* Sen. Peters…
State Senator Robert Peters’ law banning employers from requiring workers to attend meetings regarding political or religious matters was signed into law on Wednesday.
“Forcing employees to attend meetings about the employer’s political or religious views goes too far,” said Peters (D-Chicago). “There needs to be a balanced and impartial relationship between employers and employees.”
Peters’ law prohibits Illinois employers from requiring employees to attend employer-sponsored meetings where the primary purpose is to communicate the employer’s opinions on religious or political matters. Further, the legislation safeguards employees from adverse actions for refusing such employer-sponsored meetings.
The law does not explicitly exclude 501(c) organizations so as to not interfere with the work of advocacy groups or organizations seeking to communicate policy initiatives. The law also outlines exemptions for required diversity, equity and inclusion training and higher education employers speaking to employees about coursework and research.
“I want to thank the Illinois AFL-CIO labor organization for bringing these issues to my attention,” said Peters. “By banning such meetings, we safeguard employees from being forced to adhere to anti-union messaging and shield them from employers directly attempting to influence their beliefs.”
Senate Bill 3649 goes into effect Jan. 1.
* Illinois AFL-CIO…
Joined by AFL-CIO President Liz Shuler and Illinois AFL-CIO President Tim Drea, Gov. JB Pritzker signed the Illinois Worker Freedom of Speech Act into law Wednesday at the state federation’s convention. The new law makes Illinois the eighth state to bar employers from requiring workers to attend mandatory political and religious meetings at work, known as “captive audience” meetings that often take the form of anti-union rhetoric.
“People go to work to work, not to be indoctrinated. Now, workers will not have to choose between their livelihood and personal values when employers use mandatory meetings to advance their political and religious interests,” stated Illinois AFL-CIO President Tim Drea. “Today’s bill signing represents a new chapter for Illinois where all workers can feel safe at work and choose to walk away from unwanted political, religious or anti-union rhetoric without fear of retaliation. We are grateful to Governor Pritzker for standing with workers and demonstrating his commitment to workplace fairness.”
The legislation was the top priority for the Illinois AFL-CIO in the 2024 legislative session. New York, Connecticut, Minnesota, Maine, Oregon, Vermont and Washington have passed similar laws protecting workers’ freedom of speech. The laws protect workers from having to hear or read offensive or unwanted political and religious speech unrelated to job tasks or performance.
“I congratulate the Illinois AFL-CIO and its allies on this tremendous victory for working people,” said AFL-CIO President Liz Shuler. “This new law will ensure that workers are protected from being compelled to listen to their employers’ opinions on political or religious matters on the job. These coercive captive audience meetings have no place in workplaces. We commend the Illinois legislature for passing this bill and Governor Pritzker for signing this important protection into law.”
Although Section 8 of the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA) strictly prohibits employers from interfering with the formation of a union, captive audience meetings have been called a “license to coerce” and “an anomaly in labor law, inconsistent with the [National Labor Relations] Act’s protection of employees’ free choice,” by National Labor Relations Board General Counsel Jennifer Abruzzo.
…Adding… Center Square…
Employer groups opposed the measure. Noah Finley with the National Federation of Independent Business told that same committee the measure is a violation of employers’ rights.
“It doesn’t ban employers from holding mandatory meetings, it bans them from holding them on specific topics and exercises content restriction on the employers’ speech,” Finley said. “In doing so it discriminates against speech that specifically protected by the U.S. Constitution.”
Unions say the meetings prohibit anti-union rhetoric during mandatory meetings. Employers groups say employees need to know how unionization could negatively impact the workplace relationship.
Alec Laird, senior vice president of the Illinois Retail Merchants Association, told the same committee in March similar measures have been blocked for superseding the National Labor Relations Act.
“Finally, Washington just passed its law this year,” Laird said. “It appears the NLRB’s own rulings in recent case law that the legislation is preempted by federal law and an unconstitutional restriction of free speech.”
Other groups listed as opponents were the Illinois Manufacturers’ Association, Illinois Policy, the Illinois Hotel and Lodging Association and the Illinois Chamber of Commerce.
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* From the governor’s press conference this morning…
Mary Ann Ahern: Can we talk about migrants, and are you prepared if Governor Abbott does send 25,000 migrants here before the DNC or during it?
Governor Pritzker: As you know, we have a partnership with Cook County and with the City of Chicago. There was an awful lot of planning that went into effect back in the early part of this year. And we’re excited about the Democratic National Convention coming. We’re also excited to have this partnership in place, as you know, and you can go to the City of Chicago’s website to see how many beds are currently occupied, how many beds are available, and also that we have a plan for expanding that if necessary.
So far, we have not seen the influx that we might have expected. And one of the reasons for that is because, despite the fact that Donald Trump told Republicans to walk away from an immigration bill that would have helped us actually secure the border, that the President has nevertheless put in place a series of agreements with countries throughout Central America and North America, including Mexico, to make sure that that we’ve stemmed the tide of border crossings.
And so actually, we’ve seen some of the lowest numbers of border crossings in the last two years, over the last several months. And I check on that weekly, talk to the White House and others, to make sure that that’s still the case.
MAA: Are your sources [that have been] talking back and forth, is Abbott just a threat or might that really happen?
Pritzker: Well, of course, we have a governor in Texas who cares nothing for the human beings who are have crossed the border, who are in his state. He frankly, ships them all across the country, including to Chicago. Threatened to do it again when he was at the RNC, but we have not seen any evidence of him increasing the numbers that have been sent to the City of Chicago.
