Long-sought U.S. labor rule change raises worker safety
questions in coronavirus crisis
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[April 30, 2020] By
Tom Hals
(Reuters) - Some contract workers in
America's fast food restaurants, hospitals and warehouses could find it
harder to demand equipment and other measures to protect them from the
coronavirus under a new labor agency rule, according to workers'
advocates and unions.
The National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) rule that was published in the
federal government register
https://www.federalregister.gov/
documents/2020/02/26/2020-03373/joint-employer-status-under-the-national-labor-relations-act
in February and took effect on April 27, says companies must have direct
control over "essential" working conditions of franchise employees and
contract workers in order to be considered their "joint employers." The
NLRB threw out a precedent that said companies can be joint employers
when they exercise indirect control over contract workers' essential
conditions.
The agency has said the new rule restores a standard that had been
applied for decades and adds clarity.
Labor advocates on the other hand say that under the new rule, a company
that uses contract labor is less likely to be forced to bargain with
workers, be held liable for labor violations or be targeted by pickets.
Unions have criticized the NLRB for excluding health and safety as one
of the essential conditions that determines when a company is a joint
employer.
"Unfortunately, with this joint employer rule, the government is
weakening the standards, moving in exactly the wrong direction," said
Karla Gilbride, an attorney at legal advocacy organization Public
Justice.
A business group representing human resources executives said the rule
change could actually encourage companies to take a more active role in
worker safety because previously, potential liability issues gave them
pause.
"The unions have it completely backwards on safety, particularly in this
environment," of the coronavirus pandemic, said Roger King, of the HR
Policy Association.
Redefining the so-called joint employer standard has been a goal for
years for companies such as McDonald's Corp <MCD.N> and others that run
franchises or rely on outsourced staff. These companies also include
hotel operators, call centers and package delivery operations of Fedex
Corp <FDX.N> and Amazon.com Inc <AMZN.O>.
In March, the Department of Labor made a similar change to the
definition of joint employer under the Fair Labor Standards Act, which
governs pay and overtime.
The changes are being made as the economy is shrinking at the fastest
rate in more than a decade because of the impacts of the coronavirus and
U.S. President Donald Trump is eager to have some businesses reopen
after more than a month of closures designed to contain the spread of
the virus.
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A modified business schedule is displayed on the window of a closed
business during the outbreak of the coronavirus (COVID-19) disease
in Washington, U.S., April 29, 2020. REUTERS/Leah Millis
But workers are scared of getting infected and some have staged protests over
fears they are being exposed at work to the novel coronavirus that causes the
COVID-19 respiratory disease. At least 60,000 people have died in the United
States, the most in the world, according to a Reuters tally.
HOSPITAL JANITORS
Workers' advocates say the NLRB rule will, for example, prevent janitors who
work in hospitals and are employed by a staffing agency, from demanding safety
measures that could protect them from the coronavirus.
That's because the agency that employs the janitors controls the conditions the
new rule deems essential, such as pay, hours and discipline. The hospital may
control the health and safety conditions that could expose the janitors to
coronavirus at work, but the hospital would not be considered a joint employer
under the new rule.
As a result, the hospital management would have no legal duty under federal
labor law to come to the bargaining table and negotiate with the janitors over
safety.
"It is outrageous and shameful that, now of all times, the agency that exists to
protect these workers' rights is working overtime to make it harder for them to
win basic safety protections from their employers," said Nicole Berner, the
general counsel of the Service Employees International Union. Its affiliate is
the largest U.S. healthcare union.
King of the HR Policy Association said that under the old precedent even giving
a training video to contract workers could have made the company a joint
employer and by extension possibly liable for labor violations by a contract
staffing company.
He dismissed union arguments that the new rule will undermine safety. "This is
really a stretch," he said.
Fedex and Amazon did not immediately respond to a request for comment, but the
companies have generally opposed attempts in court to hold them liable for
alleged labor violations by independent delivery companies. Both have said they
were adopting additional sanitizing and cleaning measures to protect staff and
customers because of the epidemic.
(Reporting by Tom Hals in Wilmington, Delaware; additional reporting by Dan
Wiessner in Albany, New York and Hilary Russ in New York; Editing by Noeleen
Walder and Grant McCool)
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