A coalition of occupational health and safety experts submitted an amicus brief to the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) last Thursday, urging the Board to reconsider its restrictive definition of “joint employer” for purposes of collective bargaining. It’s a critical issue for workers as more and more are getting jobs through temp firms, staffing agencies, and other complex employment relationships. The workers who got your last-minute Father’s Day gift from the Amazon warehouse to your front door, for instance, don’t all get paychecks from Amazon, but they all operate at “Prime” speed because Amazon demands it.
From a health and safety perspective, it’s important that laws like the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA) and the Occupational Safety and Health Act (OSH Act) are interpreted broadly because the remedial purposes of those statutes – to ensure all workers can collectively bargain for better working conditions and to ensure that all workers are provided safe jobs – are best achieved when all of the employers with a connection to the job are at the table.
As the amici describe very well, the labor market is evolving to exploit loopholes in the laws that were meant to keep workers safe on the job. In industries like waste management, manufacturing, and food production, companies are contracting out some of the most dangerous jobs. Through those contracts, the host employers seek to off-load workers’ compensation costs, training responsibilities, and safety equipment investments. The staffing firms also frequently cut corners on training and push workers to rush their jobs in an attempt to keep costs down, profits up, and contracts renewing, leading to tragic results. The brief from the health and safety experts provides numerous examples of these tragedies, including several workers who were crushed in heavy equipment after the host employer and staffing firm failed to provide adequate training.
The case at issue here involves a BFI trash/recycling-sorting facility in Milpitas, California. A number of workers there are members of a union, but most of the workers on the front lines of the sorting process are hired through a staffing agency and are not part of the union. If the NLRB were to decide that BFI and the staffing agency are joint employers and the front-line workers were to vote to join the union, those workers would have a much better opportunity to bargain for safer work and good pay. Conversely, the hard reality is that if BFI is not considered a joint employer with the staffing agency, a vote by front-line workers to unionize creates a risk that BFI will just drop their agency and hire new workers through another one.
The amici trace the history of the NLRB’s definition of “joint employer” and show that the definition has narrowed over the last 30 to 40 years without much analysis of whether the trend goes against the stated purpose of the NLRA (to enhance workers’ ability to bargain for better working conditions), much less whether the definition is relevant in the evolving labor market.
The case is, in a sense, noteworthy for how ordinary the facts are. The employment relationship between BFI, the staffing agency, and the workers isn’t particularly unique—plenty of employers contract out dangerous jobs. From BFI’s and the staffing agency’s perspective, a written contract laid out fairly clear lines of responsibility over the workers’ assignments, hours, and pay and the staffing agency was the sole employer. From a worker’s perspective, on the other hand, those lines don’t exist. It was BFI and the staffing agency together who decided where the worker showed up for work, when the worker punched in, what lines to work, how fast to work, and how much earning potential the job provided. NLRB’s definition of “joint employer” fails to reconcile those discordant viewpoints, so the Board is right to use this case to explore new ways to think about the NLRA and the modern workplace.
NLRB is not alone in grappling with these difficult questions of who is responsible for ensuring workers are protected. OSHA, the Solicitor of Labor, and the Review Commission also have a number of cases in the pipeline that go to the same issues. How these cases are resolved will determine how relevant the NLRA, the OSH Act, and other key pieces of 20th Century legislation will be in the 21st Century workplace.
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Matt Shudtz | June 30, 2014
A coalition of occupational health and safety experts submitted an amicus brief to the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) last Thursday, urging the Board to reconsider its restrictive definition of “joint employer” for purposes of collective bargaining. It’s a critical issue for workers as more and more are getting jobs through temp firms, staffing agencies, […]
Matt Shudtz | June 26, 2014
Thousands of U.S. workers die on the job each year, the victims of unsafe workplaces. Countless more are injured, some permanently disabled, or exposed to toxic substances that could eventually harm or kill them. While the federal Occupational Safety and Health Administration has made progress to improve workplace safety since Congress passed the OSH Act […]
Celeste Monforton | June 26, 2014
Cross-posted from The Pump Handle. Luis Castaneda Gomez, 34 and Jesus Martinez Benitez, 32 were asphyxiated in June 2011 when they were doing repairs inside a manhole. Their employer, Triangle Grading and Paving, was hired by the City of Durham, NC to make water line repairs. The firm had a history of violating worker safety […]
Alice Kaswan | June 25, 2014
In Utility Air Regulatory Group v. EPA, seven members of the Supreme Court upheld the most important feature of the EPA’s Prevention of Significant Deterioration (PSD) program: the ability to require the vast majority of new and modified sources to install the “Best Available Control Technology” for reducing greenhouse gases (GHGs). As a consequence, eighty-three […]
Robert L. Glicksman | June 23, 2014
Co-authored with David L. Markell. Enforcement is widely acknowledged to be an indispensable feature of effective governance in the world of environmental protection and elsewhere. Unfortunately, criticisms of the U.S. government’s efforts to enforce the environmental laws began almost with the inception of the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) more than forty years ago – and they […]
Daniel Farber | June 23, 2014
Direct implications are limited, but we’ll be reading the tea leaves for future implications. Scholars, lawyers, and judges will be spending a lot of time dissecting today’s ruling. Overall, it’s a bit like yesterday’s World Cup game — EPA didn’t win outright but it didn’t lose either. Here are three key questions with some […]
Alice Kaswan | June 19, 2014
Power plants are not only one of the nation’s largest sources of greenhouse gases, they are also a significant source of sulfur dioxide, nitrogen oxides, particulates, and mercury, all of which have direct public health and welfare consequences. EPA’s recently proposed Clean Power Plan, which applies Clean Air Act § 111(d) to reduce greenhouse gases […]
| June 12, 2014
With little notice in the West, India has just launched the most far-reaching corporate social responsibility (CSR) program in the world. The CSR law, which took effect April 1, requires large and mid-sized firms to contribute at least 2% of their pre-tax profits (averaged over the previous three years) to social, health, educational, or environmental […]
Robin Kundis Craig | June 11, 2014
On Monday, June 9, 2014, the U.S. Supreme Court decided CTS Corp. v. Waldburger, — U.S. —, — S. Ct. —, 2014 WL 2560466 (June 9, 2014), a case that posed the seemingly simple legal question of whether the federal Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act (“CERCLA,” also known as Superfund), 42 U.S.C. §§ […]