Cook County prosecutors seek to unionize in first major drive in decades​on February 11, 2025 at 6:26 pm

In the first major union drive to reach the office in decades, a group of assistant Cook County state’s attorneys have asked the office to voluntarily recognize a bargaining unit that would represent hundreds of lawyers working for the country’s second-largest prosecutor’s office.

A majority of Cook County assistant state’s attorneys in the proposed bargaining unit have signed union authorization cards with Teamsters Local 700, according to a letter sent Monday to State’s Attorney Eileen O’Neill Burke. Teamsters representatives declined to say what percentage of attorneys signed cards.

The prosecutors are motivated by a desire to improve wages and working conditions in a notoriously grueling job, Teamsters representatives said. They gave the state’s attorney’s office a deadline of noon Thursday to respond. The office did not immediately return a request for comment Tuesday.

“Nobody takes that job to make money, but everyone who takes that job wants to do right by the victim. They want to keep the bad guys in jail,” said Laura Leahy, assistant general counsel for Teamsters Local 700 and a former Cook County prosecutor. “Essentially they go to work every day and they spend hours and hours and hours in court and then they don’t have the staff that other (legal) offices have.”

A 1995 Illinois Supreme Court decision shut the door on the last major attempt by county prosecutors to unionize, but labor leaders say the winds have changed, with a new state’s attorney who pledged not to oppose a union drive, a recent constitutional amendment, and new legislation on the table.

The effort marks a major test for O’Neill Burke, who was sworn in in December, as rank-and-file prosecutors seek fulfillment of a campaign promise the former appellate judge made to provide voluntary recognition to a union if a majority of staff demonstrated interest.

“I know firsthand the challenges that (assistant state’s attorneys) face on a daily basis. Union representation and the ability to bargain collectively with management are one of the most important tools to protect the rights of workers,” O’Neill Burke, then a candidate, wrote in a letter the Teamsters provided to the Tribune. “It would be my honor to be a part of that historic process.”

The new top prosecutor has sought to put her stamp on policy and practice in an office tackling persistent gun violence, wrongful convictions and other challenges. In recent years the office also has struggled with morale, which voluntary recognition of a union could help improve as bargaining could pave the way for better pay and working conditions, labor representatives argued.

The 1995 high court decision does not preclude Burke from voluntarily recognizing a prosecutors union, the Teamsters said. Even if O’Neill Burke chooses not to, the state’s Workers Rights Amendment, which enshrines the right to collective bargaining in the state’s constitution, provides a legal foundation to counteract the 1995 decision, Teamsters representatives said.

Legislation introduced in Springfield last week also would explicitly allow non-supervisory assistant state’s attorneys to unionize, the Teamsters said.

“Our intent and hope is that voluntary recognition, as was pledged previously, is granted,” said Pasquale Gianni, director of government affairs for Teamsters Joint Council 25, an umbrella organization for Teamsters locals in Illinois and northwest Indiana.

Still, Gianni said, the Teamsters believe they would prevail if they had to fight the case in front of the state labor relations board or in the courts.

“When you’re to read the plain language of the amendment itself, it really does enshrine within our state constitution this fundamental right of public employees to form a union,” he said.

Cook County assistant state’s attorneys filed a union petition in 1993, but the Illinois Supreme Court later ruled that the prosecutors were “managerial employees” without the right to unionize.

Then-State’s Attorney Jack O’Malley, a Republican who served from 1990 to 1996, challenged the union drive by asking a Cook County judge to halt state and local labor relations boards from certifying the petition to unionize from the Prosecutors’ Bar Association of Cook County. The association sought to represent assistant state’s attorneys who were not supervisors.

A lower court dismissed the challenge by the state’s attorney’s office, but the Illinois Supreme Court mostly sided with the office, finding that rank-and-file prosecutors are in “essence surrogates for the State’s Attorney” when prosecuting cases and making decisions.

In a dissenting opinion, though, two justices argued that the majority’s ruling was problematic.

