Overview:
Private
Employers took advantage of the Employee Handbook Civility Rules put in place
by the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) for policies that make the
Employers’ life easier and more in control of employees prior to 2022. These
Rules focused on Employer Friendly policies like:
- Being
Respectful
- No
Gossiping
- Neutral
civility rules, barring rude, offensive, or disparaging language or behavior;
- Rules
banning photography and recording, or devices for photography and recording,
from the workplace;
- Rules
against insubordination, non-cooperation, or on-the-job conduct that adversely
affects operations;
- Rules
banning disruptive behavior, disorderly conduct, or creating disturbances or
discord on premises;
- Rules
protecting confidential, proprietary, and customer information or documents;
- Rules
against defamation or misrepresentation;
- Rules
against using the employer’s logo or intellectual property without
authorization;
- Rules
requiring authorization to speak on behalf of the company; and
- Rules banning disloyalty, nepotism, or self-enrichment.
These
are outlawed now!
Now
these policies are determined to be unlawful according to the new
Administration and will be expected to be changed in 2022.
The NLRB enforces the National Labor Relations Act, which gives both unionized and non-union employees certain rights in the workplace. The extent of these protections tends to shift depending on the makeup of the Board in Washington. With a recent shift to a new administration, we expect the Board to apply the NLRA more broadly, meaning greater restrictions on employer policies and practices.
If your organization is in the private sector (i.e., not a governmental entity), then you are likely subject to the NLRB’s jurisdiction. There are more than 50 categories of cases where the current NLRB leadership may try to reverse course on existing precedents that it deems to be too employer friendly.
Find
out how the changes at the NLRB may affect your company and why you might want
to start making changes in your Employee Handbook now.
By attending this webinar participants will:
- Learn
why the civility rules are now outdated.
- Learn
how long you have before the changes are in place legislatively.
- Learn
how your current Employee Handbook might be outdated based on these new changes.
- Learn
what Role Does the NLRA and the NLRB have on non-union employees.
- How
Can Employers mitigate these changes and stay compliant?
- Learn
how you can prepare for the changes before you are violated for non-compliance.
- Expanding
monetary damages for which employers may be liable when they unlawfully
terminate workers.
- Reversing
the previous administrations decision that created a new, employer-friendly
framework for determining when an employer's handbook policies infringe on
protected concerted activity under the NLRA.
- Reversing
precedent that made it easier for employers to establish workers are
independent contractors.
- Limiting
employer unilateral actions, even when the collective bargaining agreement has
a broad management rights clause.
- Scaling
back employers' ability to govern civility in the workplace in certain
circumstances.
- Reversing
recent cases finding confidentiality, non-disparagement clauses, and certain
waiver of claims in separation agreements lawful.
- Expanding
employee rights related to employer discipline.
- Re-establishing
NLRB jurisdiction to decide matters involving religious educational
institutions.
Why should you attend?
The NLRA protects "concerted activities" that employees engage in to improve working conditions. Historically, and particularly during the previous administration, the board construed the protection as applying to conduct directly related to a specific worksite, such as protesting an employer's overtime policy.
Private-sector
union membership has steadily declined for decades. But the access issue is
getting renewed attention amid the COVID-19 pandemic and high-profile union
elections held by employees of large companies like Amazon.com Inc and
Starbucks Corp.
What
is Concerted Activity and Why Should Employers Care
Protected
Concerted Activity is a legal term used in labor policy to define employee
protection against employer retaliation in the United States.
It
is a legal principle under the subject of the freedom of association.
The
term defines the activities workers may partake in without fear of employer
retaliation.
Who
will benefit?
- All
Private Employers
- Business
Owners
- Company
Leadership
- Compliance
professionals
- Payroll
Administrators
- HR
Professionals
- Managers/Supervisors
- Private
Employers in all industries
- Small Business Owners
- Large Business Owners
Margie
Faulk is a senior level human resources professional with over 15 years of HR
management and compliance experience. A current Compliance Advisor for HR
Compliance Solutions, LLC, Margie, has worked as an HR Compliance advisor for
major corporations and small businesses in the small, large, private, public
and Non-profit sectors. Margie has
provided small to large businesses with risk management strategies that protect
companies and reduces potential workplace fines and penalties from violation of
employment regulations. Margie is bilingual (Spanish) fluent and Bi-cultural.
Margie’s
area of expertise includes Criminal Background Screening Policies and auditing,
I-9 document correction and storage compliance, Immigration compliance,
employee handbook development, policy development, sexual harassment
investigations/certified training, SOX regulations, payroll compliance,
compliance consulting, monitoring US-based federal, state and local
regulations, employee relations issues, internal investigations, HR management,
compliance consulting, internal/external audits, and performance management.
Margie
is a speaker and accomplished trainer and has created and presented compliance
seminars/webinars for over 16 US and International compliance institutes.
Margie has testified as a compliance subject matter expert (SME) for several
regulatory agencies and against regulatory agencies, thank goodness not on the same
day. Margie offers compliance training to HR professionals, business owners,
and leadership to ensure compliance with workplace and regulations.
Margie’s
unique training philosophy includes providing free customized tools for all
attendees. These tools are customized and have been proven to be part an
effective risk management strategy. Some of the customized tools include the
I-9 Self Audit. Correction and Storage program, Ban the Box Decision Matrix
Policy that Employers can provide in a dispute for allegations, Family Medical
Leave Act (FMLA) Compliance Guide, Drug-Free Workplace Volatile Termination
E-Book and other compliance program tools when attendees register and attend
Margie’s trainings.
Margie holds professional human resources certification (PHR) from the HR Certification Institution (HRCI) and SHRM-CP certification from the Society for Human Resources Management. Margie is a member of the Society of Corporate Compliance & Ethics (SCCE).
Enrollment Options
Tags: Employee Handbooks, May 2022, NLRB Changes, vImpact on Employers, New Policies, Margie, Faulk, Webinar