National Labor Relations Board general counsel Richard
Griffin is expected to issue a new legal interpretation of micro unions, which
could have major implications for unionization moving forward.
Griffin, a longtime union lawyer, announced at the Cornell
School of Industrial and Labor Relations that the board will issue a guidance
to clarify the controversial 2010 Specialty Healthcare decision. The Democratic
board departed from years of precedent when it ruled in 2010 that workers could
unionize by departments without a full majority of a shop’s employees signing
on.
Former NLRB board member Peter Schaumber said that the
decision could cause havoc for employers who could be forced to negotiate with
multiple unions working toward multiple ends. While a traditional organizing
effort would focus on all restaurant employees, for example, micro unions allow
unions to form for bartenders, while a second union could organize busboys.
“This misguided standard threatens to balkanize the
workplace, dramatically increasing an employer’s labor relations costs as it
will have to negotiate and enforce multiple collective bargaining agreements,”
Schaumber said. “It demonstrates that the animating goal for the Obama Board is
not stability in the workplace, which benefits the worker, the employer, and
the economy, it is to increase union membership.”
The NLRB allowed a small group of nurses at the Specialty
Healthcare and Rehabilitation Center in Mobile, Ala. to organize a union
without the consent of all nurses at the facility. Micro unions have since been
formed in four more companies. Women’s shoe retailers at Bergdorf Goodman, for
example, were able to form a union without approval from employees who perform
similar duties in other departments.
Republicans have set their sights on reversing the NLRB’s
micro union decision through legislation. Sen. Johnny Isakson (R., Ga.)
sponsored legislation in the Senate to ban these organizing tactics.
“Micro unions significantly tip the scales in favor of
unions and neglect our nation’s long-standing precedents of collective
bargaining. This unfair labor practice makes it easier for unions to gain
access to employees, and makes it nearly impossible for employers to manage
such fragmentation of their workforce,” he said. “I have sponsored the
Representation Fairness Restoration Act to reinstate the traditional standard
for determining appropriate bargaining units, and I will continue to fight
against micro unions.”
Brian Newell, spokesman for the House Education and
Workforce Committee, said that Griffin and the NLRB should work to protect
workers and employers from partial unionization.
“The NLRB should stop enforcing a micro union scheme that
will entangle employers in union red tape and undermine employee freedom in the
workplace,” he said. “Instead, the NLRB should restore policies in place for
decades that served the best interests of both workers and job creators.”
The anti-micro union legislation has stalled in the Senate.
The NLRB is expected to issue the micro union interpretation in 2014.
Source: Washington
Free Beacon
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