Labor Law -- 2014



Macy's, Inc.   (NLRB)

Challenge to micro-unions

The NLRB’s Specialty Healthcare decision favoring micro-unions has led to numerous cases involving the definition of a bargaining unit. In Macy’s Inc., the Board’s regional director decided that employees of the fragrance and cosmetic departments at Macy’s could form their own union. The regional director found that the small group of employees was an appropriate unit because they were readily identifiable as a group and shared a community of interest. Moreover, the burden to show that the small unit is inappropriate is on the employer, who would have to demonstrate that a larger unit shares an overwhelming community of interest with the smaller unit. Interestingly, the previous year, the union unsuccessfully tried to organize a wall-to-wall unit in the entire store.

The NAM filed an amicus brief urging the Board to overturn the regional director’s decision. The Board’s policy conflicts with the rights of employees who do not want to form a union by allowing them to be gerrymandered out of the bargaining unit. In effect, if the majority of employees in a facility do not favor forming a bargaining unit, they can be relegated to a minority status when a union selects a gerrymandered unit where it has majority support. The NAM argued that the burden should be shifted to the union to initially demonstrate that the a proposed smaller bargaining unit is constituted on factors other than union support and that the employees are readily identifiable as a group.

Manufacturers are starting to face a multitude of small unionized bargaining units, making management of the workplace much more difficult and harming their ability to compete. This is the fifth case since Specialty Healthcare in which the NAM has sought to change the Board’s policy and encourage the proper definition of bargaining units in manufacturing facilities.


Related Documents:
NAM amicus brief  (February 27, 2013)