Illinois Sexual Harassment Prevention Training Requirement

ALL employers in Illinois (regardless of size) are required to provide sexual harassment prevention training to all employees including full time, part time, seasonal, interns, etc. on a calendar year basis.

We are offering employers access to a software that will help you easily manage this compliance requirement.

  • Set up your employees in minutes
  • Track training completions
  • Download certificates of completion
  • Email reminders auto sent to employees that haven't completed the training
  • Mobile friendly
  • High-quality on-demand trainings
  • Professionally produced training content with interactive quizzes
  • Available in English and Spanish
  • Employee and manager specific sexual harassment prevention trainings
  • Access to support if you need assistance

About the Illinois Sexual Harassment Prevention Training Requirements

In May of 2020 the Illinois Department of Human Rights (IDHR) released its model Sexual Harassment Prevention Training program for Illinois employers in compliance with Public Act 101-0221 (commonly referred to as the Workplace Transparency Act).
 
Formerly Senate Bill 75, Public Act 101-0221 was signed into law by Governor Pritzker in August 2019. Under this Act, Illinois employers are required to train employees on sexual harassment prevention by December 31, 2020, and on an annual basis thereafter. This requirement applies to all employers with employees working in this State. Employers must either develop their own sexual harassment prevention training program that equals or exceeds the minimum standards for sexual harassment prevention training outlined in Section 2-109(B) of the Illinois Human Rights Act (IHRA), or they may use the model training provided by the IDHR. 
 
 

 
Illinois has made a lot of changes for 2020, not the least of which is the requirement that ALL employers provide sexual harassment prevention training for their employees on an annual basis.

Effective January 1, 2020, the new workplace harassment laws:

  • Require all employers to provide sexual harassment prevention training to every employee every year;
  • Prohibit employers from engaging in or allowing workplace harassment based on any protected trait;
  • Allow nonemployees to bring claims of unlawful harassment against employers;
  • Prohibit employers from contractually requiring confidentiality or arbitration for certain claims; and
  • Require restaurants and hotels to provide supplemental annual training and to establish, distribute and post a written policy on sexual harassment prevention.

In addition, the following new provisions become effective July 1, 2020:

  • All parts of the IHRA apply to every employer in the state (currently, most provisions apply only to employers with 15 or more employees);
  • Each employer must file a report for any year in which an adverse judgement or ruling was made against it for any employment discrimination or workplace harassment claim; and
  • Hotels and casinos must adopt written policies and provide personal safety devices to certain workers.

What does this mean for you?

Training can be time consuming and costly, but the state is actually making this easy . . . or so we have been told. The Illinois Department of Human Rights (IDHR) is preparing an online training course for both employees as well as supervisors that will meet the requirements of the law and can be accessed at no cost.While some employers might still opt to employ other training methods, the training will still need to meet the state’s minimum requirements and care should be taken to ensure that is the case (side note - we do have a very robust virtual training platform that makes it easy to manage the process of assigning employee courses and tracking completions and it will include Illinois specific sexual harassment trainings that meet state requirements).

What else has the state done?

Illinois has also defined “harassment” as separate and distinct from “sexual harassment”. Harassment occurs when there is unwelcome conduct based on protected traits such as race, color, religion, national origin, disability, pregnancy, and others, when that conduct interferes with an individual’s work performance or creates an intimidating, hostile or offensive work environment.

What should you do?

Employers simply can’t be tolerant of “bad behavior” of any sort. Making excuses for employees who act inappropriately, or not intervening when trouble appears, is a big mistake and could lead to significant repercussions. Make sure that your Employee Handbook is up to date. Lead by example. Hold employees accountable, and don’t condone behavior that is offensive, malicious, or hateful for ANY reason.

Our compliance bulletin provides additional guidance on the new harassment laws:
Compliance Bulletin-2

If you have concerns about whether the policies and procedures that you have in place are sufficient, please don’t hesitate to contact us.

Written by
Sandra1
Sandra Teague, SPHR, SHRM-SCP
Head of HR Consulting
Connor & Gallagher OneSource (CGO)
steague@GoCGO.com
(630) 599-8761

This blog post is not intended to be exhaustive nor should any discussions or opinions be construed as legal advice - it is intended for educational and/or informational purposes only.

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