We originally addressed this
topic on November 9, 2012, discussing the
National Labor Relations Board’s scrutiny of employer handbooks containing
employment-at-will provisions. Since these disclaimers are widely used in
handbooks – as well as employment applications and offer letters – the NLRB’s
sudden focus on such provisions was potentially significant. Employers
drew some comfort from two 2012 Advice Memoranda issued by the NLRB’s
General Counsel’s Office (Case 32-CA-086799 & Case 28-CA-084365), but both of those Advice
Memoranda warned employers that “the law in this area remains unsettled.”
Fast forward to July
2014. Is there anything new on this topic and if so, should employers be
concerned? In fact, there have been two noteworthy developments this
year.
First, on February 25, 2014,
the General Counsel’s Office issued a memorandum on “Mandatory Submissions to Advice”
which noted there should be “centralized consideration of certain issues” by
the General Counsel’s Office. The memo went on to cite “cases
involving ‘at-will’ provisions in employer handbooks” as an area identified for
such centralized oversight. Accordingly, the NLRB’s 26 regional offices
will submit cases involving at-will provisions to the General Counsel’s Office
for guidance, to the extent that prior NLRB case law precedent or earlier
Advice Memoranda do not definitively resolve the legal issues being faced.
In sum, look for continuing developments coming straight from Washington, D.C.,
on this subject.
Second, the General Counsel’s
Office recently found the following at-will policy of
Lionbridge Technologies in Redmond, Washington, did not obstruct employees from
organizing a union or interfere with other concerted activity under Section 7
of the National Labor Relations Act:
Employment at [the Employer]
is on an at-will basis unless otherwise stated in a written individual
employment agreement signed by the [Senior Vice President of] Human
Resources. This means that employment may be terminated by the employee
or [the Employer] at any time, for any reason or for no reason, and with or
without prior notice.
No one has the authority to
make any express or implied representations in connection with, or in any way
limit, an employee’s right to resign or [the Employer’s] right to terminate an
employee at any time, for any reason or for no reason, with or without prior
notice. Nothing in this handbook creates an employment agreement, express
or implied, or any other agreement between any employee and [the Employer].
No statement, act, series of
events or pattern of conduct can change this at-will relationship.
(Brackets in original).
In finding the above
provision to be lawful, the GC’s Office reasoned:
- the language, on its face, did not expressly limit any union organizing or concerted activity;
- the employer did not promulgate the disclaimer in response to union organizing or concerted activity;
- the employer had not applied the policy unlawfully;
- employees could not reasonably construe the provision to prohibit union organizing or concerted actions;
- the language did not threaten discipline for employees seeking to unionize to change their at-will status; and
- the policy did not ask employees to waive any rights they held under Section 7.
In concluding the policy was
lawful, the General Counsel’s Office essentially aligned with what employers
have long intended regarding their at-will disclaimers: such provisions
have everything to do with providing a rock-solid defense to claims by
ex-employees for breach of an implied employment contract and nothing
whatsoever to do with inhibiting union organizing or other concerted
activity. While the latest news from Washington, D.C., is clearly
favorable and pro-employer, employers should nevertheless carefully review any
at-will policy to ensure it is lawful, in light of the NLRB’s continued
interest in scrutinizing such provisions.
Source: JD
Supra
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