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    nlra

    Explore " nlra" with insightful episodes like "Labor Law Series Episode #5: Employees’ Protected Activity Under the NLRA in the US", "Rona Spa", "On strike! Hope and challenges for the labor movement", "516: US Employers – The NLRB Has Just Made Many Common Work Rules Unlawful" and "Pause Before You Discipline: NLRB Turns Against Civility in Lion Elastomers Decision" from podcasts like ""Employment Matters", "Lawyers Behaving Badly", "Policy for the People", "Employment Matters" and "The Labor Law Insider"" and more!

    Episodes (11)

    Labor Law Series Episode #5: Employees’ Protected Activity Under the NLRA in the US

    Labor Law Series Episode #5: Employees’ Protected Activity Under the NLRA in the US

    In this episode, we discuss the recent activity at the NLRB this last year, particularly employees’ protected activity under the National Labor Relations Act, as it affects not only employers that deal with unions, but also those that are union free.  Subscribe to our podcast today to stay up to date on employment issues from law experts worldwide.

    Host: Tara Stingley (email) (Cline Williams Wright Johnson & Oldfather, LLP / Nebraska)

    Guest Speaker: Francine Esposito (email) (Day Pitney LLP / New Jersey)

    View the related article here

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    On strike! Hope and challenges for the labor movement

    On strike! Hope and challenges for the labor movement

    All of the strike activity we’re seeing right now is a hopeful sign for those who want to see an economy that works for everyone. In this episode, we speak with Margaret Poydock and Jennifer Sherer of the Economic Policy Institute, co-authors of the recent report What to know about this summer’s strike activity. We discuss what’s driving the recent wave of strikes, the challenges workers encounter when seeking to strike, and the policy changes that would strengthen workers’ ability to act collectively. 

    516: US Employers – The NLRB Has Just Made Many Common Work Rules Unlawful

    516: US Employers – The NLRB Has Just Made Many Common Work Rules Unlawful

    In today's episode, we discuss the National Labor Relations Board’s conclusion on the Stericycle  case, addressing evaluation of workplace rules and whether they violate the NLRA. Read Chad's article on this topic here. Subscribe to our podcast today to stay up to date on employment issues from law experts worldwide.

    Host: Susan Deniker (email) (Steptoe & Johnson PLLC / West Virginia)

    Guest Speaker: Chad Horton (email) (Shawe Rosenthal LLP / Maryland)

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    Pause Before You Discipline: NLRB Turns Against Civility in Lion Elastomers Decision

    Pause Before You Discipline: NLRB Turns Against Civility in Lion Elastomers Decision

    Host Tom Godar and his guest Rufino Gaytán tackle the newly expanded protections offered employees under the National Labor Relations Board’s Lion Elastomers decision, published May 1, 2023. As part of the ping-pong effect of a Biden-appointed Board following a Trump-appointed Board following an Obama-appointed Board, employee protections for violations of employer’s policies that were previously available have been restored. This allows employee behavior in the context of concerted activities, such as shouting racial epithets, or engaging in coarse and even potentially threatening conduct, to be excused as part of the real world of labor relations as it is seen on picket lines or in other situations of conflict. This overruled the 2020 General Motors decision which held that the Board must look to employer intent and good faith in applying employer policies or standards regarding conduct, even if it was also related to National Labor Relations Act. That decision had attacked the standards set forth in Cooper Tire and other decisions; however, the Lion Elastomers decision makes it much more difficult for employers to balance the responsibility to address behavior in the workplace with the rights of employees to engage in concerted activities challenging the employer, its employees, or policies. Mr. Gaytán acknowledges that while General Counsel Abruzzo suggests that there is no inherent conflict with this position, and enforcement of employee rights to be free from threatening behavior or a hostile workplace, the analytical framework to make decisions which balance these rights is hardly easy to apply.

    In episode two of this podcast, Tom and Rufino continue their discussion and look at the potential impact upon those employers who do not have union-represented employees. They also discuss some of the practical implications of balancing the newly articulated rights of employees and the overall responsibility of employers to protect all of the employees in the workplace from improper conduct. Join us soon for part two of the Labor Law Insider.

