Showing posts with label NLRA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label NLRA. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 19, 2019

NLRB Rules Employers Can Bar Union Solicitation by Nonemployees on Company Property Open to the Public



In the latest in a series of business-friendly decisions, the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) has ruled that employers may legally bar union solicitation by nonemployees on company property that is otherwise open to the public. [UPMC N.L.R.B., 368 N.L.R.B. No. 2, Opinion 6/14/19.] The NLRB’s 3-1 ruling expressly overturns a nearly 40 year old Board precedent, referred to as the “public space exception”. Under that now reversed precedent, nonemployee union organizers could not be denied access by employers to cafeterias and restaurants open to the public if the organizers used the facility in a manner consistent with its intended use and were not disruptive.
 
The case began with a 2013 incident in which two union organizers met with six employees in the cafeteria of a Pennsylvania hospital to discuss organizing a union campaign. Union flyers and pins were displayed on the tables at which the union representatives were sitting. The hospital cafeteria was accessible to hospital employees, patients, their families and other visitors.

After an employee complained of the union solicitation, hospital security requested to see the identification of the union representatives, and subsequently requested they leave the premises. The two women refused to leave, and the head of security then called 911. Six police officers arrived and escorted the union representatives from the cafeteria. While the hospital cafeteria was open to the public, it had been the hospital’s regular practice to remove nonemployees who were engaged in promotional activity, including soliciting or distributing literature, in or near the cafeteria. Prior to the union incident, the hospital had previously escorted off the property a group soliciting for money, as well as a religious group engaged in solicitation.
 
In ruling that the hospital did not engage in an unfair labor practice by ejecting the union representatives, the NLRB held that because the hospital uniformly prohibited any groups or individual from soliciting on its property. “[w]e therefore hold that an employer may prohibit nonemployee union representatives from engaging in promotional activity, including solicitation or distribution, in its public cafeteria so long as it applies the practice in a nondiscriminatory manner by prohibiting other nonemployees from engaging in similar activity.”
 
The decision is being applauded by business groups for giving employers more control over who can access company property. However, the Board’s sole dissenting member has blasted the majority’s decision as inconsistent with Supreme Court precedent, and stating of the hospital’s actions “[i]f this was not [anti-union] discrimination, then it is hard to know what is.”
 
While this latest decision is welcomed by employers, companies should always proceed cautiously and seek legal counsel before taking actions concerning union activity or any other situations potentially implicating protected concerted activity under the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA).
 
Other significant ruling by the majority GOP NLRB may be on the horizon. Back in 2014, under the Obama administration, the then Democrat-controlled NLRB issued a controversial ruling that declared employers, generally, cannot prohibit employees from using a company’s e-mail system for union organizing purposes or other activities protected by the NLRA. The current NLRB has sought to revisit that decision, and possibly overturn it, by soliciting public comment.



Sunday, August 6, 2017

The Ugly Truth: Are Your Employee Handbook Policies and Non-Compete Agreements a Recipe for Litigation?



