Union Pacific to ask appeals court for biometrics lawsuit exemption

Union Pacific to ask appeals court for biometrics lawsuit exemption

Spread the love

Though he has said he believes the company’s position would lead to legally “absurd” results, a federal judge will still allow freight railroad giant Union Pacific to ask an appeals court to determine if an exemption under Illinois’ stringent biometrics privacy law that shields governments from costly privacy lawsuits also should extend to also protect government contractors, like Union Pacific.

On Oct. 28, U.S. District Judge Jorge Alonso granted Union Pacific’s request to appeal the judge’s ruling, delivered two months earlier, which had appeared to allow a class action lawsuit to continue against the railroad.

Union Pacific has been defending itself in court against the lawsuit since last year, when attorneys from the firm of DJC Law, of Chicago and Austin, Texas, lodged the action in Chicago federal court on behalf of potentially thousands of truck drivers whose fingerprints were scanned when entering the company’s rail yards.

The lawsuit, like thousands of others filed against employers in Illinois in the last decade, accuses Union Pacific of failing to secure authorization from the drivers and provide them with notices concerning how their data may be used, shared, stored, and ultimately destroyed, before requiring them to digitally scan their fingerprints to verify their identity, as required by BIPA.

Union Pacific and other railroad operators have been among the largest employers targeted by such class actions under BIPA in state and federal courts in Illinois.

The potential financial stakes are high in the actions. Under the BIPA law, plaintiffs can demand damages of $1,000 or $5,000 per violation. Further, under an interpretation of the law affirmed by the Illinois Supreme Court, Union Pacific could be on the hook to pay that amount for each and every fingerprint scan, not just per truck driver.

When multiplied across thousands of drivers scanning their fingerprints numerous times, potential claims for damages could quickly climb into the hundreds of millions or even billions of dollars.

Last year, to stop the potential for such astronomical and ruinous financial payouts, Illinois state lawmakers revised the BIPA law to explicitly state such damages should be calculated per person, not per scan.

However, courts have not yet decided if lawsuits filed before the law was signed by Gov. JB Pritzker – like the truck drivers’ action against Union Pacific – should be interpreted, and damages calculated, using the revised version of the law or the prior one.

In the meantime, Union Pacific has tried to defeat the lawsuit.

Most recently, the company argued it should be protected against the lawsuit by a clause in the BIPA law exempting governments from the law.

Union Pacific asserted that, as an ongoing government contractor working with several government agencies in Illinois, those exemptions should be extended to also protect the railroad.

Specifically, Union Pacific pointed to its contracts with Metra commuter rail and the Illinois Department of Transportation, among others.

In August, however, Alonso sided with plaintiffs, saying he believed the governmental exemption shouldn’t apply to a company who was merely a government contractor. Rather, Alonso said the exemption needs to be earned, through a “nexus” – meaning, the company required the scans as an essential part of their government contract and as part of the work being performed for the government.

“… A categorical exemption would lead to absurd results in which a large company with a single government contract would be categorically exempt from BIPA even when the company’s BIPA violations were entirely unrelated to the contract,” Alonso wrote on Aug. 25.

The judge noted Union Pacific pointed to work IDOT hired the railroad to perform on a rail crossing in the small southern Illinois town of Steeleville, “over three hundred miles away from the intermodal facilities in Chicago.”

“The fact that Union Pacific improved a single railroad crossing in Steeleville is entirely unrelated to the collection of truck drivers’ fingerprints at its intermodal facilities,” Alonso wrote in August.

Union Pacific asked Alonso for permission to appeal that ruling, saying the question needs to be addressed by the U.S. Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals.

In his latest ruling, Alonso said he continues to believe his earlier decision was correct. But he conceded the question is not clearly in favor of either side. So, without a controlling ruling from an appellate court, the judge said the question remains open to debate and in some doubt.

Should an appeals court ultimately side with Union Pacific in the dispute, it would provide a new avenue for potentially a host of employers to defend themselves against the continuing onslaught of class action lawsuits under the Illinois Biometric Information Privacy Act (BIPA).

To this point, courts have handed out such exemptions to private companies sparingly, handing such wins only to banks and some healthcare providers, in certain circumstances, citing explicit exemptions for such companies already provided in the original law.

Ultimately, the question may not be decided by the Seventh Circuit. Rather, that federal appeals court may yet choose to punt on the matter and ask the Illinois Supreme Court to rule, as the ultimate arbiter of Illinois state law.

The Seventh Circuit has done so on other questions related to the BIPA law.

