Yesterday, the White House Task Force on Worker Organization and Empowerment released its 45-page report on the use of executive branch policies, practices, and programs to promote the Biden Administration's support for worker power, worker organizing, and collective bargaining.
The key takeaway for employers? The Task Force has recommended that the federal government use its "authority to support worker empowerment by providing information, improving transparency, and making sure existing pro-worker services are delivered in a timely and helpful manner."
Yikes! 😱
How will the federal government accomplish this?
- The National Labor Relations Board is "strongly encouraged … to facilitate worker organizing and collective bargaining."
- Federal agencies — including the Department of Labor and the Small Business Administration — "will act to expand awareness of workers' organizing rights and employers' responsibilities when workers are trying to organize."
- The Department of Labor "will become a resource center, providing materials on the advantages of union representation and collective bargaining."
- That you support the rights of your employees to speak and act for what they believe.
- That unions, however, impact your ability to communicate directly with employees.
- Unions require formal grievance and arbitration processes to resolve workplace disputes, which take time, and sometimes a lot of time to resolve.
- With unions, promotions, raises, and other employment decisions are often based on seniority, not performance and merit.
- Employees pay unions dues whether or not they actually support the union or voted for it (except in states with "right to work" laws, which Ohio does not have).
- An employer can't threaten employees about what will happen if the union wins, such as plant closures, layoffs, shrinking pay and benefits, or discipline or termination of employees who supported the union.
- An employer can't interrogate employees about their support of the union, including polling employees about their support or asking who signed authorization cards.
- An employer can't promise employees that it will make things better for them if they vote against the union, including promises of pay raises, better benefits, or promotions for those who vote "no."
- An employer can't surveil or spy on employees, including watching who goes into union meetings, attending union meetings, or eavesdropping on employee conversations.
- An employer can share facts about the union and the organizing process, including what the company and the union can and cannot legally do during an organizing campaign and at the bargaining table, how a contract negotiation works, how much union dues might cost, and news stories about the union (e.g., corruption investigations and indictment, unsuccessful strikes).
- An employer can share its opinions about why you feel a union is not the right decision for your employees, such as unions eliminating personal and direct communication between employees and management in favor of a formal grievance and arbitration process, and how this will further divide employees from management.
- An employer can give examples of situations that involve union organizing and contract negotiations, including YouTube videos of outrageous behavior on picket lines, news stories about union corruption, and examples of unions that failed to make good on campaign promises at the bargaining table.