Starbucks and Amazon are just two of the latest examples of businesses making headlines because of worker unionization efforts. Although as a small or medium-sized business owner, you may not spend much time worrying about collective bargaining, you should know that the majority of private-sector businesses in the U.S. are still governed by laws that allow employees to seek better working conditions, regardless of whether they currently have a unionized workforce. That brings us to the NLRA.
The NLRA is the National Labor Relations Act.
Reeling from the Great Depression, workers began organizing, striking, and violently clashing with employers in the early 1930s. In response, Congress passed the NLRA in 1935 to provide employees in private-sector workplaces the right to seek better working conditions and to designate representation without fear of retaliation. The NLRA applies to all employers involved in interstate commerce and protects employees whether unionized or not.
The NLRA offers protections to employees except:
Managers and supervisors are considered part of a company's management, not its workforce, so managers and supervisors cannot join unions or be part of the bargaining process.
The NLRA grants employees the right to organize and requires that employers bargain with them collectively. It gives employees the right to engage in concerted activities, an activity undertaken by two or more employees or one employee acting on the authority of other employees to achieve progress in current working conditions or issues. It also created the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) as a regulatory agency to oversee the law.
The NLRA grants employees two basic rights:
Employees have the right to unionize and join together to advance their interests as employees and to refrain from such activity. Employers (and their managers) may not interfere with, restrain, or coerce employees that exercise their rights.
The NLRA gives employees the right to engage in protected concerted activities whether they are represented by a union or not. It defines concerted activities broadly, from worker unionization to less obvious applications. There are many actions protected under the NLRA.
Employers should think twice before taking corrective action against an employee for their conduct and make sure the offense was not related to wages or working conditions. Consult with an HR professional prior to taking action.
The NLRB is the independent federal agency that enforces the NLRA. They arbitrate deadlocked labor-management disputes, guarantee democratic union elections, and implement penalties for unfair labor practices.
It is crucial to understand that the NLRA can apply to you and your business, even if your workforce is not unionized. Visit this link to help determine whether the law applies to your business. The NLRB has become increasingly active in issuing guidance and rules that affect employers in unionized and non-unionized businesses. Recently, the NLRB has found that many employers are restricting employees’ exercise of protected concerted activity concerning pay and working conditions.
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