                                   2017 IL App (1st) 152993
                                        No. 1-15-2993

                                                                               FIRST DIVISION
                                                                               February 21, 2017


                                        IN THE
                             APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS
                               FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT



INTERNATIONAL BROTHERHOOD OF                  )
TEAMSTERS, LOCAL 700,                         )             Petition for Review of an Order of
                                              )             the Illinois Labor Relations Board
                Petitioner-Appellant,         )             Local Panel.
                                              )
                           v.                 )
                                              )
THE ILLINOIS LABOR RELATIONS BOARD, )
LOCAL PANEL, THE COUNTY OF COOK, and )
SHERIFF OF COOK COUNTY, as Joint              )             Case No. L-CA-13-055
Employers, and ILLINOIS FRATERNAL ORDER )
OF POLICE LABOR COUNCIL,                      )
                                              )
 Respondents                                  )
                                              )
(Illinois Labor Relations Board, Local Panel, )
County of Cook, and Sheriff of Cook County,   )
as Joint Employers,                           )
                                              )
 Respondents-Appellees).                      )


       PRESIDING JUSTICE CONNORS delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.
       Justices Harris and Mikva concurred in the judgment and opinion.

                                           OPINION

¶1     Petitioner, the International Brotherhood of Teamsters, Local 700 (Union), appeals from

a decision and order of the Illinois Labor Relations Board, Local Panel, that upheld two general

orders issued by respondents, the County of Cook and the Sheriff of Cook County. In relevant
No. 1-15-2993


part, the first general order—known as the Gang Order—prohibits employees from associating

with anyone the employee knew or should have known is or was in a gang and requires

employees to complete a disclosure form about gang affiliations. The second general order—

known as the Rules of Conduct Order—provides in part that the rules for on- and off-duty

conduct extend to social media and networking sites. On appeal, the Union contends that the

Gang Order was a subject of mandatory bargaining and the social media policy in the Rules of

Conduct Order is overbroad under section 10(a)(1) of the Illinois Public Labor Relations Act

(Act) (5 ILCS 315/10(a)(1) (West 2012)). We reverse the Board’s decision as to the Gang Order

and affirm the Board’s decision as to the Rules of Conduct Order.

¶2                                           I. BACKGROUND

¶3       During the relevant time period, the Union was the exclusive representative of the

Correctional Officers, Deputy Sheriffs, and Fugitive Investigators bargaining units. 1 The Gang

Order and Rules of Conduct Order, which applied to employees of the Cook County Sheriff’s

Office (CCSO), were issued on January 18, 2013, and had effective dates of January 25, 2013.

The Gang Order (order number 11.2.21.0) has eight sections that are marked with roman

numerals. Sections I-IV are not directly at issue, but parts of those sections provide helpful

background. In relevant part, section II states that “[c]riminal organizations and street gangs pose

a substantial threat to the public and directly impede the efforts of the CCSO to provide for

public safety.” Section III provides in part that “[a]ny violation of this order may result in denial

of access to the CCSO; disciplinary action up to and including termination; and/or criminal

charges where applicable.” Beginning with section V, the Gang Order states:




         1
          Before the Board issued its decision, the Illinois Fraternal Order of Police Labor Council was allowed to
intervene as the exclusive representative of the Deputy Sheriffs.

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      “V.       DEFINITIONS

                A.   Known Criminal Organization—A group of persons (such as a street

                     gang) who form an allegiance for a common purpose, who engage in

                     criminal activity, and who conform to one or more of the following traits:

                     1.     Share a common group name.

                     2.     Share common symbols, tattoos, or graffiti.

                     3.     Share a common style of dress.

                     4.     Frequently congregate upon, or lay claim to, a geographic

                            location.

                     5.     Associate together on a regular or continuous basis.

                B.   Known Criminal Organization Member—Any person who has adopted,

                     connected, associated, participated, affiliated with, or been a member of

                     any known criminal organization.

                C.   Family Relationship—For the purpose of this order, Family Relationship

                     shall include: spouse, parents, children, stepchildren, siblings; other

                     persons related by blood or by present or prior marriage; legal

                     guardians/wards; persons who share or formerly shared a common

                     dwelling; persons who have or allegedly have a child in common; persons

                     who share or allegedly share a blood relationship through a child; persons

                     who have or have had a dating or engagement relationship; relationships

                     with personal assistants and/or caregivers, personally or for any other

                     family member or relationship.




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                D.     Association—A coming together and social interaction between

                       individuals.

      VI.       PROHIBITIONS

                The following activities are specifically prohibited by this order:

                A.     Membership in any Known Criminal Organization identified by the

                       Sheriff’s Office Intelligence Center (SOIC) as a criminal organization.

                B.     Association with any member of a Known Criminal Organization

                       provided that:

                       1.      The employee knew or should have known that the person with

                               whom the employee associates is or was a member of a Known

                               Criminal Organization; or

                       2.      The employee has previous been ordered by the CCSO to cease

                               associating with a person(s) identified by SOIC as a member of a

                               Known Criminal Organization.

      VII.      RESPONSIBILITIES

                A.     CCSO employees shall:

                       1.      Not be members of Known Criminal Organizations.

                       2.      Not associate with Known Criminal Organization Members.

                                                       ***

      VIII. KNOWN CRIMINAL ORGANIZATION/GANG MEMBERSHIP
           DISCLOSURE

                A.     All CCSO employees and any individuals allowed access to CCSO

                       facilities *** must fully complete the Known Criminal Organization/Gang

                       Membership Disclosure Form and disclose:

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                     1.     Any and all current or past membership; and/or

                     2.     Family Relationships or Associations with any Known Criminal

                            Organizations or Members.

                B.   Refusal to complete or falsifying information on the Disclosure shall result

                     in:

                     1.     Disciplinary action up to and including termination of CCSO

                            employees.

                     2.     Revocation of access to CCSO facilities. ***

                     3.     Notification to the Chief Financial Officer regarding contracted

                            employees.

                     4.     Notification to the Executive Director of the Cook County

                            Department of Facilities Management regarding CCDFM or

                            CCDFM contracted employees in violation.

                C.   Employees shall disclose any and all relevant memberships and

                     associations, even where such is not a violation of CCSO policy (e.g.,

                     Family Relationship). Failure to disclose a relevant membership or

                     association is a violation of CCSO policy.

                D.   Responsibility of Department Head/designee:

                     1.     Ensure all Known Criminal Organization/Gang Membership

                            Disclosures are distributed to and completed by all CCSO

                            employees under his/her supervision bi-annually (to begin

                            January 2013).

