FILED
2014 IL App (4th) 130505 May 6, 2014
Carla Bender
NOS. 4-13-0505, 4-13-0506 cons. 4th District Appellate
Court, IL
IN THE APPELLATE COURT
OF ILLINOIS
FOURTH DISTRICT
BRIAN TRYGG, ) Direct Administrative
Petitioner, ) Review of the Illinois
v. (No. 4-13-0505) ) Labor Relations Board,
THE ILLINOIS LABOR RELATIONS BOARD, ) State Panel
STATE PANEL; and THE DEPARTMENT OF CEN- ) No. S-CA-10-092
TRAL MANAGEMENT SEVICES/DEPARTMENT )
OF TRANSPORTATION, REGION 3, DISTRICT 5, )
Respondents. )
____________________________________________ )
BRIAN TRYGG, ) No. S-CB-10-024
Petitioner, )
v. (No. 4-13-0506) )
THE ILLINOIS LABOR RELATIONS BOARD, )
STATE PANEL; and THE GENERAL TEAMSTERS )
PROFESSIONAL AND TECHNICAL EMPLOYEES )
UNION, LOCAL 916, )
Respondents. )
JUSTICE STEIGMANN delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.
Justices Knecht and Holder White concurred in the judgment and opinion.
OPINION
¶1 These consolidated appeals involve section 6(g) of the Illinois Public Labor Rela-
tions Act (5 ILCS 315/6(g) (West 2008)), which allows public employees who desire
nonassociation with a labor union "based upon bona fide religious tenets or teachings of a church
or religious body of which such employees are members" to pay an amount equal to their "fair
share" dues to a nonreligious charity instead of to the union. The proper interpretation of section
6(g) of the Act presents an issue of first impression.
¶2 In December 2009, petitioner, Brian Trygg, a civil engineer employed by the Illi-
nois Department of Transportation (IDOT), received a notification from the General Teamsters
Professional and Technical Employees Union, Local 916 (Teamsters) that the Illinois Labor Re-
lations Board (Board) had certified his employment position for inclusion in the existing collec-
tive-bargaining agreement between the Teamsters, IDOT, and the Department of Central Man-
agement Services (CMS). Shortly thereafter, petitioner informed both his employer and the
Teamsters via e-mail that he did not want to join the Teamsters and, instead, (1) wished to claim
the right of nonassociation under section 6(g) of the Act and (2) requested that his fair-share dues
to be withheld from the Teamsters until his section 6(g) claim was resolved. Later, in response
to the Teamsters' request, petitioner attempted to explain in an e-mail why his religious beliefs
brought him under the protection of section 6(g) of the Act. The Teamsters never responded to
that e-mail. CMS, acting on behalf of IDOT, subsequently deducted fair-share dues from peti-
tioner's pay.
¶3 Later in December 2009, petitioner filed separate charges with the Board, alleging
that CMS and the Teamsters committed unfair labor practices under section 10 of the Act (5
ILCS 315/10 (West 2008)). In December 2012, following investigations pursuant to section 11
of the Act (5 ILCS 315/11 (West 2008)), the Executive Director of the Board dismissed both of
petitioner's charges. Petitioner appealed to the Board pursuant to section 1200.135 of Title 80 of
the Illinois Administrative Code (Administrative Code) (80 Ill. Adm. Code 1200.135 (2003)). In
May 2013, the Board affirmed the Executive Director's dismissal of the charges.
¶4 Petitioner pro se appeals from both dismissals, arguing that CMS and the Team-
sters committed unfair labor practices under section 10 of the Act by entering into a collective-
bargaining agreement that failed to safeguard the right of nonassociation under section 6(g) of
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the Act. We consolidated the appeals on our own motion. For the reasons that follow, we re-
verse the Board's dismissal of petitioner's charges against CMS and the Teamsters and remand
for the issuance of complaints and hearings pursuant to section 11 of the Act.
¶5 I. BACKGROUND
¶6 The following facts were gleaned from the records of administrative proceedings
on petitioner's unfair labor practice charges.
