03.14.19

By:  Josh Eidelson and Hassan Kanu
Source: Bloomberg Law

Trump Administration Warned by Congress Over Employer Liability Rule

Democratic lawmakers want more information on the NLRB’s use of subcontractors to push through limits on worker claims.

Under President Donald Trump, the National Labor Relations Board told its employees that tight budgets will require cuts to compensation and even downsizing, an agency union said. So it came as a surprise when the union learned the board wants to pay subcontractors to do work employees traditionally perform themselves.

Congressional Democrats were surprised, too—especially when they found out what the subcontractors would be doing. 

In a March 14 letter to NLRB Chairman John Ring, a management-side attorney appointed by Trump, House Democrats said they are “extremely concerned about reports” that the agency is planning to contract with a third party to review public comments on its proposed new “joint employer” rule. The rule would govern subcontractors’ business relationships and liability.
The proposed rule would alter the standard by which corporations can be held liable for the mistreatment of workers paid by its subcontractors or franchisees. It would also change the standard by which those corporations can be forced to collectively bargain with those workers. In both cases, the new rule will significantly shift the standard in favor of corporations.
“All we have heard from our leadership for more than a year is that because of a budget crisis they have to cut employee compensation and downsize the agency,” said Karen Cook, president of the NLRB Professional Association. “So it was particularly galling to find out that Chairman Ring is making plans to spend the agency’s limited funds to hire contractors.”

The agency “already has the most qualified staff” for the task on its own payroll, the Democrats said in their letter.

The NLRB didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.

Under President Barack Obama, the NLRB (then with a majority of Democratic appointees) made it harder for companies to avoid being considered “joint employers” when it came to alleged wrongdoing by subcontractors or franchises. Undoing that precedent has been a priority for business lobbyists since Trump took office.

But their efforts to make it happen have hit some snags. The board, now with a Republican majority, issued a ruling in a December 2017 case that would have overturned the earlier precedent, but the decision was set aside after the agency’s inspector general said one of the Trump appointees, another management side attorney, should have recused himself due to a conflict-of-interest.

Last summer, the NLRB signaled it would move forward with rulemaking rather than finding another case to remake the existing employee-friendly standard. The strategy sparked furious lobbying from advocates on both sides as well as tens of thousands of public comments which the agency is legally required to review.

In their letter, the Democratic lawmakers request that Ring provide documents regarding the potential outsourcing, including any draft contracts or solicitations for the work, plans to avoid conflicts of interest, and legal analysis about how it would adhere to rules restricting who can perform “inherently governmental” functions.

The prospect of sub-contracting is the latest flashpoint in months of tension over joint-employer liability between the NLRB and congressional Democrats. In a letter to Ring last May, Senators Kirsten Gillibrand, Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren—now all presidential candidates—cast the rulemaking effort as an inappropriate effort to evade the ethics rules that derailed its last attempt to end the Obama-era rule..

In January, Democrats including Scott wrote a letter urging Ring to abandon the effort after a federal court upheld core aspects of the existing standard, which the lawmakers argued foreclosed the NLRB’s attempts to undercut it. In response, Ring wrote that abandoning the proposed rulemaking “would be unfair to the thousands of individuals and groups that have expressed such a strong desire to be heard on this important topic.