                     ***” (Emphasis in original.)



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¶4     The Gang Order includes an accompanying disclosure form. The form asks employees

whether they were members of a Known Criminal Organization/Gang, if they had ever been

members of a Known Criminal Organization/Gang, and for corresponding details. The form

additionally asks, “Has any Family Relationship (as defined in the policy) or Associate ever been

in a Known Criminal Organization/Gang Member or an Associate of a Known Criminal

Organization within the past ten years?” The form again asks for corresponding details. At the

bottom of the form is a space for the employee’s signature and the date, above which is written,

“By signing below, I certify that the above information has been completed to the best of my

knowledge.”

¶5     The second order at issue is the Rules of Conduct Order (number 11.2.20.0), which has

seven sections that are marked with roman numerals. The Rules of Conduct Order states in part

in section II that employees “shall conduct themselves in a professional and ethical manner both

on and off duty.” Section VI of the order, which is the only section directly at issue, states in

relevant part:

       “VI.      RULES AND REGULATIONS FOR ALL SWORN AND CIVILIAN CCSO

                 EMPLOYEES

                                       ***

                 B. Conduct on and off duty.

                    CCSO employees shall:

                        1.     Maintain a professional demeanor while on duty and will not

                               engage in off-duty behavior that would reflect negatively on the

                               CCSO.




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                2.   Conduct themselves on and off-duty in such a manner to reflect

                     favorably on the CCSO. Employees, whether on or off-duty, will

                     not engage in conduct which discredits the integrity of the CCSO,

                     its employees, the employee him/herself, or which impairs the

                     operations of the CCSO. Such actions shall constitute conduct

                     unbecoming of an officer or employee of the CCSO.

                3.   Be aware that conduct on and off duty extends to electronic social

                     media and networking sites and that all rules of conduct apply

                     when engaging in any Internet activity.

                4.   Maintain a level of conduct in their personal and business affairs

                     that is in keeping with the highest standards of the law

                     enforcement profession. Employees will not participate in any

                     incident that:

                     a.      Involves moral turpitude or impairs their ability to perform

                             as law enforcement officers; or

                     b.      Causes the CCSO to be brought into disrepute.

                5.   Not use their official position, official identification cards, stars or

                     hat shields for:

                     a.      Personal or financial gain for themselves or others.

                     b.      Obtaining privileges not otherwise available to them except

                             in the performance of duty.

                     c.      Avoiding consequences of illegal acts.




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                6.    Respect and be courteous to others and the public. Employees will

                      be tactful in the performance of their duties, will control their

                      tempers and exercise the utmost patience and discretion and will

                      not engage in argumentative discussions even in the face of

                      extreme provocation.

                7.    If sworn, carry CCSO credentials (e.g., Sheriff’s Photo

                      Identification, County Identification, Firearm Owners

                      Identification Card) on their person at all times except when

                      impractical or dangerous to their safety or to an investigation; and

                      make every effort to ensure the security and safekeeping of all

                      identification, including star and hat shield.

                8.    Furnish their names and star numbers where applicable to any

                      person requesting that information while on duty, unless

                      withholding such information is necessary for the performance of

                      police duties (e.g., undercover work).

                9.    Not use threats and coercion, or abusive, coarse, violent, profane,

                      harassing, or insolent language or gestures.

                10.   Ensure that relationships with colleagues promote mutual respect

                      within the profession and improve quality of service.

                11.   Utilize CCSO equipment only for its intended purpose and in

                      accordance with the established procedures; shall not abuse or

                      willfully damage CCSO equipment; shall use reasonable care to




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                               avoid loss of CCSO equipment; and shall maintain CCSO

                               equipment in accordance with established procedures.

                       12.     Not engage in any conduct that constitutes discrimination or

                               harassment as defined in CCSO directives regarding

                               discrimination, harassment, sexual harassment, and hostile work

                               environment.”

¶6     The record contains email correspondence between Union representatives and

respondents about the orders. On January 25, 2013, the Union’s attorney wrote an email to

respondents with the subject line, “Sheriff Rules of conduct, 11.2.20.0 and 11.2.21.0.” The

Union’s attorney demanded to bargain “over this proposed General Order” because it might

affect wages, hours, and terms and conditions of employment. The Union’s attorney asked to

advise when “such a meeting may be scheduled” and suggested that the meeting be held with

“the pending request(s) for a DOC labor/management meeting.” Approximately 30 minutes later,

an attorney for respondents replied, “Please see the newly issued Order referenced in your last

email. If there is a particular area that you are concerned about that is in conflict with or departs

from the predecessor to this Order ***, please let me know.” On February 12, 2013, the Union’s

attorney sent respondents a letter that demanded to bargain over both orders.

¶7     On April 4, 2013, the Union filed a charge with the Board that respondents engaged in

unfair labor practices related to the orders. The Union initially contended that both orders were

unlawful unilateral changes to terms and conditions of employment without notice or the

opportunity to bargain, though it later amended its position to maintain that only the Gang Order

was a subject of mandatory bargaining. The Union additionally asserted in its charge that the




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Rules of Conduct Order contained overbroad restrictions on employee use of social media and

networking sites.

¶8      On September 18, 2013, a hearing began before an administrative law judge (ALJ).

Dennis Andrews, a Union business agent for the Cook County Department of Corrections,

testified about the state of bargaining between the parties. Andrews stated that the Union did not

receive a response to its email demand to bargain. Andrews further stated that he was involved in

collective bargaining negotiations for the current Department of Corrections contracts, which

began in January 2013. Andrews had attended each of the eight or nine bargaining sessions.

According to Andrews, the orders were implemented before the first collective bargaining

session, and neither the Sheriff nor the Union had raised either of the orders as a proposal at the

bargaining table. Andrews stated that the Union had not raised the orders because it had

demanded to bargain and the Sheriff had not responded with a proposal or meeting to discuss the

orders. Andrews’s position was that if the Union demanded to bargain, it was up to the employer

to respond. Andrews acknowledged that he did not have anything in writing from respondents

that stated they would not bargain over the orders.

¶9      Andrews also testified about his interpretation of the Gang Order. He stated that before

the Gang Order, neither he nor other officers had ever been required to complete a disclosure

form for gang affiliations. Andrews described the paperwork as cumbersome and stated that the

order required employees to investigate their family members and close associates. Andrews

further stated that it was a lot of work for employees “to determine if their cousin that they

haven’t seen in five years that lives in Iowa, or their sister who lives out in California,” fell into

one of the named categories. According to Andrews, the disclosure requirement imposed a

disciplinary burden, in that “if you are not sure, you don’t know and you don’t disclose it, then



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the Department comes to find out that maybe your brother-in-law was in a gang or is in a gang

that you might not have knowledge of, you could be disciplined for not documenting that and

giving them that information.” Andrews also stated that the Union found problematic the

language that prohibits associating with anyone the employee “knew or should have known” is

or was in a gang. Andrews asked, “What if it is your father, or your mother, sister?”

