"Equal access" may be the next big fight
With card-check apparently out of reach this year, some advocates of labor reform have suggested that the National Labor Relations Act be amended to provide for expanded union access to employees. These suggestions have come recently from Sen. Arlen Specter (R-PA), Rep. Joe Sestak (D-PA), and by retailers Whole Foods, Costco, and Starbucks.
It is hard to imagine that the employer community as a whole would consider equal access any more palatable than card check. Despite the term’s ring of fairness, the proposals intrude upon an employer’s private property rights and would require the employer to assemble its employees on paid time and then step aside while a professional union organizer delivers a speech that is hostile to management.
The contemplated reform would actually bring about a significant imbalance in access. It is true that employers have the ability to call meetings with employees to discuss issues that affect the business, including potential unionization. (Of course, the employers must pay employees for time spent in those meetings, and unions are free to pay employees to attend meetings if they wish to do so.) But the union has campaign advantages that employers do not. Under the current law, union organizers can and do conduct repeated visits to employees' homes and social gatherings to present the case for unionization. These visits typically take place over a period of several months before an election petition is filed. Employers are forbidden under current law from visiting employees at home to discuss unions, and none of the proposals would appear change that. An employer’s opportunity for face-to-face discussions with employees is limited to the workplace. Requiring post-petition equal workplace access after months of pre-petition union campaigning in living rooms and kitchen tables simply gives organizers another opportunity to drown out opposing voices.