“There may sometimes be problems of divided loyalty between the employer and the collective-bargaining unit if assistant State’s Attorneys are permitted to organize, but divided loyalty is an issue whenever labor organizes,” the dissent said. “If the prospect of divided loyalty were reason enough to take employees out of the Act, no public employee could ever invoke its protections.”

Cook County assistant public defenders have been unionized since the mid-1980s with the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees.

Last week, state Rep. Kambium “Kam” Buckner introduced a bill the Teamsters said would amend the state’s labor relations act to include public-sector lawyers such as assistant state’s attorneys. The Teamsters supported a similar bill introduced in 2023 that stalled in Springfield despite passing the House and Senate.

Even if Buckner’s bill is not signed into law, the Teamsters say they are confident the prosecutors could unionize under the state’s Workers Rights Amendment, which protects Illinois employees’ “fundamental right to organize and to bargain collectively through representatives of their own choosing.”

In her letter to Burke, Leahy said the Teamsters believe the constitutional amendment, which passed by referendum in 2022, “provides the legal foundation necessary to secure union recognition for the ASAs” because it would supersede the 1995 Supreme Court decision.

The Teamsters argue that a union would provide stability to the state’s attorneys office and help with recruitment and retention, as the attorneys could attempt to bargain pay increases, build transparency around career growth opportunities and address punishing workloads, such as the required long shifts during the day and night in the office’s Felony Review Unit to review potential criminal charges.

“We are rooting for [O’Neill Burke’s] success. We supported her,” Gianni said. “This is all about, obviously, the overwhelming desire of state’s attorneys to have dignity in the workplace, parity with colleagues that they work with in courtrooms on a daily basis, economic justice.”

A group of assistant state’s attorneys seeks voluntary recognition of a bargaining unit that would represent hundreds of lawyers.   

Cook County State’s Attorney Eileen O’Neill Burke makes an appearance Jan. 30, 2025, at the Union League Club. (Brian Cassella/Chicago Tribune)
Cook County State’s Attorney Eileen O’Neill Burke makes an appearance Jan. 30, 2025, at the Union League Club. (Brian Cassella/Chicago Tribune)
Talia Soglin byline photo
UPDATED: February 11, 2025 at 1:49 PM CST

In the first major union drive to reach the office in decades, a group of assistant Cook County state’s attorneys have asked the office to voluntarily recognize a bargaining unit that would represent hundreds of lawyers working for the country’s second-largest prosecutor’s office.

A majority of Cook County assistant state’s attorneys in the proposed bargaining unit have signed union authorization cards with Teamsters Local 700, according to a letter sent Monday to State’s Attorney Eileen O’Neill Burke. Teamsters representatives declined to say what percentage of attorneys signed cards.

The prosecutors are motivated by a desire to improve wages and working conditions in a notoriously grueling job, Teamsters representatives said. They gave the state’s attorney’s office a deadline of noon Thursday to respond. The office did not immediately return a request for comment Tuesday.

“Nobody takes that job to make money, but everyone who takes that job wants to do right by the victim. They want to keep the bad guys in jail,” said Laura Leahy, assistant general counsel for Teamsters Local 700 and a former Cook County prosecutor. “Essentially they go to work every day and they spend hours and hours and hours in court and then they don’t have the staff that other (legal) offices have.”

A 1995 Illinois Supreme Court decision shut the door on the last major attempt by county prosecutors to unionize, but labor leaders say the winds have changed, with a new state’s attorney who pledged not to oppose a union drive, a recent constitutional amendment, and new legislation on the table.

The effort marks a major test for O’Neill Burke, who was sworn in in December, as rank-and-file prosecutors seek fulfillment of a campaign promise the former appellate judge made to provide voluntary recognition to a union if a majority of staff demonstrated interest.

“I know firsthand the challenges that (assistant state’s attorneys) face on a daily basis. Union representation and the ability to bargain collectively with management are one of the most important tools to protect the rights of workers,” O’Neill Burke, then a candidate, wrote in a letter the Teamsters provided to the Tribune. “It would be my honor to be a part of that historic process.”