¶7 A. Events Preceding Petitioner's Charges
¶8 In January 2009, CMS, IDOT, and the Department of Natural Resources (DNR)
entered into a collective-bargaining agreement with the Teamsters, which recognized the Team-
sters as the exclusive bargaining representative for certain classes of technical employees em-
ployed by IDOT and DNR. (DNR is not a party to these appeals. Because CMS administers pe-
titioner's compensation, we refer to CMS as petitioner's employer throughout this opinion.) The
collective-bargaining agreement included a fair-share agreement, which required CMS to deduct
from the paychecks of employees who did not join the Teamsters an amount equal to the dues
paid by member employees. The agreement required CMS to then remit those fair-share deduc-
tions to the Teamsters.
¶9 The collective-bargaining agreement contained no mention of section 6(g) of the
Act, which requires that nonmember employees be allowed to have their fair-share deductions
remitted to a nonreligious charity instead of to a union, provided that such an exemption be
"based upon bona fide religious tenets or teachings of a church or religious body of which such
employee[] [is a member]." 5 ILCS 315/6(g) (West 2008).
¶ 10 In late November 2009, the Board certified petitioner's employment classification
at IDOT (civil engineer V) for inclusion in the collective-bargaining agreement.
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¶ 11 On December 2, 2009, one of petitioner's colleagues sent an e-mail to petitioner
and other IDOT employees informing them of their inclusion in the collective-bargaining agree-
ment. Ninety minutes later, petitioner sent an e-mail to his supervisor, Lugene Joines, informing
him that he (1) did not wish to join the Teamsters and (2) wished to take advantage of section
6(g) of the Act by having his fair-share deductions remitted to a nonreligious charity instead of
the Teamsters. Petitioner explained in his e-mail that he was a member of the Gideons Interna-
tional, a Christian professional and businessmen's association, and that membership in the Team-
sters was contrary to his beliefs and degrading to his standing as a professional. That same day,
Joines replied to petitioner's e-mail and told him to contact either Dan Magee, the Teamsters' di-
vision representative, or Leo Carroll, the Teamsters' business agent.
¶ 12 On or around that same day, petitioner received a letter from the Teamsters ex-
plaining the benefits of Teamsters membership and the steps necessary to formally join the
Teamsters. The Teamsters' letter did not mention petitioner's option to abstain from joining the
Teamsters and to instead take fair-share deductions, nor did it mention the religious protections
of section 6(g) of the Act.
¶ 13 On December 7, 2009, petitioner sent the following e-mail to Carroll:
"Mr. Carroll,
I have contacted Dan Magee concerning my right to
nonassociation of employees. *** This issue is important to me
and I would like to pursue resolving it before monies are unfairly
removed from my paycheck and sent to the [Teamsters] instead of
being nonassociated and provided to a charity.
I tried contacting you by telephone, but you must have been
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away from your office. Our Administrative Services Bureau ad-
vises the payroll information is due within the next few days, so
time is of the essence."
¶ 14 On December 8, 2009, petitioner sent a letter to Joseph Crowe, Deputy Director
of IDOT Region 3, informing him that he wished to invoke his rights under section 6(g) of the
Act based upon his religious beliefs. Petitioner requested that his fair-share deductions be im-
mediately withheld from the Teamsters until a charitable organization could be determined. Peti-
tioner sent a carbon copy of that letter to the Board and the Teamsters.
¶ 15 On December 9, 2009, Carroll, on behalf of the Teamsters, sent the following e-
mail to petitioner:
"[W]e need to know the following: What established religion do
you belong to and adhere to[?] What tenet or teaching of that reli-
gion prohibits payment to a union? Further[,] we need a list of the
charities you wish the monies to go to. Once we have received this
info, we will meet with our attorney and get back to you."
Three hours later, petitioner responded to Carroll's e-mail, as follows:
"I have viewed my career as a Professional Engineer with
[IDOT] as requiring a high moral and professional standard, which
is rooted in my Christian values. My membership in the Gideons
International is based on my beliefs and values as a professional
man. Including me with the Teamsters diminishes my stature in
my professional career and is contrary to my religious beliefs.
