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Illinois Bans Mandatory Attendance at ‘Captive-Audience’ Meetings About Unions


An employer meeting attended by numerous employees.

Illinois has banned mandatory attendance at company meetings used to try to persuade workers that they’d be better off without unions—so-called captive-audience meetings—effective Jan. 1, 2025.

The Illinois law mirrors California’s SB 399, which would also prevent captive-audience meetings regarding the employer’s opinion about religious or political matters.

“While SB 399 seeks to advance our shared goal of addressing workplace incivility, we are concerned that the legislation, in its current form, would have the unintended consequence of stifling conversations that promote civility,” wrote Emily M. Dickens, SHRM chief of staff, head of government affairs, and corporate secretary, and Michael S. Kalt, California State Council of SHRM (CalSHRM) government affairs director. “The overly broad language used in the bill pertaining to ‘employer-sponsored meetings’ and ‘participating in, receiving, or listening to any communications’ creates significant uncertainty for California employers that seek to create open, civil dialogues with employees.”

We’ve gathered articles on the news from SHRM Online and other outlets.

AFL-CIO Priority

Passing the measure in Illinois had been a chief priority for the AFL-CIO. “People go to work to work, not to be indoctrinated,” Illinois AFL-CIO President Tim Drea said in a statement.

However, when the state House of Representatives debated the measure in May, Rep. Dan Ugaste said federal law already protected workers from reprisal for their union affiliation and viewpoints.

(WTTW)

Other States’ Prohibition on Mandatory Meetings

Several states—including Connecticut, Minnesota, New York, and Washington—have made it illegal for employers to require attendance at meetings sharing employers’ arguments against unions. Maine and Oregon also have laws prohibiting discipline for failure to attend captive-audience meetings.

These bills have been supported by labor organizers, who welcome the added protections for workers, but criticized by some in the business community.

(NPR)

NLRB General Counsel’s Position

For more than 70 years, employers have had the right under the National Labor Relations Act to convene captive-audience meetings with employees about their statutory labor rights, including the right to refrain from forming unions. In 2022, National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) General Counsel Jennifer Abruzzo announced in a memo that she will ask the NLRB to find such mandatory meetings unlawful.

(SHRM Online)

Colorado Governor’s Veto

Earlier this year, Colorado Gov. Jared Polis vetoed a bill to ban mandatory or captive-audience workplace meetings. The bill raised concerns about employer free speech, Polis said.

(Bloomberg)

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