IL Labor Relations Board director: Rideshare unionization bill could double budget
(The Center Square) – A bill allowing rideshare drivers to unionize while imposing fees on riders would present a conflict of interest, the executive director of the Illinois Labor Relations Board says.
State Sen. Ram Villivalam, D-Chicago, said Illinois Senate Bill 2906 would give collective bargaining rights to transportation network drivers.
“With no existing legal structure allowing rideshare drivers to unionize, workers have been left unable to negotiate fair pay, protection or a voice on the job,” Villivalam said.
SEIU Local 1 President Genie Kastrup told the Illinois Senate Labor Committee on Tuesday that SB 2906 would require rideshare companies to negotiate a collective bargaining agreement if organizers get support from 30% of active drivers.
Illinois Labor Relations Board Executive Director Kimberly Stevens told the committee that the bill’s 20-cent per ride administrative fee on riders would be an issue.
“That would come to the board to then create and administer grants back to the union out of that funding, which presents a conflict of interest for an agency that is supposed to be neutral,” Stevens said.
Stevens said the board does not have jurisdiction over private employers or their employees, and it does not collect fees or make grants.
SB 2906 would also require the Illinois Labor Relations Board to collect driver information from their employers.
The board’s executive director, Kimberly Stevens, said her agency does not currently do data collection.
“It would double, likely, our agency’s current budget and it would cost at least, we estimate from talking to Massachusetts and from other projects that we’ve had to do in the IT arena, at least three to five million dollars to stand up the systems that would be necessary,” Stevens said.
Stevens said the bill would probably increase her agency’s head count by at least half.
Latest News Stories
WATCH: Pritzker claims Trump plans election interference with troop deployment
Plaintiffs take Cook County gun ban challenge to SCOTUS
Illinois quick hits: $1.57B return on investments; solar-powered manufacturer cuts ribbon
Report: Illinois U.S. Rep faces minimal penalty after disclosure violations
18 were injured, 2 killed in Minneapolis shooting
Trump HHS tells states to remove gender ideology from sex ed or lose PREP funding
Americans could face ‘sticker shock’ as once-small tax exemption ends
‘Pro-taxpayer’ law requires operators to clean up abandoned Illinois oil wells
Black-only medical directory must open to all races after lawsuit
Embattled Fed governor sues Trump over ‘illegal’ firing
Watch: Cook County gun ban plaintiffs petition SCOTUS; Pritzker hasn’t heard from White House
Illinois quick hits: Man on pretrial release accused of murder; holiday weekend impaired driving patrols