    I.     INTRODUCTION
    A question often asked by employers is whether they are legally required to have an employee handbook, and the answer is “no.”  A much better question to ask is whether it is a good idea for employers to legally protect themselves with a well-drafted and up-to-date employee handbook, and the answer to that question is a clear and definitive “yes.”  
    A good employee handbook provides a road map for your company, and introduces employees to your culture, mission and values.  It should clearly and concisely communicate your policies, procedures and expectations to your employees and provide guidance to your supervisors.  In the event of employment litigation, what you have in your handbook as far as reporting harassment or discrimination, accommodating disabilities or religious beliefs, granting leave under the FMLA, or wage and hour issues, could make the difference between prevailing in a lawsuit, or having to pay an adverse judgment.
    However, recent changes in how federal agencies interpret existing employment law, combined with outdated, poorly drafted or “boilerplate” policies, can turn your employee handbook into a recipe for costly litigation.  Likewise, a poorly drafted non-compete agreement that is found to be unenforceable, can result in the loss of business, customers and trade secrets.  Learning the “ugly truth” about these issues can go a long way in avoiding even uglier litigation. 
    II. EMPLOYEE HANDBOOKS
    A. Ugly Truth #1:  The Best Employee Handbook in the World Will Not Prevent a Lawsuit (but a Bad One Could Help the Plaintiff Win).
    Every business is different, and there is no “one-size-fits-all” employee handbook.  Your handbook should directly reflect how your company actually operates, its culture and its expectations. As such, avoid using a handbook you found on the internet that contains provisions and policies that have nothing to do with your business or contains rules you will not actually follow or enforce. Revise or replace outdated handbooks.  Keep your handbook concise, avoid legal terminology and use language that your employees will understand.  The basics of what you should include are as follows:
    Include an At-Will Disclaimer.
    Mississippi is an at-will employment state, as is the case in most states.  At-will employment means the employee works for the employer at the employer’s will.  The employer may terminate the employment relationship for good reason, bad reason, or no reason at all.  Likewise, the employee can terminate the relationship at any time.  However, in the case Bobbitt v. The Orchard, Ltd., 603 So. 2d 356 (Miss. 1992), the Mississippi Supreme Court held that if a handbook contains detailed policies and procedures to be followed when terminating an employee, it can create an employment contract, destroy the at-will relationship, and expose an employer to a breach of employment contract claim if the employer did not follow its own procedures in terminating the employee.  However, if the handbook disclaimer expressly provides that the employment relationship is at-will and can be terminated at any time, the employer has not waived the right to unilaterally terminate the employee by setting forth a grievance process in the manual.
    The disclaimer should be clear and conspicuous. Disclaimer language should also be included in all other documents given to the employees, such as job applications, profit sharing plans, and memoranda regarding employment benefits.
    The language should make clear that the employee’s employment is terminable at will, and that nothing in the handbook should be construed to alter the at-will relationship.  Avoid “contract-like” language.
    The disclaimer should express that nothing in the handbook should be construed as creating a contractual relationship or as implying a guarantee of continued employment or benefits.  Use “may” and avoid “will” or “shall” or any language that suggests the company is promising to do something or confer specific benefits.  
    The disclaimer should make clear that the employee handbook provides only general guidelines as to company policy and should not be read as including the fine details of company policy or procedure.  The employee should be directed to appropriate management personnel for more information regarding particular policies.  
    Handbook language should reserve the company’s right to change, modify, supplement or revoke its policies at any time, with or without notice to the employee.  Although employers should keep employee handbooks up to date to accurately reflect company policy, disclaimer language should caution employees that changes in policy are not dependent upon the changes being reflected in a revised handbook. 
    Equal Employment Opportunity Statement and Anti-Discrimination / Harassment /Retaliation Policy.
    Statement that employer will comply with applicable federal and state law and provide equal employment opportunity without regard to race, color, religion, gender, sexual orientation age, national origin, disability, sexual orientation, veteran status or any other protected category.
    Definitions of discrimination, harassment, retaliation.
    Requirement that employees report to his/her supervisor or HR any complaints of unlawful conduct, without fear of retaliation.
    Specific reporting instructions, that allow employee to bypass supervisors who may be the source of the unlawful conduct.
    Statement as to company’s investigatory process for complaints and corrective/disciplinary action for unlawful conduct.
    Effective policy can provide valuable legal defense.
    Include policy regarding consensual workplace romantic relationships.
    Americans With Disabilities Act (“ADA”).
    Prohibits discrimination and ensures equal opportunity and access for persons with disabilities.  The ADA also requires employers to provide reasonable accommodations, i.e., changes to the workplace or job -- to allow employees with disabilities to do their jobs.  The ADA, like other federal employment statutes, anticipates an interactive process between the employee and the employer to reach a reasonable accommodation, and for this reason, it needs to be in your handbook so that your employees are made aware of the need to initiate the process with their employer.
    Pregnancy Discrimination Act (“PDA”).
    The PDA amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 to "prohibit sex discrimination on the basis of pregnancy."  The Act covers discrimination "on the basis of pregnancy, childbirth, or related medical conditions."
    Family Medical Leave Act (“FMLA”).
    The FMLA entitles eligible employees of covered employers to take up to twelve weeks of unpaid, job-protected leave for specified family and medical reasons with continuation of group health insurance coverage under the same terms and conditions as if the employee had not taken leave.
    Fair Labor Standards Act (“FLSA”).
    The FLSA establishes minimum wage, overtime pay, recordkeeping, and child labor standards affecting full-time and part-time workers in the private sector and in Federal, State, and local governments.
    Uniformed Services Employment and Reemployment Rights Act (“USERRA”).
    Protects the right of employees to be reemployed in their civilian job if they leave that job to perform service in the military service and protects service members from employment discrimination and/or retaliation based on their military service.
    Code of Conduct / Discipline Policy.
    Outline acceptable workplace conduct, and unacceptable conduct that will result in disciplinary action, up to and including termination.  In listing examples of unacceptable conduct, e.g. theft, false reporting of time worked, threats of violence, make it clear that it is not an exclusive or complete list.  While the policy should retain the right to use warnings or progressive discipline at the discretion of the employee, it also should state that an employee may be subject to immediate termination for inappropriate conduct or violations of workplace policies.   
    Benefits.
    Outline policies and eligibility regarding vacations, 401(k), health insurance, paid leave or other benefits to employees. 
    Include Handbook Acknowledgment Form.
