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Divided NLRB Issues Controversial Expedited Election Rules
Friday, December 23, 2011

On December 22, 2011, the National Labor Relations Board (the "NLRB" or "Board") published final rules (76 Fed. Reg. 80138) adopted by the Board on a split 2-1 vote which reversed decades of precedent and practice as to how the Board will process representation proceedings. While the final rules place into effect only about one-half of the amendments proposed in its June 22, 2011, Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (76 Fed. Reg. 36812), leaving the others for "further deliberation," the amendments adopted by the Board dramatically change the substance, timing and procedures involved in union organizing campaigns and representation proceedings, and substantially alter the rights of the parties involved. The amendments adopt many of the "reforms" sought by organized labor through its previously unsuccessful efforts to secure passage of the Employee Free Choice Act. The following comments highlight some of the major changes made by the Board to representation case processing.

While the rules, scheduled to become effective April 30, 2012, have already been challenged in court, it is important for employers to evaluate where they are in terms of their labor relations and union free policies, how well prepared they are to respond to union organizing activities which conceivably could result in a representation election being conducted between 10 to 20 days after the filing of a petition, and how best to communicate with employees on an ongoing and expedited basis.

Among the more significant changes are those relating to initial stages of processing of a representation petition. Changes impact the all-important determination of the scope and composition of an appropriate bargaining unit; inclusions in or exclusions from the voting unit of various individuals or classifications of employees; and, rights to have decisions of an NLRB Hearing Officer or Regional Director reviewed and determined prior to the conduct of an NLRB election.

Significantly, the rules narrow the scope of initial hearings conducted before a Regional Office Hearing Officer following the filing of a petition. The rules generally prevent litigation and pre-election determination of the nature and scope of the appropriate bargaining unit, and inclusions or exclusions of individuals or classifications of employees from that unit, leaving such issues for a post-election hearing, with questioned voters being permitted to vote subject to challenge.  Eligibility issues would be combined in a single post-election hearing also encompassing post-election challenges and objections. Based on the amendments, the only issues generally resolved at a pre-election hearing are to be whether a question of representation exits, and whether there exists any bar to the conduct of the election.

This presents a significant issue for employers, many of whom currently employ numerous individuals who may or may not be supervisors as defined by the National Labor Relations Act, or who may work in classifications which may or may not share a community of interest with a petitioned for unit.  Inclusion or exclusion of such individuals or groups from the voting unit can present serious ramifications. For example, an employer who employs a number of lead persons or working foremen would be found to have committed an unfair labor practice and interfered with the representation election, resulting in a set aside, if those individuals, subsequently found to be statutory supervisors, would have been permitted to participate in the election as eligible employees. Likewise, an employer who prohibits the participation of such individuals, thinking that they may be statutory supervisors, would be guilty of interfering with the protected rights of those individuals if they were found to be eligible and not supervisory employees.

Other than observing that a Regional Director or Hearing Officer might choose, in their discretion, to consider such issues in a pre-election hearing, the Board offers little comfort to employers faced with this dilemma. In fact, in its published comments accompanying the amended rules (76 Fed. Reg at p. 80165), the Board acknowledges that it has previously held in Barre-National, Inc., (1995), 316 NLRB 887, that a Hearing Officer erred by preventing an employer from presenting evidence at a pre-election hearing regarding the eligibility of 24 group leaders (just under 10% of the total unit) to vote in an election directed in a unit of production, maintenance and warehouse employees. The Board brushed off this issue, stating "The Board will no longer follow Barre-National under the amended rules." (76 Fed. Reg. at p. 80165).  Employers are apparently left, under the amended rules, with trying to persuade a Hearing Officer or Regional Director to take discretionary evidence as to eligibility or exclusion of employees even if the number of employees involved might significantly change the size or character of the voting unit.

Just as importantly, the amended rules severely restrict the rights of an employer to appeal adverse Regional Director or Hearing Officer decisions to the full Board for review. In the past, post-election regional determinations as to challenges and election objections were appealable, as a matter of right, to the NLRB. Such determinations, now including pre-election determinations, as to which no separate right of appeal exists, will only be considered by the Board on appeal in its discretion, and then only if they present an issue of first impression or if there exists a conflict in the law.

Among other noteworthy amendments, the Board has now eliminated the previous 25 day waiting period for an election to be scheduled following a direction of election by a Regional Director, and, in a major change, the terms of a "stipulation" agreement for an election can no longer provide for final resolution of post-election challenges and objections by the NLRB, leaving such final determination to a Regional Director – the same as if the parties were to have entered into a "consent" election agreement, rather than the previously more widely favored "stipulation" form of agreement.

The effect of the amendments was well stated in the dissenting comments of Board Member Hayes upon publication of the then proposed rule changes (76 Fed. Reg. at 36831):

What is certain is that the proposed rules will (1) substantially shorten the time between the filing the petition and the election date, and (2) substantially limit the opportunity for full evidentiary hearing or Board review on contested issues involving, among other things, appropriate unit, voter eligibility, and election misconduct. Thus, by administrative fiat in lieu of Congressional action, the Board will impose organized labor's much sought after "quickie election" option, a procedure under which elections will be held in 10 to 21 days from the filing of the petition. Make no mistake, the principal purpose for this radical manipulation of our election process is to minimize, or rather, to effectively eviscerate an employer's legitimate opportunity to express its views about collective bargaining.

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