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The Second Offensive

Learn about the U.S. Chamber of Commerce's Labor and Employment Policy victories from 2008 to 2013, including key initiatives, NLRB policies, and the impact on employers and unions. Stay informed about the changing landscape of labor relations.

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The Second Offensive

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  1. The Second Offensive Workforce Freedom Initiative u.s. chamber of commerce Labor and Employment Policy in 2014

  2. Employer Victories 2008-2013 • Card Check: Would have eliminated secret ballots in union elections, required arbitration of first contracts, increased employer penalties. Died in Congress. • Ambush Elections: Would have greatly reduced the time frame for union elections. Leave employers no time to respond, prevent workers from getting balanced information. Overturned in court. • Poster Rule: Would have required employers to post one-sided notice of union rights in their workplaces. Overturned in court. • Cyber Card Check: Would have established electronic voting in union elections —undermining privacy of a worker’s vote. Blocked by appropriations rider. • Noel Canning Case: Challenged validity of NLRB appointments. Kept anti-employer agenda on hold; will ultimately void many harmful decision. • Department of Labor: Numerous rules abandoned or delayed.

  3. Union Membership

  4. The Second Offensive • National Labor Relations Board: • NLRB is a small agency in Washington, DC. Five Board members. All are now Senate confirmed. General Counsel also Senate confirmed. Primed to begin deciding cases and issuing regulations. • Department of Labor: • Previous Secretary largely ineffective. New Secretary Tom Perez is a smart, hands-on manager. More than 60 items on the Department’s regulatory agenda. • New Union Organizing Strategies: • Increasing use of “worker centers,” members-only unions, undermine franchise and contractor relationships.

  5. The Second Offensive Objectives Remain the Same: • Lower the bar for union organizing. • Make it more difficult for employers to resist.

  6. New NLRB Policies • Ambush Elections: • In 2011, NRLB issued final rule on “ambush” elections. Struck down in court. The Board has now issued a new rule. • Rule designed to speed up time frame for union certification elections from an average of 38 days to as few as 10. How? • Eliminate requirement for minimum 25-day period before an election can be scheduled. • Restrict employers’ ability to file pre-and post-election appeals. Deal with issues of voter eligibility and campaign misconduct after a vote has taken place. • Requires employer to give unions workers’ home phone numbers and e-mail addresses. • Will make it harder for employers to respond to a campaign and limit employees’ ability to get balanced information about unions.

  7. New NLRB Policies • Concerted Activity Enforcement: • Applies to union and non-union employers alike. • Section 7 of the NLRA allows workers to engage in protected concerted activity. Can discuss wages, benefits, working conditions. Employers cannot discipline them for doing so or establish policies that prohibit such activity. • NLRB had found many common-sense policies to be illegal for interfering with concerted activity. • Encouraging employees to be courteous to each other and to customers. • Keeping workplace investigations confidential. • Prohibiting disclosure of confidential information about co-workers. • Regulating terms for returning to the workplace when off-duty.

  8. New NLRB Policies • Concerted Activity Enforcement: • NLRB has extended enforcement to cyberspace — posts on Face Book, Twitter, and other sites. • Many employer policies regulating employees’ use of social media have been found illegal. • Prohibiting use of company trademarks. • Prohibiting disclosure of confidential information about the company. • Requesting that social media posts be courteous. • Requesting that employees not defame the company. • NLRB sees concerted activity enforcement as a key part of its mandate. Allows it to regulate nearly all employers in the United States.

  9. New NLRB Policies • Micro Unions: • 2010 NLRB issues a decision in Specialty Healthcare case. Overturns long-standing precedent on the makeup of bargaining units. • Decision allows unions to gerrymander the bargaining units they wish to organize. Employers effectively barred from suggesting more appropriate units. • Unions can concentrate on small pockets of support to gain a foothold at a workplace. Eliminates the need to win a majority amongst a larger group of employees. • NLRB General Counsel will issue updated “guidance” on application of Specialty Healthcare in 2014.