Here is the information that you are requesting:
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What established religion do you belong to and adhere to?
Christianity. My background has brought me to learn val-
ues from mainly Presbyterian, Baptist, and Methodist denomina-
tions. As an evangelical Christian currently with membership in a
Methodist church, I had the opportunity to become a member of
[the] Gideons International. This is an association of Christian
business and professional men. The membership is based upon the
need for men of good [rapport] and good standing to participate in
the work of spreading God's word. For this reason, the standards
of membership are made and kept high.
What tenet or teaching of that religion prohibits payment to
a union?
I cannot point directly to a teaching of Christianity that
prohibits payment to a union, but the tenets of my belief are rooted
in the need for me to be a professional man of good [rapport] and
good standing, with high moral and religious standards. I believe
the Lord has been with me and provided for me, and that I should
not bow down to other gods."
Petitioner further stated that he wished his fair-share dues to be remitted to the American Diabe-
tes Association. Neither Carroll nor any representative from the Teamsters responded to peti-
tioner's e-mail.
¶ 16 On December 21, 2009, petitioner gained electronic access to his pay stubs for the
pay period ending on December 15, 2009. Those pay stubs showed that CMS had deducted fair-
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share dues from petitioner's pay.
¶ 17 On December 28, 2009, petitioner filed with the Board separate unfair labor prac-
tice charges against CMS and the Teamsters pursuant to section 10 of the Act. (Petitioner filed
those charges by completing standardized charging forms downloaded from the Board's website,
which he then submitted to the Board.)
¶ 18 B. Board Case Number S-CA-10-092
¶ 19 1. Petitioner's Charge Against CMS
¶ 20 In his charge against CMS, which the Board docketed as case No. S-CA-10-092
(our case No. 4-13-0505), petitioner alleged that CMS committed an unfair labor practice under
section 10(a) of the Act by failing to safeguard his right of nonassociation under section 6(g) of
the Act. Specifically, petitioner argued that CMS failed to (1) provide notice of the right of
nonassociation, (2) respond to petitioner's invocation of the right of nonassociation, or (3) with-
hold petitioner's fair-share dues from the Teamsters.
¶ 21 In a section of the charging form titled "relief of remedy sought by charging par-
ty," petitioner stated the following:
"I ask that disclosure of [section 6(g) of the Act] be supplied to all
employees involved with union representation to eliminate oppres-
sion created by the omission in considering or honoring beliefs. I
ask that my religious values be recognized, that an apology be
made in writing, and that documents be provided showing that the
monies are returned from the [Teamsters] so that they can be pro-
vided to a nonreligious charitable organization."
¶ 22 2. CMS's Response
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¶ 23 On January 22, 2010, CMS filed a three-page response to petitioner's charge, as-
serting that both the collective-bargaining agreement and sections 6(e) and 6(f) of the Act obli-
gated CMS to deduct fair-share dues from petitioner's pay and remit those deductions to the
Teamsters. CMS contended that its "obligation ends there," and that application of the religious
exemption of section 6(g) of the Act—specifically, the process of forwarding petitioner's fair-
share fees to a nonreligious charitable organization—is a matter to be resolved exclusively be-
tween petitioner and the Teamsters. CMS further asserted that if it would have withheld peti-
tioner's fair-share dues from the Teamsters, that action would have violated the Act.
¶ 24 CMS also claimed that it was not required to provide petitioner with notice of his
statutory rights, including the right of nonassociation under section 6(g) of the Act. Alternative-
ly, CMS argued that even if notice was required, petitioner was clearly aware of his rights under
section 6(g) of the Act, as demonstrated by his ability to invoke those rights in a timely manner,
and he therefore suffered no harm from CMS's failure to provide notice.
