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The National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) has petitioned for re-hearings in both courts that struck down its August 2011 “Notification of Employee Rights” rule. Under the rule, employers would have been required to display a poster in their workplace that contained a biased and incomplete list of employee rights under the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA). 

The NLRB first petitioned the for a rehearing on July 22 and then the on July 29.

ţӰparticipated in in the D.C. Circuit appeals court in September 2012 stating it would force some 6 million employers around the country to communicate a pro-union message to their employees for the first time in the history of the NLRA.  ţӰalso argued the board cannot show that Congress expressly or implicitly delegated authority to issue the rule and that it violates the plain language of numerous provisions of the NLRA Act, including Section 8(c), which states “expressing of any views shall not constitute or be evidence of an unfair labor practice.”

A three-judge panel for the D.C. circuit , primarily on the grounds that it violated free speech rights afforded to employers under the NLRA, supporting ABC’s arguments. the NLRB exceeded its authority when it adopted the rule but said it did not need to address the free speech issue because the NLRB clearly lacked the authority to promulgate the rule in the first place.

The NLRB is challenging the D.C. circuit’s ruling by claiming the poster is comparable to other notices that are required to be posted under other statutes. It is challenging the fourth circuit’s ruling by arguing that it did have the statutory authority to promulgate the rule. 

The notice posting rule has been in response to a request by the ABC-led Coalition for a Democratic Workplace.


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