The Obama administration should be allowed to speed up
the process by which employees unionize, a federal judge ruled Monday.
Judge Robert Pitman of the U.S. District Court for the
Western District of Texas tossed out a lawsuit from business groups challenging
the National Labor Relations Board’s (NLRB) union election rule
The National Federation of Independent Business (NFIB)
and the Texas chapters of the Associated Builders and Contractors (ABC) argued
that speeding up union elections would not give companies enough time to prepare.
“We are deeply disappointed by the Texas court ruling and
we plan to appeal the decision,” said Karen Harned, executive director of the
NFIB's Small Business Legal Center, a plaintiff in the Texas case.
The NLRB, which has maintained the rule is needed to
prevent businesses from using delaying tactics to block employees from
organizing, declined to comment.
The NLRB’s rule — maligned as the “ambush election” rule
in business circles — could allow union elections to occur as little as two
weeks after a petition is filed, critics claim.
Currently, it takes an average of 38 days to hold a union
election, according to the NLRB.
Businesses say the shorter time frame would make it
difficult for them to prepare and give labor groups an inherent advantage.
"The ambush election is a very badly disguised
effort on the part of the federal government to rig the outcome of union
elections in favor of organized labor and we don’t believe it’s legal,” Harned
said.
Pitman disagreed.
“[The] plaintiffs point to nothing in the record which
supports their conclusion that the board intended to favor organized labor,” he
wrote.
The NLRB’s rule has now withstood congressional and legal
attempts to overthrow it.
Congressional Republicans pushed through a measure that
would have overturned the rule earlier this year, but they were unable to
override President Obama’s veto.
Another lawsuit from a different set of business groups —
including the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, National Association of Manufacturers,
and National Retail Federation — is still pending in federal court.
The NFIB has vowed to appeal the judge’s decision in a
case that could make its way to the Supreme Court.
Source: The
Hill
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