I asked Pritzker about that not long ago and he said mostly the same thing. I would also note that the logistics of busing 25,000 people here in the next few weeks would be difficult. The convention will end 25 days from now, so that’s 1,000 people a day, every day, which is well beyond anything the city has ever before seen.
* Also, the city’s predictions haven’t always turned out to be accurate. This is from the end of January…
Looking to the future, [Beatriz Ponce de Leon, deputy mayor for Immigrant, Migrant and Refugee Rights] said the city is projecting another 800 people arriving per week, based on historical data. As summer approaches, those numbers could go up to 1,200 arrivals a week, which the city has experienced before, she said.
That didn’t happen. Not even close. The shelter census last week was 5,621, down from 14,900 at the end of December.
The city currently has 5,000 empty beds, according to the Tribune.
* Not saying it won’t happen, not saying it can’t happen. Just saying.
…Adding… And, just to be clear, this is what I wrote in comments…
Oh, I figure he’ll pull some sort of stunt next month. I’m just not convinced that he can pull off 25k people.
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* Background is here if you need it. The governor’s office has confirmed that a Logan Correctional Center employee who was put on administrative leave last week for mocking a murder victim online is the same Thomas Angeli who was arrested in Sangamon County yesterday…
Scroll down, and it says this, however…
Charge 1: FOID Card Required - Acq/Possess Firearm
Statute: Possess Firearms - Expired FOID -Class A
Counts: 1
* Angeli, you’ll recall, posted this…

And, as we noted last week, this wasn’t the first time, either…
The Illinois Department of Corrections has specific rules that prohibit employees from disclosing information related to offender’s records.
In response to a post from April [2019], correctional officer Thomas Angeli, who goes by Tommy Angeli on Facebook, commented about transgender woman Janiah Monroe, who had recently been transferred to a women’s facility. “Saw her in healthcare when she first came in…dude looks nothing like a girl..a tall n skinny guy,” Angeli wrote. Later the officer expressed expectations that the inmate would have “something feminine” by way of sexual organs, but did not.
…Adding… MrJM in comments…
Why did Logan Correctional Center ever employ a goon whose knuckle tattoos say “PURE HATE”?
Ugh…
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* Nexstar Illinois Capitol Bureau Chief…
…Adding… The grievance was filed by the FOP Labor Council, not, as posted in that tweet, the ILFOP.
* They’re calling for Grayson’s full reinstatement and back pay…
The grievance was terminated without just cause. Further, the employer publicly disseminated details of the investigation and termination on Facebook, in violation of the CBA and prior to giving the grievance or his representatives notice of the decision to terminate.
Remedy Sought: Reinstatement and reimbursement of all lost wages, restoration of all lost benefits, and any other appropriate relief.
That Facebook post is here.
* Sonya Massey’s autopsy was released today. A.P.…
Sangamon County Coroner Jim Allmon had previously disclosed initial findings on Massey’s July 6 death in Springfield and the full autopsy report released Friday confirmed those conclusions, including that her death was a homicide.
The report states that in addition to the bullet striking her just beneath her left eye, Massey had “minor blunt force injuries” to her right leg and she weighed 112 pounds.
The autopsy findings were released shortly before civil rights attorney Ben Crump, who is representing Massey’s family, was scheduled to hold a news conference in Springfield.
* WAND reporter…
* Invisible Institute and Investigative Reporting Workshop…
Invisible Institute, Illinois Public Media and the Investigative Reporting Workshop obtained new records from the Logan County Sheriff’s Office, where Grayson worked for 11 months prior to Sangamon County, that show department officials concluded Grayson ignored internal policies during a high-speed chase, fielded at least two formal complaints about his behavior and told him directly that they had considered firing him.
These records also include audio recordings from a November 2022 interview between Grayson and Logan County’s chief deputy which suggest the department — as well as other police departments that had employed him — were previously aware of issues with his performance and integrity as an officer.
Grayson’s relatively short law enforcement career, during which he moved between six Central Illinois police departments in just four years, has come under scrutiny in the weeks since he shot and killed Sonya Massey on July 6, 2024. […]
By the time he applied to be a deputy at the Logan County Sheriff’s Office in March 2022, Grayson had four different policing jobs across Central Illinois — three part-time gigs and one full time post. “My communication, people-centric nature, and compassion have afforded me excellent critical thinking skills,” Grayson wrote in his application.
But when Logan County officials called his current employer, the Auburn Police Department, they received mixed reviews. Auburn Police Chief Dave Campbell said that, while Grayson was an eager officer who showed up for his shifts early and had never been disciplined, he struggled with report writing and had raised concerns that he was “too aggressive.”
* Sangamon County’s response…

* SJ-R…
An official fundraiser has been set up for the family of Sonya Massey after she was fatally shot by a now former Sangamon County Sheriff’s deputy on July 6.
Massey’s father, James Wilburn, set up a GoFundMe page for the family. The family is asking for $100,000 to cover mental health counseling, supporting for the family, travel costs and household support as the family works to pursue justice for Sonya, according to the page.
“Sonya is remembered as caring and loving mother to her two children, a 17-year-old son and a 15-year-old daughter,” the family wrote on the donation page. “Sonya loved cooking, doing hair, nurturing her children, and spending time with her family. She was also a devoted church member.”
As of Thursday afternoon, the fundraiser had reached about $4,000.
…Adding… WCIA…
WCIA reached out to the police union for comment about the grievance.
“As a labor organization, we have an obligation to protect our members procedural, and due process rights contained in the collective bargaining agreement,” The Illinois FOP said in a statement. “Those rights come with very strict timelines.”
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