Small business group: Pritzker-signed bills are wrong move
[August 15, 2025]
By Jim Talamonti | The Center Square
(The Center Square) − Gov. J.B. Pritzker has signed legislation that he
says will protect workers, but a small business advocate says small
towns and Main Streets will suffer.
The governor signed two bills Thursday morning at the Illinois AFL-CIO
headquarters in Springfield.
Pritzker said Senate Bill 1976, also known as the Workers’ Rights and
Workplace Safety Act, would preserve worker protections against federal
rollbacks. He also signed House Bill 1189, which provides that workers
are paid the state’s prevailing wage if it is higher than the federal
prevailing wage for federal construction projects.
National Federation of Independent Business Illinois State Director Noah
Finley said Senate Bill 1976 expands workplace liability and red tape.
“This is not the direction we need to go for Illinois if we want to
create a prosperous future for our small towns and Main Streets across
the state,” Finley said.
The NFIB sent a letter to the governor last week, urging him to veto SB
1976.
On Thursday, Pritzker dismissed concerns that the added regulations
would hold small businesses back.
“Paying our workers properly does not hold Illinois back. It advances
the cause of Illinois,” Pritzker said.
Finley says Illinois’ GDP and population growth trail the national
averages.

“Right now we’re seeing a lot of developing countries, France, Britain,
obviously we’re seeing regulatory relief coming from Washington, but
Illinois is moving in the opposite direction. I would say we’re moving
in the wrong direction on making Illinois viable, making it possible for
small businesses to compete in the global economy,” Finley said.
Finley said he recently visited the Quad Cities and talked with small
business owners on both sides of the Mississippi River.
“A common theme I heard is that it’s much harder to do business in
Illinois, due to the administrative and regulatory environment here.
This bill will double down on that, because as small businesses in Iowa,
in Missouri and all across this country get regulatory relief from
Washington from some of this cumbersome red tape, Illinois businesses
will not receive that. That will put us further at a disadvantage grow
our local economies and our Main Street businesses,” Finley said.
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Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker holds up three bills impacting labor
laws he signed on Aug. 14, 2025
BlueRoomStream

State Sen. Robert Peters, D-Chicago, introduced SB 1976 and joined
Pritzker along with other elected officials and union leaders at the
bill-signing ceremony.
Finley said the measure creates an opportunity for so-called
“interested parties” to file lawsuits against employers.
“They don’t have to be representing employees at that business. They
can just bring lawsuits, so it’s setting the table for bad-faith
actors to bring shakedown lawsuits against small businesses,” Finley
said.
House Bill 1189 was introduced by state Rep. Jay Hoffman, D-Swansea.
Critics said the bill could lead the federal government to choose
projects in other states due to higher labor costs in Illinois.
Illinois AFL-CIO President Tim Drea praised the governor for signing
SB 1976 and HB 1189.
“Like Gov. Pritzker, I am thankful to live in Illinois, where every
day is Labor Day, and workers are protected by an administration and
a legislature that cares about workers,” Drea said.
Labor unions have donated hundreds of thousands of dollars to
Pritzker’s political campaigns, with the Illinois Education
Association ranking as the governor’s largest union donor.
The AFL-CIO Committee on Political Education Treasury Fund donated
more than $1,800 to the JB for Governor candidate committee in 2018.
Greg Bishop contributed to this report.
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