    A common claim by plaintiffs in employment litigation is that they were unaware of the workplace policy that they violated, or that they had never seen or been given a copy of the employee handbook.  Every handbook should include an acknowledgment form to be signed by the employee, attesting that they have received a copy of the handbook, acknowledging their responsibility to read and comply with the policies contained in the handbook, including any future revisions, and acknowledging their at-will employment status.  This can be done using a hard copy form to be put in the employee’s personnel file, or in the case of a handbook that is on-line or on the company’s intranet, it can be a digital form which the employee electronically signs.  A signed copy of an acknowledgment form can be a valuable exhibit when a plaintiff claims in a deposition that he was never given a handbook or had no knowledge of the policy which he violated and which resulted in his or her termination.
    Train Your Managers / Inconsistent Enforcement Can Result in Discrimination Claims.
    Don’t assume that your managers and supervisors will always act in accordance with the policies in your handbook.  Make sure they receive regular training on handbook policies so that they are implemented correctly and effectively.  Once trained, management and supervisors should periodically review handbook policies to assess whether they are being applied consistently.  Inconsistent enforcement of policies could result in claims of discrimination. 
    B. Ugly Truth #2:  Many Commonly Utilized Handbook Policies Now Expose Employers to Liability Courtesy of the National Labor Relations Board (“NLRB”).
    The National Labor Relations Board (“NLRB”) is the federal agency responsible for enforcing labor law in relation to union election, collective bargaining agreements between unions and employers, and unfair labor practices.  Unbeknownst to many employers, the National Labor Relation’s Act’s (“NLRA”) prohibition against unfair labor practices also extends to non-union employers. 
    In recent years, the NLRB has taken a highly aggressive position against many commonly utilized employee handbook policies.  The NLRB alleges that overbroad employment policies could have a chilling effect on employees’ concerted activities protected by Section 7 of the NLRA. Generally speaking, there is protected concerted activity when two or more employees act together to improve their terms and conditions of employment.  Employees have a right to advocate in this manner even where there is no union involved.  Under the NLRB’s recent interpretive guidelines, an employer’s policy will violate the NLRA if it could simply be “construed” as restricting Section 7 rights. 
    On this basis, the NLRB has been asserting unfair labor practice complaints against employers across the country for handbook policies that are commonly utilized.  Examples of handbook policies that the NLRB finds could be construed as restricting Section 7 rights include the following:
    Policies against “personal business” on company property and “while at work.” 
    [NLRB Position:  The prohibition against conducting “personal business” on company property and “while at work” can reasonably be read to restrict the communications of employees with each other about union or other Section 7 protected rights in non-work areas and on non-work time.]
    No "[d]efamatory, libelous, slanderous or discriminatory comments about [the Company], its customers and/or competitors, its employees or management.
    [NLRB PositionEmployees have the Section 7 right to criticize or protest their employer's labor policies or treatment of employees.  Thus, rules that can reasonably be read to prohibit protected concerted criticism of the employer will be found unlawfully over broad.]
    Policies against employees discussing or disclosing wages.
    [NLRB PositionEmployees have a Section 7 right to discuss wages, hours, and other terms and conditions of employment with fellow employees, as well as with nonemployees, such as union representatives.]
    "You must not disclose proprietary or confidential information about [the Employer, or] other associates (if the proprietary or confidential information relating to [the Employer's] associates was obtained in violation of law or lawful Company policy)."
    [NLRB Position:  “Although this rule's restriction on disclosing information about "other associates" is not a blanket ban, it is nonetheless unlawfully overbroad because a reasonable employee would not understand how the employer determines what constitutes a "lawful Company policy."]
    On the same basis, the NLRB also has been filing unfair labor practice complaints against employers’ because of their social media policies that impose discipline on employees for disparaging comments made about their employers or supervisors on their personal Facebook pages or other social media.
    There has been an expectation among employers that with a new administration, and with the NLRB soon to have its full complement of Republican members, that the Board might relax its position.  However, as recently as late April 2017, an NLRB judge ruled against Verizon Wireless, ordering it to strike ten of its employee handbook policies on the basis that they violated the NLRA because they could be construed in such a way to “chill” an employee’s right to engage in protected concerted activity.
    In another recent case, the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit in New York affirmed the NLRB’s controversial ruling against Whole Foods’ policy against employees from making workplace recordings.  The Second Circuit agreed with the NLRB’s position that the rule could be construed as blocking workers from recording activity protected by the National Labor Relations Act.
    The NLRB has published guidelines to assist employers in drafting handbook provisions that will withstand scrutiny, but the difference between what the NLRB considers a lawful handbook policy and what it considers an unfair labor practice is fairly subtle.  Some points to consider:
    Have your policy acknowledge the law.  One way to ensure that your handbook/social media policy is not considered invalid on its face is to include protective language which states the policy will be applied and enforced consistent with the NLRA and any other applicable local, state or federal laws.
    Avoid overly broad language.  While employers may want to have a policy that would address every conceivable situation that might arise, such a strategy runs the risk of being considered invalid under the NLRA.  
    Have handbook policies reviewed for legal compliance.
    Review Internet/social media policies yearly.  Social media and its technology is constantly changing, and the statutory and case law governing its use in the workplace is also evolving.  It is wise to make sure employment policies keep pace.
    C. Ugly Truth #3:  Not Reasonably Accommodating the Religious Beliefs of Employees Can Be Unreasonably Expensive.
    In any handbook, there will always be some generally applicable rules, such as dress and grooming policies or work schedules, that have the potential to raise a conflict with an employee’s religious belief or practice.  Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 places a duty on the employer to engage in an interactive process with the employee, to reach a reasonable accommodation that does not impose an undue hardship on the employer.  For this reason, a handbook should contain language stating that reasonable accommodation for religious beliefs or practices may be sought, and the procedures for making such a request.  Generally, these issues are relatively easy to address.  When not handled correctly, they can be costly.  This is illustrated in two recent cases.
    In EEOC v. Consol Energy, Inc., (N.D. W.Va) an employer’s use of a high-tech device to stay in compliance with the Fair Labor Standards Act (“FLSA”) resulted in a large dollar jury verdict in a religious discrimination case brought by the EEOC. 
    Consol operated a coal mine in West Virginia, and utilized a biometric hand scanning system to track employee work hours for purposes of payroll and FLSA compliance.  One employee, Christian Beverly Butcher, told his supervisor that he could not comply with the hand scanning policy because he believed the technology has a connection to the “mark of the beast” and the Antichrist, as alluded to in the Book of Revelation in the New Testament of the Bible.
    As a proposed reasonable accommodation, the company offered to allow Butcher to scan his left hand with his palm up, which he declined. Butcher resigned, stating that he was doing so involuntarily. He brought his complaint to the EEOC, which filed suit on his behalf against the company, alleging that Consol had violated Title VII by failing to reasonably accommodate Butcher’s sincerely held religious beliefs.
    A federal judge in West Virginia denied Consol’s effort to have the lawsuit dismissed, and a jury later ruled in Butcher’s favor and awarded $150,000.00 in compensatory damages.  The EEOC later filed a post-trial motion seeking an additional $413,000 in front and backpay. 
    The other case involves a very expensive flu shot.  In EEOC v. Saint Vincent Health Center (W.D. Pa.), the EEOC sued a Pennsylvania hospital on behalf of six employees over its mandatory seasonal flu vaccination requirement.  The lawsuit alleged that the employees were terminated because the hospital refused to accommodate their religious objections to the vaccinations.  The case did not go to trial but the hospital ended up paying a $300,000 settlement and entering into a consent decree requiring changes to their policies and requiring mandatory training for supervisors as to accommodating religious beliefs.
    D. Ugly Truth #4:  Gun Policies Can Be a Loaded Legal Issue.
    In light of incidents of workplace violence nationwide, many employers have handbook policies that ban employees from having firearms on company property, including in their vehicle in the parking lot.  However, in Mississippi, this creates a tension with a state law, and it already has resulted in litigation.  Miss. Code Ann. § 45-9-55 provides in part, that:
    [A] public or private employer may not establish, maintain, or enforce any policy or rule that has the effect of prohibiting a person from transporting or storing a firearm in a locked vehicle in any parking lot, parking garage, or other designated parking area.
    The law does provide an exception where: 
    A private employer may prohibit an employee from transporting or storing a firearm in a vehicle in a parking lot, parking garage, or other parking area the employer provides for employees to which access is restricted or limited through the use of a gate, security station or other means of restricting or limiting general public access onto the property. (emphasis added).
    However, employers need to be aware that courts have taken a very strict interpretation of this statute, and that to have such a policy under the exception, the employer has to strictly comply with the access restrictions described in the statute.
    It bears mention that it is completely within an employer’s rights to prohibit employees from having guns on their persons in the workplace.  The lesson here for employers, is that if you want to have a handbook policy prohibiting employees from having access to firearms in their vehicles, you have to have or build the restrictive structures required under the statute.
    E. Ugly Truth #5:  Prepare for the Inevitable Cyber-Breach!
    It is now common to read news stories about big companies being hacked, and the personal information of customers and employees being stolen.  The reality is that any size company can be a target and the result can be costly.  So what does this have to do with employee handbooks?  The cyber security firm Experian Data Breach Resolution estimates that about 80% of the breaches they service can be traced to employee negligence.  Employees need to be made aware of your company’s internal network security.  Some points to include:
    Employees should use strong passwords that are not shared and regularly changed.
    Phishing -- Employees should not trust emails asking for sensitive information even if an email appears to come from a reliable or authoritative source and unknown attachments or links should not be opened.
    No downloading of unauthorized software or apps on company computers or devices.
    USB and other non-company devices should be prohibited or screened for security issues before being plugged into a company machine.
    Parameters for accessing and sharing of company data. 
    Dangers of unsecured networks/public Wi-Fi.
    BYOD policies should reflect employer’s cyber security policies.
    Any suspected breach should be reported immediately and reporting protocols should be clear.
    While not something that needs to be included in an employee handbook, employers should be aware that many states have laws that require the reporting of cyber breaches if it results in the compromise of the personal information of customers, employees or others.  For example, in Mississippi, notice requirements are governed by Miss. Code. Ann. § 75-24-29 (Persons conducting business in Mississippi required to provide notice of a breach of security involving personal information to all affected individuals), and in Louisiana, it is governed by RS 51:3071 (Database Security Breach Notification Law).  
    DTSA Whistleblower Language.
    In 2016, President Obama signed into law the Defend Trade Secrets Act of 2016 (“DTSA”), allowing businesses nationwide to file suit in federal court to protect their trade secrets from unscrupulous former employees and dishonest business competitors. The law passed with strong bipartisan support in Congress.  Prior to the enactment of the DTSA, companies were limited to seeking relief in state courts, where the law can vary from state-to-state. DTSA contains an immunity provision to protect individuals from criminal or civil liability for disclosing a trade secret if it is made in confidence to a government official or to an attorney for the purpose of reporting a violation of law.
    However, to take full advantage of the protections provided employers under the law, the DTSA places an affirmative duty on employers to provide employees notice of the new immunity or “whistleblower” provision in “any contract or agreement with an employee that governs the use of a trade secret or other confidential information.”  Failure to provide this notice will prevent a company from being able to recover exemplary damages and attorneys’ fees in any lawsuit brought under the DTSA. In anticipation of the future need to exercise rights under the DTSA, employers should immediately begin integrating such language into company documents such as, but not limited to, employment agreements, independent contractor agreements, employee handbooks, offer letters, non-compete/non-solicitation agreements, non-disclosure/confidentiality agreements, invention and assignment agreements, and return of property agreements.
    III. NON-COMPETE AGREEMENTS
    F. Ugly Truth #6:  A Completely Unenforceable Non-Compete Agreement Can Be Effective . . . Right Up Until It Actually Needs to Be Enforced.
    A non-compete agreement is pretty self-explanatory.  It’s an agreement between an employer and an employee, where the employee agrees not to work for a competitor or start his own competing business for a set period of time after leaving his employment with the company.  Employers often require employees to sign non-compete agreements at the start of their employment to protect against a former employee gaining a competitive edge through inside knowledge of their former employer’s trade secrets, customer lists, marketing plans or other confidential information.  It’s estimated that 40% of American workers have been subject to a non-compete agreement at some time in their work history.  
    Non-compete agreements usually also contain non-solicitation provisions, where former employees agree not to contact their former customers, or try to hire their former co-workers for a set period of time.  Non-compete agreements also usually contain confidentiality agreements, where the former employees agree to not disclose or utilize their former employer’s trade secrets or other confidential or proprietary information.
    The dirty secret of non-competes is that even unenforceable agreements can be effective, because the average employee who signs one at the beginning of their employment, along with the other pile of papers they are handed, assumes it is enforceable, and abides by its terms.  The real trouble occurs when a valuable former employee, who can do real damage to your business and customer base, quits and goes to work for a competitor.  That is a bad time to find out whether or not you can enforce your non-compete agreement.
    In Mississippi and most other states, these type of “restrictive employment covenants” are generally not favored, because they are a restraint on free trade, but will be enforced by the courts if the terms of the agreement are reasonable under the particular circumstances.  Generally, there are three requirements:  (1) the employer has a valid business interest to protect; (2) the geographic restriction is not overly broad; and (3) a reasonable time limit is given.  The employer bears the burden of proving the reasonableness of the agreement.  The reason these types of agreements are construed very narrowly is that most courts recognize that an employer is not entitled to protection against ordinary competition from a departing employee.”
    So what is a “valid business interest” that an employer is entitled to protect with a non-compete agreement?  In Mississippi, examples of protectable business interests include trade secrets, confidential information, proprietary information, customer lists, vendor relationships, business practices, and the employer's investment in training and education of an employee.  Mississippi courts have enforced covenants not to compete when former employees who, like Banks, have peculiar knowledge of and relationships with the employer's customers and vendors. 
    When is a geographic restriction reasonable and when is it overly broad?  It depends on the business and the circumstances.  For some companies, restricting a former employee from competing in a three county area may be a reasonable restriction to protect the company’s valid business interests, and restricting the former employee from competing anywhere in the state of Mississippi would clearly be unreasonable.  However, in the instance of an internet-based tech company that has a nationwide customer base, a much larger geographic restriction might be reasonable under the circumstances.  In Mississippi, time restrictions from one to two years will almost always be enforceable.
    Non-compete agreements are typically governed by state law, which can vary depending on where you live or operate a business.  For instance, in the state of Georgia, a non-compete agreement will be enforced only if the employee possesses selective or specialized skills, abilities, customer contacts, customer information, and confidential information that that they have obtained as the result of working for the company. In Tennessee, Texas and Maryland, such agreements are enforceable only against employees who had access to or were entrusted with the employer’s trade secrets or other confidential or proprietary information.  In other states, such as California, non-compete agreements are generally unenforceable.
    Courts are reluctant to enforce non-compete agreements if they deprive a former employee of the ability to make a living, especially if the employee is a low level employee without any access to trade secrets or confidential information.  This was illustrated a few years ago by the sandwich shop chain Jimmy John’s.  Jimmy John’s attracted some unwelcome attention by requiring low-level employees to sign two-year non-compete agreements as a condition of employment.  After the story first broke nationally, Congressional Democrats sent a letter to the Federal Trade Commission (“FTC”) and the U.S. Department of Labor (“DOL”), describing the restrictive covenants as “clearly anti-competitive and intimidating to workers.”  The House Democrats asked for the FTC and the DOL to investigate the sandwich chain.
    The Attorney General of Illinois subsequently filed a lawsuit against Jimmy John’s, alleging the sandwich maker’s non-compete agreements were illegal under Illinois law “[b]y locking low-wage workers into their jobs and prohibiting them from seeking better paying jobs elsewhere, the companies have no reason to increase their wages or benefits.”  Under Illinois law, non-compete agreements must be premised on a legitimate business interest and narrowly tailored in terms of time, activity and place.  The State of New York was apparently about to take similar legal action, however, Jimmy John’s reached an agreement with New York’s Attorney General, in which the sandwich chain agreed to stop including sample non-compete agreements in the hiring packets it sends to its franchisees.  In addition, the company subjected itself to a lot of bad publicity.  Illinois’s Governor subsequently signed into law the “Illinois Freedom to Work Act”, which went into effect on January 1, 2017.  The Act prohibits employers from requiring employees to sign non-compete agreements if they make less than $13 per hour.
    In most matters involving the successful enforcement of non-compete agreements, the employees in question were either highly trained individuals in technical or creative fields, with direct access to their employer’s trade secrets, or were high level sales people with similar access to confidential customer information.  It is a very unlikely scenario where a fast food employer would legitimately need to have a crew worker enter into a non-compete agreement, no matter how good the sandwich.  So, in crafting an enforceable non-compete agreement, here are some points to remember:
    Be realistic.
    Pointless to have a low level unskilled employee sign a non-compete.
    Non-compete agreements should be confined to key employees, sales people or executives whose knowledge of trade secrets and other confidential information, or their relationships with customers, could cause serious damage if they went to work for a competitor.
    “What is our business, and what are we really trying to protect?” – Narrowly tailored non-compete agreements are more effective and more likely to be enforced by the court.
    Articulate valid business interests to be protected in a way that is rational and reasonable as opposed to vindictive retribution against former employees.
    Non-solicitation provisions and who owns social media?
    Pay attention to differences in state law.
    Non-compete / trade secret litigation very expensive – Actual damage?
    G. Ugly Truth #7:  Ignoring a Non-Compete Agreement Can Get You Sued.
    Not surprisingly, when a company finds out that a competitor has hired a former employee, they want to take legal action in support of the non-compete agreement signed by the former employee.  However, oftentimes, those very same companies can be very casual about wanting to hire top performers who formerly worked for their competitors, and who also are subject to a non-compete agreement.  This can expose the company to a lawsuit for tortious interference with contract.  To prove such a claim, the other company would have to show (1) the acts were intentional and willful; (2) their acts were calculated to cause damage to its lawful business; (3) the acts were done with the unlawful purpose of causing damage and loss, without right or justifiable cause; and (4) actual damage and loss resulted.”  Before you hire that employee, here are a few important steps to take:
    Expressly ask the prospective employee if they are subject to a non-compete agreement or any other restrictive covenant from their former employer, and obtain a copy for legal review.
    Any offer letter or employment contract to be signed by the employee should contain a statement attesting that they are not bound by a restrictive covenant.
    A statement attesting that they have not retained any confidential information from their former employer and will not utilize or disclose any such information during the course and scope of their employment with your company.
    IV. CONCLUSION
    Employee handbooks and non-compete agreements are valuable tools in effectively running your company and protecting your valid interests.  Careful attention to tailoring both to your particular business is the best way to avoid a recipe for litigation.

Thursday, September 29, 2016

NLRB CONTINUES AGGRESIVE CRACKDOWN ON EMPLOYEE HANDBOOKS

As The Employee With The Dragon Tattoo first reported back in 2014 and 2015, the National Labor Relations Board (“NLRB”) has taken a highly aggressive position against many commonly utilized employee handbook policies.  The NLRB alleges that overbroad employment policies could have a chilling effect on employees’ concerted activities protected by Section 7 of the National Labor Relations Act (“NLRA” or “the Act”).  This applies whether employees are members of a union or not.  Under the NLRB’s 2015 interpretive guidelines, an employer’s policy will violate the NLRA if it could simply be “construed” as restricting Section 7 rights.
The NLRB has now taken it one step further.  In a recent ruling earlier this Summer, an NLRB Administrative Law Judge (“ALJ”) held that a California casino’s handbook policy that prohibited employees from conducting “personal business” while on the job on company property could be construed to be illegal under the Act.  In the ruling, the ALJ held:

[T]he prohibition against conducting "personal business" on company property and "while at work" can reasonably be read to restrict the communications of employees with each other about union or other Section 7 protected rights in non-work areas and on non-work time. The rule makes it clear that personal business is the opposite of "Casino Pauma business," thus including communications about unions or complaints about working conditions in the "personal business" category. The restriction of protected activity "while at work" is also too broad because it is not properly restricted to "work time" and thus bans protected activity during  nonwork time, such a time on lunch, breaks and before and after work.
 