¶ 25 3. Petitioner's Response to CMS's Response
¶ 26 On January 25, 2010, petitioner filed a response to CMS's response. Petitioner
asserted that CMS's failure to include provisions safeguarding the right of nonassociation in its
collective-bargaining agreement with the Teamsters constituted an unfair labor practice under
section 10(a)(2) of the Act by discriminating in a term or condition of employment in order to
encourage or discourage membership in or other support for any labor organization.
¶ 27 Petitioner conceded that he personally suffered no harm from CMS's failure to
provide him with notice of his right of nonassociation. Petitioner stated that he fortuitously hap-
pened to learn of his right of nonassociation from a fellow employee, but were it not for that em-
ployee, he would have remained ignorant to his rights under section 6(g) of the Act.
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¶ 28 Petitioner also conceded that his eligibility for the religious exemption of section
6(g) of the Act was a point of debate between him and the Teamsters, and that CMS should not
be involved in that determination. However, petitioner argued that because CMS and the Team-
sters were equal parties to the collective-bargaining agreement, and because section 6(g) of the
Act required the "agreement" to safeguard the right of nonassociation, CMS and the Teamsters
shared the responsibility to ensure that petitioner's fair-share dues would not go to the Teamsters.
In other words, although petitioner conceded that his eligibility for nonassociation under section
6(g) of the Act was a point of debate between only him and the Teamsters, he claimed that sec-
tion 6(g) of the Act required CMS to safeguard his right of nonassociation by withholding his
fair-share dues from the Teamsters until that debate could be resolved.
¶ 29 4. Dismissal of Petitioner's Charge
¶ 30 In December 2012, the Executive Director of the Board, Jerald Post, dismissed
petitioner's charge against CMS in a written order, concluding that "the charge fails to raise an
issue of law or fact sufficient to warrant a hearing." Focusing on the relief petitioner requested
in his charge, Post determined that nothing in the Act or the Administrative Code required CMS
to provide employees with notice of their rights under section 6(g) of the Act. Finding no re-
quirement that CMS provide petitioner with notice of his rights, Post concluded that petitioner's
charge failed to raise an issue for hearing.
¶ 31 5. Petitioner's Administrative Appeal
¶ 32 In his appeal pursuant to section 1200.135 of Title 80 of the Administrative Code,
petitioner essentially reasserted his argument that CMS violated its duty to safeguard the right of
nonassociation under section 6(g) of the Act. In May 2013, the Board affirmed Post's dismissal
of petitioner's charge.
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¶ 33 C. Board Case Number S-CB-10-024
¶ 34 1. Petitioner's Charge Against the Teamsters
¶ 35 In his charge against the Teamsters, which the Board docketed as case number S-
CB-10-024 (our case No. 4-13-0506), petitioner alleged that the Teamsters committed an unfair
labor practice under section 10(b) of the Act by failing to safeguard his right of nonassociation
under section 6(g) of the Act. Specifically, petitioner argued that the Teamsters failed to (1) pro-
vide notice of the right of nonassociation, (2) respond to petitioner's invocation of the right of
nonassociation, or (3) refuse to accept petitioner's fair-share dues from CMS.
¶ 36 Petitioner's statement of the relief or remedy he sought was identical to the state-
ment he included in his charge against CMS.
¶ 37 2. The Teamsters' Response
¶ 38 On January 7, 2010, the Teamsters, through its attorney, submitted a nine-page
response to petitioner's unfair labor practice charge, asserting that it did "not believe that [peti-
tioner] has alleged sufficient facts to warrant issuance of a complaint in conjunction with an un-
fair labor practice charge concerning his assertion that he possesses a valid bona fide religious
objection to the payment of union dues and/or fair share payments." In response to petitioner's
explanation of his religious beliefs, the Teamsters argued that petitioner's asserted beliefs were
insufficient under section 6(g) of the Act, in part, because they were inconsistent with statements
of the Pope of the Roman Catholic Church and unsubstantiated by scholarly evidence.
¶ 39 3. The Robert Gierut E-mail
¶ 40 On September 20, 2012, Board representative Robert Gierut sent an e-mail to pe-
titioner, informing him that the Board was in the process of clearing a backlog of cases, includ-
ing petitioner's charges against CMS and the Teamsters. Gierut asked petitioner for additional
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information, including whether the Teamsters had honored his request to have his fair-share as-
sessment forwarded to the American Diabetes Association.
