Wednesday, April 15, 2020
Labor Board Rules Workers Dont Always Have to be Positive
Labor Board Rules Workers Don't Always Have to be Positive If you dislike having to put on a happy face every day when you go to work, then donât do it â" your company canât make you. Thatâs the result of a recent National Labor Relations Board ruling over a clause in a T-Mobile company handbook requiring employees to uphold a âpositive work environment.â The Communications Workers of America (the same union thatâs on strike against Verizon over healthcare costs going up and jobs being outsourced), represents a relative handful of T-Mobileâs 45,000 workers. The union complained to the NLRB that the companyâs happy-face mandate was unfair, and the Board agreed, ruling in the employeesâ favor. âWe find that employees would reasonably construe the rule to restrict potentially controversial or contentious communications and discussions,â it said in the ruling. While this means you can channel Grumpy Cat to your heartâs content, whatâs really at stake here is workersâ ability to organize and be able to discuss things like poor working conditions or conflicts with management. If maintaining a âpositiveâ attitude means employees canât gripe about their jobs, then an employer could use that rule as a de facto prohibition on discussions about organizing, which would invariably touch on bones of contention or topics of discontent.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.