The new top prosecutor has sought to put her stamp on policy and practice in an office tackling persistent gun violence, wrongful convictions and other challenges. In recent years the office also has struggled with morale, which voluntary recognition of a union could help improve as bargaining could pave the way for better pay and working conditions, labor representatives argued.

The 1995 high court decision does not preclude Burke from voluntarily recognizing a prosecutors union, the Teamsters said. Even if O’Neill Burke chooses not to, the state’s Workers Rights Amendment, which enshrines the right to collective bargaining in the state’s constitution, provides a legal foundation to counteract the 1995 decision, Teamsters representatives said.

Legislation introduced in Springfield last week also would explicitly allow non-supervisory assistant state’s attorneys to unionize, the Teamsters said.

“Our intent and hope is that voluntary recognition, as was pledged previously, is granted,” said Pasquale Gianni, director of government affairs for Teamsters Joint Council 25, an umbrella organization for Teamsters locals in Illinois and northwest Indiana.

Still, Gianni said, the Teamsters believe they would prevail if they had to fight the case in front of the state labor relations board or in the courts.

“When you’re to read the plain language of the amendment itself, it really does enshrine within our state constitution this fundamental right of public employees to form a union,” he said.

Cook County assistant state’s attorneys filed a union petition in 1993, but the Illinois Supreme Court later ruled that the prosecutors were “managerial employees” without the right to unionize.

Then-State’s Attorney Jack O’Malley, a Republican who served from 1990 to 1996, challenged the union drive by asking a Cook County judge to halt state and local labor relations boards from certifying the petition to unionize from the Prosecutors’ Bar Association of Cook County. The association sought to represent assistant state’s attorneys who were not supervisors.

A lower court dismissed the challenge by the state’s attorney’s office, but the Illinois Supreme Court mostly sided with the office, finding that rank-and-file prosecutors are in “essence surrogates for the State’s Attorney” when prosecuting cases and making decisions.

In a dissenting opinion, though, two justices argued that the majority’s ruling was problematic.

“There may sometimes be problems of divided loyalty between the employer and the collective-bargaining unit if assistant State’s Attorneys are permitted to organize, but divided loyalty is an issue whenever labor organizes,” the dissent said. “If the prospect of divided loyalty were reason enough to take employees out of the Act, no public employee could ever invoke its protections.”

Cook County assistant public defenders have been unionized since the mid-1980s with the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees.

Last week, state Rep. Kambium “Kam” Buckner introduced a bill the Teamsters said would amend the state’s labor relations act to include public-sector lawyers such as assistant state’s attorneys. The Teamsters supported a similar bill introduced in 2023 that stalled in Springfield despite passing the House and Senate.

Even if Buckner’s bill is not signed into law, the Teamsters say they are confident the prosecutors could unionize under the state’s Workers Rights Amendment, which protects Illinois employees’ “fundamental right to organize and to bargain collectively through representatives of their own choosing.”

In her letter to Burke, Leahy said the Teamsters believe the constitutional amendment, which passed by referendum in 2022, “provides the legal foundation necessary to secure union recognition for the ASAs” because it would supersede the 1995 Supreme Court decision.

The Teamsters argue that a union would provide stability to the state’s attorneys office and help with recruitment and retention, as the attorneys could attempt to bargain pay increases, build transparency around career growth opportunities and address punishing workloads, such as the required long shifts during the day and night in the office’s Felony Review Unit to review potential criminal charges.

“We are rooting for [O’Neill Burke’s] success. We supported her,” Gianni said. “This is all about, obviously, the overwhelming desire of state’s attorneys to have dignity in the workplace, parity with colleagues that they work with in courtrooms on a daily basis, economic justice.”

Originally Published: February 11, 2025 at 12:26 PM CST

More in Crime and Public Safety

 


Discover more from World Byte News

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Discover more from World Byte News

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading