Today, a joke.
“How is the National Labor Relations Board like the weather?”
“I don’t know, Jon, how?”
“If you don’t like either, just wait and they’ll change.”
[groan]
Not my best material, I know. But, it does illustrate an important point, driven home by an Advice Memo [pdf] just released by the NLRB Office of General Counsel on the issue of Weingarten rights for non-union employees.
Which brings us to September 2017, and the NLRB Office of General Counsel’s aforementioned advice memo.
We conclude that the … Board … extend Weingarten rights to unrepresented employees and find that the Employer violated Section 8(a)(1) by forcing one employee to submit to an investigatory interview without the assistance of a coworker and by forcing another employee to submit to an investigatory interview in the presence of an anti-Union employee witness unilaterally designated by the Employer.Practically speaking, this call for action will mean little to nothing. Richard Griffin, the Obama-appointed NLRB General Counsel, only serves until his term expires on November 4, 2017. Thereafter, President Trump will appoint a new NLRB General Counsel, presumably one who will have a more management-friendly view of federal labor laws (including the non-expansion of Weingarten rights to non-union employees).
Nevertheless, this Advice Memo is a solid reminder of how our federal administrative agencies can, and often do, sway in the political breezes.