Senate Democrats Progress on EFCA Compromise

United States SenateThe following is a reprint of a client alert recently authored by my partners Steven Swirsky and Jay Krupin.  It should be of interest to all Florida employers in the private sector. 

The past several days have brought potentially significant developments with respect to Senate Democrats' efforts to enact labor law reform and bring the Employee Free Choice Act to a vote on the Senate floor. Reports have circulated that a consensus has begun to emerge among Senate Democrats for a bill that would remove EFCA's controversial provisions eliminating secret ballot elections where a union has obtained signatures from more than 50 percent of the employees in the proposed bargaining unit, and instead would provide for significantly faster NLRB-conducted elections, within five to ten days of the filing of a representation petition. The bill would also provide for greater access to employees and to employer property during the campaign period. Presently, NLRB-conducted elections are typically held an average of 45 days after the union files a petition. Along with faster elections, the reported compromise would include increased access by unions to employer premises to campaign among employees, as well as increased restrictions on employer campaign rights. EFCA's other most controversial component, compulsory binding arbitration of the economic and other terms of initial collective bargaining agreements where the parties do not quickly reach agreement, is reported to remain a part of the compromise bill.

While the Democrats reached 60 votes in the Senate when Arlen Specter of Pennsylvania switched his party affiliation from Republican to Democrat and Al Franken was finally declared the victor over Norm Coleman in Minnesota, the fact is that there remain a substantial block of Democratic senators who have expressed doubt about EFCA's card check language and who have indicated that they are not prepared to support a bill that would eliminate secret ballot elections. The compromise language is intended to draw their support, while fulfilling the Democrats' commitment to change the law to make it easier for unions to organize.

This past Friday, The New York Times reported that a number of key Democratic Senators, including supporters of the card check bill, had indicated their willingness to compromise on an alternate form of EFCA that preserved secret ballot elections. A number of union leaders have indicated that such a compromise bill would still, from their perspective, represent an "important victory" because it would lead to faster elections and make it easier for workers to unionize. That compromise would eliminate EFCA's provisions calling for recognition on the basis of a card check and preserve NLRB-conducted secret ballot elections but would significantly change the procedures surrounding elections in a number of ways that would make it easier for unions to win and much more difficult for employers to ensure that employees were fully informed and able to weigh all of the facts before casting their votes.

  • First, it is reported that the proposed amendments to EFCA would require that representation elections take place within five and ten calendar days of the union's filing a petition for an election.
  • The compromise legislation would include "access," meaning that employers would be required to permit a union trying to organize to come onto its property to seek signatures on cards (which unions would still use as evidence of a showing of interest to secure an election), to hold meetings at which it would be able to campaign with the employees during the days preceding the election and to counter any messages the employer might seek to convey.
  • Under the current law, employers have the right to require their employees to attend meetings (so long as they are not held during the last 24 hours before the voting begins) where the employer may present its views to the employees about why they would be better off voting against union representation. Organized labor has dubbed these meetings and the remarks presented at them as "captive audience speeches" because the employer is able to require employees to attend—the unions claim the employees are held captive. One proposed amendment to EFCA would make it unlawful for employers to require employees to attend meetings where the employer presents its point of view.
  • The compromise also reportedly calls for increased use of voting by mail in representation elections. While the NLRB has long used mail ballots where it deems them necessary, they have generally been viewed as less reliable and have been disfavored and only used in a small percentage of elections today.

Significantly, the compromise bill would continue to include the other most controversial provision of EFCA, that is, the requirement of government-conducted binding interest arbitration to set the terms of a first collective bargaining agreement where the parties do not reach quick agreement. Under EFCA, an arbitrator would set the terms of an initial two-year contract. EFCA does not provide any real detail as to what limitations or direction would apply to the arbitrator in doing so.

From an employer's perspective, the reported compromise continues to represent a serious concern and in many respects is not significantly better than the original version of the EFCA bill. While it would preserve the concept of a secret ballot election, the call for a very short, five to ten day time span between the filing of a petition and the NLRB conducting the vote means, realistically, that employers will not have any meaningful opportunity to put together a campaign and present the important counter arguments to the promises that the union will have made while it has been collecting signatures on cards. Such fast elections would follow the lines of the model followed in Canada under the various provincial labor relations laws. This means that the resolution of such critical issues, such as the determination of what is the appropriate unit for bargaining, which employees are supervisors and/or managers and thus who is actually eligible to vote and take part in the election and organizing campaign would not be addressed and resolved until after the election is held.

As noted, the proposed compromise bill would also not only take away such communications tools as mandatory all employee meetings, the revised legislation appears likely to also provide unions and organizers with access to employers' facilities, such as meeting rooms, email systems, and the like to conduct their campaigns.

It is worth noting that, under existing law, the NLRB already has held that in some cases employers must allow unions such access as "special remedies" where the Board finds that employer unfair labor practices have seriously interfered with its election processes and employees' rights under the Act. The courts have affirmed the Board has the authority to grant such relief and thus it should be noted that an "Obama Board" might well seek to expand the use of such remedies even before or without Congressional action on EFCA.

Given all of the above, if EFCA were to be enacted in the modified form described above or in some similar form, employers would clearly be facing a significantly altered organizing landscape, one in which unions would have many tools and tactical advantages that they do not have today. This will likely be true regardless of whether card check is ultimately included in EFCA or other labor law reform legislation. Employers need to face the reality that union organizing will likely move deeper underground and that by the time that an employer receives notice that a representation petition has been filed with the NLRB and that an election will be held within the following week, it will often be too late to begin the process of convincing the employees why they are better off without representation.

 

 

Litigation to Rise With New NLRB Rules, Employee Free Choice Act

The following is a reprint of a client alert recently authored by my partners Steven Swirsky and Kara Maciel.  It should be of interest to all Florida employers in the private sector. 