¶ 10   Andrews acknowledged that an October 1998 General Order for the Cook County

Department of Corrections contained a provision stating, “No employee will frequent any

establishment or knowingly associate with persons having known criminal records that would

bring discredit to the department, except when properly authorized to do so.” Andrews also

acknowledged that the October 1998 General Order contained a provision stating, “Employees

will not visit any correctional institution for the purpose of visiting a detainee, inmate, or person

incarcerated, not in their immediate family, without first submitting written notification to the

divisional Superintendent/Unit Head. Immediate family includes: Father, Mother, Siblings and

legal children (of the employee).” Andrews was also directed to a March 2001 General Order for

the Court Services Department that directed employees to “avoid regular or continuous

associations or dealings with persons whom they know, or should know, are persons under

criminal investigation or indictment, or who have a reputation in the community or the

department for present or past involvement in felonious or criminal behavior.” Andrews stated

that the March 2001 order did not apply to the Department of Corrections and maintained that

the Gang Order was the first time the “should have known” language was applied to Department

of Corrections employees.

¶ 11   Asked to explain the benefits that the Union could bring to bargaining over the Gang

Order, Andrews stated that the Union would raise its concerns about the possibility of discipline



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and the cumbersome paperwork and would ask respondents to “expound more upon what they

really want in this and why they want it.” Andrews added that he would explain that the burden

was on officers to investigate family members. Andrews further stated that the order was vague

and did not inform employees of the ultimate goal.

¶ 12   Andrews also testified about the Union’s opposition to the social media provision in the

Rules of Conduct Order. Andrews stated that there had not been any previous written work rules

governing conduct on social media platforms. According to Andrews, the Union’s concern was

that “you are constantly getting friended” on social media without knowing “how [a person]

[conducts] themselves,” and an employee could be disciplined if that person was determined to

be a known criminal, gang member, or former or released felon. Andrews further stated that the

correctional officers have their own Facebook page “[s]o they can vent to each other” and “pass

out information.” Andrews had seen complaints on the page about staffing levels. Andrews did

not know of any employees who had been disciplined for statements made on the Facebook

page. However, the administration monitored the page, and the Union was concerned that an

employee could be disciplined “if somebody says the wrong thing on there or has a bad day at

work *** and gets on the computer to vent.” Andrews further stated that the Rules of Conduct

Order did not indicate exactly what employees could and could not do on social media.

¶ 13   John Figueroa, who was assigned to the Union as the chief steward for the Court Services

Division, testified that the Union had demanded to bargain over the orders almost immediately

after they were implemented, “if not the same day or the day after.” Meanwhile, collective

bargaining negotiations for the Court Services Department were ongoing. Figueroa also stated

that in his 25-year career with the Sheriff’s office, he had not been previously required to

complete a disclosure form related to gang or criminal organization affiliations. Additionally,



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Figueroa testified that members of the Court Services Department engaged in criticism of

workplace conditions on Facebook, such as complaining about inadequate elevators or criticizing

staffing levels.

¶ 14    Kim Vargas, a Department of Corrections employee, testified that she was first required

to complete a gang affiliation disclosure form in January 2013. Vargas further stated that she had

been subjected to an Office of Professional Review interrogation related to the disclosure form.

Vargas stated that she was “called in for the Sheriff’s Order that we were all supposed to fill out”

and was notified that she did not properly complete it. Vargas completed an additional form and

then was told to report for an accused investigation. Vargas believed that she could be suspended

or lose her job, but had not yet been disciplined.

¶ 15    Respondents presented the testimony of Heather Bock, who worked in the Sheriff’s

Office of Policy and Accountability and drafted the Gang Order. Bock stated that the Gang Order

itself was new, but was not a new policy, as the provisions—apart from the signature on the

form—could be found in previous orders. These older provisions stated that “[n]o employee will

frequent any establishment or knowingly associate with persons having known criminal records

that would bring discredit to the department, except when properly authorized to do so,” and

“[e]xcept in the performance of official duties, or where unavoidable because of other family

relationships, members will avoid regular or continuous associations or dealings with persons

whom they know, or should know, are persons under criminal investigation or indictment, or

who have a reputation in the community or the department for present or past involvement in

felonious or criminal behavior.” However, Bock agreed that the Gang Order’s disclosure form

was a new requirement.




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¶ 16   As for the Rules of Conduct Order, Bock agreed that the statement, “Be aware that

conduct on and off-duty extends to electronic social media” was new, but maintained that the

basic rule was not really new. Bock asserted that the social media provision was a specific

situation of on and off-duty conduct. Bock also stated that the orders did not change the kind of

work that employees perform on a daily basis and consisted of “[j]ust filling out a form,” which

employees do every day.

¶ 17   Peter Kramer, an attorney in the Sheriff’s office that handled labor matters, testified that

the Sheriff had not refused to bargain over the two orders. Kramer asserted that “[e]verything is

on the table” and that the Sheriff would be willing to bargain over the orders. Kramer was asked

to recall instances where officers received corrective action because of gang or criminal

affiliation. Kramer stated, “That happens all the time. Most frequently it involves officers

bringing contraband into the facility, but there have been sporadic incidents.” Kramer noted an

incident the previous month where a lieutenant traded inappropriate letters with a detainee and

recalled that earlier in the year, an officer with a gang affiliation was shot. Kramer further stated

that two or three months earlier, an officer was alleged to have “some gang affiliations, got in a

bunch of trouble over like three different things.”

¶ 18   After the hearing, the parties submitted post-hearing briefs. In its brief, the Union

clarified that its challenges to the Gang Order were the heightened opportunities for discipline

from the disclosure form and the requirement that employees disclose all family and associates

who may have been involved in criminal organizations, regardless of whether employees were

aware of that involvement when they completed the form. The Union contended that the

increased possibility for discipline made the new disclosure requirement a mandatory subject of

bargaining. The Union further stated that respondents did not articulate any burdens to



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bargaining. Additionally, the Union asserted that respondents instituted the Gang Order without

providing advance notice and an opportunity to bargain, despite the Union’s repeated and timely

requests to do so. The Union further contended that the social media provision was overly broad,

vague, and violated employees’ rights under section 10(a)(1) of the Act (5 ILCS 315/10(a)(1)

(West 2012)).

¶ 19   In their brief, respondents asserted that the Sheriff is statutorily tasked with providing

safety and security to employees and detainees and that gang affiliation with people detained in

custody poses serious safety concerns. Respondents further stated that the issues of public safety,

crime prevention, and correctional and courthouse security were within the inherent management

authority and not subject to bargaining. Respondents contended that even if the orders affected

wages, hours, and terms and conditions of employment, the public policies of preventing crime,

citizen safety, and the security of jails and courthouses outweighed the Union’s interest in

bargaining. Respondents also asserted that there had been problems with officers brought up on

charges because of contact with felons or gang members, as well as incidents of officers bringing

contraband into the jail. Respondents further stated that the Union’s complaint should be

dismissed because bargaining was ongoing. Additionally, respondents contended that the social

media provision did not impose new requirements on employees’ off-duty conduct.

