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Public Act 104-0099 |
| SB1422 Enrolled | LRB104 07414 SPS 17455 b |
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AN ACT concerning employment. |
Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois, |
represented in the General Assembly: |
Section 5. The Lodging Services Human Trafficking |
Recognition Training Act is amended by changing Sections 1, 5, |
10, and, 15 and by adding Section 20 as follows: |
(820 ILCS 95/1) |
Sec. 1. Short title. This Act may be cited as the Lodging |
Services Human Trafficking Recognition Training Act. |
(Source: P.A. 101-18, eff. 6-20-19; 101-499, eff. 8-23-19.) |
(820 ILCS 95/5) |
Sec. 5. Definitions. In this Act: |
"Department" means the Department of Human Services. |
"Employee" means a person employed by a lodging |
establishment, restaurant, or truck stop who has recurring |
interactions with the public, including, but not limited to, |
an employee who works in a reception area, performs |
housekeeping duties, helps customers in moving their |
possessions, or transports by vehicle customers of the lodging |
establishment, restaurant, or truck stop. |
"Employer" means a person or entity that operates a |
lodging establishment, restaurant, or truck stop. |
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"Human trafficking" means the deprivation or violation of |
the personal liberty of another with the intent to obtain |
forced labor or services, procure or sell the individual for |
commercial sex, or exploit the individual in obscene matter. |
Depriving or violating a person's liberty includes substantial |
and sustained restriction of another's liberty accomplished |
through fraud, deceit, coercion, violence, duress, menace, or |
threat of unlawful injury to the victim or to another person, |
under circumstances where the person receiving or apprehending |
the threat reasonably believes that it is likely that the |
person making the threat would carry it out. |
"Lodging establishment" means an establishment classified |
as a hotel or motel in the 2017 North American Industry |
Classification System under code 721110, and an establishment |
classified as a casino hotel in the 2017 North American |
Industry Classification System under code 721120. |
"Restaurant" means any business that is primarily engaged |
in the sale of ready-to-eat food for immediate consumption |
comprising at least 51% of the total sales, excluding the sale |
of liquor. |
"Truck stop" means an establishment intended to provide |
services to the trucking industry, including, but not limited |
to, selling fuel and food, providing showers, offering repair |
services, and offering ample room where drivers of long-haul |
trucks can park and rest. |
(Source: P.A. 101-18, eff. 6-20-19; 101-499, eff. 8-23-19; |
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102-324, eff. 1-1-22.) |
(820 ILCS 95/10) |
Sec. 10. Human trafficking recognition training. An |
employer Beginning June 1, 2020, a lodging establishment, |
restaurant, or truck stop shall provide its employees with |
training in the recognition of human trafficking and protocols |
for reporting observed human trafficking to the appropriate |
authority. The employees shall must complete the training |
within 6 months after beginning employment in such role with |
the employer lodging establishment and every 2 years |
thereafter, if still employed by the employer lodging |
establishment. The training shall be at least 20 minutes in |
duration. |
(Source: P.A. 101-18, eff. 6-20-19; 101-499, eff. 8-23-19; |
102-324, eff. 1-1-22.) |
(820 ILCS 95/15) |
Sec. 15. Human trafficking recognition training |
curriculum. |
(a) An employer A lodging establishment may use its own |
human trafficking training program or that of a third party |
and be in full compliance with this Act if the human |
trafficking training program includes, at a minimum, all of |
the following: |
(1) a definition of human trafficking and commercial |
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exploitation of children; |
(2) guidance on how to identify individuals who are |
most at risk for human trafficking; |
(3) the difference between human trafficking for |
purposes of labor and for purposes of sex as the |
trafficking relates to the employer's business lodging |
establishments; and |
(4) guidance on the role of lodging establishment |
employees in reporting and responding to instances of |
human trafficking. |
(b) The Department shall develop a curriculum for an |
approved human trafficking training recognition program which |
shall be used by an employer a lodging establishment that does |
not administer its own human trafficking recognition program |
as described in subsection (a). The human trafficking training |
recognition program developed by the Department shall include, |
at a minimum, all of the following: |
(1) a definition of human trafficking and commercial |
exploitation of children; |
(2) guidance on how to identify individuals who are |
most at risk for human trafficking; |
(3) the difference between human trafficking for |
purposes of labor and for purposes of sex as the |
trafficking relates to lodging establishments; and |
(4) guidance on the role of lodging establishment |
employees in reporting and responding to instances of |
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human trafficking. |
The Department may consult the United States Department of |
Justice for the human trafficking recognition training program |
developed under this subsection. The Department may use a |
curriculum developed under other laws of the General Assembly |
if the curriculum satisfies the requirements of this Section. |
The Department shall develop and publish the human |
trafficking recognition training program described in this |
subsection no later than October 1, 2026 July 1, 2020. |
(Source: P.A. 101-18, eff. 6-20-19; 101-499, eff. 8-23-19.) |
(820 ILCS 95/20 new) |
Sec. 20. Penalties. |
(a) Beginning October 1, 2026, the Department, a unit of |
local government regulating an employer, or a law enforcement |
agency with jurisdiction over an employer may, in the course |
of its regulatory or enforcement duties, monitor and enforce |
compliance with this Act. Upon the discovery of a violation of |
this Act, the Department, unit of local government, or law |
enforcement agency shall provide the employer with a |
reasonable notice of noncompliance that informs the employer |
that if the employer does not cure the violation within 30 days |
after notice the employer is subject to the penalty described |
in subsection (b). The notice shall include information |
concerning where an employer can obtain the training |
curriculum developed by the Department under subsection (b) of |
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Section 15. |
(b) If the Department, a unit of local government |
regulating an employer, or a law enforcement agency with |
jurisdiction over an employer verifies that the violation was |
not corrected within the cure period described in subsection |
(a), the Attorney General or State's Attorney may bring a |
civil action against that employer. An employer that violates |
this Act is guilty of a business offense and may be fined not |
more than $1,500 for each offense. |