Union Pacific is represented in the case by attorneys with the firm of Latham & Watkins, of Chicago.

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

mokena school district 159.5

Mokena 159 Board Approves Increased Cost for Junior High Storage Shed Amid Budget Debate

Mokena School District 159 Board of Education Meeting | October 15, 2025 Article Summary: The Mokena School District 159 Board of Education approved a cost increase for a new storage shed...
Mokena Logo Graphic.2

Mokena Approves Over $490,000 in Road and Sidewalk Repair Contracts

Mokena Village Board Meeting | September 22, 2025 Article Summary: The Mokena Village Board has awarded three separate contracts totaling nearly half a million dollars for street patching, pavement repair, and...
Screenshot 2025-10-10 at 12.05.55 PM

Will County Board Committee Passes Contentious ‘Live and Work Without Fear’ Resolution on 4-3 Vote

Will County Legislative Committee Meeting October 7, 2025 Article Summary: The Will County Legislative Committee on Tuesday narrowly passed a controversial resolution affirming the county's commitment to ensuring all residents...
Meeting Briefs

Will County Awards $10.4 Million Contract for Bell Road Widening in Homer Glen Area

Will County Public Works & Transportation Committee Meeting October 7, 2025 Article Summary: The Will County Public Works & Transportation Committee on Tuesday confirmed the award of a $10.4 million...
Screenshot 2025-10-10 at 12.12.16 PM

Meeting Summary and Briefs: Will County Public Works & Transportation Committee for October 7, 2025

The Will County Public Works & Transportation Committee on Tuesday, October 7, 2025, approved a major construction contract and reviewed extensive plans for both county and state transportation initiatives. The...
Meeting Briefs

Meeting Summary and Briefs: Will County Board Finance Committee for October 7, 2025

The Will County Finance Committee on Tuesday, October 7, 2025, held a contentious meeting centered on the county’s finances, narrowly approving a preliminary $161.6 million county-wide tax levy on a...
Meeting Briefs

Meeting Summary and Briefs: Will County Board Capital Improvements & IT Committee for October 7, 2025

The Will County Capital Improvements & IT Committee spent the bulk of its meeting on Tuesday, October 7, 2025, discussing the county’s long-term facilities master plan. Faced with an aging...
Mokena Logo Graphic.5

Mokena Board Honors 101-Year-Old WWII Veteran Raymond McClory

Mokena Village Board Meeting | September 22, 2025 Article Summary: The Mokena Village Board recognized longtime resident and World War II veteran Raymond L. McClory with a formal proclamation honoring his...
Mokena Logo Graphic.1

Mokena Extends Downtown TIF District to 2032 to Bolster Redevelopment

Mokena Village Board Meeting | September 22, 2025 Article Summary: The Mokena Village Board has formally approved a three-year extension for its downtown Tax Increment Financing (TIF) district, moving its expiration...
Meeting Briefs

Meeting Summary and Briefs: Will County Board Public Health & Safety Committee for October 2, 2025

The Will County Public Health & Safety Committee on Thursday, October 2, 2025, heard a mix of alarming and encouraging public health news, as officials reported a dramatic 50% drop...
Screenshot 2025-10-10 at 12.05.41 PM

Will County Shapes 2026 Federal Agenda, Prioritizing Health, Housing, and Workforce Funding

Will County Legislative Committee Meeting October 7, 2025 Article Summary: The Will County Legislative Committee on Tuesday began finalizing its 2026 Federal Legislative Agenda, formally adopting key priorities that include...
Johnson: Republicans 'have plans' to 'fix' Obamacare

Johnson: Republicans ‘have plans’ to ‘fix’ Obamacare

By Thérèse BoudreauxThe Center Square As the ongoing government shutdown enters its third week, Republican leaders are reminding Democrats that by blocking the House-passed funding bill, they are also delaying...
Illinois House Speaker: 'Mr. Trump, tear down this fence!'

Illinois House Speaker: ‘Mr. Trump, tear down this fence!’

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – The speaker of the Illinois House has compared a fence outside U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement in...
MIT rejects White House education demands

MIT rejects White House education demands

By Esther WickhamThe Center Square The Massachusetts Institute of Technology refused to sign the White House agreement that would grant federal funds linked to the administration's demands. The Trump administration...
Energy cost concerns loom as legislators look at policy changes

Energy cost concerns loom as legislators look at policy changes

By Greg Bishop | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Illinois legislators are set to begin the fall veto session Tuesday with some worried electric rate increases...