Wednesday 22nd May 2013 09:23 PM
NLRB scrutinizes employee handbooks that curb worker rights
25 October 2012
WASHINGTON - The National Labor Relations Board’s top lawyer is turning his attention to overly broad “employee handbooks” that curb or violate workers’ rights, and especially their “at will” employment clauses.
According to reports in legal blogs, the NLRB’s Acting General Counsel, Lafe Solomon, discussed his handbook scrutiny in a speech to the Connecticut Bar Association. He bases it on a settlement signed May 22 with Hyatt Hotels Corp. by NLRB’s Phoenix office.

The curbs on workers, which Hyatt agreed to drop, were part of that settlement. Hyatt agreed to remove a key paragraph where all employees agreed they are “at will” workers – i.e. non-union – unless they get top management permission to change their status.

“So far two” such at will “disclaimers have been struck as a violation of the National Labor Relations Act,” employment law attorney Deanne Katz wrote in an Oct. 23 Findlaw blog. “Both have had a similar problem: They've been excluded because they discourage collective bargaining.” Other blogs issued similar analyses.

“Both the at-will disclaimers the NLRB challenged involve statements that an employee's at-will status cannot be altered with the written signature of a high-level executive. That limitation is what the NLRB has focused on,” Katz wrote.

“Telling employees they can't alter their status without this specific approval makes it appear unlikely that collective bargaining through a union could have a positive effect on employee status. That in turn discourages employees from joining unions, in the view of the NLRB, and that is what they object to.”

The Hyatt settlement is also important to other workers as it shows what type of employer curbs on worker rights, through handbooks, are not kosher as far as the NLRB is concerned. Hyatt agreed to drop the handbook language even though it denied, in the settlement that the language broke labor law.

Besides tossing the at-will section, Hyatt also agreed to evict many other statements from its handbook. Violations would lead to discipline. They included:

• Are overbroad bans of “disclosure of confidential information,” along with overbroad definitions of confidential information. Training manuals were one example.

• A ban on participation in “civic or professional organizations” which might result in disclosure of Hyatt’s confidential information, including its finances.

• Banning “derogatory, unfounded” or disparaging statements about Hyatt, its directors, managers, officers or workers.

• Wearing only Hyatt “approved or authorized” union pins on the job.

This article was written by Press Associates, Inc., news service. Used by permission.
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