Ill. Admin. Code tit. 56, § 210.510 - Criteria Used to Establish the Necessity of a Sub-Minimum Wage
a) In order to
determine that a wage lower than the minimum wage rate provided in Section 4 of
the Act is appropriate, the following criteria will be considered:
1) the specific nature and extent of an
employed individual's disability and the direct correlation between the
individual's disability and his/her productivity on the job;
2) a comparison of the wages paid generally
to experienced employees not disabled in the locality in which the work is
being performed to an individual with a disability engaged in work of a similar
character at a sub-minimum wage rate;
3) the productivity of an individual with a
disability compared to the norm established for nondisabled workers through the
use of a verifiable work measurement method (as outlined in the regulations
promulgated under the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938, at
29 C.F.R.
525.12(h) (1994, no
subsequent dates or editions), as amended at 54 FR 32928 or the productivity of
experienced nondisabled workers employed in the locality engaged in work of a
similar character; and
4) the wage
rate to be paid to an individual with a disability for work of similar
character performed by experienced nondisabled workers.
The Director may as a prerequisite require the submission of additional information including medical or psychological examination report or an equivalent statement from a qualified federal or State agency.
b) The Director shall
not issue a license to an employer to pay a lower, disability-based wage to an
individual with a disability if the employer: eliminated essential functions
that the individual could perform, lowered production standards that the
individual could meet, or lowered the wages of the individual because it
provided the individual with a reasonable accommodation. The Director will use
the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990, as amended (29 U.C.S. 12111 et
seq.) as a guide in this area.
c) A
claim or representation by an employer that the average cost of employing older
workers as a group is higher than the average cost of employing younger workers
as a group is not an acceptable differentiation to justify a sub-minimum wage
to older workers. An older worker's production level must be measured on an
individual basis against the production level required of other employees to
justify a sub-minimum wage to older workers. The Director will use the Age
Discrimination in Employment Act of 1967, as amended (
29 U.S.C.
621 et seq.) as a guide in this
area.
Notes
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