¶ 41 In response, petitioner stated that although he had not received any communica-
tion from the Teamsters, 67 deductions totaling $3,623.78 had been taken from his pay to date,
and he had received no information indicating that the deductions had been placed in escrow
pending resolution of his charges.
¶ 42 4. Dismissal of Petitioner's Charge
¶ 43 In December 2012, Post dismissed petitioner's charge in a written order, conclud-
ing that "the charge fails to raise an issue of law or fact sufficient to warrant a hearing." Regard-
ing petitioner's claim that the Teamsters failed to provide him with notice of his rights under sec-
tion 6(g) of the Act, Post asserted that the Act contains no such notice requirement. Even if the
Teamsters should have provided petitioner with some kind of notice, Post concluded, the evi-
dence showed that petitioner was nonetheless fully aware of his rights and able to assert them in
a timely fashion.
¶ 44 As to petitioner's claim that the Teamsters committed an unfair labor practice by
failing to honor his request for exemption under section 6(g) of the Act, Post found that petition-
er's asserted beliefs were no more than a personal predisposition, and therefore insufficient under
section 6(g) of the Act.
¶ 45 5. Petitioner's Administrative Appeal
¶ 46 In his appeal pursuant to section 1200.135 of Title 80 of the Administrative Code,
petitioner reasserted his argument that the Teamsters violated its duty to safeguard the right of
nonassociation under section 6(g) of the Act. Quoting biblical scripture and further elaborating
on his beliefs, petitioner also argued that his religious beliefs were sufficient under section 6(g)
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of the Act. In May 2013, the Board affirmed Post's dismissal of petitioner's charge against the
Teamsters.
¶ 47 These appeals followed the Board's May 2013 dismissals of petitioner's charges
against CMS and the Teamsters. As previously stated, we consolidated the appeals on our own
motion.
¶ 48 II. ANALYSIS
¶ 49 In his pro se appeals, petitioner essentially contends that CMS and the Teamsters
committed unfair labor practices under section 10 of the Act by entering into a collective-
bargaining agreement that failed to safeguard the right of nonassociation under section 6(g) of
the Act. Specifically, petitioner contends that the agreement failed to (1) disclose or provide no-
tice to employees of the right of nonassociation or (2) set out procedures through which CMS
and the Teamsters would address employees' claims for nonassociation under section 6(g) of the
Act. Petitioner further asserts that the Teamsters committed an unfair labor practice by failing to
honor his invocation of the right of nonassociation under section 6(g) of the Act. We address
petitioner's claims in turn. Before doing so, however, we briefly review the applicable statutes
governing unfair labor practice procedures to place the Board's dismissals into context.
¶ 50 A. Section 11(a) of the Act and the Standard of Review
¶ 51 Section 11(a) of the Act governs unfair labor practice procedures. That section
provides that when a party files an unfair labor practice charge, the Board or its designated agent
shall conduct an investigation of the charge. 5 ILCS 315/11(a) (West 2008). Section 11(a) fur-
ther provides that "[i]f after such investigation[,] the Board finds that the charge involves a dis-
positive issue of law or fact[,] the Board shall issue a complaint and cause to be served upon the
[charged party] a complaint stating the charges, accompanied by a notice of hearing before the
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Board or a member thereof designated by the Board, or before a qualified hearing officer desig-
nated by the Board." 5 ILCS 315/11(a) (West 2008).
