 
Court Strikes Down Free-Speech Violating Poster
Law
May 8, 2013
by Casey Neeley, cneeley@glass.com
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit
ruled against a federal rule Tuesday which would have required more
than six million private-sector businesses to post signage informing
employees of their right to form a union, claiming the rule would
violate an employer's right to free speech.
According to the opinion handed down by Judge A. Raymond Randolph,
"Under the rule an employer's failure to post the required
notice constitutes an unfair labor practice
And the board
may consider an employer's 'knowing and willful' noncompliance to
be 'evidence of antiunion animus in cases in which unlawful motive
[is] an element of an unfair labor practice.'
The board,
in other words, will use an employer's failure to post the notice
as evidence of another unfair labor practice.
"
Our doubt stems, in part, from a comparison of §
8(c) with the law established under the First Amendment," continues
Judge Randolph in the opinion. "We approach the question by
considering some firmly established principles of First Amendment
free-speech law. The first is that the 'dissemination' of messages
others have created is entitled to the same level of protection
as the 'creation' of messages."
According to Randolph, allowing businesses to post the rule was
not of concern, but rather, requiring and enforcing posting of the
rule violated the First Amendment.
"
Of course we are not faced with a regulation forbidding
employers from disseminating information someone else has created.
Instead, the board's rule requires employers to disseminate such
information, upon pain of being held to have committed an unfair
labor practice. But that difference hardly ends the matter. The
right to disseminate another's speech necessarily includes the right
to decide not to disseminate it," he writes in the opinion.
Subsequently, Judge Randolph concludes that "the board's rule
violates § 8(c) because it makes an employer's failure to post
the board's notice an unfair labor practice, and because it treats
such a failure as evidence of anti-union animus in cases involving,
for example, unlawfully motivated firings or refusals to hire-in
other words, because it treats such a failure as evidence of an
unfair labor practice."
As the motivating force behind the rule, the National Labor Relations
Board (NLRB) would have required the poster to be placed in a conspicuous
place within the work environment, informing employees of their
right to unionize, and conversely, of their right to not join.
"The poster rule is a prime example of a government agency
that seeks to fundamentally change the way employers and employees
communicate," says Jay Timmons, president and CEO of the National
Association of Manufacturers, one of the named plaintiffs in the
case. "The ultimate result of the NLRB's intrusion would be
to create hostile work environments where none exist. The U.S. Court
of Appeals has rightfully ruled that the NLRB has no authority to
enforce notice posting. Stopping the NLRB's burdensome agenda of
placing itself into manufacturers' day-to-day business operations
is essential to preventing further government-inflicted damage to
employee relations in the United States."
Richard Trumka, president of the American Federation of Labor-Congress
of Industrial Organizations (AFL-CIO), issued a statement opposing
the ruling, saying, "The Republican judges of the D.C. Circuit
continue to wreak havoc on workers' rights. After attempting to
render the [NLRB] inoperable (in the Noel Canning decision), the
D.C. Circuit has once again undermined workers' rights-this time
by striking down a common-sense rule requiring employers to inform
workers of their rights under federal labor law
The Court's
twisted logic finds that 'freedom of speech' precludes the government
from requiring employers to provide certain information to employees.
This is absurd: when workers know their rights, the laws work as
intended."
The NLRB had not yet released a formal statement at press time.
This story is an original story by AGRR™ magazine/glassBYTEs.com™. Subscribe to AGRR™ Magazine.
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