    A re-energized labor movement sparks hope

    A re-energized labor movement sparks hope

    In an earlier era, a vibrant labor movement nurtured a broad middle class. But half-a-century ago, under severe attack from corporations, the fortunes of organized labor began to turn for the worse.

    Right now, though, we are seeing hopeful signs of a revival of union power, explains Mark Brenner, an economist and co-director of the Labor Education and Research Center (LERC) at the University of Oregon. Mark discusses the past and present state of the labor movement.

    Few workers face greater challenges than farmworkers, who endure low-pay and dangerous working conditions while performing truly essential work. In the second half of the show, Reyna Lopez, executive director of Pineros Y Campesinos Unidos del Noroeste (PCUN), discusses the challenges faced by Oregon’s farmworker movement, as well as its achievements and aspirations.

    Offensive Speech in the Workplace - Part II: Drawing the Line

    Offensive Speech in the Workplace - Part II: Drawing the Line

    In this Labor Law Insider podcast episode, Tom Godar is joined by Husch Blackwell attorney Sonni Nolan and firm alum Kat Pearlstone, as they conclude their exploration on protection of employee’s speech under the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA). In episode #10, the first in this series, the Labor Law Insider explored how disrespectful, crude and offensive speech may still be protected as concerted expressions under the NLRA. In this episode the panelists look at the standard for review of potentially protected speech, how threats of violence are treated under section 7 of the NLRA, the tricky world of social media comments that target people or business, and some best practices to eliminate or at least reduce the risk of an unfair labor practice charge.

    The good news is the return to the more helpful standard for assessing whether protection should be accorded an expression made by the employee. First, the employee will have to demonstrate that he or she engaged in protected conduct, that the employer knew of such conduct and the employer acted with animus against the protected activity by counseling, discipline or discharge. Upon this proof, the employer would have the burden to respond and offer a legitimate business reason, not based on protected Union activity, for its action. General Motors LLC, 369 N.L.R.B. No. 127, 2020 BL 270474.

    One area which can cross the eyes of an employer is related to possible threats of violence, and whether they would be entitled protection under the NLRA. In those cases, the Board may assess whether a provocative statement, is mere hyperbole, or a legitimate threat of violence. Kiewit Power Constructors Co., v. NLRB, 652 F.3d 22 (D.C.Cir. 2011). Employers would be asked to excuse certain threatening words as essentially not credible but are left with the near impossible task of ferreting out real threats from just excited expressions.

    Another focus of the discussion is on statements receiving protection made via social media comments. Indeed, as employees work from home at an increasing rate during and following the COVID pandemic, more of these offensive and possibly harassing or threatening comments may come through the internet and social media as opposed to directed activities in the workplace. As a result, employers will have a very difficult job of not only interpreting whether these statements may be protected, but even investigating these comments. For instance, it is not unusual that employees who are identified as making these social medial comments would deny making those statements and merely claim that their account was hacked. This presents a very difficult burden for the employer to prove or disprove that an account was hacked, yet at least some decisions experienced by our Labor Law Insiders suggest that that is precisely the burden the employer would carry. This may be true in the context of a disciplined or fired employee claiming an Unfair Labor Practice, or if actions were challenged, not under the NLRA but, for instance, in the context of an arbitration under a collective bargaining agreement appeals process. Further, other “innocent” employees complaining about comments, may not offer sufficient proof of harassing or threatening conduct if the victim making the complaint has since deleted the text or other comment from his or her social media feed.  

    At least one option for the employer is to ignore gross or disrespectful comments on the internet or through social media, with the hope that they will soon fade away, and with the recognition that rising to the bait of such comments with a response may only render greater public dialogue and further exposure of often untrue statements.

    As with so many of these issues, the panelists urge hiring and retaining excellent supervisors who are trained not to react, but to act with deliberation upon receiving or reviewing such obnoxious comments. Most employers have crafted policies which prohibit disrespectful speech, but supervisors must be trained in filtering through such policies to understand the implications of protected speech under the NLRA. In those cases, of course, counsel should be consulted for the latest iteration and interpretation of the breath of protected concerted action as interpreted by the NLRB and the Courts.

