The Illinois Employee Sick Leave Act (“Act”) is what is known as a “kin care” law; i.e., it generally requires Illinois employers that provide paid or unpaid personal sick leave benefits to their employees to allow employees to use such leave to attend to a covered family member’s illness or injury, “on the same terms” as the employees would use their sick leave benefits for their own illness or injury. A “covered family member” means an employee's “child, stepchild, spouse, domestic partner, sibling, parent, mother-in-law, father-in-law, grandchild ...
My colleague Peter Steinmeyer published a post on the Trade Secrets and Noncompete Blog that will be of interest to many of our readers: “Chicago District Judge Issues Primer On Declaratory Judgment Actions Regarding The Enforceability Of Non-Compete Agreements.”
Following is an excerpt:
Last week, Chicago district judge Charles Kocoras dismissed a declaratory judgment action challenging the enforceability of a facially broad form non-compete agreement signed by all employees of the Jimmy John’s sandwich chain. Judge Kocoras held that the dispute was not judiciable ...
Blog Editors
Recent Updates
- Video: Biden’s Final Labor Moves - Employment Law This Week
- Video: Workplace Investigation Protocols - One-on-One with Greg Keating
- Differing Approaches to Earned Wage Access Programs Lead to Regulatory Conflict
- Podcast: Beyond Non-Competes - IP and Trade Secret Assessment Strategies for Employers – Employment Law This Week
- On Trend: New Jersey Hops on the Pay Transparency Bandwagon