Fair Workweek
City Council passed a Fair Workweek Ordinance 24-O-23, which requires employers in certain industries to give their employees more predictability in their schedules and additional access to hours, among other things.
The ordinance initially went into effect on September 1, 2023, but City Council recently changed the effective date to January 1, 2024.
Rules and Regulations, Frequently Asked Questions, and more will be posted to this page in the coming weeks.
Fair workweek ordinances, also known as fair or predictable scheduling ordinances, aim to give employees more predictability in their schedules to be able to accommodate everyday needs, including securing stable childcare, attending doctor appointments, holding down second jobs, pursuing higher education, or managing family and caregiving responsibilities. Evanston’s Fair Workweek ordinance requires certain employers to:
* Provide employees with 14 days’ notice of their work schedules;
* Compensate employees for changes or cancellations to their scheduled shifts that occur with less than 14 days’ notice;
* Offer additional hours to existing employees before hiring new part-time employees; and
* Provide additional pay for employees who agree to work “clopening” shifts that start less than 11 hours after the last shift ended.
The ordinance also protects employees against retaliation for exercising their rights to stable and predictable schedules.
The ordinance applies to employers in Evanston who have 100 or more employees globally, including franchises, in one of the following industries:
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Hospitality
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Retail
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Warehouse Services
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Manufacturing
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Building Services
Employers in the Food Service and Restaurant industries must have at least 30 locations globally and at least 200 employees to be covered by the ordinance.
Yes. Employees of covered employers are not owed predictability pay if:
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The employees are covered by a collective bargaining agreement (CBA) that explicitly and unambiguously waives coverage by the ordinance (in its entirety, or the section providing for predictability pay).
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There are extenuating circumstances laid out in section 3-34-5(D) of the ordinance, which includes acts of nature, utility failures, or acts of unrest.
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The change is initiated by the employee and not the employer.




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