At the least, the prohibitions against conducting "personal business" in Rule 2.19 are ambiguous insofar as that term may be read to include discussions about unions and other concerted activity; the rule thus puts employees at risk if they guess wrongly about what the Respondent means by "personal business." (citations omitted).


The ALJ’s opinion also noted that under the Act, employees are generally free to distribute union literature on company property during such nonwork time as long as it is in nonworking areas of the company facility.
In its 2015 interpretive guidelines, the NLRB listed a series of other commonly implemented employment policies that it maintained were illegally overbroad.  Examples of such policies include:

·         Do not discuss "customer or employee information" outside of work, including "phone numbers [and] addresses."

·         "You must not disclose proprietary or confidential information about [the Employer, or] other associates (if the proprietary or confidential information relating to [the Employer's] associates was obtained in violation of law or lawful Company policy)."

·         Prohibiting employees from "[d]isclosing ... details about the [Employer]."
·         "Sharing of [overheard conversations at the work site] with your co-workers, the public, or anyone outside of your immediate work group is strictly prohibited."
·         "Discuss work matters only with other [Employer] employees who have a specific business reason to know or have access to such information.. .. Do not discuss work matters in public places."
·         "[I]f something is not public information, you must not share it."
The ALJ’s opinion that a policy against conducting personal business “while at work” likely seems nonsensical to employers who are legitimately trying to prevent employees from spending their work hours on Facebook, shopping on Amazon, or chatting with friends on the phone.  However, this latest ruling is a wake-up call for employers to review their employee handbooks to address any purported ambiguity that the NLRB might “construe” as being overbroad.
A MESSAGE TO READERS OF "THE EMPLOYEE WITH THE DRAGON TATTOO"  

 A reader of this blog recently asked if she could be included on an e-mail list for new posts.  I currently do not have an e-mail service but it seems like an excellent idea and I will be setting it up in the very near future.  If you would like to be included, please send your name, your company, and your e-mail to me at fijmanm@phelps.com.  Thanks! 



Friday, September 16, 2016

FORMER UNION OFFICIAL’S “GOOSE IS COOKED” IN “TOP CHEF” UNION EXTORTION CASE



            “Top Chef” is one of my favorite shows, and because of my last post on a legal victory against union hardball tactics, this story out of Boston caught my eye. 
            Mark Harrington, a former official of Teamsters Local 25 pled guilty to federal extortion charges in connection with union threats of physical violence and production disruption against the cast and crew of the top-rated culinary reality show because they were using non-union workers. Charges are still pending against four other union members, who have entered pleas of not guilty. Bean Town politics also are entangled in the case. In a separate but related federal  indictment, Boston’s head of tourism is accused of withholding permits for Top Chef to film in the area and calling local restaurants that were scheduled to host the show, and threatening them that they would be picketed by the union if they did not withdraw the invitations.
            After the union officials were initially indicted in 2015, Local 25 argued that they were not engaged in criminal activity, but were instead engaged in the protected concerted activity of picketing, as allowed for under the National Labor Relations Act (“NLRA”).  However federal prosecutors fired back that the union defendants were not entitled to collective bargaining rights because they did not have a collective bargaining agreement with the Top Chef production company, and the positions they were seeking for union members already were filled by non-union employees.  The ugly facts of this case make it clear that what occurred was not protected union activity under the NLRA.  As noted by U.S. Attorney Carmen M. Ortiz at the time of the September 25, 2015 indictments:
In the course of this alleged conspiracy, they managed to chase a legitimate business out of the City of Boston and then harassed the cast and crew when they set up shop in Milton. This kind of conduct reflects poorly on our city and must be addressed for what it is – not union organizing, but criminal extortion.
           
