Subject: Labor Relations INK Links July 2021

Labor Relations Institute
July 2021
Here is your monthly summary of relevant news items since the last issue of INK, delivered on the 2nd Thursday of each month. The full edition of Labor Relations INK will arrive on the 4th Thursday of the month.
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BONUS:  Labor Relations Insight Redux by Phil Wilson 
 
In the last issue of INK, through a technical glitch we accidently posted a prior version of Phil’s Insight article.  Here is the article that was supposed to have been posted as the June Insight.

Cedar Point Nursery and Organizer Access to Private Property

Yesterday the Supreme Court issued its decision in Cedar Point Nursery. The 6-3 decision split along the conservative-liberal wings of the Court. Justices Breyer, Kagan and Sotomayor dissented from the majority opinion delivered by Chief Justice Roberts.

The central question in Cedar Point was whether a provision in the California Code requiring agricultural companies to give union organizers access to their property was an unconstitutional “taking” under the fifth amendment. The provision allows that organizers can be on the property up to 3 hours per day for 120 days per year. The original rule was adopted in 1975 at the urging of the United Farmworkers under the leadership of Cesar Chavez.

The Supreme Court majority held that the provision is a “per se” taking, and that the State could not provide this access to organizers without just compensation. Justice Robert wrote:

“The regulation grants union organizers a right to physically enter and occupy the growers’ land for three hours per day, 120 days per year. Rather than restraining the growers’ use of their own property, the regulation appropriates for the enjoyment of third parties the owners’ right to exclude.”

When I first mentioned this case I questioned whether the resulting decision would help curb some of the most egregious elements of the Pro Act or other potential decisions at the NLRB. Unfortunately – although predictably – the majority issued a narrow opinion. While the provision is unconstitutional, it is only so because it doesn’t offer the growers compensation for the taking. Just like in eminent domain cases, the state is not prohibited from ever encroaching on private property. Instead, they must offer just compensation when they engage in a taking.

The Majority remanded the case back to California for courts there to determine how to handle this taking. One can certainly imagine that the State will determine that it will pay the growers (or ask unions to pay the growers) a fee for access to employees. The just amount for that fee will be open to debate. But what’s basically closed for debate is whether the state can require the employers to provide access to organizers – under Cedar Point they can, so long as they provide just compensation.

I’m pretty sure what the State of California considers “just” isn’t going to be much, so that’s likely to be the next fight. But the bottom line is that employers covered by California law can now be compelled to provide access to organizers if provided just compensation. That’s much broader than the access rights under the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA).

The Cedar Point case does not cover access rights for private employers covered by the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA). However, Justice Kavanaugh anticipated this question in his concurring opinion that explicitly makes the point that the Cedar Point decisions should be read in conjunction with the Court’s opinion in Babcock and Wilcox which was decided under the NLRA. Kavanaugh wrote:

“Against the backdrop of the Constitution’s strong protection of property rights, the Court interpreted the Act to afford access to union organizers only when “needed,” ibid.—that is, when the employees live on company property and union organizers have no other reasonable means of communicating with the employees. As I read it, Babcock recognized that employers have a basic Fifth Amendment right to exclude from their private property, subject to a “necessity” exception similar to that noted by the Court today.”

This is the most important question raised by Cedar Point for private sector companies. Can the NLRB (or Congress) require employers to provide access to union organizers even if that access isn’t technically “necessary” under the Babcock framework? If the employer is given “just compensation” for the taking, could the NLRB rule that employers are required to let organizers meet with employees on company property and during work time? Justice Kavanaugh’s opinion certainly suggests no – but he wrote his concurrence alone which is a little troubling.

This decision is another great example of why it is so important for employers to be proactively
Left of Boom in their employee relations environment and practices. In other words, the best way to avoid disputes about organizer access to your employees is to not be a target in the first place.

If you’re looking for some timely, practical tips on how to do that
check out our Pro Act Pivot webinar later today. If you happen to read this after the live webinar, you can still sign up to listen to the recording.

