• The HR Specialist - Print Newsletter
  • HR Specialist: Employment Law
  • The HR Weekly

Labor Relations / Unions

What should we do? The law and our union rules are on a collision course over harassment

01/25/2012
Q. Our union agreement says we must give 48 hours’ notice before dismissing a regular employee. But we have proof that two employees have been har­­assing—and continue to harass—black and gay em­­ployees. In fact, their har­ass­ment just caused us to lose a good em­­ployee who couldn’t take it any ­longer. What trumps what?

Labor pains: NLRB keeps turning out anti-business hits

01/20/2012
The National Labor Relations Board is continuing its string of pro-union actions: 1. Arbitration agreements can’t ban class-action lawsuits. 2. New rules will speed up union elections. 3. Poster requirement delayed to April 30. 4. NLRB makes controversial recess appointments.

NLRB: Arbitration agreements can’t ban class-action lawsuits

01/10/2012
The National Labor Relations Board has ruled that employers can’t require employees to sign arbitration agreements that ban class-action lawsuits. The decision—almost certain to be challenged in court—caps months of controversy at the NLRB, the government body that enforces the National Labor Relations Act.

NLRB pushes back pro-union poster requirement to April 30

01/05/2012
The National Labor Relations Board has postponed until April 30 the date when employers must display a new pro-union poster. The change came at the request of a Wash­­­­­ing­­ton, D.C., federal court hearing business groups’ legal challenge re­­garding the rule.

Politics around the watercooler: Can you discipline ‘overly political’ workers?

12/26/2011

While today’s Iowa caucuses feel like the end of a long campaign season, it’s really just the beginning of a heated political year … one that could spill over into your workplace. Follow these tips for handling political activity in your workplace and employees’ political advocacy outside of work.

Faster union elections on the way following NLRB action

12/21/2011

On Nov. 30, 2011, the National Labor Relations Board voted 2-1 in favor of changing the union election rules to speed up the process of securing union representation in workplaces nationwide. The new rule shortens the time be­­tween the filing of an election petition and actual voting, making it easier for unions to win elections and more difficult for employers to communicate with employees before the vote.

Call your attorney ASAP when employee complaints involve union representation

12/14/2011
The rules regarding union representation and unfair labor practices are complex and confusing for employees and employers alike. That’s reason enough to get expert help with any union-related problems, including what to do when employees vote out a union.

Legality of new union poster faces hearing; ruling by Jan. 31

12/02/2011
A court hearing is scheduled for Dec. 19 on two business-backed lawsuits challenging the legality of the NLRB’s new requirement that U.S. employers display a new workplace poster describing employees’ union rights.

Hidden risk: Do your employee committees violate labor law?

11/28/2011

At first glance, management-employee participation groups seem legally risk-free. But looking deeper, such committees could, under certain circumstances, be viewed as illegal, employer-dominated unions under federal labor law.  Key point: According to a handful of NLRB rulings, an employer commits an unfair labor practice whenever it dominates any “labor organization.”

Legality of new union poster faces hearing; ruling by Jan. 31

11/22/2011
A court hearing is scheduled for Dec. 19 on two business-backed lawsuits challenging the legality of the National Labor Relations Board’s new requirement that U.S. employers display a new workplace poster describing employees’ union rights.