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It Ain’t Necessarily So: Labor Law Reform 2010 The Reality Beyond EFCA. Presented by: Ed Cherof, Esq. National Labor Relations Act (NLRA) Today. Current “Road to Unionization” Union solicitation of support (usually via cards) Petition for election filed with NLRB (30% or more required)
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It Ain’t Necessarily So: Labor Law Reform 2010 The Reality Beyond EFCA Presented by: Ed Cherof, Esq.
National Labor Relations Act (NLRA) Today • Current “Road to Unionization” • Union solicitation of support (usually via cards) • Petition for election filed with NLRB (30% or more required) • Employer communications • Secret-ballot election • Good faith negotiations 2
Secret Ballot Union Certification via NLRB Election • National Labor Relations Board supervised secret ballot election – private vote 4
Probable Components of EFCA Compromise… • No “card check” • “Quickie” elections -- 10-21 days from petition • Enhanced remedies • Possible “baseball style” arbitration for 1st contracts • Binding interest arbitration -- right or remedy • Equal access to employees for unions
Possible EFCA Compromise Caution: Employers will find it harder to win elections in 10-21 days with union access and triple penalties. 6
Executive Orders – E.O. 13496 NOTICES MUST BE POSTED ON RIGHT TO ORGANIZE 7
Other Executive Orders Favoring Unions • “NONDISPLACEMENT OF QUALIFIED WORKERS UNDER SERVICE CONTRACTS”- E.O. 13495 Service contractor must offer jobs to prior contractor’s employees to help preserve the union and union jobs • “ECONOMY IN GOVERNMENT CONTRACTING”- E.O. 13494 Contractor cannot use government funds to pay cost incurred for labor consultants, union-free training or lawful communications concerning unions • PROJECT LABOR AGREEMENTS - E.O. 13502 Federal agencies can require every contractor or subcontractor on a large-scale construction project to negotiate or become a party to a Project Labor Agreement (PLA) with one or more labor organizations • Note potential: “High Road” Contracting Policy: preferring contractors who adopt certain labor practices 8
Other Federal and State Labor Law Initiatives • RESPECT ACT - To revise the labor law to enable unions to organize first line supervisors • PATRIOT ACT - To give tax credit to employers who do not oppose unions • OREGON WORKER FREEDOM ACT - To prohibit employers from holding employee meetings to discuss unions* * Jackson Lewis is representing Oregon Business and Industry in court challenge to law 9
New National Labor Relations Board “Labor Law Reform Without an Act of Congress” Current Members (As Of 3/26/10) CHAIR WILMA LIEBMAN Term Expires 2011 Clinton/Bush/Obama Appointee PETER SCHAUMBER Term Expires August 2010 Bush Appointee-Former Arbitrator Additional Members (Obama Recess Appointees On 3/27/10) CRAIG BECKER Term Expires 2011 Previously Assoc. General Counsel SEIU & AFL-CIO MARK PEARCE Term Expires 2011 Previously Partner at Creighton, Pearce, Johnson and Giroux Remaining Pending Nominee BRIAN HAYES Republican Staffer, Senate HELP Committee 10
The Fight Over Becker’s Nomination • July 9, 2009 - Nominated by President Obama • October 21, 2009 - Senator McCain places a hold on Mr. Becker’s nomination and insists on a public hearing • January 7, 2010 - President Obama re-nominates Becker to the NLRB • February 2, 2010 - Public hearing held before HELP committee on Becker nomination • February 10, 2010 - Senate Democrats fail to invoke cloture on Becker’s nomination (52-33) • March 25, 2010 - After Obama administration hints that “recess” appointment likely, Senate Republicans send opposition letter to the President • March 27, 2010 – Recess appointments of Becker and Pearce
New Labor Majority Wilma Liebman • Current Chair of NLRB • Dissented in employer favorable decisions of Bush Board, such as: • Restrictions on use of company e-mail for union communications • Restriction on union petitions to combine temporary and contract workers with regular employees in union elections • Restrictions on abusive language do not violate labor law • Former Counsel for the Bricklayers Union and the Teamsters Union • Former NLRB Staff Attorney 12
New Labor Majority Craig Becker Previously Associate General Counsel for the SEIU and AFL-CIO • Has expressed extreme views on labor law: • “Employers should be stripped of any legally cognizable interest in their employees' election of representatives." • Proposed to eliminate the mandate that the NLRB certify a union only after an NLRB supervised election. • Proposed the NLRB should restrict or eliminate an employer’s right to communicate with employees during election campaign. • Proposed to eliminate an employer’s right to have an observer present during NLRB-conducted election Source: Minnesota Law Review, 1993 • Engineered changes in state laws to permit unionization of home healthcare workers 13
