In his testimony today before the National Labor Relations Board
(NLRB), Brett McMahon, vice-president of business development for
the Miller and Long Company, a construction firm, raises an
interesting point. Unions have already been winning over 60 percent
of the organization elections that are held. So why does Obama’s
team of labor lawyers find it necessary to institute so called
“quickie elections.”
In June, the three Democrats who sit on the Board proposed rule
changes that would curtail the amount of time for private union
elections. Brian Hayes, the only Republican member of the board,
has been sharply critical of the proposal, but his input has been
limited.
If the rule changes go into effect, they would set elections
from a current median time of 37 days to as little as 10 days from
the filing of an election petition. They would also set
pre-election hearings for 7 days after a petition is filed; the
rules would also require the employer to respond to a pre-hearing
questionnaire raising any legal issues or waive its right to do so.
And finally, the new rules would defer a decision on the issues
raised at the hearing till after the election, putting an employer
at risk if the decision is challenged.
“The NLRB is making itself a hazard to the economic well being
of working people by chilling the entrepreneurial spirit of free
enterprise that has brought more prosperity to more people than any
other system in human history,” McMahon said in testimony. “It is
not now, nor will it ever be, the single catalyst that causes large
lay offs or stifles job creation. Rather it is the series of
actions that this Board takes that add to the weight that hurts
businesses today. Don’t adopt this rule. It is unwise
in this economic climate and it is unfair to workers and
employers.”
Even without the rule change, America’s business owners are
already at a disadvantage McMahon points out.
“Significant regulation already exists to limit the speech of
the employer yet no such restrictions exist for union organizers,
and there has been no indication that a change such as the one
proposed is necessary,” he said. “There is no demand for it other
than from pro-union allies. The small employer is nearly hamstrung
at the start even if they are aware of an organizing effort.
Many employers are not aware of the effort until the organizer
presents their cards. Most small businesses do not retain
employment counsel. In fact, until the recent headlines, I
doubt many small employers had even heard of the NLRB. With all of
the challenges in the current economy, it is unreasonable to expect
an employer to drop everything and then respond in the potential
time frame contemplated by this rule.”
The latest action from the NLRB demonstrates that the
Administration is determined to achieve administratively, what
could not accomplish legislatively, even with a Democratic
Congress.