It’s been a quiet few weeks for the NLRB.  Since January 1, the NLRB has issued only a small number of decisions, none of which appear to be noteworthy.  There are, of course, many developments that are in process.  For example, we still do not know the full effect of the NLRB’s decision in Specialty Healthcare, where the NLRB adopted the micro union standard, and which has since been applied in an alarming way.   The NLRB also has pending its new election regulations, which although under challenge, could bring major changes to the way bargaining units are established.

The fact is the NLRB’s micro union standard and election procedure regulations are probably only the tip of the proverbial iceberg.  These are the changes the NLRB could accomplish; remember, the NLRB’s original proposed election regulations were much broader in scope, and were only scaled back after a wave of intense opposition.  So, the NLRB clearly is receptive to more sweeping change. 

A recent decision demonstrates just how receptive the agency could be in the coming months.  In the final hours of 2011, the NLRB issued 2 Sisters Food Group, Inc., 357 NLRB No. 168 (December 29, 2011).pdf, which to date has gone unnoticed.  This decision, however, provides us with substantial evidence of NLRB mission creep.

The facts in 2 Sisters are fairly basic.  The union lost a representation election by a vote of 66 to 87, with more than enough challenged ballots to alter the outcome.  The union then filed numerous objections, some of which were sustained, some of which are rejected.  The employer was found, for example, to have unlawfully terminated a union adherent during the election campaign.  Standing alone, an unlawful termination would be enough to warrant a rerun election (indeed, Chairman Pearce and Members Becker and Hayes all agreed to sustain the finding that the termination was unlawful, which means the election would be thrown out in any event). 

The truly remarkable aspect of the 2 Sisters decision is that the vast majority of it deals with issues that had no effect whatsoever on the election.  These issues show how unions will attempt to cash in on the NLRB’s receptivity to change by bringing challenges asking the agency to overturn or alter existing law.  Here are a few examples-

Handbook violations.  As we have previously detailed, the NLRB has been finding that the mere existence of “overbroad” handbook violations may be enough to overturn an election even when there is no evidence the policy was enforced, let alone that employees were even aware of it.  In 2 Sisters, Chairman Pearce and Member Becker found that the employer’s rule subjecting employees to discipline for “inability or unwillingness to work harmoniously with other employees,” was an unfair labor practice (and, therefore, also grounds for an objection) because “it was sufficiently imprecise that it could encompass any disagreement or conflict among employees, including those related to discussions and interactions protected by Section 7, and that employees could reasonably construe the rule to prohibit such activity.”  The NLRB also ruled the requirement that employees arbitrate all disputes violated the Act.

The problem with these kinds of violations is twofold.  First, there is no evidence that the rules were actually construed to prohibit protected union activity (or any other activity for that matter).  Indeed, the election seems to have been hotly contested, which is actually proof the “harmonious” and “arbitration” handbook policies had no effect on the election.  One can see how important the handbook rule might be if that was the only objection to an election:  the NLRB would be nullifying free choice based on a purely theoretical impact of a policy found in a multi-page handbook odds are the employees received, yet never actually read.  Second, and more important, this finding shows that since the NLRB is more receptive to such charges, employers can and should expect unions to raise more of these challenges.  The ruling creates an incentive for the union to scour the employer’s handbook in search of some innocuous phrase, such as a requirement that employees work “harmoniously.”   No proof other than the policy is required because the NLRB decides what the employee would “reasonably construe” a rule to mean.  So, the union will hold onto the issue until after the results of the election are known.  If the union loses, then it will simply file objections asking the results be overturned based on some obscure policy buried in the handbook.  While this is an area of law that changes, and will continue to change, each employer should review its handbook in an attempt to remove such hidden land mines.

Employer Meetings.  The union in 2 Sisters objected to the employer’s holding of mandatory meetings during the campaign to discuss its views on the union.  Even though the union acknowledged that the employer’s meetings were not objectionable under the law, it still asked for the rule to be changed.  Although the NLRB did not reach this issue, Member Becker, in a three page dissent, left a parting shot, which is sure to set the stage for the next few months.  

Since 1953, it has been the law that the employer may hold mandatory meetings in which it expresses its view on the union.  The employer is prohibited from holding such meetings during the twenty-four hour period prior to the election.  Member Becker made clear his view that such rule should be discarded. and employers should be prohibited from holding any mandatory meetings to discuss the union:

Board-supervised elections have been called the ‘crown jewel of the Board’s accomplishments’ under the Act. . .By continuing to permit employers to require that employees attend campaign meetings as a condition of continued employment, the Board does not simply tarnish that jewel, it fractures it.  I would not continue down this long but fundamentally misguided path.

