By George S. Crisci*
In a decision released last week, the National Labor Relations Board (“NLRB) jettisoned nearly eight decades of its own precedent, ruling that an employer violates the National Labor Relations Act when it requires its employees — under threat of discipline or discharge — to attend meetings in which the employer expresses its views on unionization. In holding that these so-called “Captive Audience” meetings are unlawful, the Board unceremoniously discarded a 76-year precedent established by Babcock & Wilcox Co., 77 NLRB 577 (1948).
The Board’s hotly anticipated decision in Amazon.com Services LLC, represents a forceful crack-down on one of the most effective and commonly used tactics by private sector employers who face a union organizing drive. For decades, these “captive audience” meetings have been a fixture of union elections – an opportunity and forum in which employers can express their view of the potential negative effects that unionizing may have on the general workforce. The Board’s decision comes on the heels of a significant ruling earlier this month in Siren Retail Corp., NLRB Case No. 19-CA-290905, in which the Board overturned a nearly 40-year precedent and held that employers are no longer permitted to categorically tell workers that unionization will negatively impact their relationship with management.
The Board majority explained that captive audience meetings violate Section 8(a)(1) of the NLRA because they have a reasonable tendency to interfere with and coerce employees in the exercise of their collective bargaining rights. However, the Board majority explained that employers can still lawfully hold meetings with workers to express the employer’s views on unionization if certain guardrails are in place: (1) the workers must have advance notice of the subject of the meeting, (2) attendance must be voluntary with no adverse consequences for failure to attend, and (3) no attendance records of the meeting may be kept. The Board majority also made clear that its decision applies only prospectively, clearly a recognition that employers have reasonably relied on the Babock & Wilcox standard and the numerous NLRB decisions upholding “captive audience” meetings as permissible for nearly eight decades.
NLRB General Counsel Jennifer Abruzzo first identified “captive audience” meetings as a violation of NLRA rights in a memo issued in April 2022, signaling her intention to challenge this practice in proceedings before the Board and to ask the Board to overrule Babcock & Wilcox. Last week’s decision marks the culmination of GC Abruzzo’s efforts.
However, with the impending inauguration of President-elect Donald J. Trump on January 20,2025, GC Abruzzo’s service as the NLRB General Counsel – and her triumph today over “captive audience” meetings – are likely to be short-lived. President Biden unceremoniously terminated GC Abruzzo’s predecessor, Peter Robb, on the very afternoon of his presidential inauguration, January 20, 2021. Absent GC Abruzzo’s resignation, history is likely to repeat itself and bring a swift end to GC Abruzzo’s tenure.
Although GC Abruzzo’s successor will undoubtedly identify today’s decision on his or her agenda and ask that it be reconsidered and reversed by the Board, employers should not expect an immediate return to the Babcock & Wilcox standard in January 2025 and possibly not until after August 2026. The expirations of the five-year terms of current Board members are staggered on an annual basis, and a reversal of today’s decision will depend on new appointments by the President altering the composition of the current Board. One Board seat (held by Chair McFerran) expires next month, and President Biden has nominated her for reappointment during the current lame-duck Congress. If the Senate approves her reappointment, then the earliest that the Board composition could change from a Democratic to a Republican majority would be August 2026 because the seat that expires in 2025 is held by the only Republican Board member. If the Senate fails to reappoint Chair McFerran, then majority control could switch during the first few months of next year, when President Trump would nominate (and the Republican-majority Senate likely would confirm) replacements for the seat currently held by Chair McFerran and another vacant seat formerly held by John Ring. After that, it will take a period of time that cannot be accurately quantified for the new Republican-majority Board to identify a suitable pending case to issue a decision that reverses the Board’s decisions.
Until the Board (hopefully) restores its Babcock & Wilcox standard, employers are well-advised to refrain from holding “captive audience” meetings. Employers are still free to communicate with employees about the downsides of unionization and to express their views about organizing drives; however, employees must have advance notice of the topic of such meetings, attendance must be voluntary, and no attendance records may be kept.