¶ 52 Upon petitioner's filing of his charges against CMS and the Teamsters, the Board
designated Post to investigate the charges pursuant to section 11(a) of the Act. This court recent-
ly stated the purpose of such an investigation and the standard of review applicable to the
Board's dismissal of a charge at the investigation stage, as follows:
"When investigating such a charge, the Board is analogous to a
grand jury. [Citation.] Like a grand jury, the Board assesses the
credibility of witnesses; draws inferences from the facts; and, in
general, decides whether there is enough evidence to support the
charge. [Citation.] If the Board finds an issue of law or fact suffi-
cient to warrant a hearing, the Board will issue a complaint setting
forth the issues that warrant a hearing. 5 ILCS 315/11(a) (West
2008); 80 Ill. Adm. Code 1220.40(a)(3) (2012). However, the
Board will dismiss the charge if the charge fails to state a claim on
its face or the investigation reveals no issue of law or fact suffi-
cient to warrant a hearing. 80 Ill. Adm. Code 1220.40(a)(4)
(2012)." Michels v. Illinois Labor Relations Board, 2012 IL App
(4th) 110612, ¶ 44, 969 N.E.2d 996.
¶ 53 Judicial review of the Board's dismissal of a charge lies directly in the appellate
court. 5 ILCS 315/11(e) (West 2008). We apply a deferential standard of review to the Board's
dismissal of a charge:
"When deciding whether there is enough evidence to justify
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a hearing, the Board must exercise its discretion or judgment. It is
within the sound discretion of the Board to dismiss an unfair labor
practice charge. [Citations.] Thus, if the Board decides there is
not enough evidence and dismisses the charge, we ask whether it
abused its discretion. [Citations.] The Board abuses its discretion
only where its decision to dismiss the charge is clearly illogical.
[Citation.] The fact we may have reached a different decision than
the Board is not, by itself, sufficient to justify reversing the Board's
decision." Michels, 2012 IL App (4th) 110612, ¶ 45, 969 N.E.2d
996.
¶ 54 In this case, petitioner filed separate unfair labor practice charges against CMS
and the Teamsters relating to the collective-bargaining agreement that those parties entered into.
Petitioner charged CMS with committing unfair labor practices under the following provisions of
section 10(a) of the Act:
"It shall be an unfair labor practice for an employer or its agents:
(1) to interfere with, restrain or coerce
public employees in the exercise of the rights
guaranteed in this Act ***;
(2) to discriminate in regard to hire or
tenure of employment or any term or condition of
employment in order to encourage or discourage
membership in or other support for any labor or-
ganization. Nothing in this Act or any other law
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precludes a public employer from making an
agreement with a labor organization to require as
a condition of employment the payment of a fair
share under paragraph (e) of Section 6[.]" 5
ILCS 315/10(a)(1)-(2) (West 2008).
¶ 55 Petitioner charged the Teamsters with committing an unfair labor practice under
the following provision of section 10(b)(1) of the Act:
"It shall be an unfair labor practice for a labor organization or its
agents:
(1) to restrain or coerce public employees in
the exercise of the rights guaranteed in this Act
***[.]" 5 ILCS 315/10(b)(1) (West 2008).
¶ 56 Following his investigations, Post dismissed petitioner's charges against CMS and
the Teamsters, finding that neither charge raised issues of law or fact sufficient to warrant a hear-
ing. Following petitioner's administrative appeal, the Board upheld that dismissal. Accordingly,
the ultimate question before us is whether the Board abused its discretion by dismissing petition-
er's charges. As discussed in further detail below, we conclude, and the Board concedes before
this court, that neither of petitioner's charges should have been dismissed.
¶ 57 B. The Duty To Safeguard the Right of Nonassociation
¶ 58 Section 6(g) of the Act provides, in pertinent part, as follows:
"Agreements containing a fair share agreement must safeguard the
right of nonassociation of employees based upon bona fide reli-
gious tenets or teachings of a church or religious body of which
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such employees are members. Such employees may be required to
pay an amount equal to their fair share, determined under a lawful
fair share agreement, to a nonreligious charitable organization mu-
tually agreed upon by the employees affected and the exclusive
bargaining representative to which such employees would other-
wise pay such service fee." 5 ILCS 315/6(g) (West 2008).