¶ 20   The ALJ issued her decision on March 6, 2015, and agreed with the Union as to both

orders. Applying the test for whether a matter is subject to mandatory bargaining that was

outlined in Central City Education Ass’n v. Illinois Educational Labor Relations Board, 149 Ill.

2d 496 (1992), the ALJ found that the Gang Order was a term and condition of employment

because it subjected employees to potential discipline and employees could be barred from the

premises for violating the order. The ALJ also found that the Gang Order involved a matter of



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inherent managerial policy, stating that that the Sheriff had a statutory duty to maintain safety

and security within the County and the facilities under its control. After balancing the competing

interests, the ALJ asserted that the benefits of bargaining over the Gang Order outweighed the

burdens on respondents’ inherent managerial authority. The ALJ stated that the examples of

problems given by respondents at the hearing were extremely vague and that respondents had not

sufficiently demonstrated how bargaining over the Gang Order would significantly impact their

ability to carry out their statutory duties. The ALJ stated that, in contrast, employees had a strong

interest in bargaining over the Gang Order, noting that employees could be disciplined and

barred from the premises under the order. The ALJ additionally found that respondents

unilaterally imposed the Gang Order without bargaining to impasse. The ALJ stated that, at a

minimum, respondents were required to give the Union adequate notice and a meaningful

opportunity to bargain before implementing the policy, which they did not do.

¶ 21   Turning to the Rules of Conduct order, the ALJ found that the social media provision was

unlawfully overbroad in violation of section 10(a)(1) of the Act (5 ILCS 315/10(a)(1) (West

2012)). The ALJ asserted that the Board had not addressed whether a work rule that does not

explicitly restrict protected activity could be unlawful, but the National Labor Relations Board

(NLRB) had frequently addressed that issue. The ALJ further stated that the social media

provision on its own did not prohibit any conduct and was instead a clarification that the conduct

described in the conduct unbecoming provision applied to social media. As a result, according to

the ALJ, the social media provision was overly broad if the conduct unbecoming provision was

overly broad. Relying on NLRB decisions, the ALJ found that the conduct unbecoming

provision was unlawful because it was not limited to unprotected activity and did not contain

limiting language or any description of what was meant by conduct that would discredit



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respondents’ integrity. The ALJ stated that a reasonable employee could believe that the rule

prohibits publicly criticizing the employer and its employment practices. The ALJ further stated

that because the conduct unbecoming provision was overly broad, any application of the social

media provision to the conduct unbecoming provision was also overly broad.

¶ 22   Subsequently, respondents filed exceptions in opposition to the ALJ’s recommended

decision and order. In part, respondents contended that the issues of public safety, crime

prevention, and correctional and court facility security were within their inherent authority and

not subject to bargaining. Respondents cited several statutes that described their obligations and

asserted that the legislature’s intent was to impose serious penalties to prevent interference with

penal institutions such as the Cook County Department of Corrections. Respondents also

contended that the Union did not present any rebuttal evidence that having officers with gang

and criminal affiliation was not a serious problem. Additionally, respondents stated that the

Rules of Conduct language at issue had been used by the Sheriff and numerous Illinois municipal

agencies for decades and had become well-defined practice. Respondents further asserted that

there was no evidence that the language had ever been used as the basis to discourage or

discipline employees from engaging in protected activity. Lastly, respondents contended that the

Sheriff had not refused to bargain and the Union had not raised the orders at the bargaining table.

¶ 23   On September 28, 2015, the Board issued a written decision that reversed the ALJ’s

recommended decision and order. The Board found that respondents did not violate the Act

“when they unilaterally implemented the Gang Order” because the Gang Order was not a

mandatory subject of bargaining. The Board asserted that there was a self-evident connection

between “dealing with the widespread gang problem, in order to address [respondents’] mandate

to provide safety and keep the peace” and “having current and accurate information about and/or



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proscribing the gang membership and related associations with persons having gang affiliations.”

The Board also referred to section 5 of the Illinois Streetgang Terrorism Omnibus Prevention Act

(740 ILCS 147/5 (West 2012)), which stated that areas throughout Illinois were being “terrorized

and plundered by streetgangs” and that streetgangs’ activities “present a clear and present danger

to public order and safety and are not constitutionally protected.” The Board added that it was

aware of the “well-publicized and staggering number of violent crimes” in and around Chicago,

as well as “the ongoing and inextricable connection between violent crime and gang activity.”

The Board further stated that it recognized that the threat of gang violence, gang activity, and

gang influence was magnified in an environment such as the Cook County Jail and other places

where respondents are mandated to provide safety and keep the peace. The Board found that the

Gang Order was “clearly a matter of inherent managerial authority” and the balance weighed

significantly in favor of respondents’ managerial rights.

¶ 24   Turning to the Rules of Conduct Order, the Board found that the conduct unbecoming

rule had existed in predecessor General Orders since at least 1998 and that its substantive

essence had not been changed simply because respondents advised employees that the same

proscription applied to conduct carried out by contemporary means of communication. The

Board asserted that the ALJ’s analysis “overlooks the critical fact that the conduct proscribed,

has been proscribed, in essentially the same ‘conduct unbecoming’ terms since at least 1998.”

The Board could not find any evidence in the record to suggest that the Union had previously

challenged the conduct unbecoming rule and stated that the Union could not point to any

instance in the long life of the conduct unbecoming rule when the employer had punished an

employee for exercising protected rights. The Board stated that under these circumstances, a

reasonable employee would not be justified in the belief that the rule morphed into a prohibition



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on publicly criticizing the employer and its employment practices or that the rule otherwise

tended to interfere with or coerce employees in the exercise of the right to engage in protected

activity.

¶ 25    One Board member dissented as to the Gang Order, disagreeing with the Board’s finding

that the burden of bargaining outweighed its benefits. The dissenting Board member recognized

respondents’ need to limit employees’ association with gang members, but found that the

evidence was insufficient to establish that requiring respondents to bargain over the Gang Order

would impair their ability to carry out their statutory mission. According to the dissenting Board

member, respondents introduced little evidence to show that employees’ associations with gangs

had suddenly become urgent to the point that bargaining would be a significant burden on

respondents’ inherent managerial rights. The dissenting Board member stated that the Gang

Order imposed significant new responsibilities and that bargaining might have increased the

chances that those responsibilities would have been more clearly defined and reasonable.

¶ 26    The Union subsequently appealed.

