Title: REPUBLIC AVIATION Key Points
1REPUBLIC AVIATIONKey Points
- Balancing of Ees rights of self-org with Ers
property rights to maintain discipline and an
orderly worksite a tension Board must address. - Finding against no-solicitation and
no-distribution rules - workplace and working hours uniquely appropriate
for self-organization - freedom of association
- on ees own time at the workplace
- Board authority to make inferences on effects on
ee rights from proven facts - Normal conversation in work area may include
discussion of unionization
2NO SOLICITATION RULES
- Presumptively invalid outside of retailing if
they prohibit solicitation on company property
during nonworking time (Republic Aviation) - Privileged in retailing - er may prohibit
solicitation in selling areas during nonwork time
(Montgomery Ward)
3Legal Work Rules
- Using abusive or profane language in the
presence of, or directed toward, a supervisor,
another employee, a resident,a doctor, a visitor,
a member of a residents family, or any other
person on company property (the premises). - Harassment of other employees, supervisors and
any other individuals in any way. Sexual
harassment is covered by (another rule). - Verbally, mentally, or physically abusing . . .
a fellow employee or a supervisor under any
circumstances. This includes physical and verbal
threats.
SOURCE Martin Luther Memorial Home, 343 N.LR.B.
No. 75, 2004
4Is this work rule, adopted by a security firm, in
violation of Section 8(a)(1)?
- While on duty you must NOT . . . fraternize on
duty or off duty, date or become overly friendly
with the clients employees or with
co-employees. - See Guardsmark LLC, 344 N.L.R.B. No 97, 2005.
5(No Transcript)
6BABCOCK AND WILCOXKey Points
- Sec. 7 refers to the right of self-organization
- right does not extend to unions attempting to
organize employees e.g. unions do not have
rights under NLRA separate from ee rights - Ees must be inaccessible beyond reasonable union
efforts in order for union to be permitted on
ers property
7Lechmere
- Distinction between
- Employees, who have Section 7 Rights
- Nonemployees who do not have Section 7 Rights
- Unions and organizers
- Rights of nonemployees derived from rights of
employees - Balancing principle of Republic Aviation does not
apply to nonemployees - Rejection of Boards attempt to balance in Jean
Country - Hudgens not applicable involved employee
activity - ees who do not reside on ers property
presumptively not beyond reach of reasonable
union efforts
8LECHMERE Two-Part Analysis
Did union have Reasonable Access to Employees
off Of employers Property?
Board may balance between Impairment of rights
to organize And property rights, Per Republic
Aviation and Jean Country
No
Yes
Accommo- dation Exists, Trespass Not Permitted
9Lechmere Criteria
- Babcock quote . . . that an employer may
validly post his property against nonemployee
distribution of union literature if reasonable
efforts by the union through other available
channels of communication will enable it to reach
the employees with its message and if the
employer's notice or order does not discriminate
against the union by allowing other
distribution. (351 U.S. 105, 112) - Lechmere quotes
- . . . Babcock's holding that an employer need
not accommodate nonemployee organizers unless the
employees are otherwise inaccessible (502 U.S.
527, 534) - Because the employees do not reside on
Lechmere's property, they are presumptively not
beyond the reach, . . . of the union's
message (502 U.S. 527,540) - Is Lechmere an application of or an extension of
Babcock?
10Lechmere - Dissent
- That inaccessibility would warrant union access
does not mean other circumstances would not
warrant union access - Babcock principle of reasonable access should
be flexible - Court fails to defer to admin agency Jean
Country not unreasonable - Court should remand to Board for consideration of
case under two-part test, not take over Boards
role
11Lechmere
- Employer may prohibit nonemployee union
organizers from entering upon its property to
organize employees provided employees are not
otherwise inaccessible
12Discrimination in Access?
- Should employer be permitted to permit charitable
groups to solicit, but ban unions from
soliciting? - Conventional Doctrine Er may nondiscriminatorily
prohibit nonee organizers from entering its
property - If employer permits non-labor outside (such as
charitable) solicitation, it must permit unions
to solicit - blend of interference under 8(a)(1) and discrim.