             Here is what happened.  In June 2014, Top Chef came to Boston to film the twelfth season of the show.  This included Top Chef host Padma Lakshmi.  Following the threats against Boston restaurants, they withdrew their offers to host the filming of the show, and Top Chef decided to move their production plans to a well-known restaurant in nearby Milton, Massachusetts. During the production of the show, Local 25 members picketed the restaurant, physically roughed up members of the production crew, and slashed the tires of fourteen production workers. 
            From the picket line outside the Milton restaurant, the members of Local 25 screamed racist, sexist and homophobic threats and slurs for hours as production crew and cast came and went.  Some of the worst conduct was directed toward the show’s host. When Lakshmi arrived at the scene, one of the union members rushed her car and screamed “We’re gonna bash that pretty face in, you f***ing whore!”  In responding to local media reports of the incident at the time, a Local 25 spokeswoman stated, “As far as we’re concerned, nothing happened.”
            The indictment a year later charged the union members with using violent tactics in an attempt to extort jobs from Top Chef under the threat of disrupting or shutting down production.  By agreeing to plead guilty, Harrington, who was the former Secretary-Treasurer of Local 25, received a deal in which he will receive no prison time and will spend no more than two years of probation.  The maximum sentence available was up to 20 years in prison and fines of up to $250,000.  The other union members still await trial.
            According to media reports, this is not atypical behavior for Local 25.  Other union members have previously been convicted of money-laundering, extortion, racketeering and shaking down movie producers who tried to film in Boston.  The union is politically active, and has made campaign donations to Boston Mayor Martin J. Walsh, a former union attorney, every member of the Boston City Council, and Attorney General Maura Healey.
            The good news in this case is that the U.S. Department of Justice took action against obviously criminal and terrorizing action by the union, but the bad news is that the relative “slap on the wrist” no jail-time sentence of Harrington is unlikely to prove much of a deterrent to such abusive union activity in the future. There is no indication as to what, if any, involvement the National Labor Relations Board ("NLRB") had in the case.
            In light of the NLRB’s recently announced joint employer standard for franchise operations, an interesting perspective on the Top Chef incident was offered in an article by the Competitive Enterprise Institute entitled “Why Isn't There a Joint Union Standard?”  According to the author:
The NLRB argued in the majority that companies utilize common business relationships—franchising, contracting and temporary staff—to insulate themselves from labor violations and collective bargaining responsibilities.
Seemingly, if corporations are deemed liable for the wrongdoings of an entity that they voluntarily associate with and may reserve control over, then why are labor unions insulated from liability when union officials commit criminal acts when pursuing union objectives—in this case, obtaining work? Also, why is a national union shielded from liability when local unions commit criminal acts?
A national union, in essence, acts in a similar fashion as a franchisor of labor services. National unions let local unions use its brand, “provide services to their locals, such as legal advice and leadership training” and help negotiate collective bargaining agreements.
           
          As they might say on Top Chef, food for thought.

A MESSAGE TO READERS OF "THE EMPLOYEE WITH THE DRAGON TATTOO" 
 A reader of this blog asked if she could be included on an e-mail list for new posts.  I currently do not have an e-mail service but it seems like an excellent idea and I will be setting it up in the very near future.  If you would like to be included, please send your name, your company, and your e-mail to me at fijmanm@phelps.com

Thanks! 
 




Friday, March 28, 2014

NLRB Says “No Workplace Secrets Allowed!”



The National Labor Relations Board (“NLRB”) has held that an employer’s enforcement of a commonly used workplace policy could expose the employer to liability under the National Labor Relations Act (“NLRA” or “the Act”).
This particular matter involved the technology company MCPc, which had a confidentially provision in its employee handbook which read. In part, as follows:

[D]issemination of confidential information within [the company], such as personal or financial information, etc., will subject the responsible employee to disciplinary action or possible termination . . . .


This type of policy, in one form or another, is commonly utilized by many employers.  In the case of MCPc, the company fired an employer after he announced at a meeting that the salary paid to a particular executive, stating the specific amount of the executive’s compensation, would have been used to hire additional engineers.  In terminating the employee for his statements, MCPc also based the decision on the employee improperly accessing computer files to discover the executive’s salary.
Last month, the NLRB upheld an administrative law judge’s decision, finding that MCPc’s internal confidentiality policy was overbroad and violated The NLRB held that this language violated Section 8(a)(1) of the NLRA because employees would reasonably construe the overbroad rule to prohibit discussion of wages or other terms and conditions of employment with their coworkers.  In upholding the ruling against MCPc for the termination of the employee, the NLRB agreed that the employee’s discussion was protected discussion because it involved the terms and conditions of his employment, i.e. staffing shortages.

In recent years, the NLRB has used the same rationale to find many employers’ social media policies to be in violation of the Act.  Another lesson to remember from the NLRB’s assault on workplace social media policies is that an employer can be found in violation on the basis of an overbroad policy alone, even if there is no action taken against an employee for violation of the policy.  As many employers also learned from the NLRB’s social media focus, even non-union employers can be found in violation of the NLRA.

Where does this leave employers?  As mentioned above, many employers have similar policies in their employee handbooks.  This is often for the purpose of avoiding the inevitable bickering and complaints that arise when employees start comparing their respective salaries, and are aggrieved over their perception of being underpaid, or another employee being overpaid.  Unfortunately, that goal is exactly what the NLRB views as a violation.
From the perspective of the NLRB’s “bigfoot” approach in the area of social media policies, I think employers are ultimately going to have to scrap the broadly worded confidentiality policies, and opt instead for narrowly tailored policies that protect against the disclosure of trade secrets and other confidential or proprietary information.

Mark Fijman is a labor and employment attorney with Phelps Dunbar, LLC, which has offices in Louisiana, Mississippi, Florida, Texas, Alabama, North Carolina and London. To view his firm bio, click here. He can be reached at (601) 360-9716 and by e-mail at fijmanm@phelps.com