¶ 27                                    II. ANALYSIS

¶ 28                                    A. Gang Order

¶ 29    On appeal, the Union first contends that respondents violated sections 10(a)(1) and

10(a)(4) of the Act (5 ILCS 315/10(a)(1), 10(a)(4) (West 2012)) by failing and refusing to

bargain over the Gang Order. The Union argues that the “should have known” language and

disclosure requirement constitute changes to the terms and conditions of employment. The Union

further asserts that the Gang Order involves heightened opportunities for discipline. The Union

also maintains that the Gang Order does not involve inherent managerial authority, but that if it

does, the benefits of bargaining outweigh the burdens. The Union contends that through



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bargaining, the Union could help formulate and clarify the Gang Order, as well as assist

respondents in meeting their objectives. The Union also states that respondents did not articulate

any burdens to bargaining.

¶ 30   “The issue of whether a public employer is required to bargain over a specific subject

generally involves a mixed question of law and fact,” which warrants a clearly erroneous

standard of review. Forest Preserve District of Cook County v. Illinois Labor Relations Board,

369 Ill. App. 3d 733, 751 (2006). We will reverse the Board’s decision only where, on the entire

record, we are “left with the definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been committed.”

(Internal quotation marks omitted.) Id. at 752. This standard provides some deference to an

administrative agency’s experience and expertise. County of Cook v. Illinois Labor Relations

Board, Local Panel, 347 Ill. App. 3d 538, 551 (2004). Meanwhile, the Board’s findings and

conclusions on questions of fact are considered to be prima facie true and correct. Chicago

Transit Authority v. Amalgamated Transit Union, 299 Ill. App. 3d 934, 940-41 (1998). We defer

to the Board’s factual conclusions and reverse them only if they are against the manifest weight

of the evidence. Id. at 941. Additionally, we review questions of law de novo. Id.

¶ 31   Turning to the applicable statutes, sections 10(a)(1) and 10(a)(4) of the Act state in part:

                      “(a) 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 or to dominate or interfere

                        with the formation, existence or administration of any labor organization

                        or contribute financial or other support to it *** [or]

                                              ***




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                               (4) to refuse to bargain collectively in good faith with a labor

                       organization which is the exclusive representative of public employees in

                       an appropriate unit, including, but not limited to, the discussing of

                       grievances with the exclusive representative[.]” 5 ILCS 315/10(a)(1),

                       (a)(4) (West 2012).

¶ 32    Section 7 of the Act states that a public employer and the exclusive representative of the

public employees have the duty to bargain collectively “over any matter with respect to wages,

hours and other conditions of employment.” 5 ILCS 315/7 (West 2012). However, employers are

not required to bargain over matters of “inherent managerial policy,” which include “such areas

of discretion or policy as the functions of the employer, standards of services, its overall budget,

the organizational structure and selection of new employees, examination techniques and

direction of employees.” 5 ILCS 315/4 (West 2012). It is possible for a matter to be both one of

wages, hours, and other conditions of employment and within an employer’s inherent managerial

authority. Central City, 149 Ill. 2d at 523. Faced with these scenarios, Central City set out a test

to determine whether a matter is a subject of mandatory bargaining. Id. See also City of Belvidere

v. Illinois State Labor Relations Board, 181 Ill. 2d 191, 206 (1998) (applying the Central City

test to cases arising under the Act). Under the Central City test, a matter is a mandatory subject

of bargaining if it (1) involves wages, hours, and terms and conditions of employment and (2) is

either not a matter of inherent managerial authority or (3) is a matter of inherent managerial

authority but the benefits of bargaining outweigh the burdens bargaining imposes on the

employer’s authority. Central City, 149 Ill. 2d at 523; Forest Preserve District of Cook County,

369 Ill. App. 3d at 752.




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¶ 33   A matter concerns wages, hours, and terms and conditions of employment if it (1)

involved a departure from previously established operating practices, (2) effected a change in the

conditions of employment, or (3) resulted in a significant impairment of job tenure, employment

security, or reasonably anticipated work opportunities for those in the Union. Chicago Park

District v. Illinois Labor Relations Board, 354 Ill. App. 3d 595, 602 (2004). Further, a rule that

subjects employees to potential discipline concerns the terms and conditions of employment. See

County of Cook, 347 Ill. App. 3d at 552 (because residency requirement subjected employees to

potential discipline, requirement affected employees’ terms and conditions of employment).

¶ 34   The Gang Order has two components at issue—the “should have known” requirement

and the disclosure requirement. We consider whether each component concerns the terms and

conditions of employment. The Sheriff maintains that the “should have known” language is not

new, and points to a previous Court Services order that stated that employees were to “avoid

regular or continuous associations or dealings with persons whom they know, or should know,

are persons under criminal investigation or indictment, or who have a reputation in the

community or the department for present or past involvement in felonious or criminal behavior.”

The Sheriff also refers to a previous General Order that stated, “No employee will ***

knowingly associate with persons having known criminal records that would bring discredit to

the department, except when properly authorized to do so.”

¶ 35   The Sheriff overlooks key differences between previous orders and the Gang Order. The

Gang Order states that an employee may not associate with anyone who the employee “knew or

should have known *** is or was a member of a Known Criminal Organization.” Even if the

“should have known” language was in a previous order, the Gang Order re-defined the category

of people with whom an employee may not associate. While the previous orders prohibited



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associating with people who had criminal records, were under criminal investigation or

indictment, or had a particular reputation, the Gang Order prohibits associating with people who

are members of a group with certain traits—namely, the group forms an allegiance for a common

purpose, engages in criminal activity, and does one or more of the following: shares a common

group name, shares common symbols, tattoos, or graffiti, shares a common style of dress,

frequently congregates upon, or lays claim to, a geographic location, and associates together on a

regular or continuous basis. Moreover, the Gang Order has a broader sweep. Now, to be

someone with whom the employee may not associate, a person need not have personally engaged

in criminal activity or have a reputation for doing so, but need only to have been part of a group

that does. Further, the Gang Order states that “[a]ny violation of this order may result in denial of

access to the CCSO; disciplinary action up to and including termination; and/or criminal charges

where applicable.” Because employees are subject to potential discipline for associating with a

new category of people, the “should have known” requirement concerns the terms and conditions

of employment.

¶ 36   The disclosure requirement also amounts to a change that affects the terms and conditions

of employment. Under the Gang Order, employees must disclose “any and all memberships and

associations” and states that “[f]ailure to disclose a relevant membership or association is a

violation of CCSO policy.” Refusal to complete information or falsifying information on the

disclosure form results in “[d]isciplinary action up to and including termination.” The Sheriff

refers to the testimony of Heather Bock, who stated that the orders did not change the kind of

work that employees perform on a daily basis and consisted of “[j]ust filling out a form,” which

employees do every day. At the same time, Bock stated that the disclosure form was a new

requirement, and Union witnesses testified that they had never had to disclose gang affiliations



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before. As with the “should have known” rule, the disclosure form requirement is a change that

subjects employees to potential discipline, and therefore involves a change to the terms and

conditions of employment. See id.