So, the rule of the last 59 years has been wrong, despite the make-up of the NLRB changing from pro-labor to pro-management numerous times.  Member Becker would have it that an employer may not call a meeting to discuss with its own employees a matter that concerns everyone at the workplace just because the topic is the union.  As extreme as the view may sound, we can expect the issue will be raised again in the coming months, and the NLRB likely will have some receptivity to it.

Site of the election.  Having secured a rerun election, the union in 2 Sisters requested that the second election be held off-site away from the employer’s premises.  The NLRB did not grant the request yet expended five pages of the decision noting that the Regional Director has the ultimate authority to direct an election to be held at a place other than an employer’s premises.  The opinion sets out guidelines the Regional Director should consider in making his or her decision on the site of an election.  Why spend so much time talking about this issue?  Clearly, the NLRB is sending a signal.  There is enough language in these pages that indicates a new tactic may be for the union to request a location for an election other than an employer’s workplace, and if its request is denied, create yet another issue to attack the results.  Thus, the NLRB seemed to be setting this issue up for the future:

While the existing empirical work on this subject is not definitive, it is persuasive and creates concern that holding representation elections on premises controlled by one party without the consent of all other parties is inconsistent with the Board’s obligation to insure[] that no party gains last minute advantage over the other.

With the exception of mail ballot elections, the representation election is almost always held at the employer’s premises.  This is not for any nefarious reason, but a more fundamental, logical one inherently tied to the NLRB’s mission:  the employer’s premises is where the employees are most likely to be located and where the NLRB can ensure the greatest turnout. 

Calling the majority’s discussion of the election site “unwarranted” and “unprecedented,” Member Hayes, summarized the issue succinctly in his dissent:

To some, myself included, it may seem surpassingly strange to premise a change in the requirements for resolving disputes about where to hold a Board election on the prospect that an employer might exercise its right to communicate with employees on a question concerning representation.  By now, however, we should be accustomed to my colleagues’ concern that this should happen.  Time and time again, they have demonstrated a willingness, if not open zeal, for limiting employer communications. . .

 

Again, 2 Sisters issued in the final days of 2011 and has received no attention. The arguments made by the union in the case are telling, however, about some of the strategies employers are likely to see in the very near future as unions continue efforts to curtail employer communication.  Of course, the make-up of the NLRB has changed recently, so no one knows what will happen, but it is a safe guess the agency will at least be receptive to the change. 

 

 

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Photo of Mark Theodore Mark Theodore

Mark Theodore is a partner in the Labor & Employment Law Department. He has devoted his practice almost exclusively to representing management in all aspects of traditional labor law matters throughout the U.S. He is Co-Chair of Proskauer’s Labor-Management and Collective Bargaining Practice…

Mark Theodore is a partner in the Labor & Employment Law Department. He has devoted his practice almost exclusively to representing management in all aspects of traditional labor law matters throughout the U.S. He is Co-Chair of Proskauer’s Labor-Management and Collective Bargaining Practice Group.

Some recent highlights of his career include:

  • Successfully defended client against allegations that it had terminated a union supporter and isolated another. T-Mobile USA, Inc., 365 NLRB No. 15 (2017).
  • Successfully appealed NLRB findings that certain of client’s written policies violated the National Labor Relations Actions Act.  T-Mobile USA, Inc., 363 NLRB No. 171 (2016), enf’d in part, rev’d in part 865 F.3d 265 (5th Cir. 2017).
  • Represented major utility in NLRB proceedings related to organizing of planners.  Secured utility-wide bargaining unit. Bargained on behalf of grocery chain.  After negotiations reached an impasse, guided the company through lawful implementation of five year collective bargaining agreement.
  • Coordinated employer response in numerous strike situations including a work stoppage across 14 western states of the client’s operations.

Mark has extensive experience representing employers in all matters before the NLRB, including representation petitions, jurisdictional disputes and the handling of unfair labor practice charges from the date they are filed through trial and appeal. Mark has acted as lead negotiator for dozens of major companies in a variety of industries, including national, multi-unit, multi-location, multi-employer and multi-union bargaining. Mark has handled lockout and strike situations, coordinating the clients efforts.

In addition, Mark has handled hundreds of arbitrations involving virtually every area of dispute, including contract interest arbitration, contract interpretation, just cause termination/discipline, benefits, pay rates, and hours of work.