Meeting about unions? Follow NLRB guidelines or risk a violation
The National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) recently found that captive-audience meetings, mandatory gatherings where an employer’s views on unions are presented, aren’t legal.
These meetings are coercive, the board found, because their mandatory nature tilts the balance of power too much in the employer’s favor. Knowing that they could be fired or disciplined for not attending the meeting could keep employees from freely exercising their rights.
The National Labor Relations Act (NLRA) gives employees the right to form a union, engage in activities for the purpose of collective bargaining, bargain collectively, or refrain from doing so. Employers may not interfere with these rights or coerce employees into not exercising them under the NLRA.
Captive-audience meetings lend a coercive character to an employer’s message about unions and interfere with an employee’s right to freely decide whether, when, and how to participate in a debate about unionization, the board found.
Three keys to properly addressing unions in the workplace
It’s not that employers can’t express their views on unionization during a company-wide meeting. The NLRB has issued some guidelines that need to be followed when this is done, however:
1. Provide timely information. Compliance begins before the meeting starts. Employers need to give employees reasonable advance notice of the subject of the meeting. Make the meeting topic clear, so employees know what the gathering is for, and share this information a reasonable amount of time before the meeting begins. There’s no set amount of time for “reasonable,” but sharing the topic five minutes before the meeting starts, when employees are already filing into the room, would likely not be considered reasonable.
2. Don’t force employees to attend. A mandatory meeting is problematic, as this underscores the employer’s economic power. Let employees know that attendance is voluntary, and there are no adverse consequences for bowing out.
3. Don’t take attendance. Having employees sign in or making a list of everyone who is at the meeting could hint at consequences for those who are not there. Let employees know that no attendance records of the meeting will be kept.
Key to remember: Employers can present their views on unionization to employees, but must avoid captive-audience meetings to avoid violating the NLRA.