County of Cook v. Illinois Labor Relations Board Local Panel

CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 17, 2004
Docket1-03-0073, 1-03-0074 cons. Rel
StatusPublished

This text of County of Cook v. Illinois Labor Relations Board Local Panel (County of Cook v. Illinois Labor Relations Board Local Panel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
County of Cook v. Illinois Labor Relations Board Local Panel, (Ill. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

Third Division

Filed: March 17, 2004   

Nos. 1-03-0073 & 1-03-0074 (consolidated)

COUNTY OF COOK, FOREST PRESERVE DISTRICT OF ) Petition For Review of

COOK COUNTY, and SHERIFF OF COOK COUNTY, ) Order of The Illinois Labor

) Relations Board, Local Panel.

)

Petitioners-Appellants, ) Nos. L-CA-01-032,  

)        L-CA-01-064, and

v. )            L-CA-01-059

)        (consolidated)        

ILLINOIS LABOR RELATIONS BOARD LOCAL PANEL, )

TEAMSTERS LOCAL 714, ILLINOIS FRATERNAL )

ORDER OF POLICE LABOR COUNCIL, and   )

INTERNATIONAL UNION OF OPERATING )

ENGINEERS, LOCAL 150, )

Respondents-Appellees. )

____________________________________________________ )_______________________________

OFFICE OF THE COOK COUNTY STATE'S ATTORNEY, ) Petition for Review of

) Order of The Illinois Labor

Petitioner-Appellant, ) Relations Board, State Panel.

v. ) No.  S-CA-01-205

ILLINOIS FRATERNAL ORDER OF POLICE LABOR )

COUNCIL, and ILLINOIS LABOR RELATIONS BOARD, )

STATE PANEL, )

PRESIDING JUSTICE HOFFMAN delivered the opinion of the court:

In these consolidated appeals, the petitioners, County of Cook (County), Forest Preserve District of Cook County (Forest Preserve District), Sheriff of Cook County (Sheriff), and the Office of the Cook County State's Attorney (State's Attorney) seek review of decisions and orders of the Illinois Labor Relations Board (ILRB).  The ILRB ruled that the petitioners violated the Illinois Public Labor Relations Act (Act) (5 ILCS 315/1 et seq. (West 2000)), when they failed to bargain with the respondent-labor unions representing various groups of the petitioners' employees over the enforcement of a new residency ordinance which required existing employees who lived in Cook County to continue to do so and new employees to establish residency in Cook County within six months from the date they were hired.  For the reasons which follow, we affirm the decision and order of the Local Panel of the ILRB, and dismiss the appeal taken from the decision and order of the State Panel of the ILRB.  

The facts giving rise to these consolidated appeals are essentially undisputed.  The respondents, Teamsters Local Union No. 714 (Teamsters), Illinois Fraternal Order of Police Labor Council (IFOP), and International Union of Operating Engineers, Local 150 (IUOE), are labor unions representing eleven bargaining units of the petitioners' employees.  Specifically, the Teamsters represent a single bargaining unit composed of the deputy sheriffs employed by the County and Sheriff.  IFOP represents nine bargaining units composed of individuals employed by the petitioners, including: (1) Internal Affairs investigators in the Sheriff's Court Services Department; (2) sheriff sergeants in Court Services; (3) Internal Affairs investigators in the Department of Corrections, (4) investigators in the Sheriff's Fugitive Unit; (5) investigators in the Sheriff's Day Reporting Center; (6) security officers at the Cook County Hospital; (7) Juvenile Detention, MIS and Central Supply employees; (8) Forest Preserve District police officers; and (9) State's Attorney investigators.  IUOE represents a bargaining unit composed of employees working in the County's Highway Department.  With the exception of IFOP's Juvenile Detention unit and IUOE's bargaining unit, all of the units are composed of "peace officers" within the meaning of section 3(k) of the Act (5 ILCS 315/3(k) (2000)).  

Prior to December 2000, the petitioners (footnote: 1) did not require their employees to reside within Cook County as a condition of employment.  On December 5, 2000, however, the Cook County Board of Commissioners adopted the following ordinance:  

" ARTICLE I

Section 1.  Short Title:  This article shall be known as the Cook County Personnel Residence Requirement Ordinance.

Section 2.  Purpose:  To encourage each Cook County Employee to maintain a personal commitment to a residence in Cook County and to assure all residents that employees share in the responsibility of investing in the future of Cook County.

Section 3.  Residency Requirement of All Cook County Employees:  Upon the effective date of this Ordinance and thereafter, the County of Cook shall only employ persons who maintain residence in Cook County throughout their employment.  Wages, salary and employee benefits may only be paid to persons residing in Cook County.  Any new employee shall have six (6) months from date of hire to establish actual residency with Cook County.

Section 4.  Exemption:  Grandfather Clause:  All present Cook County employees who reside outside of Cook County upon adoption of this Ordinance are exempt from the provisions of the residency requirements of this Ordinance.

***

ARTICLE II

Section 1.  Effective Date: This ordinance shall take effect immediately upon adoption."

After the ordinance was passed, the respondents requested that the petitioners bargain over the changes created by the residency ordinance.  The petitioners, however, refused to bargain over the residency requirements.

On February 8, 2001, April 12, 2001, and May 1, 2001, respectively, the Teamsters, IUOE, and IFOP filed separate charges with the Local Panel of the ILRB, alleging that the County, Sheriff, and Forest Preserve District engaged in unfair labor practices within the meaning of sections 10(a)(4) and (1) of the Act (5 ILCS 315/10(a)(4), (1) (West 2000)) by failing to bargain over the residency requirement, which, they maintained, was a mandatory subject of collective bargaining.  IFOP also filed a companion charge with the State Panel of the ILRB, alleging the same infraction against the State's Attorney's Office.  Following an investigation of the charges, the Executive Director of the ILRB issued separate complaints in each case, and then consolidated the matters for purposes of a hearing.

In lieu of presenting testimony at the hearing, the parties submitted stipulations of fact and stipulated exhibits to the administrative law judge (ALJ).  The ALJ issued a single decision in which she found that the residency requirement was a mandatory subject of bargaining, and that the petitioners violated the Act by failing to bargain with the respondents over this matter.  Thereafter, the petitioners, with the exception of the Forest Preserve District, filed timely exceptions to the ALJ's recommended decision, and the respondents subsequently filed responses to the exceptions.

The Local and State Panels of the ILRB heard oral arguments from all of the parties at a joint meeting held on October 1, 2002.  On December 5, 2002, the Local Panel of the ILRB issued a decision and order wherein it adopted the ALJ's recommended decision.  Specifically, the Local Panel of the ILRB found, inter alia

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County of Cook v. Illinois Labor Relations Board Local Panel, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/county-of-cook-v-illinois-labor-relations-board-lo-illappct-2004.