(Reuters) - McDonald's Corp (MCD.N) and some of its
franchisees were named jointly in complaints filed on Friday by the U.S.
National Labor Relations Board's Office of the General Counsel, accusing them
of labor violations in a widely anticipated move that could have wide-reaching
implications for businesses.
Complaints were filed in 78 cases claiming
that McDonald's workers across the country were fired or intimidated for
participating in union organizing and in a national protest movement calling
for higher wages.
The complaints strike new ground in treating McDonald's,
the world's largest restaurant chain, as a "joint employer," meaning
that it could be held liable along with its franchisees for any violations, the
NLRB's general counsel, Richard Griffin, said in a release.
Until now, McDonald’s and other companies that make wide
use of franchises and contract employers have been insulated from such
liability under the NLRB’s previous definition of what constituted a joint
employer.
A McDonald's spokeswoman said the company and franchisees
would fight the claims.
"These allegations are driven in large part by a
two-year, union-financed campaign that has targeted the McDonald’s brand and
impacted McDonald’s restaurants," said Lisa McComb, a company spokeswoman.
The complaints will be considered by administrative law
judges beginning in March 2015; the decisions can be appealed to the
five-member NLRB and ultimately to federal courts.
While Friday's move was the first step in a long process,
it has the potential to rewrite long-held rules governing labor relations
between parent companies and franchises that are run as independent businesses.
For the last three decades, the NLRB has
held that franchisers may only be considered joint employers if they are
involved in setting wages and hiring workers.
Mary Joyce Carlson, counsel for the Fast Food Workers
Organizing Committee, the union-backed group behind the protest movement, said
Griffin was right to treat McDonald's as a joint employer because of the
control it exerts over franchises, including the way food is prepared and
served.
Trade groups said the decision to treat
McDonald's as a joint employer would lead to uncertainty about how employment
agreements are enforced and when companies can be sued for labor violations.
“This is chaos,” said Michael Lotito, a lawyer with law
firm Littler Mendelson who represents companies in labor disputes.
The real losers could be the franchisees if companies
decide to abandon the franchise model, said Robert Cresanti, vice president of
the International Franchise Association, whose membership includes McDonald's.
The franchise association says 8.5 million U.S. workers
are employed by franchises.
Griffin, in a separate case in June, asked
the NLRB to adopt a broader standard on joint employers that reflects the
influence companies like McDonald's have over working conditions, such as
requiring the use of scheduling software.
The board is set to decide in that case whether it will
begin to apply the broader standard, which would impact industries far beyond
fast food.
(Editing by Alexia Garamfalvi and Leslie Adler)
Source: Reuters
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