¶ 37   The next question is whether the Gang Order is also a matter of inherent managerial

authority, which has been defined as those matters residing “at the core of entrepreneurial

control.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Board of Trustees of the University of Illinois v.

Illinois Labor Relations Board, 224 Ill. 2d 88, 97 (2007) (quoting Ford Motor Co. v. National

Labor Relations Board, 441 U.S. 488, 498 (1979)). As noted above, section 4 of the Act states

that matters of inherent managerial policy include “such areas of discretion or policy as the

functions of the employer, standards of services, its overall budget, the organizational structure

and selection of new employees, examination techniques and direction of employees.” 5 ILCS

315/4 (West 2012). It was not clearly erroneous to conclude that the Gang Order is a matter of

the employer’s inherent managerial authority. The legislature has designated each sheriff as

“conservator of the peace” in his county, who “shall prevent crime and maintain the safety and

order of the citizens of that county.” 55 ILCS 5/3-6021 (West 2012). The Gang Order relates to

preventing crime and maintaining safety—a function of the employer—and so is a matter at the

core of respondents’ entrepreneurial control.

¶ 38   Moving to the next part of the Central City test, we must balance the benefits of

bargaining against the burdens of bargaining on respondents. Relevant to this analysis,

respondents presented testimony at the hearing about the extent of the gang problems among

employees. Peter Kramer, a Sheriff’s office attorney, stated that officers receive corrective action

because of gang or criminal affiliation “all the time,” but also stated that “there have been

sporadic incidents.” Kramer recalled three incidents in the past year where employees’ gang



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affiliations had caused problems. For the Union’s part, Dennis Andrews testified that if the Gang

Order were bargained, the Union would raise concerns about the paperwork and the possibility

of discipline and would ask respondents to “expound more upon what they really want in this

and why they want it.” Andrews expressed concern that employees could be disciplined for not

disclosing gang affiliations of family members of which employees were not aware. Andrews

was also concerned that employees would have to investigate their family members and close

associates, and noted that it would be a lot of work for an employee to determine if his “cousin

that [he] hasn’t seen in five years that lives in Iowa” or “[his] sister who lives out in California,”

falls into one of the relevant categories.

¶ 39   Though we do not doubt Kramer’s testimony that gang affiliation among employees is a

problem, the record does not indicate that this problem was so urgent that bargaining was not a

possibility. Kramer noted three incidents in the past year and characterized the problems as

“sporadic.” Further, the statute the Board relied on to reach its conclusion—the Illinois

Streetgang Terrorism Omnibus Prevention Act (740 ILCS 147/5 (West 2012))—was made

effective in 1993 and has not been amended since then. The evidence suggests that gang

affiliations among employees have been an ongoing problem, but not that the problem had

increased to the point where there was no time to bargain. Moreover, the parties were about to

begin collective bargaining negotiations anyway when the new order was issued. But cf.

American Federation of State, County & Municipal Employees, AFL-CIO v. Illinois State Labor

Relations Board, 190 Ill. App. 3d 259, 263, 268 (1989) (in finding the burdens outweighed the

benefits of bargaining a new drug testing policy, the court noted that the employer continued to

find drugs in prison and drug use despite numerous measures, that as of spring 1988, officials

were investigating 217 employees for possible drug dealing at the prison facilities, and that a



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survey revealed that 18% of trainees were involved with illegal drugs). See also Forest Preserve

District of Cook County, 369 Ill. App. 3d at 753-54 (matter was subject of mandatory bargaining

where the ALJ determined that the employer had time to bargain and that the employer’s

asserted problems “were not so immediate that bargaining could not have occurred”). Further,

and contrary to the Board’s assertion at oral argument, the Union indeed presented the benefits of

bargaining, as well as highlighted areas of concern that bargaining could address. Andrews’s

testimony indicates that bargaining could clarify the requirements of the disclosure form and

what employees are actually tasked with, which would tailor the Gang Order to better meet

respondents’ needs. Additionally, Union members have a significant interest avoiding the

prohibited associations and completing the disclosure form correctly, as they could lose their

jobs otherwise. See Town of Cicero v. Illinois Ass’n of Firefighters, IAFF Local 717, 338 Ill.

App. 3d 364, 371 (2003) (Union members’ significant interest in the matter at stake was a

consideration in the balancing analysis). We acknowledge that which matters are subject to

mandatory bargaining and which are not are very fact-specific questions that the Board, given its

experience, is eminently qualified to decide. Chicago Park District, 354 Ill. App. 3d at 602. At

the same time, the clearly erroneous standard of review does not “relegate judicial review to

mere blind deference of an agency’s order.” Board of Trustees of the University of Illinois, 224

Ill. 2d at 98. Under these circumstances, the Board’s conclusion was clearly erroneous, and the

benefits of bargaining the Gang Order outweigh the burdens.

¶ 40   Having determined that the Gang Order was a subject of mandatory bargaining, we next

consider whether respondents refused to bargain. The Union contends that it timely demanded to

bargain the Gang Order, but no opportunity to bargain occurred. Meanwhile, the Sheriff asserts

that he has not refused to bargain and that the Union has not raised the orders at the bargaining



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table. The Sheriff notes that the record does not contain evidence that the Sheriff ever stated in

writing that he would not bargain. In its written decision, the Board appeared to agree that

respondents unilaterally implemented the orders, having stated that respondents did not violate

the Act “when they unilaterally implemented the Gang Order.”

¶ 41   When an employer has the duty to bargain, it must provide notice of its willingness to

bargain before the time its plans are fixed. Service Employees International Local Union No. 316

v. Illinois Educational Labor Relations Board, 153 Ill. App. 3d 744, 755 (1987). For its part,

“[o]nce a union has been notified of a topic of bargaining, it must pursue bargaining.” Id.

¶ 42   The record indicates that the Union fulfilled its obligation to pursue bargaining, but

respondents failed to notify the Union they were willing to bargain before implementing the

Gang Order. The Gang Order states that it was issued on January 18, 2013, and was effective on

January 25, 2013. On January 25, 2013, the Union’s attorney sent an email that demanded to

bargain and requested that the Gang Order and Rules of Conduct Order be held in abeyance. In

their reply, respondents did not indicate that they were willing to bargain before implementing

the Gang Order. The email response to the Union advised the Union’s attorney to “see the newly

issued Order” and to let respondents’ attorney know if there was a particular area of concern. As

an aside, the record does not disclose whether the Union was notified about the orders before

January 25, but respondents do not contend that the Union’s demand to bargain was untimely.

