| Pritzker, SEIU Reach Agreement to 
			Release Back Pay and Implement Required Raises for More Than 40,000 
			Low-Wage Home Care & Child Care Workers
 
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			 [March 20, 2019] 
			The State of Illinois and SEIU Healthcare Illinois reached an 
			agreement to implement rate increases and release previously 
			withheld increases for more than 40,000 Department of Human Services 
			low-wage home care and child care providers that had been withheld 
			under the former Rauner administration.
 SEIU Healthcare Illinois and the Pritzker administration released 
			the following statement announcing the agreement:
 
 “Today marks a significant and 
			long-anticipated step in repairing the years of damage and 
			devastation that occurred under former Gov. Bruce Rauner’s 
			leadership. This administration has shown that it will operate in 
			compliance with court orders and the laws of the state. In that 
			spirit, this agreement carries out a law passed by the General 
			Assembly that Governor Rauner refused to comply with – on which the 
			courts ruled against the State – regarding a wage increase for Home 
			Services Program workers. The agreement also implements and ends 
			litigation over a similar law providing a wage increase for child 
			care providers.
 
			
			 
			
 “For 20 months, 28,000 Personal Assistants in the Department of 
			Human Services’ Home Services Program have been denied a 48-cent 
			raise. That’s because even after it became law, Governor Rauner 
			refused to pay it, resulting in costly litigation and courts ruling 
			that it must be paid. For eight months, 14,000 child care providers 
			in the Child Care Assistance Program have been denied a 4.26% rate 
			increase, even though it was also law.
 
			
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"These caregivers provide valuable services to their 
communities, supporting independent living for people with disabilities and 
delivering quality child care so low-income working parents can remain in the 
workforce.
 “Our agreement establishes a timeline for implementation of the mandated raises 
and for the release of back pay that is owed, ensuring the funding for these 
already approved increases finally gets into the pocketbooks of those it was 
intended for.
 
 
“Today, we are putting the State of Illinois back on the side of working 
families, and rebuilding the vital services and the workforces that deliver them 
to people with disabilities, working parents, and kids in every corner of our 
state. We look forward to continuing to stabilize these programs together, and 
we share a commitment to fixing other harmful Rauner policies through the 
bargaining process. We are committed to ensuring that our child care and home 
care workers have the stability and training they need to provide child care for 
working families and to support people with disabilities across the state.”
 BACKGROUND
 
 Workers will receive their new wages for hours worked on or after April 1. The 
state will immediately begin its accounting for the back pay, and workers will 
receive the back pay no later than the end of the annual lapse period, which 
should occur, at the latest, by late fall.
 
 The Home Services Program workers’ back pay has been held in an escrow account 
holding more than $29 million.
 
				 
			[Office of the Governor JB Pritzker] |