Old Standard, New Challenges: The NLRB Restores ‘Clear and Unmistakable Waiver’ Standard

The National Labor Relations Board issued its decision in Endurance Environmental Solutions, LLC, 373 NLRB No. 141 (2024), in which it announced a major precedential shift: a return to the “clear and unmistakable waiver” standard. This shift may make it more difficult for employers to make changes to employee working conditions without union approval.

This decision overturns the NLRB’s 2019 decision in MV Transportation, Inc., 368 NLRB No. 66 (2019), in which the NLRB jettisoned the long-standing “clear and unmistakable waiver” standard in favor of the more employer-friendly “contract-coverage” standard. Under the latter rule, an employer could make changes to workplace conditions–without engaging in collective bargaining–as long as those changes generally aligned with the management-rights clause of a collective bargaining agreement, even if the disputed employer action was not mentioned specifically in the contract’s text.

With the Environmental Solutions decision, however, the NLRB has flipped again and resurrected the old clear and unmistakable waiver standard, which had been in place from 1949 until 2019.

While the clear and unmistakable waiver rule might be familiar territory, an old standard can raise new challenges for employers.

Under this more stringent and labor-friendly standard, an employer may only make a unilateral change to workplace conditions if there is clear and unmistakable language in the collective bargaining agreement permitting the proposed action. In other words, an employer is now required to demonstrate that a union has given a “clear and unmistakable waiver” of its right to bargain over specific changes being implemented for its unilateral change to survive NLRB review.

The NLRB champions its return to this standard as one that better accomplishes the goals of the National Labor Relations Act: to promote industrial peace by “encouraging the practice and procedure of collective bargaining.” The NLRB touts this decision as more consistent with U.S. Supreme Court and NLRB precedent.

Employers negotiating collective bargaining agreements should carefully evaluate their management-rights provisions and consider whether those provisions are now insufficient to enable them to implement unilateral changes without bargaining.

Notably, with the upcoming change in presidential administrations, the effect of Environmental Solutions, LLC may be ephemeralIf (or when) the NLRB comprises a Republican majority, we may be in store for another seismic shift as the NLRB looks for more employer-friendly opportunities, like a potential return to the contract-coverage standard.

Today, the Board issued its decision in Endurance Environmental Solutions, LLC. and restored the “clear and unmistakable” waiver standard for evaluating employers’ contractual defenses to allegations that they have unlawfully changed the working conditions of union-represented employees without first giving the union notice and an opportunity to bargain. www.nlrb.gov/…

© 2024 BARNES & THORNBURG LLP by: William I. Amberger of Barnes & Thornburg LLP For more on the NLRB, visit the NLR Labor Employment section

  • Related Posts

    Federal Appeals Court Reinstates Injunction Against the CTA, Pending Appeal

    At approximately 8:15 p.m. Eastern Time on December 26, 2024, the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit (Fifth Circuit) reversed course from its prior ruling in Texas Top…

    China’s Supreme People’s Court Issues First Anti-Anti-Suit Injunction in Huawei v. Netgear

    Following Huawei obtaining two anti-anti-suit injunctions (AASI) against Netgear on December 11, 2024 at the Unified Patent Court’s Munich Local Division and the Munich I Regional Court, China’s Supreme People’s…

    Leave a Reply

    Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

    You Missed

    Dow Jones Today: Stocks Fall Sharply in Early Trading as Big-Tech Tumbles

    • By admin
    • December 30, 2024
    • 0 views

    Jimmy Carter Dies at Age 100, Leaving Long Legacy in Public Health

    • By admin
    • December 30, 2024
    • 1 views
    Jimmy Carter Dies at Age 100, Leaving Long Legacy in Public Health

    Federal Appeals Court Reinstates Injunction Against the CTA, Pending Appeal

    • By admin
    • December 30, 2024
    • 1 views

    China’s Supreme People’s Court Issues First Anti-Anti-Suit Injunction in Huawei v. Netgear

    • By admin
    • December 29, 2024
    • 3 views
    China’s Supreme People’s Court Issues First Anti-Anti-Suit Injunction in Huawei v. Netgear

    Dow Jones Today: Stocks Slide in Early Trading as Nvidia, Tesla Lead Large-Cap Tech Shares Lower

    • By admin
    • December 27, 2024
    • 3 views

    How ‘Weekend Warrior’ Workouts Can Jumpstart Your 2025 Fitness Goals

    • By admin
    • December 27, 2024
    • 8 views
    How ‘Weekend Warrior’ Workouts Can Jumpstart Your 2025 Fitness Goals