Litigation to Rise With New NLRB Rules, Employee Free Choice Act

Recent changes to the National Labor Relations Board ("the Board") procedures and the looming threat of passage of the Employee Free Choice Act ("EFCA") could significantly impact employers defending their termination decisions of employees in the face of union activity. It is increasingly likely that the Board will challenge, and employers will be forced to litigate, an appropriate back-pay damage award to an employee.

In 2007, the Board issued its decision in St. George Warehouse, 351 NLRB No. 42 (2007), which, for the first time, shifted part of the burden of proof from the employer to the Board regarding the issue of whether a terminated worker failed to adequately mitigate back-pay damages by searching for a substantially equivalent job, which would reduce the amount of back-pay owed. Earlier this month, the Board’s General Counsel issued a Guideline Memorandum to its regional attorneys which sets forth and further explains the Board’s new burden of proof and how presentation of evidence should be allocated in a compliance proceeding.

Prior to St. George Warehouse, when the Board alleged that an employer’s decision to terminate a worker violated the National Labor Relations Act, the Board initially bore the burden of demonstrating the amount of back-pay damages (i.e. what the worker would have earned but for the illegal discrimination) that the worker was owed from the employer. The employer then had an opportunity to present an affirmative defense, arguing that the worker did not properly mitigate post-employment damages by failing to adequately search for interim employment. To prove failure to mitigate, the employer had to present evidence that substantially equivalent jobs were available in the relevant geographic area during the relevant time period, and that the employee had failed to apply for these jobs. Employers challenged the employee’s failure to accept a slightly lower paying or skilled position as unreasonable efforts in the mitigation of damages. Equally important, the employer demanded records concerning an employee’s job search and proof of registrations with state and/or private employment services. Often, employers hired an expert to challenge an employee’s efforts with statistics and numbers.

Under the current law, in light of the Board’s St. George Warehouse decision, employers no longer carry the difficult burden of proving whether an employee conducted a diligent job search. Once an employer has proved that there were substantially equivalent jobs available to the worker, the burden then shifts to the Board to prove that the worker took reasonable steps to seek those jobs. While the ultimate burden of proof remains with the employer as to whether the employee failed to mitigate damages, the Board must now take certain steps in its investigation and prosecution of the case. For example, the Board attorneys must instruct employees to begin their search for work within a short time-frame following termination and to maintain careful records of their employment search. Additionally, workers will be directed to register with state and private employment services and check newspapers and internet advisements, and the Board attorneys will conduct their own investigation regarding the availability of jobs. Further, the General Counsel suggests that regional attorneys defend an employee’s failure to secure a job by arguing that the employee’s age, health, education, job skills, employment history, physical disability or lack of access to a car prevents the employee from finding a new position.

This change to Board procedures increases the likelihood that the Board attorneys seeking back-pay for workers will have to litigate whether the workers conducted a reasonable search for work, making it more costly for employers to defend such cases and more likely that they will seek a resolution without having to present evidence at a compliance proceeding.

The issue will become even more difficult for employers in the event that the Employee Free Choice Act becomes law in 2009. Under the current version of the bill, in addition to injunctive relief, the EFCA will increase the amount of monetary fines and back-pay imposed on employers that terminate workers during union organizing campaigns. Thus, if an employer terminates a union activist, under the EFCA, the worker could seek three-times the amount of back-pay otherwise owed to the employee, as a penalty to the employer. The increased financial exposure to employers under the EFCA will certainly encourage employers to challenge whether the worker had appropriately mitigated damages following employment, making the new burdens under St. George Warehouse even more important for employers.

With Board procedures changing and the EFCA looming, employers should be ready to put forth a strong defense to alleged unfair labor practices that result in a worker’s termination. It will become financially imperative for employers to take the time and pay the cost to adequately defend these cases in order to reduce the increased monetary fines and back-pay awards that the Board will be seeking.

What Would an Obama Victory Mean for Florida Employers?

Recent poll numbers showing Barack Obama with a substantial lead over John McCain have got me thinking about what an Obama victory would mean for Florida employers. 

The Employee Free Choice Act, which Obama touts in this campaign speech,

could have a major impact on Florida employers if enacted into law.  Currently most Florida employers in the private sector are union-free, in large part because Florida is a right-to-work state.  In particular, Article I, Section 6 of the Florida Constitution provides in part that "[t]he right of persons to work shall not be denied or abridged on account of membership or non-membership in any labor union or labor organization."

The EFCA would not change Florida's status as a right-to-work state. But it would jump-start the growth of unions by amending the National Labor Relations Act to eliminate an employer's right to demand a secret ballot election in cases in which a majority of employees have signed union authorization cards and there is no evidence of illegal coercion. Under the EFCA, a secret ballot election would be held only if more than 30%, but less than a majority of employees sign union authorization cards.  The bill provides that "[i]f the National Labor Relations Boad finds that a majority of the employees in a unit appropriate for bargaining has signed valid authorizations designating the individual or labor organization specified in the petition as their bargaining representative and that no other individual or labor organization is currently certified or recognized as the exclusive representative of any of the employees in the unit, the Board shall not direct an election but shall certify the individual or labor organization as the representative...." (emphasis supplied). 

Not surprisingly, the AFL-CIO supports the EFCA and summarizes the bill favorably on its web site.  But the Heritage Foundation argues that under the EFCA, "[w]orkers would never have the option of voting against union membership, and millions of workers could be forced into a union without ever getting the chance to vote on the matter." 

Another law that may be amended to be more employee-friendly under an Obama administration (if not sooner) is the Americans with Disabilities Act.  The Connecticut Employment Law Blog reports on proposed amendments to the ADA here

Stay tuned for further developments.