Yes, we need to talk about employee handbooks and the NLRB … again.
Yesterday, the Board decided
Stericycle, Inc., and announced its 5th (at least) new and different standard in the past 25 years as to when a workplace policy (such as those in employee handbooks) violate employees' rights to engage in protected concerted activity under the National Labor Relations Act to talk between and among themselves about their terms and conditions of employment.
It's enough to give an HR practitioner or employment lawyer legal whiplash, and I'm not going to go through the history of all of these various disparate standards. If you want full history, you can read the Stericycle opinion or search the blog's archives.
What you really want, and need, is a summary of the new standard moving forward (and, as you'll soon discover, backward). Here it is.