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Union Bailout Update

Nominations Move NLRB Closer to Control by Democrats
https://lri.link/36iBLWe

Biden’s labor board nominee may have misled Congress
https://lri.link/2VjRkuL

NJ Supreme Court Reminds Employers: Isolated, Offensive Comments by a Supervisor May Be Enough to Sustain a Hostile Environment Claim
https://lri.link/3wqgSmC

All You Need is One *opinion on the PRO Act
https://lri.link/3xuT9U0

House of Representatives passes bill to protect older Americans in the workplace
https://lri.link/3qQXM8h

Biden signs resolution removing overhaul to EEOC conciliation process
https://lri.link/3xp4y7E

Oregon OSHA to enact emergency rules for heat following Marion County farmworker death
https://lri.link/2UyDCna

Punching In: White House Mulling Order on Contract Labor Pacts
https://lri.link/3qSGwiN

“It Applies To Us?” -- U.S. Employers Surprised by Expansive Job-Posting Requirements in Colorado’s New Equal Pay Law
https://lri.link/3xoHLIV

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Covid-19

NLRB’s Division of Advice Concludes That Employee’s COVID-19 Policy Complaints Are Not Protected Concerted Activity
https://lri.link/36mNCTg

Judge orders Maryland to pay enhanced unemployment benefits; state appeals ruling
https://lri.link/3yxGZcZ 

Extra $300 unemployment benefits won’t end early in NC, as Cooper vetoes GOP bill
https://lri.link/3wnZ3or

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AI, Technology, and Labor

No Job Is Future-Proof. How To Adopt AI While Protecting Your Employees
https://lri.link/3dSEQkl

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Tech/Media Unions

Change.Org Workers Form A Union, Giving Labor Activists Another Win In Tech
https://lri.link/36j3TIT

Editorial Workers at Insider Win Union Vote 241 - 14
https://lri.link/3hIrTL0

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Organizing

Teamsters announce plan for unionization effort at Amazon
https://lri.link/3hntDdF

Union Organizing Trends: Use of Technology and Social Issues
https://lri.link/3wmnq60

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Striking Volvo workers in Virginia call for rejection of new tentative agreement
https://lri.link/3wnY9bx

Teamsters approve revised offer, ending labor dispute at St. Paul Park refinery
https://lri.link/3qQGkAA

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Union Corruption

Corrupt UAW leader Pearson sentenced for racketeering scandal
https://lri.link/3yz23zS

Government unions’ campaign to undermine the First Amendment
https://lri.link/3dQCfam

Perry County Woman Pleads Guilty to Union Embezzlement
https://lri.link/3qQmSUO

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Healthcare

Unions and hospitals headed for showdown over vaccine mandates
https://lri.link/3AEkJjh

SEIU strikes for 5th day after three other unions reach contract agreements with Cook County
https://lri.link/3wp66xc

Employees Of Health Tech Company One Medical Announce Plan To Unionize
https://lri.link/3r54FmF

St. Vincent, nurses to resume negotiations July 9
https://lri.link/3ACn4v7

California Tenet Healthcare Workers to Stage Protest with Striking Massachusetts Nurses
https://lri.link/3hLRVwU

Hundreds of Pennsylvania nursing home workers threaten to strike
https://lri.link/3jOAmPn

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Minimum Rising

Southwest Airlines raising minimum pay to $15 an hour to attract workers
https://lri.link/3jRVi81

Chicago minimum wage increase to $15-an-hour takes effect
https://lri.link/3jSX9te

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Labor Around the World

Oil Industry Workers Go on National Strike in Iran
https://lri.link/3yyAFSE
About Labor Relations INK
Labor Relations INK is published semi-weekly and is edited by Labor Relations Institute, Inc. Feel free to pass this newsletter on to anyone you think might enjoy it. 

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Contributing editors for this issue: Phillip Wilson, Greg Kittinger, and Meghan Jones 

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About Labor Relations Institute
Labor Relations Institute provides the widest possible range of employee communications products and sophisticated database and deep intelligence services. Through a single source, our clients can secure everything required to monitor their risk of unionization, build positive employee relations, train supervisors, and if necessary, run a winning campaign. Learn more at http://LRIonline.com
Phillip Wilson, PO Box 1529, Broken Arrow, OK 74013, United States
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