Illinois Performance Laws
Neither the federal government nor the state of Illinois have an
inalienable right to allow employees the right to come to work ten to
fifteen minutes late. By law employees are thus required to be on time
each day. Despite having psychological or physical aliments, employees
must adhere to this law.
Common issues often include depression, arthritis, bipolar depression,
attention deficit hyperactive disorder, insomnia, and migraines. Some
businesses or companies will allow employees to have different
standards if the problem is recurring and a disability. Some HR
departments may also assist employees in their cases for disability
reasoning to be late to work.
Under these cases the employees must present professional medical
diagnoses to their HR departments or current employers before the issue
can be deemed a disability. Under most circumstances the HR department
will approach the employer with the issue without mentioning the
medical or psychological ailment. This allows doctor-patient
confidentiality yet handles the issue for disability treatment. If no
negotiation can be created, then the employee may terminate his or her
position or the employer may terminate him or her on the basis of
repeated tardiness.
Meal Break Laws
The state of Illinois, unlike many other states, allows its employed
citizens the right to have a mealtime break of at least thirty minutes
every seven and one half hours or more of worked. Employers may choose
to increase these lunch hours to more time but cannot legally restrict
mealtimes to less than thirty minutes. This law is found in the
Illinois One Day Rest In Seven Act. These breaks are normally unpaid,
unless an employer chooses to pay an employee otherwise. When a break
is in progress, an employee is required to not work. If any amount of
work is submitted during the mealtime break, the employer is required
to pay for the break time.
Certain stipulations apply in regards to how breaks are handled. Under
this law a business must have a minimum of three employees working at a
time for this law to take effect. Some breaks can be required more
often. For instance the Department of Transportation requires truck
drivers to break more often when driving long distances. Most
businesses and companies allow employees to have paid ten-minute breaks
twice or more throughout the workday. These breaks often promote
productivity and allow for mental recharging to complete tasks more
effectively.
Employee Payment
At times some employees have a set work schedule from nine in the
morning to five in the evening but do not have enough work to keep
occupied during that time. Under these circumstances employers are
required to pay these employees despite not completing any work. For
instance an employee who only delivers items eight hours a day may not
having any deliveries to make for several hours. Under these
circumstances employers are legally required to pay these employees as
they otherwise would. However if an employee leaves work for personal
reasons outside of work purposes, an employer is not legally bound to
pay him or her for that amount of time.