(20 ILCS 415/9) (from Ch. 127, par. 63b109)
Sec. 9. Director, powers and duties. The Director, as executive head of the Department, shall direct and supervise all its administrative and technical activities. In addition to the duties imposed upon him elsewhere in this law, it shall be his duty:
(1) To apply and carry out this law and the rules
adopted thereunder.
(2) To attend meetings of the Commission.
(3) To establish and maintain a roster of all
employees subject to this Act, in which there shall be set forth, as to each employee, the class, title, pay, status, and other pertinent data.
(4) To appoint, subject to the provisions of this
Act, such employees of the Department and such experts and special assistants as may be necessary to carry out effectively this law.
(5) Subject to such exemptions or modifications as
may be necessary to assure the continuity of federal contributions in those agencies supported in whole or in part by federal funds, to make appointments to vacancies; to approve all written charges seeking discharge, demotion, or other disciplinary measures provided in this Act and to approve transfers of employees from one geographical area to another in the State, in offices, positions or places of employment covered by this Act, after consultation with the operating unit.
(6) To formulate and administer service wide policies
and programs for the improvement of employee effectiveness, including training, safety, health, incentive recognition, counseling, welfare and employee relations. The Department shall formulate and administer recruitment plans and testing of potential employees for agencies having direct contact with significant numbers of non-English speaking or otherwise culturally distinct persons. The Department shall require each State agency to annually assess the need for employees with appropriate bilingual capabilities to serve the significant numbers of non-English speaking or culturally distinct persons. The Department shall develop a uniform procedure for assessing an agency's need for employees with appropriate bilingual capabilities. Agencies shall establish occupational titles or designate positions as "bilingual option" for persons having sufficient linguistic ability or cultural knowledge to be able to render effective service to such persons. The Department shall ensure that any such option is exercised according to the agency's needs assessment and the requirements of this Code. The Department shall make annual reports of the needs assessment of each agency and the number of positions calling for non-English linguistic ability to whom vacancy postings were sent, and the number filled by each agency. Such policies and programs shall be subject to approval by the Governor. Such policies, program reports and needs assessment reports shall be filed with the General Assembly by January 1 of each year and shall be available to the public.
The Department shall include within the report
required above the number of persons receiving the bilingual pay supplement established by Section 8a.2 of this Code. The report shall provide the number of persons receiving the bilingual pay supplement for languages other than English and for signing. The report shall also indicate the number of persons, by the categories of Hispanic and non-Hispanic, who are receiving the bilingual pay supplement for language skills other than signing, in a language other than English.
(7) To conduct negotiations affecting pay, hours of
work, or other working conditions of employees subject to this Act.
(8) To make continuing studies to improve the
efficiency of State services to the residents of Illinois, including but not limited to those who are non-English speaking or culturally distinct, and to report his findings and recommendations to the Commission and the Governor.
(9) To investigate from time to time the operation
and effect of this law and the rules made thereunder and to report his findings and recommendations to the Commission and to the Governor.
(10) To make an annual report regarding the work of
the Department, and such special reports as he may consider desirable, to the Commission and to the Governor, or as the Governor or Commission may request.
(11) (Blank).
(12) To prepare and publish a semi-annual statement
showing the number of employees exempt and non-exempt from merit selection in each department. This report shall be in addition to other information on merit selection maintained for public information under existing law.
(13) To authorize in every department or agency
subject to Jurisdiction C the use of flexible hours positions. A flexible hours position is one that does not require an ordinary work schedule as determined by the Department and includes but is not limited to: 1) a part time job of 20 hours or more per week, 2) a job which is shared by 2 employees or a compressed work week consisting of an ordinary number of working hours performed on fewer than the number of days ordinarily required to perform that job. The Department may define flexible time to include other types of jobs that are defined above.
The Director and the director of each department or
agency shall together establish goals for flexible hours positions to be available in every department or agency.
The Department shall give technical assistance to
departments and agencies in achieving their goals, and shall report to the Governor and the General Assembly each year on the progress of each department and agency.
When a goal of 10% of the positions in a department
or agency being available on a flexible hours basis has been reached, the Department shall evaluate the effectiveness and efficiency of the program and determine whether to expand the number of positions available for flexible hours to 20%.
When a goal of 20% of the positions in a department
or agency being available on a flexible hours basis has been reached, the Department shall evaluate the effectiveness and efficiency of the program and determine whether to expand the number of positions available for flexible hours.
Each department shall develop a plan for
implementation of flexible work requirements designed to reduce the need for day care of employees' children outside the home. Each department shall submit a report of its plan to the Department of Central Management Services and the General Assembly. This report shall be submitted biennially by March 1, with the first report due March 1, 1993.
(14) To perform any other lawful acts which he may
consider necessary or desirable to carry out the purposes and provisions of this law.
The requirement for reporting to the General Assembly shall be satisfied by filing copies of the report with the Speaker, the Minority Leader and the Clerk of the House of Representatives and the President, the Minority Leader and the Secretary of the Senate and the Legislative Research Unit, as required by Section 3.1 of "An Act to revise the law in relation to the General Assembly", approved February 25, 1874, as amended, and filing such additional copies with the State Government Report Distribution Center for the General Assembly as is required under paragraph (t) of Section 7 of the State Library Act.
(Source: P.A. 98-692, eff. 7-1-14.)
Sections: Previous 8b.19 8b.20 8c 8d 8d.1 8e 8f 9 10 11 11a 11b 12a 12b 12c Next
Last modified: February 18, 2015