Proprietary and confidential
Who Is a Joint Employer? How a Recent NLRB Opinion Could
Redefine Everything You Know about Today’s Business Model
What’s Going On?
■ In April 2014, the NLRB granted review in BFI (subcontractor situation) ● Asked for the public to submit briefs about
whether the joint employer standard should be changed
■ Rather than wait for the NLRB, the GC authorized complaints vs. McDonald’s (franchisee situation), which were issued in December 2014 ● No basis for liability under current law
What Is a Joint Employer?
■ Not mentioned by Congress in NLRA ■ Created by the NLRB to reach
independent companies that: ● Share control/co-determine employment
terms of another company’s workers ● Exercise that control in a manner that is
“immediate and direct” ● Does not apply where the companies are
not legitimately separate legal entities (“single employer” doctrine)
What Does It Mean to Be a Joint Employer? ■ If you and another company are
“joint employers,” then each of you: ● Can be held liable for the other
company’s unfair labor practices ● Could be obligated to bargain with a
union representing the other company’s employees
● Could lose “secondary boycott” protection
What Relationships Could Give Rise to a Joint Employer Finding?
■ Franchisor/franchisee (like with McDonald’s)
■ Contractor/subcontractor ■ Primary employer and staffing
agency
The Current Standard
■ Laerco and TLI – cases from 1984 – established the current standard
■ Legally separate entities are joint employers ONLY when they actually share the ability to control or co-determine essential terms and conditions of employment (hiring, firing, discipline, supervision and direction of employees)
■ Putative employer’s control must be “direct and immediate”
The Current Standard
■ “Limited and routine” instruction is not enough to make you a joint employer
■ An employer may be able to tell another company’s employees what to do, but not how to do it
The Current Standard
■ “Immediate and direct” means ● Making personnel decisions, such as
■ Setting individual wages ■ Hiring, disciplining or discharging workers ■ Setting individual employees’ schedules ■ Resolving workers’ disputes
■ It does not mean: ● Pointing out issues with workers ● Setting operating hours ● Requiring particular attire or safety
equipment ● “Limited and routine” directions on
services to perform
Example: TLI, Inc. No Joint Employment ■ TLI provided drivers to another company,
Crown, that directed the group of drivers to make certain deliveries ● Drivers selected specific assignments based on
seniority ■ Drivers reported accidents to Crown
● TLI investigated and determined discipline ● If drivers’ conduct concerned Crown, it gave
incident reports to TLI; TLI conducted its own investigation
■ Crown did not hire, fire or discipline TLI drivers
Example: TLI, Inc. No Joint Employment ■ Although Crown may have exercised
some control over the drivers, Crown did not affect their terms and conditions of employment to such a degree that it may be deemed a joint employer.”
■ Crown’s daily supervision was not “meaningful,” but rather, “limited and routine”
BFI: The Case Before the Board
■ IBT petitioned for joint-employer unit of BFI and Leadpoint at BFI Recyclery ● Sorting line operations outsourced to
Leadpoint ■ Leadpoint had 15 on-site supervisors
and an HR Representative to manage its 200 employees
■ BFI not involved in hiring, supervising, disciplining or discharging employees
BFI: The Case Before the Board
■ BUT: ● Cost-plus contract ● BFI owned building and equipment ● BFI determined hours sorting line operated ● BFI provided “target” headcount estimates ● BFI occasionally observed employee
misconduct and reported it to Leadpoint ■ Leadpoint investigated and made
decisions ● BFI on (rare) occasions (allegedly) gave
directions to one or two employees
BFI: The Case Before the Board
■ ARD: ● BFI not a joint employer with Leadpoint ● Leadpoint solely controlled individual
employee decisions ■ Made all hiring, firing and discipline
decisions ● Leadpoint’s staff of supervisors
managed workers ● Any direction by BFI was “limited and
routine” ■ NLRB: We would like to see briefs
on whether we ought to reconsider the existing standard
The GC’s (Proposed) New Standard
■ It’s really the pre-1984 standard ■ Focuses on “industrial realties” ■ Direct OR indirect control over terms
and conditions ● OR the unexercised potential to control
terms and conditions of employment ● Does the company impose operational
requirements and monitor and retain effective control over those operations?
■ Based on the “totality of the circumstances”
The NLRB GC’s Position Indicates What’s Going On ■ Joint-employer status exists when,
“under the totality of the circumstances, including the way the separate entities have structured their commercial relationship, the putative joint employer wields sufficient influence over the working conditions of the other entity’s employees such that meaningful bargaining could not occur in its absence.”
How Will the NLRB Redefine Who Is a Joint Employer? ■ A few examples of “indicia of control” that
the GC has given: ● Tracking data on sales, inventory and labor
costs ● Calculating labor needs ● Setting and policing employee work
schedules ● Tracking wage reviews ● Tracking time needed for employees to fill
customer orders ● Retention of right to approve employees ● Requiring another company and employees
to follow safety rules
How Will the NLRB Redefine Who Is a Joint Employer? ■ Any company that outsources on-
site operations to a third party might be deemed a joint employer of the third party’s employees
■ Any company that closely controls off-site operations of a third party, like a franchisor, might be a joint employer
■ Then, unions can effectively use corporate campaign tactics to organize
The GC’s Reasoning
■ The term “employer” was intended to be construed broadly
■ Employers who use staffing companies and subs are still influencing terms and conditions of employment by influencing price by controlling other variables (“industrial realities”)
■ In this type of situation, employees don’t have a chance to achieve better terms and conditions through collective bargaining
Where Is This Coming From?
SEIU
■ Spent more than $150 MILLION to re-elect the president
■ Wants to organize fast food workers ■ But the workers do not seem to want to
be organized ■ Spent more than $15 MILLION since
January of this year on fast food worker protests
Look Familiar?
SEIU Likes Corporate Campaigns, Not Grass Roots Organizing ■ Takes a lot of energy to organize
local retail outlets unless employees really want a union
■ Far easier to attack large companies with PR campaigns, class action lawsuits, and environmental challenges to their development plans
■ To get neutrality agreements
But, Many Employees Don’t Work for the BIG Guy ■ They work for independent third
parties ● Sub-contractors ● Franchisees ● Business partners
■ BUT NOT IF THE NLRB REDEFINES THE CONCEPT OF A “JOINT EMPLOYER” UNDER THE NLRA
So What’s an Employer to Do?
■ Follow current law ● Good possibility that radical expansion
of the joint employer standard would not survive circuit court review ■ Still—current law: trap for unwary!
● State in agreements that sub-contractor (or franchisee) makes all employment decisions ■ And, stick to what you write! ■ NOTE: there is an exception for
franchisors to control product quality and brand
● Give as much control to the third party as you can accept
And, If You Can’t Beat ’Em . . .
■ Join ’em ● Embrace your new-found status as a joint
employer ■ Talk to your staffing company
● Draft protections into agreements ● Require compliance with laws ● Insulate yourself against union organizing
risks
The Perfect Storm?
■ The combination of the NLRB’s new “Ambush Election Rules” (which went into effect yesterday) and the potential new joint employer rules could make 2015 scary for employers
■ 7-Day position statement requirement ● Can you gather the information in time?
■ Elections in as few as 10-21 days ● Where are your weak spots?
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