NLRB Reinstates “Micro Unit” Standard Making it Easier for Unions to Cherry Pick Voting Units

admin

December 15, 2022 Volume XII, Number 349 December 15, 2022 – OCC Revises Policies and Procedures for Civil Money Penalties by: Moorari Shah and A.J.S.Dhaliwal – Battle Lines Drawn on Electric Vehicle Tax Credit Specifics by: William Ball – Emerging Threats: Cyber Attacks and Side-Channel Evolution by: Iliana L.Peters and Colin H.Black – Guide to…

December 15, 2022

Volume XII, Number 349

December 15, 2022

– OCC Revises Policies and Procedures for Civil Money Penalties by: Moorari Shah and A.J.S.Dhaliwal

– Battle Lines Drawn on Electric Vehicle Tax Credit Specifics by: William Ball

– Emerging Threats: Cyber Attacks and Side-Channel Evolution by: Iliana L.Peters and Colin H.Black

– Guide to Creating a Corrective Action Plan Template by: Dr.Nick Oberheiden

– Ten Environmental and Energy Issues to Watch in 2023 by: J.Michael Showalter and Amy Antoniolli

– S.D.N.Y.Voids ERISA Plan’s Arbitration Provision by: Joseph E Clark and Daniel B.

Wesson

– DHS Issues Guidance on Additional H-2B Temporary Nonagricultural…by: Jessica Feinstein

– 12 Days of CRM: Day 1 – How to Measure CRM Success by: Christina R.Fritsch JD

– Staff Says Some Non-GAAP Financial Disclosures Are Beyond Redemptive…by: Keith Paul Bishop

– Full Speed Ahead: District Court Entitled to Explore Litigation…by: Amol Parikh

– Economically Motivated Adulteration in Honey by: Food and Drug Law at Keller and Heckman

– China Announces New Management Measures for Food-Related Products by: David J.Ettinger and Eric Gu

– Ratings Agencies Increase Focus on “Green Ratings” by: Jacob H.

Hupart

– Applying Collateral Estoppel in IPRs by: Alexandra Cavazos, PhD

– The Ultimate Lawyer Time Off Checklist by: Kamron Sanders

– PTO Announces Cancer Moonshot Expedited Examination Pilot Program by: Bernard P.

Codd

– Do Law Firms Use HubSpot? by: CRM News and Updates, Lawmatics

– The State of ESG Reporting in Australia by: Clive Cachia and Adam Levine

December 14, 2022

– Certain Green Cards Getting 24-Month Extensions as USCIS Deals With…

by: Michael H.Neifach

– Australia: Climate and Sustainability-Related Financial Disclosure…by: Jim Bulling

– New Washington State Guidance A Reminder That More State Pay…by: Aaron Vance

– NLRB Unleashes New Damages Against Labor Law Violators by: Mark J.Neuberger

– Illinois Appellate Court Weighs in on Biometric Data Policies by: David M.

Poell and Kari M.Rollins

– FTC Issues Green Guides Questionnaire by: Phyllis H.Marcus

– Webinar Recording: Navigating Today’s Privacy Compliance…

by: Cynthia J.Larose

– US Executive Branch Update – December 14, 2022 by: Stacy A.Swanson

– AML Bill Key to Busting Russian Oligarchs by: Stephen M.Kohn and Grace Schepis

– New York State Provides Protection for Use of Leaves of Absence by: Jonathan A.Wexler

– US Executive Branch Update – December 13, 2022 by: Stacy A.Swanson

– Looking Ahead to 2023: Pay Transparency Developments by: Allan S Bloom and Evandro C Gigante

– What Does 2023 Hold for California COVID-19 Supplemental Paid Sick…by: Benjamin A.Tulis

– AND ANOTHER ONE! TCPA CLASS DISCOVERY LIMITED: Third Party Subpoena…

by: Jenniffer Cabrera

– Speak Out Act Takes Effect, Enhanced Data Privacy Obligations for…by: George Carroll Whipple, III

– California Starts Mandating Employee Bereavement Leave in 2023 by: Paul R.Lynd

– GREAT LEGAL WORK: TCPA Defendant Wins a HUGE Certification Victory…by: Eric J.

Troutman

– 401(k) Compliance Check #12: Don’t Borrow Trouble – Correcting…by: Belinda S.Morgan

– FDA Published Food Safety Culture Literature Review by: Food and Drug Law at Keller and Heckman

– Does a business have to provide a privacy notice directly to a…by: David A.Zetoony

– New Privacy Enforcement Act Commences in Australia by: Cameron Abbott and Rob Pulham

– NYC Delays Enforcement of Automated Employment Decision Tools Law to…by: Lindsay Colvin Stone

– U.S.

