be accommodated in the workplace.
Wage obligations of H-1B visa sponsorsBy Michael R. LiedInternational and Immigration Law, January 2018If an H-1B employee is in nonproductive status due to a decision by the employer, the employer is required to pay the employee’s salary. However, once there has been a bona fide termination of the employment relationship, the H-1B employee is no longer entitled to any further salary.
Conducting a human resources audit: A primerBy Mark A. SpognardiCorporate Law Departments, October 2017This primer should prove helpful to all employers that are committed to having solid and lawful employment and labor relations policies and practices.