John Figueroa, one of the Union’s witnesses, testified that the Union demanded to bargain over

the orders almost immediately after they were implemented, “if not the same day or the day

after.” Returning to the matter at hand, despite the Union’s demand to bargain, respondents

implemented the Gang Order. Kim Vargas, a Department of Corrections employee, testified that

she had to complete a disclosure form in January 2013. Simply being willing to hear particular



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areas of concern was insufficient—respondents should have communicated a willingness to

bargain in response to the Union’s demand. The Gang Order was presented as an impermissible

fait accompli. See Chicago Transit Authority, 299 Ill. App. 3d at 944 (where correspondence

from employer simply announced a job reclassification and changes in wage rates and stated that

the employer would address questions, employer presented matter as a fait accompli and failed to

bargain in good faith).

¶ 43   Because respondents refused to bargain the Gang Order—a subject of mandatory

bargaining—in spite of the Union’s demand, they violated the Act.

¶ 44                                 B. Social Media Policy

¶ 45   Next, we consider the Union’s contention that the social media policy is overbroad and

violates section 10(a)(1) of the Act (5 ILCS 315/10(a)(1) (West 2012)). The Union urges this

court to adopt the ALJ’s reasoning and relies on advice memoranda from the General Counsel of

the NLRB.

¶ 46   As the Union recognizes, Illinois courts have not yet addressed the issue of whether a

social media policy—or any work rule, for that matter—violates section 10(a)(1) of the Act (5

ILCS 315/10(a)(1) (West 2012)) because it is overbroad on its face. However, in labor cases, the

rulings of the NLRB and federal courts that construe the National Labor Relations Act are

persuasive authority for similar provisions in the Illinois Act. American Federation of State,

County & Municipal Employees, Council 31 v. Illinois State Labor Relations Board, State Panel,

216 Ill. 2d 569, 579 (2005). Further, our supreme court has recognized the close parallel between

section 10(a) of the Act and section 8(a) of the National Labor Relations Act. City of Burbank v.

Illinois State Labor Relations Board, 128 Ill. 2d 335, 345 (1989).

¶ 47   Section 10(a)(1) of the Act states in part:



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No. 1-15-2993


                “(a) 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 or to dominate or interfere with the

                       formation, existence or administration of any labor organization or

                       contribute financial or other support to it; provided, an employer shall not

                       be prohibited from permitting employees to confer with him during

                       working hours without loss of time or pay[.]” 5 ILCS 315/10(a)(1) (West

                       2012).

Additionally, section 6(a) of the Act states in part that employees are protected “in the exercise

of the right of self-organization, and may form, join or assist any labor organization,” and have

the right to “engage in other concerted activities not otherwise prohibited by law for the purpose

of collective bargaining or other mutual aid or protection, free from interference, restraint or

coercion.” 5 ILCS 315/6(a) (West 2012).

¶ 48   On the federal side, section 8(a) of the National Labor Relations Act states in part:

                “(a) Unfair labor practices by employer

                       It shall be an unfair labor practice for an employer —

                       (1) to interfere with, restrain, or coerce employees in the exercise of the

                       rights guaranteed in section 157 of this title;

                                (2) to dominate or interfere with the formation or administration of

                       any labor organization or contribute financial or other support to it:

                       Provided, That subject to rules and regulations made and published by the

                       [NLRB] pursuant to section 156 of this title, an employer shall not be




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                       prohibited from permitting employees to confer with him during working

                       hours without loss of time or pay.” 29 U.S.C. § 158(a) (2012).

Moreover, section 7 of the National Labor Relations Act states in part that employees have the

right to “self-organization, to form, join, or assist labor organizations” and to “engage in other

concerted activities for the purpose of collective bargaining or other mutual aid or protection.”

29 U.S.C. § 157 (2012).

¶ 49   As for our standard of review, whether the social media policy violates section 10(a)(1)

of the Act is a mixed question of law and fact—a question that examines the legal effect of a

given set of facts (See Oleszczuk v. Department of Employment Security, 336 Ill. App. 3d 46, 50

(2002)). As a result, we review the Board’s decision under the clearly erroneous standard,

meaning that we will reverse the Board only when a review of the record leaves us with a

“ ‘ “definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been committed.” ’ [Citation.]” Id. Federal

courts also use a deferential standard of review for NLRB decisions. See Guardsmark, LLC v.

National Labor Relations Board, 475 F.3d 369, 374 (D.C. Cir. 2007) (stating that NLRB

determinations are entitled to considerable deference as long as they are reasonably defensible

and that the court defers to the NLRB’s interpretation of section 8(a) when the NLRB faithfully

applies the applicable standard and adequately explains the basis for its conclusion); Community

Hospitals of Central California v. National Labor Relations Board, 335 F.3d 1079, 1082-83

(D.C. Cir. 2003) (stating that the court will affirm the NLRB’s order unless the NLRB acted

arbitrarily or otherwise erred in applying established law to the facts of the case).

¶ 50   We are faced with a challenge to a rule’s existence, rather than a challenge to an

employer’s enforcement of a rule. The NLRB has stated that to determine whether the mere

maintenance of a rule violates section 8(a)(1) of the National Labor Relations Act, “the



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appropriate inquiry is whether the [rule] would reasonably tend to chill employees in the exercise

of their Section 7 rights. Where the [rule is] likely to have a chilling effect on Section 7 rights,

the [NLRB] may conclude that [its] maintenance is an unfair labor practice, even absent

evidence of enforcement.” Lafayette Park Hotel, 326 N.L.R.B. 824, 825 (1998).

¶ 51    Subsequently, the NLRB expanded on the test for determining whether a rule is unlawful

in Martin Luther Memorial Home, Inc., 343 N.L.R.B. 646 (2004) (Lutheran Heritage). There,

the NLRB distinguished between a rule that explicitly restricts protected activity and one that

does not. A rule that explicitly restricts activity protected by section 7 of the National Labor

Relations Act is unlawful. Id. at 646. If the rule does not explicitly restrict protected activity, the

rule is unlawful under any of the following conditions: (1) employees would reasonably construe

the language to prohibit protected activity; (2) the rule was promulgated in response to union

activity; or (3) the rule has been applied to restrict the exercise of protected rights. Id. at 647. As

additional considerations, the NLRB stated that it must give a challenged rule “a reasonable

reading,” “must refrain from reading particular phrases in isolation, and *** must not presume

improper interference with employee rights.” Id. at 646. Under the Lutheran Heritage

framework, the validity of a workplace rule does not depend on “subjective employee

understandings or actual enforcement patterns, but on an objective inquiry into how a reasonable

employee would understand the rule’s disputed language.” Quicken Loans, Inc. v. National

Labor Relations Board, 830 F.3d 542, 549 (D.C. Cir. 2016).