New Labor Majority Mark Pearce • Labor Side Attorney in Buffalo, NY • Former NLRB Attorney • “Pearce’s representation of corrupt union leaders at the expense of workers makes him unsuitable for this position.”- Bill Wilson, President Americans for Limited Gov’t 14
Labor Law Reform Without EFCA The New Labor Board can re-write labor law in two ways: • Through Adjudication -- Reversing pro-employer Bush Board decisions and issuing new decisions favoring unions in novel ways • Through Rulemaking -- Issuing rules that permanently shift the balance in favor of unions 15
Labor Law Reform Through Adjudication • NLRB will make it harder to prove front-line supervisors are exempt from unionization • NLRB will reverse Bush Board decision requiring employer consent before temporary employees can be unionized with its regular employees • NLRB to reverse Register Guard removing employer right to prohibit employees from discussing unions via email systems • NLRB will likely restrict employer right to issue facially neutral non-harassment rules that could be seen as limiting union free speech 16
Labor Law Reform Through Adjudication • NLRB will issue New York New York decision giving contractor employees equal rights to solicit/distribute on company property • NLRB likely to impose upon companies joint employer liability over a contractor’s employees even where they are not directly supervised • NLRB will revisit IBM Corp. to grant “Weingarten” rights to non-union employees 17
Labor Law Reform Through Rulemaking • New Election Rules to Favor Unions • Mandatory union rights postings • Expedited election processing • Mail and e-balloting • More Aggressive Remedies in Initial Organizing and First Contract Cases • Union access to premises • Equal time rules in campaigns • Mandated bargaining schedule and monitoring in bad faith bargaining cases 18
Labor Law Developments + Corporate Campaign Approaches = New Labor Landscape • Unions Fighting Wall Street 19
Labor Law Developments + Corporate Campaign Approaches = New Labor Landscape • Unions In Health Care 20
What to Expect in 2010 and Beyond • Now that Congress has passed Health Care Reform, EFCA may pass in some form • Presidential Executive Orders will impact federal contractors • Even without EFCA, the NLRB will actively modify prior interpretations of the NLRA to favor unions • Union organizing through use of corporate campaigns and other approaches will intensify to take advantage of the new labor landscape 21
Employer Strategies -- Next Steps • Determine what it means for your organization to be an “employer of choice” -- today and tomorrow • Develop an up-to-date strategic, comprehensive, integrated labor relations plan (whether fully or partially unionized, or union-free) • Insure “C” suite buy-in for the plan • Create an effective labor relations and communications program for important “stakeholders”– board members, shareholders, executives, employees, politicians, customers, etc. 22
Employer Strategies -- Next Steps • Conduct a vulnerability assessment to address and eliminate legitimate workplace issues • Implement “pro-active” and “best response” policies and practices • Update employee handbooks and policies, including no solicitation/distribution rules • Consider peer review system and other alternative dispute resolution mechanisms • Consider whether the Executive Orders apply to your company 23
Employer Strategies -- Next Steps • Conduct new, focused training for legal, HR and management on labor and other workplace law developments • Assess status of “supervisors” under the NLRA and consider adjustments based upon preferred designation • Consider a specially trained legal/HR/management team to respond quickly and lawfully to union activity • For employee communications, consider the vehicles (e.g., orientation, annual meetings, video, e-mail, etc.), and approach (e.g., significant v. little or no discussion of labor philosophy, issue-free approach, informed choice, union cards, etc.) 24
Employer Strategies -- Next Steps • For full or partially unionized employers, anticipate union corporate campaign approach (media outreach, political involvement, neutrality requests, etc.) in negotiations • For union-free employers, develop plan for high level neutrality requests • Consider a “break the glass” kit to be ready for responding to union organizing • Conduct a bargaining unit analysis to establish the preferred units from an employer perspective • Review the list of likely NLRB adjudication/rulemaking changes to determine other pro-active steps your organization can take now 25