February 2025

 

Illinois To Phase Out Subminimum Wage For Employees With Disabilities

02/06/25

Illinois has enacted legislation that will phase out employers' ability to pay a subminimum wage for employees with disabilities in the state. The goal of the new law is to eliminate the use of the subminimum wage by Dec. 31, 2029.

Monday, February 3, 2025/Author: ADP Admin/Number of views (405)/Comments (0)/

Illinois - Cook County, Illinois Clarifies Paid Leave Rules

02/06/25

Cook County, Illinois recently published amended regulations implementing a law that requires employers to provide paid leave that employees can use for any reason. The regulations took effect immediately as of Oct. 2024.
Monday, February 3, 2025/Author: ADP Admin/Number of views (402)/Comments (0)/

Illinois Clarifies New E-Verify Law

12/05/24

The Illinois Department of Labor has released guidance to clarify a recently enacted law, effective Jan. 1, 2025, that will prohibit employers from imposing work authorization or re-verification requirements that are greater than those required by federal law.  The guidance clarifies that the law does not prohibit private employers from using E-Verify. 
Tuesday, December 3, 2024/Author: ADP Admin/Number of views (1413)/Comments (0)/

Illinois Prohibits Discrimination Because of Reproductive Health Decisions

10/03/24

Illinois has enacted legislation that prohibits employers from discriminating against employees because of their reproductive health decisions. The changes take effect on Jan. 1, 2025.

Tuesday, October 1, 2024/Author: ADP Admin/Number of views (2267)/Comments (0)/

Illinois Prohibits Discrimination Because of Family Responsibilities

10/03/24

Illinois has enacted legislation that prohibits employers from discriminating against employees because of their family responsibilities. The changes take effect Jan. 1, 2025.

Tuesday, October 1, 2024/Author: ADP Admin/Number of views (2317)/Comments (0)/

Illinois Adds New Work Protections for Minors Under Age 16

10/03/24

Illinois has enacted legislation that sets new standards for working conditions for employees under 16 years of age, including limiting hours of work and updating the list of jobs minors are prohibited from holding. The changes were enacted via Senate Bill 3646 and take effect on
Jan.  1, 2025.

Tuesday, October 1, 2024/Author: ADP Admin/Number of views (2218)/Comments (0)/

Illinois Establishes Guardrails Against Discrimination from AI

10/03/24

Illinois has enacted legislation that expressly prohibits discrimination by employers that deploy Artificial Intelligence (AI) to help them make employment decisions. The law (House Bill 3773) also requires employers that use AI to provide a notice to applicants and employees. House Bill 3773 takes effect Jan. 1, 2026.
Monday, September 30, 2024/Author: ADP Admin/Number of views (2224)/Comments (0)/

Illinois Enacts New Pay Statement Requirements

10/03/24

With the enactment of SB 3208, Illinois has implemented new pay statement requirements for employers.  
Monday, September 30, 2024/Author: ADP Admin/Number of views (2176)/Comments (0)/

Illinois Bars Mandatory Employer-Sponsored Meetings on Religious or Political Matters

10/03/24

Illinois has enacted legislation that prohibits employers from taking adverse action against employees because they refuse to attend an employer-sponsored mandatory meeting that communicates the opinion of the employer about religious or political matters. The changes take effect Jan.  1, 2025.

Friday, September 27, 2024/Author: ADP Admin/Number of views (2097)/Comments (0)/

Illinois Amends Law on Employee Access to Personnel Records

10/03/24

Illinois has enacted legislation that amends and clarifies the state’s Personnel Record Review Act. The new law (House Bill 3763) takes effect Jan. 1, 2025.

Friday, September 27, 2024/Author: ADP Admin/Number of views (2130)/Comments (0)/
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Recent IL Updates

Illinois - Cook County, Illinois Clarifies Paid Leave Rules

02/06/25

Author: ADP Admin/Monday, February 3, 2025/Categories: Compliance Corner , State Compliance Update, Illinois

Cook County, Illinois recently published amended regulations implementing a law that requires employers to provide paid leave that employees can use for any reason. The regulations took effect immediately as of Oct. 2024.  

The Details

Accrual Rate


Under the amended regulations, paid leave continues to accrue when employees are using the paid leave, at the same rate as if they were working (one hour for every 40 hours worked).

Rate of Pay


Employees with multiple job functions and who work for various rates should be paid an average of all hourly rates, or the greater of the minimum wage or lowest rate.

Employer Notice


Employers must provide each employee with a written policy that advises each employee of their leave benefits and rights. Employers must provide the written policy at the start of employment (or the date of initial accrual) and annually thereafter.

The policy must include:

  • A summary of the Paid Leave Ordinance;
  • A description of the benefit(s) offered by the employer;
  • Coverage, the rate of accrual, permissible uses and prohibited employer practices;
  • Contact information for the Cook County Commission on Human Rights (CCCHR); and
  • An explanation of how employees can file a complaint with the CCCHR.


Employers must also display a workplace poster that advises employees of their leave benefits and rights.


The amended regulations clarify that employees who don’t work at a physical worksite should receive a copy of the workplace poster via the normal method of communicating workplace policies (e.g., email, worker portal, company intranet).

Payout Upon Termination


The law requires employers to pay the value of unused paid leave if the leave is credited to the employee’s paid time off bank or employee vacation account. Payout of paid leave credited to an employee’s paid time off bank or employee vacation account is required within 15 days of the employee’s termination, resignation, retirement, or other separation.


Employers should additionally consider their vacation payout obligations under the Illinois Wage Payment and Collection Act. For example, an employer provides 40 hours of sick leave and 40 hours of vacation time. In this example, any unused vacation time must be paid out. Unused sick leave would not be required to be paid out.

Interplay with the Federal Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA)


The federal FMLA rules and regulations, including notification requirements, take precedence over the county’s paid leave law and an employer’s paid leave policy when an eligible FMLA employee uses FMLA leave.


Per FMLA rules, an employer may require FMLA-eligible employees to use accrued paid leave, paid sick or family leave for some or all of the FMLA leave period prior to taking unpaid FMLA leave. Absent an employer requirement to use accrued paid time off for FMLA leave, an FMLA- eligible employee may choose whether to use accrued paid leave or unpaid leave for FMLA leave purposes pursuant to the FMLA rules and regulations.

Next Steps

Employers should:

Number of views (401)/Comments (0)

 

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