¶ 52    In its brief, the Board urges this court not to follow the framework set out in Lutheran

Heritage. The Board also states that it did not address Lutheran Heritage in its decision and

argues that Lutheran Heritage has been criticized, citing dissents from NLRB decisions.




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¶ 53   As stated above, our own research has not revealed any Illinois cases that addressed

whether the mere maintenance of a rule violated section 10(a)(1) of the Act. It is possible that

Illinois courts have not been presented with a situation where Lutheran Heritage applies. In the

federal setting, however, Lutheran Heritage has been followed in numerous decisions. See, e.g.,

Boch Imports, Inc. v. National Labor Relations Board, 826 F.3d 558, 579 (1st Cir. 2016); Flex

Frac Logistics, LLC v. National Labor Relations Board, 746 F.3d 205, 208-09 (5th Cir. 2014);

International Union, United Automobile, Aerospace & Agricultural Implement Workers of

America v. National Labor Relations Board, 520 F.3d 192, 197 (2d Cir. 2008); Guardsmark,

LLC, 475 F.3d at 374; Schwans Home Service, Inc., 364 N.L.R.B. No. 20 at *1 (2016); Valley

Health System LLC, 363 N.L.R.B. No. 178 at *1 (2016); T-Mobile USA, Inc., 363 N.L.R.B. No.

171 at *1 (2016); Hills & Dales General Hospital, 360 N.L.R.B. No. 70 (2014); Karl Knauz

Motors, Inc., 358 N.L.R.B. 1754, 1754 (2012); Costco Wholesale Corp., 358 N.L.R.B. 1100,

1101 (2012); Albertson’s, Inc., 351 N.L.R.B. 254, 259 (2007). Lutheran Heritage has also been

cited as additional authority in an Illinois Board decision, though it was in the context of a

challenge to the enforcement of a work rule. Illinois Troopers Lodge No. 41, 30 PERI ¶ 70

(ILRB State Panel 2013). Given Lutheran Heritage’s consistent application in federal cases and

NLRB decisions, Lutheran Heritage applies here.

¶ 54   Furthermore, for all of the Board’s criticism of Lutheran Heritage in its brief, it has not

provided an alternative framework for assessing where the mere maintenance of a rule is

unlawful, without evidence of enforcement. The Board only points to dissents from NLRB

decisions as instances where Lutheran Heritage has been criticized. The Board further asserts

that the standard for section 10(a)(1) violations is whether the employer’s conduct, viewed

objectively from an employee’s standpoint, reasonably tended to interfere with, restrain, or



                                                -32-
No. 1-15-2993


coerce employees in the exercise of activity protected under the Act. Yet, the Board’s support for

that standard consists of cases where a union challenges an affirmative act by an employer, rather

than the situation we are faced with here, where the Union asserts that merely maintaining the

rule is unlawful. See Amalgamated Transit Union, Local 241, 30 PERI ¶ 9 (ILRB Local Panel

2013); County of Woodford, 14 PERI ¶ 2017 (ISLRB 1998).

¶ 55   We next apply the Lutheran Heritage standard to the social media policy at issue. The

Union argues that when read with the conduct unbecoming rule, the social media policy has an

overbroad chilling effect on employee workplace-based speech on the Internet that violates

section 10(a)(1) of the Act.

¶ 56   The conduct unbecoming rule states that employees shall:

                       “2. Conduct themselves on and off-duty in such a manner to reflect

                favorably on the CCSO. Employees, whether on or off-duty, will not engage in

                conduct which discredits the integrity of the CCSO, its employees, the employee

                him/herself, or which impairs the operations of the CCSO. Such actions shall

                constitute conduct unbecoming of an officer or employee of the CCSO.”

Immediately following is the social media policy, which states:

                       “3. Be aware that conduct on and off duty extends to electronic social

                media and networking sites and that all rules of conduct apply when engaging in

                any Internet activity.”

¶ 57   The Union states that reading these provisions together, the social media policy prohibits

conduct on electronic social media and networking sites that discredits the integrity of the

CCSO, its employees, the employee him/herself, or which impairs the operations of the CCSO.

Acknowledging that the social media policy does not explicitly prohibit protected activity, the



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Union asserts that the social media policy is unlawful under the first condition in Lutheran

Heritage: employees would reasonably construe it to prohibit protected activity. Lutheran

Heritage, 343 N.L.R.B. at 647. The Union contends that policy does not include limiting

language or examples of what behaviors are prohibited. Of note, the Union does not maintain

that the social media policy is unlawful under the other two possibilities stated in Lutheran

Heritage—that the social media policy was promulgated in response to union activity or has

been applied to restrict the exercise of protected rights. See id.

¶ 58   We find that the mere maintenance of the social media policy does not violate the Act.

The Union may be correct that employees could interpret the social media policy to prohibit

protected activity, but the possibility that employees could interpret the policy that way is not

enough. Where the rule does not refer to protected activity, “we will not conclude that a

reasonable employee would read the rule to apply to such activity simply because the rule could

be interpreted that way.” (Emphasis in original.) Id. We reiterate that we must give the social

media policy a reasonable reading and not read particular phrases in isolation. Albertson’s, Inc.,

351 N.L.R.B. at 259. The social media policy is part of a set of three introductory rules of

conduct that are followed by nine more specific rules. In context, the social media policy

provides that all of the other, more specific rules of conduct—none of which are challenged

here—apply to the Internet. The Union has not shown that applying the rules of conduct to

Internet activity means that employees would construe the rules of conduct as prohibiting

protected activity.

¶ 59   Further, the Union’s argument strongly relies on advice memoranda from the General

Counsel of the NLRB, which are not persuasive authority. The General Counsel has final

authority regarding investigations into unfair labor practices and prosecution of complaints



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No. 1-15-2993


before the NLRB. 29 U.S.C. § 153(d) (2012). In contrast, it is the NLRB that applies “the

[National Labor Relations Act’s] general prohibitory language in the light of the infinite

combinations of events which might be charged as violative of its terms.” Republic Aviation

Corp. v. National Labor Relations Board, 324 U.S. 793, 798 (1945). While NLRB decisions are

persuasive, the advice memoranda are not. Further, the Union did not present NLRB decisions or

federal cases that suggest the social media policy is unlawful. The mere maintenance of the

social media policy in the Rules of Conduct Order does not violate the Act.

¶ 60                                III. CONCLUSION

¶ 61   For the reasons stated above, respondents violated the Act by refusing to bargain the

Gang Order. However, the social media policy is not overbroad and does not violate the Act. We

reverse the Board’s decision as to the Gang Order and affirm the Board’s decision as to the

social media policy in the Rules of Conduct Order.

¶ 62   Reversed in part; affirmed in part.




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