¶ 59 Petitioner asserts that because section 6(g) of the Act provides that the agreement
must safeguard the right of nonassociation, the written collective-bargaining agreement itself
must set out the procedures through which the parties to the agreement will safeguard the right of
nonassociation under section 6(g) of the Act. Petitioner essentially argues that CMS and the
Teamsters committed unfair labor practices under section 10 of the Act by entering into a collec-
tive-bargaining agreement that failed to include provisions designed to implement section 6(g) of
the Act. Petitioner asserts that among the necessary safeguard provisions were (1) notice to em-
ployees of their rights under section 6(g) of the Act and (2) formal procedures for handling em-
ployees' claims for nonassociation under section 6(g) of the Act, including escrow of fair-share
dues while an employee's claim was pending. We agree that the collective-bargaining agreement
between CMS and the Teamsters failed to safeguard the right of nonassociation under section
6(g) of the Act.
¶ 60 The parties do not dispute that the collective-bargaining agreement included no
mention of the right of nonassociation under section 6(g) of the Act, nor procedures designed to
carry out the requirements of that section, as the facts of this case clearly demonstrated. After
petitioner unambiguously stated to his supervisor that he intended to claim the right of
nonassociation under section 6(g) of the Act, his supervisor told him to take up his claim with the
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Teamsters. After petitioner claimed the right of nonassociation with the Teamsters, the Team-
sters sent petitioner an e-mail asking him to explain (1) "what established religion" he belonged
to and (2) what "tenet or teaching of that religion prohibit[ed] payment to a union." When peti-
tioner attempted to answer those questions, his e-mail went ignored. Shortly thereafter, despite
having knowledge of petitioner's invocation of the statutory right of nonassociation, the Team-
sters apparently took receipt of petitioner's fair-share dues without placing them into escrow or
forwarding them to the American Diabetes Association, which petitioner had clearly designated
as the nonreligious charity he wished to receive his fair-share dues.
¶ 61 The fact that petitioner was forced to file an unfair labor practice charge with the
Board before the Teamsters or CMS formally addressed the merits of his claim for
nonassociation under section 6(g) of the Act demonstrates that the collective-bargaining agree-
ment utterly failed to safeguard the right of nonassociation. Petitioner associated with the Team-
sters against his will when his fair-share dues went into the Teamster's coffers. Section 6(g) of
the Act requires that the right of nonassociation be safeguarded by more than the type of unwrit-
ten, improvised procedures on display in this case.
¶ 62 In the 1986 administrative case of Navratil & American Federation of State,
County & Municipal Employees, Council 31, 2 PERI ¶ 2044 (ISLRB 1986), the Board addressed
the issue of procedural safeguards under section 6(g) of the Act and noted that although the stat-
ute "does not expressly define [the] procedural safeguards" necessary to protect the right of
nonassociation, the United States Supreme Court's decision in Chicago Teachers Union, Local
No. 1 v. Hudson, 475 U.S. 292 (1986), entitled the employee in Navratil to constitutional due
process. Navratil, 2 PERI ¶ 2044. In Navratil, 2 PERI ¶ 2044, the Board concluded that the em-
ployee received adequate due process because (1) he received notice and an explanation of the
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religious exemption; (2) he received a reasonably prompt and impartial hearing on his claim for
nonassociation, albeit through the unfair labor practice procedures; and (3) his fair-share dues
were placed in escrow pending resolution of his claim for nonassociation.
¶ 63 We note that the procedural safeguards set forth in Hudson were those minimally
required under the constitution for fair-share agreements in general. The Supreme Court did not
hold that such procedural safeguards were constitutionally required when an employee invoked a
statutory exemption to an otherwise valid fair-share agreement, such as the exemption created by
section 6(g) of the Act. Nonetheless, the Board in Navratil appeared to interpret section 6(g) of
the Act as requiring procedural safeguards akin to those enunciated in Hudson. We give defer-
ence to the Board's interpretation of the Act, which it was created to enforce and in which it has
experience and expertise. Illinois Council of Police v. Illinois Labor Relations Board, Local
Panel, 387 Ill. App. 3d 641, 660, 899 N.E.2d 1199, 1215 (2008).
