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Labor leaders made a major push in 2009 for Congress to pass so-called "card check" legislation that would have increased penalties for such violations and made it easier for unions to organize workers by signing cards instead of holding secret-ballot elections. But the measure failed to garner a filibuster-proof majority in the Senate. Since then, labor has pinned its hopes for a revival on action at the NLRB, the Labor Department and other sympathetic administrative agencies. The board has not disappointed. It has cracked down on businesses that fire employees during union organizing drives and proposed rules that would require all business to display posters explaining union rights. In perhaps the most prominent case, the NRLB's acting general counsel filed a controversial lawsuit earlier this year that accused Boeing Co. of retaliating against union workers in Washington state by placing a new assembly line for the Dreamliner 787 in South Carolina, a right-to-work state. The proposed rule to be announced Tuesday could be another step in helping unions halt the membership decline and organize more workers. It would: Allow electronic filing of petitions and other documents to speed up processing. Set pre-election hearings to begin
seven days after a petition is filed. Defer litigation of eligibility issues involving less than 20 percent of the bargaining unit until after the election. Eliminate pre-election appeals of rulings by an NLRB regional director. Reduce from seven to two days the time for an employer to provide an electronic list of eligible voters.
[Associated
Press;
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