Triton Community College v. Cook County College Teachers Union

CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 25, 2026
Docket1-25-1223
StatusUnpublished

This text of Triton Community College v. Cook County College Teachers Union (Triton Community College v. Cook County College Teachers Union) 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
Triton Community College v. Cook County College Teachers Union, (Ill. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

2026 IL App (1st) 251223-U No. 1-25-1223 Order filed June 25, 2026

Fourth Division

NOTICE: This order was filed under Supreme Court Rule 23 and is not precedent except in the limited circumstances allowed under Rule 23(e)(1).

IN THE APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT

TRITON COMMUNITY COLLEGE, ) Petition for Review of DISTRICT 504, ) an Order of the Illinois Educational ) Labor Relations Board. Petitioner-Appellant, ) ) v. ) ) COOK COUNTY COLLEGE TEACHERS ) UNION, LOCAL 1600, IFT-AFT, AFL-CIO, and ) THE ILLINOIS EDUCATIONAL LABOR ) RELATIONS BOARD, ) ) Respondents-Appellees. ) Charge No. 2022-CA-0030-C

PRESIDING JUSTICE NAVARRO delivered the judgment of the court. Justices Lyle and Quish concurred in the judgment.

ORDER

¶1 Held: We affirm the decision of the Illinois Educational Labor Relations Board finding that Appellant violated the Illinois Educational Labor Relations Act (115 ILCS 5/14(a)(1), (a)(8) (West 2020)) by refusing to comply with the terms of a binding arbitration award; Board decision affirmed.

¶2 Appellee, Cook County College Teachers Union, Local 1600, IFT-AFT, AFL-CIO

(Union), filed an unfair labor practice charge with the Illinois Educational Labor Relations Board

(Board) against Appellant, Triton Community College, District 504 (Triton). The Union alleged No. 1-25-1223

that Triton violated section 14(a)(8) and, derivatively, section 14(a)(1), of the Illinois Educational

Labor Relations Act (Act) (115 ILCS 5/14(a)(1), (a)(8) (West 2020)) by failing to comply with the

terms of a binding arbitration award. The Board agreed and ordered Triton to comply with the

award. Triton then filed a petition for direct administrative review of the Board’s decision and

order with this court. On direct administrative review, Triton contends the Board erred because it

failed to find that the arbitrator exceeded its authority such that the award was not binding. For the

reasons that follow, we affirm the Board’s decision.

¶3 I. BACKGROUND

¶4 Triton and the Union are parties to a collective bargaining agreement (CBA) that

governs various issues related to full-time faculty members, including conditions of employment

and teaching load. In January 2020, Triton appointed Geri Brewer, a full-time faculty member

subject to the CBA, to serve as the chair of the nursing department, and provided her five lecture

hour equivalents (LHE) release time per semester and compensation pursuant to Article III(K) of

the CBA, which addresses reduction in teaching load and compensation for department

chairpersons.

¶5 In April 2020, the Union filed a grievance with Triton, alleging that Triton violated the

past practice provision of Article I(K) of the CBA when it did not grant Brewer “full release” of

her teaching load for the spring 2020 semester. Specifically, the Union alleged that “from 2007 to

fall 2019 ([12 ½] years, or 25 semesters), the nursing chair has received full release 60% or more

of the time.”

¶6 Article I(K) of the CBA, which addresses “past practice,” provides that,

“Except as this Agreement shall herein provide, all terms and conditions of

employment applicable on the effective date of this Agreement as established and in force

2 No. 1-25-1223

on said date shall continue to be so applicable during the term of this Agreement. Unless

otherwise provided in this Agreement, nothing herein shall be interpreted or applied so as

to eliminate, reduce, or otherwise detract from any faculty benefits regarded by either party

as past practice, defined below, existing prior to the effective date of this Agreement.”

The provision then states that the parties agree “that any past practices which may arise under the

provisions of and during the term of this agreement, or at any time prior thereto shall conform” to

four elements, including:

“1. The asserted past practice must be reasonably consistent;

2. The asserted past practice must be clearly articulated in an ascertainable manner and

known by both parties to the agreement;

3. The asserted past practice shall have been acted upon; and

4. The asserted past practice must be readily ascertainable over a reasonable period of

time as a reasonably fixed and established practice. Past Practice shall be limited to

actions that have occurred within the 20 years immediately preceding the alleged

grievance. For an incident to be considered as a past practice, it must have occurred

60% of the time as opposed to it not occurring or being implemented in another

manner.”

¶7 Triton denied the Union’s grievance, stating that it awarded Brewer five LHE of release

time pursuant to Article III(K) of the CBA, which provides a table showing the number of hours

in reduction in teaching load per semester the department chair is entitled to based on the number

of full-time faculty supervised. Additionally, Triton concluded that the Union failed to demonstrate

the elements necessary to establish a past practice under Article I(K) of the CBA. It noted that a

3 No. 1-25-1223

past practice must be considered over a 20-year period and that, during the relevant 20-year period,

the chair of the nursing department received “less than full release 64% of the time.”

¶8 The Union continued the grievance through the procedure outlined in the CBA, and

Triton continued to deny it at each step. The Union then filed a demand for arbitration pursuant to

the CBA, and the parties appointed an arbitrator.

¶9 Following an arbitration hearing and the parties’ submissions of post-hearing briefs,

the arbitrator issued a written award sustaining the Union’s grievance and concluding that Triton

improperly denied Brewer full release time for the spring 2020 semester.

¶ 10 In the arbitrator’s written decision, it explained that it was uncontested that Brewer was

“entitled to at least five hours of [r]elease [t]ime” for the spring 2020 semester pursuant to Article

III(K). The arbitrator, however, noted that the Union’s issue “goes beyond the minimum required,”

as it contended it was entitled to full release time pursuant to past practice.

¶ 11 The arbitrator then highlighted that the case involved the interpretation of the past

practice provision in Article I(K) of the CBA. It concluded that the first three elements were met,

finding that the practice of granting full release time between 2007 and 2019 was reasonably

consistent, clearly articulated in an ascertainable manner, and known by both parties to the

agreement.

¶ 12 The arbitrator then explained that the question at issue was whether the Union met the

fourth element, which stated:

“The asserted past practice must be readily ascertainable over a reasonable period of

time as a reasonably fixed and established practice. Past Practice shall be limited to actions

that have occurred within the 20 years immediately preceding the alleged grievance. For

4 No. 1-25-1223

an incident to be considered as a past practice, it must have occurred 60% of the time as

opposed to it not occurring or being implemented in another manner.”

¶ 13 The arbitrator summarized the parties’ arguments regarding the fourth element as

follows. The Union argued it established a past practice because from 2007 to 2019, the chair of

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