Department of State to Update Design on Nonimmigrant and…by: Ashley K.Kerr

– Cannon Fire: Newly-Famous Judge Stays All Discovery in TCPA Class…by: Eric J.Troutman

– Why Do Law Firms Need CRM? by: CRM News and Updates, Lawmatics

– This California Rule by: Keith Paul Bishop

– UK Parliament Considers Retained EU Law (Revocation and Reform) Bill…by: Emma Thomson

December 13, 2022

– DOL Issues Final Rule Amending Investment Duties Regulation –…

by: James Frazier

– Renewed Era of Crypto Assets Growth in Hong Kong by: Jay Lee

– Division I Universities Must Be Ready for Changes to the NCAA…by: Paul V.Kelly

– Damages in Pre-Certification Discovery are Premature, Discovery…by: Jenniffer Cabrera

– When Chains Change, Do NFTs Stay The Same? How Hard Forks May Affect…

by: Jason H.Finger

– COVID-19: A Roadmap to Fraud Investigations: Office of Inspector…

by: Stephen D.Bittinger

– Update: OFCCP Plans to Disclose EEO-1 Data for Non-Objecting…by: Abby M.Warren

– DOJ Antitrust Division and HHS OIG Enter into Partnership to Increase…by: Diane Hazel

– Can Discovery Be Compelled from a Party? Possession, Custody, Control…by: Kathryn C.

Cole

– Weekly Bankruptcy Alert December 13, 2022 by: Bankruptcy & Creditors’ Rights

– All Things Chemical® Podcast: TSCA Regulation of Articles: The Saga…by: Lynn L.Bergeson

– Energy & Sustainability M&A Activity — December 2022 by: Thomas R.

Burton, III and Sahir Surmeli

– Energy & Sustainability IP Updates — December 2022 by: Brad M.Scheller

– SEC Reopens Proposal on Stock Buyback Rules by: Erin Reeves McGinnis

– Chips Chatter: December 5-12, 2022 by: Pablo E.Carrillo and Ludmilla L.Kasulke

– How Many Behavioral Advertising Trackers Do Websites Deploy Currently? by: David A.Zetoony

– FRB Proposes Climate-Related Financial Risk Management Principles by: Daniel Meade

– Energy & Sustainability Litigation Updates — December 2022 by: Jacob H.Hupart

– Cross Border Recognition, 25 years on: the view from each side of the…by: Michelle N.

Saney

– A New Era of Technology in the Private Markets by: Louis Lehot and Christopher Converse

– New York City Postpones Enforcement of Automated Employment Decision…by: Simone R.D.

Francis

– New Law Seeks To Curtail Coerced Debts by: Keith Paul Bishop

– Republican SEC Commissioners Continue to Criticize Proposed Climate…by: Jacob H.Hupart

December 12, 2022

– Raters gonna rate…but there’s a bright side! by: Daniel B.

Guggenheim

– SEC Awards More than $20 Million to Whistleblower by: Mary Jane Wilmoth

– Duty to Preserve Evidence Covers Climate Review by Higher Educational…by: Monica H.

Khetarpal and Laura A.Ahrens

– Preliminary Determination of Circumvention Regarding Solar Energy…

by: Gregory Husisian and John E.Turlais

– Estate Planning for Football Season Ticket Holders by: Katherine M.Szymanski and Rebecca K.Wrock

– Associate Attorney General Vanita Gupta Issues Statement on 2021 FBI…

by: United States Department of Justice (DOJ)

– NLRB General Counsel Proposes Lower Standard for Requiring Employers…by: Adam C.Abrahms and Steven M.Swirsky

NLRB Reinstates “Micro Unit” Standard Making it Easier for Unions to Cherry Pick Voting Units

Yesterday, the National Labor Relations Board (“Board” or “NLRB”) in American Steel Construction, Inc., 372 NLRB No.23 (2022) decided that employers must meet a heightened burden to expand a voting unit sought by a union in a union election.The decision is a significant development because it makes it easier for unions to organize workforces.And it marks yet another reversal of precedent by the Board to the benefit of unions.

(We’ve discussed prior reversals here and here.)

Background on Union Elections and Board Precedent

In order to petition the NLRB for a union election, a union must demonstrate that 30 percent of more of the employees in the unit it seeks to represent are interested in unionizing.

Despite the 30 percent threshold, the election ultimately is decided by a majority of votes cast so unions prefer to have a supermajority of employees express an interest in unionizing before asking the Board to hold an election.Practically speaking, the smaller the unit sought by the union, the less number of employees the union needs to get the union election process started.

As one might suspect, it is not uncommon for a union to propose a voting unit of employees that the union believes will best position it to win an election.Throughout most of the Board’s history, an employer could expand the voting unit sought by a union by showing that employees not in the union’s proposed unit share a sufficiently close “community of interest” with the petitioned-for unit.The community of interest analysis examines a number of factors, including: work departments; employee skills and training; employee job classifications and functions; functional integration among employees; frequency of contact among employees; interchange among employees; terms and conditions of employment; and employee supervision.