*If you have questions relating to these recent NLRB decisions and the changed prohibited employer actions, please contact Zashin & Rich’s experienced Labor attorneys: George Crisci (gsc@zrlaw.com) at (216) 696-4441, and Jonathan Downes (jjd@zrlaw.com) or Scott DeHart (shd@zrlaw.com) at(614) 224-4411.
Tuesday, November 19, 2024
Monday, November 18, 2024
Texas Court Vacates DOL 2024 Salary Threshold Rule Nationwide
By Michele L. Jakubs*
The United States District Court for the Eastern District of Texas vacated the Department of Labor’s (“DOL”) 2024 Rule that would have rendered millions of executive, administrative and professional employees nonexempt on January 1, 2025. The DOL 2024 Rule would have increased the salary threshold required for the most commonly used exemptions under the FLSA. Employees are exempt from overtime if they are paid on a salary basis and meet the duties requirements for one of these exemptions: executive, administrative, or professional.
The Court, in Texas v. DOL, previously issued a preliminary injunction preventing the DOL from enforcing the July 1, 2024 salary increase ($844 per week) for Texas as an employer only. On Friday, the Court ruled that the DOL did not have the authority to enact a rule that essentially replaced the duties tests for exempt status with a salary test and vacated the DOL rule nationwide. The Court stated that the exemptions require “that an employee’s status turn on duties—not salary—and because the 2024 Rule’s changes make salary predominate over duties for millions of employees, the changes exceed the Department’s authority to define and delimit the relevant terms.” The Court went on to state: “When a third of otherwise exempt employees who the Department acknowledges meet the duties test are nonetheless rendered nonexempt because of an atextual proxy characteristic—the increased salary level—something has gone seriously awry.”
Ultimately, the Court vacated the DOL’s 2024 Rule in its entirety. The DOL may appeal the decision or issue a revised rule. For now, however, the salary threshold for the executive, administrative and professional exemptions remains at the pre-2024 level of $684 per week or $35,568 per year and at $107,432 per year for highly compensated employees.
*If you have questions relating to the DOL’s new rule, or any other labor and employment law issues, please contact Zashin & Rich’s Wage and Hour Practice Leader, Michele Jakubs (mlj@zrlaw.com) at (216) 696-4441.
The United States District Court for the Eastern District of Texas vacated the Department of Labor’s (“DOL”) 2024 Rule that would have rendered millions of executive, administrative and professional employees nonexempt on January 1, 2025. The DOL 2024 Rule would have increased the salary threshold required for the most commonly used exemptions under the FLSA. Employees are exempt from overtime if they are paid on a salary basis and meet the duties requirements for one of these exemptions: executive, administrative, or professional.
The Court, in Texas v. DOL, previously issued a preliminary injunction preventing the DOL from enforcing the July 1, 2024 salary increase ($844 per week) for Texas as an employer only. On Friday, the Court ruled that the DOL did not have the authority to enact a rule that essentially replaced the duties tests for exempt status with a salary test and vacated the DOL rule nationwide. The Court stated that the exemptions require “that an employee’s status turn on duties—not salary—and because the 2024 Rule’s changes make salary predominate over duties for millions of employees, the changes exceed the Department’s authority to define and delimit the relevant terms.” The Court went on to state: “When a third of otherwise exempt employees who the Department acknowledges meet the duties test are nonetheless rendered nonexempt because of an atextual proxy characteristic—the increased salary level—something has gone seriously awry.”
Ultimately, the Court vacated the DOL’s 2024 Rule in its entirety. The DOL may appeal the decision or issue a revised rule. For now, however, the salary threshold for the executive, administrative and professional exemptions remains at the pre-2024 level of $684 per week or $35,568 per year and at $107,432 per year for highly compensated employees.
*If you have questions relating to the DOL’s new rule, or any other labor and employment law issues, please contact Zashin & Rich’s Wage and Hour Practice Leader, Michele Jakubs (mlj@zrlaw.com) at (216) 696-4441.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)