    Offensive Speech in the Workplace - Part I: Crossing the Line

    Offensive Speech in the Workplace - Part I: Crossing the Line
    In this Labor Law Insider podcast episode, Tom Godar and fellow Husch Blackwell attorneys Sonni Nolan and Kat Pearlstone explore the breadth of National Labor Relations Act (NLRA) protection of employee speech that can be disrespectful, crude or offensive. These protections extend to both the non-union workplace and the unionized workplace. Employers are charged with drawing a line at the workplace, curbing offensive, disrespectful, harassing and discriminatory remarks. These disrespectful remarks can be oral or written, placed on employer-maintained bulletin boards or disseminated through social medial. However, under Section 7 of the NLRA, employees have great latitude to engage in protected speech, even when considered offensive or crude or when it targets individuals or businesses. As both National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) and court decisions reveal, there are many instances when employers, whether dealing with a union-represented or a non-unionized workforce, cannot discipline or terminate an employee for what might otherwise be considered prohibited conduct either in the workplace or impacting the workplace. Oftentimes a protected comment or statement can occur in a non-union workplace when employees are criticizing management or management policies, disrespecting specific managers or owners, or even harassing co-employees. These aggressive and offensive expressions can also occur when a union is attempting to organize in a non-union workplace. An employer’s initial reaction is often to discipline or discharge, consistent with a policy that prohibits such disrespectful or harassing speech. These expressions can also take place when a unionized workforce is engaging in a strike or picketing activity. Indeed, some of these statements can be seen as discriminatory or harassing, based on protected characteristics such as race, but may still receive protection under Section 7 of the NLRA. Employers are called upon to exercise extraordinary discretion in the balancing of Section 7 rights of protected and concerted expression with the rights of employees to work in a place free from discrimination or harassment under federal and state law. This podcast explores many of these issues and reviews both cases as well as practical circumstances in which these questions arise. A companion podcast, to be released in about two weeks, will delve more deeply into the issues of expressions which might be construed as a threat of violence, as well as those made in the social media context. Our expert panelists will then describe when these free speech protections become so disloyal, reckless or maliciously untrue as to lose protection. Kat and Sonni will also assess other cases in which the NLRB may find such obnoxious expression merely to be “protected hyperbole.” This podcast will begin to offer guidelines on recognizing where those lines are drawn, and how to avoid the enormous cost and distraction of serious NLRB litigation focused on employee speech. Importantly, that companion podcast will also explore with greater depth the steps employers can take to curb such expression in the first place, and how to respond to disrespectful and offensive speech, threading the needle of enforcing well-drafted policies and keeping away from violation of employee rights under the NLRA. Stay tuned, and look for that podcast in mid-April.

    Beware the Unfair Labor Practice: Not Just for Unions Anymore

    Beware the Unfair Labor Practice: Not Just for Unions Anymore
    In this episode, Husch Blackwell's Tom Godar, Kat Pearlstone and Sonni Nolan take an in-depth look at what an unfair labor practice is, why non-union employers need to be wary of these federal law violations, and how to avoid running afoul of the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA). They also discuss National Labor Relations Board (Board) General Counsel Jennifer Abruzzo’s recent guidance regarding the types of remedies available when an unfair labor practice occurs.

    Episode 303: NLRA Employee Status of Players at Academic Institutions

    Episode 303: NLRA Employee Status of Players at Academic Institutions

    In this episode, we discuss the memo received by the NLRB's General Counsel on student athletes and their possible status as employees. Subscribe to our podcast today to stay up to date on employment issues from law experts worldwide.

    Moderator: Susan Deniker (Steptoe & Johnson, PLLC / West Virginia)

    Guest Speakers: Neil Goldsmith (Lathrop GPM LLP / Minnesota) & Peter Jones (Bond, Schoeneck & King, PLLC / Upstate New York)

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    Episode 270: The Changing Landscape of Labor Law Under the Biden Administration

    Episode 270: The Changing Landscape of Labor Law Under the Biden Administration

    In this episode, we discuss what the National Labor Relations Act is, what it requires, and who it applies to. We also explain how the NLRA is playing out under the Biden Administration. Subscribe to our podcast today to stay up to date on employment issues from law experts worldwide.

    Moderator: Tara Stingley (Cline Williams Wright Johnson & Oldfather, LLP / Nebraska)

    Guest Speaker: Francine Esposito (Day Pitney LLP / New Jersey)

    Support the show

    Register on the ELA website here to receive email invitations to future programs.

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