¶ 64 In Hudson, 475 U.S. at 310, the Supreme Court held that "the constitutional re-
quirements for the Union's collection of agency fees [(also known as fair-share dues)] include [1]
an adequate explanation of the basis for the fee, [2] a reasonably prompt opportunity to challenge
the amount of the fee before an impartial decisionmaker, and [3] an escrow for the amounts rea-
sonably in dispute while such challenges are pending." Citing Hudson, the Board and the Team-
sters concede that because petitioner's fair-share dues should have been placed in escrow pending
the resolution of his section 6(g) claim, the Board should not have dismissed petitioner's charges.
We need not decide whether the statutory right of nonassociation under section 6(g) of the Act is
also constitutional in dimension, thus implicating the constitutional requirements of Hudson, be-
cause we conclude that safeguarding the right of nonassociation under section 6(g) of the Act
necessarily requires escrow of fair-share dues pending resolution of an employee's claim under
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that section. Preventing the union from receiving an objecting employee's fair-share dues is the
only means by which nonassociation is accomplished under section 6(g) of the Act. It is there-
fore evident that the General Assembly intended an objecting employee's dues to be placed in
escrow pending resolution of his claim under section 6(g) of the Act.
¶ 65 CMS argues that even if petitioner's fair-share dues should have been placed in
escrow, the Board nonetheless properly dismissed petitioner's charge against CMS because the
responsibility to escrow fell entirely upon the Teamsters. However, CMS overlooks the com-
mand of section 6(g) of the Act that the agreement safeguard the right of nonassociation. Be-
cause escrow of fair-share dues is required to safeguard the right of nonassociation, both parties
to the agreement are responsible for ensuring that the agreement spells out procedures for es-
crowing the fair-share dues of employees who invoke their right of nonassociation. CMS's ar-
gument would require us to conclude that the duty to safeguard under section 6(g) of the Act can
be satisfied through procedures that exist entirely outside of the actual collective-bargaining
agreement. Because section 6(g) of the Act explicitly requires the agreement to safeguard the
right of nonassociation, both parties to the agreement are responsible for ensuring that it does so.
Likewise, when an agreement fails to comply with section 6(g) of the Act, both parties share
equal culpability.
¶ 66 However, the fact that the collective-bargaining agreement between CMS and the
Teamsters violates section 6(g) of the Act does not automatically mean that either CMS or the
Teamsters are guilty of an unfair labor practice under section 10 of the Act. Questions of law
and fact remain over whether the agreement's failure to safeguard the right of nonassociation—
for which CMS and the Teamsters are equally culpable—constituted, or resulted in, unfair labor
practices under section 10 of the Act. Because of these unresolved issues of law and fact, the
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Board abused its discretion by dismissing petitioner's charges against CMS and the Teamsters.
As previously stated, the Board concedes that the charges should not have been dismissed.
¶ 67 Because the collective-bargaining agreement failed to safeguard the right of
nonassociation under section 6(g) of the Act, the fact-finding procedures used in this case failed
to provide us with a sufficiently complete record from which to address the merits of petitioner's
claim for nonassociation. Accordingly, we decline to address whether petitioner qualifies for the
right of nonassociation under section 6(g) of the Act. Until formal procedures are in place to ap-
propriately address petitioner's claim for nonassociation, petitioner's right of nonassociation can
be adequately protected through escrow of his fair-share dues.
¶ 68 III. CONCLUSION
¶ 69 For the foregoing reasons, we reverse the Board's dismissal of petitioner's charges
against CMS and the Teamsters and remand for the issuance of complaints and hearings pursuant
to section 11 of the Act to determine whether CMS and the Teamsters engaged in unfair labor
practices by entering into a collective-bargaining agreement that failed to safeguard the right of
nonassociation under section 6(g) of the Act. Consistent with the Board and Teamsters' conces-
sions, we further direct that the sum of petitioner's fair-share dues to date and future payments be
placed in escrow pending a final decision on his claim for nonassociation under section 6(g) of
the Act.
¶ 70 Reversed and remanded with directions.
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