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Graduate Employees Organization v. Illinois Educational Labor Relations Board

Ill. App. Ct.June 30, 2000No. 1-98-1685Cited 1 time
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Case Details

Judge(s)
Theis
Status — whether other courts must follow this ruling
Published
Procedural Posture — the stage the case had reached
appeal

Related Laws

No specific laws identified for this ruling.

Outcome

The Illinois Appellate Court reversed the IELRB's dismissal of the graduate employees' petition for collective bargaining certification and remanded the case for further proceedings, finding that the IELRB's 'significant connection' test for determining whether teaching/graduate/research assistants are 'students' precluded from organizing was overly broad and not supported by statutory language.

What This Ruling Means

**Graduate Student Workers Win Right to Unionize** This case involved graduate students at the University of Illinois who worked as teaching and research assistants while pursuing their degrees. These graduate employees wanted to form a union to negotiate for better wages and working conditions, but the Illinois Educational Labor Relations Board (IELRB) denied their request. The board ruled that because the graduate students had a "significant connection" to their academic programs, they were primarily students rather than employees and therefore couldn't unionize. The Illinois Appellate Court disagreed and overturned the board's decision. The court found that the IELRB's "significant connection" test was too broad and wasn't supported by the actual language in the law. The court sent the case back to the board to reconsider the graduate students' unionization petition using proper legal standards. This ruling matters for workers because it recognizes that graduate students who perform teaching and research duties can be considered employees with the right to organize, even while they're students. The decision helps protect the collective bargaining rights of graduate student workers, who often face low pay and poor working conditions. It also clarifies that being a student doesn't automatically disqualify someone from union protections if they're also doing work for their institution.

This summary was generated to explain the ruling in plain English and is not legal advice.

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