  10. New NLRB Policies • Increased Union Access: • Unions desire expanded access to non-unionized employees in the workplace. • NLRB is preparing to set new precedent that allows unions access to employer e-mail systems – requested amicus briefs in Purple Communications. • New policy would restrict employers’ ability to regulate their workplaces. • NLRB Employers would face a choice of two impractical solutions • Completely bar all non-business use of e-mail system by employees, or • Allow unfettered access for all purposes.

  11. Department of Labor • Persuader Regulations • Will limit “advice” exemption under existing law. • Require detailed financial reporting on activities intended to “persuade” workers about collective bargaining. Impacts union and non-union employers alike. • Many common employment practices could trigger reporting obligations under the proposed rule. • No attorney-client privilege. • CEO may be liable for failure to file reports. • Intended to deter employers from contesting organizing campaigns. • Other Issues • OSHA “walk around” letter. • Crackdown on use of independent contractors.

  12. Alternative Union Strategies • Worker Centers • Members-Only Unions • Franchise/Contractor Ties

  13. Worker Centers • Unions protests, picketing limited by federal law. Unions also must file financial disclosures with DOL and owe workers a duty of fair representation. • To avoid these requirements of federal law, unions have created “worker centers.” Tax-exempt groups that advocate on behalf of employees. Don’t call themselves unions. • Worker Centers launch protests on behalf of unions, call for higher wages, paid leave, changes in working conditions. • Black Friday protests, fast food strikes in New York and other cities, “codes of conduct” for the food service industry. Intermittent strikes. • Ultimate goal: use worker centers as a wedge for unionization.

  14. Members-Only Unions • When a union wins an election, it gains the right to exclusive representation of employees. Drawback is unions have to convince a majority to support them. • To get around this, unions have begun advocating for members-only unions. • Any small group of workers could get together and form a union. Employers would have to recognize these unions. No election would be needed. • Would lead to multiple unions within a workplace; disparate unions scattered across multi-state employers. • NLRB may attempt to authorize members-only union through a case decision or rulemaking.

  15. New Litigation Strategies • Joint Employer Liability • Worker Centers trying hold employers jointly responsible for actions of contractors and franchisees. Particularly with wage and hour issues. • NLRB has signaled its intent to adopt new, liberal standard to find “joint employer” status by requesting briefs for Browning-Ferris Industries. • Intermittent Strikes • Sporadic, disruptive, ‘hit-and-run’ strikes where workers walk out for a short time and then return to work, often involving a single shift. • Repeated series of short-term strikes are illegal, but there is no clear-line rule or definition. • Favorite tool for Worker Centers. • NLRB may be using charges against Walmart to grant protection to intermittent strikes. Would make it very difficult to manage attendance at a workplace.

  16. What We Can Do • Get educated on the issues – www.WorkforceFreedom.com & www.USChamber.com • Urge Congress to Support Good Legislation and to Fight Overregulation - Contact Officials by phone or webpage (www.senate.gov & www.house.gov) • Secret Ballot Protection Act– H.R. 2346 – Union elections must be by secret ballot, not card check. • Representation Fairness Restoration Act– H.R. 2347 – Reverses Specialty Healthcare (micro-unions) and gives employers equal weight when  determining appropriate bargaining units. • Workforce Democracy and Fairness Act – H.R. 4320; S.2178 – Mandates at least 35 days notice before holding an election. Workers can make fully informed decisions.  Bargaining unit and voter eligibility issues must be decided before certifying a union. • Employee Privacy Protection Act – H.R. 4321 – Protects employee privacy.  Workers choose how the union may contact them and what personal information is disclosed. • National Right To Work Act – H.R. 946; S. 204 – Eliminates laws that require employees to join a union as a condition of employment. • Submit letters to Congress and op-eds to your local newspaper editor • Stay Involved with your State and Local Chamber and the U.S. Chamber

  17. Workforce Freedom Initiative u.s. chamber of commerce

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