under 8(a)(3) - Evolving Doctrine not illegal discrimination
under NLRA to prohibit non-employee solicitation
and still permit non-labor (e.g., charitable)
solicitation - Employer Rights Theory
- Separation between labor and nonlabor employer
domains - Discrimination defined as favoring one union over
another, or allowing employer-related information
while barring similar union-related information - Ers have right to permit charities to solicit on
their property - See Albertsons v. NLRB, 301 F. 3rd 441 (6th
Cir., 2002)
13- The judge found, and we agree, that the
Respondent unlawfully denied IAPE's requests to
meet on the Respondent's property . . . . He
effectively concluded that the Respondent's
application of its policy precluding "outside
organizations" from the use of its premises
constituted unlawful disparate treatment as
applied to IAPE, because the Respondent
interpreted the same policy to permit meetings on
its property for other organizations for
example, a women's group made up of the
Respondent's employees and focused on workplace
issues of particular interest to women a
minority employees' group also made up of the
Respondent's employees and focused on
minority-employee workplace issues a
weight-reduction program for employees conducted
by an independent organization and a similarly
independently conducted smoke-ending program for
employees. The judge found that the Respondent
could not permit this array of employee
activities and meetings at its facilities and at
the same time lawfully deny the same kind of
access to IAPE, an organization not only existing
for the purpose of representing the Respondent's
employees on matters of terms and conditions of
employment, but also made up entirely of the
Respondent's employees. The judge also properly
concluded that the Respondent's particular
interpretation of its policy--that an "outside
organization" must have a "Dow Jones
business-related purpose" to gain access to its
meeting facilities--did not coherently and
objectively distinguish between the activities
permitted and the union activity denied. (Dow
Jones And Company, Inc, 318 NLRB 574, 574-75,
1995).
14- To discriminate in the enforcement of a
no-solicitation policy cannot mean that an
employer commits an unfair labor practice if it
allows the Girl Scouts to sell cookies, but is
shielded from the effect of the Act if it
prohibits them from doing so. . . .. Although the
Court has never clarified the meaning of the
term, and we have found no published court of
appeals cases addressing the significance of
"discrimination" in this context, we hold that
the term "discrimination" as used in Babcock
means favoring one union over another, or
allowing employer-related information while
barring similar union-related information. . . .
Although we are respectful of the Board's
interpretation, we are not compelled to follow it
when it rests on erroneous legal foundations . .
. . No relevant labor policies are advanced by
requiring employers to prohibit charitable
solicitations in order to preserve the right to
exclude nonemployee distribution of union
literature when access to the target audience is
otherwise available. The purpose of section
8(a)(1) is to prevent employers from interfering
with employees' exercise of section 7 rights. An
owner of private commercial property who permits
a charitable organization to distribute
information or conduct solicitations on its
property simply does not implicate the policies
of the NLRA and does not, without more, render an
employer guilty of an unfair labor practice when
later it chooses to follow the general rule of
"validly posting its property against
nonemployee distribution of union
literature."Cleveland Real Estate Partners, NLRB,
95 F.3d 457, 65 USLW 2217, 153 L.R.R.M. (BNA)
2285, 6th Cir. 1996.)
15GENERAL PRINCIPLE Employees have the right to
engage in self-organization, including obtaining
information about unions. Generally, unions do
not have the right to enter the employers
property, because the employee right is one of
self-organization. Therefore the employer may
generally prohibit a union that is organizing
from entering the employers property if the
union is able to reach employees through
reasonable efforts. But employer may
discriminate in access to its property.
- Labor Lens/Motivation Framework Conventional
View - Why would the employer wish to keep the union off
the property? Assuming that the employer is not
prohibiting a union from entering the property to
deprive employees of pro-union information, it
must be that permitting an outsider union on the
property is disruptive to the orderly operation
of the business. Thus, if the employer permits
other outsiders on the property, but not unions,
it suggests that the true motive for the
prohibition is not avoidance of business
disruption, but rather depriving employees of
information useful to self-organization.
- Management Rights/Property Rights
Framework/Business Decisions Evolving View - Thus, an employer may permit outside solicitation
because it wishes to do so (perhaps because it
wishes to cultivate goodwill in the community).
Such permission is a business matter unrelated to
the employers labor policies and practices. On
the other hand, if the employer permits
solicitation by one union but not another union,
or uses outside organization solicitation to
support matters related to employment, then it
can be presumed that the employers intent is to
discriminate against the union, because the
employer is using its premises for outside
organizations to solicit on employment-related
matters.
16E-mail Solicitation
- Is e-mail system
- employees work area in which ees may discuss
unionization? - employer equipment that employer may control for
its own use? - See Adtranz, ABB Daimler-Benz Transportation
Inc., 331 N.L.R.B. No. 40 (2000) - Employer may bar nonbusiness use of its property
or equipment, - unless
- violations of that policy are tolerated
- rule not enforced
- may not discriminatorily tolerate only nonunion
information or enforce rule only against union
information - Other electronic solicitation issues
- Definition of work area
- Harm to employer through use of e-mail system
17Excelsior List
- Employer must provide to Board names and
addresses of employees when union has made a
showing of substantial interest and the Board has
scheduled an election Excelsior Underwear Inc.,
156 N.L.R.B. 1236 (1966), NLRB v. Wyman-Gordon,
Inc. 394 U.S. 759 (1969). - List made available to union.