The standard for challenging the voting unit proposed by a union briefly changed in 2011 when the NLRB in Specialty Healthcare & Rehabilitation Center of Mobile, 357 NLRB 934 (2011), enfd.sub nom.Kindred Nursing Centers East, LLC v.

NLRB, 727 F.3d 552 (6th Cir.2013) enhanced the employer’s burden by requiring an employer to demonstrate that the employees it sought to add to the voting unit shared an “overwhelming” community of interest with the employees the union seeks to represent.

Six years later, the Board returned to the traditional standard in PCC Structurals, Inc., 365 NLRB No.160 (2017).A few years after that, the NLRB set forth a three-step process in The Boeing Co., 368 NLRB No.67 (2019) to elaborate upon the traditional community of interest test, explaining:

First, the proposed unit must share an internal community of interest.Second, the interests of those within the proposed unit and the shared and distinct interests of those excluded from that unit must be comparatively analyzed and weighed.

Third, consideration must be given to the Board’s decisions on appropriate units in the particular industry involved.

A Summary of the American Steel Construction Decision

In American Steel Construction, a union sought to represent journeymen and apprenticeship field ironworkers.The employer argued that the voting unit should include painters, drivers, and inside fabricators who worked in the employer’s shop.The regional director agreed with the employer, finding that the field ironworkers did not “possess a community of interest that is ‘sufficiently distinct’ from the [e]mployer’s remaining employees.” The union requested review of the regional director’s decision from the Board.The NLRB granted the request and invited interested parties to weigh-in on whether the Board should adhere to the PCC-Boeing standard, return to the Specialty Healthcare standard, or use some other standard to analyze whether employees should be added to a voting unit sought by a union.

In deciding the case, the NLRB proceeded to reinstate the “overwhelming” community of interest standard first announced in Specialty Healthcare.It remanded the case to the regional director for a new decision under that standard.

In so ruling, the Board opined that step two as articulated in Boeing was incorrect.

At the second step, …the PCC-Boeing test diverges significantly from Specialty Healthcare in terms of what it means for a petitioned-for unit to be “sufficiently distinct.” While Specialty Healthcare holds that a petitioned-for unit is sufficiently distinct unless the excluded employees share an “overwhelming community of interest” with the petitioned-for employees, PCC-Boeing holds that the petitioned-for unit is sufficiently distinct only if the “excluded employees have meaningfully distinct interests in the context of collective bargaining that outweigh similarities with the unit members.” The distinction between these two standards lies at the heart of PCC-Boeing, which focuses almost exclusively on the “overwhelming community of interest” standard and the supposedly undue deference it gave to petitioned-for units.

The NLRB explained that a petitioned-for unit of a “subdivision” of employees is appropriate if that subdivision: (1) shares an internal community of interest; (2) is readily identifiable as a group based on job classifications, departments, functions, work locations, skills, or similar factors; and (3) is sufficiently distinct.The Board added that, if an employer contends the petitioned-for unit is not sufficiently distinct, the NLRB will apply the traditional community of interest factors to determine whether the employees the employer seeks to add to the unit share an overwhelming community of interest with the petitioned-for unit.

In a dissent, the minority Board members criticized the reinstatement of the overwhelming community of interest standard.They noted that the decision departs from the traditional standard used by the NLRB for most of its history and disregards two central policies of the National Labor Relations Act: “ensuring to employees their rights to self-organization and freedom of choice,” and “fostering industrial peace and stability through collective bargaining.” The National Labor Relations Act “requires the Board to determine an appropriate unit for the purpose of collective bargaining—not, as out colleagues appear to believe, for the purpose of making it easier for unions to win elections,” explained the dissent.

Conclusion

The decision in American Steel Corporation provides unions with a key organizing advantage at a time when the American labor movement is poised for a resurgence.

This past year, NLRB election petition filings have increased by 57 percent.A recent Gallup poll shows the approval rating of union is at its highest point since 1965.Employers should be proactively working with labor counsel to understand what they can and should be doing at this very moment to protect themselves and their employees from unwelcomed union organizing efforts..

Leave a Reply

Next Post

NLRB Dramatically Increases Liability for Unfair Labor Practices with Far-Reaching “Consequential Damages”

December 15, 2022 Volume XII, Number 349 December 15, 2022 - Guide to Creating a Corrective Action Plan Template by: Dr.Nick Oberheiden - Ten Environmental and Energy Issues to Watch in 2023 by: J.Michael Showalter and Amy Antoniolli - S.D.N.Y.Voids ERISA Plan’s Arbitration Provision by: Joseph E Clark and Daniel B.Wesson - DHS Issues Guidance…

Subscribe US Now